George E. Ruppert of New York City made application to the liquor control commission for the renewal of an out-of-state shipper’s permit for beer only. Jacob Ruppert, a New York corporation, was the proposed backer. The New York corporation owns 748 out of a total of 750 shares of stock in Jacob Ruppért, Inc., a Connecticut corporation. This Connecticut corporation is presently the backer of four wholesaler permits for beer only issued to its branch managers at Bridgeport, Hamden, Hartford and Nor *671 wich. The commission, acting pursuant to General Statutes, § 4266, denied the out-of-state shipper’s permit to George E. Ruppert because of the identity of control or interest of his proposed backer and the backer of the wholesaler beer permits. The commission’s action was affirmed by the Court of Common Pleas upon facts which were undisputed and based upon admissions in the pleadings and a certified transcript of the testimony before the commission, admitted under § 4277 of the General Statutes. George E. Ruppert and Jacob Ruppert, the New York corporation, have appealed.
The appeal presents two major issues for determination: the legal interpretation of General Statutes, § 4266, and its constitutionality as applied to these plaintiffs. If the section is to be interpreted as not applying to an out-of-state shipper’s permit, or if it is unconstitutional, as the plaintiffs claim, the action of the commission in denying the permit is without legal sanction.
Section 4266 is set forth in full in a footnote.
1
The
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plaintiffs direct their argument at the provision contained in the first sentence: “No backer or permittee of one class shall be a backer or permittee of any other class except in the case of railroad and boat permits.” In considering the question of interpretation raised by the plaintiffs, we observe that the facts in the instant case are identical in their effect with those in
Downer
v.
Liquor Control
Commission,
The plaintiffs claim that, in so far as § 4266 applies to out-of-state shippers’ permits, it violates the fourteenth amendment of the constitution of the United States because it is discriminatory and denies to them the equal protection of the laws and also deprives them of their property without due process of law. This precise question has not heretofore been before us. See
Downer
v.
Liquor Control
Commission, supra, 559;
State
v.
Zazzaro,
The twenty-first amendment to the constitution of the United States allows the exercise of very broad police powers by the states with respect to alcoholic liquors. The states may absolutely prohibit the manufacture, transportation, sale or possession of such liquors within their borders or they may permit these activities under conditions prescribed by their legislatures. To these ends they can adopt such measures as they may deem reasonably appropriate.
Ziffrin, Inc.
v.
Reeves,
The Liquor Control Act, presently chapter 204 of the General Statutes, was adopted in the light of these well-recognized principles. In passing upon the question whether a state may legally adopt for nonresident liquor dealers regulations which are different from those imposed upon residents, the Supreme Court of the United States has described the broad- power to regulate the liquor traffic possessed by the states in this concise language: “A classification recognized by the Twenty-first Amendment cannot be deemed forbidden by the Fourteenth.”
State Board of Equalization
v.
Young's Market Co.,
If we look at the question of discrimination from another point of view, it can be said that § 4266 does not, standing alone, work any discrimination as between residents and nonresidents engaged in the liquor business. In plain terms it prohibits any backer of one class of permit from being the backer of any other class of permit and thus imposes the same regulation upon residents and nonresidents alike. It is § 4241 that requires out-of-state shippers to obtain a permit to import beer into the state. By so doing it creates another class of permittee to which the provisions of § 4266 apply. For the reasons hereinbefore stated, such a classification is within the power of the legislature.
The plaintiffs point out that if the commission’s ruling is sustained they will be required either to give up very substantial properties in the state, or to subject themselves to the taxes and expense of doing business through another nonresident having an out-of-
*676
state shipper’s permit and doing business in Connecticut, or to cease doing business here altogether. Any of these alternatives will result, they argue, in what amounts to a confiscation of their present property without due process of law. All property is held subject to the reasonable exercise of the police power in the interest of the public welfare. A police regulation, otherwise reasonable and valid, does not become invalid because it deprives one of the use or enjoyment of his property in the manner to which he has been accustomed.
State
v.
Heller,
Our conclusion is that the expressed intention of the legislature is that the prohibitions contained in § 4266 should extend to every class of permit prescribed by statute and that so interpreted § 4266 is a constitutional exercise of the legislative power.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
Sec. 4266. limitation of permits, loans. No backer or permittee of one class shall be a backer or permittee of any other class except in the case of railroad and boat permits. No permittee or backer thereof and no employee or agent of such permittee or backer shall borrow money or receive credit in any form for a period in excess of thirty days, directly or indirectly, from any manufacturer permittee, or backer thereof, or from any wholesaler permittee, or backer thereof, of alcoholic liquor or from any member of the family of such manufacturer permittee or backer thereof or from any stockholder in a corporation manufacturing or wholesaling, such liquor, and no manufacturer permittee or backer thereof or wholesaler permittee or backer thereof or member of the family of either of such permittees or of any such backer, and no stockholder of a corporation manufacturing or wholesaling such liquor shall lend money or otherwise extend credit, directly or indirectly, to any such permittee or backer thereof or to the employee or agent of any such permittee or backer. The commission shall revoke or suspend any permit for a violation of this section. An appeal from such order of revocation or suspension may be taken in accordance with section 4272.
