¶ 1. The Rusty Nail, a licensed bar in Stowe, appeals the Liquor Control Board’s conclusion that the bar violated a Board regulation by allowing two intoxicated patrons to loiter on the premises. We affirm.
¶2. In February 2008, a team of liquor control investigators carried out an inspection of all licensees on the Stowe Mountain Road, including the Rusty Nail. After observing licensee’s dance floor from an upstairs balcony for approximately ten minutes, the team determined that one male patron appeared intoxicated. They based this determination on his aggressive dancing, difficulty standing up, and general unruly behavior.
¶ 3. After watching him for several minutes, members of the team escorted the man from the dance floor and brought him to the attention of the bar’s manager. During this interaction, the man’s friend approached, and the team observed signs of intoxication from both patrons. The manager indicated that he did not dispute that the two men were intoxicated. The team instructed the manager to see that the two men got a ride home and then left, having concluded their inspection.
¶ 4. The team reported a violation of General Regulation 17 (GR17), 1 which states:
No alcoholic beverages shall be sold or furnished to a person displaying signs of intoxication from alcoholic beverages or other drugs/substances. No alcoholic beverages may be consumed on the licensed premises by any person displaying such signs of intoxication. No person displaying such signs of intoxication shall be allowed to loiter on the licensed premises.
Department of Liquor Control General Regulation 17, 4 Code of Vermont Rules 26 020 016-1 (2005). The matter was referred to the state Liquor Control Board, which administers alcohol service licenses in the state and adjudicates alleged violations of the General Regulations. Licensee was cited for violating the last sentence of GR17, which prohibited allowing intoxicated persons to loiter on the premises, and a contested hearing was held. Licensee disputed the violation on two grounds, contending that the patrons were not intoxicated — or at least not intoxicated enough for licensee’s management to have noticed them — and also positing that the GR17 loitering prohibition was void for vagueness. The Board concluded that the meaning of “loiter” in the context of GR17 was clear and unambiguous, thus validating the constitutionality of the regulation, and ruled that it was or should have been apparent that the patrons were intoxicated
¶ 5. Licensee makes three arguments on appeal. It asserts, first, that the regulation exceeds the Board’s enabling legislation. Second, it contends that GR17 is void for vagueness, both on its face and as applied. Third, it argues that the Board committed reversible error by deciding that the events in question violated the rule’s prohibition on drunken loitering. We address each in turn.
I. Whether the Regulation Exceeds the Board’s Enabling Statute
¶ 6. By statute, the Board has the authority to promulgate and enforce regulations relating to the “ ‘furnishing, purchasing, selling, . . . delivering and possessing of alcohol.’ ”
In re Club 107,
¶ 7. We have stated that Board regulations exceed the Board’s Title 7 authority when the regulations force the Board to define and regulate matters over which it has no expertise or authority. In
Club 107,
this Court invalidated a Board regulation that prohibited certain activities it labeled as “obscene, lewd, or indecent entertainment” at licensed establishments because the Board had no expertise or authority to regulate obscenity.
¶ 8. General Regulation 17, however, is quite different from the obscenity regulation at issue in
Club 107.
Its purpose is not to regulate or prevent loitering per se, but to prevent
intoxicated
persons from loitering in a licensed establishment. Therefore, the Board need not exceed its expertise or authority to enforce the regulation. Instead, the inspectors need only to observe patrons for signs of intoxication, a matter which is clearly within the Board’s expertise. When individuals in a licensed establishment exhibit commonly recognized signs of intoxication, and the licensee takes no action to remove them, the licensee is in violation of GR17. Enforcing the regulation, therefore, depends solely upon observing demonstrably intoxicated
¶ 9. Furthermore, GR17 does not, as licensee argues, attempt to regulate loitering generally in contravention of the
Board’s statutory authority to regulate only intoxicating liquors. In
SBC Enterprises, Inc. v. City of South Burlington Liquor Control Commission,
¶ 10. Unlike both
Club 107
and
SBC Enterprises,
where liquor control authorities attempted to regulate matters wholly unconnected to alcohol consumption and beyond the scope of the Board’s enabling legislation, the regulation at issue here specifically ties together loitering with the state of intoxication, bringing it squarely within the Board’s purview. There is the necessary nexus between the regulation and the consequences of excessive use of alcohol because the regulation prevents licensees from allowing only intoxicated people to idle at their establishments, which are places where intoxicated people may pose a threat to themselves and to public safety. See
In re DLC Corp.,
¶ 11. We also accept the Board’s conclusion that removing intoxicated patrons from a licensed establishment furthers the Board’s mandate to facilitate sales of alcoholic beverage in such a manner as to “discourage intoxication and encourage temperance.”
In re Club 107,
II. Whether GR17 is Void for Vagueness
¶ 12. The second issue is whether the term “loiter” is impermissibly vague in the context of GR17. Ordinarily, this Court upholds the Board’s interpretation of its regulations as well as the statutes within its area of expertise, and will reverse only when there is a compelling indication of error.
In re Kacey’s, Inc.,
A. Threshold Issues
¶ 13. We use the same void-for-vagueness test for administrative regulations, such as GR17, as we do for statutes. See
Rogers v. Watson,
¶ 14. One of the main reasons for a less strict application of the vagueness doctrine in the context of economic regulations is that the Vermont Administrative Procedure Act (APA) provides regulated entities and the public with multiple opportunities to participate in the rulemaking process. Regulations such as GR17 are developed in agency rulemaking processes governed by the APA, which contains several provisions aimed at allowing members of the public concerned about the effect of a rule on their businesses to comment on
¶ 15. Because these APA provisions are available to all regulated entities “we are unlikely to intervene for persons who had the opportunity to clarify their responsibilities and did not use it.”
In re S.M.,
B. Whether GR17 Fails to Apprise Citizens of Prohibited Conduct
¶ 16. Licensee alleges that the word “loiter” in GR17 fails to apprise licensed establishments of what particular conduct is prohibited, which, if true, would render it impermissibly vague.
State v. Beauregard,
¶ 17. In this case, licensee attempts to isolate the word “loiter” from the context of the entire regulation in which it is used, and
asks us to ignore its admitted understanding of the overall regulation, and instead focus on some alleged uncertainty over the definition of the term. “Loiter” is variously, but commonly, understood to mean linger, tarry, delay, or dawdle. Loitering is often associated with idleness, and it is not lost on this Court, and presumably not to the Board, that patrons can be reasonably expected to spend leisure time in a taproom engaged in no particularly constructive occupation. The gravamen of GR17, however, is not on how customers spend their time in a licensed establishment, but whether the operators
¶ 18. Both the claim of ambiguity, and the need for closer definition, is belied by licensee’s own understanding of the rule in this case. The record reveals that licensee’s reading of GR17 is entirely consistent with the Board’s construction. The Board concluded that GR17 means that “when a licensee has an intoxicated person on the premises who is displaying signs of intoxication they shall not be allowed to remain on the licensed premises.” This is essentially the same as the understanding expressed by the bar’s manager in his testimony before the Board that “[a]n intoxicated person is not allowed to be in our club.” The manager’s testimony showed that, practically speaking, GR17 sowed no confusion over drunken loitering, despite the lack of further definition, but rather, prohibited a licensee from allowing an intoxicated person to remain on the licensed premises. Since the licensee’s manager articulated the same meaning of the regulation as that expressed by the Board, and fairly appearing in the rule itself, we conclude that GR17 adequately apprised licensee of the conduct prohibited.
C. Whether GR17 Authorizes or Encourages Arbitrary Enforcement
¶ 19. Due process also requires that GR17 not subject licensees to arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement. Thus, in addition to offering a person of ordinary intelligence a reasonable opportunity to know what is prohibited, regulations must also provide explicit standards for the law enforcement officers who apply them.
Sec’y, Vt. Agency of Natural Res. v. Irish,
¶ 20. Contrary to licensee’s assertions, the regulation does not allow the Board to invoke an amorphous and undefined durational aspect of “loitering,” which could create a risk of arbitrary punishment. Again, the regulation is concerned not with loitering patrons, but with intoxicated customers staying on the premises. GR17 specifically requires a patron be intoxicated
and
allowed to remain on the premises before a violation may be found. This plain and unambiguous requirement defines the prohibited conduct with sufficient clarity to prevent arbitrary enforcement. See, e.g.,
Yuen v. Mun. Court, 125
Cal. Rptr. 87, 92 (Ct. App. 1975) (upholding an ordinance prohibiting loitering while carrying a concealed weapon because the requirement of carrying a concealed weapon adequately puts both violators and officers on notice of what conduct is prohibited);
State ex rel. Williams v. City Court,
¶ 21. Furthermore, we agree with the Board that “[t]he condition of noticeable intoxication is specific and clearly demonstrable, and is not unreasonably subject to arbitrary interpretation.” Investigators must see patrons showing signs of alcohol
¶ 22. As licensee points out, at least one other court has found unconstitutional vagueness in a statute similar to the regulation at issue here. In an Oklahoma appellate court decision, a statute that
prohibited a licensee from “permitting any intoxicated person to loiter in or around [licensee’s] place of business” was struck down as vague.
Curtis v. Peterson (In re Beverage License
#
ABL-93-26),
¶23. Licensee also contends that GR17 is unconstitutionally vague as applied. Generally, a party who has clearly violated a statute or regulation that is not facially vague cannot challenge it for vagueness unless fundamental rights are implicated.
Vill. of Hoffman Estates v. Flipside, Hoffman Estates, Inc.,
¶ 24. Likewise, licensee’s argument that a patron engaging in any activity, such as dancing or playing pool, is not loitering is incorrect in this context. Debate over whether dancing, billiards, or simply stepping on a bar rail is gainful, as opposed to idle, activity is unnecessary. Licensee’s manager agreed that GR17 meant “[a]n intoxicated person is not allowed” to remain on the premises, and he did not dispute that the two customers were demonstrably drunk. Thus, licensee recognizes that any person showing signs of intoxication must be asked to leave, regardless of what activities he or she is engaged in at the time. The regulation is valid on its face, as understood, and as applied to the licensee.
III. Whether the Board’s Conclusion that a Violation Occurred Should be Reversed
¶ 25. Finally, licensee argues that the Board’s conclusion that it violated
¶ 26. Furthermore, we have said before that licensees have an affirmative duty to become aware of and prevent regulatory violations. See
In re Kacey’s,
Affirmed.
Notes
GR17 has been amended, and recodified as General Regulation 18. It now reads:
No alcoholic beverages shall be sold or furnished to a person displaying signs of intoxication from alcoholic beverages or other drugs/substances. No alcoholic beverages may be consumed on the licensed premises by any person displaying such signs of intoxication. No person displaying such signs of intoxication shall be allowed to stay on the licensed premises, except under direct personal supervision by a licensee or his or her employees in a segregated nonpublic area when the patron’s immediate departure could be expected to pose a risk of bodily injury to the patron or any other person.
Department of Liquor Control General Regulation 18, 4 Code of Vermont Rules 26 020 016-1 (2009), available at http://liquorcontrol.vermont.gov/enforcement/ regulations/regehanges.pdf (emphasis added).
In the context of alcoholic beverage regulation, local control commissions are subordinate agencies constituted under the paramount authority of the Liquor Control Board. 7 V.S.A. §§ 166-167;
SBC Enters.,
While licensee is correct that criminal prosecution is possible for a willful violation of Board regulations, 7 V.S.A. § 667(b), licensee was not charged with a willful violation here, and even if it had been, distributing liquor is not constitutionally protected conduct, so we grant some leeway to regulations affecting it. See
Ackerman v. Kogut, 117
Vt. 40, 47,
As if to emphasize this point, soon after leaving licensee’s establishment, the two customers in question were found by police meandering down the middle of Route 100.
