De La Torre v. CashCall, Inc.
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Opinion
CUÉLLAR, J.
**1007
*972
Under California law, can a loan contract include an interest rate term so high that it is "unreasonably and unexpectedly harsh," "unduly oppressive," or "so one-sided as to shock the conscience"? (
*973
Sanchez v. Valencia Holding Co., LLC
(2015)
That responsibility is one courts must pursue with caution. Unsecured loans made to high-risk borrowers often justify high rates. Both consumers' acceptance of such rates, as well as restrictions on them, may trigger
**1008
unintended consequences. (See, e.g., Bhutta et al.,
Consumer Borrowing after Payday Loan Bans
(2016) 59 J. Law & Econ. 225, 247 [finding that "although payday loan regulations reduce the usage of payday loans, many consumers turn to other forms of high-interest credit"].) Wary of such consequences and cognizant of the limits of its power, a court declares unconscionable only those interest rates that-in light of the totality of a transaction's bargaining context-are so "unreasonably and unexpectedly harsh" as to be "unduly oppressive" or "shock the conscience." (E.g.,
Sanchez
,
supra
, 61 Cal.4th at pp. 910-911,
Defendant CashCall, Inc. (CashCall) is a lender of consumer loans to high-risk borrowers. One of CashCall's signature products was an unsecured $2,600 loan, payable over a 42-month period, and carrying an annual percentage rate (APR) of either 96 percent or, later in the class period, 135 percent. People who took out such loans from CashCall were "consumers with low credit scores," living "under financial stress." (
De La Torre v. CashCall, Inc.
(N.D.Cal. 2014)
In bringing this lawsuit in the federal district court for the Northern District of California, plaintiffs Eduardo De La Torre and Lori Saysourivong do not contend CashCall's advertising was deceptive. Nor do they claim CashCall failed to disclose accurately the terms of the loan as required by federal law. What plaintiffs allege instead is that CashCall violated California's Unfair Competition Law (UCL). The UCL defines "unfair competition" to include "any unlawful, unfair or fraudulent business act or practice." ( Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17200.) Plaintiffs bring their claim *358 under the "unlawful" prong of the UCL and assert that CashCall's lending practice was unlawful because it violated section 22302, the section that applies the unconscionability doctrine to consumer loans.
The district court certified plaintiffs' lawsuit as a class action. It defined the class as those borrowers who took out loans from CashCall of at least $2,500 "at an interest rate of 90% or higher." ( CashCall , supra , 56 F.Supp.3d at p.
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CUÉLLAR, J.
**1007
*972
Under California law, can a loan contract include an interest rate term so high that it is "unreasonably and unexpectedly harsh," "unduly oppressive," or "so one-sided as to shock the conscience"? (
*973
Sanchez v. Valencia Holding Co., LLC
(2015)
That responsibility is one courts must pursue with caution. Unsecured loans made to high-risk borrowers often justify high rates. Both consumers' acceptance of such rates, as well as restrictions on them, may trigger
**1008
unintended consequences. (See, e.g., Bhutta et al.,
Consumer Borrowing after Payday Loan Bans
(2016) 59 J. Law & Econ. 225, 247 [finding that "although payday loan regulations reduce the usage of payday loans, many consumers turn to other forms of high-interest credit"].) Wary of such consequences and cognizant of the limits of its power, a court declares unconscionable only those interest rates that-in light of the totality of a transaction's bargaining context-are so "unreasonably and unexpectedly harsh" as to be "unduly oppressive" or "shock the conscience." (E.g.,
Sanchez
,
supra
, 61 Cal.4th at pp. 910-911,
Defendant CashCall, Inc. (CashCall) is a lender of consumer loans to high-risk borrowers. One of CashCall's signature products was an unsecured $2,600 loan, payable over a 42-month period, and carrying an annual percentage rate (APR) of either 96 percent or, later in the class period, 135 percent. People who took out such loans from CashCall were "consumers with low credit scores," living "under financial stress." (
De La Torre v. CashCall, Inc.
(N.D.Cal. 2014)
In bringing this lawsuit in the federal district court for the Northern District of California, plaintiffs Eduardo De La Torre and Lori Saysourivong do not contend CashCall's advertising was deceptive. Nor do they claim CashCall failed to disclose accurately the terms of the loan as required by federal law. What plaintiffs allege instead is that CashCall violated California's Unfair Competition Law (UCL). The UCL defines "unfair competition" to include "any unlawful, unfair or fraudulent business act or practice." ( Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17200.) Plaintiffs bring their claim *358 under the "unlawful" prong of the UCL and assert that CashCall's lending practice was unlawful because it violated section 22302, the section that applies the unconscionability doctrine to consumer loans.
The district court certified plaintiffs' lawsuit as a class action. It defined the class as those borrowers who took out loans from CashCall of at least $2,500 "at an interest rate of 90% or higher." ( CashCall , supra , 56 F.Supp.3d at p. 1082 [defining as a class " '[a]ll individuals who while residing in California borrowed from $2,500 to $2,600 at an interest rate of 90% or higher from CashCall for personal family or household use at any time from June 30, 2004 through July 10, 2011' "].) Because the class was defined by the interest rate paid by its members, the interest rate became the crucial term on which the parties and the courts trained their attention.
After class certification, CashCall moved for summary judgment on plaintiffs' unfair competition claim. It argued "Plaintiffs have failed to establish that [CashCall's] interest rates are unconscionable as a matter of law." ( CashCall , supra , 56 F.Supp.3d at p. 1086.) The district court initially denied the motion, as "there [were] disputed questions of fact with regard to both the procedural and substantive unconscionability inquiries." ( Id. at p. 1104.)
But the court changed its mind when CashCall made a motion for reconsideration. The court now agreed with CashCall that "the UCL cannot be used as a basis for Plaintiffs' Unconscionability Claim because ruling on
*975
that claim would impermissibly require the Court to regulate economic policy." (
De La Torre v. CashCall, Inc.
(N.D.Cal. 2014)
Plaintiffs appealed. After reviewing the parties' arguments, the Ninth Circuit certified to us this question: "Can the interest rate on consumer loans of $2500 or more governed by California Finance Code § 22303, render the loans unconscionable under California Finance Code § 22302?" (
De La Torre v. CashCall, Inc.
(9th Cir. 2017)
II.
As long established under California law, the doctrine of unconscionability reaches contract terms relating to the price of goods or services exchanged. (
Sonic-Calabasas A, Inc. v. Moreno
(2013)
An interest rate is the price charged for lending a particular amount of money to a given individual or entity. (
Carboni
,
supra
, 2 Cal.App.4th at p. 82, fn. 7,
CashCall's arguments to the contrary fail to persuade us. Although section 22303 sets maximum interest rates only on loans less than $2,500, whether an interest rate is unconscionable is fundamentally a different inquiry than whether the rate exceeds a numerical cap. Unconscionability is a flexible standard in which the court looks not only at the complained-of term but also at the process by which the contractual parties arrived at the agreement and the larger context surrounding the contract, including its "commercial setting, purpose, and effect." ( Civ. Code § 1670.5, subd. (b) ;
Sanchez
,
supra
, 61 Cal.4th at pp. 911-912,
So we conclude plaintiffs have indeed stated a cause of action in this litigation by bringing an unfair competition claim that alleges a violation of section 22302 due to an unconscionably high interest rate. To arrive at this conclusion, we consider the Financial Code, the UCL, and the unconscionability doctrine itself.
A.
The Financial Code governs the consumer loans at issue here. But the roots of the unconscionability doctrine long predate existing statutory provisions. The doctrine can be traced back to Roman law and, more recently, English common law. (Atty. Gen. Amicus Brief, at p. 9, fn. 3; Orozco, Note,
The Judicial Expansion of an Old Tool to Combat Predatory Lending in New Mexico
(2016)
In 1985, the Legislature approved Senate Bill 447, enacting into law the current versions of sections 22302 and 22303. Before the bill's passage, the Legislature had set maximum interest rates for consumer loans up to $5,000. The bill, as codified at section 22303, *978 lowered this threshold to $2,500. In fact, section 22303 accomplished two things. First, it set various numerical maximums on interest rates for loans ranging from less than $250 to more than $1,650; second, it specified that the section "does not apply to any loan of a bona fide principal amount of two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) or more." 2 **1011 So, while a *361 lender such as CashCall may charge, at most, "[o]ne percent per month" ( § 22303, subd. (d) ) on the last dollar lent on a loan just shy of $2,500, it escapes the rigid restriction of the usury law by lending just a little more and pushing the loan amount to at least $2,500.
Just as the Legislature was enacting section 22303, it also approved an amendment with precisely the same language found in section 22302 today. The amendment (now section 22302 ) consists of two subdivisions. The first subdivision applies the unconscionability doctrine to consumer loans. ( Fin. Code, § 22302, subd. (a) [" Section 1670.5 of the Civil Code applies to the provisions of a loan contract that is subject to this division."].) The second provides that an unconscionable loan violates the consumer lending law and subjects the lender "to the remedies specified in this division." ( Fin. Code, § 22302, subd. (b) ["A loan found to be unconscionable pursuant to Section 1670.5 of the Civil Code shall be deemed to be in violation of this division and subject to the remedies specified in this division."].)
Both subdivisions of section 22302 refer to Civil Code section 1670.5, the statutory codification of the unconscionability doctrine.
3
While Civil Code section 1670.5 is a verbatim enactment of
*979
Section 2-302 of the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC), its adoption in California in 1979 as part of the Civil Code made unconscionability a doctrine applicable to all contracts. (See Prince,
Unconscionability in California: A Need for Restraint and Consistency
(1995)
CashCall resists this conclusion, contending that section 22302"has nothing to do with interest rates." To support its position, CashCall mounts a blunderbuss attack on whether "the Legislature intended for courts to make determinations of unconscionability" under section 22302 at all. CashCall begins with a kernel of truth, pointing out that under section 22302 unconscionable loans are "subject to the remedies of this division." Since "[t]here is *980 no private right of action to enforce 'the remedies of this division,' " CashCall contends that plaintiffs cannot litigate their unconscionability claims in court.
But plaintiffs are neither bringing a cause of action under the Financing Law nor seeking remedies under that division. Instead, plaintiffs advance an unfair competition claim under the UCL. The claim is premised on unlawful business conduct, which section 17200 of the UCL proscribes. ( Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17200 ;
Farmers Ins. Exchange v. Superior Court
(1992)
Nor does it help CashCall to argue that Civil Code section 1670.5 merely codifies the defense of unconscionability without providing for an affirmative cause of action. Whatever merit underlies the claim, it proves irrelevant where a different statute-here, section 22302 -expressly provides that an unconscionable loan breaks the law and the UCL supplies a cause of action to police such unlawful conduct. ( Fin. Code, § 22302, subd. (b) ;
Cel-Tech
,
supra
, 20 Cal.4th at p. 180,
*981 So Plaintiffs have stated a cause of action by basing their UCL claim on the allegation that the interest rate on CashCall's consumer **1013 loans of at least $2,500 rendered the loans unconscionable under section 22302.
B.
Our conclusion holds even when we consider section 22302 in light of the interest rate caps imposed in section 22303. Section 22303 imposes strict limits on the interest rates charged on loans less than $2,500. The section, however, expressly states that it does not apply to any loan of $2,500 or more. By providing that it "does not apply to any loan of a bona fide principal amount of two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) or more," section 22303 seems to mean what it says: the section does not apply to loans of $2,500 or more. (See
Larkin v. Workers' Comp. Appeals Bd.
(2015)
CashCall's interpretation would stand section 22303 on its head. According to CashCall, because section 22303"expressly considers loans of $2,500 or more and declares that they are not subject to any rate cap," such loans cannot be unconscionable due to their rate. In essence, CashCall argues that by stating that section 22303 does not apply to loans of $2,500 or more, the Legislature actually meant to say that section
22302
does not apply to interest rates. More still, CashCall's argument rests on an assumed-but false-equivalence between interest rate caps and unconscionability: if an interest rate is not capped, it cannot be unconscionable. CashCall
*364
cites no apposite authority to support its position. (Contra
West Pico Furniture Co. v. Pacific Finance Loans
(1970)
Instead, unconscionability requires oppression or surprise-that is, procedural unconscionability-along with the overly harsh or one-sided results that epitomize substantive unconscionability. (E.g.,
Armendariz v. Foundation Health Psychcare Services, Inc.
(2000)
In assessing the presence of substantive unconscionability, a court may also need to consider context. (See
Sanchez
,
supra
, at pp. 911-912,
These factors underscore why finding unconscionable a contract setting an interest rate is categorically different from imposing an unvarying cap on the interest rate. To declare an interest rate unconscionable means only that-under the circumstances of the case, taking into account the bargaining process and prevailing market conditions-a particular rate was "overly harsh," "unduly oppressive," or "so one-sided as to shock the conscience." (E.g.,
Sonic II
,
supra
, 57 Cal.4th at p. 1145,
C.
CashCall concedes that consumer protection was a clear purpose of the legislation that enacted sections 22302 and 22303. The company argues, however, that section 22302 shows only "the Legislature wanted to ensure that strong consumer protections remained in place as to aspects of loans other than interest rates." To make this argument, CashCall relies on the legislative history of sections 22302 and 22303. Such reliance is misplaced: to the extent the legislative history is relevant here, it cuts against CashCall's position.
As introduced by Senator Rose Ann Vuich on May 1, 1985, Senate Bill 447 did not contain the protection now codified at section 22302. (Sen. Bill No. 447 (1985-1986 Reg. Sess.) May 1, 1985.) The Attorney General opposed the bill. In a letter addressed to Senator Vuich, the Attorney General expressed concern that the bill will leave "[c]onsumers who borrow amounts of less than $5,000" without adequate protection. (Atty.
*985 Gen. John K. Van De Kamp, letter to Sen. Vuich, June 28, 1985.) As the Attorney General explained, "these borrowers are least able to negotiate favorable finance charges" and "are precisely the persons who need protection against the exorbitant rates that could be charged if SB 447 is enacted." ( Ibid. ) Less than two weeks after receiving the letter, Senator Vuich introduced an amended version of Senate Bill 447, adding a statutory provision now codified in section 22302. (Sen. Amend. to Sen. Bill No. 447 (1985-1986 Reg. Sess.) July 10, 1985.)
This sequence of events fairly gives rise to the inference the legislation that became **1016 section 22302 was enacted to assuage the concern that the removal of interest rate caps would leave consumers without protection *367 against exorbitant interest rates. By passing this legislation, the Legislature ensured that unconscionability would protect against such overreaching by lenders. (See Legis. Counsel's Dig., Sen. Bill. No. 447 (1985-1986 Reg. Sess.) as amended Apr. 23, 1985 [stating that the amendment "would make unconscionable loan contracts of personal property brokers and consumer finance lenders a violation of their respective licensure laws"].) It is true that the Department of Corporations (which was then engaged in "a friendly debate" with one of the industry supporters of Senate Bill 447) had expressed that it "will be neutral [to the proposed legislation] if the noninterest rate provisions ... continue to apply to loans up to $5,000 ." (Sen. Com. on Banking and Commerce, Analysis of Sen. Bill No. 447 (1985-1986 Reg. Sess.) as amended Apr. 23, 1985, p. 2.) That statement, however, was made months before Senator Vuich amended the bill to add the protection now found in section 22302. As such, the statement sheds little light on the significance of section 22302 or its scope.
To be sure, the statutory changes wrought by Senate Bill 447 had important consequences for the loan market-consequences described in subsequent analyses of the bill. By removing interest rate caps on loans of at least $2,500, the Legislature allowed the market to set the rates on those loans. (See Dept. of Corporations, Enrolled Bill Rep. on Sen. Bill No. 447 (1985-1986 Reg. Sess.) prepared for Governor Deukmejian (Aug. 29, 1985) p. 1 ["The effect of this bill is that interest rates for consumer finance loans above $2,500 will be set by the market place."]; 6 Assem. J. (1993-1994 Session) p. 9016 ["It is the intent of the Legislature to let the rates charged generally be set by free market competition ...."].
6
) But the Legislature did not preclude the possibility that courts would step in
*986
to protect consumers if interest rates-within the particular context of a given transaction-are shown to be unconscionable. (See Dept. of Corporations, Enrolled Bill Rep. on Sen. Bill 447 (1985-1986 Reg. Sess.) p. 1 ["Senate Bill 447 removes only the rate regulation provision of the laws regulating lenders while preserving the consumer protection provisions of all laws."]; 6 Assem. J. (1993-1994 Session) p. 9016 ["The Legislature believes that the Law creates a reasonable balance between regulation and free-market activity, and provides necessary consumer protections."];
Perdue
,
supra
, 38 Cal.3d at p. 943,
At core, CashCall fails to persuade that removing an interest rate cap is the equivalent of making the interest rate immune from a finding of unconscionability. This is despite the company's attempt to spin this argument in different ways. For instance, CashCall casts the discussion as one in which sections 22302 and 22303 are irreconcilably inconsistent and section 22303 must prevail because it is the more specific provision. We do not agree. For a loan of at least $2,500, there is no overlap-and hence no inconsistency-between sections 22302 and 22303. As discussed **1017 above, section 22303 simply does not apply to such loans. 7
In the alternative, CashCall seeks to characterize section 22303 as a "safe harbor" that protects lenders of larger-denominated loans from the reach of section 22302. In the context of a UCL claim alleging an unfair business practice, we have explained, "[i]f the Legislature has permitted certain conduct or considered a situation and concluded no action should lie," the "specific legislation" permitting that conduct provides a safe harbor that "plaintiffs may not use the general unfair competition law to assault." (
Cel-Tech
,
supra
, 20 Cal.4th at p. 182,
That lack of proscription is not enough. (See
Cel-Tech
,
supra
, 20 Cal.4th at p. 183,
CashCall seeks to buttress its position by relying on the authority of the Department of Business Oversight (DBO), the administrative agency that oversees the enforcement of the Financing Law.
8
An agency interpretation of a statute's meaning and legal effect is entitled to the courts' consideration and respect (
Yamaha Corp. of America v. State Bd. of Equalization
(1998)
We can hardly credit the preceding statement as the DBO's interpretation of the provisions at issue here. While we sometimes afford careful consideration and even a measure of deference to positions that are not taken through more formal policymaking mechanisms (see
Yamaha
,
supra
, 19 Cal.4th at pp. 10-11,
Even if we assume the statement reflects the DBO's interpretation of the statutes, we would not acquiesce to it. (
Bonnell v. Medical Board
(2003)
D.
Despite having urged an interpretation of sections 22302 and 22303 that ultimately fails, CashCall advances a beguiling argument for judicial abstention in the area of interest rate regulation. The district court adopted the argument, and-at least in certain circumstances different than those presented here-so have we.
One such case that came from our court is
Harris
,
supra
,
We rejected the claim. After a careful examination of the language of the statute, our prior decisions, and the Legislature's reaction following some of
*989
those decisions (
Harris
,
supra
, 52 Cal.3d at pp. 1154-1165,
Harris
is distinguishable. In
Harris
, we were "unwilling to engage in complex economic
**1019
regulation" absent "clear legislative direction." (
Harris
,
supra
, 52 Cal.3d at p. 1168,
Nor would our involvement supersede or interfere with the functions of the DBO. (Cf.
Alvarado v. Selma Convalescent Hospital
(2007)
Nothing we say today limits the agency's operation. In fact, if CashCall were correct, then the DBO has been operating under the erroneous impression that a lender like CashCall "can charge whatever interest rates it chooses on loans of bona fide principal amounts of $2,500 or more." (Accusation,
supra
, ¶ 2.) By holding to the contrary, we empower the agency-and the courts-to take action when the interest rates charged prove unreasonably and unexpectedly harsh. In so doing, we recognize the expertise of the DBO, but also that of the courts. (Cf.
Quelimane Co. v. Stewart Title Guaranty Co.
(1998)
Despite the courts' breadth and depth of experience, the trial judge here thought it impossible to fashion a remedy under the UCL "without deciding the point at which CashCall's interest rates crossed the line into unconscionability." (
CashCall
,
supra
, 56 F.Supp.3d at p. 1109.) We offer only brief thoughts on this matter, as the question of class-wide relief under the UCL is beyond the issue we are asked to consider by the Ninth Circuit. We acknowledge that
*372
some
remedies may conceivably operate in a manner that approximates an across-the-board imposition of a cap on interest rates. (See, e.g.,
California Grocers
,
supra
, 22 Cal.App.4th at p. 217,
In short, California courts have the authority to decide whether contract provisions, including interest rates, are unconscionable. Our respect for the Legislature's prerogative to shape economic policy through legislation is why we have kept the doctrine relatively narrow, and are careful to observe its nuances. But this is no reason for courts to absent themselves from the picture entirely.
Even were we to adopt a policy-oriented, consequentialist perspective, we are not convinced that a parade of horribles is likely to result from the courts' inquiry into whether a consumer loan is unconscionable owing to the interest rate charged. CashCall argues to the contrary, contending that such scrutiny *992 would undermine the purposes of the Financing Law. This is because "[t]he uncertainty and unpredictability imposed by ad hoc decisions of 'unconscionability' ... would drive lenders out of the market," and so both deprive "consumers of credit options" and hamper competition among lenders.
CashCall is correct that the Financing Law is intended to foster competition and ensure an adequate supply of credit. But the law is also meant to protect consumers. (See Fin. Code, § 22001, subd. (a).) What's more, whatever are the relative advantages or disadvantages of relying on unconscionability to afford such protection, that is the choice the Legislature has made. Ultimately, CashCall has not said anything that is not true of "ad hoc decisions of 'unconscionability' " generally. Unconscionability, as an ex post, case-specific mechanism by which a court "may refuse to enforce the contract ... [or] limit the application of any unconscionable clause as to avoid any unconscionable result" ( Civ. Code, § 1670.5 ) by necessity introduces uncertainty into commercial transactions. But neither that uncertainty nor the fact that "[c]ommerce depends on the enforceability, in most instances, of a duly executed written contract" has persuaded the Legislature to decree that all duly executed written contracts shall be enforced at all times. (
**1021
*373
Baltazar v. Forever 21, Inc.
(2016)
What concerns about freedom of contract, the importance of commerce, and continued access to credit have done is produce an understanding of unconscionability that is inherently nuanced, such that few courts have ever declared contracts unconscionable. This is all the more true in the context where the unconscionable term alleged is the interest rate on a loan. In 1991, the First District Court of Appeal was surprised to learn there has been no case "which applies the doctrine of unconscionability to specifically annul or reform a loan which bears a shockingly high rate of interest." (
Carboni
,
supra
, 2 Cal.App.4th at p. 81,
What's more, to the extent CashCall means to raise concerns about a possible flood of unmeritorious lawsuits, certain features of the UCL are likely to mitigate any such flood. The unfair competition law, while broad in scope, is limited in remedies. (E.g.,
Cel-Tech
,
supra
, 20 Cal.4th at p. 179,
Finally, CashCall focuses much of its briefing on defending its business methods and practices. The Ninth Circuit did not ask us to decide whether CashCall's loans *374 were unconscionable, and we do not resolve that question. We hold only that California law permits such a finding, as long as the requirements of unconscionability are satisfied.
III.
With roots predating the Anglo-American legal tradition, the doctrine of unconscionability has been used to temper the consequences of certain bargains arising in the course of economic life. The California Legislature is entitled to subject loan transactions, like other contracts, to the unconscionability doctrine's nuanced blend of tractability and protection of human dignity. It did so here.
**1022 In doing so, the Legislature chose to retain the flexible standard of unconscionability even as it did away with interest caps on consumer loans of $2,500 or more. By its action, the Legislature recognized to some degree how commerce depends on fairness, and functioning markets on meaningful choices. Although courts must proceed with caution in this area, the possibility that an interest rate is unconscionable in a particular context is not so *994 different relative to any other kind of potential contractual defect that it justifies concluding that courts lack power or responsibility to address unconscionable interest rates. In light of the Legislature's choice, as reflected in the text, context, and history of the relevant statutory provisions and the unconscionability doctrine, we conclude the interest rate on consumer loans of $2,500 or more may render the loans unconscionable under section 22302 of the Financial Code.
WE CONCUR:
CANTIL-SAKAUYE, C. J.
CHIN, J.
CORRIGAN, J.
LIU, J.
KRUGER, J.
HALLER, J. *
Associate Justice of the Court of Appeal, Fourth Appellate District, Division One, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
All further references to sections 22302 and 22303 are to the Financial Code.
In its entirety, section 22303 reads: "Every licensee who lends any sum of money may contract for and receive charges at a rate not exceeding the sum of the following:
"(a) Two and one-half percent per month on that part of the unpaid principal balance of any loan up to, including, but not in excess of two hundred twenty-five dollars ($225).
"(b) Two percent per month on that portion of the unpaid principal balance in excess of two hundred twenty-five dollars ($225) up to, including, but not in excess of nine hundred dollars ($900).
"(c) One and one-half percent per month on that part of the unpaid principal balance in excess of nine hundred dollars ($900) up to, including, but not in excess of one thousand six hundred fifty dollars ($1,650).
"(d) One percent per month on any remainder of such unpaid balance in excess of one thousand six hundred fifty dollars ($1,650).
"This section does not apply to any loan of a bona fide principal amount of two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) or more as determined in accordance with Section 22251."
Civil Code section 1670.5 states:
"(a) If the court as a matter of law finds the contract or any clause of the contract to have been unconscionable at the time it was made the court may refuse to enforce the contract, or it may enforce the remainder of the contract without the unconscionable clause, or it may so limit the application of any unconscionable clause as to avoid any unconscionable result.
"(b) When it is claimed or appears to the court that the contract or any clause thereof may be unconscionable the parties shall be afforded a reasonable opportunity to present evidence as to its commercial setting, purpose, and effect to aid the court in making the determination."
Division 9 of the Financial Code was previously known as the California Finance Lenders Law. The Legislature renamed it the California Financing Law in 2017. (Stats. 2017, ch. 475, § 4, p. 3575.)
To the extent that CashCall argues individual borrowers' circumstances relevant to a procedural unconscionability determination would create individualized issues unsuited for class adjudication, we express no view on the merits of its argument as we were not called upon to review the district court's class certification order.
As noted, the Assembly Journal cited relates to the 1993-1994 legislative session, the session held about a decade after the passage of Senate Bill 447. Normally, we do not think a statement of a later-sitting legislator sheds much light on "the intent of an earlier Legislature's enactment." (
Western Security Bank v. Superior Court
(1997)
While it is possible that such an overlap may arise for loans less than $2,500, we have here no occasion to consider those loans. We thus express no view on whether an interest rate on such a loan may be unconscionable under section 22302 even if it complies with the interest rate cap of section 22303.
The DBO is the successor to the Department of Corporations. (DBO, History available at < http://www.dbo.ca.gov/About_DBO/DBO_history.asp> [as of Aug. 9, 2018].) All Internet citations in this opinion are archived by year, docket number, and case name at < http://www.courts.ca.gov/38324.htm>.
In
Peoples Finance & Thrift Co. of Beverly Hills v. Mike-Ron Corp.
(1965)
Related
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