Opinion ID: 787235
Heading Depth: 4
Heading Rank: 2

Heading: As Applied

Text: 42 Joelner argues that the Village's application of the numerical restriction was unfounded, arbitrary, and capricious and thus, unconstitutional. As a preliminary matter, we point out that the Board based its rejections of his licenses, at least in part, upon his alleged failure to pay applicable licensing fees. This can hardly be considered an arbitrary and capricious reason for denying Joelner the requested licenses. However, because the record does not reveal what the Board based these allegations upon, how the license applications came to be ordered as they were on the April 15 agenda, or how an application not on the April 15 agenda was considered at all, and particularly how it was considered before Joelner's, we refrain from making any determination with respect to this assertion and leave the issue for a more full examination upon remand.