Yamaha Motor Corporation, U.S.A. v. Tony Riney Steve Landers Emmett Jones Jack Caldwell William Gandy Leah Leonard, Cycle Center, Inc., Intervenor

21 F.3d 793
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMay 6, 1994
Docket93-2197
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 21 F.3d 793 (Yamaha Motor Corporation, U.S.A. v. Tony Riney Steve Landers Emmett Jones Jack Caldwell William Gandy Leah Leonard, Cycle Center, Inc., Intervenor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yamaha Motor Corporation, U.S.A. v. Tony Riney Steve Landers Emmett Jones Jack Caldwell William Gandy Leah Leonard, Cycle Center, Inc., Intervenor, 21 F.3d 793 (8th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

MAGILL, Circuit Judge.

The Yamaha Motor Corporation (Yamaha) appeals the district court’s order abstaining from, and dismissing without prejudice, Yamaha’s 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim against six members of the Arkansas Motor Vehicle Commission (the Commission). Because we find that the district court erred when it abstained from exercising its jurisdiction over this action, we reverse and remand to the district court for further proceedings.

I. BACKGROUND

In 1986, Cycle Center, Inc., (Cycle Center) entered into a dealer agreement (the Agreement) with Yamaha. That Agreement, which furnished the terms of Yamaha’s reimbursement obligation to Cycle Center for warranty work, provided the catalyst for this action. In 1992, Cycle Center complained to the *795 Commission that Yamaha’s reimbursement terms, memorialized in the Agreement, violated the provisions of the Arkansas Motor Vehicle Commission Act 1 (the Act). Following a hearing, the Commission, voting six to two, found that Yamaha failed to comply with the Act. Yamaha then Sled suit in federal district court, contending that the Commission’s vote violated its constitutional rights and requested that the district court grant injunctive and declaratory relief.

Under the terms of the Agreement, Cycle Center was entitled to either ten or fifteen percent over dealer cost for parts replaced pursuant to the warranty policy. The Act, originally passed in 1975, 2 was amended in 1991, 3 adding the emphasized language.

On satisfactory proof that any manufacturer ... has unfairly and without due regard to the equities of. the parties or to the detriment of the public welfare failed to properly fulfill any warranty agreement or to adequately and fairly compensate any of its motor vehicle dealers for labor, parts, compensation for parts for two wheeled vehicles must be at the manufacturer’s suggested retail price, or incidental expenses incurred by the dealer with regard to factory warranty agreements performed by the dealer.

Ark.Code Ann. § 23-112-308(a)(10) (emphasis added).

The language emphasized above formed the basis for Cycle Center’s complaint to the Commission. Cycle Center argued before the Commission that Yamaha had violated the terms of § 23-112-308(a)(10) by compensating it at less than the manufacturer’s suggested retail price (MSRP). Yamaha contended that the Act’s 1991 amendment, requiring that warranty parts be compensated at the MSRP, did not apply to its relationship with Cycle Center because the parties had a preexisting contractual agreement. Citing Chrysler Motors Corp. v. Thomas Auto. Co. 4 for the premise that the Act was not to be applied retroactively, 939 F.2d 538, 540 (8th Cir.1991), Yamaha argued to the Commission that the only issue in contention was legal and the legal issue — application of the Act to a preexisting contract — had been judicially resolved.

Cycle Center contended at the July 29, 1992 hearing that the Agreement had been modified after 1991 and hence, Yamaha must comply with the Act. Essentially, Cycle Center argued that the annual updated price lists distributed by Yamaha to its dealers comprised a yearly modification of its Agreement with Yamaha.

The Commission’s counsel, senior assistant attorney general Thomas Gay, discussing the retroactivity of a law, stated, “[t]he test is what the law says. If there is some'ambiguity in what the law says, then you determine what the legislature’s intent was in construing and interpreting that particular statute.” Appellant’s App. at 360. Attorney Gay also counseled that,

in Arkansas, statutes are presumed to apply prospectively only, from the date they are enacted forward, not' retroactively. And to have a statute apply retroactively, that meaning going back and apply [sic] to a contract that already exists at the time the law takes place, takes effect, there has to be some language in the statute itself to show that that’s what the legislature intended.

Id. at 361. 5

Commissioner Jones, President of the Arkansas Motorcycle Dealer’s Association and a Harley Davidson dealer, advocated applying the 1991 amendment to Yamaha. He stated:

*796 Where this winds up in court as far as somebody with a higher pay rate than I, somebody with a black robe on to decide what is amended and what is not amended, the law is very clear as passed by the legislature that says retail on parts. So, if it’s something that pertained to law, we are not lawyers, that’s for lawyers to argue, for the court to decide what, in fact, is correct.

Id. at 365-66. After farther discussion, primarily led by Commissioner Jones, Commissioner Whitson 6 stated, “I think we would be remiss as a Commission to go against our legal counsel in what we see in front of us that the law was not written with retroactive •language.” Id. at 369.

The Commission appeared to understand that in order to apply the Act retroactively, it must find that the Agreement had been substantially changed after the 1991 amendment. Cf. Woodhaven Homes v. Kennedy Sheet Metal, 304 Ark. 415, 803 S.W.2d 508, 510 (1991) (“[A] statute will not be given a retroactive application when it takes away a vested right unless such be the ‘unequivocal and inflexible import of the terms and the manifest intention of the legislature.’”) (citation omitted). Commissioner Jones, however, encouraged abdication of that responsibility. He stated, “there is a possibility that the contracts ... has [sic] been amended. We don’t know that. We can’t make that judgment here, because this is not a court of law.” Appellant’s App. at, 374. Attorney Gay corrected Commissioner Jones, stating, “[t]he facts as presented in this case are for you to decide subject to appeal by the court.” Id. “The issue is for the Commission to decide whether these various amendments change this contract so that there is a new underlying agreement.” Id. at 375. Nevertheless, without deciding whether the Agreement had been modified after the 1991 amendment was added, six of the eight Commissioners decided that Yamaha had violated § 23-112-308. While discussing the appropriate penalty to be imposed upon Yamaha, Commissioner Jones made a motion to “[sjuspend [Yamaha] from the state of Arkansas.” Id. at 381. That motion died due to lack of a second vote, and instead, the Commission voted to fine Yamaha pending compliance with the Act.

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21 F.3d 793, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yamaha-motor-corporation-usa-v-tony-riney-steve-landers-emmett-jones-ca8-1994.