We granted certiorari in this case,
In proceedings below, the Tiverton Board of License Commissioners had considered evidence obtained during a search of the Attic Lоunge, a local liquor-serving establishment, in deciding to revoke its license. A Rhode Island judge in related criminal proceedings subsequently ruled that the evidence had been obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment.
Rhode Island
v.
Benoit,
No. N2/77-51 (Super. Ct. Newport Cty., R. L, Jan. 16, 1978). The Attic Lounge then argued that еvidence obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment could not be admitted in a civil hearing to revoke its liquor license. The Rhode Island Liquor Control Administrator reversed the decision of the Tiverton Commissioners on unrelated grounds, and directed that the license be reinstаted. After losing an appeal to the State Superior Court, Civ. Aсtion No. 78-2659 (Super. Ct., Providence Cty., R. L, Aug. 6, 1980), the Tiverton Commissioners obtained review in the Rhode Island Supreme Court through a petition for certiоrari naming both the Attic Lounge and the Liquor Control Administrator as respоndents. The Rhode Island Supreme Court held that the exclusionary rule applies to liquor license revocation hearings.
After this Court issued a writ of certiorari to the Rhode Island Supreme Court, considеred briefs on the merits, and commenced oral argument, we leаrned that the Attic Lounge has gone out of business. Counsel for both the Tiverton Board of License Commissioners and the respondent Liquor Control Administrator stated at oral argument that no decision on the merits by this Court can now have an effect on the Attic Lounge’s liquor license. Tr. of Oral Arg. 28, 31. The case is therefore moot. At oral argument counsel discussed some circumstances under which a decision on the merits
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by this Court might conceivably affect substantive rights of interested parties. But as the Court noted in
DeFunis
v.
Odegaard,
“ ‘[S]uch speculative contingencies afford no basis for our passing on the substantive issues [the petitionеr] would have us decide,’ Hall v. Beals,396 U. S. 45 , 49 (1969), in the absence of ‘evidence that this is a prospect of immediacy and reality.’ Golden v. Zwickler,394 U. S. 103 , 109 (1969); Maryland Casualty Co. v. Pacific Coal & Oil Co.,312 U. S. 270 , 273 (1941).”
It is appropriate to remind counsel that they have a “continuing duty to inform the Court of any development which may conceivably affect the outcome” of the litigation.
Fusari
v.
Steinberg,
The writ of certiorari is dismissed as moot.
It is so ordered.
