Dallman, Jesse v. Felt & Lukes, LLC et al
Filing
64
ORDER granting 18 Motion for Summary Judgment. Signed by District Judge William M. Conley on 12/17/13. (rep)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN
JESSE DALLMAN,
Plaintiff,
OPINION & ORDER
v.
12-cv-765-wmc
FELT & LUKES, LLC, PARKER
COMMUNITY CREDIT UNION, and
TRAVELERS CASUALTY AND SURETY
COMPANY OF AMERICA,
Defendants.
In this civil action, plaintiff Jesse Dallman contends that defendants Parker
Community Credit Union (“PCCU”) and Felt & Lukes, LLC (“Felt & Lukes”) unlawfully
seized his Ford F350 after he defaulted on his loan payments in violation of the Fair Debt
Collections Practices Act (“FDCPA”), 15 U.S.C. § 1692 et seq., the Wisconsin Consumer
Act (“WCA”), Wis. Stat. § 421 et seq., and other Wisconsin statutes and common law.1
Dallman admits defaulting on the loan, but he contends that the repossession was unlawful
because defendants failed to provide him with proper notice, as required by the WCA,
before repossessing the F350. Before the court now is defendants‟ motion for summary
judgment (dkt. #18).
Because the court finds that the WCA did not apply to the
transaction in question and because Dallman has advanced no other reason why the
repossession was unlawful, it will grant defendants‟ motion.
1
Travelers Casualty and Surety Company of America (“Travelers”) is allegedly Felt &
Lukes‟ insurer. (See Amended Compl. (dkt. #12) ¶ 8.)
UNDISPUTED FACTS2
Plaintiff Dallman, a resident of Afton, Wisconsin, was a member of PCCU and had
been for several years. PCCU, a federally-insured and state-chartered credit union, with its
primary place of business in Janesville, Wisconsin, is in the business of extending credit to
individuals. Felt & Lukes, LLC is a Wisconsin limited liability corporation with its primary
place of business in Hartland, Wisconsin. While the exact nature of Felt & Lukes‟ business
is disputed, the parties agree that it collects debts for third parties, in the course of which it
recovers assets, makes phone calls, sends letters, works with attorneys, reviews bankruptcies
and files claims.
On December 6, 2004, Dallman became a participant in PCCU‟s Loanliner Plan (the
“Plan”), an open-end, multi-featured credit plan which by its terms required him to
complete only one security agreement at the time of his enrollment. Upon completion,
participants could then apply for and obtain multiple loans, called “advances,” without
having to sign a new security agreement each time. Thus, all loans obtained through the
Plan were subject to the terms of the original security agreement. Finance charges differed
between loans, and payments were applied to the specific loan for which they were intended
(as reflected on transaction receipts).
Dallman completed the Loanliner Security Agreement (the “Security Agreement”)
with PCCU on December 6, 2004.
The Security Agreement contains a cross-
collateralization provision for all loans issued under it, meaning that the collateral put forth
for each individual loan would also serve as collateral for all other loans made under the
The following undisputed facts are derived from the parties‟ submissions on summary
judgment when viewed in a light most favorable to Dallman as the non-moving party.
2
2
Plan, both past and future.3 The Agreement also references several specific provisions of the
Wisconsin Consumer Act (“WCA”) and contains no provision excluding any transactions
made pursuant to the agreement from the WCA.
As to actions after default for Wisconsin borrowers, the Agreement advises:
When you are in default and after expiration of any right you
have under the applicable state law to cure your default, we may
require immediate payment of your outstanding loan balance
under the Plan and seek possession of property given as security.
You may voluntarily give the property to us if you choose, or we
may seek to take possession of the property by judicial process.
If we repossess the property, you agree to pay reasonable
expenses incurred in the disposing of the property. If the
property is a motor vehicle, mobile home, trailer, snowmobile,
boat or aircraft, you will also be required to pay any costs
permitted by Section 422.423 of the Wisconsin Statutes.
On January 11, 2011, Dallman obtained two loans through the Plan. In the first
loan (“Advance E”), Dallman borrowed $40,561.50 in order to refinance a 2003 Ford F250
Super Duty XL, purchased in 2007 (the “F250”), which was valued at $35,000. Advance E
was secured by the F250 and all property securing other advances as set forth in the
Security Agreement‟s cross-collateralization provision. Advance E had an APR of 8.5% and
a monthly payment of $756.33. The due date for the first payment on Advance E was
February 26, 2011, forty-five days after it was disbursed.
In the second loan (“Advance F”), Dallman borrowed $14,472.32 to finance a 2003
Ford F350 Super Duty Crew Cab Laria (the “F350”), which was valued at $18,350. That
loan was secured by the F350, as well as all other property securing other advances.
Advance F had an APR of 8.0% and a monthly payment of $353.34. The due date for
3
Specifically, the Security Agreement states that: “Property you give as security will secure
all amounts owed under the Plan and all other loans you have with us now or in the future,
except any loan secured by your principal dwelling.”
3
Dallman‟s first payment on Advance F was February 11, 2011, thirty days after he obtained
it.
Under the Security Agreement, a borrower defaults when he fails to make a payment
when due twice during any twelve-month period. In May 2011, Dallman defaulted on
Advance F. Upon his default, Felt & Lukes began calling Dallman and sending him letters
requesting payment. On June 20, 2011, Felt & Lukes prepared a Notice of Right to Cure
Default on Advance F and sent it via certified and U.S. mail.
The Notice identified
Advance F as the loan in default; described the collateral as the “2003 Ford”; and informed
Dallman that he could cure the default by paying $676.55 by July 5, 2011. When Dallman
cured that default, neither Felt & Lukes nor PCCU took any further action to repossess the
collateral.
Sometime in July 2011, Dallman defaulted on Advance E. The total amount he still
owed on Advance E exceeded the value of either the F250 or the F350 individually. Once
again, Felt & Lukes began calling Dallman and sending him a variety of letters asking for
payment. On July 5, 2011, Felt & Lukes mailed Dallman two envelopes, one by certified
mail and one by U.S. mail. Dallman never received the certified mail envelope, which was
returned to Felt & Lukes on August 1, 2011, unclaimed and unable to be forwarded,
according to the imprint on the envelope.4 When it was returned, a mail sticker obscured
Dallman‟s address. Sharon Riley, a Felt & Lukes employee, does not recall receiving the
certified mail envelope, but a notation on the envelope indicates she handled it. She does
not recall whether she opened it, but she admits she may have. At any rate, Lynn Lukes
4
Dallman testified that he did receive the U.S. mail envelope; he contends that the U.S.
mail envelope contained only a Notice of Right to Cure Default for the F250. He has not
produced the U.S. mail envelope or Notice F250 in this litigation.
4
testified that the envelope was open by the time she retrieved it, sometime after October
2011.
The parties dispute what exactly was contained within the certified mail envelope.
They agree, however, that the certified mail envelope contained at least one Notice of Right
to Cure Default stating that Dallman was in default on a note dated January 11, 2011 in
the amount of $40,561.50 (that is, Advance E) and describing the collateral as a “2003
Ford F250.” This “Notice F250” also contained the name and address of PCCU, the loan
account number and Lukes‟ phone number; a statement that, as a result of Dallman‟s
default, the merchant may have the right to take possession of the collateral without further
notice or court proceeding; a statement that if the customer is not in default or objects to
the merchant‟s right to take possession of the collateral, he must notify the credit union in
writing within fifteen days of the Notice;5 and a statement that the customer may be
required to pay court costs and attorney fees in the event of a court proceeding to collect.
5
The parties appear to dispute whether this provision meets the notice requirements of
Wis. Stat. § 425.205(1g)(a)3, which states that the notice shall contain “[a] statement that
if the customer is not in default or objects to the merchant's right to take possession of the
collateral or goods, the customer may, no later than 15 days after the merchant has given
the notice, demand that the merchant proceed in court by notifying the merchant in writing.”
(Emphasis added.) The court agrees with defendants, however, that Dallman did not plead
enough facts to put them on notice of this potential claim for relief. The Amended
Complaint states:
Upon information and belief, Defendants failed to provide
proper statutory notice prior to repossessing the Second Vehicle
pursuant to § 425.205, Stats. Specifically, Defendants failed to
provide Mr. Dallman with any Notice of Right to Cure Default
for the First Vehicle, which included his Second Vehicle as
collateral available for repossession.
5
At some point, a second Notice of Right to Cure Default was generated for Dallman‟s
F350. This “Notice F350” stated that Dallman was also in default on the note dated Jan.
11, 2011 in the amount of $14,472.32, for failure to make payments due on Advance E and
described the collateral as “2003 Ford F350 cross collateralized.” Dallman claims that the
Notice F350 was not contained within the U.S. mail envelope and that he, therefore, never
received it.
The parties vigorously dispute whether the Notice F350 was placed in the
certified mail envelope along with the Notice F250.
Dallman never cured his default on Advance E, notified PCCU that he was not in
default on Advance E, or objected in writing to PCCU repossessing the trucks collateralizing
Advance E without a court proceeding. On October 27 or 28, 2011, Dallman contacted
Felt & Lukes about voluntarily surrendering the F250. Felt & Lukes hired a repossession
agent in light of the default. On October 28th, Dallman voluntarily surrendered the F250
and the agent repossessed the F350.
In this suit, Dallman alleges that defendants failed to send him the Notice F350,
which under the WCA is required before taking possession of motor vehicle collateral. See
Wis. Stat. § 425.205(1g)(a).
Though notice is presumed upon mailing by certified or
registered mail, see Wis. Stat. § 425.205(1g)(c), he alleges that there is a genuine dispute of
material fact as to whether defendants actually included the Notice F350 in the certified
mail envelope. Defendants argue that (1) neither the FDCPA nor the WCA applies in this
(Amended Compl. (dkt. #12) ¶ 48; see also id. at ¶ 23.) Dallman pleads no other facts
suggesting that the Notice F250 was not in compliance with Wisconsin statutes.
Accordingly, he has failed to state any other claim for deficient notice under that section.
6
case and (2) in the alternative, they are entitled to summary judgment because there is no
genuine dispute as to whether Felt & Lukes sent the Notice F350 via certified mail.
OPINION
I. Legal Standard
Summary judgment is appropriate if the moving party “shows that there is no
genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter
of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). In ruling on a motion for summary judgment, the court views
all facts and draws all inferences in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 255 (1986). “Only disputes over facts that
might affect the outcome of the suit under the governing law will properly preclude
summary judgment.” Id. at 248.
The party moving for summary judgment bears the initial burden of informing the
district court of the basis for its motion. Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323 (1986).
Once the initial burden is met, for an issue on which the nonmoving party will bear the
burden of proof at trial, the nonmoving party must then “go beyond the pleadings” and
“designate „specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial.‟” Id. at 324. It is
not sufficient to “simply show that there is some metaphysical doubt as to the material
facts.” Matsushita Elec. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 586 (1986). Rather, the
nonmoving party must produce “evidence . . . such that a reasonable jury could return a
verdict for the nonmoving party.” Anderson, 477 U.S. at 248. If he fails to do so, “[t]he
moving party is „entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.‟” Id. at 323.
7
II. Applicability of FDCPA
As a preliminary matter, the court must determine whether the FDCPA applies to
this case, since its jurisdiction is premised on a federal question arising from that section.
The parties apparently do not dispute that Felt & Lukes is generally a “debt collector” as
defined in 15 U.S.C. § 1692a(6). (See Defs.‟ Reply (dkt. #60) 11.) Neither do they dispute
that PCCU retained Felt & Lukes in order to collect the funds that Dallman owed on his
loans, nor that Felt & Lukes “took steps” to get Dallman to make payments on his account.
(Resp. PPFOF (dkt. #61) ¶¶ 19-20.)
Rather, defendants argue that the court must
distinguish between its general debt collection activities and the specific action it took to
cause the repossession of the F350 here. According to defendants, the latter is merely the
enforcement of a security interest, rather than a debt collection activity, which falls outside
the scope of the FDCPA.
Defendants are correct that courts generally distinguish between debt collection and
the enforcement of security interests, because the latter is not regulated by the FDCPA. See,
e.g., Jordan v. Kent Recovery Servs., Inc., 731 F. Supp. 652, 656-59 (D. Del. 1990)
(interpreting FDCPA to exclude repossessors from definition of “debt collector”); Rosado v.
Taylor, 324 F. Supp. 2d 917, 924 (N.D. Ind. 2004) (“Security enforcement activities fall
outside the scope of the FDCPA because they aren‟t debt collection practices.”). There is,
however, an exception to this general rule. The section of the FDCPA that defines “debt
collector” states that “[f]or the purpose of section 1692f(6) of this title, such term also
includes any person who uses any instrumentality of interstate commerce or the mails in
any business the principal purpose of which is the enforcement of security interests.” 15
U.S.C. § 1692a(6). Even the cases upon which defendants rely recognize this exception.
8
See Nadalin v. Auto. Recovery Bureau, 169 F.3d 1084, 1085 (7th Cir. 1999) (“The [FDCPA]
regulates the practices of „debt collectors,‟ a term that is defined as excluding repossessors
and other enforcers of security interests, 15 U.S.C. § 1692a(6), except that a repossessor
may not take or threaten to take nonjudicial action to dispossess a person of property if
„there is no present right to possession of the property claimed as collateral through an
enforceable security interest.‟ § 1692f(6)(A).”); Rosado, 324 F. Supp. at 924 n.3 (noting that
“§ 1692f(6) applies to security enforcement actions”); Overton v. Foutty & Foutty, LLP, No.
1:07-cv-0274-DFH-TAB, 2007 WL 2413026, at *4 (S.D. Ind. Aug. 21, 2007) (recognizing
the “specific provision applying § 1692f(6) to enforcers of security interests”).
Section 1692f(6) states in relevant part that a debt collector may not take any
nonjudicial action to effect dispossession of property if “there is no present right to
possession of the property claimed as collateral through an enforceable security interest.”
15 U.S.C. § 1692f(6)(A). Here, Dallman alleges exactly that: defendants did not send him
the notice that state law mandated be sent before they could repossess his motor vehicle
collateral. Consequently, he alleges, they took the F350 without having a “present right to
possession.” Dallman‟s FDCPA claim thus arises under § 1692f(6) and falls squarely within
the exception to the general rule excluding security interest enforcement from the FDCPA.
Accordingly, the court need not resolve the question of whether the repossession constituted
debt collection or security interest enforcement. Either way, the FDCPA would apply.
III. Applicability of WCA
Defendants also argue that the WCA does not apply in this case. Specifically, they
point to § 421.202, which lists transactions that are statutorily excluded from the scope of
9
the WCA. Under that section, “[c]hapters 421 to 427 do not apply to any of the following:
. . . (6) Consumer credit transactions in which the amount financed exceeds $25,000[.]”
Wis. Stat. § 421.202(6). First, defendants argue that Advances E and F were part of the
same consumer credit transaction, and the “amount financed” was, therefore, $55,033.82,
more than double the statutory cut-off of the WCA. In the alternative, defendants point
out that even if the court finds that Advances E and F are separate transactions, Advance E
exceeded $40,000 by itself and still falls outside of the scope of the WCA‟s coverage. And
because the F350 was repossessed in connection with Dallman‟s default on Advance E, he
was not entitled to notice under the WCA.
Dallman makes several arguments in response.
While admitting that the WCA
applies only to transactions where the amount financed is less than $25,000, Dallman
argues that: (1) each advance is a separate transaction for the purposes of the WCA, such
that Advance F does not exceed the statutory cap; (2) defendants “opted in” to the WCA
for Advance E; and (3) even if the court finds Advance E is exempt from the WCA,
defendants were required to comply with the WCA before repossessing the F350, because
the F350 was cross-collateralized pursuant to Advance F, which is subject to the WCA.
The broader question of whether the two advances constituted a single transaction or
multiple transactions for purposes of the WCA “is a mixed question of fact and law.” Dorr
v. Sacred Heart Hosp., 228 Wis. 2d 425, 448, 597 N.W.2d 462 (Ct. App. 1999). Once the
facts surrounding those advances are established, the court can then determine whether, as a
matter of law, the advances fulfill the legal standard for a single transaction or separate
transactions. Dorr, 228 Wis. 2d at 449.
10
The parties set forth a variety of different facts they contend support their respective
positions. Dallman points out that Advances E and F were for different sums of money;
they had different monthly payments and APRs; all payments he made were applied to the
specific loan for which they were intended; and finance charges were computed separately
for each separate balance under the plan. Defendants do not dispute any of these facts.
(See Resp. to PPFOF (dkt. #61) ¶¶ 37-38, 44-46, 55-56, 61-63.) Instead, they argue that
the two advances represent a single transaction made pursuant to the Plan. In support, they
point out that Dallman signed only one Security Agreement; each sum advanced was
governed by the Security Agreement‟s overarching terms; and any collateral securing
individual advances also secured all other advances under the Loanliner Plan. All of these
facts plaintiff, in turn, does not dispute. (Reply to DPFOF (dkt. #62) ¶¶ 10-16.)
With the facts established, the court turns to the correct legal standard. Under the
WCA, a “transaction” is “an agreement between 2 or more persons, whether or not the
agreement is a contract enforceable by action, and includes the making of and the
performance pursuant to that agreement.”6 Wis. Stat. § 421.301(44). A “consumer credit
transaction,” specifically, is defined as:
[A] consumer transaction between a merchant and a customer in
which real or personal property, services or money is acquired on
credit and the customer‟s obligation is payable in installments or
for which credit a finance charge is or may be imposed, whether
such transaction is pursuant to an open-end credit plan or is a
transaction involving other than open-end credit. The term
includes consumer credit sales, consumer loans, consumer leases
and transactions pursuant to open-end credit plans.
6
An “agreement” is “the bargain of the parties in fact as found in their language or by
implication from other circumstances including course of dealing or usage of trade or course
of performance.” Wis. Stat. § 421.301(3).
11
Wis. Stat. § 421.301(10).
Applying the undisputed facts to this legal standard, the court agrees with Dallman
that the two advances at issue are separate “consumer credit transactions.”
First, the
Security Agreement does not meet the definition of a “consumer credit transaction.” By
signing the Security Agreement, Dallman neither acquired property, services or money on
credit, nor did he undertake an obligation to pay back money in installments or pay a
finance charge. Rather, signing the Security Agreement represented the beginning of his
participation in an open-ended credit plan, which permitted him to borrow money “from
time to time” -- that is, permitted him to enter into “consumer credit transactions” in the
future. (See Petrillo Affidavit Exh. B (dkt. #22-2).) To the extent that defendants contend
the Agreement represents a single “consumer credit transaction,” that argument appears
inconsistent with the statutory text, as well as the parties‟ agreement and course of credit.
The court also finds that each advance separately meets the legal standard to qualify
as a “consumer credit transaction.” As previously noted, the WCA defines a “transaction”
as an “agreement, which in turn is defined as a “bargain” between the parties. Based on the
undisputed facts, the two advances represented different “bargains” between Dallman and
PCCU. Advance E was for $40,561.50, with an APR of 8.5% and a monthly payment
obligation of $756.33 for purchase of the F250. (Resp. to PPFOF (dkt. #61) ¶¶ 37-38, 40.)
Advance F was for $14,472.32, with an APR of 8.0% and a monthly payment obligation of
$353.34, for purchase of the F350. (Id. at ¶¶ 44-46, 49-50.) The payments were due on
different dates. (Id. at ¶¶ 64-65.) Each payment was applied to the specific loan for which
it was intended. (Id. at ¶ 61.) Lastly, the applications for each advance show that Advance
E was disclosed as an outstanding liability when Dallman applied for Advance F, and vice
12
versa.
(See Petrillo Affidavit Exhs. C & D (dkt. ##22-3, 22-4).)
These facts belie
defendants‟ argument that “the total amount financed was treated as a single advance.”
(Def.‟s Summ. J. Br. (dkt. #25) 12.) On the contrary, each advance represented a separate
bargain, were subject to its own terms, and were separate transactions as a matter of law. 7
Therefore, the WCA indisputably applies to Advance F, a loan made in the amount
of $14,472.32. Advance E, however, was made in the amount of $40,561.50, far in excess
of the $25,000 statutory cut-off, which falls outside the scope of the WCA.
To overcome this obstacle, Dallman first argues that defendants have “opted in” to
the WCA with respect to Advance E, such that they were required to comply with all of its
provisions in spite of the statutory exclusion. He cites Bank of Barron v. Gieseke, 169 Wis. 2d
437, 485 N.W.2d 426 (Ct. App. 1992), for the proposition that a lender may opt into the
WCA for consumer credit transactions in an amount greater than $25,000.
In Bank of
Barron, the Wisconsin Court of Appeals interpreted a consumer real estate security
agreement (CRESA), which provided that the lender had a continuing lien on the property
to secure any debts arising out of “credit granted in the future by Lender to any Customer ...
except credit in an original amount of less than $1,000.00, the granting of which is subject
to the Wisconsin Consumer Act.” Id. at 453. The Bank, in seeking priority for certain
notes, argued that the final clause (“the granting clause”) allowed it to “opt in” to the WCA
for all future credit advances, regardless of whether the amount exceeded $25,000. The
Wisconsin Court of Appeals agreed, determining that the granting clause modified future
7
The court finds additional support for its conclusion in the fact that the definition of
“consumer credit transaction” contemplates that an open-ended credit plan may give rise to
separate transactions, rather than the plan itself representing a single transaction for all
future sums advanced. See Wis. Stat. § 421.301(10).
13
credit and that “[t]here is nothing in the WCA, specifically ch. 422, Stats., governing
consumer credit transactions, that would prevent a lender from opting in to the WVA for
consumer credit granted in an amount greater than $25,000.” Id. at 456. “If the lender opts
in, it has to meet the requirements of the WCA.” Id.
Having determined that lenders could opt into the WCA, and that the granting clause
gave the parties that option, the court went on to hold that the $104,611.07 note at issue
was not subject to the WCA, because it included a clause that read the note was “not
governed by the Wisconsin Consumer Act.” Thus, although the parties had the option to
opt into the WCA, the court found that they had not exercised that option with respect to
the note at issue. Id. at 458-59.
Dallman argues that the Security Agreement incorporates WCA protections and that
the PCCU has, therefore, “opted in” to the WCA for any advances over $25,000.
Specifically, Dallman points to the following passage in Paragraph 13 of the Security
Agreement:
The following paragraph applies only to Wisconsin borrowers:
When you are in default and after expiration of any right you have
under applicable state law to cure your default, we may require
immediate payment of your outstanding loan balance under the
Plan and seek possession of property given as security. You may
voluntarily give the property to us if you choose, or we may seek
to take possession of the property by judicial process. If we
repossess the property, you agree to pay reasonable expenses
incurred in disposing of the property. If the property is a motor
vehicle, mobile home, trailer, snowmobile, boat or aircraft, you
will also be required to pay any costs permitted by Section
422.413 of the Wisconsin Statutes.
(Petrillo Aff. Exh. B (dkt. #22-2) ¶ 13 (emphasis added).) The Security Agreement also
refers to other provisions of the WCA: for instance, it provides that PCCU “can change the
14
terms of the Plan from time to time in accordance with Section 422.415 of the Wisconsin
Statutes” and that a borrower‟s obligation to pay unpaid balances continues after
cancellation “except to the extent that [his] liability is limited by Section 422.4155 of the
Wisconsin Statutes.” (Petrillo Aff. Exh. B (dkt. #22-2) ¶ 14.) Dallman argues that based
on these references, and on the fact that the Security Agreement does not state that the
WMC does not apply, a consumer would reasonably have assumed he was guaranteed the
protections of the WCA in all respects, and the court should accordingly enforce that
agreement.
While defendants concede that Bank of Barron supports enforcement of an express optin requiring the WCA to apply, they point out that the CRESA in that case contained just
that:
an explicit provision stating that future credit advances were “subject to the
Wisconsin Consumer Act.”
In contrast, here, the Security Agreement merely makes
reference to certain provisions of the WCA, but nothing in the Security Agreement indicates
that those provisions would apply even if a future advance exceeded the $25,000 statutory
limit.
This is a close question, made more difficult by the fact that it does not appear any
court has considered the opt-in question since Bank of Barron. Furthermore, the Bank of
Barron court provided little guidance as to what constitutes an express “opt in,” since the
language in the note at issue was unambiguous in declining to opt in. Ultimately, Bank of
Barron suggests that the focus should be on “the parties‟ true intentions as expressed by the
contractual language.” Bank of Barron, 169 Wis. 2d at 455.
With that guiding principle in mind, the court finds nothing in the documents
indicating that PCCU opted in to the WCA -- and all the duties and potential liabilities that
15
follow -- with regard to Advance E.
The general statement of Paragraph 13 on which
Dallman relies states only that PCCU may require immediate payment of an outstanding
balance “after expiration of any right you have under applicable state law.” Petrillo Aff. Exh.
B (dkt. #22-2) ¶ 13 (emphasis added).) Since the WCA is not applicable to Advance E
based on the exclusion of section 421.202(6), this provision does not help Dallman. While
the remaining references to particular sections of the WCA in the Agreement may suggest
PCCU agreement to abide by some of the protections of the WCA, none of the statutory
sections the Agreement references have anything to do with the notice requirement of
section 425.205(1g)(a). Ultimately, the Agreement evinces no intent on PCCU‟s part to
opt into the WCA for transactions that by their terms are otherwise excluded from its scope.
Dallman also argues that defendants opted into the WCA by sending either the first
notice of default on Advance F, which he admits receiving in June 2011, or the Notice
F250, which he received via regular mail when he defaulted on Advance E. Both those
notices read at the top that they are “[r]equired before legal action for collection is
commenced. Wisconsin Statutes 425.105.” (Lukes Affidavit Exhs. A & B (dkt. ##21-1,
21-2); see also Resp. to PPFOF (dkt. #61) ¶¶ 83, 135.) While Felt & Lukes may have
muddied the waters by sending the notices when it was not required to do so, Felt & Lukes
did not agree to take on the legal responsibility of complying with the WCA in its entirety
simply by providing notice above and beyond what was required. The notices appear to be
standardized, created using the same form and language regardless of the amount at issue -and thus regardless of whether the WCA actually applies. (Compare dkt. #21-1 (default on
Advance F), with dkt. #21-2 (default on Advance E).) Such a boilerplate notice, with no
language expressing an intent to opt into the WCA (and indeed, with no language even
16
clearly demonstrating that opting in was an option the parties contemplated), cannot serve
to bind defendants to all the responsibilities and potential liabilities such a decision would
entail.
Finally, Dallman argues that, even if Advance E is exempt from the WCA,
defendants needed to comply with it for purposes of repossessing the F350 because that
truck was purchased with and secured Advance F, which is subject to the WCA. Thus, he
contends that a reasonable consumer would expect that the F350, as collateral initially
securitized by a covered transaction, would be protected by the WCA. Defendants cite no
case law for this proposition, nor did the court find any support for this argument in the
WCA itself. The WCA does not offer protection or withhold it based on the collateral at
issue. The focus is on the transaction: section 421.202(6) states that the WCA does not
apply to any “[c]onsumer credit transactions in which the amount financed exceeds
$25,000.” The consumer credit transaction at issue here -- and the one for which Dallman
contends he deserved the protections of the WCA -- was Advance E.
indisputably exceeds the $25,000 cap.
Advance E
The mere fact that the F350 also collateralized
Advance F, which was subject to the WCA, is therefore essentially irrelevant.8
8
An additional wrinkle comes from the Notice F350 and from the deposition testimony of
Lynn Lukes. The Notice F350 states that Dallman is in default on a Note “dated
1/11/2011 in the original amount of $14,472.32.” Given the amount, this obvously refers
to Advance F, not Advance E. In fact, the parties apparently do not dispute that
“[a]lthough Mr. Dallman [w]as not behind in his payments on Loan F, Felt & Lukes
considered him in default on Loan F for failing to make payments on Loan E.” (Resp. to
PPFOF (dkt. #61) ¶ 120.) Ultimately, though, it is clear that the F350 was repossessed in
connection with Dallman‟s non-payment on Advance E, to cover a balance that the parties
agree was greater than the worth of either one of the two trucks. (Reply to DPFOF (dkt.
#62) ¶ 35.) Dallman failed to fulfill his obligations under Advance E and as a result opened
up the cross-collateralized F350 to repossession. Even though the parties ostensibly agree
that Felt & Lukes “considered” Dallman to have defaulted on Loan F, there are no facts in
17
Because the court finds that the WCA does not apply to Advance E, it need not
reach the issue of whether there is a genuine dispute of material fact as to whether Felt &
Lukes sent the Notice F350 via certified mail.
Since no such notice was required,
defendants are, therefore, entitled to summary judgment on plaintiff‟s WCA claims.
IV. Other Claims
Dallman‟s other claims will be dismissed from this case as well, because those claims
are also premised on a violation of the WCA. Beyond the lack of adequate notice under the
WCA, Dallman offers no other reason why defendants were not entitled to take the F350.
Indeed, he admits that (1) the F350 secured repayment on Advance E (Reply to DPFOF
(dkt. #62) ¶ 25); and (2) he defaulted on Advance E and did not cure the default. (Id. at
¶¶ 34, 52) His civil theft and conversion claims, therefore, fail as a matter of law, because
defendants indisputably had the right to take possession of the F350 pursuant to their
security interest in the vehicle.
The FDCPA claims, too, are premised on a violation of the WCA.
Dallman
essentially alleges that defendants had no present right to repossess the F350 at the time
that they took it.9
See 15 U.S.C. § 1692f(6).
“A court should look to state law
the record suggesting that he actually did. Neither party contends that Dallman had missed
payments on Advance F, nor that he had breached some other term of the agreement with
regard to Advance F that materially impaired his ability to pay the amount he owed or the
condition, value or protection of or defendants‟ right in property he gave as security. (See
Petrillo Affidavit Exh. B (dkt. #22-2) ¶ 12 (defining “default” under the Agreement).)
While the provisions of the WCA are to be construed and applied liberally, the court will
not ignore the reality that the F350 was repossessed due to Dallman‟s default on Advance E,
which is exempt from the WCA.
9
The Amended Complaint also names 15 U.S.C. § 1692e as a section that defendants have
violated, but Dallman offers no facts that suggest that defendants used a “false, deceptive,
or misleading representation or means in connection with the collection” of the debt at
18
requirements to determine whether there was a present right to possession under the
FDCPA.” Speleos v. BAC Home Loans Serv., L.P., 824 F. Supp. 2d 226, 233 (D. Mass. 2011)
(quoting Revering v. Norwest Bank Minn., N.A., No. Civ. 99-480/RHK/JMM, 1999 WL
33911360, at *5 (D. Minn. Nov. 30, 1999)). Since the court has already determined that
the WCA did not apply to Advance E, the lack of notice to cure default did not undermine
the right defendants otherwise had to take the car. Dallman has suggested no other reason
why defendants did not have a right to repossess the F350 under state law at the time of
repossession, and so the court will grant summary judgment to defendant on these claims as
well.
ORDER
IT IS ORDERED that defendants‟ Motion for Summary Judgment (dkt. #18) is
GRANTED.
Entered this 17th day of December, 2013.
BY THE COURT:
/s/
________________________________________
WILLIAM M. CONLEY
District Judge
issue.
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