Va. company sues to block Mo.'s limit on fees for records

Friday, August 1, 2008 | 7:51 p.m. CDT

 JEFFERSON CITY - A Virginia company hired to overhaul the computer system for Missouri's driver's license and motor vehicle records has filed a lawsuit challenging a new state law capping fees for buying those records.

The suit filed by BearingPoint Inc. is another round in the wrangling that has followed the Missouri Department of Revenue's decision to begin charging $7 per driver's license or motor vehicle record. Previously, it cost a fraction of a cent per record for bulk purchases.

Businesses regularly buy the records to track vehicle histories and traffic violations and in turn sell that information to used car dealers, consumers, insurance companies and other entities.

Since the record fee was increased May 1, a state trial judge blocked the higher fees for bulk record purchases after four companies sued, and lawmakers have responded by establishing a one-half of a cent price limit per record for bulk purchases.

The legislative price cap was added earlier this year to property tax legislation and has already been signed by the governor. It takes effect Aug. 28.

But BearingPoint, in a lawsuit filed Tuesday in the Capitol's home of Cole County, contends that the price limit is unconstitutional because it wrongly mixes multiple subjects within the same bill. The lawsuit asks the court to toss out that provision.

BearingPoint has a contract worth up to $50 million through the Missouri Department of Revenue to develop the computer system, with the company keeping $1 from every record sale.

The company's lawsuit argues that the title of the legislation with the records price cap only mentions property taxes, and that lawmakers changed the bill's purpose when they added the price cap. Missouri's constitution requires that a bill's title explain the topics in the legislation, and it bars lawmakers from adding amendments that alter a measure's underlying purpose.

The lawsuit specifically asks that the court sequester the records price cap from the rest of the bill, which seeks to limit local property tax increases. By doing that, it's possible to toss out the cost limit provisions without invalidating the entire bill.

Revenue Department spokesman David Griffith said Friday that BearingPoint has not yet begun work on the new computer system. Griffith said that the department charges $7 per record for individual purchases but has now reverted to its old pricing scheme for bulk buys.

 

»Contact an editor with corrections or additional information

Comments

Ted Picraux August 2, 2008 | 10:06 a.m.

The BearingPoint lawsuit is just another exanple of a crooked company make a buck from someone else's information. That is illegal. Their lawyers and Owners should be arrested and found guilty of treason against Americans. The company assets should be immediately turned over to the Missouri State's Treasuer's office. We may also have to start looking into whether or not lawyers in this state are competent and not just plain greedy folks. We may have to close the socalled Missouri Bar and charge all members with fraud and treason as well.

(Report Comment)

Leave a comment

Speak up and join the conversation! You can comment below. (Click here to register.) Please be civil and refrain from profanities and name-calling; in other words, don't say anything you wouldn't otherwise say in public. If you see something objectionable, please tell us which comment and why it should be removed. When you post, please use your actual name. Read the full comment policy here.

You must be logged in to comment.

Forget your password?

Don't have an account? Register here.

advertisements