California Steps Up Liquor License Enforcement

By and on September 11, 2023
Posted In Licensing

We always recommend you regularly review your state liquor licenses to ensure you hold the correct licenses for your business needs. However, given recent feedback from California regulators, you may want to expedite such a review. We have learned that California is scrutinizing liquor licenses and enforcing regulations that prohibit licensees from obtaining licenses that could create tier violations.

California recently provided guidance on which industry members can hold a Type 13 Distilled Spirits Importer’s General license. As a reminder, a Type 13 license authorizes licensees to import and sell distilled spirits to other distilled spirits manufacturers, wholesalers, rectifiers and importers within the state. Historically, California issued a Type 13 license to out-of-state supplier-tier companies importing distilled spirits in their name. These companies would use licensed public warehouses for storage before distributing their products to authorized California licensees, such as licensed California wholesalers.

However, the California Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control (CA ABC) asserts that CA BPC § 23771 prohibits distilled spirits suppliers from holding a Type 13 license if they have any interest in manufacturing within or outside of the state. This prohibition applies to suppliers who manufacture distilled spirits outside of California or have a parent company that manufactures distilled spirits overseas. The state has said that these suppliers should hold a manufacturer-type license, such as a Type 5 license.

A Type 5 Distilled Spirits Manufacturer’s Agent license is frequently held by an agent of out-of-state distilleries or manufacturers who promotes the products and does missionary work for the out-of-state distillers or manufacturers. They can also solicit sales from licensed distilled spirits manufacturers, rectifiers or distilled spirits wholesalers and hold possession of distilled spirits in public or private warehouses. Although Type 5 licensees cannot import distilled spirits into California, they can sell distilled spirits to other Type 13 license holders who may import into the state.

While we have not seen proactive enforcement from CA ABC on this matter, the issue may arise when or if Type 13 license-holding companies renew a license or file a person-to-person transfer or premises transfer for a current license. CA ABC has indicated that Type 13 license-holding suppliers will not be penalized for holding an improper license; the agency will expect these suppliers to work with it to determine if they should hold a different set of licenses to meet their business needs.

If you have any questions about California ABC liquor licenses, please contact Alva Mather, Nichole Shustack, Alice Chung or McDermott’s alcohol team.

Alice Chung
Alice Chung works closely with clients on projects relating to global trade compliance, food labeling and packaging compliance, and general compliance relating to R&D, formulation, nutritional, new product development and market release. She spent close to a decade in-house as a Regulatory Compliance Director, giving her a unique perspective of the complex regulatory standards her clients need to comply with as their industries remain hyper competitive and highly regulated. Read Alice Chung's full bio.


Alva C. Mather
Alva Mather is the global head of McDermott’s Regulatory Practice Group and a member of the Firm’s Management Committee, and heads the Alcohol Regulatory & Distribution Practice. As a nationally recognized go-to lawyer for alcohol beverage regulatory, commercial and M&A matters, clients say that Alva “comes to the situation with clear leadership and strong knowledge of the food and beverage industry.” She combines her extensive knowledge of the commercial and legal landscape as well as deep understanding of the beverage industry to help clients mitigate risk, respond to challenges, and capture and pursue new business opportunities. Read Alva Mather's full bio.

BLOG EDITOR

STAY CONNECTED

TOPICS

ARCHIVES