Star Bank, N.A. v. Stearns (In Re Stearns)

241 B.R. 611, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 1675, 35 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 69
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedNovember 26, 1999
Docket19-30652
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 241 B.R. 611 (Star Bank, N.A. v. Stearns (In Re Stearns)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Star Bank, N.A. v. Stearns (In Re Stearns), 241 B.R. 611, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 1675, 35 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 69 (Minn. 1999).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT, CONCLUSIONS OF LAW, AND ORDER FOR JUDGMENT

GREGORY F. KISHEL, Bankruptcy Judge.

This adversary proceeding for determination of dischargeability of debt came on before the Court for trial. The Plaintiff appeared by its attorney, Philip R. Schenkenberg. The Defendant appeared personally and by her attorney, John F. Wagner. Upon the evidence adduced at the trial and the memoranda and arguments of counsel, the Court makes the following:

FINDINGS OF FACT

The Parties.

The Plaintiff is a banking institution, headquartered in Cincinnati, Ohio. It provides consumer credit through revolving charge accounts under the “VISA” system.

The Defendant is a resident of Apple Valley, Minnesota. She obtained a VISA account from the Plaintiff in February, 1996. When the Defendant filed for bankruptcy relief under Chapter 7 on December 7, 1997, the outstanding balance owing to the Plaintiff on the account was $7,854.08. The Defendant duly scheduled the Plaintiff as a creditor on the papers for her bankruptcy case.

The Events.

The parties’ relationship as creditor and debtor had its origins in a mass solicitation by the Plaintiff. The Plaintiff first obtained the Defendant’s name, among those of other potential VISA card customers, *615 from the TRW credit reporting system. The Plaintiff ordered a first list from TRW as part of an effort to cultivate its charge card lending portfolio; it specified its qualifications for creditworthiness among the sorts of data that TRW collects from numerous sources, with particular reference to past usage of consumer credit and current indebtedness. After obtaining this larger list from TRW, the Plaintiff used a different vendor of credit analysis services to select the best payment risks from the TRW list, in a number equal to the size of the solicitational mailing that it planned to make. 1

After obtaining the Defendant’s name through this process, the Plaintiff mailed a solicitation for a “Pre-Approved Star Bank VISA Gold card” to her in early January, 1996. The mailing included a form “acceptance certificate” under which the recipient could signal a willingness to open a VISA account. The “certificate” included a space with blanks for completion by the recipient, 3 x 3.5 inches in size. The blanks were to be completed with the prospective customer’s social security number; date of birth; length of time at current residence; monthly housing payment; home and business telephone numbers; current employer, duration of employment, and title or position; and gross annual household income. The form requested no other financial information from the recipient, and only a modicum of such information for any person who was to be a co-debtor on the account.

The Defendant completed the form. She stated her length of time at her current address as one year; her monthly housing payment as $400.00; her position as “Dispatcher,” the duration of that employment as one and one-half years, and her employer as “City of Northfield,” and her gross annual household income as $33,-000.00. These were accurate reflections of her main employment and gross income at the time; she was earning a gross annual salary of $30,000.00 to $34,000.00 from employment as a police dispatcher with the City of Northfield, Minnesota, and was also making approximately $3,000.00 per year from a second job with A+ Driving School.

The Defendant returned the form to the Plaintiff. At that time she had “two or three” other credit card accounts open, on which she was maintaining very small monthly balances. She was generally current on her personal debt obligations at the time, and was having approximately $150.00 per month withheld from her wages for deposit into a savings account at a credit union.

After the Plaintiff received the “acceptance certificate,” its employee input the data on its computer system, and obtained an updated, electronically-transmitted individual report on the Defendant’s credit history from TRW. After the inputting employee checked the updated report for “drastic changes,” and put them into the Plaintiffs computer system, an analyst reviewed the results and determined the Defendant’s creditworthiness.

Throughout this process, the Plaintiff and its employees relied on the information provided by TRW-a summary of data compiled from reports made by the Defendant’s past creditors to TRW, apparently on a periodic basis. The Plaintiffs assistant vice-president, James Deller, testified that the Plaintiffs staff believes that the Plaintiff can receive “95 to 99 percent of the information” they need for individual credit evaluation from TRW’s reports.

TRW assigns an “MDS score” of creditworthiness 2 to the subjects of its reports. At the time of the Plaintiffs request in late January, 1996, TRW gave the Defendant a value of 339. Deller testified that this was “an excellent score” per the Plaintiffs criteria. The report showed that the Defendant had maintained credit card accounts *616 since 1988; that she had made payment per their terms; and that some of her card accounts were not currently active. After all this information was inputted, the programs on the Plaintiffs computer systems reformatted the collected data and displayed it to enable a final evaluation of the Defendant’s application. At the time, the Plaintiff, through its analysts, relied solely on this final display in passing on initial applications for credit card accounts.

Overall, Deller opined at trial, the results of the Defendant’s application process showed her to be “an excellent risk” for the issuance of a VISA card. The Plaintiff’s analyst apparently had been of like opinion, because he or she elected to have the Plaintiff issue a card to the Defendant. The analyst then used the formulas set forth in a “Credit Card Matrix” to calculate the dollar-limit of charging privileges that the Defendant was to have, by factoring in the ratio of her preexisting debt to her income. Though the “matrix” contained a “New Factor” multiple to apply to gross income that would have resulted in a lower credit limit for the Defendant, the analyst used the matrix’s “Old Factor” because the Plaintiffs staff had not implemented the new one throughout its system. Applying the old factor, the analyst determined that the Defendant would be offered an account limit of $5,900.00. The analyst forwent a verification of the Defendant’s income and income source, in light of her “extremely strong” credit history as reported by TRW. It was, however, “normal” to do such a verification for a credit limit of the level indicated by the application of the matrix.

The Plaintiff, then, issued a VISA card with a $5,900.00 charge limit to the Defendant. It also sent her a copy of a document entitled “Star Bank Credit Card Account Agreement.” In pertinent part, this • standard printed form provides:

Purchases and Cash Advances. You can use the Card for Purchases and Cash Advances.... You will owe us for these amounts plus Finance Charge and Other Charges, if any, all payable in United States Dollars.
Monthly Statement.... You must pay us ...

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
241 B.R. 611, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 1675, 35 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/star-bank-na-v-stearns-in-re-stearns-mnb-1999.