Ray Hutson Chevrolet v. General Motors Corp

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 18, 2000
Docket00-2233
StatusPublished

This text of Ray Hutson Chevrolet v. General Motors Corp (Ray Hutson Chevrolet v. General Motors Corp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ray Hutson Chevrolet v. General Motors Corp, (7th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

No. 00-2233

RAY HUTSON CHEVROLET, INCORPORATED,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION,

Defendant-Appellee.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin No. 99-C-518-S--John C. Shabaz, Chief Judge.

Argued October 24, 2000--Decided December 18, 2000

Before FLAUM, Chief Judge, and MANION and EVANS, Circuit Judges.

EVANS, Circuit Judge. This case, brought under our diversity jurisdiction, requires us to interpret a provision of the Wisconsin Automobile Dealership Law, sec. 218.01 Wis. Stat. The district judge granted the motion of the General Motors Corporation to dismiss the statutory claims on the basis of language in the 1993 revisions to the law, which he read to grant GM broad immunity from suit. Ultimately he dismissed all the claims, including common law claims, on the basis of the immunity provision. On this unsettled question of Wisconsin law we must surmise how the Wisconsin Supreme Court would likely interpret the statute.

Since 1953 Ray Hutson Chevrolet has been a licensed Chevrolet dealership in LaCrosse, Wisconsin. In 1966 Hutson built new dealership facilities in accordance with GM’s facility space guidelines. These facilities have proven to be larger than required to handle the dealership’s service business. In 1985 Hutson obtained GM approval to add Nissan service to the service facility. Though it serviced Nissans in the GM service facility, Hutson sold Nissans out of a separate building because GM does not allow sales of cars other than GM cars out of GM dealerships. Even after Nissan service was added, the service facility was too large for the business.

In the spring of 1999 Hutson accepted an offer from the United States distributor for Kia vehicles, Kia Motors America, Inc., to open a Kia franchise at the Hutson dealership. The plan was to sell Kias out of the Nissan facility but to add Kia to the GM service and parts facility, which GM and Nissan were already sharing.

Under the dealership agreement with GM, Hutson was required to notify GM of these plans. It did that and furnished all the information GM requested for its evaluation of the proposal. GM rejected the proposal on May 24, 2000, citing "performance standards." One was the GM facility standard, which refers to its policy of not selling competing brands from its GM sales facilities. But Hutson claims it was not going to sell Kias out of the GM sales facility and GM had recently approved a plan similar to Hutson’s for another dealership. GM also cited customer satisfaction standards, which it says were low and Hutson says were fine when compared to similar dealerships. With regard to working capital standards, which GM also cited, Hutson agreed to raise its working capital.

As a result of GM’s refusal to approve the Hutson proposal, Kia withdrew its franchise offer and Hutson says it lost an opportunity to increase net profits by several hundred thousand dollars. This case followed. The district judge granted a motion to dismiss and a motion for summary judgment for GM, both of which depend on the interpretation of a Wisconsin statute. Our review of those decisions is de novo. Lexington Ins. Co. v. Rugg & Knopp, Inc., 165 F.3d 1087 (7th Cir. 1999). Because the issue involves an unsettled issue of Wisconsin law, we must determine what the Wisconsin Supreme Court would have to say about it.

In 1937 Wisconsin enacted the Wisconsin Automobile Dealership Law; its purpose was to protect dealers from manufacturers. Forest Home Dodge, Inc. v. Karns, 29 Wis. 2d 78 (1965). The law was revised in 1993. The 1993 revisions are at issue here.

The 1993 revisions created sec. 218.01(3x), which set out procedures for challenging a manufacturer’s refusal to allow a change in ownership, management, or location of a dealership and, as relevant here, to add another franchise to an existing facility. It provided that if the grantor does not approve the dealer’s request, it must provide a written statement, within 30 days, of its reasons for disapproval. Failure to file the statement results in approval. A dealership which is served with a written statement disapproving its proposal may file a complaint with the Wisconsin Department of Transportation and ask for a determination of whether there is good cause for permitting the proposed action. The Office of the Commissioner of Transportation must promptly schedule a hearing and decide the matter. Factors which the commissioner should consider are set out in the statute.

Subsection (3x) also has a qualified immunity provision which provides:

The reasons given for the disapproval or any explanation of those reasons by the manufacturer . . . shall not subject the manufacturer . . . to any civil liability unless the reasons given or explanations made are malicious and published with the sole intent to cause harm to the dealer . . . .

Hutson says the qualified immunity provision shields the manufacturer only from defamation claims which might arise out of the requirement that the manufacturer give reasons for the denial of the request; GM says it provides qualified immunity as to any cause of action for damages arising out of its disapproval of a proposed dealership change. It was the latter interpretation which carried the day with the district court.

The language of the immunity provision, like a lot of legislative enactments, is not as clear as crystal. Hutson’s reading of the statute requires that we imply that the legislature meant that the "publication of the reasons," rather than simply the reasons themselves, shall not subject the manufacturer to liability. On the other hand, if, as GM contends, the legislature had intended to provide a broad grant of immunity, it could easily have done so more clearly.

Before we try our hand at making sense out of these provisions, we need to look at other relevant provisions of the law. Section 218.01(9), provides a civil cause of action for various violations of the law: "Without exhausting any administrative remedy available under an agreement or this section, except as provided in sub. (3)(f) and (fm), a licensee may recover damages in a court of competent jurisdiction for pecuniary loss" and costs and attorney fees if the loss is caused by certain violations, including two which are relevant to our analysis. One is "[b]eing a manufacturer . . . who fails to comply with the procedures in sub. (3x) regarding a dealer’s request for approval of . . . adding another franchise at the same location as its existing franchise . . . ." Section 218.01(3)(a)24. Another covers violations of subsection (3)(a)22, which in turn refers to section 219.01(2g), which requires that performance standards by which dealership performance is measured must be "fair, reasonable and equitable."

Hutson brought its lawsuit based on violations of subsection (3)(a)22, requiring fair performance standards, and (3)(a)11, forbidding unconscionable practices, rather than subsection (3)(1)24, regarding failure to comply with the procedures for evaluation of a request to add a franchise.

Even though there is considerable incongruity in saying that, without exhausting administrative remedies, a dealer can bring a suit for damages if a manufacturer fails to comply with administrative procedures, it appears that the parties agree that a suit based on subsection (3)(a)24 can only be brought based on a manufacturer’s failure to do just that.

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Related

Forest Home Dodge, Inc. v. Karns
138 N.W.2d 214 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1965)

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Ray Hutson Chevrolet v. General Motors Corp, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ray-hutson-chevrolet-v-general-motors-corp-ca7-2000.