Opinion by
Plaintiff appeals from an order of the court below sustaining preliminary objections to his amended complaint in assumpsit in which he claimed $5,000. for damages resulting from defendant’s failure to retrans-fer a liquor license.
Plaintiff leased his premises 253 E. Chestnut Street, Lancaster, Pa. to the defendant as a licensed premises and in and by said lease transferred to defendant a *569 liquor license then held by plaintiff. The lease contained the following provision: “Should Howard P. Snavely remove from the within leased premises while he had a liquor license — he agrees to transfer said liquor license to Frank Piehler”. Snavely removed from said leased premises while he had a liquor license and leased the next door property and had the license transferred to himself at said place. Defendant then refused to retransfer the liquor license to plaintiff. Plaintiff claimed that the failure to transfer said liquor license damaged him to the extent of $5,000., viz, the difference between the value of his property with a liquor license and the value of his property without a liquor license.
The law is well settled that a liquor license is not a property right, but only a purely personal privilege for a specific limited time, which is subject to termination by the Liquor Control Board for cause and which, in any event, terminates with the licensee’s life. A liquor license or the privilege to sell liquors for a specified time, although often very valuable, is not assignable, (as that term is generally understood) nor does it go to the personal representatives
*
or become an asset of the holder’s estate in case of death:
Grimm’s Estate,
Equity will grant specific performance of a contract to sell or assign a liquor
license
— Cochrane
v. Szpakowski,
It is unnecessary to decide whether an action in deceit would lie and if so, what the measure of damages would be; suffice it to say that plaintiff’s present action in assumpsit will not lie and that the preliminary objections to plaintiff’s complaint were properly sustained by the court below.
Order affirmed.
Notes
We are not unmindful that a liquor license may be transferred in accordance with and subject to the terms and provisions of the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Act of November 29, 1983, P. L. 15, as amended, 47 P.S. §744-1, et seq.; and that it has been the practice of the present Liquor Control Board to transfer the liquor license of a deceased licensee to his personal representatives or wife, upon compliance with the Board’s regulations.
