Parks Superior Sales, Inc. v. BPOA, State Board of Motor Vehicle Manufacturers, Dealers and Salespersons ( 2017 )


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  •          IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Parks Superior Sales, Inc.,              :
    Petitioner            :
    :
    v.                           :
    :
    Bureau of Professional and               :
    Occupational Affairs, State Board        :
    of Motor Vehicle Manufacturers,          :
    Dealers and Salespersons,                :   No. 914 C.D. 2016
    Respondent            :   Argued: December 12, 2016
    BEFORE:     HONORABLE ROBERT SIMPSON, Judge
    HONORABLE JOSEPH M. COSGROVE, Judge
    HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Senior Judge
    OPINION NOT REPORTED
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    BY JUDGE COSGROVE                            FILED: October 20, 2017
    Parks Superior Sales, Inc. (Petitioner) petitions for review of the order
    of the Pennsylvania Board of Motor Vehicle Manufacturers, Dealers and
    Salespersons (Board) assessing Petitioner with a $55,000 fine and ordering it to
    cease and desist from engaging in the business of a vehicle dealer in the
    Commonwealth of Pennsylvania until Petitioner obtains a license to do so from the
    Board. For the following reasons, we reverse the order of the Board.
    Petitioner is a funeral coach dealer located in Somers, Connecticut and
    has been selling funeral specialty vehicles since 1952. Petitioner employed a single
    salesperson, John O’Donnell, who worked out of his home in Collegeville,
    Pennsylvania. On behalf of Petitioner, Mr. O’Donnell sold fifteen vehicles to
    consumers in Pennsylvania during 2012, twenty during 2011, and twenty during
    2010. (Board’s Order, 5/9/16, at 3-8.)
    On February 18, 2015, the Commonwealth filed an order to show cause
    charging that Petitioner is subject to discipline under the Board of Vehicles Act1
    (Act) and Act 482 for engaging in the business of a vehicle dealer in Pennsylvania
    on at least fifty-five occasions without being licensed to do so by the Board.
    Petitioner filed an answer and new matter acknowledging it does not hold a license
    in Pennsylvania and that it sold vehicles to customers in Pennsylvania. Petitioner,
    however, denied it engaged in the business of vehicle dealing in the Commonwealth.
    (Board’s Order at 3-5.)
    A hearing on the matter was held on September 1, 2015. Neither
    Petitioner nor anyone representing Petitioner, appeared at the hearing. 3 Maria
    Kanoff, an investigator employed by the Department of State, Bureau of
    Enforcement Investigation, who conducted an investigation into the present matter,
    provided testimony on behalf of the Commonwealth. Ms. Kanoff explained that the
    vehicles sold were only specialty vehicles and that they were sold to trade shows and
    via the internet. She testified that Mr. O’Donnell did visit people in person, usually
    by request of the trade show. (Certified Record (R.R.), Item 8, Transcript of
    Testimony (T.T.) at 9-16.) Ms. Kanoff was further asked about the nature of the
    sales of vehicles in relation to Pennsylvania and Connecticut:
    1
    Act of December 22, 1983 P.L. 306, No. 84, as amended, 63 P.S. §§ 818.1-818.37.
    2
    Act of July 2, 1993 P.L. 345, No. 48, as amended, 63 P.S. §§ 2201-2207.
    3
    Counsel for Petitioner has indicated that she did not receive notice of the September 1
    hearing, and we have no reason to doubt this assertion.
    2
    Q: … But these people are selling vehicles into
    Pennsylvania, are -- where is the -- do you know [where]
    the paperwork is being done?
    A: As -- the paperwork that was submitted to me -- I can’t
    verify all the paperwork. But the paperwork that was
    submitted to me was based out of Connecticut.
    T.T. at 16-17 (emphasis added).4
    On May 9, 2016, the Board found Petitioner was a dealer of funeral
    specialty vehicles located in Somers, Connecticut, and did not hold a license as a
    vehicle dealer in Pennsylvania. Additionally, the Board found Petitioner engaged in
    the business of selling funeral specialty vehicles to Pennsylvania consumers. The
    Board found that, over the course of 2010 through the end of 2012, Petitioner’s
    salesperson sold fifty-five vehicles to Pennsylvania customers also located in
    Pennsylvania in violation of Section 5(a)(1) of the Act.5 As such, the Board assessed
    Petitioner with a $55,000.00 fine, $1,000.00 per vehicle sold while unlicensed, and
    ordered Petitioner to cease and desist from acting as a vehicle dealer within
    Pennsylvania until licensed to do so. The Board also assessed Petitioner with the
    costs of investigation in the amount of $923.16. (Board’s Order at 10.)
    On May 24, 2016, Petitioner filed a petition for a rehearing. Ultimately,
    the Board denied the petition as untimely. On August 4, 2016, this Court, while
    acknowledging the petition was untimely, granted Petitioner nunc pro tunc relief.
    Argument before a panel of this Court was held on December 12, 2016.
    4
    Reference was made at the hearing several times to Petitioner selling vehicles “into
    Pennsylvania,” (T.T. at 13.) (emphasis added). Ms. Kanoff stated repeatedly that while Petitioner
    admitted “sell[ing vehicles] to Pennsylvania residents,” and to “consumers in Pennsylvania,” (T.T.
    at 12,) Petitioner “didn’t say they sell [the vehicles in Pennsylvania…]” Id.
    5
    63 P.S. § 818.5.
    3
    Accordingly, currently before us for review is the issue of whether or not Petitioner
    was doing business in Pennsylvania in violation of Section 5(a) of the Act.
    Discussion
    Petitioner argues it did not violate Section 5(a) of the Act. Petitioner
    asserts it did not sell vehicles to customers or to the general public, rather, it sold
    vehicles to business purchasers with very specific needs. Further, it does the
    majority of its business via telephone, internet and trade shows and does not have a
    sales facility in Pennsylvania. Petitioner also argues the evidence does not show that
    any sale actually took place “within the Commonwealth.” (Petitioner’s Brief at 27-
    28.)
    The Commonwealth points out that Petitioner utilized a Pennsylvania
    phone number to conduct business and finalized at least one sale of a vehicle to a
    Pennsylvania consumer from the office in Pennsylvania. The Commonwealth
    claims these activities fall squarely within the Act’s definition of “buying, selling,
    and exchanging” for which a license is required. (Commonwealth’s Brief at 18.)
    Section 2 of the Act states, in pertinent part,
    [t]o promote the public safety and welfare, it shall be
    unlawful for any person to engage in the business as a
    salesperson, dealer, branch lot, wholesale vehicle auction,
    public or retail vehicle auction, manufacturer, factory
    branch, distributor, distributor branch, factory
    representative or distributor representative within this
    Commonwealth unless the person has secured a license as
    required under this act.
    63 P.S. § 818.5(a)(1).
    4
    Additionally, the Act defines a dealer as a person required to be licensed
    under this Act who is engaged in the business of buying, selling or exchanging new
    or used vehicles or an interest in new or used vehicles, regardless of whether the
    vehicles are owned by that person. 63 P.S. § 818.2.
    Petitioner was a dealer because it sold new vehicles for compensation.
    However, the question remains as to whether Petitioner was engaged in the business
    as a vehicle dealer in Pennsylvania.
    It is well settled that “the language of the statute must be read in a sense
    which harmonizes with the subject matter and its general purpose and object.”
    Kerbeck Cadillac Pontiac, Inc. v. State Board of Vehicle Manufacturers, Dealers &
    Salespersons, 
    854 A.2d 663
    , 668 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2004). The Act states that its
    motivating purpose is “[t]o promote the public safety and welfare.”             63 P.S.
    § 818.5(a)(1).
    The vehicles Petitioner sold were not intended for use by the general
    public, but rather only for limited purposes within the funeral industry. Sales of the
    vehicles were infrequent and limited. Petitioner employed a single salesperson who
    resided in Pennsylvania and worked out of his home, with Petitioner’s total amount
    of contact with Pennsylvania being quite tenuous. Indeed, the findings of fact made
    by the Board show that only fifty-five vehicles were sold to Pennsylvania customers
    over the course of three years, and all paperwork was completed in Connecticut.
    Mindful of these extremely unique circumstances and nature of the vehicles in
    question, we fail to see how imposing upon Petitioner a $55,000 penalty and
    requiring Petitioner to obtain a license harmonizes with the Act’s purpose of
    promoting public safety and welfare.        Rather, we find Petitioner activities in
    Pennsylvania were so insubstantial that they did not amount to a violation of the Act.
    5
    Moreover, reading the statute in a way proffered by the Board creates a
    dormant commerce clause issue which would best be avoided. The activities
    prohibited by the Act did not occur “within this Commonwealth” but instead in
    Connecticut: the transactions occurred in Connecticut; sales occurred in
    Connecticut; the vehicles themselves were assembled or modified in Connecticut.
    The United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit addressed a matter similar
    to that presently before this Court. In Carolina Trucks & Equipment, Inc. v. Volvo
    Trucks of North America, Inc., 
    492 F.3d 484
     (4th Cir. 2007), Carolina Trucks invoked
    state law which prohibited manufacturers from “own[ing], operat[ing], or
    control[ing] a new motor vehicle dealer[ship] in South Carolina … or … sell[ing]
    directly or indirectly, a motor vehicle to a consumer in [that] State,” 
    id. at 488
    (internal citations omitted), and thus attempted to prevent Volvo Trucks (Volvo)
    from selling vehicles to consumers in South Carolina. While Volvo was not located
    in South Carolina, and there was no evidence that it actually consummated sales
    there, it did advertise in publications within that state. Carolina Trucks argued that
    “[a]lthough [Volvo] is physically located in Georgia, it entered South Carolina
    through direct mailings and phonebook advertisements.” 
    Id. at 490-491
    . Thus,
    “Carolina Trucks contended that the sales [of vehicles] took place partly on South
    Carolina soil” despite the fact that the culmination of transactions occurred outside
    that state. 
    Id. at 490
     (internal quotations omitted).
    In finding against Carolina Trucks, the Fourth Circuit held that “a
    plaintiff cannot seek to apply one state's statute to transactions in another state
    through an expansive definition of the site of the regulated conduct. ...[State statutes
    cannot be used to] seize upon a company's in-state commercial activities, such as the
    mailings and phone book advertising in this case, to regulate the companies' [sic]
    6
    out-of-state conduct [i.e. the sales of the vehicles in Georgia].” 
    Id. at 491
    . To find
    otherwise, the Court noted, risked upsetting the delicate constitutional balance
    outlined in our “dormant commerce power” jurisprudence. 
    Id. at 492
    .6
    Petitioner’s activity which may have occurred “within this
    Commonwealth,” whether through advertising or direct discussion, was similar in
    nature to that found in Carolina Trucks, but it also differs in a number of respects.
    Because of our statutory holding, we need not decide whether the Board’s action
    violates the Constitution, nor need we address Petitioner’s other issues raised on
    appeal.
    For the foregoing reasons we reverse the order of the Board.
    ___________________________
    JOSEPH M. COSGROVE, Judge
    6
    The Court also avoided an additional constitutional dilemma by interpreting the South
    Carolina statute in a fashion so as to prevent “giving the state's laws extraterritorial reach…”
    Carolina Trucks, 
    492 F.3d at 489
    .
    7
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Parks Superior Sales, Inc.,            :
    Petitioner          :
    :
    v.                        :
    :
    Bureau of Professional and             :
    Occupational Affairs, State Board      :
    of Motor Vehicle Manufacturers,        :
    Dealers and Salespersons,              :   No. 914 C.D. 2016
    Respondent          :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 20th day of October, 2017, the order of the
    Pennsylvania Board of Motor Vehicle Manufacturers, Dealers and Salespersons is
    reversed.
    ___________________________
    JOSEPH M. COSGROVE, Judge
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 914 C.D. 2016

Judges: Cosgrove, J.

Filed Date: 10/20/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/20/2017