WALLIN, J., Dissenting I disagree with the majority’s conclusion that a defendant must bear the onerous burden of conclusively establishing the truth or falsity of a matter of public record within the statutory time for answering a verified complaint. While the majority blithely asserts a defendant may easily contact the appropriate public agency by telephone or letter, the reality is not so simple. Anyone who has tried to elicit information from a public agency is likely to have experienced the frustration of unanswered questions unless he knew in advance exactly which agency, department, telephone number or extension to contact.
The relatively few authorities providing any justification for the general rule rely on a faulty premise: the easy accessibility of public records. Literally tens of thousands of federal, state and local agencies issue myriad licenses, permits and “public records” every day. Filing cabinets, warehouses and computer banks throughout the nation are jammed with them. Any trial lawyer who has investigated a product liability case or any homeowner who has searched for an old building permit can attest to the time and expense involved. Yet the majority concludes that whenever a plaintiff bases an allegation on a public record (which the plaintiff must possess), the defendant, before answering, must prove the negative fact that the record does not exist. If he cannot do so, he is deemed to have admitted the allegation.
[735]I believe the better rule is to allow a defendant who is uncertain of a record’s status to answer by denying its existence on information and belief. Determining whether it actually exists should be postponed until the discovery stage. This rule has the additional benefit of encouraging the prompt filing of an answer. Where the public record is significant, the majority’s holding, by contrast, will tempt a defendant to challenge the pleading by demurrer or other motion simply to gain time to search for the record or obtain it through discovery before answering.1
Of course even an extensive, unsuccessful search by a defendant does not prove the nonexistence of the record; it proves only that the defendant did not find it. But this problem is inherent in a pleading rule which forecloses contesting the issue when a defendant truthfully denies, based on information and belief, that the record exists.
At another point the majority suggests “the fact of nonlicensure may be raised as an affirmative defense . . . .” (Maj. opn., p. 734, fn. 1.) But, they add, where, as here, plaintiff has pleaded it possesses the license, “A . . . denial on information and belief does not raise a triable issue as to the license status of the plaintiff.” (Maj. opn., pp. 733-734.) In other words, Transworld is deemed to be licensed because Rogan’s denial on lack of information and belief was insufficient to controvert the issue. How can an affirmative defense overcome a matter admitted by the answer? Does the majority intend to establish a new special pleading rule that the absence of a public record can be controverted by an affirmative defense, even though the record is admitted by the answer? If so, does this rule apply to all plaintiffs who must have a license or some other document to pursue their claim? To all public records pleaded by plaintiffs?
The majority fails to answer these questions for trial courts. In this case, since Rogan’s denial was ineffective to controvert the license issue and he pleaded no affirmative defenses, Trans world must be deemed properly licensed. Apparently the “new trial” ordered by the majority is merely to repeat the evidence of the debt, including any defense to it.
[736]It makes more sense to place the burden of proving the existence of a public record on the party required to possess it. Proof of a license is a preliminary issue which can be disposed of simply and quickly at trial by either a stipulation or the introduction of a certified copy. Alternatively, and preferably, the fact can be established pretrial by a request for admission with a copy of the license attached.
The cases cited by Transworld do not convince me otherwise. In Oliver v. Club Tell (1963) 222 Cal.App.2d 528 [35 Cal.Rptr. 324], the court held that the defendant Swiss Club Tell could not deny, on information and belief, its own status as an unincorporated association since the information could have been conclusively determined by reference to its own records. (Id., at p. 540.) This is not the case here. Rogan did not deny either a matter concerning himself or a matter that could have been determined by reference to materials in his own possession.
In Curtin v. Salomon (1926) 80 Cal.App. 470 [251 P. 237], the defendant had denied, on insufficient information, that the plaintiff was doing business under a fictitious name and that the necessary certificate had been filed. The court determined the defendant’s denial was improper in form because it was not also based on his lack of belief, thus, the denial did not raise an issue. (Id., at pp. 474-475.) Although the court recited the general rule that no issue can be raised by denying a matter of public record on information and belief, it did not rely on it.
In Meyer v. Selggio (1947) 80 Cal.App.2d 161 [181 P.2d 690], the trial court granted judgment on the pleadings for the plaintiff in an action to recover a broker’s commission for the sale of a hotel. The broker had alleged his license and fictitious name status. The seller denied both on lack of information or belief. The court concluded in part that the defendant admitted the license and fictitious name status of the plaintiff because these matters could have been ascertained from public records. Despite the denial on lack of information or belief, however, the answer was so replete with other defects that the seller admitted an entire cause of action in favor of the broker. (Id., at pp. 164-165.)
Also, the broker and seller in Meyer were parties to a contractual business relationship; Transworld and Rogan were not. Presumably a seller has ample opportunity before and during the relationship to confirm the license of the broker he retains. By contrast, in collection actions the agency, as an assignee, is a stranger to the debtor and the transaction. The debtor does not [737]participate in selecting the agency and it may be unknown to him until the lawsuit is served; he has no opportunity to investigate its license status beforehand. In addition, the initial relationship of broker-seller is cooperative, at least until a commission dispute arises, but the relationship between a collection agency and a debtor is always adversarial.
Lastly, in Art Metal Const. Co. v. A.F. Anderson Co. (1920) 182 Cal. 29 [186 P. 776], the court relied on the general rule to conclude “[t]he allegation of the corporate capacity and existence of the plaintiff could not be successfully denied upon information and belief . . . .” (Id., at p. 33.) Whatever the rule’s merits may have been nearly 70 years ago when Art Metal was decided, they no longer exist. The proliferation of public records and, in this case, the relationship between a debtor and a collection agency render the rule impractical and unfair.
These old cases reflect a period when pleadings were virtually the only means of resolving issues prior to trial. Today, pretrial discovery, including requests for admission of facts or the genuineness of documents, is the primary vehicle for pretrial issue determination, and pleadings have diminished in importance.2
I am also unimpressed with the majority’s citations to ostensible authority in support of its premise that “[a]s a matter of public policy, the fact of nonlicensure may be raised as an affirmative defense to an action by an unlicensed collection agency by motion before, during, and after trial, whether asserted in the answer or not.” (Maj. opn., p. 734, fn. 1.) Two of the three cases cited have nothing to do with licensing or the timing of its proof, and the third is devoid of any discussion of when the licensing issue must be raised.
Horn v. County of Ventura (1979) 24 Cal.3d 605 [156 Cal.Rptr. 718, 596 P.2d 1134] is a California Environmental Quality Act case. A party unsuccessfully contended the plaintiff was not entitled to relief because he had not purchased his property by the time the planning department had approved [738]a tentative map. The court noted in passing that an argument “directed at [a] plaintiff’s standing to sue . . . may be raised for the first time on appeal.” (Id., at p. 619.) Our case does not involve standing.
Parker v. Bowron (1953) 40 Cal.2d 344 [254 P.2d 6] involved a mandate proceeding to compel city officials to pay certain city employees the prevailing private industry wage; it was brought by an official of a federated labor council on behalf of several unincorporated unions. The city challenged both the plaintiff’s standing and the unions’ capacity to sue. The court noted that while standing may be raised for the first time on appeal, capacity must be raised by demurrer or answer, or it is deemed waived. The court explained: “Incapacity is merely a legal disability, such as infancy or insanity, which deprives a party of the right to come into court. The right to relief, on the other hand, goes to the existence of a cause of action.” (Id., at p. 351.) Parker supports my position; while an unlicensed collection agency may possess a valid assignment and have standing to sue (National Reserve Co. v. Metropolitan Trust Co. (1941) 17 Cal.2d 827, 831 [112 P.2d 598]; 1 Weil & Brown, Cal. Practice Guide: Civil Procedure Before Trial (1988) §§ 2:6-2:7, pp. 2-2, 2-3), it is statutorily deprived of the capacity to sue for payment. Since the failure to possess a license deprives an agency of capacity to sue, any challenge must be raised by demurrer or answer—or the issue is deemed waived. (I Weil & Brown, Cal. Practice Guide: Civil Procedure Before Trial, supra, §§ 2:46-2:49, at p. 2-12.)
Grossman v. Vaupel (1970) 13 Cal.App.3d 706 [91 Cal.Rptr. 876], a municipal court case certified to the Court of Appeal, at first blush would seem to say otherwise. Grossman, an attorney’s wife, filed a complaint alleging she was the assignee of three of his law firm’s clients. The municipal court sua sponte inquired of her counsel whether Grossman was licensed and bonded. She was not. It then received testimony she was not an employee of the firm. The trial court found Grossman lacked capacity to sue and entered judgment for the defendant.
The majority cites Grossman to support its contention nonlicensure may be raised at any time. This is completely at odds with Parker's holding that capacity must be raised by demurrer or answer, or is waived. Grossman does not discuss when capacity must be challenged; it merely recites the rule that only holders of valid collection agency licenses—or those exempt from licensing—may collect claims for others. (13 Cal.App.3d at p. 710.) And Grossman is a two-edged sword for my colleagues; it assumes the burden to prove licensure rests with the agency.
[739]In conclusion, I would affirm the judgment because Rogan’s answer denied Transworld’s allegation it was licensed and Transworld did not prove otherwise.
The majority suggests “multiple extensions to answer [complaints] are probably the rule rather than the exception” so that a “defendant will usually have 60 to 90 days to investigate plaintiff’s status.” (Maj. opn., p. 734, fn. 1.) But the opposite is true in collection cases and expressly violates legislative policy and trial court rules in many others. Collection plaintiffs are anxious to move forward and avoid further delay on the claimed past due obligation. New “fast track” legislation (Gov. Code, § 68600 et seq.) and local trial court rules implementing it discourage extensions and even sanction lawyers for agreeing to them. While some lawyers may be willing to extend time, it is certainly preferable to demand that a party required to have a license or public record produce it, rather than delay a case while the other side searches for it.
Two other cases mentioned in the majority opinion provide little support for its holding. In Werner v. State Bar (1954) 42 Cal.2d 187, 194-196 [265 P.2d 912] the Supreme Court granted readmission to the bar to a disbarred lawyer despite allegations he had made unwarranted denials in verified pleadings of matters in public records. The unsigned plurality opinion merely holds signing the verifications did not indicate a lack of good moral character. Mulcahy v. Buckley (1893) 100 Cal. 484 [35 P. 144] is a dusty relic discussing pleading rules of little relevance today.