In the Matter of Eve M. Carlson

38 Haw. 9
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 9, 1948
Docket2685
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 38 Haw. 9 (In the Matter of Eve M. Carlson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Matter of Eve M. Carlson, 38 Haw. 9 (haw 1948).

Opinion

*10 This is an appeal by the Real Estate Commission and its members, hereinafter referred to as “the respondents,” the appellee being Eve M. Carlson, an applicant for a real estate broker’s license, hereinafter referred to as “the petitioner.” The appeal is from the mandate of a circuit judge at chambers, directing the respondents to issue the license to the petitioner. The mandate is a peremptory one on the pleadings issued pursuant to Revised Laws of Hawaii 1945, section 10267.

The first of the two specifications of error challenges the circuit judge’s interpretation of the enactment dealing with real estate brokers and salesmen (R. L. H. 1945, c. 150, §§ 7731-7742; Sess. L. 1933, c. 140, §§ 1-10), but raises no question of constitutionality with respect to the enactment’s requirement that persons acting as real estate brokers and salesmen be licensed. The circuit judge interpreted the enactment to mean that the commission is neither authorized to examine an applicant as a condition precedent to issuing a real estate broker’s license, nor empowered to refuse such license merely for failure to pass an examination. This interpretation was occasioned by the admitted facts of pleading that the petitioner was required by the respondents to take a written examination “in the lore of the real estate business” and that she did not pass such examination, which is the sole reason why the respondents refuse to grant the license. At this juncture it is important to note that the examination here involved is distinct and apart from the character investigation and information bearing upon the issuance of a real estate broker’s or salesman’s license, which may be made and required by the commission as permitted by statute. (§§ 7737, 7738.) The specification presents but one question of law. Did the circuit judge correctly interpret the enactment?

The answer to the question depends upon legislative *11 intent drawn from the whole enactment as embodied in chapter 150 of Revised Laws of Hawaii 1945. It is first to be noted that, while the enactment empowers the commission to grant real estate broker and salesman licenses (§ 7734), it does not specify that applicants be examined as to technical knowledge or erudition in the real estate business. Correlatively, the enactment does not require the members of the commission to possess qualifications of competency to examine applicants in this particular field, the only requisites being United States citizenship and residence in the Territory of at least three years preceding appointment (§ 7733). Moreover, no language appears in the enactment susceptible to the interpretation that the legislature intends to insure that applicants be possessed of learning in the real estate business, or demand that the commission be composed of real estate experts. Rather, the primary purpose of the enactment is to protect the public from fraud and misrepresentation perpetrated by unscrupulous persons acting as real estate brokers and salesmen. This purpose is effectuated (1) by making it unlawful for any person to act as a real estate broker or salesman without a license previously obtained (§ 7736) ; (2) by prohibiting the issuance of either license to a person not possessing “a good reputation for honesty, truthfulness and fair dealing,” or to one “who has been convicted of a felony or a misdemeanor involving moral turpitude unless such person has received a full and free pardon or presents satisfactory proof to the commission that for five years next preceding the date of his application he has lived an upright and moral life” (§ 7737) ; (3) by authorizing the commission to revoke the license of such person should he be the holder of one (§ 7741). In the face of such purpose and in the absence of any terms extending its scope, there necessarily arises from the language employed the implication that the legislature *12 did not intend to authorize or require an examination of technical knowledge as a condition precedent to the issuance of either license. This implication is so strong that the contrary can not reasonably be supposed. It is therefore as much a part of the enactment as if expressed. (See Hon. R. T. Co. v. Wilder, 30 Haw. 685, 690.) Nothing further is needed to reveal the legislative intent. However, confirmation thereof may be found extrinsically in the significant fact that other enactments authorizing the issuance of licenses for different businesses, occupations and professions (cc. 87, 143, 144, 146, 149 and 191, R. L. H. 1945) were in force and effect at the time this one was passed by the legislature. Each of these enactments expressly provided that an applicant for a license to engage in such business, occupation or profession shall or may be examined relative to competency in the particular field of endeavor by persons qualified, therein, the reasonable inference being that the legislature, in empowering the commission to license applicants to engage in the real estate business as brokers and salesmen, was aware of such reciprocal requisites of examination and advisedly omitted them from this enactment.

The respondents argue that the course of conduct with respect to examinations as pursued by them in the case of the petitioner is authorized by a rule or regulation which they promulgated approximately two and a half years after the effective date of the enactment. They contend that such course constitutes an administrative practice of the commission recognized by subsequent legislatures as evidenced by those bodies not passing proposed amendments expressly stating that applicants for real estate broker licenses shall not be required to pass an examination. However, the real estate commission is essentially an administrative body with statutory authority to adopt and make rules and regulations pursuant to the *13 provisions of tlie enactment as it may deem proper to effectuate and carry out the purposes thereof. (§ 7734, par. 2 and 3.) But this authority is limited to reasonable rules and regulations for carrying into effect the provisions of the enactment, which are valid and may be enforced accordingly. Nevertheless, the making thereof is an administrative function, not a legislative power. (See State v. Burdge, 95 Wis. 390, 70 N. W. 347.) Nor can such function be performed arbitrarily and without reasonable relation to the administration for which the mies and regulations were authorized to accomplish. Hence in order to have the force and effect of law they must not conflict with, alter or amend, or enlarge or impair the scope of the provisions of legislative enactment. (Dickey v. Rapid Transit Co., 15 Haw. 304; Whitcomb Hotel v. California Employment Commission, 24 Calif. [2d] 753, 151 P. [2d] 233, 155 A. L. R. 405.) Obviously, the respondents’ rule or regulation, assuming but not deciding it to be of the import claimed by them, transcends the enactment it purports to administer and requires conditions not imposed by statute as prerequisites to the issuance of a license. Consequently, it amounts only to the respondents’ ipse dixit and is without force and effect of law. In short, such rule or regulation is void and unenforceable. It therefore can not give rise to any valid administrative practice. Nor could the mere not passing of the proposed amendments to the enactment by subsequent legislatures render valid that which is invalid.

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Bluebook (online)
38 Haw. 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-eve-m-carlson-haw-1948.