Realty Projects, Inc. v. Smith

32 Cal. App. 3d 204, 108 Cal. Rptr. 71, 1973 Cal. App. LEXIS 977
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 9, 1973
DocketCiv. 38744
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 32 Cal. App. 3d 204 (Realty Projects, Inc. v. Smith) 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
Realty Projects, Inc. v. Smith, 32 Cal. App. 3d 204, 108 Cal. Rptr. 71, 1973 Cal. App. LEXIS 977 (Cal. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

Opinion

COBEY, Acting P. J.

Appellants, Realty Projects, Inc., Stanley Zimmerman, Richard Greenberg and Frances Varela, appeal from a judgment denying them a writ of mandate that would have directed the Department of Real Estate to set aside its decision and order suspending and revoking their real estate licenses.

The basic issue of this appeal is whether under the Real Estate Law licensed real estate brokers and salesmen, when acting as mortgage loan brokers and loan officers, are obligated to disclose to prospective borrowers, who indicate they need loans within the monetary limits below which the compensation, etc., of such brokers are statutorily limited, that, if *207 these borrowers accept the suggestion of the loan officers that they seek loans exceeding these statutory limits, the statutory ceilings upon the broker’s compensation, etc., will no longer obtain. 1 We hold that appellants as real estate licensees dealing in their licensed capacities with prospective borrowers are so obligated. 2

Facts

Realty, Zimmerman and Greenberg are licensed mortgage loan brokers; Varela is a licensed mortgage loan saleswoman. 3

In 1967, the year in which the loans under review were made, Zimmerman, the secretary of Realty, was in charge of its day-to-day operations and Greenberg and Varela were two of its loan officers. Realty did business under the name of Mortgage Refinance Company. Through various of its employees, including appellants, it negotiated and obtained loans from private individual lenders for borrowers who employed Realty as their agent for this limited purpose and who paid Realty a commission for this service. The loans were secured by trust deeds on real estate usually owned by the borrowers.

Realty entered the mortgage loan brokerage business in 1955. In 1967 some 25,000 prospective borrowers a year called at its offices to inquire about real estate loans of whom approximately 10 percent actually negotiated loans through Realty. About 95 percent of the loans so negotiated by Realty were loans in which the maximum compensation, etc., of Realty was controlled by the ceilings specified in section 10242. On these loans Realty apparently took from the loan proceeds made available to the borrower a commission in cash.

About January 1967, because the market for funds available for these real estate loans was shrinking, Realty commenced the practice of reducing the amounts of cash their lenders would have to provide in situations where *208 the loans exceeded the limits within which Realty’s compensation, etc., was regulated by section 10242 by adopting the practice of sometimes taking its commission from the borrower in the form of a promissory note secured by a junior deed of trust on real estate. During 1967 Realty negotiated 100 to 150 loans of this character.

Zimmerman conducted meetings of Realty’s loan officers every business day as part of a continuous training program. 4 At these meetings loan files were reviewed for problems in some detail and those present would be instructed by Zimmerman on any changes in Realty’s policies and practices. The loan officers were told to obtain from customers authorization for the highest loans possible so that Realty might receive the highest commissions possible. With the exception of Greenberg, the loan officers received from Realty $150 per loan for each loan negotiated. If they negotiated an unregulated loan, they received additional compensation from Realty in the form of 10 percent of the commission Realty charged.

The loan officers recevied no instructions on whether they should advise prospective borrowers of the limits on loans (then $10,000 for first trust deeds, then $5,000 for junior trust deeds) beyond which Realty’s compensation, etc., was unlimited by law. Accordingly, the loan officers made no such disclosure to any prospective borrower.

Zimmerman instructed the loan officers to include credit life and disability insurance in their loans whenever possible. 5 The writing of this insurance was for Realty’s benefit as well as that of the borrower since Realty advertised to its prospective lenders that they would never lose a penny on any real estate loans they placed through Realty and in order to make this claim good, Realty itself always took over any defaulting loans from its lenders and paid them off in full.

In five transactions occurring in February, March and July 1967 and involving as loan officers appellants Greenberg and Varela and one other loan officer, John Mennitto (who is not a party to these mandamus proceedings), 6 the prime and controlling cause of the amount of each of the loans was the desire by Realty and its loan officers to place the amount of the loan above the statutory limits for regulated loans so that the various borrowers could be charged commissions substantially in excess of those *209 permitted on regulated loans. In other words, there was no other economic justification for pushing these loans up into the unregulated area. In each transaction the borrower or borrowers indicated that he or they needed a loan within the statutory limits for regulated loans under the Necessitous Borrower’s Act but, as just indicated, authorized and received loans in excess of those limits at the suggestion of the loan officers. 7 In each of the transactions the respective borrower or borrowers did not know and were not aware that if they obtained loans through Realty that were below the statutory limits, Realty could not have lawfully charged them commissions in excess of the statutory ceilings. Realty and its loan officers knew both the limits of regulated loans and the consequences of exceeding those limits in the possible commissions, etc., Realty could lawfully charge these borrowers. Nevertheless Realty and its loan officers failed to disclose these facts to these prospective borrowers before they authorized the obtaining of the loans suggested to them by Realty.

Positions of the Parties

The department found that the foregoing conduct on the part of appellants constituted substantial misrepresentation, fraud and dishonest dealing in violation of section 10176, subdivisions (a) and (i) and section 10177, subdivision (j). These constitute the fundamental findings. The department also found that appellants willfully disregarded the provisions of the Real Estate Law in violation of section 10177, subdivision (d) and that they had conducted themselves in a manner that would have warranted the denial of real estate licenses to them under section 10177, subdivision (f). 8 (See § 10152.) The trial court found all of these findings, including the fundamental ones, to be supported by the weight of the evidence as it determined that weight.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 Cal. App. 3d 204, 108 Cal. Rptr. 71, 1973 Cal. App. LEXIS 977, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/realty-projects-inc-v-smith-calctapp-1973.