UNITED BEVERAGE COMPANY OF SOUTH BEND, INC. and National
Beer Wholesalers Association, Inc., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
INDIANA ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE COMMISSION, et al., Defendants-Appellees.
No. 83-2635.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Argued Dec. 7, 1984.
Decided April 22, 1985.
George E. Herendeen, Voor, Allen, Fedder, Herendeen & Kowals, South Bend, Ind., for plaintiffs-appellants.
Frank A. Baldwin, Indianapolis, Ind., for defendants-appellees.
Before CUDAHY and POSNER, Circuit Judges, and SWYGERT, Senior Circuit Judge.
POSNER, Circuit Judge.
This is not an antitrust case, but it has its roots in antitrust law. In United States v. Arnold, Schwinn & Co.,
United Beverage Company, an Indiana beer wholesaler, and the trade association to which it belongs brought this suit in a federal district court against the Commission and its members to enjoin the enforcement of Rule 28(3) as contrary both to the United States Constitution and to state law. The district court granted summary judgment for the defendants and the plaintiffs appeal.
Apart from two frivolous contentions (that the term "area of primary responsibility"--long a term of art in antitrust law, see, e.g., White Motor Co. v. United States,
The usual sequence in considering issues of state law and of federal constitutional law is to address the former first, in the hope of avoiding having to decide the latter. In this case, however, the federal constitutional issues are easier than the state law issues; a decision on the state law issues would entangle us in delicate questions of internal state governance; and we shall see that once United's federal grounds are rejected, the entire case must be dismissed, leaving United free if it wants to pursue the state law issues in state court, where they belong.
United assumes that there is a general federal constitutional doctrine limiting a state legislature's delegation of legislative authority to an administrative agency. There is not.
The traditional concept of unlawful delegation of legislative authority by the United States Congress, a concept that reached its high-water mark in Panama Refining Co. v. Ryan,
It is true that all the states now have such a system (at the time the Constitution was adopted many of the states had virtually a one-branch government--the one branch being the legislature), and it is true that state courts tend to be stricter about limiting state legislative delegation than federal courts are about limiting federal legislative delegation. See 1 Davis, Administrative Law Treatise Sec. 3.14 (2d ed. 1978 and 1982 Supp.); Linde, Bunn, Paff & Church, Legislative and Administrative Processes 477-78 (2d ed. 1981). But in general the separation of powers is less stringently observed at the state level (in particular, most state judges lack guarantees of independence from the other branches comparable to those that Article III gives federal judges), for the excellent reason that the danger of concentrated political power that called forth the separation of powers at the federal level is much less acute at the state level. If you didn't like Huey Long's Louisiana, you could move to a different state; tyranny at the federal level is more difficult to escape. It is therefore not surprising that the framers of the Constitution did not force the states to imitate the structure of the federal government. Although the wording of Article IV, section 4, guaranteeing the states a republican form of government, assumes that states have at least two branches, legislative and executive, the Supreme Court held in Highland Farms Dairy, Inc. v. Agnew,
It is true that delegation arguments are sometimes made, and occasionally succeed, in federal constitutional challenges to state action. But only in special contexts:
1. One of the premises of the void-for-vagueness doctrine is that an excessively vague statute promotes arbitrary and discriminatory law enforcement by delegating (too much) power to law-enforcement officers. See, e.g., Grayned v. City of Rockford,
2. The doctrine that forbids a state, pursuant to a collective bargaining agreement with a union of its employees, to force them to contribute money to the union's political and ideological causes, see, e.g., Abood v. Detroit Bd. of Education,
An alternative explanation of the Abood line of cases assimilates them to:
3. Cases involving procedural safeguards that the courts, being unwilling to countenance broad delegations of the power to regulate speech and other expression, have insisted accompany efforts to control pornography or otherwise regulate in the neighborhood of the First Amendment. See, e.g., Shuttlesworth v. City of Birmingham,
4. It has been argued that state action impinging on specific federal constitutional rights such as free speech and freedom from racial discrimination should be evaluated more skeptically the lower the defendant is in the state hierarchy (e.g., a local school board versus the state legislature). See, e.g., Bickel, The Supreme Court, 1960 Term, Foreword: The Passive Virtues, 75 Harv.L.Rev. 40, 63, 67-68 (1961); Sandalow, Racial Preferences in Higher Education: Political Responsibility and the Judicial Role, 42 U.Chi.L.Rev. 653, 695-96 (1975). Some judges have accepted the argument, see, e.g., Barenblatt v. United States,
5. State or local referenda are sometimes attacked as improper, because standardless, delegations of legislative power. See City of Eastlake v. Forest City Enterprises, Inc.,
6. Delegation can violate due process in a quite elementary sense. If the state delegated to a mob the decision whether to punish a person for crime, there would be no doubt that due process had been violated. See Moore v. Dempsey,
From all this it can be seen that there is no independent federal constitutional doctrine of excessive delegation of state legislative power but that such a doctrine is sometimes used as an ancillary protection for free speech and other specific rights that the Constitution protects. If this is correct, there is no merit to United Beverage Company's federal claim. The underlying right--to sell beer without competition from other dealers in the same brand--is not a right conferred or protected by the Constitution; indeed, the states have, by virtue of the Twenty-First Amendment, broader authority over the liquor business than over any other business, see, e.g., Battipaglia v. New York State Liquor Authority,
The next question is whether Rule 28(3) exceeds the Alcoholic Beverage Commission's authority, whether statutory or constitutional, under state law. The district court held that it does not, but we think the court should not have addressed the merits of the question. The Supreme Court said in United Mine Workers of America v. Gibbs,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed insofar as it dismisses the plaintiffs' federal claim on the merits, but is modified to dismiss their state law claims for lack of federal jurisdiction.
MODIFIED AND AFFIRMED.
