Consumer Financial Protection Bureau v. The Mortgage Law Group, LLP

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Wisconsin
DecidedNovember 4, 2019
Docket3:14-cv-00513
StatusUnknown

This text of Consumer Financial Protection Bureau v. The Mortgage Law Group, LLP (Consumer Financial Protection Bureau v. The Mortgage Law Group, LLP) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau v. The Mortgage Law Group, LLP, (W.D. Wis. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN

CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION BUREAU,

Plaintiff, OPINION and ORDER v. 14-cv-513-wmc THE MORTGAGE LAW GROUP, LLP, CONSUMER FIRST LEGAL GROUP, LLC, THOMAS G. MACEY, JEFFERY J. ALEMAN, JASON E. SEARNS and HAROLD E. STAFFORD,

Defendants.

Plaintiff brought this civil enforcement action under the Consumer Financial Protection Act of 2010 (“the Act”), 12 U.S.C. §§ 5564-65, against two former mortgage relief services providers and their principals for violations of Regulation O, 12 C.F.R. part 1015, including misrepresenting their services to consumers in a number of respects, failing to make required disclosures, and illegally collecting advance fees. On July 20, 2016, the Honorable Barbara B. Crabb resolved a number of the claimed violations against defendants on summary judgment, including finding the individual defendants liable under the Act for the misconduct of institutional defendants The Mortgage Law Group (TMLG) and Consumer First Legal Group (CFLG) I and II.1 (Dkt. #191.) Following a subsequent transfer of the case to me for reasons unrelated to the merits, the remaining disputes proceeded to a bench trial in April 2017. In its first post-trial order on June 21, 2017, the

1 “CFLG I” refers to the company solely owned by defendant Stafford between January to July 2012; and “CFLG II” refers to the company jointly owned by defendants Macey, Aleman, Searns, and Stafford after July 2012. court entered monetary and injunctive relief against defendant TMLG only, including imposition of civil penalties, while leaving other questions to be further briefed by the other defendants. (Dkt. #404.)2 On November 15, 2018, the court issued its second post-trial

order with respect to various issues of liability and level of scienter of the remaining defendants -- CFLG I and II, Harold Stafford, Thomas Macey, Jeffery Aleman, and Jason Searns -- although the court refrained from entering final judgment until the parties had an opportunity to be heard on the issues of damages and injunctive relief. Those issues included: (1) whether civil penalties should be awarded against the remaining defendants

under 12 U.S.C. § 5565(c); (2) how those penalties, if any, should be calculated; and (3) whether any relevant mitigating factors apply. (Dkt. #409.) Having considered the parties’ additional briefs with respect to these issues, and the court’s factual findings as set forth in its post-trial orders on liability, the court now orders restitution and disgorgement, civil penalties, and permanent injunctive relief as set forth below.

OPINION As the court explained in its post-trial orders, the Act authorizes courts to “grant any appropriate legal or equitable relief with respect to a violation of Federal consumer

financial law, including a violation of a rule or order prescribed under [that] … law.” 12 U.S.C. § 5565(a)(1). While the Act provides for various forms of relief, including restitution, disgorgement, civil money penalties, and “limits on the activities or functions of the person,” § 5565(a)(2), it does not expressly authorize the imposition of exemplary

2 That order was later amended on November 15, 2018, at the parties’ request. (Dkt. #410). or punitive damages, § 5565(a)(3). Here, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (“the Bureau’) seeks restitution, disgorgement, civil money penalties, and permanent injunctive relief, all of which are addressed in this order.

I. Restitution and Disgorgement The Bureau seeks restitution jointly and severally from: defendants Macey, Aleman, and Searns with respect to TMLG’s advanced fees in the amount of

$18,716,725.78; defendants CFLG, Macey, and Aleman with respect to CFLG II’s advanced fees in the amount of $2,897,566; and defendants Stafford and CFLG with respect to CFLG I’s advanced fees in the amount of $94,730. To the extent that any portion of these amounts can no longer be returned directly to consumers as restitution, the Bureau further asks that the leftover funds be deposited in the United States Treasury

as disgorgement of defendants’ ill-gotten gains. See FTC v. Lanier Law, LLC, 194 F. Supp. 3d 1238, 1287 (M.D. Fla. 2016) (ordering disgorgement of revenues that defendants derived through deceptive and improper solicitations, misleading sales tactics, and impermissible advance fees). Previously, Judge Crabb determined on summary judgment that the appropriate measure for restitution or disgorgement in this case is defendants’ net revenues—the

amount of advance fees collected from their clients minus any refunds made to those clients—which totaled $18,331,7373 for TMLG and $2,992,296 for the CFLG entities

3 This first amount differs from the Bureau’s current request of $18,716,725.78, which includes an additional $384,988.78 in TMLG’s net revenue that defendants only disclosed to the Bureau months after trial, and that the TMLG trustee stipulated to for purposes of a settlement with the Bureau. See TMLG Final Order (dkt. #410, ¶ 14). ($94,730 for CFLG I and $2,897,566 for CFLG II). (Dkt. #191 at 4.) Before trial, defendants moved this court to reconsider that ruling and reduce the restitution amount to account for the benefits that some consumers may have received from defendants’

services in the form of mortgage modifications. The court denied this motion for reconsideration, finding that: (1) defendants had waived the issue by failing to develop it properly in their original response to the Bureau’s motion for summary judgment; and (2) even if no waiver had occurred, the question whether a consumer was lucky enough to obtain a mortgage loan modification is ultimately irrelevant to the question whether

defendants used misleading or deceptive representations to induce consumers to pay them fees, particularly since it is highly likely that the client would have obtained the same relief on his or her own or with assistance from a free, non-profit provider of loan resolution services. (Dkt. #256.) Using the briefing on remedies as an opening, defendants once again ask the court to reconsider its prior ruling on the measure and amount of restitution or disgorgement,

asserting that there is new, contrary authority on the issue. Specifically, defendants cite CFPB v. Nationwide Biweekly Admin., 2017 WL 3948396 (N.D. Cal. Sept. 8, 2017), and CFPB v. CashCall, Inc., 2018 WL 485963 (C.D. Cal. Jan. 19, 2018), as more recent decisions in which restitution and disgorgement were not ordered. Contrary to defendants’ assertions, however, both of these unpublished decisions turn on facts easily distinguishable from those in this case. In particular, neither Nationwide nor CashCall

involved illegal advanced fees or misrepresentations under Regulation O. Moreover, the reasons provided for denying restitution in those cases do not apply here. In Nationwide, the Northern District of California found that a complete refund of “set up fees” charged to consumers for a mortgage “interest minimization” program would

have been both unfair and unwarranted because the Bureau had only proven that some, rather than all, of defendants' challenged marketing statements were false or misleading and, in particular, the Bureau failed to prove that the nature of the set up fees were not adequately disclosed. Nationwide, 2017 WL 3948396, at *1, 13.

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