ORDER DENYING PLAINTIFF’S “MOTION FOR LEAVE TO AMEND COMPLAINT,” DENYING PLAINTIFF’S “MOTION TO STRIKE ...,” AND GRANTING DEFENDANTS’ “MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT”
CLELAND, District Judge.
Pending before the court is a “Motion for Summary Judgment,” filed by Defendants Midland Funding NCC-2 Corp. (“Midland Funding”) and Midland Credit Management, Inc. (“Midland Credit”) on May 26, 2005. Also pending before the court are two motions filed by Plaintiff Herman Calkins on December 14, 2005: a motion to amend the complaint and a mo
tion to strike certain exhibits attached to Defendants’ motion for summary judgment. The court conducted a hearing on the motions on January 11, 2006. For the reasons stated below, the court will grant Defendants’ motion and will deny Plaintiffs motions.
I. INTRODUCTION
Midland Funding is a wholly owned operating subsidiary of Encore Capital Group, Inc. (“Encore”). (Def.’s Mot. Br. at 2.) Encore and its subsidiaries, including Midland Funding, acquire charged-off receivable portfolios at discounts from their face values.
(Def.’s Mot. Br. at 2.) The receivable portfolios that Encore purchases consist primarily of charged-off domestic consumer credit from across the United States purchased from national financial institutions, major retail corporations and other owners of such portfolios. (Def.’s Mot. Br. at 2-3.) According to Defendants, Midland Funding does not engage in the business of collecting debt. (Def.’s Mot. Br. at 3.) Instead, Midland Credit is the entity that attempts to collect on accounts in the various portfolios purchased by Encore and its wholly owned subsidiaries. (Def.’s Mot. Br. at 3; Pl.’s Statement of Facts ¶ 6.) The instant lawsuit involves Midland Credit’s attempts to collect on an account owned by Midland Funding and owed by Plaintiff Herman Calkins.
II. BACKGROUND
On November 13, 2000, Plaintiff purchased a used 1997 Oldsmobile automobile from Crippen AutoMall in Lansing, Michigan for $15,962.90. (Def.’s Mot. Br. at 4.) Plaintiff financed $14,874.97 toward the purchase of the car through a Motor Vehicle Installment Contract (“Installment Contract”) with Crippen Automall, who immediately assigned the Contract to Household Automotive Finance Corporation (“Household”). (Def.’s Mot. Br. at 4.) Plaintiff subsequently defaulted on the loan, and Household repossessed the car on December 11, 2001. (Def.’s Mot. Br. at 4.) Household sold the car at an auction for $5,000, leaving $10,208.11, which Plaintiff owed to Household. (Def.’s Mot. Br. at 4.)
At some point, Household sold Plaintiffs account to Palisades Acquisition I, LLC (“Pallisades”). (Def.’s Mot. Br. at 5.) On November 25, 2003, Midland Funding executed a Purchase and Sale Agreement (the “Purchase Agreement”) with Palisades, whereby Midland Funding acquired a portfolio of charged-off accounts, including Plaintiffs. (Def.’s Mot. Br. at 5.) Midland Credit thereafter attempted to collect payment on the balance of the installment credit still owed. (Def.’s Mot. Br. at 5.) A few months later, Plaintiff initiated this action in the United States District Court for the Western District of Michigan.
Defendants filed their motion for summary judgment on May 26, 2005. On June 30, 2005, Plaintiff contemporaneously filed a response to the summary judgment motion and a motion for discovery pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(f). Plaintiffs motion was granted in part on August 9, 2005, and the parties conducted
limited discovery on certain specified issues relating to Defendants’ motion.
(See
8/9/05 Order). After the case was reassigned to this court,
(see
9/09/05 Administrative Order), the court ordered Plaintiffs June 30, 2005 response brief and Defendants’ July 14, 2005 reply brief stricken from the docket, and allowed the parties a chance to resubmit them after incorporating the requested discovery into their analysis.
(See
10/13/05 Order.) The parties timely filed their updated briefs.
Plaintiff also filed a motion to amend his complaint and a motion to strike on December 14, 2005.
III. MOTION TO AMEND
On December 14, 2005, Plaintiff filed a motion to amend the complaint, which consists of a total of one paragraph of analysis, and presents no specific explanation of how the proposed complaint differs from the original complaint. Plaintiff accurately sets forth the liberal standard of review for motions to amend, but provides no reasoned application of that standard to the facts of this case.
On this basis alone the court is inclined to deny the motion. Additionally, however, the motion is also untimely, and Plaintiff has presented no explanation for his failure to move earlier.
See Wade v. Knoxville Util. Bd.,
259 F.3d 452, 459 (6th Cir.2001) (“When amendment is sought at a late stage in the litigation, there is an increased burden to show justification for failing to move earlier.”) (citing
Duggins v. Steak ‘N Shake, Inc.,
195 F.3d 828, 834 (6th Cir.1999)). Plaintiffs motion is filed over nineteen months after this action was initiated, seven months after the motion for summary judgment was filed, and two months after the deadline for discovery related to the motion for summary judgment. Plaintiff presents no excuse for this undue delay, and the court can discern no reason why the motion could not have been brought earlier. This delay has likely prejudiced Defendants in that, by moving earlier, it is possible that Plaintiffs limited discovery may have been tailored or focused differently.
Finally, the motion is futile because, even if the court were to grant the motion, it would not affect the analysis of the summary judgment motion. Indeed, having reviewed the proposed amended complaint along with Defendants’ objections, the court finds that the proposed amendments do very little to affect the substance of Plaintiffs claims. Rather, the proposed amended complaint appears to clarify Plaintiffs claims and, perhaps, adjust a few minor technical issues in the original complaint.
Most, if not all, of these amendments have been subsequently
clarified in the various briefs filed since the time of the original complaint and are simply not necessary to form the basis of an amended pleading.
Because the Plaintiffs untimely motion to amend does not present a reasoned analysis to allow the proposed amendment and because the amended pleading is futile, the court will deny the motion.
See General Elec. Co. v. Sargent & Lundy,
916 F.2d 1119, 1130 (6th Cir.1990) (citing
Hageman v. Signal L.P. Gas, Inc.,
486 F.2d 479, 484 (6th Cir.1973)) (“In the decision whether to permit an amendment, some of the factors which may be considered by the trial court are undue ‘delay in filing, lack of notice to the opposing party, bad faith by the moving party, repeated failure to cure deficiencies by previous amendments, undue prejudice to the opposing party, and futility of amendment.’ ”).
IV. Motion for Summary Judgment
Plaintiffs complaint contains claims brought under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (the “FDCPA”), 15 U.S.C. § 1692 (Count I), the Motor Vehicle Sales Finance Act (“MVSFA”), Mich. Comp. Laws § 492.101 (Count II), the Michigan Credit Reform Act, Mich. Comp. Laws § 445.1851 (Count III), the Michigan Occupational Code, Mich. Comp. Laws 339.901 (Count IV), and the Michigan Dept Collection Practices Act (Count V). Plaintiff also seeks class action status for persons who owe money on accounts owned by Midland Funding. (CompJ 22.)
A. Standard
Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56, summary judgment is proper when there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R.Civ.P. 56(c). “Where the moving party has carried its burden of showing that the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, admissions and affidavits in the record construed favorably to the non-moving party, do not raise a genuine issue of material fact for trial, entry of summary judgment is appropriate.”
Gutierrez v. Lynch,
826 F.2d 1534, 1536 (6th Cir.1987) (citing
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
477 U.S. 317, 106 S.Ct. 2548, 91 L.Ed.2d 265 (1986)).
Summary judgment is not appropriate when “the evidence presents a sufficient disagreement to require submission to a jury.”
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
477 U.S. 242, 251-52, 106 S.Ct. 2505, 91 L.Ed.2d 202 (1986). The existence of some factual dispute, however, does not defeat a properly supported motion for summary judgment; the disputed factual issue must be material.
See id.
at 252, 106 S.Ct. 2505 (“The judge’s inquiry, therefore, unavoidably asks whether reasonable jurors could find by a preponderance of the evidence that the plaintiff is entitled to a verdict-'whether there is [evidence] upon which a jury can properly proceed to find a verdict for the party producing it, upon whom the
onus
of proof is imposed.’ ”). A fact is “material” for purposes of summary judgment when proof of that fact would have the effect of establishing or refuting an essential element of the claim or a defense advanced by either party.
Kendall v. Hoover Co.,
751 F.2d 171, 174 (6th Cir.1984). In considering a motion for summary judgment, the court must view the facts and draw all reasonable inferences from the admissible evidence presented in a manner most favorable to the nonmoving party.
Dunigan v. Noble,
390 F.3d 486, 492 (6th Cir.2004) (“[W]e must determine ‘not whether there is literally no evidence, but whether there is any upon which a jury could properly proceed to find a verdict for the party producing it upon whom the
onus
of proof is imposed.’ ”) The court does not weigh the evidence to determine the truth of the matter, but must determine if the evidence produced creates a genuine issue for trial.
Sagan v.
United States,
342 F.3d 493, 497 (6th Cir.2003).
B. MVSFA
1. The Existence of a Private Right of Action
The gravamen of Plaintiffs complaint is that Midland Funding charged Plaintiff fees which were not authorized because Midland Funding is not licensed under the MVSFA. (CompJ35.) Plaintiff asserts that, due to Midland Funding’s lack of license, “[a]ll charges apart from the principal balance are forfeit.”
(Id.)
Defendants argue that, even if Midland Funding were required to be licensed under the MVSFA (which, as discussed below, Defendants dispute), the MVSFA does not provide for a private right of action under which Plaintiff can sue Defendants. Michigan courts have not spoken on this issue, and Defendants rely primarily on a decision from the United States District Court for the Western District of Michigan,
Lozada v. Dale Baker Oldsmobile, Inc.,
136 F.Supp.2d 719 (W.D.Mich.2001).
In
Lozada,
the plaintiffs claimed that when they purchased their vehicles the defendant failed to provide a copy of the installment sales contracts to them, which is required under the MVSFA.
See id.
at 726-727 (citing Mich. Comp. Laws 492.112(c)). The plaintiffs in
Lozada
relied on the same provision which Plaintiff cites in this case to argue the existence of a private right of action under the MVSFA. Specifically, the plaintiffs cited Mich. Comp. Laws § 492.131(d), which provides:
Whenever in an installment sale contract under this act the seller or any subsequent holder has charged, contracted for, collected, or received from the buyer prohibited costs or charges in connection with the contract, all the costs and charges in connection with the contract, other than for insurance, shall be void and unenforceable and any amounts paid by the buyer for such costs and charges, other than insurance, shall be applied on the principal of the contract.
Mich. Comp. Laws § 492.131(d). Under the plaintiffs theory in
Lozada,
because the defendant did not provide a copy of the installment contract as is required under Mich. Comp. Laws § 492.112(c), all finance charges which it assessed against the plaintiff were “prohibited” and plaintiff could therefore recover the charges under Mich. Comp. Laws § 492.131(d).
Lozada,
136 F.Supp.2d at 726. The court rejected this contention, reasoning that the plaintiffs interpretation unreasonably stretched the words “prohibited charges,” and that the term “prohibited charges” instead referred only to those charges which are expressly disallowed in Mich. Comp. Laws § 492.131(a).
Id.
In so holding, the court soundly reasoned that:
[While sjpecific remedial entitlements are provided in various other sections of the [MVSFA,] no broad general civil remedy is described for violations of the act. Instead, the MVSFA contains a
broad criminal penalty section for all willful violations of the act, which authorizes criminal sanctions, including imprisonment and fines.
See
Mich. Comp. Laws § 492.137. The inclusion of section 492.137 implies that the legislature intended that the act would be largely enforced criminally and did not intend expansive civil penalties unless specifically authorized by other provisions.
Id.
This court finds the reasoning of
Lozada
persuasive and, contrary to Plaintiffs attempts to distinguish
Lozada,
almost directly applicable to the facts in this case. As in
Lozada,
Plaintiff interprets § 492.131(d) as creating a private cause of action for, essentially, any violation of the MVSFA. Plaintiff argues that because Midland Funding was not licensed, all of its assessed charges were “prohibited” and should be declared void. Plaintiff cites Mich. Comp. Laws § 492.115(a) for the proposition that “no installment sales contract shall be sold to any person doing business in this state who is not licensed under the provisions of this act.” (Pl.’s Resp. Br. 10.) Assuming,
arguendo,
that Midland Funding violated this provision by acquiring Plaintiffs defaulted account, this does not mean that (1) the violation of this provision necessarily means Midland Funding cannot collect charges above the principal
or that (2) a private cause of action exists for violating § 492.115(a).
Although there are no Michigan cases on point, the court finds it likely that Michigan courts would apply the same reasoning as found in
Lozada
to hold that there is no private cause of action under the MVSFA for the failure to obtain a license.
In order to determine whether a private cause of action exists, Michigan courts employ the following approach:
If the common law provides no right to relief, and the right to such relief is instead provided by statute, then plaintiffs have
no
private cause of action for enforcement of the right
unless:
(1) the statute expressly creates a private cause of action or (2) a cause of action can be inferred from the fact that the statute provides no adequate means of enforcement of its provisions.
Bell v. League Life Ins. Co.,
149 Mich.App. 481, 482-483, 387 N.W.2d 154 (1986). It follows that courts must dismiss a private cause of action under a statute creating a new right unless the statute expressly created the private cause of action or the cause of action may be inferred because
the statute does not provide adequate means to enforce its provisions.
Forster v. Delton School Dist.
176 Mich.App. 582, 585, 440 N.W.2d 421 (1989).
Pitsch v. ESE Michigan, Inc.,
233 Mich.App. 578, 586-587, 593 N.W.2d 565, 570 (Mich.Ct.App.1999) (emphasis in original) (citing
Long v. Chelsea Community Hosp.,
219 Mich.App. 578, 581-582, 557 N.W.2d 157 (1996));
see also Friend v. North Branch,
No. 251415, 2005 WL 599705 at *2 (Mich.Ct.App. Mar.15, 2005).
With respect to the first prong, the court has reviewed the MVSFA and finds that it does not expressly create a private cause of action for the violation that Plaintiff asserts in this case. Plaintiff relies on Mich. Comp. Laws § 492.131(d), but the court finds, as did' the
Lozada
court, that § 492.131(d) provides a private remedy only to recoup or void “prohibited charges.” There is nothing in that provision indicating that either (1) any fees charged by an unlicensed individual are “prohibited” or (2) that any charges imposed by someone who has violated the act in any way (such as by failing to obtain a license) are “prohibited.” Accordingly, there is no express private cause of action for failing to obtain a license. Plaintiff can maintain this action against Defendants only if the court finds that “a cause of action can be inferred from the fact that the statute provides no adequate means of enforcement of its provisio'ns”.
Pitsch,
233 Mich.App. at 586-587, 693 N.W.2d at 570.
Plaintiff implicitly argues that this inference is appropriate when he argues that a private cause of action must be implied in the statute in order to ensure the “proper functioning” of the MVSFA.
(PL’s Resp. Br. at 12.) The statute, however, can still encourage licensing, regardless of whether a civil remedy exists, because the MVSFA contains a broad criminal penalty for noncompliance.
See
Mich. Comp. Laws § 492.137 (“Any person ... who ... shall wilfully or intentionally engage in this state in business as [an] installment seller or sales finance company as defined in this act without having obtained a license, as required under this act, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof shall be sentenced to pay a fine of not more than $5,000.00, or to suffer imprisonment of not more" than 3 years, or both, at the discretion of the court.”). In the absence of an express provision allowing a private cause of action, the criminal penalty for engaging in business without a license actually
precludes
a private cause of action.
See Wallad v. Access BIDCO, Inc.,
236 Mich.App. 303, 307-308, 600 N.W.2d 664, 667 (Mich.Ct.App.1999) (citing
Claire-Ann Co. v. Christenson & Christenson, Inc.,
223 Mich.App. 25, 566 N.W.2d 4 (1997).) (“[A] private party cannot maintain an action to enforce a statute if the statute sets up a public enforcement mechanism and creates new rights that did not exist at common law.”). The court need not — indeed cannot — imply a private cause of action for failure to obtain a li
cense when the MVSFA provides a public enforcement mechanism, in the form of criminal penalties, for such violation. This conclusion is also buttressed by a recent opinion of the Michigan Court of Appeals which, though reserving a ruling on the existence of a private cause of action, noted that the MVSFA’s criminal penalty and statutory history indicated that the statute was regulatory in nature.
King v. Ford Motor Credit Co.,
257 Mich.App. 303, 318, 668 N.W.2d 357, 366 (Mich.Ct.App.2003). In
King,
the court stated:
An entity that operates under the act without a license or a licensee that violates the act may be found guilty of a misdemeanor and sentenced to pay a fíne of not more than $500 for the first offense, and face imprisonment, not to exceed a year, for subsequent offenses. MCL 492.137. Thus, an overall review of the statute reveals that it is regulatory, setting forth the licensing and procedural fees charged in the sale of a motor vehicle through an installment sale contract without restricting the parties’ ability to negotiate the terms of the sale or the profit margin earned on the sale.
King,
257 Mich.App. at 318, 668 N.W.2d at 366;
see also id.
(“In essence, the MVSFA is a regulatory statute ... ”). Thus, there is no express private cause of action in the MVSFA and, further, one cannot not be inferred because the statute provides an adequate means of enforcement of its provisions.
Pitsch,
233 Mich.App. at 586-587, 593 N.W.2d at 570;
see also Wallad,
236 Mich.App. at 307-308, 600 N.W.2d at 667.
Accordingly, the court finds that Michigan law does not allow Plaintiff a private cause of action as a result of any damages allegedly incurred by Midland Funding’s lack of license.
2. The Application of the MVSFA
Defendants also argue that, even if a private cause of action exists within the MVSFA, Plaintiffs claim nonetheless fails because the MVSFA does not require Midland Funding to obtain a license.
The Michigan Court of Appeals has recently reviewed the text and legislative history of the MVSFA and found that “the MVSFA was designed to address usurious fees and improper conduct that occurred in the financing of an automobile.”
King,
257 Mich.App. at 316, 668 N.W.2d at 365. The Michigan court’s “review of the statute reveals that its predominant purpose is to set forth licensing and procedural requirements governing a motor vehicle installment sale. Briefly, a person may not engage in the sale of motor vehicles under installment contracts unless the seller is licensed in accordance with the terms of the act.”
Id.
at 316-317, 668 N.W.2d at 365.
The parties here dispute whether Midland Funding’s activities required it to obtain and maintain a license under the MVSFA. The MVSFA provides:
Except for a person licensed under the consumer financial services act, a person shall not engage in this state as a principal, employee, agent, or broker in either of the following unless that person is licensed as provided in this act:
(a) The business of an installment seller of motor vehicles under installment sale contracts.
(b) The business of a sales finance company.
Mich. Comp. Laws § 492.103. There appears to be no contention that Midland Funding is an “installment seller,” and thus the only way Midland Funding falls under the purview of the MVSFA is if it is engaged “as a principal, employee, agent, or broker” in “[t]he business of a sales finance company.”
Id.
The MVSFA defines “sales finance company” as follows:
“Sales finance company” means a person engaged as principal, agent, or broker in
the business
of financing or soliciting the financing of installment sale contracts made between other parties, and includes the business of acquiring, investing in, or lending money or credit on the security of the retail seller’s interest in such contracts
whether by discount, purchase, or assignment of those contracts, or otherwise. The term does not include a person, financial institution, or sales finance company that takes assignments of, or an interest in, an aggregation of installment sale contracts only as security for bona fide commercial loans under which, in the absence of default or other bona fide breach of the loan contract, ownership of the contracts remains vested in the assignor and collection of payments on the contracts is made by the assignor, nor a person who purchases installment sale contracts from a sales finance company or a financial institution. The term includes a person, whether or not licensed under this act, who as a seller finances installment sale contracts for other sellers or sales finance companies. The term includes a financial institution.
Mich. Comp. Laws § 492.102(6) (emphasis added). Plaintiff focuses on the italicized portion, arguing that Midland Funding fits squarely within this definition because Midland Funding is in the business of “investing in retail installment contracts or soliciting such business, as by acquiring those contracts.” (Pl.’s Resp. Br. at 16.) Midland Funding, however, distinguishes its business from this definition because it asserts that it is in the business of acquiring not retail installment contracts, but charged-off accounts. (Defs.’ Br. at 5.) Indeed, this fact is undisputed by Plaintiff.
(See
Pl.’s Statement of Undisputed Facts # 1.) To that end, Defendants claim that it is entities such as Household, who first purchased Plaintiffs installment contract from Crippen Automall, who would fall within the definition upon which Plaintiff relies.
Instead, Defendants assert, and the court agrees, that Midland Funding’s activities fall within an express exclusion from the definition of “sales finance company.” Specifically, the definition states that “[t]he term does not include ... a person who purchases installment sale contracts from a sales finance company or financial institution.” Mich. Comp. Laws § 492.102(6). There is no dispute Midland Funding acquires accounts such as Plaintiffs as charged-off receivable portfolios at discounts from their face values and that Midland Funding primarily purchases them from national financial institutions, major retail corporations and other owners of such portfolios. (Defs.’ Mot. Br. at 2-3.) There is similarly no dispute that Plaintiffs contract was sold from Crippen Auto-mall to Household, from Household to Palisades, and from Palisades to Midland Funding.
(Id.)
Based on the plain language of the statute, Midland Funding’s activities in buying the charged-off account in a portfolio from Palisades are expressly excepted from the licensing requirements of the MVSFA.
Putkamer v. Transamerica Ins. Corp. of America,
454 Mich. 626, 631, 563 N.W.2d 683, 686 (Mich.1997) (“Where the language of a statute is clear and unambiguous, the courts must apply the statute as written.”). The Michigan legislature has opted to exclude secondary buyers, under situations present in the instant case, from the licensing requirements of the MVSFA.
Accordingly, the
court finds as a matter of law that Midland Funding is not a “sales finance company” as defined under the MVSFA.
Defendants further argue that Plaintiffs complaint cannot succeed because Midland Funding does not “do business” in Michigan. Specifically, in Defendants’ motion, they hypothesized that Plaintiffs complaint likely relies on Section 115(a) of the MVSFA, which provides that:
Whenever an installment sale contract is lawfully sold, transferred or assigned to a person who is licensed as a sales finance company, pursuant to the provisions of this act, such new holder shall furnish to the buyer in such contract a written notice of such sale, transfer or assignment, excepting when assignment is made only to secure a bona fide commercial loan or pursuant to a bulk sale of installment sale contracts. Such notices shall set forth the name and address of the new holder and shall notify the buyer of the name and address of the person authorized to receive future payments on such contract. If such notice has not been given, any payment or tender of payment made to and any service of notice on the last known holder by the buyer shall be binding upon any subsequent holder.
No installment sales contract shall he sold to any person doing business in this state who is not licensed under the provisions of this act.
Mich. Comp. Laws § 492.115(a) (emphasis added). Defendants argue that, to the extent Plaintiff relies on this provision, it is not applicable because Midland Funding is not “doing business” in Michigan. Midland Funding asserts that it has no employees, property or place of business in Michigan. (Defs.’ Mot. Br. At 15.) Rather, it contends that it merely purchases and holds portfolios of charged-off accounts for loan financing purposes. (Id.)
In response, Plaintiff contends that Midland Funding’s activities in filing lawsuits in Michigan and engaging agents
(i.e.,
Midland Credit) to collect on its contracts constitute “doing business.” (Pl.’s Resp. Br. at 18.) The court disagrees.
There is no definition of the term “doing business” found within the MVSFA. Thus, Defendants suggest that the court look to other Michigan statutes for an indication of how the Michigan legislature would define “doing business.” Defendants cite an unpublished Michigan Court of Appeals case for the proposition that “the terms of one statute can be taken as a factor in determining the interpretation of another statute.”
Federal Financial Co.
v. Papas,
No. 248574, 2004 WL 2624853, *3 (Mich.Ct.App. Nov.18, 2004) (citing
Louis A Demute, Inc. v. Michigan Employment Security Comm.,
339 Mich. 713, 721-722, 64 N.W.2d 545 (1954)). Indeed, while attempting to determine whether the plaintiffs debt collection activity constituted “carrying on any business” within the meaning of the statutes at issue in that case, the Michigan court looked to similar language in other statutes:
While neither MCL 449.101
et seq.,
nor the Uniform Partnership Act, MCL 449.1
et seq.,
define “carrying on any business,” Michigan’s Business Corporation Act (BCA), MCL 450.1101
et seq.,
provides that “transacting business in this state” does not include “[sjecuring or collecting debts.... ” MCL 450.2012(l)(h) (“a foreign corporation is not considered to be transacting business in this state, for the purposes of this act, solely because it is ... [securing or collecting debts.... ”). Likewise, article 9 of the revised Uniform Limited Partnership Act (ULPA)contains similar language. MCL 449.1909(a)(8).... See
Long Mfg. Co., Inc. v. Wright-Way Farm Service, Inc.,
391 Mich. 82, 88-89, 214 N.W.2d 816 (1974) (With respect to carrying on a business, “ ‘[t]he thing done must be of a character indicative of an intention on the part of the corporation to carry on its business in the state. There is implied in the term “doing business” a continuity of act and purpose.’ ”);
Papas,
2004 WL 2624853 at *3. In light of this holding from a Michigan court addressing similar facts under similar statutory language, and in the absence of any persuasive authority to the contrary, the court holds as a matter of law that Midland Funding’s activities in engaging Midland Credit to collect on its charged-off accounts, without more tangible connections to Michigan, is not sufficient to constitute “doing business” under the meaning of the MVSFA. The court also holds as a matter of law that maintaining lawsuits in the state of Michigan likewise does not constitute “doing business.”
See
Mich. Comp. Laws § 450.2012 (“[A] foreign corporation is not considered to be transacting business in this state, for the purposes of this act, solely because it is carrying on in this state any 1 or more of the following activities: (a) Maintaining, defending, or settling any proceeding .... (h) Securing or collecting debts or enforcing mortgages and security interests in property securing the debts.”). Thus, the court accepts Defendants’ alternative argument that Midland Funding’s activities do not constitute “doing business” under the MVSFA.
C. Remaining Claims
For the reasons discussed above, the court has found Defendants are entitled to summary judgment with respect to Plaintiffs claim that Midland Funding violated the MVSFA because (1) the MVSFA does not create a private cause of action and that (2) even if it did, Midland Funding did not violate the act by failing to obtain and maintain a license because it is not a “sales finance company” and was not “doing business” under the MVSFA. The latter hold
ing compels dismissal of all the remaining claims.
First, there is no dispute that Plaintiffs federal claim, under the FDCPA hinges on Plaintiffs claims under the MVSFA. Specifically, Plaintiff claims that “Defendants are ‘debt collectors’ for purposes of the FDCPA; that contracts in question are to be held only by those with licenses under the [MVSFA] from the State of Michigan; and that Midland Funding was not licensed to hold those contracts under the MVSFA.” (PL’s Resp. Br. at 2.) Plaintiff further alleges that, because of Midland Funding’s lack of license, when Defendants attempted to collect finance charges, those “charges were illegal and misstated for purposes of the FDCPA.”
(Id.)
Since the court has found as a matter of law that Midland Funding was not required to be licensed under the MVSFA, Defendants are also entitled to summary judgment on the FDCPA claim.
Moreover, it appears from the briefing that
all
of the counts fail if the MVSFA does not apply to Midland Funding.
See
Defs.’ Reply Br. at 1 (“Plaintiffs Response confirms that all of his claims against Midland Credit and Midland Funding-including those brought under the FDCPA-rely solely on his flawed theory that Midland Funding is required to be licensed under the MVSFA.”). Indeed, the court confirmed this with Plaintiffs counsel during the January 11, hearing; Plaintiffs counsel acknowledged that Plaintiffs entire complaint
hinges on the MVSFA claim.
V. Motion to Strike
Finally, the court will deny Plaintiffs December 14, 2005 “Motion to Strike Documents in Support of Summary Judgment.” As with the motion to amend the complaint, filed on the same day, Plaintiffs motion to strike contains very little analysis. The court has reviewed the motion, along with Defendants’ response brief, and finds that the documents of which Plaintiff complains are sufficiently authenticated for purposes of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56. Moreover, the court notes that none of these documents were central to the court’s analysis and the motion is therefore moot.
VI. CONCLUSION
IT IS ORDERED that Defendants’ “Motion for Summary Judgment” [Dkt. # 21] is GRANTED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Plaintiffs “Motion for Leave to Amend Complaint” [Dkt. # 52] and “Motion to Strike Documents in Support of Summary Judgment” [Dkt. # 53] are DENIED.