Mark Geran v. Xerox Education Services, Inc.

469 S.W.3d 459, 2015 Mo. App. LEXIS 554, 2015 WL 2392375
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 19, 2015
DocketWD77507
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 469 S.W.3d 459 (Mark Geran v. Xerox Education Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mark Geran v. Xerox Education Services, Inc., 469 S.W.3d 459, 2015 Mo. App. LEXIS 554, 2015 WL 2392375 (Mo. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

VICTOR C. HOWARD, JUDGE

Mark Geran appeals from the summary judgment in favor of Xerox Education Services, Inc. (XES), a loan servicer, in his suit for damages for violations of the Missouri Merchandising Practices Act and for intentional infliction of emotional distress. The judgment is affirmed.

Factual and Procedural Background

Mr. Geran took out various student loans with Norwest Bank for his law school education between 1997 and 2000, and Wells Fargo Education Financial Services became the holder of the promissory notes relating to those loan's. In 2005, Mr. Geran applied for and entered into an agreement with Wells Fargo to consolidate-all of his student loans and executed a Promissory Note in favor of Wells Fargo promising to repay that consolidated loan. Mr. Geran applied for an income sensitive repayment plan but was placed on a graduated repayment plan that provided for interest only payments for one-third of the’ repayment period and a level monthly payment for the remaining two-thirds of the repayment period. On March 18, 2005, Wells Fargo mailed Mr. Geran a Disclosure Statement and Repayment Schedule for the consolidated loan. It showed that the consolidated loan consisted of two accounts for subsidized and unsubsidized portions and set out the specific repayment plan — 100 payments’ of $160.41/ month total for both accounts beginning April 2005 and then the remaining 200 payments of $345.55/month beginning in August 2013. The Promissory Note provided that terms of the Disclosure Statement and Repayment Schedule were made part of the loan:

At or about the time my Federal Consolidated Loan is disbursed, a' disclosure statement and repayment schedule (“disclosure”) will be provided to me. This disclosure will identify my Federal Consolidated Loan amount and additional terms of the loan.... If the information in this Note conflicts with information in the disclosure, the specific terms and information in the disclosure apply to my loan.,

Similarly, the Disclosure Statement and Repayment Schedule provided, “This document will become an attachment to, and a part of, your Consolidated Loan Application/Promissory Note. Mr. Geran had the ability at any time under the Promissory Note and the Disclosure Statement and Repayment Schedule to request a change in his repayment plan, but Wells Fargo was not obligated to grant such request. Specifically, the Disclosure Statement and Repayment Schedule provided, “You must repay your loan according to the scheduled payments described below, unless the lender of your Consolidated Loan agrees to other terms'.” ■ Additionally, the- Promissory Note provided that the lender “may allow” a forbearance (temporary delayed or reduced loan payments) if the borrower is unable to make scheduled loan payments. -

In 2011, Wells Fargo contracted with ACS Education Services, Inc. (ACS), which was later acquired by XES in 2012, to service Mr. Geran’s consolidated loan. On March 23, 2011, ACS sent Mr. Geran a letter informing him that it could not accommodate the graduated payment plan that he was on with Wells Fargo and gave *462 him an option to request a graduated plan offered by ACS or be placed on level payments. Specifically, the letter provided:

ACS has determined that your account(s) was approved for a graduated repayment plan while being serviced by Wells Fargo Education Financial Services. While ACS offers graduated repayment plans, we cannot accommodate the identical plan you previously selected at Wells Fargo Education Financial Sei-vices. We do offer a similar plan with a tiered repayment schedule where the payment amount gradually increases every 24 months. If you would like to choose this repayment plan, please complete the bottom portion of this letter and send the entire letter to the following address by 5/22/2011....

It was undisputed that Mr. Geran called ACS on May 23, 2011, regarding the repayment plan change. Mr. Geran alleged that the customer service representative estimated that his monthly payment amount under the new tiered repayment schedule would be $154.81 within plus/minus ten percent. ACS admitted that the customer service representative provided Mr. Geran with an estimate but denied the amount. It also presented documents showing that Mr. Geran requested information on his debt and interest rate, requested to be placed on ACS’s tiered repayment schedule, and was told to put his request in writing during the phone call. That day, Mr. Geran returned by fax and mail the March 23, 2011 letter requesting to be placed on ACS’s tiered repayment plan. The request was signed by Mr. Ger-an on May 22, 2011.

On April 9, 2011, ACS received a copy of Mr. Geran’s Promissory Note and became aware that the specific terms of the repayment plans were set out in the form Promissory Note while most other lenders would only list the generic graduated payment definition. Consequently, ACS and Wells Fargo decided that ACS needed to change its system to accommodate the repayment plans set out in the Promissory Note. Wells Fargo and ACS entered into a change order in this regard dated July 14, 2011.

In the meantime, in June 2011, ACS sent Mr. Geran two Loan Consolidation Disclosure Statement and Repayment Schedules for the two accounts under the consolidated loan. They set out the specific repayment plans under the new ACS tiered repayment plan. The first payment beginning June 28, 2011, for both accounts of the consolidated loan was $204.03 ($93.02 for subsidized part plus $111.01 for unsubsidized part) and increased as follows: $244.96/month beginning June 28, 2013; $294.09/month beginning June 28, 2015; $353.07/month beginning June 28, 2017; $423.89/month beginning June 28, 2019; $508.91/month beginning June 28, 2021; $610.99/month beginning June 28, 2023; and a single final payment of $552.99 due on March 28, 2025.

ACS had sent out a billing statement under the prior graduated repayment plan dated May 31, 2011, for the June 28 payment due of $160.41. Thereafter, it sent Mr. Geran two new billing statements dated June 7, 2011, one for each account under the consolidated loan, for a new total of $204.03 due on June 28, 2011. Mr. Geran sent ACS a payment of $180 on June 28, 2011. On July 10, 2011, ACS sent Mr. Geran a past due reminder. Mr. Ger-an sent ACS a payment of approximately $160 on July 23, 2011. On July 31, 2011, ACS sent Mr. Geran a delinquency notice assessing late charges.

Mr. Geran phoned ACS on August 10, 2011, to inquire about his account and the delinquent status. A few days later on August 16, 2011, Mr. Geran sent a letter to ACS disputing the delinquency on his loan *463 and further disputing the “current monthly payment amount scheduled by lender/hold-erMr. Geran complained that “ACS breached the existing agreement between the previous lender, Wells Fargo, and myself by stating an intention to modify the existing agreement;” “ACS failed to properly apply payments made to lender/holder in accordance with statements received by debtor;” and “ACS is [sic] represented that payment amounts that would result from enrolling in its graduated repayment plan, and that ACS had the right to change payments if debtor did not enroll in the graduated repayment plan.” On August 19, 2011, ACS received and credited a payment of $228.89 that brought Mr. Ger-an’s loan current and resolved the deficiency. Thereafter, ACS notified Mr. Geran that the late charges were reversed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
469 S.W.3d 459, 2015 Mo. App. LEXIS 554, 2015 WL 2392375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mark-geran-v-xerox-education-services-inc-moctapp-2015.