Sean McKenna v. William R. Guglietta, in his capacity as magistrate of the Rhode Island Traffic Tribunal , 185 A.3d 1248 ( 2018 )


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  • June 14, 2018
    Supreme Court
    No. 2017-112-Appeal.
    (PC 13-1716)
    Sean McKenna et al.               :
    v.                      :
    William R. Guglietta, in his capacity as   :
    magistrate of the Rhode Island Traffic
    Tribunal, et al.
    NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before
    publication in the Rhode Island Reporter. Readers are requested to
    notify the Opinion Analyst, Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 250
    Benefit Street, Providence, Rhode Island 02903, at Telephone 222-
    3258 of any typographical or other formal errors in order that
    corrections may be made before the opinion is published.
    Supreme Court
    No. 2017-112-Appeal.
    (PC 13-1716)
    Sean McKenna et al.                :
    v.                       :
    William R. Guglietta, in his capacity as    :
    magistrate of the Rhode Island Traffic
    Tribunal, et al.
    Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and Indeglia, JJ.
    OPINION
    Justice Robinson, for the Court. The plaintiffs appeal from a May 16, 2014 order of the
    Superior Court dismissing their second amended complaint with prejudice and a judgment of the
    same date in favor of defendants.1 This case came before the Supreme Court for oral argument
    pursuant to an order directing the parties to appear and show cause why the issues raised in this
    appeal should not be summarily decided. After reviewing the record and considering the written
    and oral submissions of the parties, we are satisfied that cause has not been shown and that this
    appeal may be decided at this time.
    For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.
    1
    The plaintiffs in the instant case, as delineated in the Second Amended Complaint, are:
    Sean McKenna, Christopher McKenna, Michele Ormerod, Maureen Brumbaugh, Steven Murray,
    Francisco Espinal, Phyliss Stafford, April Caplinger, Amanda Couture, Faith Torres, John Paiva,
    Joseph Payette, Kara Berker, Tasha Pabon, James Eche, Nicholas Moran, Eugenio Simas, Joseph
    McKenna, Brittney Manzi, Charles Picerno a/k/a Charles Barrowdough III, Robert Rigdon, Tod
    McKinley, Ward McKenna, Charlotte Nehme, and Lynn Iovino.
    The defendants, as delineated in the Second Amended Complaint, are: William R.
    Guglietta, Alan Goulart, R. David Cruise, Domenic A. DiSandro III, William T. Noonan, Joseph
    Abate, Lillian M. Almeida, and Edward C. Parker (all in their capacities as either judicially or
    legislatively appointed magistrates of the Rhode Island Traffic Tribunal), as well as Gina
    Raimondo, in her former official capacity as the Treasurer of the State of Rhode Island.
    -1-
    I
    Facts and Travel
    On January 10, 2014, plaintiffs filed a second amended complaint2 in Superior Court
    challenging the constitutionality of the statutory system for appointing magistrates to the Rhode
    Island Traffic Tribunal (Traffic Tribunal) and claiming that plaintiffs were due a refund of fines
    and costs that had previously been assessed by the Traffic Tribunal on the theory that, as a result
    of defendants’ unconstitutional conduct, defendants had been unjustly enriched by levying those
    fines. In that complaint, plaintiffs alleged that they were residents of Rhode Island who had “had
    controversies which [had] been adjudicated before the R.I. Traffic Tribunal since 1999, [and had]
    been forced to pay fines and costs imposed by the putative Defendants and their predecessors.”
    The complaint also alleged that defendants “lack[ed] judicial power to levy fines” because their
    appointments to the Traffic Tribunal “ha[d] not been approved by the R.I. Judicial Nominating
    Commission and a Governor * * *.” The plaintiffs averred that “[t]he unconstitutional actions of
    Defendants levying fines have unjustly enriched the R.I. Treasury” and that “[t]he State Treasurer
    holds those illegal fines in trust to be repaid to the Plaintiffs * * *.”
    On February 28, 2014, defendants moved to dismiss plaintiffs’ second amended complaint
    with prejudice pursuant to Rules 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6) of the Superior Court Rules of Civil
    Procedure, arguing that that complaint was “substantively identical” to the two previous
    complaints, both of which, defendants argued, had been dismissed without prejudice for failure to
    “articulate a case in controversy.” At the May 13, 2014 hearing on defendants’ motion to dismiss,
    defendants contended that “[t]he State defendants still do not have basic information from the
    2
    The plaintiffs’ original complaint (filed on April 11, 2013) was dismissed without
    prejudice on June 25, 2013. The plaintiffs’ first amended complaint (filed on August 30, 2013)
    was passed without prejudice in an order that was entered on December 16, 2013.
    -2-
    complaint which would allow them to frame any type of responsive pleading”—such as “what is
    the harm and when did the plaintiff[s] suffer from it.”
    At the conclusion of the hearing, the hearing justice issued a bench decision, in which he
    first assessed the sufficiency of the allegations contained in the second amended complaint
    pertaining to plaintiffs’ challenge to the constitutionality of the system for appointing magistrates
    to the Traffic Tribunal. The hearing justice, referring to the earlier proceedings before the Traffic
    Tribunal, observed that “[t]he Supreme Court has said in the past that a party wishing to challenge
    the authority of a magistrate should do so at the outset of his or her case and continue to press the
    issue throughout.” (Emphasis added.) The hearing justice noted that the second amended
    complaint failed to allege “whether [plaintiffs] are presently subject to the jurisdiction of the
    Traffic Tribunal or whether they have matters pending before the Traffic Tribunal or whether
    [plaintiffs] raised constitutional issues while before the Traffic Tribunal.” He further stated that the
    second amended complaint “specifically [did] not indicate * * * the travel of the cases where the
    alleged illegal or unconstitutionally-imposed fines applie[d] to each of these 24 plaintiffs.”
    The hearing justice next addressed the allegations in the second amended complaint
    pertaining to plaintiffs’ unjust enrichment claim. He concluded that said complaint did not plead
    sufficient facts to support a claim for unjust enrichment in view of his determination that:
    “The second amended complaint does not plead sufficient facts to
    recover previously-paid traffic fines or fines imposed by members of
    the Traffic Tribunal. Specificity is woefully lacking * * * as to
    whether facts have been pled here by any of the 24 plaintiffs that
    would, under any set of circumstances that could be proved, make
    this complaint -- the second amended complaint sufficient in terms
    of pleading unjust enrichment.”
    -3-
    Accordingly, an order entered on May 16, 2014, granting defendants’ motion to dismiss
    plaintiffs’ second amended complaint with prejudice.3 A judgment entered in favor of all
    defendants on that same date. The plaintiffs timely appealed.
    II
    Standard of Review
    “When we review the grant of a motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), we apply the
    same standard as the hearing justice.” Tri-Town Construction Co., Inc. v. Commerce Park
    Associates 12, LLC, 
    139 A.3d 467
    , 478 (R.I. 2016). “In reviewing a hearing justice’s decision with
    respect to a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, this Court examines the allegations contained in the
    plaintiff’s complaint, assumes them to be true, and views them in the light most favorable to the
    plaintiff.” Palazzo v. Alves, 
    944 A.2d 144
    , 149 (R.I. 2008). Dismissal is appropriate “when it is
    clear beyond a reasonable doubt that the plaintiff would not be entitled to relief from the defendant
    under any set of facts that could be proven in support of the plaintiff’s claim.” 
    Id. at 149-50
    .
    III
    Analysis
    We note initially that, during oral argument before this Court, counsel for plaintiffs, with
    laudable candor, conceded that he had not been able to obtain or locate any records, either directly
    from plaintiffs or through his own research, showing that any of the plaintiffs had, in fact, had any
    violations adjudicated before the Traffic Tribunal. In addition, counsel acknowledged that only
    three plaintiffs remained actively involved in the case because, in preparing for his appellate
    argument, he had been unable to make contact with the other twenty-two plaintiffs named in the
    second amended complaint.
    3
    We infer from the record that said dismissal was premised on Rule 12(b)(6) of the Superior
    Court Rules of Civil Procedure.
    -4-
    With respect to plaintiffs’ constitutional claim, this Court has previously stated that a
    challenge to the constitutional authority of a magistrate is subject to our stringent raise-or-waive
    rule such that claimants must raise their arguments challenging the authority of the magistrate to
    act in the original proceeding before that magistrate. See Gordon v. State, 
    18 A.3d 467
    , 474 (R.I.
    2011) (“We need not * * * address this constitutional challenge to the magistrate’s authority
    because it is clear to us that applicant has failed to preserve the issue for appellate review.”); Yates
    v. Wall, 
    973 A.2d 621
    , 623 (R.I. 2009) (mem.) (concluding that an applicant for postconviction
    relief had lost the opportunity to challenge “the constitutionality of a magistrate’s statutory
    authorization” by “failing to raise [that issue] at the trial level”); State v. Bouffard, 
    945 A.2d 305
    ,
    311 (R.I. 2008) (“It is undisputed that the magistrate was statutorily authorized to preside over the
    * * * hearing. What defendant has belatedly sought to challenge is the constitutionality of that
    statutory authorization. However, pursuant to our raise-or-waive rule, defendant has lost the
    opportunity to pursue that challenge in this Court since he did not bring it to the attention of the
    court below.”) (footnotes omitted).
    As the hearing justice correctly noted, the second amended complaint does not allege any
    facts specifying that plaintiffs brought their constitutional challenges to the attention of the
    presiding Traffic Tribunal magistrates during their proceedings in that tribunal. As such, we are of
    the opinion that plaintiffs’ second amended complaint fails to state a viable claim for relief as to
    that issue. See Gordon, 
    18 A.3d at 474
    ; Yates, 
    973 A.2d at 623
    .
    With respect to plaintiffs’ claim for unjust enrichment, we are of the opinion that the
    second amended complaint fails to allege the facts necessary to support that claim. Other than
    supplying plaintiffs’ names and the allegation that they paid fines to the Traffic Tribunal, the
    complaint is devoid of the facts that would be necessary to establish a claim for unjust enrichment.
    Moreover, counsel for plaintiffs conceded that he had not been able to obtain necessary
    -5-
    information, either directly from plaintiffs or through his own research, relative to plaintiffs’
    adjudications before the Traffic Tribunal, including whether plaintiffs had paid fines to the Traffic
    Tribunal and, if so, in what amounts. This concession demonstrates that plaintiffs have been
    unable to allege facts sufficient to support the first element of their claim for unjust enrichment—
    i.e., proof that plaintiffs “conferred a benefit upon the party from whom relief is sought * * *.”
    Dellagrotta v. Dellagrotta, 
    873 A.2d 101
    , 113 (R.I. 2005); see also Bouchard v. Price, 
    694 A.2d 670
    , 673 (R.I. 1997) (“[I]n order to recover * * * for unjust enrichment, a plaintiff is required to
    prove three elements: (1) a benefit must be conferred upon the defendant by the plaintiff, (2) there
    must be appreciation by the defendant of such benefit, and (3) there must be an acceptance of such
    benefit in such circumstances that it would be inequitable for a defendant to retain the benefit
    without paying the value thereof.”) (internal quotation marks omitted). As such, in our view, it is
    “clear beyond a reasonable doubt” that plaintiffs “would not be entitled to relief from the
    defendant[s]” with respect to their claim for unjust enrichment, in light of the admission that there
    are not sufficient facts to support that claim. Palazzo, 
    944 A.2d at 149-50
    .
    Accordingly, we perceive no error in the hearing justice’s dismissal of the plaintiffs’
    second amended complaint with prejudice.
    IV
    Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the order and judgment of the Superior Court. The
    record may be returned to that tribunal.
    -6-
    STATE OF RHODE ISLAND AND                                 PROVIDENCE PLANTATIONS
    SUPREME COURT – CLERK’S OFFICE
    OPINION COVER SHEET
    Sean McKenna et al. v. William R. Guglietta, in his
    Title of Case                        capacity as magistrate of the Rhode Island Traffic
    Tribunal, et al.
    No. 2017-112-Appeal.
    Case Number
    (PC 13-1716)
    Date Opinion Filed                   June 14, 2018
    Suttell, C.J. Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and
    Justices
    Indeglia, JJ.
    Written By                           Associate Justice William P. Robinson III
    Source of Appeal                     Providence County Superior Court
    Judicial Officer From Lower Court    Associate Justice Joseph A. Montalbano
    For Plaintiffs:
    William P. Tocco, III, Esq.
    For Defendants:
    Sean Lyness, Esq.
    Attorney(s) on Appeal
    Michael W. Field
    Assistant Attorney General
    Ariele Yaffee
    Special Assistant Attorney General
    SU-CMS-02A (revised June 2016)