Warren Wholesale Company, Inc., Glidewell Distributing Company, Inc., Ritchie Grocer Company, Inc., Northwest Tobacco & Candy Company, Douglas Companies, Inc., Merritt Wholesale Distributor, Inc., and Warehouse Distributing Company, Inc. v. McLane Company, Inc., and McLane Southern, Inc.
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SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS
No.
07-1034
WARREN WHOLESALE CO., INC.,
GLIDEWELL DISTRIBUTING CO.,
INC., RITCHIE GROCER CO., INC.,
NORTHWEST TOBACCO & CANDY
CO., DOUGLAS COMPANIES, INC.,
M E R R I T T
W H O L E S A L E
DISTRIBUTOR,
INC.,
AND
WAREHOUSE DISTRIBUTING CO.,
INC.,
APPELLANTS;
VS.
MCLANE COMPANY, INC., AND
MCLANE SOUTHERN, INC.,
APPELLEES;
Opinion Delivered SEPTEMBER 11, 2008
APPEAL FR O M THE PU LASKI
COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, NO. CV
03-6278; HON. COLLINS KILGORE,
JUDGE;
APPEAL DISMISSED.
DONALD L. CORBIN, Associate Justice
1.
MOOTNESS —
REPEAL OF AGENCY REGULATION
—
REPEAL OF CHALLENGED AGENCY
REGULATION DURING PENDENCY OF APPEAL RENDERED APPEAL MOOT . — An appellate court
will not pass on the validity of laws and regulations that are repealed during the pendency
of litigation challenging those same laws and regulations; accordingly, when the Arkansas
Tobacco Control Board repealed the version of section 15 of Rules and Regulations of the
Board that was the subject of the challenge below, the appeal of the trial court’s ruling on
that same section 15 was rendered moot.
2.
MOOTNESS —
REPEAL OF AGENCY REGULATION
—
BECAUSE LAWSUIT WAS A FACIAL
CHALLENGE TO THE REPEALED AGENCY REGULATION , THERE WAS NO CONTEXT IN WHICH TO
CONSTRUE THE STATUTORY LANGUAGE THAT
APPELLANTS ARGUED CONTROLLED . — Any
construing of the Unfair Cigarette Sale Act had to be done in the context of the challenged
regulation; the fact remained that this suit was a facial challenge to an agency regulation, and
the challenged regulation was repealed; because the challenged regulation no longer exists,
there is no context in which to construe the statute, and the appeal is moot.
3.
MOOTNESS — EXCEPTION WHEN APPEAL PRESENTS ISSUES OF SUBSTANTIAL PUBLIC INTEREST
THAT ARE LIKELY TO ARISE IN FUTURE LITIGATION — SUPREME COURT DECLINED TO APPLY
EXCEPTION . — Where considerations of public interest or prevention of future litigation are
present, the appellate court may, at its discretion, elect to settle an issue even though moot;
here, it is not apparent that a decision in this case would actually achieve the objective of
preventing future litigation, as the parties have been litigating issues relating to wholesaler’s
cost for over ten years; because the supreme court was not convinced that a decision would
“settle the issue,” it declined to consider this case as a discretionary exception to the
mootness doctrine and dismissed the appeal.
4.
MOOTNESS —
ARGUMENTS TIED TO APPEAL OF REPEALED REGULATION
—
ARGUMENTS
CONCERNING EXHAUSTION OF REMEDIES AND SEPARATION OF POWERS WERE ALSO RENDERED
MOOT . — Because Appellants’ arguments concerning exhaustion of remedies and separation
of powers were tied to the repealed regulation, those arguments were likewise rendered moot
by the repeal of the challenged regulation; the circuit court’s directives did not go beyond
Appellees’ facial challenge to the regulation or exceed the circuit court’s jurisdiction.
Appeal from Pulaski Circuit Court, Collins Kilgore, Judge; appeal dismissed.
Lax, Vaughan, Fortson, McKenzie & Rowe, P.A., by: Grant E. Fortson, for appellants.
Williams & Anderson PLC, by: Peter G. Kumpe and Stephen A. Hester, for appellees.
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07-1034
Appellants, Warren Wholesale Co., Inc., Glidewell Distributing Co., Inc., Ritchie
Grocer Co., Inc., Northwest Tobacco & Candy Co., Douglas Companies, Inc., Merritt
Wholesale Distributor, Inc., and Warehouse Distributing Co., Inc., appeal the June 11, 2007
order of the Pulaski County Circuit Court declaring ultra vires and unconstitutional certain
portions of a cost and minimum price rule promulgated by the Arkansas Tobacco Control
Board (the Board) as section 15 of the Rules and Regulations of the Board. Together with
this appeal, we also consider the motion of Appellees, McLane Company, Inc. d/b/a McLane
Southwest and McLane Southern, Inc., to take judicial notice and to dismiss appeal. Our
jurisdiction is pursuant to Arkansas Supreme Court Rule 1-2(b)(6) as an appeal presenting a
substantial question of law concerning the construction of an act of the General Assembly and
a regulation of an administrative agency. We dismiss the appeal.
This case began in Benton County when Appellees, who are out-of-state companies
licensed to sell wholesale cigarettes in Arkansas, filed a complaint against the Board and its
director for declaratory judgment pursuant to the Arkansas Administrative Procedure Act,
specifically Arkansas Code Annotated section 25-15-207 (Repl. 2002), to determine the
validity of section 15. Appellees also sought an injunction to prevent the Board and its
director from enforcing any provision of section 15 or any cost standard that prescribes
methods to determine cost that are different or contrary to the standards and methods of
accounting referred to at Arkansas Code Annotated section 4-75-702(5)(A) (Supp. 2007) in
the Unfair Cigarette Sales Act. The case was transferred to Pulaski County, and Appellants,
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who are Arkansas companies licensed to sell wholesale cigarettes in Arkansas, were allowed
to intervene.
The circuit court held a two-day bench trial in October 2006 and entered an order on
June 11, 2007, declaring certain portions of section 15 ultra vires of the Unfair Cigarette Sales
Act and in violation of due process. Appellants filed this appeal from that order, although the
Board did not.
While this appeal was pending, the Board did, however, initiate the rulemaking process
to consider alternatives to the challenged section 15. The Board ultimately promulgated a
completely new version of section 15 in May 2008 while this appeal was still pending and
repealed the version of section 15 that was challenged in this declaratory-judgment action
below. Appellees filed a motion asking this court to take judicial notice of the new section
15 and dismiss Appellants’ appeal as moot.
This court has historically and consistently taken judicial notice of rules and regulations
promulgated by administrative agencies. Ark. Alcoholic Beverage Control Bd. v. Muncrief, 308
Ark. 373, 825 S.W.2d 816 (1992); Webb v. Bishop, 242 Ark. 320, 413 S.W.2d 862 (1967);
State v. Martin, 134 Ark. 420, 204 S.W.2d 622 (1918). The Board filed with the Secretary
of State a new section 15, which became effective May 22, 2008. The new section 15
replaces in its entirety the section 15 at issue in this case.
[1] In support of their argument to dismiss this appeal as moot, Appellees rely on Weiss
v. Chavers, 357 Ark. 607, 184 S.W.3d 437 (2004), and Morgan v. Sparks, 258 Ark. 273, 523
S.W.2d 926 (1975), for the proposition that this court will not pass on the validity of laws and
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regulations that were repealed during the pendency of the litigation challenging those same
laws and regulations. This court relied on Morgan and stated in Chavers that when a statute
is constitutionally challenged on appeal and the General Assembly repeals that statute while
the appeal is pending, the appeal is rendered moot. This court has also held that a negotiated
settlement agreement reached during the pendency of an appeal renders the appeal moot.
City of Pine Bluff v. Jones, 370 Ark. 173, 258 S.W.3d 361 (2007). The principles of mootness
involved in these cases concerning statutes and settlement agreements are likewise applicable
to an agency regulation that is repealed while the appeal challenging the regulation is pending.
We therefore conclude that when the Board repealed the version of section 15 that was the
subject of the challenge below, the appeal of the trial court’s ruling on that same section 15
was rendered moot.
As a general rule, appellate courts of this state will not review issues that are moot.
Honeycutt v. Foster, 371 Ark. 545, ___ S.W.3d ___ (2007) (citing Ball v. Phillips County Election
Comm’n, 364 Ark. 574, 222 S.W.3d 205 (2006)). To do so would be to render advisory
opinions, which this court will not do. Id. A case becomes moot when any judgment
rendered would have no practical legal effect upon a then-existing legal controversy. Id. This
court has recognized two exceptions to the mootness doctrine. Id. The first exception
involves issues that are capable of repetition, but that evade review.
Id.
The second
exception concerns issues that raise considerations of substantial public interest which, if
addressed, would prevent future litigation. Id.
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[2] Appellants respond that this case is not moot because the language that is the crux
of this litigation is found in the statute, the Unfair Cigarette Sales Act, not in the regulation
that was repealed. Appellants contend that the central issue presented here is the meaning of
the phrase “standards and methods of accounting” as found in section 4-75-702(5)(A).
Appellants also contend that the circuit court’s interpretation of this phrase essentially stripped
the Board of its authority to determine the level of “proof satisfactory to the Board” mandated
by section 4-75-702(5)(B). While there was indeed evidence presented below concerning
methods of accounting and discussion concerning proof to the Board, the fact remains that
this suit is a facial challenge to an agency regulation, and the challenged regulation no longer
exists. Thus, despite Appellants’ arguments to the contrary, any construing of statutes that is
required in this case has to be done in the context of the challenged regulation. Since the
challenged regulation no longer exists, we are void of a context in which to construe the
statute, and the appeal is moot.
[3] Alternatively, Appellants contend that this appeal presents issues of substantial public
interest that are likely to arise in future litigation. Appellants rely on Gray v. Mitchell, which
states that “‘[w]here considerations of public interest or prevention of future litigation are
present,’ this court may, at its discretion, ‘elect to settle an issue, even though moot.’” 373
Ark. 560, 572, ___ S.W.3d ___, ___ (2008) (quoting Owens v. Taylor, 299 Ark. 373, 374, 772
S.W.2d 596, 597 (1989)). Appellants refer to the history of litigation between the parties to
this appeal as an indication that there will be future litigation on this subject.
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The new section 15 altered the procedures, requirements, and standards applicable
when a wholesaler seeks Board approval to sell cigarettes below the statutorily presumed
minimum price. The changes are such that, even if we were inclined to view this case as
presenting a discretionary exception to the mootness doctrine, we would only be speculating
as to the positions the parties would take and the ruling the trial court would make. This
court does not engage in speculation, and does not render advisory opinions. Honeycutt, 371
Ark. 545, ___ S.W.3d ___. Assuming for the sake of argument that we could somehow
overcome the speculation hurdle, we are not convinced that we could “settle the issue” and
actually achieve the objective of preventing future litigation. As Appellants have observed,
these parties have been litigating issues relating to a wholesaler’s cost for over ten years.1
In summary, the agency regulation being challenged below was repealed while this
appeal was pending. Appellees initiated this case with a complaint seeking both a declaration
that section 15 was invalid and an injunction restraining the Board’s enforcement of section
15. The section 15 being challenged in this case is no longer in effect. There is therefore no
longer a controversy between the parties, and this appeal is moot. We therefore grant
Appellees’ motion to dismiss the appeal.
We are mindful of Appellants’ claim that other issues raised in this appeal are not
rendered moot by the repeal and replacement of section 15. Appellants refer specifically to
1
McLane S., Inc. v. Davis, 366 Ark. 164, 233 S.W .3d 674 (2006); McLane Co. v. Davis, 353 Ark. 539, 110 S.W .3d
251 (2003); McLane Co. v. Davis, 342 Ark. 655, 33 S.W .3d 473 (2000); McLane Co. v. Weiss, 332 Ark. 284, 965 S.W .2d
109 (1998); McLane S., Inc. v. Davis, 80 Ark. App. 30, 90 S.W .3d 16 (2002).
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the following two directives in the circuit court’s order, which they claim went beyond
Appellees’ facial challenge to the regulation and exceeded the circuit court’s jurisdiction:
The Board and the Director also are enjoined from enforcing or
applying any “cost” standard against McLane that is higher than its cost of
cigarettes and of doing business as determined from evidence of the standards
and methods of accounting it regularly employs, which is the standard provided
by Ark. Code Ann. § 4-75-702(5)(A).
. . . McLane is entitled to a determination of its actual cost of doing
business as evidenced by the standards and methods of accounting that it
regularly employs.
Appellants give the above-quoted directives an overly broad reading. The trial court
was simply ordering the Board to use only the cost standard found in the statute and not those
found in the now-repealed section 15.
We read the foregoing directives as implicitly
requiring that Appellees follow the requisite statutory and regulatory procedures for obtaining
such a determination found in the then-existing regulation 15.
Therefore, Appellants’
arguments concerning exhaustion of remedies and separation of powers are tied to the
repealed regulation and are therefore likewise rendered moot by the repeal of the challenged
regulation.
Appellees’ motion to dismiss the appeal is granted. The case is remanded for entry of
a decree stating that the grounds upon which the trial court relied for entering the declaratory
judgment and injunction have become moot by the repeal of the challenged section 15. See
Morgan, 258 Ark. 273, 523 S.W.2d 926.
Appeal dismissed.
G LAZE, J., not participating.
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07-1034
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