Lucas Wall v. Lucinda Barbers

82 A.3d 794, 2014 WL 18313, 2014 D.C. App. LEXIS 1
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 2, 2014
Docket12-CV-107
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 82 A.3d 794 (Lucas Wall v. Lucinda Barbers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lucas Wall v. Lucinda Barbers, 82 A.3d 794, 2014 WL 18313, 2014 D.C. App. LEXIS 1 (D.C. 2014).

Opinion

EASTERLY, Associate Judge:

After the District of Columbia Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) declined to renew his driver’s license, Lucas Wall sued the District of Columbia and Lucinda Ba-bers in her official capacity as the director of the DMV. The trial court determined that Mr. Wall had failed to state a claim and granted the District’s motion to dismiss the amended complaint under Super. Ct. Civ. R. 12(b)(6). Mr. Wall appealed. Mr. Wall makes a number of arguments, which, when distilled, amount to two claims: (1) that the DMV was required to renew his license; and (2) that he was not given adequate pre- or post-deprivation process when his license was not renewed. We affirm. 1

I. Facts

Because we are reviewing an order dismissing Mr. Wall’s complaint under Super. Ct. Civ. R. 12(b)(6), we assume all the facts *796 pled in his amended complaint are true. See Potomac Dev. Corp. v. District of Columbia, 28 A.3d 581, 544 (D.C.2011). In May 2006, Mr. Wall received a speeding ticket in Maine. At the time, Mr. Wall lived in Boston and had a Massachusetts driver’s license. Mr. Wall called the Violations Bureau in Maine, and the prosecutor there agreed to enter a nolle prosequi in his ease. Shortly after receiving the Maine speeding ticket, Mr. Wall moved to the Washington, D.C. area. Mr. Wall established D.C. residency in February 2007 and received a D.C. driver’s license at that time. Mr. Wall maintained a valid D.C. license for four years.

Before his D.C. driver’s license expired in 2011, Mr. Wall attempted to renew it online, but he received an error message indicating that he could not do so because there were “stops” associated with his record. After some initial confusion about the cause of the problem, Mr. Wall was told that the stops were related to issues in Maine and Massachusetts. It turned out the traffic case in Maine had never been dismissed. In December 2006, after Mr. Wall had failed to pay the Maine speeding ticket, Maine suspended Mr. Wall’s in-state driving privileges 2 and, in December 2009, contacted Massachusetts to request that Mr. Wall’s Massachusetts license be suspended. By that time, however, Mr. Wall had exchanged his Massachusetts license for a District of Columbia license, so Massachusetts could no longer suspend his license; instead, Massachusetts, like Maine, suspended Mr. Wall’s instate driving privileges.

In an attempt to clear up these matters, Mr. Wall contacted authorities in Massachusetts, who told him that his Massachusetts driving privileges would be restored if he resolved his traffic case in Maine. The Maine Violations Bureau told Mr. Wall in turn that he could either pay $260 — the outstanding $210 fine from his speeding ticket plus a $50 fee to restore his Maine driving privileges — or request that the case be reopened. Neither option was attractive to Mr. Wall. 3 Instead, Mr. Wall opted to seek relief in the District of Columbia. He wrote a letter to Ms. Ba-bers explaining why he believed he was entitled to have his D.C. driver’s license renewed and he requested that she approve his renewal application. The DMV eventually told Mr. Wall that it could not renew his license “until the matters in Maine and Massachusetts are clear.”

The DMVs refusal to renew his expired license prompted Mr. Wall to file suit. In his complaint he asserted that “[n]owhere in DCMR Chapter 18-1 or in the D.C.Code is there any authority given to the defendants to refuse a noncommercial driver’s license renewal application based on records from another state.” Mr. Wall thus took the position that the DMV had no choice but to issue him a renewed license and requested a “mandatory injunction” to compel the DMV to do so. We *797 now review the trial court’s order dismissing Mr. Wall’s complaint. 4

II. Mr. Wall’s claim that his right to a renewed license was violated

Mr. Wall argues that, despite the actions taken by Maine and Massachusetts to suspend his driving privileges, the DMV had to issue him a new license and that its refusal to do so gave him a basis to sue. As the foundation for this argument in the trial court, Mr. Wall argued that the District was broadly violating the D.C.Code and DMV regulations. 5 However, the District’s response redirected and narrowed the trial litigation to the meaning and force of the Driver’s License Compact (DLC), 6 an interstate compact designed to encourage party states to “consider! ] the overall compliance with motor vehicle laws ... as a condition precedent to the continuance or issuance of any [motor vehicle] license,” D.C.Code § 50-1001, and the National Driver Register (NDR), a federal database which facilitates reporting under the DLC. Specifically, the District asserted that it would have been prohibited from renewing Mr. Wall’s license under the DLC, an argument which the trial court accepted when it dismissed Mr. Wall’s complaint.

On appeal, the District initially defended the ruling it asked the trial court to make. But the District’s resort in the first instance to an interstate compact and a federal registry was curious. These are mechanisms to ensure coordination between preexisting state regulatory systems; they are not meant to supplant state systems or create a model regulatory system for states. Accordingly, we asked the parties to submit supplemental briefs addressing whether Mr. Wall’s right to a renewed license and the District’s corresponding authority to deny renewal could be discerned not by reference to interstate compacts, but instead by looking to the law Mr. Wall initially asserted the District had violated: the District’s statutory and regulatory scheme for the operation of motor vehicles. 7 With that law as our reference *798 point, we resolve this case. 8 Examining the trial court’s dismissal order de novo, 9 we conclude that Mr. Wall was not entitled to a renewed license. Instead, the DMV had the authority and discretion to require Mr. Wall to clear up his driving record in other states before it issued him a new license.

Driving in the District is thoroughly regulated by statutes and regulations, and the DMV is entrusted with overseeing its regulation. Considering this scheme as a whole, 10 we determine that it was entirely proper under the law for the DMV to rely on the information about Mr. Wall’s out-of-state driving privileges, and the DMV had ample authority to deny him a license while his speeding ticket in Maine was outstanding and his driving privileges in Massachusetts were suspended.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 A.3d 794, 2014 WL 18313, 2014 D.C. App. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lucas-wall-v-lucinda-barbers-dc-2014.