Michael L. Klein Informal Opinion Town Attorney No. 2006-2 Town of Ramapo 237 Route 59 Suffern, New York 10901
Dear Mr. Klein:
You have requested an opinion regarding the authority of the Town to enact a local law that would prohibit any person over 16 years of age from hosting a party at a premises under his or her control where five or more minors (meaning any person under 21 years of age) are present and alcohol is being consumed by any minor. The penalty for violating the local law would be a fine ranging from $250 to $1000. You have explained that the purpose of the proposed local law is to prevent underage drinking. You have asked whether the local law is preempted by state law.
The Legislature has enacted a number of statutes generally restricting access to alcoholic beverages by underage individuals. Several of these provisions are directed towards persons other than the underage drinker: a person is prohibited from giving, selling, or causing to be given or sold any alcoholic beverage to a person less than 21 years old,1
Penal Law §
Other statutes are directed towards the underage persons themselves: an underage person is prohibited from presenting or offering to a licensee under the Alcoholic Beverage Control Law any written evidence of age that is false, fraudulent, or not actually his or her own for the purpose of purchasing or attempting to purchase any alcoholic beverage, Alcoholic Beverage Control Law §
The Town's proposed local law is directed towards a third group of persons: a host providing access to premises under his or her control, whether or not he or she is supplying or consuming alcoholic beverages.5 As explained below, we are of the opinion that the State has not preempted this type of local legislation.
ANALYSIS
A town has broad power to enact local laws pursuant to the law of municipal home rule, including those relating to the safety, health, and well-being of persons within the town.6 See
N.Y. Constitution article
The preemption doctrine constitutes a fundamental limitation on home rule powers. Albany Area Builders Ass'n v. Town ofGuilderland,
The Legislature's intent to preempt a field of regulation need not be express, but may be implied from the nature of the subject matter being regulated and the purpose and scope of the state legislative scheme, including the need for statewide uniformity in a given area. Albany Area Builders,
As discussed above, under state law, a person under 21 years may not present false identification for the purpose of purchasing alcoholic beverages, nor may he or she possess an alcoholic beverage with the intent to consume it. Alcoholic Beverage Control Law §§
With respect to access to alcoholic beverages by underage persons, the state statutes do not include an express statement of preemption. Moreover, none of them include a statement of policy indicating an intent to preempt local regulation or an expression of need for uniform control of access to alcoholic beverages by minors.
The more difficult question is whether the statutes constitute a comprehensive and detailed regulatory scheme indicating that the Legislature has "evinced its desire to preclude the possibility of local regulation," Jancyn,
We find particularly instructive the decisions in Vatore v.Commissioner of Consumer Affairs,
The Court of Appeals addressed only the issue of whether the local law was preempted by the Adolescent Tobacco-Use Prevention Act,11 and held that it was not.
As the Court of Appeals found in Vatore with respect to the Adolescent Tobacco-Use Prevention Act, we have found no expression of need for uniform statewide control in the legislation regulating access to alcoholic beverages by minors. Moreover, like the Court of Appeals in Vatore, we believe that the regulatory scheme is not so broad and detailed so as to require the conclusion that the Legislation has precluded local regulation in the area. Indeed, the state regulatory scheme with respect to access to alcoholic beverages by minors is similar to that determined by Supreme Court and affirmed by the Appellate Division not to be preemptive in Vatore. It regulates and prohibits particular behavior of specified individuals but does not constitute a comprehensive scheme regulating all aspects of access to alcoholic beverages by minors, and it is silent with respect to providing access to private premises on which alcohol is available. Because we believe the legislative scheme contains no clear indication of an intent to preclude local legislation in the field of access to alcoholic beverages by minors, we are of the opinion that local legislation of the type proposed by the Town is not preempted by state law.
The Attorney General issues formal opinions only to officers and departments of state government. Thus, this is an informal opinion rendered to assist you in advising the municipality you represent.
Very truly yours,
KATHRYN SHEINGOLD Assistant Solicitor General In Charge of Opinions
