Equity Solutions of the Carolinas, Inc. v. N.C. Dep't of State Treasurer , 232 N.C. App. 384 ( 2014 )


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  •                                  NO. COA13-300
    NORTH CAROLINA COURT OF APPEALS
    Filed: 18 February 2014
    EQUITY SOLUTIONS OF THE
    CAROLINAS, INC.,
    Petitioner,
    v.                                 Wake County
    No. 10 CVS 15729
    NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT
    OF STATE TREASURER,
    Respondent.
    Appeal by petitioner from order entered 11 September 2012 by
    Judge W. Osmond Smith, III in Wake County Superior Court.           Heard
    in the Court of Appeals 9 September 2013.
    Ward and Smith, P.A., by A. Charles Ellis and Joseph A.
    Schouten, for petitioner-appellant.
    Attorney General Roy Cooper, by Assistant Solicitor General
    Gary R. Govert, Special Deputy Attorney General K.D. Sturgis,
    and Special Deputy Attorney General M.A. Kelly Chambers, for
    respondent-appellee.
    GEER, Judge.
    Petitioner Equity Solutions of the Carolinas, Inc. appeals
    from    the   trial   court's   order   affirming   the   North   Carolina
    Department of State Treasurer's decision to deny Equity Solutions'
    request for a declaratory ruling and dismissing Equity Solutions'
    petition for judicial review of the State Treasurer's decision.
    -2-
    On appeal, while Equity Solutions contends that the trial court
    applied an improper standard of review when reviewing the State
    Treasurer's decision to deny Equity Solutions' request for a
    declaratory ruling, we hold that the trial court employed the
    correct standard of review.
    Further, Equity Solutions contends that the State Treasurer
    in fact issued a "de facto ruling" against Equity Solutions on the
    merits that the trial court should have reviewed.     We disagree.
    The State Treasurer never rendered a declaratory ruling, and the
    merits of Equity Solutions' arguments were, therefore, not before
    the trial court and are not before this Court.
    Facts
    Equity Solutions is a business that identifies the possible
    existence of surplus funds remaining from foreclosure sales and
    contacts people or entities it believes are entitled to some or
    all of the surplus funds.     After then entering into an agreement
    with the owner of the surplus funds, Equity Solutions files before
    the clerk of the superior court holding the surplus funds a special
    proceeding pursuant to 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-339.71
     (2013).
    Equity Solutions asserts that it attached to its "Petition
    for Surplus Funds" initiating the special proceeding a copy of its
    agreement with the owner of the surplus funds, which purports to
    assign the right to the funds to Equity Solutions in exchange for
    -3-
    payment of a percentage of the amount of the funds.                 If the clerk
    of court allows the petition and directs that the foreclosure
    surplus funds be paid to Equity Solutions, then Equity Solutions
    pays the owner of the surplus funds the portion of the funds
    designated in the agreement.
    The    State      has   contended    that   Equity      Solutions'    business
    constitutes      the    recovery    of    abandoned    and    unclaimed    property
    governed by the Unclaimed Property Act, N.C. Gen. Stat. §§ 116B-
    51 et seq. (2013).           N.C. Gen. Stat. § 116B-78(a1) (2013) governs
    an "agreement . . . if its primary purpose is to locate, deliver,
    recover,    or    assist       in   the    recovery    of     property    that   is
    distributable to the owner or presumed abandoned."                       Agreements
    covered by the statute must be in writing and include certain
    disclosures regarding the property at issue and the fee being
    charged for the property's recovery.                  N.C. Gen. Stat. § 116B-
    78(b).     The statute also generally limits the maximum allowable
    property finder's fee.              N.C. Gen. Stat. § 116B-78(b)(6).              A
    violation of the provisions of the statute constitutes an unfair
    or deceptive act or practice in violation of 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 75
    -
    1.1 (2013).      N.C. Gen. Stat. § 116B-78(g).
    On 11 May 2010, the Attorney General of North Carolina issued
    an investigative demand to Equity Solutions seeking documents
    relating to Equity Solutions' business, claiming that it involved
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    the recovery of abandoned or unclaimed property located in North
    Carolina.   In April and June 2010, Allen Martin, an employee of
    the State Treasurer's office, sent letters to two county clerks of
    court stating that the agreements between Equity Solutions and its
    clients filed by Equity Solutions in superior court violated N.C.
    Gen. Stat. § 116B-78 and were, therefore, invalid.
    On 18 June 2010, Equity Solutions submitted a letter to the
    State Treasurer describing its business model and attaching two
    sets of business documents that Equity Solutions claimed were
    representative of those it had used in the past and those it
    planned to use in the future.   Equity Solutions requested that the
    State Treasurer issue "a declaratory ruling as to the applicability
    of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 116B-78 to the assignment agreements which
    Equity Solutions has employed in its business operations in the
    past . . . and the agreements it intends to employ in the future
    . . . ."
    On 13 August 2010, the State, through the Attorney General
    and the State Treasurer, filed an action against Equity Solutions
    and several individuals alleging claims for racketeering, unfair
    and deceptive practices, and unjust enrichment (the "enforcement
    action").   The complaint alleged that the assignment agreements
    referred to in Equity Solutions' request for a declaratory ruling
    were, in fact, "sham agreements" that were not supported by
    -5-
    consideration.        The   complaint    further   alleged   that   Equity
    Solutions' business model included inducing "the apparent owners
    to agree to pay defendant Equity Solutions a 'contingency fee' and
    other fees and charges" that exceed the statutory maximum property
    finder's fee under the Unclaimed Property Act and that those
    contingency fee agreements constituted the real agreements between
    the parties.   The complaint alleged that since the contingency fee
    agreements did not comply with N.C. Gen. Stat. § 116B-78 for
    several reasons, they were unenforceable.
    On 16 August 2010, the State Treasurer sent a letter to Equity
    Solutions declining to issue a declaratory ruling and stating:
    Pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 150B-4 and 20
    N.C.A.C. 01F 0205, I have determined that the
    issuance   of   a   declaratory   ruling   is
    undesirable.    Therefore, the Petitioner's
    request is denied for the following reasons:
    1.    The subject matter of the request is
    the subject of active litigation in
    Wake    County    between     Equity
    Solutions, the State Treasurer, and
    the Attorney General.
    2.    The request seeks application of
    N.C.G.S. § 116B-78 to an "Absolute
    Assignment"      and     "Conveyance
    Agreement" without disclosing the
    full factual setting surrounding
    these   documents,   including   any
    representations made to induce the
    apparent   owner   to   sign   these
    documents, and the manner in which
    any of these documents may have been
    used in court proceedings seeking
    -6-
    disbursement   of   unclaimed   or
    abandoned funds.
    3.   The   request   involves  disputed
    issues of material fact, including
    whether the "Absolute Assignment"
    represents   an  actual  agreement
    between the parties.
    4.   The proposed "Purchase Agreement"
    offers only blank spaces for its
    material terms, such as the amount
    of the finder's fee, and the amount
    of the costs and expenses to be
    borne by the apparent owner.
    On 15 September 2010, Equity Solutions filed a petition for
    judicial review of the State Treasurer's denial of its request for
    a declaratory ruling.    On 15 October 2010, the State Treasurer
    moved to dismiss Equity Solutions' petition for judicial review
    pursuant to Rules 12(b)(1), (6), and (7) of the Rules of Civil
    Procedure.
    On 18 October 2010, the defendants in the enforcement action,
    including Equity Solutions, filed an answer, motions to dismiss,
    a motion for Rule 11 sanctions, counterclaims against the State,
    and a third-party complaint against State Treasurer Janet Cowell,
    individually.   On 17 November 2010, the State filed a motion to
    dismiss the third-party complaint against the State Treasurer,
    individually, and the counterclaims against the State.      On 11
    September 2012, the trial court entered an order denying the
    defendants' motions to dismiss in the enforcement action, but
    -7-
    granting the State's motion to dismiss the counterclaims and third-
    party complaint in the enforcement action.
    Also on 11 September 2012, the trial court entered an order
    affirming the State Treasurer's decision to deny Equity Solutions'
    request for a declaratory ruling and dismissing Equity Solutions'
    petition for judicial review.    Equity Solutions timely appealed
    the order to this Court.
    Discussion
    "This Court's review of 'a superior court order entered upon
    review of an administrative agency decision, . . . [involves a]
    two-fold task: (1) [to] determine whether the trial court exercised
    the appropriate scope of review and, if appropriate; (2) [to]
    decide whether the court did so properly.'"    In re Denial of NC
    IDEA's Refund of Sales, 
    196 N.C. App. 426
    , 433-34, 
    675 S.E.2d 88
    ,
    94-95 (2009) (quoting Cnty. of Wake v. N.C. Dep't of Env't &
    Natural Res., 
    155 N.C. App. 225
    , 233–34, 
    573 S.E.2d 572
    , 579
    (2002)).
    Here, Equity Solutions sought a declaratory ruling from the
    State Treasurer pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 150B-4(a) (2009).1
    1The General Assembly enacted a revised version of N.C. Gen.
    Stat. § 150B-4 in 2011 N.C. Sess. Law ch. 398, § 56 (effective
    June 18, 2011). Given the date of Equity Solutions' request for
    a declaratory ruling and the State Treasurer's denial of Equity
    Solutions' request, the revised version of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 150B-
    4 does not apply to this case.
    -8-
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 150B-4(a) provides in relevant part: "On request
    of a person aggrieved, an agency shall issue a declaratory ruling
    as to the validity of a rule or as to the applicability to a given
    state of facts of a statute administered by the agency or of a
    rule or order of the agency, except when the agency for good cause
    finds issuance of a ruling undesirable."
    After the State Treasurer denied Equity Solutions' request
    for a declaratory ruling, Equity Solutions petitioned the trial
    court for judicial review.    The trial court's review of the State
    Treasurer's denial was governed by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 150B-51(b)
    (2009).2    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 150B-51(b) provides that the trial
    court may
    reverse or modify the agency's decision . . .
    if the substantial rights of the petitioners
    may have been prejudiced because the agency's
    findings,    inferences,   conclusions,    or
    decisions are:
    (1) In    violation    of   constitutional
    provisions;
    (2) In excess of the statutory authority
    or jurisdiction of the agency;
    (3)   Made upon unlawful procedure;
    (4)   Affected by other error of law;
    2The General Assembly's revised version of N.C. Gen. Stat. §
    150B-51, enacted in 2011 N.C. Sess. Law ch. 398, § 27, applies "to
    contested cases commenced on or after" 1 January 2012 and,
    therefore, does not apply to this case. Id.
    -9-
    (5) Unsupported by substantial evidence
    admissible under G.S. 150B–29(a), 150B–
    30, or 150B–31 in view of the entire
    record as submitted; or
    (6) Arbitrary, capricious, or an abuse
    of discretion.
    "During judicial review of an administrative agency's final
    decision, the substantive nature of each assignment of error
    dictates the standard of review."         In re Denial, 196 N.C. App. at
    432, 
    675 S.E.2d at 94
    .        The first four grounds for reversing or
    modifying an agency's decision provided in N.C. Gen. Stat. § 150B-
    51(b)   give   rise    to   questions   of   law   and   the   trial   court,
    accordingly, reviews arguments based on those grounds de novo.             In
    re Denial, 196 N.C. App. at 433, 
    675 S.E.2d at 94
    .             However, the
    fifth and sixth grounds for reversing or modifying an agency's
    decision set out in N.C. Gen. Stat. § 150B-51(b) involve factual
    inquiries, and the trial court, therefore, reviews arguments on
    those two grounds under the whole record test.           In re Denial, 196
    N.C. App. at 433, 
    675 S.E.2d at 94
    .
    "Under the       de novo   standard of review, the trial court
    'consider[s] the matter anew[] and freely substitut[es] its own
    judgment for the agency's[.]'"          
    Id.
     (quoting Mann Media, Inc. v.
    Randolph Cnty. Planning Bd., 
    356 N.C. 1
    , 13, 
    565 S.E.2d 9
    , 17
    (2002)).   "In conducting 'whole record' review, the trial court
    must examine all the record evidence in order to determine whether
    -10-
    there is substantial evidence to support the agency's decision."
    
    Id.
     "When the trial court reviews an administrative decision under
    the whole record test, it 'may not substitute its judgment for the
    agency's as between two conflicting views, even though it could
    reasonably have reached a different result had it reviewed the
    matter de novo.'"       
    Id.
     (quoting Watkins v. N.C. State Bd. of Dental
    Exam'rs, 
    358 N.C. 190
    , 199, 
    593 S.E.2d 764
    , 769 (2004)).
    In this case, in reviewing the State Treasurer's decision,
    the   trial    court    concluded   (1)   that   "[t]here   is   substantial,
    competent evidence to support each of the State Treasurer's reasons
    for denying the requested declaratory rulings" and (2) that "[t]he
    State Treasurer's reasons for denying the request, each standing
    alone or taken together, constitute 'good cause' for the denial."
    The   trial     court     further   observed     that   "material    factual
    representations in, and omissions from, Equity Solutions' request
    . . . presented merely hypothetical circumstances and did not
    provide 'a given state of facts' regarding genuine and legally
    valid 'assignments' about which Equity Solutions is presently
    'aggrieved' within the meaning of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 150B-4."
    The order additionally found:
    Regarding Equity Solutions' proposed new
    "Purchase Contracts," on the face of the
    record and Equity Solutions' pleadings, these
    documents   are   simply    possible   future
    contracts, with several material terms not
    provided by Equity Solutions.      Therefore,
    -11-
    Equity Solutions is not presently "aggrieved"
    regarding the possible validity or invalidity
    of those potential contracts under N.C. Gen.
    Stat. § 116B-78 (whatever their material terms
    may end up being), and the State Treasurer
    therefore could not have lawfully rendered an
    advisory opinion on that matter as well.
    The trial court ultimately concluded that "[t]he State Treasurer's
    denial of the request for declaratory rulings was not arbitrary,
    capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise in violation of
    substantive or procedural law."
    I
    Equity Solutions first argues that the trial court erred in
    limiting its decision to whether the State Treasurer properly
    declined to give a declaratory ruling.         Equity Solutions argues
    that the trial court should have reached -- and this Court should
    reach -- the merits of Equity Solutions' request for a declaratory
    ruling and hold that N.C. Gen. Stat. § 116B-78 does not apply to
    its business model.       Equity Solutions contends that the State
    Treasurer issued a "de facto ruling" denying its request on the
    merits since the State Treasurer "made [her] position very clear,
    through [her] Complaint in the State Action and by the actions
    taken by Allen Martin and the Attorney General's Office, that
    Section   116B-78   did    apply    to    Equity   Solutions'   business
    arrangements."
    -12-
    However,    investigative actions by the Attorney General's
    Office, letters from a State Treasurer's Office employee to two
    county clerks of court, and allegations in the enforcement action
    complaint do not individually or collectively constitute a formal
    decision by a State agency that is legally binding on Equity
    Solutions and the State Treasurer, as a formal declaratory ruling
    would be.     See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 150B-4(a) ("A declaratory ruling
    is binding on the agency and the person requesting it unless it is
    altered or set aside by the court.").       Since there has been no
    declaratory ruling that actually binds Equity Solutions and the
    State Treasurer, there was no decision on the merits before the
    trial court or this Court.
    Equity    Solutions   nonetheless   contends   that   because   its
    request sought a decision on a solely legal issue -- whether N.C.
    Gen. Stat. § 116B-78 applies to its business model as described in
    its request to the State Treasurer -- and because this Court
    reviews legal issues de novo, this Court can properly reach the
    merits of the request for a declaratory ruling.      Equity Solutions'
    argument appears to confuse the concept of a trial de novo, in
    which a court conducts a "'new trial on the entire case . . . as
    if there had been no trial in the first instance[,]'" N.C. Dep't
    of Env't & Natural Res. v. Carroll, 
    358 N.C. 649
    , 661 n.3, 
    599 S.E.2d 888
    , 895 n.3 (2004) (quoting Black's Law Dictionary 1512
    -13-
    (7th ed. 1999)), with the concept of a de novo standard of review
    "that applies when the trial court acts, as here, in the capacity
    of an appellate court and reviews an agency decision for errors of
    law and procedure," 
    id.
     (internal citation omitted).              Again,
    because there has been no agency decision on the merits in this
    case, there is no decision to which this Court can apply a de novo
    standard of review.
    We, therefore, offer no opinion on the merits of Equity
    Solutions' request for a declaratory ruling.          That issue was not
    before the trial court and is not before this Court.
    II
    Equity Solutions next argues that the trial court applied an
    improper standard of review when reviewing the petition from the
    State Treasurer's denial of its request for a declaratory ruling.
    We disagree.
    When reviewing the issue whether an agency had good cause to
    decline to issue a declaratory ruling, the reviewing court must
    first determine whether the record supports the reasons given by
    the agency for declining to issue a ruling.              Cf. Charlotte-
    Mecklenburg Hosp. Auth. v. Bruton, 
    145 N.C. App. 190
    , 191-92, 
    550 S.E.2d 524
    , 525-26 (2001) (setting out pertinent facts in record
    supporting   agency's   determination   that   good   cause   existed   to
    decline to issue declaratory ruling).          If the reviewing court
    -14-
    determines there is record support for the reason given by the
    agency, the reviewing court then reviews de novo whether the reason
    given constitutes good cause to decline to issue a ruling.            
    Id. at 193
    , 550 S.E.2d at 526.
    Here, the trial court's order detailed the facts in the record
    supporting the State Treasurer's reasons for declining to issue a
    ruling.   The court then determined that there was "substantial,
    competent evidence to support each of the State Treasurer's reasons
    for denying the requested declaratory rulings."          Thus, the order
    demonstrates that the court properly reviewed the record and found
    there was evidence supporting the State Treasurer's reasons for
    declining to issue a ruling.
    After determining that the record supported the reasons given
    by the State Treasurer, the trial court further concluded, in a
    separately numbered conclusion of law, that the "State Treasurer's
    reasons for denying the request, each standing alone or taken
    together, constitute 'good cause' for the denial."             Given this
    language, we hold that the trial court properly applied a de novo
    standard of review to the issue whether the reasons set forth by
    the trial court constituted good cause to decline to issue a
    ruling.   We note, however, that the better practice is for a trial
    court   reviewing   an   agency   decision   to   expressly   state   which
    -15-
    standard of review it has applied to each distinct issue decided
    in an order.
    Equity Solutions nonetheless points to the language in the
    trial court's order stating that the court "reviewed the whole
    record    to   determine   whether    there   is   substantial,   competent
    evidence to support the denial of the request for declaratory
    rulings" in support of its contention that the court erroneously
    applied the whole record test rather than de novo review. However,
    this language supports our determination that the trial court first
    properly concluded that the record contained evidence supporting
    the State Treasurer's reasons for declining to issue a ruling, and
    it does not demonstrate that the trial court erroneously applied
    whole record review to the legal issue before the trial court:
    whether the reasons given by the State Treasurer constituted good
    cause.    The trial court, therefore, applied the proper standard of
    review.
    III
    Equity Solutions next contends that even if the trial court
    did apply the proper standard of review, the court erred in
    affirming the State Treasurer's determination that good cause
    existed to decline to issue a ruling.          We, like the trial court,
    review this issue de novo.      Id.
    -16-
    The first three reasons given by the State Treasurer in
    declining to issue a ruling were (1) that the subject matter of
    the request was "the subject of active litigation in Wake County
    between Equity Solutions, the State Treasurer, and the Attorney
    General"; (2) that the request failed to disclose the "full factual
    setting"   of   Equity   Solutions'      business   model,     including   "any
    representations made to induce the apparent owner" to sign the
    conveyance and assignment agreements used by Equity Solutions; and
    (3) that the request involved "disputed issues of material fact,"
    including whether the assignment agreements represented "an actual
    agreement between the parties."          The trial court agreed.
    Equity Solutions has conceded on appeal that this declaratory
    ruling action concerns "the same subject matter" as the enforcement
    action   and    that   the    issues   presented    in   its   request   for   a
    declaratory ruling will probably be decided in the course of the
    enforcement action.      In addition, in its request for a declaratory
    ruling, Equity Solutions did not disclose that it entered into
    contingency fee agreements with the owners of surplus funds prior
    to entering into subsequent conveyance and assignment agreements.
    Equity Solutions later filed an affidavit of its vice president in
    superior court that acknowledged its practice of entering into an
    initial "Authority to Represent & Contingency Fee Agreement" with
    the apparent owners.         It was these contingency fee agreements that
    -17-
    the   Attorney   General   and    State       Treasurer   contended,   in     the
    enforcement action, constituted, in whole or in part, the actual
    agreements between the parties.
    This Court has previously held that an agency had good cause
    to decline to issue a ruling where the agency had already issued
    a ruling on the same matter and issuing a second ruling would,
    therefore, constitute a waste of administrative resources.              Id. at
    192-93, 550 S.E.2d at 526-27; Catawba Mem'l Hosp. v. N.C. Dep't of
    Human Res., 
    112 N.C. App. 557
    , 563, 
    436 S.E.2d 390
    , 393 (1993).
    Although the State Treasurer had not, in this case, already decided
    the issue presented in Equity Solutions' request, we believe that
    the principle underlying the holdings in Charlotte-Mecklenburg
    Hospital and Catawba Memorial Hospital is also applicable here.
    It would be a waste of administrative resources for the State
    Treasurer to issue a ruling on a matter that would likely be
    judicially determined during the course of pending litigation
    between   Equity   Solutions     and    the    State   Treasurer.      This    is
    particularly true since the trial court ruling on the issues in
    the enforcement action will have the benefit of a fully developed
    factual   record   following     discovery,       while   Equity    Solutions'
    request to the State Treasurer presented only an alleged factual
    basis for a ruling that did not mention the contingency fee
    agreements that Equity Solutions has since admitted were part of
    -18-
    its business model.     Indeed, the State Treasurer was aware that
    the request submitted by Equity Solutions presented the State
    Treasurer with an inadequate record from which to issue a ruling.
    Equity Solutions, however, asserts that the State Treasurer
    should not be allowed to "manufacture 'good cause' to avoid issuing
    a ruling" by, as here, "filing a complaint on the same subject
    matter after receiving the request for a ruling."             However, the
    record shows that the Attorney General and State Treasurer were
    openly investigating Equity Solutions at least one month prior to
    the time of Equity Solutions' request and that Equity Solutions
    was aware of that investigation.           We do not believe that the
    Attorney   General     or    the   State    Treasurer's     discretion   in
    determining when to file their enforcement action resulting from
    months of investigation should have been curtailed because of the
    timing of Equity Solutions' decision to request a declaratory
    ruling from the State Treasurer.           The State Treasurer was not
    required to allow Equity Solutions to preempt the enforcement
    proceedings by requesting a declaratory ruling.
    With respect to the issue of a factual dispute, Equity
    Solutions contends that the "sole purpose" of N.C. Gen. Stat. §
    150B-4 is for an agency to aid an aggrieved person by applying the
    statute to a "given set of facts."         Equity Solutions asserts that
    "[t]he   agency   is   not   charged   with   a   broader    authority   to
    -19-
    investigate the 'given set of facts' to determine whether other
    legal issues exist or to otherwise assess the legal validity or
    viability of the proposed transaction . . . ."
    However, in Catawba Memorial Hospital, this Court determined
    that the set of facts provided by the petitioner in its belated
    request for a declaratory ruling would not control where the agency
    had already closed the record of a contested case hearing on the
    same matter, and the agency had determined, in the contested case,
    the actual facts to be inconsistent with the set of facts provided
    in the petitioner's request.      See 
    112 N.C. App. at 563
    , 
    436 S.E.2d at 393
     ("Whereas a declaratory ruling by definition involves the
    application of a statute or agency rule to a given state of facts,
    the facts regarding [the petitioner's] proposed surgical services
    were    established   by   the   record   in   the   contested   case.").
    Similarly, here, the State Treasurer was not obligated to ignore
    the existence of the information regarding this same matter that
    had been discovered during the investigation that led to the
    enforcement action when deciding whether good cause existed to
    decline to issue a ruling on Equity Solutions' request.
    Equity Solutions also cites Hope-A Women's Cancer Ctr., P.A.
    v. N.C. Dep't of Health & Human Servs., 
    203 N.C. App. 276
    , 
    691 S.E.2d 421
     (2010), disc. review denied, 
    365 N.C. 87
    , 
    706 S.E.2d 254
     (2011), in support of its argument that its failure to provide
    -20-
    a more factually complete request for a declaratory ruling did not
    constitute good cause for the State Treasurer to decline to issue
    a ruling.    However, the Court in Hope did not address whether
    circumstances existed, in that case, that would have constituted
    good cause to deny issuing a ruling since the agency, in fact,
    issued a ruling on the relevant request.         
    Id. at 279, 282
    , 
    691 S.E.2d at 423, 425
    .      Hope does not, therefore, support Equity
    Solutions' argument.
    We, accordingly, hold that the State Treasurer, and the trial
    court, properly determined that good cause existed to decline to
    issue a ruling on Equity Solutions' request, based on the first
    three grounds asserted by the State Treasurer, as it related to
    the business practices already used by Equity Solutions at the
    time of the request.
    The issue remains whether the State Treasurer had good cause
    to decline to issue a ruling as to the business practice that
    Equity Solutions planned to employ in the future.       With respect to
    the agreements that Equity Solutions' request stated that it
    proposed to use, the State Treasurer declined to issue a ruling
    regarding   the   propriety   of   those   agreements   because   "[t]he
    proposed 'Purchase Agreement[]' offer[ed] only blank spaces for
    its material terms, such as the amount of the finder's fee, and
    the amount of the costs and expenses to be borne by the apparent
    -21-
    owner."     As the State Treasurer noted, the purchase agreement
    Equity Solutions claimed it planned to use in the future had blank
    spaces for material terms, including the percentage of the surplus
    funds which would be paid by Equity Solutions to the apparent owner
    in exchange for the apparent owner's selling Equity Solutions the
    owner's right to the funds -- in other words, Equity Solutions'
    fee.
    In Diggs v. N.C. Dep't of Health & Human Servs., 
    157 N.C. App. 344
    , 345, 
    578 S.E.2d 666
    , 667 (2003), the petitioner was a
    custodial parent of three children and had previously been the
    caretaker   of   her   niece,   and    she   petitioned   an   agency   for   a
    declaratory ruling that the practice of calculating the debt owed
    to the State when an adult caretaker accepts payment of benefits
    under certain government programs was invalid.                  In order to
    demonstrate that she was a "person aggrieved" under N.C. Gen. Stat.
    § 150B-4, the petitioner set out "two hypothetical situations
    involving whether child support paid by the biological father of
    petitioner's children . . . pursuant to a court order for the
    support of their biological children may be taken by the State for
    reimbursement of earlier and separate public assistance grants
    made solely for the use and benefit of petitioner's niece . . . ."
    Diggs, 157 N.C. App. at 347, 578 S.E.2d at 668.
    -22-
    On appeal, this Court held that the petitioner was not
    entitled to a declaratory ruling since she was "not presently
    aggrieved."     Id. at 348, 578 S.E.2d at 668.      The Court reasoned
    that    the   petitioner's   request   presented   merely   hypothetical
    scenarios that were not certain to occur and, therefore, the
    petitioner could not show that her legal rights had, in some way,
    been impaired.     Id., 578 S.E.2d at 668-69.       Because the agency
    had, nonetheless, issued a ruling on the petitioner's request, the
    court further held that "the request was ineffective to trigger
    the issuance of a declaratory ruling, and the declaratory ruling
    has no effect, binding or otherwise, on petitioner . . . ."          Id.
    at 349, 578 S.E.2d at 669.
    Similarly, here, the State Treasurer could properly determine
    that good cause existed to deny Equity Solutions' request for a
    declaratory ruling as to the potential future agreements since,
    given the missing material terms of the contracts, any ruling on
    whether the contracts were in compliance with N.C. Gen. Stat. §
    116B-78 would be purely hypothetical.      Notably, the allegations in
    the enforcement action that the agreements actually used by Equity
    Solutions in the past violated N.C. Gen. Stat. § 116B-78 are
    focused, in part, on allegations that the fees charged by Equity
    Solutions exceeded the statutory limit for property finder's fees.
    -23-
    Yet, the proposed purchase agreements did not specify the amount
    of the finder's fee.
    In the absence of a proposed agreement setting out all terms
    material to the request for a declaratory ruling,      the State
    Treasurer did not have authority to issue a ruling because, as in
    Diggs, she was presented only with a hypothetical scenario, and
    Equity Solutions could not show that any of its legal rights were
    legally impaired.   We, therefore, hold that the State Treasurer
    had good cause to decline to issue a ruling as to the future
    purchase agreements based upon the fourth ground provided by the
    State Treasurer.
    In sum, the trial court applied the proper standard of review
    and did not err in affirming the State Treasurer's decision to
    decline to issue a ruling on Equity Solutions' request based upon
    all four grounds provided by the State Treasurer.   Consequently,
    we affirm the trial court's order.
    Affirmed.
    Chief Judge MARTIN and Judge STROUD concur.