Lawrence J. HARRINGTON, III, Appellee, v. COMMONWEALTH of Pennsylvania, DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION, BUREAU OF DRIVER LICENSING, Appellant.
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
Decided Dec. 22, 2000.
763 A.2d 386
Submitted Dec. 3, 1999.
Anthony T. McBeth, Robert L. Knupp, Knupp & Kodak, P.C., Harrisburg, for County Com‘rs Ass‘n of Pa.
Maryellen Gallagher, Philadelphia, for CCP Jefferson County.
ORDER
PER CURIAM:
AND NOW, this 20th day of December, 2000, the order of the Commonwealth Court is affirmed.
John J. Kerrigan, Newtown, for Lawrence J. Harrington, II.
Before: FLAHERTY, C.J., and ZAPPALA, CAPPY, CASTILLE, NIGRO, NEWMAN and SAYLOR, JJ.
OPINION
SAYLOR, Justice.
This direct appeal requires consideration of whether a 1998 amendment to
On August 9, 1998, Appellee, Lawrence J. Harrington, III (“Harrington“) was arrested in New Jersey and charged with the offense of driving under the influence of liquor or drugs,
Nevertheless, pursuant to Article IV of the Compact, see supra note 1, the Bureau treated Harrington‘s conviction as if he had been convicted of driving under the influence in Pennsylvania pursuant to
Section 1581 of the Vehicle Code requires the Department to treat certain out of state convictions as though they had occurred in Pennsylvania. Therefore, as a result of the Department receiving notification from NEW JERSEY of your conviction on 01/27/1999 of an offense which occurred on 08/09/1998, which is equivalent to a violation of Section
3731 of the Pa. Vehicle Code, DRIVING UNDER INFLUENCE, your driving privilege is being SUSPENDED for a period of 1 YEAR(S), as mandated by Section 1532B of the Vehicle Code. The effective date of the suspension is 04/02/1999, 12:01 a.m.
Harrington filed a statutory appeal of this administrative action in the court of common pleas, see
The Department of Transportation of the Commonwealth shall furnish to the appropriate authorities of any other party state any information or documents, reasonably necessary to facilitate the administration of Articles III, IV and V of the compact. The omission from any report received by the Department from a party state of any information required by Article III of the Compact shall not excuse or prevent the Department from complying with its duties under Article IV and V of the Compact.
In its subsequent opinion, the common pleas court indicated that the report of conviction from New Jersey failed to comply with the Compact‘s reporting requirements,
An examination of
75 Pa.C.S.A. § 1584 reveals a broad and sweeping provision which permits Pennsylvania to suspend a driver‘s license where “any information” is omitted from the report required by Article III of the Compact. Applying [Section] 1584 literally could result in Pennsylvania suspending the license of a driver where the report only contained the licensee‘s name or operator‘s license number. Such notice would be really no notice at all because it would lack fundamental facts sufficient to advise the licensee of who, what, where or when an alleged violation occurred. It would be the equivalent of a criminal information which read only “John Jones, you violated the law” or a civil complaint which read only “John Jones owes me money.”
Id.
The Bureau lodged an appeal in the Commonwealth Court, which transferred the matter to this Court pursuant to
Presently, the Bureau maintains that, in deeming the amendment to
Preliminarily, we note that Harrington‘s arguments, and the common pleas court‘s opinion, conflate the statutory requirements concerning reporting pursuant to the Compact with notice requirements of the ensuing license suspension arising from due process precepts. As noted, the statutory reporting requirements which trigger the Bureau‘s duties in relation to an out-of-state conviction are set forth in Article III of the Compact. See supra note 2. While the Commonwealth Court had construed Article III‘s technical reporting requirements as mandatory, the reasoning of such decisions was grounded in principles of statutory construction, not constitutional due process. See, e.g., Mazurek, 717 A.2d at 25 (applying a plain meaning interpretation of Article III in construing the reporting requirements as mandatory); see also supra note 3.7 Indeed, in some cases, the Commonwealth Court has found notices of suspension provided by the Bureau to a licensee adequate, although it directed the rescission of the suspension based upon the failure of the reporting state to comply with the Article III reporting requirements. See, e.g., Kiebort, 719 A.2d at 1143. Thus, neither this Court nor the Commonwealth Court has treated the Article III requirements as conterminous with the due process requirements for notice to a licensee subject to a civil, administrative suspension action. See generally id.; McCafferty, 563 Pa. at 161, 758 A.2d at 1163.
Applying a correct conception of due process notice principles to the present case, the notice provided to Harrington advised him that his license was being suspended for a
Finally, Harrington contends that the General Assembly lacked the authority to promulgate the amendment to
The order of the court of common pleas is reversed, and the matter is remanded for consideration of the remaining contentions raised in Harrington‘s statutory appeal.
CAPPY, J., files a concurring opinion.
CAPPY, Justice, concurring.
I join the instant opinion, notwithstanding my concurring and dissenting opinion in Commonwealth, Dep‘t of Transp. v. McCafferty, 758 A.2d 1155 (Pa.2000), in which the majority of this court determined that certain reporting requirements of Article III of the Driver‘s License Compact,
