Barry M. Barash, Chapter 7, Trustee for Raymond M. Pine, Jr. v. Gale Employees Credit Union, a Corporation

659 F.2d 765, 1981 U.S. App. LEXIS 17833
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 11, 1981
Docket80-2655
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 659 F.2d 765 (Barry M. Barash, Chapter 7, Trustee for Raymond M. Pine, Jr. v. Gale Employees Credit Union, a Corporation) 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
Barry M. Barash, Chapter 7, Trustee for Raymond M. Pine, Jr. v. Gale Employees Credit Union, a Corporation, 659 F.2d 765, 1981 U.S. App. LEXIS 17833 (7th Cir. 1981).

Opinion

MARKEY, Chief Judge.

Appeal from a judgment of the district court for the Central District of Illinois denying a guarantor recovery under the Truth In Lending Act (Act) for inadequate disclosure made to a principal borrower. We reverse.

Background

Raymond Pine sought to borrow from Gale Employees Credit Union (Union) of which he was a member. His wife Darlene was not a member, because she was employed elsewhere. Among the papers evidencing the loan transaction, all of which are dated 1 June 1979, is a “Comaker and Guarantor Agreement” and a “Wage Assignment” in favor of Union, both signed by Darlene, and an Agreement and Truth in Lending Disclosure signed only by Raymond. Because the disclosure document was signed only by Raymond, it is presumed that the disclosure required by the Act was made only to him and that Darlene did not see it.

The Pines having filed in bankruptcy, trustee Barash sued Union for violation of the Act, seeking to recover the statutory maximum ($1,000) for each of Raymond and Darlene under Section 1640(a) of the Act. 1 On August 1, 1980,- the bankruptcy court issued a judgment order requiring payment of $2,000 in damages, plus $500 as attorneys fees, and costs, to the plaintiff. On October *766 24, 1980, the district court issued a judgment reducing the damages in the bankruptcy court order from $2,000 to $1,000.

Neither the bankruptcy nor the district court supplied an opinion with their respective orders. It is clear, however, and the parties have so presented the matter to us, that the bankruptcy court viewed the remedy for violation of the Act as encompassing recovery of civil penalties by Raymond and Darlene and the district court considered the remedy as limited to recovery by Raymond.

Issue

The issue is whether, along with the primary obligor, a guarantor is entitled to recover under the Act, the disclosure violative of the Act having been made only to the primary obligor.

OPINION

The material facts are not in dispute. Raymond is a primary obligor. Darlene is a guarantor. 2 *Union’s disclosure constituted a violation of the Act and was made only to Raymond. Raymond is entitled to recover $1,000 in damages, plus an attorney fee and costs. 3 The sole contention on appeal is whether Darlene, a guarantor, may also recover $1,000 in damages. 4 We hold that she can.

As reflected in the guarantor agreement signed by Darlene, Union was “unwilling to extend credit to debtor unless it receives a guaranty of payment”. That agreement specified that Darlene unconditionally guaranteed payment of the full amount loaned, plus interest accrued and the costs of collection. Respecting Raymond’s liabilities, it provided that Darlene waived presentment, demand, protest, and notice of protest and dishonor. In addition, she gave Union an assignment of her wages from her employment with Rockwell International and future employers. Darlene thus undertook, as required by Union, substantial obligations to Union. If Raymond defaulted, she would stand in his shoes.

Union argues that Darlene was not a co-maker or joint obligor, asserting that she would be liable only on default of Raymond. Harkening to the statute and its remedial purposes, however, it is clear that Darlene’s status as a contingent obligor is enough. Whether Darlene’s obligations were primary or contingent bears no probative relation to the question of whether Union’s breach of its disclosure duty under the Act should render it liable to her. Nothing in the Act limits a creditor’s liability for its violation to primary obligors, co-makers or joint obligors. The civil penalties of Section 1640(a), (2)(A), and (3), limited in amount as they are, were designed to aid enforcement of the Act, not to compensate or reimburse a party for having undertaken a particular obligation. Actual damages resulting from the violation may be recovered under Section 1640(a)(1).

To hold that because Darlene’s obligations were contingent upon Raymond’s default she could not recover the penalty for Union’s failure to make truthful disclosures would be to countenance a practice under which a creditor would be the beneficiary of substantial, albeit contingent, obligations running from a guarantor, but would be free of any reciprocal responsibilities whatever. Such an interpretation would enable *767 a violator of the Act to obtain the benefit of guaranteed repayment, while limiting liability for his violation to a single payment of $1,000 to the one primary obligor. Nothing in the Act, in its legislative history, in common sense, or in the record here, would appear to justify such a “heads I win, tails you lose” approach.

In Mirabel v. General Motors Acceptance Corporation, 537 F.2d 871 (7th Cir., 1976), this court, after pointing out (at 875) that the disclosure requirements of the Act were enforceable only by regulation and private suits for civil penalties, and quoting (at 881) Section 1640(a), said:

This appears to indicate that Congress felt that the duty of the creditor ran to each obligor involved in a loan transaction and that for a failure to fulfill this duty each obligor could sue and recover.

In Mirabel, Mr. and Mrs. Mirabel purchased an automobile on credit. The court’s opinion refers to the Mirabels as “joint obligors”, without further description or any indication that Mrs. Mirabel was a guarantor. Nonetheless, we consider the approach and explication of the reasoning applied in Mirabel as controlling here, where Darlene is an obligor, albeit a contingent obligor. 5

Fully applicable here are this court’s reference in Mirabel (at 881) to Section 1640(a)’s placement on a creditor who fails to comply “with respect to any person” of liability “to such person”; its recognition (at 878) that “the Act should be interpreted liberally in favor of the consumer to affectuate its broad remedial purpose”; its refusal (at 882) to adopt the notion that Section 1631’s permissive provision for disclosure to one of multiple obligors can be equated with liability to only that one obligor; and its recognition (at 883) that a creditor’s failure to give proper disclosures to one Mirabel was a failure to give proper disclosures to both.

It is true that Section 1640(a) speaks of a creditor’s failure to comply with disclosure requirements “with respect to” any person, and makes the creditor liable to that person. A creditor would not be liable in civil penalties under the section to a person who was a stranger to the transaction. There is no warrant, however, for Union’s assumption that “with respect to” must be limited to the one person to whom a creditor, for its administrative convenience, is permitted to make the required disclosure. Section 1640(a) simply does not say that a creditor is liable only to the person to whom a disclosure is made. The admittedly improper disclosure here made to Raymond was made “with respect to” Darlene, who was so inextricably bound into the transaction.

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Bluebook (online)
659 F.2d 765, 1981 U.S. App. LEXIS 17833, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barry-m-barash-chapter-7-trustee-for-raymond-m-pine-jr-v-gale-ca7-1981.