City of Detroit v. Mashlakjian

166 N.W.2d 493, 15 Mich. App. 236, 1968 Mich. App. LEXIS 813
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 24, 1968
DocketDocket 1,715
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 166 N.W.2d 493 (City of Detroit v. Mashlakjian) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Detroit v. Mashlakjian, 166 N.W.2d 493, 15 Mich. App. 236, 1968 Mich. App. LEXIS 813 (Mich. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

Levin, J.

The defendant George Mashlakjian appeals his conviction of operating a public lodging-house without a license. (Detroit Ord 860-E, as amended by Ord 654-F [Municipal Code § 29-2-1, et seq.].) The defendant’s hotel is located in downtown Detroit. It is an inexpensive hotel catering- to working men. Its owner Harry Kemsuzian testified he operated it from 1939 to 1961 and annually obtained a license authorizing him to do so from the city of Detroit. In 1961 Kemsuzian leased the hotel to the defendant George Mashlakjian.

Mashlakjian testified that he obtained a license for the years 1961-1962 and 1962-1963 without difficulty. The license obtained for the year 1962-1963 expired June 30, 1963. A Detroit police officer testified that he took an application for a renewal of that license from Mashlakjian on May 15,1963,1-1/2 months before, by its terms, it was due to expire.

Two years later, on May 20,1965, Mashlakjian was ticketed for operating without a license. At the time the ticket was issued, no action had been taken by the city on his renewal application for 1963-1964. Mashlakjian did not apply for a renewal for the license year in which the ticket was issued (1964- *238 1965) until the day after the ticket was issued, i.e., May 21, 1965. The police officer testified that Mashlakjian’s May 21, 1965, application for a 1964-1965 license and the $55 filing fee paid therewith were “accepted.” When asked whether that application was pending, the police officer responded that as far as his office was concerned it had not been “refused.”

At the time of trial, July 23, 1965, no action had been taken by the city on either the application for the year 1963-1964 or the late filed application for the year 1964-1965, nor had any portion of the annual $55 fees been returned. At the time of trial still another application was pending (for the year 1965-1966) on which a $55 fee had also been paid but, likewise, no action had been taken by the city on that application.

Mashlakjian’s application for 1963-1964 could well be viewed as a continuing application for a one year license, so that when the city failed to act thereon before the expiration of the period for which it was applied, it became an application for a license for the next annual license period, i.e., for the year 1964-1965, the license year in which the ticket was issued and specific renewal application made the following day. It is, however, unnecessary for us to decide whether the application can properly be so characterized. As previously mentioned, the Detroit police officer testified that the city accepted the application made on May 21,1965, for the year 1964-1965 and the fee therefor, no part of which had been returned by the time of trial. On this appeal the city does not contend that Mashlakjian’s application for renewal was not pending throughout the period from May 15, 1963 (the date the 1963-1964 application was filed) until the time the ticket was issued for the offense of which he was later convicted and *239 from which conviction he now appeals. Accordingly, we proceed on the assumption that Mashlakjian’s application for renewal was pending throughout.

It is now well established that a licensing authority issuing occupational licenses may not refuse, revoke or suspend a license without informing the applicant or licensee of the reasons for the proposed negative action and giving him an opportunity to be heard thereon. Thus, whether called a renewal or a new application, Mashlakjian was entitled to notice and to an opportunity to be heard before denial of his application. This was his right both as a matter of constitutional principle 1 and under provisions of city of Detroit ordinances. 2

*240 In Gilchrist v. Bierring (1944), 234 Iowa 899, (14 NW2d 724) the licensing authority asserted that there was no need to grant a hearing to one seeking renewal of a license issued to a school of cosmetology because, the license having expired, the licensee’s rights thereupon were extinguished. In rejecting that contention the Iowa Supreme Court made the following observations which we now adopt (pp 914-916) :

“The right to earn a living is among the greatest of human rights and when lawfully pursued, cannot be denied. It is the common right of every citizen to engage in any honest employment he may choose, subject only to such reasonable regulations as are necessary for the public good. Due process of law is satisfied only by such safeguards as will adequately protect these fundamental, constitutional rights of the citizen. Where the state confers a license to engage in a profession, trade or occupation, not inherently inimical to the public welfare, such license becomes a valuable personal right which cannot be denied or abridged in any manner except after due notice and a fair and impartial hearing before an unbiased tribunal. * * *
“The state cannot, by issuing only annual licenses, ingeniously thwart these precious rights. As stated in Craven v. Bierring, supra, 222 Iowa 613, 619 (269 NW 801, 805), once an annual license is issued to a *241 dentist, ‘unless lie has violated some of the provisions of the statute applicable to his profession, he is entitled to renewal of his license as a matter of right.’ # # *
“The plaintiff heretofore has been determined to be qualified to operate a school of cosmetology. He has made a substantial investment in reliance thereon. He possesses a valuable personal right, which the courts are bound to protect and to secure to him. It is our duty to see that this personal right is not taken from him without due process of law. If his conduct has demonstrated that he is no longer worthy to operate his business, a determination of that fact constitutes the exercise of a judicial function. That function can be exercised only after notice and an opportunity to be heard. Defendants undertook to destroy plaintiff’s business without according to him that fundamental right. This they cannot do.”

See, also Bankers Life & Casualty Co. v. Cravey (1952), 208 Ga 682 (69 SE2d 87), where the Georgia Supreme Court refused to draw a distinction in regard to notice and hearing requirements between revocation of and refusal to renew a license.

Mashlakjian’s filing of the application for renewal had the effect of preserving the status quo until the city acted thereon in the manner required by law. In Parker v. Board of Barber Examiners (La App, 1955), 84 So 2d 80, Louisiana’s Court of Appeals speaking through Judge Albert Tate, Jr. ruled that, with the possible exception of a public emergency requiring immediate action, the procedural due process to which an occupational licensee is entitled requires not only notice and an opportunity to be heard but preservation of the status quo until completion of the review process.

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Bluebook (online)
166 N.W.2d 493, 15 Mich. App. 236, 1968 Mich. App. LEXIS 813, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-detroit-v-mashlakjian-michctapp-1968.