HEJAMADI v. MIDLAND FUNDING LLC

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedJune 25, 2024
Docket2:18-cv-13203
StatusUnknown

This text of HEJAMADI v. MIDLAND FUNDING LLC (HEJAMADI v. MIDLAND FUNDING LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
HEJAMADI v. MIDLAND FUNDING LLC, (D.N.J. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF NEW JERSEY

SHANTHI R. HEJAMADI and RICARDO VARELA, on behalf of themselves and those similarly situated, Civil No.: 18-cv-13203 (KSH) (CLW) Plaintiffs,

v. MIDLAND FUNDING, LLC; MIDLAND CREDIT MANAGEMENT, INC.; and JOHN OPIN ION DOES 1 to 10,

Defendants.

Katharine S. Hayden, U.S.D.J. I. Introduction This matter is before the Court on remand from the Third Circuit to determine whether under the standard announced in Morgan v. Sundance, Inc., 596 U.S. 411 (2022), defendants Midland Funding, LLC (“Midland”) and Midland Credit Management, Inc. (“MCM”) (together, “defendants”) waived their right to compel arbitration of the claims asserted by plaintiffs Shanthi R. Hejamadi and Ricardo Varela in this action brought under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (“FDCPA”), 15 U.S.C. § 1692 et seq. For the reasons set forth below, they did not, and their motion to compel arbitration and dismiss the action will be granted. II. Background The background of this action is set forth in the Court’s two prior opinions, as well as in the Third Circuit’s decision. (D.E. 85-2, 3d Cir. Opinion; D.E. 36, 10/2/19 Opinion; D.E. 80, 3/31/22 Opinion.) As will be seen, a detailed recital of the facts and procedural history up to this motion is necessary in order to assess fairly whether defendants Midland and MCM undertook litigation steps that constitute a waiver of their contractual right to compel arbitration. Plaintiffs, on behalf of a putative class, have asserted that defendants’ collection letters to them violated the FDCPA. In 2017, Midland bought a pool of credit card accounts from Citibank, N.A., the original creditor on plaintiffs’ accounts, and that purchase included plaintiffs’ accounts. Midland then filed a collection action against Hejamadi in New Jersey Superior Court, Bergen County, Special Civil Part. She answered and counterclaimed against Midland under the

FDCPA. Thereafter, Midland dismissed its collection claim against Hejamadi; the action was transferred from Special Civil Part to the Law Division; and Midland removed the action to this Court. Midland then moved to compel arbitration on an individual basis and dismiss Hejamadi’s complaint, relying on an arbitration provision and class action waiver in the credit card agreement between Hejamadi and Citibank. (D.E. 10.) Midland further argued that if the Court declined to compel arbitration, it should nonetheless dismiss the class allegations in the complaint on statute of limitations grounds and because the putative class was identical to the proposed class defined in a matter then pending before a different judge of this Court. Several

weeks later, Hejamadi filed an amended complaint, which added Varela as a plaintiff and MCM as a defendant and slightly changed the class definition. (D.E. 13). Both plaintiffs then filed an opposition to Midland’s motion to compel arbitration, arguing that discovery was necessary on whether a valid, enforceable agreement to arbitrate existed (D.E. 14). Midland withdrew its pending motion to compel arbitration because the amended complaint rendered it moot. (D.E. 16, 17.) Both defendants then filed a renewed motion seeking to compel arbitration on an individual basis and dismissal of the amended complaint. (D.E. 20.) As in Midland’s original motion, defendants also argued in the alternative that the class action definition was temporally overbroad and duplicative of the class definition in a different, then- pending case. Defendants further argued that plaintiffs’ claims against MCM, the newly added defendant, were barred by the statute of limitations. In opposing, plaintiffs again argued that discovery on arbitrability was necessary. (D.E. 24.) On October 2, 2019, the Court denied the motion without prejudice so the parties could conduct limited discovery on arbitrability; for example, discovery was necessary to “determine

whether defendants were transferred the right to enforce the arbitration provision” when Citibank assigned plaintiffs’ accounts. (10/2/19 Opinion, at 9.) After the parties undertook that discovery, defendants renewed their motion seeking to compel arbitration on an individual basis and dismissing the action. (D.E. 70.) It made the same alternative arguments as before. The Court granted the motion on March 31, 2022, concluding that defendants had the right to arbitrate plaintiffs’ claims (i.e., that there was an agreement to arbitrate and the dispute is within the agreement’s scope) and had not waived that right. (D.E. 80, 3/31/22 Opinion.) The waiver analysis was based on governing Third Circuit precedent at the time, which had as its “touchstone” the prejudice to the party opposing arbitration and relied on a “number of non-

exhaustive factors” to discern whether that prejudice existed. (Id. at 12 (citing Hoxworth v. Blinder, Robinson & Co., 980 F.2d 912, 925-27 (3d Cir. 1992)).1 Plaintiffs appealed. (D.E. 82.) On May 23, 2022, less than two months after this Court issued its opinion, the Supreme Court decided Morgan v. Sundance, which held that whether a party waived a contractual right to arbitrate is decided by the same standard as waiver of any other contractual right. That is, there are no “arbitration-specific variants of federal procedural rules, like those concerning

1 Those factors included the timeliness of the motion to compel arbitration; the degree to which the movant had contested the merits of the claims against it; whether the movant had informed, even informally, its adversary of its intent to seek arbitration; the extent of its non-merits motion practice; its assent to pretrial orders; and the extent to which both parties had engaged in discovery. (Id.) waiver, based on the [Federal Arbitration Act’s] ‘policy favoring arbitration.’” Morgan, 596 U.S. at 416 (quoting Moses H. Cone Mem. Hosp. v. Mercury Constr. Corp., 460 U.S. 1, 24 (1983)). This meant that because the test for waiver does not usually include a prejudice requirement, courts cannot require prejudice to conclude that “a party by litigating too long, waived its right to stay litigation or compel arbitration under the FAA.” Id. at 419. In so

deciding, the Supreme Court rejected the case law of various circuits, including the Third Circuit, that conditioned arbitration waiver on a showing of prejudice. Id. at 416 & n.1 (citing PaineWebber Inc. v. Faragalli, 61 F.3d 1063, 1068-69 (3d Cir. 1995)). Post-Morgan, the Third Circuit’s test for arbitration waiver now focuses on the actions of the party seeking to arbitrate, rather than the effects of those actions on the party opposing arbitration. White v. Samsung Elecs. Am., 61 F.4th 334, 339 (3d Cir. 2023). Ruling on plaintiffs’ appeal in this matter, the Third Circuit, noting the “change in governing authority that post-dates the District Court’s order,” remanded for this Court to address the waiver question “using the inquiry required by Morgan.” (D.E. 85-2, 3d Cir.

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HEJAMADI v. MIDLAND FUNDING LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hejamadi-v-midland-funding-llc-njd-2024.