401 Auto Sales v. Ri Motor. Veh. Dealers'

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 4, 2011
DocketC.A. No. PC 07-1120
StatusPublished

This text of 401 Auto Sales v. Ri Motor. Veh. Dealers' (401 Auto Sales v. Ri Motor. Veh. Dealers') is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
401 Auto Sales v. Ri Motor. Veh. Dealers', (R.I. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

DECISION
Before the Court is an appeal by 401 Auto Sales, LLC ("Appellant" or "LLC") from a final order of the Director of the Department of Administration, Office of the Administrator of Adjudication ("Director"), upholding an adverse decision of the Motor Vehicle Dealers' License and Hearing Board ("Board"). Appellant seeks reversal of the decision of the Board denying its application for a dealer's license to operate as a used motor vehicle dealer. The Court has jurisdiction over Appellant's timely appeal pursuant to G.L. 1956 §§ 31-5-2.1(d)1 and 42-35-15. *Page 2

I
FACTS AND TRAVEL
Appellant is a limited liability company organized under the laws of the State of Rhode Island. On May 23, 2006, the manager and sole member of the LLC, Manasse Payen, filed an application — on behalf of Appellant — with the Dealers' License and Regulations Office for a motor vehicle dealer's license in order to operate a used motor vehicle dealership at 616 Douglas Avenue in Providence, Rhode Island ("Douglas Avenue Property").2 (Application for Motor Vehicle Dealer's License, 401 Auto Sales, LLC, May 22, 2006 (filed May 23, 2006).) Following a hearing on June 22, 2006, the Board conditionally granted Appellant's license application, subject to a satisfactory site inspection of the Douglas Avenue Property.3 (Motor Vehicle Dealers' Hearing Board Results, June 22, 2006.)

In accordance with the Board's directives, a site inspection of the Douglas Avenue Property was performed on June 28, 2006 by Investigator Kevin Rabbitt. During the inspection, however, Investigator Rabbitt determined that the building and display area did not conform to the minimum size requirements set forth in Section VI (B) of the Rules and Regulations Regarding Dealers, Manufacturers Rental Licenses ("Rules and Regulations"), mandating that a dealer's place of business include "at least 2,400 square feet of enclosed and heated floor space." See Rules and Regulations § VI (B). Indeed, Investigator Rabbitt ascertained that the Douglas Avenue Property only afforded 762 square feet of enclosed building space. (Investigator K. Rabbitt, Site Inspection Report, *Page 3 616 Douglas Avenue, Providence, June 28, 2006.) Accordingly, Joseph Monteiro, Chief Enforcement Officer for the Division of Motor Vehicles, sent a correspondence to Appellant, dated June 30, 2006, stating that the pending license application was denied because the "building and display area do not meet the minimum requirements." (Letter from Joseph I. Monteiro, Chief of Division of Enforcement, to Manasse Payen, June 30, 2006.) Appellant did not appeal that decision.

On September 11, 2006, Appellant, through counsel, resubmitted the application for a motor vehicle dealer's license and attached thereto a memorandum in support of the application. (Memorandum in Support of Application of 401 Auto Sales, LCC, Sept. 11, 2006.) Therein, Appellant conceded that the Douglas Avenue Property did not conform to the building size requirements set forth in Rules and Regulations. Id. Nonetheless, Appellant maintained that the proposed location "has obtained a Zoning Certification as a used car lot, has received a License Approval from the Department of Inspections and Standards for a Dealer in Second-Hand Automobiles, and has met all other requirements set forth in the [Rules and Regulations]." Id. Moreover, Appellant noted that two used car dealerships had operated at the Douglas Avenue Property between 1976 and 1990. Id. In light of these facts, Appellant requested "that the Department of Administration exercise its discretion granted under Title VI, Subsection B, to allow an exception to the building size requirement." Id.

On September 15, 2006, Chief Enforcement Officer Monteiro responded to the Appellant's request on behalf of the Board. Therein, Mr. Monteiro stated that:

"[T]here is no allowance in [the] Rules and Regulations for an exception [to the building size requirement], and so we have no choice but to deny your request. Section VI (B) of the Rules and Regulations requires that `all dealers must *Page 4 establish a suitable place of business . . . which contains at least 2,400 square feet of enclosed and heated floor space.' The only exception provided for with regard to this requirement was for dealers whose licenses expired on December 31, 1983, who `may [have been] granted an exception to this requirement at the discretion of the department.' [. . .] There [sic] mere fact that your client meets all of the other requirements for licensure under the Rules and Regulations does not except it from meeting the building size requirement. There is no discretion allowed under Section VI (B) with regard to your client's application." (Letter from Joseph I. Monteiro, Chief of Division of Enforcement, to Heather M. Bonnet, Counsel for 401 Auto Sales, LLC, Sept. 15, 2006.)

Furthermore, Mr. Monteiro opined that:

"The fact that the location may have been used as a dealership in the past is immaterial to your client's licensing application. It is possible that the dealer who was licensed at the 616 Douglas Avenue location in the past was granted an exception in 1983 under the one exception allowed in Section VI (B) of the Rules and Regulations; whether that was the case or not, your client is not now eligible for that exception, and therefore must qualify with each and every requirement of the Rules and Regulations, as must every other application for a dealer['s] license in the state." Id.

Accordingly, Mr. Monteiro concluded that "based on the outcome of the site inspection which revealed that the present location does not comply with the building size requirements of Section VI (B) of the Rules and Regulations, the application for a dealer['s] license is denied." Id.

Appellant timely appealed the September 15, 2006 decision4 to the Director, and Administrator of Adjudication Catherine R. Warren ("Hearing Officer") rendered her appellate decision on February 2, 2007. In the decision, the Hearing Officer made the *Page 5 requisite findings of facts and, thereupon, concluded that although the appeal was not barred by the doctrine of administrative finality, Appellant failed to demonstrate any substantive, procedural, statutory, or constitutional infirmity with the Board's decision. (Department of Administration Decision, Feb 2, 2007, ("Decision") at 4, 11-12.) Notably, the Hearing Officer found that the Board had the requisite authority to promulgate regulations establishing a minimum building size requirement for motor vehicle dealers' place of business and, pursuant to the established Rules and Regulations, the Board was not vested with discretion to waive or deviate from this licensing requirement with respect to Appellant's application.Id. at 5-9. Moreover, the Hearing Officer concluded that the fact that the Board previously licensed a dealer at the Douglas Avenue Property was immaterial to Appellant's application, and the Board's prior issuance of any such dealer's license did not constitute an affirmative representation to Appellant which would give rise to a claim for equitable estoppel. Id. at 8-11.

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401 Auto Sales v. Ri Motor. Veh. Dealers', Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/401-auto-sales-v-ri-motor-veh-dealers-risuperct-2011.