Catherine Mercado and Michael B. Kuknyo v. Calumet Federal Savings & Loan Association

763 F.2d 269, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 20710
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 20, 1985
Docket84-1875
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 763 F.2d 269 (Catherine Mercado and Michael B. Kuknyo v. Calumet Federal Savings & Loan Association) 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
Catherine Mercado and Michael B. Kuknyo v. Calumet Federal Savings & Loan Association, 763 F.2d 269, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 20710 (7th Cir. 1985).

Opinion

EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge.

Catherine Mercado bought a house with funds lent by the Calumet Federal Savings & Loan Association. According to the complaint, from which we take all the facts, she told Calumet that Michael B. Kuknyo, her son, would live in the house and make payments on the mortgage. For several years Calumet accepted Kuknyo’s payments and all went well.

Then Calumet noticed that the house was insured in Kuknyo’s name, and it asked Mercado to transfer formal ownership of the property to him. When Mercado gave Calumet the documents of sale, Calumet declared the loan in default because she had not obtained its approval to sell (for which, we suppose, it could have extracted compensation). It accelerated the loan and demanded immediate payment on pain of foreclosure. Calumet also offered Mercado the option of refinancing the loan at a higher rate of interest. The refinancing would have entailed new application fees and closing charges. Calumet says that the higher charge was the appropriate one for a borrower not living in the premises. On a view more favorable to Mercado, Calumet simply sought to take advantage of an increase in the market rate of interest between the time of the loan and the time of the transfer to Kuknyo.

Mercado preferred the original loan to the proposed refinancing and brought this suit. She and Kuknyo maintain that the acceleration and refinancing would violate § 7(b) of the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act of 1974 (RESPA), 12 U.S.C. § 2607(b), which provides that “[n]o person shall give and no person shall accept any portion, split, or percentage of any charge made or received for the rendering of a real estate settlement service in connection with a transaction involving a federally related mortgage loan other than for services actually performed.” (Section 7 was later redesignated section 8, but we use the original numbering.) Mercado and Kuknyo contend that the refinancing, new charges and closing costs are a “real estate settlement service,” see United States v. Graham, Mortgage Corp., 564 F.Supp. 1239 (E.D.Mich.1983), and that Calumet seeks new compensation without new “services actually performed.”

The district court dismissed the suit for failure to state a claim on which relief may be granted. The court thought it “apparent from the face of plaintiffs’ amended complaint that any fees received by this defendant in connection with the subject mortgage were for ‘services actually performed.’ This action is a transparent attempt to transform section 2607(b) into a general mortgage loan antifraud provision in circumvention of the statute’s plain language and purpose.”

We affirm because the complaint does not allege that Calumet gave or received “any portion, split, or percentage of any charge” to a third party. Section 8 of RESPA is an anti-kickback statute. The statute requires at least two parties to share fees. As the Senate Report explained, § 8 “is intended to prohibit all kickback and referral fee arrangements whereby any payment is made or ‘thing of value’ furnished for the referral of real *271 estate settlement business. The section also prohibits a person that renders a settlement service from giving or rebating any portion of the charge to any other person except in return for services actually performed.” S.Rep. 93-866, 93d Cong., 2d. Sess. (1974), reprinted at 1974 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 6551. The complaint does not allege the presence of any “other person.” Calumet simply seeks additional fees on the refinancing of the mortgage. Calumet may be right or it may be wrong in believing that Mercado and Kuknyo committed a default permitting the acceleration of the loan, but the bank’s error, if any, does not create the “other person” and the “portion, split, or percentage” of which the statute speaks.

We emphasized in United States v. Gannon, 684 F.2d 433 (7th Cir.1981) (en banc), that RESPA was designed to address a variety of practices that raised the cost of real estate settlement services. We held that a counter attendant at Cook County’s title registration office violated RESPA by accepting “gratuities” of two or three dollars for recording changes of title. The attendant’s acts met the common definition of a split; he took part of a payment for himself and passed on the rest. He had no right to make his services contingent on this payment, yet he did. The “gratuities” also involved multiple parties. Cook County imposed a statutory fee, which was supposed to cover all of the attendant’s services, yet the attendant collected a larger fee and kept part for himself.

Some language in Gannon, taken out of context, might support Mercado and Kuknyo. We said in Gannon that “Congress’ aim was to stop all abusive practices that unreasonably inflate federally related settlement costs to the public.” Id. at 438 (emphasis in original). Parts of the opinion in Gannon may be read to state that any payment in excess of the value of the services rendered is an abusive practice, the equivalent of splitting fees and equally to be condemned. The court had no occasion to consider unduly high fees in Gannon, however, for the case focused squarely on an arrangement under which a participant in the settlement process extracted more than a statutorily-prescribed fee, remitted the appropriate fee to the County, and kept the rest for himself.

If Cook County imposed a single fee of $100 per transfer of title, it would not be possible to attack that fee under RESPA by saying that everything over $25 is “too high” and “abusive” because the cost of service is only $25. Congress considered and explicitly rejected a system of price control for fees; it concluded that the price of real estate services should be set in the market. See 1974 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 6549-50. It directed § 8 against a particular kind of abuse that it believed interfered with the operation of free markets — the splitting and kicking back of fees to parties who did nothing in return for the portions they received. Gannon received a portion of a fee without delivering any service other than the one he was legally obliged to perform in exchange for the statutory fee payable to the County. We held in Gannon that “a single individual can violate § 2607(b) by receiving in his official capacity a ‘charge’ for the rendering of settlement services, but personally keeping a portion of the charge in fact for something other than the performance of those services.” 684 F.2d at 438 (emphasis in original). Nothing of the sort occurred here.

Doubtless RESPA is a broad statute, directed against many things that increase the cost of real estate transactions. Full enforcement of its provisions will assist the buyers of houses. But the objective of a statute is not a warrant to disregard the terms of the statute. Congress always has some objective in view when it legislates, and it is always possible to move a little farther in the direction of that objective. The fact that Congress has pointed in a particular direction does not authorize a court to march in that direction without limit. The language and structure of the statute establish how far to go.

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Bluebook (online)
763 F.2d 269, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 20710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/catherine-mercado-and-michael-b-kuknyo-v-calumet-federal-savings-loan-ca7-1985.