Justices hear sides in Tennessee case on liquor-sale law

In this image provided by Karen Pulfer Focht, Doug Ketchum and his wife Mary pose with their daughter Stacie as their Memphis liquor store, Kimbrough Wine & Spirits. The U.S. Supreme Court is set to hear a dispute over Tennessee's residency requirements for liquor store owners. Doug and Mary Ketchum moved from Utah to Memphis and say Tennessee makes it almost impossible for someone to break into the liquor business from out of state. (Karen Pulfer Focht)
In this image provided by Karen Pulfer Focht, Doug Ketchum and his wife Mary pose with their daughter Stacie as their Memphis liquor store, Kimbrough Wine & Spirits. The U.S. Supreme Court is set to hear a dispute over Tennessee's residency requirements for liquor store owners. Doug and Mary Ketchum moved from Utah to Memphis and say Tennessee makes it almost impossible for someone to break into the liquor business from out of state. (Karen Pulfer Focht)

WASHINGTON -- The U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments Wednesday in a case involving a Tennessee law requiring people to live in the state for two years before obtaining a license to sell alcohol.

The requirement makes it easier for authorities to do background checks and seize a liquor seller's financial assets if necessary, and makes it less likely someone will flee, said Shay Dvoretzky, a Washington lawyer representing the Tennessee Wine and Spirits Retailers Association.

A ruling invalidating the residency requirement would be a victory for a family that bought a Memphis liquor store and moved to Tennessee from Utah in search of a healthier climate for their disabled adult daughter.

Several justices said the restriction unconstitutionally discriminates against out-of-state economic interests, despite strong state interests in regulating liquor sales.

Justice Neil Gorsuch was among justices who worried that getting rid of the residency law would help enable online alcohol sales with no state regulation. "You want to be the Amazon of liquor," Gorsuch told a lawyer for a liquor store chain that opened an outlet in Tennessee.

The arguments took place on the 100th anniversary of ratification of Prohibition, the constitutional ban on the manufacture and sale of alcohol in the United States. The amendment didn't take effect until 1920.

But the case involved the amendment that actually ended the Prohibition era in 1933. The 21st Amendment also left states with considerable power to regulate the sale of alcohol.

In Arkansas, an applicant for a permit must be a resident on the day application is made to the state Alcoholic Beverage Control Administration Division. The applicant also must be either a resident of the county where the permit will be used or live within 35 miles of the location described in the application. Such residency also is required for permits to be renewed.

A corporation or partnership seeking a permit, including those based out of state, can have the permit assigned to a person who meets those residency requirements.

Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge in November joined attorneys general from 34 other states and the District of Columbia in favor of states being able to set residency requirements and other restrictions on the sale of alcohol.

"But even if Tennessee's durational residency requirement were held invalid, state regimes mandating in-state presence would remain permissible," according to the brief, which originated with the attorney general of Illinois.

In one oddity of the case, Tennessee itself has essentially stopped defending the residency requirements. "You're representing quite a number of states, including Tennessee, I guess? Maybe?" Justice Elena Kagan said to Illinois Solicitor General David Franklin, who argued on behalf of the states.

Not even the retailers group is defending a longer requirement that people live in Tennessee 10 years before a liquor license can be renewed.

Both residency provisions were struck down by lower courts.

Justice Brett Kavanaugh was among members of the court who said the provisions seem to be pure economic protectionism that were designed to discourage competition.

"The problem I'm having is the text of the 21st Amendment does not support that," Kavanaugh said. He suggested that the amendment was intended to allow states to remain "dry," banning the sale of all alcohol if they wished.

The case began when the retailers association opposed the issuance of licenses to Doug and Mary Ketchum, who moved to Tennessee because of their daughter's disability, and Total Wine Spirits Beer & More in Knoxville, Tenn., part of a national chain with nearly 200 stores in 23 states.

The Ketchums operate Kimbrough Wines & Spirits in Memphis. Their 32-year-old daughter, Stacie, has cerebral palsy and had serious respiratory problems in Utah.

A decision in Tennessee Wine and Spirits Retailers Association v. Blair, 18-96, is expected by late spring.

Information for this article was contributed by Mark Sherman of The Associated Press and by Stephen Steed of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.

Business on 01/17/2019

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