In regard to plaintiffs’ first claim for relief, being the claim to recover damages for breach of agreements under which defendants leased spaces in the park to several plaintiffs, the court announced at the close of the evidence that it would “grant the motion of the plaintiffs for a directed verdict in regard to the breach of lease as to each of the plaintiffs from the period of October 7, 1974, to October 7, 1977, and submit to the jury the issue of how much damages, if any, is each of the plaintiffs entitled to recover therefor.” Consistent with the ruling, the court instructed the jury that “the court has concluded that there was a substantial breach of the lease agreement between the parties.” The court then submitted to the jury in regard to plaintiffs’ first claim for relief only Issue No. 3 as to what amount of damages, if any, each plaintiff was entitled to recover for breach of lease. In directing a verdict in plaintiffs’ favor on the issue of breach of lease, the court committed error.
In prosecuting their first claim for relief, plaintiffs had the burden of proving first, the nature and extent of the contrac
*539
tual agreements made between the parties concerning facilities and services to be furnished by defendants in exchange for payment of monthly rental by plaintiffs and, second, defendants’ breach of those agreements. By directing verdict in plaintiffs’ favor on those issues, the court directed verdict in favor of the parties having the burden of proof. Under some circumstances, this may be proper.
See Bank v. Burnette,
For their second claim for relief, each of the plaintiffs, Stewart, Brown, Howell, and Bell, alleged in their original complaint that after the defendants had sold to each of them a mobile home, including the undercarriage consisting of axles, wheels, and tires, defendants removed these items and either sold or otherwise intentionally converted them to defendants’ use. Plaintiffs prayed to recover damages in the amount of the fair market value of the items allegedly wrongfully taken by the defendants. After close of the evidence, the court permitted the plaintiffs to amend their complaint to allege as an alternative to their second claim for relief that defendants had “wilfully failed to honor the trust created by the delivery of the plaintiffs’ tires, wheels and axles to the defendants as alleged.” The court then allowed the plaintiffs’ motion for a directed verdict “as to the breach of the constructive trust to return the wheels, tires and axles.” Consistent with these rulings, the court submitted *540 to the jury in regard to plaintiffs’ second claim for relief only Issue No. 3 as to what amount, if any, the named plaintiffs were entitled to recover of the defendants “for breach of the constructive trust to return the tires, wheels and axles.” In imposing a constructive trust and in directing verdict that defendants had breached the trust, the court committed error.
No constructive trust arose on the evidence in this case. Evidence presented by defendants, if believed, would tend to show that the contested tires, wheels, and axles were never included in the original sales of the mobile homes to the plaintiffs. Evidence presented by plaintiffs, if believed, would tend to establish either that the defendants had failed to deliver the contested items as agreed at the time of the original sales of the mobile homes or that, although delivered at that time, they were later retained by defendants and stored in another area of the park. If the latter, the relationship between the named plaintiffs and the defendants with respect to such items became that of bailors and-bailees, in which event defendants’ liability for loss or damage to the property would be governed by a determination of the question of for whose benefit the property was being stored. See
Clott v. Greyhound Lines,
We now turn to plaintiffs’ claim based upon defendants’ alleged violations of G.S. 75-1.1(a). At the time defendants committed the acts which plaintiffs allege as the basis of their claim, the statute read as follows:
*541 Unfair methods of competition and unfair or deceptive acts or practices in the conduct of any trade or commerce are hereby declared unlawful. 1
Interpreting this statute, this Court has held that the rental of residential housing is “trade or commerce” under G.S. 75-1.1.
Love v. Pressley,
While charging the jury with respect to Issue No. 7, which concerned the amount of damages which the jury could find *542 plaintiffs sustained because of defendants’ alleged violations of G.S. 75-l.l(a), the court instructed the jury:
Now the fact that you will answer — would have answered something for the breach of lease, don’t worry about that. You may use some of the same elements in answering this.
This becomes a question of law. If you decide — you get to this, you are not required to get to this issue, the burden is on the plaintiffs to satisfy you from the evidence and greater weight thereof, you should get to this issue, you should answer this in some sum you find the plaintiffs sustained or any of them by reason of the defendants’failure to provide the facilities listed in the preceding items. (Emphasis added).
In giving this instruction, the court committed error. The effect of this instruction was to permit the jury to assess damages against the defendants twice for the same default. The error was compounded when the court, acting under G.S. 75-16, gave judgment for treble the amount of the damages fixed by the jury’s answer to issue No. 7 in addition to the amounts already fixed by the jury’s answer to Issue No. 3. The net result is that some of the plaintiffs were given judgment for quadruple damages. We do not believe that the legislature intended any such result when it enacted G.S. 75-1.1(a). Where the same course of conduct gives rise to a traditionally recognized cause of action, as, for example, an action for breach of contract, and as well gives rise to a cause of action for violation of G.S. 75-1.1, damages may be recovered either for the breach of contract, or for violation of G.S. 75-1.1, but not for both.
We also find error in the form of Issue No. 4 as submitted to the jury. It was possible for the jury to answer that issue in the affirmative, thus furnishing a portion of the basis on which the court concluded there had been a violation of G.S. 75-1.1, if the jury found that defendants, even though acting in good faith, became financially unable to fulfill all of their contractual obligations. We hold that, absent a finding of some bad faith, the jury’s answer to Issue No. 4 would not support a violation of *543 G.S. 75-1.1 and an award of treble damages under G.S. 75-16. In so holding, we note the distinction between the private method of enforcement and the public methods of enforcement provided for in the legislative scheme of Chapter 75.
The present action based on a violation of G.S. 75-1.1 was brought pursuant to G.S. 75-16, which grants a private right of action to any person injured by any act in violation of Chapter 75 of the General Statutes. Chapter 75 also contains provisions for enforcement of G.S. 75-1.1 in suits brought by the Attorney General, provisions which substantially follow the federal scheme for enforcement of § 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act. G.S. 75-14 (actions brought by Attorney General to obtain mandatory orders); G.S. 75-15.2 (imposition of civil penalties in suits brought by the Attorney General where the “acts or practices which constituted the violation were, when committed, specifically prohibited by a court order or knowingly violative of a statute.”). Unlike our own statutory scheme, however, the FTC Act confers no private right of action upon an injured party,
Federal Trade Commission v. Klesner,
Our Supreme Court has held that our courts should look for guidance to federal decisions interpreting the FTC Act.
Johnson v. Insurance Co.,
For the errors above noted, defendants are entitled to a
New Trial.
Notes
Effective 27 June 1977, which was prior to institution of the present action but subsequent to the commission by defendants of the acts complained of, G.S. 75-l.l(a) and (b) were rewritten by Ch. 747 of the 1977 Session laws to read as follows:
G.S. 75-1.1
(a) Unfair methods of competition in or affecting commerce, and unfair or deceptive acts or practices in or affecting commerce, are declared unlawful.
(b) For purposes of this section, “commerce” includes all business activities, however denominated, but does not include professional services rendered by a member of a learned profession.
