
H. B. 2817


(By Delegates Stemple, Shelton,
Pino and Hunt)


[Introduced February 17, 1999; referred to the


Committee on the Judiciary.]
A BILL to amend and reenact section nineteen, article sixteen,
chapter eleven of the code of West Virginia, one thousand
nine hundred thirty-one, as amended; and to amend and
reenact section nine, article six, chapter sixty of said
code, all relating to making the state's criminal and
penalty laws applying to the use and display of beer and
alcoholic beverages in motor vehicles to conform to federal
law.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
That section nineteen, article sixteen, chapter eleven of
the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one,
as amended, be amended and reenacted; and that section nine,
article six, chapter sixty of said code be amended and reenacted,
all to read as follows:
CHAPTER 11. TAXATION.
ARTICLE 16. NONINTOXICATING BEER.
§11-16-19. Unlawful acts of persons; criminal penalties.
(a) Any person under the age of twenty-one years who
purchases, consumes, sells, possesses or serves nonintoxicating
beer is guilty of a misdemeanor and, upon conviction thereof,
shall be fined in an amount not to exceed five hundred dollars or
shall be incarcerated in the county or regional jail for a period
not to exceed seventy-two hours, or both fined and imprisoned,
or, in lieu of such fine and incarceration, may, for the first
offense, be placed on probation for a period not to exceed one
year.
Nothing in this article, nor any rule or regulation of the
commissioner, shall may prevent or be deemed considered to
prohibit any person who is at least eighteen years of age from
serving in the lawful employment of any licensee, which may
include the sale or delivery of nonintoxicating beer as defined
in this article. Further, nothing in this article, nor any rule
or regulation of the commissioner, shall may prevent or be deemed
considered to prohibit any person who is less than eighteen but
at least sixteen years of age from being employed by a licensee
whose principal business is the sale of food or consumer goods or
the providing of recreational activities, including, but not
limited to, nationally franchised fast food outlets, family-oriented restaurants, bowling alleys, drug stores,
discount stores, grocery stores and convenience stores:
Provided, That such person shall may not sell or deliver
nonintoxicating beer.
Nothing in this subsection shall prohibit prohibits a person
who is at least eighteen years of age from purchasing or
possessing nonintoxicating beer when he or she is acting upon the
request of or under the direction and control of any member of a
state, federal or local law-enforcement agency or the West
Virginia alcohol beverage administration while the agency is
conducting an investigation or other activity relating to the
enforcement of the alcohol beverage control statutes and the
rules and regulations of the commissioner.
(b) Any person under the age of twenty-one years who, for
the purpose of purchasing nonintoxicating beer, misrepresents his
or her age, or who for such that purpose presents or offers any
written evidence of age which is false, fraudulent or not
actually his or her own, or who illegally attempts to purchase
nonintoxicating beer, is guilty of a misdemeanor and, upon
conviction thereof, shall be fined in an amount not to exceed
fifty dollars or shall be imprisoned in the county or regional
jail for a period not to exceed seventy-two hours, or both such
fine and imprisonment fined and imprisoned, or, in lieu of such
fine and imprisonment, may, for the first offense, be placed on probation for a period not exceeding one year.
(c) Any person who shall knowingly buy buys for, give gives
to or furnish furnishes nonintoxicating beer to anyone under the
age of twenty-one to whom they are not related by blood or
marriage is guilty of a misdemeanor and shall, upon conviction
thereof, be fined in an amount not to exceed one hundred dollars
or shall be imprisoned in the county or regional jail for a
period not to exceed ten days, or both such fine and imprisonment
fined and imprisoned.
(d) Any person who at any one time transports into the state
for their personal use, and not for resale, more than six and
seventy-five hundredths gallons of nonintoxicating beer, upon
which the West Virginia barrel tax has not been imposed, shall be
is guilty of a misdemeanor and shall, upon conviction thereof, be
fined in an amount not to exceed one hundred dollars and have all
the untaxed nonintoxicating beer in their possession at the time
of the arrest confiscated, or imprisoned for ten days in the
county or regional jail, or both fined and imprisoned.
(e) It is unlawful for any person to drink any beer beverage
in a motor vehicle or to keep in the passenger area of a motor
vehicle located anywhere on a public road or highway or the
right-of-way of any public road or highway, any bottle, can or
other receptacle that contains any amount of any beer beverage,
and that is open or has a broken seal, or the contents of which are partially removed, unless the container is kept in the trunk
of the vehicle, or behind the last upright seat of some other
area of the vehicle not normally occupied by passengers if the
vehicle is not equipped with a trunk. This prohibition does not
apply to the passenger area of a motor vehicle designed or used
primarily for the transportation of persons for compensation such
as buses, taxis and limousines or to the living quarters of a
house coach or house trailer. For the purposes of this subsection
the following definitions apply:
(1) "Beer" means any beer, ale, porter, stout and other
similar fermented beverages including sake or similar products of
any name or description containing one half of one percent or
more of alcohol by volume, brewed or produced from malt, wholly
or in part, or from any substitute for malt;
(2) "Passenger area of a vehicle" means the area designed to
seat the driver and passengers while the motor vehicle is in
operation and any area that is readily accessible to the driver
or a passenger while in their seating position, including the
glove compartment; and
(3) "Public road or highway or right-of-way of a public road
or highway" means the entire width between and immediately
adjacent to the boundary lines of every way publicly maintained
when any part is open to the use of the public for vehicular
travel.
If the Congress of the United States repeals the mandate
established by the Surface Transportation Assistance Act of 1982
relating to national uniform drinking age of twenty-one as found
in section six of Public Law 98-363, or a court of competent
jurisdiction declares the provision to be unconstitutional or
otherwise invalid, it is the intent of the Legislature that the
provisions contained in this section and section eighteen of this
article which prohibit the sale, furnishing, giving, purchase or
ownership of nonintoxicating beer to or by a person who is less
than twenty-one years of age shall be null and void and the
provisions therein shall thereafter remain in effect and apply to
the sale, furnishing, giving, purchase or ownership of
nonintoxicating beer to or by a person who is less than nineteen
years of age.
CHAPTER 60. STATE CONTROL OF ALCOHOLIC LIQUORS.
ARTICLE 6. MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS.
§60-6-9. Intoxication or drinking in public places; illegal 
possession of alcoholic liquor; arrests by sheriffs 
or their deputies for violation in their presence.
(a) A person shall may not:



(1) Appear in a public place in an intoxicated condition;



(2) Drink alcoholic liquor in a public place;



(3) Drink alcoholic liquor in a motor vehicle on any highway, street, alley or in a public garage;



(4) Keep in the passenger area of a motor vehicle located
anywhere on a public road or highway or the right-of-way of any
public road or highway, any bottle, can or other receptacle that
contains any amount of any alcoholic beverage, and that is open
or has a broken seal, or the contents of which are partially
removed unless the container is kept in the trunk of the vehicle,
or behind the last upright seat of some other area of the vehicle
not normally occupied by passengers if the vehicle is not
equipped with a trunk. This prohibition does not apply to the
passenger area of a motor vehicle designed or used primarily for
the transportation of persons for compensation such as buses,
taxis and limousines or to the living quarters of a house coach
or house trailer. For the purposes of this subsection the
following definitions apply:



(A) "Alcoholic beverage" means distilled spirits which is
that substance known as ethyl alcohol, ethanol or spirits of wine
of not less than one half of one percent of alcohol in any form
including all dilutions and mixtures from whatever source or by
whatever process produced;



(B) "Passenger area of a vehicle" means the area designed
to seat the driver and passengers while the motor vehicle is in
operation and any area that is readily accessible to the driver
or a passenger while in their seating position, including the glove compartment; and



(C) "Public road or highway or right-of-way of a public road
or highway" means the entire width between and immediately
adjacent to the boundary lines of every way publicly maintained
when any part is open to the use of the public for vehicular
travel.




(4) (5) Tender a drink of alcoholic liquor to another person
in a public place;




(5) (6) Possess alcoholic liquor in the amount in excess of
ten gallons, in containers not bearing stamps or seals of the
commission, without having first obtained written authority from
the said commission therefor; or




(6) (7) Possess any alcoholic liquor which was manufactured
or acquired in violation of the provisions of this chapter.



(b) Any law-enforcement officer may arrest without a warrant
and take the following actions against a person who, in his or
her presence, violates subdivision (1) of subsection (a) of this
section: (1) If there is some nonintoxicated person who will
accept responsibility for the intoxicated person, the officer may
issue the intoxicated person a citation specifying a date for
appearance before a judicial officer and release him or her to
the custody of the individual accepting responsibility:
Provided,
That the issuance of a citation shall be used whenever
feasible; (2) if it does not impose an undue burden on the officer, he or she may, after issuance of such a citation,
transport the individual to the individual's present residence or
arrange for such transportation; (3) if the individual is
incapacitated or the alternatives provided in subdivisions (1)
and (2) of this subsection are not possible, the officer shall
transport or arrange for transportation to the appropriate
judicial officer as defined by section seventeen, article eleven,
chapter twenty-seven of this code; or (4) if the individual is
incapacitated and, in the law-enforcement officer's judgment, is
in need of acute medical attention, that officer shall arrange
for transportation by ambulance or otherwise to a hospital
emergency room. The officer shall accompany the individual until
he or she is discharged from the emergency room or admitted to
the hospital. If the individual is released from the emergency
room, the officer may proceed as described in subdivisions (1),
(2) and (3) of this subsection. If the individual is admitted to
the hospital, the officer shall issue a citation to the
individual specifying a date for appearance before a judicial
officer.



(c) Upon presentment before the proper judicial officer, the
law-enforcement officer shall serve as the chief complaining
witness. The judicial officer must make a finding that there is
probative evidence that the individual may be guilty of the
charge of public intoxication. If such this evidence is not presented, the charge shall be dismissed and the individual
released. If sufficient evidence is presented, the judicial
officer shall issue a warrant and establish bail or issue a
summons to the individual. Once a warrant or summons has been
issued, the following actions may be taken: (1) If the
individual is no longer incapacitated, he or she may be released;
(2) if the individual is still incapacitated but a nonintoxicated
person is available to accept responsibility for him or her, he
or she may be released to the responsible person; or (3) if the
individual is still incapacitated and no responsible person is
available, the judicial officer shall proceed under the
provisions of article five or six-a, chapter twenty-seven of this
code.



(d) Any law-enforcement officer is hereby authorized and
empowered to arrest and hold in custody, without a warrant, until
complaint may be made before a judicial officer and a warrant or
summons issued, any person who in the presence of the
law-enforcement officer violates any one or more of subdivisions
(1) through (6) (7), subsection (a) of this section: Provided,
That the law-enforcement officer may use reasonable force to
prevent harm to himself or herself, the individual arrested or
others in carrying out the provisions of this section.



(e) Any person who violates subdivision (1), subsection (a)
of this section shall be is guilty of a misdemeanor and, upon conviction thereof, shall be sentenced by a judicial officer in
accordance with the following options: (1) Upon first offense,
a fine of not less than five dollars nor more than one hundred
dollars and not more than sixty days in the county or regional
jail or completion of an alcohol education program of not more
than six hours' duration at the nearest community mental health
-- mental retardation center. If the individual, prior to
conviction, agrees to voluntarily attend the alcohol education
program, the judicial officer may delay sentencing until the
program is completed and upon completion may dismiss the charges;
(2) upon conviction for a second offense, a fine of not less than
five dollars nor more than one hundred dollars and not more than
sixty days in the county or regional
jail or completion of not
less than five hours of alcoholism counseling at the nearest
community mental health -- mental retardation center; (3) upon
third and subsequent convictions, a fine of not less than five
dollars nor more than one hundred dollars and not less than five
nor more than sixty days in the county or regional
jail or a fine
of not less than five dollars nor more than one hundred dollars
and completion of not less than five hours of alcoholism
counseling at the nearest community mental health -- mental
retardation center: Provided,
That three convictions for public
intoxication within the preceding six months shall be considered
evidence of alcoholism: Provided, however,
That for the educational counseling programs described in this subsection the
community mental health -- mental retardation center may charge
each participant its usual and customary fee and shall certify in
writing to the referring judicial officer the completion or
failure to complete the prescribed program for each individual.



(f) A person charged with a violation of subdivision (1),
subsection (a) of this section who is an alcoholic shall be found
not guilty by reason of addiction and proper disposition made
pursuant to articles five and six-a, chapter twenty-seven of this
code.



(g) Any person who violates subdivision (2) or (3),
subsection (a) of this section shall be is guilty of a
misdemeanor and, upon conviction thereof, shall be fined not less
than five nor more than one hundred dollars, or confined in the
county or regional
jail not more than sixty days, or both such
fine and imprisonment fined and imprisoned. Any person who
violates subdivision (4) (5) or (6), subsection (a) of this
section shall be is guilty of a misdemeanor and, upon conviction,
shall be fined not less than one hundred dollars nor more than
five hundred dollars, or confined in the county or regional
jail
not less than sixty days nor more than twelve months, or both
such fine and imprisonment fined and imprisoned, and, upon
conviction of second or subsequent offense, he or she shall be is
guilty of a felony and shall be confined in the penitentiary a state correctional facility of this state for a period of not
less than one year nor more than three years.



NOTE: The purpose of this bill is to make the state's
criminal and penalty laws applying to the use and display of beer
and alcoholic beverages in motor vehicles to conform to federal
law.



Strike-throughs indicate language that would be stricken from
the present law, and underscoring indicates new language that
would be added.