COMMENT IN-FLIGHT LIQUOR SERVICE: A DILEMMA OF SOVEREIGNTY

Similar documents
THE majority of jurisdictions forbid sale on the open

Page 1 of 5. Appendix A.

UNMANNED AERIAL SYSTEMS LEGISLATION: STATE COMPARISON CHART

WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION

Elder Financial Abuse and State Mandatory Reporting Laws for Financial Institutions Prepared by CUNA s State Government Affairs

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW MEXICO

H.R and the Protection of State Conscience Rights for Pro-Life Healthcare Workers. November 4, 2009 * * * * *

Soybean Promotion and Research: Amend the Order to Adjust Representation on the United Soybean Board

2006 Assessment of Travel Patterns by Canadians and Americans. Project Summary

and Ethics: Slope Lisa Sommer Devlin

Accountability-Sanctions

PERMISSIBILITY OF ELECTRONIC VOTING IN THE UNITED STATES. Member Electronic Vote/ . Alabama No No Yes No. Alaska No No No No

Laws Governing Data Security and Privacy U.S. Jurisdictions at a Glance UPDATED MARCH 30, 2015

Survey of State Civil Shoplifting Statutes

Survey of State Laws on Credit Unions Incidental Powers

CA CALIFORNIA. Ala. Code 10-2B (2009) [Transferred, effective January 1, 2011, to 10A ] No monetary penalties listed.

Case 3:15-md CRB Document 4700 Filed 01/29/18 Page 1 of 5

FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION [NOTICE ] Price Index Adjustments for Contribution and Expenditure Limitations and

Aircraft Hijacking and International Law

State-by-State Chart of HIV-Specific Laws and Prosecutorial Tools

States Adopt Emancipation Day Deadline for Individual Returns; Some Opt Against Allowing Delay for Corporate Returns in 2012

Notice N HCFB-1. March 25, Subject: FEDERAL-AID HIGHWAY PROGRAM OBLIGATION AUTHORITY FISCAL YEAR (FY) Classification Code

PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS POLICY. Table of Contents Page

Statutes of Limitations for the 50 States (and the District of Columbia)

Laws Governing Data Security and Privacy U.S. Jurisdictions at a Glance

TITLE 8 ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES 1 CHAPTER 1 INTOXICATING LIQUORS

Matthew Miller, Bureau of Legislative Research

Horse Soring Legislation

STATE LAWS SUMMARY: CHILD LABOR CERTIFICATION REQUIREMENTS BY STATE

National State Law Survey: Mistake of Age Defense 1

Name Change Laws. Current as of February 23, 2017

THE PROCESS TO RENEW A JUDGMENT SHOULD BEGIN 6-8 MONTHS PRIOR TO THE DEADLINE

State Prescription Monitoring Program Statutes and Regulations List

State P3 Legislation Matrix 1

2016 Voter Registration Deadlines by State

For jurisdictions that reject for punctuation errors, is the rejection based on a policy decision or due to statutory provisions?

STATUTES OF REPOSE. Presented by 2-10 Home Buyers Warranty on behalf of the National Association of Home Builders.

National State Law Survey: Statute of Limitations 1

ACCESS TO STATE GOVERNMENT 1. Web Pages for State Laws, State Rules and State Departments of Health

Jurisdictional Control of Airflight

Section 4. Table of State Court Authorities Governing Judicial Adjuncts and Comparison Between State Rules and Fed. R. Civ. P. 53

NOTICE TO MEMBERS No January 2, 2018

ANIMAL CRUELTY STATE LAW SUMMARY CHART: Court-Ordered Programs for Animal Cruelty Offenses

Table Annexed to Article: Wrongfully Established and Maintained : A Census of Congress s Sins Against Geography

State Trial Courts with Incidental Appellate Jurisdiction, 2010

Case 1:16-cv Document 3 Filed 02/05/16 Page 1 of 66 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) )

Case 1:14-cv Document 1-1 Filed 06/17/14 Page 1 of 61 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Swarthmore College Alumni Association Constitution and Bylaws. The name of this Association shall be Swarthmore College Alumni Association.

APPENDIX C STATE UNIFORM TRUST CODE STATUTES

Employee must be. provide reasonable notice (Ala. Code 1975, ).

State Statutory Provisions Addressing Mutual Protection Orders

Cattlemen's Beef Promotion and Research Board (Board), established under the Beef Promotion and Research Act of 1985

States Permitting Or Prohibiting Mutual July respondent in the same action.

(4) Airport hazard area means any area of land or water upon which an airport hazard might be established.

If it hasn t happened already, at some point

Electronic Notarization

The remaining legislative bodies have guides that help determine bill assignments. Table shows the criteria used to refer bills.

AIRPORT HAZARD ZONING ORDINANCE BRAZORIA COUNTY AIRPORT

The Victim Rights Law Center thanks Catherine Cambridge for her research assistance.

additional amount is paid purchase greater amount. coverage with option to State provides $30,000 State pays 15K policy; by legislator. S.P. O.P.

APPENDIX D STATE PERPETUITIES STATUTES

GUIDING PRINCIPLES THE NATIONAL COUNCIL ON ELECTRICITY POLICY (NCEP)

The New York City Council Page 1 of 6

Time Off To Vote State-by-State

MEMORANDUM JUDGES SERVING AS ARBITRATORS AND MEDIATORS

(Reprinted with amendments adopted on April 21, 2015) SECOND REPRINT A.B. 239

EXCEPTIONS: WHAT IS ADMISSIBLE?

Registered Agents. Question by: Kristyne Tanaka. Date: 27 October 2010

NC General Statutes - Chapter 63 1

Effect of Nonpayment

ADVANCEMENT, JURISDICTION-BY-JURISDICTION

SUMMARY: This document amends regulations listing the current addresses and describing

INDEX NO /2010 NYSCEF DOC. NO. 113 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 05/03/2012. Western Surety Company

DEFINED TIMEFRAMES FOR RATE CASES (i.e., suspension period)

Delegates: Understanding the numbers and the rules

Federal Rate of Return. FY 2019 Update Texas Department of Transportation - Federal Affairs

Components of Population Change by State

Decision Analyst Economic Index United States Census Divisions April 2017

BRECKNOCK TOWNSHIP, BERKS COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA ORDINANCE NO. 167

Appendix Y: States with Rules Identical to FRCP Draft. By: Tarja Cajudo and Leslye E. Orloff. February 8, 2018

BOARD OF TRUSTEES of WESTERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY. REGULATIONS Approved: November 16, 2001

Chart 12.7: State Appellate Court Divisions (Cross-reference ALWD Rule 12.6(b)(2))

Election Year Restrictions on Mass Mailings by Members of Congress: How H.R Would Change Current Law

Private Associations Synopsis

2008 Changes to the Constitution of International Union UNITED STEELWORKERS

CITY OF LOWRY CROSSING, TEXAS ORDINANCE NO. 262

Appendix: Legal Boundaries Between the Juvenile and Criminal. Justice Systems in the United States. Patrick Griffin

POLITICAL CONTRIBUTIONS. OUT-OF- STATE DONORS. INITIATIVE STATUTE.

Department of Legislative Services Maryland General Assembly 2010 Session

WILLIAM J. BATTEN AND KATIE M. BATTEN, his wife,

Oregon enacts statute to make improper patent license demands a violation of its unlawful trade practices law

votenet [ur: t' ;{ I i{ Raj Naik Vice President Thursday, May 21,2009

Lobbying: 10 Answers you need to know Venable LLP

Campaign Finance E-Filing Systems by State WHAT IS REQUIRED? WHO MUST E-FILE? Candidates (Annually, Monthly, Weekly, Daily).

Governance State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies

The Legal Basis of Extraterritorial Zoning in Oklahoma

Rhoads Online State Appointment Rules Handy Guide

Results and Criteria of BGA/NFOIC survey

State Complaint Information

How Many Illegal Aliens Currently Live in the United States?

Transcription:

COMMENT IN-FLIGHT LIQUOR SERVICE: A DILEMMA OF SOVEREIGNTY BY JEANNE POLUlTT* Service of intoxicating liquor aboard commercial passenger aircraft in interstate (or international) flight gives rise to questions that test the delicate line of sovereignty between state and nation. Yet courts and administrative bodies havf! scarcely touched on the problem of whether a state's liquor laws may validly be extended ad coelum. A third of the states (Arizona, Florida, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, New York, South Carolina, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Washington) have by statute made some effort at controlling in-flight liquor service, by license or otherwise. Of these, South Carolina by statute I and New Mexico under an opinion of the state attorney general! refrain from attempting to extend their restrictions to aircraft in interstate flight. Even those states imposing licensing requirements seemingly make no effort to enforce their liquor statutes in 1010 by requiring airline personnel and passengers to comply with diverse regulations-hours of sale, size of containers, service by licensed bartenders-while an aircraft crosses state lines and time zones, and e:ven hopscotches between wet and dry counties. Any attempt at literal compliance with the myriad of state laws and even county ordinances conjures a vision of monumental madness comparable only with a Marx Brothers movie. Yet the practical difficulty of enforcement does not answer the question of the righl of enforcement. If the matter be one of ft;:deral jurisdiction, applicable regulations are a far cry from the detailed liquor laws of most states. Regulations of the Federal A viation Administration provide simply: (a) No person may drink any alcoholic beverage aboard an aircraft unless the certificate holder operating the aircraft has served that beverage to him. (b) No certificatt: holder may serve any alcoholic beverage to any person aboard any of its aircraft if that person appears to be intoxicated. Member of the California Ba,r. A.B., The College of Idaho. Ll.B., University of Idaho. I. CODE OF LAWS OF SOUTH CAROLINA 4-83. 2. ATI'y GEN. Ops. 435 (1956). 169 HeinOnline -- 3 Transp. L.J. 169 1971

170 THE TRANSPORTATION LAW JOURNAL (c) No certificate holder may allow any person to board any of its aircraft if that person appears to be intoxicated. (d) Each certificate holder shall, within five days after the incident, report to the Administrator the refusal of any person to comply with paragraph (a) of this section, or of any disturbance caused by a person who appears to be intoxicated aboard any of its aircraft. 3 The juridical vacuum has its origin in the unique wording of the Twenty-first Amendment, which, following language repealing the Eighteenth, provides: "The transportation or importation into any State, Territory, or possession of the United States for delivery or use therein of intoxicating liquors, in violation of the laws thereof, is hereby prohibited. " Is consumption of liquor in the airspace over a state "use therein" within the meaning of the amendment? Aircraft have been found to be "within" the state whose airspace they occupy, however fleetingly, for purposes of service of process, forfeiture proceedings, 5 and, to at least a limited extent, control of traffic.' The question of jurisdiction over the airspace was left unanswered when Congress by statute declared the United States possesses and exercises "complete and exclusive national sovereignty in the airspace of the United States" to the exclusion of other nations. 7 The House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, in a report on 1961 legislation broadening the Federal Aviation Act to cover hijacking and certain other acts committed aboard aircraft,8 treated airspace as being within the concurrent jurisdiction of the underlying state and the federal government for purposes of the criminal law. The committee viewed the problem as being primarily a practical one of enforcement. Its report states in part: [C]rimes committed in the airspace over a State pose peculiar and extremely troublesome problems of enforcement which are not present when such crimes take place on the ground. When a criminal moves the scene of his activity to an aircraft in flight he is able to take advantage of practical and physical difficulties that may 3. 14 C.F.R. 121.575. 4. Grace v. MacArthur, 170 F. Supp. 442 (Ark. 1959). 5. U.S. v. One Pitcairn Biplane, II F. Supp. 24 (N.Y. 1935). 6. Erickson v. King, 15 N.W. 2d 201 (Minn. 1944). 7. 49 U.S.c. 1508. 8. 49 U.S.c. 1472. HeinOnline -- 3 Transp. L.J. 170 1971

IN-FLIGHT LIQUOR SERVICE 171 seriously impair effective apprehension and prosecution, particularly if the offense is one against the law of a State rather than against Federal law. Furthermore, in the case of offenses against State law, State officials are often faced with an insuperable task in trying to establish that a particular act occurred in the airspace over that State-and in some cases, under State law, it would be necessary to prove that the offense was committed over a particular county in the State. It is obvious that such proof may be very difficult and often imposible if the offense is committed on a jet aircraft traveling at 600 miles per hour at an altitude of 30,000 feet.... We wish to emphasize that it is not our intent to divest the States of any jurisdiction they now have. This legislation merely seeks to give the Federal Government concurrent jurisdiction with the States in certain areas where it is felt that concurrent jurisdiction will contribute to the: administration of justice and protect air commerce.' An analogy to the problem of in-flight liquor service may be sought in Foppiano v. Speed,'o which upholds the power of the state to exact a license fee as a condition of the right to sell intoxicating liquor over the bar of a steamboat navigating interstate waters. Yet is air traffic truly analogous? Maya plane flying miles above the earth, perhaps never touc:hing down within the state, be likened to a river craft? Judge J. Smith Henley, in Grace v. MacArthur, supra, suggests otherwise: It may be conceded, perhaps, that a time may come, and may not be far distant, when commercial aircraft will fly at altitudes so high that it would be ulllrealistic to consider them as being within the territorial limits ofthe United States or of any particular State while flying at such altitudes... 11 Prof. Joseph H. Beale n suggests the upper air may be likened to the sea, and jurisdiction accordin!:ly divided: The analogy of the superjacent air to the border seas is a close one; and the same boundary of jurisdiction should be fixed. In all that concerns the pe:ace and safety of the subjacent land and in the regulation of all aerial acts that do not have to do with navigation of 9. 2 u.s. Code Congo &. Ad. News (87th Cong., 1st Session, 1961) 2563-65. 10. 82 S.W. 222 (Tenn. 1904Jt, affd 199 U.S. 501 (1905). II. Supra note 4, at 447. 12. A TREATISE ON THE CONFLICT OF LAWS 286 (1935). HeinOnline -- 3 Transp. L.J. 171 1971

172 THE TRANSPORTATION LAW JOURNAL the air and the communication of intelligence, the jurisdiction of the state within whose vertically prolonged boundaries the air lies is complete. The state, however, has no jurisdiction to interfere with the peaceful commerce of the air, or with the purely internal affairs of passing aircraft. The question of sovereignty has been perhaps most squarely put-and most frankly avoided-in a motion before the Civil Aeronautics Board in the case of Capital Airlines. Inc. v. Northwest Airlines. Inc. 13 Capital complained that its competitor unfairly advertised in-flight liquor service, and served liquor, over states where such practice was forbidden by statute. The Chief of the Office of Enforcement had decided action on the complaint would not be in the public interest. He noted the case involved resolution of a multiplicity of state and local laws, as well as the question of jurisdiction, and "policing of such aircraft for possible violations would, as a practical matter, be well nigh impossible." The C.A.B. agreed, holding the matter to be peculiarly within the province of the state courts. The crucial question of sovereignty was relegated to a footnote: "Of course, there is also involved the question of whether State prohibition laws may be made applicable to operations of aircraft in the navigable air space over such States." The Attorney General of Texas, in a 1968 opinion directed to the Texas Liquor Control Board,lt relied in part on the 1961 report of the House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce (supra) to conclude that the state possessed jurisdiction over its airspace, that it might exercise police powers therein where the powers had not been granted to nor assumed by the federal government, and that in-flight liquor sales therefore were unlawful under state statutes then in effect, without regard to whether a particular flight originated or terminated within or beyond the state's boundaries. (Texas has since adopted a licensing statute. 15) The dilemma may perhaps be resolved by application of the rule in United States v. Causby, II a landmark decision turning upon the extent of the property owner's right in airspace. The court in the Causby case divided the airspace into a lower zone in which private property is permitted and in which one may assume state law applies, and an upper zone where the rights of the federal government are paramounty 13. 18 C.A.B. 145 (1953). 14. AlI'y GEN. Qps. M-227 (1968). 15. TEXAS PENAL CODE Article 666-15. 16. 328 U.S. 256 (1946). 17. For a comprehensive discussion of the historical antecedents and the impact of HeinOnline -- 3 Transp. L.J. 172 1971

IN-FLIGHT LIQUOR SERVICE 173 Such a division for purposes of liquor control is suggested by DeForest Billyou: IS The liquor laws of the several states are most diverse, and highly in~ividualistic, and, it is fair to say, the Service of liquor on board aircraft in such airspace does not, and probably can not, comply with the diverse regulatory pattern of state liquor laws.... Isn't the appropriate and complete answer, and one which should add to the cheer of the weary traveler, that aircraft in the airspace over the United States are in an area where the federal government possesses and exen;ises "complete and exclusive national sovereignty," an area that is not part of any state; that there exists, by force of federal statute, "a public right of freedom of transit through the navigable airspace of the United States" in behalf of any citizen of the United States;I' and that the delivery or use of intoxicating liquors in such area cannot be subjected to regulation by the laws of any stat e of the United States? Such an answer admittedly would do violence to the concept of dual jurisdiction implicit in the report of the House Committee on Interstate and Foreigh Commerce, supra. Yet until this solution or another be reached, the question of jurisdiction over in-flight liquor service will continue to present in mi<:rocosm the whole problem of federal-state sovereignty in the skies. Causby, apart from the instant problem, see Cooper, State Sovereignty vs. Federal Sovereignty of Navigable Airspa.ce, IS J. AIR L. &; COM. 27 (1948) and Dinu. State Sovereignty in the Navigable Airspace, 17 J. AIR L. &; COM. 43 (1950). 18. AIR LAW 37-38 (2nd ed. 1964). 19. 49 U.S.c. 1304. HeinOnline -- 3 Transp. L.J. 173 1971