Opinion
Lаrry Menke, Inc., doing business as Larry Menke Chrysler, and Larry Menke (collectively, Menke) appeal from a judgment of dismissal after the trial court sustained the demurrer filed by DaimlerChrysler Motors Company, LLC, and one of its employees, Louis Stavale (collectively, Chrysler). Menke had intervened as an additional plaintiff in Wester Motors’s (Wester) suit against Chrysler after Chrysler declined to approve Wester’s application to transfer its Dodge automobile dealership in Seaside, California, to Menke. Menke contends the trial court erred in concluding its first amended complaint stated no cause of action for violation of Vehicle Code section 11713.3, subdivision (e),
1
which governs a manufacturer’s responsibilities to a franchisee seeking to transfer or assign its interest in an automobile dealership. Menke also challenges the trial court’s conclusion its complaint failed to state claims for intentional or negligent interference with prospective business advantage or for tortious interference with the franchise transfer contract agreed upon by Wester and Menkе. Because section 11713.3,
I
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
After local government officials announced plans to condemn part of the auto mall in which Wester operated, Wester’s owners sought to exit the business and sell their Dodge dealership rather than relocate. Menke, already a DaimlerChrysler franchiseе in Seaside with a Chrysler dealership, expressed interest in bringing the Dodge line under its roof. But according to Menke, Chrysler personnel expressed immediate and unrelenting hostility to the idea, with one representative annоuncing the transfer was “ ‘never going to happen’ ” and another stating that Chrysler approval would occur “ ‘[o]ver my dead body.’ ” Nevertheless, Menke continued negotiations with Wester, though it displeased Menke when Chrysler invited Donald Butts, another interested dealer, to franchise-sale discussions with Wester that Menke had believed would be exclusive and private. Louis Stavale, a Chrysler representative, reportedly informed Wester that Chryslеr “would find it difficult to approve Larry Menke, but Donald Butts was an approvable candidate.” Wester, however, rejected Butts’s $500,000 offer for the franchise, accepting Menke’s $950,000 bid. Wester’s franchise agreement with Chrysler conditioned any transfer of the franchise on Chrysler’s approval. The terms of section 11713.3 governing franchise transfers included the same condition. (§ 11713.3, subd. (e).)
Chrysler rejected the proposed transfer of Wester’s franchise to Menke. Chrysler detailed its reasons for rejecting Menke as a franchisee in a letter to Wester required by section 11713.3, subdivision (d)(2)(B). To no avail, Menke wrote Chrysler a detailed letter explaining how he could resolve Chrysler’s unfounded reservations. Menke explained, for example, that its working capital for its Chrysler dealership exceeded Chrysler’s requirements, contrary to Chrysler’s letter. Chrysler was not persuaded. Chrysler also later rеjected a separate transfer agreement between Butts and Wester.
Wester eventually sued Chrysler, and Menke intervened as an additional plaintiff. Asserting statutory violations and interference with prospective
The trial court sustained Chrysler’s demurrer to the complaint with leave for Menkе to amend, and after concluding Menke’s first amended complaint failed to cure the pleading defects, denied further leave to amend. Menke now appeals.
II
DISCUSSION
A. Menke Had No Standing to Assert Violation of Section 11713.3, Subdivision (e)
Menke contends the trial court erred in sustaining Chrysler’s demurrer to his cause of action under section 11713.3, subdivision (e).
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According to Menke, subdivision (e) protects not only automobile franchise transferors, but alsо potential transferees. We disagree. “On review of an order sustaining a demurrer without leave to amend, our standard of review is de novo, ‘i.e., we exercise our independent judgment about whether the complaint states a cause of action as a matter of law.’ [Citation.]”
(Santa Teresa Citizen Action Group v. State Energy Resources Conservation & Development Com.
(2003)
Subdivision (e) makes it “unlawful and a violation of this code” for any manufacturеr “[t]o prevent, or attempt to prevent,
a dealer
from
receiving
“ ‘When the language of a statute is clear and unambiguous, there is no need for interpretation and we must apply the statute as written.’ ”
(Chambers
v.
Miller
(2006)
We do not pass on the wisdom or policy of thе Legislature’s enactments. “In interpreting statutes, we follow the Legislature’s intent, as exhibited by the plain meaning of the actual words of the law, ‘ “ ‘whatever may be thought of the wisdom, expediency, or policy of the aсt.’ ” ’ ”
(California Teachers Assn. v. Governing Bd. of Rialto Unified School Dist.
(1997)
Menke relies on section 11726 fоr a contrary conclusion, but the trial court correctly read that provision in conjunction with section 11713.3, subdivision (e), to determine that the damages and attorney fee
remedies
specified in section 11726 are only available to
transferors
frustrated by manufacturer conduct violating subdivision (е), not to prospective transferees. Section 11726 provides: “Any licensee suffering pecuniary loss because of any willful failure by any other licensee to comply with any provision of Article 1 (commencing with Section 11700) . . . may recover damages and
Individual statutes, however, are not to be read in isolation. “ ‘ “[T]he meaning of the enactment may not be determined from a single word or sentence; the words must be construed in context.. ..” [Citation.]’ ”
(State of California ex rel. Dockstader v. Hamby
(2008)
Menke asserts the reference to “any other person” in section 11713.3, subdivision (d)(1) confers standing on all persons to sue. But, like subdivision (e), the terms of subdivision (d)(1) make it clear that its protection extends to franchise transferors, not transferees. Under section 11713.3, subdivision (d)(1), a manufacturer may not “prevent or require, or attempt to prevent or require, by contract or otherwise, [with] any dealer, or any officer, partner, or stockholder of any dealership, the sale or transfer of any part of the interest of any of them to any other person.” (Italics added.) These plain terms, as in subdivision (e), do not include potential transferees. Because neither subdivision (d)(1) or (e) of section 11713.3 creates a cause of action for potential transferеes, the trial court correctly sustained Chrysler’s demurrer on Menke’s statutory claim.
B. Menke’s Interference Claims Are Also Without Merit *
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DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. Respondents are entitled to their costs on appeal.
A petition for a rehearing was denied March 5, 2009.
Notes
All subsequent unlabeled section references are tо the Vehicle Code.
For convenience, we hereafter sometimes refer to section 11713.3, subdivision (e), as simply subdivision (e).
Section 11713.3, subdivision (d)(1), expressly authorizes a franchise owner to transfer the dealership to “any other person,” not just to persons already licensed under the Vehicle Code.
See footnote, ante, page 1088.
