DocketNumber: A-66-67 September Term 2017; 080700
Citation Numbers: 200 A.3d 398, 236 N.J. 431
Judges: Lavecchia
Filed Date: 1/24/2019
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
**434New Jersey's Consumer Fraud Act (CFA or the Act), N.J.S.A. 56:8-1 to -210, is a powerful "legislative broadside against unsavory commercial practices" in the marketplace. Real v. Radir Wheels, Inc.,
In this appeal, where plaintiffs, an individual and his limited liability towing company, entered into a contract for the purchase of a customized medium-duty 4x4 truck with autoloader tow unit, we are called on to determine whether the CFA covers the transaction as a sale of "merchandise." The trial court answered that question in the negative and granted summary judgment to defendants on that basis. The Appellate Division disagreed and reversed.
For the reasons expressed herein, we agree with the Appellate Division that the trial court took too narrow an approach in assessing what constitutes "merchandise" under the remedial CFA. The customized *401tow truck and rig fit within the CFA's expansive definition of "merchandise" and, therefore, plaintiff's CFA claim should not have foundered based on an application of that term. We further agree with the appellate panel's remand to the trial court for a determination of whether defendants' other bases for seeking summary judgment are meritorious. That assessment **435of the summary judgment record is best made by the trial court in this instance, not by an appellate body.
I.
A.
This appeal arises from defendants' motion for summary judgment. Therefore, just as Rule 4:46-2 requires of a trial court, on appeal we view all facts related to the application of the term "merchandise" in the light most favorable to the non-moving parties, plaintiffs. See Brill v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am.,
Goodman is the sole owner of plaintiff, All the Way Towing, LLC (ATW) (Goodman and ATW collectively, plaintiffs). Goodman formed ATW in 2005. During the time relevant to this matter, ATW employed only one person in addition to Goodman and operated three tow vehicles.
In or around November 2010, plaintiffs sought to purchase a medium-duty tow truck with all-wheel drive because ATW was interested in securing a contract that required medium-duty towing capability. After conducting research on the internet, Goodman found the website for Navistar, which manufactures "International" brand trucks. In the summary judgment motion filings, defendants and plaintiffs agreed that defendant, Bucks County International, Inc. (BCI), which is in the business of truck sales, parts sales, and service, sells exclusively the "International" brand trucks that Goodman was interested in purchasing.
Goodman testified that he also conducted research on the website of co-defendant Dynamic Towing Equipment and Manufacturing, Inc. (Dynamic). A representative from Dynamic testified that Dynamic manufactures only towing mechanisms that mount onto truck cabs and chassis; it does not manufacture cabs or chassis. Goodman stated that he decided to purchase an "International"
**436brand truck from BCI with an installed Dynamic 801 model autoloader tow body. Plaintiffs' information about Dynamic's autoloader tow body came from Dynamic's website brochure.
Following his online research, Goodman contacted a salesman at BCI, Herb Krewson, and informed Krewson that he was interested in an "International" brand all-wheel drive truck and that he wanted a Dynamic 801 model autoloader tow body installed onto the truck so that he could perform medium-duty towing work. Krewson told Goodman that Krewson had never dealt with Dynamic before.
Goodman testified that he and Krewson spent "a couple of months" negotiating options and pricing. BCI and ATW signed a ten-page contract,
Krewson informed Goodman that after BCI delivered the truck to Dynamic, Dynamic discovered that its tow body was incompatible with the truck, prompting Dynamic to make modifications to the towing unit. Goodman testified that defendants attempted to deliver the truck with the tow rig to ATW on four occasions during October and November 2011. Each time, ATW identified deficiencies with the truck and/or the towing rig, including "spew[ing] hydraulic fluid," "metal falling out[,] and the wheel lift [of the tow rig] not closing properly." In his testimony, Goodman conceded that when he test drove the truck, "it drove all right" but noted that the tow rig failed to function correctly. After the **437fourth attempted delivery, Goodman told Krewson that ATW rejected the truck and wanted a refund of ATW's deposit. Goodman does not recall contacting Dynamic directly about the truck's rejection.
When BCI refused to return ATW's $10,000 deposit, plaintiffs commenced this action that includes the CFA claim.
B.
The trial court dismissed the CFA count on defendants' motion for summary judgment. For the trial court, the issue was the CFA's definition of "merchandise," which, the court emphasized, refers to products being offered to the public. The court stated that the tow truck "was a specially designed product that was the subject of negotiations." The court determined that the truck's custom design was "a critical issue" that caused the product not to fit within the definition of merchandise, and thus, the CFA did not apply. The court did not address whether, if the product had fit within that definition, plaintiffs provided sufficient evidence to survive defendants' summary judgment motion regarding the CFA.
The Appellate Division reversed. All the Way Towing, LLC v. Bucks Cty. Int'l, Inc.,
II.
A.
1.
Dynamic's argument emphasizes that the purpose of the CFA is to protect consumers from deceptive business practices that injure the public at large and, therefore, not all transactions are covered by the Act. Whether the CFA applies depends on the nature of the transaction and whether the goods at issue were "offered" "to the public for sale" as stated in N.J.S.A. 56:8-1(c). Further, according to Dynamic, the Appellate Division misinterpreted Finderne and Princeton Healthcare by suggesting that the holdings rested on the complexity of the goods rather than the level of sophistication between the companies and the length of negotiations between the parties.
**439Dynamic's argument is essentially that the CFA does not apply to transactions concerning custom-made goods designed specifically to meet the purchaser's particular needs. To determine whether a product constitutes merchandise available "to the public for sale" in a setting such as here, Dynamic suggested that the Court adopt a fact-sensitive test. Focusing on the facts that it urges as pivotal in such an analysis, Dynamic asserts that the "International" brand truck with the Dynamic 801 model tow rig was not advertised or offered by Dynamic to anyone, especially not to the general public. Dynamic also emphasizes that BCI and ATW had months-long negotiations and that ATW is sophisticated and experienced within the towing industry.
2.
Petitioning separately, BCI similarly asserts that the tow truck was not available to the public for sale and that the Appellate Division erred in interpreting Finderne and Princeton Healthcare as focusing on complexity. BCI asserts that the CFA has limited application in a commercial setting. Relying on Princeton Healthcare in particular, BCI argues that a months-long negotiated contract between sophisticated corporate entities does not fall within the CFA.
BCI further argues that the Appellate Division should have reviewed whether plaintiffs satisfied the elements of a CFA claim. In the event that this Court determines that the transaction fits within the CFA's definition of "merchandise," BCI asks us to dismiss plaintiff's claim on the basis that plaintiffs have not established all essential elements of a CFA cause of action.
B.
Plaintiffs maintain that the CFA is remedial legislation to be construed broadly to protect consumers. They assert that case law recognizes that the CFA applies to custom-made products and that it has been applied to commercial transactions involving goods and services not mass marketed to the public. Their arguments **440rely on the broad terms used in the CFA's definition of "merchandise."
Plaintiffs distinguish Finderne and Princeton Healthcare on the bases that *404they involved a series of complex financial transactions and specially designed in-house software programming, and the transactions necessitated assistance and advice from attorneys and consultants. In contrast, in this transaction, no lawyers or intermediaries were involved; plaintiffs dealt directly with defendants. Plaintiffs further argue that modifying a product, or having a term sheet listing specifications, does not remove a transaction from the CFA's purview.
Plaintiffs maintain that although few members of the public may have an interest in purchasing a medium-duty tow truck, anyone can purchase this tow truck. They contend that the tow truck was not a complex product because the specifications in the contract, although numerous, are similar to specifications required for purchasing a consumer automobile. Finally, plaintiffs assert that being knowledgeable about the tow truck business does not make plaintiffs sophisticated or knowledgeable about the manufacturing of tow trucks.
Amicus curiae NJAJ supports plaintiffs. NJAJ notes that courts interpret the CFA broadly to protect consumers and that the CFA applies to transactions between businesses, pointing to the plain language of the CFA's definition of "person." NJAJ argues that the CFA's definition of merchandise is not limited to "off the rack" goods and analogizes the purchase of the tow truck to that of a typical passenger vehicle that involves many customizing specifications determined by the purchaser.
III.
The issue in this appeal is whether the customized tow truck in this transaction fits within the CFA's definition of "merchandise" in N.J.S.A. 56:8-1(c). Appellate review of this issue involving statutory construction is de novo.
**441Cashin v. Bello,
Our interpretive task begins with a review of the statute's plain language, DiProspero v. Penn,
The CFA provides that
[t]he act, use or employment by any person of any unconscionable commercial practice, deception, [or] fraud, ... in connection with the sale or advertisement of any merchandise..., whether or not any person has in fact been misled, deceived or damaged thereby, is declared to be an unlawful practice[.]
[ N.J.S.A. 56:8-2 (emphasis added).]
Our inquiry centers on the meaning of the term "merchandise," which the CFA defines.
The term "merchandise" shall include any objects, wares, goods, commodities, services or anything offered, directly or indirectly to the public for sale[.]
[ N.J.S.A. 56:8-1(c).]
The Legislature amended the definition of "merchandise" in 1967 to read as it presently does. L. 1967, c. 301, § 1 (adding the language "or anything offered, directly or indirectly to the public for sale"). Prior to that amendment, the CFA defined "merchandise" as "any objects, wares, goods, commodities or services." L. 1960, c. 39, § 1. We view the amending language as merely adding more of the same to the definition's original thrust which was always concerned with items offered to the public for sale.
When originally enacted, the CFA outlawed use of "fraudulent practices in the *405marketplace" to deter sharp practices and dealings in the marketing of merchandise. Furst,
The CFA's history has been "one of constant expansion of consumer protection." Gennari v. Weichert Co. Realtors,
In light of the Act's original remedial purpose and its subsequent and continuous expansion by the Legislature, courts have consistently recognized that the CFA must be liberally construed. Furst,
We do so against a backdrop of decided cases that have touched on the definition of merchandise and the import of "offered to the **443public for sale" as applied in various factual settings. We address the cases that are most pertinent to our inquiry.
IV.
A.
First, it is well established that the CFA is applicable to commercial transactions. See, e.g., Coastal Grp., Inc. v. Dryvit Sys., Inc.,
Plainly, however, context is important. We do not suggest that all business-to-business transactions automatically fit the intendment of a sale offered to the public. Here we need not plumb such limits because plaintiffs, as interested members of the public, were purchasing the tow truck with rig for their own use. It is not disqualifying that their use was that of a small business desirous of being able to engage in a wider range of towing activity. The nub of the issue here focuses on the good in question.
Second, as did the appellate panel that considered this matter, we note that several cases have already recognized that the CFA may apply to custom-made goods. Although the principle can trace **444back to the customized goods and services at issue in Cox, in Czar, Inc. v. Heath, this Court more recently was called on to determine "whether a contractor hired by a homeowner to design and install a kitchen," including building and installing custom kitchen cabinets, was subject to the CFA.
Consistent with this Court's reasoning, the Appellate Division similarly has rejected arguments premised on customization of an item, which have been asserted to remove a transaction from the CFA's reach.
In Sprenger v. Trout, the plaintiffs asserted a CFA claim related to the defendants' custom auto repair work.
For that reason, the defendants rely heavily on Finderne and Princeton Healthcare to support their contention that the CFA should not apply in this case. We review them next.
B.
In Finderne, the plaintiffs' CFA claim involved its participation, at defendants' recommendation, in "a tax-deductible vehicle to fund pre-retirement death benefits for owner-employees."
The transaction in Princeton Healthcare began with the plaintiff, a hospital and healthcare provider, distributing a request for proposals to upgrade their complex computer software system.
As Finderne and Princeton Healthcare demonstrate, courts have examined with care the nature of the transaction when *408customized products and commercial entities are involved in a private individual CFA claim.
C.
In our examination of the matter at hand, the applicability of the CFA does not turn on whether the public at large purchases **447International trucks onto which a Dynamic 801 tow unit is installed. What is relevant is that a member of the public could, if inclined, purchase an operational tow truck consisting of a Dynamic 801 tow body installed onto an International chassis. It is consistent with the intent of the CFA to protect consumers regardless of the popularity of the product or service sold or advertised. To promote consistency in the application of the requirement that a product be offered to the public when evaluating a private individual CFA action, we hold that the availability requirement can be met by showing that any member of the public could purchase the product or service, if willing and able, regardless of whether such a purchase is popular.
We reject defendants' characterization of Princeton Healthcare and Finderne as having placed "limitations on the application of the [CFA] in business-to-business transactions." The transactions at issue in those cases were between two businesses; however, it was the nature of the transaction between the two business entities that precluded CFA protection. See Princeton Healthcare,
In business-to-business transactions it is the "nature of the transaction" that will determine whether it can fit within the CFA's definition of "merchandise." See D'Agostino v. Maldonado,
Applying those principles in the instant matter, we hold that the customization of the tow truck with rig does not remove the product from the CFA's definition of "merchandise." Simply because identically customized tow trucks are not typically sold to the "public at large" does not mean the trucks are not offered "to the public for sale." Here it was a direct consumer purchase transaction; no attorneys or other experts were involved. Similarly, it is irrelevant that the "public at large" does not purchase International trucks onto which a Dynamic 801 tow unit is installed. The relevant point is that a member of the public so inclined could purchase an operational tow truck consisting of a Dynamic 801 tow body installed onto an International chassis. It is consistent with the remedial purposes of the CFA to protect consumers regardless of the popularity of the product or service sold or advertised.
In conclusion, we agree with the holding of the Appellate Division that reversed the *409grant of summary judgment to defendants on the basis that this transaction did not satisfy the definition of "merchandise" under the CFA. We further agree with the judgment of the Appellate Division that remanded this matter to the trial court for consideration of the remaining summary judgment arguments advanced by defendants.
V.
The judgment of the Appellate Division is affirmed and the matter is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings.
CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES PATTERSON, FERNANDEZ-VINA, SOLOMON, and TIMPONE join in JUSTICE LaVECCHIA's opinion. Justice ALBIN did not participate.
Dynamic is not a party to the signed contract.