OPINION
STAPLETON, District Judge:
This is an action for violation of the Truth in Lending Act (15 U.S.C. § 1601,
et seq.)
arising out of a loan transaction between plaintiffs Alvin and Goldie Ecenrode and defendant Household Finance Corporation of South Dover. Plaintiffs originally alleged one violation of the Act and regulations issued pursuant to that Act by the Federal Reserve Board (hereinafter referred to as Regulation Z), and subsequently amended their complaint on two occasions to allege six additional violations arising out of the same loan transaction.
Defendant has filed a motion to dismiss contending that none of the allegations concerning the seven asserted violations of the Act state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Defendant also moved to strike plaintiffs’ claim for attorney’s fees as immaterial in view of the asserted inability of plaintiffs’ counsel, the Community Legal Aid Society, Inc., to accept an award of attorney’s fees in this case.
As to the motion to strike, the Third Circuit in
Manning v. Princeton Consumer Discount Company, Inc.,
533 F.2d 102 at 106 (3rd Cir. 1976) resolved any doubts concerning the materiality of plaintiffs’ claim for attorney’s fees, holding:
A creditor who fails to provide any information required to be disclosed to the consumer is liable “for a reasonable attorney’s fee.” 15 U.S.C. § 1640(a). The Act does not make the award contingent upon the plaintiff’s obligation to pay her attorney or whether a fee in fact was charged.
Defendant’s motion to strike plaintiffs’ third prayer for relief is denied.
Plaintiffs allege that defendant failed to clearly identify that property in which a security interest was obtained in violation of 15 U.S.C. § 1639(a)(8) and Sec
tions 226.8(b)(5) and 226.6(c) of Regulation Z.
In particular, plaintiffs assert, the creditor’s statement that the security agreement “may cover after-acquired property”
is misleading and erroneous in part because under Delaware law a creditor may only obtain an interest in those after-acquired goods which the debtor acquires within ten days of the secured party’s giving value.
I find that this segment of the complaint states a claim for relief under Sections 226.-8(b)(5) and 226.6(c).
Erroneous statements of a creditor’s rights against the debtor under state law are not the kind of “meaningful disclosure” contemplated by Congress when it passed the Truth in Lending Act. See 15 U.S.C. § 1601. As Chief Judge Morgan noted in
Johnson v. Associates Finance, Inc.,
369 F.Supp. 1121 (S.D.Ill.1974) with respect to a security agreement provision virtually identical to the one alleged here:
The challenged provision fails to clearly and accurately define the extent of the defendant’s security interest and seems almost patently designed to mislead and confuse the borrower in that regard. As such, it violates the spirit of the law as well as the letter of Sections 226.6(c) and 226.8(b)(5) of Regulation Z.
Defendant’s motion to dismiss paragraph 7(a) of the complaint will be denied.
Defendant next challenges plaintiffs’ assertion that failure to identify the security agreement’s acceleration provision as a default charge violates the Truth in Lending Act and Section 226.8(b)(4) of Regulation Z.
Plaintiffs argue that, while defendant is required under Delaware law to rebate unearned portions of the finance charge in the event of voluntary payment of the loan prior to maturity, it is not required to rebate such unearned charges in the event of plaintiffs’ default and acceleration of the unpaid balance of the loan. The failure to rebate upon acceleration of the loan, plaintiffs assert, constitutes a default charge which should be disclosed pursuant to Section 226.8(b)(4).
Defendant argues that under Delaware law unpaid portions of the finance charge must be rebated in the event of acceleration in the same manner as is required where the loan is voluntarily prepaid, and that that method is disclosed in the portion of the note dealing with rebate of the finance charge for prepayment in full.
The question of whether unearned finance charges are to be rebated in the event of acceleration of a loan upon default is an unclear one under Delaware law. Whatever may be the proper resolution of that question, however, it is clear that defendant’s motion to dismiss must be denied. Where a loan is voluntarily prepaid, unearned finance charges are rebated. If a creditor is permitted to retain unearned finance charges in the event of default and acceleration, that would represent the assessment of an additional penalty charge incurred because of late payment of an installment.
Cf. Johnson v. McCrackin-Sturman Ford, Inc.,
527 F.2d 257 (3rd Cir. 1975). As such, Section 226.8(b)(4) would require the disclosure of that assessment as a default charge.
No such disclosure was made here.
On the other hand, if rebate of finance charges is required and the method of rebate is different for acceleration than it is for voluntary prepayment, then both methods should be identified under Section 226.-8(b)(7) of Regulation Z.
(See Federal Reserve Board staff letter of October 22, 1974). The loan agreement alleged here discloses in detail the method of rebate for prepayment in full in one section. In another section, it discloses that in the event of default of more than 30 days on a monthly installment the creditor,may “render the entire sum remaining unpaid ... at once due and payable,
less any required rebate of Finance Charge”.
The implication is that the method of rebate for voluntary prepayment is different from the method anticipated by the creditor in the event of default and acceleration of the loan. Under Section 226.8(b)(7) the latter method should have been disclosed.
Thus,
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
OPINION
STAPLETON, District Judge:
This is an action for violation of the Truth in Lending Act (15 U.S.C. § 1601,
et seq.)
arising out of a loan transaction between plaintiffs Alvin and Goldie Ecenrode and defendant Household Finance Corporation of South Dover. Plaintiffs originally alleged one violation of the Act and regulations issued pursuant to that Act by the Federal Reserve Board (hereinafter referred to as Regulation Z), and subsequently amended their complaint on two occasions to allege six additional violations arising out of the same loan transaction.
Defendant has filed a motion to dismiss contending that none of the allegations concerning the seven asserted violations of the Act state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Defendant also moved to strike plaintiffs’ claim for attorney’s fees as immaterial in view of the asserted inability of plaintiffs’ counsel, the Community Legal Aid Society, Inc., to accept an award of attorney’s fees in this case.
As to the motion to strike, the Third Circuit in
Manning v. Princeton Consumer Discount Company, Inc.,
533 F.2d 102 at 106 (3rd Cir. 1976) resolved any doubts concerning the materiality of plaintiffs’ claim for attorney’s fees, holding:
A creditor who fails to provide any information required to be disclosed to the consumer is liable “for a reasonable attorney’s fee.” 15 U.S.C. § 1640(a). The Act does not make the award contingent upon the plaintiff’s obligation to pay her attorney or whether a fee in fact was charged.
Defendant’s motion to strike plaintiffs’ third prayer for relief is denied.
Plaintiffs allege that defendant failed to clearly identify that property in which a security interest was obtained in violation of 15 U.S.C. § 1639(a)(8) and Sec
tions 226.8(b)(5) and 226.6(c) of Regulation Z.
In particular, plaintiffs assert, the creditor’s statement that the security agreement “may cover after-acquired property”
is misleading and erroneous in part because under Delaware law a creditor may only obtain an interest in those after-acquired goods which the debtor acquires within ten days of the secured party’s giving value.
I find that this segment of the complaint states a claim for relief under Sections 226.-8(b)(5) and 226.6(c).
Erroneous statements of a creditor’s rights against the debtor under state law are not the kind of “meaningful disclosure” contemplated by Congress when it passed the Truth in Lending Act. See 15 U.S.C. § 1601. As Chief Judge Morgan noted in
Johnson v. Associates Finance, Inc.,
369 F.Supp. 1121 (S.D.Ill.1974) with respect to a security agreement provision virtually identical to the one alleged here:
The challenged provision fails to clearly and accurately define the extent of the defendant’s security interest and seems almost patently designed to mislead and confuse the borrower in that regard. As such, it violates the spirit of the law as well as the letter of Sections 226.6(c) and 226.8(b)(5) of Regulation Z.
Defendant’s motion to dismiss paragraph 7(a) of the complaint will be denied.
Defendant next challenges plaintiffs’ assertion that failure to identify the security agreement’s acceleration provision as a default charge violates the Truth in Lending Act and Section 226.8(b)(4) of Regulation Z.
Plaintiffs argue that, while defendant is required under Delaware law to rebate unearned portions of the finance charge in the event of voluntary payment of the loan prior to maturity, it is not required to rebate such unearned charges in the event of plaintiffs’ default and acceleration of the unpaid balance of the loan. The failure to rebate upon acceleration of the loan, plaintiffs assert, constitutes a default charge which should be disclosed pursuant to Section 226.8(b)(4).
Defendant argues that under Delaware law unpaid portions of the finance charge must be rebated in the event of acceleration in the same manner as is required where the loan is voluntarily prepaid, and that that method is disclosed in the portion of the note dealing with rebate of the finance charge for prepayment in full.
The question of whether unearned finance charges are to be rebated in the event of acceleration of a loan upon default is an unclear one under Delaware law. Whatever may be the proper resolution of that question, however, it is clear that defendant’s motion to dismiss must be denied. Where a loan is voluntarily prepaid, unearned finance charges are rebated. If a creditor is permitted to retain unearned finance charges in the event of default and acceleration, that would represent the assessment of an additional penalty charge incurred because of late payment of an installment.
Cf. Johnson v. McCrackin-Sturman Ford, Inc.,
527 F.2d 257 (3rd Cir. 1975). As such, Section 226.8(b)(4) would require the disclosure of that assessment as a default charge.
No such disclosure was made here.
On the other hand, if rebate of finance charges is required and the method of rebate is different for acceleration than it is for voluntary prepayment, then both methods should be identified under Section 226.-8(b)(7) of Regulation Z.
(See Federal Reserve Board staff letter of October 22, 1974). The loan agreement alleged here discloses in detail the method of rebate for prepayment in full in one section. In another section, it discloses that in the event of default of more than 30 days on a monthly installment the creditor,may “render the entire sum remaining unpaid ... at once due and payable,
less any required rebate of Finance Charge”.
The implication is that the method of rebate for voluntary prepayment is different from the method anticipated by the creditor in the event of default and acceleration of the loan. Under Section 226.8(b)(7) the latter method should have been disclosed.
Thus,
regardless of whether rebate is required under Delaware law, consumers confronted with a loan agreement such as the one involved here would be left in the dark as to precisely what credit charges the lender will assess. Failure to fully inform consumers about the cost of credit, thereby preventing them from comparing relative credit costs, is precisely the evil which the Truth in Lending Act was designed to prevent.
Zeltzer v. Carte Blanche,
514 F.2d 1156 (3rd Cir. 1975).
Defendant also challenges plaintiffs’ claim that the alleged disclosure, that “attorney fees may be charged, if the account is actually turned over to an attorney and he has commenced proceedings thereon” violates the Truth in Lending Act and Section 226.8(b)(4) of the Regulations which provide for the disclosure of default charges. Plaintiffs claim that the alleged disclosure erroneously states Delaware law because the Delaware Small Loans Act (5 Del.C. § 2101,
et seq.)
prohibits the assessment of attorney’s fees in a collection action by a small loan creditor. Defendant counters that the controlling state law is Section 3912 of Title 10 of the Delaware Code, which permits reasonable attorney’s fees to be awarded in “all causes of action . brought for the enforcement of any note.”
I have been unable to find and have not been directed to any decision of the Delaware courts on whether attorney’s fees incurred in the recovery of money loaned may be assessed against the borrower where the loan was made under the authority of the Delaware Small Loans Act. Sections 2108 and 2109 of that Act regulate the interest rate and service fee a creditor may charge and provide that the only other charge which may be assessed in the event of default is a fine of not more than 5 percent of the amount of the payment in which default is made. Section 2111(c) of the Act relied on by plaintiffs, regulates the interest a creditor may recover in an action for the recovery of money loaned and prohibits the attachment of a borrower’s wages for the purpose of collection. None of these sections, however, prohibit the assessment of attorney’s fees.
On the other hand the Delaware Small Loan Operating Regulations promulgated by the State Banking Commission seem to recognize that attorney’s fees may be charged in collection actions. Regulation 14 provides:
Collection Fee:
Attorneys’ fees for collection as allowed by law, and so included in the evidence of debt and other supporting papers, shall not be charged to the borrower unless the account is actually proc
essed by an attorney not an employee of the lender.
Most persuasive, however, is 10 Del.C. § 3912 which permits the assessment of reasonable attorney’s fees in
all
actions brought to enforce
any
note or written instrument. Both this section and the relevant provisions of the Small Loan Act have co-existed for over 60 years. The legislature could long ago have articulated its desire to exempt actions to enforce loan agreements entered into pursuant to the provisions of the Small Loans Act from the all-inclusive language of Section 3912 directed specifically to the award of attorney’s fees in all actions. Its failure to do so suggests that no such exemption was intended. Since I find no erroneous statement of Delaware law as to the assessment of attorney’s fees, paragraphs
7(c)
and 7(d) of the complaint will be dismissed for failure to state a claim for which relief can be granted. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6).
Defendant further challenges plaintiffs’ claim that the amount allegedly designated as a service fee in the loan should have been designated and disclosed as a prepaid finance charge pursuant to Sections 226.8(d)(2) and 226.4 of Regulation Z. I agree with plaintiffs that the alleged service charge represents a prepaid finance charge. It was deducted from the amount financed and was not refundable in the event of any rebate of finance charge for prepayment in full. See
Jones v. Community Loan and Investment Corporation of Fulton County,
526 F.2d 642 (5th Cir. 1976). And, while the alleged loan agreement makes it clear that the service charge is a sum which the consumer will not have the use of as part of the amount financed and which will not be returned in the event of early repayment of the loan, it fails to label this sum a prepaid finance charge. Thus, although the purposes behind requiring certain charges to be labeled as prepaid finance charges have been served by this creditor’s explanatory disclosures elsewhere in the loan agreement, the literal terms of the Regulation have nevertheless been violated. I need not decide, however, whether such a technical violation alone calls for imposition of penalties under the Truth in Lending Act
in view of my conclusions above that the alleged agreement contains other clear violations of the Act. Defendant’s motion to dismiss paragraph 7(f) of the complaint is denied.
Finally, defendant challenges plaintiffs’ assertion that the loan agreement violates Sections 226.8(b)(6)
and (b)(7) of Regulation Z by failing to disclose that unearned credit insurance premiums are to be refunded in the event the loan is prepaid. Plaintiffs are correct on their
state law. Regulation 11 of the Delaware Small Loan Operating Regulations requires that creditors rebate any unearned insurance premiums collected. At the same time, however, this obligation to rebate precludes any holding that these unearned premiums are penalty charges for prepayment which must be disclosed pursuant to Section 226.8(b)(6).
Cf. Johnson v. McCrackin-Sturman Ford, Inc., supra.
Paragraph 7(g) of the complaint does not state a claim for relief for violation of Section 226.8(b)(6).
Similarly I find that paragraph 7(g) fails to state a claim for relief under Section 226.8(b)(7). By definition, non-mandatory insurance premiums, such as the ones alleged here are not “finance charges” as that term is defined in Section 226.4 of Regulation Z.
Consequently, Section 226.8(b)(7), which requires disclosures concerning the amount or method of computing unearned finance charges and the rebate of such charges, is not applicable to the insurance premiums allegedly charged here. Paragraph 7(g) of the complaint is dismissed for failure to state a claim for relief under either Section 226.8(b)(6) or (b)(7).