Turo v. Super. Ct. ( 2022 )


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  • Filed 6/28/22
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    TURO INC.,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE                   A160200
    CITY AND COUNTY OF SAN
    FRANCISCO,                                  (San Francisco County
    Super. Ct. No. CGC-18-563803)
    Respondent;
    THE PEOPLE ex rel. DENNIS J.
    HERRERA, as City Attorney, etc., et
    al.,
    Real Parties in Interest.
    Turo Inc. operates an online platform that allows car owners to rent
    their cars to other Turo users. Unlike companies such as Enterprise or
    Hertz, Turo does not own, lease, or rent a fleet of cars for customers to rent.
    The People, acting by and through the City Attorney of San Francisco, sued
    Turo alleging that Turo engaged in unlawful and unfair business practices by
    operating a rental car business at San Francisco International Airport (SFO)
    without a valid permit. Turo cross-complained against the City and County
    of San Francisco (the City), which owns and operates SFO, seeking a
    declaratory judgment that it is not a rental car company under California
    law. The issue before us here is whether Turo is “in the business of renting
    1
    vehicles to the public.” If it is, then the parties agree that Turo is a “rental
    car company” for the purposes of Government Code section 50474.1, and
    accordingly SFO is authorized to require Turo to collect a fee from its
    customers on behalf of the airport.
    The trial court granted summary adjudication to the People and the
    City on Turo’s first cause of action for declaratory relief that it is not a rental
    car company under California law, and Turo now challenges that ruling.
    Because we conclude that Turo is not a rental car company as that term is
    defined in California statutes, we grant Turo’s petition for writ of mandate.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    The material facts are undisputed. Turo is an Internet-based platform
    that allows vehicle owners to list, and customers to rent, specific passenger
    vehicles. Turo processes reservations and payments for the rentals, and
    retains a percentage of the proceeds of each rental transaction. Turo’s terms
    of service contract governs the rentals with respect to cancellations,
    extensions and late returns, late fees, smoking, pets, fuel, tolls, security
    deposits, street parking, and nondiscrimination. Turo provides a liability
    insurance policy through a third-party insurer that covers vehicles during a
    rental and offers “vehicle protection options” to “cover” the entitlement of
    owners and liability of renters if a vehicle is damaged during a rental. Turo
    competes with traditional on-airport and off-airport rental car companies,
    and has used phrases like “rent” and “rental car” in its advertisements. Turo
    lists cars for rental to be picked up at SFO, and some of Turo’s customers pick
    up cars at SFO, including at curbside. The average cost of a Turo transaction
    at SFO is similar to that of a traditional car rental at SFO.
    The People sued Turo alleging that Turo violated the Unfair
    Competition Law (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17200 et seq.) by operating a rental
    2
    car business at SFO without the required permit, engaging in prohibited
    curbside transactions at SFO, and using airport roadways and offering
    services on airport property without permission. The People further alleged
    that Turo’s actions constituted unfair business practices, inasmuch as failure
    to comply with SFO’s permit and fee requirements resulted in Turo’s ability
    to advertise and charge lower prices than competitor rental car companies.
    Turo cross-complained against the City, seeking a declaratory
    judgment that it is not a rental car company under California law.1 Turo
    alleged that SFO had unlawfully demanded that Turo obtain an off-airport
    rental car company permit, and pay fees that SFO is authorized to charge
    only “rental car companies” under Government Code section 50474.1,
    subdivision (a).2
    The People and the City (collectively, Real Parties) moved for summary
    adjudication on Turo’s cross-claim for declaratory relief. The trial court
    concluded that Turo is a rental car company within the meaning of
    Government Code section 50474.1, subdivision (a), and granted the Real
    Parties’ motion.
    This petition for writ of mandate followed.3
    1  Turo alleged six causes of action in its operative Corrected First
    Amended Cross-Complaint, but only its first cause of action for declaratory
    relief is at issue in this appeal.
    2 Government Code section 50474.1, subdivision (a) states in part: “An
    airport operated by a city and county may require a rental car company . . . to
    collect a fee from its customers on behalf of the airport for the use of an
    airport-mandated common use busing system or light rail transit system
    operated for the movement of passengers between the terminal and a
    consolidated on-airport rental car facility.”
    3 We summarily denied Turo’s petition after preliminary briefing. Turo
    then filed a petition for review in our Supreme Court, which was granted.
    3
    DISCUSSION
    I.
    The term “rental car company” is not defined in the Government Code,
    but it is defined in nearly identical language in three separate California
    statutes to mean a person or entity in the business of renting passenger
    vehicles to the public. In the chapter of the Civil Code governing “Rental
    Passenger Vehicle Transactions,” “[r]ental company” is defined as “a person
    or entity in the business of renting passenger vehicles to the public.” (Civ.
    Code, § 1939.01, subd. (a).) In the Consumer Automotive Recall Safety Act
    (Veh. Code, § 11750 et seq.), “rental car company” is defined as “a person or
    entity in the business of renting passenger vehicles to the public in
    California.” (Veh. Code, § 11752, subd. (f).) And in the portion of the
    Insurance Code regulating the sale of insurance by “Car Rental Agents,” a
    “[r]ental car company” is “any person in the business of renting vehicles to
    the public.” (Ins. Code, § 1758.89, subd. (d).) From this we conclude, and the
    parties agree, that for purposes of section 50474.1 of the Government Code,
    Turo is a “rental car company” if it is in the business of renting vehicles to the
    public.
    Because the trial court’s summary adjudication order presents a
    question of statutory interpretation and the application of that statute to
    undisputed facts, we review the order de novo. (MacIsaac v. Waste
    Management Collection & Recycling, Inc. (2005) 
    134 Cal.App.4th 1076
    , 1081-
    1082 (MacIsaac).) We must “ ‘determine the Legislature’s intent so as to
    effectuate the law’s purpose.’ ” (Skidgel v. California Unemployment Ins.
    The matter was transferred back to us with instructions to direct the superior
    court to show cause, which we have done. The matter has now been fully
    briefed, and we have had the benefit of oral argument.
    4
    Appeals Bd. (2021) 
    12 Cal.5th 1
    , 14 (Skidgel).) We begin by looking to the
    words of the statute itself. (Ibid.; MacIsaac, supra, 134 Cal.App.4th at p.
    1082 [statutory language is the “most reliable indicator” of legislative intent
    because it “ ‘ “has successfully braved the legislative gauntlet” ’ ”].) We
    construe those words in context, giving them “ ‘a plain and commonsense
    meaning’ unless the statute specifically defines the words to give them a
    special meaning.” (MacIsaac, supra, 134 Cal.App.4th at p. 1083.) Courts
    appropriately refer to dictionary definitions “to ascertain the ordinary, usual
    meaning of a word.” (Wasatch Property Management v. Degrate (2005) 
    35 Cal.4th 1111
    , 1121-1122,) We harmonize clauses and sections of a statutes
    “ ‘by considering them in the context of the statutory framework as a whole.
    [Citation.] If the statutory language is unambiguous, then its plain meaning
    controls.’ ” (Skidgel, supra, 12 Cal.5th at p. 14, quoting People v. Cole (2006)
    
    38 Cal.4th 964
    , 975.)
    II.
    There is no dispute that Turo’s entire business consists of enabling the
    public to rent motor vehicles. Turo points to various dictionary definitions of
    the word “rent.” (See Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019) at p. 1551
    [defining the verb “rent” as “[t]o pay for the use of another’s property”]; see
    also Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary, http://www.merriam-
    webster.com/dictionary/rent (June 28, 2022) [defining the noun “rent” as “the
    amount paid by a hirer of personal property to the owner for the use thereof”
    and the verb “rent” as “to grant the possession and enjoyment of in exchange
    for rent” and “to take and hold under an agreement to pay rent”].) Turo
    argues that because it does not own or possess or control the vehicles listed
    on its website, and has no authority to grant the possession and enjoyment of
    those vehicles to others, it does not itself rent vehicles to the public. Turo
    5
    further argues that because it does not rent vehicles to the public, it cannot
    be in the business of renting vehicles to the public.
    We conclude that Turo’s reading of the statutes is correct.
    That Turo is not a rental car company is supported by several
    provisions in the chapter of the Civil Code governing Rental Passenger
    Vehicle Transactions. (See Civ. Code, § 1939.01, subd. (a) [“ ‘[r]ental
    company’ means a person or entity in the business of renting passenger
    vehicles to the public”].) In that chapter of the Civil Code, a “[r]enter” is
    defined as a person “obligated under a contract for the lease or hire of a
    passenger vehicle from a rental company for a period of less than 30 days.”
    (Id., subd. (b), italics added.) By describing a renter as leasing or hiring a
    vehicle from a rental company, the definition presumes that a rental company
    contracts with renters for the lease or hire of vehicles that the rental
    company owns or controls. Here, however, Turo does not own or control the
    vehicles.
    Other provisions in the Civil Code similarly suggest that Turo is not a
    “[r]ental company” under Civil Code section 1939.01. For example, later in
    this chapter, the Civil Code sets limits on the amount of a renter’s liability to
    a rental company for damage to a rented vehicle, including “[t]he estimated
    cost of parts which the rental company would have to pay to replace damaged
    vehicle parts”; “[t]he estimated cost of labor to replace damaged vehicle
    parts”; and “[a]ctual charges for towing, storage, and impound fees paid by
    the rental company.” (Civ. Code, § 1939.05, subd. (a).) These limits presume
    that the rental company owns or controls the rented vehicle, which is not the
    case for Turo. The Civil Code defines “[d]amage waiver” as “a rental
    company’s agreement not to hold a renter liable for all or any portion of any
    damage or loss related to the rented vehicle, any loss of use of the rented
    6
    vehicle, or any storage, impound, towing, or administrative charges.” (Civ.
    Code, § 1939.01, subd. (g).) A damage waiver presumes that the rental
    company owns or otherwise has a property interest in the rented vehicle,
    which is not the case for Turo’s rentals. In contrast, Turo offers “vehicle
    protection options” for vehicle owners (whom Turo calls “hosts”) and renters
    (whom Turo calls “guests”), which cover what an owner is entitled to, and
    what a renter is responsible for, if a vehicle is damaged during a rental. And
    another provision in this chapter, Civil Code section 1939.23, subdivision (b),
    allows rental companies to “equip[ ] rental vehicles” with GPS-based
    technology to provide navigation assistance, and electronic surveillance
    technology that allows the remote locking or unlocking of the vehicle or that
    allows the company to provide roadside assistance. The equipping of vehicles
    by a rental company implies that the company owns or otherwise controls the
    vehicles, again not the case for Turo.
    We are not aware of any published case in which a California court has
    held that an entity is “in the business of renting passenger vehicles to the
    public” for the purposes of Civil Code section 1939.01, subdivision (a), when
    the entity rents vehicles that it does not own or otherwise control. Still, Real
    Parties argue that Turo is in the business of renting vehicles because Turo
    derives revenue from its customers’ rental transactions, and the rental
    activity from which it derives revenue constitutes Turo’s entire business. We
    find it instructive to consider Sentry Select Ins. Co. v. Fidelity & Guaranty
    Ins. Co. (2009) 
    46 Cal.4th 204
    , a case discussed by the trial court and by the
    parties in their appellate briefs. In Sentry Select, our Supreme Court
    recognized that courts disagree whether being “ ‘in the business of renting’ ”
    commercial vehicles depends upon the frequency with which an entity
    engages in the rental of commercial vehicles or the factual circumstances
    7
    surrounding the lease of a particular commercial vehicle. (Id. at pp. 213-214
    [discussing a former version of Ins. Code, § 11580.9, subd. (b)].) There was
    apparently no dispute, however, that in order to be in the business of renting,
    the entity must rent out vehicles that it owns or controls. In each of the cases
    discussed in Sentry Select, the entity in question owned the vehicles that
    were rented. (See Travelers Indemnity Co. v. Maryland Casualty Co. (1996)
    
    41 Cal.App.4th 1538
    , 1546-1547 [considering whether renting or leasing
    activities were “a regular part of the insured’s business” where the insured
    owned commercial trailers that were regularly used by independent
    contractors]; Western Carriers Insurance Exchange v. Pacific Insurance Co.
    (1989) 
    211 Cal.App.3d 112
    , 117 [considering whether “ ‘bargained exchange’ ”
    for use of vehicle owned by insured company can be construed as a lease or a
    rental]; Mission Insurance Co. v. Hartford Accident and Indemnity Co. (1984)
    
    160 Cal.App.3d 97
    , 100-101 [considering whether a vehicle owner’s leasing of
    vehicle was for a commercial purpose].) Similarly, the entity at issue in
    Sentry Select, 
    supra,
     
    46 Cal.4th 204
     was a carrier company that owned a fleet
    of commercial vehicles and routinely leased most of them to independent
    contractors under a standard lease agreement (id. at p. 214) and our
    Supreme Court concluded that the rentals were “a regular and significant
    part of the insured’s business activities.” (Ibid.)
    As a general matter, the phrase “to be in the business of renting”
    entails engaging in acts of renting. Thus, Village of Bedford Park v. Expedia,
    Inc. (7th Cir. 2017) 
    876 F.3d 296
     (Bedford Park) holds that online travel
    agencies like Expedia are not “ ‘engaged in the business of renting’ ” hotel
    rooms because they do not own or control the hotel rooms and cannot rent
    them to customers. (Id. at p. 305.) In Bedford Park, as here, a statute
    applied to entities “ ‘engaged in the business of renting,’ ” and did not define
    8
    the phrase. (Id. at pp. 301, 305.) The court considered dictionary definitions
    of “rent,” determined that “renting implies ownership and granting
    possession of property,” and concluded that since the travel agencies did not
    own hotels or hotel rooms, they could not independently grant customers
    access to those rooms. (Id. at p. 305.) The court considered the meaning of
    the phrase “ ‘engaged in the business’ ” as it was used in other contexts, such
    as products liability, where “sellers are not held strictly liable unless they are
    engaged in the business of selling the defective product.” (Ibid.) “In that
    context, a seller is only engaged in the business of selling if he does it
    routinely or commercially. The [online travel agencies] do not rent hotel
    rooms, so of course they do not do so routinely or commercially[, and] are not
    engaged in the business of renting rooms and are not subject to” the
    ordinances at issue. (Ibid.) The same could be said here with respect to Turo
    and the statutes that define rental car companies.4
    Real Parties argue that we should follow the reasoning of the federal
    district court in Crawford v. Uber Technologies, Inc. (N.D.Cal. 2018) 
    2018 WL 1116725
     (Crawford). There, in seeking judgment on the pleadings, Uber
    argued that it was “not an entity ‘primarily engaged in the business of
    transporting people’ ” for the purposes of the federal Americans with
    4 The Legislature has demonstrated that it can craft broad statutory
    definitions to cover entities that facilitate an activity rather than engaging in
    it themselves. For example, in the Vehicle Leasing Act (Civ. Code, § 2985.7
    et seq.), “[l]essor” is defined as “a person who is engaged in the business of
    leasing, offering to lease or arranging the lease of a motor vehicle under a
    lease contract.” (Civ. Code, § 2985.7, subd. (b), italics added.) Similarly, in
    the Vehicle Code, “[d]ealer” is defined to include a person “engaged . . . in the
    business of selling vehicles or . . . otherwise dealing in vehicles, whether or not
    the vehicles are owned by the person.” (Veh. Code, § 285, subd. (b), italics
    added.)
    9
    Disabilities Act. (Id. at *3.) Uber’s argument rested on the undisputed fact
    that drivers, not Uber, convey passengers in vehicles that Uber does not own.
    (Ibid.) In denying Uber’s motion, the district court observed that nothing in
    the relevant statute requires that an entity own or lease its own vehicles in
    order to qualify as a private entity providing taxi service. (Id. at *4.) Real
    Parties argue that, just as nothing in the statute at issue in Crawford
    required that an entity own its own vehicles, nothing in the statutory
    definitions of “rental company” or “rental car company” require that a rental
    car company have a possessory interest in the vehicles its rents or have the
    right to control the vehicles. Real Parties argue that to interpret the statutes
    as including a requirement that a rental company be in the business of
    renting vehicles that it owns or controls is to effectively add words to the
    statutes, which we must not do. (See City of Sacramento v. Public Employees’
    Retirement System (1994) 
    22 Cal.App.4th 786
    , 794 [“ ‘[w]ords may not be
    inserted in a statute under the guise of interpretation’ ”].) This argument is
    not persuasive, because the word “rent,” which does appear in the statute,
    implies ownership or control of the item rented. Our interpretation of “a
    person or entity in the business of renting passenger vehicles to the public” as
    applying only to the business of renting vehicles the person or entity owns or
    controls therefore does not require the addition of any words to the statutes.
    (Civ. Code, § 1939.01, subd. (a); Veh. Code, § 11752, subd. (f); Ins. Code,
    § 1758.89, subd. (d).)
    Real Parties also point out that the court in Crawford, unpersuaded by
    Uber’s attempt to rely on Bedford Park, concluded that Uber’s analogy to
    Expedia was “strained”: “Expedia facilitates a transaction that is not
    dependent on the service it offers. Hotels have rented rooms to guests long
    before the creation of expedia.com and can do so without the website’s
    10
    assistance. By contrast, without Uber and its competitors, non-professional
    drivers would find it difficult—if not impossible—to locate a rider and
    transport her to the destination of her choice for monetary compensation. To
    say that Uber merely facilitates connections between ‘both sides of the two-
    sided ridesharing market’ obscures the fact that Uber arguably created a
    market for this type of transportation.” (Crawford, supra, 
    2018 WL 1116725
    at *4.) We agree that Turo’s business model is unlike Expedia’s, and may
    well be more like Uber’s, but that is not determinative. It seems as though
    neither company is a perfect analogy to Turo, which appears to have some
    traits in common with both: for example, the court in Crawford observed
    that Expedia does not control how the hotels listed on its website price their
    rooms, just as Turo apparently does not control the prices at which car
    owners list their vehicles for rental. (Ibid.) In any event, the primary issue
    in Crawford concerned the control that Uber exercised over its drivers, an
    issue that the district court concluded could not be determined on the
    pleadings. (Id. at *4.) The court observed that there were “significant factual
    questions as to Uber’s degree of control over its drivers for employment law
    purposes,” as well as questions about whether Uber controlled how its drivers
    dealt with riders. (Ibid.) The question we face is different and more focused:
    is Turo a rental car company for the purpose of section 50474.1 of the
    Government Code. Interpreting that statute as incorporating the current
    statutory definitions of “rental company” and “rental car company” in the
    Civil Code, Vehicle Code, and Insurance Code, we conclude that the answer is
    “no.”
    Our conclusion that a rental car company owns or otherwise controls
    the vehicles that it rents is further supported by the definition of “[p]ersonal
    vehicle sharing programs,” or PVSP’s, in the Insurance Code. The Insurance
    11
    Code defines “ ‘[p]ersonal vehicle sharing’ ” as the “use of private passenger
    motor vehicles by persons other than the vehicle’s owner, in connection with a
    personal vehicle sharing program” (Ins. Code, § 11580.24, subd. (b)(1)), and
    defines “ ‘[p]ersonal vehicle sharing program’ ” as “a legal entity qualified to
    do business in the State of California engaged in the business of facilitating
    the sharing of private passenger vehicles for noncommercial use by
    individuals within the state.” (Id., subd. (b)(2).) The Insurance Code imposes
    different requirements on PVSP’s, defined in section 11580.24 of the Code,
    and rental car companies, defined in section 1758.89 of the Code, as persons
    or entities “in the business of renting passenger vehicles to the public in
    California.” (Ins. Code, § 1758.89, subd. (d).) A PVSP must “provide
    insurance coverages for the vehicle and operator of vehicle that are equal to
    or greater than the insurances coverages maintained by the vehicle owner”
    and in any event “shall not provide liability coverage less than three times
    the minimum insurance requirements for private passenger vehicles.” (Ins.
    Code, § 11580.24, subd. (c)(1), italics added.) Rental car companies, in
    contrast, are not required to exceed the statutory minimum liability coverage
    for private passenger vehicles. (See Veh. Code, § 16000 et seq. [“Financial
    Responsibility Laws”]; Philadelphia Indemnity Insurance Co. v. Montes-
    Harris (2006) 
    40 Cal.4th 151
    , 155 [noting that supplemental liability policy in
    effect at the time of a rental transaction was “in excess of the minimum
    statutory amounts . . . required under the Financial Responsibility Law”].)
    Those requirements reflect that a PVSP, unlike a rental car company, does
    not own the vehicles at issue.
    Further, the Insurance Code’s definition of PVSP is incorporated in the
    Vehicle Code’s Consumer Automotive Recall Safety Act, which imposes
    different requirements on a PVSP than on a “rental car company,” defined as
    12
    a “person or entity in the business of renting passenger vehicles to the public
    in California” (Veh. Code, § 11752, subd. (f)). The different requirements
    reflect the fact that a rental car company owns or otherwise controls the
    vehicles it rents, unlike a PVSP. Accordingly, once a rental car company
    receives notice of a manufacturer’s recall, it generally may not rent a vehicle
    subject to recall until the recall repair has been made. (Veh. Code, § 11754,
    subds. (a) & (b).) But once a PVSP has notice of a recall, the PVSP may not
    “facilitate or otherwise arrange for transportation” with a recalled vehicle
    “until after any recall notices for that vehicle no longer appear in the recall
    database provided by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.”
    (Veh. Code, § 11754, subd. (c).) This distinction reflects the fact that a rental
    car company has control over the vehicles in its fleet in a way a PVSP does
    not.5
    In sum, although the Government Code does not expressly define the
    term “rental car company,” we conclude that Turo is not a “rental company”
    or “rental car company” as that term is defined in the statutes discussed
    above, and not a rental car company for the purposes of Government Code
    5In section 11754 of the Vehicle Code, the Legislature expressly stated
    that its addition of distinct provisions governing the obligations of PVSP’s
    with respect to recalls “shall not apply in any manner to pending litigation”
    (Veh. Code, § 11754, subd. (d)), and further stated that the section “does not
    affect the determination of whether or not a company is a rental car company
    or whether or not a company is a personal vehicle sharing company.” (Id.,
    subd. (e).) Nevertheless, the distinct obligations imposed on rental car
    companies and PVSP’s in both the Insurance Code and the Vehicle Code
    reflect the Legislature’s intent that a “rental car company” will have owner-
    like control over the vehicles that are rented. The statute appears to leave
    open the possibility that a given entity could operate as a PVSP with respect
    to some transactions and as a rental car company with respect to others.
    13
    section 50474.1. The trial court erred in concluding otherwise, and we
    reverse.
    DISPOSITION
    The petition for writ of mandate is granted. Let a peremptory writ of
    mandate issue, directing respondent court to vacate the portion of its order of
    April 23, 2020, granting Real Parties’ motion for summary adjudication of
    Turo’s first cause of action for declaratory judgment in its corrected first
    amended cross complaint, and to enter a new order denying said motion.
    Costs are awarded to petitioner.
    14
    _________________________
    Miller, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    _________________________
    Richman, Acting P.J.
    _________________________
    Mayfield, J.*
    A160200, Turo, Inc. v. Superior Court
    *Judge of the Mendocino Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice
    pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    15
    Court: San Francisco County Superior Court
    Trial Judge: Hon. Ethan P. Schulman
    Cooley LLP, Michael G. Rhodes, Matthew D. Brown, Benjamin H. Kleine,
    Bethany C. Lobo, Ashley K. Corkery, Julie M. Veroff, Elizabeth B. Prelogar,
    for Petitioner
    No appearance by Respondent
    Dennis J. Herrera, City Attorney, Yvonne R. Meré, Chief Attorney, Owen J.
    Clements, Kristine A. Poplawski, Marc Price Wolf, Deputy City Attorneys, for
    Real Parties in Interest
    A160200, Turo, Inc. v. Superior Court
    16