Johnson v. Department of Commerce

2023 UT App 152
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedDecember 14, 2023
Docket20221126-CA
StatusPublished

This text of 2023 UT App 152 (Johnson v. Department of Commerce) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Department of Commerce, 2023 UT App 152 (Utah Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

2023 UT App 152

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

KATE JOHNSON, Petitioner, v. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, Respondent.

Per Curiam Opinion No. 20221126-CA Filed December 14, 2023

Original Proceeding in this Court

April L. Hollingsworth and Katie Panzer, Attorneys for Petitioner Sean D. Reyes and Sarah E. Goldberg, Attorneys for Respondent

Before JUDGES GREGORY K. ORME, RYAN M. HARRIS, and AMY J. OLIVER.

PER CURIAM:

¶1 Kate Johnson petitions for review of the Department of Commerce’s (the Department) order dismissing her request for agency review as untimely.

¶2 Utah Code section 63G-4-301(1)(a) provides that where agency review of an adjudication is permitted, “the aggrieved party may file a written request for review within 30 days after the issuance of the order” with the designated review entity. The request for review must state the date on which it was mailed. Utah Code § 63G-4-301(1)(b)(iii). The Department has established rules to implement the statute. “[A]n aggrieved party may obtain agency review of a final order by filing a request with the executive director within 30 calendar days after the issuance of Johnson v. Department of Commerce

the order.” Utah Admin. Code R151-4-901(1)(a). “This 30-day deadline is jurisdictional.” Id. R151-4-901(1)(b).

¶3 Department rules also set out requirements for filing documents. Filing may be accomplished by first class or certified mail. Id. R151-4-401(2)(a)(ii). A filing by mail is complete when received and date stamped by the Department. Id. R151-4- 401(2)(b)(i). Filing may also be accomplished by “attachment to electronic mail.” Id. R151-4-401(2)(a)(iii). However, a filing by email will be complete only when meeting certain other requirements. Id. R151-4-401(2)(b)(ii). An email filing will be complete upon transmission if received during the Department’s business hours and if the party filing the document “also mails the document to the [Department] . . . the same day, as evidenced by a postmark.” Id. R151-4-401(2)(b)(ii)(B), (D)(I). “The burden is on the party filing the document to ensure that a filing is properly completed.” Id. R151-4-401(2)(c).

¶4 An adjudication order (the Order) imposing sanctions on Johnson was issued on September 2, 2022. The Order was transmitted to Johnson’s counsel (Counsel) by email at about 6:00 p.m. the same day. The Order included a notice of the right to seek administrative review. The notice stated,

Agency review of this order may be obtained by filing a request for agency review with the Executive Director of the Department of Commerce, 160 East 300 South, Box 146701, Salt Lake City, Utah 84114- 6701, within thirty (30) days after the date of this order. . . . The laws and rules governing agency review of this proceeding are found in Section 63G- 4-101 et seq. of the Utah Code and Rule 151-4 of the Utah Administrative Code.

The thirty-day time to file a request for review ran to October 2. Because October 2 was a Sunday, the time expired on the next business day, Monday October 3.

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¶5 On Friday September 30, 2022, Counsel sent a request for agency review of the adjudication order by email to a Department Administrative Law Judge (ALJ). Shortly after the email was received, the ALJ responded to Counsel and identified a deficiency in her filing. “I trust you are aware that under the Department UAPA Rule, an electronic filing is not complete unless it is also mailed the same day (as evidenced by a postmark). Utah Admin. Code R151-4-401. You must meet this mailing requirement.” Counsel acknowledged the ALJ’s email the following day, stating that she had not been aware of the mailing requirement.

¶6 Although Counsel could have corrected the filing in a timely manner by filing on October 3, she did not file a new request for review until October 5, two days after the time to file had expired. Counsel asserted in that filing that the request was timely filed from the date of service of the Order. The Department moved to dismiss the agency appeal as untimely. The Executive Director granted the motion in an order dated November 30, 2022. Johnson filed a timely petition for judicial review of the agency dismissal.

¶7 Johnson argues that the request for agency review was timely filed and the Department erred in dismissing the request. She contends that the statute requires only that a request for review be “in writing to the proper address.” She also asserts, without support, that the term “mail” is commonly construed to include email. 1 Accordingly, she argues, the email transmission of

1. In her reply memorandum, Counsel notes that the statute does not define the term “mail” and argues that “the meaning of the term is presumed to change with the times when it is not expressly defined.” However, this misstates the rules of statutory interpretation. Where a statutory term is not defined, a court “must interpret the statutory language according to the plain (continued…)

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the request for review was sufficient to meet the jurisdictional requirements for filing under the statute.

¶8 However, Counsel does not address the Department rule that clarifies the filing requirements. The plain language of the rule indicates that mail and email are, indeed, different methods of filing. Utah Admin. Code R151-4-401. Furthermore, the filing rule expressly provides that a document transmitted by email will not be considered filed unless it is also mailed. Id. R151-4- 401(2)(b)(ii)(D)(I). As explained in the Executive Director’s order of dismissal, the allowance for an email transmittal with a contemporaneous mailing is a benefit for a party approaching the filing deadline. Because the filing of a mailed document is not complete until received, a party may transmit the document electronically as a placeholder followed by the mailed document postmarked the same day. However, absent a mailed document, a filing is not complete under the Department rules.

¶9 Furthermore, the thirty-day time for properly filing a request for review is jurisdictional. Id. R151-4-901(1)(b). “To preserve the right to challenge an agency decision, an interested party must file a request for review within thirty days. If no such request is filed, the agency action is final and conclusive.” Living Rivers v. DWQ, 2014 UT 25, ¶ 18, 344 P.3d 568 (citing Utah Code § 63G-4-301(1)(a)). Because Counsel did not timely mail the request for review, the filing was not complete and the Executive

meaning of its text.” John Kuhni & Sons, Inc. v. Labor Comm’n, 2018 UT App 6, ¶ 12, 414 P.3d 952 (quotation simplified). The dictionary definition of a term is a “starting point” in determining a term’s meaning. See id. ¶ 13. In Kuhni & Sons, the court, in interpreting the phrase “certified mail,” noted that the dictionary definition of “mail” was “one or more items that have been properly addressed, stamped with postage, and deposited for delivery in the postal system.” Id. (citing Mail, Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014)) (quotation simplified).

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Director correctly determined that it lacked jurisdiction to consider the request for review on its merits. 2

¶10 Counsel also argues that the Executive Director erred in finding no good cause to extend the time for filing the request for review. “[T]he executive director may extend the deadline [for filing a request for review] only for good cause shown.” Utah Admin. Code R151-4-901(1)(c).

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2023 UT App 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-department-of-commerce-utahctapp-2023.