People v. Nationwide Asset Services, Inc.

26 Misc. 3d 258
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 9, 2009
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 26 Misc. 3d 258 (People v. Nationwide Asset Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Nationwide Asset Services, Inc., 26 Misc. 3d 258 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Patrick H. NeMoyer, J.

This special proceeding was filed by the New York State Attorney General (hereinafter petitioner) in June 2009 pursuant to his authority under Executive Law § 63 (12) and General Business Law article 22-a, which authorize petitioner to sue for restitution, damages, an injunction, and other relief whenever an individual or entity has engaged in repeated fraud, deceptive business practices, false advertising, or other illegality in the carrying on, conduct, or transaction of business. Petitioner also proceeds pursuant to Business Corporation Law § 1303, which empowers him to sue to restrain a foreign corporation from doing business in New York State without proper authorization.

Background

Respondents Nationwide Asset Services, Inc., Servicestar, LLC, and Universal Debt Reduction, LLC (collectively, Nation[261]*261wide) are interrelated entities created and headquartered in Arizona. Respondent FGL Clearwater, Inc., doing business as American Debt Arbitration (ADA), is an entity incorporated and headquartered in Florida. Nationwide and ADA are in the business of “debt settlement” which is to say the business of negotiating on behalf of highly debt-burdened consumers with those consumers’ creditors in an effort to wipe out a portion of each consumer’s total unsecured debt. Respondent ADA markets Nationwide’s debt reduction program through telephone sales presentations initially made during “cold calls” to credit-distressed consumers, and it is established on this record that Nationwide and ADA split the fees paid by the consumers according to a schedule, ADA for enrolling the consumers, and Nationwide for negotiating on those consumers’ behalf with creditors (thus, the court will refer to respondents’ program, words, and actions).

Basically, respondents represent to consumers that they can eliminate their unsecured debt over a period of time, typically, two to three years, and moreover can do so in a way that will save the consumers a large portion, typically 25% to 40%, of the “Original Amount Due” or “Amount Originally Due” (AOD), a sum referring at once to the consumer’s contemporaneous indebtedness on each account, and his/her aggregate indebtedness on all accounts, that the consumer opts to enroll in or designate to respondents’ program. Respondents’ promise of such significant savings assertedly takes into account the payment of all of the substantial fees charged by respondents (see infra). The consumers are promised that they can achieve such substantial savings by: (1) ceasing all payments to their creditors for the duration of the. program; (2) making monthly payments (of amounts typically less than the sums that the consumers already are paying to their creditors each month) directly to respondents; (3) not negotiating personally with their creditors, or with attorneys or collection agencies who might contact the consumers on those creditors’ behalf, for the duration of the program; and (4) instead authorizing respondents to negotiate favorable debt settlements with the creditors — albeit not immediately, but rather only after the lapse of some period, usually many months. Those four steps essentially constitute respondents’ program. With regard to steps (1), (3), and (4), consumers are told that their default in paying the debt over some period of time contributes to a higher likelihood and probable more favorable terms of eventual settlement because credi[262]*262tors are more willing and likely to compromise debts that are more seriously delinquent. Consumers are told, however, that their enrollment in respondents’ program is no guarantee against their creditors’ continuing to dun them, placing the debt in collection, or taking legal action on account of such default. Consumers also are instructed or advised to disclose all of their unsecured debt to respondents, enroll or designate all such debt into the program, not withdraw any accounts/debts from the program, and not contract any new debt. With respect to step (2) of the program, after eliciting information regarding each consumer’s monthly income and expenses and thereby determining that consumer’s available monthly cash flow, respondents require a monthly payment intended to enable that consumer to pay the debt settlement(s) “targeted] ” for negotiation by respondents, as well as respondents’ fees, over the anticipated duration of that consumer’s participation in the program. Thus, the monthly payments (aside from any amounts earmarked to pay respondents’ fees) are accumulated and used to pay any debt settlements. The amount of the monthly payment is typically set at a minimum of $300 but could be set much higher depending on the consumer’s available income and expenses and the number of credit accounts and the amount of debt that the consumer opts to designate to be settled through respondents’ program.

In exchange for providing such services, respondents charge various fees, including a setup fee, an enrollment fee, a monthly administrative fee (in conjunction with monthly bank fees), and an ultimate settlement fee. The setup fee is a one-time up-front charge of $399. The enrollment fee is equal in amount to three of the monthly payments set for the consumer (thus a minimum of $900 but sometimes a larger amount for those consumers who dedicate a large number and amount of debts to the program). The first three to five monthly payments by the consumer are applied first towards those two initial fees (as indicated, a minimum of $1,299). Only after such payment is any portion of the consumer’s monthly payment deposited into a special bank account set up to fund any debt settlement(s) negotiated by respondents. Of course, it is over the period of payment of such fees and the additional months spent waiting for significant sums to accumulate in the special bank account for payment of creditors that the consumer usually becomes seriously delinquent in paying his or her creditors. Once the special bank account is set up for receipt of the consumer’s [263]*263continued monthly payments, the consumer begins paying respondents an additional monthly administrative fee of $49, plus additional monthly fees (a minimum of around $7 per month) to the bank, Rocky Mountain Bank & Trust, chosen by respondents as the repository of those funds earmarked for settlement. The final fee is denominated the settlement fee and is earned at the time respondents settle each designated account. The settlement fee is invariably set at, 29% of the difference between the AOD on each account at the time the consumer embarked upon the program and the amount of the settlement ultimately negotiated by respondents on that account. All of those fees likewise are deducted from the consumers’ monthly payments and/or the special bank account funded thereby. Where the special bank account does not hold enough funds to pay the ultimately negotiated debt settlement and respondents’ fees, the consumer must remit the shortfall in addition to his or her next scheduled monthly payment.

The Petition and Supporting Proof

The issue in this proceeding is the truth of the representations made by respondents in offering their services to New York State consumers and respondents’ faithfulness in delivering what they have promised to those consumers. The petition states four causes of action against respondents pursuant to Executive Law § 63 (12). The first cause of action alleges that respondents have repeatedly and persistently engaged in conduct amounting to common-law or statutory fraud.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 Misc. 3d 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-nationwide-asset-services-inc-nysupct-2009.