Opinion
MANUEL, J.
This petition for writ of mandate challenges the constitutionality of California’s procedure for the nonjudicial foreclosure of
deeds of trust on real property. Petitioners contend that this procedure permits the deprivation of the trustor’s property without adequate notice or hearing in violation of the due process guarantees of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and of article I, section 7 of the California Constitution, We conclude, in agreement with the decisions which have considered this question in relation to California’s nonjudicial foreclosure procedure
(Strutt
v.
Ontario Sav. & Loan Assn.
(1972) 28 Cal.App.3d 866 [105 Cal.Rptr. 395];
U.S. Hertz, Inc.
v.
Niobrara Farms
(1974) 41 Cal.App.3d 68 [116 Cal.Rptr. 44];
Davidow
v.
Corporation of America
(1936) 16 Cal.App.2d 6 [60 P.2d 132];
Davidow
v.
Lachman Bros. Inv. Co.
(9th Cir. 1935) 76 F.2d 186;
Lawson
v.
Smith
(N.D.Cal. 1975) 402 F.Supp. 851) and in accord with the overwhelming majority of decisions which have considered this question in relation to similar nonjudicial foreclosure procedures of other jurisdictions,
that California’s procedure constitutes private, not state action and is therefore exempt from the due process constraints of the federal Constitution. We also conclude that the private action herein involved does not satisfy the state action requirement of the due process clause of the state Constitution.
In January 1970, petitioners Susan and Gary Garfinkle (the Garfinkles) purchased a family residence from the Lannings, whose loan on the property was secured by a deed of trust in favor of Wells Fargo Bank (Bank). This deed of trust contained a standard due-on-sale clause which provided that the Bank could accelerate the balance due on the loan if the Lannings sold the property without the written consent of the Bank. The deed of trust also contained a power of sale clause which provided in part as follows: “If default be made in the payment of said promissory note ... or in case any change is made in the title to all or any part of the said property ... all sums hereby secured shall, at the election of the Bank, forthwith become due and payable, without notice, and the Bank may cause the said property to be sold in order to accomplish the object of these trusts, and upon demand of the Bank the Trustee shall sell the whole, or such portion of the said property as the Trustee shall deem necessary to accomplish the purposes of these trusts, and such sale may be made in any manner provided by law, and if none is provided, then by
first giving notice of the time and place of sale in the manner and for a time not less than that now required by law for the sale of real property on execution ...
The Bank offered to let the Garfinkles assume the Tanning loan at an increased rate of interest in return for the Bank’s agreement not to accelerate the balance due on that loan pursuant to the due-on-sale clause. The Garfinkles refused to assume the Tanning loan on these terms. Thereafter, the Bank notified both the Tannings and the Garfinkles that it had accelerated the Tanning loan and that the balance owing thereon was due and payable in its entirety. In June 1970 when the balance due had not been paid, the Bank recorded its notice of default as required by section 2924 of the Civil Code. The Tannings and Garfinkles received actual notice of the Bank’s notice of default. The Garfinkles then brought a series of legal actions
challenging both the constitutionality of California’s nonjudicial foreclosure procedure and the validity of the automatic enforcement of the due-on-sale clause; and culminating in the present action seeking declaratory relief on both of these issues in respondent Contra Costa County Superior Court. The Bank filed a general demurrer to the Garfinkles’ complaint. Respondent sustained the demurrer without leave to amend as to the constitutional challenge to the nonjudicial foreclosure procedure on the ground that no state action was involved.
After decision by this court in
Connolly Development, Inc.
v.
Superior Court
(1976) 17 Cal.3d 803 [132 Cal.Rptr. 477, 553 P.2d 637], in which we
held that California’s mechanic’s lien and stop notice laws constituted state action, respondent, at the Garfinkles’ request reconsidered its previous ruling on the state action question. Respondent then entered a new order, again sustaining the demurrer without leave to amend.
By this petition for mandate the Garfinkles seek review of the trial court’s order.
The statutory provisions regulating the nonjudicial foreclosure of deeds of trust on real property are contained in Civil Code sections 2924-2924h.
Basically, these provisions require that before the trustee, acting under a power of sale contained in the deed of trust, can sell the subject trust property, the trustee must first record a notice of default setting forth the nature of the default and the election to exercise the power of sale. (§ 2924.)
If the trustor (borrower) has recorded a request for notice or if
the deed of trust contains a request for notice,
the trustee is required to mail a copy of the notice of default to the trustor at the address specified in the recorded request or in the deed of trust. (§ 2924b, subd. (3)(b).)
After the notice of default has been recorded, the trustee must allow three months to elapse, during which time, the trustor may “cure” the default and reinstate the deed of trust, where reinstatement is possible. (§ 2924c.)
Upon expiration of this 90-day period, the trustee must then post a written notice of sale in a conspicuous place on the property at least 20 days prior to the date of sale (§ 29241), and must mail a copy of this notice of sale to the trustor if notice has been requested.
The trustee can then proceed to sell the property. There, is no statutory provision for a judicial determination, prior to the sale, of the validity of the alleged default.
The property must be sold by public auction to the highest bidder (§ 2924h)
to whom title is transferred by a trustee’s deed. Thereafter, upon recording of this deed, the purchaser is entitled to bring an unlawful detainer action against the trustor in order to get possession of the property. (Code Civ. Proc. § 1161a.)
Petitioners contend that this nonjudicial procedure violates procedural due process under both the federal and state Constitutions because it deprives real property owners of their property without adequate notice and without a judicial hearing, thus coming within the scope of the decisions in
Sniadach
v.
Family Finance Corp.
(1969) 395 U.S. 337 [23 L.Ed.2d 349, 89 S.Ct. 1820] and its progeny.
We first turn to petitioner’s federal constitutional claim. The Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides in part: “No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; ...”
“The Fourteenth Amendment prohibits the State from depriving any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; but it adds nothing to the rights of one citizen as against another.”
(United States
v.
Cruikshank
(1875) 92 U.S. 542, 554 [23 L.Ed. 588, 592].) The Fourteenth Amendment “erects no shield against merely private conduct, however discriminatory or wrongful.”
(Shelley
v.
Kraemer
(1948) 334 U.S. 1, 13 [92 L.Ed. 1161, 1180, 68 S.Ct. 836, 842].) The question presented here, as in all actions challenged under the Fourteenth Amendment, is whether “there is a sufficiently close nexus between the State and the challenged action ... so that the action ... may be fairly treated as that of the State itself.”
(Jackson
v.
Metropolitan Edison Co.
(1974) 419 U.S. 345, 351 [42 L.Ed.2d 477, 484, 95 S.Ct. 449].) Thus, the threshold question which we must determine is whether the state is
significantly involved in the nonjudicial foreclosure procedure so as to bring that procedure within the reach of the due process clause.
Petitioners first contend that there is significant involvement by the state in nonjudicial foreclosures because these foreclosures are pervasively regulated by detailed statutory provisions. It is also argued that the nonjudicial foreclosure procedure when viewed as a whole, requires participation by a state official, the county recorder, and by the state courts. Petitioners rely primarily on our decision in
Connolly Development, Inc.,
v.
Superior Court, supra,
17 Cal.3d 803, in support of this contention.
In
Connolly,
we held that the mechanics’ lien constitutes state action because that lien not only is governed by detailed statutory provisions but also only becomes effective upon recordation with the county recorder and can only be enforced by resort to the state courts. (17 Cal.3d 803, 815.) We also held in
Connolly
that the stop notice procedure constitutes state action because use of that procedure, which was created by statute and is governed by comprehensive statutory regulations, is encouraged and in fact only made possible by virtue of statutory authorization for its enforcement. (17 Cal.3d 803, 815.)
There are several significant differences, however, between the creditors’ remedies involved in
Connolly
and the remedy of nonjudicial foreclosure pursuant to a power of sale that is at issue in the case at bar. Unlike the mechanics’ lien or stop notice which are authorized by statute and not by the contract of the parties (see also
Adams
v.
Department of Motor Vehicles, supra,
11 Cal.3d 146, 153) the power of sale exercised by the trustee on behalf of the lender/creditor in nonjudicial foreclosures is a right authorized solely by the contract between the lender and trustor as embodied in the deed of trust.
(Davidow
v.
Corporation of America, supra,
16 Cal.App.2d 6, 13;
U.S. Hertz, Inc.
v.
Niobrara Farms, supra,
41 Cal.App.3d 68, 87.) The contractual nature of the power of sale and right of the parties to include such a power in the deed of trust to be exercised in the event of a default was first recognized by this court in 1859. Noting that deeds of trust containing powers of sale were commonly utilized in this state, this court held in
Koch v. Briggs
(1859) 14 Cal. 256, that these contractual powers are valid and enforceable and that merchantable title is transferred pursuant to the exercise thereof.
In 1881, this court, again recognizing the validity of nonjudicial foreclosures of deeds of trust pursuant to powers of sale contained therein, reiterated that this remedy is created by contract and that a sale conducted in accordance with the conditions of the power would result in the transfer of good title to the purchaser.
(Bateman
v.
Burr
(1881) 57 Cal. 480.) In so holding, the court rejected the contention that judicial foreclosure was the proper method of enforcing the security interest embodied in the deed of trust.
In 1917, the Legislature impliedly recognized the validity of this contractual remedy when, acting under its police power, it established certain minimum standards for conducting nonjudicial foreclosures, by placing various restrictions on the creditors’ exercise of the power of sale in order to protect the trustor/debtor against forfeiture. (§ 2924;
Smith
v.
Allen
(1968) 68 Cal.2d.93, 96 [65 Cal.Rptr. 153, 436 P.2d 65];
Strutt
v.
Ontario Sav. & Loan Assn., supra,
28 Cal.App.3d 866, 877; see also Burke & Reber,
State Action, Congressional Power and Creditors' Rights; An Essay on the Fourteenth Amendment
(1973) 47 So.Cal.L.Rev. 1, 23-28, 32.) Since that time these statutory protections have been expanded into a comprehensive statutoiy scheme regulating in detail all aspects of the nonjudicial foreclosure process. (See
Smith
v.
Allen, supra,
68 Cal.2d 93, 96.)
Petitioners contend that this comprehensive statutory regulation of nonjudicial foreclosures constitutes state action because it encourages and facilitates use of that remedy. This contention does not withstand examination. The nonjudicial foreclosure statutes do not authorize or compel inclusion of a power of sale in a deed of trust or provide for such a power of sale when one has not been included by the parties. Nor do these statutes compel exercise of the power of sale. The decision whether to exercise the power of sale is a determination to be made by the
creditor. The statutes merely restrict and regulate the exercise of the power of sale once a choice has been made by the creditor to foreclose the deed of trust in that manner.
(Strutt
v.
Ontario Sav. & Loan Assn., supra,
28 Cal.App.3d 866, 877; see also,
Davidow
v.
Corporation of America, supra,
16 Cal.App.3d 6, 13;
Barrera
v.
Security Building & Investment Corporation, supra,
519 F.2d 1166, 1170;
Federal National Mortgage Ass'n.
v.
Howlett, supra,
521 S.W.2d 428, 432.)
We are also unpersuaded that the state encourages nonjudicial foreclosures by acknowledging the legal validity of the title transferred thereby. Mere recognition of the legal effect of the private arrangements of the lender and trustor is not sufficient to convert the acts of the lender or trustee into the acts of the state for Fourteenth Amendment purposes. As the court in
Barrera
v.
Security Building & Investment Corporation, supra,
519 F.2d 1166, 1170, cogently stated: “Virtually all formal private arrangements assume, at some point, the supportive role of the state. To hold that the state, by recognizing the legal effect of those arrangements, converts them into state acts for constitutional purposes would effectively erase to a significant extent the constitutional line between private and state action and subject to judicial scrutiny under the Fourteenth Amendment virtually all private arrangements that purport to have binding legal effect.”
(Id.,
at p. 1170.)
Similarly, we are not convinced that the state has encouraged or facilitated nonjudicial foreclosure by enacting comprehensive and detailed regulations governing that process. As we stated earlier, these statutory regulations were enacted primarily for the benefit of the trustor and for the greatest part limit the creditors’ otherwise unrestricted exercise of the contractual power of sale upon default by the trustor.
For this reason, it cannot realistically be claimed that the state, by acting to protect the debtor, has thereby become the partner of the creditor so that the creditor’s actions are converted into the actions of the state. (See
Burton
v.
Wilmington Pkg. Auth.
(1961) 365 U.S. 715 [6 L.Ed.2d 45, 81 S.Ct. 856];
Barrera
v.
Security Building & Investment Corporation, supra.)
We also reject petitioners’ contention that the nonjudicial foreclosure procedure involves significant acts of the county recorder. We agree with the decision in
Lawson
v.
Smith, supra,
402 F.Supp. 851, in which it was concluded that the acts of the county recorder required by the California nonjudicial foreclosure statutes are ministerial in nature, and are thus distinguishable from the significant, discretionary acts of the county recorder under North Carolina’s nonjudicial foreclosure procedure, which has been held to constitute significant state action. (See
Turner
v.
Blackburn
(W.D.N.C. 1975) 389 F.Supp. 1250, 1258.) Other than
these
ministerial acts by the county recorder, we note that there is no participation or intervention by any state official or judicial officer prior to the trustee’s sale and the vesting of title in the purchaser. (See
Levine
v.
Stein, supra,
560 F.2d 1175.) This absence of judicial involvement represents another significant difference between the nonjudicial foreclosure of a deed of trust and the mechanics’ lien and stop notice in
Connolly,
where court action was required for the enforcement of those liens. Petitioners argue, however, that although judicial intervention may not occur prior to the transfer of title, resort to the state’s courts later becomes necessary because the purchaser in order to enforce the rights previously acquired at the trustee’s sale ordinarily must bring an action in unlawful detainer against a trustor who will not voluntarily relinquish possession of the property. For this reason, it is argued that when the nonjudicial foreclosure process is viewed as a whole, the state’s involvement therein becomes apparent. We disagree. The fact that a purchaser who has acquired rights by virtue of a trustee’s deed, like a party who has acquired rights under any other type of contract, may have a right to resort to the courts in order to enforce such previously acquired contractual rights when that becomes necessary, is not sufficient to convert the acts creating these contractual rights into state action. For to hold otherwise, would be to subject every private contract to review under the Fourteenth Amendment. (See
Federal National Mortgage Ass'n.
v.
Howlett, supra,
521 S.W.2d 428, 437.)
Petitioners’ final argument that state action is here involved is based upon the assertion that the state has delegated to private parties the
traditional judicial function of the enforcement of liens on real property. (See
Adams
v.
Department of Motor Vehicles, supra,
11 Cal.3d 146, 153; see also
Evans
v.
Newton
(1966) 382 U.S. 296 [15 L.Ed.2d 373, 86 S.Ct. 486];
Marsh
v.
Alabama
(1946) 326 U.S. 501 [90 L.Ed. 265, 66 S.Ct. 276].) In
Adams,
the garageman’s lien law involved therein permitted the possessory lienholder to sell the owner’s vehicle if the owner did not pay the amount due for repairs thereon within the specified time. Noting that at common law, the possessory lienholder had no such power of sale, we concluded that state action was involved on the ground, inter alia, that the state had delegated a power traditionally and exclusively reserved to the state. (11 Cal.3d at p. 153.) Unlike the power of sale in
Adams,
however, the power of sale exercised by the trustee in nonjudicial foreclosure is created by contract, not by statute. Furthermore, as has been noted above, nonjudicial foreclosure under a power of sale is a remedy that has widely been used and recognized in this state for over a century. It can therefore certainly be characterized as a traditional remedy, and as such, has paralleled the foreclosure remedies provided by the state. Thus, it cannot be said that foreclosure under a power of sale has been traditionally and exclusively performed by the state.
We conclude therefore that California’s nonjudicial foreclosure procedure does not constitute state action and is therefore immune from the procedural due process requirements of the federal Constitution.
We now proceed to determine whether California’s nonjudicial foreclosure procedure is subject to the due process requirements of the state Constitution as set forth in article I, section 7, subdivision (a) which states in part that “A person may not be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law. .. .”
We held in
Kruger
v.
Wells Fargo Bank
(1974) 11 Cal.3d 352, 366 [113 Cal.Rptr. 449, 521 P.2d 441, 65 A.L.R.3d 1266], that California’s due process clause (former art. I, § 13), like the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment to the federal Constitution, applied to state, not private action, even though a state action requirement was not expressly set forth therein. No tenable reason
has been pointed out to us, and none appears, why a similar requirement of state action is not implicit in article I, section 7.
Although in interpreting the scope of the due process clause under the state Constitution, we are not bound by federal decisions analyzing the state action requirement under the Fifth or Fourteenth Amendments (See Kruger,
supra,
11 Cal.3d 352, 367, fn. 21), we have found no' reason to depart from those cases in the present context. We therefore conclude for the reasons set forth above in relation to petitioners’ federal Constitution claim that the nonjudicial foreclosure of a deed of trust constitutes private action authorized by contract and does not come within the scope of the California due process clause.
Petitioners contend, however, that even if California’s due process requirements apply only to action by the state, the Legislature, pursuant to its police power, has a duty to enact such regulations as would enable Californians to enjoy their inalienable right to protect their property as guaranteed by article I, section 1,
of the state Constitution. Thus it is urged that the Legislature must provide by statute for adequate notice and an opportunity to be heard before the trustor’s property can be sold by nonjudicial foreclosure. This contention is unconvincing. For, just as the Legislature has full power to enact regulations which limit the means by which individuals may enjoy their rights, as long as there is no interference with constitutional guarantees (see
Werner
v.
Southern Cal.
etc. Newspapers
(1950) 35 Cal.2d 121, 125 [216 P.2d 825, 13 A.L.R.2d 252]), so it has full power to determine what regulations it should enact to protect and facilitate the individual’s enjoyment of such rights.
We find equally unpersuasive petitioners’ final contention that notice and a judicial hearing are required prior to the deprivation of the trustor’s property, under the common law principle of procedural fairness. This common law doctrine, which is not applicable here, requires only a hearing before the private association or entity involved, and not the judicial hearing which petitioners herein seek. (See
Pinsker
v.
Pacific Coast Society of Orthodontists
(1974) 12 Cal.3d 541 [116 Cal.Rptr. 245, 526 P.2d 253];
Anton
v.
San Antonio Community Hosp.
(1977) 19 Cal.3d 802 [140 Cal.Rptr. 442, 567 P.2d 1162];
Ezekial
v.
Winkley
(1977) 20 Cal.3d 267 [142 Cal.Rptr. 418, 572 P.2d 32].)
The alternative writ heretofore issued is discharged and a peremptory writ is denied.
Bird, C. J., Tobriner, J., Mosk, J., Clark, J., Richardson, J., and Newman, J., concurred.
Petitioners’ application for a rehearing was denied June 15, 1978. Newman, J., was of the opinion that the application should be granted.