William H. Porter, Inc. v. Lue

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedNovember 17, 2023
DocketN23C-07-142 FWW
StatusPublished

This text of William H. Porter, Inc. v. Lue (William H. Porter, Inc. v. Lue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William H. Porter, Inc. v. Lue, (Del. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

WILLIAM H. PORTER, INC., a ) Delaware Corporation d/b/a/ Porter ) Chevrolet, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) C.A. No. N23C-07-142 FWW v. ) ) KIMBERLY LYNN LUE and ) LANI ELIJAH LUE, jointly and severally, ) ) Defendants. )

Submitted: November 14, 2023 Decided: November 17, 2023

Upon Plaintiff William H. Porter, Inc.’s Motion to Assess Legal Fees and Costs, GRANTED.

ORDER

Jeffrey M. Weiner, Esquire, 1332 King Street, Wilmington, DE, 19801, Attorney for Plaintiff William H. Porter, Inc..

Kimberly Lynn Lue and Lani Elijah Lue, 7958 Pines Blvd., Suite 209, Pembroke Pine, FL 33024 and/or 7221 Branch Street, Hollywood, FL 33024, Defendants.

WHARTON, J. This 17th day of November 2023, upon consideration of Plaintiff William H.

Porter, Inc.’s (“Porter”) Motion to Assess Legal Fees and Costs (“Motion”),1 the

response of Defendant Lani Elijah Lue (“Lue”),2 and the record in this case, it

appears to the Court that:

1. On October 10, 2023, the Court granted Porter’s Motion for Judgment

on the Pleadings.3 Porter brought a declaratory judgment action against Lue and

Kimberly Lynn Lue (collectively the “Lues”) on July 19, 2023.4 Porter asked the

Court to declare 15 U.S.C. § 1635 inapplicable to the sale by Porter of a vehicle to

the Lues. Alternatively, Porter asked the Court to declare that there was no violation

by Porter in connection with that sale and assess Defendant Lani Elijah Lue all costs,

expenses and legal fees incurred by Porter in connection his purported exercise of a

right of recission.5

2. The Complaint alleged that the Lues purchased a 2022 Chevrolet

Camaro from Porter on July 28, 2022 for $52,950 based on a deposit of $12,500 with

the Lues independently obtaining financing for the balance which included all

1 Pl.’s Mot. to Assess Legal Fees and Costs, D.I. 14. 2 Def.’s Rebuttal to Mot., D.I. 16. Although Defendant Kimberly Lynn Lue purported to witness documents included in the Rebuttal, she did not sign them in any other capacity. 3 William H. Porter, Inc. v. Lue, 2023 WL 6849000 (Del. Super. Ct. Oct. 10, 2023). 4 Compl., D.I. 1. 5 Id. 2 additional fees from a California credit union.6 In June 2023, Porter received a

number of documents: (1) a purported Right of Recission pursuant to 15 U.S.C. §

1635 executed by Lani Elijah Lue only; (2) a executed copy of the Agreement of

Sale between Porter and the Lues; and (3) two of the five pages of the Loan and

Security Agreements and Disclosure statement the California credit union provided

the Lues, identifying a different residence for them than stated in the Agreement of

Sale with Porter.7 By letter dated June 15, 2023, Porter notified Lani Elijah Lue that

it denied any violation of § 1635 and requested him to withdraw the allegation within

seven business days of his receipt of its letter, otherwise it would file a declaratory

judgment action.8 Lani Elijah Lue failed to withdraw the allegation and Porter

brought this action.9

3. On August 8, 2023, the Lues filed and Answer, asked the Court to

“Take Judicial Notice of Adjudicated Facts, Del. Rule 201,” asserted affirmative

defenses, and counterclaimed.10 The Answer admitted the allegations of each

paragraph of the Complaint with some commentary added to three responses.11

Regarding paragraph 2 which alleged the residences of the Lues, they added, “note

6 Id. at ⁋ 3. 7 Id. at ⁋ 4. 8 Id. at ⁋ 5. 9 Id. at ⁋ 8. 9 Defs.’ Ans., D.I. 3. 11 Id. at 1-2. 3 the commercial KIMBERLY LYNN LUE and LANI ELIJAH LUE Resident is 7221

BRANCH STREET but the natural man and woman beneficiaries domicile in

Broward County and The Peoples of the State of Florida.”12 They corrected the

amount of the deposit alleged in paragraph 3 to $12,150 and alleged that they were

unaware of their right of recission.13 Finally they conditioned their admission that

Lani Elijah Lue did not withdraw his allegation that Porter violated § 1635 as

“pending Subject matter jurisdiction.”14

4. The portion of their Answer captioned “TAKE JUDICIAL NOTICE

OF ADJUDICATED FACTS, DEL., RULE 201” contained two paragraphs. The

first read:

We, :Lani – Elijah Lue the natural man and Kinberly- Lynn: Lue the natural woman, the Settlor/Trust Protector under declaration of the DE LA FLOR DAISY EXPRESS TRUST d/b/a Kimberly Lynn Lue move the court to take judicial notice of section 1-37, Article IV of the Delaware Constitution of 1897 and I declare full acceptance of members of the legislature, and all officers, executive and judicial to carry out their duties as trustees to the trust indenture to the benefit of the beneficiaries, the People. Furthermore, I state that I am a Floridian Native, a national but not a citizen of the United States (Public Law 94-241, section 302) and one of “The People of the State of Florida” and all the prosecutions shall be conducted in the name and by the authority of same. The DE LA FLOR DAISY EXPRESS TRUST is a natural person, does not pass the U.S. Court Test nor the U.S. Control Test, as the

12 Id. at 1. 13 Id. 14 Id. at 2. 4 Sole Trustee is a non-resident alien, and has the authority to control all substantial decisions of the trust. THIS MATTER IN EQUITY SHALL NOT BE REGULATED BY THE ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURES ACT OR ANY OF ITS AGENCY ACTIONS, WHICH ARE TRIAL-LIKE PROCEDURES AND ARE ARBITRARY AND CAPRICIOUS TO THE 1987 DELAWARE CONSTITUTION.15

The second paragraph under this heading asked the Court to take judicial notice of

the Supremacy Clause, Article VI Clauses One and Two of the United States

Constitution.16

5. The Affirmative Defenses section asked the Court to “TAKE

EQUITABLE NOTICE, of Title 18, Part I, Chapter 13, § 242” prohibiting the

deprivation under color of law of any persons “rights, privileges and immunities

secured or protected by the Constitution or laws of the United States.” 17 They

requested the assistance of the Attorney General of Delaware, a jury trial, and that

“the courts to provide ‘personal jurisdiction.’”18

6. Their counterclaims asserted that: (1) “We Kimberly- Lynn Lue: and:

Lani – Elijah: Lue participated in a consumer credit transaction and not a loan;” (2)

Porter requested a downpayment of “$12,150.00 to secure the vehicle” which was

15 Id. 16 Id. 17 Id. 18 Id. at 3. 5 “false and deceptive information to a transaction to which we are the creditors;” (3)

Porter never disclosed that they had a right of recission, contractually agreed to

liquidated damages in the amount of $0, and added extra taxes and fees while failing

to disclose all of Lani Elijah Lue’s rights as a consumer; and (4) Porter failed to

“disclose and provide all information clearly to me/us as the consumers according

to the several U.S. codes and U.C.C. Codes.”19 They – “the defendant :Lani – Elijah:

Lue the natural man and :Kimberly – Lynn :Lue the natural woman, the Settlor/Trust

Protector under declaration of the DE LA FLOR DAISY EXPRESS TRUST d/b/a

Kimberly Lynn Lue” - request relief in the amount of $15,000 for Porter’s “deceptive

practices.”20 The document was signed “:Kim-Lynn: Lue.”21

7. Porter moved for judgment on the pleadings on both the Complaint and

Counterclaims on September 1, 2023.22 After laying out the facts as set out in the

Complaint, Porter asserted that it was entitled to a default judgment because neither

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Bluebook (online)
William H. Porter, Inc. v. Lue, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-h-porter-inc-v-lue-delsuperct-2023.