Virachack v. Univeristy Ford ( 2005 )


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  •                   FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    MALINEE B. VIRACHACK; RITNARONE         
    T. VIRACHACK,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    No. 03-55852
    and
    D.C. No.
    RACHELLE HARVEY,
    Plaintiff,      CV-02-00139-
    JTM/JFS
    v.
    OPINION
    UNIVERSITY FORD, dba: Bob Baker
    Ford,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of California
    Jeffrey T. Miller, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted
    December 10, 2004—Pasadena, California
    Filed May 20, 2005
    Before: Betty B. Fletcher, John T. Noonan, and
    Richard A. Paez, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge Noonan;
    Dissent by Judge B. Fletcher
    5467
    VIRACHACK v. UNIVERSITY FORD             5469
    COUNSEL
    Frank J. Fox, San Diego, California, for the plaintiffs-
    appellants.
    Jan T. Chilton, San Francisco, California, for the defendant-
    appellee.
    OPINION
    NOONAN, Circuit Judge:
    Malinee B. Virachack and Ritnarone T. Virachack (the
    Virachacks) appeal the district court’s grant of summary judg-
    5470                       VIRACHACK v. UNIVERSITY FORD
    ment to University Ford, a California corporation doing busi-
    ness as Bob Baker Ford, in their action under the Truth In
    Lending Act (TILA), 
    15 U.S.C. § 1601
     et seq. Holding that
    Bob Baker Ford did not fail to disclose the total finance
    charge, we affirm the judgement of the district court.
    FACTS
    On November 18, 2001, the Virachacks bought a Ford
    Explorer from Bob Baker Ford. The purchase was partly on
    credit. Bob Baker Ford made the following statement in the
    Retail Sales Installment Contract executed by the Virachacks,
    Federal Truth-In-Lending Disclosure
    ANNUAL               FINANCE                Amount              Total of       Total Sale Price
    PERCENTAGE              CHARGE                Financed            Payments        The total cost of
    RATE               The dollar         The amount of      The amount you      your purchase,
    The cost of your      amount the credit   credit provided to    will have paid     including your
    credit as a yearly     will cost you.      you or on your       after you have    down payment of
    rate.                                    behalf             made all
    payments as
    scheduled.           $4303.14 is
    0.90%              $417.47 (e)          $22615.33          $23032.80 (e)         $27335.94 (e)
    (e) = estimate
    The contract also stated that the Virachacks would make
    monthly payments of $479.85 for 48 months. The contract
    also reflected a sales tax of $1,748.47, based on the “cash
    price” of the vehicle of $23,268.
    According to the affidavit of Nathaniel Torres, the finance
    manager of Bob Baker Ford, on the day the Virachacks
    bought the Explorer, Ford Motor Company was offering a
    $2,000 rebate to certain customers buying that model and year
    vehicle, but was not offering this rebate to customers buying
    on credit at the 0.9% rate. The availability of the rebate also
    depended, in part, on the geographical area in which the cus-
    tomer resided. The possibility of the rebate was not mentioned
    in the “Federal Truth-In-Lending Disclosure” of the contract.
    VIRACHACK v. UNIVERSITY FORD                 5471
    According to Torres, had the Virachacks “desired a factory
    rebate and financing through Bob Baker Ford, they could
    have entered into a retail installment contract with Bob Baker
    Ford at a non-promotional interest rate offered by Ford Motor
    Credit Company, or they could have entered into a retail
    installment contract with Bob Baker Ford at whatever interest
    rate, promotional or not, was offered by any one of the other
    banks or finance companies to whom we regularly sell con-
    tracts.”
    PROCEEDINGS
    The present suit began as a class action in the Superior
    Court for the County of San Diego. Bob Baker Ford trans-
    ferred it to the district court. By stipulation of the parties, the
    Virachacks were substituted for the original plaintiff, who
    was discovered to have entered a transaction with Bob Baker
    Ford where the rebate option was not available. The
    Virachacks alleged that the $2,000 cash rebate they might
    have received if they had paid cash should have been dis-
    closed as part of the finance charge and that the failure to dis-
    close violated the TILA, 
    15 U.S.C. § 1638
    (a)(2),(3), (4), and
    (5). They sought for themselves and for each member of the
    plaintiff class damages not to exceed the statutory maximum
    of the lesser of $500,000 or 1% of the defendant’s net worth.
    
    Id.
     at § 1640(a)(2)(b).
    After discovery, each side moved for summary judgment.
    Granting summary judgment to Bob Baker Ford, the district
    court stated:
    The reality of plaintiffs’ transaction is that they
    were given a “discount” on the market interest rate
    in order to induce them to purchase their vehicle.
    Indeed, plaintiffs’ own separate statement of facts
    posits that the promotional rate is below the market
    interest rate. The cash rebate is not a cost of credit
    imposed upon plaintiffs. Rather, the rebate is an
    5472            VIRACHACK v. UNIVERSITY FORD
    option made available to both cash and credit pur-
    chasers in order to induce the purchase of Ford vehi-
    cles at a price that would otherwise be unavailable to
    those consumers. In essence, the promotional interest
    rate is simply a different form of the cash rebate in
    that both the rebate and the interest rate are forms of
    subsidizing the market price of the vehicle offered to
    consumers in order to generate sales. Thus, the
    rebate is a “discount” made available to consumers
    who wish to receive the promotional interest rate but
    in the form of the reduced APR rather than in cash.
    Therefore, plaintiffs have received the “discount”
    made available to cash and other credit purchasers
    illustrating that the forgone rebate is not a condition
    of the extension of credit. See 12 C.F.R. Pt. 226,
    Supp. I, Comment 4(a)(i)(B) (discount available to
    both cash and credit consumers not a finance
    charge). Consequently, the record does not support
    plaintiffs’ argument that the forgone rebate is
    imposed as a condition of the extension of credit or
    that the rebate is being offered to induce purchases
    by means other than credit. Therefore, the court con-
    cludes that the cash rebate is not part of plaintiffs’
    cost of credit and need not be disclosed.
    Virachack v. Univ. Ford, 
    259 F. Supp.2d 1089
    , 1091 (S.D.
    Cal. 2003).
    The Virachacks appeal.
    ANALYSIS
    The case is governed by a statute with a broad purpose,
    “the informed use of credit” by consumers. 
    15 U.S.C. § 1601
    (a). The statute’s carefully drawn terms are rendered
    even more precise by the regulations issued by the Federal
    Reserve Bank, the agency entrusted with the implementation
    of this law.
    VIRACHACK v. UNIVERSITY FORD                 5473
    [1] The statute defines “finance charge” as “the sum of all
    charges, payable directly or indirectly by the person to whom
    the credit is extended, and imposed directly or indirectly by
    the creditor as an incident to the extension of credit. The
    finance charge does not include charges of a type payable in
    a comparable cash transaction.” 
    15 U.S.C. § 1605
    (a).
    [2] The statutory definition does not embrace a rebate that
    is withheld. A charge is a request for payment. A rebate is a
    reduction in payment. It is to turn topsy-turvy to contend that
    a rebate that is not given is a hidden charge.
    [3] The Virachaks’ case looks less implausible under Regu-
    lation Z of the Federal Reserve Bank. This authoritative inter-
    pretation of the statute lists among examples of finance
    charges the following: “Discounts for the purpose of inducing
    payments by a means other than the use of credit.” FRB Reg-
    ulation Z, 
    12 C.F.R. § 226.4
    (b)(9) (2004). How can a discount
    be a charge? It cannot be. What the Federal Reserve Bank
    means is that the presence of a discount for a cash transaction
    is an index that more is being charged for a credit transaction.
    The Virachacks contend that a rebate for cash on the purchase
    price is functionally the same as a discount for cash. The
    rebate is an index that more is being charged for credit. They
    refer to the Official Staff Commentary on the regulations:
    The seller of land offers individual tracts for $10,000
    each. If the purchaser pays cash, the price is $9,000,
    but if the purchaser finances the tract with the seller
    the price is $10,000. The $1,000 difference is a
    finance charge for those who buy the tracts on credit.
    Commentary to Fed. Reserve Bd. Reg. Z, 12 C.F.R.
    part 226 Supp. I 374 para. 4(b)(9)
    The preceding example treats the discount as evidence of pur-
    pose to induce payment in cash.
    5474             VIRACHACK v. UNIVERSITY FORD
    [4] The question for decision, then, is whether the $2,000
    rebate was offered to induce customers to use means other
    than credit. The declaration of Nathaniel Torres is that induce-
    ment to pay with means other than credit was not the purpose
    of the offer. Although an employee of Bob Baker Ford, Torres
    acted as the agent of Ford Motor Company so far as the avail-
    ability of the rebate was concerned and so may be relied on
    in his statement that the rebate would have been offered to the
    Virachacks if they had sought to buy on credit but not at the
    extraordinarily low rate of 0.9%. If we accept Torres’s
    unchallenged account of the facts, Ford Motor Company
    denied the rebate only because the manufacturer did not want
    to offer two incentives to the same customer. According to
    Torres, the $2,000 rebate is not an index of a hidden credit
    charge but simply a subsidy from the manufacturer that was
    available only to those not getting the subsidized interest rate.
    The element of a purpose to induce a cash payment—the ele-
    ment critical to the Virachacks’ case—is absent.
    This account is confirmed by two facts also furnished by
    Torres. Bob Baker Ford did not determine eligibility for the
    rebate. If a rebate had been offered, the price of the vehicle
    for sales tax purposes would not have been affected; the tax
    would have been paid on the price before the rebate. The price
    is therefore the same on credit or cash terms.
    [5] The Virachacks complain that, not being told of the
    possibility of the rebate in the “Federal Truth-In-Lending Dis-
    closure,” they never got to choose; that they, therefore, were
    not the informed users of credit that the federal law seeks to
    assure. Compliance with the TILA did not require them to be
    informed to this extent. They got a good deal. Seeking to get
    a windfall, they cannot get more than the statute and its regu-
    lations afford them.
    For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court
    is AFFIRMED.
    VIRACHACK v. UNIVERSITY FORD                    5475
    B. FLETCHER, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    The majority affirms the district court’s summary judgment
    dismissal of the Virachacks’ claim under the Truth in Lending
    Act (“TILA”), concluding their foregone rebate was not a
    finance charge. I respectfully dissent. A discount or rebate
    offered to purchasers paying with cash that is not extended to
    purchasers using credit is a finance charge. See F.R.B. Regu-
    lation Z, 
    12 C.F.R. § 226.4
    (b)(9) (“Regulation Z”).
    The Appellants, Malinee B. Virachack and Ritnarone T.
    Virachack, purchased a Ford Explorer from the Appellee,
    University Ford d/b/a Bob Baker Ford, the dealer and credi-
    tor. The Virachacks purchased the Explorer on a credit plan
    negotiated with Bob Baker Ford. The credit plan had an Aver-
    age Percentage Rate (“APR”) of 0.9%. To receive this APR,
    customers including the Virachacks had to forego a $2,000
    manufacturer’s rebate offered by Ford Motor Company
    (“Ford Motor”) for the purchase of its Explorer. The $2,000
    manufacturer’s rebate was offered to all other customers pur-
    chasing an Explorer paying either cash or credit. The
    Virachacks argue the foregone rebate was a finance charge.
    As such, they argue the $2,000 increase in cost incurred by
    financing at 0.9% APR should have been disclosed to them
    under TILA.
    A finance charge is defined by TILA “as the sum of all
    charges, payable directly or indirectly by the person to whom
    the credit is extended, and imposed directly or indirectly by
    the creditor as an incident to the extension of credit.” 
    15 U.S.C. § 1605
    (a). Bob Baker Ford argues the foregone rebate
    was not a finance charge requiring disclosure under TILA.
    The district court agreed and the majority opinion affirms.
    As a general matter, discounts to purchasers using cash that
    are not extended to purchasers using credit are treated as
    finance charges. See 
    12 C.F.R. § 226.4
    (b)(9). Regulation Z1
    1
    Regulation Z, 
    12 C.F.R. § 226
    , is the Federal Reserve Board’s regula-
    tions implementing the Truth in Lending Act. Its purpose “is to promote
    5476               VIRACHACK v. UNIVERSITY FORD
    specifically lists “Discounts for the purpose of inducing pay-
    ment by a means other than the use of credit” under examples
    of finance charges. 
    Id.
     To further explain this principle the
    official staff interpretation states:
    Discounts for payment by other than credit. The dis-
    counts to induce payment by other than credit men-
    tioned in § 226.4(b)(9) include, for example, the
    following situation:
    The seller of land offers individual tracts for
    $10,000 each. If the purchaser pays cash, the price
    is $9,000, but if the purchaser finances the tract with
    the seller the price is $10,000. The $1,000 difference
    is a finance charge for those who buy the tracts on
    credit.
    12 C.F.R. Pt. 226, Supp. 1 § 226.4-4(b)(9)(1). A discount
    offered to customers that pay in cash but withheld from cus-
    tomers paying with a particular form of credit is considered
    a finance charge to those customers paying with the particular
    form of credit.2 Withholding the rebate from these customers
    is necessarily a discount for the purpose of inducing payment
    by other means. This is a legal conclusion. A creditor’s testi-
    mony on why he or she believes the rebate is withheld from
    the informed use of customer credit by requiring disclosures about its
    terms and costs.” Id. at § 226.1(b). To augment Regulation Z the Board
    also issues Official Staff Interpretations. 12 C.F.R. Pt. 226, Supp. I. The
    Supreme Court has said that because “Congress . . . delegated expansive
    authority to the Federal Reserve Board to elaborate and expand the legal
    framework governing commerce in credit” that “absent a clear expression
    to the contrary” deference is due the Board’s interpretations of TILA.
    Ford Motor Credit Co. v. Milhollin, 
    444 U.S. 555
    , 559-60 (1980).
    2
    Credit cards and other forms of open-ended credit are exempt from this
    rule. See 15 U.S.C. § 1666f(b). The Virachacks’ financing is a closed-end
    credit plan. See 
    12 C.F.R. § 226.2
    (a)(10) (defining closed-end credit); 
    12 C.F.R. § 226.2
    (a)(20) (defining open-end credit).
    VIRACHACK v. UNIVERSITY FORD                      5477
    customers paying with a particular form of credit is not perti-
    nent to this consideration. The result of withholding the rebate
    is a discount to cash paying customers as contrasted to cus-
    tomers paying with the 0.9% APR plan.
    The example used in the official staff interpretation of land
    being sold for $10,000 to purchasers using credit and for
    $9,000 to purchasers using cash is analogous to the
    Virachacks’ transaction. If the Virachacks had paid cash for
    their Ford Explorer they would have received the $2,000
    rebate. But under the credit plan with 0.9% APR they were
    denied the rebate and as a result paid $2,000 (plus interest on
    the $2,000 loaned) more for their car than a cash purchaser.
    Ford Explorers sold to purchasers paying cash cost at least
    $2,000 less than the same car sold to purchasers paying with
    the 0.9% APR credit plan.
    The Virachacks are not requesting a “windfall” as the
    majority opinion suggests. Maj. op. at 5474. Rather they sim-
    ply want to be fully informed, as TILA requires, of the full
    costs of paying with the 0.9% APR credit plan. The credit
    plan extended to the Virachacks cost them $2,000 (plus inter-
    est) more than paying with cash would have cost them.
    The district court found the foregone $2,000 rebate was not
    a finance charge.3 The district court reasoned that the $2,000
    rebate was available to people who paid with either cash or
    credit. The only group excluded from the $2,000 rebate was
    composed of people who paid with the 0.9% APR financing.
    The district court’s flawed reasoning was as follows, “Simply
    put, a consumer may obtain the rebate and still purchase on
    independently obtained credit. Forgoing the rebate, then, is
    not a condition of the extension of credit but, instead, is
    merely a condition of receiving the promotional rate.”
    3
    The district court in Virachack adopted the reasoning of the only other
    federal court opinion on this issue Coehlo v. Park Ridge Oldsmobile, Inc.,
    
    247 F.Supp.2d 1004
     (D. Ill. 2003). No federal court of appeals has yet
    ruled on this issue.
    5478             VIRACHACK v. UNIVERSITY FORD
    The problem with this reasoning is that although forgoing
    the $2,000 rebate was not a cost for all purchasers using
    credit, it was a cost for all purchasers using Bob Baker Ford’s
    0.9% APR financing plan. The official staff interpretation of
    Regulation Z explains that when determining whether a
    charge is a finance charge one should look at the particular
    credit transaction at issue. 12 C.F.R. Pt. 226, Supp. 1 § 226.4-
    4(a)(1). The staff interpretation states “[c]harges imposed uni-
    formly in cash and credit transactions are not finance charges.
    In determining whether an item is a finance charge, the credi-
    tor should compare the credit transaction in question with a
    similar cash transaction.” Id. (emphasis added). This requires
    “the credit transaction in question” to be compared with a
    cash transaction. Id. If one compares the Virachacks’ transac-
    tion with a cash transaction for a Ford Explorer then the
    Virachacks paid $2,000 (plus interest) more for their car than
    a cash purchaser would have paid.
    At the time the Virachacks purchased their car, receiving
    the 0.9% APR credit required a purchaser to forego the
    $2,000 rebate. This was not a negotiable aspect of the sale.
    Persons receiving the 0.9% APR forfeited the rebate. Individ-
    uals paying cash or with other forms of credit were eligible
    for the rebate. Thus, in this case, the $2,000 rebate was with-
    held “as an incident to or as a condition of the extension of
    credit.” 
    15 U.S.C. § 1605
    (a); 
    12 C.F.R. § 226.4
    (a). Foregoing
    the $2,000 credit was a cost of receiving Bob Baker Ford’s
    0.9% APR financing. The district court erred by comparing
    purchasers using credit as a general group to purchasers using
    cash. The fact that the Virachacks could seek other financing
    is irrelevant. When examining the costs of the credit terms
    offered, the appropriate comparison is between purchasers
    using the specific type of credit at issue and purchasers paying
    with cash. In this case, such a comparison reveals that the
    Virachacks and similarly situated customers paid $2,000 (plus
    interest) more for their vehicle than a cash purchaser paid for
    the same vehicle. This price differential for using the 0.9%
    APR financing was not disclosed to the Virachacks.
    VIRACHACK v. UNIVERSITY FORD                5479
    The central purpose of TILA is to provide “the informed
    use of credit” by requiring “meaningful disclosure of credit
    terms” to consumers. 
    15 U.S.C. § 1601
    ; Ford Motor Credit
    Co. v. Milhollin, 
    444 U.S. 555
    , 559 (1980). If Ford Motor
    gives a rebate to every Bob Baker Ford customer buying a
    Ford Explorer but withholds the rebate from those customers
    financing at 0.9% then the foregone rebate is a cost to the lat-
    ter group of customers. If 0.9% APR customers are not
    informed of the $2,000 rebate then they are ignorant of the
    full cost of the credit. This conflicts with the explicitly stated
    purpose of TILA:
    It is the purpose of this subchapter [
    15 U.S.C. § 1601
    et seq.] to assure a meaningful disclosure of credit
    terms so that the consumer will be able to compare
    more readily the various credit terms available to
    him and avoid the uninformed use of credit, and to
    protect the consumer against inaccurate and unfair
    credit billing and credit card practices.
    
    15 U.S.C. § 1601
    (a). Not disclosing the $2,000 cost of the
    0.9% financing means customers are making uninformed
    credit decisions. I believe the failure of Bob Baker Ford to
    disclose the foregone rebate violates TILA. I would reverse.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 03-55852

Filed Date: 5/19/2005

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/13/2015