Martin v. Morris

243 N.W. 747, 62 N.D. 381, 1932 N.D. LEXIS 191
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1932
DocketFile No. 6039.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 243 N.W. 747 (Martin v. Morris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin v. Morris, 243 N.W. 747, 62 N.D. 381, 1932 N.D. LEXIS 191 (N.D. 1932).

Opinion

Burr, J.

This is an appeal from an order denying a writ of certiorari.

The state inspection department had granted to the petitioner License No. 3679 for the operation of a taxi cab stand in Bismarck under the name of the Ball Taxi Company and for the season of 1931 — 32.

A hearing was had before the state inspector to determine whether such license should be cancelled, the petitioner appeared, evidence was introduced and findings of fact and conclusions were made and the license cancelled.

The petitioner applied to the district court for a writ of certiorari and the court issued an order to show cause why the writ should not issue. The findings, conclusions and order of the state inspector cancelling the license were attached to and made a part of the return on the part of the respondent and no attack was made on this return, except that on its face it showed no ground for cancelling the license.

On this return, the court declined to issue the writ. The petitioner therefore appealed to this court on the ground that the court was in *383 error in denying the application for the writ and in refusing to review the proceedings had before the state inspector.

Section 548al of the Supp. provides that no taxi cab or auto livery “shall he opened, maintained, operated or conducted within this state unless the owner, proprietor or managing agent thereof shall first secure a license so to do in the manner prescribed.”

Section 548a2 requires the application to state “the name of the owner, manager and proprietor” of the business to be carried on and provides that if a license be issued and a violation of the law of this state occurs in the operation of the place the attorney general shall be authorized to cancel the license issued.

Section 548a4 authorizes the appointment of a state .inspector or inspectors and section 548a5 authorizes the state inspector to “revoke any license granted pursuant to the provisions of this act after a hearing had before the inspector etc.”

The fact that a license was issued authorizes .us to assume the petitioner in his application for a license, represented himself to be the owner, manager and proprietor of the taxi cab livery business operating it under the trade name of the Ball Taxi Company. The record before us shows nothing to the contrary.

At the hearing before the state inspector evidence was introduced by the State, and the findings of the inspector show; that petitioner herein “is not engaged in the actual management of the Ball Taxi Company — and that the actual manager and operator of said taxi line is one Waldo Bryan;” that the license was issued to the petitioner, “with the express understanding and upon the representation that he (the petitioner) would be the actual operator and manager of the taxi business known as the Ball Taxi Company, and which is operated under license No. 3679, issued by the state inspection department;” that the petitioner herein, at the time the license was issued to him, represented to the inspection department “that he was purchasing the business from one Waldo Bryan, and that if the license was issued to the licensee he would be the sole manager of the business, and that the aforesaid Waldo Bryan would not be connected with the same, either directly or indirectly ;” that thereafter the business of the taxi company was transacted by the said Waldo Bryan and “the said Waldo Bryan represented himself to be, and acted as the active manager and operator of the aforé *384 said Taxi Company.” The inspector found also certain facts which he determined constituted a violation of the laws of this State. Petitioner offered no testimony in opposition thereto.

In his application for a writ of certiorari the petitioner states he had been charged before the state inspector with “having obtained a license by false representation and fraudulently,” that he was charged with violating a law of the State, and that the order revoking the license was made upon such findings.

While the jurisdiction of the inspector is questioned it is not on the ground that the inspector is not the one to revoke the license, but rather that the proceedings show the license should not have been revoked.

That in a proper case the inspector has a right to revoke the license is clear from a reading' of § 548a5 of the Supp. partially quoted.

At the hearing before the inspector a bill of particulars was served and filed. This bill sets out these two charges — that the license was procured by fraud; and that the petitioner was guilty of a violation of the laws of this state.

With reference to this bill of particulars and the specifications therein contained, the petitioner says in this court “for the purpose of this Appeal and to determine whether the manner in which the Inspector attempted to exercise his powers was within the jurisdiction vested in him by law we must assume that the specifications are true.”

The specification in regard to fraud is such that if it be true it amounts to fraud, and shows that the license was obtained by means of fraud. Plaintiff contends “there was.no evidence offered supporting the first Specification in the Bill of Particulars;” but if the specification be true, and this is admitted, then it is not necessary to have evidence.

However the record shows evidence was introduced and findings made thereon, and the statute does not require the inspector to reduce such evidence to writing nor preserve the same.

The allegation of fraud is lengthy, but is in effect as found by the inspector in the findings made upon the hearing.

In respect to the second charge set forth in the bill of particulars, the allegation in regard to violation of the law sets forth certain facts, .and it is the claim of the petitioner that though such facts be true yet they do not amount to a violation of law.

*385 The petitioner proceeds under the theory that the question of fraud cannot be involved in a proceeding to cancel his license, and says that “violation of any of the laws of this State” is the only statutory ground for revocation, that nothing in the findings shows the petitioner had violated any of the laws of this State; and this being so the court should on certiorari review the decision.

The petitioner overlooks or ignores the fact that this license was revoked because it was obtained fraudulently.' It is true § 548a5 says such license may be revoked*“upon the violation of any of the laws of this State” and states no other ground for revocation; but fraud vitiates the whole transaction. If the license was issued fraudulently,as found by the inspector, then it may be cancelled because of such fraud.

Assuming, without deciding, that the facts found by the inspector, on the application to revoke the license, did not constitute a crime and therefore are not a ground for revocation of the license, yet this does not avail petitioner if in fact his license was obtained by fraud.

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Bluebook (online)
243 N.W. 747, 62 N.D. 381, 1932 N.D. LEXIS 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-morris-nd-1932.