Iowa Dot Auto Titles
Iowa Dot Auto Titles
Iowa Dot Auto Titles
No. 17-0976
Filed July 18, 2018
vs.
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Paul D. Scott, Judge.
automobiles, appeals from the district court ruling affirming the agency’s decision
to revoke both licenses for one year. AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART,
AND REMANDED.
POTTERFIELD, Judge.
Extreme Auto Plaza, Inc. (Extreme)1 appeals from the district court ruling
affirming the decision of the Iowa Department of Transportation (DOT) revoking its
motor vehicle dealership’s licenses to sell and recycle automobiles for one year.
the DOT determined Extreme had overcharged the buyer for registration fees on
nine of the sales. Based on this finding, the DOT applied for and received a search
warrant and then seized Extreme’s files for sales made between January 2013 and
May 2014. After reviewing the files, the DOT found 122 buyers had been
$11,000. In some cases, buyers had also been undercharged, with those amounts
vehicles for which Extreme had applied for and received a “clear,” non-salvage title
by checking the box on the front of the title application form for a “regular title.”
Additionally, when Extreme later signed those vehicles over to its purchasers,
with the following statement: “I have knowledge the motor vehicle is now or was
1
Extreme is owned and operated by Paul Moyer. We ascribe any actions taken by Moyer
or his employees to Extreme.
3
previously titled as salvage, rebuilt or flood in this state or any other state.”
However, on sales contracts for the same vehicles, Extreme included handwritten
notes stating the new buyer understood the vehicle had been a total loss to
someone else and having the purchaser sign next to the statement.
December 2014 notifying it that its motor vehicle dealer and recycler licenses were
being revoked for one year, starting December 31, 2014. According to the letter,
Additionally, the DOT demanded Extreme “immediately remove from its sales
inventory all vehicles that have a salvage history or current or previous damage
greater than 50 percent of their value, for which the dealer possesses clear Iowa
certificates of title” and threatened Extreme with an injunction if it did not comply.
vehicles “that fail to conform with the notice” from the DOT, which Extreme was “in
law judge.
First Hearing:
4
The administrative hearing took place in July 2015 with testimony and
challenging both the DOT’s finding of violations and the DOT’s chosen punishment
of revocation, as the DOT had other, less severe options such as suspension.
However, Extreme conceded that people had been overcharged registration fees.
Extreme refunded the customers the amount they were overcharged and provided
In August, the administrative law judge (ALJ) who heard the case issued a
proposed decision, which affirmed the DOT’s findings of violations and sustained
In October 2015, the reviewing officer of the DOT affirmed the proposed
decision. In reaching the decision, the reviewing officer noted that while Extreme
the claim. Additionally, the reviewer noted a “greater concern” in “the evidence
supplied by the [DOT] regarding clean titles issued by the appellant on salvaged
titles—a clear violation of section 321H.6.” The reviewer concluded that Extreme
fraud and deception,” and the one-year revocation “is a measured response to
the voluminous violations committed by” Extreme, the reviewer agreed the one-
Extreme then filed a petition for judicial review and a request for an order
staying the revocations of its licenses pending the outcome of the appeal. The
Before the court ruled on Extreme’s petition for judicial review, in February
2016, Extreme filed an application with the district court asking the court to
remand the matter to the ALJ to hear additional evidence that had not been
served with six criminal complaints at the same time the civil, agency case was
proceeding. The DOT resisted the application. The district court granted the
application, ruling:
The facts and circumstances of this case are somewhat unusual with
the civil administrative matter proceeding at the same time as the
criminal matter regarding the same underlying factual situation.
While the court does not necessarily agree with [Extreme’s]
characterization of the intent and/or motive of the [DOT] in these
7
ALJ on May 4, 2016—at which time Extreme’s license had been revoked for
approximately half of its one-year revocation. Counsel for Extreme opened the
hearing with an argument that explained about how the words “salvage” or
“wrecked” have a specific legal meaning within the context of titling vehicles. He
argued that words or descriptions had been used too freely during the initial
hearing to describe vehicles that may not have met the legal definitions. Pursuant
damaged motor vehicle that “(1) had repair costs exceeding 50 percent of its fair
market value before it had become damaged, and (2) had a fair market value of
$500 or more before it became damaged.” The “fair market value” is “the average
retail value found in the National Automobile Dealers Association (NADA) Official
Used Car Guide.” Counsel for Extreme also asserted a number of errors in the
initial ruling by the ALJ, including the finding that Extreme “failed to properly
disclose vehicle prior history on multiple title applications when the damage
information was readily available.” As the executive officer of the DOT, Tim Allen,
2
NADA refers to the National Automobile Dealers Association Official Used Car Guide.
8
conceded, there is not a place on the title application to indicate whether the
vehicle has suffered any prior damage, vehicle history, or values. Rather, the
person applying for the title simply marks either the “regular title” box or the
“salvage title” box. It is on the back of the title, once the vehicle is being signed
over to the new buyer, that the seller—here, Extreme—must mark whether the
vehicle has ever been titled as a salvage vehicle or has sustained “damage for
which the cost of repair exceeded 50% of the fair market value before it became
damaged.” The only option provided by the DOT form is to mark “yes” or “no.”
Similarly, the initial ruling stated Extreme had “admitted that nearly [it’s]
entire inventory is obtained via online insurance auctions which move salvaged
its inventory through online auctions, which were often stocked with vehicles from
insurance companies and most of those vehicles had some damage. Extreme did
not admit it purchased vehicles at the online auctions that had damages greater
than 50% of the NADA value of the vehicle before the damage occurred or that
During its testimony at the second hearing, Extreme claimed it had not
improperly applied for a regular title on a single salvage vehicle. In that testimony,
Extreme contradicted its previous affidavit listing fourteen vehicles that it retitled
that if it did “not immediately remove from its sales inventory all vehicles that have
a salvage history or previous damage greater than 50 percent of their value, for
which the dealer possesses clear Iowa certificates of title, an injunction [would] be
filed.” Extreme testified that it knew at the time those vehicles were retitled to
9
salvage titles that their damage did not meet the 50% threshold but that it retitled
them anyway because of the “threatening letter.” Extreme reasoned, “So I thought
if I go down and salvage these, I can continue in business. If I don’t, they’re just
thirty-six vehicles the DOT had identified at the first hearing as improperly titled,
vehicle, its “clean retail” NADA value, the costs Extreme had incurred in repairing
the vehicle, and the resulting percentage of the NADA value represented by the
percentage on any vehicle was 40%. Extreme’s records of the repair costs were
handwritten on note cards. Extreme testified that the cards were kept as a normal
part of business and were in the file on each of the cars when the DOT seized its
records—suggesting the cards were created before there was any reason to be
anything but accurate. Additionally, Extreme testified that it used the records in
order to determine its net profits on each vehicle, asserting there would be no
amount of profit—an amount Extreme had to pay taxes on—would be skewed high.
Extreme testified that it advised buyers when a vehicle had been a total loss to
someone else in order to ensure that the buyer was aware that a vehicle history
may show that an insurance company had deemed that vehicle a “total loss.”
While the DOT argued it was common sense that the insurance company would
not declare a vehicle a “total loss” if the damages did not exceed the value of the
vehicle a total loss (because the insurance customer would be compensated for
the vehicle), and then later sell the non-damaged vehicle when it was located.
Moreover, the term “total loss” is not a term used in the titling of vehicles in Iowa.
The DOT claimed that the statute provided two situations in which it was
necessary to title a vehicle with a salvage title. The first was the situation both
NADA value of the vehicle before the damage. The second situation first
introduced at the second hearing by Allen during his testimony involved vehicles
bought by a recycler or dealer from outside of Iowa that was titled in an insurance
company’s name. The DOT conceded that the language of the statute speaks
of the vehicle arising out of damage to, or unrecovered theft of, the vehicle shall
be deemed to be a wrecked or salvage vehicle and the insurer shall comply with
its vehicles had sustained. While the administrative rule requires the use of the
“average retail value found in the” NADA, the NADA does not provide any “average
retail” category. Instead, a “low,” “average,” and “high” value is given under the
category “auction”; a “rough,” “average,” and “clean” value is given under “trade-
in”; and then there is a “clean loan” and a “clean retail” value. The “clean retail”
value—the value which Extreme used in all of its calculations—is the category with
the greatest values. The DOT agreed that the administrative rule did not provide
any guidance as to which category of the NADA was to be relied upon, but it
contested whether Extreme’s use of the “clean retail” value for each of the vehicles
was the appropriate value. Additionally, the DOT contested Extreme’s use of its
actual repair costs, as the DOT maintained Extreme was getting parts at wholesale
value and was receiving discounts on the repair work that was completed.
Extreme testified it “get[s] a little bit of a break on the parts” but maintained it was
12
paying full price at the repair shops for the work being completed. The DOT’s
evidence that Extreme was not paying the same repair costs as the average
companies to determine that vehicle was a total loss. Most, if not all, of these
estimates from insurance companies were based on repair costs in another market
and state, such as Dallas, Texas. The administrative rule is silent as to how repair
costs should be determined. Still, the DOT maintained comparing a “clean retail”
NADA value to Extreme’s minimal “wholesale” repair costs did not provide an
accurate result when determining if the damage to the vehicle met the 50%
threshold. Rather, the DOT maintained that the retail estimate of repair costs was
In the second proposed ruling, filed in July 2016, the ALJ noted:
When the ALJ compared Extreme’s reported repair costs with those insurance
company’s estimated repair costs, it found the difference “striking” and “so vast
vehicle files in Exhibit A[3] that Extreme routinely applied for and
secured an Iowa certificate of title in far less than 30 days. Mr. Moyer
acknowledged at hearing that the cars were often not repaired prior
to obtaining an Iowa title, and he relied on his own estimate for the
repair costs. This is consistent with the statute which allows the
owner to apply for a regular certificate of title after the vehicle has
been repaired and passes a salvage theft examination. See Iowa
Code § 321.52(4)(b). Mr. Moyer also relied on his own estimate for
fair market value. He testified he does not need to look up the NADA
value, or use any other source regarding repair costs for making the
determination to apply for a regular or salvage title. His own
estimates for these figures are based on his personal guess from
looking at the cars.
This calculation is important. If the repair costs exceed 50%
of the fair market value of the vehicle prior to damage, Extreme must
apply for a salvage title pursuant to Iowa Code section 321.52(4)(a),
(d). The figures that Extreme now argues must be used lead to a
less than 50% damage result for all thirty-six vehicles in Exhibit A.
This includes at least two vehicles that entered Iowa with a salvage
title from another state. Mr. Moyer testified at hearing that all of the
vehicles in Exhibit A came to Iowa with a regular title. This is not
accurate according to the documentation in evidence. Exhibit A, p.
829 contains a copy of a salvage title from the state of Missouri for a
2013 Volkswagen Jetta, and the final settlement statement showing
Extreme purchased the vehicle via Copart Auto Auction on April 11,
2014. Extreme contends that this vehicle was not salvage, and its
repair costs were only 19% of its prior damage value. These results
do not make sense. Mr. Moyer’s testimony is not consistent with
other evidence in the record. He has not submitted any
documentation verifying the accuracy of his reported repair costs. As
the owner of Extreme, he clearly has an interest in maintaining
licensure. His repair costs are dramatically less than other available
estimates, and lead to a “non-salvage” result in every instance. As
a result, Mr. Moyer’s testimony, and his reported repair costs at
Exhibit 40, lack credibility.
The DOT’s position that Mr. Moyer’s reported repair costs
grossly understate what a retail cost of repairs would be is clearly
bolstered by the comparison of Moyer’s costs to the insurance
company repair estimates. This type of retail repair cost estimate is
relied upon in section 321.52(4)(b) for the determination of damages
following theft. It is not unreasonable to give them weight in this
context as well. The applicable statute and rule require the use of
an average retail value when determining fair market value, it follows
3
Exhibit A is the DOT’s 941-page exhibit from the first hearing, which includes identifying
and supportive information that Extreme improperly titled thirty-six vehicles with a regular
title instead of a salvage one.
14
that a retail repair cost should also be used. Mr. Moyer’s reported
repair costs appear to be of a wholesale nature, rather than retail.
He acknowledged at hearing that he is given a break on the cost of
parts from auto shops. It is unclear from the index card notations if
labor costs have been included. Additionally, it is unclear whether
Moyer’s repairs actually returned the vehicles to their condition prior
to damage. Moyer testified at hearing, for example, that he has
declined to repair hail damage if he considers it to be light.
An Iowa title application requires an applicant to indicate if
they are seeking a regular or salvage certificate of title. By failing to
apply for a salvage certificate of title when repair costs exceed 50%
of the fair market value of the vehicle prior to damage, Extreme
obtained a regular Iowa certificate of title that did not properly
disclose prior damage. The back side of the certificate of title asks if
the vehicle was previously titled as salvage. If the answer is no, it
then asks if the owner has knowledge of the vehicle sustaining
damage for which the cost of repair exceeded 50% of the fair market
value before it became damaged. The same questions are asked
again on the Iowa damage disclosure statement which is filled out
when the vehicle is sold. Extreme applied for a regular certificate of
title for all of the vehicles in Exhibit A, and did not disclose prior
damage for which the cost of repair exceeded 50% of the fair market
value before it became damaged on any of the certificates or damage
disclosure statements.
In December 2014, Extreme identified fourteen vehicles on its
sales lot with titles that failed to comply with Iowa law. Mr. Moyer
submitted an affidavit attesting to this and reporting he would have
all of the vehicles properly titled as salvaged vehicles. The affidavit
and list of vehicles were submitted at the July 2015 hearing, as
evidence of Mr. Moyer’s willingness to cooperate with the DOT and
fix violations. Mr. Moyer subsequently testified at the May 4, 2016
hearing that his sworn affidavit was actually false, and all fourteen of
the listed vehicles were not salvage. He contends he changed the
titles on these vehicles and submitted the affidavit solely to avoid the
DOT seeking an injunction. Mr. Moyer’s explanation makes little
sense. He was represented by counsel at the time the affidavit was
submitted and was in the process of appealing the DOT license
revocation. The notion that he falsely identified fourteen examples
of his failure to comply with Iowa law to avoid further legal challenges
from the DOT is not believable and I give it no weight.
The ALJ determined Extreme had improperly applied for regular titles when
it should have applied for salvage titles. In making this determination, the ALJ
15
relied upon the retail costs of repairs and either the “clean retail” or “clean trade-
Next, the ALJ acknowledged section 321.52(4)(a) on its face only places an
that the statute also placed an obligation on licensed dealers and recyclers to
obtain a salvage certificate of title when they purchase a vehicle with a foreign title
Transportation, 565 N.W.2d 348, 350 (Iowa 1997), in which the court discussed
that the legislative intent of section 321.52 was to “ensure that consumers were
informed about any significant damage and/or prior salvage designations which a
Finally, the ALJ noted that Extreme had admitted it overcharged customers
registration fees. While Extreme claimed it had paid customers back the overage
in the instances the customers noticed and requested it even before the execution
of the search warrant, Extreme had no receipts to support this assertion. It was
undisputed that after the search warrant was executed, Extreme paid each of the
122 customers back with a check and provided the receipts to the DOT. Based on
Extreme appealed the ALJ’s proposed ruling, and the DOT’s reviewing
officer affirmed, finding Extreme had failed to meet its burden to prove that no
stated:
The district court affirmed the agency ruling, finding substantial evidence
supported the DOT’s findings; that the agency’s determinations that the “clean
retail” category of the NADA was not the proper category to use pursuant to the
“average retail value” language from rule 761-405.6 and that it was more
appropriate to utilize the insurance company’s estimated repair cost rather than
17
Extreme’s claimed costs. The district court ruled these findings were neither
arbitrary and capricious manner; and that the agency acted within its discretion
However, although the issue was raised, the district court did not rule on whether
recyclers and requires them to title any vehicle obtained from an out-of-state
Extreme appeals.
II. Discussion.
On appeal, Extreme asks us to conclude that that it did not make any
fraudulent title applications. In doing so, Extreme challenges both the DOT’s
salvage titles for any vehicles bought from out-of-state insurance companies and
the DOT’s determination that at least some of the vehicles originally identified by
the DOT had more than 50% damage. If Extreme is meritorious in these claims, it
asks that we remand back to the DOT to impose a less-severe penalty on the
Standard of Review:
district court functions in an appellate capacity to correct errors of law on the part
of the agency.” Willett v. Iowa Dep’t of Tranps., 572 N.W.2d 172, 173–74 (Iowa
Ct. App. 1997). “We review such action by the district court applying the same
conclusions are the same as the district court.” Id. at 174. Insofar as the DOT’s
findings of facts are at issue, we are bound by the findings if they are supported
by substantial evidence in the record, when the record is viewed as a whole. Cobb
v. Emp’t Appeal Bd., 506 N.W.2d 445, 447 (Iowa 1993). “The possibility of drawing
two inconsistent conclusions from the evidence does not prevent an agency’s
Transp., 389 N.W.2d 390, 392 (Iowa 1986). Additionally, it is Extreme that bore
the burden to show compliance with all lawful requirements for the retention of its
licenses. See Mary v. Iowa Dep’t of Transp., 382 N.W.2d 128, 132 (Iowa 1986);
annulment, or withdrawal” “of any license” until after “the licensee was given an
provisions of this chapter for contested cases, compliance with all lawful
certificate of title when they purchase a vehicle with a foreign title held by an out-
4
While Extreme raised this issue before the district court, the district court did not rule on
it. Additionally, although it was included in—and in fact, constituted the main portion of—
Extreme’s appellate brief, the DOT has not responded to Extreme’s argument on appeal.
However, we decide the issue as it was properly raised before and decided upon by the
agency. See Staff Mgmt. v. Jimenez, 839 N.W.2d 640, 647 (Iowa 2013) (stating error-
preservation rules are different for administrative law cases; the court has “held a party
preserves error on an issue before an agency if a party raises the issue in the agency
proceeding before the agency issues a final decision and both sides have had an
opportunity to address the issue”); Chauffeurs, Teamsters, & Helpers, Local Union No.
19
statute is a pure question of law over which agencies are not delegated any special
powers by the General Assembly, so, a court is free to, and usually does, substitute
its judgment de novo for that of the agency.” Renda v. Iowa Civil Rights Comm’n,
784 N.W.2d 8, 11 (Iowa 2010) (citation omitted). Here, the enabling statute does
not expressly vest in the agency the right to interpret laws. See Iowa Code
§ 307.12 (listing the duties of the director of the department of transportation); cf.
Renda, 784 N.W.2d at 11 (noting that the enabling statute for the Iowa Department
of Education does explicitly grant the department the power to interpret school laws
and rules relating to school laws). Additionally, while the DOT has been given
rulemaking authority, see Iowa Code § 307.12(1)(n), “we have not concluded that
a grant of mere rulemaking authority gives an agency the authority to interpret all
statutory language.” Renda, 784 N.W.2d at 13. Moreover, the issue here—
legal meaning and [is] widely used in areas of law other than the” department of
transportation arena. Id. at 14. Thus, we are not convinced the legislature
intended to vest the DOT with the authority to interpret the term insurer, and we
of statutory construction. Id. at 15. “It is of course true that where the language
238 v. Iowa Civ. Rts. Comm’n, 394 N.W.2d 375, 382 (Iowa 1986) (finding error must be
preserved at the agency level, not on judicial review in the district court); Brewbaker v.
State Bd. of Regents, 843 N.W.2d 466, 471 (Iowa Ct. App. 2013) (“To preserve an issue
on appeal, the party must first argue the issue before the agency.”).
20
Rhoades v. State, 880 N.W.2d 431, 446 (Iowa 2016). “A statute is ambiguous if
reasonable minds differ or are uncertain as to the meaning of the statute.” Id.
Neither here nor before the ALJ did the DOT claim that the term “insurer” as used
recyclers, and dealers. Rather, the DOT focused on the legislative intent of the
statute, arguing that because the legislature meant for the statute to ensure that
customers were informed about any prior damage, the statute must be applied
more broadly than written. See Mulder, 565 N.W.2d at 350. But we do not
consider the purpose of a statute when the language is unambiguous. See McGill
v. Fish, 790 N.W.2d 113, 118 (Iowa 2010) (“We do not search for legislative intent
beyond the express language of a statute when that language is plain and the
meaning is clear. . . . We only apply the rules of statutory construction when the
Extreme, as a dealer and a recycler, to title any vehicle obtained from an out-of-
state insurance company as salvage. Thus, we limit the scope of our review to the
question whether Extreme improperly applied for regular titles when the vehicle
had sustained damage for which the cost of the repair exceeds 50% of the fair
After the second hearing, when the ALJ was provided the NADA information
for each of the vehicles the DOT claimed were improperly titled, the ALJ identified
five vehicles on which Extreme had improperly applied for a regular title. Extreme
maintains this determination was in error, as the ALJ relied on the insurance
21
company’s estimate of repair costs, which was higher than Extreme’s actual costs.
But the ALJ found that Extreme’s claimed repair costs lacked credibility. In doing
so, the ALJ noted that Extreme failed to bring a single receipt to establish that the
costs listed on the handwritten note cards were correct. Additionally, because
Extreme’s numbers were so much lower than those estimated by the insurance
companies, the ALJ doubted their veracity. The insurance companies had found
the vehicles to be a total loss, while Extreme claimed that four of the vehicles
sustained damage 15% or less of the NADA value, with the outlier fifth vehicle
having sustained 22% damage. Extreme contends the ALJ could not rely on the
estimates of a third party to determine whether the vehicle needed to be titled with
a salvage title. First, we note that both the appropriate code section and the
appropriate as Extreme had a motive for being dishonest about its repair costs.
Moreover, as the ALJ noted, because Extreme titled the vehicles under a regular
title immediately, the vehicles were never inspected to determine that the repairs
Extreme made to the vehicles actually fixed the damage the vehicle had sustained.
While the DOT did not have a witness who could testify as to what the actual costs
of repair would have been for the vehicles in question, Extreme bore the burden of
establishing that the vehicles had been properly registered, see Mary, 382 N.W.2d
at 132, and the ALJ determined Extreme’s evidence of such lacked credibility. The
DOT’s reviewing officer affirmed the ALJ’s ruling, adding its own statements about
witnesses and the evidence. See Christiansen v. Iowa Bd. of Educ. Exam’r, 831
N.W.2d 179, 192 (Iowa 2013) (“The law is well-settled. It is in the agency’s duty
‘as the trier of fact to determine the credibility of the witnesses, weigh the evidence,
and decide the facts in issue.’” (citation omitted)). Because substantial evidence
supports the DOT’s determination that Extreme improperly titled five vehicles with
punishment5 and believe the DOT should be given the opportunity to review
section 321.52(4)(a) does not require recyclers and dealers to title all vehicles
5
Iowa Code section 322.9 concerns motor vehicle dealers and allows the department to
“revoke or suspend the license of a retail motor dealer if, after notice and hearing by the
department of inspections and appeals, it finds the licensee has been guilty of an act which
would be a ground for the denial of a license under section 322.6.” Similarly, Iowa
Administrative Code 761-425.62(1) concerns motor vehicle dealers and provides, “The
department may deny an application or suspend or revoke a certificate or license if the
applicant, certificate holder, or licensee fails to comply with the applicable provisions of
this chapter.”
Iowa Code section 321H.6 allows the DOT to deny, revoke, or suspend the license
of a vehicle recycler to deny the application for the recycler license if the department finds
the “licensee has violated any provision of the chapter” or “made any material
misrepresentations to the department in connect with an application for a license, junking
certificate, salvage certificate, certificate of title, or registration of a vehicle”—among other
things.
6
We note that Extreme has already served its one-year revocation. Still, Extreme has
asked us to remand for review by the DOT, as the DOT may use its determination that
Extreme failed to comply with the statutory provisions as grounds to deny Extreme’s future
applications to re-obtain its dealer and recycler licenses.