Riley v. Chambers

185 P. 855, 181 Cal. 589, 8 A.L.R. 418, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 399
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 29, 1919
DocketSac. No. 2985.
StatusPublished
Cited by113 cases

This text of 185 P. 855 (Riley v. Chambers) 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
Riley v. Chambers, 185 P. 855, 181 Cal. 589, 8 A.L.R. 418, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 399 (Cal. 1919).

Opinion

OLNEY, J.

The legislature of 1919 passed an act (Stats. 1919, p. 1252), purporting to regulate the business of acting as a real estate broker or salesman in California, creating a state real estate department with an official having the title of real estate commissioner at its head, and pro *591 viding for the payment of the expenses of the department out of a certain fund in the state treasury. The petitioner, Ray L. Riley, was appointed real estate commissioner, incurred certain expenses on account of his department, and sought their payment out of the state treasury in the manner provided by the act. The respondent, the state controller, refused to authorize such payment, having apparently some doubt as to the constitutional validity of the act. Thereupon the commissioner sought to obtain a writ of mandate from this court to compel the controller to authorize the payment of the1 expenses in question. A demurrer was interposed to the petition for a writ, and the matter has been submitted to us upon this demurrer. The only points raised are as to the constitutionality of the act.

The act makes it unlawful for any person or corporation to act as a real estate broker or real estate salesman without first obtaining a license. A real estate broker is defined as any “person, copartnership, or corporation who, for a compensation, sells, or offers for sale, buys, or offers to buy, or negotiates' the purchase or sale or exchange of real estate, or who, for compensation, negotiates loans on real estate, leases, or offers to lease, rents, or places for rent, or collects rent from real estate, or improvements thereon, for others as a whole or partial vocation.” A real estate salesman is defined as one who for compensation and as a whole or partial vocation is employed by a real estate broker to do any of the things specified in the definition of a broker.

The act provides that it shall not apply to anyone acting in regard to his own property, to anyone “holding a duly executed power of attorney from the owner,” to any attorney at law acting in his professional capacity, or to any receiver, trustee in bankruptcy, or trustee selling under a deed of trust. It also provides that a single act of selling, etc., shall make the person a real estate broker.

The required license is to be issued by the real estate commissioner upon written application, accompanied, in the case of a broker, by the recommendation of two real estate owners certifying that the applicant is “honest, truthful and of good reputation,” and in the case of a salesman by a similar recommendation and certification by his employer. The act does not in so many words authorize the commis- ' sioner to refuse a license if he is not satisfied as to the *592 honesty, truthfulness, and good reputation of the applicant, hut such authority is necessarily implied. For the license a broker is required to pay an annual fee of ten dollars and a salesman one of two dollars.

The commissioner is given power to suspend or revoke any license for dishonest dealing by the licensee after the presentation of written charges against him and an opportunity afforded him to be heard. The decision of the commissioner suspending or revoking any license is made subject to review by the courts in accordance with the provisions of the code for the issuance of Writs of review, the action of the courts, however, being limited by the act to determining whether there has been “an abuse of discretion” on the part of the commissioner.

Anyone acting as real estate broker or salesman in violation of the act is made liable to punishment, if an individual, by a fine not exceeding two thousand dollars or by imprisonment not exceeding two years, or by both fine and imprisonment, and if a 'corporation, by a fine not exceeding five thousand dollars.

A real estate department is, as we have said, created with the real estate commissioner as its head. The latter is authorized to employ such deputies and assistants as he may need and fix their compensation. No limit is placed on his discretion in this respect, other than the practical limit incident to the fact that all the expenses of the department, including the five thousand dollar salary of the commissioner himself, are payable only out of a certain fund in the state treasury, which, in turn, is made up solely of fees collected by the department.

Such being the general scope and outline of the act, a number of objections - are made to it. The most important of these is that the act is an unreasonable interference with the right of every citizen to engage in a legitimate and useful occupation. This objection is fundamental, and if sound, the whole act falls, since its sole primary purpose is to hedge about the pursuit of the vocation of a real estate broker or salesman with certain restrictions. That such vocation is a legitimate and useful one cannot be controverted. [1] Nor can it be controverted that the right to engage in a lawful and useful occupation cannot, in effect, be taken away under the guise of regulation. On *593 the other hand, it is equally true that a lawful and useful occupation may be subjected to regulation in the public interest, and that all regulation involves in some degree a limitation upon the exercise of the right regulated. The test is whether or not the limitation imposed is really by way of regulation only, is one whose purpose and effect go no further than throwing reasonable safeguards in the public interest around the exercise of the right. If the limitation is of this character, its imposition is a proper exercise of the police power resident in the legislature, and whose exercise is one of the latter’s most important functions.

Now the single primary purpose of the act is to require of real estate brokers and salesmen that they be “honest, truthful and of good reputation.” All of its provisions, including the requirement of a license, are but incidental to this single purpose and designed to accomplish it. In the nature of things no amount of regulation can insure the possession of those qualities by everyone engaged in the business, and it is easy to conceive of regulations which would have this as their sole object and yet be so extreme as practically to take away the general right of engaging in the business. Two questions, therefore, arise regarding such regulations as those here imposed; First, is the general limitation that only persons of good character may engage in the particular business a safeguard which may reasonably be required as to that business? And, second, are the specific limitations prescribed to accomplish the general purpose no more than reasonable therefor?

As to the second question, there is no controversy in the present case, and in fact there could not well be any. It is clear that if it is permissible to require some assurance of good character, the specific limitation imposed for that purpose by this act that everyone seeking to engage in the business shall file a written application accompanied by a certificate of good character, is no more than reasonable. The controversy is over the first question, whether or not the general limitation that only persons of good character should engage in the business is a permissible one.

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Bluebook (online)
185 P. 855, 181 Cal. 589, 8 A.L.R. 418, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riley-v-chambers-cal-1919.