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No. 10768267
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Peridot Tree, Inc. v. City of Sacramento
No. 10768267 · Decided January 2, 2026
No. 10768267·Ninth Circuit · 2026·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
January 2, 2026
Citation
No. 10768267
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
PERIDOT TREE WA, INC., No. 24-3481
D.C. No.
Plaintiff - Appellant,
3:23-cv-06111-
TMC
v.
WASHINGTON STATE LIQUOR
AND CANNABIS CONTROL OPINION
BOARD; WILLIAM LUKELA,
Defendants - Appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Western District of Washington
Tiffany M. Cartwright, District Judge, Presiding
PERIDOT TREE, INC.; KENNETH No. 24-7196
GAY,
D.C. No.
2:22-cv-00289-
Plaintiffs - Appellants,
KJM-SCR
v.
CITY OF SACRAMENTO; DAVINA
SMITH,
Defendants - Appellees.
2 PERIDOT TREE WA, INC. V. WA STATE LCB
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of California
Kimberly J. Mueller, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted June 3, 2025
Seattle, Washington
Filed January 2, 2026
Before: Johnnie B. Rawlinson, Daniel A. Bress, and Patrick
J. Bumatay, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Bress
PERIDOT TREE WA, INC. V. WA STATE LCB 3
SUMMARY *
Dormant Commerce Clause
In these consolidated appeals, the panel affirmed the
judgments of two district courts dismissing actions
challenging, under the dormant Commerce Clause, cannabis
licensing dispensary schemes in the City of Sacramento and
the State of Washington, which require a person to have been
a resident of the area for a specified period of time to be
eligible for a cannabis dispensary license.
Both district courts held that the dormant Commerce
Clause does not apply to residency requirements for
cannabis dispensaries because marijuana is illegal under
federal law.
Affirming the judgments of the district courts, the panel
declined to extend the dormant Commerce Clause to
interstate commerce in a drug market that Congress has
declared illegal. Mindful of the Supreme Court’s directive
that extreme caution is warranted before a court deploys its
implied authority under the dormant Commerce Clause, the
panel saw insufficient license in Supreme Court precedent to
use the judge-made dormant Commerce Clause to promote
a constitutional right to interstate commerce that is unlawful
under federal law.
*
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
4 PERIDOT TREE WA, INC. V. WA STATE LCB
COUNSEL
Jeffrey M. Jensen (argued), Jeffrey M. Jensen PC, Beverley
Hills, California; Christian Kernkamp, Kernkamp Law APC,
Los Angeles, California; for Plaintiff-Appellant.
Tera M. Heintz (argued), Deputy Solicitor General; Penny
Allen, Senior Counsel; Samantha Hellwig and Jonathan
Pitel, Assistant Attorneys General; Robert W. Ferguson,
Washington Attorney General; Office of the Washington
Attorney General, Olympia, Washington; Lee H. Roistacher
(argued), Dean Gazzo Roistacher LLP, Solana Beach,
California; Andrea M. Velasquez, Supervising Deputy City
Attorney; Susan A. Wood, City Attorney; Sacramento
Office of the City Attorney, Sacramento, California; for
Defendants-Appellees.
Jason Horst, Horst Legal Counsel PC, Walnut Creek,
California, for Amicus Curiae Alliance for Sensible
Markets.
Taylor Kayatta and Arthur J. Wylene, Rural County
Representatives of California, Sacramento, California, for
Amici Curiae California State Association of Counties and
League of California Cities.
PERIDOT TREE WA, INC. V. WA STATE LCB 5
OPINION
BRESS, Circuit Judge:
Marijuana remains illegal under federal law, but many
states have legalized its sale and use for medicinal and
recreational purposes. To ensure proper oversight over
marijuana sales, these states and localities have adopted a
variety of rules governing cannabis dispensaries. As part of
these regimes, certain jurisdictions require a person to have
been a resident of that area for a specified period of time to
be eligible for a cannabis dispensary license, or else give
priority to these persons when issuing licenses. We are asked
to decide whether two of these cannabis dispensary licensing
regimes—those of the State of Washington and the City of
Sacramento—violate the dormant Commerce Clause.
We hold that the dormant Commerce Clause does not
apply here. Mindful of the Supreme Court’s directive that
“‘extreme caution’ is warranted before a court deploys” its
“implied authority” under the dormant Commerce Clause,
Nat’l Pork Producers Council v. Ross, 598 U.S. 356, 390
(2023) (quoting Gen. Motors Corp. v. Tracy, 519 U.S. 278,
310 (1997)), we decline to extend the dormant Commerce
Clause to interstate commerce in a drug market that
Congress has declared illegal. Although we appreciate that
judges on other courts are divided on this question, we see
insufficient license in Supreme Court precedent to use the
judge-made dormant Commerce Clause to promote a
constitutional right to interstate commerce that is unlawful
under federal law. The two district courts in these cases both
reached the same conclusion. In both cases, we therefore
affirm.
6 PERIDOT TREE WA, INC. V. WA STATE LCB
I
A
Under the federal Controlled Substances Act (CSA), it is
unlawful “to manufacture, distribute, or dispense, or possess
with intent to manufacture, distribute, or dispense, a
controlled substance,” including marijuana. 21 U.S.C.
§ 841(a)(1); see 21 U.S.C. § 812(c) (classifying marijuana as
a Schedule I substance); Patients Mut. Assistance Collective
Corp. v. Comm’r of Internal Revenue, 995 F.3d 671, 674 (9th
Cir. 2021). Marijuana’s classification under the CSA reflects
a congressional determination about marijuana’s “high
potential for abuse, lack of any accepted medical use, and
absence of any accepted safety for use in medically
supervised treatment.” Gonzales v. Raich, 545 U.S. 1, 14
(2005) (citing 21 U.S.C. § 812(b)(1)).
Despite this longstanding federal prohibition, many
states have legalized marijuana for adult medicinal and
recreational purposes. See, e.g., Raich, 545 U.S. at 5;
Standing Akimbo, LLC v. United States, 141 S. Ct. 2236,
2237 (2021) (statement of Thomas, J., respecting the denial
of certiorari); Peridot Tree, Inc. v. City of Sacramento, 94
F.4th 916, 921 (9th Cir. 2024). In response, Congress has
sent “mixed signals.” Peridot Tree, 94 F.4th at 923. For the
last approximately ten years, Congress has included a
version of the Rohrabacher-Farr Amendment in its
appropriation to the U.S. Department of Justice. See, e.g.,
Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2024, Pub. L. No. 118-
42, § 531, 138 Stat. 25 (2024); Standing Akimbo, 141 S. Ct.
at 2237 (statement of Thomas, J.); Peridot Tree, 94 F.4th at
923–24; United States v. Kleinman, 880 F.3d 1020, 1027 (9th
Cir. 2017); Northeast Patients Grp. v. United Cannabis
Patients & Caregivers of Maine, 45 F.4th 542, 547–48 (1st
PERIDOT TREE WA, INC. V. WA STATE LCB 7
Cir. 2022). This appropriations rider provides that “[n]one
of the funds made available under this Act to the Department
of Justice may be used . . . to prevent [specified states] from
implementing their own laws that authorize the use,
distribution, possession, or cultivation of medical
marijuana.” Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2024, 138
Stat. at 174.
For its part, the DOJ in recent times has not made
marijuana an enforcement priority. See, e.g., Peridot Tree,
94 F.4th at 924. Recently, on December 18, 2025, the
President signed an Executive Order concerning the use of
marijuana for medical purposes. See Increasing Medical
Marijuana and Cannabidiol Research, Executive Order
(Dec. 18, 2025), https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-
actions/2025/12/increasing-medical-marijuana-and-
cannabidiol-research/. As part of this Executive Order, the
President directed the Attorney General to “take all
necessary steps to complete the rulemaking process related
to rescheduling marijuana to Schedule III of the CSA . . . in
accordance with Federal law.” Id. The Executive Order
further directs the Executive Branch to “work with the
Congress to update the statutory definition of final hemp-
derived cannabinoid products to allow Americans to benefit
from access to appropriate full-spectrum [cannabidiol]
products while preserving the Congress’s intent to restrict
the sale of products that pose serious health risks.” Id.
Nevertheless, at this time, marijuana remains illegal under
the CSA.
California legalized recreational cannabis in 2016, and
many counties and cities then passed ordinances to regulate
its sale, production, and purchase. Peridot Tree, 94 F.4th at
921. These measures were designed to “prevent state-level
legalization from harming local communities” while also
8 PERIDOT TREE WA, INC. V. WA STATE LCB
creating business opportunities for “those negatively
affected by marijuana’s past criminalization.” Id.
Sacramento’s Cannabis Opportunity Reinvestment and
Equity (CORE) Program is the city’s mechanism for
licensing marijuana dispensaries (medical and recreational).
Id. The CORE Program established five different
classifications for licensing purposes, two of which are
relevant here:
Classification 1. A current or former resident
of the City of Sacramento who previously
resided or currently resides in a low-income
household and was either: a) arrested or
convicted for a cannabis related crime in
Sacramento between the years 1980 and
2011; or is b) an immediate family member
of an individual described in subsection a of
Classification 1 or Classification 2.
Classification 2. A current or former resident
of the City of Sacramento who has lived in a
low-income household for at least five (5)
years, between the years of 1980 and 2011 in
the following zip codes: [¶] 95811, 95815,
95817, 95820, 95823, 95824, 95826, 95828,
and 95818.
Both of these Classifications require participants to be
current or former Sacramento residents. The other
Classifications pertaining to businesses are keyed to the
Classification 1 and 2 criteria.
After implementing the CORE Program, Sacramento set
aside ten storefront cannabis dispensary permits specifically
for Classification 1 and 2 participants only. See Peridot Tree,
PERIDOT TREE WA, INC. V. WA STATE LCB 9
94 F.4th at 922. A city ordinance limited the total number of
permits to 40, and the other 30 had already been granted, so
the only people eligible to apply for an available permit were
those who met the residency requirement. Id.
Like California, Washington has also legalized
marijuana, doing so in 2012 through a voter initiative known
as Initiative Measure 502. This Measure authorized the
Washington State Liquor & Cannabis Board (“LCB”) to
regulate the cannabis market. RCW §§ 69.50.331(4), .342,
.345 (2013). Since 2015, Washington has imposed a six-
month residency requirement for cannabis dispensary
licenses. Id. § 69.50.331(1)(b) (2015). In 2020, Washington
created the Social Equity Program in an effort “to reduce
barriers to entry to the cannabis industry for individuals and
communities most adversely impacted by the enforcement
of cannabis-related laws.” 2020 Wash. Sess. Laws Ch. 236
§ 1(1). Under this program, which bears similarities to the
Sacramento regime that we discussed above, the LCB now
reserves retail cannabis licenses exclusively for social equity
applicants. RCW § 69.50.335(1)(a), (2)(a).
In 2022, the LCB adopted the Social Equity Program
criteria. To be considered, applicants must meet the
following criteria:
(b) At least a 51 percent majority, or
controlling interest, in the applicant, must be
held by a person, or persons, who has or have
resided in Washington state for six months
prior to the application date, consistent with
RCW 69.50.331, and meets at least two of the
following qualifications:
10 PERIDOT TREE WA, INC. V. WA STATE LCB
(i) Qualification 1: The social equity
applicant or applicants have lived in a
disproportionately impacted area in
Washington state for a minimum of five
years between 1980 and 2010; or
(ii) Qualification 2: The social equity
applicant or a family member of the
applicant has been arrested or convicted
of a cannabis offense; or
(iii) Qualification 3: The social equity
applicant’s household income in the year
prior to submitting the application was
less than the median household income
within the state of Washington as
calculated by the United States Census
Bureau.
Wash. Admin. Code § 314-55-570(2) (2022).
“Disproportionately impacted area” means: “a census tract
within Washington state where community members were
more likely to be impacted by the war on drugs. The board
will provide maps to identify disproportionately impacted
areas.” Id. § 314-55-570(1)(a). The LCB posted maps
identifying disproportionately impacted areas in Washington
by decade, from 1980 to 2010. Applicants are awarded
points according to a scoring rubric—40 points for having
lived in a disproportionately impacted area, and 20 to 40
additional points if they have lived in the area for longer
periods of time. Washington amended its social equity
provision effective January 2025, but in ways that are
immaterial to this case. See id. § 314-55-570(4) (2025).
PERIDOT TREE WA, INC. V. WA STATE LCB 11
B
Kenneth Gay is a resident of Michigan and the majority
owner of Peridot Tree, Inc., a California corporation, and
Peridot Tree WA, a Washington corporation. The Peridot
Tree entities are the plaintiffs in these two cases. We will
refer to them in the singular, as Peridot.
Peridot applied for a license in King County, Washington
through the Social Equity Program. On September 17, 2023,
the LCB notified Peridot that its application would not be
considered because Peridot failed to meet the minimum
residency qualifications. Peridot asserts that it met all
application requirements except those favoring Washington
residents. A similar story played out in Sacramento. Peridot
claims it met Sacramento’s requirements for CORE
Classification 1 and 2, except for the residency requirement,
which was the reason its application to operate a Sacramento
cannabis dispensary was rejected.
Peridot filed substantially identical lawsuits under 42
U.S.C. § 1983 claiming that the Sacramento and Washington
cannabis dispensary licensing schemes violated the dormant
Commerce Clause by preferring in-state interests over out-
of-state competitors. The Sacramento case had a prior trip
to our court on a different issue involving abstention. See
Peridot Tree, 94 F.4th at 924. Ultimately, the district courts
in both cases dismissed Peridot’s suits under Rule 12(b)(6)
and denied Peridot’s requests for preliminary injunctions.
Both district courts held that the dormant Commerce
Clause does not apply to residency requirements for
cannabis dispensaries because marijuana is illegal under
federal law. The district court in the Western District of
Washington, for example, concluded that the dormant
Commerce Clause does not “protect an interstate market that
12 PERIDOT TREE WA, INC. V. WA STATE LCB
Congress affirmatively prohibited, given that protecting this
market would facilitate illegal interstate activity. Peridot
cannot use the dormant Commerce Clause to demand a
constitutional right to participate in an illegal interstate
market.” The district court in the Eastern District of
California reasoned similarly in an equally thoughtful
opinion on this question of first impression in the Ninth
Circuit.
We consolidated these cases for oral argument and now
issue this single opinion that resolves both appeals. We
review dismissals under Rule 12(b)(6) de novo. See, e.g.,
Pardini v. Unilever U.S., Inc., 65 F.4th 1081, 1084 (9th Cir.
2023).
II
A
The Constitution’s Commerce Clause gives Congress the
power to “regulate Commerce . . . among the several States.”
U.S. CONST. art. I, § 8, cl. 3. Although it is an affirmative
grant of power to Congress, the Supreme Court has
interpreted the Commerce Clause to impliedly preclude
certain state laws that restrain interstate commerce. See, e.g.,
Pork Producers, 598 U.S. at 368; Tenn. Wine & Spirits
Retailers Ass’n v. Thomas, 588 U.S. 504, 514 (2019). This
“‘negative’ aspect of the Commerce Clause prevents the
States from adopting protectionist measures and thus
preserves a national market for goods and services.” Tenn.
Wine & Spirits Retailers Ass’n, 588 U.S. at 514 (quoting New
Energy Co. of Ind. v. Limbach, 486 U.S. 269, 273 (1988)).
The “very core” of the dormant Commerce Clause is that
States may not discriminate against interstate commerce
through “regulatory measures designed to benefit in-state
PERIDOT TREE WA, INC. V. WA STATE LCB 13
economic interests by burdening out-of-state competitors.”
Pork Producers, 598 U.S. at 369 (first quoting Camps
Newfound/Owatonna, Inc. v. Town of Harrison, 520 U.S.
564, 581 (1997), and then quoting Dep’t of Revenue of Ky. v.
Davis, 553 U.S. 328, 337–38 (2008)). A law that
discriminates against interstate commerce is “‘virtually per
se invalid’ and will survive only if it ‘advances a legitimate
local purpose that cannot be adequately served by reasonable
nondiscriminatory alternatives.’” Dep’t of Revenue of Ky.,
553 U.S. at 338 (citation omitted) (quoting Oregon Waste
Sys., Inc. v. Dep’t of Env’tl Quality of Ore., 511 U.S. 93, 99,
101 (1994)); see also South Dakota v. Wayfair, Inc., 585 U.S.
162, 173 (2018); Flynt v. Bonta, 131 F.4th 918, 923 (9th Cir.
2025). By presumptively prohibiting discrimination against
interstate commerce, the dormant Commerce Clause inhibits
States from “restrain[ing] the free exchange of goods and
services in an interstate market.” Flynt, 131 F.4th at 923; see
also Pork Producers, 598 U.S. at 369; South Dakota, 585
U.S. at 173; Dep’t of Revenue of Ky., 553 U.S. at 337–38.
In analyzing the legal question in this case, we are guided
by two key aspects of the Supreme Court’s dormant
Commerce Clause jurisprudence. First, “the proposition that
the Commerce Clause by its own force restricts state
protectionism is deeply rooted in” the Supreme Court’s case
law. Tenn. Wine & Spirits Retailers Ass’n, 588 U.S. at 515.
It is our role as an inferior court to apply this case law,
faithful to its moorings and objectives.
Second, although the dormant Commerce Clause is
based on longstanding precedent, the Supreme Court has
also instructed that we must tread cautiously when
considering whether to invalidate state laws under the court-
inferred dormant Commerce Clause. As the Supreme Court
recently reiterated, “‘extreme caution’ is warranted before a
14 PERIDOT TREE WA, INC. V. WA STATE LCB
court deploys this implied authority.” Pork Producers, 598
U.S. at 390 (quoting Gen. Motors Corp., 519 U.S. at 310).
In Pork Producers, the Supreme Court’s latest word in this
area, the Court “decline[d] th[e] invitation” to fashion “new
and more aggressive constitutional restrictions on the ability
of States to regulate goods sold within their borders.” Id. at
364. As the Court made clear, “[p]reventing state officials
from enforcing a democratically adopted state law in the
name of the dormant Commerce Clause is a matter of
‘extreme delicacy.’” Id. at 390 (quoting Conway v. Taylor’s
Executor, 66 U.S. 603, 634, 1 Black 603 (1861)). This
caution about overriding democratically enacted laws
through the “implied judicial power” of the dormant
Commerce Clause, id., is itself deeply rooted in the Court’s
longstanding guidance in this area, which has historically
emphasized this same point. See, e.g., United Haulers Ass’n,
Inc. v. Oneida-Herkimer Solid Waste Mgmt. Auth., 550 U.S.
330, 343–45 (2007); Gen. Motors Corp., 519 U.S. at 309–
10; S.C. State Highway Dep’t v. Barnwell Bros., 303 U.S.
177, 190–91 (1938); Conway, 66 U.S. at 634, 1 Black 603.
B
This case raises the question of whether the dormant
Commerce Clause even applies to state restrictions on an
interstate market that Congress has deemed unlawful. Is
there, in effect, an implied constitutional right to engage in
illegal interstate commerce? The Supreme Court has never
answered this question. But two other circuits have, as have
a number of district courts. Although other circuits have
held that the dormant Commerce Clause applies to marijuana
even though it is illegal under federal law, judges on those
courts have disagreed and would have held otherwise.
Numerous district courts, meanwhile, have aligned
themselves with those dissenting views and have concluded
PERIDOT TREE WA, INC. V. WA STATE LCB 15
that the dormant Commerce Clause does not apply to
protectionist marijuana laws. Before turning to the question
ourselves, we review what others have said on the issue.
The first circuit to address this issue was the First Circuit
in Northeast Patients Group, 45 F.4th at 542. That case
concerned a dormant Commerce Clause challenge to a
Maine law requiring that officers and directors of medical
marijuana dispensaries operating in Maine be Maine
residents. Id. at 544. Over a dissent, the First Circuit held
that the Maine law violated the dormant Commerce Clause.
The First Circuit began by explaining that if Maine’s
residency requirement “were applied to a lawful market,” it
would not survive dormant Commerce Clause scrutiny
because it would not be “narrowly tailored to serve a
legitimate local purpose.” Id. at 546. The court then
concluded that it made no difference that “federal law makes
participation in the market to which the residency
requirement applies illegal.” Id. at 546–47.
The First Circuit recognized that notwithstanding the
CSA, there “is an established, albeit illegal, interstate
market” in marijuana. Id. at 547 (emphasis removed)
(quoting Raich, 545 U.S. at 18). It rejected the notion that
through the CSA, Congress had effectively displaced the
dormant Commerce Clause in this area or otherwise
consented to protectionist state measures, believing any such
congressional intent could not be sufficiently discerned. Id.
at 548–56. Nor did it matter to the dormant Commerce
Clause analysis that marijuana is illegal under federal law.
In the First Circuit’s view, “given the long-held
understanding that the dormant Commerce Clause has a
negative aspect, there would seem to be no basis for our
declining to enforce the dormant Commerce Clause unless
16 PERIDOT TREE WA, INC. V. WA STATE LCB
there were a reason for us to think that Congress” has
articulated a contrary intent, which Congress had not done.
Id. at 556–57.
Judge Gelpí issued a forceful dissent. Judge Gelpí
“disagree[d] that the test we have developed for the mine-
run of dormant Commerce Clause cases applies
automatically or with equal vigor when the market in
question is illegal as a matter of federal law.” Id. at 558
(Gelpí, J., dissenting). In his view, “the principles that
animate the dormant Commerce Clause” do not apply in this
context. Id. A central rationale of the dormant Commerce
Clause is maintaining “an unencumbered ‘national market.’”
Id. at 559 (quoting Gen. Motors Corp., 519 U.S. at 299).
That “‘fundamental objective’” is “inapplicable” when
“Congress has already outlawed the national market for
marijuana.” Id. (quoting Gen. Motors Corp., 519 U.S. at
299). Judge Gelpí would have held that “illegal markets are
constitutionally different in kind,” and that the dormant
Commerce Clause should thus not be understood to
“protect[] the free-flowing operation of national markets that
Congress has already made illegal.” Id. That was especially
true considering that by the logic of the majority opinion, the
dormant Commerce Clause would promote the free
exchange of heroin, fentanyl, or any other illicit good that a
state might try to legalize. Id.
The Second Circuit in Variscite NY Four, LLC v. New
York State Cannabis Control Bd., 152 F.4th 47 (2d Cir.
2025), was the second federal court of appeals to address this
issue. It considered a dormant Commerce Clause challenge
to a New York law that prioritized New York residents for
marijuana dispensary licenses. Id. at 52, 54–55. Like the
First Circuit, the Second Circuit held that this regime
violated the dormant Commerce Clause, although once
PERIDOT TREE WA, INC. V. WA STATE LCB 17
again, the panel was not unanimous in its decision. Id. at
65–66.
The Variscite NY Four majority began by explaining that
the dormant Commerce Clause is “expressed through a
bright-line rule: ‘the Commerce Clause prohibits the
enforcement of state laws driven by economic
protectionism—that is, regulatory measures designed to
benefit in-state economic interests by burdening out-of-state
competitors.’” Id. at 60 (quoting Pork Producers, 598 U.S.
at 369). The court acknowledged that the “fundamental
objective” of maintaining a national market free of state
interference “applies with some irony in the context of illicit
markets.” Id. (quoting Gen. Motors Corp., 519 U.S. at 299).
But in the court’s view, “that objective should not be
conflated with the rule itself.” Id. It was thus of “no
constitutional import” that marijuana is illegal at the federal
level. Id. (quoting Raich, 545 U.S. at 19 n.29). And
exempting illegal markets from the dormant Commerce
Clause would produce market distortion if Congress later
legalized marijuana, for at that point States would have
“bake[d] in advantages for their residents.” Id. at 61. Nor,
the Second Circuit concluded, had Congress sufficiently
expressed its intent to bless protectionist state regimes in this
area. Id. at 61–63.
Chief Judge Livingston dissented, describing the
majority’s conclusion as “obviously wrong.” Id. at 66
(Livingston, C.J., dissenting). In Chief Judge Livingston’s
view, “[w]hen Congress criminalizes a market,” we should
“presume that it authorizes states to enact their own laws that
aid that objective, whether by banning, restricting, or
burdening those transactions.” Id. at 67. And we should “not
interpret a doctrine implied from the Commerce Clause—an
affirmative grant of power to Congress—to require states to
18 PERIDOT TREE WA, INC. V. WA STATE LCB
enact laws that promote the very interstate commerce
Congress wants to eradicate.” Id. 1
The First and Second Circuits are presently the only
federal courts of appeals to evaluate whether the dormant
Commerce Clause applies to protectionist marijuana laws.
At the district court level, the views of the dissents in these
cases have found greater purchase. A few district courts, like
the First and Second Circuits, have held that the dormant
Commerce Clause invalidates discriminatory cannabis laws.
See NPG, LLC v. City of Portland, Maine, 2020 WL
4741913, at *9–10 (D. Me. Aug. 14, 2020); Finch v. Treto,
606 F. Supp. 3d 811, 831–33 (N.D. Ill. 2022). But many
other district courts—including the two decisions on review
here—have held that the dormant Commerce Clause does
not apply to marijuana given its status as an illegal drug
under federal law. See Charm City Hemp, LLC v. Moore,
2025 WL 2165173, at *22–23 (D. Md. July 30, 2025);
Fluresh, LLC v. City of Grand Rapids, 2025 WL 1122034, at
*8 (W.D. Mich. Apr. 16, 2025); Variscite, Inc. v. City of L.A.,
2025 WL 433448, at *3 (C.D. Cal. Feb. 4, 2025); Jensen v.
Maryland Cannabis Admin., 719 F. Supp. 3d 466, 483 (D.
Md. 2024), aff’d by 151 F.4th 169 (4th Cir. 2025); Variscite
NY Four, LLC v. New York State Cannabis Control Bd., 2024
WL 406490, at *12 (N.D.N.Y. Feb. 2, 2024), overruled by
152 F.4th 47; Brinkmeyer v. Washington State Liquor &
Cannabis Board, 2023 WL 1798173, at *9–13 (W.D. Wash.
Feb. 7, 2023); Original Invs., LLC v. State of Oklahoma, 542
1
The Fourth Circuit recently resolved a dormant Commerce Clause
challenge to a Maryland cannabis licensing law. See Jensen v. Maryland
Cannabis Admin., 151 F.4th 169 (4th Cir. 2025). But the court held that
the law did not discriminate against out-of-state interests. Id. at 176–77.
The court did not reach “the question of whether the Dormant Commerce
Clause applies to the marijuana market.” Id. at 177 n.3.
PERIDOT TREE WA, INC. V. WA STATE LCB 19
F. Supp. 3d 1230, 1231 (W.D. Okla. 2021); see also Ctrl Alt
Destroy v. Elliott, 2025 WL 790963, at *8 (S.D. Cal. Mar.
12, 2025) (bolstering holding under unclean hands doctrine
by relying on the “numerous district courts” that “have held
that the protections afforded by the dormant Commerce
Clause do not apply to the commercial cannabis industry, a
federally illegal market”).
Just as both district courts below did, many of these
district courts have relied on Judge Gelpí’s dissent in the
First Circuit case. See, e.g., Fluresh, 2025 WL 1122034, at
*8; Jensen, 719 F. Supp. 3d at 483. As one district court
wrote, the goal of the dormant Commerce Clause—
“‘preserv[ing] a national market for competition undisturbed
by preferential advantages conferred by a State upon its
residents’”—is “not served by encouraging such a market for
a good that Congress has already expressly declared to be
illegal and against the public interest.” Jensen, 719 F. Supp.
3d at 483 (quoting Northeast Patients Grp., 45 F.4th at 558–
59 (Gelpí, J., dissenting)).
C
There is force to the argument that through the CSA,
Congress expressed an intent to permit protectionist state
regimes that restrict interstate commerce in marijuana, and
that the usual test for assessing this congressional intent
should be relaxed when Congress has made the good in
question illegal. See Variscite NY Four, 152 F.4th at 67–70
(Livingston, C.J., dissenting); Northeast Patients Grp., 45
F.4th at 559 (Gelpí, J., dissenting)). But we conclude as an
antecedent matter that the dormant Commerce Clause need
not be extended to facilitate interstate commerce that is
illegal under federal law.
20 PERIDOT TREE WA, INC. V. WA STATE LCB
The Supreme Court has never extended the dormant
Commerce Clause in this manner or suggested that it should
be so extended. Instead, the Court has explained that the
“fundamental objective” of the dormant Commerce Clause
is to “preserv[e] a national market for competition
undisturbed by preferential advantages conferred by a State
upon its residents or resident competitors.” Gen. Motors
Corp., 519 U.S. at 299. That “fundamental objective” of
preserving “‘free private trade in the national marketplace,’”
id. at 287, 299 (quoting Reeves, Inc. v. Stake, 447 U.S. 429,
437 (1980)), surely wanes when the national marketplace is
prohibited under federal law.
When considering the dormant Commerce Clause, “it is
the responsibility of the judiciary to determine whether
action taken by state or local authorities unduly threatens the
values the Commerce Clause was intended to serve.”
Wardair Canada, Inc. v. Florida Dep’t of Revenue, 477 U.S.
1, 7 (1986). And when “Congress has already outlawed the
national market for marijuana,” we do not see why the
Constitution would insist that we “protect[] the free-flowing
operation” of illegal interstate commerce. Northeast
Patients Grp., 45 F.4th at 559 (Gelpí, J., dissenting). The
dormant Commerce Clause reflects an anti-discrimination
rule, to be sure, but the Supreme Court has not said that the
rule must blindly apply in all contexts. And it is not too
much to think that the “premise” of the Clause’s negative
component is the existence of a legally valid market that
federal law does not proscribe. Id. Nothing in dormant
Commerce Clause precedent requires us to indulge the
“obvious ‘irony’ of applying a doctrine implied from an
affirmative grant of power to Congress to preserve a national
market that Congress does not want to exist.” Variscite NY
PERIDOT TREE WA, INC. V. WA STATE LCB 21
Four, 152 F.4th at 70 (Livingston, C.J., dissenting)
(quotations omitted).
The contours of the dormant Commerce Clause are not
so rigid as to be unable to account for the fact that marijuana
is illegal under federal law. See Flynt, 131 F.4th at 923 (“As
a judge-made and enforced doctrine, the strictures of the
dormant Commerce Clause have ebbed and flowed over time
through case law, with the Supreme Court refining the
doctrine’s proper scope.”). “[E]xtreme caution” and
“extreme delicacy” are the orders of the day when
considering whether to extend the protections of the dormant
Commerce Clause. Pork Producers, 598 U.S. at 390
(quotations omitted). The caution that the Supreme Court
has counseled reflects not only hesitancy about the ability of
courts to fashion principled rules to govern interstate
commerce, but the fact that any invocation of the dormant
Commerce Clause amounts to a judicial intrusion on a
democratically enacted law. See id. Here, extending the
dormant Commerce Clause to cannabis dispensary licensing
regimes would override the democratic process twice over,
first by potentially invalidating state and local laws
governing marijuana dispensaries, and then by
countermanding Congress’s own judgment about the
harmfulness of the controlled substance in question. The
extreme caution we must exercise when working with this
implied doctrine would seem at its apex when confronted
with the prospect of hammering in a regulatory regime
through the blunt force object of a per se rule of invalidity,
which would force states to open up their marijuana markets
even further once they have opened them partway.
The mixed signals that the federal government has sent
about marijuana legalization at the state level do not change
our calculus. It is true that Congress has used its power of
22 PERIDOT TREE WA, INC. V. WA STATE LCB
the purse to limit DOJ interference with state medical
marijuana regimes, see, e.g., Consolidated Appropriations
Act of 2024, 138 Stat. at 174, and that federal enforcement,
if it can be called that, reflects a non-enforcement approach.
But our assessment of the dormant Commerce Clause’s
reach cannot turn on how much the political branches still
believe in the laws that are on the books. “[I]n our
constitutional order, it’s Congress that passes laws, Congress
that saw fit to enact 21 U.S.C. § 841, and Congress that in
§ 841 made the distribution of marijuana a federal crime.”
Feinberg v. C.I.R., 808 F.3d 813, 816 (10th Cir. 2015)
(Gorsuch, J.). That is enough to tell us that the national
marketplace Peridot seeks to further open is one that federal
law disallows.
There is an ongoing debate in our country, at both the
national and local levels, about whether marijuana should be
legalized and, if so, what kinds of regulatory schemes should
govern. But when Congress has made the national
marketplace illegal, the premises of the dormant Commerce
Clause do not require the courts to leapfrog the political
process and inaugurate free trade in the market for marijuana
dispensary licenses. And we are uncertain where the
contrary logic would take us, if for example, a state were to
legalize even more harmful drugs, such as heroin. See
Northeast Patients Grp., 45 F.4th at 559 (Gelpí, J.,
dissenting) (“My reluctance to join my colleagues in
extending constitutional solicitude to protecting an illegal
market is heightened if one were to imagine extending the
same logic to relieve burdens on the illicit trade in other
Schedule I controlled substances, such as heroin, fentanyl,
or cocaine, or indeed most any other black market in goods
or services which Congress has determined is harmful to the
public interest.”). A doctrine of constitutional law that
PERIDOT TREE WA, INC. V. WA STATE LCB 23
catapults a state’s legalization of an illicit drug into dormant
Commerce Clause protection would have courts facilitating,
if not creating, the very national marketplaces that Congress
has disallowed. This is a far cry from what the dormant
Commerce Clause set out to do.
In reaching a different conclusion, the Second Circuit
expressed concern that without the protections of the
dormant Commerce Clause, “States would then be free today
to bake in advantages for their residents should Congress
later legalize the market.” Variscite NY Four, 152 F.4th at
61. But the possibility that Congress might one day legalize
marijuana or that marijuana may at some point become
reclassified under the CSA provides no basis for the judicial
enabling of a marketplace that is presently not supposed to
exist as a matter of federal law. See Raich, 545 U.S. at 19
(discussing “the federal interest in eliminating commercial
transactions in the interstate market in their entirety”). We
are not persuaded that the dormant Commerce Clause
requires us to contradict Congress’s judgment and protect an
illegal national marketplace from state restrictions.
The judgments of the district courts are
AFFIRMED.
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT PERIDOT TREE WA, INC., No.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT PERIDOT TREE WA, INC., No.
02WASHINGTON STATE LIQUOR AND CANNABIS CONTROL OPINION BOARD; WILLIAM LUKELA, Defendants - Appellees.
03Cartwright, District Judge, Presiding PERIDOT TREE, INC.; KENNETH No.
04WA STATE LCB Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of California Kimberly J.
Frequently Asked Questions
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT PERIDOT TREE WA, INC., No.
FlawCheck shows no negative treatment for Peridot Tree, Inc. v. City of Sacramento in the current circuit citation data.
This case was decided on January 2, 2026.
Use the citation No. 10768267 and verify it against the official reporter before filing.