Kingery v. Chapple

Decision Date29 December 1972
Docket NumberNo. 1554,1554
Citation504 P.2d 831
PartiesJerry KINGERY, Appellant, v. Emery W. CHAPPLE, Commissioner of the Department of Public Safety, and the State of Alaska, Appellees.
CourtAlaska Supreme Court

Robert H. Wagstaff, Anchorage, for appellant.

John E. Havelock, Atty. Gen., Juneau, Sanford M. Gibbs and John A. Reeder, Asst. Attys. Gen., Anchorage, for appellees.

Before RABINOWITZ, C. J., and CONNOR, ERWIN and BOOCHEVER, JJ.

BOOCHEVER, Justice.

During October 1969 the Alaska Department of Public Safety published a notice of proposed regulations governing vehicles on public roadways as required by AS 44.62.190. The notice included a proposal for mandatory safety equipment on motorcycles. Specifically, the regulations required that all motorcycles be equipped with two mirrors giving a view 200 feet to the rear, handlebars no higher than 15 inches above the seat or saddle, and either a windshield rising at least 15 inches above the handlebars or approved goggles or face shield to be worn by the driver. The proposed regulations also required that the operator and riders wear protective helmets of specified quality. 1

Interested parties were invited to submit written statements or appear at a hearing scheduled for November 17, 1969 at the State Capitol Building in Juneau. No one appeared or submitted statements in opposition. The regulations were subsequently approved as proposed. 2 In order to allow motorcyclists time to comply, the effective date of the regulations was extended one year to January 1, 1971.

On December 3, 1970, the appellant Kingery filed a complaint pursuant to AS 44.62.300 seeking to enjoin the enforcement of the regulations, and requesting a declaratory judgment that the regulations were unconstitutional. A motion for a preliminary injunction was denied. Following trial on the merits, the superior court decided that

absent a showing that the responsible administrative agency had exceeded its authority, this Court cannot exercise its independent judgment in reversing such an administrative determination. There is no evidence that the Department of Public Safety's actions were arbitrary and capricious. I find that the department acted within the scope of its authority in promulgating the subject regulations.

The court also found that the notice requirements of AS 44.62.190 were satisfied. 3

On appeal Kingery urges that the notice and hearing procedures were defective, that the superior court applied an erroneous test in evaluating the substance of the regulations, and that the regulations are unconstitutional because they are arbitrary and capricious, vague and an invasion of privacy.

AS 44.62.100(a)(3) establishes a rebuttable presumption that the procedural requirements for the promulgation of administrative regulations have been satisfied. 4 AS 44.62.300 provides that in addition to any other ground, a court may find the regulation invalid for a 'substantial' failure to comply with the requirements of the Administrative Procedure Act. The published notice of revision of regulations pertaining to motorcycles appeared in three of the largest newspapers in the state, and in areas which include most of the population of the state. While published as a general notice that a comprehensive revision of rules of the road was being considered, a subsection of the notice referred specifically to those safety features on motorcycles which are contested in this case. 5 The publications invited interested parties to obtain a complete copy of the comprehensive revision from either the regional offices of the Alaska State Troopers or from the Department of Public Safety. Critics were not required to travel to Juneau for the public hearings. The notice invited written comments.

Under these factual circumstances and the statutory presumption of validity, the superior court properly found that there was no substantial failure to comply with the requirement of AS 44.62.200(3) that the notice shall include 'an informative summary of the proposed subject'. Having made this determination, we must next ascertain whether the superior court applied proper standards in upholding the promulgation of the regulations.

In Kelly v. Zamarello, 486 P.2d 906, 911 (Alaska 1970) this court unanimously decided that

when a regulation has been adopted under a delegation of authority from the legislature to the administrative agency to formulate policies and to act in the place of the legislature, we should not examine the content of the regulation to judge its wisdom, but should exercise a scope of review not unlike that exercised with respect to a statute.

Thus, where an administrative regulation has been adopted in accordance with the procedures set forth in the Administrative Procedure Act, and it appears that the legislature has intended to commit to the agency discretion as to the particular matter that forms the subject of the regulation, we will review the regulaltion in the following manner: First, we will ascertain whether the regulation is consistent with and reasonably necessary to carry out the purposes of the statutory provisions conferring rulemaking authority on the agency. This aspect of review insures that the agency has not exceeded the power delegated by the legislature. Second, we will determine whether the regulation is reasonable and not arbitrary. This latter inquiry is proper in the review of any legislative enactment.

The two standards whereby it must be ascertained whether the agency acted within its 'scope of authority' and in a 'reasonable and not arbitrary' manner are the standards which the superior court applied in the instant case. The refusal of the superior court to substitute its judgment for that of the administrative agency as to the efficacy of the regulation is in accord with this court's statement in Kelly v. Zamarello, supra, that the 'wisdom' of a regulation is not a subject of review.

AS 28.05.030(a) specifically authorizes the Commissioner of Public Safety to adopt regulations governing rules of the road, the operation of vehicles on the roadways, and equipment to be carried on such vehicles. We interpret this power as including the regulation of safety apparel and the regulation of motorcycle construction insofar as such regulations are reasonable and do not violate constitutional rights of the individual. Hence, we do not find that the subject regulations exceed the scope of authority vested in the Commissioner of Public Safety by the legislature to ensure safety on public roads.

We also agree with the decision of the trial court that the regulations are reasonably related to the purpose to be achieved. At the outset we find that the regulations are designed for the safety of the public traveling the highways and not merely for the personal safety of the motorcycle operator. 6 We take judicial notice of the very real possibility that a stone thrown by a passing vehicle, a flying insect or other foreign objects might injure or distract the motorcycle operator, causing him to careen out of control and collide with other vehicles using the roadway. Helmets, face shields, goggles and windshields act as deflectors to prevent such injury or distraction. Testimony at trial indicated that windshields prevent body fatigue and that the limited height of handlebars prevent loss of circulation and arm fatigue, thus ensuring better control of steering. While vibrations of the vehicle may cause blurring of objects viewed through the required mirrors, there is no evidence that such vibrations prevent the operator from discerning that there is some object approaching from the rear. The mirror, helmet and eye protection requirements were adopted from the suggested standards of the National Highway Safety Bureau, and the handlebar-height requirement is taken from the Uniform Vehicle Code.

While in most cases the plaintiff carries the burden of presenting a prima facie case, the burden of proving the negative of a public-protection purpose raises special problems for the individual challenger of administrative regulations. 7 Hence we conclude that in such cases the state should be required to come forward with at least prima facie evidence that such a reasonable relation to purpose exists before the burden shifts to the complainant. In this case the experienced cyclists introduced as witnesses by the state did establish such a prima facie case, and we cannot conclude that the witnesses of the appellant offered such rebuttals that the decision of the superior court was erroneous. 8 We agree with the holdings of the vast majority of jurisdictions that the regulations in question bear a reasonable relation to the purpose of protecting the public, and hence are not a violation of the police power of the state. 9

We also find that the regulations are sufficiently specific to withstand the attack of vagueness by the appellant. As with the regulation upheld by this court in Nelson v. State, the presently contested regulation 'is addressed to men of ordinary intelligence who reasonably would be expected to understand it in its common and ordinary sense.' 10 While the termini for measuring the 15-inch height of the handlebars are not specified as particular points on the handlebars and on the seat or saddle, we do not feel that there is such an inexactitude as warrants voiding of that regulation at this time. 11

The appellant also urges that the 200-feet rear visibility requirement 12 is vague because the regulation does not indicate whether the measure occurs when the cycle is running or when it is parked. He notes that vibrations created by a cycle in operation limit rear visibility through a mirror. But the fact of vibration and blurring need not affect the distance of vision to the rear. It only affects the clarity of outlines of the object viewed. The regulation is concerned to ensure that the driver has placed his mirrors at such a distance and angle as to permit vision 200...

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    ...S.Ct. 1595, 1600.)12 See Picou v. Gillum (11th Cir.1989) 874 F.2d 1519; Simon v. Sargent (D.Mass.1972) 346 F.Supp. 277; Kingery v. Chapple (Alaska 1972) 504 P.2d 831; State v. Beeman (1975) 25 Ariz.App. 83, 541 P.2d 409; Penney v. City of North Little Rock (1970) 248 Ark. 1158, 455 S.W.2d 1......
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