Vulcan Waterproofers, Inc. v. Maryland Home Improvement Commission

252 A.2d 62, 253 Md. 204, 1969 Md. LEXIS 955
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 9, 1969
Docket[No. 326, September Term, 1968.]
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 252 A.2d 62 (Vulcan Waterproofers, Inc. v. Maryland Home Improvement Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vulcan Waterproofers, Inc. v. Maryland Home Improvement Commission, 252 A.2d 62, 253 Md. 204, 1969 Md. LEXIS 955 (Md. 1969).

Opinions

Smith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court. Barnes, J., concurs and filed a concurring opinion at Page 215, infra.

Appellant (Vulcan) is a home improvement contractor within the meaning of Code (1968 Repl. Vol.) Art. 56, §§ 245 to 269, inclusive. Vulcan here appeals the action of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City in granting Maryland Home Improvement Commission (established under the aforegoing sections of the Code) the right to inspect Vulcan’s records. We shall remand for further proceedings.

The Maryland Home Improvement Commission (Commission) was established by Chapter 133 of the Acts of 1962. Section 257 (g) of Art. 56 as amended by Chapter 827 of the Acts of 1963 provides:

“Requiring supplementary or additional information.—The Commission may, at any time, require reasonable information of an applicant or licensee, and may require the production of books of accounts, financial statements, or other records which relate to the home-improvement activity, or qualification, or compliance with this subtitle, whether such information or records are supplementary or additional to the contents of license applications or otherwise.”

[206]*206On October 24, 1966, the Commission addressed the following letter to Vulcan:

“Pursuant to the authority granted the Maryland Home Improvement Commission by section 257 (g) of Article 56 of the Annotated Code of Maryland (Home Improvement Law) the Maryland Home Improvement Commission directs that you provide an investigator from this Commission with the names and addresses of homeowners for whom you have had to provide service due to the fact that your Vulcan Waterproofers’ method did not work, after the first application.
“The Commission is desirous of having the names and addresses of these homeowners for whom service had to be performed during the period from July 1, 1966 to the present.”
“This information should be provided the investigator upon presentation of this letter to you.”

Counsel for Vulcan replied in pertinent part as follows :

“Due to the fact that this could cause substantial inconvenience to my client and possibly jeopardize its standing in the community as a reputable water-proofing concern I have advised my client that this information not be made available to you without the opportunity of a full hearing by your Board.”
“I do not think that this is unreasonable on our part and request that if you have any questions concerning the same that you contact me.”

The reply of counsel brought about a registered letter from the Commission under date of November 4 directing that Vulcan supply to the Commission the records of all waterproofing work performed by Vulcan for home owners within the State of Maryland in the period July 1, 1966, to November 4, 1966, including the names and addresses of the home owners. Vulcan was advised that if it did not comply with the directive by noon on November 9 the Commission would “have no alternative but to institute action [207]*207against [its] license for violation of Section 261 (a) (14) of Art. 56 of the Annotated Code of Maryland.” Section 261 (a) (14) lists as a prohibited act “willful failure to comply with any order, demand or requirement lawfully made by the Commission under and within the authority of this subtitle.” Section 261 (b) by referring to Section 259 provides for suspension or revocation of license for violation of any of the prohibitions of Section 261.

Section 260 (d) of Art. 56provides in pertinent part:

“(d) Failure to comply with order * * * of Commission.—If any person fails to comply with a lawful order * * * of the Commission * * *, upon petition of the Commission setting forth the facts, it shall be the duty * * * of the Baltimore City court * * * to compel obedience to the requirements of such * * * order and to compel the production of relevant documents and other evidence. Any person failing, refusing or neglecting to comply with such order of the court shall be punished as for contempt of court.”

Without waiting for action by the Commission under Section 260 (d), Vulcan filed its bill of complaint on November 9, 1966, in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City. After various preliminary recitations it stated:

“8. That the request for information by the Commission is malicious, arbitrary and unreasonable in that Vulcan will be irrevocably harmed as a result of the questioning and harassment of its satisfied customers by the Commission and/or its inspectors, that no grounds or basis for its request have been stated, that said request is made solely for the purpose of harassment, that said request is made solely to injure the standing and reputation of Vulcan, and that there is no reasonable cause for the Commission to have such information and that immediate, substantial and irrevocable injury will result to Vulcan if this order is sustained.
“9. That the Commission has no legal authority to demand such information.
[208]*208‘TO. That Vulcan is without an adequate remedy at law.”

Vulcan prayed that the court temporarily and permanently enjoin the Commission, “from acting upon, and forcing (sic) or carrying out the order contained in its letter dated November 4, 1966” and that it, “Determine that said order is arbitrary, malicious, unreasonable and without any legality.”

A demurrer filed by the Commission was overruled. An answer was then filed and the matter came on for hearing on June 15, 1967. Melvin Waxman, president of Vulcan, testified as did John C. Coolahan, the former executive director of the Commission, who was called as a witness by Vulcan. The hearing was recessed for lunch and never resumed, apparently because the parties decided to attempt to work out a settlement. On December 8, 1967, the Assistant Attorney General advised counsel for Vulcan that the matter could not be further delayed and that unless he received a copy of a proposed order by December 11 and unless they could conclude an agreement by the afternoon of December 12, he would be obliged to ask the court to re-schedule the matter for trial. On December 15 he wrote to the chancellor requesting that the case be re-scheduled and the trial continued. There was no further hearing.

On August 19, 1968, the chancellor passed an order holding the order previously issued by the Commission to be a lawful order and directing the procedures under which the desired inspections might take place. On August 28 Vulcan submitted a motion to rescind or suspend the order followed by a motion on September 18 to vacate the order of Aqgust 19. The chancellor on September 18 modified the August 19 order by providing:

“All files examined by the Commission representatives, all notes taken by Commission representatives, and all items removed from said files by [Vulcan] or as to which a claim of trade secret has been or is asserted shall be submitted by [Vulcan] to this court under seal by September 27, 1968.”

Pursuant to motion for a statement for the grounds of his order made under Maryland Rule 18 c, the chancellor said:

[209]*209“Vulcan filed a Bill of Complaint for temporary and permanent injunction on November 9', 1966.

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Vulcan Waterproofers, Inc. v. Maryland Home Improvement Commission
252 A.2d 62 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1969)

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Bluebook (online)
252 A.2d 62, 253 Md. 204, 1969 Md. LEXIS 955, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vulcan-waterproofers-inc-v-maryland-home-improvement-commission-md-1969.