In 1959 the Legislature enacted the Uniform Disposition of Unclaimed Property Act. (Code Civ. Proe., §§ 1500-1527.) The act defines abandoned property (§§ 1502-1508) and requires that its holder shall report (§ 1510) and pay or deliver it to the State Controller (§1512). The statutе of limitations is not a defense to such reporting and payment or delivery (§1515), and the act applies to property that was abandoned before it took effect (§ 1510, subd. (g)). It provides for notice to the owner by publication аnd otherwise (§§1510, subd. (e), 1511). The owner may appear at any time and claim the property from the Controller after it has been delivered to him (§§ 1517-1520). Delivery to the Controller is a defense to any action by the owner against the holder. (§1513.) Thе objectives of the act are to protect unknown owners by locating them and restoring their property to them and to give the state rather than the holders of unclaimed property the benefit of the use of it, most of which experience shows will never be claimed.
After the act became effective, Douglas Aircraft Company brought this action against the Controller for declaratory relief with respect to over $17,000 in unpaid wage claims fоr work done in California on which the statute of limitations had *464 run before the effective date of the act. Douglas perforins government and private contracts. In the past it has credited unclaimed wages arising out of its contrаcts with the United States to the United States, and the Controller makes no claim that such wages should be reported or paid to him. He contends, however, that Douglas is required to report and pay unclaimed wages arising out of work dоne on nongovernment contracts to the extent that such wages are ascertainable from the available records of Douglas (§ 1510, subd. (g)) whether or not the statute of limitations had run on the claims for such wages before the effеctive date of the act. The trial court held that Douglas could not constitutionally be required to pay wage claims to the Controller on which the statute of limitations had run before the effective date of the act. The Cоntroller appeals.
Douglas contends that the California Constitution precludes the Legislature from abrogating the defense of the statute of limitations after the statute has run. (See
Chambers
v.
Gallagher,
The Controller contends that the rule of
Chambers
v.
Gallagher,
We need not resolve these conflicting constitutional contentions unless it clearly appears that the act provides for the retroactive abrogation of the defense of the statute of limitations. Section 3 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that “No part of it is retroactive, unlеss expressly so declared.” (See also
Di Genova
v.
State Board of Education,
These rules afford warning to potential defendants that until the statute of limitations has run it may be extendеd, whereas after it has run, they may rely upon it in conducting their affairs. The keeping of records, the maintenance of reserves, and the commitment of funds may all be affected by such reliance, particularly in a well-organized enterprise that seeks *466 to operate efficiently. To defeat such reliance does more than deprive obligors of windfalls; it deprives them of the ability to plan intelligently with respect to stale and apparently abandoned claims. In view of these considerations, we believe that in enacting the Uniform Disposition of Unclaimed Property Act the Legislature would have expressed itself in unmistakable terms had it rejected the established rules governing the interpretation of statutes of limitations.
Section 1515 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that “The expiration of any period of time specified by statute or court order, during which an action or proceeding may be commenced or enforced to obtain payment of a claim for money or recovery of property, shall not prevent the money or property from being presumed abandoned property, nor affect any duty to file a report required by this chapter or to pay or deliver abandoned property to the State Controller. ’ ’ This section does not expressly provide that it shall be retroactive or apply to claims that were already barred when it was enacted. Accordingly, under section 3 of the code and the rules set forth in the Evelyn case it must be interpreted as applying only to claims on which the statute of limitations had not run on the effectivе date of the act. As to such claims, and as to claims that will arise in the future, however, it prevents the running of the statute applicable between the holder and the owner from barring the duty of the holder to report and pay to the Controller.
There is nothing in subdivisions (e) and (g) of section 1510 that compels giving section 1515 a different interpretation. Subdivision (e) provides: “If the holder of property presumed abandoned under this chapter knows the whereabouts of the оwner and if the owner’s claim has not been barred by the statute of limitations, the holder shall, before filing the annual report, communicate with the owner and take necessary steps to prevent abandonment from being presumed. Thе holder shall exercise reasonable diligence to ascertain the whereabouts of the owner.” This subsection deals with the continuing situation in the administration of the act arising from the fact that frequently the statute of limitations against the owner will have run before the property is presumed abandoned and required to be reported. In such cases subdivision (e) provides that there is no duty to attempt to locate or communicate with the owner. It does not provide, however, that the bar of the statute is inapplicable against the Controller if it had run before the effective date of the act.
*467
Subdivision (g) of section 1510 provides: “The initial report filed under this chapter shall include аll items of property held for another person which are ascertainable from the available records of the holder, which items of property would have been presumed abandoned if this chapter had been in effect at and after the time such property first became payable, demandable or returnable; . . . All items of property, less proper charges and offsets, other than unclaimed funds, which on January 1, 1949 appeared from the available records to be held for another person and were thereafter without notice to the owner or without prior approval of any regulatory or licensing authority of this State transferred or credited by thе holder directly to capital or surplus or undivided profits shall be deemed to be subject to the provisions of this chapter and shall be included within the initial report. ’ ’ This section is expressly made retroactive and makes clear that existing abandoned property is subject to the act. Such property includes major categories as to which the statute of limitations had not run on the effective date of the act, such as obligations of financial institutions (Code Civ. Proc., § 348) and trustees
(Davenport
v.
Davenport Foundation,
It is true that the draftsmen of the uniform act indicated that they believed the provision on which section 1515 is based would apply retroactively (9A Uniform Laws Annotated pp. 267-269) and that similar provisions of other statutes have been so interpreted.
(Evans Products Co.
v.
Fry,
The judgment is affirmed.
Gibson, C. J., Schauer, J., MeComb, J., Peters, J., White, J., and Tobriner, J., concurred.
