Thomas A. KOURLIS, Commissioner of Agriculture, Colorado Department of Agriculture, Petitioner, v. DISTRICT COURT, EL PASO COUNTY; Colorado Animal Refuge, Inc., a Suspended Colorado Corporation; and Mary Port, Respondents.
No. 96SA355.
Supreme Court of Colorado, En Banc.
Jan. 13, 1997.
Rehearing Denied Feb. 18, 1997.
930 P.2d 1329
William M. Schoewe, Colorado Springs, for Respondent.
Justice HOBBS delivered the Opinion of the Court.
This original proceeding is brought pursuant to
I.
The Pet Animal Care Facility Program of the Department of Agriculture (the Department) is operated pursuant to the Act. Associate State Veterinarian, Dr. Keith Roehr, D.V.M. (Roehr), oversees licensing procedures for animal pet care facilities2 and performs inspections for the Commissioner.
In early 1996, Roehr learned that Mary Port, operator of Colorado Animal Refuge, Inc. (CARI), a non-profit organization supported by donations, planned to open a new pet care facility in Ellicott, El Paso County, Colorado, to replace a licensed facility that had suffered extensive fire damage.4
new facility, actually an old dairy farm, had no running water, no isolation or quarantine area, no drainage, and lacked adequate facilities and operating procedures to clean and care for animals housed at the facility.
On February 9, 1996, Roehr began prelicensure inspections of the new facility to which Mary Port had transferred animals that had survived the fire at the licensed facility and subsequently brought others. The Department agreed to give Mary Port time to bring the buildings up to compliance in order to become licensed as required by
Roehr returned to make a follow-up visit approximately six weeks later on March 27, 1996, and found continuing substantial violations. In his inspection report, Roehr identified the actions that Port needed to take in order to meet licensing requirements: first, discontinue the use of the house and barn to shelter animals until the structures met the Act‘s licensing requirements; second, decrease the number of animals at the facility to one hundred, the maximum that the existing facility could lawfully accommodate; third, build the perimeter fence previously requested. The remaining improvements necessary to bring the facility into compliance were noted as a fourth category.6
On April 18, 1996, Roehr conducted a third pre-licensure inspection. He noted that there were no improvements, as requested, since the previous inspection; rather, new and continuing deficiencies existed. For example, the dog population had increased to approximately one hundred and ninety-five, the fenced-in area around Port‘s home was being used as a kennel for approximately fifty to sixty dogs, rooms in the dairy barn and house were continuing to be used to house dogs, the dairy barn area had not been cleaned and disinfected, the requested gravel had not been put down, dog food on the ground was creating a rodent feeding area, and no shade or overhead protection against the sun was provided in the outdoor kennels. Additionally, CARI had not provided the Department with records of the facility‘s operation. Roehr again wrote out a report citing violations and providing his recommendations to CARI for meeting licensure requirements. The notice was left with the person in charge of the facility, and sent by mail and facsimile.
On May 22, 1996, Roehr inspected the facility and noted that major violations were continuing and were becoming more serious with the advent of hot weather.7 On the date of the last inspection, Roehr served Mary Port with a cease and desist order that directed her to cease operating the pet care facility without the license required by
Thirteen days later, on June 4, 1996, after learning that CARI was continuing to operate the facility despite the agency order, the Commissioner sought a temporary restraining order and preliminary and permanent injunctive relief in El Paso County District Court in accordance with the enforcement provisions of
The district court found that CARI had made good faith efforts towards compliance and, in the future, likely would be able to bring the facility into compliance. The court did not set a hearing on the Commissioner‘s motion for a preliminary injunction but, in
The effect of the court‘s ruling was that CARI was allowed to continue operation of the facility, in violation of the license requirement of
The issue before this court is whether the district court abused its discretion under the circumstances of this case by failing to grant the requested relief to enforce the statute‘s licensure requirement.
II.
The General Assembly may prohibit practice of a profession or operation of a facility in the absence of a statutorily-prescribed license or permit. See People v. Rosburg, 805 P.2d 432, 440 (Colo.1991) (enjoining practice of midwifery in the absence of a license); see also
The test usually applicable for injunctions under
A.
Under
In 1994, the General Assembly enacted the Pet Animal Care and Facilities Act,
When interpreting a statute our role is to effectuate the meaning and intent of the General Assembly. May Dep‘t Stores Co. v. State ex rel. Woodard, 863 P.2d 967, 976 (Colo.1993).
The Commissioner, upon showing that a person has engaged in or is about to engage in violation of the Act, is not required to plead or prove irreparable injury or inadequacy of a remedy at law when seeking either a temporary restraining order or preliminary or permanent injunctive relief.
CARI argues that the court, under Rathke, did not abuse its discretion in refusing to grant the requested relief under the circumstances of this case. We do not agree. Contrary to CARI‘s argument, Rathke does not dictate denial of relief to the Commissioner here. Rathke actually employed a
It is true that in Rathke we set forth the now familiar six-part test for considering issuance of a preliminary injunction under
In exercising its discretion, the trial court must find that the moving party has demonstrated:
(1) a reasonable probability of success on the merits; (2) a danger of real, immediate, and irreparable injury which may be prevented by injunctive relief; (3) that there is no plain, speedy, and adequate remedy at law; (4) that the granting of a preliminary injunction will not disserve the public interest; (5) that the balance of equities favors the injunction; (6) that the injunction will preserve the status quo pending a trial on the merits.
648 P.2d at 653-54 (citations omitted).
Special statutory procedures may supersede or control the more general application of a rule of civil procedure. See In re Oxley, 182 Colo. 206, 210, 513 P.2d 1062, 1064 (1973). We here address a comprehensive enactment which includes a restraining order and injunction provision as an essential feature of the enforcement design of a licensing statute.
The district court determined that attempts to comply with the statute mitigated in favor of allowing the new facility to operate in derogation of the statute‘s proscription against the operation of an unlicensed facility. In this, the court abused its discretion by placing an unlicensed facility in a more advantageous position than a facility which has initiated a license application and has demonstrated eligibility to hold a license prior to receiving and housing animals.
B.
The Act anticipates that unlicensed locations at which animals will be newly housed will be subject first to agency licensure proceedings. Administrative safeguards for the applicant are provided. See
Here, no license application was at issue, and no hearing on refusal of the Commissioner to grant a license for which the facility had qualified was requested. Instead, operation of the facility was commenced in open violation of the statutory provision that it is unlawful and a violation of the Act for any person or entity “to perform any of the acts of a pet animal facility for which licensure is required without possessing a valid license under this article.”
In commencing operation without a license, housing an increasing number of dogs at an unlicensed facility, refusing to comply with the Commissioner‘s cease and desist order which was designed to enforce the licensure requirement of the Act, and particularly, in successfully securing an order of the court allowing it to continue operation as an unlicensed, non-complying facility, CARI gained a position more advantageous to it than were it an applicant for licensure as contemplated by the statute. Before taking animals into such a facility, a person or entity must demonstrate compliance with the explicit statutory mandate that “[a]ny person operating a
The Commissioner correctly argues that this statute is straightforwardly designed to avoid such an anomaly between the law-abiding applicant and the unlicensed operator. Throughout the enforcement provisions of
The usually applicable discretion to postpone the effective date of agency action under the APA which the court may issue upon a finding of irreparable injury pending judicial review, see
The evident design of this statute is to forward the public interest in protecting animals against placement in inadequately designed and operated facilities, safeguarding their caretakers against unsanitary working conditions, and ensuring the public interest in the proper care and confinement of animals. Contrary to the district court‘s conclusion, the evidence adduced by the Commissioner at the hearing demonstrated that the Commissioner would succeed in establishing the likelihood of success on the merits of CARI‘s non-compliance with the statute‘s licensure requirements. In addition, the evidence demonstrated that the public interest expressed throughout the design of this statute favored issuance of the requested relief. Moreover, the balancing of the equities between a non-licensed, non-complying facility and the Commissioner‘s role on behalf of the public in ensuring properly licensed facilities, should have been resolved in favor of the Commissioner.
In Lloyd A. Fry Roofing Co. v. State Dep‘t of Health Air Pollution Variance Board, 191 Colo. 463, 473, 553 P.2d 800, 808 (1976), we determined that, despite the absence of a specific provision dispensing with the irreparable injury requirement, irreparable injury nevertheless need not be shown in order to enjoin continued violation of an enforcement cease and desist order. We reached this conclusion on the basis that the injunction was sought “in behalf of the public” in a suit imbued with “great public importance” to prevent noncompliance which, of itself, was “sufficient injury to the public interest.” Id.
In the statute before us, as contrasted with Fry where this court implied the negation of the
Contrary to the actions of the district court, the statutory context demonstrates that the judicial proceeding on the Commissioner‘s motion for relief is to focus on whether the cease and desist order was validly issued within the scope of the Commissioner‘s authority, whether the facility required a license to operate under the Act and the implementing regulations, and whether the facility was operating without a license in violation of the Act and the order. The record demonstrates that the Commissioner possessed and demonstrated “sufficient evidence satisfactorily indicating,” see
Under the facts of this case, the district court incorrectly utilized the balancing of the equities and public interest factors set forth in Rathke, which resulted in the continued operation of an unlicensed facility contrary to the Act. In the absence of compelling evidence to the contrary, the public interest, and equitable considerations having to do with that interest, favored enforcement of the statutory licensure requirement. CARI was clearly on notice, by the statute and implementing regulations, and by its prior conduct of a licensed facility at another location, that start-up of another facility at a different location involved compliance with the licensure requirement.
Although the Commissioner allowed several opportunities for the facility to qualify for a license, the Act did not require that he do so, and the record adequately demonstrates the basis and validity of the agency‘s action in issuing the cease and desist order. Under the circumstances, the district court abused its discretion in denying the requested relief and, in doing so, frustrated the accomplishment by the assigned executive agency of its statutory purpose.13
III.
Accordingly, we make the rule absolute. We return the case with directions to enter the temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction against continued operation of the facility in violation of the cease and desist order, and for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
SCOTT, J., dissents, and LOHR, J., joins in the dissent.
KOURLIS, J., does not participate.
I respectfully dissent from the majority opinion. First, based on the plain language of
I.
A.
the commissioner may apply to any court of competent jurisdiction to temporarily or permanently restrain or enjoin the act or practice in [violation of the Act] and to enforce compliance with this article or any rule or order issued under this article. In any such action, the commissioner shall not be required to plead or prove irreparable injury or the inadequacy of the remedy at law.
It is beyond peradventure that the granting or denial of a preliminary injunction is a decision which lies within the sound discretion of the trial court. Evans v. Romer, 854 P.2d 1270, 1274 (Colo.1993); Rathke v. MacFarlane, 648 P.2d 648, 653 (Colo.1982). In exercising that discretion, the trial court must find that the moving party has demonstrated: (1) a reasonable probability of success on the merits; (2) a danger of real, immediate, and irreparable injury which may be prevented by injunctive relief; (3) that there is no plain, speedy, and adequate reme
It is unclear from my reading of the majority opinion whether it concludes that the trial court was correct to apply the four controlling factors under Rathke, but merely abused its discretion in doing so, see maj. op. at 1335 (“the court abused its discretion by placing an unlicensed facility in a more advantageous position ....“), or that Rathke‘s elements are irrelevant because the language of
In my view, the proper standard is a balancing of the factors set out by this court in Rathke, as modified by
Contrary to the actions of the district court, the statutory context demonstrates that the judicial proceeding on the Commissioner‘s motion for relief is to focus on whether the cease and desist order was validly issued within the scope of the Commissioner‘s authority, whether the facility required a license to operate under the Act and the implementing regulations, and whether the facility was operating without a license in violation of the Act and the order.
In its opinion, the majority recognizes that “the test usually applicable for injunctions under
It may be true that, under certain circumstances, the granting of an injunction provided for in the statutory scheme of an administrative agency is mandatory and not within the discretion of a court to deny. See, e.g., 12 Debra Knapp, Colorado Civil Procedure Forms and Commentary § 65.3, at 667 (1996) (“Except where a statute makes injunctive relief mandatory upon a given showing, the granting or denial of both a temporary restraining order and a preliminary injunction is within the sound discretion of the trial court.“) (Emphasis added.) However, no cases in Colorado have yet recognized any such circumstances and the treatise above provides no case law support for its statement.
As the majority effectively illustrates, see maj. op. at 1333 n. 11, statutes that intend to make the granting of an injunction mandatory on the trial court do so explicitly. For example,
Furthermore, although no cases have interpreted it as such, an additional example of a statute that may be viewed as providing mandatory injunctive relief in the face of an administrative violation is
Although that statute contains the mandatory language “shall,” the General Assembly is clearly directing that mandatory language at the attorney general and not at the judicial officer who will preside over the civil action and determine the merits of the injunction or restraining order.
In contrast to the statutes noted above, the language in the statute at issue here,
In my view, the plain language of
Second, the fact that the General Assembly has used specific language in the past to indicate that a court must issue an injunction if certain requirements are met leads me logically to conclude that, because such language was not used in
B.
Moreover, the statute specifically excepts the requirements of pleading irreparable injury and the inadequacy of a remedy at law — two factors that we can assume come from our decision in Rathke. See State Eng‘r v. Castle Meadows, Inc., 856 P.2d 496, 499 (Colo.1993) (when the General Assembly adopts legislation, it is presumed to be cognizant of judicial precedent relating to the subject matter under inquiry). Although these two Rathke factors are not to be considered, four other factors remain. Importantly, one of those four factors is the consideration of “the balance of equities,” which by its very nature is discretionary.
And, although the majority states that Rathke is inapposite because it does not involve “a comprehensive enactment which includes a restraining order and injunction provision as an essential feature of the enforcement design of a licensing statute,” maj. op. at 1335, that distinction is not meaning
Therefore, the plain language of the statute at issue does not support the majority‘s view that the trial court had no discretion in refusing to order an injunction.
II.
A.
Although seemingly contradictory with most of its analysis, the majority also states that the trial court abused its discretion in not issuing the injunction. Maj. op. at 1335 & 1337. Nevertheless, in my view, it is not necessary for us to reach the merits of this issue because the petitioner has failed to provide an adequate record to support that conclusion.
It is incumbent upon the moving party to designate all those portions of the record necessary for appeal. Hock v. New York Life Ins. Co., 876 P.2d 1242, 1252 (Colo.1994). Here, however, petitioner has not included those portions of the record that might counter the trial court‘s finding that the balance of the equities favored denying the injunction. Petitioner relies only upon the undisputed fact that
Thus, because the portions of the record before us are not complete and do not evince the equities that would support the issuance of the injunction, we must accept the trial court‘s findings and conclusions as correct. Hock, 876 P.2d at 1252 (“An appellate court must presume that the trial court‘s findings and conclusions are supported by the evidence when the appellant has failed to provide a complete record.“).
B.
The majority also implies that the trial court abused its discretion or exceeded its authority by postponing the permanent injunction hearing until the following year. The majority states:
The district court‘s action here was neither prompt nor effective. By denying relief to the Commissioner, the court in effect granted to this unlicensed facility an interim operating license not available to it under the Act .... We conclude that the court thus undertook the agency‘s role in determining when and how to employ the agency‘s enforcement discretion.
However, nothing in the record before us indicates that the petitioner objected to the timing of that hearing. Thus, because the petitioner did not raise the issue below, we should not consider it for the first time here. Christensen v. Hoover, 643 P.2d 525, 531 (Colo.1982) (an issue not raised before the decision maker below should not be addressed on appeal).
Accordingly, for the reasons stated above, I respectfully dissent to the majority opinion.
LOHR, J., joins in this dissent.
The PEOPLE of the State of Colorado, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Timothy FORTUNE, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 96SA345.
Supreme Court of Colorado, En Banc.
Jan. 13, 1997.
Notes
Pet animal facility means any place or premise used in whole or in part, which part is used for the keeping of pet animals for the purpose of adoption, breeding, boarding, grooming, handling, selling, sheltering, trading or otherwise transferring such animals. Pet animal facility also includes any individual animals kept by such a facility as breeding stock, such licensing of individual breeding stock to be inclusive in the pet animal facility license.
Pet animal facility shall not mean a common carrier engaged in intrastate or interstate commerce.
In addition to the portions of the court‘s order set forth in the majority opinion, the trial court further provided:The Court was also persuaded by the testimony of three independent veterinarians who had treated animals from Colorado Animal Refuse [sic] for routine veterinarian care that the animals at the facility are well cared for and generally healthy. All three veterinarians had been to the facility and at least one of them had inspected the facility in anticipation of his testimony. The Plaintiff did produce evidence of isolated incidences of trauma to animals but the vast balance of testimony and evidence justify the factual conclusion that the animals are adequately cared for in the current facility.
The Court was not persuaded by the proof of the Plaintiff that the balance of equities favors the imposition of a temporary order. A number of witnesses testified to statements made by Dr. Keith Roehr that the Defendants would have additional time until the “fall” to bring the facility into compliance. While these statements were contested by the Plaintiff it is clear that latitude had been extended to facilities covered by PACFA because of the recent origin of the legislation. In addition, the Defendants had suffered a catastrophic fire at a previous location and thus faced the prospect of moving an existing animal population into a new facility.
Finally, the Court is not persuaded that the public interest will be served if the temporary order is Granted. The testimony of virtually all witnesses is that Colorado Animal Refuge provides a service for the citizens of this area by providing necessities, shelter and health care to animals while promoting adoptions.
For the foregoing reasons, the Motion for Temporary Restraining Order is Denied.
PURSUANT TO
You are presently operating a pet animal care facility without the required PACFA license, violating the Act and the rules and regulations thereto as follows:
YOU ARE ORDERED TO CEASE AND DESIST OPERATION OF THIS PET ANIMAL FACILITY FORTHWITH, unless and until you are licensed pursuant to PACFA and the rules and regulations thereto.
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that you may request in writing, a hearing, on the question of whether any violation has occurred. If so requested, a prompt hearing pursuant to the provisions of the Pet Animal Care Facilities Act and
SO ORDERED THIS 22nd day of May, 1996.
The Motion for Temporary Restraining Order is Denied. In making this order, the Court acknowledges that the power to issue an injunction should be exercised with great discretion only when necessity requires it. McLean v. Farmers Highline Canal & Reservoir Co., 44 Colo. 184, 98 P. 16 (1908). Trial Courts have considerable latitude in injunction cases. Brennan v. Monson, 97 Colo. 448, 50 P.2d 534 (Colo.1935). In exercising its discretion the trial court must find among other elements that the moving party has demonstrated a reasonable probability of success on the underlying merits, that the balance of equities favors the injunction, and that the granting of the injunction will not disserve the public interest. Rathke v. MacFarlane, 648 P.2d 648 (Colo. 1982). The Court is not persuaded that the Plaintiff has proved the existence of these three elements to justify the imposition of the temporary restraining order.
Although the current facility in Ellicott, Colorado is not in full compliance with the Pet Animal Care and Facilities Act,
For the foregoing reasons, the Motion for Temporary Restraining Order is Denied. The parties are ordered to set this matter for hearing on the issue of permanent injunction after January 1, 1997 at which time the Court will receive proof as to whether the facility is properly licensed and in compliance with applicable laws.
Whenever the commissioner possesses sufficient evidence satisfactorily indicating that any person has engaged in or is about to engage in any act or practice constituting a violation of any provision of this article or any rule adopted under this article, the commissioner may apply to any court of competent jurisdiction to temporarily or permanently restrain or enjoin the act or practice in question and to enforce compliance with this article or any rule or order issued under this article. In any such action, the commissioner shall not be required to plead or prove irreparable injury or the inadequacy of the remedy at law. Under no circumstances shall the court require the commissioner to post a bond.
