NISSAN MOTOR CORPORATION IN U.S.A., A California
Corporation, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Russell HARDING, In His Official Capacity as Executive
Director of the Texas Motor Vehicle Commission,
Austin, Texas, et al., Defendants-Appellees.
No. 83-1862.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fifth Circuit.
August 23, 1984.
Latham & Watkins, Hedlund, Hunter & Lynch, John P. Lynch, Charles S. Treat, Laurence H. Levine, Chicago, Ill., Joe H. Reynolds, Houston, Tex., J. Bruce Bennett, Austin, Tex., for plaintiff-appellant.
Jim Mattox, Atty. Gen. of Tex., Douglas Fraser and Susan Bradshaw, Asst. Attys. Gen., Austin, Tex., for Harding and Texas Motor Vehicle Com'n.
Joe R. Greenhill, Jr., Gary E. Zausmer, Austin, Tex., for Twin City Datsun and Gay Pontiac.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas.
Before CLARK, Chief Judge, JOLLY, and DAVIS, Circuit Judges.
CLARK, Chief Judge:
Nissan appeals from a district court judgment abstaining from the exercise of jurisdiction based on Texas Railroad Commission v. Pullman,
* In 1979, Nissan Motor Corporation ("Nissan") and Twin City Datsun, Inc. ("Twin City") entered into an agreement that established Twin City as a dealer of Datsun automobiles and products in Texas City, Texas. The contract provided that Twin City could not relocate its dealership facility without Nissan's written consent.
On March 29, 1983, Twin City requested Nissan's permission to sell its dealership to Gay Pontiac, Inc. ("Gay") and to relocate the dealership to Dickinson, Texas. On June 3, 1983, Nissan approved the sale but refused to approve the relocation.
On June 19, 1983, the Texas legislature amended the Texas Motor Vehicle Commission (TMVC) Code. New section 5.02(13) provides:
It shall be unlawful for any manufacturer, distributor or representative to ....
(13) Notwithstanding the terms of any franchise agreement, deny or withhold approval of a written application to relocate a franchise unless (A) the applicant has received written notice of the denial or withholding of approval within 90 days after receipt of the application containing information reasonably necessary to enable the manufacturer or distributor to adequately evaluate the application, and if (B) the applicant files a protest with the Commission and establishes by a preponderance of the evidence at a hearing called by the Commission that the grounds for, and distance of, the relocation are reasonable.
Tex.Civ.Stat. art. 4413(36) Sec. 5.02(13) (Vernon's Supp.1984).
On July 11, 1983, Twin City and Gay filed a petition with the TMVC seeking a hearing under section 5.02(13) concerning Nissan's pre-enactment denial of approval for the proposed relocation. Nissan moved to dismiss the petition on the grounds that section 5.02(13) does not apply retroactively to pre-existing franchise contracts or to pre-enactment events, and that if the section did apply retroactively it would violate the Texas and federal Constitutions. Russell Harding, the Executive Director of the TMVC, denied Nissan's motion. Harding held that section 5.02(13) by its terms applied retroactively and that the TMVC lacked authority to consider any constitutional challenges to the amended act. He ordered Nissan to appear at a hearing on October 19, 1983.
On October 11, 1983, Nissan filed a complaint in district court against Harding and the TMVC alleging that the retroactive application of section 5.02(13) violates the Contracts Clauses of the Texas and federal Constitutions; the Retroactive Law Clause of the Texas Constitution, and clear and settled principles of Texas statutory construction law. The TMVC held its evidentiary hearing as scheduled on October 19.
On November 17, 1983, the district court granted TMVC's motion to dismiss on the authority of the Pullman abstention doctrine. The court found that the question of the retroactive application of section 5.02(13) was an unsettled question of state law. It therefore dismissed the case without prejudice.
While Nissan's appeal was pending before this court, Harding issued his Proposal for Decision based on the October 19 hearing. Harding ruled that section 5.02(13) applied retroactively to contracts in existence on the effective date of the section, but not to denials of relocation that occurred prior to the effective date. On June 28, 1984, the full Commission adopted Harding's Proposal for Decision in its entirety.
On appeal, Nissan urges that several reasons make Pullman abstention inappropriate: (1) There is no unsettled issue of state law in this case; (2) the state administrative and court proceedings will entail considerable delay and will force Nissan to submit to a proceeding it has a constitutional right to avoid; and (3) the district court's abstention amounts to a requirement that Nissan exhaust state administrative remedies and therefore violates Patsy v. Board of Regents,
II
In order to abstain from the exercise of federal jurisdiction under the authority of Railroad Commission v. Pullman, a federal court must find that the case presents a difficult, obscure, or unsettled issue of state law, the resolution of which could eliminate or substantially narrow the scope of the federal constitutional issue. Railroad Commission v. Pullman,
Nissan contends that Pullman abstention is inappropriate here because the settled presumption in Texas law against retroactive application of statutes operates to render the state law in question unambiguous.
The most recent statement of the presumption of prospectivity by the Texas Supreme Court is as follows:
The general rule is that there exists a presumption that an act is intended to operate prospectively and not retroactively. If there is any doubt, the intention will be resolved against retrospective operation of a statute.... An act will not be applied retrospectively unless it appears by fair implication from the language used that it was the intent of the Legislature to make it applicable to both past and future transactions. In ascertaining legislative intent, the entire act must be examined, not just isolated provisions in the act.
Ex Parte Abell,
Harding argues that this case presents an unclear issue of state law because the language "Notwithstanding the terms of any franchise agreement" could be construed to give the statute retroactive effect (applicable to any franchise agreement, including those in existence before the effective date of the statute) or prospective effect (post-enactment agreements cannot alter the effect of the statute). Nissan argues that the language does not clearly express a legislative intent to give the statute retroactive effect. It relies for this argument on Doran v. Compton,
If the Texas courts limited their consideration to the phrase "notwithstanding any franchise agreement" the lack of explicit language in section 5.02(13) would compel prospective application. However, Nissan's argument does not go far enough. To ascertain legislative intent, a court must examine "the entire act ... not just isolated provisions." Ex parte Abell, supra. No Texas court has examined the entire Motor Vehicle Code in an effort to resolve this issue. We cannot say that a Texas court would undoubtedly find that section 5.02(13) applies prospectively. When read in context of the stated broad remedial purpose of the act,1 section 5.02(13) is reasonably susceptible of a retroactive construction to effectuate that purpose and the economic interests which prompted its enactment. We therefore decline to hold that the Texas presumption of prospectivity precludes Pullman abstention in this case.
Nissan also argues that section 5.02(13), if construed and applied retroactively, would clearly violate the Retroactive Law Clause of the Texas Constitution.2
"A statute is retroactive, and prohibited by the Constitution, if it takes away or impairs vested rights acquired under existing laws, or creates a new obligation, imposes a new duty, or adopts a new disability in respect to transactions or considerations already passed." French v. Insurance Company,
Harding replies that whether this law, if interpreted to be retroactive, would impair Nissan's contract rights presents an unsettled question of state law. He urges that Nissan's rights are subject to valid exercises of the state's police power to prevent unfair or oppressive trade practices by adjusting the balance of bargaining power between car manufacturers and dealers. Twin City and Gay add that whether section 5.02(13) violates the Retroactive Law Clause of the Texas constitution also presents an unsettled question of state law. They urge that the procedures specified if held retroactive are in fact more favorable to Nissan than previous procedures. These arguments clearly demonstrate that how Texas courts will choose to apply the Retroactive law clause will depend on how they view the exercise of legislative power even if they consider it to be retroactive. This is but another facet of unsettled state law. The clause per se does not render abstention improper.
III
"Federal abstention ... presupposes the availability of an alternative state forum which can afford full and fair relief." Duncan v. Poythress,
Nissan's first asserted ground of inadequacy hinges on its contention that TMVC review of relocation decisions constitutes an unconstitutional impairment of Nissan's contractual rights. Because TMVC jurisdiction is unconstitutional, Nissan argues, the administrative proceedings are not adequate. This claim is now moot. The TMVC held that section 5.02(13) cannot be applied to Nissan's denial of Twin City's relocation request. In any event, Nissan's argument misperceives the meaning of an "adequate state forum." Such a forum is one in which there is available a means of obtaining a resolution of the ambiguous state law issue. "Thus if a plaintiff would be forced to incur excessive delay in state court, or if certain forms of relief are unavailable there, or if the state prohibits its courts from deciding state law issues in abstention decisions, then abstention is inappropriate." Redish, Federal Jurisdiction: Tensions in the Allocation of Judicial Power 237 (1980) (footnotes omitted); see, e.g., Palmer v. Jackson,
Nissan's claim of undue delay is an appropriate claim, but not a persuasive one. The kind of delay that argues against abstention is delay that might significantly impair constitutional rights, see Redish, supra at 236; Field, Abstention in Constitutional Cases: The Scope of the Pullman Abstention Doctrine, 122 U.Pa.L.Rev. 1071, 1129-34 (1974), for example, where lengthy state proceedings will chill first amendment rights, Zwickler v. Koota,
Nissan's allegation that the state proceedings are not sufficiently prompt centers on the necessity of completing the TMVC proceedings before filing in state court. Those proceedings, now complete, consumed less than a year's time. Nissan has offered no evidence that the state court proceedings will be unusually protracted, and has made no showing of any harm resulting from the alleged delay that is equivalent to the chilling of first amendment rights. We therefore cannot say that the delay involved in this case outweighs the factors counseling abstention.
IV
Nissan's final contention is that abstention in this case violates Patsy v. Board of Regents,
Application of the Pullman abstention doctrine in a Sec. 1983 suit is not affected by Patsy. Abstention is not as crude a mechanism as exhaustion. It is a means of postponing federal jurisdiction to obtain a definitive state resolution of ambiguous state law issues only when to do so will not destroy the rights of the parties and will avoid the possibility of unnecessarily deciding a federal constitutional question. It is not a blanket prerequisite to the institution of a Sec. 1983 suit in federal court. Moreover, the Pullman abstention doctrine does not require a litigant remanded to state court to present his federal claims there: he may reserve such claims for federal court disposition. England v. Louisiana State Board of Medical Examiners,
V
The district court did not err in abstaining. The case was properly dismissed "without prejudice so that any remaining federal claim may be raised in a federal forum after the Texas courts have been given the opportunity to address the state law questions in this case." Harris County Commissioners Court v. Moore,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
The purpose and policy of the Motor Vehicle Code are set out in Section 1.02 of art. 4413(36) as follows:
The distribution and sale of new motor vehicles in this state vitally affects the general economy of the state and the public interest and welfare of its citizens. It is the policy of this State and the purpose of this Act to exercise the State's police power to insure a sound system of distributing and selling new motor vehicles through licensing and regulating the manufacturers, distributors, and franchise dealers of those vehicles to provide for compliance with manufacturer's warranties, and to prevent frauds, unfair practices, discriminations, impositions and other abuses of our citizens."
"No ... retroactive law ... shall be made." Texas Constitution, art. I Sec. 16 (Vernon 1956)
The Court refused to impose a requirement of exhaustion of state judicial remedies in Sec. 1983 actions in Monroe v. Pape,
