District Cablevision Limited Partnership v. Bassin

828 A.2d 714, 51 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 149, 2003 D.C. App. LEXIS 471, 2003 WL 21664513
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 17, 2003
Docket98-CV-1837, 98-CV-1838
StatusPublished
Cited by110 cases

This text of 828 A.2d 714 (District Cablevision Limited Partnership v. Bassin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
District Cablevision Limited Partnership v. Bassin, 828 A.2d 714, 51 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 149, 2003 D.C. App. LEXIS 471, 2003 WL 21664513 (D.C. 2003).

Opinion

GLICKMAN, Associate J.

The District of Columbia Consumer Protection Procedures Act affords a panoply of strong remedies, including treble damages, punitive damages and attorneys’ fees, to consumers who are victimized by unlawful trade practices. In this case two consumers sued District Cablevision Limited Partnership (DCLP) under the Act on behalf of a class of cable television service subscribers who, they alleged, paid illegally excessive late payment fees levied by DCLP. The trial court ruled that the causes of action were governed by a three-year statute of limitations rather than a four-year statute as the plaintiffs proposed. After a jury trial, the plaintiffs obtained a judgment against DCLP for $3,414,411.00 in compensatory damages be *718 fore trebling. In a second phase of the trial, the jury awarded an additional $3,274,080.00 in punitive damages. The trial court upheld the plaintiffs’ cause of action under the Consumer Protection Procedures Act and the jury’s compensatory damage award, but ruled that the evidence was insufficient to support punitive or treble damages. Accordingly, the court set aside the punitive damages award. The court also ruled that the plaintiffs were not entitled to prejudgment interest on their award. Finally, the court awarded the plaintiffs $425,916.25 in attorneys’ fees. Both the plaintiffs and DCLP have appealed.

Except in two significant respects, we affirm the trial court’s rulings. In agreement with the trial court, we hold that the plaintiffs were entitled to invoke the Consumer Protection Procedures Act to remedy DCLP’s violation, in charging a late fee, of common law requirements for a valid liquidated damages clause. We also hold that DCLP was entitled, despite the invalidation of its liquidated damages provision, to prove and recoup the actual damages it sustained as a result of late payments by its subscribers. We agree as well with the trial court’s ruling that the plaintiffs’ action was governed by a three-year statute of limitations. Hence we uphold the jury’s determination of compensatory damages. We hold, however, that the plaintiff class is entitled to prejudgment interest on those damages. Further, while we agree with the trial court that the evidence was insufficient to justify punitive damages, we hold that the plaintiff class is entitled to treble damages.

I.

During the years relevant to this appeal, DCLP provided cable television service to over 100,000 subscribers in the District of Columbia under the franchise awarded by the Council pursuant to the Cable Television Communications Act of 1981. See D.C.Code § 34-1213.01 (2001). Subscribers entered into standardized contracts with DCLP under which they agreed to pay DCLP a monthly fee for the level of cable service they selected. Subscribers also agreed to pay a late charge or administrative fee if they were late with their payments, in an amount to be set from time to time by DCLP. DCLP’s ostensible purpose in imposing this late fee was not merely to recover the time value of the delayed payments, ie., DCLP’s carrying costs, but more importantly to defray the expenses that DCLP incurred in its efforts to collect delinquent accounts.

In 1990, DCLP unilaterally increased the late fee it charged its subscribers from $2.00 to $5.00. The new fee was half the charge for basic cable service. DCLP did not base the increase to $5.00 on any analysis or estimate of the costs it actually incurred or anticipated incurring as a result of late payment. In hearings before the District’s Office of Cable Television, 1 DCLP’s general manager candidly acknowledged that the $5.00 late fee was not cost-based and explained that it was designed simply to “motivate” subscribers to pay in a timely fashion. “The -whole point,” according to DCLP, was “that we would like them to pay as soon as possible.... If this is a way to facilitate that payment, then that is exactly what we would like them to do.” The Office of Cable Television expressed concerns that the increased late fee was not achieving this goal and was larger than necessary to cover the administrative cost burden at *719 tributable to late payments. The Office did not insist that the fee be reduced, however. The Office also voiced concerns that DCLP’s bills and billing procedures in charging the late fee were confusing to its subscribers. In response to the Office’s concerns, DCLP changed the format of its bills, but it kept the late fee at the $5.00 level. At that level, the late charge was comparable to what some cable service providers charged in other localities, though it was higher than what most others charged. DCLP’s late fee also was significantly higher than the late fees typically charged by public utilities for gas, electric and similar services.

DCLP subsequently reported to the Office of Cable Television that it was collecting revenues of $1.2 million annually from late fee payments at the new $5.00 rate. Some twenty-five percent of DCLP’s subscribers incurred the $5.00 charge each month.

In November of 1994, Robert Bassin and Sheri Weems filed a class action lawsuit in Superior Court on behalf of all subscribers who had paid DCLP’s $5.00 late fee in the preceding four years. Mirroring the concerns previously raised by the Office of Cable Television, the plaintiffs challenged DCLP’s late fee practices as predatory in two main respects. First, they claimed that DCLP violated the District of Columbia Consumer Protection Procedures Act (“CPPA”), D.C.Code §§ 28-3901-8911 (2001), by intentionally employing confusing and deceptive bills and billing procedures to mislead and manipulate subscribers into paying late fees that they did not owe or could have avoided by paying their bills more promptly. Second, the plaintiffs claimed that DCLP violated the CPPA, as well as the common law and the liquidated damages provision in the Sales Article of the Uniform Commercial Code, D.C.Code § 28:2-718 (2001), by imposing an exorbitant penalty for late payment. The plaintiffs charged that the $5.00 fee was an illegal penalty and not a valid liquidated damages provision because it bore no reasonable relationship to the anticipated or actual losses that DCLP sustained on account of late-paying subscribers. Moreover, the plaintiffs contended, the late fee was misleading because DCLP did not disclose that its “actual purpose” in levying the fee was to enhance its revenues rather than to recover damages legitimately attributable to late payment. In addition to compensatory damages (disgorgement of accumulated late fees), the plaintiffs sought an award under the CPPA of treble or punitive damages and attorneys’ fees and costs.

At trial, both sides presented extensive testimony and other evidence regarding DCLP’s billing practices and the costs that DCLP sustained when its subscribers did not pay their bills on time. We need not recount that evidence in detail for the reader to understand the issues raised in this appeal.

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828 A.2d 714, 51 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 149, 2003 D.C. App. LEXIS 471, 2003 WL 21664513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/district-cablevision-limited-partnership-v-bassin-dc-2003.