Morgan v. Reasor Corp.

447 P.2d 638, 69 Cal. 2d 881, 73 Cal. Rptr. 398, 1968 Cal. LEXIS 283
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1968
DocketSac. 7786
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 447 P.2d 638 (Morgan v. Reasor Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morgan v. Reasor Corp., 447 P.2d 638, 69 Cal. 2d 881, 73 Cal. Rptr. 398, 1968 Cal. LEXIS 283 (Cal. 1968).

Opinion

TOBRINER, J.

Plaintiffs, the buyers of a house to be constructed upon their land, obtained a judgment barring the assignees of the sellers of the house from collecting certain carrying charges (the so-called time price differential) because of violations of the Unruh Act (sections 1801 through 1812 of the Civil Code). The judgment also awarded to plaintiffs their attorney’s fees and costs as well as certain incidental damages.

*885 Recognizing the salutary purposes of the Unruh Act in requiring that consumers obtain certain specified information as to the terms of instalment contracts, and in protecting against abusive provisions in such contracts, we reject defendants' appellate contentions, which defeat the statute’s provisions and objectives. We therefore hold (1) that the Unruh Act applies to the contract for the construction of the residential housing involved in the instant ease, (2) that the holder of a note with constructive knowledge of noneompliance with the Unruh Act is “barred from recovery of any time price ¡differential or service charge,” (3) that the defendant assignee of that note here had both constructive and actual knowledge of the violations of the Unruh Act, (4) that the Unruh Act provides for reasonable attorney’s fees and costs in a suit for a declaratory judgment, and (5) that violations of the Unruh Act cannot be corrected more than 30 days after the execution of the contract involved. The judgment should therefore be affirmed in all respects except for its provision for the defendants’ collection of a time price differential accruing after June 2,1966.

The trial court’s findings of fact disclose that on or about October 14, 1962, plaintiffs agreed to purchase from the IBC Corporation (hereinafter “IBC”) a house (IBC’s “Pixley” model) to be constructed by IBC on a lot owned by plaintiffs. Plaintiffs executed a written document' designated a “Lien Contract and Deed of Trust” (hereinafter “contract”) by which IBC sold and plaintiff bought the goods and services described by the trial court as “the labor and management necessary to cause said home to be constructed; and goods, to wit: the materials, appliances, fixtures, and other personal property necessary for the construction of said home and dwelling in accordance with said documents.” The contract also contained a provision granting the lot and all improvements thereon to the Bay Counties Title & Guarantee Company to be held by Bay Counties as security until plaintiffs completed payment. 1 In addition, plaintiffs executed at the same time in a separate document in favor of IBC a promissory note for $19,398.12, which represented the $11,844 cost of the house, plus a “time price differential” of $7,554.12. Under the note plaintiffs agreed to pay 71 monthly install *886 ments of $116.06 each and a final installment of $11,157.86.

Within three months thereafter, IBC assigned to the Midwest Homes Acceptance Corporation (hereinafter ‘ ‘ Midwest”) both the contract and the note. Midwest accepted the assignment with full knowledge of all of the “terms and conditions” of the contract and the note, including knowledge that- the note and contract arose simultaneously out of the same transaction. On or about March 29, 1963, IBC merged into the Reasor Corporation (hereinafter “Reasor”) and Reasor assumed all the “liabilities, debts, obligations, and causes of action which had existed against IBC. ’ ’ 2

Plaintiffs contend that the contract and note violated the Unruh Act. Although defendants urge that the act does not apply to the construction of residential housing, they admit that if it is applicable, the facts here would constitute a showing of its violation. Contrary to Civil Code section 1803.2, 3 the contract and note were not encompassed in a single document ; contrary to Civil Code section 1803.1, 4 the note was not dated at the time it was executed by plaintiffs; and, contrary to Civil Code section 1803.4, 5 the contract contained blank spaces which were later filled in by either IBC or Midwest.

Section 1812.7 of the Civil Code 6 provides that any person failing to comply with provisions of the Unruh Act, and any person acquiring a contract with knowledge of such noncomplianee, shall be barred from recovery of any time price differential. Accordingly, plaintiffs sought a declaratory judgment which would hold that they owed no obligation to pay any such time price differential.

The trial court held the Unruh Act applicable to the con *887 tract and note executed by plaintiffs and declared that plaintiffs were not obliged to pay any time price differential accruing before June 2, 1966, the date on which, pursuant to court order, defendants delivered to plaintiffs a completed and dated copy of the contract and note. The court ruled that plaintiffs were entitled to an offset against the amounts due and owing in the amount of $766 because of certain deficiencies in the work done by IBC; 7 it awarded plaintiffs costs and attorney’s fees pursuant to section 1811.1 of the Unruh Act. The court also held that defendants could recover the time price differential accruing after June 2,1966.

1. The Unruh Act applies to the construction of the residential housing involved in the instant case.

Subject to certain limitations, not relevant here, the Unruh Act applies to a contract for the sale of goods except such goods as are attached or affixed to real property; the act also applies to contracts for services, whether or not those services are rendered for the improvement of real property. As we point out, the Unruh Act clearly covers the sale of goods and services involved in this case.

The applicability of the Unruh Act to the residential construction here involved turns on the act’s definitions of “goods” and “services.” Section 1802.1 provides: “ ‘Goods’ means tangible chattels bought for use primarily for personal, family or household purposes . . . and including goods which, at the time of the sale or subsequently are to be so affixed to real property as to become a part of such real property whether or not severable therefrom, . . . .” (Italics added.) Section 1802.2 states: “ ‘Services’ means work, labor and services, for other than a commercial or business use, including services furnished ... in connection with the improvement of real property .. . .” (Italics added.) The essential distinction drawn by these definitions lies between goods and services acquired for personal use and those obtained for business or commercial purposes. Residential housing by definition serves personal rather than commercial ends.

Although section 1802.1 applies only to chattels, not real property, the question as to whether the property acquired is real or personal must be fixed not as of the date of the completion of the contract, but as of the date of the exeeu *888 tion of the contract.

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Bluebook (online)
447 P.2d 638, 69 Cal. 2d 881, 73 Cal. Rptr. 398, 1968 Cal. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-reasor-corp-cal-1968.