Rhodes v. Clark
Decision Date | 13 July 1962 |
Docket Number | No. 7626,7626 |
Citation | 92 Ariz. 31,373 P.2d 348 |
Parties | Allen H. RHODES, Registrar of Contractors, State of Arizona, Appellant, v. Doyle Lee CLARK, d/b/a Clark Dry Wall, Appellee. |
Court | Arizona Supreme Court |
Robert W. Pickrell, Atty. Gen., Alvin E. Larson, Asst. Atty. Gen., John P. Frank, Monroe McKay, Sp. Asst. Attys. Gen., Phoenix, for appellant.
Vanlandingham & Stoneman, Phoenix, for appellee.
This is an appeal by Allen H. Rhodes, Arizona State Registrar of Contractors, from a writ of mandamus issued by the trial court directing said Registrar to issue a dry wall contracting license to appellee Doyle Lee Clark d/b/a Clark Dry Wall.
On January 30, 1962 Clark filed with the Registrar an application for a C-10 dry wall license and thereafter, as required by A.R.S. § 32-1122 (1956), he passed an examination, paid a fee and filed a bond. The Registrar thereupon posted notice of the application pursuant to Rule 34A of the Registrar's Rules and Regulations. 1 On February 28, the twenty-second day after posting, one Jalvia W. Hunsinger filed a complaint with the Registrar asserting that Clark had done 'contract work prior to the issuance of his license' thereby not fulfilling one of the requirments of A.R.S. § 32-1122, subd. B, to wit:
'To obtain a license under this chapter, the applicant shall * * * meet the following requirements: * * *
2
Clark answered objecting to the timeliness of the complaint and denying the allegations therein. A hearing was held March 8 before the Deputy Registrar, but no decision regarding the application having been reached by March 12, Clark petitioned the superior court for a writ of mandamus. An alternative writ was issued March 12, whereupon the Registrar set March 16 as the date for a second hearing on the application and obtained an ex parte order postponing the return date of the writ until after such hearing. The hearing was held March 16, and on March 30, sixty days after Clark had made application, the Registrar issued an order denying the license.
On April 10 the court held a hearing on the Registrar's motion to quash the alternative writ of mandamus and on the order to show cause. On April 27 a peremptory writ was issued but the Registrar still refused to issue the license, and on May 2, the court ordered a stay of execution of the writ pending argument on a motion for stay on appeal. After a hearing on May 7, the formal judgment was entered whereby the peremptory writ of mandamus was issued requiring the Registrar to issue a contractor's license to Clark but a stay thereof was granted through May 29. On the same day notice of appeal from the judgment was filed by the Registrar and, after hearing informal arguments on May 29, we accelerated the appeal and continued the stay of execution of the writ pending our disposition of the matter.
The Registrar contends that the trial court erred in not dismissing the petition for a writ of mandamus because the Administrative Review Act and not the writ afforded Clark the proper remedy upon the denial of his application, and in any event the denial was correct.
A writ of mandamus 'is an extraordinary and expeditious legal remedy which proceeds on the assumption that the applicant has an immediate and complete legal right to the thing demanded.' 3 Such a writ will lie only where two conditions are present: first the act, performance of which is sought to be compelled, must be 'a ministerial act which the law specially imposes as a duty resulting from an office,' 4 or if discretionary it must clearly appear 'that the officer has acted arbitrarily and unjustly and in the abuse of discretion * * *.'; 5 and second there must exist no other 'plain, speedy and adequate remedy at law.' 6
We believe that A.R.S. Title 12, Ch. 7, Art. 6 (1956) entitled 'Judicial Review of Administrative Decisions' (hereafter called the Review Act or The Act) provides just such a plain, speedy and adequate remedy. Therefore since the second condition precedent to the issuance of the writ of mandamus was not present in this case, neither the first condition nor the validity of the Registrar's denial of the license need be discussed. 7 A.R.S. § 12-902, subd. A provides:
'This article applies to and governs every action to review judicially a final decision of an administrative agency except the state department of public welfare, or where the act creating or conferring power on an agency or a separate act provides for judicial review of the agency decisions and prescribes a definite procedure for the review.'
The only procedure for review of the decisions of the Registrar of Contractors is set out in A.R.S. § 32-1159. This section appears in Art. 3 of Title 32, Ch. 10 dealing with the suspension and revocation of licenses only, and has no reference to the issuance of license covered by Article 2 thereof. Therefore since the Registrar of Contractors is an 'administrative agency' 8 and the denial of a license is a 'final decision' 9 within the meaning of § 12-902, the Review Act is applicable to the case at bar.
A.R.S. § 12-902, subd. B provides in part:
'Unless review is sought of an administrative decision within the time and in the manner provided in this article, the parties to the proceeding before the administrative agency shall be barred from obtaining judicial review of such decision.'
In State Board of Technical Registration v. Bauer, supra note 3, the trial court had granted a writ of mandamus ordering the board to issue a certificate to practice architecture to Bauer who had asserted that he had fulfilled the statutory requirements therefor and need not take a written examination. We quashed the peremptory writ and stated:
* * *'
'To permit appellee to by-pass or circumvent the jurisdiction of the Board, as was done in the instant case, not only sets a bad precedent but invalidates, in part at least, the Administrative Review Act recently passed by the legislature which safeguards the rights of litigants appearing before such administrative bodies.' 84 Ariz. at 242, 326 P.2d at 361.
The Act is not however, 'in all cases, the exclusive and an adequate remedy * * * [although i]n the usual and ordinary situation--absent a jurisdictional question--such is the procedure that must be followed.' 10 Thus in the McDaniel case, supra note 10, we allowed a writ of prohibition to be issued because in reviewing the action of the lower court we found a number of factors tending to justify its finding that the remedy of appeal was inadequate. The McDaniel case concerned a registered engineer who was being subjected to disciplinary proceedings by the State Board of Technical Registration and we said the trial court had not abused its discretion because of:
'questions as to the constitutionality of portions of the Act relied upon; grave doubts as to the legal sufficiency of the charges made; [the possibility] that the same acts charged might involve appellee McDaniel in a criminal prosecution under the criminal sections of the statute * * *; the extreme burden placed upon appellee in connection with the broad requirements of a subpoena issued in the matter; lack of jurisdiction of the Board; and the fact that a criminal case involving similar constitutional questions had already been certified to this court.' 11
It is evident from the language we have quoted above from A.R.S. § 12-902 and the Bauer and McDaniel, cases, 12 that the Review Act was passed to provide a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy for all adverse administrative determinations covered thereby. In order for the party injured to by-pass the Act and avail himself of the extraordinary writs, it is incumbent upon him to demonstrate that factors, such as those in the McDaniel case, are present and make appeal by means of the Act inadequate. Therefore unless the record in the instant case contains evidence of such factors, we must reverse the trial court for abusing its discretion in granting the writ.
Clark contends that the requirement of A.R.S. § 32-1122, subd. B, sub-para. 3, that the applicant shall not have engaged in the contracting business within a year, gives the Registrar the power only to make a finding that the applicant had theretofore been found guilty by a court and jury under A.R.S. § 32-1164, sub-para. 2 of the misdemeanor of '[a]cting in the capacity of a contractor within the meaning of this chapter without a license.' Thus, Clark argues, the Registrar exceeded his jurisdiction when he called a hearing to determine himself whether the applicant had failed to fulfill this requirement. We see no merit to such an argument. Section 32-1222, subd. B, sub-para. 3 does not so limit the Registrar's power and it is evident that the intention fo the entire chapter is to take out of the courts and place in the administrative agency the duty of making determinations based upon adduced facts in areas in which the agency has expertize. A holding that a prosecution under § 32-1164, sub-para. 2 is a prerequisite to the Registrar's determination that the requirement has not been met, would run counter to the very purposes in setting up the...
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