Conn Credit I, L.P. v. TF Loanco III, L.L.C.

903 F.3d 493
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 10, 2018
Docket17-40148
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 903 F.3d 493 (Conn Credit I, L.P. v. TF Loanco III, L.L.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conn Credit I, L.P. v. TF Loanco III, L.L.C., 903 F.3d 493 (5th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

STEPHEN A. HIGGINSON, Circuit Judge:

Appellee Conn Credit I, L.P. sued Appellant TF LoanCo, III, LLC for breach of *497 contract. TF Loan counterclaimed, also alleging breach. Following a bench trial, the district court ruled for Conn. We reverse, render judgment for TF Loan, and remand for calculation of damages.

I.

Conn Credit I, L.P., together with its parent company, sells furniture, appliances, and other goods to consumers on credit. When Conn's customers default, Conn charges off 1 the accounts and sells them to debt collectors for pennies on the dollar. In April 2014, TF LoanCo III, LLC entered into a Purchase and Sale Agreement to purchase a portfolio of charged-off loans from Conn.

The deal was divided into thirteen pieces-an initial "bulk sale" followed by twelve deliveries of Conn's future charged-off accounts, or "future flow." The purchase price was based on the balances of the accounts TF Loan bought. Depending on the account type, TF Loan agreed to pay between approximately 4.8% and 9.8% of the total remaining balances.

In the bulk sale, which closed on the day the parties entered into the Sale Agreement, TF Loan paid nearly $5 million for 43,367 accounts with total remaining balances just shy of $79 million. The Sale Agreement provided that the remaining twelve future-flow installments would be periodically delivered to TF Loan over the next year. On May 9, 2014, TF Loan received Delivery One and Delivery Two (a combined 10,412 accounts with total remaining balances of more than $20 million) and paid Conn approximately $1.5 million.

Deliveries Three, Four, Five, and Six, were scheduled to close on August 28, 2014. On August 23, Conn sued TF Loan for breach of contract, alleging that TF Loan had "declared through its agents and representatives that it w[ould] not fund the August 28, 2014 closing." TF Loan answered that it was not obligated to close on August 28 because Conn had breached the contract and failed to satisfy a condition precedent. TF Loan also asserted counterclaims for breach of contract and fraud. TF Loan has since abandoned its fraud claim and its defense of prior material breach.

A.

TF Loan's remaining defense and counterclaim center on Retail Service Agreements (RSAs) that Conn sells alongside its consumer products. RSAs are extended warranties that cover product replacement and repair. Although a Conn customer has the option of paying for a RSA upfront, many customers choose to finance the RSA together with the product. Of the 53,779 accounts TF Loan purchased in the bulk sale and Deliveries One and Two, 26,418 include a RSA bought on credit. When these 26,418 customers defaulted on their payments, Conn canceled the RSA-meaning the customer could no longer obtain benefits under the warranty. But, crucially, Conn did not credit the customer for the canceled portion of the RSA. In other words, Conn's customers remained on the hook for the full cost of the RSA, even after Conn canceled the RSA early for non-payment. 2

*498 TF Loan asserts that this practice violates Texas law. Chapter 1304 of the Texas Occupations Code governs "service contracts" like Conn's RSAs. Section 1304.159(c) states:

A service contract holder whose contract is canceled by the provider in accordance with this section is entitled to a prorated refund of the purchase price of the contract reflecting the remaining term of the contract, based on mileage, time, or another reasonably applicable measure of the remaining term that must be disclosed in the contract, decreased by the amount of any claims paid under the contract. (Emphasis added).

Relying on this language, TF Loan asserts that Conn's undisputed failure to credit charged-off accounts for canceled RSAs violates Section 1304.159(c).

B.

Whether Conn's servicing practices ran afoul of Section 1304.159(c)matters because, according to TF Loan, the parties made compliance with this and other applicable laws a condition precedent to TF Loan's purchase. 3 In the parties' Sale Agreement, Conn made several "Representations and Warranties." Two are relevant to this appeal. In Section 8.3 of the Sale Agreement, Conn "represent[ed], warrant[ed], and covenant[ed]" that "[t]he execution and delivery of this Agreement and the performance of its obligations hereunder by Seller [Conn] will not conflict with any provision of any law or regulation to which Seller is subject...." In Section 8.5 of the Sale Agreement, Conn similarly represented, warranted, and covenanted that "[t]he Accounts have been originated, serviced, and collected in accordance with all applicable laws." 4

These warranties are incorporated as "Conditions Precedent to Purchase or Sale of Accounts" in Section 10.2 of the Sale Agreement. That section states in relevant part:

The Seller [Conn] and the Buyer [TF Loan] will be obligated to transfer Accounts on a Closing Date only if ... the representations and warranties of the Buyer or the Seller, respectively, in this agreement are true and correct as of such Closing Date....

Finally, Section 9.4 of the Sale Agreement governs TF Loan's remedies if Conn has breached its representations and warranties. Section 9.4 states:

Except for the indemnification remedies provided herein, Buyer [TF Loan] and Seller [Conn] agree that, as to any breach by Seller of any of its representations or warranties in respect to any Account, Buyer's sole and exclusive remedy for damages other than third party *499 claims arising out of such breach shall be the Seller's repurchase of such Account. (Emphasis omitted).

Adding these provisions up, TF Loan argues that it did not breach the Sale Agreement when it refused to close on Deliveries Three, Four, Five, and Six because:

First , Section 10.2 of the Sale Agreement imposed as a condition precedent that TF Loan was obligated to close only if Conn's representations were "true and correct" as of the closing date;

Second , in Sections 8.3 and 8.5 of the Sale Agreement, Conn represented that the sale would not "conflict with any provision of any law or regulation to which [Conn] is subject" and that "[t]he Accounts have been originated, serviced, and collected in accordance with all applicable laws"; and

Third , Conn's representations were false because Conn did not credit its customers' accounts with the "prorated refund" required by Section 1304.159(c) of the Texas Occupations Code.

Similarly, in its single live counterclaim, TF Loan argues that:

First , Conn breached its warranties in Sections 8.3 and 8.5 as to any customer account with an unrefunded RSA that TF Loan purchased in the Bulk Sale or Deliveries One and Two; and

Second , under Section 9.4, TF Loan's remedy for this breach is repurchase of these accounts.

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Bluebook (online)
903 F.3d 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conn-credit-i-lp-v-tf-loanco-iii-llc-ca5-2018.