Discover Bank v. Maurie Lemley, et ux

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 18, 2014
Docket31080-9
StatusPublished

This text of Discover Bank v. Maurie Lemley, et ux (Discover Bank v. Maurie Lemley, et ux) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Discover Bank v. Maurie Lemley, et ux, (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

FILED

MARCH 18, 2014

In the Office of the Clerk of Court

WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION THREE

DISCOVER BANK, ISSUER OF THE ) DISCOVER CARD, ) No. 31080-9-111 ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) ) PUBLISHED OPINION MAURIE L. LEMLEY and DOE I, and their ) marital community composed thereof, ) ) Respondents. )

FEARING, J. - Discover Bank filed suit against Maurie and Linda Lemley,

husband and wife, for failing to pay a credit card debt. The trial court granted the

Lemleys' summary judgment motion, ruling that Discover Bank failed to present

admissible evidence establishing the Lemleys entered into a contract, let alone owed the

bank the alleged $5,729.28. Discover Bank appeals the summary judgment order. The

principal issue raised by the parties on appeal concerns the qualifications needed by an

affiant on behalf of a major credit card company to identify the controlling contract with

the debtor and establish the amounts owed, in response to a summary judgment motion.

We do not address this issue, but instead remand the case to the trial court for another

summary judgment hearing. At the new hearing, the court should consider the affidavits No. 31080-9-III Discover Bank v. Lemley

despite their not being labeled in opposition to the Lemleys' summary judgment motion,

unless they are inadmissible or should be stricken, in whole or in part, on other grounds.

FACTSANDPRODECURE

This outline of facts chronologically follows events during this lawsuit. Some of

the underlying facts will emerge when identifying and outlining affidavits filed in support

of and in opposition to summary judgment motions.

On December 16,2010, Discover Bank filed suit alleging Maurie and Linda

Lemley failed to pay a debt they accrued on their Discover Card. The Lemleys,

unrepresented by counsel, responded on January 18, 2011. The response read, in part:

They have double[ d] what I borrowed and now [are] asking for 12% interest. I do not think this is fair. I realize I asked for this credit card. But due to circumstances beyond my control. First the plant I worked for for 10 years closed and both myself and my wife lost our jobs. Our house was au[c]tioned off by the bank. We [went] home one night and the locks were changed. Then I find out that the fire I was in, the blood the[y] used to keep me alive, had Hep C in it and was now years after causing me Pain and exhaustion to a point I can no longer work. I am applying for SSD and have been denied and on reconsideration at the moment.

After letting them know what was going on, they started calling[.] I told them again what was happening. [N]ext week they called again asking me if I could borrow the money from a relative, was there anyway I could get the money. I told them I could not and I was applying for SSD. Next week same thing they would call asking why I was not making payments could I borrow money to pay them. If I did not answer the phone they would call my wife and I 2 to 3 times aday each sometimes I would answer and they would hang up.

Clerk's Papers (CP) at 10. Counsel later appeared for the Lemleys.

No. 31080-9-111 Discover Bank v. Lemley

On July 28,2011, Discover Bank moved for summary judgment. In support of its

motion, Discover submitted an affidavit of Patrick Sayers, account manager for DB

Servicing Corporation. In the affidavit, Sayers described his qualifications as follows:

I am an account manager in the Attorney Placement Department for DB Servicing Corporation, the servicing affiliate of DISCOVER BANK, ISSUER OF THE DISCOVER CARD, an FDIC insured Delaware State Bank collectively ("Discover"). I am responsible for managing and overseeing the Discover accounts that have resulted in contested litigation. Included within the scope of my responsibilities includes the performance of collection and recovery services. I make this affidavit on the basis of my personal knowledge and a review of the records maintained by Discover with respect to the account at issue. All such records are maintained in the regular course of business at or near the time of the events recorded. I am a Designated Agent and a Custodian of the records.

CP at 15.

In his affidavit, Patrick Sayers testified:

On or about October 01, 2006 Defendant opened a Discover Credit Card. Attached hereto is true and correct copies of the Cardmember Agreement and Application which govern the credit card account at issue, along with periodic statements and evidence of payments on the account. No payments have been made since February 24,2010, and Defendant has defaulted under the terms of the Cardmember Agreement by failing to make the payments due as required by the agreement. At the time that the suit was commenced, the principal balance on the account was $5,729.78.

CP at 16. The affidavit was signed in New Albany, Ohio. Contrary to the affidavit,

Sayers did not attach any application.

No. 31 080-9-III Discover Bank v. Lemley

The first page attached to Patrick Sayers' affidavit is a Discover Financial Services

"TM SALE DETAIL REPORT." CP at 17. Sayers' affidavit does not identify or explain

the nature or content of the report. The report may attempt to document a call, on

September 27,2006, from Maurie Lemley, during which he requested a Discover card.

The next 14 pages attached to Sayers' affidavit is a Discover account cardmember

account agreement. A date printed on the bottom right-hand comer of each page of the

agreement is December 15,2009, i.e., three years after which Discover contends Maurie

Lemley opened an account and two years after which Lemley made his last purchase by a

charge on the card. Curiously, the comer also includes the time of 1:37 p.m., which may

suggest the date and time is the date of printing the document from a computer, but such

date precedes the lawsuit by more than one year. Each page also includes a "second"

designation, with the first page starting at 1:37:03 p.m., the last page ending at 1:37:07

p.m., and intervening pages progressing periodically with the second. The attached

. agreement is copyrighted in the year 2010, by Discover Bank, Member FDIC. Maurie

Lemley did not sign the cardmember agreement, nor did any person on behalf of

Discover Bank sign the agreement.

The first page of the Discover account cardmember account agreement reads, in

part:

Please read this Agreement carefully before using your Discover® Card Account. It contains the terms and conditions of your Account, some of which may have changed from earlier materials provided to

No. 31080-9-III Discover Bank v. Lemley

you. In the event of any differences, this Agreement shall control.

CP at 19.

Sixty-three pages of credit card account statements, beginning in November 2006

and ending in August 2010, follow the cardmember agreement as attachments to Patrick

Sayers' affidavit. The statements disclose credit tactics employed by Discover Card to

maximize revenue and personal details of Maurie Lemley's life. Of course, the truth of

the information contained on the statements is subject to a determination of whether

Patrick Sayers could properly identify the statements.

The Lemleys conducted discovery to discover Discover Bank's evidence. In

response to a request to produce all records concerning the Lemleys, the bank disclosed

only the documents it produced for its initial motion for summary judgment. The bank

issued a blanket response to each interrogatory:

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