§ 110.028 SALE OR TRANSFER OF LICENSE.
   (A)   A license shall be a purely personal privilege, good for not to exceed one year after issuance unless sooner revoked as in this chapter or the Liquor Control Act provided, and shall not constitute property, nor shall it be subject to attachment, garnishment or execution, nor shall it be alienable or transferable, voluntarily or involuntarily, or subject to being encumbered or hypothecated.
   (B)   The license shall cease upon the death, dissolution or termination of the licensee and shall not descend by the laws of testate or intestate devolution, provided that executors or administrators of the estate of any deceased licensee and the trustee of any insolvent or bankrupt licensee, when the estate consists in part of alcoholic liquor, may continue the business of the sale of alcoholic liquor under the order of the appropriate court and may exercise the privileges of the deceased or insolvent or bankrupt licensee after the death of the decedent, or insolvency or bankruptcy, until the expiration of the license, but not longer than six months after the death, bankruptcy or insolvency of the licensee; provided, however, that the administrator or executor of an estate must meet the qualifications set out in § 110.019.
(Ord. 07-05-01, passed 5-22-2007)