Opinion
In this opinion we consider the viability of appellants’ claim for injunctive relief filed to prevent common carriers and retailers who sell prepaid phone cards to the public in several-minute blocks from allegedly engaging in misleading and deceptive advertising. Appellants contend that respondents have improperly failed to disclose in their advertising and packaging materials that calls made with the cards will be charged by rounding up to the next full minute, so that, for example, a call lasting one minute and one second will be debited from the card as a two-minute call. Appellants, who brought this action as private attorneys general on behalf of The People of the State of Cаlifornia, claim that respondents’ advertising practices are unfair and misleading within the meaning of Business and Professions Code sections 17200 and 17500.
1
In the trial court, they sought to enjoin respondents from continuing these practices and asked for a disgorgement of all “ill-gotten profits” resulting therefrom. Respondents, who include two providers of telephone services
2
and four nonprovider phone card retailers,
3
successfully demurred to appellants’ first amended complaint on the ground that the action was barred by the filed rate doctrine. This doctrine,
4
which will be discussed in greater detail presently, derives from the requirement contained in the Federal Communications Act that common carriers, such as AT & T, file with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and keeр open for public inspection “all charges [and the] classifications, practices, and regulations affecting such charges.” (47 U.S.C. § 203(a).) As a corollary, the filed rate doctrine prohibits an entity
*329
subject to these requirements from “charging rates ‘for its services other than those properly filed with the appropriate federal regulatory authority.’ [Citation.]” (Ma
rcus
v.
AT&T Corp.
(S.D.N.Y. 1996)
Based upon the filed rate doctrine, the trial court sustainеd without leave to amend the demurrer of each defendant, denied a motion for reconsideration brought by the retailer defendants and dismissed the action. We decide here that an action which seeks only to enjoin misleading or deceptive practices in the advertising of phone card rates, and seeks no monetary recovery, does not implicate the federal filed rate doctrine and can proceed under sections 17200 and 17500.
We also consider and reject respondents’ several other grounds for demurrer, which were not specifically addressed by the trial court’s ruling. We hold that the complaint is not preempted by the Federal Communications Act, that the Californiа Public Utilities Commission does not have exclusive jurisdiction, that the doctrine of primary jurisdiction does not compel dismissal or stay of the action and that the appellants were not required to exhaust their administrative remedies. Accordingly, we reverse and remand for further proceedings on appellants’ claim for injunctive relief.
Factual and Procedural Background
On June 14, 1996, appellants filed, on behalf of The People of the State of California, a first amended complaint for injunctive relief, alleging that respondents were engaging in unfair business practices and false and misleading advertising, in violation of sections 17200 and 17500. Specifically, they alleged that respondents, who sell prepaid phone cards to the public, act deceptively in that the packaging for the cards does not “reveal to the consumer, prior to purchase, that calls made with these cards are, in fact, rounded up to the next higher minutes.” For example, on the outer packaging of its “PrePaid Card” respondent AT & T states the card is “worth 10 minutes of phone calls in the U.S.” and that “1 minute of calling time requires 1 unit when calling within the U.S.” Appellants contend that these statements are false, deceptive and misleading because of the failure to state that calls are rounded up to the next minute, so that a twenty-second call will be billed at one minute, and a one-minute and ten-second call will be billed at two minutes. Statements made on packаging for phone cards sold by the *330 remaining respondents are similarly detailed, with copies of the packages attached to the complaint as exhibits. 5 In each case, it is alleged that the packages purport to sell more than is actually provided, because the rounding up is not revealed.
Appellants’ first amended complaint alleges that respondents’ practices, characterized as misrepresentations and nondisclosures of material facts, constitute unfair and fraudulent business acts or practices, within the meaning of section 17200 and unfair, deceptive, untrue or misleading advertising likely to have deceived the consuming public, within the meaning of section 17500. The complaint seeks “appropriate equitable relief including but not limited to an order: [¶] (1) Restraining defendants from continuing and/or pursuing the acts described and complained of in this action. [¶] (2) Restraining defendants from failing and/or refusing to undertake an immediate public information campaign to inform members of the general public in California of their policy of rounding up to the nearest minute when billing calls to their respective pre-paid phone cards. [¶] (3) Restraining defendants from failing and/or refusing to disgorge all ill-gotten monies which they obtained in California as a result of the acts set forth in this Complaint.”
Respondents demurred to the first amended complaint, contending that it failed to state a cause of action under the filed rate doctrine because their billing practices, including that of rounding up phone card calls, had been fully disclosed in publicly filed rates, the contents of which the California public was conclusively presumed to know. They also demurred on the ground that the San Francisco Superior Court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the raised claims, which were within the exclusive jurisdiction of the California Public Utilities Commission, the FCC and the federal courts. The demurrers were sustained without leave to amend and the action dismissed on the ground that the action was barred by the filed rate doctrine. This timely appeal followed.
*331 Standard of Review
On appeal from a judgment of dismissal after a demurrer is sustained without leave to amend, we assume the truth of all properly pleaded facts in the complaint.
(First Nationwide Savings
v.
Perry
(1992)
Discussion
We decide here whether the trial court properly concluded that the filed rate doctrine is implicated in the narrow circumstances presented. There is no question that the doctrine has been used repeatedly to bar myriad claims seeking monetary recovery. No case, however, has used the doctrine to bar an action for injunctive relief brought under sections 17200 аnd 17500, which require no proof of damages in order to be sustained. As we shall discuss, we hold that the filed rate doctrine does not apply to bar the case before us, to the extent of the claim for injunctive relief. We hold that the policies which are furthered by the California statutes would be undermined by the filed rate doctrine’s presumption of a consumer’s omniscience of filed rates, and the resulting immunity to common carriers, regardless of any advertising deception used to lure the consumer.
We will first consider sections 17200 and 17500 and address whether, assuming the truth of the complaint’s well-pleaded allegations, a cause of action has been stated. Next we consider whether the claims fall within and are barred by the filed rate doctrine. Finally, we address the remainder of the grounds raised on demurrer.
Does the Complaint State a Cause of Action Under Sections 17200 and 17500? 6
Sections 17200 and 17500 are consumer protection statutes designed, in part, to protect the public by prohibiting false, unfair, misleading
*332
or deceptive advertising.
(Committee on Children’s Television, Inc.
v.
General Foods Corp.
(1983)
Thus, the statutes are meant to protect the public from a wide spectrum of improper conduct in advertising. They may be invoked where the advertising complained of is not actually false, but thought likely to mislead or deceive, or is in fact false. By their breadth, the stаtutes encompass not only those advertisements which have deceived or misled because they are untrue, but also those which may be accurate on some level, but will nonetheless tend to mislead or deceive. We reiterate the point made in Saunders, that the concept encompassed in the phrase “likely to be deceived” has no relationship to the concept of common law fraud, which is also sometimes referred to as deception. A fraudulent deception must be actually false, known to be false by the perpetrator and reasonably relied upon by a victim who incurs damages. None of these elements are required to state a claim for injunctive relief under seсtion 17200 or 17500. A perfectly true statement couched in *333 such a manner that it is likely to mislead or deceive the consumer, such as by failure to disclose other relevant information, is actionable under these sections.
We consider the claims here in light of these standards. Of course, we make no factual findings as to the allegations, other than to say that for our purposes on appeal, we must assume the allegations to be true.
(First Nationwide Savings
v.
Perry, supra,
Respоndents urge us to follow the lead taken by the courts in
Alicke
v.
MCI Communications Corp.
(D.C. Cir. 1997)
We decline to conclude on the facts alleged here that no reasonable consumer of prepaid phone cards would be likely to be misled or deceived by respondents’ practices. The rationale of the holdings in Alicke and Marcus rested in part upon the consumers’ ability to read the phone bills provided by *334 the respondents there. With this document before them, they could see that only full minutes had been charged, but could not reasonably believe that each call they had made had been in increments of precise minutes. As noted by the court in Marcus, the only reasonable conclusion which could be drawn was that the company was rounding up or down. The situation before us differs in significant respect. The phone cards in question, whose outer packagings do not reveal the practice of rounding up, are prepaid. A consumer cannot read any materials provided by the carrier with the card before buying the card, which will advise him or her of the practice. Based on the advertising a consumer will not know that whole minutes are being credited for each fraction of a minute until the card has been used. We emphasize that it is immaterial under the statutes pursuant to which appellants have sued whether a consumer has been actually misled by an advertiser’s representations. It is enough that the language used is likely to deceive, mislead or confuse. (People v. Dollar Rent-A-Car Systems, Inc., supra, 211 Cal.App.3d at pp. 129-130.) Wе conclude that the practices alleged here were likely to mislead, confuse or deceive members of the 7
In addition, the decisions in
Alicke
and
Marcus
are premised upon a finding that it was not reasonable for plaintiffs to rely only on defendants’ billing format in formulating their understanding of the amounts they were being billed, because of the independent knowledge they must have possessed about their own calling habits. The appellate opinion affirming
Marcus
held similarly that plaintiffs could not reasonably rely on an understanding of the rates that was different from those filed with the FCC. As explained above, the appellants here are not required to allege reasonable reliance in order to sustain their claim under the California statutes. This is so bеcause the statutes seek to protect against the
likelihood
that the public will be deceived, not against the
actual
harm incurred by the public. For this reason, “[t]he court may impose liability and civil penalties without individualized proof of reliance . . . .”
(People
v.
Dollar Rent-A-Car Systems, Inc., supra,
Are These Well-pleaded State Claims Barred by the Filed Rate Doctrine?
Respondents contend that appellants’ action implicates phone card rates as filed with the FCC and therefore is preempted or barred by the federal *335 scheme. To consider this argument we examine the relevant federal statutes and their purposes. If appellants’ action seeks redress for matters completely within the purview of federal law, then they have no recourse under California’s unfair business practices and deceptive advertising statutes.
Respondents contend that appellants’ claims necessarily and exclusively arise under the Federal Communications Act
8
(the Act) which aims to regulate “interstate and foreign commerce in communication by wire and radio so as to make available, so far as possible, to all the people of the United States a rapid, efficient, Nation-wide, and world-wide wire and radio communication service with adequate facilities at reasonable charges.” (47 U.S.C. § 151.) As noted above, in what has been described as “the heart of the common-carrier section of the Communications Act”
(MCI Telecommunications Corp.
v.
American Telephone & Telegraph Co.
(1994)
It has been said that the doctrine furthers two legitimate goals: nondiscriminatory rate setting and agency autonomy in rate setting without court interference.
(Wegoland Ltd.
v.
NYNEX Corp.
(2d Cir. 1994)
*336
Without a doubt, if appéllants’ complaint concerned the propriety of the rounding up practice itself, their claim would be barred by the filed rate doctrine. This would be so whether the gravamen of such a complaint was based in contract or on a theory of fraud.
(Marcus, supra,
What of a matter such as the one before us, which makes no claim of fraud in the
charged
rate, nor a claim of breach of contract for services, nor an attack on the reasonableness of the rounding up practice, but instead complains of improper advertising practices in the promotion of the services and seeks to enjoin the further use of those practices? As stated by the court in
Marcus'.
“Plaintiffs’ request for an injunction requiring AT & T to disclose its billing practices in materials other than the tariffs is not barred by the filed rate doctrine, because that type of relief wоuld have no impact on the tariff charged. It would not require AT & T to charge more or less than the filed rate, nor would it permit a customer to pay more or less than the filed rate. Nor would plaintiffs’ claims for injunctive relief to remedy AT &.T’s non-disclosure be preempted by the Communications Act, which requires common carriers to disclose their rates in the filed tariffs only. The Act does not prohibit a state from requiring common carriers to disclose their rates elsewhere, and any such state obligation would not frustrate [the] Act’s purposes of uniformity and agency ratemaking.” (
The State of California has no requirement that common carriers disclose their rates anywhere other than in the rate schedules filed with the Public Utilities Commission. Nonetheless, businesses are prohibited from engaging *337 in advertising practices which are potentially misleading to the public, so that if they choose to promote their rates, they must do so with sufficient accuracy that they do not risk misleading or deceiving the consumer. We hold that under California’s unfair business practices and deceptive advertising provisions respondents are prohibited from disseminating misleading or deceptive packaging materials with their prepaid phone cards. Appellants are entitled to seek to enjoin the alleged practice, and respondents’ demurrers to this claim were erroneously sustained.
Scope of Relief Available
Appellants have asked for an injunction to prevent respondents from continuing their allegedly deceptive practices, and have asked for disgorgement of respondents’ allegedly ill-gotten gains. Throughout this opinion we have alluded to the type of relief which may be available to appellants under sections 17200 and 17500 without implicating the filed rate doctrine bar. We explicitly repeat our holding: To the extent appellants do not seek a monetary recovery, they may proceed with their action for injunctive relief. They may not seek to recover any money from respondents, whether they label their request one for disgorgement or otherwise. The net effect of imposing any monetary sanction on the respondents will be to effectuate a rebate, thereby resulting in discriminatory rates. As we have seen, this is a matter which is strictly of federal concern under the Act, and is, therefore, barred by the filed rate doctrine.
Appellants insist that they do not run afoul of the filed rate doctrine by asking for disgorgement because they do not seek a rebate or refund, which they concede would violate the filed rate doctrine’s prohibition against discriminatory rates. They seek, instead, that broad equitable remedy which is allowed by section 17203: “Any person who engages, has engaged, or proposes to engage in unfair competition may be enjoined in any court of competent jurisdiction. The court may make such orders or judgments, including the appointment of a receiver, as may be necessary to prevent the use or employment by any person of any practice which constitutes unfair competition, as defined in this chapter, or as may be necessary to restore to any person in interest any money or property, real or personal, which may have been acquired by means of such unfair competition.” (Italics added.)
Respondents contend that any monetary award to appellants would be tantamount to a rebate which necessarily would result in rate discrimination against those not receiving a portion of the award. They argue, first, that there are no ill-gotten gains to disgorge, because the rates charged are those filed with the FCC, and are presumptively correct. (Marcus, supra, 938 *338 F.Supp. at p. 1170 [a customer who has paid the filed rate has suffered no legally cognizablе injury].) Second, they contend that any calculation of the appropriate amount to disgorge would require the trial court’s determination of how much of the phone card profits respondents can keep, and how much they must relinquish, which would necessitate a finding regarding the reasonableness of the rate charged. Such an inquiry would contravene the presumption of the filed rate’s correctness and would enmesh the trial court in a determination of the reasonableness of the rates, a matter within the exclusive province of the FCC and the California Public Utilities Commission.
In response to these concerns, appellants urge the use of a “fluid recovery” which would not be dependent upon a calculation or consideration of reasonable rates. Instead, for example, the court could order disgorgement of all respondents’ profits or all sums collected from sales of the phone cards. These sums, appellants insist, would not represent damages paid for an injury, but instead would serve as a punishment for past and a deterrent from future misleading advertising campaigns.
In deciding this question we think it important to consider the unfair trade practice act’s scheme for allowing monetary awards. In general, the unfair competition provisions allow for such equitable orders “as may be necessary to restore to any person in interest any money or property, real or рersonal, which may have been acquired” by means of unfair competition or unlawful advertising practices. (§§ 17203, 17535, italics added.) The statutory scheme also allows for the imposition of civil penalties of up to $2,500 per violation in actions brought by certain governmental agencies. (§§ 17206, 17536.) In addition, it provides for a $6,000 civil penalty to be imposed against any person who intentionally violates any injunction issued pursuant to section 17203 or 17535. (§§ 17207, 17535.5.) These $2,500 and $6,000 sanctions, having been labeled by the Legislature as “civil penalties,” can be understood as a form of punishment imposed for a defendant’s wrongdoing.
It has been held that the broad scope of remedies allowed by section 17203 includes those orders which provide restitution to the victim of unfair competition.
(State Farm Fire & Casualty Co.
v.
Superior Court
(1996)
Even in those cases which have allowed for a fluid recovery, as opposed to a restoration to identified individuals or classes, the amount being restored has been objectively measurable as that amount which the defendant would not have received but for the unfairly competitive practice. (See, e.g.,
People
v.
Thomas Shelton Powers, M.D., Inc.
(1992)
It is in this analysis that appellants’ argument falters. If the court were to fashion a fluid recovery in this case, how would the amount be measured? What have respondents obtained which they are not entitled to keep? Appellants assert that the court could, if it chose to, order respondents to disgorge all the money earned from phone card sales, because if they had not advertised misleadingly, members of the public would not have purchasеd the cards at all. The fact remains, however, that once the cards were purchased and used, the members of the public received exactly what they paid for. The filed tariffs allow the practice of rounding up, so that a card lasts only as long as the number of full minute units debited, regardless of actual “talk time.” This appellants do not dispute. They make clear, in fact, that they are not attacking the practice of rounding up, as to do so would trigger the application of the filed rate doctrine. That said, there are no ill-gotten profits to restore. Any amount taken away from respondents for services provided using properly filed tariffs would amount to a rebate. This, as we have seen, is not permitted.
*340 To summarize, the notion of restoring something to a victim of unfair competition includes two separate components. The offending party must have obtained something to which it was not entitled and the victim must have given up something which he or she was entitled to keep. Because the filed rates charged by respondents are presumptively correct, a consumer who uses a prepaid phone card obtains the full value of what was paid for and therefore has given up nothing, regardless of whether he or she was improperly induced to purchase the card in the first place. Any attempt to calculate a monetary amount to be paid on behalf of those who purchased the cards would necessarily result in a refund or rebate of properly collected fees for services. This would enmesh the court in the rate-setting process and directly contravene the filed rate doctrine. Appellants are not entitled to seek restoration of any money under section 17203.
Other Grounds for Demurrer
We have held that appellants’ claim for injunctive relief states a cause of action under sections 17200 and 17500 and does not implicate in any manner the reasonableness of respondents’ practice of rounding up. It follows, therefore, that respondents’ other grounds for demurrer that jurisdiction rests exclusively or primarily with the California Public Utilities Commission and/or the FCC and the federal courts cannot be sustained, as these theories are all dependent upon a conclusion that rate setting is implicated in the action. The superior court has jurisdiction to decide the matter.
Viability of Action Against Retailer Respondents
The retailer respondents have filed a separate brief claiming, as they did in seeking reconsideration before the trial court, that they cannot be held to answer appellants’ complaint, as the fixed rate doctrine has no applicability to noncommon carriers. Again, because we decide that this action can go forward without implicating that doctrine, we need not reach the point raised. An action claiming unfair business practices and misleading advertising under California law can proceed against these respondents as well.
Disposition
The trial court’s orders sustaining respondents’ demurrers and dismissing appellants’ first amended complaint are reversed. The matter is remanded for further proceedings on appellants’ claim for an injunction, but not on their *341 claim for restitution under sections 17203 and 17535. Appellants to recover costs on appeal.
Corrigan, Acting P. J., and Parrilli, J., concurred.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Business and Professions Code unless otherwise indicated.
AT & T Corporation and Sprint Communications Co. L.P.
Dayton Hudson Corporations (which owns and operates Target stores), BLT Technologies, Inc. (which provides network services for 7-Eleven and Longs Drugs), Southland Corporation (which is the franchiser of 7-Eleven stores) and Longs Drug Stores Corporation.
The filed rate doctrine is also known as the filed tariff doctrine.
As to the remaining respondents, the complaint alleges as follows: The packaging for Sprint’s prepaid card, the “Spree instant foncard,” states that the $10 phone card is worth 20 minutes of domestic calls, without specifying that calls are rounded up to the next full minute; the packaging for Dayton Hudson’s Target phone card, the “Hotline Pre-Paid Calling Card,” is said to provide 40 minutes of long distance calls within the continental United States, again without revealing the practice of rounding up; Longs’s card, the “Talk ’n Toss,” has packaging claiming “big savings,” “30 minutes,” “$9.99,” “one low rate throughout the United States” and “no surcharges” but does not reveal the practice of rounding up; finally, Southlаnd Corporation’s 7-Eleven, whose prepaid phone card network services are provided by respondent BLT, has a phone card with outer packaging claiming 15 minutes worth of calls. Once the sealed outer packaging is opened the inner packaging reveals that “All calls are rounded up to the next whole minute.”
Section 17200: “As used in this chapter, unfair competition shall mean and include any unlawful, unfair or fraudulent business act or practice and unfair, deceptive, untrue or misleading advertising and any act prohibited by Chapter 1 (commencing with Section 17500) of Part 3 of Division 7 of the Business and Professions Code.” Section 17500: “It is unlawful for any person, firm, corporation or association, or any employee thereof with intent directly or indirectly to dispose of real or personal property or to perform services, professional or otherwise, or anything of any nature whatsoever or to induce the public to enter into any obligation relating thereto, to make or disseminate or cause to be made or disseminated before the public in this state, or to make or disseminate or cause to be *332 made or disseminated from this state before the public in any state, in any newspaper or other publication, or any advertising device, or by public outcry or proclamation, or in any other manner or means whatever, any statement, concerning such real or pеrsonal property or services, professional or otherwise, or concerning any circumstance or matter of fact connected with the proposed performance or disposition thereof, which is untrue or misleading, and which is known, or which by the exercise of reasonable care should be known, to be untrue or misleading, or for any such person, firm, or corporation to so make or disseminate or cause to be so made or disseminated any such statement as part of a plan or scheme with the intent not to sell such personal property or services, professional or otherwise, so advertised at the price stated therein, or as so advertised. Any violatiоn of the provisions of this section is a misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment in the county jail not exceeding six months, or by a fine not exceeding two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500), or by both.”
Marcus
also differs from this case because the New York’s Consumer Protection Act requires that the misleading or deceptive practice complained of result in an injury to plaintiff.
(Oswego Laborers’
v.
Marine Midland Bank
(1995)
47 United States Code section 151 et seq.
As noted, sections 17206, 17207, 17535.5 and 17356 operate to impose monetary penalties.
