Dеfendant owned two lots in a tract of land known as the Whitesell Home Place in Alamance County. In June 1987 defendant, through his agent Teague Auction and Realty, Inc. (Teague), advertised the property for sale at a public auction scheduled for 27 June 1987. His ad stated:
Tract #1 Consists of 1.56 Acres with 302.06 ft. Fronting on Williamson Ave. 278.99 ft. Deep [and including a house and several outbuildings]. . . . Tract #2 Consists of 1.13+ Acres . . . w/ 299.61 ft. Fronting Whitesell Drive. 201.84 ft. Deep .... Investors, Speculators, Homeseekers, This Is Some Choice Property That You Will Want To Have A Look At. (Emphasis added.)
The ad listed defendant as the prоperty owner and stated that Teague, third party defendant at trial, would conduct the sale.
At the auction on 27 June 1987, plaintiff purchased Tract #1 for $66,000 and Tract #2 for $39,000. Pursuant to the advertised terms of the sale, plaintiff deposited ten percent of the $105,000 рurchase price, i.e., $10,500, with Teague. The terms required that the balance be paid “upon delivery of deed.” Subsequently, plaintiff discovered that the advertised frontage on Tract #1 was incorrect and that the deed plat in the Alamance County Register of Deeds office showed that the frontage was only 268.4 feet, substantially less than the 302.06 feet represented in the ad.
On 12 August 1987, plaintiff filed a complaint against defendant, alleging that defendant had misrepresented Tract #l’s frontage and claiming that “other descriрtions set forth in said advertisement, circulars, and flyers, were misleading and substantially dif *242 ferent from the actual size and dimensions of said property.” Plaintiff further alleged that defendant had refused to refund plaintiff’s payment of $10,500, and that plaintiff had relied on defendant’s intеntionally or recklessly misleading statements to his detriment. Plaintiff concluded by alleging that defendant’s actions constituted “unfair or deceptive acts or practices” in violation of N.C.G.S. Chapter 75. Plaintiff prayed for: (1) recovery of the $10,500 plus interest from 27 June 1987; (2) treble damages and reasonable attorney fees; and (3) payment of the court costs by defendant.
Defendant answered, denying that the descriptions were intentionally misrepresented and denying that plaintiff reasonably relied on the descriptiоns. Defendant also contended that “publication of the plat description, including accurate meets [sic] and bounds and distances, together with the announcement prior to the auction sale, correcting the error in advertising . . . constitutes estоppel against the plaintiff’s action.” Defendant counterclaimed for a sum of $150,000, attorney fees, and court costs, stating:
the reason defendant was auctioning said property was that he had certain financial obligations, including obligations to the Internal Revenue Service, which required immediate payment, that as a result of the Plaintiff’s breach of the Sales Contract and his failure to tender[ ] the agreed upon Purchase Price, the Defendant was required to sell his home and incur moving and storage expenses, disrupt his family, suffer interest payments and suffer other ancillary and other consequential damages.
Further, defendant filed a third party complaint against Teague, alleging that Teague was responsible for advertising and conducting the sale, аnd seeking indemnification and contribution from Teague. Teague answered, alleging that: (1) there was no mistake in the description of Tract #2, and (2) defects in the description of Tract #1 were “corrected by stopping the sale and passing around plаts of the property giving the correct front footage . . . [and] after inspection had been made by all of those who wished to see said plat, the sale was resumed.”
At trial, the jury found that the sale was procured by defendant’s “fraudulent representation” and that it was not the result of a mutual mistake. It found that plaintiff was entitled to recover from defendant $10,500 with interest from the date the suit was commenced, plus costs. The trial court entered judgment according *243 ly, but denied plaintiff’s motion to treble the damages рursuant to N.C.G.S. Chapter 75.
On plaintiff’s appeal, the majority in the Court of Appeals — relying on
Rosenthal v.
Perkins,
Because this case is before us pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7A-30(2), our review is limited to the issue raised in Judge Greene’s dissent: whether defendant’s sale of the two lots was “in or affecting commerce” within the meaning and intent of that phrase as used in N.C.G.S. § 75-1.1. N.C.R. App. P. 16(b). For the reasons stated below, wе hold that defendant’s actions were “in or affecting commerce.” We accordingly reverse.
N.C.G.S. § 75-1.1 declares unlawful “[u]nfair methods of competition in or affecting commerce.” N.C.G.S. § 75-l.Ha) (1988). The case law applying Chapter 75 holds that a plaintiff who рroves fraud thereby establishes that unfair or deceptive acts have occurred. “Proof of fraud would necessarily constitute a violation of the prohibition against unfair and deceptive acts . . . .”
Hardy v. Toler,
Application of Chapter 75 is not unfettered, however. The statute itself exempts both “professional services rendered by a member of a learned profession,” N.C.G.S. § 75-l.Kb), аnd acts by an advertising medium unaware of their “false, misleading or deceptive character.” N.C.G.S. § 754.1(c) (1988). Our Court of Appeals has engrafted a further exemption. In two
cases
— Rosenthal,
The defendants . . . were not engaged in trade or commerce. They did not by the sale of their residence on this one occasion become realtors. It is clear from the cases involving violation of the Unfair Trade Practices Act thаt the alleged violators must be engaged in a business, a commercial or industrial establishment or enterprise.
Rosenthal,
Defendant did not appeal from the jury’s finding that the sale here was procured by his “fraudulent representation,” so that finding is undisputed. Because the presence of fraud is undisputed, defendant’s acts were “unfair or deceptive.”
Hardy v. Toler,
It is clear beyond argument that the sale in this case does not fall within either of the two statutory exemрtions. It remains, then, to determine whether it falls within the “homeowner’s exception” created by the Court of Appeals, or is otherwise exempt. Apart from the “homeowner’s exception,” no basis for exempting the sale is either argued by the partiеs or suggested by the record. *245 While this Court has not passed upon the “homeowner’s exception,” for purposes of deciding this case we assume, arguendo, that it exists, and that the sale by a private party of his or her residence is not within the scope of Chapter 75.
In determining whether defendant has met his burden of proving himself within the scope of the “homeowner’s exception,” we consider the facts he has proved in the context of the purposes underlying the protections provided by Chapter 75. The General Assembly initially stated the purpose of section 75-1.1 as follows:
The purpose of this section is to declare, and to provide civil legal means to maintain, ethical standards of dealings between persons engaged in business and between persons engaged in business and the consuming public within this State to the end that good faith and fair dealings between buyers and sellers at all level[s] of commerce be had in this State.
N.C.G.S. § 75-1.1 (1975) (quoted in
Threatt v. Hiers,
The Generаl Assembly subsequently amended section 75-l.l(b) to define “commerce” inclusively as “business activity,
however denominated,"
limited only by the express exemptions set forth above. N.C.G.S. § 75-l.Kb) (1988) (emphasis added). The term “business” generally imports a broad definition.
See, e.g.,
Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary 113 (G. & C. Merriam Co., Springfield, Mass., 1953) (“Business,
often an inclusive term,
specifically names the combined aсtivities of those engaged in the purchase and sale of commodities or in related financial transactions”) (emphasis added). Other courts have emphasized the inclusive nature of the statute in light of the foregoing considerations. Our Court of Appeals has stated: “The purpose of G.S. 75-1.1 is to provide a civil means to maintain ethical standards of dealings between persons engaged in business and the consuming public in this State[,] and [it]
applies to dealings between buyers and sellers at all levels of cоmmerce.”
*246
United Virginia Bank v. Air-Lift Associates,
So far as the record here reveals, the transaction at issue was indisputably a commercial land transaction that affected commerce in the broad sense. Defendant’s advertising of this property explicitly appealed to “Investors [and] Speculators” as well as “Homeseekers.” The more probable inference from this evidence is that the sale was not of residential property. This probability is further advanced by defendant’s assertion in his сounterclaim that plaintiff’s failure to pay “the agreed upon Purchase Price” required defendant “to sell his home.” This pleading does nothing to advance the proposition that defendant was selling residential property, but suggests instead that his residence and the property sold here were discrete entities. Assuming that a “homeowner’s exception” exists, its application is limited to an individual involved in the sale of his or her own residence. The only evidence in this record tending in any way to prove thаt the property at issue was residential was that the advertisement noted that the lots to be sold included a house and several outbuildings. This evidence is insufficient to carry defendant’s burden of proving that he was a “private party engaged in the sale of a residence.”
On the contrary, to the limited extent that the transaction is depicted by the sparse facts in this record, it involved a buyer and seller in a commercial context to which the protections afforded by section 75-1.1, whether viewed literally or purposively, apply. The defendant did not prove that the transaction was anything other than a business activity well within the banks of the stream of commerce as broadly defined by the General Assembly in N.C.G.S. § 75-1.1. As such, plaintiff is entitled to the protection of the statutе.
We thus conclude that the sale fell within the ambit of the inclusive phrase “business activities, however denominated,” N.C.G.S. § 75-l.l(b), and was therefore “in or affecting commerce” within the meaning and intent of that phrase as used in N.C.G.S. § 75-l.l(a). Because the jury found that the sale was procured by defendant’s
*247
“fraudulent representation,” plaintiff was entitled to treble damages.
Hardy v. Toler,
Defendant relies in part on
Blackwell v. Dorosko,
For the reasons stated, the decision of the Court of Appeals is reversed. The cause is remanded to the Court of Appeals for further remand to the Superior Court, Alamance County, for entry of a judgment for treble the amount of damages fixed by the verdict. N.C.G.S. § 75-16 (1988). The superior court shall also determine, in its discretion, whether to award plaintiff an attorney fee. N.C.G.S. § 75-16.1 (1988).
Reversed and remanded.
