Metropolitan Property v. Hittner, 97-0302 (1998)

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 15, 1998
DocketC.A. No. 97-0302
StatusPublished

This text of Metropolitan Property v. Hittner, 97-0302 (1998) (Metropolitan Property v. Hittner, 97-0302 (1998)) 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
Metropolitan Property v. Hittner, 97-0302 (1998), (R.I. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

AMENDED DECISION
The Decision in the above entitled matter, which was filed on May 15, 1998, is hereby amended to make the following correction:

The last sentence on page 14 currently reads: "And it is in part to whether Providence Auto Body demonstrated that the Taurus was stored in the normal course to which the Court now turns."

The last sentence starting on page 14 and continuing on page 15 now reads:

"And it is to both, whether Providence Auto Body demonstratedthat the Taurus was stored in the normal course, and the broaderquestion of whether the director properly levied anadministrative penalty, to which the Court now turns." NEEDHAM, J.

Is an auto-body repair shop entitled to storage fees from a third-party insurer after storing one of its own autos (which had been totaled while on loan to one of its customers) in its own storage facility? The plaintiff, Metropolitan Property and Casualty Insurance Company (Metropolitan), appeals1 a final decision of the defendant, Barry G. Hittner, in his capacity as Director of the Rhode Island Department of Business Regulation (variously the director or the department), urging the court to answer that question in the negative and to vacate the director's decision which not only concluded contrariwise but also levied an administrative penalty against Metropolitan for not paying such fees.2 Although the court agrees with the director's legal conclusion that auto-body repair shops are so entitled generally, the court does not find reliable, probative, and substantial evidence on the whole record to support the director's discretionary imposition of penalties against Metropolitan for its failure to pay those fees as originally claimed here. Accordingly, and because substantial rights of Metropolitan were prejudiced, the court vacates the $2,386.00 administrative penalty that the director levied against Metropolitan.

Facts and Procedural History
Providence Auto Body, Inc. (Providence Auto Body) is a licensed auto-body repair shop which, like many other such shops, frequently loans its own vehicles (loaners) to its customers while their auto is being repaired. Unfortunately, along with the convenience that inures to Providence Auto Body's customers comes the unfortunate consequence to Providence Auto Body of lost loaners; that is, autos which are totaled or stolen while on loan. And it is the travails of one of these lost loaners (of which there are 20 or so each year) that paved the way for this proceeding.

Providence Auto Body's license allows it to maintain an auto-body repair facility at 350 Silver Spring Street in Providence, Rhode Island (the repair facility). Given the nature and volume of its business (there are usually 150 to 200 autos in its custody on any given day), Providence Auto Body also leases a separate facility at 476 Silver Spring Street for the storage of totaled autos (the storage facility). The storage facility is itself owned by Providence Auto Body's owner who in turn leases it to Providence Auto Body for $3,500.00 per month. The customary practice of Providence Auto Body is to store totaled autos at the storage facility because of the protection afforded to both its autos and its employees, the latter of whom are actively working at the repair facility and who would otherwise have to contend with the presence of numerous totaled autos lying around.

All of Providence Auto Body's 125 loaners are normally kept at the repair facility and are titled in the name of North American Auto Sales, Inc., a fictitious business name of Providence Auto Body3 that lists its address as 350 Silver Spring Street on the loaners' certificate of title. Although Providence Auto Body's owner characterized the loaners as being "owned" by North American Auto Sales, Inc., that characterization is sufficiently misleading, even if not entirely inaccurate,4 to warrant avoiding its use in this context. Thus, the court will refer to the loaners as having been owned by Providence Auto Body. Having traveled sufficiently down this back road, the Court now turns to the sequence of events that led to this proceeding.

As it is wont to do, on January 4, 1996 Providence Auto Body loaned a Ford Taurus to one of its customers who also happened to be one of Metropolitan's insureds. Calamitously, on January 16, 1996, the customer totaled the Taurus in Connecticut. Thereafter, Coletta's Downtown Service towed the Taurus back to Rhode Island (for which, in addition to an unspecified storage charge, Metropolitan paid) and returned it to the repair facility at the latest on January 17, 1996. Upon its arrival, Providence Auto Body's employees deemed the Taurus to be totaled and removed it to the storage facility pending its appraisal by Metropolitan, which was notified of the loss on January 23, 1996.

The Taurus remained in the storage facility until January 31, 1996 when it was moved back to the repair facility by Providence Auto Body for Metropolitan's appraisal. Providence Auto Body's owner testified that all damage appraisals are carried out at the repair facility rather than the storage facility as a convenience to the appraiser, who may need equipment that is readily available there. Thus, after an appraisal date was set, Providence Auto Body would move the auto that was to be appraised from the storage facility to the repair facility and afterwards return it if the auto was determined to be totaled. Such was the course the Taurus followed on January 31, 1996; that is, Providence Auto Body moved the Taurus from the storage facility to the repair facility, where it was appraised by Metropolitan, and thereafter returned it to the storage facility. Providence Auto Body's shifting of the Taurus was unknown to Metropolitan and, accordingly, Metropolitan's appraisal report reflects only that the appraisal took place at the repair facility address.

The appraisal report also reflects that Metropolitan deemed the Taurus totaled, that it closed its file on the matter on January 31, 1996, and that, in the words of its claims adjuster, "per sup no storage to be paid as veh[icle] owner is also sh[o]p owner, can[']t charge yourself storage." (Respondent's Exhibit A). Shortly after the appraisal, during a February 2, 1996 telephone conversation, Metropolitan and Providence Auto Body agreed that the Taurus was totaled and to settle the matter for $11,900.00. However, consistent with its appraiser's position and as recounted in a confirming letter sent to Providence Auto Body, Metropolitan explained that "due to the duel [sic] ownership of both the vehicle and storage facility" it would not be able to honor Providence Auto Body's request for storage fees. As a result of Metropolitan's February 2, 1996 denial of its liability for storage fees, Providence Auto Body lodged a formal complaint with the department by letter dated that same day. Then, on February 8, 1996, Providence Auto Body allowed Metropolitan to tow the Taurus away from the storage facility (476 Silver Spring Street) by a company of Metropolitan's choice, Auto Placement Center, Inc. Auto Placement Center's job order, however, indicates a pick-up location of 350 Silver Spring Street (the repair facility) rather than the address of actual removal, namely, 476 Silver Spring Street (the storage facility).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Dart Industries, Inc. v. Clark
696 A.2d 306 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1997)
Blackstone Park Improvement Ass'n v. State Board of Standards & Appeals
448 A.2d 1233 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1982)
Pawtucket Power Associates Ltd. v. City of Pawtucket
622 A.2d 452 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1993)
Gallison v. Bristol School Committee
493 A.2d 164 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1985)
Parkway Towers Associates v. Godfrey
688 A.2d 1289 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1997)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Metropolitan Property v. Hittner, 97-0302 (1998), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-property-v-hittner-97-0302-1998-risuperct-1998.