Opinion
The Home Equity Sales Contracts Act (Civ. Code, § 1695 et seq.; HESC)
1
was enacted to protect homeowners faced with mortgage foreclosure proceedings from being victimized by persons employing oral and written misrepresentations, intimidation, and other unreasonable commercial practices to induce the homeowners to sell their homes for a fraction of their fair market values and lose the equity in the homes.
(Boquilon v. Beckwith
(1996)
In 2003, plaintiff Ingo Schweitzer’s home mortgage was in foreclosure. Defendant
On appeal, Westminster asserts the proper interpretation of section 1695.17 is that the bonding requirement applies only to representatives who use undisclosed equity purchasers to purchase homes in foreclosure, and that because Cote disclosed she was acting on behalf of Westminster, the requirements of section 1695.17 are inapplicable. Westminster asserts that a contrary interpretation would render section 1695.17 invalid under the equal protection clause of the United States Constitution. Westminster also argues the bond requirement is void for vagueness under the due process clause, 2 and the attorney fees award to Schweitzer was error.
Schweitzer’s cross-appeal argues the trial court (1) erred when it found the purchase contract provided adequate notice of Schweitzer’s right to cancel, and (2) erroneously excluded evidence of a purported violation by Westminster of section 1695.16. Because of the nature of the issues in this case, we have received and considered amicus curiae briefs from the State of California and the California Association of Realtors.
I
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
A. The Facts
A
home owned by Schweitzer was the subject of mortgage foreclosure proceedings and, by September 9, 2003 (the day before the scheduled trustees sale), Schweitzer was in arrears on 13 monthly payments exceeding $16,000. On September 9, Mr. Webster (an agent working for Westminster) contacted Schweitzer regarding Westminster’s potential purchase of the home. That evening, Mr. Webster and Ms. Cote (another agent working for
On September 10, Schweitzer signed the grant deed and delivered it to Westminster, which recorded it. Also on September 10, Westminster asked the foreclosure trustee to ascertain the amount required to reinstate the loan. The trustee postponed the sale and, on September 11, informed Westminster that nearly $23,000 would be required to reinstate the loan. Westminster sent the necessary funds to the lender the following day and the loan was reinstated.
The purchase contract allowed Schweitzer to stay in the home until January 2, 2004, at a rental rate of $1,300 per month, to be paid by deducting the monthly rents from the purchase contract cash consideration Westminster owed to Schweitzer. Westminster later extended Schweitzer’s occupancy to January 31, 2004. When Schweitzer did not vacate the home, Westminster commenced unlawful detainer proceedings. Schweitzer responded by filing the present action and tendered restitution of the amounts paid by Westminster to reinstate the loan.
B. The Litigation
Schweitzer’s complaint alleged the purchase contract was voidable because Westminster did not provide proof of Cote’s bonding. Schweitzer’s complaint also alleged the purchase contract was voidable because it did not provide adequate notice of his right to cancel and was unconscionable. (§§ 1695.5, 1695.13, 1695.14.) Westminster disputed those allegations.
Westminster contended the statutory language, considering the legislative history of the 1990 amendments, showed the bond requirement was intended to apply only when an undisclosed equity purchaser used a “front man” to importune the homeowner into selling his or her home, and did not apply when the agent disclosed the identity of the equity purchaser to the seller. Westminster asserted that if the statute were construed to require that a disclosed principal use a bonded agent to negotiate with a seller, it would discriminate against corporate buyers (which can act only through agents) by imposing a bond requirement on corporate buyers while imposing no similar bond requirement on individuals who negotiate directly with sellers to acquire homes in their individual names. Westminster argued this discriminatory impact would invalidate the statute under the equal protection clause because there was no rational basis for distinguishing between individual and corporate equity purchasers and treating them differently under the bonding statute. Westminster also asserted, in response to the court’s ruling denying Westminster’s motion for judgment on the pleadings, that application of section 1695.17 to this transaction would violate due process because Westminster did not receive fair notice of what it was required to do to comply with the bonding provisions of section 1695.17.
On the eve of trial, Schweitzer moved to amend his complaint to allege the contract was also voidable because a provision violated section 1695.16, which prohibits limitation of liability in a home equity purchase contract. Westminster opposed the motion, and concurrently filed a motion in limine to preclude Schweitzer from raising the issue at trial. The court denied the motion for leave to amend and granted the motion in limine.
The matter was tried on stipulated facts. The court rejected Schweitzer’s arguments that the contract was rescindable
On appeal, Westminster challenges the judgment both as to the court’s declaration awarding title to the home to Schweitzer and as to the posttrial order awarding attorney fees to Schweitzer. 3 We reverse the judgment on the merits and necessarily vacate the order awarding attorney fees to Schweitzer. By cross-appeal, Schweitzer challenges the orders denying him leave to amend his complaint and granting Westminster’s motion in limine precluding him from raising the section 1695.16 issue. We affirm the latter rulings.
II
OVERVIEW
The key disputed issue is whether section 1695.17 is enforceable, either as applied to this transaction or more generally to any transaction subject to the HESC. Section 1695.17 provides:
“(a) Any representative, as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 1695.15, deemed to be the agent or employee, or both the agent and the employee of the equity purchaser shall be required to provide both of the following:
“(1) Written proof to the equity seller that the representative has a valid current California Real Estate Sales License and that the representative is bonded by an admitted surety insurer in an amount equal to twice the fair market value of the real property which is the subject of the contract.
“(2) A statement in writing, under penalty of perjury, that the representative has a valid current California Real Estate Sales License, is bonded by an admitted surety insurer in an amount equal to at least twice the value of the real property which is the subject of the contract and has complied with paragraph (1). The written statement required by this paragraph shall be provided to all parties to the contract prior to the transfer of any interest in the real property which is the subject of the contract.
“(b) The failure to comply with subdivision (a) shall at the option of the equity seller render the equity purchase contract void and the equity purchaser shall be liable to the equity seller for all damages proximately caused by the failure to comply.”
The trial court determined section 1695.17 was applicable to the purchase contract in this matter and rejected Westminster’s challenges to its validity. The parties agree that we review de novo the court’s interpretation of the statutory scheme, as well as its application to the undisputed facts.
When construing a statutory scheme, our primary guiding principle is to ascertain the intent of the Legislature to effectuate the purpose of the law.
(Palos Verdes Faculty Assn. v. Palos Verdes Peninsula Unified Sch. Dist.
(1978)
Ill
THE BOND REQUIREMENT
Westminster argues we may rely on the legislative history accompanying the 1990 amendments to the HESC, which added the bond requirement, to construe the bond requirement as applicable only when the agent is representing an undisclosed principal. The cited legislative history reflects one of the concerns addressed by the legislation was that agents representing undisclosed principals were engaged in reprehensible conduct toward home equity sellers. (See Off. of Sen. Floor Analyses, 3d reading analysis of Sen. Bill No. 2641 (1989-1990 Reg. Sess.) as amended Aug. 27, 1990, p. 3.) However, nothing in the statutory language suggests the licensing and bonding requirements were applicable
only
to agents representing undisclosed principals.
4
Westminster’s
IV
VAGUENESS
A. Applicable Principles
A statute is void for vagueness if persons of common intelligence must guess as to its meaning and differ as to its applications.
(Franklin v. Leland Stanford Junior University
(1985)
When assessing a facial challenge to a statute on vagueness grounds, courts should where possible construe the statute in favor of its validity and give it a reasonable and practical construction in accordance with the probable intent of the Legislature; a statute will not be declared void for vagueness or uncertainty if any reasonable and practical construction can be given its language.
(Turner v. Board of Trustees
(1976)
B. Evaluation
Westminster asserts the statutory requirement that representatives of home equity purchasers subject to the HESC be “bonded by an admitted surety insurer in an amount equal to twice the fair market value of the real property which is the subject of the contract” (§ 1695.17, subd. (a)(1)) is so vague and ambiguous with regard to the nature and conditions of the required bond that
persons of common intelligence must
The Amount Is Ambiguous
The statute does not specify the total amount of the bond required by the statute. There are two conflicting interpretations as to the amount of the bond. The first interpretation is that the representative must proffer proof that he or she has a separate bond for each transaction in an amount equal to at least twice the fair market value of the home subject to that transaction. The alternative interpretation is that a representative may conduct multiple transactions under the umbrella of a single “blanket” bond as long as the blanket bond is at least twice the amount of the fair market value of the real property on any individual transaction. Neither the text of the statute nor the accompanying legislative history provides guidance to determine the legislative intent regarding the amount of the bond, and there are no administrative rulings or regulations addressing this issue.
The trial court below concluded a single blanket bond satisfies the statutory requirement. The Attorney General, appearing in an amicus curiae capacity on appeal, relies on the interpretative maxims that we should “select the construction that comports most closely with the Legislature’s apparent intent, with a view to promoting rather than defeating the [statute’s] general purpose” while simultaneously “avoid[ing] a construction that would lead to unreasonable, impractical, or arbitrary results”
(Copley Press, Inc.
v.
Superior Court
(2006)
We agree these economic realities suggest individualized bonds would be unreasonable or impractical. However, although this interpretation (in favor of a blanket bond) may rely on sound
economic
considerations, that interpretation is untethered to any
statutory language
and could be contrary to the apparent textual focus of section 1695.17, subdivision (a)(1), because the language of that subdivision defines the
amount
of the bond by reference to the
individual transaction
for which it is proffered.
6
Moreover, to the
The Obligee Is Uncertain
Even were we comfortable speculating (based on economic considerations extraneous to statutory language or legislative history) that a blanket bond would satisfy the statute, the statute would still be devoid of adequate notice of other essential elements of a bond that would guide a representative to know what bond would comply with the statute. Section 1695.17 requires the representative be “bonded” without identifying who is to be the
obligee
on the bond. Unlike other statutory bonds required as conditions to various business activities,
8
a representative of an equity
The Attorney General posits that because Code of Civil Procedure section 995.830 specifies the bond shall “be to the State of California” when a statutory bond “does not specify the beneficiary of the bond,” the absence of any specific identification in section 1695.17 does not deprive the representative of notice of what is required. Assuming the default provision of Code of Civil Procedure section 995.830 provides a person of common intelligence notice of who the obligee on the bond shall be, this construction leaves unanswered an entirely new set of issues relating to the conditions that must be included in the requisite bond: if the State of California is indeed the intended obligee, what are the conditions for payment on the bond, and who is the beneficiary of the bond?
The Conditions on and Beneficiaries of the Bond Are Undefined
Ordinarily, a bond identifies the obligation secured and the conditions precedent to the surety’s obligation to the identified beneficiary (see generally Conners, Cal. Surety & Fidelity Bond Practice, supra, § 2.1 et seq., p. 13 et seq.), and when a bond is posted as required by a statute, the terms and conditions of the bond are statutorily defined.
(Id.,
§ 5.2, pp. 39—40; accord,
Electrical Electronic Control, Inc.
v.
Los Angeles Unified School Dist.
(2005)
The Delivery or Posting Requirements Are Unidentified
A bond is ordinarily ineffective until it has been delivered to the obligee (see
Flora
v.
Aetna Cas. & Surety Co.
(1962)
Conclusion
We are convinced that the amorphous requirement of section 1695.17, subdivision (a)(1), requiring proof the representative is “bonded by an
Although we conclude the bond requirement may not be enforced, the remainder of the statutory scheme remains valid if the bond provisions are severable from the balance of the enactment.
(California Gillnetters Assn. v. Department of Fish & Game
(1995)
All three criteria are met here. The HESC contains 18 sections, prescribing a wide range of rules regulating the conduct of and contractual provisions for home equity sales contracts, and only a portion of one section refers to the bonding requirement. We conclude the clauses containing the bond requirement are grammatically severable from the remaining provisions of the HESC.
(In re Blaney
(1947)
V
THE CROSS-APPEAL
Schweitzer raises two issues in his cross-appeal. First, he asserts the trial court erred when it rejected his claim that he was entitled to a judgment canceling the deed and quieting title because of alleged noncompliance with section 1695.5. Second, he asserts the trial court erroneously precluded him from introducing evidence that the contract violated section 1695.16.
A. The Section 1695.5 Claim
Schweitzer peremptorily asserts, without citation either to the record or to any relevant authority, 12 that the contract did not comply with the requirement (imposed by section 1695.5, subdivision (a)) that the notice informing him of his right to cancel be in immediate proximity to the space reserved for his signature. However, the HESC does not specify that a violation of section 1695.5 provides grounds for rescinding a transaction after recordation of the deed. More importantly, the purchase contract, which contains the required notice, placed the notice in the paragraph following the signature line and on a page that required the seller to again sign by initialing. Thus, the notice was in “immediate proximity to the space[s] reserved for the . . . seller’s signature” (§ 1695.5, subd. (a)), and therefore complied with section 1695.5.
B. The Section 1695.16 Claim
Schweitzer asserts the trial court erred when it granted Westminster’s motion in limine to bar any evidence concerning, or any argument referring to, an alleged violation of section 1695.16. The court mled the alleged violation of section 1695.16 was not one of the grounds raised by the complaint, and granted the motion. 13 Section 1695.16 prohibits the inclusion of a provision in the purchase contract limiting the liability of the equity purchaser for a violation of section 1695.15.
A motion in limine, which is a commonly used tool brought at the beginning of trial when evidentiary issues are anticipated by the parties, is designed to preclude the presentation of evidence deemed inadmissible and prejudicial by the moving party.
(People v. Morris
(1991)
Here, the court granted the motion because it concluded the alleged violation of section 1695.16 was not a claim raised by Schweitzer’s complaint. It is axiomatic that “[t]he pleadings establish the scope of an action and, absent an amendment to the pleadings, parties cannot introduce evidence about issues outside the pleadings.”
(Emerald Bay Community Assn.
v.
Golden Eagle Ins. Corp.
(2005)
Schweitzer argues that under Code of Civil Procedure section 469, which provides that a variance between the issues raised by the pleadings and the proof at trial will not be deemed material absent prejudice to the opposing party, his failure to specifically plead section 1695.16 should be deemed immaterial. Schweitzer misunderstands the operation of that section. Code of Civil Procedure section 469 merely precludes a party from complaining about a variance between the pleadings and the proof at trial for the first time on appeal
when there was no objection lodged at trial
(see
Wishart v. Claudio
(1962)
DISPOSITION
The judgment is reversed, except insofar as the court denied Schweitzer’s motion for leave to amend and granted defendants’ motion in limine on the section 1695.16 claim, and the order awarding attorney fees is vacated. On remand, the court shall enter judgment in favor of defendants. Defendants are entitled to costs on appeal.
Nares, Acting P. J., and McIntyre, 1, concurred.
The petition of appellant Ingo Schweitzer for review by the Supreme Court was denied March 26, 2008, S160152.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Civil Code unless otherwise specified.
Westminster also argues, even assuming its representatives were required to be bonded, the remedies provided under the statutory scheme for that technical violation do not include the remedy granted below, i.e., a judgment quieting title to the seller. Although our disposition makes it unnecessary to decide whether the absence of a bond permits the seller to cancel the recorded deed, we have substantial doubts the statutory scheme contemplated that remedy would be available if the only violation of the HESC is the absence of a bond. The HESC specifically provides for the remedy of rescission and cancellation of the deed after the recordation of the conveyance in section 1695.14, but that remedy is available only for a “transaction ... in violation of Section 1695.13.” (§ 1695.14, subd. (a).) The HESC does not similarly extend that remedy to violations of section 1695.17. Instead, section 1695.17 provides that the failure to comply with its provisions “shall at the option of the equity seller render the equity purchase contract void.” (Italics added.) It appears the HESC’s adoption of section 1695.17 was designed to allow the seller to refuse to perform the purchase contract before the conveyance was recorded, but would not (by the absence of any reference to section 1695.17 in the rescission provisions of section 1695.13) permit that remedy after the conveyance was recorded. We do not reach that issue because we conclude the bond requirement is void.
Westminster has filed a motion to augment the record on appeal to include a declaration filed in the proceedings below, and a motion requesting we take judicial notice of various articles published by amicus curiae California Association of Realtors. We grant the motion to augment. We also grant the motion for judicial notice, although we consider those articles for the limited purpose of demonstrating what advice has been given in those articles, and not for the truth of the statements contained therein. (Cf.
Seelig
v.
Infinity Broadcasting Corp.
(2002)
Westminster asserts that, if we construe the statute as requiring agents of a disclosed principal to be bonded, the statute violates equal protection because it imposes a greater burden on a corporation (e.g., requiring a bond) than on a similarly situated individual, and there is no rational basis for this discriminatory imposition of a greater burden on a corporation than on an individual. Westminster notes that corporations, which necessarily act through their agents and employees (see, e.g.,
Hughes v. Los Angeles
(1914)
The evidence submitted below suggested no surety carrier was willing to issue the bonds, and amicus curiae California Association of Realtors has advised its members that it was “unaware of any insurer currently offering the bond.” Our research has revealed no administrative regulations describing the nature of the required bond or delineating its contents, and the legislative history accompanying the adoption of the bond requirement does not hint at the nature or contents of the bond. We therefore have only the statutory language of section 1695.17 to attempt to determine what is required to comply with its provisions. Schweitzer did submit a declaration from Mr. Back, a vice-president of a company that issues a variety of different bonds, stating his company would consider issuing a bond meeting the requirements of section 1695.17. However, Westminster proffered a subsequent declaration from Mr. Back in which he explained (1) his company had never issued such a bond “as it is not practical given the overly broad and general requirement of the statute,” and (2) his company would be willing to issue such a bond only if the principal on the bond posted “cash collateral equal to the penalty amount of the bond.”
Moreover, the proffered construction violates the “ ‘ “settled rule of statutory construction that where a statute, with reference to one subject contains a given provision, the omission of such provision from a similar statute concerning a related subject is significant to show that a different legislative intent existed with reference to the different statutes.” ’ ”
(In re Marriage of Corman
(1997)
Although we assume here (for purposes of discussion) the bond would serve as a fund to which injured equity sellers could look for recompense, it is far from clear (as we discuss below) the bond would serve that purpose.
For example, Business and Professions Code section 17511.12, subdivision (a) requires certain bonds for telephone sales marketers to be posted “in favor of the State of California for the benefit of any person suffering pecuniary loss in a transaction commenced during the period of bond coverage with a telephonic seller who violated this chapter,” and provides for the enforcement mechanisms of the bond. Similarly, the provisions of Civil Code section 1812.510, subdivision (b), imposing a bond requirement for employment counseling services, provides the bond “shall be in favor of, and payable to, the people of the State of California, and . . . shall be for the benefit of any person or persons damaged by any violation of this title.” Similar provisions articulate the requirements for other bonds required as a condition of transacting certain types of businesses. (See Bus. & Prof. Code, § 6405, subd. (h) [requiring bond by legal document assistants in a specified amount “in favor of the State of California for the benefit of any person who is damaged as a result of the violation of this chapter”]; Bus. & Prof. Code, § 7071.10, subd. (a) [contractor’s bond “shall be executed by an admitted surety insurer in favor of the State of California ... for the benefit of the following persons ...”]; Civ. Code, § 1812.104 [bond required for discount buying club “shall be in favor of the State of California for the benefit of any person who is damaged by any violation of this title”]; Fin. Code, § 12207 [bond required for bill payer or prorater “shall run to the state for the use of the state and of any person who has a cause of action against the principal under the provisions of this division”].)
See, e.g., Business and Professions Code section 17511.12, subdivision (a) (bond for telephone sales marketers to be “filed with the Consumer Law Section of the Department of Justice”); section 1812.510, subdivision (a) (bond for employment counseling services “shall be filed with the Secretary of State”); section 1812.103 (bond for discount buying club “shall be filed with the Secretary of State”); Business and Professions Code section 6405, subdivisions (b) through (d) (bond for legal document assistants filed with county clerk and recorded by county recorder); Business and Professions Code section 7071.5 (contractor’s bond “shall be . . . filed with the registrar”).
The Attorney General argues that no statute conditions the enforceability of a bond on its filing, and therefore the bond is entirely enforceable. However, the Attorney General cites no authority suggesting an undelivered bond is enforceable, or any authority that even if the section 1695.17 bond is to be delivered to the principal on the bond (a question ambiguous under the statute) delivery to the principal would suffice to render the bond enforceable.
Under the default provisions of the Bond and Undertaking Law (Code Civ. Proc., § 995.010 et seq.), a bond expires after its term ends {id, § 995.430), but a bond given as a condition of a license or permit runs concurrently with the license or permit period. {Id, § 995.440.) It is unclear whether the section 1695.17 bond is a bond given as a condition of the right to do business within the meaning of Code of Civil Procedure section 995.440.
This omission would permit the court to deem the claim waived on appeal
(Dills
v.
Redwoods Associates, Ltd.
(1994)
At the hearing on the motion in limine, Schweitzer apparently moved for leave to amend his complaint to add the allegation as one of the grounds for rescission, but the court denied the motion to amend because it was untimely. On appeal, Schweitzer asserts the court should have granted him leave to amend. However, his brief makes no effort to cite any law or facts suggesting the ruling was an abuse of discretion, and we deem the contention abandoned. (See fn. 12, ante.)
