From “Rational” to “Reasonable”:
N.C. Bar & Tavern Association v. Stein (2025) and the Re-Tooling of Fruits-of-Labor Doctrine
Introduction
In N.C. Bar and Tavern Association v. Stein, the Supreme Court of North Carolina revisits the constitutionality of Governor-issued COVID-19 shutdown orders that kept stand-alone bars closed for more than 400 days while allowing restaurants, breweries, and other alcohol-serving venues to operate under capacity limits. Bar owners claimed the orders violated the state constitution’s Fruits of Their Own Labor Clause, Equal Protection, and several statutory guarantees. Although similar challenges had been filed nationwide, this decision is distinctive because it crystallises, for the first time, a post-Ace Speedway analytical framework for Fruits-of-Labor claims, clarifies the proper level of scrutiny for equal-protection attacks on economic regulations, and construes the Emergency Management Act’s compensation provisions.
Parties:
- Plaintiffs – A statewide coalition of bar owners, managers, and employees;
- Defendant – Joshua Stein (sued as successor to former Governor Roy Cooper) in his official capacity as Governor of North Carolina.
Summary of the Judgment
- Fruits of Labor Claim – The trial court’s grant of summary judgment for the Governor is vacated; the matter returns to the superior court for renewed discovery and fact-finding under the two-pronged “proper purpose / reasonable means” test announced in Kinsley v. Ace Speedway Racing, Ltd. (2024). Rational-basis review is declared incorrect for Fruits-of-Labor challenges.
- Equal Protection Claim – The Court re-establishes that economic-classification cases (where no suspect class or fundamental right under equal-protection doctrine is implicated) receive rational-basis scrutiny; therefore the Court of Appeals’ use of strict scrutiny is reversed.
- Emergency Management Act (EMA) – Compensation under N.C.G.S. §166A-19.73 is available only when property is “commandeered, seized, taken, condemned, or otherwise used.” Mere regulatory closure does not trigger payment; Court of Appeals affirmed.
- Public Records Act – Because plaintiffs failed to complete the statutory pre-suit mediation process, the courts lacked subject-matter jurisdiction; dismissal affirmed.
- Procedural Orders – The case is remanded; discovery may be reopened in light of the clarified Fruits-of-Labor standard.
Analysis
A. Precedents Cited and Their Influence
- Kinsley v. Ace Speedway Racing, Ltd. (2024) – Introduced the two-step Fruits-of-Labor test (proper governmental purpose + reasonable means) and rejected rational-basis review for such claims. Stein is the first major application; the Court of Appeals is faulted for not having Ace Speedway guidance.
- State v. Ballance (1949) – Historic case requiring that economic restraints be “reasonably necessary” to serve public health, morals, or safety. Re-affirmed as doctrinal root.
- Corum v. UNC (1992) – Established direct constitutional damages actions (“Corum claims”) when no adequate alternative remedy exists. The majority holds sovereign immunity does not bar plaintiffs’ Fruits claims (no adequate EMA remedy), while the dissent insists the EMA is adequate.
- Deminski v. State Bd. of Educ. (2021) & Washington v. Cline (2024) – Provide the three-part test for colourable Corum claims and discuss when an alternative remedy suffices.
- Town of Beech Mountain v. Watauga Cnty. (1989) and Duggins (1978) – Reiterate that economic equal-protection challenges are subject to rational-basis. Used to reverse the Court of Appeals.
B. The Court’s Legal Reasoning
- Threshold Sovereign-Immunity Question
• Plaintiffs proceed via a Corum theory.
• Majority: EMA compensation is not meaningfully available for regulatory shutdowns, so no “adequate alternative remedy”; sovereign immunity falls.
• Dissent: EMA is adequate; Corum barred. - Fruits-of-Labor Framework Re-Articulated
1. Determine the actual governmental purpose (plaintiffs may rebut asserted purpose).
2. Evaluate whether the means are reasonable in light of competing burdens and public benefits – a fact-intensive inquiry that usually defeats summary judgment.
Because neither lower court used this exact inquiry and discovery occurred under different assumptions, the case returns to the trial court. - Equal Protection Tier
The right to work, though “fundamental” in Fruits-of-Labor jurisprudence, is not a fundamental right under Equal Protection doctrine; thus bars are an ordinary economic class. Strict scrutiny applied by the Court of Appeals was error. - Statutory Interpretation: EMA §166A-19.73
The verbs “commandeered, seized, taken, condemned, or otherwise used” require some affirmative appropriation of property, not mere restriction. Regulatory closures therefore elicit no automatic compensation.
C. Likely Impact of the Judgment
- Heightened Fruits-of-Labor Litigation – By confirming that rational-basis is not the test, Stein invites more robust fact development and discovery in economic-liberty cases. Expect a surge of challenges to licensing, land-use, and pandemic-era regulations.
- Emergency-Powers Architecture – Governors retain broad emergency authority, but any prolonged disparity among similarly-situated businesses is vulnerable if unsupported by a strong evidentiary record.
- Equal Protection Stability – The Court quietly reins in the Court of Appeals, reaffirming that strict scrutiny is exceptional; most economic classifications remain at the rational level.
- Statutory Drafting Signals – The EMA ruling clarifies that the legislature must speak expressly if it wants compensation for shutdown-only scenarios; policymakers may revisit §166A-19.73.
Complex Concepts Simplified
- Fruits of Their Own Labor Clause – A unique NC constitutional guarantee that individuals may pursue lawful vocations free from unreasonable state interference. Think of it as North Carolina’s home-grown economic-liberty shield.
- Corum Claim – A lawsuit filed directly under the constitution when no statutory remedy exists and state actors violate constitutional rights. Named after Corum v. UNC.
- Rational-Basis vs. Reasonable-Necessity
• Rational-Basis: Government wins if it can imagine any conceivable legitimate purpose.
• Reasonable-Necessity (Fruits test): Government must prove the regulation is actually aimed at a legitimate purpose and the chosen means are reasonably necessary after weighing burdens and benefits; a harder test. - Emergency Management Act Compensation – Applies when the state physically commandeers or requisitions private property (e.g., turning a hotel into a storm shelter). Pure closures ≠ taking.
- Strict vs. Rational Scrutiny in Equal Protection – Strict scrutiny (almost always fatal) is reserved for suspect classes (race, religion) or fundamental rights (voting, speech). Ordinary economic groups, like bar owners, get deferential review.
Conclusion
N.C. Bar & Tavern Ass’n v. Stein is a pivotal decision that both sharpens and narrows constitutional review of economic regulations in North Carolina. By transplanting the Ace Speedway “proper purpose / reasonable means” test from dicta into holding, the Court elevates the Fruits-of-Labor Clause beyond the lenient rational-basis paradigm while simultaneously re-anchoring equal-protection review of economic matters. On the statutory side, the opinion signals that compensation for emergency closures remains a policy choice for the legislature, not a judicial mandate. The practical upshot: executive officials must now compile a robust record—before acting—demonstrating why their chosen means are the least burdensome route to a legitimate end, and litigants challenging economic restrictions gain a potent discovery-driven tool. Whether the remanded case ultimately proves unreasonable interference or not, the doctrinal architecture laid down here will steer North Carolina jurisprudence on pandemic response, occupational licensing, and emergency powers for years to come.
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