Betty L. Besta v. Beneficial Loan Co. Of Iowa, Beneficial Loan Company of Iowa v. Betty L. Besta

855 F.2d 532, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 11659, 1988 WL 87073
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 25, 1988
Docket87-1801
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 855 F.2d 532 (Betty L. Besta v. Beneficial Loan Co. Of Iowa, Beneficial Loan Company of Iowa v. Betty L. Besta) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Betty L. Besta v. Beneficial Loan Co. Of Iowa, Beneficial Loan Company of Iowa v. Betty L. Besta, 855 F.2d 532, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 11659, 1988 WL 87073 (8th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

BEAM, Circuit Judge.

Betty L. Besta appeals from an order of the district court dismissing her claim that her loan agreement with Beneficial Finance Company of Iowa (BFC) is unconscionable. We reverse.

Background

The loan at issue (Loan II) was written on May 2, 1983, and in part refinanced an earlier loan made in 1981 (Loan I). The loans were structured in the following manner:

Loan I Loan II
Amount Requested $1000.00 $ 500.00
Cash Advanced $1249.33 $1442.23 1
Insurance Premiums $ 214.02 $ 972.00
Recording Pees $ 15.00 $ 184.00
Loan Principal $1478.35 $2598.23
Length of Loan 36 months 72 months
Annual Percentage Rate 24% 28.09%
Amount Per Payment Amount of Interest to be $ 58.00 $ 75.00
paid • $ 609.65 $2801.77
Total Amount to Repay $2088.00 $5400.00

David Mootz, an employee of BFC, negotiated both loans.

Besta made 18 of the 36 payments due on Loan I. At that time, she needed $500.00 to finish her basement. She contacted Dial Finance, who, in turn, called BFC to check on Besta’s BFC loan.

David Mootz asked Dial Finance how much money Besta was requesting. Mootz then telephoned Besta at her home and “explained to her that if she wanted to come to Beneficial, that, you know, [he would] be glad to see if [he] could work up something for her to get her the money she needed.” Record at 35. All of the terms for Loan II were discussed over the telephone, and on May 2, 1983, Besta went to BFC to sign the prepared documents. Dial Finance never responded to Besta with regard to her loan inquiry.

Besta was laid off from her job soon after Loan II was made. She fell in arrears. To prevent BFC from foreclosing on her assets, she filed this rescissionary action. BFC counterclaimed for the amount then owing — $2986.86. The district court found in BFC’s favor on both claims.

Standard of Review

Iowa courts review unconscionability determinations de novo. Home Fed.Sav. & Loan Ass’n v. Company, 357 N.W.2d 613, 615 (Iowa 1984). Unconscionability is something that courts usually find as a matter of law. Iowa Code Annot. § 537.5108(1). At the same time, it is evident that factual findings must be made in order to determine whether or not the transaction at issue meets the statutory standard. Such cases present mixed questions of law and fact. See Hill v. Blackwell, 774 F.2d 338, 343 (8th Cir.1985); see also Mullan v. Quickie Aircraft, 797 F.2d 845, 850 (10th Cir.1986).

On mixed questions of law and fact, at least concerning federal law, this circuit exercises plenary review of the legal conclusion. See Hill, 774 F.2d at 343. When reviewing an interpretation of state law by a resident federal judge, however, *534 we accord substantial deference to the interpretation unless we believe it does not correctly apply local law, or unless the judge has not expressed adequate reasons for the ruling on the state law question. Kansas State Bank v. Citizens Bank, 737 F.2d 1490, 1496 (8th Cir.1984). Here, the judge did not supply us with his reasoning on what we believe to be the relevant question. We, therefore, believe that our deference must yield to reasoning we find more compelling. See id.

The State Law Question

Katherine Keest, an expert witness, presented undisputed testimony that the Besta loan if paid over 36 months instead of 72 months would have cost Besta a total of $2541.88 instead of $5400.00 — and her installment payments would have been $5.00 per month less. The question before us, then, is whether Iowa law was correctly applied when the district court concluded that it was not unconscionable for BFC to arrange to finance Loan II over a six-year period without informing Besta of a more advantageous three-year option.

The district court concluded that all of the insurance charges under Loan II were lawful. For a six-year loan, the court was correct. However, the thrust of Keest’s testimony — she was a consumer lending specialist — was that lending $1442.23 over six years, with the insurance premiums necessary for a six-year loan, was an arrangement no fair person would propose. Record at 437.

Her testimony was that the longer the loan period, the higher the insurance premiums. By adding the increased premiums to the cash advanced, BFC propelled the loan principal to an ever higher amount, and in this case, made the principal amount exceed $2000.00.

With the loan principal greater than $2000.00, the lender could then take a valid mortgage on the borrower’s home. (Iowa Code Annot. § 537.2307 corroborates Keest’s testimony on this point.) The real estate mortgage allegedly necessitated the charging of additional recording and other fees with regard to the security taken. 2 These fees were, in turn, added to the principal amount which then required the payment of still higher insurance premiums. Interest, of course, runs for six years on this entire amount.

The following chart illustrates the effect of Loan II being stretched to six years when compared to the terms calculated by Keest under a three-year agreement (Exh. 69). The terms for Loan I, a BFC loan that was for three years, substantiates the accuracy of Keest’s figures.

Loan II Exh. 69
Amount Requested M000.00 $ 500.00 $ 500.00
Cash Advanced £ 1249.33 $1442.23 $ 1444.46 3
Disability Insurance & 79.34 $ 275.40 $ 96.59
Life Insurance 5 40.72 $ 210.60 $ 49.57
Household Contents Insurance 93.96 $ 486.00 $ 114.38
Recording Fees 15.00 $ 184.00 $
Amount Financed $1478.35 $2598.23 $ 1705.00
Annual Percentage Rate 24% 28.09% 28.09%
Number of Payments 36 72 36
Amount Per Payment $ 58/mo. $ 75/mo. $ 70.61/mo.
Amount of Interest to Pay $ 609.65 $2801.77 $ 836.88
Total Amount to Repay $ 2088.00 $ 5400.00 $ 2541.88

Unconscionability

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855 F.2d 532, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 11659, 1988 WL 87073, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/betty-l-besta-v-beneficial-loan-co-of-iowa-beneficial-loan-company-of-ca8-1988.