Georgia-Carolina Bail Bonds brought an action seeking to enjoin the Aiken County Clerk of Court from assessing a $150 fee for each license their bondsmen possessed. After a non-jury proceeding, the circuit court refused to enjoin the Clerk of Court from charging the fee. We reverse.
FACTSIPROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Georgia-Carolina Bail Bonds (“Carolina”) is a corporation organized, incorporated, and doing business in Aiken County pursuant to the laws of South Carolina. Carolina employs several surety bondsmen who operate as agents for multiple insurance companies that guarantee the bonds they write. The bondsmen have an independent license for each insurance company for which they are an agent. These separate licenses are filed with the Aiken County Clerk of Court. The Clerk of Court is required to process, file, and record additional
Carolina filed an action seeking to enjoin the Clerk of Court from collecting $150 for each individual license held by a bondsman, arguing South Carolina law only empowers the Clerk of Court to charge $150 a year per individual holding a license, not for each individual license. The parties agreed to a non-jury trial on the pleadings and stipulated to the facts of the case. The circuit court denied the injunction, ruling that the statute enables the Clerk of Court to collect $150 for each license held by a bondsman.
ISSUE
Does S.C.Code Ann. section 38-58-100(D) authorize the Clerk of Court to collect only $150 per year per individual or $150 per year per license held by that individual?
LAW/ANALYSIS
Carolina argues the circuit court erred when it denied its action to enjoin the Aiken County Clerk of Court because S.C.Code Ann. section 38-53-100(D) only entitles the Clerk of Court to collect $150 dollars for each bondsman who holds a license and not $150 for each license a bondsman holds. We agree.
I. Statutory Construction
The cardinal rule of statutory interpretation is to ascertain the intent of the legislature.
State v. Scott,
The legislature’s intent should be ascertained primarily from the plain language of the statute.
Morgan,
When faced with an undefined statutory term, the court must interpret the term in accord with its usual and customary meaning.
Strother v. Lexington County Recreation Comm’n,
If a statute’s language is unambiguous and clear, there is no need to employ the rules of statutory construction and this Court has no right to look for or impose another meaning.
Paschal v. State Election Comm’n,
If the language of an act gives rise to doubt or uncertainty as to legislative intent, the construing court may search for that intent beyond the borders of the act itself.
Morgan,
II. Section 38-53-100(D)
The statutory provision in question reads:
[A] professional or surety bondsman shall pay to the clerk of court of his home county the sum of one hundred fifty dollars annually for each licensee to be paid directly to and retained by the clerk. In addition, each bondsman andrunner shall pay to any other county where he is doing business, the sum of one hundred dollars to be paid and retained by the clerk. The fee must be paid annually and directly to the clerk of court who shall deposit it in an account maintained by the clerk.
S.C.Code Ann. § 38-58-100(D) (2002).
Although not binding or controlling, this court gives deference to the opinion of a state agency charged with the duty and responsibility of enforcing a state statute. The South Carolina Department of Insurance is given general oversight responsibility in regard to the licensing of a bondsman. Willie Seawright, the Licensing Coordinator for the South Carolina Department of Insurance, who is not an attorney, has offered his interpretation that “[t]his charge can only be assessed one time a year, regardless of the number of licenses that a bondsman register [sic] in your county.” Additionally, David K. Avant, Assistant Attorney General, opined: “It is also my opinion that each person licensed under Chapter 53 of Title 38 is subjected to one fee under Section 38-53-100(D), no matter how many licenses that person holds.”
South Carolina has long recognized the rule that an opinion or construction of a statute by an agency that is in charge of enforcing the statute should be given great deference. “[T]he construction of a statute by the agency charged with its administration will be accorded the most respectful consideration and will not be overruled absent compelling reasons.”
Brown v. South Carolina Dep’t of Health & Envtl. Control,
The circuit court established that “licensee” meant “one to whom a license is granted.” The circuit court also noted that the legislature did not intend to apply the fee to the individual
create a system whereby fees would be generated to offset the expense of registering and monitoring the qualifications of bail bondsmen and runners in a given county.... Additionally, the court finds that the increased time and effort required to maintain records and supervise bondsmen with multiple licenses warrants a separate charge for each license that the bondsman holds in the county.
The circuit court felt such a ruling was equitable because “[allowing the Clerk to collect only one fee for [the] registration of multiple licenses for an individual bondsman would not be logical or fair. Bondsmen with multiple licenses would pay a proportionately smaller fee for registration of each license than would a bondsman with a single license.”
We disagree with the circuit court’s interpretation of the statute. The term licensee encapsulates both bondsmen and runners as evidenced by the second passage in the statute. The statute directs a bondsman operating in another county to pay a $100 fee -without regard to the number of licenses he or she holds. If the legislature had intended for the fee to be $150 for each license, the legislature could have articulated this requisite with exactitude. Instead, the statute as written requires a licensee to pay $150 to the clerk without specific reference to any number of licenses a bondsman or a runner holds. We acknowledge that the legislative purpose of the statute is to obtain fees to defray the costs of monitoring and licensing bondsmen. However, the legislature, in penning this statute, had sound reasons for circumscription of the fee to the licensee. An obvious legislative policy response was that an open-ended per license charge would make the process expensive for a bondsman to enter and remain in the profession. In any event, it is not necessary to bestow the rules of statutory interpretation because it is clear that the term licensee encompasses bondsman and the statute only orders the licensee to pay $150 to the clerk -without any mention of the number of individual licenses the licensee holds.
Utilizing the “plain meaning” rule of statutory construction, we hold that S.C.Code Ann. section 38-53-100(D) requires a bondsman to pay the $150 fee as a licensee and does not require an additional fee for each license the bondsman owns. The circuit court erred when it denied Carolina’s action to enjoin the Clerk from assessing a $150 fee for each license a bondsman has. Accordingly, the decision of the trial court is
REVERSED.
