Opinion
Petitioners seek a writ of mandate directing respondent court to vacate its order commanding petitioners to answer interrogatories. The action in which the interrogatories had been put is one wherein John McDowell and Lucylle Miller (real partiеs in interest) seek, on behalf of themselves and others of an alleged class, rescission of retail installment sales contracts, treble damages, injunction against further asserted violations of the California Consumers Legal Remedies Act, and attorneys’ fees of $500 for each person found to be a member of the class.
The primary malefactors, according to the allegations of the complaint, are one Jack Felix, doing business under the impressive name Apollo Industries, and his franchisor, Family Buying Power, Inc., a Nеw Jersey corporation. It is alleged that representations were made by agents of these two to plaintiffs (and assertedly to others) that by joining a “buying club” they could purchase merchandise at reduced prices, and that a particular stereo set (which was exhibited to the prospective initiates to the club) was available at about half its retail price. Installment contracts and membership certificates were then produced, and were signed by plaintiffs. The contracts were then assigned to рetitioners or to another financing agency, Morris Plan Company of California. Falsity of the representations is alleged, and violations of the Consumers Legal Remedies Act (Civ. Code, § 1750 et seq.). Plaintiffs pray that every member of the class of asserted victims be identified, notified of the action and invited to participate in it.
A demurrer to the complaint was filed by each of the petitioners and was sustained, but with leave to amend. The demurrers apparently were sustained on the proposition that plaintiffs had not alleged that their particular contracts with Family Buying Power, Inc. were assigned to Budget Finance Plan or C.I.T. Financial Services, and therefore that plaintiffs have no legal capacity to sue. But plaintiffs take the position that each of the petitioners for the writ did finance transactions which had been executed by the Felix agency, and that plaintiffs are entitled to know who were the *797 residents of Santa Cruz County who signed contracts with Felix, Apollo Industries or Family Buying Power, which were later assigned to petitioners, and tо know the details of the transactions. To this end, they proposed interrogatories, which are not presently challenged as to form or as to relevance in their particulars. Petitioners were ordered by the court to answer the interrogatories; whereupon, petitioners have sought a writ compelling nullification of that order.
I. Status of the Action
Petitioners contend that general demurrer having been sustained, there is no pleading at all before the trial court, therefore no party, and therefore again, no onе who can invoke the power of the court to conduct discovery, because Code of Civil Procedure section 2030, subdivision (a), provides for discovery at the instance of “any party.” Petitioners cite, as authority for the proposition that after the sustaining of a demurrer there is neither a proper pleading nor a proper party before the court, the decisions of
Cohen
v.
Superior Court,
If a plaintiff, demurrer to whose complaint had been sustained with leave to amend, were no longer a
party,
he could not dismiss the action if he were so advised, for Code of Civil Prоcedure section 581 refers to dismissal “by plaintiff” and “by either party, upon the written consent of the other.” Nor could he appeal from a subsequent dismissal by the court because Code of Civil Procedure section 902 allows an appeal by “any
*798
party aggrieved.” But in
Berri
v.
Superior Court,
Nor could the trial court reconsider its ruling after sustaining an order sustaining a demurrer withоut leave to amend if the action were so obliterated as to destroy the very existence of a party as plaintiff; but it is established that the court may do so.
(Berri
v.
Superior Court, supra,
at p. 860;
Bank of America
v.
Superior Court,
In fact, to grant a plaintiff leave to amend' (which should be allowed where the defect, though one of substance, may possibly be cured by supplying omitted allegations
(MacLeod
v.
Tribune Publishing Co., 52
Cal.2d 536, 542 [
Since plaintiff does so remain, plaintiff is entitled to reasonable discovery, even to disclose facts essential to his stating a cause of action. Code of Civil Procedure section 2030 allows any party to file and serve written interrogatories on any other party.
II. Class Action
The facts, so far as they may be learned at this incipient stage of the lawsuit, are to be found in the allegations of the complaint (at this point taken as true), from the petition for the writ, and from the return to the alternative writ, together with declarations accompanying each. Briefly stated, they are: Plaintiff McDowell bought a stereo set from Felix because of fraudulent representations, and signed the installment contract which he desires rescinded. The contract was assigned to Morris Plan Company, which is a defendant, but is not a petitioner for the writ. Plaintiff Miller bought a radar oven from Felix, but she financed the purchase by a direct loan of $570 from C.I.T. Financial Services (the proceeds were directed to Apollo Industries), and not by assignment from Felix. Budget Finance and C.I.T. make no denial, in the declarations of their officers, that they did finance Apollo contracts of persons other than plaintiffs.
Community of Interest
The Felix operation was a classic kind of door-to-door sales solicitation disguised (if the salesman were proficient) as an invitation to join a pre
*799
ferred group of buyers. A “canned” speech was provided the solicitоr, the reading of which (with its directions when to “break eye contact,” when to “commit,” and when to announce that the preferred purchasing service itself was not for sale even if a $1,000 check were given) would provide material for a satisfying satire. There was used even the device referred to in
Vasquez
v.
Superior Court,
But petitioners protest that because neither of them is an assignee of an Apollo contract executed by either of the plaintiffs, plaintiffs have no cause of action against petitioners, and plaintiffs cannot represent a class of adversaries to petitioners of which they are not members. Plaintiffs have suffered, and will suffer, no injury, evеn unintentional, at the hands of these defendants-petitioners.
But to hold with petitioners would be to give too narrow a breadth to the “class” which is essential to the bringing of a common action by persons commonly cozened. To allow them relief against Felix only would be futile —he has defaulted, his whereabouts are unknown, his records are unavailable. Ordinarily, consumer fraud class actions are contests between buyers and finance companies. They have a common potential adversary who frequently will be unаble to respond to just demands of either. But the *800 finance companies have made the vendor’s operation possible; in the present case, they supplied him with forms imprinted with their names, and discounted his paper. It is not alleged that- the assistance which they have given has made them guilty participants in the deception practiced by the vendor; but their support of the enterprise by financial aid, even though done impersonally, does oblige them to reveal the identities of those whose contraсts were assigned, so that effective class action may possibly be brought. If it were not so, righting of wrongs could be prevented by assignment by a larcenous purveyor to many financing agencies.
In
Payne
v.
United California Bank,
In
La Sala
v.
American Sav. & Loan Assn.,
The class action for the benefit of consumers has been regarded favorably by judicial decisions such as Daar and Vasquez, supra. The Consumers Legal Remedies Act (which became effective later than the decision in Daar and during the period when Vasquez was pending in the Supremе Court) reinforces this disposition expressly by the terms of Civil Code *801 section 1760, which directs liberal construction and application of the act in order to protect consumers and “to provide efficient and economical procedures to secure such protection.”
The petition for writ of mandate is denied and the alternative writ is discharged.
Rattigan, J., and Bray, J., * concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied November 14, 1973, and petitioners’ application for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied December 19, 1973.
Notes
Retired Presiding Justice of the Court of Appeal sitting under assignment by the Chairman of the Judicial Council.
