Posted on 12/22/2007 6:11:08 PM PST by elkfersupper
A lawyer for the owner of the Player's Club Bar and Grill in Independence has challenged in court the enforceability of the city's Clean Indoor Air Act ordinance and won.
John Carnes, an Independence attorney for Player's Club owner Jennifer Brashear, got Jackson County Circuit Court Judge Jeffrey Bushur to overturn two clean air citations given to Brashear. Municipal judges in Independence had found Brashear guilty of violating the city's health code by allowing patrons of the lounge to smoke on two separate occasions.
"There are some holes in that ordinance that basically makes it unenforceable," Carnes said. "It's an unworkable ordinance when it comes to enforcement."
City Manager Robert Heacock said the city attorney is reviewing the appeal and city staff will address perceived holes in the smoking ordinance in a timely fashion.
"The case is being reviewed by our legal department," Heacock said. "We are not sure what the next step will be."
Carnes said on April 13 a Player's Club customer claimed to have observed patrons smoking in the lounge. The person, Carnes said, contacted Heacock, who notified the Health Department.
The Health Department issues a citation, alleging violation of the city's clean air ordinance. After a hearing, the city's municipal court found Brashear in violation of the ordinance, Carnes said.
Carnes added he represented Brashear in the municipal case as well as a appeal hearing Monday before the associate court, where Bushur found Brashear not guilty based upon testimony and a review of the applicable provisions of the ordinance.
"The issue was trying to fit what you had to do to prove the person violated the ordinance," Carnes said. "That ordinance contains vague and overbroad language, making it legally impossible for the city to enforce the ordinance."
Brashear's conviction on the second citation, issued June 8, was also overturned by Bushur Monday.
In that case, Carnes said six officers from the Independence Tactical Swat Team and two patrol officers accompanied two Health Department employees in response to a a report that a person may have been smoking in the establishment. Three citations were issued, one to Brashear and two to customers.
One customer pleaded guilty in Municipal Court, the other was found not guilty in the same courtroom, while Brashear had to appeal her conviction in Municipal Court in Associate Court.
"The customer's argument was under the ordinance you have to be warned first to quit smoking before you are cited," Carnes said. "In Jennifer's case, the argument was 'what consists of a warning?' Does the sign at the front of the business that says 'no smoking allowed' constitute a warning? The way this ordinance is written, the question is, can it be enforced?"
Police spokesperson Tom Gentry said the department did not send a tactical unit to Players Club June 8. Gentry said two patrol officers were asked to assist the Health Department workers because of the intimidation factor at Player's Club that night and a nearby DWI enforcement unit's sergeant decided the unit would assist in the sting as well. The enforcement unit had just finished conducting a sobriety checkpoint, Gentry said.
"We do not send SWAT teams to enforce city ordinances," Gentry said.
Carnes said his next step is to pursue legal action in federal court if another client is cited by city officials after the associate court has determined the clean air ordinance is unenforceable.
"After the recent court test of the ordinance," Carnes said, "it is my belief that the present ordinance cannot be enforced and to do so would put the city at risk of committing federal civil rights violations."
A Jackson County Missouri (Independence/KC) judge also declared the particular ordinance in this thread to be illegal when the bar owner went to court because the ordinance is poorly written. In our fair city, KC, the proposed ordinance banning smoking allows the casinos to be exempted. I would think if that one passes it too will be a court case celebre.
Sixty four years standing in a corner?
Two questions:
#1 - Are you sort of triangular in the front from standing in that corner so long?
#2 - What in the heck did you do to your mom to get a, "Go stand in the corner for sixty-four years" punishment?
_. . _
O. O
. U
. 0
My estimation would be 1993.
You’re a rebel and an American Patriot. The sheeple will obey.
The founding fathers would have done something a little different in the face of this tyranny.
As someone wiser than we once said, “Sheep are made for shearing.”
IMHO, it isn't so much a matter of surgical procedure as it is so many people believing that the 'law' is whatever government says it is.
Those guys look like they’re teed up to shoot one another in the back of the head, especially if they encounter someone who understands tactics who had an assistant pull a flanking maneuver on them.
I am fortunate to live in a mid-sized West Texas city that has no smoking ban applicable to commercial establishments. They ban smking in all public buildings, but this I see as reasonable. Anyone, including thiose truly offended by smoke, might be required to enter those places. Most large stores and malls ban smoking of their own volition, again, if done by the owner, I have no problem, that is his right.
The barkeep handle is for real, I did that for quite a while. In my experience, the percentage of smokers may be a minority in the general population, but that reverses in bars. I can say this; I have never seen a non-smoking bar that lasted any time UNLESS the nannies had banned smoking in all bars. Then you see most of the patrons taking breaks to go huddle in the elements from time to time.
San Angelo has taken the rational position that the owner of a commercial establishment knows best his customers’ preference and will cater to it out of self interest. But then, we also have a Christmas creche on the courthouse lawn with no legal challenge. A remarkable island of minor freedoms I inhabit.
Nice catch.
The "intimidation factor?"
Potential resistance to stupid laws requires a SWAT team.
ahh... the smoking police
I can’t believe this is going on. (sigh)
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