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DRAFT FOR ATTORNEY REVIEW — NOT FINAL

Section 17535

Citation
Section 17535
Parent Document
Kraus v. Trinity Management Services, Inc., 999 P.2d 718 (2000)
Jurisdiction
California (state)
Effective Date
2000-06-05

Other Sections in This Document (353)

Full Text

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Contrary to the majority’s apparent implication (see maj. opn., ante, at p. 127 & fn. 11), nothing in section 17203—or anywhere else in the UCL— suggests the Legislature’s use of the phrase “any person in interest” (§ 17203) was intended to restrict a court’s inherent equitable powers when crafting UCL remedies. As the majority points out, this language originated in the 1972 amendments to section 17535 and subsequently was added to the UCL. (Maj. opn., ante, at p. 131.) We previously have noted that “whenever the Legislature has acted to amend the UCL, it has done so only to expand its *149scope, never to narrow it.” (Stop Youth Addiction, supra, 17 Cal.4th at p. 570.) In describing one category of permissible UCL remedies, section 17203 refers genetically to orders “necessary to restore” unfair competition proceeds, but notably does not employ the more specific term, “restitution.” Thus, as the majority recognizes, an order that a defendant disgorge money obtained through an unfair business practice “may include a restitutionary element, but is not so limited.” (Maj. opn., ante, at p. 127.)