(a)(1) A wholesaler permit shall allow the bottling of alcoholic liquor and the wholesale sale of alcoholic liquor to permittees in this state and without the state, as may be permitted by law, and the sale of alcoholic liquors to vessels engaged in coastwise or foreign commerce, and the sale of alcohol and alcoholic liquor for industrial purposes to nonpermittees, such sales to be made in accordance with the regulations adopted by the Department of Consumer Protection, and the sale of alcohol and alcoholic liquor for medicinal purposes to hospitals and charitable institutions and to religious organizations for sacramental purposes and the receipt from out-of-state shippers of multiple packages of alcoholic liquor. The holder of a wholesaler permit may apply for and shall thereupon receive an out-of-state shipper's permit for direct importation from abroad of alcoholic liquors manufactured outside the United States and an out-of-state shipper's permit for direct importation from abroad of beer manufactured outside the United States. The annual fee for a wholesaler permit shall be two thousand six hundred fifty dollars.
(2) When a holder of a wholesaler permit has had the distributorship of any alcohol, beer, spirits or wine product of a manufacturer or out-of-state shipper for six months or more, such distributorship may be terminated or its geographic territory diminished upon (A) the execution of a written stipulation by the wholesaler and manufacturer or out-of-state shipper agreeing to the change and the approval of such change by the Department of Consumer Protection; or (B) the sending of a written notice by certified or registered mail, return receipt requested, by the manufacturer or out-of-state shipper to the wholesaler, a copy of which notice has been sent simultaneously by certified or registered mail, return receipt requested, to the Department of Consumer Protection. No such termination or diminishment shall become effective except for just and sufficient cause, provided such cause shall be set forth in such notice and the Department of Consumer Protection shall determine, after hearing, that just and sufficient cause exists. If an emergency occurs, caused by the wholesaler, prior to such hearing, which threatens the manufacturers' or out-of-state shippers' products or otherwise endangers the business of the manufacturer or out-of-state shipper and said emergency is established to the satisfaction of the Department of Consumer Protection, the department may temporarily suspend such wholesaler permit or take whatever reasonable action the department deems advisable to provide for such emergency and the department may continue such temporary action until its decision after a full hearing. The Department of Consumer Protection shall render its decision with reasonable promptness following such hearing. Notwithstanding the aforesaid, a manufacturer or out-of-state shipper may appoint one or more additional wholesalers as the distributor for an alcohol, spirits or wine product within such territory, provided such appointment shall not be effective until six months from the date such manufacturer or out-of-state shipper sets forth such intention in written notice to the existing wholesaler by certified or registered mail, return receipt requested, with a copy of such notice simultaneously sent by certified or registered mail, return receipt requested, to the Department of Consumer Protection. For just and sufficient cause, a manufacturer or out-of-state shipper may appoint one or more additional wholesalers as the distributor for a beer product within such territory provided such manufacturer or out-of-state shipper sets forth such intention and cause in written notice to the existing wholesaler by certified or registered mail, return receipt requested, with a copy of such notice simultaneously sent by certified or registered mail, return receipt requested, to the Department of Consumer Protection. For the purposes of this section, “just and sufficient cause” means the existence of circumstances which, in the opinion of a reasonable person considering all of the equities of both the wholesaler and the manufacturer or out-of-state shipper warrants a termination or a diminishment of a distributorship as the case may be. For the purposes of this section, “manufacturer or out-of-state shipper” means the manufacturer or out-of-state shipper who originally granted a distributorship of any alcohol, beer, spirits or wine product to a wholesaler, any successor to such manufacturer or out-of-state shipper, which successor has assumed the contractual relationship with such wholesaler by assignment or otherwise, or any other manufacturer or out-of-state shipper who acquires the right to ship such alcohol, beer, spirits or wine into the state.
(3) Nothing contained in this section shall be construed to interfere with the authority of the Department of Consumer Protection to retain or adopt reasonable regulations concerning the termination or diminishment of a distributorship held by a wholesaler for less than six months.
(4) All hearings held under this section shall be held in accordance with the provisions of chapter 54.
(b) A wholesaler permit for beer shall be in all respects the same as a wholesaler permit, except that the scope of operations of the holder shall be limited to beer; but shall not prohibit the handling of nonalcoholic merchandise. The holder of a wholesaler permit for beer may apply for and shall thereupon receive an out-of-state shipper's permit for direct importation from abroad of beer manufactured outside the United States. The annual fee for a wholesaler permit for beer shall be one thousand dollars.
(c) A wholesaler permittee may offer to industry members and its own staff free samples of alcoholic liquor that it distributes for tasting on the wholesaler's premises. Any offering, tasting, wine education and tasting class demonstration held on permit premises shall be conducted only during the hours a package store is permitted to sell alcoholic liquor under section 30-91. No tasting of wine on the premises shall be offered from more than ten uncorked or open bottles at any one time. A wholesaler may offer such tastings to retail permittees not more than four times per year.
(1949 Rev., S. 4239; 1955, S. 2156d; 1971, P.A. 605, S. 1; 747, S. 1; 1972, P.A. 95, S. 1; P.A. 73-230; P.A. 75-186, S. 1, 3; 75-641, S. 3; P.A. 77-373; 77-614, S. 165, 587, 610; P.A. 78-303, S. 80, 85, 136; P.A. 79-131, S. 1, 2; P.A. 80-482, S. 4, 170, 191, 345, 348; P.A. 81-367, S. 2, 9; P.A. 84-432, S. 2, 3; P.A. 86-57, S. 1, 2; P.A. 93-139, S. 11; P.A. 95-161, S. 6, 9; 95-195, S. 21, 83; June 30 Sp. Sess. P.A. 03-6, S. 146(d); P.A. 04-169, S. 17; 04-189, S. 1; June Sp. Sess. P.A. 09-3, S. 328; P.A. 17-77, S. 3; P.A. 21-37, S. 80.)
History: 1971 acts added Subsec. (1)(B) and (C) re termination of distributorship of products and diminishment of territories and specified that wholesaler permit allows “the receipt from out-of-state shippers of multiple packages of still wines and sparkling wines”; 1972 act specified products distributed in Subsec. (1)(B) as alcohol, beer, spirits or wine and added provisions re appointment of successor distributors; P.A. 73-230 made technical correction; P.A. 75-186 substituted “beer” for “malt beverages” in Subsec. (1); P.A. 75-641 changed manner of designating subsections, subdivisions, etc. for consistency with other statutes; P.A. 77-373 deleted word “beer” (added by P.A. 73-230) in provision re appointment of successor distributor; P.A. 77-614 replaced liquor control commission with division of liquor control within the department of business regulation, except as later limited by P.A. 78-303, effective January 1, 1979; P.A. 79-131 deleted provision which had stated that termination of distributorship or diminishment of territory is effective not earlier than one year from date of notice unless there is just and sufficient cause for imposing an earlier date, defined meaning of just and sufficient cause for purposes of section and changed effective date of successor distributor's powers (previously 90 days after notice), distinguishing between alcohol, spirits or wine products and beer; P.A. 80-482 made division of liquor control an independent department and abolished the department of business regulation, overriding provision of same act which would have placed the division within the public safety department; P.A. 81-367 amended Subsec. (a) to provide that termination or diminishment of a wholesaler's distributorship may be effected only for just and sufficient cause if the wholesaler has had the distributorship for 6 months or more where prior law extended this protection only after 24 months, and to provide that the 6-month time period applies to the successors or assigns of a manufacturer or out-of-state shipper; P.A. 84-432 amended Subsec. (a) by specifying the conditions under which a manufacturer or out-of-state shipper might appoint an additional wholesaler as a distributor of beer, and by adding Subdiv. (4) requiring hearings to be held in accordance with chapter 54; P.A. 86-57 amended Subsec. (a) to add definition of “manufacturer or out-of-state shipper”; P.A. 93-139 made technical changes and added the annual fee for each wholesaler permit; P.A. 95-161 amended Subsec. (a) to change the type of alcohol that can be received from an out-of-state shipper from still and sparkling wines to alcoholic liquor, effective June 27, 1995; P.A. 95-195 substituted Department of Consumer Protection for Department of Liquor Control, effective July 1, 1995; June 30 Sp. Sess. P.A. 03-6 and P.A. 04-169 replaced Department of Consumer Protection with Department of Agriculture and Consumer Protection, effective July 1, 2004; P.A. 04-189 repealed Sec. 146 of June 30 Sp. Sess. P.A. 03-6, thereby reversing the merger of the Departments of Agriculture and Consumer Protection, effective June 1, 2004; June Sp. Sess. P.A. 09-3 increased fee in Subsec. (a)(1) from $2,400 to $2,650 and increased fee in Subsec. (b) from $800 to $1,000; P.A. 17-77 amended Subsec. (a)(2) to add provisions re sending notice by certified mail, effective July 1, 2017; P.A. 21-37 amended Subsecs. (a)(3) and (4) to make technical changes and added Subsec. (c) re tastings of alcoholic liquor, effective July 1, 2021.
Structure Connecticut General Statutes
Title 30 - Intoxicating Liquors
Chapter 545 - Liquor Control Act
Section 30-2. - Liquor Control Commission: Appointment, term, vacancies, oath, removal.
Section 30-5. - Receipts and expenditures.
Section 30-6a. - Adoption of regulations.
Section 30-7. - Regulations to be furnished upon request.
Section 30-8. - Investigations, oaths and subpoenas.
Section 30-9. - Status of towns as to sale of alcoholic liquor.
Section 30-10. - Vote on liquor permit question.
Section 30-11. - Form of ballot label.
Section 30-12. - Liquor permit contrary to vote void. Exception.
Section 30-13. - Previous town action to remain in effect.
Section 30-13a. - Prior vote not to apply to sale under cafe permit. Referendum requirement.
Section 30-13b. - Local option re nonprofit theater permits.
Section 30-14a. - Renewal and issuance of package store permits. Removal of premises.
Section 30-15. - Issuance of permits.
Section 30-16a. - Off-site farm winery sales and wine, cider and mead tasting permit.
Section 30-16c. - Delivery of alcoholic liquor manufactured by holder of manufacturer permit.
Section 30-17a. - Sales by wholesaler permittees to retail permittees outside territory.
Section 30-17b. - Wholesaler's salesman certificates.
Section 30-18. - Out-of-state shipper's permit for alcoholic liquors.
Section 30-19. - Out-of-state shipper's permit for beer.
Section 30-19f. - In-state transporter's permit.
Section 30-20. - Package store permit. Grocery store beer permit.
Section 30-20a. - University permit.
Section 30-20b. - Out-of-state shipments by package store permit holder.
Section 30-21. - Hotel permit.
Section 30-21a. - Night club permit.
Section 30-21b. - Resort permit.
Section 30-22aa. - Club and nonprofit club permits.
Section 30-22d. - Connecticut craft cafe permit.
Section 30-22e. - Seasonal outdoor open-air permits.
Section 30-23. - Club permits.
Section 30-23a. - Guest book requirements under club permits.
Section 30-23b. - Club permit for Rocky Hill Veterans' Home and Hospital.
Section 30-24. - Spouses of club and golf country club members.
Section 30-24a. - Golf country club permit. Nonprofit service club.
Section 30-24b. - Auxiliary club members.
Section 30-25. - Special club permit for picnics.
Section 30-25a. - Cafe permit in no-permit towns.
Section 30-27. - Taverns not to be screened from street.
Section 30-28. - Railroad permit.
Section 30-28a. - Airline permit.
Section 30-30. - Broker's permit.
Section 30-31. - Sale of warehouse receipts for alcoholic beverages.
Section 30-32. - Warehouse permit.
Section 30-33. - Concession permit.
Section 30-33a. - Coliseum permit. Special rule re backers.
Section 30-33b and 30-33c. - Special sporting facility permits.
Section 30-34. - Military permit.
Section 30-35. - Temporary permit for outings, picnics or social gatherings.
Section 30-35a. - Nonprofit theater permit.
Section 30-35b. - Ninety-day provisional permit.
Section 30-36. - Druggist permit.
Section 30-37. - Sales on prescription.
Section 30-37a. - Nonprofit public museum permit.
Section 30-37b. - Charitable organization permit.
Section 30-37c. - Bowling establishment permit. Racquetball facility permit.
Section 30-37d. - Nonprofit public television corporation permit.
Section 30-37e. - Airport restaurant permit. Airport bar permit. Airport airline club permit.
Section 30-37g. - Nonprofit golf tournament permit.
Section 30-37h. - Nonprofit corporation permit.
Section 30-37i. - Hotel guest bar permit.
Section 30-37k. - Casino permit.
Section 30-37o. - Farmers' market sales permit. Municipal prohibition of sale.
Section 30-37p. - Gift basket retailer permit.
Section 30-37s. - Religious wine retailer permit.
Section 30-37t. - Festival permit.
Section 30-38. - Storage of liquor. Approval of facilities.
Section 30-38a. - Transfer of liquor between retail permit premises under common ownership.
Section 30-39. - Applications for permits, renewals. Fees. Publication, remonstrance, hearing.
Section 30-39a. - Bartender certificate. When required. Application; fee; refusal; exemption.
Section 30-40. - Second application.
Section 30-41 and 30-42. - Permit fees. Rebate of permit fees.
Section 30-42a. - Permit fee rebate.
Section 30-43. - Granting and denial of permits. Notice of hearing.
Section 30-44. - Mandatory refusal of permit where sale prohibited.
Section 30-45. - Mandatory refusal of permits to certain persons. Exceptions.
Section 30-46a. - Permit for restaurant within a coliseum.
Section 30-48a. - Limitation on interest in retail permits.
Section 30-48b. - Municipalities and authorities as backers of coliseum permittees.
Section 30-51a. - Leasing of part of premises operating under grocery store beer permit.
Section 30-52. - Permit to specify location and revocability. Removal to another location.
Section 30-53. - Permit to be recorded.
Section 30-54. - Permit to be hung in plain view.
Section 30-56. - When appeal not to act as stay of execution.
Section 30-57. - Conviction of permittee or backer; revocation or suspension of permit; forfeiture.
Section 30-58. - Revocation of permit obtained by fraud.
Section 30-58a. - Offer in compromise in lieu of suspension.
Section 30-59. - Posting of notice of revocation or suspension.
Section 30-59a. - Suspension of permit for license suspension or revocation.
Section 30-61. - Service of process on members of commission.
Section 30-62. - Substitution of permittees. Fee.
Section 30-62a. - Consumer bars.
Section 30-62b. - Home manufacture of wine.
Section 30-62d. - Authorization for use of self-pour automated system for beer, cider and wine.
Section 30-63e. - Conditions required for closeout sale.
Section 30-63f. - Brand or size to be closed out.
Section 30-64a. - Sales within a wholesaler's geographic territory.
Section 30-64b. - Unfair pricing practices.
Section 30-66. - Administration expenses.
Section 30-68. - Wholesale prices of wine.
Section 30-68j. - Minimum markup in sale of beer.
Section 30-68k. - Price discrimination prohibited.
Section 30-68l. - Wholesale permittees. Sale below cost prohibited. Sale of family brand cases.
Section 30-68m. - Retail permittees; sales below cost prohibited; exception.
Section 30-68n. - Advertisement of manufacturers' rebates.
Section 30-69 to 30-73. - Seizures.
Section 30-74. - Unauthorized sale prohibited.
Section 30-75. - Prima facie evidence of intent to sell.
Section 30-76. - Purchase for resale.
Section 30-76a. - Sales to persons holding temporary or charitable organization permits.
Section 30-77. - Disposing of liquor without permit.
Section 30-78. - Nuisance. Disposal.
Section 30-79. - Soliciting orders in no-permit towns.
Section 30-80. - Delivery in town deemed sale.
Section 30-82. - Sale pending renewal of permit.
Section 30-86a. - Statement from purchaser as to age.
Section 30-88. - Identity card.
Section 30-88a. - Operator's license as proof of age. Misrepresentation of age to procure liquor.
Section 30-90. - Loitering on permit premises. Unaccompanied minors prohibited.
Section 30-90a. - Employment of minors.
Section 30-91. - Hours and days of closing. Exemption.
Section 30-91a. - Effect of prior local votes re Sunday sale.
Section 30-92. - Capacity of beer containers.
Section 30-92a. - Bottle size, conversion to metric system.
Section 30-92b. - Beer packaging.
Section 30-93. - Containers to be sealed.
Section 30-93a. - Regulation of shipments into state.
Section 30-95. - Advertising and bottling.
Section 30-95a. - Display of trademarks by permittees.
Section 30-96. - When music permitted.
Section 30-97. - Town and probate records not to be kept where liquor is sold.
Section 30-98. - Liquor not to be furnished to prisoners.
Section 30-99. - Denatured alcohol or adulterated liquor. Penalty.
Section 30-100. - Bottle clubs.
Section 30-101. - Pharmacist, breaking law, forfeits permit and license.
Section 30-103. - Contracts and actions based on illegal sales.
Section 30-104. - Jurisdiction.
Section 30-105. - Prosecutions.
Section 30-106. - Entry into disorderly house by officer.
Section 30-107. - Arrest and seizure without warrant. Disposition of illegal liquor.
Section 30-108. - Court may order analysis of liquor.
Section 30-109. - State chemist to analyze samples. Copies of analysis to be evidence.
Section 30-110. - Tampering with analysis.
Section 30-111. - Reports of convictions, fines and forfeited bonds.
Section 30-112. - Civil action barred on certain debts.
Section 30-116. - Sale, purchase or possession of alcohol vaporization device prohibited. Penalty.
Section 30-117. - Purchase, possession or sale of powdered alcohol prohibited. Penalty.