Dipaolo v. Marques

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 9, 2010
DocketC.A. No. PC-08-0352
StatusPublished

This text of Dipaolo v. Marques (Dipaolo v. Marques) 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
Dipaolo v. Marques, (R.I. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

DECISION
This case is before the Court on Vincent DiPaolo's ("DiPaolo") appeal from a decision of the Rhode Island Department of Business Regulation ("the DBR"). After an administrative hearing, the DBR revoked DiPaolo's insurance claims adjuster and motor vehicle damage appraiser licenses pursuant to G.L. 1956 §§ 27-10-7 and 27-10.1-1(e). For the reasons set forth below, this Court affirms the DBR's decision. Jurisdiction is pursuant to G.L. 1956 § 42-35-15.

I
FACTS AND TRAVEL
This case arises out of a business arrangement between DiPaolo — then a licensed insurance claims adjuster and motor vehicle damage appraiser — and Ms. Mariah Nelson ("Nelson") in April 2005.1 (DBR Dec. at 3.) After a serious auto accident, Nelson *Page 2 brought her vehicle to DiPaolo on the advice of a mutual friend.Id. at 3. Although Nelson was under the impression that she was hiring DiPaolo to repair her vehicle, she instead executed a document that authorized DiPaolo to negotiate a settlement of her claim on her behalf. (DBR Ex. 3; 09/18/2006 Tr. at 10:7-18, 34:5-24.) The authorization form made specific note of the fact that DiPaolo would not be "acting in the capacity of a repair facility." (DBR Ex. 3.) Nelson also signed a form directing her insurer to disburse her settlement funds to United Auto Sales, Inc. ("United Auto"). See DBR Dec. at n. 3 (explaining that United Auto is a corporation owned by Carol DiPaolo); DBR Ex. 4. The record makes no mention of DiPaolo's relationship or connection with either Carol DiPaolo or United Auto. Id. Despite the fact that Nelson believed that DiPaolo would repair her car and that neither document executed by Nelson referenced the hiring of other auto repair shops, DiPaolo apparently labored under the belief that Nelson had hired him to negotiate a settlement with her insurance company and to "negotiate with a certified auto repair facility to repair her vehicle." Id. at 5; DBR Ex. 1.2 A witness for DiPaolo testified that Nelson asked DiPaolo to use the insurance settlement proceeds to *Page 3 make repairs and improvements unrelated to the April 2005 accident to her car; Nelson denied having made these requests. (12/12/2006 Tr. at 16:7-20, 26:18-20; 09/18/2006 Tr. at 38:21-39:1-24.)

Nelson's insurer hired a company to appraise the damage to the car. (DBR Dec. at 5.) This company estimated a cost of $9348.20 to repair the vehicle and notified DiPaolo that the car was a "borderline" total loss. Id. at 5; DBR Ex. 1. Based on this appraisal, DiPaolo negotiated a settlement of $8848.20, an amount equal to the appraised cost minus Nelson's $500 deductible. (DBR Dec. at 5-6.) DiPaolo hired two auto repair shops to make a combined $4750 in repairs to Nelson's car. Id. at 6. He did not turn over the difference between the $8848.20 in settlement funds and the $4750 in repairs to Nelson. See id. at 6.

Nelson was dissatisfied with the quality of the repairs that DiPaolo had arranged for her car. See 09/18/2006 Tr. at 13:14-19, 15:6-16:15. After Nelson retrieved her vehicle from DiPaolo, her insurer hired an appraiser to conduct another inspection. (DBR Dec. at 7.) The appraiser testified that the vehicle as repaired was unsafe to drive, that repairs listed in the original appraisal had not been made, that parts that needed to be replaced had not been replaced, and that the few repairs that had been done were worth only approximately $3000 to $3300.Id. at 7-8; 10/06/2006 Tr. at 22:20-23:2, 43:11-16, 45:19-22, 46:5-47:1.

DiPaolo presented evidence that he applied the unused portion of Nelson's insurance settlement to offset certain expenses that Nelson had incurred while her car was being repaired. (DBR Dec. at 21-22; DBR Ex. 1.) In his letter to his attorney, DiPaolo explained that he allowed Nelson to use four different courtesy vehicles while her car was *Page 4 being repaired, and that Nelson damaged each of these vehicles. (DBR Ex. 1.) According to DiPaolo, Nelson informed a man named John Voller — apparently an employee of either DiPaolo or of United Auto — that he should use the insurance settlement money to repair the damage she caused to the courtesy vehicles. (DBR Ex. 1.) Nelson testified that she used four different courtesy vehicles but that she did not cause any damage to the first three vehicles. (09/18/2006 Tr. at 56:4-58:2, 59:14-61:10.) She agreed that the fourth courtesy vehicle had sustained damage as a result of a "hit-and-run" incident. Id. at 61:11-62:20; DBR Ex. 13. Nelson denied that she ever agreed to allow DiPaolo or United Auto to apply any of her insurance proceeds to repair the courtesy vehicles. (09/18/2006 Tr. at 63:14-64:1.) No written documentation of this alleged side-agreement was presented at the hearing. (DBR Dec. at 22.)

Based on Nelson's testimony regarding his experiences with DiPaolo, the DBR sought to revoke DiPaolo's insurance claims adjuster and motor vehicle damager appraiser licenses on the following grounds: (1) that DiPaolo had been operating an unlicensed auto body shop; (2) that DiPaolo had failed to serve his customer's interests and that his continued licensure was not in the public interest; and (3) that DiPaolo had violated a consent order that he and the DBR had entered into in April 1999. Id. at 2. The DBR held hearings on September 18, October 6, and December 12, 2006 and January 19, 2007 and issued a written decision on December 21, 2007.Id. at 28. The Hearing Officer found that the DBR had not established by a preponderance of the evidence that DiPaolo had been operating an auto repair shop without a license. Id. at 27. However, the Hearing Officer revoked DiPaolo's appraiser and adjuster licenses on the grounds that his continued licensure would not serve the public interest and for cause. Id. at 27. *Page 5 In addition, the Hearing Officer held that DiPaolo's violation of the April 1999 Consent Order (the "Consent Order") was an alternative basis for revoking the motor vehicle damage appraiser license. Id. at 28. He did not reach the issue of whether violation of the Consent Order furnished alternative grounds for revoking the insurance claim adjuster license. Id.

The Hearing Officer's decision that DiPaolo's licenses should be revoked both for cause and for considerations related to the public interest is predicated on three conclusions: (1) that DiPaolo's "woefully inadequate business practices demonstrate a level of incompetence that seriously calls into question his fitness to be licensed in the public adjuster profession"; (2) that DiPaolo failed in his duty to represent Nelson's interests; and (3) that DiPaolo "took advantage of Ms. Nelson's situation and used his insurance claim adjuster license to inure a benefit for himself."Id. at 19. In response to DiPaolo's explanation that he had retained the balance of Nelson's insurance settlement funds to offset the cost of the alleged damage to the four courtesy vehicles, the Hearing Officer found that there had been no oral or written agreement to use the settlement funds to repair the courtesy vehicles. Id. at 22. The Hearing Officer did not make factual findings regarding whether the loaned vehicles had been damaged or the cost of the damage.

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Dipaolo v. Marques, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dipaolo-v-marques-risuperct-2010.