The appellant, a non-profit corporation composed of dues-paying members who reside and own property in the Georgetown section of Washington, seeks judicial review of its claim that the members of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Board violated its governing statute in reissuing a retail liquor license to 3259 M Street, Inc., for the operation of an establishment at that address known as The Crazy Horse. 1 The District Court found that the appellant lacks standing for such a suit.
The question of standing depends primarily upon the existence of a logical and adequately direct nexus between the plaintiff’s interests and the adverse action of the opposing party or parties.
See
Flast v. Cohen,
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. Specifically, the appellant claims that the Board acted illegally in reissuing the license by erroneously finding that the establishment was a bona fide restaurant under 25 D.C.Code §§ 103(n), 111(g) (1967), and that the Board acted arbitrarily and capriciously in its consideration of the objections of persons residing or owning property in the neighborhood, thereby violating 25 D.C.Code 115(a) (5) (1967).
.
See
NAACP v. Button,
