Court Opinion

ID: 1082397
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-09 20:58:23.864815+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:06:50.340302
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE, WESTERN SECTION
                                AT NASHVILLE
            _______________________________________________________

                                    )
THE METROPOLITAN                    )     Davidson County Chancery Court
GOVERNMENT OF NASHVILLE             )     Rule No. 92-3809-III
AND DAVIDSON COUNTY,                )
                                    )
   Plaintiff/Appellee.              )
                                    )
VS.                                 )     App. No. 01A01-9504-CH-00142
                                    )
NASHVILLE PARK HOSPITALITY,         )
INC., et al

   Defendants/Appellants.
                                    )
                                    )
                                    )
                                                           FILED
                                                             Oct. 4, 1995
                                    )
______________________________________________________________________________
                                                          Cecil Crowson, Jr.
                                                           Appellate Court Clerk
From the Chancery Court of Davidson County at Nashville.
Honorable Robert S. Brandt, Chancellor

Joel H. Moseley,
MOSELEY & MOSELEY, Nashville, Tennessee
Attorney for Defendants/Appellants.

John L. Murphy, III, Nashville, Tennessee
John L. Kennedy, Nashville, Tennessee
Attorney for Plaintiff/Appellee.

OPINION FILED:

REVERSED IN PART, AFFIRMED IN PART AND REMANDED

                                            FARMER, J.

CRAWFORD, J. : (Concurs)

KOCH, J. : (Concurs)
                  Appellant, Nashville Park Hospitality, Inc. ("Nashville Park"), is the owner of the

Budget Lodge, a motel in Nashville consisting of three separate buildings identified as the 100, 200

and 300 Buildings. Ninety-six suites compose the 100 and 300 Buildings, with 92 available to the

public and rented on a weekly basis. The 200 Building consists of standard motel rooms which are

rented nightly. Appellee, the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County

("Metropolitan Government"), filed suit seeking to enjoin Nashville Park from operating the Budget

Lodge in violation of the Hotel, Food, Service Establishment and Public Swimming Pool Inspection

Act of 1985, T.C.A. § 68-14-301 et. seq. ("Act").1 After a hearing, the trial court granted

Metropolitan Government's application for a permanent injunction, enjoining Nashville Park from

operating Budget Lodge in violation of the Act. The court, however, refused to entertain the issue

of whether the Act applied to the suites rented weekly, 2 citing Nashville Park's failure to first exhaust

its administrative remedies. Nashville Park has appealed, challenging that determination by the

chancellor. For reasons to be discussed, we reverse that portion of the judgment holding the trial

court without jurisdiction to decide the issue prior to an exhaustion of the administrative process.

                  This lawsuit was filed after various inspections by the Metropolitan Board of Health

revealed Budget Lodge's failure to comply with certain minimum standards imposed under the Act.

The inspections were conducted pursuant to Metropolitan Government's contract with the Tennessee

Department of Health authorizing the former to inspect hotels/motels to ensure compliance with the

Act and the regulations promulgated thereunder the Act. Metropolitan Government did not issue

an operating permit to Budget Lodge for the year beginning July 1, 1992 and notified Nashville Park

to cease operations initially in August and then in December of 1992. Metropolitan Government

alleged that as of the date suit was filed, December 22, 1992, Nashville Park was operating without

a valid permit.

                  In granting the injunction, the trial court found Nashville Park in noncompliance with

        1
       Alleged violations included sewage in guest rooms, insect infestation, unlabeled toxic
chemicals and missing fire extinguishers and smoke detectors.
        2
         The parties stipulated that the 200 Building is subject to inspection under the Act's
provisions and agreed that the non-comporting units in that building would be brought into
compliance by dates specified. The parties' "Stipulation and Agreement" was incorporated into
the final judgment.
the Act. The chancellor, however, felt the issue regarding the Act's applicability to the weekly

rented suites "best decided by the entity to which the General Assembly has given the inspecting and

permitting responsibility. It is . . . the Health Department of the Metropolitan Government, that has

the expertise to decide this issue."

               The sole issue on appeal is whether the trial court erred in refusing to consider the

Act's applicability to the 100 and 300 Buildings. It is Nashville Park's position that the issue was

properly before the trial court. Metropolitan Government asserts that it is best addressed by the

administrative agencies responsible for promulgating health and safety regulations. Both parties

agree that a resolution of the issue requires an interpretation of the language in T.C.A. § 68-14-

302(5), which states:

                       "Hotel" means any building or establishment kept, used, or
               maintained as, or advertised as, or offered to the public to be, a place
               where sleeping accommodations are furnished for pay to transients
               or travelers, whether or not meals are served therein to transients or
               travelers; (emphasis added).

               Nashville Park asserts that the suites in the 100 and 300 Buildings do not

accommodate "transients or travelers," but the "working poor," thus they are not subject to regulation

under the Act. Indeed, the trial court found that these two buildings were rented on a weekly basis

to the working poor - "people who do not have funds to pay a month's rent on an apartment." The

trial court also found that these individuals typically stay in the suites for approximately 6 months.

               It is undisputed that Nashville Park has not exhausted the administrative process. In

Reeves v. Olsen, 691 S.W.2d 527 (Tenn. 1985), the Tennessee Supreme Court held that "[e]xcept

when required by statute, exhaustion of administrative remedies is not an inexorable command, but

is a matter of sound judicial discretion." Reeves, 691 S.W.2d at 530 (quoting Cerro Metal Products

v. Marshall, 620 F.2d 964, 970 (3d Cir. 1980)). The pertinent statute here is T.C.A. § 68-14-310,

which provides as follows:

                       (a) The hearings provided for in this part shall be conducted
               by the commissioner in accordance with the Uniform Administrative
               Procedures Act, compiled in title 4, chapter 5.
                        (b) Appeals from any final decision after a hearing shall be
                pursued in accordance with the Uniform Administrative Procedures
                Act, compiled in title 4, chapter 5.
                        (c) Subsections (a) and (b) do not apply in a county whose
                health department is operating a program under § 68-14-303(7)3
                which meets the minimum requirements of due process; provided,
                that appeals from final decisions made under such programs may be
                made to the commissioner, for the limited purpose of determining
                whether a material error of law was made at the county level.
                (Emphasis added.)

                Metropolitan Government contends that Nashville Park is obligated to pursue its

administrative remedies before seeking judicial intervention. We note the use of the word "may" in

subsection (c). "[T]he word 'may' in a statute ordinarily connotes discretion or permission."

Johnson v. Alcoholic Beverage Comm'n, 844 S.W.2d 182, 185 (Tenn. App. 1992). We conclude

that the foregoing language does not evidence a legislative intent to proscribe one's pursuit of judicial

relief until exhaustion of the administrative process.

                Absent a direct statutory mandate, we find exhaustion of the administrative process

under these facts unnecessary.

                       The rule that administrative remedies must be exhausted
                before resort is had to the courts is not absolute and without
                exceptions. . . .

                        . . . . A failure to exhaust administrative remedies may be
                justified when the only or controlling question is one of law, at least
                where there is no issue essentially administrative, involving agency
                expertise and discretion, which is in its nature peculiarly
                administrative, where the issue is one of the validity or construction
                or interpretation of rules and regulations.

                       . . . . A litigant need not proceed with optional administrative
                process before seeking judicial relief.

73 C.J.S. Public Administrative Law and Procedure § 40 (1983).

                In this matter, Nashville Park challenges the application for injunction based upon

        3
         Duties of commissioner. -- The commissioner is authorized to: . . . .
        (7) Enter into an agreement or contract with county health departments whereby the
departments would implement the provisions of this part or its equivalent in their respective
areas of jurisdiction if the commissioner deems it to be appropriate;
its position that the Act does not seek to regulate certain suites within the Budget Lodge. Proper

resolution depends solely upon interpretation of the pertinent provisions of the Act. This is not

something within the confines of agency expertise and a deferral thereto is not warranted. We adhere

to the reasoning expressed by the Kentucky Court of Appeals in Harrison's Sanitarium, Inc. v.

Commonwealth, 417 S.W.2d 137 (Ky. 1967), in recognizing that "a party may have direct judicial

relief without exhaustion of administrative remedies when there are no disputed factual questions

to be resolved and the issue is confined to the validity or applicability of a statute or ordinance."

Harrison's Sanitarium, 417 S.W.2d at 138 (emphasis added).

               Accordingly, this cause is remanded to the trial court with instructions to determine

the Act's applicability to the suites encompassing the 100 and 300 Buildings. To this extent, the

judgment is reversed; it is, in all other respects, affirmed. Costs are taxed one-half to the

Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County and one-half to Nashville Park

Hospitality, Inc., for which execution may issue if necessary.

                                                      ________________________________
                                                      FARMER, J.

______________________________
CRAWFORD, J. (Concurs)

______________________________
KOCH, J. (Concurs)