Consumer Financial Protection Bureau v. Nationwide Biweekly Administration, Inc. et al
Filing
412
ORDER SUPPLEMENTING, MODIFYING, AND REAFFIRMING PRIOR FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW FOLLOWING REMAND, AND REAFFIRMING JUDGMENT (and denying 407 ). (rslc1, COURT STAFF) (Filed on 8/28/2024)
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
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NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
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CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION
BUREAU,
Plaintiff,
United States District Court
Northern District of California
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Case No. 15-cv-02106-RS
v.
NATIONWIDE BIWEEKLY
ADMINISTRATION, INC., et al.,
Defendants.
ORDER SUPPLEMENTING,
MODIFYING, AND REAFFIRMING
PRIOR FINDINGS OF FACT AND
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
FOLLOWING REMAND, AND
REAFFIRMING JUDGMENT
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I. INTRODUCTION
This is a civil enforcement action brought by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
(CFPB) against entities and an individual whom the CFPB contends misled consumers.
Defendants sold a financial services product that purportedly allowed consumers to save
significant sums they would otherwise pay in mortgage interest. CFPB contended that few, if any,
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consumers would come out ahead financially, given the effect of the fees defendants charged.
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CFPB challenged several aspects of defendants’ marketing as allegedly misleading.
After a seven-day bench trial, the Court entered an Opinion and Order comprising the
findings of fact and conclusions of law required by Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a). Then,
following consideration of briefing as to the appropriate form of a judgment and a motion for
reconsideration, a monetary judgment was entered against defendants Nationwide Biweekly
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Administration, Inc., its wholly owned subsidiary Loan Payment Administration (“LPA”)1, and
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Daniel Lipsky, the founder, president, sole officer, and sole owner of Nationwide. The joint and
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several judgment was in the amount of $7,930,000, representing a civil penalty under 12 U.S.C. §
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5565(c)(1). The judgment also included a permanent injunction against various specified
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marketing practices.
Proceedings on appeal were protracted as the result of the fact that other cases addressing
United States District Court
Northern District of California
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potentially dispositive issues were percolating through the appellate process. Ultimately, the Ninth
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Circuit issued a memorandum decision in this action stating: “we vacate the district court’s order
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and remand, allowing it to reassess the case under the changed legal landscape since its initial
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order and opinion.” Although the Ninth Circuit expressly identified several potentially relevant
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questions and precedents, it also emphasized that it did not intend to “limit the issues for
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consideration on remand.” The court stated:
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In addition to these questions, the parties may raise, and the district
court may consider, other issues raised on appeal. Our framing of
the questions above should not be taken to provide our view of their
merits. The parties and the district court are free to reframe the
questions as they wish.
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Following that remand, the parties were invited to report what further proceedings they
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believed should take place in light of the Ninth Circuit’s mandate. See Dkt. No. 382. The parties
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jointly responded that they “agree that no issues besides those explicitly identified by the Ninth
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Circuit in its January 27, 2023 Memorandum Disposition (Dkt. 380) should be briefed and decided
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by the Court.” The parties labeled those three questions as: (1) the Seila Law issue identified in the
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Memorandum Disposition at pages 3-4, (2) the restitution issue identified in the Memorandum
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Disposition at pages 4-5, and (3) the issue of the constitutionality of the CFPB’s funding
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mechanism. Defendants have subsequently withdrawn the third issue, in light of the Supreme
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LPA functioned essentially as a second name under which Nationwide marketed its services.
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15-cv-02106-RS
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Court’s ruling earlier this year in Community Financial Services Association of America v.
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Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, No. 22-448, rejecting the argument that the CFPB’s
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funding mechanism is unconstitutional.
Accordingly, the only issues to be decided are defendants’ challenge to the validity of the
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judgment in light of the “Seila Law issue,” and CFPB’s contention that the judgment should
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include restitution, in addition to the civil penalty previously awarded.2 No party has suggested
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that it would be appropriate to reopen proceedings to take additional evidence on either of these
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issues, or made any request to do so. The decision will therefore be based on the briefing and on
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the evidence admitted at trial.3
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II. DISCUSSION
United States District Court
Northern District of California
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A. Seila Law
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In post-trial briefing prior to the appeal, defendants raised an argument that the CFPB’s
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institution of this action was “void” because the “CFPB is an unconstitutional entity.” Dkt. No.
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295 at p. 15. Defendants cursorily advanced both the contention that the CFPB director was
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impermissibly insulated from removal without cause, and that the funding structure of the agency
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was constitutionally flawed. Id. The prior Opinion and Order rejected those underdeveloped
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arguments, given the state of then-existing precedent. See Dkt. No. 315, p. 17 n. 23. As noted
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above, the Supreme Court has since rejected the claim that the CFPB’s funding mechanism is
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improper.
During the pendency of the cross-appeals in this action, however, the Supreme
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Also under submission is defendants’ motion for release of $409,685.99 held in escrow pursuant
to an agreement between the parties reached during the pendency of the appeal. That motion is
addressed in section C of the discussion below.
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Plaintiff expressly states it does not request a hearing, and defendants do not state otherwise. The
matter is suitable for disposition without oral argument, and no hearing will be set.
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CASE NO.
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Court held the CFPB Director’s for-cause removal protection violated the Constitution. See Seila
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Law LLC v. CFPB, 140 S. Ct. 2183, 2211 (2020) (“Seila Law I”). The Court severed the offending
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statutory provisions, and remanded to the Ninth Circuit to consider whether the CFPB’s pursuit of
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the civil investigative demand in dispute in that proceeding had subsequently been validly ratified
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by an acting director and/or by a director who acknowledged she served at-will. Id.
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Kraninger, expressly ratified the agency’s prior decision to file this lawsuit, and to pursue its
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cross-appeal. The Ninth Circuit held argument on the cross-appeals in this action, but following
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that argument, it vacated submission of the matter pending resolution of the Seila Law remand.
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United States District Court
Northern District of California
Shortly after Seila Law I issued, the CFPB director in office at the time, Kathleen L.
The Circuit subsequently held in Seila Law II, 997 F.3d 837 (9th Cir. 2021) that the
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CFPB’s actions in that matter had been validly ratified. Id. at 846. A decision on the appeals in
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this action, however, was further held pending the outcome of another CFPB case, which
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ultimately resulted in a published opinion, CFPB v. CashCall, Inc., 35 F.4th 734 (9th Cir. 2022).
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Additionally, while the cross-appeals were being held in abeyance, the Supreme Court decided
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Collins v. Yellen, 141 S. Ct. 1761 (2021), which addressed remedies for constitutional separation-
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of-powers violations.
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In remanding this case, the Circuit stated:
Nationwide believes that this case is distinguishable from Seila Law
II and CashCall and that it is entitled to dismissal for the CFPB
Director’s unconstitutional for-cause removal provision. Nationwide
argues that Director Kraninger’s ratification was untimely and
therefore invalid and that it can show “actual” or “compensable
harm” entitling it to relief. See CashCall, 35 F.4th at 742–43;
Collins, 141 S. Ct. at 1788–89. On remand, the district court should
determine the correct application of Seila Law II, CashCall, and
Collins, in deciding these issues. The inquiries into the validity of
the CFPB’s ratification and Nationwide’s showing of harm “turn[]
on case-specific factual and legal questions” that should be resolved
in the first instance by the district court. Seila Law I, 140 S. Ct. at
2208.
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In their post-remand briefing, defendants argue ratification is no longer an issue, in light of
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Collins and CashCall. In CashCall, the Ninth Circuit held that it did not need to decide the
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validity of ratification, because the Supreme Court made clear in Collins “that despite the
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unconstitutional limitation on the President’s authority to remove the Bureau’s Director, the
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Director’s actions were valid when they were taken.” CashCall, 35 F.4th at 742. While the CFPB
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argues Director Kraninger’s ratification provides an additional reason to reject defendants’ claim
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that they are entitled to a remedy for the constitutional infirmity in the statute as drafted, it
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acknowledges there is no need to reach the ratification issue. See Dkt. No. 401, ECF p. 16
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United States District Court
Northern District of California
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With ratification put to the side, defendants insist they have shown they are entitled to
dismissal here under the following observations of the CashCall court:
That is not to say that the unlawfulness of a removal provision can
never be a reason to regard an agency’s action as void. See Collins,
141 S. Ct. at 1788. But at a minimum, the “party challenging an
agency’s past actions must . . . show how the unconstitutional
removal provision actually harmed the party.” Kaufmann v.
Kijakazi, 32 F.4th 843, 849 (9th Cir. 2022); see also Collins, 141 S.
Ct. at 1788–89.
35 F.4th at 742–43.
Defendants’ effort to show they suffered actual harm as a result of the unconstitutional
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removal provision is perhaps hobbled by the fact that they first raised the constitutional argument
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in post-trial briefing. Their claim that they were harmed by the provision was not pleaded or the
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subject of discovery during the litigation. No evidence or argument specifically on the point was
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presented at trial.
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Defendants have instead cobbled together an argument that “a culture of recklessness”
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existed at CFPB, citing to various arguments and some evidence they presented at trial in
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connection with their defense on the merits and/or their counterclaims. Defendants’ presentation,
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however, falls woefully short of what would be necessary to support a factual finding that they
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suffered cognizable harm as a consequence of the provision purporting to insulate the CFPB
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director from removal at will by the President. Even assuming there was merit to one or more of
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defendants’ criticisms of how the CFPB operated, it is sheer speculation that this litigation would
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not have been pursued, or that it would have been pursued in a different manner, had the CFPB
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directors known from the outset that the removal provision was unconstitutional. Indeed, while the
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validity of ratification may no longer be a critical issue, the fact that this litigation has continued to
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be pursued vigorously by the CFPB under multiple directors who were fully aware that they were
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not insulated from removal at the discretion of the President, supports a conclusion to the contrary.
United States District Court
Northern District of California
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CashCall offered that “a party might demonstrate harm by showing that the challenged
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action was taken by a Director whom the President wished to remove but could not because of the
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statute.” 35 F.4th at 743. Defendants have not even argued that occurred here. While CashCall did
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not suggest that was the only way to show harm, defendants’ failure to make any comparable
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showing dooms their claim that they are entitled to dismissal, or any other remedy based on the
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unconstitutional removal provision.
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B. Restitution
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The Ninth Circuit described the restitution issue as follows:
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On cross-appeal, the CFPB urges this court to reverse the district
court’s denial of restitution, which the CFPB maintains is mandatory
and should be ordered in the amount of $73,955,169. We remand to
allow the district court to consider the effect, if any, of CashCall and
Liu v. SEC, 140 S. Ct. 1936 (2020) (discussing the bounds of equity
practice), and whether the CFPB waived its claim to legal restitution
by characterizing it only as a form of equitable relief before the
district court. See CashCall, 35 F.4th 734 at 750.
Memorandum Disposition at pages 4-5
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The CFPB is now unambiguously claiming a right to legal restitution, as opposed to
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equitable restitution. The Supreme Court has explained restitution “‘is a legal remedy when
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ordered in a case at law and an equitable remedy . . . when ordered in an equity case,’ and whether
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it is legal or equitable depends on ‘the basis for [the plaintiff’s] claim’ and the nature of the
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underlying remedies sought.” Great-Western Life & Annuity Ins. Co. v. Knudson, 534 U.S. 204,
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213, (2002) (second and third alterations in original) (quoting Reich v. Continental Cas. Co., 33
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F.3d 754, 756 (7th Cir. 1994)). Accordingly, where a plaintiff cannot “assert title or right to
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possession of particular property” but instead has “just grounds for recovering money to pay for
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some benefit the defendant had received from him, the claim is for legal restitution.” Id. Equitable
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restitution, applies “where money or property identified as belonging in good conscience to the
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plaintiff could clearly be traced to particular funds or property in the defendant’s possession.” Id.
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See also CashCall at 750 (citing Great-Western). The Supreme Court acknowledged, however,
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that its cases had “not previously drawn this fine distinction between restitution at law and
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restitution in equity.” Great-Western, 534 U.S. at 214.
United States District Court
Northern District of California
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In post-trial briefing, the CFPB labeled restitution as one form of “appropriate equitable
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relief” that was available. See Dkt. No. 294, ECF p. 28. The Opinion and Order similarly included
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language suggesting CFPB’s claim for restitution was subject to equitable considerations. Because
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the CFPB was never attempting to recover “particular funds or property,” however, its claim
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necessarily was for legal restitution, not equitable restitution. Furthermore, despite the passing
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references to restitution as a form of equitable relief, the CFPB presented no argument that turned
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on any distinction between equitable and legal relief. Indeed, as the district court observed
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following remand in CashCall, “before the Supreme Court’s decision in Liu, there was little or no
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reason to differentiate between the two forms of restitution.” Consumer Fin. Prot. Bureau v.
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CashCall, Inc., , 2023 WL 2009938, at *7 (C.D. Cal. Feb. 10, 2023) (“CashCall II”).
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Under these circumstances, there is no basis to conclude the CFPB waived its claim to
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legal restitution. See CashCall II, 2023 WL 2009938, at *7 (reaching same conclusion where
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CFPB also had previously referred to the restitution it sought as equitable). Although defendants
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apparently argued waiver during the appellate proceedings, they have not pursued that contention
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on remand. Accordingly, the issue is whether legal restitution should be awarded, and any
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statements in the prior Opinion and Order addressing points that would only apply to a claim for
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equitable restitution are no longer relevant.
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Furthermore, because the claim is for legal restitution, the CFPB is correct that the
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principles discussed in Liu and its holding have no direct application here. See CashCall II, 2023
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WL 2009938, at *7 (“Because the Supreme Court's decision in Liu did not purport to limit the
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15-cv-02106-RS
United States District Court
Northern District of California
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scope of legal restitution, the Court need not limit the restitution in this case to net profits.”)
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Defendants do not contend Liu has any impact here except to the extent that it should be seen, in
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defendants’ opinion, as supporting the general principle that “words used by Congress that limit
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the authority of a regulatory agency should be enforced in full measure to protect the rights of
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citizens,” and as an exemplar of how the Supreme Court will act to curb agency overreach.
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Whatever merit that generalized characterization may have, Liu provides no particular guidance on
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the issues in this case.
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The remaining issue identified by the Ninth Circuit’s remand is “the effect, if any, of
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CashCall.” In CashCall, the district court had denied restitution on grounds that the CFPB had not
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shown the defendants “intended to defraud consumers or that consumers did not receive the
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benefit of their bargain.” 35 F.4th 750. While the CashCall court “emphasize[d] at the outset” that
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it was not holding restitution was necessarily appropriate in the case, or deciding what amount, if
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it were warranted,” it did find that intent to defraud was not a relevant consideration. Id. The
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circuit court then remanded for the district court to apply the circuit’s two-step burden-shifting
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framework for calculating restitution. See Consumer Fin. Prot. Bureau v. Gordon, 819 F.3d 1179,
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1195 (9th Cir. 2016)
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Under that framework, at step one the CFPB “bears the burden of proving that the amount
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it seeks in restitution reasonably approximates the defendant’s unjust gains.” Id. (citation omitted).
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If the CFPB makes that threshold showing, then “the burden shifts to the defendant to demonstrate
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that the net revenues figure overstates the defendant’s unjust gains.” Id. Furthermore, a district
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court may use a defendant’s net revenues as a basis for measuring unjust gains. Id.
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The prior Opinion and Order in this case did not reject restitution on the grounds that
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defendants had acted in good faith, so that aspect of CashCall is not directly implicated. As
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mentioned, however, the order included some language regarding equitable considerations. Not
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only should that language be disregarded to the extent it is inapplicable to legal restitution, in light
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of CashCall it cannot support denying restitution, insofar as it may have reflected considerations
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similar to good faith.
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United States District Court
Northern District of California
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Additionally, the prior Opinion and Order reflected a concern that at least some of
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defendants’ customers derived benefits from the services defendants provided. CashCall flatly
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states that restitution may not be denied simply because “consumers received the benefit of their
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bargain.” 35 F.4th at 751. That said, precedent is less clear as to when and how a restitutionary
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award should account for any valuable benefits some consumers may have obtained, to avoid a
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windfall to those individuals. See, e.g. CashCall II, 2023 WL 2009938, at *9 (“the Court
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concludes that the amount of restitution should not include the interest and fees paid by any
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consumer who paid CashCall less than that consumer received in principal . . . . Failing to adjust
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the restitution amount for consumers who paid Defendants less than they received from CashCall
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would result in a windfall to consumers and overcompensate them for their loss.”); F.T.C. v.
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Figgie Int’l, Inc., 994 F.2d 595, 606 (9th Cir. 1993) (“The district court’s order creates no windfall
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for Figgie’s customers . . . . Those consumers who decide, after advertising which corrects the
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deceptions by which Figgie sold them the heat detectors, that nevertheless the heat detectors serve
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their needs, may then make the informed choice to keep their heat detectors instead of returning
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them for refunds.”); F.T.C. v. Amy Travel Serv., Inc., 875 F.2d 564, 572 (7th Cir. 1989),(“The
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magistrate correctly acknowledged the existence of satisfied customers in computing the amount
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of defendants' liability—customers who actually took vacation trips were excluded when the
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magistrate computed the amount of restitution awarded.”)
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Regardless of if, when, and how a restitutionary award should be adjusted to account for
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benefits some consumers may have received notwithstanding deceptive marketing, it appears to be
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an issue on which defendant bears the burden of proof at step two of the framework. See CashCall
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II, 2023 WL 2009938, at *9. Here, defendants offered evidence suggesting many of their
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customers were satisfied with their services, but as CFPB points out, defendants failed to show
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how many, if any, of those supposedly satisfied customers had become aware of the
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misrepresentations in the marketing process. More fundamentally, defendants failed to offer any
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evidence to quantify any benefit its customers received, such that any restitutionary award could
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be adjusted on that basis. Accordingly, any suggestion in the prior order that restitution was
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properly denied because defendants’ customers may have obtained some benefits ceases to be
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applicable.
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it seeks is warranted, for reasons alluded to throughout the prior Opinion and Order, though
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perhaps with insufficient clarity. As the Opinion and Order observed, the CFPB asked for
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restitution in an amount representing the setup fees all of Nationwide’s customers paid in the
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relevant time period, deducting only those refunds previously made. Of the various marketing
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practices and representations found to be false or misleading, however, the only category that
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implicated Nationwide’s entire customer base, were the representations regarding the timing of the
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United States District Court
Northern District of California
All that said, the CFPB still has not met its burden to establish that the restitutionary award
savings customers would realize from utilizing defendants’ program.
Relying in part on the analysis of the CFPB’s expert, and in part on the text of the
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representations, the Opinion and Order found that at least some of the representations were “likely
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to mislead consumers acting reasonably under the circumstances.” That finding was sufficient to
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support defendants’ liability, and therefore the civil penalties and the injunctive relief. The
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Opinion and Order also found, however, that defendants’ approach to calculating savings was
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consistent with the method lenders must use in describing interest in Truth In Lending Act
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disclosures, and that, with some exceptions, the representations could be characterized as literally
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truthful. While not spelled out in the prior decision, the implication was that while some customers
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were likely to be misled for the reasons explained, others likely were not. To establish liability, the
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CFPB was not required to prove that all, or virtually all consumers would be misled by
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defendants’ marketing, and the CFPB did not so prove.
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As the CFPB correctly asserts, under Figgie, a court must presume that consumers relied
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on the defendant’s misrepresentations in paying for a product once a government enforcement
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agency “has proved that the defendant made material misrepresentations, that they were widely
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disseminated, and that consumers purchased the defendant’s product.” Figgie, 994 F.2d at 605-06.
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Presuming reliance on an unambiguously false representations, however, does not answer the
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question of what percentage of consumers were actually mislead by a literally truthful
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representation that only had the capability to mislead.
The CFPB acknowledges that at step one of the Gordon framework, it “bears the burden of
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proving that the amount it seeks in restitution reasonably approximates the defendant’s unjust
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gains.” 819 F.3d at 1195. It has not met that burden here, because it is seeking restitution for its
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entire customer base, when it did not prove that the representations in issue likely misled all or
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virtually all of its customers. All its customers can be presumed to have relied on the
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representations, but they cannot all reasonably be presumed to have been misled by the
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representations, which were largely literally true and consistent with interest calculations in truth-
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in-lending disclosures.
The CFPB has not offered an approach for correlating any restitution award to the numbers
United States District Court
Northern District of California
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of customers who were actually misled. Accordingly, while the liability finding remains
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supported, and the previously imposed civil penalties and injunctive relief are warranted, the
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CFPB has failed to show this is a case where an award of restitution is “appropriate.” See 12
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U.S.C. § 5565(a) (“The court . . . in an action or adjudication proceeding brought under Federal
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consumer financial law, shall have jurisdiction to grant any appropriate legal or equitable relief
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with respect to a violation of Federal consumer financial law . . . .”).4
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C. Motion for release of funds in escrow
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While these matters were pending, defendants filed a motion for “return of property” in
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which they sought to recover approximately $410,000 that was paid to CFPB under an agreement
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among the parties when defendants sold their prior headquarters building in Ohio. Defendants
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represent they were forced to sell the building to pay overdue mortgage and tax obligations. The
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CFPB had filed abstracts of the judgment in this action in several Ohio counties, thereby
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encumbering all of defendants’ real property in those places.
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Defendants renew their argument that CFPB cannot recover both civil penalties and restitution.
Although of no consequence given the denial of restitution, that argument fails for the reasons
stated in the prior Order and Opinion.
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The CFPB’s judgment lien on the former headquarters building was, of course, junior to
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the mortgage and tax liabilities, but defendants could not deliver clear title to the buyer without
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satisfying the CFPB’s lien. After an exchange of various proposals, the parties reached an
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agreement that net sale proceeds would be paid into the CFPB’s Civil Penalty Fund, where they
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could “be held and returned if a final judgment is entered in favor of Mr. Lipsky and Nationwide.”
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The transferred net proceeds would “be considered civil money penalties under the November 8,
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2017 judgment and deposited in the Civil Penalty Fund of the Bureau as required by 12 U.S.C. §
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5497(d).” The agreement further provided, “[i]f Defendants prevail on their appeal of this action
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and any court order makes clear that the Bureau cannot retain the funds as civil money penalties,
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United States District Court
Northern District of California
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the Bureau will comply with the terms of such an order.”
The effect of the present order, of course, is to reaffirm the prior judgment. Any argument
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that defendants were entitled to return of the monies between the issuance of the Ninth Circuit’s
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mandate and this decision fails. First, defendants’ insistence that the mandate itself somehow
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required return of the monies, or compelled this court to order such a return, is belied by the terms
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of the mandate, which was silent as to the status of the judgment, or any funds previously
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collected thereunder. The mandate said nothing other than that the previously entered judgment of
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the court of appeal had taken effect as of the date of the mandate. Dkt. No. 381. The judgment of
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the court of appeal, embodied in its memorandum opinion, was stated as “we vacate the district
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court’s order and remand, allowing it to reassess the case under the changed legal landscape since
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its initial order and opinion.” Dkt. No. 380.
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It is therefore at best unclear as to whether the prior judgment was vacated, as opposed to
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merely the order. Assuming, however, that the better reading is that both the order and the
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judgment were vacated, that would not somehow automatically entitle defendants to return of the
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funds. Had defendants not sold the property and entered into an agreement with the CFPB
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regarding disposition of the sales proceeds, defendants would have had whatever remedies Ohio
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law provides (or does not provide) under circumstances like these to have the lien removed
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pending a new final judgment. Instead, the question is effectively one of contract—the agreement
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the parties reached when defendants wished to sell the property governs when and if defendants
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may become entitled to return of the funds.
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of contract claim brought by defendants against the CFPB regarding the funds. Assuming,
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however, that the court has ancillary jurisdiction because the matter relates to enforcement of the
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judgment, defendants’ contention that they became entitled to return of the funds when the
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mandate issued fails under the clear terms of the parties’ agreement. Despite defendants’ efforts to
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characterize aspects of the remand as favorable to them, at this juncture they cannot be said to
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have “prevailed on appeal” and no final judgment in their favor has been entered.
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United States District Court
Northern District of California
It is not self-evident this court even has jurisdiction to decide what is effectively a breach
Defendants’ further argument that the retention of the funds constitutes an unconstitutional
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taking borders on frivolous. Thus, to the extent not mooted by the outcome in this order,
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defendants’ motion for return of property is denied.
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III. CONCLUSION
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Subject to the modifications and supplemental findings discussed above, the prior Order
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and Opinion is reaffirmed. A separate judgment in the same form as the prior judgment will be
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entered.
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IT IS SO ORDERED.
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Dated: August 28, 2024
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RICHARD SEEBORG
Chief United States District Judge
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CASE NO.
13
15-cv-02106-RS
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