Dollar Loan Center of SD v. Bret Afdahl , 933 F.3d 1019 ( 2019 )


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  •                 United States Court of Appeals
    For the Eighth Circuit
    ___________________________
    No. 18-2416
    ___________________________
    Dollar Loan Center of South Dakota, LLC, doing business as Dollar Loan Center
    lllllllllllllllllllllPlaintiff - Appellee
    v.
    Bret Afdahl, individually and in his official capacity as director of the South
    Dakota Division of Banking
    lllllllllllllllllllllDefendant - Appellant
    ___________________________
    No. 18-2497
    ___________________________
    Dollar Loan Center of South Dakota, LLC, doing business as Dollar Loan Center
    lllllllllllllllllllllPlaintiff - Appellant
    v.
    Bret Afdahl, individually and in his official capacity as director of the South
    Dakota Division of Banking
    lllllllllllllllllllllDefendant - Appellee
    ____________
    Appeals from United States District Court
    for the District of South Dakota - Pierre
    ____________
    Submitted: June 12, 2019
    Filed: August 14, 2019
    ____________
    Before LOKEN, KELLY, and ERICKSON, Circuit Judges.
    ____________
    ERICKSON, Circuit Judge.
    Dollar Loan Center (“DLC”) and four of its branches were previously licensed
    as money lenders by the South Dakota Division of Banking (“Division”). On
    September 13, 2017, Bret Afdahl, Director of the Division, sent DLC a “Cease and
    Desist and License Revocation Order.” This order required DLC to: (1) immediately
    stop lending money in South Dakota; (2) to notify all consumers who had loans
    issued after June 21, 2017, that the loans were void and uncollectible; and (3) to
    surrender all of its money lending licenses and return them to the Division. DLC
    commenced this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Afdahl, alleging that license
    revocation without a pre-deprivation hearing deprived DLC of its procedural due
    process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment. Afdahl appeals the district court’s
    denial of absolute or qualified immunity and its decision that the quick action
    exception to a pre-deprivation hearing was not applicable. After careful review of the
    record, we conclude that Afdahl is entitled to qualified immunity. We reverse with
    directions to enter judgment in favor of Afdahl on the basis of qualified immunity.
    I.    Background
    In South Dakota, the Division of Banking is administered under the direction
    and supervision of the Department of Labor and Regulation and its Secretary. S.D.
    Codified Laws § 51A2-2. The Division is vested with the authority to control and
    supervise banking activities within the state and is to exercise its “quasi-judicial,
    quasi-legislative, advisory, and other nonadministrative functions independently.”
    -2-
    
    Id. Under Chapter
    54-4, the Director of the Division is responsible for approving or
    denying license applications and renewals. S.D. Codified Laws §§ 54-4-41, 54-4-45.
    If the Director determines that a licensee is engaging in a practice that fails to
    conform to the law or a commission rule, order, or condition, he may issue a cease
    and desist order. S.D. Codified Laws § 54-4-48. He is also authorized to “condition,
    deny, decline to renew, suspend for a period not to exceed 6 months, or revoke a
    license for ‘good cause.’” Under South Dakota’s Administrative Procedure and
    Rules, unless an agency finds that public health, safety, or welfare require emergency
    action, a license cannot be revoked or suspended unless the agency has given notice
    and afforded the licensee an opportunity to be heard. S.D. Codified Laws § 1-26-29.
    In July 2010, DLC submitted money lending license applications to the
    Division for its main place of business in Sioux Falls and a branch location in Rapid
    City. The applications stated that the businesses would not provide short term
    consumer loans, payday lending, or title loans as defined under South Dakota Law.
    A “short term loan” is any loan with a duration of six months or less. S.D. Codified
    Laws § 54-4-36. Based on the information provided in the applications, the Division
    approved money lending licenses to DLC. DLC submitted the required annual
    renewal applications from 2011 to 2016. With the exception of the year 2012, DLC
    affirmed on its renewal applications that there had not been any substantive changes
    to the loan products offered since the last application or renewal. In 2012, DLC
    informed the Division that it was changing from a 52 week to a 65 week amortized
    loan product.
    In 2017, DCL submitted money lending license applications for branches in
    Sioux Falls, Aberdeen, and Watertown, South Dakota. These applications also
    indicated that the businesses would not provide short term consumer loans, payday
    lending, or title loans.
    -3-
    Before July 1, 2017, DLC originated and serviced unsecured loans ranging
    from $100 to $2,000. The customer was required to make weekly interest payments
    for 51 weeks (beginning in 2012, a period of 64 weeks) and then on the final week
    a balloon payment consisting of total principal plus interest. The annual percentage
    rate (“APR”) on these loans varied from 259 percent to 492 percent. The rate varied
    based on the loan amount and whether the customer had a checking account. In
    November 2016, DLC was forced to change its loan product after Initiated Measure
    21 was approved by the voters and became law. The measure set a maximum finance
    charge for all money lenders licensed under South Dakota law. Total interest, fees,
    and charges could not be greater than an APR of 36 percent. S.D. Codified Laws §
    54-4-44 prohibited money lenders from evading the rate limitation by imposing other
    charges or fees.
    The Division understood that DLC would not make additional loans after the
    measure went into effect. However, in a letter dated July 12, 2017, DLC disputed the
    Division’s understanding and stated it had informed the Division that DLC “planned
    to maintain its money lending license for each of its locations and that it reserved the
    right to lend money and service loans consistent with South Dakota law.”
    DLC informed the Division that beginning sometime after July 1, 2017, it
    would begin using a new loan product. Upon reviewing the new product, the
    Division expressed concern to DLC in a letter dated July 7, 2017, that DLC’s new
    loan product was attempting to use the late fee provision in its new loan contracts as
    a “device, subterfuge, or pretense to evade” the new law.1 The Division informed
    1
    South Dakota law provides:
    54-4-44.1. Device, subterfuge, or pretense to evade maximum finance
    charge prohibited--Penalties. No person may engage in any device,
    subterfuge, or pretense to evade the requirements of § 54-4-44,
    including, but not limited to, making loans disguised as a personal
    -4-
    DLC that it would be conducting an examination within the next 30 days. The
    Division conducted a “targeted” examination on July 13, 2017, and a “full scope”
    examination on August 17-18, 2017.
    The Division’s investigation revealed that DLC’s new loan product involved
    unsecured loans ranging from $250 to $1,000 with a seven day term, which under
    South Dakota law was a short term loan. The stated APR on the new loan product
    was between 35.87 percent and 35.98 percent and weekly late fees varied from $25
    to $70 per week. The main difference between the new loan product and the previous
    loan product was the amount due the first week. On the new loan, the first payment
    included principal plus the interest. If the customer did not make the payment, a $70
    late fee was imposed every seven days until the loan, all accrued interest, and late fees
    were paid in full. This new loan product with a substantially higher payment due the
    first week caused the loan portfolio’s delinquency rate to exceed 50 percent. After
    late fees are included in the APR as finance charges, the Division determined that the
    APR ranged from 300.86 percent to 487.64 percent.
    The Division also discovered that between July 1, 2017, and August 17, 2017,
    late fees accounted for 90.22 percent of DLC’s total income. The Division concluded
    that DLC’s new loan product was a short term consumer loan; that the late fees
    property sale and leaseback transaction; disguising loan proceeds as a
    cash rebate for the pretextual installment sale of goods or services; or
    making, offering, assisting, or arranging a debtor to obtain a loan with
    a greater rate of interest, consideration, or charge than is permitted by
    this chapter through any method including mail, telephone, internet, or
    any electronic means regardless of whether the person has a physical
    location in the state. Notwithstanding any other provision of this
    chapter, a violation of this section is subject to the penalties in § 54-4-
    44.
    -5-
    charged are anticipated fees that must be included in the finance charge calculation;
    and that the product violated the maximum APR allowed to be charged under South
    Dakota law. In light of these findings, Director Afdahl issued on September 13,
    2017, a cease and desist order and a license revocation order. He revoked DLC’s
    money lending licenses and also ordered DLC to stop engaging in the business of
    lending money in South Dakota; to notify consumers that any loan made after June
    21, 2017, was void and uncollectible; and to surrender immediately the money
    lending licenses and return them to the Division.
    Fifteen days after issuing his findings and revocation order, Afdahl issued a
    limited stay. The stay allowed DLC to continue servicing any loans originated before
    November 16, 2016, so long as the servicing of the loans was not in violation of
    South Dakota law. On October 3, 2017, the Division served on DLC’s attorney a
    notice of hearing to address the status of DLC’s money lending licenses. The hearing
    was set for October 17, 2017. The notice identified the following issues: (1) that
    DLC was originating and servicing short terms loans when it had not been authorized
    by the Division to do so; (2) the loans offered by DLC after June 21, 2017, were
    designed to incur late fees and as such were considered anticipated fees that were
    required to be included in the finance charge calculation; and (3) DLC had violated
    statutes pertaining to consumer credit and engaged in unfair practices involving its
    lending activity. DLC requested a continuance and questioned whether the hearing
    was “jurisdictionally appropriate” since it believed the Division had taken “final
    action.” No hearing was held.
    DLC commenced this action, alleging Afdahl violated DLC’s clearly
    established right to procedural due process by revoking DLC’s money lending
    licenses without a pre-deprivation hearing. Afdahl moved to dismiss for failure to
    state a claim. The parties also filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The
    district court denied Afdahl’s motion to dismiss, finding he was not entitled to
    absolute immunity because his decision to revoke the money lending licenses prior
    -6-
    to affording DLC a hearing exceeded the statutory authority vested by South Dakota
    law and was not the type of conduct that absolute immunity was intended to protect.
    The court denied Afdahl’s motion for summary judgment, determining that he was
    not entitled to qualified immunity and the quick action exception obviating a pre-
    deprivation hearing did not apply. It granted partial summary judgment in favor of
    DLC as to the 15 day period between Afdahl’s revocation order and when he issued
    the stay, noting that “damages appear to be limited in this case” and cautioning the
    parties that “nothing in this opinion should be taken as an endorsement of the extent
    of DLC’s damages claims.” The district court later clarified when it denied DLC’s
    motion to reconsider that the issue of whether there was a deprivation outside of the
    15-day period was an unresolved fact question. Afdahl appeals the district court’s
    denial of immunity and ruling that the quick action exception permitted him to act
    without a pre-deprivation hearing.2
    II.   Discussion
    We review the denial of qualified immunity de novo. Dadd v. Anoka Cty., 
    827 F.3d 749
    , 754 (8th Cir. 2016) (quoting Hager v. Ark. Dep’t of Health, 
    735 F.3d 1009
    ,
    1013 (8th Cir. 2013)). To warrant reversal, Afdahl must show that he is entitled to
    immunity on the face of the complaint. 
    Id. (quoting Bradford
    v. Huckabee, 
    394 F.3d 1012
    , 1015 (8th Cir. 2005)). This requires us to analyze whether DLC “has stated a
    plausible claim for a violation of a constitutional or statutory right [of which a
    reasonable person would have known] and whether the right was clearly established
    at the time of the alleged infraction.” 
    Hager, 735 F.3d at 1013
    (citing Powell v.
    Johnson, 
    405 F.3d 652
    , 654–55 (8th Cir. 2005)). “Absent either a clearly established
    right or a constitutional violation, qualified immunity applies.” Dillard v. City of
    2
    DLC filed a cross-appeal on the issue of whether the district court erred in
    finding the constitutional deprivation lasted only 15 days. DLC has not pursued its
    cross-appeal after the court issued its order on DLC’s motion to reconsider.
    -7-
    Springdale, Arkansas, No. 17-3284; No. 17-3287, __ F.3d __ , 
    2019 WL 3049010
    ,
    at *3 (8th Cir. July 12, 2019).
    DLC’s alleged constitutional claim is that Afdahl deprived it of a procedural
    due process right when Afdahl revoked DLC’s money lending licenses on September
    13, 2017, before holding a pre-deprivation hearing. In a qualified immunity analysis,
    “a right is ‘clearly established’ if the ‘contours of the right [are] sufficiently clear that
    a reasonable official would understand that what he is doing violates that right.’”
    Sutton v. Bailey, 
    702 F.3d 444
    , 447 (8th Cir. 2012) (quoting Anderson v. Creighton,
    
    483 U.S. 635
    , 640 (1987)).
    The district court, relying on Freeman v. Blair, 
    793 F.2d 166
    (8th Cir. 1986)
    (Freeman I) and Freeman v. Blair, 
    862 F.2d 1330
    (8th Cir. 1988) (Freeman II), found
    that the right to a pre-deprivation hearing under these circumstances was clearly
    established. In Freeman I, we concluded that state officials who sought to perform
    warrantless campground inspections and then suspended the campground’s operating
    license without a pre-deprivation hearing, despite lacking a factual basis to invoke the
    public welfare exception, were not entitled to qualified 
    immunity. 793 F.2d at 178
    .
    After the decision was vacated and remanded by the Supreme Court, we reconsidered
    the qualified immunity question and concluded that even if objectively reasonable
    officials could have believed a warrantless search of the campground was
    constitutionally permissible, it does not follow that they could have believed a
    summary suspension of the campground license was constitutionally 
    permissible. 862 F.2d at 1332
    .
    We disagree with the district court’s conclusion that procedural due process
    requires more than what the Division did and DLC’s right to a pre-deprivation
    hearing was clearly established by Freeman. The process and procedure employed
    by the Division is distinguishable from that utilized by the officials in Freeman such
    that a reasonable official in Afdahl’s position would not be on notice that he was
    -8-
    violating a clearly established right when he issued the combined cease and desist and
    revocation order in this case. Before taking adverse administrative action, the
    Division conducted an extensive examination of DLC’s new loan product. Seven
    state banking officials were involved in examining DLC’s operations. Three
    performed the onsite “target” examination in July, including the Deputy Director.
    They reviewed 20 “active” loans and several “denied” loans. Because the new loan
    product was only 10 days old at the time and only loans originated from July 3 to July
    5 could contractually be deemed past due, the examiners determined that additional
    information and a larger sample was needed to complete their investigation.
    After the examiners determined that DLC’s responses to follow-up written
    questions were incomplete or unresponsive, a two day examination was scheduled in
    August. In addition to the Deputy Director, three examiners not involved in the first
    examination participated in the second examination. DLC’s regional manager and
    its lawyer, which the Division found unusual, were present during both examinations.
    The examiners selected 308 new loan products from the 633 short term loans that had
    originated from July 1 to August 17, 2017. Of the loans selected for review, 276 had
    a maturity date prior to August 17. The review demonstrated to the examiners that
    DLC was overwhelmingly reliant on late fees to generate revenue and that DLC was
    issuing short term loans without authorization to do so. After this intense
    investigation, the examiners reached the conclusion that DLC’s loan product violated
    South Dakota law. Contrary to the officials’ actions in Freeman, the procedures
    employed by the Division armed Afdahl with a substantial factual foundation upon
    which he based his legal conclusion that DLC was violating South Dakota’s lending
    laws.
    DLC’s claim that it had no notice that it could not issue short term loans is
    disingenuous. DLC was aware that it had to notify the Division of any substantive
    changes to the loan products it offered. The renewal application inquired about
    substantive changes and DLC notified the Division in 2012 of a change when it
    -9-
    extended its amortization schedule from 52 to 65 weeks. Yet, the Division received
    DLC’s new money lending license applications for branches in Aberdeen, Watertown,
    and Sioux Falls on June 1, 2017, approximately a month before DLC was to begin
    using its new short term loan product. In those applications, DLC indicated no short
    term loans were being provided. Despite being aware of its obligation, DLC never
    notified the Division of the substantial change in its loan product. DLC knew or
    should have known that it was providing a loan product inconsistent with the terms
    on the face of its applications.
    It is indisputable that Director Afdahl acted within his authority when he issued
    the cease and desist order. South Dakota law permits summary cease and desist
    orders. The cease and desist order prohibited DLC from engaging in the business of
    lending money in South Dakota. DLC had sought approval from the Division to offer
    this single loan product. Without another approved product, DLC could not originate
    any new loans. While it would have been more precise to prohibit DLC from
    originating or servicing the new loan product, the potentially overbroad order was
    swiftly corrected. Approximately two weeks later, Afdahl issued a stay allowing
    DLC to continue to service any lawful loan originated before November 16, 2016.
    Although the Division requested a listing of unpaid loans originated before November
    16, 2016, from DLC, the record does not appear to contain DLC’s response, if any,
    to the request.
    Afdahl’s September 13, 2017, order also revoked DLC’s money lending
    licenses. Before the revocation, DLC, through its regional manager and its counsel,
    had been given an opportunity to respond to several of the Division’s concerns
    regarding DLC’s new loan product. DLC presented written responses to the
    Division’s questions. DLC disputes the Division’s legal conclusions, not the data
    relied on by the Division, which was supplied by DLC. While a trial-like hearing was
    not conducted, due process has been described by the United States Supreme Court
    as a “flexible” concept. Mathews v. Eldridge, 
    424 U.S. 319
    , 334 (1976) (quoting
    -10-
    Morrissey v. Brewer, 
    408 U.S. 471
    , 481 (1972)). In this case, there is no evidence
    that adverse administrative action against DLC’s property interest was based on an
    erroneous factual basis. It was Afdahl’s responsibility to make a legal interpretation
    regarding the lawfulness of DLC’s new loan product. He did so only after an intense
    investigation allowing DLC’s regional manager and counsel to participate in both on-
    site examinations and to respond to follow-up questions. Under these circumstances
    where DLC was on notice that the Division was investigating the lawfulness of its
    new loan product, DLC was afforded an opportunity to provide additional
    information addressing the Division’s concerns, and the revocation order had no more
    of an effect on DLC’s business than the simultaneously issued cease and desist order,
    we conclude that DLC has not shown a procedural due process violation.
    More importantly, qualified immunity is intended to give “government officials
    breathing room to make reasonable but mistaken judgments, and [to] protect[] all but
    the plainly incompetent or those who knowingly violate the law.” Messerschmidt v.
    Millender, 
    565 U.S. 535
    , 546 (2012) (internal quotations omitted). Even if Afdahl
    should have done something more before taking adverse action against DLC’s money
    lending licenses, he made a reasonable mistake in the exercise of his official duties.
    This is the type of mistake that the qualified immunity rule was intended to protect.
    Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the complaint, we find DLC has
    failed to show a violation of a constitutional right that was clearly established.
    Afdahl is entitled to qualified immunity.
    III.   Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the district court’s denial of qualified
    immunity. We direct the district court to enter judgment in favor of Afdahl on the
    basis of qualified immunity.
    -11-
    KELLY, Circuit Judge, concurring in the judgment.
    Afdahl expressly states that, for purposes of appeal, he assumes that “DLC is
    normally entitled to a pre-deprivation hearing.” In other words, he concedes that
    DLC was not afforded the pre-deprivation hearing that it would normally be entitled
    to. He argues that he is nonetheless entitled to qualified immunity either because the
    “quick action exception” applies—as there was a compelling state interest in taking
    immediate action—or because it was not clearly established that the quick action
    exception did not apply. See Moore v. Warwick Pub. Sch. Dist. No. 29, 
    794 F.2d 322
    , 327 (8th Cir. 1986) (noting “situations requiring quick action by the State when
    there is a compelling or overriding state interest in a summary adjudication” are
    exempt from the pre-deprivation hearing requirement). Whether Afdahl afforded
    DLC sufficient process absent the existence of circumstances that a reasonable
    official would conclude required immediate action to safeguard public welfare is not
    a question before us, so I would not reach it. But I concur in the result the court
    reaches because I agree that at the time Afdahl took the action he did with respect to
    the cease and desist order and the license revocation, it was not clearly established
    that the quick action exception did not justify the lack of a pre-deprivation hearing.
    ______________________________
    -12-