Seibert v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.

45 Cal. App. 3d 1, 120 Cal. Rptr. 233, 1975 Cal. App. LEXIS 1659
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 31, 1975
DocketCiv. 33020
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 45 Cal. App. 3d 1 (Seibert v. Sears, Roebuck & 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
Seibert v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 45 Cal. App. 3d 1, 120 Cal. Rptr. 233, 1975 Cal. App. LEXIS 1659 (Cal. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

Opinion

RATTIGAN, Acting P. J.

These five appeals are from judgments which concluded eleven separate actions commenced in the Superior Courts of *4 Alameda County and the City and County of San Francisco. The defendant in each action is a major retail merchant whose practices in selling on installment credit are regulated by the Unruh Act (Civ. Code, div. 3, pt. 4, tit. 2, ch. 1 [“Retail Installments Sales”], commencing with § 1801.) 1 Despite the multiple origins of the appeals, a principal question on each of them is whether the various defendants (respondents in this court) are complying with the Act, as properly interpreted, in the computation and collection of finance charges billed to credit customers. The challenged judgments were entered in different procedural sequences, but upon facts which were substantially identical as pleaded in each of the actions and which are not materially disputed in any of them. Because the principal legal issue and the factual elements are thus common to all of them, we dispose of the five appeals in this single decision.

1 Civil 33020

The Alameda County Actions

Among the eleven actions mentioned, seven were commenced in the Alameda County Superior Court between December 197Ó and July 1971. Each of these (to which we hereinafter refer on occasion as “the Alameda County actions”) was brought against a separate defendant by an individual who (1) named as plaintiffs therein himself (or herself) “and all persons similarly situated,” (2) made allegations in the complaint to the effect that he (or she) was maintaining a class action on behalf of himself (or herself) and others as members of “the class of persons maintaining retail installment accounts with [the respective] defendant,” (3) further alleged that the defendant was violating the Unruh Act in stated respects as to all members of “the class,” and (4) sought various forms of relief. (The parties and pleadings in the Alameda County actions are hereinafter described in further detail.)

In a joint pretrial conference order, the trial court ordered the seven Alameda County actions consolidated for trial. In the order, the court also defined eleven issues for trial, of which the first eight dealt with “liability” (i.e., whether the defendants were violating the Unruh Act as alleged in the several complaints) and ancillary matters; the other three involved the propriety and management of the actions as class actions. *5 The court further ordered the trial bifurcated into two phases, with the eight “liability” issues to be tried in the first phase.-

After a nonjury trial of the liability phase of the consolidated actions, the court filed findings of fact and conclusions of law in the defendants’ favor and entered a single judgment which denied relief in all seven actions and terminated them. In 1 Civil 33020, each of the individual Alameda County plaintiffs joins in an appeal from this judgment. 2

1 Civil 31184, 31804, 31811 and 31812

The San Francisco Actions

The remaining four actions (“the San Francisco actions”) were filed in the San Francisco Superior Court in December 1970, and February 1971. Again, each was brought against a separate defendant as a class action maintained by an individual on behalf of himself (or herself) “and all persons similarly situated”; in this respect, in alleging membership of the plaintiff “class” and violations of the Unruh Act, and in terms of the relief sought in each, the San Francisco complaints were identical (for our purposes) with those filed in the Alameda County actions. In each of the San Francisco actions, the trial court sustained a general demurrer to the complaint without leave to amend and entered a judgment of dismissal. In 1 Civil 31184, 31804, 31811 and 31812, each of the San Francisco plaintiffs appeals from the respective judgment dismissing his or her action.

Although the Alameda County actions involved materially undisputed facts and a single legal issue requiring, interpretation of the Unruh Act, they were tried at length and in detail. 3 For this reason (and unlike the San Francisco appeals, which present the same question of law but on abbreviated records because they originated at the demurrer stage in each instance), the Alameda County record is a comprehensive basis for *6 our review of all the judgments before us. Although its sheer length precludes a summary of all the facts received in evidence (see fn. 3, ante), we first recite some of them, as found in part by the trial court, by way of background, and in terms of the indicated provisions of the Unruh Act itself. 4

Background Facts and the Unruh Act

The Act provides for, and regulates, two arrangements under which .retail installment credit is extended to a “buyer” by a “seller” in California. 5 One plan is the so-called “closed-end contract,” which is not directly involved in the present actions but which should be described for the purpose of distinguishing it and because of certain parallels in the statutory treatment of both arrangements. The Act refers to the closed-end plan as a “retail installment contract,” or “contract.” (§ 1802.6.) It involves a written contract, between the store and the customer, which is executed in a specified form at the time a particular purchase is made; a down payment by the customer at that time; a “finance charge” which is defined in section 1802.10, 6 calculated when the contract is prepared, and added (together with other charges permitted by the Act, if they are applicable in the transaction) to the unpaid balance of the sale price; and a provision in the contract wherein the customer agrees to pay the resulting total (the “amount financed”) in a scheduled sequence of fixed consecutive payments. (§§ 1803.1-1803.3.) The precomputed finance charge is calculated by multiplying a fixed percentage of the “amount financed” by the number of months between *7 the date of purchase and the date of the last scheduled installment payment. (See §§ 1802.11, 1805.1.) Installment purchases of other items by the same customer, if made on the same closed-end basis, are made under separate contracts or under appropriate “add-on” provisions, as permitted and regulated by the Act, in a single contract. (§§ 1808.1-1808.6.)

The other credit arrangement offered is the so-called “revolving charge account,” which is the subject of all of the present actions and which is denominated “ ‘retail installment account’ or ‘installment account’ or ‘revolving account’ ” in section 1802.7, which also defines it and its terms. 7

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 Cal. App. 3d 1, 120 Cal. Rptr. 233, 1975 Cal. App. LEXIS 1659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seibert-v-sears-roebuck-co-calctapp-1975.