(dissenting).
The facts stated in the majority opinion make it appear that the applicant is a complete newcomer to the wholesale beer business, ’and that, in applying for a permit, it was endeavoring to enter, rather than merely to remain, in the ranks of Atlanta beer sellers. Too, the statement there of the legal issues of the case makes it appear that the applicant, by its appeal, asks us to oppose our administrative judgment to that of the Federal Alcohol Administrator. But this, with deference, is not the case made out, either in fact or in law.
The corporation began business in May, 1935, and has since been engaged in a profitable business, conducted strictly in accordance with state and federal laws. It employs more than 30 persons with a monthly pay roll of $2,500, and a fleet of 14 trucks. It has taken a long-term lease on a downtown storage building, and has installed escalators and other conveniences for handling its products. Its reputation as law-abiding, industrious, and financially sound is attested by officials and business men of prominence and standing in the community, and no one brings a word of reproach against it.1 The result of the action of the Administrator, therefore, in, as appellant claims, arbitrarily refusing a permit is not to prevent applicant’s entering into new business, but it is to take from it and destroy the established business and capital which it has already built up.
Putting altogether aside the point made by it, that the refusal of the permit would operate ex post facto to destroy its business, *14Ex parte Garland, 4 Wall. (71 U.S.) 333, 18 L.Ed. 366; Cummings v. Missouri, 4 Wall. (71 U.S.) 277, 18 L.Ed. 356, I think that under the facts disclosed, the Administrator could not deny the permit except upon the clearest showing that one of the statutory grounds for refusing it existed. I think it plain, too, that not only was no such showing made, but that there was no finding by the Administrator, that it was. I am therefore constrained not only to dissent, but to give my reasons for doing so.
In support of their view that the order of the Administrator should be affirmed, my associates say: “In providing for a judicial review by appeal we think the Congress did not intend to vest this court with the administrative power to determine whether or not the permit should have been granted.” Certainly it did not. Indeed, it could not have imposed such a nonjudicial duty upon this court. Appellant certainly does not invoke the exercise by us of such power. Appealing as it is by law allowed to do, it asks no extrajudicial action; no grace at our hands. It stands upon the immutable proposition that this is, and is to remain, a government de jure of laws, and not of men. That men are subject to laws, not laws subject to men, and that arbitrary power and the rule of law are antagonistic and incompatible forces which cannot both exist. It stands upon the proposition that Congress has accorded it the due process of a hearing in this court, upon whether the Administrator refused its permit in accordance with, or in violation of, law. It stands upon the proposition that it is of the highest importance in a republican form of government, that the Governors should be obliged to control themselves. It stands upon the proposition that “men are not corrupted by the exercise of power, or debased by the habit of obedience, but by the exercise of a power which they believe to be illegitimate, and by obedience to a rule which they consider' to be usurped and oppressive,” and' therefore that, “in forming a government of men over men, the greatest difficulty lies in this — you must first enable the government to control the governed, and in the next place, oblige it to control itself.” It stands firmly on • the statute which peremptorily provides that upon its application, it shall have a permit, unless the Administrator finds (of course not arbitrarily, but upon supporting evidence) : “(A) that such person (or in case of a corporation, any of its officers, directors, or principal stockholders) has, within five years prior to the date of application, been convicted of a felony under Federal or State law, or has, within three years prior to the date of application, been convicted' of a misdemeanor under any Federal law relating to liquor, including the taxation thereof; or (B) that such person is, by reason of his business experience, financial standing or trade connections, not likely to commence operations within a reasonable period or to maintain such operations in conformity with Federal law; or (C) that the operations proposed to be conducted by such person are in violation of the law of the State in which they are to be conducted.” It insists, with eminent correctness, I think, that the Administrator has not found any of these. It insists, with equal correctness, that if he has so found, there is no evidence in the record upon which he could have done so.
I concede that if the Administrator has, upon evidence supporting his finding, found the existence of any one of the three statutory grounds, his action must be affirmed. I deny that he has found any of them to exist, and affirm that if his finding may be construed to be a finding of fact under the statute, and not a mere conclusion, there is no evidence to support the finding. I deny thé existence in him of the arbitrary power the majority opinion in effect concedes him, of refusing a permit not upon statutory grounds, but upon grounds of his own devising.
I affirm that m intent and effect the finding is a deliberate overriding of the intent and effect of subdivision (A), section 4(a) (2) of the statute (27 U.S.C.A. § 204 (a) (2) (A) which by implication provides that the convictions of applicant, or any of its officers, except as therein stated, shall not, standing alone, constitute grounds for a refusal of a permit. The record overwhelms, indeed, the Administrator concedes, that the applicant’s business experience, financial standing, and trade connections are unexceptionable. The record overwhelms, and the Administrator concedes, that as a person apart from the conduct of its president, the applicant is entitled to the permit it applies for. The hearing officer and the Administrator have proceeded upon a theory of their own, which finds no countenance in the statute, that Dodd’s convictions for liquor violations alone, though they are not within subdivision (A), section 4(a) (2) of the act, constitute statutory grounds for denying the corporation a permit. Instead, therefore, of a finding as the statute provides, either under (A) that the company *15or its officers had been convic-ted ás therein provided; or (B) that the applicant, by reason of its business experience, financial standing, or trade connections (italics mine) is not likely to maintain its operations in conformity to federal laws, the hearing officer and the Administrator have substituted a ground and finding of their own invention, that “by reason of the criminal record of Dodd, the president, treasurer and sole stockholder of the company, the applicant is not likely to maintain its operations in conformity with Federal law, and in accordance with Section 4(a) (2) (A, B) of the Federal Alcoholic Administration Act, and Art. 2, Section 3(B) 2 of Regulation 1 of said Administration, in the event' the permit herein applied for should be granted.”
Thus the Administrator, nullifying the first subdivision, has added to the statute a fourth in effect, that solely because of liquor law convictions of Dodd, as to which subdivision (A), section 4(a) (2) has impliedly granted him full legal and moral amnesty, his corporation may be denied a permit. It is, I think, settled law that an officer cannot enlarge a statute under which he acts, that it is his guide and master. It is quite plain, I think, that this finding of the Administrator, on which his denial is rested, is without counterpart in the statutory authority granted him, and his order, denying the permit, may not stand.
But if, as my associates seem to think, the finding of the criminal record of Dodd may be taken as equivalent in law to a finding of the statutory fact that “the applicant company, by reason of business experience, financial standing or trade connections is not likely to conduct his business in accordance with the Federal law,” I think it equally plain that the order should be set aside, for the finding is not only without evidence to support it, but is in the teeth of ¿11 the relevant evidence tending to throw any light upon the issue. It is particularly in the teeth of the undisputed testimony that for more than two years the company has conducted its business in complete conformity with federal and state laws, and has built up a growing and flourishing business, which commands the respect and confidence of the public it serves.
Instead of, as my associates see the case,. one in which the Administrator, acting under statutory authority, has made a finding in accordance with and upon supporting evidence, I see it as one in which the Administrator has set himself up to bind and to loose, to grant and to deny permits, not upon statutory ground, but upon his own notions of moral fitness. He has dope this in the fade of the fact that the statute peremptorily orders him to grant the permit except where, upon supporting evidence, he finds the existence of one of the statutory grounds for denying it. He has done this upon a finding .of past delinquencies on Dodd’s part which the Permit Act impliedly forgives and condones. He has done it upon a finding which conforms to the statute neither in fact nor in effect. He has done it apparently because, differing with the expressed congressional policy of “go and sin no more” which sec. 4(a) (2) (A) of the act exhibits, he is determined to visit upon Dodd the consequences of his past sinning. My associates, in short, purport to see in what the Administrator has done a finding of sufficient evidence of a statutory ground for denial. I see no fact finding whatever, but only a bald and unsupported conclusion, without support in either the statute or the evidence.
I respectfully dissent.
Indeed, one of the findings of the Administrator is: “The company appears to have ample financial resources, and to he doing a very substantial business in the wholesaling of beer, which has increased rapidly since the company commenced operations in May, 1935. There is no issue in this case as to the financial standing of the applicant, and consequently no further consideration need be given to the company’s finances.”