Krupa v. Landsafe, Inc.

514 F.3d 1153, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 1184, 21 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. C 331
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 22, 2008
Docket07-10061
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 514 F.3d 1153 (Krupa v. Landsafe, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Krupa v. Landsafe, Inc., 514 F.3d 1153, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 1184, 21 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. C 331 (11th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

CARNES, Circuit Judge:

Joel Price and Joshua and Cynthia Kru-pa, who sued on behalf of a class of borrowers, appeal the district court’s grant of summary judgment on their Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, 12 U.S.C. § 2601 et seq., claims in favor of the defendants, Landsafe Credit, Inc. and Countrywide Home Loans, Inc.

I.

Countrywide is a residential mortgage loan broker, and Landsafe is a credit reporting agency. The two of them are subsidiaries of the same parent company, Countrywide Financial Corporation.

Countrywide obtains almost all of the credit reports it needs for customers from Landsafe. Countrywide orders a credit report from Landsafe for each of its customers in the pre-qualification or pre-ap-plication stage of the loan process. Before August 2002, Landsafe charged Countrywide a $25.00 fee for each credit report that Countrywide ordered. Countrywide *1155 passed that $25.00 cost on to each customer who “locked in” a loan with it — each customer who made it through the application process and actually ended up using Countrywide to obtain a loan. The cost of the credit report that Countrywide ordered for a customer who did not end up getting a loan through it could not be passed on but was instead absorbed by Countrywide.

In order to avoid having to absorb that cost, Countrywide asked Landsafe to change its pricing policy to charge more for the cost of credit reports on applicants who locked in loans and nothing for the reports on applicants who did not. The change would enable Countrywide to pass on to those who locked in loans the entire cost of all the credit reports it received. Landsafe made the change in its pricing policy in August 2002.

Under the change, Landsafe charged Countrywide a $35.00 fee for each customer credit report it ordered that led to the locking in of a loan, and nothing for any report that did not. Countrywide, in turn, passed on the $35.00 credit report fee as part of the cost of the loan to each customer who received one through the company. The price point was set so that the new pricing policy would be “revenue-neutral,” and it achieved that goal: Landsafe’s revenues from the credit reports it sold to Countrywide were the same after the new policy was implemented as they had been before.

The plaintiffs, Price and the Krupas, obtained home mortgage loans through Countrywide in 2003 and 2004, respectively. As part of the screening process for the loans, Countrywide ordered from Landsafe a credit report on each of the plaintiffs. Landsafe charged Countrywide $35.00 for each report, and Countrywide passed that cost on to each plaintiff as part of the closing costs. The plaintiffs, on behalf of a class of borrowers who had paid Countrywide’s $35.00 credit report fee, sued Countrywide and Landsafe under RESPA’s anti-kickback, 12 U.S.C. § 2607(a), and anti-markup, 12 U.S.C § 2607(b), provisions. The district court granted summary judgment against the plaintiffs on both claims.

II.

The theory of the plaintiffs’ kickback claim is that through the new pricing policy Landsafe is providing Countrywide with free credit reports for customers who don’t lock in loans, or at least it is providing Countrywide with a pricing structure that allows it to pass along all of its credit report costs to its customers, as a kickback in return for Countrywide referring its credit reporting business to Landsafe.

In granting summary judgment to Countrywide and Landsafe on this claim, the district court concluded that the revised pricing policy did not violate RES-PA’s anti-kickback provision because it is undisputed that: (1) Landsafe made no more or less money as a result; and (2) Countywide purchased the same percentage (virtually all) of the credit reports it needed from Landsafe as it had before the change. We agree.

RESPA’s anti-kickback provision provides:
No person shall give and no person shall accept any fee, kickback, or thing of value pursuant to any agreement or understanding, oral or otherwise, that business incident to or a part of a real estate settlement service involving a federally related mortgage loan shall be referred to any person.

12 U.S.C. § 2607(a). Interpreting this provision, the Department of Housing and Urban Development has said: ‘When a thing of value is received repeatedly and is *1156 connected in any way with the volume or value of the business referred, the receipt of the thing of value is evidence that it is made pursuant to an agreement or understanding for the referral of business.” 24 C.F.R. § 3500.14(e).

RESPA’s § 2607(a) is quite specific in describing the kickback that it prohibits. It prohibits a kickback for referral of business. In this case the one receiving business is Landsafe and the one giving it that business is Countrywide. In order for there to have been a forbidden kickback, there would have to have been an agreement between the two that Countrywide would give Landsafe more of its credit reporting business than it was giving Landsafe before the agreement, or at least an agreement that it would not give Land-safe any less of that business.

The agreement, as the plaintiffs have plotted it out, was that Landsafe would change its pricing policy so that Countrywide could pass along to its customers all of the costs of the credit reports it received, instead of just part of those costs. We may assume, as the plaintiffs urge us to find, that by agreeing to the change in pricing Landsafe conveyed a thing of value to Countrywide — the thing of value Countrywide received being the ability to pass along to its customers the costs of all of the credit reports it orders instead of just part of them. Still, there is no violation of RESPA’s anti-kickback provision unless the agreement also provided or promised Landsafe Countrywide’s business in return. And it did not.

The undisputed evidence is that the volume and value of the credit reporting business Countrywide referred to Landsafe has not changed in any way since the modification in pricing. In their statement of undisputed facts, the plaintiffs conceded that before the change Countrywide sent virtually all of its credit reporting business to Landsafe. And the evidence is undisputed that it still does. That is hardly surprising since the two companies are subsidiaries of the same parent.

The plaintiffs also conceded in their statement of undisputed facts that:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
514 F.3d 1153, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 1184, 21 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. C 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krupa-v-landsafe-inc-ca11-2008.