90-006467
Department Of Agriculture And Consumer Services vs.
Lewis Oil Co., Inc. (Suwannee Swifty Food Store No. 265)
Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Friday, April 26, 1991.
Recommended Order on Friday, April 26, 1991.
1STATE OF FLORIDA
4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS
8DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE )
12AND CONSUMER SERVICES, )
16)
17Petitioner, )
19)
20vs. ) CASE NO. 90-6467
25)
26LEWIS OIL COMPANY, INC., )
31(SUWANEE), )
33)
34Respondent. )
36__________________________________)
37RECOMMENDED ORDER
39Pursuant to notice this cause came on for hearing before P. Michael Ruff
52duly designated hearing officer in Ocala, Florida.
59APPEARANCES
60For Petitioner: Clinton H. Coulter, Jr., Esquire
67Department of Agriculture
70513 Mayo Building
73Tallahassee, FL 32399-0800
76For Respondent: Jerry Hammond (authorized by
82Respondent's president)
84Lewis Oil Company, Inc.
88P.O. Box 1282
91Gainesville, FL 32602-1282
94STATEMENT OF THE ISSUES
98The issue to be resolved in this proceeding concerns whether a bond in the
112amount of $696.68 posted in lieu of confiscation of certain allegedly illegal
124gasoline product should be returned to the Respondent or whether an assessment
136against the bonded amount of $696.68 should be made by the department against
149the Respondent.
151PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
153This cause arose upon delivery to the Respondent of notification that the
165Petitioner (Department) found that certain gasoline sold from a "leaded regular"
176pump allegedly contained less than the required lead content for the product to
189be legally sold as "leaded regular". See Rule 5F-2.001(1)(j), Florida
200Administrative Code. The Department issued a Stop Sale Notice to the Respondent
212as to that product because of the alleged misrepresentation of the nature of the
226product. The Respondent at the behest of the Department, provided a bond in the
240amount of $696.68 in lieu of confiscation of the allegedly below standard
252product, in accordance with Section 525.06, Florida Statutes. This amount was
263arrived by multiplying the price of $1.26.9 per gallon times the number of
276gallons sold which yielded the maximum assessment of $696.68.
285The Respondent's position is that indeed the gasoline in the tank serving
297the pump in question was not of the normal required content for "leaded
310regular," but rather a quantity of unleaded gasoline had been placed in the tank
324in the process of converting the tank to storage and dispensing of "unleaded
337plus" type gasoline. There remained a small amount of regular leaded gasoline
349in the tank, hence the relatively low lead content beneath the standard for
362leaded regular, but above the standard for unleaded. The Respondent's position
373is that this is a necessary part of the process of converting a tank from leaded
389gasoline to unleaded and that no customer was harmed because the gasoline was
402sold at a substantially lower price than is leaded regular (the label
414represented on the pump) and indeed if the pump had been relabeled as unleaded
428while a certain lead content remained in the gasoline in the tank serving the
442pump, possible damage to cars designed to operate only on unleaded gasoline
454could have resulted. This would have also been a mislabelling. Accordingly,
465the Respondent maintains that it was attempting an honest conversion of its tank
478to the different type of gasoline in such a way as to avoid harm to the vehicles
495of the motoring public.
499The cause came on for hearing as noticed at which the Petitioner adduced
512the testimony of Mr. Jerry Hammond, representative of the Respondent Lewis Oil
524Company and John C. Whitton, Jr., Chief of the Bureau of Petroleum Inspection
537and a chemist. The Respondent's case consisted of the Respondent's testimony in
549the case of the Petitioner.
554FINDINGS OF FACT
5571. The Petitioner is an agency of the state of Florida charged, in
570pertinent part, with regulating purveyors of gasoline sold at retail in the
582state of Florida, to ascertain if gasoline meets appropriate quality standards
593including the standards, embodied in the Department's rules for lead additive
604content. The Respondent is a corporation doing business in the state of Florida
617which engages in the retail sale of gasoline, including sale of such product at
631the Suwanee Swifty Store #265 at 1971 West Silver Springs Boulevard in Ocala,
644Florida.
6452. An agent of the Petitioner agency performed a routine inspection on a
658pump connected to a storage tank operated by the Respondent on September 12,
6711990. The pump add storage tank contained gasoline offered for sale and some of
685which had been previously sold to the general motoring public. The gasoline
697contained in the storage tank was a mixture of unleaded gasoline and lead-
710containing regular gasoline (leaded regular). The pump which pumped the gas from
722that tank was labeled "regular", meaning that it was labeled for a gasoline
735containing lead. There is no dispute that the Respondent was selling gasoline
747which did not meet the standard for leaded regular gasoline because it contained
760an insufficient amount of lead.
7653. This situation arose because the Respondent had placed an order of
777unleaded regular gasoline from its supplier into the tank in order to begin
790converting that tank and pump from the sale of regular leaded gasoline to
803unleaded gasoline. As part of the switching process, unleaded gasoline was being
815added to the regular gasoline remaining in the pump or tank in order to convert
830the contents of the tank over to gasoline which could be legally sold as
844unleaded gasoline. Until the conversion process for the tank contents was
855complete the Respondent intended to and did sell the gasoline as leaded regular,
868because selling the gasoline at below the actual lead content of leaded regular
881during the conversing process would not harm customers and the price was set at
895below the current market price for leaded regular. If, on the other hand, the
909Respondent had sold the product in the tank and through that pump as unleaded
923gasoline, by re-labeling the pump before the actual contents of the tank served
936by it had been converted completely to unleaded gasoline, the labeling might
948have been strictly legal because the contents of the tank were below the legal
962standard for leaded regular authorized in Rule 5F-2.001(1)(j), Florida
971Administrative Code, but the selling of such gasoline which still contains some
983lead might harm the vehicles of the motoring public using it for vehicles
996designed to use only unleaded gasoline.
10024. In any event, because the Department's investigation revealed that the
1013Respondent was selling gasoline through the pump labeled for regular leaded
1024gasoline which did not meet the lead content standard for regular leaded
1036gasoline, the Department seized the gasoline and immediately allowed the
1046Respondent to post a bond in the amount of $1.26.9 per gallon times the number
1061of gallons sold, for a total bond of $696.68. The Department seeks to assess an
1076identical amount against the Respondent in this proceeding. Upon on the posting
1088of the bond, the product was released back to the possession of the Respondent
1102the next day and allowed to be sold after the pump was relabeled to indicate
"1117unleaded plus".
11205. In fact, the allowing of the Respondent to resume sales of the product
1134under the label "unleaded plus" may not be strictly legal either, because, in
1147fact, the product when the resale of the product began still contained some lead
1161content when resale began. In any event, however, the product being sold at the
1175time the inspection was made was not of a quality equivalent to the appropriate
1189standard in the above rule for "leaded regular" and therefore under the
1201authority cited below the Department has the authority to make the assessment it
1214seeks to impose against the bond posted by the Respondent. The assessment would
1227be reasonable under circumstances prevailing under other similar cases in which
1238the Department has imposed a similar amount of assessment. However, in the
1250instant case, the Respondent established with unrefuted testimony that it was
1261making an honest attempt to convert the gasoline in its tank and the pump to
1276unleaded and that during the transition from the same tank of leaded regular to
1290unleaded gasoline from that tank and pump it is normal and accepted in the
1304industry for the product to contain some lead, albeit not enough to be truly in
1319conformance with the above standard. Likewise it would have been inaccurate to
1331label the pump at that point in the conversion process as "unleaded" because
1344some residuum of lead remained in the product in the tank. The point is that
1359the manner in which the Respondent sold the gasoline, by continuing to label it
1373as regular, instead of unleaded, was less harmfully misleading to the public
1385because the use of such gasoline in cars requiring leaded regular would not be
1399harmful to the mechanical components of those vehicles. Because the pump at the
1412time of the sales in question was labeled regular (meaning leaded regular) cars
1425requiring unleaded gasoline would not have been filled at that pump with such
1438drivers being aware of the necessity to only fill their car at pumps labeled
"1452unleaded", etc. Thus the harm which can be posed to mechanical components of
1465cars requiring unleaded gas by the fueling of the car with leaded gasoline was
1479least likely to occur by the conversion method followed by the Respondent
1491involving keeping the old regular leaded label until the gasoline in the tank
1504was entirely converted over to a content and quality which equated to the legal
1518standard for unleaded gasoline. Because of this, although it is undisputed that
1530Respondent was selling gasoline from the pump in question which did not meet the
1544legal standard for leaded regular, the Department should exercise its discretion
1555in favor of returning the amount of the bond posted to the Respondent.
1568CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
15716. The Division of Administrative Hearings has jurisdiction of the parties
1582to and the subject matter of these proceedings. Section 120.57(1), Florida
1593Statutes.
15947. Section 525.06, Florida Statutes provides:
"1600All oils . . . that shall fall below the
1610standard fixed by the Department of
1616Agriculture and Consumer Services, are
1621declared illegal and shall be subject to
1628confiscation and sale by order of the
1635department. Instead of confiscation, a
1640refundable bond in cash or by certified check
1648in the amount of the value of the product
1657subject to confiscation may be accepted by
1664the Department, pending legal disposition.
1669The amount of this bond should be limited to
1678$1,000. If any of the product has been sold
1688to retail customers, the Department is
1694authorized to make an assessment equal to the
1702retail value of the product sold, not to
1710exceed $1,000."
17138. In the instant case, as delineated in the above findings of fact, it
1727has been established that the Respondent sold gasoline which did not contain a
1740sufficient amount of lead to equate with the legal standard for leaded regular
1753gasoline embodied in Rule 5F-2.001(1)(j), Florida Administrative Code. That
1762gasoline was sold from a pump which, nevertheless, was labeled regular (meaning
1774leaded regular). Thus, technically, the gasoline sold from the pump was
1785misrepresented and was not regular gasoline because it did not contain
1796sufficient lead. On the other hand, the gasoline in the pump could not have
1810been legally labeled unleaded because it contained lead. The explanation the
1821Respondent adduced in testimony, concerning the reason that the product remained
1832labeled as it was while the conversion to "unleaded" in that tank was being
1846carried out, is a reasonable one and (demonstrates that the public interest in
1859purchasing quality motor fuels was thus best observed.
18679. The Respondent showed that the safety of the mechanical components of
1879gasoline customers vehicles was best protected by continuing to label the
1890product as regular, because "unleaded customers" would therefore not pump gas
1901into their vehicles from that tank and therefore would not be receiving gasoline
1914containing lead when their vehicles were not designed for it. On the other hand
1928customers who normally buy regular leaded gasoline for their vehicles would
1939continue to buy from that pump, which product posed no harm to their vehicles
1953merely because it had less than the legal requirement of lead content.
196510. In view of this circumstance, it is clear that, while the Respondent
1978violated Section 525.06, Florida Statutes by selling mislabeled gasoline and
1988while the above statute clearly authorizes the Department to either confiscate
1999the subject product or demand a bond in lieu of confiscation, and to make an
2014assessment equal to the retail value of the product sold, the statute does not
2028make those actions mandatory on the Department. The statute speaks in terms of
2041the above-defined illegal product being "subject" to confiscation and sale or to
2053the bonding process and to the Department's being "authorized" to make an
2065assessment. The statute does not require the Department to either confiscate,
2076require the bond or require an assessment. Thus the Department has discretion
2088in this regard and although it has been established that the Department made an
2102assessment in a manner authorized by the statute, the Department also has
2114discretion not to impose the assessment if the circumstances warrant.
2124Accordingly, because of the mitigatory circumstances delineated in the above
2134findings of fact and conclusions of law it is therefore
2144RECOMMENDATION
2145That a final order be entered by the Department of Agriculture and Consumer
2158Services granting the request of the Respondent for refund of the bond posted
2171and that the Department elect to rescind its assessment-in the amount of
2183$696.68.
2184DONE and ENTERED this 25th day of April, 1991, in Tallahassee, Florida.
2196_________________________
2197P. MICHAEL RUFF
2200Hearing Officer
2202Division of Administrative Hearings
2206The DeSoto Building
22091230 Apalachee Parkway
2212Tallahassee, FL 32399-1550
2215(904) 488-9675
2217Filed with the Clerk of the
2223Division of Administrative Hearings
2227this 26th day of April, 1991.
2233COPIES FURNISHED:
2235R. Bruce Sheets, Manager
2239Lewis Oil Company, Inc.
2243Post Office Box 1282
2247Gainesville, FL 32602
2250Clinton H. Coulter, Jr., Esq.
2255Department of Agriculture and
2259Consumer Affairs
2261515 Mayo Building
2264Tallahassee, FL 32399-0800
2267Honorable Bob Crawford,
2270Commissioner of Agriculture
2273Department of Agriculture
2276and Consumer Services
2279The Capitol, PL-10
2282Tallahassee, FL 32399-0810
2285Richard Tritschler, General Counsel
2289Department of Agriculture and
2293Consumer Services
2295515 Mayo Bldg.
2298Tallahassee, FL 32399-0800
2301NOTICE OF RIGHT TO SUBMIT EXCEPTIONS
2307ALL PARTIES HAVE THE RIGHT TO SUBMIT WRITTEN EXCEPTIONS TO THIS RECOMMENDED
2319ORDER. ALL AGENCIES ALLOW EACH PARTY AT LEAST 10 DAYS IN WHICH TO SUBMIT
2333WRITTEN EXCEPTIONS. YOU SHOULD CONTACT TEE AGENCY THAT WILL ISSUE THE FINAL
2345ORDER IN THIS CASE CONCERNING, AGENCY RULES ON THE DEADLINE FOR FILING
2357EXCEPTIONS TO THIS RECOMMENDED ORDER. ANY EXCEPTIONS TO THIS RECOMMENDED ORDER
2368SHOULD BE FILED WITH THE AGENCY THAT WILL ISSUE THE FINAL ORDER IN THIS CASE.
Case Information
- Judge:
- P. MICHAEL RUFF
- Date Filed:
- 10/11/1990
- Date Assignment:
- 11/06/1990
- Last Docket Entry:
- 04/26/1991
- Location:
- Ocala, Florida
- District:
- Northern
- Agency:
- ADOPTED IN TOTO