MEMORANDUM AND ORDER DISMISSING PLAINTIFF’S COMPLAINT
This is аn action seeking an interlocutory and permanent injunction to prevent the State of Utah or its Department of Motor Vehicles from suspending plaintiff’s driver’s license pursuant to the provisions of the State Financial Responsibility Act. Utah Code Annotated §§ 41-12-1 et seq. (1970). Defendant filed a motion to dismiss. The request for an interlocutory injunction and the motion to dismiss came on for hearing together. Evidence was taken on thе request for interlocutory injunction and the matter was argued to the court.
Plaintiff alleged in his complaint, and defendant admitted, that on June 13, 1971, plaintiff was involved in an auto accident. The State of Utah, by and through its Dеpartment of Public Safety, Financial Responsibility Division, suspended the driving privilege of plaintiff effective September 1, 1971, not only for failure to show he had automobile insurance in effect, but because he did nоt establish any exemption from the security requirements of §§ 41-12-1 et seq. Utah Code Anno. (1970). In essence, the order of suspension advised him he had to provide security as indicated in the order of suspension, (Exhibit A) or to establish his right to аn exemption in one of the ways set out on the reverse side of the order or the suspension would be effective.
Plaintiff contends that the possession of a driver’s license is a material and essential property right and that suspension of the same was done without opportunity for a hearing on the question of his possible liability and that such action constitutes a denial of due process of law under the Fourtеenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
Plaintiff cites the case of Bell v. Bursom,
Plaintiff’s evidence fails to show that the injury caused by the
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State’s action in this case is certain to cause irreparable damage, a fact necessary before an injunction can issue. Flood v. Kuhn,
Standard Brands, Inc. v. Zumpe,
The real issue presented by defendant’s motion to dismiss is whether or not there is, in this сase, a substantial federal question which would invoke the jurisdiction of this court. Plaintiff has argued that since his complaint seeks to declare the Utah statute unconstitutional, a three-judge court should be called. If a substantial constitutional question is presented, a three-judge court must be called pursuant to 28 U. S.C. §§ 2281, 2284 (1965). However, “[t]he threshold determination of whether or not a substantial constitutional question is involved is the responsibility оf the District Judge before whom the action is pending.” Herald Co. v. Harper,
In the present case, plaintiff’s complaint alleges that the suspension of his driver’s license denies him procedural due process in that he was not given a hearing relating to the likelihood of his being at fault, and that such failure violates the due process standards enunciated in Bell. The evidence presented at the hearing, hоwever, showed that the suspension notice sent to plaintiff by the State Financial Responsibility Department contained a clause informing the recipient that he could appeal the Commission’s order to the State District Court within ten days. There was also an enclosure which informed the recipient of his right to apply for a hearing before the agency. 1 Plaintiff does not *1194 recall having seen the enclosure, but acknowledges that he had notice of the ten-day appeal provisions. He stated that the notice was, in turn, transmitted to his attorney, but no appeal was filed in the state court to contest the departmentаl order of suspension.
In
Bell,
the Supreme Court states that a driver’s license, once issued, can only be suspended if the requirements of procedural due process are met. (
We hold that procedural due process will be satisfied by an inquiry limited to the determination whеther there is a reasonable possibility of judgment in the amounts claimed being rendered against the licensee. Id. at 540,91 S.Ct. at 1590 .
Such a hearing need not be in the form of a full-blown adjudication of liability. It would thus appear that the requirements of procedural due process laid down in Bell would be met if the state statutory scheme provides for some type of meaningful administrative or judicial proceeding. To provide such, the aggriеved party should be able to appear and present evidence for the purpose of assisting in the making of a decision whether there is the probability of his being liable for damages resulting from the accident in question. If so, then he may be required to post a bond or lose his license. The fault in the Georgia proceedings, as indicated by the Court in Bell, was that the Georgia appeals court held that under the Georgia statute fault was irrelevant to the statutory scheme and, therefore, no evidence of fault or freedom therefrom could be considered in a determination of whether or not bond should be pоsted or a driver’s license suspended. The United States Supreme Court held that under such circumstances there was a denial of procedural due process, under Georgia law, in the suspension of Bell’s licеnse.
In the case of Hague v. State,
Plaintiff’s evidence at the hearing acknowledges that no attempt was made to secure a hearing as to fault before the Financial Responsibility Division. Neither did he elect to challenge the suspension order in the courts. Section 41-12-2 (b) of the Utah Code provides :
Any person aggrieved by an order of the commission may, within ten days after notice thereof, file a petition in the district court for a review thereof.
Plaintiff had notice of this provision and willfully failed to take action thereon.
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By definition, “due proсess of law” is an opportunity to be heard and defend a substantive right. Brinkerhoff-Faris Trust & Savings Co. v. Hill,
Uncertainty in the law and mistakes of parties in construing the law are frequent. It was the duty of plaintiffs to construe * * * [the law] correctly and timely to pursue their remedy in the right court. They must bear the blame for not using the proper procedural remedy * * * and the situation created by such laches does not state a claim to which the 14th amendment to the Constitution of the United States is applicable. Id. at 306.
It clearly appеars that plaintiff’s plight is mainly the result of his failure to pursue the remedies available to him in state court and, absent some showing that the state procedure violates due process to the extent that to follow it would be useless and a waste of time — -a fact which was not pleaded and never suggested at the hearing on the motion to dismiss — there is no violation of due process under the Fourteenth Amendment to the Unitеd States Constitution. There is, therefore, no basis to plaintiff’s claim of a denial of due process, and plaintiff’s complaint fails to raise a substantial federal question.
Complaint dismissed.
Notes
. Plaintiff’s Exhibit A was an enclosure which was allegedly sent to plaintiff and provides as follows:
NOTICE
In addition to the exemptions listed on the reverse side of your suspension order:
“Any time prior to the effective date of your suspension a hearing as to liability will be granted upon your request.”
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY DIVISION
