Opinion by
On September 3, 1965, after hearing, the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board entered an order suspending for a period of fifty days the restaurant liquor license issued to Nathan Dubin for premises known as the Cozy Corner Bar, 765 North 20th Street in the City of Philadelphia. This order was based upon the following finding of fact: “The licensee’s servants,
agents or employes, engaged in traffic in narcotics on the licensed premises, on November 8, 1963”. The licensee appealed to the Court of Quarter Sessions of Philadelphia County, which entered an order, January 24, 1967, reversing the suspension. The Board has appealed to this court.
*348 The record discloses that the Cozy Corner Bar was under investigation during the months of October and November 1963. A city police officer discussed with the bartender, November 8, 1963, the purchase of a quantity of marijuana. “At the time he told me his man would be through later in the evening. The bartender told me that it was five dollars for a bag. I gave the bartender ten dollars at the time . . . Later the bartender told me that my man was at the door with the bag, and he took out . . . five dollars from the ten dollar bill, with the knowledge that this was the five dollars for the bag. At this time he motioned me to the door. He said, ‘There’s your man over there’ ”. The man in question, one Willie Harris, handed the officer a manila envelope containing a loose weed, which later proved to be marijuana. Nathan Dubin was not present at the time. He testified that he had no knowledge of the sale of narcotics in his establishment until the bartender’s arrest.
The learned hearing judge reasoned that “the alleged violation must be concluded to have been an isolated incident which was participated in by the appellant-licensee’s employee at a time when the appellant-licensee was absent from the premises”, citing inter alia
Young Men's Republican Club License Case,
The holder of a liquor license is under a duty not only to regulate his own personal conduct in a manner consistent with the permit he has received, but also to
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control the acts and conduct of his employes:
Glass Door Liquor License Case,
The order of the court below is reversed, and the order of the Board is reinstated.
