M. HANNAH LAUCK, District Judge.
Plaintiff John Taylor brings this five-count Complaint
The Court referred the Motion to Dismiss to the Honorable David J. Novak, United States Magistrate Judge, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(B).
By copy of the R&R, the Magistrate Judge advised each party of the right to file written objections to the findings and recommendations made in the R&R. 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1). On February 19, 2019, Timepayment and Taylor each filed timely objections to the R&R. (ECF Nos. 31, 31.) Taylor filed a brief opposing Timepayment's Objection to the R&R. (ECF No. 33.) Timepayment responded, and Taylor replied. (ECF Nos. 34, 35.) The Coin! has conducted a de novo review of the R&R and each party's objections.
Timepayment lodges two objections, both of which the Court overrules. Timepayment raises the following arguments: (1) the Agreement does not constitute a credit sale subject to TILA because the value of the purchase option may equal fair market value of the heat pump at the end of the contractual term; and, (2) Virginia usury law does not apply to the Agreement because Virginia's usury law does not apply to lease agreements. Timepayment asks the Court to overrule the R&R as to these recommended findings, and instead deny the Motion to Dismiss as to the TILA disclosures count (Count III) and the Virginia usury count (Count V).
In Count III, Taylor claims that Timepayment did not comply with the disclosure requirements contained in TILA § 1638(a) because Timepayment failed to disclose the true financing cost of the heat pump. Taylor contends that Timepayment failed to disclose the interest rate in the Agreement, leaving him "unaware of the true financing cost associated with his purchase of the heat pump." (Compl. ¶ 66.)
In its Motion to Dismiss, Timepayment challenged Count III under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6),
15 U.S.C. § 1602; see also 12 C.F.R. § 1026.2(a)(16). Specifically, Timepayment highlighted the Agreement's purchase option provision, which allows Taylor to purchase the heat pump "for its fair market value, not to exceed 3 regular monthly lease payments"
In considering Timepayment's arguments, the Magistrate Judge evaluated the purchase option provision, correctly concluding that, although the value of the purchase option was uncertain, it would equal either the lower of the fair market value of the heat pump at the end of the payment schedule under the Agreement or $1,231.32. The R&R concluded: "Viewing the facts in the light most favorable to Plaintiff, as the Court must do at this stage of the litigation, $1,231.32 may represent an amount substantially less than the fair market value of the heat pump at the end of the lease term, thereby constituting nominal consideration." (R&R 28.) Because Taylor may become the owner of the heat pump at the end of the Agreement schedule by paying only nominal consideration, the Agreement may constitute a credit sale agreement subject to TILA.
In its Objection to the R&R, Timepayment argues that because the purchase option "is tied to the fair market value of the heat pump at lease-end, the consideration required for Plaintiff to exercise the purchase option is not nominal consideration as a matter of law." (Timepayment Obj. 3, ECF No. 31.) This argument simply reiterates Timepayment's prior positions,
Next, Timepayment argues that the R&R erred in concluding that the Virginia usury claim (Count V) survives the Rule 12(b)(6) challenge. In support, Timepayment renews its contention that the Agreement constitutes a lease, not a credit sale, and claims that Virginia usury law does not apply to leases.
In light of recent guidance from the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit published after the Magistrate Judge issued the R&R, Taylor raises several objections. Considering the Fourth Circuit's most recent articulation of the law governing standing, the Court will allow the CLA disclosures count (Count I) to proceed. See Curtis v. Propel Property Tax Funding, LLC, et al., 915 F.3d 234 (4th Cir. 2019).
The Consumer Lease Act ("CLA") requires lenders to make certain disclosures to borrowers.
12 C.F.R. § 1013.4(e). Taylor alleges that the Agreement contains a heading that reads:
In its Rule 12(b)(1) Motion to Dismiss,
Applying then-existing case law, the R&R ultimately concluded that Count I failed because, even assuming that Timepayment violated the CLA provisions, Taylor "failed to allege how any deficiencies with the disclosures deceived him or left him oblivious to the true cost of the lease — the type of injury that Congress intended the CLA to prevent." (R&R 12 (citing Cottle v. Monitech, Inc., No. 7:17cv137, 2017 WL 6519024 (E.D. N.C. Dec. 20, 2017), aff'd, 733 F. App'x 136 (4th Cir. 2018) (affirming, per curium, the district court)). Given the Fourth Circuit's most recent evaluation of standing in Curtis, and for the reasons stated below, the Court concludes that the CLA disclosure count (Count I) survives the Rule 12(b)(1) challenge.
The Fourth Circuit has reiterated that a substantive statutory violation may, without more, confer standing to an injured party. Curtis, 915 F.3d at 241. As to procedural violations, in Spokeo, the Supreme Court discussed the manner in which a plaintiff must allege "injury in fact" to establish standing for what courts call a "procedural violation" of statutory requirements. The Supreme Court confirmed that, to establish an injury in fact, a plaintiff must demonstrate that she or he suffered `"an invasion of a legally protected interest' that is `concrete and particularized' and `actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical.'" Spokeo, 136 S. Ct. at 1548 (quoting Lujan, 504 U.S. at 560). In doing so, the Spokeo court refined standing law by defining "particularized"
The Spokeo court stated that for an injury to be "concrete," it must be "de facto," meaning that it must be "real," and not "abstract." Spokeo, 136 S. Ct. at 1548 (quotation omitted). That said, an injury need not be "tangible" in order to be "concrete." Id. at 1549 (quotation omitted). An intangible injury may constitute injury in fact. Id. The Spokeo court noted that even the risk of real harm might satisfy concreteness. Id. In evaluating whether an intangible injury satisfies the "concreteness" requirement, the Supreme Court reiterated two important considerations: (1) history, which may reveal "whether an alleged intangible harm has a close relationship to a harm that has traditionally been regarded as providing a basis for a lawsuit in English or American courts;" and, (2) the judgment of Congress, which "`has the power to define injuries and articulate chains of causation that will give rise to a case or controversy where none existed before.'" Id. (quoting Lujan, 504 U.S. at 580 (Kennedy, J., concurring in part and concurring in judgment)); see also Curtis, 915 F.3d at 241 (recognizing Congressional authority to define substantive rights, the violation of which confer Article III standing).
With respect to this congressionally-defined, or statutory, standing, the Spokeo court explained: "Article III standing requires a concrete injury even in the context of a statutory violation."
The Spokeo court observed that in cases in which "harms may be difficult to prove or measure[,]" id. at 1549 (citing Restatement (First) of Torts §§ 569 (libel), 570 (slander per se) (1938)), "the violation of a procedural right granted by statute can be sufficient . . . [and] a plaintiff in such a case need not allege any additional harm beyond the one Congress has identified," id. at 1544 (citing Akins, 524 U.S. at 20-25). A plaintiff may therefore suffer "a concrete informational injury where [she or] he is denied access to information required to be disclosed by statute, and [she or] he `suffers, by being denied access to that information, the type of harm Congress sought to prevent by requiring disclosure.'" Dreher v. Experian Info. Sols., Inc., 856 F.3d 337, 345 (4th Cir. 2017) (quoting Friends of Animals v. Jewell, 828 F.3d 989, 992 (D.C. Cir. 2016)). In such a situation, a procedural injury can become constitutionally cognizable when "a person lack[s] access to information to which [she or] he is legally entitled and . . . the denial of that information creates a `real' harm with an adverse effect." Id. at 345 (citing Spokeo, 136 S. Ct. at 1548; Akins, 524 U.S. at 21).
Taylor's Objection asserts that the R&R erred in construing the alleged violations as procedural rather than substantive. Taylor draws analogies to, and relies heavily on, the Fourth Circuit's analysis in Curtis, which postdates the R&R: "The Curtis complaint centered on the defendant's multi-year installment agreement containing restrictions specifically prohibited by the [Electronic Funds Transfer Act], which violations the Fourth Circuit found to be `substantive' rather than `procedural' due to their relationship to the purpose of the statute." (Taylor Obj. 7, ECF No. 32 (citing Curtis, 915 F.3d at 241).) The Court finds Curtis's discussion of substantive rights instructive, and thus Taylor's arguments persuasive.
In Curtis, the Fourth Circuit considered whether a plaintiff had standing to bring suit based on the defendant's alleged violations of the Electronic Funds Transfer Act [EFTA]. See generally Curtis, 915 F.3d 234. The plaintiff, who owed certain local taxes, had entered into a tax payment agreement with the defendant.
The Fourth Circuit disagreed with the defendant, finding that the lender violated the plaintiffs substantive statutory rights when it required preauthorizing electronic funds transfers. Id. The Curtis court explained: "Congress enacted EFTA to protect `individual consumer rights' in the context of electronic fund transfers." Curtis, 915 F.3d at 241 (quoting 15 U.S.C. § 1693(b)). "Among these substantive rights is the right of a consumer to enter into a credit agreement without being required to agree to preauthorized EFTs. [15 U.S.C] § 1693k. This is the same right that [the plaintiff] alleges that [the defendant] violated in its [agreement] with him." Id.
Thus, Curtis lends support for Taylor's argument that, in certain circumstances, a statutory violation that reaches the very purpose of the statute may constitute a substantive violation rather than a procedural violation. Notably, in the case at bar, Congress enacted the CLA "to prevent the `deception, misinformation, and obliviousness to the true costs of credit or lease terms . . . encountered by inexperienced or uninformed consumers." (R&R 9 (citing Monitech, 2017 WL 6519024 at *3.).) To further this goal, the CLA requires lenders to make numerous written, and sometimes segregated, disclosures to borrowers.
As alleged in the Complaint, and summarized in the R&R, Taylor plausibly alleges that Timepayment violated a number of these requirements. Compare, e.g., 12 C.F.R. § 1013.4(e) (requiring a lender to disclose the total amount due under a lease agreement); with (Agr. 1 (omitting the total amount due under the Agreement).). These purported violations include, among others: (1) providing misinformation, by misleadingly identifying the sum of the monthly payments as the total amount due under the Agreement;
Taylor at times describes the disclosures as "misleading[]," (Compl. ¶ 103), and describes himself as "unaware" of the true financing cost
Taylor also argues that, even assuming the statutory violations constitute procedural, rather than substantive, violations, he plausibly alleged at least a risk of real harm. (Taylor Obj. 8); Spokeo, 136 S. Ct. at 1549 (stating that, in some cases, an intangible injury may constitute injury in fact and even the risk of real harm might satisfy concreteness). Viewing all the well-pleaded allegations in the light most favorable to Taylor, as the Court must at this juncture, the Court finds that Taylor plausibly states that he suffered "the type of harm Congress sought to prevent by requiring disclosure.'" Dreher, 856 F.3d at 345 (quoting Jewell, 828 F.3d at 992).
In sum, Taylor plausibly alleges that Timepayment violated the CLA when it failed to adequately disclose information related to the amount due under the Agreement, including failing to clearly state and identify the total amount due on monthly payments or the total amount due under the Agreement. Next, Taylor alleges that, as a result of the improper disclosures and the deficiencies of the Agreement, he remained "unaware" of the true financing cost. (Compl. ¶¶ 68, 158.) Based on this, the Court draws the reasonable inference that Taylor remained misinformed or oblivious to the full amount due under the terms of the Agreement. And this status represents precisely the kind of harm Congress sought to prevent in enacting the CLA provisions at issue. See Monitech, 2017 WL 6519024 at *3; Dreher, 856 F.3d at 345.
Because the Complaint plausibly alleges that Timepayment violated Taylor's statutory right under the CLA, and these CLA violations caused Taylor to suffer the kind of harm that Congress sought to prevent in enacting the violated provisions, Taylor adequately satisfies Article III's injury in fact requirement for purposes of the Motion to Dismiss. The Court will deny the Motion to Dismiss as to Count I, the CLA disclosure count.
Taylor raises two other objections in an effort to sustain Counts II and IV, which the R&R recommends dismissing for want of standing. The Court will overrule both objections, but grant Taylor leave to amended his Complaint should he wish to do so.
First, as to Count IV (the Virginia UCC count), Taylor assigns error to the R&R's finding that he failed to "satisfy the `actual or imminent' element of the injury in fact analysis." (R&R 20.) According to Taylor, Curtis "confirms that Mr. Taylor has been injured for purposes of Article III standing without having already been subjected to improper default or repossession methods." (Taylor Obj. 19.) Taylor misunderstands the nature of the rights at issue in Curtis compared to here.
In Curtis, the violation of the plaintiffs rights occurred upon entering into the written agreement with the lender because the agreement itself violated the statute. Put differently, the Electronic Funds Transfer Act ("EFTA") proscribed parties from entering into the kind of agreement that the defendant foisted onto the Curtis plaintiff. Here, Taylor claims that acting in accordance with the terms of the Agreement would violate his rights under the Virginia UCC. But this represents a hypothetical, future injury. Only a violation of the terms of the Virginia UCC triggers its protections. Unlike in Curtis, the mere existence of the Agreement does not itself constitute an injury.
Next, Taylor avers that the CLA early termination count (Count II) should survive the Rule 12(b)(1) challenge for the same reason: according to Taylor, Curtis supports his position that the Agreement's early termination provision violates the CLA, thus causing him injury. As discussed above, Curtis did not change the requirements for a plaintiff to show the "actual or imminent" prong of the injury in fact analysis. Here, the Magistrate Judge concluded that Taylor failed to show the "actual or imminent" prong of the injury in fact analysis because he "alleged a `speculative, hypothetical injury' that falls short of Article III's case-or-controversy requirement" that does not suffice to meet Article III's requirement that an injury exist or be imminent confer standing. (R&R 19); Spokeo, 136 S. Ct. at 1548. Specifically, Taylor failed to allege that but for the allegedly violative early termination provision, he would have terminated the Agreement early. Even making all reasonable inferences in Taylor's favor, he failed to adequately allege an actual or imminent harm stemming from the alleged violation of the CLA.
For the reasons stated above, the Court will:
An appropriate Order shall issue.
The first page of the Agreement contains a heading that reads, "Consumer Equipment Lease," (Agr. 1 (capitalization altered and holding removed)), although subsequent pages refer to the parties as "buyer" and "seller," (id. 5, 6, 7). Taylor characterizes the Agreement as a "consumer credit sale[] disguised as [a] lease[] for personal property." (Compl. ¶ 5, ECF No. 1.) The nature of the Agreement shapes the dispute in this case.
28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(B).
As to Count I (the CLA disclosure count), the R&R concluded that Taylor failed to show an injury in fact, a necessary element to satisfy Article III's standing test, because the alleged disclosure violations were materially divorced from any alleged harm. Spokeo, 136 S. Ct. at 1549.
As to Count II (the CLA early termination count), the R&R recommended dismissal because Taylor "alleged a `speculative, hypothetical injury' that falls short of Article III's case-or-controversy requirement" that does not suffice to meet Article III's requirement that an injury exist or be imminent to confer standing. (R&R 19, ECF No. 30); Spokeo, 136 S. Ct. at 1548.
Finally, the R&R stated that Count IV (the Virginia UCC Count) must fail because the Virginia UCC provisions that Taylor relied on in his Complaint "only accrue upon default," meaning the "allegations in Count IV [constitute] another purely speculative, hypothetical injury insufficient to confer standing." (R&R 22); Spokeo, 136 S. Ct. at 1548.
As to Count III (the TILA disclosures count), the R&R concluded that Taylor plausibly pled facts in support of his contention that the Agreement constitutes a credit sale subject to TILA provisions, meaning that Taylor can pursue his TILA disclosures claim.
Finally, the R&R recommended that Count V (the Virginia usury count) proceed because Virginia's usury law applies to credit sales under TILA, and Taylor plausibly pled that the Agreement constitutes a credit sale subject to TILA.
According to Timepayment, then, the small lettering clarifies that the $8,619.24 figures refers only to the total amount due in monthly payments. At a minimum, the placement is awkward. Had the disclosure mimicked the Model Form, for instance, no implication of deception could arise. (See, e.g., "Model Form," ECF No. 1-2.) Thus, viewing the facts favorably to Taylor, as it must, the Court reasonably infers that these dual descriptions of the $8,619.24 figure may misinform an inexperienced consumer.
Timepayment reiterates that "the amount due at lease signing ($384.72) and the total of periodic payments ($8,619.24) are conspicuously disclosed side-by-side on the first page of the" Agreement. (Mem. Supp. Mot. Dismiss 8.) Timepayment avers that Taylor only "faults [it] for failing to add these two numbers together for him." (Id.) But the CLA requires exactly that of lenders: that they provide the borrower with the total amount due under the lease, defined as "the sum of the amount due at lease signing (less any refundable amounts), the total amount of periodic payments (less any portion of the periodic payment paid at lease signing), and other charges under paragraphs (b), (c), and (d) of this section." 12 C.F.R. § 1013.4(e).
Reading the Agreement and the Complaint favorably towards Taylor, the dual descriptions of the $8,619.24 and the omission of a total amount due under the Agreement could misinform an "inexperienced or uninformed consumer[]" about the "true cost of credit." Monitech, 2017 WL 6519024 at *3.
The Agreement compounds this ambiguity when it, on the second page, includes terms describing the right to return the equipment. Though the "return of property" provision states that any return must be at the creditor's expense, the provision does not clearly outline the potential costs or logistics, which would include hiring others to remove the heat pump, fixing any HVAC changes that result from removal, and purchasing a new heat pump. (Compl. ¶¶ 60 n.6, 73-74; Agr. 2.)
Alongside the deemphasized disclosure of a plausibly required purchase (and its cost) and the cost of an unlikely invocation of the right to return, the Agreement, especially when read favorably to Taylor, veers even more toward embodying the kind of misinformation and deception Congress sought to prevent through enactment of the CLA.
But in articulating the basis for Count I specifically, Taylor avers he "was unaware of the true financing cost associated with the purchase of his heat pump as a result of Defendant's inadequate disclosures." (Id. ¶ 158.) Although Taylor does not expressly state that he remained oblivious to the true total cost of the Agreement, the Court draws the reasonable inference that the CLA violations caused and contributed to Taylor's obliviousness of the total cost of the Agreement, including the financing rate. Put differently, because Taylor plausibly remained unaware of the actual financing cost of the agreement, a favorable inference of the Complaint reasonably suggests that Taylor remained similarly unaware of the actual total cost of the Agreement.
Second, in Monitech, the plaintiff alleged that the CLA violations as to the terms of payment resulted in her "confusion." Id. The Monitech court concluded that confusion did not equal deception, misinformation, or obliviousness. Id. Here, instead, Taylor alleges he remained "unaware" of the cost of the Agreement by giving examples of how and why, plausibly suggesting obliviousness for the sake of this Rule 12(b)(1) challenge. (Compl. ¶ 158.)
Next, the Monitech court stated that the plaintiff had "failed to allege that defendant's procedural violations had any adverse effect on her conduct in order to demonstrate an injury in fact." Id. Here, Taylor alleges that, had Timepayment properly complied with disclosure requirements, he would have sought other means of financing the acquisition of the heat pump. Considering these allegations and the Agreement in the light most favorable to Taylor, these minimal allegations of injury suffice to overcome this Rule 12(b)(1) challenge.