The question for decision in this case is whether the City of Atlanta was authorized in denying the appellee’s application for an alcoholic beverage license, under the following sequence of events: The city issued the appellee building permits authorizing the renovation of a building which would house a restaurant/lounge in which nude or partially nude dancing would be performed; the appellee expended approximately $40,000 in renovating the building; however, the city subsequently enacted an adult-business zoning ordinance; because of the performance of nude or partially nude dancing in the appellee’s restaurant/lounge, it constitutes an “adult cabaret” under this ordinance; and, because it is within 500 feet of a “residential district,” it does not meet the distance requirements of the ordinance; accordingly, the city denied the appellee an alcoholic beverage license.
The trial court mandamused the city to issue the license, under the reasoning of
Barker v. County of Forsyth,
The United States Supreme Court has made clear that under the Twenty-first Amendment, states and municipalities located therein
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are vested with broad, sweeping authority to refuse to license the sale of liquor in establishments in which even non-obscene naked dancing is performed. See California v. LaRue,
Judgment reversed.
