During the last several years the City Council of Chicago has enacted a series of ordinances freezing the number of liquor licenses in particular neighborhoods. Approximately a third of the City now is subject to a moratorium. These ordinances prevent the issuance of new liquor licenses in the affected areas and restrict transfers of existing licenses: licensees may transfer their businesses only on death or to immediate relatives. Non-relatives who own part of the business when a moratorium takes effect may buy the rest; strangers may buy no more than a 5% interest per year. Chi.Muni.Code § 4-60-024.
Tomica Marusic owns 100% of Cornell Liquors, a package goods store. In November 1991 the City Council dubbed “East 53rd Street (South Side) from S. Lake Park Avenue to South Shore Drive” and “East 55th Street (both Sides) from S. Lake Park Avenue to South Shore Drive” as moratorium zones. Chi.Muni.Code § 4-60-020(e)(9), (10). This nine-square-bloek area includes Maru-sie’s store. Marusic believes that the practice of designating a few city blocks for special treatment violates Illinois law, which requires cities to regulate liquor by “general ordinance.” 235 ILCS 5/4-1. Marusic wants to be rid of the restrictions on his sale of the license and store. But instead of filing suit under state law in state court, Marusic filed this federal suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, contending that the freeze violates the equal protection and due process clauses, takes his property without just compensation, and amounts to a bill of attainder. The district court dismissed the action on the pleadings, ruling that the claims are unripe because Marusic has no immediate plan to sell the business.
Moratorium ordinances aid incumbent vendors at the expense of consumers. They restrict competition and thus promote higher prices. Marusic appears to be a winner rather than a loser — and his request in this litigation, to avoid the restrictions on sale rather than to avoid the restrictions on the issuance of new licenses, appears to be an effort to capitalize these gains through a higher price for his business. Yet Marusic suffers injury and therefore has standing to sue. The benefits to incumbents are spread over many years. Someone who wants to change occupations or locations in the near future to better his station in life can be a net loser. He will experience higher profits for only a few years, and then under the ordinance he must abandon the business, suffering a capital loss that may swamp the temporary gains. Only licensees who plan to stay put indefinitely are winners. (Marusic insists that his immediate relatives do not want to run the business; perhaps Marusic or his wife could retain ownership while hiring outside management, but the agency costs of this arrangement may be high.) Marusic has standing to sue; the only question is whether now is the right time.
A claim is unripe when critical elements are contingent or unknown. When, for example, a property owner alleges that general regulation affects his land in some special way, the claim is not ripe until all efforts to avoid the restriction or obtain compensation for it have been exhausted.
Williamson County Regional Planning Commission v. Hamilton Bank of Johnson City,
Although the district court should not have dismissed this suit as unripe, neither side wants us to remand for further proceedings. The merits have been exhaustively briefed. The facts are undisputed. A court of appeals should bring litigation to a close when it can, to avoid putting the parties through the wringer and lengthening the queue in which other litigants wait.
Saukstelis v. Chicago,
Not since the
Slaughter-House Cases,
Marusic depicts his license as a kind of property that the state must respect, and the privileges of which it may not change. This misunderstands the nature of a “license” in a system of regulation.
A license is nothing but a promise by the issuing body not to interfere in business conducted according to its terms. River Park, [Inc. v. Highland Park,23 F.3d 164 (7th Cir.1994) ] at 166; Toulabi v. United States,875 F.2d 122 (7th Cir.1989). Not since legislatures responded to the Dartmouth College case by reserving the right to alter the terms of charters and licenses have courts treated them as substantive bars to regulation. A license, as a species of property, may require the government to afford appropriate process. But the people, directly or through their legislature, may alter the substantive terms of the promise not to interfere in private economic transactions. See Philly’s, the Original Philadelphia Cheese Steak, Inc. v. Byrne,732 F.2d 87 (7th Cir.1984) (holding that Illinois may allow each voting precinct to decide whether to permit the sale of liquor, even though a decision to “go dry” may extinguish rights held under licenses and even though customers may continue to buy liquor in neighboring precincts).
National Paint,
Seeking to turn adversity to advantage, Marusic leans heavily on
Philly’s.
We held that precincts may go dry by referendum, a form of direct democracy. Here the City Council has acted. Marusic insists that he was thus deprived of the “protections” offered by a referendum. He could try to persuade his neighbors to vote wet; but how could he influence the City Council, which does not even have to offer him a hearing? This argument deserves credit for inventiveness, but it has things backward. Indirect democracy is the ordinary form of governance in the United States. Assemblies of elected representatives decide. One premise of this method is that the representatives spend more time studying the problems of society than do ordinary voters. Because no single person’s vote affects the outcome of a plebiscite, the voters do not invest heavily in information; rational ignorance is the order of the day, and direct elections accordingly are more prone to decision by passion or prejudice — as Socrates learned. Professional legislators not only have more time to brush up on the facts but also more reason to do so, because votes in a smaller assembly are more likely to be dispositive. Of course professional representatives also have more opportunity to court (and be courted by) special interest groups, but this has been accepted as the lesser evil: better an elected representative under the sway of organized interest groups than decision by a mob. The question at issue in
Philly’s
was, given that decision by a legislative assembly is possible (and preferred), is decision by referendum
also
permissible? We answered “yes,” as had the Supreme Court in
Eastlake v. Forest City Enterprises, Inc.,
Philly’s
went on to reject an argument that permitting decision precinct by precinct (which can be as small as one apartment building) facilitates discrimination against licensees who are disfavored for improper reasons, such as skin color, religion, speech — or being a recent immigrant. The possibility that prejudice will influence decisions does not forbid any particular method of reaching decisions, we held.
Affirmed.
