Shannon Lee Duncan v. Ford Motor Credit Company, LLC, Bruce Shores, and Repossessors, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 17, 2021
Docket19-1821
StatusPublished

This text of Shannon Lee Duncan v. Ford Motor Credit Company, LLC, Bruce Shores, and Repossessors, Inc. (Shannon Lee Duncan v. Ford Motor Credit Company, LLC, Bruce Shores, and Repossessors, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shannon Lee Duncan v. Ford Motor Credit Company, LLC, Bruce Shores, and Repossessors, Inc., (iowactapp 2021).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 19-1821 Filed February 17, 2021

SHANNON LEE DUNCAN, Plaintiff-Appellant,

vs.

FORD MOTOR CREDIT COMPANY, LLC, BRUCE SHORES, and REPOSSESSORS, INC, Defendants-Appellees. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Winneshiek County, Richard D.

Stochl, Judge.

A car buyer appeals a summary judgment barring her from seeking punitive

damages in her action for civil extortion against the creditor and repossessor.

REVERSED AND REMANDED.

Dennis G. Larson of Larson Law Office, Decorah, and Jeremy Thompson,

Decorah, for appellant.

Angela E. Dralle of Dorsey & Whitney LLP, Des Moines, for appellee Ford

Motor Credit Co.

Jace T. Bisgard and Teresa K. Baumann of Shuttleworth & Ingersoll, PLC,

Cedar Rapids, for appellees Repossessors, Inc. and Bruce Shores.

Considered by Doyle, P.J., and Tabor and Ahlers, JJ. 2

TABOR, Judge.

Shannon Duncan’s civil-extortion action filed in 2015 has yet to go to trial.

This appeal marks the second time Duncan has challenged the grant of summary

judgment for her lender and its agents. In the first appeal we reversed the district

court’s mistaken application of a two-year statute of limitations. See Duncan v.

Ford Motor Credit, No. 17-1122, 2018 WL 3060265, at *3–4 (Iowa Ct. App. June

20, 2018). Now Duncan contests the court’s exclusion of her claim for punitive

damages. Because a jury could find the defendants engaged in intentional acts of

an unreasonable character, we reverse the partial summary judgment and remand

for further proceedings.

I. Facts and Prior Proceedings

Duncan bought a new Ford Edge in 2008 from the Decorah Auto Center.

She financed the vehicle through Ford Motor Credit Company (Ford) and made

installment payments through the summer of 2010. That fall, she received a notice

from Ford that she owed $1871 by November 19. Duncan asserts she timely paid

that amount. Still, on the due date, Bruce Shores of Repossessors, Inc.1 showed

up at her workplace and took possession of the Edge.

Duncan, through her attorney, demanded Ford and Shores return the

vehicle. They did not. In February 2011, Ford sent a letter to Duncan’s attorney,

suggesting they would not return the vehicle unless Duncan signed a release

absolving them of liability for any wrongdoing. In a letter sent March 8, Duncan’s

attorney rejected that idea. Two weeks later, Ford responded, “Arrangements

1 We will use the name Shores to refer collectively to him and his employer. 3

have been made for a waiver of the requirement that Ms. Duncan or an authorized

representative sign a release when the vehicle is redelivered.” Meanwhile, Duncan

paid the loan’s remaining balance of $22,196.

But not until June 2011 did Ford and Shores reveal the location of the Edge.

When Duncan traveled to Minnesota to retrieve the vehicle, Shores told her

personally that she would have to execute a liability release before he would turn

over the keys. Eventually, she recovered the vehicle without signing a release. It

was then that she discovered personal property missing from the vehicle. Plus,

the Edge was damaged, according to Duncan, and she incurred expenses in

repairing it.

More than four years later, in December 2015, Duncan sued Ford and

Shores, claiming conversion and civil extortion. The defendants filed motions for

partial summary judgment, alleging the statute of limitations barred Duncan’s

claims.2 The district court found Duncan’s extortion action arose in June 2011,

when she recovered her vehicle. So her petition, filed four and a half years later,

was outside the two-year statute of limitations in Iowa Code section 614.1(2)

(2015). The court granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment on the

civil extortion claim.

In the first appeal, we affirmed the dismissal of the conversion count but

reversed and remanded on the extortion claim. See Duncan, 2018 WL 3060265,

at *4. We held “the district court improperly granted summary judgment on the

2 The district court found the conversion occurred on November 19, 2010, when Shores took the vehicle from Duncan. So the five-year statute of limitations under Iowa Code section 614.1(4) ran on November 19, 2015, the month before Duncan sued. The court granted partial summary judgment on the conversion claim. 4

issue of civil extortion on the ground the claim was barred by the statute of

limitations.” Id. (holding five-year statute of limitations in section 614.1(4) should

apply). We also found the court properly concluded “Duncan’s petition adequately

raised a claim of civil extortion.” Id.3

Once the case returned to the district court, Ford again moved for summary

judgment on the civil extortion claim alleging no genuine issue of material fact

existed. Shores joined the motion. Before Duncan filed her resistance, Ford

moved for partial summary judgment on her claim for punitive damages. Shores

again joined. In early September 2019, the court denied the motion for summary

judgment on the civil extortion claim. The court read our earlier decision as

precluding the grant of summary judgment:

Defendants’ current motion essentially asks this court to reconsider the prior finding that the claim of civil extortion has been properly brought by Duncan. She alleges defendants committed civil extortion when they demanded a release of liability in exchange for the return of her car. Based on the prior findings of the court of appeals this court finds whether the demand for a release constitutes extortion under Iowa law is a fact issue for the jury to determine.

Ford moved to reconsider that ruling and requested a separate ruling on its motion

for partial summary judgment on punitive damages. The court granted the

defendants’ motion on punitive damages but reaffirmed its denial of summary

judgment on the extortion claim.

Meanwhile, Duncan asked to “vacate” the partial summary judgment on

punitive damages. The court treated the request as a motion to reconsider under

3 We reached this issue in response to an argument from appellees Ford and Shores that the district court’s dismissal of the civil extortion claim could be affirmed on the separate basis that it failed as a matter of law. 5

Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.904(2) and denied it. Duncan challenged these

rulings by applying for interlocutory appeal to the Iowa Supreme Court. Ford

responded by filing an “application for interlocutory cross appeal.” As was his

practice, Shores joined Ford’s application. They urged

it is important for this Court to grant [our] Application for Interlocutory Cross-Appeal and that the Order denying summary judgment on Duncan’s civil extortion claim be reviewed at this time. The District Court’s misinterpretation of the prior Court of Appeals decision in this case must be corrected in order to protect [our] substantial rights, to avoid the additional appealable decisions that will likely result therefrom that will materially affect the final decision in this matter, and to better serve the interests of justice.

Noting their application was filed more than thirty days after the ruling

denying summary judgment on the extortion claim, the supreme court asked Ford

and Shores for jurisdictional statements explaining whether their request for review

was timely.

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Shannon Lee Duncan v. Ford Motor Credit Company, LLC, Bruce Shores, and Repossessors, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shannon-lee-duncan-v-ford-motor-credit-company-llc-bruce-shores-and-iowactapp-2021.