RENDERED: APRIL 23, 2021; 10:00 A.M.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
Commonwealth of Kentucky
Court of Appeals
NO. 2020-CA-0115-MR
JIM KING APPELLANT
APPEAL FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT
v. HONORABLE JUDITH E. MCDONALD-BURKMAN, JUDGE
ACTION NO. 16-CI-003013
BEVERAGE WAREHOUSE, LLC
AND GREGORY ANASTAS APPELLEES
OPINION
DISMISSING
** ** ** ** **
BEFORE: CLAYTON, CHIEF JUDGE; GOODWINE AND KRAMER,
JUDGES.
CLAYTON, CHIEF JUDGE: Jim King, the former ABC (Alcoholic Beverage
Control) Administrator for the City of St. Matthews, appeals from orders of the
Jefferson Circuit Court which set aside a previous grant of summary judgment to
King and held that he is not entitled to qualified official immunity from claims of
negligence in granting a liquor license. Having reviewed the record and the
applicable law, we conclude that we are without jurisdiction to hear this appeal,
and consequently, it must be dismissed.
Factual and Procedural Background
In February 2009, Liquor Barn filed a public notice of intent to apply
for a liquor license to operate a retail package liquor store in St. Matthews, a
fourth-class city located in the Louisville metropolitan area. The proposed location
of the new store was across the road from another package liquor retailer,
Beverage Warehouse.
A St. Matthews ordinance in effect at that time required a minimum
distance of 700 feet between two retail package liquor stores. The ordinance
prescribed the following method for measuring the distance:
All distances referred to in this ordinance shall be
measured along the right-of-way of existing public
vehicular roadways from a point on any such right-of-
way line nearest the entrance of any such existing
premises licensed for such sales to a point on any such
right-of-way line nearest the entrance of the proposed
licensed premises. All intersecting right-of-way lines
shall be measured at right angles and where it is
necessary in such measurement to cross a right-of-way
the measurement shall be made at right angles.
St. Matthews Ordinances § 111.15(E).
At that time, King was serving as the St. Matthews ABC
Administrator with the same functions with respect to city licenses and regulations
as the state Board of Alcoholic Beverage Control. Kentucky Revised Statutes
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(KRS) 241.190. KRS 243.450(1)(b) at that time provided that an applicant for a
license had to comply with the regulations of the city administrator. KRS 241.190
provided that no regulation adopted by the city administrator could be less
stringent than the state statutes relating to alcoholic beverage control or the ABC
Board’s regulations. Within this framework, it was King’s task to ensure that
Liquor Barn’s application complied with the relevant St. Matthews ordinances.
Accordingly, he instructed his zoning and enforcement officer to make a
preliminary unofficial measurement between the front doors of the Beverage
Warehouse and the proposed Liquor Barn location, using the method set forth in
the ordinance. The measurement indicated a distance of less than 700 feet between
the two establishments.
According to Jim Anastas, the owner and operator of Beverage
Warehouse, when he contacted King to express his opposition to the proposed
Liquor Barn site, King told him that the location would violate the St. Matthews’
ordinance and assured him the only way Liquor Barn would get the license would
be over “his dead body.” In a letter dated March 10, 2009, King informed Liquor
Barn’s legal counsel, Kenneth S. Handmaker, that the proposed location was too
close to Beverage Warehouse.
Handmaker responded with a letter, in which he accused King of
prejudging the case before the application for a license was even filed, in violation
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of Liquor Barn’s basic due process rights. He asserted that a professional engineer
had determined, using “legally established methods of measurement,” that the
distance between the two stores was 830 feet.
In his deposition testimony, King testified that he spoke with the St.
Matthews City Attorney about Handmaker’s letter but could not recall what was
said. King also contacted the state ABC for guidance regarding how to measure
between the stores. He testified, “I did call the state and said, ‘We have an
ordinance about 700 feet distance, and can you give me any assistance on how to
measure that?’ And their response was, ‘I can send you a copy of Bambi Bar’s
appeal court answer’ or whatever ‘on how you’ -- or ‘how it’s to be measured.’
And that’s – when I got that, I read it, and I looked at the thing. I had the distance,
measured it according to the [Bambi Bar case].”
The so-called “Bambi Bar case” to which King was referring
addressed the proper method of measuring between two establishments for
purposes of granting a liquor license. See Louisville/Jefferson County Metro
Government v. Commonwealth, No. 2005-CA-000343-MR, 2006 WL 3524350
(Ky. App. Dec. 8, 2006). The statute at issue in that case, KRS 241.075, was
similar to the St. Matthews’ ordinance in prohibiting the issuance of a retail
package liquor or retail drink liquor license to a business located 700 feet or less
from a similar establishment in certain areas. But the method of measurement set
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forth in the statute differed substantially from that in the St. Matthews ordinance.
It provided:
The distance between location of similar establishments
. . . shall be measured by following the shortest route
of ordinary pedestrian travel along public
thoroughfares from the nearest point of any present
location of any such similar place of business to the
nearest point of any proposed location of any such place
of business. The measurement shall be taken from the
entrance of the existing licensed premises to the entrance
of any proposed location.
KRS 241.075(3) (emphasis supplied).1
In the “Bambi Bar” case, this Court construed the phrase “the shortest
route of ordinary pedestrian travel” to mean the shortest legal route between the
establishments using a marked crosswalk. Louisville/Jefferson County Metro
Government v. Commonwealth, 2006 WL 3524350 at *3.
In 2009, the Kentucky Supreme Court addressed KRS 241.075(3)
again in the so-called “Molly Malone’s” case and reiterated that “the shortest route
of ordinary pedestrian travel” required the measurement to “be taken along a route
that is both lawful and safe.” Louisville/Jefferson County Metro Government v.
TDC Group, LLC, 283 S.W.3d 657, 661 (Ky. 2009).
1
This version of KRS 241.075 was later found to be unconstitutional for reasons which do not
affect this Opinion and was repealed. See Louisville/Jefferson County Metro Government v.
O'Shea’s-Baxter, LLC, 438 S.W.3d 379, 386 (Ky. 2014) (holding that the statute was special
legislation which violated Sections 59 and 60 of the Kentucky Constitution).
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According to King, when he used this method to measure between the
Beverage Warehouse and the Liquor Barn sites, he found that more than 700 feet
separated the stores. King approved Liquor Barn’s application on April 15, 2009
and the requisite state liquor licenses were issued on October 15, 2009.
Meanwhile, on February 23, 2009, Beverage Warehouse had filed a
formal protest with the ABC on the basis that the proposed Liquor Barn license
was in violation of the St. Matthews ordinance. The ABC Board declined to hear
the case. Beverage Warehouse appealed the decision to the Franklin Circuit Court
which ruled that Beverage Warehouse was entitled to a hearing before the Board.
On appeal, this Court affirmed the ruling of the circuit court and remanded the case
to the Board for a hearing. Beverage Warehouse, Inc. v. Commonwealth, Dep’t of
Alcoholic Beverage Control, 382 S.W.3d 34, 46 (Ky. App. 2011).
On remand, the Board conducted an extensive hearing and found that
the distance between Beverage Warehouse and Liquor Barn was less than 700 feet,
whether it was measured following the method in KRS 241.075(3) or St.
Matthews’ ordinance. It concluded that there was at least one safe and lawful
pedestrian route and at least one safe and lawful vehicular route between the two
stores measuring less than 700 feet and held that the issuance of the liquor package
licenses to Liquor Barn violated both the state statute and the city ordinance.
Specifically, as to King, the Board rejected Liquor Barn’s argument that King had
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acted within the scope of his duties erroneously but reasonably in interpreting the
ordinance or the statute and that Liquor Barn had relied upon his error in good faith
and was therefore entitled to invoke the defensive doctrines of honest error and
equitable estoppel. The Board’s order stated in pertinent part as follows:
Here, Mr. King did not misinterpret the [St. Matthews]
Ordinance – he admittedly ignored it altogether. He
testified he thought it did not apply. He reached this
decision on his own by interpreting KRS 241.075 and the
applicability of the Molly Malone case without the advice
of available St. Matthews counsel. He instead relied on
the advice of Liquor Barn’s attorney Mr. Handmaker.
Even if Mr. King was not just caving in to pressure from
Liquor Barn, there is nothing reasonable about his
decision not to follow the law that he admitted he was
required to enforce as the administrator, nor can he be
said to have been acting in good faith by so proceeding
without counsel and in the face of Liquor Barn’s
prodding and threats. Finally, Liquor Barn has not
shown that it relied upon Mr. King’s action in good faith.
. . . There was a lack of good faith on the part of Mr.
King and a lack of good faith reliance, not to mention
unclean hands on the part of Liquor Barn. The Board
finds the doctrines of honest error and equitable estoppel
are not intended to be applied to a situation like this
where Liquor Barn had knowledge the license could not
be issued due to the Ordinance or KRS 241.075 before it
ever applied for a license, participated in a plan to avoid
compliance with the Ordinance and KRS 241.075,
threatened the administrator with repercussions if the
license was not issued, and took a calculated business
risk to spend money on the premises so that it could later
claim the status quo should be maintained due to the
significant expenditure of money despite the violations.
Record (“R.”) at 1206-07.
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Liquor Barn appealed the Board’s decision to the Franklin Circuit
Court and then to this Court. Meanwhile, the Liquor Barn store, which had been
closed for several months, was sold. In October 17, 2015, Liquor Barn voluntarily
dismissed its appeal.
On June 28, 2016, Beverage Warehouse and Anastas filed suit against
Liquor Barn, its former owner, Robert Rosenstein, the City of St. Matthews, and
King, in his individual capacity and in his official capacity as the ABC
Administrator for the City of St. Matthews. The complaint alleged that King had
conspired with Liquor Barn and Rosenstein to have the Liquor Barn license issued
illegally and raised claims including civil conspiracy, negligence and/or negligence
per se, violation of a statute, and malfeasance and/or nonfeasance. The complaint
sought compensatory and punitive damages.
The defendants brought motions to dismiss which were denied in an
order entered on January 26, 2017. The trial court held that St. Matthews and King
could not invoke the Claims Against Local Governments Act, KRS 65.200 et seq.,
nor the doctrine of qualified official immunity. In reference to King, the trial court
outlined the test for qualified official immunity and stated:
KRS 243.450 required the denial of an application if it
did not comply with all the regulations, including the 700
foot rule. Either it complied or it did not. Furthermore,
the ABC found King had not acted in good faith and
“there is nothing reasonable about his decision not to
follow the law.” This lack of good faith prevents St.
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Matthews or King from being immune to the claims
asserted.
R. 286. King and St. Matthews did not to bring an interlocutory appeal from this
ruling.
In March 2019, King and St. Matthews filed a motion for summary
judgment which did not raise immunity defenses. The co-defendants, Liquor Barn
and Rosenstein simultaneously renewed a previously filed motion for summary
judgment. Following oral arguments, the trial court granted summary judgment to
all the defendants on June 27, 2019. It held with respect to King that, “he
conducted himself in a manner consistent with his duties as ABC Commissioner
[of St. Matthews] by contacting [state] ABC personnel to learn the appropriate
means of measuring the distance between the two establishments.” R. at 1271.
On July 8, 2019, Liquor Barn and Anastas filed a motion to alter,
amend, or vacate the grant of summary judgment, arguing under Kentucky Rules
of Civil Procedure (CR) 52.04 that the trial court’s opinion contained factual and
legal errors and omissions. Specifically, in regard to King, the motion cited the
findings of the ABC Board that the distance between the stores, measured using
either the statutory or ordinance method, was under 700 feet, that King’s call to the
state ABC did not excuse him from complying with the St. Matthews ordinance,
and there was no evidence that the ABC clerk even knew there was such an
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ordinance. The motion argued that the statute and the ordinance imposed an
obligation that was ministerial rather than discretionary.
St. Matthews and King responded that the motion did not meet the
requirements for relief under CR 59.05 and argued that the findings of the Board
were not binding on St. Matthews and King, who were not parties to the action
before the Board, which had addressed only the propriety of granting the liquor
license, not the claims in the complaint of civil conspiracy and negligence. The
plaintiffs replied that there was direct and circumstantial evidence in the record,
including testimony before the Board and the Board’s findings, that could be
considered by a jury and therefore precluded a grant of summary judgment.
The trial court denied the motion except insofar as it related to the
negligence claim against the City of St. Matthews and King and entered an order
on September 16, 2019, setting aside the summary judgment granted to these
defendants. In regard to King, the trial court cited the well-established rule that “a
public officer who knowingly or negligently fails or refuses to execute a
ministerial act, which the law positively charges him to carry out, may
be compelled to answer in damages to any person to whom the performance was
owing to the extent of the injury proximately caused by the nonperformance.”
Upchurch v. Clinton County, 330 S.W.2d 428, 431 (Ky. 1959). The trial court
ruled that a jury could find that King failed to perform a ministerial duty when,
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instead of measuring the distance as mandated by the ordinance, he contacted the
state ABC and construed the Molly Malone’s case on his own without consulting
the St. Matthews city attorney.
King then filed a motion to alter, amend, or vacate, raising the defense
of qualified official immunity based on the court’s previous ruling. The motion
argued that King’s decision regarding which source to use in determining how to
measure between the two stores was a discretionary act, and he was consequently
protected by official immunity from the negligence claim.
The trial court denied the motion in an order entered on January 6,
2020. It held that St. Matthews and King had not met the standard for relief under
CR 59.05 because the issues raised in their motion had been before the court on
multiple previous occasions. It further reiterated, citing Godman v. City of Fort
Wright, 234 S.W.3d 362 (Ky. App. 2007), and Wales v. Pullen, 390 S.W.3d 160
(Ky. App. 2012), that a statutory duty was a ministerial duty and that it was King’s
ministerial duty to measure the distance between the two liquor stores in
accordance with the method set forth in the ordinance. Because King chose
instead to follow the advice given by the ABC, the trial court held that a jury could
find he had breached his ministerial duty.
King filed a notice of appeal from the trial court’s order denying his
motion to alter, amend, or vacate and then amended the notice of appeal to include
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the underlying order of September 16, 2019, which set aside the grant of summary
judgment as to St. Matthews and King.2
Analysis
As a preliminary matter, we address the appellees’ argument that
King’s invocation of official immunity was improperly presented before the trial
court and inadequately preserved for appellate review. As described above, King
had raised the defense of official immunity unsuccessfully earlier in the
proceedings and did not file an interlocutory appeal from the trial court’s January
26, 2017 order. The appellees argue that he is consequently foreclosed from
raising the issue again. We agree.
Generally, the “denial of a motion for summary judgment is . . . not
appealable because of its interlocutory nature[.]” Transportation Cabinet, Bureau
of Highways, Commonwealth of Ky. v. Leneave, 751 S.W.2d 36, 37 (Ky. App.
1988). An exception is made for an order denying a substantial claim of absolute
immunity or qualified official immunity, which is immediately appealable.
Harrod v. Caney, 547 S.W.3d 536, 540 (Ky. App. 2018).
The extent of our review in this type of appeal is strictly limited “to
the issue of immunity, and no substantive issues.” Baker v. Fields, 543 S.W.3d
2
King’s first notice of appeal is taken from the order denying his motion to alter, amend, or
vacate and gives January 3, 2020, as the date of that order. The record shows the order was
actually entered on January 6, 2020. His amended notice of appeal clarifies this distinction and
also adds the September 16, 2019 order.
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575, 578 (Ky. 2018). The Kentucky Supreme Court has specifically held “that an
appellate court reviewing an interlocutory appeal of a trial court’s determination of
a defendant’s immunity from suit is limited to the specific issue of whether
immunity was properly denied, nothing more.” Id.
In its order of January 26, 2017, the trial court expressly held that
immunity was not available to King or St. Matthews. This ruling was immediately
appealable. Harrod, supra. The purpose of allowing such an instant, interlocutory
appeal is “to address substantial claims of right which would be rendered moot by
litigation and thus are not subject to meaningful review in the ordinary course
following a final judgment.” Baker, 543 S.W.3d at 577 (citation omitted). For this
reason, the Kentucky Supreme Court has stated that “orders denying claims of
immunity . . . should be subject to prompt appellate review.” Id. at 577-78
(emphasis supplied).
King’s appeal is taken from orders entered on January 6, 2020, and
September 16, 2019, long after the dispositive order of January 26, 2017. These
later orders did not serve to invoke or to extend the appellate jurisdiction of this
Court. Because we are without jurisdiction to hear this appeal, it must be
dismissed.
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Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, King’s appeal from the orders of the
Jefferson Circuit Court is dismissed.
ALL CONCUR.
BRIEFS FOR APPELLANT: BRIEF FOR APPELLEES:
Derek Miles Chadwick N. Gardner
R. Thad Keal Prospect, Kentucky
Michelle Turner
Prospect, Kentucky F. Larkin Fore
Louisville, Kentucky
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