EXECUTIVE LANDSCAPE CORPORATION, Plaintiff and Appellant,
v.
SAN VICENTE COUNTRY VILLAS IV ASSOCIATION et al., Defendants and Respondents.
Court of Appeals of California, Fourth District, Division One.
*497 COUNSEL
Duckor & Spradling, Scott L. Metzger and Steven I. Kastner for Plaintiff and Appellant.
Wingert, Grebing, Anello & Chapin, Michael M. Anello and Alan K. Brubaker for Defendаnts and Respondents.
*498 OPINION
WIENER, J.
Plaintiff Executive Landscape Corporation (Executive) appeals the judgment of dismissal entered after defendants' (collectively, San Vicente) demurrer was sustained without leаve to amend. The basis of the court's ruling was that Executive failed to possess the license required under Business and Professions Code section 7031[1] at the time it entered into a written contract with San Vicente fоr the management and maintenance of the common areas of San Vicente's condominium complex. We reverse.
Section 7031 provides a contractor cannot bring or maintain an action to recover for work performed unless he alleges and proves he was duly licensed at all times during performance. In denying recovery to unlicensed contractors courts have rationalized the harsh impact on some competent, but unlicensed, persons by deferring to the legislative determination that deterrence outweighs the cumulative effect of the penalty suffered by the contractor and the unjust enrichment obtained by the property owner. (Lewis & Queen v. N.M. Ball Sons (1957)
Our research of the reported decisions on whether section 7031 bars recovery indicates the determination of liability or nonliability is almost always made in a factual context either through trial or by summary judgment.[2] The case before us is thus procedurally different from most, reaching *499 us by appeal from the judgment entered following defendants' successful demurrer. We are therefore governed by the fоllowing well established rules.
(1) We must accept as true all facts pleaded in the complaint. (Tameny v. Atlantic Richfield Co. (1980)
Here, the parties sought to buttress their respectivе arguments in the demurrer by submitting declarations on the nature of the work actually performed and to be performed in the future. Executive also submitted a declaration *500 from an employee of the Contrаctors State License Board explaining that in his opinion Executive did not need a license to do maintenance of lawns and shrubs. (3) In the absence of a stipulation agreeing the demurrer could be treated as a motion for summary judgment, the court was precluded from weighing the disputed facts to determine the nature of Executive's services.
(4) Executive's complaint incorporated by referencе the contract the parties signed in July 1980 which describes the range of services Executive was to perform. The bulk of those services included landscaping and general maintenance.[3] Even under the regulаtions adopted by the Contractors State License Board, a license is not required of those who, for example, mow, water and edge lawns.[4] Because a party's entitlement to compensation under a contract is geared to the nature of his performance rather than his status when the contract is signed (see J.B. Gaines v. Eastern Pacific (1982)
The purpose of the statute is hardly served when a person who is not required to have a contractоr's license is denied legal redress solely because the form of the contract indicates the likelihood that some, perhaps minimal, services requiring a license may be performed under it. A contrаctual clause calling for hybrid services does not on its face render the contract unenforceable. The converse is also true. Unlicensed persons may not finesse the statute by drafting contracts calling solely for unlicensed services where in reality other services requiring a license will be performed. In each case, the court must examine the substance rather than the form of the bargаin and must make all reasonable inferences in support of plaintiff's position. (See Scientific Cages, Inc. v. Banks, supra,
Disposition
Judgment reversed.
Brown (Gerald), P.J., and Work, J., concurred.
NOTES
Notes
[1] All statutory references are to the Business and Professions Code unless otherwise specified.
Section 7031 provides: "No person engaged in the business or acting in the capacity of a contractor, may bring or maintain any action in any court of this state for the collection of compensation for the perfоrmance of any act or contract for which a license is required by this chapter without alleging and proving that he was a duly licensed contractor at all times during the performance of such aсt or contract, except that such prohibition shall not apply to contractors who are each individually licensed under this chapter but who fail to comply with Section 7029."
[2] Taking advantage of the computerized wizardry of the day, our electronic research reveals 78 published opinions discussing section 7031. Fifty-one of these were appeals from trials; ten others were appeals frоm grants or denials of summary judgment motions. Of the remaining 17, 13 involve demurrers, nonsuits, or judgments on the pleadings. In these cases a common issue was whether the plaintiff was an independent contractor or an employee (see § 7053) (Skipper v. Gilbert J. Martin Constr. Co. (1957)
We do not hold a challenge to plaintiff's status undеr section 7031 can never be made by demurrer. If the plaintiff's pleadings admit the contract accurately describes the services to be performed, the court may conclude as a matter of lаw those services require license. (See Proffitt & Durnell Plumbing, Inc. v. David H. Baer Co. (1966)
[3] The landscaping services Executive was obligated to perform included the following: mowing, edging and weeding all lawns as required; cultivating, weeding and trimming all ground covers, shrubs and flower beds as needed; fertilizing all lawns and flower beds at least four times a year; reseeding all lawns, trimming and pruning trees and shrubs as necessary; insрecting the sprinkler system and performing minor repairs upon it; treating the lawns, shrubs and other landscape areas with pesticides for insects and controlling disease as required; replacing shrubs, plants and trеes as necessary; removing all clippings and trimmings, raking all fallen leaves and hosing down and cleaning the walkways immediately after mowing and trimming; replacing flower plants four times a year in various areas; furnishing аnd applying fertilizers, insecticides, weed killers, and other chemicals as necessary; and rehabilitating and renovating all areas which, when the agreement was signed, were lawn burnouts or areas needing replanting or reseeding. Executive also had a number of duties not directly related to landscaping. These included cleaning and sweeping side streets, parking areas, sidewalks and bike paths; washing down sidewаlks; cleaning storm drains, gutters, and down spouts twice a year; and performing additional similar services in the event of a natural occurrence creating debris, such as winds or rainstorms; overhauling, maintaining and reрairing exterior light fixtures and replacing light bulbs as necessary; inspecting all buildings, storm drains, gutters, down spouts, and grounds for areas requiring repairs, and making minor repairs.
[4] The board has defined a landscape contrаctor as "... a specialty contractor whose principal contracting business is the execution of contracts, usually subcontracts, requiring the art, ability, experience, knowledge, sciencе and skill to install, plant, repair and maintain gardens, lawns, shrubs, vines, bushes, trees and other decorative vegetation including the grading and preparation of plots and areas of land for such architecturаl horticulture, decorative treatment and arrangement; construct pools, tanks, fountains, pavilions, conservatories, hot and green houses, retaining walls, fences, walks, drainage and sprinkler systems; arrаnge, fabricate and place garden furniture, statuary and monuments, in connection therewith, or to do any part or any combination of any thereof in such a manner that, under an agreed specification, acceptable landscaping projects can be executed." (Cal. Admin. Code, tit. 16, § 747.)
