LIMOLINER, INC. vs. DATTCO, INC.
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
September 7, 2016
475 Mass. 420 (2016)
Suffolk. May 2, 2016. - September 7, 2016.
Present: GANTS, C.J., SPINA, CORDY, BOTSFORD, DUFFLY, LENK, & HINES, JJ.1
This court concluded that
CERTIFICATION of a question of law to the Supreme Judicial Court by the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit.
Robert E. Curtis, Jr., for the plaintiff.
Christopher S. Williams for the defendant.
LENK, J. The plaintiff, Limoliner, Inc. (Limoliner), owns and operates a fleet of luxury motor coaches. In 2011, it hired the defendant, Dattco, Inc. (Dattco), to perform repair work on one of those vehicles, verbally requesting certain specific repairs. The defendant recorded most of those requests in writing, but failed to write down the plaintiff‘s request to repair one of the vehicle‘s key electrical components. The defendant then failed to make any repairs to that component. Thereafter, the plaintiff commenced an action in the Superior Court, alleging, among other things, that, by not recording the plaintiff‘s verbal request in writing, the defendant had violated
“Does
940 [Code Mass. Regs.] § 5.05 apply to transactions in which the customer is a business entity?”
We conclude that this regulation does apply to transactions in which the customer is a business entity and, accordingly, answer “yes” to the certified question.
1. Background. “We set forth below the relevant background and procedural history of the case contained in the [decision of] the First Circuit [certifying a question to this court], occasionally supplemented by undisputed information in the record.” Insurance Co. of the State of Pa. v. Great N. Ins. Co., 473 Mass. 745, 746 (2016). See Limoliner, Inc. v. Dattco, Inc., 809 F.3d 33 (1st Cir. 2016) (Limoliner).
Limoliner is a Massachusetts corporation that operates a fleet of luxury motor coaches. Id. at 34. Dattco is a Connecticut corporation that repairs motor vehicles, including buses and coaches. Id. at 34-35. In May, 2011, representatives of Limoliner met with representatives of Dattco regarding one of Limoliner‘s motor coaches, which was in need of extensive repairs. Id. at 35. At this meeting, Limoliner verbally requested that Dattco repair, among other things, the vehicle‘s inverter. The inverter is “an important component of LimoLiner‘s vehicles” because it converts power generated by the vehicle into a form usable by passengers, who may plug their electronic devices into onboard outlets. Dattco agreed to make the necessary repairs, including those to the inverter. Id. Following this meeting, Dattco generated a written list of repairs that did not include the inverter. Id.
In August, 2011, repairs to the motor coach — including to the inverter — were not yet complete, and Limoliner “became concerned about the time Dattco was taking to repair the vehicle.” Id. Later that month, Dattco informed Limoliner that the vehicle was ready to be picked up, although the inverter had not yet been fixed. Id. Dattco sent Limoliner an invoice for $10,404, which Limoliner refused to pay. Id. Dattco, however, “would not return [the vehicle] without payment of its invoice.”
Following a jury-waived trial, a magistrate judge found for Limoliner on the breach of contract claim.4 She found for Dattco on Limoliner‘s remaining claims, as well as on the counterclaim for quantum meruit.5 Id. at 36. In rejecting Limoliner‘s regulatory claim under
Limoliner appealed from various aspects of the decision. The United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit affirmed the judgment, except with respect to the regulatory claim. Id. at 42. On that issue, it certified to us the question we now address.
2. Discussion.
“(2) It is an unfair or deceptive act or practice for a repair shop, prior to commencing repairs on a customer‘s vehicle, to fail to record in writing the following information:
. . . “(e) The specific repairs requested by the customer, or, if the customer has not requested specific repairs, a brief description of the problems the customer has encountered with the vehicle which caused him to bring it to the repair shop.”
This regulation was promulgated by the Attorney General pursuant to
As amended in 1972, the protections provided by
“The general and familiar rule is that a [regulation] must be interpreted according to the intent of [the officer or agency responsible for its promulgation] ascertained from all its words construed by the ordinary and approved usage of the language, considered in connection with the cause of its enactment, the mischief or imperfection to be remedied and the main object to be accomplished, to the end that the purpose of its framers may be effectuated.” Knapp, supra at 744-745, quoting Industrial Fin. Corp. v. State Tax Comm‘n, 367 Mass. 360, 364 (1975).
The regulation‘s own language indicates the answer to this question. The word “customer” is defined in the first section of the Attorney General‘s motor vehicle regulations as “any person who . . . seeks to have repairs . . . performed by a repair shop on a motor vehicle” (emphasis supplied),
That the “customer” protected by the regulation may be a business emerges, also, from the regulation‘s definition of “customer” as a person who seeks “repairs . . . on a motor vehicle” (emphasis added). See
Of significance, also, is that another provision in the Attorney General‘s motor vehicle regulations contains a clause specifically limiting its applicability to “motor vehicles which are purchased primarily for personal, family or household purposes.” See
Our reasoning in Knapp, supra, supports this analysis. There, we held that a provision from a different section7 of the Attorney General‘s regulations promulgated under
The defendant argues, however, that at least one aspect of our reasoning in Knapp militates for an opposite conclusion. In that case, we found significant that the regulation “concern[ed] matters generally involved in consumer transactions.” Id. at 744. “These matters include[d], for example, . . . a prohibition on charging for repairs which the customer has not authorized, or representing, untruthfully, that the goods being inspected are in such a dangerous condition that they should not be used prior to repair.” Id. Because the regulation at issue here concerns similar matters, the defendant contends that it, like that in Knapp, was intended to apply only to consumer transactions.9 See
This argument is unavailing. That the regulation in Knapp, supra at 744, “concern[ed] matters generally involved in consumer transactions” was significant only in the absence of indications from the regulation‘s language of its intended scope. See id. at 744-745 (regulation lacked “language denoting the persons protected thereunder,” and “contain[ed] no language suggesting that it was meant to apply to a broader class of persons or interests“). Here, by contrast, the regulation contains language “denoting the persons protected thereunder,” and indicating that “it was meant to apply to a broader class of persons or interests.” See id. Thus, while the regulation‘s provisions plainly are relevant to consumer transactions, its protections were not limited to that context.10
We note, in this regard, that the provision at issue here appears in the Attorney General‘s “Motor Vehicle Regulations,”
In the motor vehicle context, however, the specialized nature of the product is such that even an otherwise-sophisticated business might be at an informational disadvantage. This is especially so if the business is not, as here, a commercial bus company with some automotive expertise, but, for example, a retail shop looking to repair its delivery van. The Attorney General might reasonably have decided — as the regulation‘s language indicates he did — that the policies behind the motor vehicle rules necessitated that they be applied even beyond the consumer context.
3. Conclusion. Concluding that
The Reporter of Decisions is to furnish attested copies of this opinion to the clerk of this court. The clerk in turn will transmit one copy, under the seal of the court, to the clerk of the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, as the answer to the question certified, and will also transmit a copy to each party.
regulations in
Also, even with respect to the general customer protection regulations in
Notes
The defendant notes one additional similarity: that the Knapp regulation, like the one here, broadly defines “person” to include corporations and legal entities.
