Colorado Motor Vehicle Dealer Licensing Board v. Northglenn Dodge, Inc.

972 P.2d 707, 1998 WL 722602
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 14, 1999
Docket97CA0425
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 972 P.2d 707 (Colorado Motor Vehicle Dealer Licensing Board v. Northglenn Dodge, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colorado Motor Vehicle Dealer Licensing Board v. Northglenn Dodge, Inc., 972 P.2d 707, 1998 WL 722602 (Colo. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge JONES.

In this administrative appeal, respondent, Northglenn Dodge, Inc. (Northglenn), seeks review of a final order of the Colorado Motor Vehicle Dealer Licensing Board (Board) which determined that Northglenn had violated §12-6-118, C.R.S.1998, and imposed a penalty. Additionally, counsel for North-glenn appeals the award of attorney fees assessed against her personally. We affirm the order in part, vacate the penalty, dismiss counsel’s appeal, and remand the cause with directions.

Northglenn is a new car dealership licensed to do business by the Board.

In December 1995, the Board served Northglenn with a notice of charges. These charges were subsequently dismissed, and new charges were reissued in May 1996 and amended in August 1996. In May 1996, finding certain motions filed by Northglenn’s attorney to be groundless and frivolous, the Board granted the Attorney General’s motion for attorney fees and, after a hearing, assessed fees in the amount of $368 against counsel personally.

Northglenn was charged with violating six provisions under §12-6-118, C.R.S.1998. The six charges were comprised of several individual counts, including two counts of making a fraudulent or illegal sale, five counts of willfully misrepresenting or failing to disclose material facts to customers, two counts of failing to comply with notice requirements, two counts of failing to disclose the capital cost reduction in lease agreements or disclosures, two counts of tax evasion, and one count of selling a vehicle which it had accepted for trade-in before the former owner of the vehicle had been approved for financing on his new vehicle.

After a six-day hearing, the Board found that sufficient evidence had been presented to sustain four of the charges, and dismissed the two remaining charges concerning notice and tax evasion. As a penalty, the Board ordered that Northglenn’s motor vehicle dealer license be suspended for two days, with one day of the suspension to be held in abeyance, upon the condition that North-glenn pay a fine of $35,000 and successfully complete the terms and conditions of a two-year probation.

This appeal followed.

I. Recusal

Northglenn first contends that it was error for the Board to decline to recuse itself. We disagree.

There is a presumption of integrity, honesty, and impartiality in favor of those serving in quasi-judicial capacities. Thus, it is presumed that administrative agency deci- *711 sionmakers will conduct the affairs of their agencies impartially, in the absence of a personal, financial, or other official stake in the decision. Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph, Co. v. Public Utilities Commission, 763 P.2d 1020 (Colo.1988); First Bank v. State, 852 P.2d 1345 (Colo.App.1993).

Here, no claim has been made as to any conflict of interest on the part of a decision-maker. Rather, Northglenn contends that improper conduct by the Board’s staff, specifically an investigator and an unknown agent, created the appearance of impropriety, thereby requiring recusal.

Contrary to Northglenn’s argument, we do not agree that evidence of a potential bias on behalf of an agency’s staff member alone is sufficient to rebut the presumption of a board’s impartiality. Rather, because it is those serving in a quasi-judicial capacity whose impartiality is at issue, one challenging a board’s decision must establish that'the staff member’s bias had an actual impact on the board’s decision. See Do-Right Auto Sales v. Howlett, 401 F.Supp. 1035 (D.C.Ill.1975).

Thus, in the absence of any evidence indicating that a Board member acting in a quasi-judicial capacity directed, condoned, or had knowledge of, improper conduct by staff members, the hearing must be held to have been conducted impartially.

Here, the record indicates that Northglenn failed to present any evidence indicating that the Board’s decision was affected by the alleged improper conduct of its staff members. Furthermore, at a hearing on the matter, each board member testified as to his or her impartiality. Accordingly, we find no error in the Board’s denial of Northglenn’s request for recusal.

II. Expert Witness Contact

Northglenn further contends that the Board erred in subjecting the dealership to one of the forgery charges because the Board’s expert witness, without authorization from the Board or from Northglenn’s counsel, contacted Northglenn’s expert witness. We perceive no error.

While we agree that the contact by the Board’s expert witness was improper, we conclude, based on the record, that no bias or prejudice resulted from the contact. Accordingly, dismissal of the charge was not warranted.

III. Interpretive Rule B

Northglenn next contends that it was denied due process by the Board’s order denying its discovery requests because the Board’s interpretive rule relied on is ultra vires or, alternatively, because the denial was fundamentally unfair. We disagree.

A.

First, Northglenn asserts that Colorado Motor Vehicle Dealer Licensing Board Interpretive Rule B is void ab initio because it was not adopted in compliance with the procedural requirements of the Administrative Procedure Act, §24-4-101, et seq., C.R.S. 1998 (APA).

The APA establishes the procedures that must be followed by a state agency when adopting rules. It generally requires notice and hearing procedures to be followed when the agency promulgates new rules. Section 24-4-103, C.R.S.1998. Specifically exempted from this requirement, however, are “interpretive rules or general statements of policy, which are not meant to be binding as rules, or rules of agency organization.” Section 24-4-103(1), C.R.S.1998. Furthermore, the APA provides that no rule “shall be relied upon or cited against any person” unless it was available to the public in accordance with the required procedures under the Act. Section 24^-103(10), C.R.S.1998.

Northglenn bases its argument of ultra vires on its characterization of Interpretive Rule B as a “legislative” rather than an “interpretive”' rule. If it is a legislative rule, Interpretive Rule B would have to have been promulgated in accordance with.the notice and hearing requirements under the Act. The agency is exempted from those requirements if the rule is deemed to be “interpretive.”

Northglenn argues that the rule is legislative and that, therefore, because the agency did not comply with the notice and hearing *712 requirements in promulgating Interpretive Rule B, the rule, and any decisions rendered pursuant to it, are void. We disagree with Northglenn’s characterization of Interpretative Rule B as other than an interpretive rule.

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972 P.2d 707, 1998 WL 722602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colorado-motor-vehicle-dealer-licensing-board-v-northglenn-dodge-inc-coloctapp-1999.