This is an appeal from the decision of the defendant commissioner of motor vehicles in finding that the plaintiff violated § 14-51 of the
In its assignment of errors, the plaintiff claims that the court erred in failing to find that the decision reached by the commissioner was illegal, arbitrary and unsupported by the evidence.
Section 14-51 of the General Statutes reads in part: “A ‘new car dealer’ includes any person, firm or corporation engaged in the business of merchandising new motor vehicles under a manufacturer’s or importer’s contract for each such make of vehicle who may, incidental to such business, sell used motor vehicles and repair motor vehicles or cause them to be repaired by qualified persons in his employ. He shall be a person qualified to conduct such business and have a suitable and adequate place of business [emphasis added], which shall be determined to be such by the commissioner.”
The notice of the charge made against the plaintiff with respect to the violation of § 14-51 reads as follows: “It is alleged you are no longer qualified to be licensed as a dealer in that you did conspire to defraud Mr. Tait out of the guarantee that was part of the sale of the 1967 Ford Country Squire. It is alleged you instructed R & R Atlantic Service,
Pursuant to the provisions of § 14-64 the commissioner held a hearing and found the plaintiff in violation of § 14-51, stating as follows: “A violation of Section 14-51, regarding qualifications of a new car dealer, is found in that you represented the 1967 Ford you sold to Mr. Tait to be under a 100% guarantee, yet reduced this to a 50/50 guarantee without Mr. Tait’s knowledge.”
With respect to this charge and the finding made, the plaintiff contends that it was misled by the notice and asserts that it was prepared to defend a charge of conspiracy to defraud in the repair of a car, but instead was found in violation of reducing a guarantee at the time of the sale of the car, a charge it was not prepared to defend based upon the notice given. The plaintiff further contends that the charge as alleged was not proven and that it violates the fundamentals of natural justice to find a violation on a theory different from that alleged in the notice.
“[I]f . . . [administrative] agencies deemed to be necessary in our complex society are to serve the purposes for which they are created and endowed with vast powers, they must accredit themselves by acting in accordance with the cherished judicial tradition embodying the basic concepts of fair play.”
Morgan
v.
United States,
The concept of due process, when the government seeks to deprive a person of life, liberty or property, is that the thoroughness of the procedure by which the deprivation is effected must be balanced against the gravity of the potential loss and the interests at stake, and due process requires that the procedure involved must be appropriate to the nature of the case. See
Mullane
v.
Central Hanover Bank & Trust Co.,
Clearly, here the plaintiff had the right to fair notice and hearing before its license could be suspended. Section 14-64 of the General Statutes, which empowers the commissioner to suspend or revoke dealers’ licenses, predicates such action on notice and hearing. Moreover, the Supreme Court of the United States, grounding its decision on procedural due process, has held that not even a driver’s license, which could be essential in the pursuit of a livelihood, can be suspended without prior notice and an appropriate hearing.
Bell
v.
Burson,
supra. The purpose of the hearing required by § 14-64 is to enable the commissioner to determine whether a licensee accused of misconduct under a statute pertaining to his license has, in fact, violated the statute. The effect of the procedure, if a violation is found, is revocation or suspension of the license, a valuable property right
1
on which the licensee and
The record here clearly shows that the offense alleged and the offense found were separate and distinct in point of time and in factual detail. The charge alleged against the plaintiff was an offense involving the participation of R & R Atlantic Service, Inc., having to do with the repairs of an oil leak which developed in the complainant’s car several days after the sale. At no time prior to or during the hearing was the plaintiff accused or made aware of a charge concerning a reduction of the guarantee given on the sale of the car. We find this ease to be indistinguishable from Rodale Press, Inc. v. F.T.C., supra. In that case, the complaint and hearing were based on a theory different from that on which the complaint was ultimately sustained by the Federal Trade Commission and the court declared that an agency may not change theories in midstream without giving the party reasonable notice of the change. Id., 1256.
To charge on one theory and then find on another, about which the plaintiff did not know and against which it was not prepared to defend, is contrary to law and would, in this ease, constitute the taking of property without due process of law. With respect to the alleged violation of § 14-51, therefore, we conclude that the commissioner’s action in failing to put the plaintiff on notice of the charge on which he made a finding was reversible error.
The plaintiff was also charged with a violation of $ 14-63-2 (f) of the regulations of the motor vehicle department and received the following notice:
Since the credibility of witnesses and the determination of factual issues are matters within the province of the administrative agency, and since there is evidence printed in the appendices which reasonably supports the decision of the commissioner, we cannot disturb the conclusion reached by him that the plaintiff did not have the proper personnel and equipment to service the complainant’s car.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
The United States Supreme Court has indicated that distinctions between “right” and “privilege” are no longer significant with respect to suspension of licenses: “Suspension of issued licenses . . . involves state action that adjudicates important interests of the licensees. In such eases the licenses are not to be taken away without that procedural due process required by the Fourteenth Amendment. . . . This is but an application of the general proposition that relevant constitutional restraints limit state power to terminate an entitlement whether the entitlement is denominated a 'right’ or a
“It should be understood that the requirements of due process are not fixed but depend on the nature of the case under consideration and the relative interests, both governmental and private, involved. See, e.g.,
Goldberg
v.
Kelly,
