Angela Flowers v. Kia Motors Finance

105 F.4th 939
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 26, 2024
Docket23-2270
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 105 F.4th 939 (Angela Flowers v. Kia Motors Finance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Angela Flowers v. Kia Motors Finance, 105 F.4th 939 (7th Cir. 2024).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 23-2270 ANGELA FLOWERS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v.

KIA MOTORS FINANCE, Defendant-Appellee. ____________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin. No. 21-cv-411-wmc — William M. Conley, Judge. ____________________

ARGUED FEBRUARY 16, 2024 — DECIDED JUNE 26, 2024 ____________________

Before RIPPLE, BRENNAN, and JACKSON-AKIWUMI, Circuit Judges. BRENNAN, Circuit Judge. Early one morning, Angela Flow- ers saw a truck parked across the street from her apartment building in Lodi, Wisconsin. She and her son got into her car, a Kia Forte, to drive to work. The truck parked behind them, preventing them from backing out of their parking space. So, they drove through their backyard, onto the street, and later 2 No. 23-2270

the highway, the truck following close behind. Eventually, they lost the truck. The next day Flowers contacted Kia Motors Finance (“Kia”), with whom she had a car loan. The company con- firmed that she was behind on her payments and that her ve- hicle was subject to repossession. Kia had repossessed her car a year earlier, so Flowers suspected that the previous day’s events were another repossession attempt. Flowers sued Kia, alleging unlawful collection practices. But she unduly delayed her attempt to include the earlier re- possession in her amended complaint. And she cannot point to any evidence from which a reasonable jury could find that Kia was involved in the events she describes. The district court granted Kia summary judgment, which we affirm. I. Background A. Factual Summary judgment was granted to Kia, so we construe all facts and draw all reasonable inferences in a light most favor- able to the non-movant, Flowers. Biggs v. Chicago Bd. of Educ., 82 F.4th 554, 559 (7th Cir. 2023). Flowers purchased a Kia Forte compact sedan in 2017. Kia financed a loan for her to buy the car. In 2019, Flowers fell behind on her loan payments. Kia gave her notice that she was in default and the Forte was repossessed in September 2019. Flowers paid the amounts she owed, and the next month re- gained possession of the car. In the summer of 2020, Flowers again failed to make the scheduled loan payments, and Kia gave her notice that she was in default and that the vehicle may be repossessed. No. 23-2270 3

Flowers spoke to a Kia representative and was told she would be sent some paperwork to try to resolve the default, but she alleged she never received it. In November 2020, Flowers and her son would drive to work together early in the morning. One morning before 3:00 a.m. she went outside and noticed a truck parked across from her apartment building. She did not hear its engine running, nor could she recognize the make or model of the truck. She could see that its driver was a man wearing a beanie, but his clothing did not display any identifying information. The only other cars she saw in the parking lot that morning were her mother’s and possibly a neighbor’s. Flowers knew her neighbor’s car had been paid off for some time. That same morning at 3:30 a.m. Flowers and her son left their apartment, walked across the parking lot toward Flow- ers’s vehicle, and saw the truck still parked across the street. As they walked toward the Forte, the truck drove backwards and stopped behind and perpendicular to Flowers’s car. She estimated a four-to-five-foot gap between the rear of her car and the truck. Before Flowers entered her car, she looked at the truck. She could not see any signs, numbering, lettering, or license plate. Neither she nor her son communicated with the driver, who remained in the truck. Flowers and her son then got into her car. They sat for about a minute with the truck parked behind the Forte. This prevented her son, who was driving, from backing out of the parking space. So, he drove the car across the grassy backyard of the apartment building, through a small driveway, and onto a city street and eventually the highway. The truck 4 No. 23-2270

followed them through town, “right on [her] bumper,” only a foot or 18 inches behind her car. Rather than Flowers directing her son to take them to work, she told him to “go, go, go.” The truck followed them onto the interstate. Instead of traveling their usual route south, Flowers’s son drove north. The truck pursued them, staying “a bumper distance away” from their car. Flowers’s son left the interstate, traveled through a truck stop parking lot, and then returned to the highway heading in the opposite direction. Only after travel- ing through the truck stop did Flowers and her son lose sight of the truck. The next day, Flowers called Kia to ask if her car was sub- ject to repossession. The representative initially said it was not, but later admitted it was. While Flowers had her loan with Kia, the company used repossession companies in Wis- consin, including in the area where she lived. The Forte was not repossessed in 2020 or thereafter. B. Procedural In June 2021, Flowers sued Kia alleging that blocking her car in and chasing her were an unlawful attempt to repossess the Forte. She claimed this violated the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1692 et seq., and the Wisconsin Con- sumer Act, Wisconsin Statutes ch. 421 to ch. 427. The district court held a pretrial conference and issued a scheduling order. The deadline to amend pleadings was set for July 29, 2022, after which “Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 15 applies, and the later a party seeks leave of the court to amend, the less likely it is that justice will require the amend- ment.” No. 23-2270 5

Four days before that deadline, the parties filed a stipula- tion about Flowers amending her complaint. The July 25, 2022 stipulation read: “Plaintiff shall have leave to amend the Complaint by and through the date seven (7) days after Plain- tiff deposes [Kia Motor Finance]’s 30(b)(6) corporate repre- sentative, which the parties expect to complete in August 2022.” Due to scheduling conflicts, the deposition did not occur. Instead, Flowers’s counsel suggested several potential dates, including August 30 and 31. Kia’s counsel responded on July 28 that either date would work. Without filing an amended complaint, Flowers’s counsel did not follow up with Kia about potential deposition dates until August 29. Then, on September 9, Flowers’s counsel noticed the Kia corporate rep- resentative deposition for October 11. On September 28, 2022, before that deposition, Kia moved for judgment on the pleadings. After Kia filed this motion, the district court accepted the parties’ July 25, 2022 stipulation nunc pro tunc. Flowers then requested an extension of her deadline to respond to Kia’s motion for judgment on the pleadings. She also said she intended to request leave to file an amended complaint. The district court distributed a text only order to the par- ties on October 26, 2022, which read: Plaintiff’s stated intent to seek leave to file an amended complaint that adds two new parties is a non sequitur. In any event, the deadline to amend without leave of court passed three months ago, and the court cautioned the parties in May, 2022 that the later they sought leave to 6 No. 23-2270

amend, the less likely it was that justice would require the amendment. R. [23] at 2. (To the ex- tent the parties have stipulated to a future amendment, see R. [39], the court remains the gatekeeper whether to allow an amended com- plaint at this juncture regardless of the parties' stipulation).

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105 F.4th 939, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/angela-flowers-v-kia-motors-finance-ca7-2024.