Paramount General Hospital Co. v. National Medical Enterprises, Inc.

42 Cal. App. 3d 496, 116 Cal. Rptr. 42, 1974 Cal. App. LEXIS 1243
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 15, 1974
DocketCiv. 42549
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 42 Cal. App. 3d 496 (Paramount General Hospital Co. v. National Medical Enterprises, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paramount General Hospital Co. v. National Medical Enterprises, Inc., 42 Cal. App. 3d 496, 116 Cal. Rptr. 42, 1974 Cal. App. LEXIS 1243 (Cal. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

*498 Opinion

KAUS, P. J.

Action for damages and injunctive relief under the Unfair Practices Act (“the Act”). Plaintiffs Paramount General Hospital Company, a limited partnership, and Paramount General Hospital, Inc., appeal from a judgment in favor of defendant National Medical Enterprises, Inc., and various individual defendants, after the trial court sustained defendants’ general demurrers to plaintiffs’ second amended complaint without leave to amend.

Allegations of Complaint

Plaintiffs 1 own and operate as a business, a hospital and adjoining medical office building in Paramount. For the “purpose of earning a profit” the partnership “supplies” 2 office space in the medical building to doctors. Plaintiffs also supply the following services: answering service, direct communication facilities to the hospital, receptionist service, “specialized suite improvements,” radiological, pharmaceutical and other such services in the medical building; utilities; janitorial and security services, parking; and, in the adjoining hospital, laboratory, clinical testing, diagnostic, therapeutic and related facilities.

Defendants are plaintiffs’ competitors. When this action was filed, defendants were about to open a hospital and were constructing a medical building in Lakewood, a few miles from plaintiffs’ hospital and medical building in Paramount. Defendants offered about a dozen named and five unknown doctors, medical office space and all the services enumerated above that plaintiffs now furnish to doctors.

Plaintiffs allege that by the means described below, defendants are either giving away or selling below cost the use of office space in the medical building and the various services described above. 3 Defendants are making these offers for the purpose of destroying competition from plaintiffs.

*499 Plaintiffs have been injured, because various specified doctors, who would have used plaintiffs’ “space and services” have accepted or intend to accept defendants’ below-cnst or giveaway offers. Plaintiffs have “lost the patronage of the patients” who would have been “supplied” by those doctors who will be accepting defendants’ offer. Plaintiff partnership, which owns the office building, has been damaged over a four-month period in the amount of about $11,000 in lost rentals; plaintiff corporation, which owns the hospital, has been “actually damaged in the amount of $796,000 or more, which is the net income that plaintiff corporation would have earned from said patients which it lost.” (See fn. 14, infra.)

Plaintiffs, in a second cause of action, recharacterize the appropriate facts alleged above as a “secret rebate” of which future tenants, who will be charged more, will not be advised.

Discussion

The Unfair Practices Act (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17000 et seq.) 4 prohibits: (1) Selling below cost or giving away any “article or product” for *500 the purpose of injuring competitors or destroying competition (§ 17043); (2) selling or using any “article or product” as a “loss leader” (§ 17044); (3) secret rebates, or the extension of special services or privileges to certain purchasers (§ 17045); and—not involved in this case—(4) locality discrimination with respect to any “article or product” (§ 17040).

The Unfair Practices Act was enacted in 1941. (Stats. 1941, ch. 526, § 1.) (See, generally, Barron, California Antitrust—Legislative Schizophrenia (1962) 35 So.Cal.L.Rev. 393, 400.) However, “locality discrimination” has been prohibited since 1913. (Stats. 1913, ch. 276, § 1.) Since 1933, secret rebates (Stats. 1933, ch. 261, § 1) and below-cost sales or giveaways (Stats. 1933, ch. 504, § 1) have been prohibited. (See generally Wholesale T. Dealers v. National etc. Co., 11 Cal.2d 634, 640, seq. [82 P.2d 3, 118 A.L.R. 486].) The provisions of the Act have remained substantially unchanged since 1941. (See Dooley’s Hardware Mart v. Food Giant Markets, Inc., 21 Cal.App.3d 513, 516-517 [98 Cal.Rptr. 543].)

In enacting the Act, the Legislature set itself no small goal. In section 17001 it declared that the purpose of the Act was “to safeguard the public against the creation or perpetuation of monopolies and to foster and encourage competition, by prohibiting unfair, dishonest, deceptive, destructive, fraudulent and discriminatory practices by which fair and honest competition is destroyed or prevented.”

It will be noted that what the Legislature sets out to “foster and encourage” is competition generally, not just competition in the sale or furnishing of certain goods or services. 5 The issue posed by this litigation must be viewed in the light of this broad legislative target.

To achieve its aim, the Legislature specifically provided that the Act “shall be liberally construed that its beneficial purposes may be subserved.” (§ 17002.)

Further—and this is vital in view of defendants’ contention that this litigation involves nothing but leases to real property to which transactions covered by the Act are as incidental as “tires on a newly purchased automobile”—section 17049 provides in relevant part as follows: “The prohibitions of this chapter against . . . sales below cost embrace any scheme *501 of special rebates, collateral contracts or any device of any nature whereby such . . . sale below cost is in substance or fact effected in violation of the spirit and intent of this chapter.” (Italics added.)

The specific prohibition contained in the Act on which plaintiffs chiefly rely is found in section 17043: “It is unlawful for any person 6 engaged in business within this State to sell any article or product at less than the cost thereof to such vendor, or to give away any article or product, for the purpose of injuring competitors or destroying competition.”

Defendants in their brief pose the issue on this appeal as follows: “Where the subject matter of the complaint is a proposed ten-year lease of real property, namely medical building office space, is a cause of action stated under those sections of the California Unfair Practices Act which proscribe the ‘sale below cost’ or ‘giving away’ of ‘articles or products’ by vendors’?” (Italics in original.)

In thus posing the issue defendants lose sight of the pleaded facts as well as the law.

Factually, we are not concerned with a simple lease of real property. Plaintiffs and defendants compete in offering to the medical profession specially designed working quarters, as well as a variety of sophisticated, specialized services.

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Bluebook (online)
42 Cal. App. 3d 496, 116 Cal. Rptr. 42, 1974 Cal. App. LEXIS 1243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paramount-general-hospital-co-v-national-medical-enterprises-inc-calctapp-1974.