Stratton v. Portfolio Recovery Associates, LLC

706 F. App'x 840
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 23, 2017
Docket16-5468
StatusUnpublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 706 F. App'x 840 (Stratton v. Portfolio Recovery Associates, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stratton v. Portfolio Recovery Associates, LLC, 706 F. App'x 840 (6th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

MERRITT, Circuit Judge.

This is a Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (“Act”) case, now before us for the second time, brought by a plaintiff debtor, Dede Stratton, against a defendant debt collection agency, Portfolio Recovery Associates, LLC (“Portfolio”). The only question before this court is whether Portfolio violated federal law by attempting to collect prejudgment interest of 8% per annum on a credit card debt in a Kentucky state-court collection action. Portfolio has not changed its position in its subsequent pleadings or briefs that it was entitled to collect the original card debt of “$2,630.95, with interest thereon at the rate of 8% per annum from December 19, 2008 until date of judgment with 12% per annum thereaf-' ter until paid, plus court costs.”

This case is here for the second time because both parties failed to allege or disclose the existence of a credit card agreement applying Utah law—a fact disclosed only after we remanded the case to the district court. Stratton asserts that Kentucky law rather than Utah law applies, and that Portfolio violated the federal Act by filing a collection action in Kentucky state court for interest on a credit card debt when it had no right to collect the interest under Kentucky law. To prove that Portfolio violated the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, Stratton must prove that Portfolio was entitled to neither statutory nor contractual interest. Portfolio now argues that the credit card agreement proves Portfolio’s right to collect statutory interest on the debt under Utah law. The district court granted Portfolio’s motion for summary judgment on remand, finding that Utah law applied and that Stratton failed to demonstrate that Portfolio had violated the Act when it filed the collection action. Stratton now appeals again, claiming that the district court improperly relied on a Utah choice-of-law provision in the credit card agreement between Strat-ton and her original creditor, GE Money Bank, and that the court should have applied Kentucky law.

We conclude that the application of the choice-of-law provision is dispositive in this case. Utah law applies and Portfolio did not violate the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. As the assignee of the right to collect Stratton’s credit card debt, Portfolio received the rights and obligations arising from Stratton’s original credit card contract, including the right to invoke the Utah choice-of-law provision. The rights of Portfolio as assignee are subject to all terms of the agreement between the account debtor and the assignor. Accordingly, the Utah choice-of-law provision applies, and under Utah law Portfolio was *842 entitled to file a collection action for prejudgment interest in Kentucky state court without violating the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act.. Since the only question before this court is whether Portfolio violated the Act, we conclude that the district court properly granted summary judgement to Portfolio. The collection action is a matter for Kentucky’s Scott County state court.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

In September 2007, Dede Stratton opened a credit card account with GE Money Bank, F.S.B./Lowes (“GE”). On December 19, 2008, GE “charged off’ the account, declaring to the credit bureaus that it had given up trying to collect Strat-ton’s unpaid debt. At the time, Stratton’s debt was $2,630.95, and GE ceased charging interest on it. Before the debt was charged off, the contractual rate of interest on the debt was set in the Credit Card Agreement at 21.99%.

Portfolio, a company primarily engaged in the business of purchasing debt from creditors and collecting those debts, purchased Stratton’s $2,630.95 credit card debt from GE on January 4, 2010. More than two years later on January 20, 2012, Portfolio filed a collection action in Kentucky to collect the debt from Stratton. Importantly, Portfolio alleged in the collection action complaint that Stratton owed $2,630.95 with interest “at the rate of 8% per annum from December 19, 2008 until date of judgment with 12% per annum thereafter until paid, plus court. costs.” (emphasis added). 1 Kentucky sets the legal statutory rate of interest on loans at 8%. Ky. Rev. Stat. § 360.010(1). Stratton then sued Portfolio in federal court under the Fair Debt Collections Practice Act. Strat-ton argued that since GE had previously “waived” its right to collect interest, Portfolio, as GE’s assignee, did not inherit a right to collect any interest. She asserted that Portfolio’s collection action violated the Fair Debt Collections Practice Act by: (1) pursuing a collection action that was not “expressly authorized by the agreement creating the debt or permitted by law” in violation of 15 U.S.C. § 1692(f)(1), (2) falsely representing the character of the debt under 15 U.S.C. § 1692(e)(2)(A), and (3) illegally “threatening]” Stratton with the state court action under 15 U.S.C. § 1692(e)(5),

Portfolio filed a 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss Stratton’s claim, and the district court granted the dismissal. But this court reversed, holding that Stratton had alleged a plausible claim for relief. See Stratton v. Portfolio Recovery Assocs., LLC, 770 F.3d 443, 451 (6th Cir. 2014). The decision held that under Kentucky law, prejudgment statutory interest rates are waived where the parties are bound to a contractual interest rate, and that GE and Stratton had a binding contractual rate. See id. at 447. When GE allegedly waived the contractual interest rate, it could not revive a right to collect statutory interest. 2 See id. at 447- *843 48. Consequently, under Kentucky law GE’s assignee, Portfolio, also had no right to statutory interest. See id. at 448. Since under Kentucky law Portfolio had illegally attempted to collect the interest, we found that Stratton had plausibly alleged that Portfolio had violated the Pair Debt Collection Practices Act. See id. at 452.

However, when the Sixth Circuit remanded the case to the district court we noted that, “[i]t may be that the discovery process could reveal some contractual provision that entitles [Portfolio] to collect some sort of interest.” Id. at 448. The case is before this court again because Portfolio has found such a provision. During discovery on remand, Portfolio obtained the original Credit Card Agreement between GE and Stratton and amended its Answer to Stratton’s complaint to include the Agreement. Portfolio claimed that a Utah choice-of-law provision in the Agreement changes the outcome of the case in its favor. Portfolio distinguished the Utah language from the language in the Kentucky code, claiming that the Utah language allows a creditor (or debt collector) to collect statutory interest even if the right to collect contractual interest is established and then waived. See U.C.A.

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Bluebook (online)
706 F. App'x 840, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stratton-v-portfolio-recovery-associates-llc-ca6-2017.