PLEADING YOUR LICENSE AWAY
By Ralph B. Saltsman with Stephen Warren Solomon and Stephen A.
Jamieson
File this scenario under “Just when you think your troubles
are over.” You “accidentally” place a bunch of socks in your
pockets as you clear the check-out line at the local department
store. A few moments later out in the parking lot, you tell store
security you were observing their system to see if you could
install something like that in your small liquor store. Store
security personnel do not laugh, but they do call the police.
Several months later, in order to avoid the cost of trial, you
plead guilty to Petty Theft and pay a nominal fine as arranged by
your criminal lawyer. Petty Theft is a crime involving moral
turpitude, so here comes the ABC after your license. Or….
You have just pled no contest to felony driving under the
influence of alcohol. This is the third or even fourth DUI plea in
seven years, but your criminal lawyer got you the minimum fine and
jail. A little rest at the government facility and you can get
back to your office and run that corporate machine that has ten or
twelve ABC licensed premises. You are the major shareholder and
the corporate president, and life will be back to normal in no
time. Right? Not so fast there. What your criminal lawyer didn’t
tell you because he didn’t know was that felony DUI with three
or more priors in seven years constitutes a crime involving moral
turpitude (see People v. Forster, 1994). Since the ABC is
empowered to revoke a liquor license based on a licensee’s plea
to a crime involving moral turpitude, now the ABC will begin its
task of revoking all the licenses issued to your corporation.
Or….
How about this one: Your business partner who is also your
co-licensee is out for an evening on the town and engages in some
extra curricular activity that results in the District Attorney
filing felony charges of kidnapping and rape as well as the lesser
charge of misdemeanor sexual battery. The details will not be
discussed here, but after a long and heated trial, your business
partner and co-licensee is convicted by the jury only of the
misdemeanor. Although the more serious charges resulted in a
verdict of acquittal, the jury did find that your partner engaged
in activity that constituted misdemeanor sexual battery. Your
partner celebrates a near complete victory. The ABC files an
accusation to revoke your license since misdemeanor sexual battery
is a crime involving moral turpitude.
By Constitutional mandate, the Department of Alcoholic
Beverage Control has the power to deny, suspend or revoke a
license where the licensee or applicant has “violated any law
involving moral turpitude.” By statute the Department may
suspend or revoke a license where a licensee has sustained “a
plea, verdict, or judgment of guilty or the plea of nolo
contendere to any public offense involving moral
turpitude.”Exactly what is a crime involving moral turpitude?
The Court of Appeal in People v. Chavez (2000) advised:
“The California Supreme Court has divided
crimes of moral turpitude in to two groups. The first group
includes crimes in which dishonesty is an element (i.e. fraud,
perjury, etc.). The second group includes crimes that indicate a
general readiness to do evil…Crimes in the latter group are
acts of ‘baseness, vileness or depravity in the private and
social duties which a man owes to his fellowmen, or to society
in general…’(citation omitted).”
The Department has revoked licenses where the licensees
were convicted of issuing checks with insufficient funds. The
Department has revoked licenses where the licensees were convicted
of filing false income tax returns. Certainly pleas or convictions
for trafficking in, or manufacturing, or selling supplies to
manufacture narcotics will result in Department revocation
proceedings. Any crime where fraud is an underlying element will
constitute a crime involving moral turpitude (See Kirby v.
Alcoholic Beverage Control 1969).
Let’s go back to the criminal court for a moment. After that
plea to a crime involving moral turpitude, misdemeanor petty theft
for example, you are sentenced to 30 days in the county jail with
the sentence suspended (that is, no jail time) on condition that
you pay a fine, and you are placed on one year informal probation
and ordered to obey all laws. The year passes, and you complete
probation. Your lawyer files a petition under Penal Code Section
1203.4 to release you “from all penalties and disabilities
resulting from the offense or crime for which [you have] been
convicted.” Your record expunged, now you can’t lose your ABC
license, right? Wrong. In Copeland v. Department of Alcoholic
Beverage Control (1966) the Court of Appeal specifically
answered this question, stating:
“As used in section 1203.4 of the Penal
Code, the words ‘penalties and disabilities’ have reference
to criminal penalties and disabilities or to matters of a
kindred nature. But the disciplining of licensees…is for the
protection of the public in the exercise of police power and not
for the purpose of punishing any licensee (Citations omitted).
It is settled that proceedings to suspend or revoke business or
professional licenses are not included among the penalties and
disabilities that are released by a dismissal pursuant to
section 1203.4”
Just how close does the average licensee get to a crime
involving moral turpitude in the normal course of doing business?
The answer is: too close and too often. Filling out an ABC
application under penalty of perjury; submitting tax (including
sales tax) statements; making representations of material fact to
the State Board of Equalization or the Department of Alcoholic
Beverage Control; if these statements are knowingly incorrect,
their submission over your signature may be perjury. Getting
someone else to knowingly submit false information to one of these
state agencies or to federal agencies under oath may be
subornation of perjury.
Perjury in and of itself involves moral turpitude. The
California Supreme Court in Martin v. Appeals Board (Haley)
(1959) upheld the Department’s right to revoke a license
where a licensee’s application contained a misrepresentation of
a material fact. The courts have consistently determined that
perjury is a crime involving moral turpitude.
Penal Code Section 118 states, in part, every person who
testifies under oath, willfully and contrary to the oath, states
as true any material matter which he or she knows to be false is
guilty of perjury.
Penal Code Section 118a states, in part, any person who, in any
affidavit taken before any person authorized to administer oaths,
swears, in any particular manner, or to any particular fact, and
in such affidavit willfully and contrary to such oath states as
true any material matter which he knows to be false, is guilty of
perjury.
One last nightmare: The District Attorney files a perjury case
against you based on the form you signed and submitted to the ABC
two years ago when you were applying for the license you now have.
Knowing that a plea of guilty can endanger your license, you
insist on a trial. You are charged with perjury because the
application contained false information about, for example, who
really owns the business that was to be and is now licensed. In
trial you testify that you couldn’t read the information on the
form, because the room was dark when you signed it. You tell the
jury that you assumed all information was correct, but it was too
dark to see. Your lawyer argues to the jury: “If the words
aren’t lit, you must acquit.” And they do. Not guilty.
Are you off the hook? No, because the Department can still file
an accusation alleging the underlying charge. Then the Department
must prove the facts of the offense in order to sustain that
accusation. Obviously this is a more difficult burden on the
Department.
Where there is a guilty or no contest plea to a crime of moral
turpitude, the Department files its accusation and the ABC
attorney typically just brings to the administrative hearing a
certified copy of the docket sheet and sentencing documents
showing the charge and plea and then enters the court papers into
evidence and rests.
You haven’t lost yet. The Department has presented its case
in five minutes and argues for revocation. But now it’s your
turn. Skilled experienced counsel can still save your license.
There’s myriad defenses and procedural issues that can be
pursued, and the propriety of the penalty is always in question.
Regardless of what the Department believes, pleading guilty is not
the same as just turning in your license.
Solomon, Saltsman & Jamieson are
attorneys practicing in the areas of ABC law, ABC Appeals Board
cases, and all related Land Use Matters such as City and County
Conditional Use Permits, Variances, Police and Fire permits,
Entertainment law, and Gambling Law; as well as Business and
Personal Injury litigation. Solomon, Saltsman & Jamieson can
be reached at 800 405 4222."
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