In its complaint plaintiff Board alleges that it seeks in-junctive relief under G.S.
G.S. Chapt. 93A, entitled “Real Estate Brokers and Salesmen,” regulates the real estate business. The Chapter was declared constitutional in
State v. Warren,
G.S. 93A-2(a) defines a real estate broker as follows:
“Definitions and exceptions.— (a) A real estate broker within the meaning of this Chapter is any person, partnership, association, or corporation who for a compensation or valuable consideration or promise thereof lists or offers to list, sells or offers to sell, buys or offers to buy, auctions or offers to auction (specifically not including a mere crier of sales), or negotiates the purchase or sale or exchange of real estate, or who leases or offers to lease, or who sells or offers to sell leases of whatever character, or rents or offers to rent any real estate or the improvement thereon, for others. A broker shall also be deemed to include a person, partnership, association, or corporation who for a fee sells or offers to sell the name or names of persons, partnerships, associations, or corporations who have real estate for rental, lease, or sale." (Emphasis added.)
The last sentence of subsection (a) was added by Session Laws 1975, c. 108, and became effective upon ratification on 7 April 1975. The defendant questions the constitutionality of this amendment on the ground that it regulates an ordinary trade or occupation contrary to the provisions of the North Carolina Constitution, art. I, secs. 1 and 19.
The defendant’s business activity consists only of selling for a modest fee the addresses of property for rent, some information about the features of the properties, and the phone numbers of the lessors. There is no indication that he counsels or advises the customers. He charged the lessor no fee for listing the property. There is no further contact with the customer. Nevertheless, this activity is clearly within the definition of real estate broker set out in the last sentence of G.S. 93A-2 (a).
The exercise of the police power of the State in the regulation of certain sectors of the economy must be reasonably related to the protection of the health, morals, safety or general welfare of the public.
Roller v. Allen,
We find significant to this case the rationale in
State v. Warren, supra,
which held valid the regulation of real estate brokering. There the court noted two aspects
The business activity of the defendant in the sale of a list of addresses of property for rent and the telephone numbers of the lessor does not involve a confidential relationship with the customers nor negotiations or other acts as an intermediary. An established and accepted definition of a broker is “one who is engaged for others, on a commission, to negotiate contracts relative to property.” 12 C.J.S. Brokers, § 1 (1938). (Emphasis added.)
The key word in this and other accepted definitions of a broker is “negotiate.” In his business the defendant does not negotiate; he provides information. The definition of a real estate broker in the last sentence of G.S. 93A-2(a) is a sharp and dangerous detour from any established and accepted definition and is so broad as to include the classified ad section of a newspaper and the rental guide of a municipal chamber of commerce.
It is an arbitrary and irrational exercise of the police power to require the defendant to obtain a license as a real estate broker after first satisfying the plaintiff Board that he possessed the required knowledge of mortgages, suretyships, escrow agreements and other real property subjects, none of which is reasonably relevant to his business activity. In
Real Estate Commission of Maryland v. Phares,
It is clear that defendant’s activities do not fall within those which the legislature may constitutionally regulate as constituting the practice of real estate brokering. The reason for this conclusion is simple but profound. It has been expressed by the courts of this State many times in upholding the rights of a free people to live without undue regulation, but probably nowhere has it found a more eloquent expression than in
State
v. Ballance, supra.
In an opinion worthy of re-reading, Ervin, J., wrote that the founding fathers of this State “possessed an actite awareness of the long and bitter struggle of the English speaking race for some substantial measure of dignity and freedom for the individual. They loved liberty and loathed tyranny, and were convinced that government itself must be compelled to respect the inherent rights of the individual if freedom is to be preserved and oppression is to be prevented. In consequence, they inserted in the basic law a declaration of rights designed chiefly to protect the individual from the State.”
Two provisions of our State Constitution contain such protection and are relevant here. Art. I, sec. 1, declares that among the inalienable rights of the people are life, liberty, the enjoyment of the fruits of their own labor, and the pursuit of happiness. Art. I, sec. 19 declares that no person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property but by the law of the land. These fundamental provisions guarantee the right to pursue ordinary and simple occupations free from governmental regulation. State v. Warren, supra.
For the reasons set forth, we hold that the amendment to G.S. 93A-2(a) enacted by Session Laws 1975, c. 108, is unconstitutional as repugnant to art. I, secs. 1 and 19 of the North Carolina Constitution.
