Holiday Alaska, Inc. v. Alaska
Annotate this Case
Holiday Alaska, Inc. (Holiday) sells tobacco at over 25 stores in Alaska, and each store holds a tobacco license endorsement from the State. The State sought to suspend five different Holiday stores' tobacco license endorsements following five separate incidents of Holiday employees' illegal tobacco sales to minors. Each case resulted in conviction: One employee was found guilty by default judgment, three pled guilty, and one was found guilty at trial. Holiday requested a hearing before the Office of Administrative Hearings in each case. An Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) held two hearings. The ALJ first considered the allegations against Holiday resulting from four of the convictions and issued a consolidated decision; the ALJ later considered the allegations against Holiday resulting from one additional employee's conviction and issued a separate decision. Throughout the proceedings Holiday asserted various constitutional challenges, which the ALJ denied because he could not "rule on a constitutional challenge that seeks to nullify the statute." However, the ALJ allowed Holiday to present evidence relevant to its constitutional challenges to construct a factual record for appeal. Holiday appealed the ALJ decision to the superior court, which rejected Holiday's constitutional arguments. Holiday presented one challenge on appeal: whether AS 43.70.075 violated its due process rights. In "Godfrey v. State of Alaska, Department of Community & Economic Development," the Supreme Court upheld a version of AS 43.70.075, the tobacco endorsement statute, against several due process challenges. While those challenges were pending the legislature amended the statute to address due process concerns. In this opinion, the Court considered due process challenges to the amended statute, and affirmed the superior court's conclusion that the amended statute provides due process.
Some case metadata and case summaries were written with the help of AI, which can produce inaccuracies. You should read the full case before relying on it for legal research purposes.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.