Linton v. Consumer Protection Division

225 A.3d 456, 467 Md. 502
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 3, 2020
Docket33/19
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 225 A.3d 456 (Linton v. Consumer Protection Division) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Linton v. Consumer Protection Division, 225 A.3d 456, 467 Md. 502 (Md. 2020).

Opinion

Crystal Linton, et al. v. Consumer Protection Division, No. 33, September Term, 2019 (1) Individuals who had assigned structured settlement benefits filed a class action against the assignees of those benefits seeking civil damages on the ground that the assignments were the product of fraud on the part of the assignees. (Linton action). Prior to the filing of that action, the Consumer Protection Division of the Attorney General’s Office (CPD) had sued the assignees for violations of the Consumer Protection Act seeking civil penalties, injunctive relief, and disgorgement/restitution. The Federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) filed a similar action in the U.S. District Court.

(2) While the CPD and CFPB actions were pending, the Linton action parties reached a settlement that would have paid the plaintiffs only about four percent of the economic value of the benefits they assigned and would have not only precluded them from receiving any benefits from the CPD or CFPB actions but assigned anything collected by CPD or CFPB to the defendants who defrauded them and purported to require CPD and CFPB to dismiss their actions. Over CPB’s objection, the Circuit Court confirmed the settlement class and approved the settlement out of concern that the defendants had little in the way of assets, which were being depleted by the litigation.

(3) The Court of Special Appeals reversed that judgment on the ground that it was impermissible for private parties in a settlement of their case, to interfere with the ability of CPD or CFPB to pursue statutory remedies in their cases, including disgorgement/restitution. On cross petitions for certiorari, the Court of Appeals agreed that a settlement with those conditions was impermissible.

(4) In its Opinion, the Court of Appeals discussed the difference between civil damages and disgorgement/restitution and held that the latter, which involves stripping the wrongdoer of ill-gotten gains, had a public purpose apart from merely compensating individual victims. The Court directed that the case be remanded to the Circuit Court for further proceedings. Circuit Court for Baltimore City IN THE COURT OF APPEALS Case No. 24-C-16-003894 Argued: January 6, 2020 OF MARYLAND

No. 33

September Term, 2019

CRYSTAL LINTON, ET AL. Case No. 419686V Argued 1/7/19 vs.

CONSUMER PROTECTION DIVISION

Barbera, C.J. McDonald Hotten Getty Booth Battaglia, Lynne A. (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned) Wilner, Alan M. (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned)

Opinion by Wilner, J. Hotten, Getty and Booth, JJ., dissent

Filed: March 3, 2020

Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.

2020-03-03 15:48-05:00

Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk This is a class-action lawsuit filed on behalf of 100 individuals who had assigned

structured settlement annuity benefits they were entitled to receive from various tortfeasors

to petitioner Access Funding, LLC or its affiliates or designees (collectively “Access”).

The lawsuit, which we shall refer to as the Linton action, was filed in July 2016 in the

Circuit Court for Baltimore City and is based on allegations that the assignments were the

product of fraud on the part of Access.

There were several strains to the claim of fraud, but, most prominently, it was based

on evidence of a modus operandi in which (1) most of the assignors were young victims

of lead paint poisoning whose ability to understand the economic impact of the assignment

was severely limited; (2) those individuals were actively solicited by Access; (3) as a

condition to implementing an assignment of structured settlement benefits, Maryland law

requires approval of the proposed assignment by a Circuit Court but prohibits a court from

approving an assignment unless the assignor has received “independent professional advice

regarding the legal, tax, and financial implications of the transfer” (Md. Code, § 5-1102 of

the Cts. &Jud. Proc. Article (CJP)); (4) independent professional advice means advice from

a licensed professional adviser who is engaged by the assignor and is not affiliated with or

compensated by the assignee (CJP § 5-1101(d)); (5) most of the assignments at issue

involved an Access agent posing as an independent professional adviser who gave no (or wholly inadequate) independent advice to the assignors; and (6) the amount paid for

the assignment of benefits was unconscionably inadequate.1

The ultimate issue before us is whether the Circuit Court erred in certifying a

settlement class and approving a settlement reached by the parties with respect to that class.

Resolving that issue requires consideration of several sub-issues arising in large part from

the fact that there were two other actions pending against Access by Government regulatory

agencies for the same alleged misconduct, one by the Consumer Protection Division of the

Maryland Attorney General’s Office (CPD), and one by the Federal Consumer Financial

Protection Bureau (CFPB). In the end, we shall conclude, as did the Court of Special

Appeals, that the Circuit Court erred in approving the proposed settlement and shall direct

that the case be remanded to the Circuit Court for further proceedings in accordance with

this Opinion.

1 In its unreported Opinion in this case, the Court of Special Appeals accurately summarized the evidence regarding this activity as follows (2019 WL 1770524, April 2019): “When people responded to Access’s ads, Access referred them to Charles Smith, a lawyer . . . In their petitions for approval of the transfers, Access represented that Mr. Smith had provided the transferors with independent professional advice. In fact, Access had paid Mr. Smith for each victim he ‘advised,’ more than $50,000 overall . . .. Mr. Smith also practiced law with Access’s former attorney, Anuj Sud. None of this was disclosed by Access to the targets of the offers.” The Court of Special Appeals also noted that, between 2013 and 2015, Access “obtained judicial approval to acquire 163 structured settlements from 100 victims and obtained $33.8 million in future payment rights (with a present value of $25.5 million) in exchange for $7.7 million in cash.” A fuller exposition of the fraudulent activity alleged on the part of Access is set forth in the Complaint filed in this case. Access has consistently asserted, including in the Stipulation of Settlement, that it acted properly in all respects. That is not an issue presented in this appeal. 2 PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In May 2016, two months before the filing of the Linton action, CPD, alleging the

same misconduct, had filed an enforcement action under the State Consumer Protection

Act (Md. Code, Commercial Law Article (CL) Title 13), against Access in the same court.

CPD’s Complaint alleged that, in soliciting and consummating the assignments, Access

engaged in unfair or deceptive trade practices in violation of CL § 13-303. In that action,

in addition to civil penalties, CPD sought to enjoin Access from continuing their alleged

misconduct, to restore to the assignors the future stream of structured settlement payments,

and to compensate them, through restitution and disgorgement, for the value of the

structured settlement payments that had been assigned and already paid to Access. We

shall refer to that as the CPD action.

Six months after the Linton action was filed, the Federal Consumer Financial

Protection Bureau (CFPB), chartered by Congress to enforce the Consumer Financial

Protection Act of 2010 (12 U.S.C.

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Related

Access Funding v. Linton
Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2022
In the Matter of Cash-N-Go
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Assanah-Carroll v. Law Offices of Maher
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Linton v. Access Funding
Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2022

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Bluebook (online)
225 A.3d 456, 467 Md. 502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/linton-v-consumer-protection-division-md-2020.