Consumers Union of the U.S., Inc. v. Federal Reserve Board

938 F.2d 266, 291 U.S. App. D.C. 1, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 14651, 1991 WL 123967
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJuly 12, 1991
Docket90-5186
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 938 F.2d 266 (Consumers Union of the U.S., Inc. v. Federal Reserve Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Consumers Union of the U.S., Inc. v. Federal Reserve Board, 938 F.2d 266, 291 U.S. App. D.C. 1, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 14651, 1991 WL 123967 (D.C. Cir. 1991).

Opinion

Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SILBERMAN.

SILBERMAN, Circuit Judge:

This appeal from the district court challenges regulations issued by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System implementing the amendments to the Truth in Lending Act (“TILA”) concerning open-end home equity loans. Appellant asserts that the regulations are inconsistent with the statute. We reject the majority of appellant’s contentions but remand to the Board on two issues.

I.

Open-end home equity loans (“HELs”) are financial instruments whose popularity among ordinary consumers skyrocketed in the last few years, in large part because of the Tax Reform Act of 1986. That legislation made interest deductions on personal loans generally unavailable except with respect to residential housing indebtedness. Consequently, many consumers discovered tax advantages in converting an unsecured line of credit with their bank into a line of credit secured by the residence. The vast majority of these loans are not taken out to secure the actual purchase of the home, and therefore many of the borrowers do not need the principal of the loan distributed to them at once. They often prefer to have the ability to draw on their line of credit as needed; these loans are described as open-ended. The HEL differs from the traditional mortgage loan — also known as a closed-end loan — in which the borrower takes out the entire sum at the outset and then makes interest and principal payments on that fixed amount over the life of the loan.

The interest on the amounts advanced under an HEL is known as the annual percentage rate (“APR”) and is the sum of two elements. The first element is the index, which can be one of the several *268 publicly available proxies for the bank’s cost of funds, that is, for the current interest rate. The second element is the margin, which is a fixed percentage generally designed to cover the bank’s expenses and allow for a profit on the loan. The index fluctuates with the changes in the interest rate but the margin stays constant at the level set in the HEL contract. To guarantee the consumer against unlimited rises in the APR, the agreements must provide for a ceiling which the APR cannot exceed regardless of the rise in the index, see 12 U.S.C. § 3806, and often also provide for a limitation on annual increases in the APR. These limitations are known, respectively, as lifetime and annual caps. As the HEL market is highly competitive, banks often attempt to attract customers by offering to charge discount APRs for an initial period of the loan (“teasers”) or by reducing the margin charged to “preferred customers.”

Of course, an open-end home equity loan is simply the consumer equivalent of a secured commercial line of credit. The large scale transplantation of a sophisticated commercial instrument into the consumer finance area, although generally beneficial to consumers by providing them with additional options for the management of their financial affairs, also exposes them to large additional risks: possible misinformation by the lender, possible misunderstanding of the precise terms of the loan, or just plain improvidence in assuming too great a burden of repayment (a burden which often appears more manageable than it actually is). As the consequence to a consumer may be the loss of his home, Congress decided that additional regulation of the banks’ credit practices in the specific area of HELs was necessary and enacted certain amendments to the Truth in Lending Act. See Home Equity Loan Consumer Protection Act of 1988, Pub.L. No. 100-709, 102 Stat. 4725. The Federal Reserve Board was delegated authority to implement the amendments through promulgation of its regulations. Consumers Union claims that these regulations contradict the statute. The district court upheld all aspects of the regulations, 736 F.Supp. 337, and the Consumers Union appeals.

Consumers Union challenges six separate provisions of the regulations.

First, the Board’s failure to require banks offering HELs to specify, in pre-application written materials, the current margins. The regulations instead require the bank only to remind the customer to “ask about” the current margins.
Second, the Board’s failure to require banks to include the actual current margin in historical tables designed to show customers how interest rates would have fluctuated in the past under an HEL offered by the bank. The regulations permit past margins to be used.
Third, the regulation permitting disclosure of a range within which the annual and lifetime might fall; Consumers Union believes that the lender must disclose a fixed cap.
Fourth, the regulation allowing lenders to provide in HEL contracts that changes in the terms of an HEL will take place upon specified triggering events. For example, the Board allows banks to provide for an increase in the interest rate if the borrower leaves the lender’s employment and also permits the lender to freeze the credit line when the APR would exceed the applicable cap.
Fifth, the failure to require lenders employing teasers to inform consumers about the interest rate over the life of an HEL. The Board required instead that the banks notify borrowers to “ask about” the discount rate.
Sixth, the Board’s failure to require lenders to disclose how all possible repayment options would have been affected by changes in the index during the preceding 15-year period. The Board authorized lenders to disclose only a representative sample of options and how the consumers would have fared under representative repayment options.

The dispute between the Consumers Union and the banks offering HELs (whose position was partially adopted by the Board) might be thought to center on the flexibility that banks would have in tailoring loans to particular customers whose *269 high credit rating, ownership of other accounts with the bank, or other attributes, enable them to receive more favorable terms than the terms offered to the other customers. The banks did not wish to disclose in pre-application literature their actual margins (challenges (1) and (2)), or their actual caps (challenge (3)) because they wished to be free to give favorable treatment to more creditworthy customers. The banks also were concerned that a regulatory regime which eliminates their power to change the terms of the loan (even when the power to make changes upon certain triggering events was granted by the terms of the HEL contract) might expose the banks to the risk of being obliged to advance credit where it was understood at the outset of the contract that banks would not lend if the triggering events occurred. The most important power given to the banks was to withhold credit at a rate below the bank’s cost of funds, as in the case of the APR going above the level of a cap. The Board’s recognition of that threat in its regulations is the focus of challenge (4).

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938 F.2d 266, 291 U.S. App. D.C. 1, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 14651, 1991 WL 123967, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consumers-union-of-the-us-inc-v-federal-reserve-board-cadc-1991.