Court Opinion

ID: 2721561
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-08-28 13:04:00.678087+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T10:02:46.380172
License: Public Domain

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                  THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

                            ___________________________

Hillsborough-northern judicial district
No. 2013-357

                    PROLERIZED NEW ENGLAND COMPANY

                                          v.

                              CITY OF MANCHESTER

                             Argued: March 5, 2014
                         Opinion Issued: August 28, 2014

      Shaheen & Gordon, P.A., of Concord (Donald C. Crandlemire on the brief
and orally), for the petitioner.

      Office of the City Solicitor, of Manchester (Peter R. Chiesa on the brief
and orally), for the respondent.

      BASSETT, J. The respondent, the City of Manchester (City), appeals an
order of the Superior Court (Brown, J.) denying the City’s motion to dismiss
and granting the motion for summary judgment filed by the petitioner,
Prolerized New England Company (Prolerized). The City argues that the trial
court erroneously ruled that RSA chapter 322 preempts the City’s ordinances
regulating junk and scrap metal dealers. RSA ch. 322 (2011 & Supp. 2013).
We reverse and remand.
       The trial court found the following facts to be undisputed. Prolerized is
engaged in the business of scrap metal recycling, and operates two scrap metal
recycling centers in Manchester. There is one other licensed scrap metal yard
within the City.

      In 1995, the City adopted an ordinance requiring scrap metal dealers to
maintain for inspection certain records regarding every transaction as a
condition to the license to operate within the City. Manchester, N.H., Code of
Ordinances § 114.03(B) (1995). The ordinance required dealers to document
the proven identity of the seller, the date of the transaction, and to maintain an
accurate, detailed description of each item purchased. Id.

      In 2012, in an effort to combat the growing problem of scrap metal theft,
the City adopted § 114.03(C), which requires scrap metal dealers to prepare
transaction records electronically “as directed by the Chief of Police or his
designee,” and to forward them “to the Police Department or authorized data
storage site . . . no later than 24 hours after completion of the transaction.”
Manchester, Ordinances § 114.03(C) (2012). Subsection 114.03(C) also
requires that the electronic transaction records include a digital photograph of
the scrap metal seller and a color digital photograph of all items sold in the
transaction. Id. The City also adopted § 114.03(D), which requires dealers to
include a complete and accurate description of the seller’s vehicle, as well as
§ 114.03(E), which levies a fee of fifty cents per electronic transaction for which
a record must be prepared pursuant to § 114.03. Manchester, Ordinances
§ 114.03(D), (E) (2012).

       Pursuant to § 114.03(C), the City designated a private company,
LeadsOnline, as the authorized storage site for the electronic transaction
records, and directed Prolerized to set up a user account and begin uploading
data. Shortly thereafter, Prolerized filed a petition seeking declaratory and
injunctive relief, arguing that § 114.03, as amended, is preempted by State law.
Prolerized also argued that the fifty cent per transaction fee is an unlawful
business tax because it raises revenues in excess of the reasonable costs to the
City, and violates Prolerized’s constitutional right to freedom of contract and
equal protection. The City filed a motion to dismiss, and Prolerized filed a
motion for summary judgment. The trial court denied the City’s motion to
dismiss and entered summary judgment for Prolerized, ruling that State law
preempted § 114.03. Because of its preemption ruling, the trial court did not
consider whether § 114.03 imposes an unlawful business tax or violates
constitutional protections. This appeal followed.

      “We review de novo the trial court’s application of the law to the facts in
its summary judgment ruling.” EnergyNorth Natural Gas v. City of Concord,
164 N.H. 14, 15 (2012) (quotation omitted). “We consider all of the evidence
presented in the record, and all inferences properly drawn therefrom, in the

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light most favorable to the non-moving party.” Id. at 15-16. “If our review of
that evidence discloses no genuine issue of material fact and if the moving
party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law, then we will affirm the grant of
summary judgment.” Id. at 16 (quotation omitted).

       On appeal, the City argues that its ordinance “relative to transaction
fees, digital record keeping, and digital reporting neither expressly contradicts
the statute nor intrudes upon an area reserved to the exclusive control of the
General Court.” Prolerized counters that the trial court properly concluded
that, because § 114.03 and RSA chapter 322 conflict, the state statutory
scheme preempts the City’s ordinance.

I. General Principles

      “Preemption is essentially a matter of statutory interpretation and
construction.” EnergyNorth Natural Gas, 164 N.H. at 16 (quotation omitted).
“Statutory interpretation is a question of law that we review de novo.” Id. “We
are the final arbiter of the intent of the legislature as expressed in the words of
a statute considered as a whole.” Id. “In interpreting a statute, we first look to
the language of the statute itself, and, if possible, construe that language
according to its plain and ordinary meaning.” Id. “Unless we find statutory
language to be ambiguous, we will not examine legislative history.” Clare v.
Town of Hudson, 160 N.H. 378, 384-85 (2010) (quotation omitted).
“Furthermore, we interpret statutes in the context of the overall statutory
scheme and not in isolation.” EnergyNorth Natural Gas, 164 N.H. at 16.

       “Preemption may be express or implied.” N. Country Envtl. Servs. v.
Town of Bethlehem, 150 N.H. 606, 611 (2004). Express preemption is not
claimed here. One form of implied preemption exists “when there is an actual
conflict between State and local regulation.” Id. That is, “[a] conflict exists
when a municipal ordinance or regulation permits that which a State statute
prohibits or vice versa.” Id. Even when a local ordinance does not expressly
conflict with a State statute, it will be preempted when it frustrates the
statute’s purpose. Id.

       A second form of “[i]mplied preemption may be found when the
comprehensiveness and detail of the State statutory scheme evinces legislative
intent to supersede local regulation.” Id. “When the State has preempted the
entire regulatory field, any local law on the subject is preempted, regardless of
whether the terms of the local and State law conflict.” Id. at 612. Nonetheless,
“[t]he mere fact that a state law contains detailed and comprehensive
regulations of a subject does not, of itself, establish the intent of the legislature
to occupy the entire field to the exclusion of local legislation.” Id. at 611
(quotation omitted). “To determine whether the legislature has intended to
occupy the field, the court may look to the whole purpose and scope of the

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legislative scheme and need not find such intent solely in the statutory
language.” Id. “The very nature of the regulated subject matter may demand
exclusive state regulation to achieve the uniformity necessary to serve the
state’s purpose or interest.” Id. (quotation and brackets omitted).

      [T]he following questions are pertinent in determining whether the
      state has preempted the field: does the ordinance conflict with
      state law; is the state law, expressly or impliedly, to be exclusive;
      does the subject matter reflect a need for uniformity; is the state
      scheme so pervasive or comprehensive that it precludes
      coexistence of municipal regulation; and does the ordinance stand
      as an obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of the full
      purposes and objectives of the legislature.

Id. at 611-12 (quotation and brackets omitted).

II. Comprehensiveness of State Statutory Scheme

       RSA chapter 322 delegates to local authorities the general regulation of
junk and scrap metal dealers. The legislature granted authority to “[t]he
governing body of any town, city, or unincorporated place” to license, “in [its]
discretion,” junk and scrap metal dealers within the municipality. RSA 322:1
(2011). Local boards are authorized to issue and revoke licenses and “establish
rules, regulations and restrictions,” each of which “shall be incorporated in the
license.” RSA 322:2 (2011). These boards may designate the location for junk
and scrap metal dealers to conduct business and to store their wares, RSA
322:1, and may, by regulation, designate areas of the city where these
operations are prohibited. RSA 322:6 (2011). A dealer must keep “records
sufficient to the licensing authority” — that is, the same municipal body — “of
the accumulation, storage, and handling of commodities as a junk or scrap
metal dealer.” RSA 322:6-a (2011). RSA chapter 322 does not give the State a
role in governing the management or operations of junk and scrap metal
dealers. Thus, “[t]he design of the statute is to localize the junk-business, as
well as to confine it to conduct by proper persons.” Belmont v. Parent, 90 N.H.
249, 252 (1939).

      Prolerized argues that RSA 322:6-a, RSA 322:7 (2011), and RSA 322:11
(2011) evince a legislative intent to establish a uniform statewide system of
regulating junk and scrap metal dealers. However, each of these provisions
grants control to the local board. Although RSA 322:6-a requires that the
transaction records include certain information, it also requires each licensee
to “keep records sufficient to the licensing authority,” i.e., the local board. RSA
322:7 authorizes any officer with jurisdiction to enter the licensed premises,
which would include local law enforcement. See 63 C.J.S. Municipal
Corporations § 632 (explaining powers of police officers), § 633 (generally the

                                         4
powers conferred on police officer must be exercised within territorial limits of
municipality) (2011). RSA 322:11 requires a local board to establish the
license fee and dictates that the fee be paid into the treasury of the city or town
where the license is in force. Thus, not only do these provisions fail to
demonstrate a legislative intent to preempt municipal control, they
demonstrate precisely the opposite: an intent to delegate control to local
entities.

      Prolerized cites JTR Colebrook v. Town of Colebrook, 149 N.H. 767
(2003), in support of its claim. In JTR Colebrook, we held that the State Indoor
Smoking Act preempted a municipal ordinance that prohibited smoking in any
restaurant for public health reasons with certain strictly limited exceptions.
JTR Colebrook, 149 N.H. at 768-70 (explaining statute), 773. We explained:

      RSA 155:77 provides that: “Nothing in this subdivision shall be
      construed to permit smoking where smoking is prohibited by any
      other provision of law or rule relative to fire protection, safety and
      sanitation.” We interpret this provision according to its plain
      meaning and hold that it permits additional municipal regulation
      of smoking only with respect to fire protection, safety and
      sanitation, not with respect to public health.

Id. at 771. Here, in contrast, RSA chapter 322 contains no such limited
authorization.

       Significantly, in JTR Colebrook, we concluded that, given the
comprehensiveness of the State Indoor Smoking Act and the balancing of
multiple interests, it was “highly improbable that the legislature . . . intended
to leave the ultimate public health regulation of indoor restaurant smoking to
the vagaries of local regulation.” Id. In comparison, here, the legislature has
specifically delegated the regulation of junk and scrap metal dealers to local
authorities. RSA 322:1, :2; :6.

      Therefore, we hold that RSA chapter 322 does not constitute a
comprehensive and detailed State regulatory scheme of junk and scrap metal
dealers that occupies the field.

      A. Record-Keeping

       Our conclusion that the State regulatory scheme does not occupy the
field does not end our inquiry because municipal ordinances are nonetheless
implicitly preempted if they conflict with state law. See, e.g., N. Country Envtl.
Servs., 150 N.H. at 611. Prolerized argues that § 114.03(C) and (D) are
preempted because they impose stricter record-keeping requirements than are
authorized under RSA chapter 322. Specifically, it argues that: (1) the

                                         5
amended ordinance imposes more detailed record-keeping requirements than
do RSA 322:6-a and RSA 322:7; and (2) RSA chapter 322 does not impose an
affirmative obligation to transmit records, but only requires dealers to keep
records. Prolerized also challenges the terms and conditions imposed by the
City’s designee as contrary to the statute. Because, as Prolerized notes,
extension of this argument raises issues “not directly germane to the issue on
appeal (i.e. preemption),” we limit our review to Prolerized’s argument that RSA
chapter 322 does not authorize a local board to require a licensee to enter into
a contract with a private third party. We address these arguments in turn.

       First, Prolerized argues that RSA 322:6-a evinces a legislative intent to
preempt ordinances such as § 114.03(C) and (D), which require more detailed
record-keeping requirements. Specifically, Prolerized contends that “[h]ad the
legislature intended to allow municipalities to impose strict[er] requirements on
scrap metal dealers concerning recordkeeping and handling, it could have
explicitly done so like it did in RSA 322:1, 322:2 and 322:6.” (Quotation
omitted.) We disagree.

       “An ordinance which merely enlarges upon the provision of a statute by
requiring more restrictions than the statute requires creates no conflict unless
the statute limits the requirement for all cases to its own terms.” Peak v. City
of Tuscaloosa, 73 So. 3d 5, 19 (Ala. Crim. App. 2011) (quotation and emphasis
omitted). “[I]t is no objection to a municipal ordinance not in contravention of
a state law that it affords additional regulation complementary to the end state
legislation would effect.” Id. (quotation omitted).

       RSA 322:6-a provides that “[e]ach person required to be licensed under
this chapter shall keep records sufficient to the licensing authority of the
accumulation, storage, and handling of commodities as a junk or scrap metal
dealer.” This provision requires a licensed dealer to maintain records that the
licensing authority — that is, the local board — finds sufficient, thereby vesting
discretion within the local board to determine what is sufficient. RSA 322:6-a
also provides that the transaction records “shall be legibly written in the
English language and provide account and description of the goods purchased,
the date and time of their purchase, and the name and residence, verified by
photo identification issued by a governmental agency, of the seller.” Read in
light of the statute’s mandate that such records be “sufficient to the licensing
authority,” these statutory requirements cannot be read as maximum allowable
requirements. See, e.g., In re Guardianship of Williams, 159 N.H. 318, 323
(2009) (“the legislature is not presumed to waste words or enact redundant
provisions and . . . every word of a statute should be given effect” (quotation
and brackets omitted)). Because the statute vests the local licensing authority
with the power to determine what additional information the records must
contain to be “sufficient,” we disagree with Prolerized that the more detailed
record-keeping requirements of the ordinance conflict with the statute.

                                        6
       Next, Prolerized argues that RSA chapter 322 does not authorize the City
to impose upon dealers the affirmative obligation to transmit transaction
records to a third-party designee, but rather, only enables the City to require
junk and scrap metal dealers to keep records. We disagree. The statute’s
mandate that dealers “keep records sufficient to the licensing authority” vests
discretion in the local board to determine how a junk and scrap metal dealer
keeps records, including the discretion to require dealers to keep records
electronically on a third-party website. See RSA 322:6-a.

       Moreover, RSA 322:2 provides a local licensing authority general power
to adopt rules and regulations governing licensees. RSA 322:2 states that
“[t]he board which grants said license . . . may from time to time establish
rules, regulations and restrictions relative to the business carried on as
aforesaid.” The plain language does not limit the type of ordinances that a
local licensing authority can enact; consequently, under the authority of RSA
322:2, a local licensing authority may require a junk and scrap metal dealer to
upload data to a third-party designee. Given that RSA 322:2 enables a local
board to enact regulations governing record-keeping, it was unnecessary to
repeat the identical authority in RSA 322:6-a. Cf. Lessee of Hannel v. Smith,
15 Ohio 134, 146 (1846) (“But it is at least reasonable to suppose, that the
Legislature having once, in the same act, made this express provision, deemed
it unnecessary to repeat the identical words in every clause of the statute
where this list of forfeited lands was treated of.”).

       Prolerized argues that the ordinance requiring the upload of data to a
third party conflicts with RSA 322:7 because LeadsOnline, the City’s designee,
is not an “officer[] having jurisdiction” to enter onto a dealer’s premises. See
RSA 322:7 (“Any officer, having jurisdiction may enter upon any premises used
by a licensee for the purpose of his or her business, ascertain how the licensee
conducts business and examine all commodities purchased, obtained, kept, or
stored in or upon said premises, and all books and inventories relating
thereto.”). However, RSA 322:7 governs only entries upon the physical
premises to conduct an inspection and examination of commodities stored on
the premises. It does not govern the transmission or storage of electronic data
for the purpose of recordkeeping under RSA 322:6-a. Given that LeadsOnline
does not enter the physical premises of the dealers, the City’s requirement that
dealers store the data in a designated manner and transmit the data to a third-
party designee does not conflict with RSA 322:7.

      In sum, nothing in RSA chapter 322 expressly prohibits what the City
requires in terms of more detailed record-keeping requirements, or the
transmission of transaction data to a third-party designee. Manchester,
Ordinances § 114.03. Nor does anything in RSA chapter 322 limit the
reporting requirements of dealers or the method of reporting to its own terms.
A dealer complying with the City’s record-keeping requirements can still

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comply with the less-specific requirements of RSA chapter 322, and both the
statute and ordinances can operate concurrently. See State ex rel. Whiteco v.
Bowers, 965 S.W.2d 203, 209 (Mo. Ct. App. 1998) (“A municipal ordinance may
expand upon the provisions of a state statute by requiring more than what is
required in the statute.”).

       Prolerized cites Tosi v. County of Fresno, 74 Cal. Rptr. 3d 727 (Ct. App.
2008), in support of its argument that municipalities cannot enact stricter
requirements than those set forth in RSA chapter 322. In Tosi, the California
Court of Appeals concluded that state law preempted municipal ordinances,
see id. at 732, that required, among other restrictions, that junk and scrap
metal dealers engage in more detailed record-keeping. Id. at 733. The court
found that these ordinances were preempted because the commercial activities
of scrap metal dealers “are matters of statewide concern that our Legislature
has comprehensively addressed through various provisions of this state’s Penal
and Business and Professions Codes, leaving no room for further regulation at
the local level.” Id. at 733 (quotation and brackets omitted). The California law
does not authorize municipalities to adopt rules and regulations, and outlines
in great detail the information that dealers must report. Cal. Bus. & Prof. Code
§§ 21600-21610 (2007 & Supp. 2013). In contrast, RSA chapter 322 allows
municipalities to adopt rules and regulations, and requires dealers to keep
records “sufficient to the licensing authority.” RSA 322:2; :6-a. Thus, Tosi is
inapposite. Accordingly, we conclude that the trial court erred when it ruled
that the City’s record-keeping ordinances were preempted because they were
incompatible with State law.

      B. Transaction Fee

      Subsection 114.03(E) states: “Every junk dealer and/or scrap yard that
purchases an item in which a transaction record must be prepared pursuant to
§ 114.03 shall pay to the city a fee of [fifty cents] per transaction due in full the
second Tuesday of every month, for the preceding month.” Manchester,
Ordinances § 114.03(E). RSA 322:11 states that “no person shall be required
to pay a larger fee for said license than that required to be paid by any other
person in the same city or town for a similar license.” Neither party argues
that RSA 322:11 is ambiguous.

      Prolerized contends that the transaction fee conflicts with RSA 322:11
and is therefore preempted, arguing that:

      [subsection 114.03(E)] of the ordinance requires dealers to pay to
      the City a fee of [fifty cents] per transaction. The more
      transactions a particular dealer processes, the higher its license
      fee will ultimately be. As different dealers have different

                                         8
      transaction volumes, the ordinance necessarily imposes different
      fees upon different scrap metal dealers in violation of [RSA
      322:11].

The City responds that the ordinance is lawful because all junk and scrap
metal dealers are charged the same annual license fee, which is based on
square footage, as well as the same fifty-cent fee per transaction. Furthermore,
it argues that it is permissible to have transaction fees based on volume, and,
therefore, that RSA 322:11 does not preempt the fee. We agree with the City.

      By its very terms, RSA 322:11 applies only to license fees paid by junk
and scrap metal dealers — not to any other fee paid to the local board.
Therefore, the issue before us is whether the fifty-cent transaction fee is a
license fee.

       The term “license” or “license fee” is not defined in RSA chapter 322.
“Therefore, we ascribe to the term its plain and ordinary meaning, utilizing the
dictionary definition for guidance.” Magoon v. Thoroughgood, 148 N.H. 139,
142 (2002). The term license is commonly understood to mean “a right or
permission granted in accordance with law by a competent authority to engage
in some business or occupation, to do some act, or to engage in some
transaction which but for such license would be unlawful.” Webster’s Third
New International Dictionary 1304 (unabridged ed. 2002). Indeed, the
dictionary definition of license is consistent with the legislature’s definition of
license in other parts of the Revised Statutes Annotated. See, e.g., RSA 170-
E:2, IX (2014) (“‘License’ means an authorization granted by the commissioner
to provide one or more types of child day care.”); RSA 170-E:25, XI (2014)
(“‘License’ means a complete license issued to an operator of a child care
agency, child care institution or child-placing agency, authorizing the licensee
to operate in accordance with the term and conditions of the license, this
subdivision, and the rules of the department.”); RSA 399-A:1, VI (2006)
(“‘License’ means the authority to do business issued by the commissioner
under the provisions of this chapter.”); RSA 402-J:2, VI (2006) (“‘License’
means a document issued by the commissioner authorizing a person to act as
an insurance producer for the lines of authority specified in the document.”);
RSA 433:21, XI (Supp. 2013) (“‘License’ means an authorization from the
director to sell plant stock.”); RSA 541-A:1, VIII (2007) (“‘License’ means the
whole or part of any agency permit, certificate, approval, registration, charter
or similar form of permission required by law.”).

      Although it is true that the City’s description of the fee in its ordinance
“does not settle the question of its character,” Tirrell v. Johnston, 86 N.H. 530,
535 (1934), we observe that § 114.03(E) refers to the fifty-cent fee as a
transaction fee, and that § 110.20 requires payment of a license fee. Section
110.20, entitled “Business License Fees,” requires that a person seeking a

                                         9
license pay a fee “based on the gross square feet of area occupied by the
business seeking such license as follows: For the first 1,500 square feet or
fraction thereof, $50; plus $2 per 100 square feet or fraction thereof over 1,500
square feet, except that the maximum fee for any license shall be $1,000.”
Manchester, Ordinances § 110.20 (2001). It is of consequence that the fifty-
cent transaction fee is not paid in order to secure the right to engage in the
business of scrap metal recycling — rather, the fee is paid for each transaction
for which a licensed dealer files an electronic record as required by the City
regulations. Manchester, Ordinances § 114.03(E). The right to engage in such
a business is instead secured by the payment required by § 110.20. See
Manchester, Ordinances § 110.20.

       We note that Prolerized acknowledges its inability to find cases, and we
could not find any, which support its argument that the transaction fee is
preempted. Nonetheless, as Prolerized argues, because the issue is whether
the ordinance is preempted by RSA 322:11, the City’s arguments as to the
validity of volume-based fees under other statutory schemes, see Tirrell, 86
N.H. at 537, or constitutional provisions, see Opinion of the Justices, 94 N.H.
513 (1947), and Northeast Airlines, Inc. v. Aeronautics Comm’n., 111 N.H. 5
(1971), are inapposite.

        Because we conclude that the fifty-cent transaction fee is not a license
fee, it is not incompatible with state law, and, therefore, is not preempted.

                                                   Reversed and remanded.

      DALIANIS, C.J., and HICKS and CONBOY, JJ., concurred.

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