Pioneer Military Lending, Inc., Appellee/cross-Appellant v. Earl L. Manning, Commissioner, Division of Finance, Appellant/cross-Appellee

2 F.3d 280
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 9, 1993
Docket92-2671, 92-2672
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 2 F.3d 280 (Pioneer Military Lending, Inc., Appellee/cross-Appellant v. Earl L. Manning, Commissioner, Division of Finance, Appellant/cross-Appellee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pioneer Military Lending, Inc., Appellee/cross-Appellant v. Earl L. Manning, Commissioner, Division of Finance, Appellant/cross-Appellee, 2 F.3d 280 (8th Cir. 1993).

Opinion

DIANA E. MURPHY, District Judge.

This case involves the attempt by the Missouri Commissioner of Finance, Earl L. Manning, to impose certain laws for small loan companies upon Pioneer Military Lending, Inc. (Pioneer), a Nebraska corporation. The district court ruled that application of the Missouri regulatory scheme to Pioneer would place an undue burden on interstate commerce in violation of the Constitution, and the Commissioner appealed. Pioneer in turn *281 appeals from that part of the judgment which dismissed its claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. 1

I.

The district court based its findings on a lengthy joint stipulation of facts and a one day trial at which four witnesses testified.

Pioneer is a Nebraska corporation whose business entirely consists of making loans to military personnel. It conducts business throughout the United States, some of it by mail or telephone, and some of it through full-service or satellite offices. It has an agency agreement with Dick Jones of Woods-Jones Associates to operate a satellite office in Rolla, Missouri. The Woods-Jones office assists Pioneer in making expedited loans through Pioneer’s “Redi-Loan” program. Pioneer also operates this program in Nebraska and Kansas and plans to expand it to the other 45 states with military installations.

Pioneer makes expedited loans to military personnel stationed in Missouri at Fort Leonard Wood who are not state residents. The Woods-Jones office receives calls from potential borrowers and completes loan applications. It obtains copies of a potential borrower’s military identification and leave and earning statements, and transmits these documents via facsimile to Pioneer’s office in Bellevue, Nebraska.

If Pioneer approves a loan, it sends copies of promissory notes, security agreements, and checks from Nebraska to the Woods-Jones office by Airborne Express. The Woods-Jones office informs the applicant of the decision, and arranges for the applicant to come to the office to sign the notes and pick up the check. The documents are then sent back to Pioneer.

. Borrowers, who are frequently transferred to another state before fulfilling their loan obligations, repay Pioneer by one of three methods. Approximately 60% of the Fort Leonard Wood borrowers use the Military Allotment method, by which the military deducts the repayment sum from the borrower’s paycheck. The funds are transferred to Citizen’s Fidelity Bank of Elizabethtown, Kentucky, which in turn transfers the payments to Pioneer upon receiving authorization from the borrower. Another 30% of the Fort Leonard Wood borrowers use the Easy Funds Transfer method, by which the borrower authorizes Pioneer to initiate a debit against a preauthorized bank account. The remaining borrowers repay by mail, using a monthly coupon system.

Pioneer keeps the promissory notes, loan documents, and loan records in its Bellevue, Nebraska office at 1605 Galvin Road. These records include information about the amount of each loan, its term, finance charges, additional points charged, origination fees, other loan fees, the annual percentage rate, and the type of collateral.

Pioneer maintains its loan records in compliance with Nebraska law. The Nebraska Department of Banking and Finance has the right, under Nebraska law, to review Pioneer’s loan records, including loans to military personnel who were stationed in Missouri when the loan was made. The Nebraska Department of Banking and Finance has exercised this right by auditing Pioneer on May 7, 1990, and again on January 16, 1991.

Nebraska regulations on the interest rates and fees allowable differ in a number of respects from the Missouri regulations. The stipulation of the parties indicates that loans made at the maximum rate and fees permitted under Nebraska law would have higher annual percentage rates, monthly payments, and finance charges than under the maximum permitted by Missouri law. On the other hand, late charges are permitted under Missouri law but not by Nebraska.

The Commissioner is responsible for licensing and regulating consumer credit lenders in the state of Missouri. On July 3,1990, he instructed Pioneer to cease and desist making loans in the state unless it complied with state law regarding registration, records, and fees. The Commissioner demanded compliance in connection with the loans *282 made through the Redi-Loan program. He did not seek to enforce the regulations with regard to any loans made solely through the mails, which he concedes are not loans made in Missouri.

Compliance with Missouri law would involve Pioneer’s obtaining a certificate of registration, maintaining records in compliance with the law and regulations, and subjecting its operation to examination by the Commissioner. See Mo.Rev.Stat. §§ 367.100 et seq. In addition, Missouri law restricts interest rates and fees chargeable to the borrower. See Mo.Rev.Stat. §§ 408.100 et seq. Lenders with certificates of registration are subject to examination by the Commissioner, obligated to keep business books and records in the state, and bound by restrictions on interest rates and fees. Joint Stipulation ¶ 23, App. at 39.

The district court found that to comply with Missouri law, Pioneer would have to establish a full-service office in the state. It would cost $89,100 initially to start up a full-service operation and approximately $123,000 per year to maintain it. Thus, in the first year Pioneer’s cost for a full service operation would exceed $210,000. Pioneer’s current Missouri office operates at an expense of less than $24,000 per year. The district court found that the volume of Pioneer’s business in Missouri was not large enough to maintain a profitable full-service office.

The Commissioner contended that Pioneer could satisfy the state’s regulations by putting on the payroll one loan officer familiar with Missouri’s requirements and responsible for seeing that these requirements were met. There was testimony, however, that even the addition of a single employee would have the practical effect of closing Pioneer’s operation in Missouri. The district court considered this alternative and found it unfeasible.

There was conflicting evidence about the nature and extent of Pioneer’s competition. The Commissioner brought out evidence which indicated that there is some competition for military loans in Missouri. Other lenders who make loans to personnel at Fort Leonard Wood maintain their records in Missouri and are examined for compliance with Missouri law. Pioneer presented evidence that it is the sole company in Missouri that only lends to military personnel. Pioneer is also the only company, other than used car dealers who provide their own sales financing, that offers loans to personnel in the lowest pay grades. (Tr. at 7). The district court did not make any finding specifically dealing with the extent or effect of Pioneer’s competition in Missouri.

In the district court, the Commissioner clearly identified two interests the state of Missouri has in applying its loan laws to Pioneer. 2

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Bluebook (online)
2 F.3d 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pioneer-military-lending-inc-appelleecross-appellant-v-earl-l-ca8-1993.