Consumer Financial Protection Bureau v. Accrediting Council for Independent Colleges and Schools ( 2016 )


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  • UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
    CONSUMER FINANCIAL )
    PROTECTION BUREAU, )
    )
    Petiti0ner, )
    )
    v. ) Civil Case N0. 15-1838 (RJL)
    )
    ACCREDITING COUNCIL FOR )
    INDEPENDENT COLLEGES AND )
    SCHOOLS, ) F I |- E D
    § APR 2 1 2015
    Respondent.
    (§!erk, U.S. District & Bankruptc»;
    W f§uurts for the District of Co|umh:'a
    MEMOR NUM OPINION
    Aprii§z , 2016 [Dkr. #1 ]
    On October 29, 2()15, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau ("CFPB" or
    "petitioner") filed a petition in this Court, seeking an order requiring the Accrediting
    Council for Independent Colleges and Schools ("ACICS" or "respondent") to comply
    with a Civil Investigative Demand the CFPB issued to it on August 25, 2015. See Pet. to
    Enforce Civil Investigative Demand 1 [Dkt. #l] ("Pet."). Because the CFPB did not have
    authority to issue this Civil Investigative Demand, the petitioner’s request is DENIED
    and this case is DISMISSED.
    BACKGROUND
    On August 25, 2015, the CFPB issued to ACICS, an accreditor of for-profit
    col1eges, a Civil investigative Demand ("CID") with the stated purpose of "determin[ing]
    whether any entity or person has engaged or is engaging in unlawful acts and practices in
    connection with accrediting for-profit colleges." Decl. of Benjamin Konop Ex. A at 5‘
    [Dkt. #l-3] ("CID"). The CID required ACICS to designate a company representative to
    appear and give oral testimony regarding AClCS’s policies, procedures, and practices
    relating to the accreditation of seven particular schools, and to respond to two
    interrogatories: (l) to identify all post-secondary educational institutions that ACICS has
    accredited since January 20l0 and (2) to identify all individuals affiliated with ACICS
    who conducted any accreditation reviews since January l, 2010 specific to twenty-one
    particular schools. See CID 6-7. According to the CFPB, this CID was issued following
    a CFPB investigation of "for-profit colleges for deceptive practices tied to their private
    student-lending activities." Mem. in Supp. of Petition to Enforce CID 5 [Dkt. #l-2]
    ("Pet’r’s Mem.").
    Following receipt of the CID, AClCS’s counsel conferred with the CFPB several
    times by telephone to discuss compliance. Pet’r’s Mem. 2. These discussions, however,
    did not resolve disagreements between ACIClS and the CFPB concerning ACICS’s
    obligations, and on Septe1nber l4, 2015, ACICS petitioned the CFPB to set aside or
    modify the CID. Pet’r’s Mem. 2-3. The CFPB’s Director denied the petition on October
    8, 2015 and ordered ACICS to meet and confer with CFPB counsel. Pet’r’s Mem. 3.
    Thereafter, ACICS’S counsel continued to object to the CID, submitting to the CFPB a
    motion to reconsider its refusal to modify the CID on October 23, 2015 and a letter
    reiterating its arguments on October 26, 20l5. Pet’r’s Mem. 3. On October 27, 2015, the
    ' The Court refers to the page numbers assigned in the ECF caption for ease of reference,_
    2
    CFPB indicated that it would not consider AClCS’s motion for reconsideration because
    its regulations did not permit such motions. Pet’r’s Mem. 3. Just two days later, the
    CFPB filed the instant petition for enforcement. See Pet. To date ACICS has not
    complied with the CID and opposes the CFPB’s petition on the ground that it "concerns
    an investigation that is well outside the scope of the agency’s authority." ACICS Opp’n
    to the CFPB’s Pet. to Enforce CID l [Dkt. #4] ("Resp’t’s Opp’n"). For the following
    reasons, l agree.
    LEGAL STANDARD
    In determining whether to enforce a CID, a court must consider (l) whether the
    agency has the authority to make the inquiry, (2) whether the information sought is
    reasonably relevant, and (3) whether the demand is not too indefinite. See Um'ted States
    v. Morton Salt C0., 
    338 U.S. 632
    , 652 (1950); FTC v. Texaco, Inc., 
    555 F.2d 862
    , 872
    (D.C. Cir. 1977); CFTC v. Ekczsala, 
    62 F. Supp. 3d 88
    , 93 (D.D.C. 20l4). Ifthese three
    requirements are met, a court should enforce the petition unless it is unduly burdensome.
    See, e.g., Texaco, 
    555 F.2d at 882
    . Although a court’s role at this stage is "neither minor
    nor ministerial" it is "a strictly limited one," designed to further the "important
    governmental interest in the expeditious investigation of possible unlawful activity." 
    Id. at 871-72
    . In_short, the Court is not "to determine whether the [targeted entity’s]
    activities [are] covered by the statute," but rather whether the information sought is
    relevant to an investigation for "a lawfully authorized purpose." [a’. at 872 (discussing
    Ena’z``cottJohnson v. Perkins, 
    317 U.S. 501
     (1943))-. Moreover, agencies are generally
    accorded broad deference both in their interpretation of the scope of their authority and
    3
    their estimation of the relevance of requested records. See FTC v. Ken Roberts Co., 
    276 F.3d 583
    , 586-87 (D.C. Cir. 2001) ("[W]e have held that enforcement of an agency’s
    investigatory subpoena will be denied only when there is ‘a patent lack of jurisdiction’ in
    an agency to regulate or to investigate."); Dir., Oy%ce of T hrzft Supervz``sz``on v. Vinson &
    Elkz'ns, LLP, 
    124 F.3d 1304
    , 1307 (D.C. Cir. l997) ("We give the agency a wide berth as
    to relevance because it need establish only that the information is relevant to its
    investigation not to a hypothetical adjudication, and as we have explained, the boundary
    of an investigation need only, indeed can only, be defined in general terms.").
    Nevertheless, where it is clear that an agency either lacks the authority to investigate or is
    seeking information irrelevant to a lawful investigatory purpose, a court must set such
    inquiry aside. See Morton Salt, 
    338 U.S. at 652
     ("[A] governmental investigation . . .
    may be of such a sweeping nature and so unrelated to the matter properly under inquiry
    as to exceed the investigatory power.").
    ANALYSIS
    ln the final analysis this case boils down to the answer to one question: Did the
    CFPB have the statutory authority to issue the CID in question? Unfortunately for the_
    CFPB, the answer is no. How so?
    The CFPB was established on July 21, 2010 by Title X of the Dodd-Frank Wall
    Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, which tasked the CFPB with "regulat[ing]
    the offering and provision of consumer financial products or services under the Federal
    consumer financial laws." 12 U.S.C. § 549l(a). As such, the CFPB is authorized, inter
    alz'a, to take action "to prevent a covered person or service provider from committing or
    4
    engaging in an unfair, deceptive, or abusive act or practice under Federal law in
    connection with any transaction with a consumer for a consumer financial product or
    service, or the offering of a consumer financial product or service." Io’. § 553 l(a). To
    facilitate this purpose, the CFPB may issue CIDs to "any person [believed to] be in
    possession, custody, or control of any documentary material or tangible things, or may
    have any information, relevant to a violation" of the federal consumer financial laws. lo'.
    § 5562(0)(1). These CIDs must "state the nature of the conduct constituting the alleged
    violation which is under investigation and the provision of law applicable to such
    violation." Io’. § 5562(€)(2).
    Purportedly acting pursuant to this authority, the CFPB issued a CID to ACICS
    which contained the following statement of purpose:
    The purpose of this investigation is to determine whether any
    entity or person has engaged or is engaging in unlawful acts
    and practices in connection with accreo’iting for-profit
    colleges, in violation of sections 1031 and 1036 of the
    Consumer Financial Protection Act of 2010, 
    12 U.S.C. §§ 5531
    , 5536, or any other Federal consumer financial protection
    law. The purpose of this investigation is also to determine
    whether Bureau action to obtain legal or equitable relief would
    be in the public interest.
    CID 5 (e1nphasis added). ACICS argues that this language demonstrates the CFPB is
    attempting to conduct an investigation outside its statutory authority-that is, an
    investigation into the accreditation process of for-profit schools. Resp’t’s Opp’n 8.2 As
    2 ACICS also spends much of its opposition discussing why it is not subject to the Consumer Financial
    Protection Act. Resp’t’s Opp’n 1 1-l5. Heeding our Circuit Court’s instructions, however, 1 must agree
    with petitioner that this preliminary stage it is not the i%p§:_»_``z‘i``§)_``§-‘,iz*-.i``ate"i``£)i‘t``f'l-z,!§``?t§;*;adj_ii``§'iicate wh'£;_i:}}ie;_r ;'§_LClCS’s
    activities are covered by any consumer financial law.   Z_'¢i§‘si';aco,_"~§``-§``S P",Ed -at``f.-IY‘~E'.Z (cauti_i-is°h_-i``iig éourts
    considering petitions to enforce administrate subpoenas that they are not consider the ultimate 'question of
    5
    previously discussed, the CFPB investigative authority is limited to inquiries to determine
    whether there has been a violation of any consumer financial laws. See 
    12 U.S.C. §§ 5561
    (1), (5). As respondent points out, and the CFPB does not deny, none of these laws
    address, regulate, or even tangentially implicate the accrediting process of for-profit
    colleges. Thus, at first blush, the CID’s statement of purpose appears to concern a
    subject matter that is not within the statutory jurisdiction of the CFPB. See Ken Roberts,
    
    276 F.3d at 586-87
     (finding that a court asked to enforce a CID_must ensure that "the
    subject matter of the investigation is within the statutory jurisdiction of the subpoena-
    issuing agency" (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    RealiZing the absence of a clear nexus between the consumer financial laws it is
    tasked with enforcing and its purported investigation into accreditation of for-profit
    schools, the CFPB argues that because it indisputably "has authority to investigate for-
    profit schools in relation to their lending and financial-advisory services," it also has
    authority to investigate whether any entity has engaged in any unlawful acts relating to
    the accreditation of those schools. Pet’r’s Mem 4-5; Pet’r’s Reply l. Put simply, this
    post-hoc justification is a bridge too far! As ACICS has repeatedly and accurately
    explained, the accreditation process simply has no connection to a school’s private
    student lending practices. Resp’t’s Opp’n l3. l\/loreover, ACICS is not involved in the
    financial aid decisions of the schools it accredits, which means that it plays no part in
    "wliefth.é-°:§-the ;[i"i*;``~T-_gi;‘;ted entity’s] activi_-``I‘§i:§‘:>$: [ziz‘v::,] :;‘-i?.n;»'@i"ed by the s‘£:€:,-i``£t``.;i``:ga'l"’ at this §il?f@i:ir§ii'inary  I--E;z;;§=_sz_‘._='s:'
    no f{i@_u_t;>i``tliat ``:i``f" the CFPB pursues a c';§_zl'&i:;'s a;_;§*.~'L§inSH--EE;{QE_ICS in the €z_-I§__ui'=c_; these sig;=;~z_if,§;``$nt  qiié)§§tii'ii»ns
    will be at the center of the litigation.
    deciding whether to make or fund a student loan. Id. at l4. The CFPB objects that it "is
    not obligated to accept at face value ACICS’s generalized description of its interaction
    with the schools it accredits, or what aspects of those schools’ activities it ‘touches,"’ but
    rather it has the right to investigate and determine for itself whether these assertions are
    true.3 Pet’r’s Reply 5-6. Please. Although it may be that the CFPB is entitled to learn
    whether ACICS is connected in any way to potential violations of the consumer financial
    laws by the schools it accredits, the statement of purpose and the CFPB’s actual requests
    belie any notion that its inquiry is limited in this way. Indeed, the statement of purpose
    says nothing about an investigation into the lending or financial-advisory practices of for-
    profit schools. Moreover, the CFPB’s requests-for a list of all schools ACICS has
    accredited since 2010, for a list of all individuals involved in the accreditation of twenty-
    one enumerated schools, and for representatives to attest to the overall approach to
    accrediting seven enumerated schools_clearly reveal its investigation targets the
    accreditation process generally. This the CFPB was never empowered to do. See Morton
    Salt, 
    338 U.S. at 652
    . And the fact that the CFPB is also investigating for-profit schools
    3 Indeed, in its Notice of Supplemental Filing [Dkt. #12] ("Pet’r’s Suppl."), the CFPB argues that
    AClCS’s AccreditationI'§f-z"it._i:;!_jia si§._;g§gest tlr°ii