Pate v. Government of the Virgin Islands
This text of 62 V.I. 271 (Pate v. Government of the Virgin Islands) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of The Virgin Islands primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
DUNSTON, Judge
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND DECLARATORY JUDGMENT
(April 17, 2015)
Before the Court is Plaintiff John-Russell B. Pate’s October 22, 2014, request for injunctive relief and a declaratory judgment; Defendant Department of Licensing and Consumer Affairs’ (“DLCA” or the “Department”) November 21,2014, motion to dismiss, treated here as one for summary judgment; and Defendant’s March 12, 2015, and March 23, 2015, motions to strike.
Plaintiff alleges that the fee charged to attorneys and law firms is not a tax but instead an attempt to regulate the practice of law and that the DLCA does not have the authority to regulate attorneys because this authority lies exclusively with the Supreme Court of the Virgin Islands.1 Plaintiff moves for a preliminary injunction regarding the “unconstitutional and ultra-vires actions” of the DLCA.2 Plaintiff alleges that an injunction is necessary to prevent his arrest and criminal fines or other sanctions by the DLCA.
Defendant seeks dismissal of Plaintiff’s October 22, 2014, Complaint, arguing that the DLCA does not violate the separation of powers doctrine by levying a business license fee against attorneys; Plaintiff’s claims are barred under the doctrine of collateral estoppel; Plaintiff fails to state a claim that Defendant’s actions are ultra vires; Plaintiff fails to state a claim for selective enforcement of the licensing fee; and Plaintiff has no standing to bring a class action on behalf of similarly situated attorneys.
Plaintiff responded on January 8, 2015, that “as a result of ensuing Constitutional and statutory violations . . . this Court must deny Defendant’s motion to dismiss and allow the case to move forward.”3 [279]*279Defendant replied on January 27, 2015,4 that Plaintiff fails to establish any property interest under the Due Process Clause of the Constitution entitling him to notice and hearing for an expired business license or a business license which was never issued.5 Since matters outside the pleadings have been presented to and not excluded by the Court, Defendant’s motion to dismiss will be treated as one for summary judgment under Fed. R. Civ. P. 56.
Defendant seeks to strike Defendant’s March 4, 2015, Notice of Testimony of Devin Carrington, Commissioner Designee for Department of Licensing and Consumer Affairs, arguing that “Plaintiff has improperly filed a sur-reply in the guise of a notice without first obtaining leave of the Court to do so” in violation of Superior Court Rule 7.6 Defendant also seeks to strike the Defendant’s February 6, 2015, attempt to supplement Exhibit E of his Complaint with additional samples of DLCA attorney business licenses, arguing that Defendant seeks to amend his Complaint without leave of Court in violation of Fed. R. Crv. P. 15.7
Because the Court here issues a Declaratory Judgment, Plaintiff’s motion for preliminary injunction and Defendant’s motion for summary judgment are denied as moot. Defendant’s motions to strike are denied.
The Court finds that the Legislature divested the DLCA of any power the DLCA may have had to regulate Virgin Islands attorneys via 3 V.I.C. § 272(a)(14), 27 V.I.C. § 302(b) and 4 V.I.C. § 32(e); that the fee is regulatory, that any regulation by the DLCA violates the exclusive jurisdiction of the Supreme Court to regulate the practice of law in the Territory; and, that the continued attempts by a non-taxing authority to collect these fees as revenue generating exceeds the Department’s authority as a regulatory agency.
[280]*280The DLCA lacks authority to control the practice of law and is ordered herewith to cease such regulation. Likewise, the DLCA has failed to establish that the loss of the fees generated for the General Fund of the Treasury legitimizes its regulation of attorneys.
The Court is cognizant that a portion of the fees collected by the DLCA from attorneys is paid into the Judicial Council Imprest Account, an account which covers the necessary expenses of the District and Superior Court libraries and the Virgin Islands Bar Association’s Ethics and Grievances and Legal Education and Admission to the Bar committees. The most important consideration of this Court when considering new or a non-precedential application of the law is the identification of “the best rule for the Virgin Islands . . . based on the unique characteristics and needs of [the people] of the Virgin Islands.”8 Therefore, as the public is dependent on access to the law libraries and the regulation of attorneys by the Supreme Court via the Bar Association, it would not serve the best interest of the people of the Virgin Islands to suddenly deny funding to the Imprest Account. In the interest of justice, the Court will, as a matter of comity, permit the DLCA to collect from attorneys on behalf of, and forward to, the Judicial Council Imprest Account a $200.00 fee as a temporary tax until the Legislature has enacted a proper tax imposed by an appropriate taxing authority to fund the account or the Supreme Court has chosen to increase or reallocate attorneys’ fees and dues to fund the Judicial Council Imprest Account, whichever occurs first.
RELEVANT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On October 14, 2014, Plaintiff was cited by the DLCA for failure to pay an attorney licensing fee. Plaintiff’s October 22, 2014, Complaint seeks a temporary restraining order, preliminary injunction and declaratory judgment against the Department to prevent what he alleges to be a threat of arrest, demand to cease practicing, and the revocation or suspension of his business license without notice or a hearing.
Plaintiff’s request for a temporary restraining order was denied on jurisdictional grounds on October 24, 2014. Plaintiff’s November 6, 2014, request for reconsideration was denied on December 11, 2014, because [281]*281the movant failed to properly serve Defendant with the Summons and Complaint and to establish that his risk of harm is so imminent as to justify a TRO. The DLCA has since responded via a November 21, 2014, Motion to Dismiss and November 26, 2014, Opposition, and the Court is now satisfied that the Defendant has received notice for purposes of considering the request for a preliminary injunction.9 Defendant’s motion and opposition also served to waive any objections it may have to service.10
Defendant incorporated its arguments in support of the motion to dismiss into its opposition to Plaintiff’s motion for TRO.11 Because Plaintiff had not had an opportunity to respond to Defendant’s motion to dismiss, the motion was referenced — but not completely resolved — in the Court’s December 11, 2014, Memorandum.
The December 11, 2014, Memorandum stated that the Court suspects that the DLCA may violate due process by revoking or suspending licenses and requesting cease and desist orders without a hearing.
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DUNSTON, Judge
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND DECLARATORY JUDGMENT
(April 17, 2015)
Before the Court is Plaintiff John-Russell B. Pate’s October 22, 2014, request for injunctive relief and a declaratory judgment; Defendant Department of Licensing and Consumer Affairs’ (“DLCA” or the “Department”) November 21,2014, motion to dismiss, treated here as one for summary judgment; and Defendant’s March 12, 2015, and March 23, 2015, motions to strike.
Plaintiff alleges that the fee charged to attorneys and law firms is not a tax but instead an attempt to regulate the practice of law and that the DLCA does not have the authority to regulate attorneys because this authority lies exclusively with the Supreme Court of the Virgin Islands.1 Plaintiff moves for a preliminary injunction regarding the “unconstitutional and ultra-vires actions” of the DLCA.2 Plaintiff alleges that an injunction is necessary to prevent his arrest and criminal fines or other sanctions by the DLCA.
Defendant seeks dismissal of Plaintiff’s October 22, 2014, Complaint, arguing that the DLCA does not violate the separation of powers doctrine by levying a business license fee against attorneys; Plaintiff’s claims are barred under the doctrine of collateral estoppel; Plaintiff fails to state a claim that Defendant’s actions are ultra vires; Plaintiff fails to state a claim for selective enforcement of the licensing fee; and Plaintiff has no standing to bring a class action on behalf of similarly situated attorneys.
Plaintiff responded on January 8, 2015, that “as a result of ensuing Constitutional and statutory violations . . . this Court must deny Defendant’s motion to dismiss and allow the case to move forward.”3 [279]*279Defendant replied on January 27, 2015,4 that Plaintiff fails to establish any property interest under the Due Process Clause of the Constitution entitling him to notice and hearing for an expired business license or a business license which was never issued.5 Since matters outside the pleadings have been presented to and not excluded by the Court, Defendant’s motion to dismiss will be treated as one for summary judgment under Fed. R. Civ. P. 56.
Defendant seeks to strike Defendant’s March 4, 2015, Notice of Testimony of Devin Carrington, Commissioner Designee for Department of Licensing and Consumer Affairs, arguing that “Plaintiff has improperly filed a sur-reply in the guise of a notice without first obtaining leave of the Court to do so” in violation of Superior Court Rule 7.6 Defendant also seeks to strike the Defendant’s February 6, 2015, attempt to supplement Exhibit E of his Complaint with additional samples of DLCA attorney business licenses, arguing that Defendant seeks to amend his Complaint without leave of Court in violation of Fed. R. Crv. P. 15.7
Because the Court here issues a Declaratory Judgment, Plaintiff’s motion for preliminary injunction and Defendant’s motion for summary judgment are denied as moot. Defendant’s motions to strike are denied.
The Court finds that the Legislature divested the DLCA of any power the DLCA may have had to regulate Virgin Islands attorneys via 3 V.I.C. § 272(a)(14), 27 V.I.C. § 302(b) and 4 V.I.C. § 32(e); that the fee is regulatory, that any regulation by the DLCA violates the exclusive jurisdiction of the Supreme Court to regulate the practice of law in the Territory; and, that the continued attempts by a non-taxing authority to collect these fees as revenue generating exceeds the Department’s authority as a regulatory agency.
[280]*280The DLCA lacks authority to control the practice of law and is ordered herewith to cease such regulation. Likewise, the DLCA has failed to establish that the loss of the fees generated for the General Fund of the Treasury legitimizes its regulation of attorneys.
The Court is cognizant that a portion of the fees collected by the DLCA from attorneys is paid into the Judicial Council Imprest Account, an account which covers the necessary expenses of the District and Superior Court libraries and the Virgin Islands Bar Association’s Ethics and Grievances and Legal Education and Admission to the Bar committees. The most important consideration of this Court when considering new or a non-precedential application of the law is the identification of “the best rule for the Virgin Islands . . . based on the unique characteristics and needs of [the people] of the Virgin Islands.”8 Therefore, as the public is dependent on access to the law libraries and the regulation of attorneys by the Supreme Court via the Bar Association, it would not serve the best interest of the people of the Virgin Islands to suddenly deny funding to the Imprest Account. In the interest of justice, the Court will, as a matter of comity, permit the DLCA to collect from attorneys on behalf of, and forward to, the Judicial Council Imprest Account a $200.00 fee as a temporary tax until the Legislature has enacted a proper tax imposed by an appropriate taxing authority to fund the account or the Supreme Court has chosen to increase or reallocate attorneys’ fees and dues to fund the Judicial Council Imprest Account, whichever occurs first.
RELEVANT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On October 14, 2014, Plaintiff was cited by the DLCA for failure to pay an attorney licensing fee. Plaintiff’s October 22, 2014, Complaint seeks a temporary restraining order, preliminary injunction and declaratory judgment against the Department to prevent what he alleges to be a threat of arrest, demand to cease practicing, and the revocation or suspension of his business license without notice or a hearing.
Plaintiff’s request for a temporary restraining order was denied on jurisdictional grounds on October 24, 2014. Plaintiff’s November 6, 2014, request for reconsideration was denied on December 11, 2014, because [281]*281the movant failed to properly serve Defendant with the Summons and Complaint and to establish that his risk of harm is so imminent as to justify a TRO. The DLCA has since responded via a November 21, 2014, Motion to Dismiss and November 26, 2014, Opposition, and the Court is now satisfied that the Defendant has received notice for purposes of considering the request for a preliminary injunction.9 Defendant’s motion and opposition also served to waive any objections it may have to service.10
Defendant incorporated its arguments in support of the motion to dismiss into its opposition to Plaintiff’s motion for TRO.11 Because Plaintiff had not had an opportunity to respond to Defendant’s motion to dismiss, the motion was referenced — but not completely resolved — in the Court’s December 11, 2014, Memorandum.
The December 11, 2014, Memorandum stated that the Court suspects that the DLCA may violate due process by revoking or suspending licenses and requesting cease and desist orders without a hearing. Because the Court found that the Department’s authority to impose licensing fees and interfere with the practice of law appears to have been nullified by the Legislature’s grant of exclusive authority to regulate attorneys to the Supreme Court of the Virgin Islands, the Court scheduled a hearing on February 26, 2015, on Plaintiff’s motion for a preliminary injunction. On January 28, 2015, Plaintiff filed an Unopposed Request for Continuance of Hearing Date, and the hearing to address Plaintiff’s request for a [282]*282preliminary injunction was rescheduled for March 26, 2015. The parties were ordered to be prepared to address all issues raised by both the parties and the Court at the hearing.
A six and one-half (6.5) hour hearing was held on March 26, 2015, to address Plaintiff’s request for a preliminary injunction and the Court’s other concerns regarding the fees imposed upon attorneys by the DLCA. The parties were ordered by Order dated December 11, 2014, to be prepared to address the multitude of issues raised by this matter. Each party had the opportunity to present witnesses and arguments on: potential due process violations by the DLCA; DLCA’s procedure for the furnishing and gathering of personal and professional information; DLCA’s authority and jurisdiction to regulate attorneys (separation of powers) in light of 4 V.I.C. § 32(e); whether the fees collected by the DLCA from attorneys and law firms are regulatory or revenue generating in nature; whether the collection of fees by both the Virgin Islands Supreme Court and the DLCA results in double-taxation; whether the collection of fees from both law firms and attorneys is an ultra vires act; whether the fee charged by the DLCA is selectively enforced against on-island attorneys; and whether the fee is properly charged against pro hac vice attorneys.
STANDARD OF REVIEW — PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION
Pursuant to Superior Court Rule 7, Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 65 governs the Court’s consideration of temporary restraining orders (“TRO”) and preliminary injunctions.12 “Although granted without a full adjudication on the merits, a preliminary injunction has all of the force of a permanent injunction during its period of effectiveness” and “it binds defendant, defendant’s representatives, and persons with actual notice of the order who are acting in concert with defendant in the same way as does a permanent injunction.”13
[283]*283Petrus Factors
Temporary restraining orders and preliminary injunctions are issued in order “to protect [the] plaintiff from irreparable injury and to preserve the court’s power to render a meaningful decision after a trial on the merits.”14 “[T]he grant or denial of a [TRO or preliminary injunction] remains a matter for the trial court’s discretion,”15 and the Court considers the following, referred to as the Petrus factors:
1. Whether the movant has shown a reasonable probability of success on the merits;
2. whether the movant will be irreparably injured by denial of the relief;
3. whether granting preliminary relief will result in even greater harm to the nonmoving party; and
4. whether granting the preliminary relief will be in the public interest.16
The Court applies a hybrid sliding-scale test when weighing the Petrus factors, and each element must be supported by clear and convincing evidence.17 If the movant has shown a reasonable probability of success on the merits and irreparable harm, the remaining two (2) factors are [284]*284considered and balanced against each of the elements.18,19 However, the Court recognizes that there may be situations in which the balance of the equities favors injunctive relief even where it cannot be established that the movant will be more harmed than the nonmovant and/or that granting the preliminary relief will be in the public interest.
“[T]he most compelling reason in favor of entering [an injunction] is the need to prevent the judicial process from being rendered futile by defendant’s action or refusal to act.”20 “Implicit in the court’s discretion ... is that the court need not grant the total relief sought by the applicant but may mold its decree to meet the exigencies of the particular case or may enter conditional preliminary relief.”21
[285]*285STANDARD OF REVIEW — MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
Summary judgment is only appropriate when the movant establishes both “that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.”22 Once the moving party meets its initial burden, “the non-moving party [then] has the duty to set forth specific facts showing that a genuine issue of material fact exists and that a reasonable factfinder could rule in its favor.”23 All inferences are drawn in favor of the nonmoving party;24 but, in order to survive summary judgment, the non-moving party must present evidence that amounts to “more than a scintilla, but may amount to less than a preponderance.”25 Summary judgment “cannot be entered unless the movant has established [both] its right[ ] to a judgment with such clarity as to leave no room for controversy and [that] the other party is not entitled to recover under any discernible circumstances.”26
STANDARD OF REVIEW — DECLARATORY JUDGMENT
Pursuant to the Virgin Islands Declaratory Judgment Act, 5 V.I.C. §§ 1261-1272, the Superior Court has the “power to declare [the] rights, status, and other legal relations whether or not further relief is or could be claimed.”27 The “decision to entertain a declaratory action is within the discretion of the Court,”28 and the matter must involve an actual and [286]*286justiciable controversy.29 The “declaration may be either affirmative or negative in form and effect,” with “the force and effect of a final judgment or decree.”30 “[A]n interlocutory order denying declaratory judgment is generally not appealable” unless the action only seeks declaratory relief.31 The Court reviews the parameters established by FED. R. Civ. P. 54(a) and (b) to determine whether an order is interlocutory and thus subject to LRCl 7.3,32 or final and subject to FED. R. Civ. P. 59(e) or 60(b).33
DISCUSSION
I. Overview
A. Department of Licensing and Consumer Affairs
The Department of Licensing and Consumer Affairs is an executive department of the Government of the Virgin Islands,34 created in 1987 by Act 5265 to “consolidate diverse licensing, regulatory, and permitting functions of various governmental agencies into one administrative entity.”35 The Department is headed by the Commissioner of Licensing and Consumer Affairs (the “Commissioner”),36 and the DLCA must “establish, administer, coordinate and supervise the regulation and licensing of private business and professions.”37 The DLCA has the authority to “file any necessary legal action to fulfill the purposes of this [287]*287chapter and enforce the rules, regulations, orders and determinations of the Department.”38 Enforcement officers of the DLCA are “peace officers,” and “[a] warrant of arrest shall be directed to and executed by such officers.”39 “Any violation of the provisions of [the DLCA] or of the provisions contained in the rules and regulations promulgated there under . . . shall constitute a misdemeanor punishable by fine of not more than $1,000 or by imprisonment... not to exceed six months, or by both at the discretion of the Court.”40
B, Attorney Business Licensing — DLCA
Pursuant to 27 V.I.C. § 301, “[e]very person or association wishing to engage in [the profession of a lawyer], as a condition precedent to engaging in any such . . . profession, shall apply in writing to and obtain from the Commissioner of Licensing and Consumer Affairs ... a license to engage in or conduct such ... profession”. “[A]ll attorneys, whether or not employed by others, are subject to the license requirement and fee”.41 Attorneys must pay a license fee of $500 annually 42 as well as provide “pertinent [personal and professional] facts” as part of DLCA’s application process.43
C. Attorney Licensing — Virgin Islands Supreme Court and Virgin Islands Bar Association
In the Virgin Islands, an attorney can seek regular, special, or pro hac vice admission in Supreme Court.44 The Virgin Islands Supreme Court [288]*288has exclusive jurisdiction over attorney regulation,45 and the Supreme Court has appointed the Virgin Islands Bar Association to assist the Supreme Court in supervising the practice of law in the Territory 46
“All attorneys admitted to practice law in the Supreme Court are required to be members of the Virgin Islands Bar Association so that no one may practice law in the Supreme Court of the Virgin Islands without being a member in good standing of the Virgin Islands Bar Association.”47 Attorneys are subject to fees 48 the grievance procedures established by the Virgin Islands Bar,49 and the Virgin Islands Rules of Professional Conduct.50 All active members of the Bar must participate in a requisite number of hours of continuing legal education annually.51 Even inactive attorneys are subject to regulation by the Bar Association and the payment of annual fees.52
II. Administrative Remedies
Although the Superior Court has “original jurisdiction in all civil actions, regardless of the amount in controversy,”53 plaintiffs suing government agencies may be statutorily54 or judicially55 required to first exhaust any available administrative remedies before seeking redress through the Court. Chapter 9 of Title 27, Licensing of Businesses and Occupations, does not require movants to exhaust administrative remedies prior to pursuing injunctive relief,56 nor does the Chapter [289]*289provide administrative remedies for person’s harmed without a hearing, although Act 5265 states that “[a]ny person . . . adversely affected by acts . . . [of] the Department. . . may within the ten (10) days following his notification file a written petition for reconsideration, specifying his objections.”57
Even if the Court were to insist on administrative exhaustion in matters involving the DLCA, this case presents the need for a “pragmatic exception[ ] to promote efficiency.”58 The “exceptions to the exhaustion requirement of (1) futility, (2) violation of statutory or constitutional rights, and (3) inadequate to prevent irreparable harm” “apply even in instances where a statutory scheme explicitly provides for administrative remedies”.59 Here, the Defendant has already recommended that a cease and desist order be issued against the Plaintiff, seeking to prohibit him from conducting business within the Virgin Islands. Although the citation states that the Plaintiff may avoid adverse action by paying both the fees and penalties or by presenting himself to the DLCA, these procedures fall short of the statutory and Constitutional requirements of notice and a hearing. Plaintiff presents a colorable argument for at least some additional statutory violations, and allowing the DLCA to remove business licenses for any period of time without a hearing in violation of due process certainly presents an opportunity for irreparable harm. Therefore, even if the Plaintiff were required to first exhaust his administrative remedies before seeking relief from this Court, that restriction would be excepted under these circumstances.
III. Motions to Strike
A. Supplements as an Attempt to Amend Complaint
Defendant seeks to strike Plaintiff’s February 6, 2015, Notice of Supplemental Exhibits to “Exhibit E” of the Plaintiff’s Complaint, arguing that the additional exhibits are an attempt to amend the Complaint [290]*290without leave of Court or opposing part’s written consent in violation of Fed. R. Civ. P. 15.
“[Superior Court] Rule 8 governs amendments to pleadings in Superior Court proceedings,”60 and a pleading may be amended “for any omission or defect therein.”61 Because parties ought to be “afforded an opportunity to test [their] claim[s] on the merits,”62 the Court “should freely give leave when justice so requires.”63 However, “such amendments ... are vested in the sound discretion of the Superior Court.”64 The factors courts consider when evaluating a motion to amend include: delay in bringing the motion, prejudice to the opposing party, and futility of the amendment.65
The Court should not immediately exclude a motion seeking to amend a Complaint because parties often determine new claims — or even eliminate previously raised claims — during the discovery process. Allowing for amendment when there is no prejudice to the opposing party serves both judicial economy and the interests of justice. However, the Court need not even reach these considerations here. The Court finds that Plaintiff’s attempt to supplement an exhibit to his Complaint is not a request to amend his Complaint because he is not seeking add additional claims.
[291]*291The Court will allow the Plaintiff to supplement the record. The additional DLCA attorney licenses are in line with the Court’s December 11, 2014, Order that the parties address whether the collection of fees from both law firms and attorneys is an ultra vires act and whether the fee charged by the DLCA is selectively enforced against on-island attorneys.
B. Surreply “In the Guise of a Notice”
Defendant argues that Plaintiff’s notice of filing the testimony before the Virgin Islands Legislature of Devin Carrington, Commissioner Designee for DLCA, is not an attempt to supplement the record but is instead “a sur-reply in the guise of a notice without leave of the Court to do so.”66
Pursuant to LRCl 7.1(a), “[o]nly a motion, a response in opposition, and a reply may be served on counsel and filed with the Court; further response or reply may be made only by leave of Court obtained before filing,” and the Court may sanction counsel for violation of this limitation.67,68 Sanctions against an attorney could include, but are not [292]*292limited to:69 criminal and/or civil contempt;70 summary contempt sanctions;71 and the striking of pleadings.72 Surreplies are disfavored [293]*293because parties are expected to fully and expeditiously address all matters raised in the original motion in their response. “[0]ur local rules require leave of court to file any supplemental pleadings,”73 and this requirement serves the interest of judicial economy, which benefits not only the Court but all parties involved. It should be noted, though, that Rule 7.1(a) is not a complete bar to filing a surreply. But even if issues have been raised for the first time in a reply — which would warrant a surreply in response74 — the rule is clear that the respondent must first seek leave of court before filing an additional response.
Since matters outside the pleadings have been presented to and not excluded by the Court, Defendant’s motion to dismiss is being treated as one for summary judgment. Plaintiff’s Opposition was filed on January 8, 2015, but Mr. Carrington’s testimony regarding the regulatory nature of the DLCA was not presented to the Legislature until February 25, 2015. Plaintiff could not be expected to file an exhibit with his opposition when the exhibit did not yet exist. While Plaintiff was amiss for not seeking leave of Court to supplement the record,75 the Court allows the testimony as both an addition to his Opposition and as a proper response to the Court’s December 11, 2014, Order requiring the parties to address whether the fees collected by the DLCA from attorneys and law firms are regulatory or revenue generating in nature.
IV. Issues Addressed in December 11,2014, Memorandum Opinion
Because the Plaintiff did not yet have the opportunity to respond to the Defendant’s motion to dismiss when the Court issued its December 11, 2014, Order and accompanying Memorandum Opinion, many of Defendant’s arguments were referenced but not completely resolved — or even resolvable — at that time. However, any previously discussed [294]*294arguments are included and augmented at various points throughout this Memorandum in response to Plaintiff’s opposition and Defendant’s reply.
V. Class Action
Defendant argues that “Plaintiff has no standing to bring a class action” on behalf of other Virgin Islands attorneys and that Plaintiff “has not met the requirements for class action certification.”76 Although Plaintiff’s case is not captioned as a “class action,”77 Defendant fails to demonstrate why Plaintiff’s proposed class action should be dismissed in whole because it includes off-island attorneys who presumably pay taxes outside of the Virgin Islands. Nor has Defendant shown in what specific way Plaintiff has failed to meet the certification requirements of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23.
The Court held on December 11, 2014, that the determination of whether this case constitutes a valid class action need not be addressed. Because this matter involves both real and potential constitutional and statutory violations, any holding made by the Court will affect both Plaintiff and all “attorneys similarly situated,” regardless of how the case is captioned. The Court need not reach the question of whether it will permit maintenance of a class action, and, for simplicity, the Court’s December 11, 2014, Order directed that the caption be changed to reflect only Plaintiff’s name.
VI. Collateral Estoppel
Defendant argues that Plaintiff’s case is barred under the doctrine of collateral estoppel78 because the legitimacy of DLCA attorney licensing fees has been litigated before and settled by the District Court of the Virgin Islands in Virgin Islands Bar Association v. Government of the Virgin Islands.
While the holding in Virgin Islands Bar Association was later upheld by the Third Circuit in Hollar v. Government of the Virgin Islands,82 both cases addressed the validity and rationality of a DLCA fee increase, not whether the regulation of the bar by the DLCA is proper. And both decisions predate the Virgin Islands Legislature’s 2004 grant of exclusive authority over attorneys to the Virgin Islands Supreme Court with the amendment of 4 V.I.C. § 32(e). Therefore, the Court finds that this matter is ripe for review and has not been previously litigated in light of the amended statute.
VII. Due Process
Defendant argues that Plaintiff “has not established an impairment of any right under the U.S. Constitution or federal law” and thus “this claim must be dismissed.”83
“States enjoy broad power to regulate the practice of professions within their boundaries, and the interest of the States in regulating lawyers is especially great since lawyers are essential to the primary governmental function of administering justice, and have historically been officers of the courts.”84 “The attorney does not acquire a right to practice, through the Constitution, but through the statutes.”85 However, once an attorney has “obtained license and been admitted to practice,”86 “the requirements of procedural due process must be met before a State can exclude a person [296]*296from practicing law”.87 A “state cannot exclude a person from the practice of law or from any other occupation in a manner or for reasons that contravene the Due Process or Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.”88
A. Private Cause of Action
Defendant argues that Plaintiff’s due process claims should be dismissed because “[t]he Fourteenth Amendment, by its terms, does not create a private cause of action” and “[a]ny claim for violation of a constitutional right must be brought through Section 1983 of the Civil Rights Act.”89
Defendant is correct in noting that “Plaintiff’s Complaint does not contain a due process count or any claims under Section 1983.”90 In fact, the due process concerns were raised sua sponte by this Court in its December 11, 2014, Order in response to a review of the DLCA’s licensing, citation and revocation process.91 Plaintiff brings this action both personally and as a Virgin Islands taxpayer, and the Court may address constitutional concerns regarding illegal or unauthorized Government action via both 5 V.I.C. § 80 and its inherent powers.
B. Refusal to Issue, Revocation or Suspension of Attorney Business Licenses Without Notice and a Hearing
Plaintiff submits that the “condition precedent business licensing of attorneys is unconstitutional” because “[a] law license is a property right to which due process protections attach” and “[o]nce a law license has been conferred . . . taking away that right requires notice and an opportunity to be heard.”92
Pursuant to 27 V.I.C. § 304(a), “[t]he Commissioner, after notice and hearing, may refuse to issue, or may revoke or suspend a license for any one or any combination of the following causes [listed below]”. [297]*297Although non-payment is not an enumerated licensing violation listed under Section 304(a) — and, in fact, the “condition precedent” requirement of Section 301(a) could be read to negate any need for notice and a hearing — due process requires notification and an opportunity to be heard before interference with an individual’s right to practice law,93 even for non-payment of a fee. Second, as Plaintiff points out, pursuant to 27 V.I.C. § 304(j), “[a] license applicant is not a part to the tax clearance transaction between the BIR and the DLCA”94 and thus is not afforded notice before the business license application is denied on those grounds. The Court finds that the DLCA’s procedure of denying, revoking or suspending an attorney’s business license without a hearing violates due process.
C. Request for a Cease and Desist Order Without Notice and a Hearing
“Statutory interpretation begins with the language of the statute itself.”95 The DLCA may, “upon previous notice and an opportunity for a fair hearing, impose administrative fines for violations of the rules, regulations and orders approved or prescribed by the Department.”96 And “[affter a hearing and determination that an accused has violated [the licensing requirements] ... , the Department may issue against such accused party an order to cease and desist and may prescribe the corrective terms and conditions through the evidence at its disposal”.97 The Department may apply to the Court to have any cease and desist order issued by the DLCA enforced, and noncompliance with the judicial order constitutes contempt of Court.98
The violation/citation issued to Plaintiff on October 14, 2014, states that “[t]he above violation(s) have resulted in a recommendation to [298]*298the [DLCA] that a ‘CEASE AND DESIST’ order be issued to prohibit [Plaintiff] from conducting business in violation of V.I. Licensing laws.” Defendant’s contention that Plaintiff “fails to establish any property interest... in an expired business license”99 is unpersuasive because the threat of a cease and desist order against the Plaintiff stemmed from a citation to renew his business license, a “condition precedent” requirement under Title 27 to the practice of a profession within the Virgin Islands. And a party retains a property interest in an expired license until the license is actually revoked.100 The request for a cease and desist order without notice and a hearing violates procedural due process.
D. Due Process Violations By the Bureau of Internal Revenue
Plaintiff also challenges the Bureau of Internal Revenue’s (“BIR”) alleged ability to “unilaterally, without notice or the right to a hearing, prevent Plaintiff from engaging in the practice of law.”101 The BIR is not a party to this action, and the Court will not address any alleged constitutional violations against it here. However, the Court finds that the denial of a business license predicated solely on information obtained from the BIR or other sources without notice may violate due process.
VIII. Approval of Business License on Payment of a Tax and Other Conditions
Defendant argues that “the power to tax includes the power to enforce the tax and to place reasonable regulations on persons of whom the tax [299]*299will be collected.”102 Plaintiff alleges that he is required, at the request of the DLCA, to submit certificates of good standing and tax compliance, partnership/corporation registration, a police background check, and proper licenses from DPNR and Fire Services.103 Defendant acknowledges that “there is no provision in the statute that requires [submission of a Certificate of Good Standing from the V.I. Supreme Court].”104
Under 27 V.I.C. § 301(b), an applicant must “furnish information concerning his identity, personal history, experience, business record, purposes, record of any conviction of any offense which is a felony or crime involving moral turpitude in the jurisdiction where the offense occurred, and any other pertinent facts that the Commissioner may reasonably require.” But pursuant to 27 V.I.C. § 303(a), the Commissioner, not the applicant, is required to “submit copies of the application to the U.S. Virgin Islands Police Department (V.I.P.D.) for verification of the police record stated on the application, to the Virgin Islands Historic Preservation Commission, Department of Planning and Natural Resources for construction and site acceptability, . . . and to pay any other pertinent agency or instrumentality of the Government of the United States Virgin Islands or of the United States for the purpose of obtaining reasonable information or approval determined necessary by the Commissioner for action upon the application.”105 The applicant is, however, required to produce a tax clearance letter upon application or request for renewal under the provisions of the Virgin Islands Stop Tax [300]*300Evasion Program.106 The Court finds that Defendant has not established that its process for regulating an attorney’s business license is reasonable or in line with the statutory requirements of Title 27.
IX. Jurisdiction and Separation of Powers
Defendant alleges that “[i]n the Virgin Islands, the power to prescribe the qualifications and duties of officers of the court is shared under the Revised Organic Act by the legislature and judiciary,”107 and thus “the DLCA does not violate the separation of powers doctrine by levying a business license fee on attorneys”.108 Plaintiff argues that while “the Legislature has made the affirmative choice to create [4 V.I.C. § 32(e)] while not speaking directly to what should be done with respect to the DLCA’s business licensure regulatory power over attorneys . . . Plaintiff. . . ask[s] this court to decide what the state of law should be in the face of this apparently [sic] statutory contradiction and what the soundest law in the Virgin Islands is”.109 Defendant replies that the doctrine “is not violated by the regulation of attorneys by the Legislature because the Legislature shares powers to regulate under the ROA”.110
“[T]he principle of separation of powers applies to the coordinate branches of the Virgin Islands government”.111 The principle dictates that “the three branches of government — legislative, executive, and judicial — each [have] specified duties on which neither of the other branches can encroach”.112 Therefore, “as a general rule ... unless otherwise expressly provided or incidental to the powers conferred, the legislature cannot exercise either executive or judicial power; the executive cannot exercise [301]*301either legislative or judicial power; [and] the judiciary cannot exercise either executive or legislative power.”113
However, as the DLCA points out,114 the division of powers between the branches of government is not always clearly delineated. The Defendant cites Smith v. Magras for its argument that the power to regulate the practice of law is shared by the legislature and the judiciary pursuant to the Revised Organic Act (“ROA”).115 The Third Circuit’s 1997 holding in Smith was based on a finding that, at that time, nothing in the Virgin Islands Code vested “exclusive control over the regulation of attorneys in the judiciary.”116 In the absence of a specific designation, the Third Circuit found that the ROA envisioned a sharing of powers between the legislature and judiciary over the regulation of attorneys.117 And, at the time Smith was settled, the holding was “not inconsistent with the state court cases that have invalidated similar licensing because such schemes infringe on the power of the courts to regulate attorneys ...[,] cases [that] are grounded on the exclusive control over the regulation of attorneys the particular state had vested in its judiciary.”118 However, in 2004, the Legislature passed Act No. 6687, which amended 4 V.I.C. § 32(e) and vested exclusive regulation of the bar in the Supreme Court [302]*302of the Virgin Islands.119 The DLCA has “cognizance and control of the granting, transferring, revoking, suspending and canceling of all licenses and permits, except in cases with respect to which, and to the extent to which, any of said powers are conferred upon another agency or person by law,”120 and the legislative branch divested the DLCA of any shared powers it may have had with the judiciary over the regulation of attorneys with the amendment of 4 V.I.C. § 32(e).121
A. Kradolfer v. Smith Is Merely Persuasive as to Reasonableness and Comity Considerations
Defendant cites Kradolfer v. Smith,
B. Royall v. Virginia Is Merely Persuasive as to the Prohibition Against an Authority’s Interference with an Attorney’s Professional License.
Defendant places similar reliance on Royall v. Virginia, an 1886 U.S. Supreme Court case, for its contention that “the requirement that payment is first received to obtain a license and the possibility of enforcement of the statute for failure to pay the tax through measures such as arrest is indicia that a tax [for revenue purposes] is being levied”.128 The U.S. Supreme Court held in Royall that the tax placed upon attorneys was revenue generating and not regulatory, noting that the “revenue license” was “different from and in addition to the license to [practice] law,” an “occupation tax for which the license is merely a receipt and not an authority . . . because it is laid and collected as revenue and not merely as incident to the general police power of the state”.129 The court discussed that, while city authorities “could not prohibit attorneys at law, already licensed, from practicing their profession within the city limitsf, t]he exercise of the vocation [of law], was, however, a civil right and privilege, to which are attached valuable immunities and pecuniary advantages, and is a fair subject of taxation by the State”.130 The monetary charge, “if reasonable and just,” is then only subject to “fees or [304]*304fines,”131 not, as the DLCA avers, to prohibition from the practice of law. This Court is particularly persuaded by the U.S. Supreme Court’s holding that while attorneys could be subject to a reasonable and just tax as an incident of their business license, the taxing authority oversteps its bounds by seeking to restrict, pursuant to the Supreme Court’s holding in Royall, an attorney’s Constitutional right to practice the profession of law under the attorney’s professional license:
[Tjhat the statute, whose application in the particular case is sought to be restrained, is not void on its face, but is complained of only because its operation in the particular instance works a violation of a constitutional right; for the cases are numerous where the tax laws of a State, which in their general and proper application are perfectly valid, have been held to become void in particular cases, either as unconstitutional regulations of commerce, or as violations of contracts prohibited by the Constitution, or because in some other way they operate to deprive the party complaining of a right [to practice his profession as] secured to him by the Constitution of the United States.132
And while Defendant contends that “Plaintiff has not set forth facts drawing a nexus between any alleged regulation by DLCA and the regulation of the practice of law,”133 Defendant citation recommends that a cease and desist order be issued against the Plaintiff, seeking to prohibit the Plaintiff from conducting business within the Virgin Islands.
C. The Legislature’s Divestment of the DLCA’S Jurisdiction Over the Virgin Islands Bar is in Line with 48 U.S.C. § 1611.
Defendant points to 48 U.S.C. § 1611(c) to support its argument that the power to regulate attorneys is shared by the legislative branch and the judiciary under the ROA.134 Pursuant to 48 U.S.C. § 1611(c), Practice and Procedure,
The rules governing the practice and procedure of the courts established by local law and those prescribing the qualifications and duties [305]*305of the judges and officers thereof, oaths and bonds, and the times and places of holding court shall be governed by local law or the rules promulgated by those courts.
While both the legislative and executive branch have a degree of authority over the judicial branch pursuant to checks and balances, Defendant’s contention that the Legislature has authority over the regulation of attorneys135 does nothing to further its argument that the DLCA— as part of the executive branch — has any authority to do so. Under 48 U.S.C. § 1611(b),
The legislature of the Virgin Islands may vest in the courts of the Virgin Islands established by local law jurisdiction over all causes in the Virgin Islands over which any court established by the Constitution and laws of the United States does not have exclusive jurisdiction. Such jurisdiction shall be subject to the concurrent jurisdiction conferred on the District Court of the Virgin Islands by section 22(a) and (c) of this Act [48 USCS § 1612(a) and (c)].
Congress granted the Legislature the power to vest the local courts with any jurisdiction that was not held exclusively or concurrently under federal law elsewhere. The federal courts do not have exclusive or even concurrent jurisdiction with any authority to regulate members of the Virgin Islands bar regarding local matters. The Court need not interpret the intent of the Legislature where it specifically divested the DLCA of any authority over the practice of law by vesting the Virgin Islands Supreme Court with exclusive jurisdiction over regulating Virgin Islands attorneys, pursuant to — and not in violation of — 48 U.S.C. § 1611.136 The Court finds that the statutes granting the DLCA authority to regulate attorneys were implicitly repealed by passage of 4 V.I.C. § 32.137
[306]*306Additionally, Plaintiff appears to argue that while the Supreme Court has exclusive jurisdiction over the “admission” and “discipline” of attorneys, this power is not absolute, and that even with the enactment of 4 V.I.C. § 32(e), the Legislature retains the authority to enact legislation granting other departments of the government the authority to regulate attorneys in other ways.138 Inherent to an attorney’s admission to the bar is whether the attorney may then pursue his profession, and the Plaintiff alleges that the DLCA infringes upon this right. The Court need not reach what authority, if any, exists elsewhere within the Virgin Islands Government over attorneys if that power does not infringe on the Supreme Court’s exclusive authority to regulate the practice of law. And the Court will not address the Legislature’s ability to enact legislation that may in some way affect the practice of law, as that question is not presented here.
D. Whether the Imposition of the Licensing Fee in 1967 Was Constitutional is Irrelevant to the Question of Whether the DLCA’S Regulation of Attorneys Violates the Exclusive Power of the Virgin Islands Supreme Court, Local Laws and the U.S. Constitution.
Defendant argues that “[wjhen the legislature imposes a tax, there is a presumption that the tax is constitutional and the presumption is indeed ‘strongest in the area of taxation.’ ”139 However, the constitutionality of the 1967 imposition of the business license fee, as well as whether the non-payment of business license fees due to the government may subject one to civil and criminal consequences, is not the subject of the Court’s review. Instead, the Court inquires as to whether regulation by DLCA via criminal and civil penalties infringes upon the exclusive power of the Virgin Islands Supreme Court and violates local law and the United States Constitution.
[307]*307X. Regulatory or Revenue Generating
Defendant argues that “a business license fee does not lose its character of a tax because it imposes minimal regulations on attorneys; a statute is not per se impermissible because it imposes minimal regulations on attorneys.”140 Plaintiff responds that “[m]uch less intrusive attorney licensing schemes have been struck down by other jurisdictions.”141 Defendant replies that “[the DLCA] must seek recourse in the judiciary if an attorney engages in the practice of law without obtaining a business license.”142 However, Defendant’s contention conflicts with the clear language of 27 V.I.C. § 301, which states that “[e]very person or association wishing to engage in [the profession of a lawyer], as a condition precedent to engaging in any such ... profession, shall apply in writing to and obtain from the Commissioner of Licensing and Consumer Affairs ... a license to engage in or conduct such ... profession”. Under the statute, the DLCA has the authority to prohibit the practice of law without first seeking approval from the judiciary.
Whether the fee is referred to as a tax or a fee is secondary to the regulatory or revenue raising purpose behind the charge,143 and the Court need even not settle the issue of whether the fee imposed is properly termed a “tax” or a “fee”:144 Plaintiff challenges the imposition and enforcement of the fee as a statutorily prohibited interference with the Supreme Court’s exclusive authority to regulate the practice of law.145 According to the Third Circuit, “[licensing schemes similar [this one] are not uncommon .... [S]ome merely generate revenue by way of fees, [308]*308[while] others include regulatory provisions that govern conduct”146 and “for the most part, these arrangements are largely unobjectionable and are ordinarily approved by state courts.”147 But, while courts within our circuit have held that a “pure[ly] revenue-raising measure does not infringe on the power of the state courts to regulate attorneys,”148 “[c]ourts have taken a different view of measures that include regulatory provisions placing conditions on the practice of law.”149
The issue of regulatory or revenue generating licensing fees has come before the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, most notably in Smith, in which non-owner attorneys who worked at law firms challenged the imposition of licensing fees upon them. Although the District Court stated in Mendez v. Hovensa and Alexis v. Hovensa that “the Court in Smith found Section 301(a) to be a revenue-generating provision that does not regulate the conduct of attorneys,”150 Smith did not so hold. Instead, Smith relied on the then Commissioner’s “explicit disclaimer ... of authority to interfere with the court’s control over lawyers” when holding that any “potential [regulatory] infringement is more modest than was originally supposed.”151 The Third Circuit later clarified its holding in Smith, stating that it had “determined] that the attorney licensing scheme posed a minimal interference on the judiciary’s power to regulate attorneys.”152 Smith did not settle the question of whether the DLCA’s attorney licensing scheme is regulatory or revenue inducing.
Even if Smith held that the licensing of attorneys in the Virgin Islands is regulatory but acceptable, the regulation of attorneys in our Territory has changed quite a bit since 1997. In 2004, the power to regulate attorneys was granted exclusively to the Virgin Islands Supreme Court. Although this Court may sanction attorneys by, but not limited to, criminal and/or civil contempt, summary contempt sanctions, and the [309]*309striking of pleadings,153 even the Superior Court lacks the authority to disbar154 attorneys.155 Therefore, it is likely that Smith’s holding — that the Commissioner’s promise of no interference was sufficient to address any regulatory concerns — was not based on good law and is no longer binding upon this Court regarding the propriety of allowing any degree of interference156 with the Virgin Islands Supreme Court’s exclusive authority to regulate the practice of law within our Territory, including the Supreme Court’s singular authority to order that an attorney cease the practice of law. And Smith acknowledged that at least one jurisdiction has invalidated a purely revenue-raising measure that “infringed on the . . . exclusive power of the courts to regulate attorneys.”157
Defendant states that “[i]t has already been determined in this jurisdiction that the purpose of the licensing fee imposed by DLCA on attorneys is to raise revenue,”158 an issue addressed by the District Court in Virgin Islands Bar Association.
A. Purely Revenue Generating Fees
Defendant argues that “the purpose of the licensing fee imposed by the DLCA on attorneys is to raise revenue.”162 Plaintiff responds that “[a] simple tax measure does not regulate public welfare, health, morals or safety,” the tasks assigned to the DLCA by 27 V.I.C. § 304,163 and Plaintiff points out that enforcement officers of the DLCA are peace officers by statute.164
i. The DLCA is Not a Revenue Generating Division of the Virgin Islands Government.
Defendant’s assertion that Section 302 is merely revenue generating and in no way regulatory165 appears to conflict with the stated Legislative intent behind the creation of the Department of Licensing and Consumer Affairs to “establish, administer, coordinate and supervise the regulation and licensing of private businesses and professions”166 for the [311]*311benefit and protection of Virgin Islands consumers. And, enforcement officers within the DLCA are peace officers, which does not appear to support its contention that it is merely a revenue generating department.167 Unlike the Department of Finance and the Bureau of Internal Revenue, the DLCA was not established as a revenue generating division168 or a taxing authority.169 This is so even if the Court were to “uphold the portion of the statute requiring payment of the fee . . . after severing any unconstitutional provisions in the statute.”170 In the same way that “[t]he Legislature did not surrender its authority to collect [revenue generating] fees to the judiciary,”171 it appears that the Legislature also did not grant this power to the Defendant. “It is an accepted rule, when a power is expressly conferred . . . and the mode of its exercise is prescribed, that such mode is exclusive of all others.”172 Additionally, even if it is argued that the Department is self-revenue generating, the fees collected are not being used for the statutory purpose of the fees — to regulate professions, a power that the DLCA does not appear to have over attorneys.
[312]*312ii. That a Portion of the Funds Collected Are Directed to the Judicial Council Imprest Account Does Not Valídate the Business License.
The DLCA states that the fee collected by the DLCA “aids the judiciary by directing a portion of the licensing fee to the judiciary.”173 The Judicial Council Imprest Account “shall consist of all eligible federal funds, all donations, gifts and bequests, and other revenues designated to the Imprest Account.”174 Pursuant to 4 V.I.C. 442(b), “$200.00 [of the DLCA attorney licensing fee] shall be made payable to the Judicial Council for deposit into the Imprest Fund[ and t]he remaining $300.00 of the licensing fee shall be [paid] into the General Fund of the Treasury of the Government of the Virgin Islands”.175
“Payments shall be made from the Judicial Council Imprest Account only for the . . . necessary expenses of the law libraries maintained by the District and Superior Courts .. ., and for the expenses of the Virgin Islands Bar Association’s Committee on Ethics and Grievances, and its Legal Education and Admission to the Bar Committee,”176 When necessary, the Account also funds “[t]he annual expenses of the Office of Disciplinary Counsel”.177 Notably, the funds are not deposited with the authority delegated by the Legislature to regulate attorneys — the Virgin Islands Supreme Court. And the designation of the funds to the judiciary does not validate an otherwise invalid fee or attempt by the DLCA to regulate the bar. Whether the collection of allegedly revenue-generating fees by a regulatory agency violates the Legislative intent of 27 V.I.C. § 301 et seq., and 4 V.I.C. § 32, and whether this [313]*313collection of revenue exceeds the regulatory powers granted to it is an unsettled question of law and survives summary judgment.
iii. Sakanashi is Persuasive to the Court’s Determination of the Primary Purpose of the Fee.
Territory v. Sakanashi,178 cited by Defendant for the contention that “[i]f the primary purpose of the statute is to raise revenue, it will be viewed as a permissible tax even if it has some components which are regulatory in nature,”179 is persuasive to the Court’s consideration of whether the fee applied by the DLCA is revenue generating or regulatory in nature. In Sakanashi, the Supreme Court of Hawaii stated that “[i]f revenue is the primary purpose and regulation is merely incidental[,] the imposition is a [revenue generating] tax; while if regulation is the primary purpose^] the mere fact that incidentally a revenue is also obtained does not make the imposition a tax”.180 Sakanashi dealt with a peddler’s contention that the requirement of a broker’s license fee violated the Privileges and Immunities Clause of the Constitution, not, as Plaintiff contends, allegations of due process violations upon an attorney’s right to practice his profession. Thus, the Supreme Court of Hawaii’s affirmation of Plaintiffs conviction under a Hawaii statute is not on point to the Court’s present considerations and does not confirm the validity of DLCA’s fee upon attorneys.
iv. Taxation By a Regulatory Agency
Plaintiff responds that “[t]he Government cannot promise it will separate out attorneys from the applicable laws and enforce the DLCA regulations only as a tax as to attorneys but as a regulatory agency to all other businesses,”181 citing Harlen v. Helena, a case in which the Montana Supreme Court invalidated a city ordinance requiring a fee of all persons or entities carrying out business in the city.182
The Court is persuaded by the Montana Supreme Court’s holding in Harlen v. Helena:
[314]*314We recognize the City’s assertions that it does not or will not attempt to regulate standards and qualifications for attorney admission and practice. Nevertheless, we know of no rule of law that allows us to consider only the City’s intentions as opposed to the unambiguous language of the ordinance. Despite its original intent, the City has adopted an ordinance which conditions an attorney’s access to the practice of law. As such, the ordinance intrudes upon this Court’s constitutional authority.183
The DLCA is statutorily required to regulate, not collect revenue from, professions. Thus, it is particularly determinative of this matter that the DLCA, a regulatory agency, is taxing the profession of law.
B. Regulatory Fees
Assuming the funds are in any way regulatory in nature, the appropriateness of the collection of funds by the DLCA, an agency not tasked with regulatory powers over attorneys under 4 V.I.C. § 32, is also unsettled. As discussed, while the Department may “coordinate with other agencies and departments of the Government of the Virgin Islands to promote and watch over the enforcement of all laws,”184 the DLCA has “cognizance and control of... all licenses and permits, except in cases ... [where] any of said powers are conferred upon another agency ... by law.”185 And, it appears that money raised for regulatory purposes should be paid to the entity entrusted by the Legislature to do such regulation — the Supreme Court of the Virgin Islands.186
[315]*315Defendant’s argument that it has either the power to tax or regulate the profession of law is inapposite to the language of Section 302(b), which states that the DLCA has jurisdiction over “[a]ny person or association engaged in a business, occupation, profession, or trade ... not covered by any other provision of this Code.” (emphasis added). Attorneys are regulated directly through — and pay a fee partly as a result of — 4 V.I.C. 32(e), and therefore, clearly fall outside of the purview of 27 V.I.C. § 302.
C. Double Taxation
Defendant argues that The Virgin Islands District Court held in 1986 in Virgin Islands Bar Association v. Government of the Virgin Islands187 that bar dues and the DLCA licensing fees do not constitute a “double tax” upon attorneys. Double taxation involves “[t]he imposition of two taxes on the same property during the same period and for the same taxing purpose.”188 Neither the District Court nor the Third Circuit looked at the Legislative intent behind Section 302, nor did those courts have the opportunity to view that section in light of the Supreme Court’s relatively recent receipt of exclusive authority over Virgin Islands attorneys. If the DLCA attorney licensing fee is a tax, as the Defendant urges, this raises potential double-taxation concerns regarding the collection of fees from the Virgin Islands Bar by both a regulatory agency and the Supreme Court of the Virgin Islands during the same period and for the same taxing purposes.189
[316]*316However, as stated above, the Court will allow a temporary fee to be imposed by the DLCA in comity in order to fund the Judicial Council Imprest Account. The Court finds that this does not result in double-taxation because the $200 of the licensing fee funds the Imprest Fund while the money raised by the Virgin Islands Supreme Court via the Bar Association does not.
XI. Ultra Vires Act
Plaintiff argues that the DLCA’s levy of an additional one hundred dollar ($100.00) fee to law firms and law offices, when it is already collecting five hundred dollar ($500.00) licensing fees from each individual attorney, is an ultra vires act because “[t]here is no listed fee for ‘law firm’ or ‘law office’ by statute or administrative notice.”190 Defendant counters in its motion to dismiss that the “DLCA has authority under 27 V.I.C. § 302 to impose the fee”191 and that “Plaintiff’s complaint does not support Plaintiff’s allegation that the fee charged is outside of DLCA’s authority.”192 Section 302(b) states that:
Any person or association engaged in a business, occupation, profession, or trade not designated in subsection (a) of this section or not covered by any other provision of this Code shall obtain an annual license at a fee determined by the Commissioner as reasonable to defray the costs of regulation, but not to exceed $500.
[317]*317Defendant urges that Plaintiff’s complaint should be dismissed because “Plaintiff has failed to state a claim that he paid a fee in excess of what is permitted under law.”193
The Court need not address whether Defendant’s actions are ultra vires because the Court holds that the DLCA lacks the authority to regulate attorneys and law firms, a power that lies exclusively with the Virgin Islands Supreme Court.
XII. DLCA Regulation of Buildings
Defendant posits that “[t]he business license issued by DLCA does not give attorneys the statutory authority to practice law in the Virgin Islands, but permits them to maintain a business in the Virgin Islands”194 and contends that “[a] license fee which only controls where an attorney may obtain his office and does not regulate who is licensed as an attorney nor places any professional requirements on individuals who practice law ... is not unconstitutional.”195 This argument does not support the DLCA’s practice of charging a fee to each attorney working within a law office, nor does it offer sustenance to DLCA’s argument that it may regulate law office locations. The authority to regulate a business location already lies with the Department of Planning and Natural Resources.196
XIII. Excessive Fee
Plaintiff responds that Defendant admits in its motion to dismiss that it is only permitted to collect a fee “not to exceed $500.”197 Plaintiff argues that the fee it charges law firms — $130.00 — is not in violation of Section 302(b). Section 302(b) states that “[a]ny person or association engaged in a business, occupation, profession, or trade not designated in subsection (a) of this section or not covered by any other provision of this [318]*318Code shall obtain an annual license at a fee determined by the Commissioner as reasonable to defray the costs of regulation, but not to exceed $500,” and does not support Plaintiff’s contention that the fee is excessive. However, pursuant to Section 302(a), attorneys are to be charged an annual fee of $500.00, while Plaintiff presents evidence that he is charged an annual fee of $600.00.198
Defendant points to Act No 6585, Section 13, which provided that “the departments and agencies of the Government of the Virgin Islands may increase any administrative fee established under provisions of the Virgin Islands Code by not more than $100 a year” and amended 27 V.I.C. § 302(b) to allow the Commissioner to charge a “reasonable” fee “to defray the cost of regulation . . . not to exceed $500,”199 in support of its authority to charge both attorneys and law firms a fee. However, this is in opposition to the clear language of Section 302(b), which states that the DLCA may charge a fee to “[a]ny person or association engaged in a business, occupation, profession, or trade not designated in subsection (a)” (emphasis added). Law firms are comprised of attorneys, and attorneys are specifically designated in Section 302(a).
XIV. Pro Hac Vice
Defendant submits that Plaintiff’s “allegation that all pro hac vice attorneys are required to obtain a business license in the Virgin Islands is speculative and cannot survive a motion to dismiss”200 and that, as a regularly admitted attorney, Plaintiff lacks standing to address the DLCA license as it applies to attorneys admitted pro hac vice. As a Virgin Islands taxpayer, Plaintiff need not allege that every harm discussed may befall him personally, only that the Government action is illegal or unauthorized. 5 V.I.C. § 80. Additionally, Defendant states that “[a] license issued by DLCA entitles the owner to ‘carry on the specified business or occupation from the designated place of business,’ ” and, if a pro hac vice attorney lists a designated place of business in its application [319]*319for a business, the DLCA may impose a business fee upon that individual.201 Plaintiff responds that pro hac vice attorneys list “a physical and mailing address in the Virgin Islands on [their] form . . . because DLCA will not accept a stateside address on its forms.”202 The Court finds, then, that the Defendant’s objection to Plaintiff’s allegations regarding pro hac vice attorneys is waived because the DLCA requires all professionals seeking “to engage in any business, occupation, profession, or trade”203 to apply for a business license, and the application for a business license requires all attorneys — regardless of status — to list a local address.
The Third Circuit declined to “reach the question whether [attorneys who do not ordinarily work in the Virgin Islands] are ‘engaged in’ being attorneys in the Virgin Islands,”204 but has held that “engaging in a single isolated business transaction does not constitute being engaged in a business for which a license to do business must be procured.”205 In the Virgin Islands, “[n]o attorney or law firm may appear pro hac vice in more than a total of three [civil] causes,”206 and this rule applies to entire firms, whether the appearances are before the local or District courts.207 Pro hac vice attorneys may appear in three (3) civil cases, may practice separately before the District Court, and may be able to accept additional criminal cases. Thus while the Court finds that application of DLCA business license requirements to pro hac vice attorneys — or any attorneys — is not in line with the requirements and purposes of Chapter 27 of the Virgin Islands Code, it does find that pro hac vice attorneys are capable of multiple business transactions within our jurisdiction and are thus subject to the $200 temporary Judicial Council Imprest Account tax.
[320]*320XV. Character of DLCA Regulation Versus Character of Judicial Regulation of Attorneys
Defendant argues that “DLCA does not usurp the judiciary’s authority because the regulation, if any, by DLCA is of a different character than the regulation conducted by the judiciary.”208 That a DLCA business license and a professional license issued by the Virgin Islands Bar are of a separate character is not at issue and needs not be discussed further. Instead, the Court must consider whether the DLCA exceeds its authority by presenting itself as a taxing authority and/or by attempting to regulate the practice of law within the Virgin Islands, as Plaintiff alleges.
A. Legislative Intent and Licensure of Self-Regulating Professions
Related to the this discussion is the fact that the Court could not find any other traditionally self-regulating profession subject to the same licensing provisions established by the DLCA in Chapter 9 of Title 27. For example: members of the medical field are subject to the requirements of the Virgin Islands Board of Medical Examiners,209 and licensing fees collected, with the exception of fines and initial application fees, are deposited with the Board of Medical Examiners;210 the profession of psychology is governed by the Board of Psychology Examiners,211 and licensing fees are paid to the psychology board of the original license;212 and the profession of public accounting is subject to regulation by the Virgin Islands Board of Public Accountancy.213 The fees collected from these professions go, almost exclusively, to the boards that regulate each practice. However, with the exception of public accountants,214 medical [321]*321doctors, surgeons, dentists, nurses, midwives, psychologists and psychiatrists are not included in Section 302, which appears to be a “catch all” provision for professions and occupations not addressed elsewhere in Title 27.
Fees collected from attorneys are not returned to the entity that oversees the practice of law, but are instead divided between the Judicial Council Imprest Account and the General Fund.215
“If the language [of a statute] is clear and unambiguous, there is no need to resort to any other rule or [to] statutory construction.”216 And, unless the disposition required by the text is absurd, the Court must enforce the statute according to its terms.217 However, the Court must be ever mindful of statutes and portions of statutes that have since been repealed. Section 302 was added to the Virgin Islands Code on June 6, 1967, and, in 1997, the Third Circuit held that “the Organic Act envisions the possibility of the sharing of power over the regulation of attorneys between the Virgin Islands courts and the Virgin Islands legislature”.218 But, seven (7) years later, the Legislature vested exclusive regulation of the bar in the Supreme Court.219
The Court finds that Section 302 infringes on judicial power; the Legislature intended to nullify Section 302 with the passage of 4 V.I.C. § 32(e);220 and these findings are in line with the Legislative intent regarding other self-regulating professions.
XVI. Selective Enforcement
Plaintiff’s Complaint argues that “by common administrative practice, DLCA requires an attorney and/or law office to have a physical address in [322]*322the Virgin Islands to be issued a business license” and “[a]s a result, DLCA does not require off-island attorneys to obtain a V.I. business license when they practice in the Territory.”221 Defendant argues that “Plaintiff cannot establish that he was deliberately singled out and discriminated against on account of race, religion, and any other impermissible consideration, that similarly situated attorneys received treatment more favorable than the treatment Plaintiff received, or that any [sloppiness] in the enforcement of the business license fee was intentional or deliberate.”222
“Selective enforcement” involves “[t]he practice of law-enforcement officers who use wide or even unfettered discretion about when and where to carry out certain laws”223 and can involve “facially discriminatory conduct or arbitrary decision making”224 or “singling a person out for prosecution or punishment under a statute . .. because the person is a member of a protected group or because the person has exercised or is planning to exercise a constitutionally protected right.”225 Even if the selective enforcement of a law is simply the result of the difficulty of enforcement, that does not make the selective enforcement appropriate.226 Indeed, any difficulty the DLCA has in regulating off-island Virgin Islands attorneys supports the conclusion that the Supreme Court is in the better position to regulate attorneys — both on and off-island — because of its relationship with the Virgin Islands Bar Association,227 even if the Supreme Court’s jurisdiction was not exclusive.
[323]*323Chapter 27 states that “[e]very person or association wishing to engage in any business, occupation, profession, or trade”228 in the Virgin Islands is subject to regulation and licensing requirements established by our Legislature. The licensing requirements for attorneys in Chapter 27 do not appear to be restricted to residents of our Territory. If Defendant requires attorneys to reside on-island in order to receive a business license, a license which is, by statute, a prerequisite to the practice of law under Section 301 of Title 27, it appears this too may constitute a constitutional violation. Such a residency requirement has been struck down by the Supreme Court of the United States as unconstitutional under the Privileges and Immunities Clause.229 The Court finds that the DLCA’s process for the licensing of — and subsequent enforcement against — attorneys and firms located on-island involves selectively enforced regulation because Section 301 requires licensure of every person and association wishing to engage in business in the Virgin Islands, regardless of residency.
Therefore, the DLCA must charge the temporary Judicial Council Imprest Account tax to all attorneys engaging in business within the Virgin Islands.
XVII. Any Conflict Between 27 V.I.C. § 301 et seq. and 4 V.I.C. § 32
Defendant argues that “[b]ecause the issuance of the DLCA license does not authorize the practice of law, [DLCA’s] termination [of a business license] cannot logically foreclose the practice of law.”230 However, because Defendant’s argument conflicts with the clear language of Act No. 5265, Section 272(d)(1), which states that “the Department may issue against such accused party an order to cease and desist,” the Court finds that while the DLCA may not initially permit the practice of law, it certainly has the potential to interfere with it. As discussed above, it is a statutory requirement that one first obtain a business license before [324]*324one can practice their profession within the Virgin Islands.231 Thus, Defendant’s contention that “the denial of a DLCA business license is [not] concomitant with a denial of the right to practice law”232 fails.
CONCLUSION
A “[declaratory judgment] may be either affirmative or negative in form and effect,” with “the force and effect of a final judgment or decree.”233 The Court recognizes that a portion of the fees collected by the DLCA from attorneys is paid into the Judicial Council Imprest Account, an account which covers the necessary expenses of the District and Superior Court libraries and the Virgin Islands Bar Association’s Ethics and Grievances and Legal Education and Admission to the Bar committees. And the most important consideration of this Court when considering new or a non-precedential application of the law is the identification of the best rule for the Virgin Islands based on the unique characteristics and needs of [the people] of the Virgin Islands. Therefore, as the public is dependent on access to the law libraries and the regulation of attorneys by the Supreme Court via the Bar Association’s Ethics and Grievances Committee, it would not serve the best interest of the people of the Virgin Islands to suddenly deny funding to the Imprest Fund. In the interest of justice, the Court will, as a matter of comity, permit the DLCA to collect from attorneys on behalf of, and forward to, the Judicial Council Imprest Account a $200.00 fee as a temporary tax until the Legislature has enacted a proper tax imposed by an appropriate taxing authority to fund the account or the Supreme Court has chosen to increase or reallocate attorneys’ fees and dues to fund the Judicial Council Imprest Account, whichever occurs first.
Because the Court here issues a Declaratory Judgment, Plaintiff’s motion for preliminary injunction and Defendant’s motion for summary judgment are denied as moot. Defendant’s motions to strike are denied.
An appropriate order is issued herewith.
[325]*325ORDER AND DECLARATORY JUDGMENT
Having considered Plaintiff John-Russell B. Pate’s October 22, 2014, request for injunctive relief and a declaratory judgment; Defendant Department of Licensing and Consumer Affairs’ November 21, 2014, motion to dismiss, treated here as one for summary judgment; and Defendant’s March 12, 2015, and March 23, 2015, motions to strike, it is
ORDERED that Plaintiff’s motion for injunctive relief is DENIED AS MÍOOT; and it is
ORDERED that Defendant’s motion for summary judgment is DENIED AS MOOT; and it is
ORDERED that Defendant’s motions to strike are DENIED; and it is
ORDERED that Defendant SHALL IMMEDIATELY CEASE issuing, revoking or suspending attorney business licenses; and it is
ORDERED that Defendant SHALL IMMEDIATELY CEASE requesting or threatening to request cease and desist orders involving attorney business licenses; and it is
ORDERED that in the interest of justice, the Court will, as a matter of comity, permit the DLCA to collect from attorneys on behalf of, and forward to, the Judicial Council Imprest Account a $200.00 annual fee as a temporary tax until the Legislature has enacted a proper tax imposed by an appropriate taxing authority to fund the account or the Supreme Court has chosen to increase or reallocate attorneys’ fees and dues to fund the Judicial Council Imprest Account, whichever occurs first; and it is
ORDERED that the $200.00 annual temporary tax SHALL NOT be collected from attorneys who have already submitted attorney licensing fees for the year 2015 to the DLCA as of April 17, 2015; and it is
ORDERED that attorneys who fail to pay the $200.00 annual temporary tax SHALL be referred by the DLCA to the Virgin Islands Bar Association for disciplinary action, if appropriate; and it is
ORDERED that the file can be closed by the Clerk of Court; and it is
ORDERED that copies of this Order shall be directed to counsel of record and to the IT Division of the Superior Court of the Virgin Islands, St. Thomas/St. John Division.
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
62 V.I. 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pate-v-government-of-the-virgin-islands-visuper-2015.