30 A.D.2d 1045 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1968
Order unanimously reversed, without costs and determination of the State Liquor Authority confirmed. Memorandum: The action of the State Liquor Authority in refusing to issue a-license to petitioners was neither arbitrary, capricious nor without any rational basis. An application of the applicants was filed with the Authority on August 2, 1967. The answer to the question of whether either of the applicants had been arrested or indicted or served with a summons for any crime or offense of any kind, was that applicant Irving J. Belden had been charged with the crime of incest on January 15,1952, but not convicted. There was nothing said about any arrest, indictment or conviction against the applicant Janet L. Belden. A personal history sheet of the applicant Janet L. Belden, attached to the application, answered that she had never been convicted. Upon investigation by the State Liquor Authority, it was determined that she had been convicted of robbery, first degree, in 1946 as a youthful offender. This first application was denied. A later application (the one now in question) was filed November 6, 1967, and it contained a statement that the charge of incest against applicant Irving Belden was based upon á complaint of incest with his daughter and that Janet Belden had been adjudged a youthful offender and placed on three years’ probation. In a letter from her lawyer submitted with the reapplication, it was stated: “ Insofar as Janet Belden is concerned, she informs me that the reason that the information relative to her being treated as a ‘ youthful offender ’ at the time she was 18 years of age,