Opinion
Plаintiff Mark J. Penning appeals from a judgment dismissing his class action complaint 1 after demurrer by defendants Glendale Federal Bank, its former and current parent companies, and its securities brokerage subsidiary. We reverse.
Facts
Glendale Federal Bank (the Bank) is a federally chartered savings and loan association organized and operating under the Home Owners’ Loan Act *1289 of 1933 (HOLA), as amended, 12 United States Code section 1461 et seq. The Bank is federally insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), and federally regulated by the Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS, formerly known as the Federal Hоme Loan Bank Board). Glendale Brokerage Services, Inc., doing business as Glenfed Brokerage Services (Glenfed Brokerage), is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Bank, organized and existing under the laws of the State of California. As such, it is a “service corporation” within the meaning of the HOLA regulations. (12 C.F.R. § 545.74 (1995).) A member of the National Association of Securities Dealers, Glenfed Brokerage provides securities brokerage and investment advisory services. Glenfed, Inc., and Glendale Investment Corporation are, respectively, the former and current holding companies of the Bank.
In his complaint, plaintiff alleges that he walked into a branch office of the Bank where he maintained a checking account, seeking to reinvest the proceeds of a certificate of deposit from his pension and employee benefit plans. After explaining his investment objectives to an “investment consultant” whom he believed to be a Bank employee, he was persuaded to invest his money in two mutual funds, neither of which was FDIC insured. Plaintiff first learned that his investment was not with the Bank, and not FDIC insured, when he received his first quarterly account statement, which reported an investment loss.
Plaintiff filed this class action suit against defendants, alleging causes of action for unfair and deceptive business practices in violation of California Business and Professions Code sections 17200 and 17500, 2 fraud, and negligent misrepresentation. The gravamen of the complaint is that the *1290 advertising and sales practices of Glenfed Brokerage purposefully deceive customers by blurring the distinction between the Bank, whose investment products are safe and federally insured, and Glenfed Brokerage, which sells uninsured investments subject to substantial risks of loss, in order to induce customers to purchase investment products from Glenfed Brokerage. Plaintiff maintains that these advertising and sales practices are unfair and deceptive business practices. Plaintiff also alleges that these business practices are in direct violation of federal regulations applicable to service corporations such as Glenfed Brokerage. Moreover, plaintiff maintains that the Bank is separately liable for this conduct because, by means of the improper and misleading use of the Bank’s personnel, logo, and facilities to sell securities, the Bank, in effect, actively engaged in cоnsumer fraud.
Defendants demurred to the complaint, asserting that plaintiff’s claims are preempted by HOLA, and specifically by 12 Code of Federal Regulations section 545.2 (1995), which provides that “The regulations in this part 545 are . . . preemptive of any state law purporting to address the subject of the operations of a Federal savings association.” The trial court sustained defendants’ demurrer on that basis, and dismissed the complaint. Plaintiff appeals. We reverse the judgment, finding that the state law causes of action against the defendants are not preempted by HOLA or its implementing regulations.
Contentions
Plaintiff contends that the trial court erred in dismissing his complaint, urging that (1) although a state may not regulate the “operations" of a federally chartered savings association, plaintiff’s claims against the Bank do not implicate its “operations” as a savings association; (2) the activities of a subsidiary service corporation are not “operations” of the parent association so as to be precluded from state regulation; and (3) neither Congress nor the OTS has manifested any intent to subject the entire field of service corporations to exclusive federаl regulation.
Federal Preemption
Under the supremacy clause of the United States Constitution (art. VI, cl. 2), federal law preempts state law where Congress so intends.
(Fidelity Federal Sav. & Loan Assn.
v.
de la Cuesta
(1982)
Congressional intent tо preempt state law may be established in one of three ways. First, Congress may expressly state that the field is preempted.
(California Federal S. & L. Assn.
v.
Guerra
(1987)
HOLA Regulations
With the foregoing principles in mind, we review the regulatory scheme governing federal savings and loan associations such as the Bank.
In HOLA, Congress created a system of federal savings and loan associations to be regulated by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board (the Bank Board).
3
Pursuant to its broad statutory authorization, the Bank Board “has prоmulgated regulations governing ‘the powers and operations of every Federal savings and loan association from its cradle to its corporate grave. . . .’”
(De la Cuesta, supra,
In 1983, the Bank Board promulgated 12 Code of Federal Regulations section 545.2 (1995) to codify the preemptive effect of the Board’s regulations. That section provides: “The regulations in this Part 545 are promulgated pursuant to the plenary and exclusive authority of the Office to *1292 regulate all aspects of the operations of Federal savings associations, as set forth in section 5(a) of the [Home Owners’ Loan] Act [of 1933, 12 United States Code section 1464, as amended.] This exercise of the Office’s authority is preemptive of any state law purporting to address the subject of the operations of a Federal savings association.” (12 C.F.R. § 545.2 (1995).)
Section 545.74 of 12 Code of Federal Regulations, entitled “Service corporations,” authorizes and regulates a savings association’s activities with respect to commercial enterprises other than residential lending. Thus, the regulations permit an association to “invest in service corporations organized under the laws of the state ... in which the assoсiation’s home office is located, . . .” (12 C.F.R. § 545.74(b) (1995).) Among the activities in which a service corporation may engage are residential, consumer, educational, and commercial lending (12 C.F.R. § 545.74(c)(1)); financial services (such as credit analysis, escrow, and internal auditing services) (12 C.F.R. § 545.74(c)(2)); real estate services (including real property management, relocation and real estate brokerage services) (12 C.F.R. § 545.74(c)(3)); securities brokerage services (12 C.F.R. § 545.74(c)(4)); and insurance brokerage services (12 C.F.R. § 545.74 (c)(6)).
The regulations governing a securities brokerage service corporation suсh as Glenfed Brokerage provide that the service corporation must conduct such activities “in an area that is clearly identified and distinguished from the areas where the association’s depository functions are performed” (12 C.F.R. § 545.74(c)(4)(A) (1995)), and that the service corporation must distinguish between its advertising and that of the association’s “such that advertising does not confuse securities transactions executed, securities purchased, or investment advice provided by the service corporation with the federally-insured deposits” and must ensure “that the advertising indicates that the service corporation and broker-dealer, and not the association, is providing the securities brokerage or investment advisory services, identifies the broker-dealer in advertising, and does not use the logo of the parent association in the text of any advertisement prepared or distributed by the service corporation . . . .” (12 C.F.R. § 545.74(c)(4)(B) (1995).) As noted, the complaint alleges violation of these precise regulations as one of the bases for the unfair business practices cause of action.
Discussion
Plaintiff sued both the Bank, a federal savings association, and three affiliаted companies, none of which is a federal savings association. Consequently, we must make independent determinations of whether Congress intended to preempt plaintiff’s claims against the Bank and the other *1293 defendants. We begin with a discussion of Glenfed Brokerage, the service corporation wholly owned by the Bank.
1. Claims Against Glenfed Brokerage
Our research has revealed but three cases which discuss the issue of federal preemption of state law claims against service corporations. In the first case, a 1988 lawsuit before the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, the defendant federal savings association advanced an argument similar to that of defendants here. There, the plaintiffs alleged state law claims for unfair and deceptive business practices in connection with an unlawful referral and kickback relationship between a federal savings association, its title insurance service corporation, and Chicago Title Insurance Company. The defendants contended that, because the federal association was chartered under HOLA, plaintiffs’ state law claims were preempted by federal law. The District Court replied, in dicta: “The regulations [governing service corporations] relied upon by defendants do no more than authorize investment in service organizations providing title insurance. We cannot conclude from this that Congress intended for such organizations to operate wholly exempt from the trade laws governing their competitors simply because they happen to be financed by a savings and loan.” (Mid America Title Company v. Chicago Title Insurance Company (U.S. Dist Ct., N.D.Ill.) 1988, No. 88C5864.)
Next, in
THM, Ltd.
v.
Commissioner of Ins.
(1989)
Finally, the Illinois Court of Appeal dealt squarely with the preemptive effect of the HOLA regulations with respect to service corporations in
Spitz
v.
Goldome Realty Credit Corp.
(1991)
On appeal, the Court of Appeal acknowledged that “There is no question that the doctrine of preemption applies with respect to the parent corporation; . . . nor do the parties dispute that there is exclusive federal regulation of federally chartered savings associations and that the Bank Board hаs the exclusive and plenary power to ‘regulate all aspects of the operations of Federal associations.’ ... At issue is whether the preemption that applies to the parent federal savings associations is applicable to the state chartered subsidiary service corporation.”
(Spitz
v.
Goldome Realty Credit Corp., supra,
After noting that HOLA regulations mandate that a majority of the service corporation’s common stock be owned by one or more federal savings associations (12 C.F.R. § 561.45 (1990)), govern the investment of parent associations in their subsidiary service corporations (12 C.F.R. § 563.98 (1990)), and vest in the Bank Board discretion to circumscribe the permitted activities of service corporations (12 C.F.R. § 545.74(b)(4) and (c) (1990)), thе court stated: “While service corporations are subject to federal regulation in other areas as well as those described above, neither Congress nor the Bank Board has manifested any intention to preempt the entire field of service corporation activities. Although Congress has set limitations on how federally chartered associations may invest in service corporations, (12 U.S.C. sec. 1464(c)(4)(B) (1987)), no federal statute exists specifically precluding state regulation of service corporations. In fact, service corporations are state сhartered and must be organized under the laws of the state in which their parent association’s home office is located. (12 U.S.C. sec. 1464(c)(4)(B) (1987).) Moreover, while the Bank Board does regulate service corporations in some areas, such regulation is selective and sporadic. . . . Therefore, it does not appear that the Bank Board, based on the explicit content of its regulations or on its pattern of regulatory activity, has indicated any intent to preempt any state regulation of service corporations.”
(Spitz
v.
Goldome Realty Credit Corp., supra,
*1295
We find the foregoing reasoning compelling. By inсorporating a service corporation under the laws of the state of the home office of the association, federally regulated savings associations are permitted to engage in fields of commerce, such as real estate and insurance brokerage, traditionally subject to state law. Had Congress intended to preempt service corporations engaged in these fields from the state laws to which their competitors are subject, it would have done so in clear and explicit terms, as it did with respect to savings associations. Moreover, preemption cannot be implied where, as here, there is scant regulation of service corporations, as opposed to a regulatory scheme that is “ ‘so pervasive as to make reasonable the inference that Congress left no room for the States to supplement it.’ ”
(De la Cuesta, supra,
This conclusion is bolstered by the Bank Bоard’s stated position on the subject in a series of opinion letters. 4 In 1985, general counsel to the Bank Board stated in an opinion letter that the Bank Board held no position regarding the applicability of the preemption regulation (12 C.F.R. § 545.2) to service corporations. (Fed. Home Loan Bank Bd. Opn. Letter (Aug. 13, 1985).) The following year, general counsel to the Bank Board opined, with respect to a Wisconsin law setting forth notice of relationship requirements, that while the state law was preempted by federal law as it related to federal savings associations, it was not preempted with respect to subsidiaries or affiliates of federal associations which are not themselves federal associations. (Fed. Home Loan Bank Bd. Opn. Letter (Sept. 16, 1986).)
In 1988, the Bank Board’s deputy general counsel addressed at length the very issue posed in this case. In that letter, the Bank Board disclaimed any intention to preempt any state regulation of service corporations. Deputy general counsel stated that “neither Congress nor the Bank Board has expressed an intent to preempt state law by occupying the field with regard to the service corрorations of federal associations. In this regard, it is contemplated that there would be a system of dual federal and state regulation.” (Fed. Home Loan Bank Bd. Opn. Letter (Nov. 21, 1988).) The *1296 letter concluded with the opinion that, absent a direct conflict, federal regulation will not preempt state law with respect to service corporations.
From the foregoing we conclude that neither Congress nor the Bank Board intended that federal law preempt state law claims against service corporations absent an actual conflict. Plaintiffs’ claims against Glenfed Brоkerage were therefore improperly dismissed below.
2. Claims Against the Bank
As noted by the court in
Wisconsin League of Financial Inst. Ltd.
v.
Galecki
(W.D.WIS. 1989)
Two recent California Court of Appeal decisions have concluded that the preemptive language of 12 Code of Federal Regulations section 545.2 (1995) did not preclude prosecution of the causes of action presented therein. Thus, in
Siegel
v.
American Savings & Loan Assn.
(1989)
The
Siegel
court also held that the state law claims were not impliedly preempted by the Bank Board’s occupation of the field. In this regard, it relied on the Supreme Court’s discussion in
de La Cuesta,
where the court stated: “As we noted above a savings and loan’s mortgage lending practices are a critical aspect of its ‘operation,’ over which the Board unquestionably has jurisdiction. Although the Board’s power to promulgate regulations exempting federal savings and loans from the requirements of state law may not be boundless, in this case we need not explore the outer limits of the Board’s discretion.”
(De La Cuesta, supra,
Likewise, in
People
ex rel.
Sepulveda
v.
Highland Fed. Savings & Loan
(1993)
While the challenged conduct of the association in
Sepulveda
included aspects of the association’s lending practices, the Court of Appeal stated “we have found no provision of HOLA nor any particular regulation, and none have been cited to us, which expressly preempt the statutory action by the People for unfair business practices and the causes of action by the tenant plaintiffs for fraud, RICO violations, etc. We therefore hold the subject аction is not explicitly barred by federal preemption pursuant to HOLA.” (
The court continued: . . we conclude neither the intent of Congress in enacting HOLA nor the purpose of HOLA would be served by finding preemption under these circumstances. The paramount purpose of HOLA is to ensure the solvency of federal associations. (See, e.g., § 1463(a)(1)-(3), and § 1464(d)(2).) That purpose would not be hindered, directly or indirectly, by the prosecution of the subject state claims.” (
Plaintiff urges us to adopt the rationales of Siegel and Sepulveda to find no preemption, while the Bank seeks to distinguish these cases from the instant case. However, we do not find Siegel and Sepulveda particularly helpful to our analysis. Both cases concluded that the federal regulations neither expressly nor impliedly preempted state law, and concluded that the prosecution of the plaintiffs’ causes of action resulted in no conflict with the regulations, and thus were not preempted. The question with which we are faced here, however, is whether plaintiff’s lawsuit for fraud, negligent misrepresentation (which is, of course, a species of fraud), and unfair and deceptive business practices in effect regulates the “operations” of a savings association. We conclude that it does not.
Plaintiff’s complaint alleges that the Bank, in soliciting the sale of securities, engaged in deceptive advertising practices, intentionally or negligently made material misrepresentations and omissions, and engaged in other misleading and deceptive acts, causing plaintiff and the class to “believ[e] that the GlenFed Brokerage employees they were dealing with were Glenfed Bank employees and thаt the mutual funds or other securities purchased had substantially the same safety features as a federally insured Certificate of Deposit.” Plaintiff further alleged that he and the class were misled by the Bank’s deceptive advertising and reasonably relied on the Bank’s misrepresentations and omissions, all to their detriment.
As the
Siegel
court noted, actions for fraud are governed almost exclusively by state law, and do not raise issues of great federal interest.
(Siegel
v.
American Savings & Loan Assn., supra,
Consequently, we conclude that plaintiff’s causes of action against the Bank are not preempted by federal regulations. The trial court therefore erred in dismissing these claims on federal preemption grounds.
3. The Claims Against the Bank’s Former and Current Parent Corporations
Because we have concluded that plaintiff’s suit against the Bank is not preempted, plaintiff’s claims against Glenfed, Inc., and Glendale Investment Corporation are likewise not preempted. Since federal preemption was the sole grоund for dismissing the lawsuit against Glenfed, Inc., and Glendale Investment Corporation, the judgments in favor of these two defendants must be reversed.
Disposition
The judgment is reversed. Plaintiff to recover his costs of appeal.
Turner, P. J., and Godoy Perez, J., concurred.
Respondents’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied March 28, 1996.
Notes
The class had yet to be certified.
Business and Professions Code section 17500 provides in pertinent part: “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 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 personal property or services, professionаl 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 advertisеd at the price stated therein, or as so advertised. . . .”
Business and Professions Code section 17200 defines unfair competition to include “any unlawful, unfair or fraudulent business act or practice and unfair, deceptive, untrue or misleading advertising . . . .”
In 1989, Congress passed the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act, which amended HOLA by, among other things, dissolving the Bank Board and creating the OTS in its place. (12 U.S.C. §§ 1462a-1464.)
While such letters from an administrative agency are not binding authority, they may be persuasive
(Skidmore
v.
Swift & Co.
(1944)
Neither does plaintiff’s suit seek to regulate behavior which conforms to the federal statutes and regulations to which the Bank is subject.
