The licensee appeals from a decision of the Liquor Control Board (Board) suspending licensee’s first- and third-class licenses for a period of fifteen days. We affirm.
I.
Licensee’s suspension results from incidents which occurred on the night of February 20-21, 1987. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prevailing party, see
In re Johnston,
Meanwhile, inside the premises, a number of patrons who had witnessed the original fight became verbally abusive of the combatant who had remained inside. On the public address system, licensee’s manager requested the crowd to quiet down and refrain from any further outbursts. The patrons did not heed this request. One of the licensee’s owners then announced that the premises would close, and he instructed the patrons they would have to leave immediately. Numerous patrons were upset by this announcement, particularly those who had recently entered the premises and would not be refunded their cover charge, and those *480 who were unable to finish drinks or receive refunds for drinks they had recently purchased. More police officers were called in to assist in the evacuation of the premises. The officers observed a number of patrons exhibiting clear signs of intoxication as they departed from the premises. By 12:30 a.m. all the patrons had left the premises.
The Vermont Department of Liquor Control (Department) subsequently brought charges against licensee. Following a hearing, the Board determined that the licensee had violated General Regulations Nos. 19 1 and 41 2 of the Department, and that the appropriate penalty for those violations would be to suspend licensee’s liquor licenses for a period of fifteen days. The Board stayed enforcement of its suspension order pending the outcome of licensee’s appeal to this Court.
Licensee raises two issues. First, licensee argues that the Board’s determination that licensee violated the Board’s General Regulation No. 19 is speculative and not supported by the Board’s findings of fact. Second, licensee asserts that the Board misconstrued General Regulation No. 41 and that the Board’s determination that licensee had violated the regulation is not supported by the evidence.
II.
In reviewing an administrative agency’s determination, we presume the reasonableness and validity of a determination made within the agency’s expertise, and require a clear and convincing showing to overcome the presumption.
In re Johnston,
There exists ample evidence to support the Board’s conclusion that licensee had permitted one or more patrons to loiter on the premises in an intoxicated state, in violation of General Regulation No. 19. The police officers testified to the obvious intoxication of the combatant outside the premises when they arrived, and that numerous patrons leaving the premises exhibited clear signs that they were under the influence of intoxicating liquor. From this evidence, the Board drew the permissible inference that intoxicated patrons had been allowed to loiter on licensee’s premises. “Intoxication may be evidenced circumstantially by prior or subsequent condition of intoxication within such a time that the condition may be supposed to be continuous. . . . This accords with our rule that an inference may be and often is retroactive; a trier [of fact] may from present conditions infer a previous fact.”
Ackerman
v.
Kogut,
Licensee attempts to distinguish our opinion in
In re Tweer,
III.
Licensee also attacks the Board’s determination that “licensee had failed to take adequate steps to control the conduct of [the] patrons, thereby ‘suffering’ disturbances and fighting” in violation of General Regulation No. 41. Licensee asserts that the Board misconstrues the meaning of the term “to suffer.” Licensee states that the Board’s interpretation implies an absence of will or control, whereas the Board should interpret the term as requiring assent or toleration on the part of the licensee to the proscribed acts. See
Hansmar, Inc.
v.
Illinois Liquor Control Comm’n,
Absent compelling indications of error, interpretations of administrative regulations or statutes by the agency responsible for their execution will be sustained on appeal. See
In re Agency of Administration,
The facts of the instant case show that licensee failed to satisfy this affirmative duty. The Board concluded that “licensee should have been able to better control” events on the night in question, stating that this could have been accomplished with more manpower, increased vigilance, and insistence on proper decorum from patrons. In particular, the Board pointed to the fact that licensee deposited one combatant to the original altercation outside the premises, still in a combative mood, without supervision, despite his obvious state of intoxication and his threats of dire harm to the other participant of the fight, who remained inside the premises. When the police arrived, they found the combatant involved in an altercation with another person outside of the premises, with several other persons becoming embroiled in the fray. The Board properly construed General Regulation No. 41 in finding that licensee had permitted or suffered prohibited conduct on its premises, and the evidence supports the Board’s conclusion that licensee failed in its affirmative duty to keep the public areas adjacent to the premises from becoming a public nuisance.
Affirmed.
Notes
General Regulation No. 19 provides that:
No alcoholic liquor shall be sold or furnished to a person apparently under the influence of liquor. No alcoholic liquor may be consumed on the licensed premises by any person apparently under the influence of liquor. No person under the influence of alcoholic liquor shall be allowed to loiter on the licensed premises.
General Regulation No. 41 states that:
It shall be the duty of all licensees to control the conduct of their patrons at all times. No person shall carry or consume alcoholic beverages while dancing. No disturbances, brawls, fighting, unlawful conduct shall be permitted or suffered upon any licensed premises; nor shall such premises be conducted in such a manner as to render said premises or the streets, sidewalks or highways adjacent thereto a public nuisance.
