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2013 Pennsylvania Attorney General Reports and Opinions 1 (2013)

handle is hein.sag/sagpa0063 and id is 1 raw text is: COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA
OFFICE OF ATTORNEY GENERAL                               16TH FLOOR
HARRISBURG, PA 17120                            STRAWBERRY SQUARE
KATHLEEN G. KANE                                                                        HARRISBURG, PA 17120
ATTORNEY GENERAL                                                                        (717) 787-3391
July 11, 2013
Joseph E. Brion, Chairman
Liquor Control Board
517 Northwest Office Building
Harrisburg, PA 17124
Re:    Request for Legal Advice Concerning the Citizenship and
Residency Requirements for Licensure under the Liquor Code
Dear Chairman Brion:
On behalf of the Pennsylvanian Liquor Control Board (Board), you have requested an
opinion regarding the Board's enforcement responsibility for the citizenship and residency
prerequisites to licensure contained in the Liquor Code (Code), 47 P.S. §1-101 et. seq.
With regard to those sections of the Code which require an applicant for licensure be a
United States citizen, this office has rendered two previous opinions on the subject. Official
Opinion No. 23 of 1974 advised the Board not to take any action to enforce the citizenship
requirement for corporate licensees with resident alien officers contained in section 4-403 of the
Code, as it was unconstitutional under the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States
Constitution. In rendering the opinion, the office relied upon United States Supreme Court
jurisprudence, which establishes that classifications based on alienage are inherently suspect and
the subject of close judicial scrutiny. See Graham v. Richardson, 403 U.S. 365 (1971) (striking
down a Pennsylvania statute which conditioned state welfare benefits on United States
citizenship). Only when a state can demonstrate a compelling interest will a citizenship
requirement be upheld. Id. The Fourteenth Amendment requires that all persons lawfully in
this country possess an equality of legal privileges with all citizens under non-discriminatory
laws. Takahashi v. Fish and Game Commission, 334 U.S. 410, 420 (1948) (holding that
California could not refuse to issue commercial fishing licenses to resident aliens which were
otherwise available to non-alien state residents). As a result, this office concluded that
discrimination against alien residents is obviously irrational and invidious and ultimately
unenforceable. 0.0. No. 23 at pg. 83, Op. Pa. Atty. Gen. (April 30, 1974).
Also in 1974, this office issued Official Opinion No. 48, which clarified whether the
ruling in Official Opinion No. 23 applied to foreign corporations having nonresident alien
officers or stockholders. While we acknowledged that nonresident aliens are not expressly
protected by the United States Constitution or Federal Civil Rights Acts, there was no need to
require that the citizenship provisions of the Liquor Code be treated as unconstitutional when

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