Opinion
Appellants, Terry Le Doux and Isabel Milan, individually and on behalf of the general public as permitted by Civil Code section 3369 seek an injunction restraining respondent Credit Research Corporation from practicing law. They appeal the judgment of dismissal of our superior court entered following ¡their refusal to amend after an order sustaining a demurrer to their complaint.
Appellants admit that respondent is duly incorporated and licensed as a collection agency in this state.
*453 The sole question presented is whether respondent’s manner of doing business constitutes the practice of law. The crucial allegations of the complaint on this subject are:
“7. . . . [respondent] and ... in the ordinary course of business and for financial gain, have repeatedly engaged and continue to engage in the following collection practice:
“(a). . . accept assignments of claims from creditors for the purpose of allowing [respondent] to file suits thereon in its own name ....
“(b) . . . the . . . assignments are assignments for the purpose of “Collection”: No monetary consideration is paid for said assignments; but instead, there is a contingent fee arrangment between [respondent]... and the creditors whereby [respondent] . . . retains a fixed amount of any claim it collects returning the balance to the creditor.
“(c) . . . [respondent] does file suits in its own name.......in said
suits, . . . [respondent] is represented by its own attorneys under . . . [respondent’s] direct control and supervision.
“(d) . . . there is no attorney-client relationship between the creditor-assignors of the aforementioned claims and ... [respondent’s] attorneys.”
The parties, and amici curiae agree on the basic principles that only the Supreme Court of this state may grant the privilege to practice law subject to reasonable acts by the Legislature
(In re Lavine
(1935)
*454
As we read the cases, the appellate decisions
King
v.
Mortimer
(1948)
After reciting the definition of practicing law in
People
v.
Merchants Protective Corp.
(1922)
Appellants argue however that doctrine of
Cohn
was limited by the Legislature when in 1933 after
Cohn
was decided it added the provision now contained in section 6947
2
that nothing in the Collection Agency Act authorized a collection agency to engage in the practice of law. Asserting
*455
that the Legislature must be presumed to have known what the law was at the time of its amendment (People v.
Perkins
(1951)
Appellants argue that the legal profession and the public are harmed by the actions of collection agencies and that the operations of such agencies are against public policy. Cases such as
Czap
v.
Credit Bureau of Santa Clara Valley
(1970)
“Commercial necessity is the primary justification for allowing suits by assignees for collection only. Refusal to permit such parties to sue results in unnecessary economic waste. If assignees for collection only were not permitted to sue, merchants might be forced to decide between abandoning their enterprises while suing on delinquent accounts, or *456 abandoning their delinquent accounts. Neither choice produces socially desirable results.
“. . . The policy reasons for requiring that suits be prosecuted by beneficially interested parties are highly abstract. They reflect value judgments regarding fairness. Against such intangible judgments must be weighed the probability that tangible economic waste will follow from refusal to allow assignees for collection only status to sue. In small cases the threat of tangible harm seems far more compelling than, the intangible feeling that suits should be prosecuted by the beneficially interested party.” (Fns. omitted.)
Confined to the facts of this case we cannot improve on the doctrine of Cohn. We adopt it. Respondent is not practicing láw.
The judgment is affirmed.
Fleming, J., and Compton, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied November 17, 1975, and appellants’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied December .23, 1975.
