Lead Opinion
Kevin and Andrew Jordan appeal an order of Franklin Superior Court dismissing their petition for review of an Agency of Transportation (AOT) fuel-tax assessment. The Jordans argue that the court erred in ruling that they failed to exhaust their administrative remedies because they did not attend the administrative hearing where their appeal was initially considered. We agree that failure to attend an administrative proceeding does not necessarily preclude judicial review of an agency action, and remand for a de novo hearing on the fuel-tax assessment.
The basic facts are not in dispute. In August 1995, AOT informed the Jordans by mail that a business audit indicated they owed $15,179 in fuel taxes, interest, and penalties. The letter included notice that administrative appeal was available but must be requested within thirty days or they would lose their right to judicial review. The Jordans submitted a timely notice of appeal to AOT, which scheduled a hearing for September 1995. Following two postponements at the Jordans’ request, a hearing was scheduled for November 28, 1995. The Jordans failed to appear on the day of the hearing, and on December 1,1995, AOT informed the Jordans that it had found the amount of the assessment, interest, and penalty to be proper.
In January 1996, the Jordans filed a petition for de novo hearing of the assessment in Franklin Superior Court pursuant to 23 V.S.A. § 8023. Two months later the court
A party’s failure to exhaust administrative remedies permits a court to dismiss the action for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. DiLaura v. Power Auth. of N.Y.,
This Court has consistently held that when administrative remedies are established by statute or regulation, a party must pursue, or “exhaust,” all such remedies before turning to the courts for relief. In re D.A Assocs.,
The Jordans contend the trial court erred in concluding that they failed to exhaust their administrative remedies. We agree. A person against whom diesel fuel taxes have been assessed may request appeal of that assessment to the Commissioner of Motor Vehicles within fifteen days of mailing of the notice. 23 V.S.A. § 3019. Failure to request appeal within that period results in the assessment becoming final. Id. But a person who timely appeals the assessment and who remains dissatisfied with the result may have the “decision, order or finding of the commissioner . . . reviewed under Rule 75 of the Vermont Rules of Civil Procedure” in superior court. Id. § 3023(a). Judicial review is de novo, id., and “shall be the exclusive remedy available ... for review of a decision of the commissioner.” Id. § 3023(b).
The record indicates that the Jordans fully complied with these procedures. On August 4,1995, AOT mailed the Jordans a letter listing the amount of the assessment and notifying them of their right to administrative appeal.
AOT argues, however, that the Jordans’ failure to appear at the November hearing resulted in the administrative equivalent of a default judgment, and that they therefore failed to complete the administrative appeal process. By implying that a default judgment would fail to satisfy the exhaustion requirement, AOT raises the related, but distinct, issue of ripeness of an action for judicial review. With limited exceptions, it is our practice to decline to judge a case piecemeal and to require that the order appealed from be final. In re Pelham North, Inc.,
For an order to be final, it must have disposed “‘of all matters that should or could properly be settled at the time and in the proceeding then before the [decision-making body].”’ In re Central Vermont Ry.,
There is no indication from the record, however, that the December 1995 decision was not final. The letter noted that the Jordans failed to appear, but in no way suggested that their absence affected consideration of their claim. The language implies that the decision was issued on the merits, stating that “[t]he hearing finds that the assessment, interest and penalty [were] proper.” In addition, there is no indication that AOT requested a dismissal or default judgment, or that any such request was considered by the hearing examiner. In the absence of any evidence in the record to the contrary, we presume that the Agency’s December 1995 decision was issued on the merits and thus was final.
Contrary to AOT’s assertion, the finality of the decision does not fail simply because the Jordans did not attend the hearing. Finality does not hinge on whether all parties to the appeal were physically present during the proceeding, but rather whether the decision fully addressed the issues and was based on the evidence. See Leiter v. Pfundston,
In light of our decision, we do not address the Jordans’ assertion that they were not required to exhaust their administrative remedies. We also need not consider whether the trial court erred when it failed to exempt them under the irreparable-injury exception.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
The Jordans apparently contest the adequacy of the notice because it referenced the right to appeal under the Regional Fuel Tax Assessment (RFTA) (pursuant to 23 VS.A. § 3021(b)(3), Commissioner may enter agreements for reciprocal enforcement of fuel use tax laws; notice provisions under RFTA may vary from those under § 3019), instead of citing 23 KS.A. § 3019. We find, however, that the RFTA notice provisions are materially equivalent to or more generous than the notice requirements under § 3019. The major distinction is that under § 3019 the Jordans would have received only fifteen days from the mailing date of the notice to file their appeal, whereas under RFTA they received thirty days from the date they received notice. Thus, they received more time to file their appeal under RFTA than they would have received under § 3019. More importantly, the Jordans requested, and were granted, their administrative appeal. Thus, they have failed to demonstrate how they were prejudiced by receiving notice under RFTA rather than under § 3019. See Paradis v. Kirby,
The dissent asserts that other jurisdictions have found attendance and presentation of evidence to be determinative on the finality issue. But in doing so the dissent misconstrues our holding. It is not initiation of the appeal process that satisfies the exhaustion requirement. Rather, we leave it to the agency to decide whether a party’s failure to appear precludes the agency from considering the merits of the appeal. If so, the agency should dismiss the action, in which case there is no decision on the merits and the party that failed to pursue its appeal is foreclosed from subsequent judicial review. If, however, the agency moves forward and addresses the merits, the absent party retains the right to judicial review of that decision within the bounds of the law. The cases cited by the dissent support this approach. See Boyd a Supervisor of Assessments,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. Contrary to the Court, I do not believe that merely stepping through the motions of the administrative process by filing a timely notice of appeal comports with the exhaustion-of-remedies doctrine. The taxpayers’ total disregard of administrative procedure in failing to appear and present evidence or argument at the administrative hearing should result in a forfeiture of the right to judicial review on the merits. The Court’s holding to the contrary contradicts all of the policy reasons for having an exhaustion rule. Accordingly, I would affirm the well-reasoned decision of the superior court dismissing the taxpayers’ appeal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
After receiving notice that additional fuel taxes were owing, taxpayers filed an appeal with the Commissioner of Motor Vehicles pursuant to 23 V.S.A. § 3019. The Commissioner subsequently notified taxpayers that a hearing on their appeal had been scheduled and that they were to “appear through yourself and/or counsel to show why the . . . assessment . . . was not proper.” At taxpayers’ request, the hearing was twice rescheduled, each time followed by an identical notice. Taxpayers ultimately failed to appear at the hearing, either in person, through counsel, or by way of affidavit, resulting in an administrative decision upholding the assessment. Taxpayers thereupon appealed the Agency’s decision pursuant to 23 V.S.A. § 3023, which provides for a hearing de novo in superior court. The statutory appeal constitutes a taxpayer’s “exclusive remedy” from an adverse administrative decision. Id. § 3023(b).
The Agency moved to dismiss the taxpayers’ appeal on the ground that they had failed to exhaust their administrative remedies by declining to appear and argue their claim before the commissioner. The trial court granted the motion, ruling that taxpayers may not complain about an administrative hearing they elected not to attend, nor contest a result they might well have avoided had they chosen to appear at the hearing to address the merits. To hold otherwise, the court ruled, would circumvent the statutory scheme, and defeat the underlying purposes of the exhaustion doctrine.
The trial court’s ruling was correct. Exhaustion of administrative remedies is required to afford the parties and the courts
Understood in the light of these purposes, it is readily apparent that exhaustion of remedies does not mean the mere initiation of administrative procedures. Rather, it means the initiation and pursuit of them to their appropriate conclusion by appearing, presenting evidence or argument, and receiving a final decision. Otherwise, the agency would effectively be frustrated in its ability to render informed and reliable decisions, and the courts would be burdened by unnecessary cases that might otherwise have been terminated below. Thus, affording judicial review where the complainant has requested an administrative hearing but failed to attend, contradicts the purposes of the exhaustion rule.
For these reasons, other jurisdictions have specifically held that the invocation of an administrative appeal followed by an unexcused failure to appear at the subsequent hearing amounts to a failure to exhaust administrative remedies and is fatal to the complainant’s judicial appeal. See, e.g., Purtill v. Harris,
In some cases, as the Court notes, the agency may enter a default judgment against the complainants; in others, it may simply deny the protest. See, e.g., Webb,
The Court is nevertheless persuaded that taxpayers were entitled to judicial review because, following the hearing at which they failed to appear, the agency wrote them a letter stating that it had found the assessment to be “proper.” The Court construes this as a “final” decision on the merits, and thus concludes that taxpayers “acted within their rights in appealing that decision to the
