People v. Mel MacK Co.

53 Cal. App. 3d 621, 126 Cal. Rptr. 505, 1975 Cal. App. LEXIS 1593
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 10, 1975
DocketCiv. 15275
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 53 Cal. App. 3d 621 (People v. Mel MacK Co.) 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
People v. Mel MacK Co., 53 Cal. App. 3d 621, 126 Cal. Rptr. 505, 1975 Cal. App. LEXIS 1593 (Cal. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

Opinion

THE COURT. *

A partnership firm owns and operates several mobile home parks in Orange County. Whenever one of its tenants sells a mobile home through a mobile home broker, park management as a regular practice charges the broker a $300 fee before allowing the buyer to move into the park. The district attorney filed suit on behalf of the People for the purpose of enjoining the firm from collecting the fee, claiming it constituted consumer fraud (Civ. Code, §§ 789.7, 789.8) and unfair competition (Civ. Code, § 3369). In addition, the People requested restitution and the imposition of civil penalties.

The court issued a temporary restraining order at the time the action was initiated and set the matter for hearing in connection with the People’s application for a preliminary injunction. Following the hearing, the court issued a preliminary injunction prohibiting the trailer park firm from collecting any entry or transfer fees unless it performed services in connection with the sale.

*624 The park owner attacks the injunction on several grounds: (1) The statutes proscribing payment óf entrance or transfer fees apply only to tenants (sellers) and prospective tenants (buyers), not brokers; (2) the court failed to make essential findings; (3) the statute is vague and uncertain on its face; and (4) a park operator is entitled to charge a fee when he performs valuable services in connection with a sale and a statute prohibiting the payment of such a fee is constitutionally void in that it deprives operators of a valuable property right without just compensation.

We have determined that the issuance of the preliminary injunction was proper; that it is illegal for mobile home park management to impose an entrance or transfer fee upon mobile home brokers under the circumstances presented herein; that the injunction does not prohibit the charging of a fee if a mobile home park operator performs extraordinary services in connection with the sale of a mobile home; that the statute involved is not vague, indefinite or otherwise constitutionally defective; and that the court’s findings are supported by substantial evidence.

Facts

The Mel Mack Company, a general partnership composed of four individuals (“Defendants”) owns and operates nine (9) mobile home parks in Orange County. Mobile home owners become tenants in Mel Mack’s parks in one of three ways: (1) They already own a mobile home and apply for a vacant space; (2) a Mel Mack tenant sells his mobile home situated in the park directly to a buyer and the latter moves into the seller’s space; and (3) a Mel Mack tenant desiring to sell his mobile home lists it with a mobile home broker; the broker finds a buyer; and the purchaser moves into the park, providing a $300 entrance or transfer fee is paid.

It is worthy of emphasis that in the first two situations, a fee is not involved; it is only in situation 3 that the $300 fee is charged and the fee is imposed upon the broker, not the seller or buyer.

In a typical case where a Mel Mack tenant wishes to sell through a broker, he advises the broker of the amount he wants to net on the sale ($10,000); the broker finds a buyer willing to pay a higher price ($11,000); the broker then pays Mel Mack the $300 fee from his gross profit ($1,000).

*625 Two of Mel Mack’s former managers filed declarations indicating that while they were in defendants’ employ they never provided services in connection with sales by brokers; never showed a mobile home to a prospective buyer for a broker; never examined a home involved in a sale for maintenance problems; never informed a purchaser of or repairs needed before he could move in; never prorated rents or utilities (the tenants performed that function); never kept keys in the park for brokers’ use; never measured a vacant space; never orally interviewed a new tenant except to set down certain rules; and never were told by Mel Mack that the $300 fee was being charged for services; to the contrary, the managers were told the fee was a transfer fee.

One of the partners (Bradley), in his capacity as superintendent of the parks, had posted the following sign in one of the parks: “Any Agent or Mobile Home Broker Selling a Mobile Home in this Park Shall Pay a $300 Entrance Fee.” When brokers inquired why they were being charged a fee, the superintendent said the fee was exacted because Mel Mack was providing the spaces.

If the broker refused to pay the $300 fee, the seller could either stay in the park or move out. If the seller is required to sell his home and remove it from the park, he will suffer an estimated loss of at least 50 percent of the fair market value of the home in place.

On the other hand, defendants filed opposing declarations to the effect that Mel Mack park operators provide the following direct and indirect services to brokers: (1) Show the park facilities to the prospective tenants; (2) inform prospective tenants of any possible repairs or maintenance they may have to perform on a particular home or space; (3) prorate utilities and rent between the out-going and in-coming tenants; (4) conduct character and credit investigations of prospective tenants; and (5) confer with brokers who are attempting to obtain listings from tenants and furnish them with pertinent information, such as the size of the space.

After considering the foregoing declarations and affidavits, the court issued an injunction pendente lite enjoining the defendants from collecting from any tenant or broker any entry, transfer or selling fee “... if defendants perform no service in the sale of the mobile home. . . .” The court expressly found that defendants’ practice violated sections 789.7 and 789.8 of the Civil Code. 1

*626 Mobilehome Parks Legislation

Section 789.7, enacted in 1971, provides as follows: “The owner of a mobilehome park or his agents shall not charge any fees to tenants other than charges for rent, utilities, or incidental reasonable service charges.”

Section 789.8, enacted in 1972, provides as follows: “There shall be no entry charge as a condition of tenancy in a mobilehome park, nor shall there be any transfer or selling fee as a condition of sale of a mobilehome within a mobilehome park, even if such mobilehome is to remain within the park, if the park management performs no service in the sale of the mobilehome.”

As a matter of legislative history, the parties agree that prior to the enactment of the foregoing sections, it was the practice of some mobile home park owners to require prospective tenants desiring to move into a park to pay a fee to the park owner (an entrance fee); it was also customary in some parks to charge a fee when tenants sold their mobile homes and left them in the park (a transfer fee); the transfer fee had to be paid by the seller or the buyer. If the tenant or prospective tenant did not pay the fee, some park owners threatened them with eviction.

Against this background, Mel Mack argues that the statutes were designed to protect only tenants and prospective tenants,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 Cal. App. 3d 621, 126 Cal. Rptr. 505, 1975 Cal. App. LEXIS 1593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-mel-mack-co-calctapp-1975.