Fireside Nissan v. Fanning, DOT RI ( 1994 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion









    August 3, 1994 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    ____________________

    No. 93-1977

    FIRESIDE NISSAN, INC.,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,

    v.

    DANIEL P. FANNING, DIRECTOR,
    DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
    FOR STATE OF RHODE ISLAND, ET AL.
    Defendants-Appellees.

    ____________________

    ERRATA SHEET

    The opinion of this court issued on July 20, 1994 is amended

    as follows:

    Page 26, line 6 should read ". . . flow are . . ." instead

    of ". . . flows is . . ."












































    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CURCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 93-1977

    FIRESIDE NISSAN, INC.,

    Plaintiff-Appellant,

    v.

    DANIEL P. FANNING, DIRECTOR,
    DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
    FOR STATE OF RHODE ISLAND, ET AL.

    Defendants-Appellees.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND

    [Hon. Francis J. Boyle, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Torruella, Circuit Judge,
    _____________
    Coffin, Senior Circuit Judge,
    ____________________
    and Boudin, Circuit Judge.
    _____________

    _____________________

    Ronald W. Del Sesto, with whom Peter P. D. Leach and Updike,
    ___________________ _________________ _______
    Kelly, Spellacy & Del Sesto were on brief for appellant.
    ___________________________
    John J. Igliozzi, Office of the Legal Counsel, Rhode Island
    ________________
    Department of Transportation for appellee Department of
    Transportation for State of Rhode Island.
    Gerald C. DeMaria, with whom Lawrence P. McCarthy III,
    ___________________ __________________________
    Patrick B. Landers and Higgins, Cavanagh & Cooney were on brief
    __________________ ___________________________
    for appellee Nissan Motor Corporation in U.S.A.
    John D. Biafore, with whom Goldman & Biafore was on brief
    ________________ _________________
    for appellee Nissan of Smithfield, Inc.

    ____________________
    July 20, 1994
    ____________________














    TORRUELLA, Circuit Judge. Rhode Island's automobile
    _____________

    dealership law allows existing dealers within a twenty-mile

    radius of a proposed new dealership to protest the establishment

    of the new dealership. The issue raised by this appeal concerns

    situations in which, by reason of a proposed new dealership in

    proximity to the state border, a part of that twenty-mile radius

    falls outside of Rhode Island. State officials have taken the

    position that within the twenty-mile area surrounding a proposed

    new dealership, only the dealers who are located inside Rhode

    Island's borders are covered by Rhode Island law and thus are

    entitled to protest the establishment of the new dealership. A

    Massachusetts car dealer who is located within the twenty-mile

    radius of a proposed dealership, but in Massachusetts, claims

    that this interpretation of Rhode Island law runs afoul of the

    Commerce Clause because it burdens and discriminates against

    interstate commerce. Because Rhode Island is merely applying its

    law to those subject to its jurisdiction and regulation, rather

    than extraterritorially, and because it neither burdens nor

    discriminates against interstate commerce in the process, we

    agree with Rhode Island and affirm.

    I. BACKGROUND
    I. BACKGROUND

    Plaintiff-appellant Fireside Nissan, Inc. ("Fireside"),

    a Massachusetts automobile dealer, brought this action against

    the Rhode Island Department of Transportation ("RIDOT") after

    RIDOT excluded Fireside from participating in hearings regarding

    a proposed Nissan dealership in Rhode Island. Fireside claimed


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    that RIDOT's application of Rhode Island's new dealership law to

    exclude Fireside merely because it was not located in Rhode

    Island was unconstitutional.

    Rhode Island General Laws, Section 31-5.1-4.21 sets

    out certain procedural requirements for establishing a new

    automobile dealership in the state. First, a manufacturer

    desiring an additional dealership must notify dealers "in the

    relevant market area" of its intentions. R.I. Gen. Laws 31-

    5.1-4.2(a). "Relevant market area" is defined as "the area

    within a radius of twenty (20) miles around an existing dealer or

    the area of responsibility defined in the franchise, whichever is

    greater." R.I Gen. Laws 31-5.1-1(J). Existing retail dealers

    in the "relevant market area" may then protest the establishment

    ____________________

    1 R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2 provides in relevant part:

    (a) In the event that a manufacturer
    seeks to enter into a franchise
    establishing an additional new motor
    vehicle dealership . . . within or into a
    relevant market area where the same line
    make is then represented, . . . the
    manufacturer shall in writing by
    certified mail first notify the
    department . . . and each new motor
    vehicle dealer in such line make in the
    relevant market area . . . . [A]ny such
    new motor vehicle dealership may file
    with the department a protest to the
    establishing or relocating of the new
    motor vehicle dealership . . . . When
    such a protest is filed, . . . the
    manufacturer shall not establish or
    relocate the proposed new motor vehicle
    dealership . . . until the department
    has held a hearing, nor thereafter, until
    the department has determined [whether]
    there is good cause for not permitting
    such new motor vehicle dealership.

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    of the new dealership in which case RIDOT must hold a hearing to

    determine if "there is good cause for not permitting" the

    additional franchise. R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2(a). The

    statute does not explicitly state whether or not the dealers who

    may protest the establishment of a dealership in the "relevant

    market area" must be located in Rhode Island or be a licensed

    Rhode Island dealership.2

    In March of 1991, Nissan Motor Corporation in U.S.A.

    ("Nissan USA"), gave notice to RIDOT, Fireside, and other Nissan

    dealers of its intention to establish a dealership in Smithfield,

    Rhode Island. Fireside, which sells and services Nissan

    ____________________

    2 Throughout Title 31 of the Motor Vehicle Code, the term
    "dealer" is defined as:

    Every person engaged in the business of
    buying, selling, or exchanging vehicles
    of a type required to be registered
    hereunder and who has an established
    place of business for such purpose in
    __
    this state.
    __________

    R.I. Gen. Laws 31-1-19 (emphasis added).

    For purposes of the provision regarding the establishment of new
    car dealerships, R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2, however, the right
    to protest at a hearing applies to any "new motor vehicle dealer"
    which is defined as:

    [A]ny person engaged in the business of
    selling, offering to sell, soliciting or
    advertising the sale of new motor
    vehicles and who holds, or held at the
    time a cause of action under this chapter
    accrued, a valid sales and service
    agreement, franchise or contract, granted
    by the manufacturer or distributor for
    the retail sale of said manufacturer's or
    distributor's new motor vehicles.

    R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-1(C).

    -4-














    automobiles, is located in North Attleboro, Massachusetts,

    approximately two miles from the Rhode Island border and within

    twenty miles of Smithfield. Fireside is therefore squarely

    within the "relevant market area" of the Smithfield dealership.

    Fireside is not a licensed automobile dealer in Rhode Island but

    instead holds a Massachusetts dealership license.

    In response to Nissan USA's notice, Fireside filed a

    protest with RIDOT on April 12, 1991. Three Rhode Island dealers

    of Nissan automobiles, who were also within the "relevant market

    area," filed protests with RIDOT as well. On February 13, 1992,

    RIDOT issued a notice to Fireside and the other dealers stating

    that it was scheduling a hearing regarding the Smithfield

    dealership on April 2, 1992.

    At the hearing, Nissan USA moved to exclude Fireside

    because it was an out-of state dealer. RIDOT, acting through the

    Rhode Island Dealer's License and Regulations Office, determined

    that Fireside lacked standing to participate in the hearing and

    excluded Fireside from presenting witnesses or evidence at the

    hearing. The three Rhode Island dealers did participate at the

    hearing and presented evidence on their own behalf.

    Fireside was prepared to present evidence at the

    hearing showing that 48% of Fireside's sales and 45% of its

    service business went to Rhode Island residents. In addition,

    Fireside would have established that 100% of its cable television

    advertising and 75% of its print advertising is done in Rhode

    Island.


    -5-














    After the hearing, RIDOT determined that good cause

    existed for the establishment of the Smithfield dealership.

    According to R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2(b), RIDOT must base its

    determination of "good cause" on the "existing circumstances,

    including, but not limited to:"

    (1) Permanency of the investment of the
    existing new motor vehicle dealer(s) in
    the community;

    (2) Whether the new motor vehicle
    dealers of the same line make in that
    relevant market area are providing
    adequate consumer care . . . which shall
    include the adequacy of motor vehicle
    sales and service facilities, equipment,
    supply of motor vehicle parts, and
    qualified service personnel;

    (3) Whether there is reasonable evidence
    that after the granting of the new motor
    vehicle dealership, that [sic] the market
    would support all of the dealerships of
    that line make in the relevant market
    area;

    (4) Consequently, whether it is
    injurious to the public welfare for an
    additional new motor vehicle dealership
    to be established.

    R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2(b).

    Upon consideration of these factors, RIDOT found cause to issue a

    license to the Smithfield dealership, which is now known as

    Nissan of Smithfield, Inc. ("Smithfield Nissan").

    Fireside commenced this action on April 9, 1992, naming

    Daniel Fanning, Director of RIDOT as the defendant. Fireside

    sought a declaration that RIDOT's interpretation of Section 31-

    5.1-4.2 as excluding Fireside from the new dealership hearing

    violated the Commerce Clause, the Privileges and Immunities

    -6-














    Clause, the Due Process Clause and the Equal Protection Clause of

    the United States Constitution. Fireside also sought an

    injunction restraining RIDOT from precluding Fireside from

    participating in future hearings as well as a temporary

    restraining order and a preliminary injunction enjoining RIDOT

    from granting a dealership license to Smithfield Nissan. Nissan

    USA and Smithfield Nissan intervened in the action.

    The district court denied Fireside's requested relief.

    The court found that the exclusion of Fireside from the

    dealership hearings did not violate the Commerce Clause or

    otherwise violate Fireside's constitutional rights. As a result,

    Fireside could not show the irreparable harm or the likelihood of

    success on the merits necessary for the granting of a preliminary

    injunction. The court also denied Fireside's request for a

    declaratory judgment and a permanent injunction and entered a

    final judgment in favor of RIDOT, Nissan USA, and Smithfield

    Nissan.

    II. ANALYSIS
    II. ANALYSIS

    Fireside's right to its requested relief, including the

    preliminary and permanent injunctions and the declaratory

    judgment, depends primarily on whether the exclusion of Fireside

    from RIDOT's new dealership hearings violates the Constitution.

    Before the court will grant a preliminary injunction, Fireside

    must establish, among other things, that it faces a likelihood of

    success on the merits and that it will suffer irreparable harm if

    the injunction is not issued. Planned Parenthood League v.
    __________________________


    -7-














    Bellotti, 641 F.2d 1006, 1009 (1st Cir. 1981). Fireside alleges
    ________

    that it will suffer irreparable injury from RIDOT's violation of

    Fireside's constitutional rights. See National People's Action
    ___ _________________________

    v. Village of Wilmette, 914 F.2d 1008, 1013 (7th Cir. 1990),
    ____________________

    cert. denied, 499 U.S. 921 (1991) (finding constitutional
    ____ ______

    violation sufficient to establish irreparable injury); Mitchell
    ________

    v. Cuomo, 748 F.2d 804, 806 (2d Cir. 1984) (same). Likewise, the
    _____

    merits of the permanent injunction and the declaratory judgment

    also turn on the constitutionality of RIDOT's actions. Because

    we uphold the district court's finding that RIDOT did not violate

    the Commerce Clause or any of Fireside's constitutional rights,

    we affirm the final judgment in favor of the defendants.

    As a preliminary matter, we find it beneficial to our

    constitutional inquiry to clarify the nature and purpose of the

    Rhode Island new dealership statute, R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2.

    Title 31 of Rhode Island General Laws governs state regulation of

    motor and other vehicles. Chapter 5.1 of that title regulates

    business practices among motor vehicle manufacturers, dealers and

    distributors. The provision covering the establishment of new

    automobile dealerships, R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2, is designed

    to protect existing dealers and consumers from the detrimental

    effects of aggressive franchising practices by the automobile

    manufacturers whose efforts to establish excessive competing

    franchises are considered to be potentially "injurious to the

    public welfare" if not properly regulated. R.I. Gen. Laws 31-

    5.1-4.2(b).


    -8-














    The district court found that the statute targeted only

    activities which occur within the state of Rhode Island performed

    by businesses seeking or holding Rhode Island dealership

    licenses. According to the court, R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2

    was designed to safeguard the interests of those dealers and

    consumers located in Rhode Island; the Rhode Island legislature

    did not intend for the statute to apply to, or for the benefit

    of, out-of-state dealers such as Fireside. As a result, the

    court concluded that RIDOT properly applied the statute by

    excluding Fireside from the new dealership hearings.

    We agree with the district court's finding on this

    issue. Taking its cue from the Sixth Circuit, which interpreted

    a similar Kentucky statute as excluding out-of-state dealers from

    new dealership hearings, BMW Stores, Inc. v. Peugeot Motors of
    _________________ _________________

    Am., Inc., 860 F.2d 212 (6th Cir. 1988), the district court based
    _________

    its analysis on the stated purposes and language of the statute,

    the interpretation of the statute by state regulators and on

    general principles of statutory construction. Because we find

    the first two factors to be the relevant considerations, we

    discuss them below.

    Although R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2 does not

    explicitly include or exclude out-of-state dealers, the declared

    policy of the statute indicates a concern for protecting only

    Rhode Island dealers and residents. As in BMW Stores, the new
    __________

    dealership licensing provision is aimed at protecting "the

    investment of the existing new motor vehicle dealer[s] in the


    -9-














    community" and safeguarding the "public welfare." R.I. Gen. Laws

    31-5.1-4.2(b). BMW Stores, 860 F.2d at 215 (noting that the
    ___________

    declared policy of the Kentucky statute was to "preserve the

    investments and properties of the citizens of this state").3

    The new dealership provision is one part of a set of provisions

    concerning the duties, obligations, liabilities and privileges of

    licensed dealers in Rhode Island and their supplying

    manufacturers. R.I. Gen. Laws. 31-5.1-1 through 31-5.1-20.

    None of these duties and obligations apply to Fireside because it

    is not licensed in Rhode Island. Accordingly, the privileges

    that correspond to such duties and obligations do not apply to

    Fireside either. The new dealership provision, with its

    procedure for hearings, is simply part and parcel of Rhode

    Island's regulation and licensing of local dealerships. It makes

    no sense, therefore, to apply Rhode Island's comprehensive

    regulatory scheme for the benefit of out-of-state dealers.

    Furthermore, as in BMW Stores, state regulatory
    ____________

    officials have interpreted the state's new dealership statute as


    ____________________

    3 We do not attach any significance, as does Fireside, to the
    use of the word "community" in Rhode Island's statute instead of
    the words "citizens of this state" in the Kentucky statute. Both
    terms evidence the legislature's concern with the welfare of the
    public which it is charged with protecting. Also, Fireside
    incorrectly claims that the Kentucky statute differs from the
    Rhode Island statute because Kentucky's does not state as a
    purpose the safeguarding of the general public interest. The
    Kentucky statute explicitly states that its purpose is the
    promotion of "the public interest and public welfare" and
    mentions as one of its concerns the provision of "convenient
    consumer care," which clearly indicates the same concern for
    consumers and the public as the Rhode Island statute. Ky. Rev.
    Stat. Ann. 190.015; 190.047(7)(b).

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    applying only to in-state dealers, an interpretation that

    deserves some measure of deference. BMW Stores, 860 F.2d at 215;
    __________

    Gallison v. Bristol School Comm., 493 A.2d 164, 166 (R.I. 1985).
    ________ ____________________

    We disagree with Fireside's claim that RIDOT has not conclusively

    determined whether R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2 applies to out-of-

    state dealers. Fireside points to the fact that, prior to the

    hearing for Smithfield Nissan, RIDOT promulgated proposed rules

    and regulations that included a provision, Section XI, that

    explicitly excluded out-of-state dealers from protesting new

    dealerships and participating in hearings. The final rules and

    regulations, however, were issued without adopting Section XI.

    Fireside argues that the failure to adopt Section XI indicates an

    intent to include out-of-state dealers in the hearings. We

    disagree.

    First of all, the proposed Section XI, while precluding

    out-of-state dealers from cross-examining witnesses or presenting

    evidence, did allow for out-of-state dealers to offer verbal or

    written statements at the hearings at RIDOT's discretion. The

    proposal thus could be interpreted as granting more participation

    rights to out-of-state dealers than they would otherwise enjoy.

    As a result, we do not know if the proposal was rejected because

    it was too permissive or because it was too restrictive, i.e.,

    because it removed out-of-state participation rights that RIDOT

    thought out-of-state dealers should have or because it granted

    new rights that RIDOT thought out-of-state dealers should not

    have. RIDOT's failure to promulgate Section XI is thus


    -11-














    inconclusive. Secondly, RIDOT's current regulations for R.I. 31-

    5.1 state that their purpose is:

    (a) . . . to protect the interests of the
    public when dealing with motor vehicle
    dealers in Rhode Island . . . .
    _______________

    (b) . . . to implement the provisions of
    Sections 31-5 and 31-5.1 regarding the
    issuance, suspension and/or revocation of
    such licenses as well as the regulation
    of business practices among the
    ___________
    businesses seeking or holding those
    _________________________________________
    licenses. (emphasis added)
    ________

    This demonstrates RIDOT's intent to apply R.I. Gen. Laws 31-

    5.1-4.2 only to Rhode Island dealerships. In any event, the only

    evidence we have of RIDOT actually taking a stand on the specific

    issue before us is RIDOT's actions in this case. RIDOT excluded

    Fireside from the hearings and thereby affirmatively expressed

    its interpretation of R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2 as barring

    participation of out-of-state dealers in new dealership hearings.

    Fireside maintains that certain language in the statute

    expresses an intent to include Fireside in the new dealership

    hearings. Fireside notes that it falls within the literal

    definition of a "new motor vehicle dealer" inside the "relevant

    market area" for purposes of R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2, because

    the definition of "new motor vehicle dealer" includes "any

    person" selling cars, R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-1(C), and the

    "relevant market area" is the area within a twenty mile radius

    around an existing dealer, R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-1(J). The

    lack of an explicit statement that the "relevant market area"

    stops at the state border does not, however, indicate that the


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    state affirmatively intended to include out-of-state dealers in

    licensing hearings. On the contrary, the definition of "dealer"

    for all of Title 31 of Rhode Island's General Laws is limited to

    persons who have an established place of business "in this

    state." R.I. Gen. Laws 31-1-19(a). Fireside is correct that

    the definition of "new motor vehicle dealer" as used in the

    licensing section at issue here, R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2,

    does not contain this limitation. R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-1(C).

    However, the term "relevant market area," the other key term in

    R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2, is defined as a twenty mile radius

    "around an existing dealer," employing the general term "dealer"
    ______

    from 31-1-19(a) and not "new motor vehicle dealer" from 31-5.1-

    1(C). One could thus interpret R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2 as

    granting protest rights only to Rhode Island dealerships because

    only Rhode Island dealers can be in a "relevant market area."

    Fireside also points to R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-2 for

    evidence that the licensing provision applies to out-of-state

    dealers. R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-2 states:

    Any person who engages directly or
    indirectly in purposeful contacts within
    this state in connection with the
    offering or advertising for sale or has
    business dealings with respect to a motor
    vehicle within the state shall be subject
    to the provisions of this chapter and
    shall be subject to the jurisdiction of
    the courts of this state, upon service of
    process in accordance with the provisions
    of the general laws.

    This provision is not a general grant of extraterritoriality but

    rather an affirmation that parties who are covered by the various


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    substantive provisions in Chapter 5.1 of Title 31, which

    regulates manufacturers, dealers and distributors, cannot escape

    enforcement of those provisions by claiming they are

    nonresidents. If Fireside's interpretation were adopted, the

    substantive regulatory provisions in Chapter 5.1 -- for example,

    those regarding fraud and breach of warranty -- would apply to

    Fireside and any other dealer in any other state, an absurd

    result. Notwithstanding R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-2, one must

    still look to the specific substantive provisions of Chapter 5.1

    to see who is covered. Doing so reveals that 31-5.2 was mainly

    directed toward out-of-state automobile manufacturers, rather
    _____________

    than dealers. A majority of the provisions in chapter 5.1 impose

    explicit duties and obligations on manufacturers, all or most of

    whom, presumably, are, like Nissan USA, from outside of the

    state. E.g., R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4 through 31-5.1-11.
    ____

    Unlike the definition of "new motor vehicle dealer" which

    includes generally "any person" selling cars, R.I. Gen. Laws

    31-5.1-1(C), the definition of "manufacturer" specifically

    includes any person, "resident or nonresident," who makes cars.

    R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-1(B). Thus, the Rhode Island legislature

    has clearly expressed an intent to regulate out-of-state

    manufacturers when they do business in Rhode Island. No such

    expression exists with regard to out-of-state dealers selling

    cars in another state. The absence of any specification that

    "new motor vehicle dealers" can include "nonresidents" confirms

    RIDOT's interpretation of R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2 as


    -14-














    excluding Fireside from the new dealership hearings.

    Now that we have determined that Rhode Island's new

    dealership law applies only to in-state dealers, we can proceed

    to the task of determining whether RIDOT's action of excluding

    Fireside from the new dealership hearings was a constitutional

    exercise of state power.

    A. Commerce Clause
    A. Commerce Clause
    _______________

    The Commerce Clause, while literally a grant of power

    to Congress, also restricts states from passing laws that

    interfere with interstate commerce. Wyoming v. Oklahoma, 112 S.
    _______ ________

    Ct. 789, 800 (1992); New Energy Co. v. Limbach, 486 U.S. 269, 273
    ______________ _______

    (1988). "This 'negative' aspect of the Commerce Clause prohibits

    economic protectionism -- that is, regulatory measures designed

    to benefit in-state economic interests by burdening out-of-state

    competitors." New Energy, 486 U.S. at 273-74; see also Hyde Park
    __________ ________ _________

    Partners, L.P. v. Connolly, 839 F.2d 837, 843 (1st Cir. 1988).
    ______________ ________

    Laws that have either the purpose or effect of
    _______ ______

    discriminating against interstate commerce will be struck down as

    unconstitutional unless the state can establish that there is no

    reasonable alternative method of safeguarding a legitimate local

    interest. Wyoming v. Oklahoma, 112 S. Ct. at 800; New Energy,
    ____________________ __________

    486 U.S. at 274; Maine v. Taylor, 477 U.S. 131, 138 (1986)
    _____ ______

    (citing Hughes v. Oklahoma, 441 U.S. 322, 336 (1979)). State
    ______ ________

    laws which have as their primary or exclusive purpose the

    promotion of local interests by burdening out-of-state commerce,

    that is, economic protectionism, are subject to a virtual "per se


    -15-














    rule of invalidity." Wyoming v. Oklahoma, 112 S. Ct. at 800
    ___________________

    (quoting Philadelphia v. New Jersey, 437 U.S. 617, 624 (1978)).
    ____________ __________

    In the absence of discrimination, state action that

    interferes with or burdens interstate commerce will be struck

    down if the local interest is not very substantial or if the

    burdens imposed on interstate commerce are excessive in relation

    to the putative benefits of the state's action. Maine v. Taylor,
    _____ ______

    477 U.S. at 138; Brown-Forman Distillers Corp. v. New York State
    _____________________________ ______________

    Liquor Auth., 476 U.S. 573, 579 (1986); Pike v. Bruce Church,
    ____________ ____ ______________

    Inc., 397 U.S. 137, 142 (1970); Hyde Park, 839 F.2d at 844-45.
    ____ __________

    Thus, when a state law regulates in-state and out-of-state

    businesses evenhandedly, courts should apply "less strict

    scrutiny" or a more lenient balancing test than they would apply

    in the case of discrimination against interstate commerce.

    Wyoming v. Oklahoma, 112 S. Ct. at 800 n.12; Brown-Forman, 476
    _______ ________ ____________

    U.S. at 579; Philadelphia v. New Jersey, 437 U.S. at 624.
    ____________ __________

    1. Discrimination Against Interstate Commerce
    1. Discrimination Against Interstate Commerce
    __________________________________________

    R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2 does not have the purpose

    of discriminating against interstate commerce. As discussed

    above, R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1 is designed to regulate automobile

    dealerships in the state of Rhode Island, and R.I. Gen. Laws

    31-5.1-4.2, in particular, is designed to insure that certain

    conditions are met before a new dealership license is granted.

    Rhode Island's intent is to protect Rhode Island consumers and

    Rhode Island dealers from certain franchising practices of

    automobile manufacturers which are perceived as harmful to the


    -16-














    local community. R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2 is not designed to

    promote local dealers at the expense of out-of-state dealers nor

    to alter the terms at which dealers sell, or consumers purchase,

    cars within or outside of Rhode Island.

    In addition, the exclusion from licensing hearings of

    out-of-state but not in-state dealers within a given area is not

    facially discriminatory against interstate commerce such that "on

    its face [it] appears to violate the cardinal requirement of

    nondiscrimination." New Energy, 486 U.S. at 274; Healy v. The
    __________ _____ ___

    Beer Institute, 491 U.S. 324, 340-41 (1989). R.I. Gen. Laws
    ______________

    31-5.1-4.2 is strictly concerned with licensing dealerships in

    Rhode Island; it does not, on its face, regulate any aspect of

    interstate commerce such as the flow of goods across borders, the

    sale of out-of-state goods, the comparative cost of making or

    selling those goods, or any other aspect of the commercial

    activity of out-of-state businesses. Exxon Corp. v. Governor of
    ____________ ___________

    Maryland, 437 U.S. 117, 126 (1978) (noting that a Maryland law
    ________

    prohibiting producers and refiners of petroleum products from

    operating retail service stations within the state was

    distinguishable from laws discriminating against interstate

    commerce because the law "creates no barriers whatsoever against

    interstate independent dealers; it does not prohibit the flow of

    interstate goods, place added costs upon them, or distinguish

    between in-state and out-of-state companies in the retail

    market"). Because Rhode Island's new car dealership law does not

    facially apply to interstate commerce, it cannot facially


    -17-














    discriminate against interstate commerce.

    We therefore turn to the alleged discriminatory effect
    ______

    of Rhode Island's new dealership law. R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-

    4.2 does not place burdens on goods or services from out-of-state

    or on the out-of-state businesses that produce them. The statute

    concerns the rights and obligations of licensed Rhode Island

    dealerships, a group that does not include Fireside. It simply

    has no application whatsoever to Fireside. The statute in no way

    hinders Fireside's ability to sell cars to Rhode Islanders; nor

    does it increase Fireside's cost of doing business with Rhode

    Island. These facts distinguish Rhode Island's statute from

    those statutes which the Supreme Court has commonly struck down

    because of their discriminatory effects. See, e.g., Healy, 491
    ___ ____ _____

    U.S. at 337-40 (striking down Connecticut statute requiring beer

    shippers to affirm that their prices are no higher than prices in

    bordering states because the statute affected prices outside of

    the state); Hughes v. Oklahoma, 441 U.S. 322, 336-38 (1979)
    ______ ________

    (striking down Oklahoma statute prohibiting the sale of minnows

    outside of the state because it blocked the flow of commerce

    through state borders); Philadelphia v. New Jersey, 437 U.S. at
    ____________ __________

    625-28 (striking down New Jersey law prohibiting the shipment of

    garbage into the state for the same reason); Hunt v. Washington
    ____ __________

    State Apple Advertising Comm'n, 432 U.S. 333, 349-352 (1977)
    ________________________________

    (striking down North Carolina law that restricted grade

    identifications on closed apple containers, including the

    favorable grade for Washington apples, because the law raised the


    -18-














    cost of doing business in North Carolina for Washington apple

    growers and stripped away the competitive advantage of the

    Washington apple industry). Rhode Island's law clearly does not

    have the effect of burdening out-of-state businesses.

    Instead, this case falls into the "local benefit" or

    "subsidy" category of cases -- that is, cases dealing with state

    laws that confer a benefit on businesses within the state while

    withholding the benefit from similarly situated out-of-state

    businesses. Fireside claims that R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2

    grants to Rhode Island dealerships the privilege of protesting

    the establishment of new car dealerships at locations close to

    their existing dealerships, thus allowing them an opportunity to

    limit their competition. At the same time, Fireside argues, R.I.

    Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2 denies the same privilege to out-of-state

    dealers in the same competitive area. The result of such

    discriminatory effects, Fireside alleges, is to drive the

    establishment of new car dealerships out towards Rhode Island's

    borders where they can divert businesses from dealers in

    neighboring states who have no standing to protest the

    establishment of such dealerships at a good-cause hearing.

    Supreme Court jurisprudence on discriminatory

    privileges for in-state business under the Commerce Clause is,

    unfortunately, somewhat inconsistent. On the one hand, several

    state laws designed to promote local industry have been struck

    down by the Court. E.g., Wyoming v. Oklahoma, 112 S. Ct. at 800
    ____ ___________________

    (striking down Oklahoma law reserving a segment of the Oklahoma


    -19-














    coal market for Oklahoma-mined coal); New Energy, 486 U.S. at
    ___________

    273-80 (striking down Ohio tax credit for ethanol produced in the

    state); Bacchus Imports, Ltd. v. Dias, 468 U.S. 263 (1984)
    _______________________ ____

    (striking down Hawaiian law exempting local producers of certain

    liquors from general liquor tax). On the other hand, the Court

    has repeatedly affirmed the long-recognized proposition that

    states may directly subsidize local industry as long as they do

    so without burdening the ability of interstate competitors to

    sell their products in the state. New Energy, 486 U.S. at 278;
    __________

    Bacchus, 468 U.S. at 271; Hughes v. Alexandria Scrap Corp., 426
    _______ ______ _______________________

    U.S. 794, 814-17 (1976) (Stevens., J., concurring);4 see also
    ________

    West Lynn Creamery, Inc. v. Healy, 62 U.S.L.W. 4518, 4525 (June
    ________________________ _____

    17, 1994) (Scalia, J., concurring) (describing this area of the

    Court's Commerce Clause jurisprudence as a "quagmire"). As

    Justice Scalia stated in New Energy:
    __________

    The Commerce Clause does not prohibit all
    state action designed to give its
    residents an advantage in the
    marketplace, but only action of that
    description in connection with the
    ___________________________
    State's regulation of interstate
    _________________________________________
    commerce. Direct subsidization of
    ________
    domestic industry does not ordinarily run
    afoul of that prohibition; discriminatory
    taxation of out-of-state manufacturers

    ____________________

    4 Although the majority decided Alexandria Scrap according to
    ________________
    what has become known as the "market participant" doctrine --
    i.e., normal Commerce Clause scrutiny does not apply when the
    state enters the market as a buyer, seller, or employer to favor
    local citizens, Alexandria Scrap, 426 U.S. at 805-10 -- the
    ________________
    majority also placed some emphasis on the fact that Maryland's
    beneficial treatment of only in-state businesses, while affecting
    the flow of interstate commerce, did not "interfere[] with the
    natural functioning of the interstate market either through
    prohibition or through burdensome regulation." Id. at 806.
    __

    -20-














    does.

    New Energy, 486 U.S. at 278 (emphasis in original).
    __________

    Although we see no practical difference between the tax

    break offered to local liquor producers in Bacchus, for example,
    _______

    and a "direct" cash subsidy to those same industries (thus

    blurring the imaginary line between discriminatory privileges

    that burden interstate commerce and those that do not), the

    Court's focus on laws "in connection with the State's regulation

    of interstate commerce" appears to invoke the Commerce Clause

    only where the challenged law relates to taxes, prices, or the

    conditions and costs imposed on an out-state-business doing

    business in the state. See Exxon Corp., 437 U.S. at 126; West
    ___ ___________ ____

    Lynn Creamery, 62 U.S.L.W. at 4520-22.
    _____________

    R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2 does bestow the benefit of

    protesting new dealerships on existing Rhode Island dealers in a

    competitive area which is not simultaneously extended to Fireside

    or other out-of-state dealers who are also in the competitive

    area. This "advantage in the marketplace," however, is not one

    "in connection with the state's regulation of interstate

    commerce." New Energy, 486 U.S. at 278. The creation of new car
    __________

    dealerships in Rhode Island does not relate to the price of the

    automobiles being sold, the taxes paid for them, or the costs and

    conditions of selling them. Moreover, Rhode Island's procedure

    for protesting new dealerships does not diminish the

    opportunities for Massachusetts dealers to sell cars to Rhode

    Island customers. Rhode Island's efforts to license and regulate


    -21-














    in-state dealers is thus far afield from protectionist laws that

    serve to enhance economic prosperity of local citizens by

    hindering the free flow of products or by affording privileges

    provided at the expense of out-of-state businesses.

    Fireside claims that denying it the protest privilege

    provided by R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2 will have a differential

    effect on the number of competitors a given car dealership will

    face, ultimately reducing the number of Rhode Islanders who will

    travel to Massachusetts to buy shiny new Nissan 380-Z's. This

    diversionary effect is present in all subsidy cases and, thus,

    cannot by itself establish a violation of the Commerce Clause.

    In this case, the diversion of business does not result from a

    comparative advantage in the marketplace created by the

    challenged state action that would not normally exist in a free

    market for new car sales. Consequently, this case does not

    involve a practice that even comes close to the types of local

    subsidies that raise Commerce Clause concerns. See Hunt v.
    ___ ____

    Washington State Apple, 432 U.S. at 351-52 (striking down North
    ______________________

    Carolina law because it stripped away advantages that out-of-

    state competitor would normally have in the free market); Hyde
    ____

    Park, 839 F.2d at 843 ("state action must not 'neutralize the
    ____

    economic consequences of free trade among the states'") (quoting

    Baldwin v. G.A.F. Seelig, Inc., 294 U.S. 511, 526 (1935)).
    _______ ___________________

    The mere act of granting a dealership license that

    might not otherwise be granted had out-of-state dealers been

    allowed to protest at the hearing does not mean that the new


    -22-














    dealership will have some preferential ability to sell cars to

    Rhode Island customers. Similarly, nothing in R.I. Gen. Laws

    31-5.1-4.2 affects Fireside's ability to sell a shinier Nissan at

    a better price, and a Rhode Islander's ability to take advantage

    of such bargains. The effect of the law is not to dictate the

    terms of competition between businesses, but rather, to regulate

    the existence of competitors. Given these circumstances, the

    fact that some theoretical group of Rhode Island dealers in the

    interior of the state face less competition from new dealerships

    allegedly concentrated on the border is not significant for

    purposes of a Commerce Clause analysis. The alleged beneficial

    effect of R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2 is too far afield from the

    protectionism that the Commerce Clause prohibits.

    This case is distinguishable from the Bendix case
    ______

    relied on by Fireside for the proposition that the withholding of

    "legal defenses or like privileges" from out-of-state businesses

    discriminates against interstate commerce. Bendix Autolite Corp.
    _____________________

    v. Midwesco Enters., Inc., 486 U.S. 888, 893 (1988). In Bendix,
    _______________________ ______

    the Supreme Court struck down an Ohio statute that tolled the

    statute of limitations (i.e. suspended the running of time) on

    fraud and breach of contract actions for any foreign business

    that was not "present" in the state and had not designated an

    agent for service of process. Id. To begin with, the Supreme
    __

    Court never determined whether or not the Ohio statute

    discriminated against interstate commerce. Id. at 891. Instead,
    __

    the Court based its finding on a balancing of the burdens of the


    -23-














    law with the justifications for the law. Id. In any event,
    __

    Bendix is not applicable to the present case for a number of
    ______

    reasons.

    First, the Bendix Court found that the Ohio statute
    ______

    places a "significant burden" on out-of-state businesses because

    it "forces a foreign corporation to choose between exposure to

    the general jurisdiction of Ohio courts or forfeiture of the

    limitations defense, remaining subject to suit in Ohio in

    perpetuity." Id. at 893. The statute thus affected the costs
    __

    and conditions of doing business in the state relative to local

    businesses.

    As already noted, that is not the case here. Fireside

    does not face any increased liability, or other burden that would

    increase its cost of doing business, by virtue of its exclusion

    from the licensing hearings. The only effect of R.I. Gen. Laws

    31-5.1-4.2 on Fireside is a relative limitation on its ability

    to restrict the number of competitors it will face, an interest

    beyond the purview of the Commerce Clause. Legal defenses in

    contract or fraud actions are simply not comparable to

    participation in a local hearing for the granting of a state

    dealership license to a completely different party. The former

    involves "an integral part of the legal system . . . relied upon

    to project the liabilities of persons and corporations active in

    the commercial sphere." Id. The latter involves local licensing
    __

    proceedings that have nothing to do with the out-of-state

    business beyond its concern over the creation of a competitor.


    -24-














    Furthermore, the alleged protest right in this case,

    unlike the statute of limitations defense in Bendix, is not part
    ______

    of a statutory scheme that applies to out-of-state businesses.

    As discussed above, R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2 is concerned with

    local licenses and simply has no application to Fireside. The

    statute of limitations defense, however, is a part of the general

    scheme of civil commercial liability that applies to all

    companies with minimum contacts to the state. The Ohio statute

    was thus purposefully directed to out-of-state businesses to

    revoke a procedural defense they would normally enjoy. In the

    present case, no benefit was revoked or withheld from out-of-

    state parties because R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2 was concerned

    solely with local dealership licensing and was never intended to

    afford any benefits to out-of-state dealers in the first place.

    2. Impermissible Burdening of Interstate Commerce
    2. Impermissible Burdening of Interstate Commerce
    ______________________________________________

    Because we find no discriminatory purpose or effect on

    interstate commerce from R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2, we must

    apply the more lenient Pike balancing test to determine whether
    ____

    the law imposes an unreasonable burden on interstate commerce.

    Laws that have only an incidental impact on interstate commerce

    will be upheld so long as the burden imposed on interstate

    commerce is not clearly excessive in relation to the putative

    benefits. Brown-Forman, 476 U.S. at 579; Philadelphia v. New
    ____________ ____________ ___

    Jersey, 437 U.S. at 623-24; Pike, 397 U.S. at 142. "'[T]here is
    ______ ____

    a residuum of power in the state to make laws governing matters

    of local concern which nevertheless in some measure affect


    -25-














    interstate commerce or even, to some extent, regulate it.'"

    Kassel v. Consolidated Freightways Corp., 450 U.S. 662, 669
    ______ _______________________________

    (1981) (quoting Southern Pacific Co. v. Arizona, 325 U.S. 761,
    ____________________ _______

    767 (1945)).

    R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2 burdens interstate commerce

    only minimally, if at all. As discussed above, no burdens are

    placed on an out-of-state dealer's ability to sell cars to Rhode

    Islanders. The only effect on interstate commerce, theoretically

    anyway, appears to be a decrease in the number of Rhode Island

    customers who go to Massachusetts to buy Nissans because out-of-

    state dealers are not able to protest the establishment of new

    Rhode Island dealerships near the border. This diversionary

    effect, however, attributable to increased competition from

    competitors who gain no special competitive advantage from the

    state action, does not implicate the Commerce Clause. The free

    flow of goods remains unaffected by R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2

    and any changes in that flow are due solely to consumers acting

    within the free market. See Minnesota v. Clover Leaf Creamery
    ___ _________ ____________________

    Co., 449 U.S. 456, 473-74 (1981) (upholding Minnesota law banning
    ___

    the use of plastic milk containers even though the statute

    benefitted the predominantly local pulpwood producers at the

    expense of the predominantly out-of-state plastics industry);

    Exxon Corp., 437 U.S. at 126-28 (upholding Maryland statute
    ____________

    prohibiting producers and refiners of petroleum products from

    operating retail service stations within the state partly because

    "in-state independent dealers will have no competitive advantage


    -26-














    over out-of-state dealers").

    Given the lack of any significant burden on interstate

    commerce in this case, we find Rhode Island's interest in

    excluding out-of-state parties from participating in a matter of

    strictly local concern -- the licensing of Rhode Island

    dealerships -- more than sufficient to pass Constitutional muster

    under the Pike balancing test. Certainly the state's desire to
    ____

    protect local dealers and consumers from harmful franchising

    practices is a lawful legislative goal. Even if we confine our

    analysis to state interests that are directly tied to the

    restriction on who can participate in hearings, however, the

    statute survives the balancing test. Rhode Island's concerns for

    administrative convenience and the reasonable belief that state

    citizens are best qualified to represent local interests

    sufficiently justify the state's exclusion of out-of-state

    dealers from the new dealership hearings.

    B. Other Constitutional Claims
    B. Other Constitutional Claims
    ___________________________

    1. Due Process
    1. Due Process
    ___________

    Fireside claims that RIDOT's exclusion of Fireside from

    new dealership hearings deprived it of a protected property

    interest without procedural due process. The district court

    rejected this claim, finding that Fireside had no protectable

    interest in pursuing its business free from competition. On

    appeal, Fireside argues that it has a protected property interest

    in the form of a legitimate claim of entitlement to be free from

    "excessive intrabrand competition" in the market for new Nissans.


    -27-














    Fireside maintains that R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2 granted this

    interest to Fireside when it bestowed protest rights on all

    dealers within the "relevant market area" and that RIDOT then

    deprived Fireside of this right when it excluded Fireside from

    the hearings.

    The protections of procedural due process are not

    triggered unless Fireside can show it has been deprived of a

    protectable liberty or property interest. Cleveland Bd. of Educ.
    ______________________

    v. Loudermill, 470 U.S. 532, 538 (1985); Board of Regents v.
    __________ _________________

    Roth, 408 U.S. 564, 569 (1972). Property interests "'are created
    ____

    and their dimensions are defined by existing rules or

    understandings that stem from an independent source such as state

    law.'" Loudermill, 470 U.S. at 538 (quoting Roth, 408 U.S. at
    __________ ____

    577).

    Fireside does not have a protectable property interest

    in being free from excessive intrabrand competition or from

    participating in Rhode Island's new dealership hearings because

    R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2 does not confer any protections or

    rights of participation on out-of-state dealers. As we have

    already found, Rhode Island's dealership licensing statute only

    applies to dealerships within the state of Rhode Island and does

    not have, nor has it ever had, any application to out-of-state

    dealers like Fireside. Consequently, RIDOT did not deprive

    Fireside of any existing property interest when it excluded

    Fireside from its hearing on the establishment of Smithfield

    Nissan. The district court correctly found no due process


    -28-














    violation in this case.

    2. Equal Protection
    2. Equal Protection
    ________________

    Fireside finally claims that RIDOT's exclusion of

    similarly situated out-of-state dealers from new dealership

    hearings is an impermissible classification under the Equal

    Protection Clause of the Constitution.

    Absent a suspect classification or a fundamental right,

    courts will uphold economic and social legislation that

    distinguishes between two similarly situated groups as long as

    the classification is rationally related to a legitimate

    government objective. Nordlinger v. Hahn, 112 S. Ct. 2326, 2331-
    __________ ____

    32 (1992); Schweiker v. Wilson, 450 U.S. 221, 230 (1981);
    _________ ______

    Dandridge v. Williams, 397 U.S. 471, 485 (1970); LCM Enterprises,
    _________ ________ ________________

    Inc. v. Town of Dartmouth, 14 F.3d 675, 678-79 (1st Cir. 1994).
    ____ _________________

    A state statute will survive this "rational basis" scrutiny under

    the Equal Protection Clause as long as "any state of facts

    reasonably may be conceived to justify it." Dandridge, 397 U.S.
    _________

    at 485 (quoting McGowan v. Maryland, 366 U.S. 420, 426 (1961));
    _______ ________

    accord LCM Enters., 14 F.3d at 679 (collecting cases). A state's
    ______ ___________

    classification is not unconstitutional simply because it "'is not

    made with mathematical nicety or because in practice it results

    in some inequality.'" Dandridge, 397 U.S. at 485 (quoting
    _________

    Lindsley v. Natural Carbonic Gas Co., 220 U.S. 61, 78 (1911)).
    ________ ________________________

    Fireside claims that RIDOT's application of R.I. Gen.

    Laws 31-5.1-4.2 is not rationally related to the stated goal of

    protecting Rhode Island consumers and Rhode Island dealerships


    -29-














    from certain franchising practices of automobile manufacturers.

    Fireside argues that excluding out-of-state dealers from the

    good-cause hearings not only fails to further the goals of

    protecting consumers and dealers but actually undermines those

    goals. According to Fireside, its exclusion from the hearings

    gives Rhode Island regulators a distorted view of the "relevant

    market area" by understating the existing competition among

    automobile franchises, resulting in licensing decisions that are

    detrimental to Rhode Island consumers and dealers. The only

    purpose for excluding out-of-state dealers, Fireside posits, is

    the illegitimate one of economic protectionism.

    We disagree with Fireside's contention that RIDOT's

    exclusion of Fireside bears no rational relationship to the goal

    of protecting Rhode Island consumers and car dealers. Excluding

    out-of-state parties from hearings on matters of strictly local

    concern is a reasonable way to conduct state governmental

    business. We find it reasonable for Rhode Island to believe,

    rightly or wrongly, that members of its own community are best

    qualified to represent community interests to regulators,

    including interests concerning the effect of a manufacturer's

    efforts to establish a new dealership on existing dealers and

    consumers. Out-of-state parties may be more likely to have

    interests that conflict with local interests. Further, Rhode

    Island's interest in administrative convenience may justify its

    decision to cut off the number of people participating in state

    decisionmaking at the logical point of state citizenship.


    -30-














    Whether more information concerning out-of-state dealers would

    better serve Rhode Island's goal of protecting consumers and

    dealers is irrelevant for purposes of rational basis analysis

    under the Equal Protection Clause. In any event, we are

    skeptical of the proposition that Rhode Island consumers and

    dealers are unable to fully represent their own interests at a

    hearing without the participation of out-of-state dealers. If an

    existing Rhode Island dealer or a consumer group finds it in

    their interest to present information about other out-of-state

    dealerships, nothing in the law prevents them from doing so.

    Finally, we find that Rhode Island did not purposefully

    discriminate against Fireside by excluding it from new dealership

    hearings for the sole purpose of furthering the illegitimate goal

    of economic protectionism. See Snowden v. Hughes, 321 U.S. 1, 8
    ___ _______ ______

    (1944). As already discussed above, R.I. Gen. Laws 31-5.1-4.2

    was designed and intended to regulate and protect licensed car

    dealerships in Rhode Island and was not intended nor designed to

    benefit local businesses at the expense of out-of-state

    competitors. We therefore uphold the district court's holding

    that RIDOT did not violate Fireside's constitutional rights.

    Affirmed.
    ________












    -31-