Prof'l Solutions v. Seidman ( 2021 )


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  •                IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 19–0514
    Submitted January 20, 2021—Filed June 25, 2021
    PSFS 3 CORPORATION,
    Appellee,
    vs.
    MICHAEL P. SEIDMAN, D.D.S., P.C., d/b/a DENTAL ASSOCIATES OF
    CAPE COD and MICHAEL P. SEIDMAN, Individually, et al.,
    Appellants.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Scott D.
    Rosenberg, Judge.
    Nearly 300 optometrists and dentists, consolidated into two cases,
    appeal the district court’s rulings on common and specific issues of
    personal jurisdiction and the legality of contract terms, as well as the entry
    of judgment of damages against each defendant without individual trials
    on the issue of damages in violation of the defendants’ due process rights.
    AFFIRMED.
    Appel, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which all justices
    joined.
    Ronald P. Gossett (argued) of Gossett & Gossett, P.A., Hollywood,
    Florida, and Billy J. Mallory of Brick Gentry, P.C., West Des Moines, for
    Gossett appellants.
    2
    David H. Charlip of Charlip Law Group, LC, Miami, Florida, and
    Matthew L. Preston (argued), Brad J. Brady, and Cara L. Roberts of Brady
    Preston Gronlund PC, Cedar Rapids, for Charlip appellants.
    Benjamin P. Roach and Randall D. Armentrout (argued) of
    Nyemaster Goode, P.C., Des Moines, for appellee.
    3
    APPEL, Justice.
    In this case, hundreds of optometrists, dentists, and their
    professional associations appeal from money judgments entered in Polk
    County District Court in favor of an Iowa corporation arising from finance
    agreements related to the purchase from a third-party vendor of
    multimedia systems for their waiting rooms. After consolidating the cases
    and trying two bellwether actions, the district court found that the finance
    agreements were enforceable and entered a judgment for damages against
    each bellwether defendant using a formula for damages presented by the
    plaintiff. The district court then applied the damages formula against the
    remaining defendants based upon proposed orders submitted by the
    plaintiff finance company which provided individual calculations of the
    amounts owed by each defendant.
    The defendants appeal. They raise a wide variety of substantive and
    procedural challenges including questions related to personal jurisdiction,
    the application of a floating forum-selection clause to the case, the proper
    measure and approach to damages, the application of various provisions
    of Iowa Code chapter 535 (2009) to the agreements in this case, the
    imposition of an 18% default rate alleged to be unconscionable under the
    facts and circumstances, and the orders finding the defendants liable for
    attorney fees.
    For the reasons expressed below, we affirm the rulings and
    judgments of the district court.
    I. Factual and Procedural Background.
    A. Overview of the Underlying Dispute.
    1. The transaction. In the years between 2005 and 2008 or 2009,
    NCMIC Finance Corporation (NCMIC) and the optometrists, dentists, and
    their professional associations entered into finance agreements related to
    4
    the purchase of Exhibeo multimedia systems for their waiting rooms. The
    Exhibeo systems included a computer, monitor, and software.
    The principal place of business of NCMIC is Clive, Iowa. With one
    exception, the material terms of the finance agreements between NCMIC
    and the defendants were identical. They all contained a common “hell-or-
    high-water clause,” a floating forum-selection clause, and a default
    provision authorizing acceleration of all future payments and the
    assessment of a default interest rate of 18% interest per annum.
    The vendor of the Exhibeo systems, Brican America, Inc. and later
    Brican America, LLC (Brican), sold these systems by allegedly making
    representations that a third party would purchase enough advertising on
    the systems to cover the finance payments and that if the advertising
    stopped Brican would buy back the systems and assume any remaining
    liability. The advertising payments stopped, but Brican refused to buy
    back the systems.     The defendants then stopped making payments to
    NCMIC under the finance agreements.
    2. The litigation. As a result of the dispute, defendants filed several
    putative class actions, two in the United States District Court for the
    Southern District of Florida, one in the United States District Court for the
    District of New Jersey, and one in the United States District Court for the
    Central District of California.      In these putative class actions, the
    defendants sought, among other things, a declaration that the finance
    agreements were not enforceable.           At about the same time, NCMIC
    assigned its interests in the finance agreements to a newly formed wholly
    owned subsidiary, PSFS 3 Corporation (PSFS 3).1 The assignment allowed
    1NCMIC     also conducted business under the name Professional Solutions
    Financial Services (PSFS) which should not be confused with the NCMIC subsidiary
    PSFS 3.
    5
    PSFS 3 to invoke a floating forum-selection clause in the finance
    agreements in which the parties agreed that the local courts where the
    headquarters of an assignee are located would have jurisdiction over
    disputes under the finance agreement. After the assignment, PSFS 3 filed
    hundreds of cases against individual defendants in Polk County District
    Court seeking to enforce the terms of the finance agreements.
    With multiple lawsuits in several forums threatening incoherent
    results, the United States Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation (MDL
    Panel) consolidated the federal actions in the Southern District of Florida.
    The litigation against individual defendants in Polk County was stayed
    during the Florida federal court proceedings. After the conclusion of the
    federal court litigation favorable to NCMIC and PSFS 3, the Polk County
    District Court lifted its stay of the enforcement actions in Iowa.
    Following the consolidation of the cases and a series of unsuccessful
    dispositive motions, the parties orally agreed to a stipulation that provided
    that the parties would try two bellwether cases (Busch and Insoft) and that
    “rulings and orders therefrom shall be binding as to all other remaining
    cases filed with similar issues and parties and shall constitute issue
    preclusion.” At the conclusion of the two bellwether trials, the district
    court entered judgment for the plaintiff PSFS 3 and awarded damages in
    each case.
    The plaintiff then moved to enforce the stipulation against the
    remaining defendants, asserting that all factual disputes had been
    resolved. PSFS 3 proposed that it submit individual proposed judgments
    with damages calculations in each individual case along the legal
    principles established in the bellwether cases. The defendants object to
    this procedure, asserting they had a due process right to a trial on the
    issue of damages.    The district court, however, adopted the procedure
    6
    proposed by PSFS 3 with respect to the remaining cases by asking PSFS 3
    to submit proposed judgments in the remaining cases but stating it would
    give the defendants “an opportunity to respond.”        After receiving no
    resistances, the district court proceeded to enter judgments in the
    hundreds of pending matters.
    3. Issues raised on appeal. In their appeal, the defendants raise
    several claims related to the ability of the Polk County District Court to
    hear the enforcement actions. They claim that because of the rulings in
    the Florida litigation by the Southern District of Florida and by the MDL
    Panel, principles of res judicata prevent PSFS 3 from asserting personal
    jurisdiction of defendants under the floating forum-selection provision.
    Further, aside from their res judicata argument, the defendants claim that
    the Iowa district court lacked personal jurisdiction over the defendants
    because the floating forum-selection provision is unenforceable under the
    facts and circumstances of the case. In particular, the defendants attack
    an assignment of the interests in the financing agreements from NCMIC to
    PSFS 3 for the purpose of triggering a floating forum-selection clause that
    provided for personal jurisdiction in the state of any assignee.
    Second, the defendants raise several specific issues related to
    personal jurisdiction. With respect to eleven defendants, they claim the
    actions were filed before NCMIC assigned the company’s interests in the
    financing agreements to PSFS 3 and that, as a result, the original actions
    were void and cannot support personal jurisdiction against those
    defendants.   One group of defendants, Jeff Wineinger and Cedar Park
    Vision Center, P.A., argue on appeal that they have a distinctly different
    finance agreement that has no provision relating to choice of forum, and
    as a result, the claim against them should have been dismissed for want
    of personal jurisdiction.
    7
    Third, the defendants claim that the finance agreements are
    unenforceable because they violate two provisions of Iowa Code chapter
    535. The first provision defendants argue that the plaintiff violated is Iowa
    Code section 535.17(1), which requires that material terms of a
    transaction must be disclosed to the borrower, and that the plaintiff failed
    to disclose the interest rate the defendants were being charged in the
    financing transaction. The defendants’ second claimed violation of chapter
    535 is that the interest rate in the finance agreement exceeded the rate
    permitted under Iowa’s usury statute provided in Iowa Code section 535.2.
    Fourth, the defendants claim that PSFS 3 failed to prove the fact of
    damages arising from the alleged breaches of the finance agreements.
    They claim that PSFS 3’s basic approach to calculating damages by
    multiplying the number of missed payments times the amount of each
    payment, was flawed. Instead, the defendants argue that the plaintiff was
    obligated to apportion a part of each payment to principal and interest and
    make calculations of damages based on these key factors.
    Fifth, the defendants claim that the district court’s approach to the
    damages issues in the case violated due process. They claim that they did
    not have an opportunity in the litigation to contest on an individualized
    basis the number of payments that were not paid by an individual
    defendant.     They also claim that final judgments were made against
    seventy-three parties, who were not signors of any finance agreement,
    without an opportunity to litigate whether they were a proper party to the
    proceedings.
    Sixth, the defendants claim that the 18% default interest rate in the
    finance agreements is unconscionable. They claim the high rate of interest
    amounts to an unjustified penalty and cannot be enforced.
    8
    Seventh, the defendants seek to preemptively attack any award of
    attorney fees to the plaintiff in these cases.
    B. Commencement of Litigation in Iowa and Florida Regarding
    Enforceability of Finance Agreements.
    1. Initial Iowa enforcement actions brought by NCMIC. NCMIC filed
    several enforcement actions in Polk County District Court in late 2009 and
    early 2010.     NCMIC filed its first enforcement action on December 18,
    2009.      Additional cases were filed on March 16, 2010, against other
    defendants.
    In the initial Iowa enforcement actions, NCMIC alleged that each
    party:
    [A]greed to personal jurisdiction and venue in any State or
    Federal Court located where the assignee[’]s corporate
    headquarters is located. The corporate headquarters of the
    Plaintiff is located in Clive, Polk County, Iowa. The Iowa
    District Court in Polk County is therefore the proper court in
    which to bring this action under the forum selection clause
    contained in the lease agreement.
    A copy of the finance agreement was attached to each petition. The
    forum-selection clause in Paragraph 13 of the finance agreement stated:
    13. GOVERNING LAW, CONSENT TO JURISDICTION
    AND VENUE OF LITIGATION. This Lease and each Schedule
    shall be governed by the internal laws for the state in which
    Lessor’s or Lessor’s assignee’s principal corporate offices are
    located. IF THIS IS ASSIGNED, YOU AGREE THAT ANY
    DISPUTE ARISING UNDER OR RELATED TO THIS LEASE
    WILL BE ADJUDICATED IN THE FEDERAL OR STATE
    COURT       WHERE       THE     ASSIGNEE’S       CORPORATE
    HEADQUARTERS IS LOCATED AND WILL BE GOVERNED BY
    THE LAW OF THAT STATE. YOU HEREBY CONSENT TO
    PERSONAL JURISDICTION AND VENUE IN THAT COURT
    AND WAIVE ANY RIGHT TO TRANSFER VENUE.
    Paragraph 13 has been described as a “floating forum selection
    clause.” The proper forum for disputes among the parties to the finance
    agreement “floats” with each assignment of the interests to the courts
    9
    where the assignee’s headquarters are located. While the forum-selection
    clause expressly stated that disputes would be adjudicated in the state
    where an assignee’s corporate headquarters are located, it did not
    expressly address jurisdiction with respect to disputes involving the
    original party, NCMIC.
    2. Putative class actions filed in Florida attacking the validity of
    finance agreements. While enforcement actions were commenced in Iowa
    by NCMIC, two groups of doctors filed actions in Florida challenging the
    enforceability of the finance agreements. On March 3, 2010, a group of
    doctors represented by attorney David Charlip filed a putative class action
    in Florida state court seeking to void the finance agreements.          On
    March 16, doctors represented by attorney Ronald Gossett filed an action
    in federal court in Florida seeking to have the finance agreements declared
    unenforceable.   The simultaneous filings in Iowa and Florida set up a
    procedural battle regarding the proper forum for the adjudication of the
    underlying claims.
    3. NCMIC forms PSFS 3 and assigns interests in the finance
    agreements. After the filing of the Florida litigation, an unnamed attorney
    questioned the applicability of the floating forum-selection clause in what
    NCMIC saw as an attempt to stop Iowa-based enforcement efforts.         In
    response, NCMIC took steps to address the omission in Paragraph 13 of
    the finance agreement.     Counsel for NCMIC recommended that the
    agreements be assigned to another Iowa corporation because under
    Paragraph 13, it “is very clear that jurisdiction and venue [are] proper in
    the home state and county of any assignee.” Thus, according to NCMIC
    counsel, “if these leases are assigned to an Iowa corporation located in
    Polk County we have a lock on jurisdiction and venue here in Polk County.”
    When NCMIC wrote its lender seeking consent to the assignment, it
    10
    advised: “It is important we deal with the possible venue challenge issue
    immediately in order to thwart the need to potentially litigate defaulted
    lease contracts outside of Iowa.”
    On March 30, NCMIC created a new entity, PSFS 3. The same day,
    NCMIC assigned its lease contract rights to the new corporation.          The
    apparent purpose of the assignment was to create a “lock” on personal
    jurisdiction in Polk County with respect to enforcement actions filed by
    PSFS 3, the assignee of NCMIC.         After the assignment, PSFS 3 filed
    numerous additional enforcement actions in Polk County District Court.
    PSFS 3 also filed amended petitions in cases filed before March 30.
    In the amended petitions, PSFS 3 was substituted as the “real party in
    interest” by “virtue of the assignment.”        Service was made on the
    defendants by ordinary mail.
    4. Preliminary skirmishes over forum in Iowa.         Defendants filed
    motions to dismiss the Iowa enforcement actions based upon lack of
    personal jurisdiction, lack of venue, and forum non conveniens. The first
    such motion, submitted by defendant Porter, was heard by the district
    court on May 25. The Porter case involved a transaction where Brican was
    the original party to the finance agreement but assigned its interest to
    PSFS. The district court limited its consideration in the motion to the
    question of whether the floating forum-selection clause in the finance
    agreement was enforceable. On June 4, the district court entered an order
    concluding that the floating forum-selection clause was permissive but
    once PSFS 3 chose to file in its home forum, the purchaser waived the
    right to seek to transfer the action to another court. As a result, the motion
    to dismiss was denied. The district court, however, agreed to stay the
    matter pending resolution of the Florida litigation.
    11
    Other defendants filed motions to dismiss with broader arguments
    than those considered in the Porter case. Some defendants claimed that
    the assignment of a category of leases referred to as the “three column”
    leases to PSFS 3 occurred after the actions were filed and thus were not
    applicable to their lawsuits.2        The defendants further claimed that the
    floating forum-selection clause did not apply because it became applicable
    only through a “sham” transaction designed solely to engage in forum-
    shopping after the filing of litigation in Florida and other states.                 The
    defendants also claimed that the floating forum-selection clause was
    unenforceable because it was unreasonable and unjust. The defendants
    also invoked the doctrine of forum non conveniens, claiming that Florida
    was a more convenient forum for the parties than Iowa. In the alternative,
    the defendants asked for a stay of the action pending resolution of the
    Florida class action.
    PSFS 3 filed a resistance to the motions to dismiss.                      PSFS 3
    defended the assignment of the contracts from NCMIC to PSFS 3 as
    perfectly valid and not the product of a sham transaction. It asserted that
    the floating forum-selection clause was not unreasonable under all the
    circumstances.
    Attached to the PSFS 3 resistance was an affidavit from Patrick
    McNerney, CEO of NCMIC, along with various supporting documents.
    McNerney reviewed the creation of PSFS 3 and the assignment by NCMIC
    of contracts to the newly created PSFS 3. He attached the assignment
    documentation, articles of incorporation of PSFS 3, security agreement,
    2There  were two principal forms of financing agreements in the Florida litigation.
    The first type, referred to as the full page format, involved doctors signing agreements
    with Brican as the original financing entity and Brican assigning the agreements to PSFS
    (NCMIC). The second type, referred to as the three column agreements, involved doctors
    signing agreements with PSFS (NCMIC) as the original financing entity that were later
    assigned to PSFS 3 on March 30, 2010.
    12
    certificate of incorporation, and bylaws of the new corporation. He stated
    that PSFS 3 is a wholly owned subsidiary of NCMIC and was capitalized
    with $500,000 in cash.
    The district court held a hearing on the motions to dismiss on
    July 9. At the hearing, the Gossett defendants, pursuant to Iowa Rule of
    Civil Procedure 1.431(6), requested the opportunity to cross-examine
    McNerney, who did not appear for the hearing.
    At the hearing, the parties asked the court to consolidate the
    individual actions.   On July 22, the district court entered an order
    consolidating the cases pursuant to Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.913.
    The district court stated that while the consolidation remained in place,
    “any rulings which may be forthcoming . . . shall be considered as having
    been individually filed in each of the [consolidated] cases.”
    On August 12, the district court ruled on the pending motions to
    dismiss. The district court denied the motions. With respect to the Brican-
    PSFS leases, the district court reaffirmed its prior ruling in the Porter
    action. The district court further addressed an issue not decided in Porter,
    namely, whether the interest being assigned was sufficiently identified in
    the Brican-PSFS documents. The district court concluded that they were.
    On the question of the validity of the assignment of interests in the
    finance agreements by NCMIC to PSFS 3, the district court held that the
    assignment was valid. In rejecting the claim that the assignment was a
    sham, the district court relied extensively on the McNerney affidavit and
    accompanying documents. The district court noted: “These documents
    persuasively make the case that PSFS 3 is a separate corporate entity,
    properly capitalized and which receives the benefit of the monthly lease
    payments called for under the assignments in question.”
    13
    The district court further concluded that the language of the floating
    forum-selection clause created mandatory jurisdiction in Iowa. Further,
    the district court concluded that under Iowa law, a floating forum-selection
    provision was enforceable unless “unreasonable or unjust” or invalid for a
    reason such as fraud or overreaching. On the record made, the district
    court concluded that the defendants failed to make such a showing.
    After the district court’s August 12 ruling, the parties engaged in
    discovery on the assignment issue.       The defendants obtained financial
    records and organizational documents related to PSFS 3. On January 12,
    2011, the defendants also deposed McNerney.
    After conducting the discovery, on January 24, the defendants again
    moved to dismiss the actions.     The defendants emphasized what was
    uncovered in the deposition of McNerney. According to the defendants, on
    the expense side of the ledger, the deposition established that PSFS 3 paid
    no fees for incorporating, paid no compensation to anyone, had no paid
    employees, paid no rental for any offices, paid no telephone bills, paid no
    electrical bills, purchased no office supplies, purchased no paper, nor paid
    for business cards. The only expenses of PSFS 3 were a payment for bank
    service charges and an unexplained payment of $264.94 to NCMIC.
    On the questions of capitalization and income, the defendants noted
    that the deposition of McNerney revealed that although the company was
    formed on March 30, 2010, money was not deposited in any PSFS 3 bank
    account until May 14 when $500,000 was deposited. Further, in terms of
    income, NCMIC deposited amounts monthly into PSFS 3’s bank account,
    and then PSFS 3 immediately transferred the exact same amount back to
    NCMIC.
    PSFS 3 resisted dismissal and filed a supplemental affidavit from
    McNerney. PSFS 3 addressed the challenge to the assignment of the three
    14
    column leases to PSFS 3. Among other things, PSFS 3 noted that it was
    common for wholly owned subsidiaries to rely on employees of the parent
    and to share common space with a parent. PSFS 3 noted that it signed a
    $13,500,000 promissory note with NCMIC as compensation for the
    assignment of the three column leases.         PSFS 3 further noted that
    $500,000 in capital was transferred on March 31, on to the general ledger
    of the new corporation and deposited into a PSFS 3 account once Wells
    Fargo Bank completed the necessary internal activities to activate the
    account.
    On March 3, 2011, the district court again denied the motion to
    dismiss. The district court stated it had carefully reviewed the McNerney
    testimony. The district court, however, concluded that while the plaintiff
    may have gone to great lengths to create an assignment which would form
    the basis for the use of the floating forum-selection clause, the defendants
    “have not convinced the court that this underlying assignment is
    fraudulent or otherwise a ‘sham.’ ” The district court, however, agreed to
    the defendants’ motion to stay the three column proceedings pending
    developments in the Florida litigation.
    5. Preliminary skirmishes in Florida over forum. On May 5, 2010,
    NCMIC (PSFS) filed a motion to dismiss the Florida federal court action or
    to transfer it to the Polk County District Court. The federal district court
    denied the motion on several grounds. First, the district court observed
    that the floating forum-selection clause was permissive, not mandatory.
    Second, the district court noted that the putative class action was filed
    prior to the assignment of finance agreements in the case and thus “it
    would be inequitable to allow Defendants to shop the actions to another
    forum simply by assigning the Leases after the lawsuit [was] filed.” Finally,
    the district court noted that the MDL Panel had expended resources and
    15
    decided that the actions were “triggered belatedly for the purposes of forum
    shopping.”
    After similar actions against NCMIC were filed in other federal
    district courts, the Charlip and Gossett defendants filed a motion with the
    MDL Panel to transfer all similar actions to the Southern District of
    Florida. NCMIC and PSFS 3 responded to the motion, arguing that Florida
    was an improper venue because the leases contained the floating forum-
    selection clauses which would require the claims to be litigated in Iowa.
    The MDL Panel transferred the cases to the Southern District of Florida,
    stating “[w]e are persuaded that the Southern District of Florida is an
    appropriate . . . forum.”
    C. Conclusion of Federal Court Litigation in Florida.             The
    litigation in Florida proceeded to resolution. In a series of rulings, the
    federal district court proceeded to winnow the claims through summary
    judgment proceedings. On August 1, 2013, the district court ruled that
    under the finance agreement, the cancellation provision did not invalidate
    the hell-or-high-water clause of the contracts. On January 22, 2014, the
    district court ruled that to the extent Brican made misrepresentations to
    doctors that it would “ ‘buy back,’ ‘repurchase’ or ‘assume assignment’ of
    the Financing Agreement,” it was not acting as an agent for NCMIC. The
    district court noted, however, that enforcement was subject to “defenses
    unique to individual plaintiffs that were not and could not have been
    asserted within the scope of the common questions of law or fact presented
    in this action.”
    On May 7, 2015, the district court entered final judgments in the
    cases involving three column leases.        The doctors appealed.       On
    November 22, 2016, the United States District Court for the Eleventh
    Circuit affirmed.
    16
    D. Iowa Proceedings After the Conclusion of the Florida
    Litigation.
    1. Pretrial proceedings.    On January 3, 2017, the Polk County
    District Court lifted the stay on the Iowa cases. A trial was scheduled for
    December 11 for all the cases. The district court ordered the defendants
    to amend their answers to raise any and all affirmative defenses within
    fifteen days of the order. The district court further ordered the parties “to
    select those cases for trial first that have the most common issues as to as
    many parties as possible and proceed there from the most issues to the
    least issues.”
    On March 7, the defendants opted to continue the litigation with two
    large groups of defendants (one group represented by Gossett and the
    other by Charlip). The Gossett defendants filed a consolidated document
    with amended answers and affirmative defenses. The Gossett defendants
    raised fifteen additional affirmative defenses, including: (1) lack of personal
    jurisdiction, (2) violation of Iowa Code section 535.17, and (3) violation of
    Iowa’s usury statute contained in Iowa Code section 535.4. The Gossett
    defendants also counterclaimed for a declaratory judgment that PSFS 3
    waived its right to attorney fees in federal courts by failing to timely file.
    The Charlip defendants filed a similar amended answer and affirmative
    defenses.
    On May 5, PSFS 3 moved for summary judgment.                The general
    thrust of the motion was that the federal district court had ruled in favor
    of the enforceability of the finance agreements, subject only to unique
    individualized defenses and that the defendants were precluded from
    relitigating the issues that were brought, or could have been brought, in
    the Florida federal court action. The defendants resisted, noting, among
    17
    other things, that issues unique to individual defendants remained to be
    litigated.
    On August 4, the district court denied the motion. The district court
    found that the defendants did not include certain Iowa law claims in the
    Florida litigation for fear of destroying commonality. Further, the district
    court found that there were genuine issues of material fact on whether the
    material terms of the financing agreements were included in the
    documents, whether the financing agreements violated Iowa usury law by
    not including a rate of interest, whether NCMIC is entitled to default
    interest on future amounts due to accelerating the amount owed, and
    whether NCMIC is entitled to recover attorney fees in the Iowa court for
    fees incurred in the Florida litigation.
    After the denial of the motion, the parties continued discovery. On
    the issue of damages, PSFS 3 answered interrogatories asking how
    damages were calculated and produced records showing the total number
    of payments made by each defendant on their respective finance
    agreements.
    On October 12, PSFS 3 renewed its motion for summary judgment.
    The plaintiff asserted in the second summary motion that the terms of the
    finance agreements complied with Iowa Code chapter 535 and that the
    18% default rate was not unconscionable. Also on October 12, the Gossett
    and Charlip defendants filed a motion for summary judgment on their
    affirmative defenses. They claimed that the failure to disclose the interest
    rate and the interest rate itself violated Iowa Code section 535.17(1) related
    to material disclosures and section 535.2 dealing with usurious rates of
    interest.
    At the hearing on the motions on November 21, the district court did
    not provide a ruling. The district court again urged the defendants to file
    18
    any defenses unique to individual defendants. Specifically, the district
    court noted, “The parties shall raise any and all defenses by December 1,
    2017 or be barred from raising them at any future time.” In response,
    three defendants filed amended answers.3
    2. Trial of bellwether cases.          With one exception, the finance
    agreement was identical in all cases.4 On November 21, 2017, the parties
    entered into a stipulation to try two bellwether cases against defendants
    Insoft and Busch: “The parties agree that the two trials on December 11
    and 12, 2017 and the rulings and orders therefrom shall be binding as to
    all other remaining cases filed with similar issues and parties and shall
    constitute issue preclusion.”
    On December 11 and 12, the district court held bench trials in the
    bellwether cases. The parties filed posttrial briefs. On April 9, 2018, the
    district court issued an order entitled “Ruling and Order on Plaintiffs’ and
    Defendants’ Motions for Summary Judgment.” In the ruling, the district
    court held that the finance agreements were enforceable and ordered
    PSFS 3 to submit proposed judgment entries on damages in the bellwether
    cases. The PSFS 3 submission determined the damages by calculating the
    payments that were unpaid under each agreement. PSFS 3 further sought
    default interest, late fees, unpaid taxes, and court costs.
    3. Calculation of damages in bellwether cases. On June 15, 2018,
    the district court entered judgment in the bellwether cases. The Busch
    and Insoft defendants filed a motion to reconsider on June 25. In their
    3Andrea  Gentile-Fiori and Gary Goberville claimed that their business entities
    should have been sued rather than themselves personally. Jeffrey Mellom challenged the
    signature on the finance agreement that PSFS 3 sought to enforce.
    4Wineinger’s finance agreement did not contain any provision related to forum
    selection.
    19
    motion, the Busch and Insoft defendants attacked the imposition of late
    fees and a court ruling that the plaintiff was entitled to attorney fees. The
    district court disposed of the motion to reconsider on July 1, 2019.5
    4. Entry of judgments against the remaining defendants.                     On
    May 17, 2018, PSFS 3 moved to enforce the stipulation against the
    remaining defendants and to have judgments entered pursuant to the
    same damages approach employed in the bellwether cases. In support of
    the motion, PSFS 3 submitted a chart showing the remaining payments
    owed by each defendant. On May 30 and May 31, a total of fifty-four
    defendants resisted, arguing, among other things, that without a trial on
    the remaining issues they would be deprived of due process.6                     They
    specifically stated that while rulings in the Busch and Insoft cases may be
    preclusive on issues of liability, the plaintiff failed to establish damages in
    the bellwether cases that would be applicable in the other cases. The
    defendants noted that damages calculations based on the number of
    missed payments times the amount of each missed payment would differ
    for each and every defendant. The defendants also suggested that entering
    final orders in the remaining cases should await the outcome of any appeal
    in the bellwether cases.
    On June 6, PSFS 3 filed a reply urging the district court not to stay
    final resolution of the other cases that had already been pending for eight
    years. PSFS 3 argued that all that remained in the individual cases was a
    calculation of damages by multiplying the number of missed payments
    5The  two bellwether cases have settled and thus those judgments are not subject
    to this appeal.
    6The May 30 filing was on behalf of three Gossett defendants where judgments
    were not entered against them and who are not parties to this appeal. The May 31 filing
    was on behalf of Charlip defendants in 51 individual cases.
    20
    times the amount of each payment and assessing default interest from the
    date of the filing of each petition.
    To the extent there were due process concerns, PSFS 3 asked the
    district court to treat its filing as a motion for summary judgment. PSFS 3
    argued that it had submitted necessary records supported by an affidavit
    to determine damages in each case. Unless the defendants’ resist with
    admissible evidence that established a genuine issue of material fact, the
    district court should proceed to enter judgments in the cases. PSFS 3
    closed by asking the district court to enter judgment in its favor in the
    cases and proposed that it prepare individual judgments as the district
    court might direct.
    On December 14, the district court held a hearing on the pending
    motions.     At the hearing, PSFS 3 again asserted that the manner of
    calculating damages had been determined and that there were no
    remaining factual disputes on damages. PSFS 3 noted that it filed its
    materials in May and that none of the defendants contested the damages
    calculations.    PSFS 3 suggested that as no responses were filed, the
    district court could treat their submission as a motion for summary
    judgment and issue judgments including damages based on undisputed
    facts.
    The defendants replied that the burden of proving damages in each
    case rested with the plaintiff and that a noncross-examined affidavit could
    not be used to shift the burden to the defendants.        The defendants
    emphasized that the PSFS 3 motion to enforce the stipulation was not
    presented as a motion for summary judgment and, as a result, “we didn’t
    go to the individual damage claims.”
    At the conclusion of the December 14 hearing, the district court
    directed PSFS 3 to submit proposed judgment entries as to all the
    21
    remaining defendants. The district court told the parties “I won’t rule on
    the final order judgment until I see what you present and give the
    defendants an opportunity to respond.” PSFS 3 submitted such proposals
    between January 11 and 29, 2019. After the proposed judgments had
    been on file for nearly a month without resistances being filed by the
    defendants, the district court began entering judgments in individual
    cases on February 26 and running through April 8. The defendants filed
    postjudgment motions, but none of them disputed the number of
    remaining payments with respect to any defendant. The district court
    denied the posttrial motions.
    II. Common Issues of Personal Jurisdiction.
    A. Introduction. In this litigation, PSFS 3 relied upon a forum-
    selection clause in its standard finance agreement to establish consent to
    personal jurisdiction in Iowa courts by the defendants. The problem is
    that Paragraph 13 of the finance agreement that related to forum selection
    did not expressly apply to the original contracting parties. The forum-
    selection clause was a floating forum-selection provision that applied only
    in the event of an assignment of the contracts by NCMIC.
    To remedy the lack of explicit consent to an Iowa forum in litigation
    with NCMIC, NCMIC assigned the finance agreements to a wholly owned
    related corporation, PSFS 3. Because of the assignment, PSFS 3 argued
    that the floating forum-selection clause now applied and the district court
    in Polk County had jurisdiction over the cases pursuant to the parties’
    agreement. The defendants, however, argued that the assignment was a
    sham transaction and that the floating forum-selection clause should not
    be applied under the facts of this case.
    B. Standard of Review.         Rulings on questions of personal
    jurisdiction are reviewed for correction of errors at law. Shams v. Hassan,
    22
    
    829 N.W.2d 848
    , 853 (Iowa 2013).          A motion to dismiss is a special
    proceeding that requires findings of fact and conclusions of law. Cap.
    Promotions L.L.C. v. Don King Prods., Inc., 
    756 N.W.2d 828
    , 832–33 (Iowa
    2008). The plaintiff has the burden to set forth a prima facie case that
    jurisdiction is appropriate, with the district court “accept[ing] as true the
    allegations of the petition and the contents of uncontroverted affidavits.”
    Shams, 829 N.W.2d at 853 (quoting Addison Ins. v. Knight, Hoppe, Kurnik
    & Knight, L.L.C., 
    734 N.W.2d 473
    , 476 (Iowa 2007)). Once “the plaintiff
    makes a prima facie case . . . , the burden shifts to the defendant to rebut
    that showing.” 
    Id.
    C. Positions of the Parties.
    1. The defendants. Generally, the defendants raise several personal
    jurisdiction arguments that apply to all defendants. First, the defendants
    claim that the assignments made by NCMIC to PSFS 3 were made for
    improper forum-shopping purposes after the commencement of federal
    litigation in Florida. They noted that “the MDL panel rejected PSFS 3’s
    claim to Iowa jurisdiction” and that the federal district court in Florida
    declared that “it would be inequitable to allow Defendants to shop the
    actions to another forum simply by assigning the Leases after the lawsuit
    [was] filed.” The defendants argue that this aspect of the unappealed and
    final Florida district court ruling conclusively binds the Polk County
    District Court through application of res judicata.
    Second, aside from the alleged preclusive effect of the Florida
    litigation, the defendants attack the findings of the district court about the
    nature of the assignments at issue. The district court found that PSFS 3
    is a separate corporate entity, properly capitalized, and received the benefit
    of the monthly lease payments under the assignments. The defendants
    attack the district court’s findings on four fronts.
    23
    With respect to the validity of the assignments, the defendants claim
    that the district court’s conclusion regarding PSFS 3 receiving the benefit
    of monthly lease payments received by PSFS 3 was in error.              The
    defendants assert that, in reality, lease payments were originally collected
    by NCMIC as an agent for PSFS 3, transferred to PSFS 3, and then
    transferred back to NCMIC in the exact same amount. The transfer back
    to NCMIC was to pay off a note that PSFS 3 signed with NCMIC to purchase
    the assignment of the finance agreements. In the end, according to the
    defendants, NCMIC has assigned bare legal title to the financing
    agreements to PSFS 3 while keeping the full beneficial interest for itself.
    The sole purpose of the transaction, according to the defendants, was to
    promote NCMIC’s forum-shopping interest.
    Next, the defendants note that the record does not establish that
    PSFS 3 was properly capitalized. PSFS 3 had signed promissory notes to
    NCMIC for $13,000,000 and PSFS 3’s initial capitalization of $500,000
    was made with a promissory note from NCMIC to PSFS 3. The defendants
    claim that these facts do not support a finding of proper capitalization of
    PSFS 3.
    In addition, the defendants assert that PSFS 3 is not really a
    “separate corporate entity.” They note that PSFS 3 is wholly owned by
    NCMIC, “has nothing except an interlocking board of directors and officers,
    and holds bare legal title to the Financing Agreements (whose benefits
    remain flowing to NCMIC) for the sole purpose of triggering a floating forum
    jurisdiction clause.”
    Finally, the defendants assert that the assignment of the financing
    agreements was a sham.        The defendants cite Iowa Supreme Court
    Commission on Unauthorized Practice of Law v. A–1 Associates, Ltd., 
    623 N.W.2d 803
    , 808 (Iowa 2001) (en banc), in support of their position. In A–
    24
    1 Associates, we determined that a purported assignment of debt to a
    collection agency was a sham transaction to permit the collection agency,
    proceeding pro se, to practice law on the cheap while remitting the balance
    to the original assignor after collecting a fee.      
    Id.
       According to the
    defendants, counsel for the plaintiff admitted that the purpose of the
    assignment to the new corporation was to provide a “lock” on jurisdiction
    and venue in Polk County.
    Having shown that the transaction was, in fact, a “sham,” the
    defendants claim that NCMIC violated its duty of good faith and fair
    dealing by attempting to use the forum-selection clause not pursuant to a
    valid arm’s length assignment but instead for a forum-shopping purpose.
    In support of its argument, the defendants cite Garcia v. Eidal International
    Corp., 
    808 F.2d 717
    , 722 (10th Cir. 1986), and Vista Outdoor Inc. v. Reeves
    Family Trust, 
    725 Fed. Appx. 17
    , 21 (2d Cir. 2018).
    2. Position of the plaintiff.   On the generally applicable personal
    jurisdiction issues, PSFS 3 asserts that the question in this case is
    whether application of the floating forum-selection provision is unfair,
    unreasonable, or unjust under Iowa caselaw. See Karon v. Elliott Aviation,
    
    937 N.W.2d 334
    , 346 (Iowa 2020).           PSFS 3 notes that the individual
    doctors all contracted with an Iowa company and that the contract would
    be governed by Iowa law. Even in the absence of an assignment, according
    to PSFS 3, the defendants should have expected to be sued in Iowa when
    a dispute arose. Thus, to the extent the forum floated in this case, it did
    not float very far from what the parties should have expected.
    PSFS 3 asserts that the transaction was not a sham transaction but
    instead amounted simply to the creation of a related entity for the purpose
    of “monitoring the receipt of payments . . . and, where necessary, enforcing
    the Financing Agreements in court.” PSFS 3 points out that the entity is
    25
    properly organized under Iowa law, is fully capitalized, has separate books,
    and follows corporate formalities.
    PSFS 3 rejects the effort of the defendants to “pierce the corporate
    veil.” PSFS 3 points out that the pierce the corporate veil doctrine is a
    misnomer and is really a remedial doctrine that permits liability to extend
    to individuals notwithstanding the presence of a corporate structure that
    might ordinarily limit the personal liability of individual owners. In any
    event, PSFS 3 argues there is no sham, and instead, there is transparency.
    The purpose of PSFS 3 is to allow for the consolidation of the finance
    agreements to actions in one forum and to enforce those agreements. It is
    not a case where unlawful or unauthorized activity is masked by an
    organizational structure as in A–1 Associates.
    Finally, PSFS 3 addresses the res judicata issue.        According to
    PSFS 3, no court has held that Iowa courts have no personal jurisdiction
    over any defendants in the Iowa cases.           Instead, the Florida court
    determined that the floating forum-selection provisions were not
    “mandatory.” As a result, there is no identical issues in the Florida case
    that precludes a finding of personal jurisdiction in the Iowa cases. Emps.
    Mut. Cas. Co. v. Van Haaften, 
    815 N.W.2d 17
    , 22 (Iowa 2012).
    D. Discussion.
    1. Res judicata. We first begin with the claim that the Iowa litigation
    is barred by the doctrine of res judicata as a result of the decision of the
    federal district court in Florida. It is true, as the doctors point out, that
    the federal district court rebuffed efforts to have the Florida cases
    transferred to Iowa courts. And, it is true that PSFS 3 did not appeal those
    rulings.
    But, it does not follow that the rulings denying the transfer of cases
    to Iowa amounted to a determination in federal court that Iowa courts
    26
    lacked personal jurisdiction over the doctors. There is nothing in the order
    of the MDL Panel or the Florida district court that takes a position on that
    precise issue. Instead, the rulings declined to take the affirmative step
    requested by PSFS 3, namely, to transfer the pending Florida cases to
    Iowa. That, of course, would defeat the plaintiff’s choice of forum where
    the plaintiff filed its action first.
    Thus, the MDL Panel and the Florida federal district court
    determined that it would be inequitable to transfer the cases to Iowa based
    on the assignment after the doctors’ litigation had already been filed in
    Florida. Nothing more was decided. In order for res judicata to apply,
    however, the issue in the previous litigation must be identical.
    Van Haaften, 815 N.W.2d at 22; Soults Farms, Inc. v. Schafer, 
    797 N.W.2d 92
    , 104 (Iowa 2011). As a result, the action in federal court has no res
    judicata effect on the unaddressed question of whether there was personal
    jurisdiction over the defendants in Polk County, Iowa.
    2. Sham transaction. The defendants argue that the transfer of the
    finance agreements to PSFS 3 was a sham transaction of a kind that
    prevents enforcement of the floating forum-selection provision. But the
    assignment was not a sham. It was a transparent transaction with the
    limited purpose of creating an optimal enforcement mechanism with
    respect to the finance agreements.
    Further, we agree with PSFS 3 that the pierce the corporate veil
    doctrine is not well designed for the context we deal with here.        The
    question here is not one of remedy where the corporate structure has been
    abused, but one of compliance with an express contractual term that
    establishes personal jurisdiction in the courts of the state where the
    corporate headquarters of an assignee is located.
    27
    While the defendants urge us to apply a doctrine of good faith and
    fair dealing, we think it does not apply in this context. There is an express
    unqualified contractual provision here authorizing assignment of the
    interest created by the finance agreement. The doctrine of good faith and
    fair dealing “does not ‘give rise to new substantive terms that do not
    otherwise exist in the contract,’ ” let alone override an express contractual
    provision. Bagelmann v. First Nat’l Bank, 
    823 N.W.2d 18
    , 34 (Iowa 2012)
    (quoting Mid–Am. Real Est. Co. v. Iowa Realty Co., 
    406 F.3d 969
    , 974 (8th
    Cir. 2005)). Further, enforcement of the literal terms of the contract does
    not appear unfair, especially where the original party to the contract was
    headquartered in Clive, Iowa, and the contract expressly declared that the
    law of Iowa applied.      The assignment in this case simply cannot be
    considered far afield from the parties’ legitimate expectations. Am. Tower,
    L.P. v. Loc. TV Iowa, L.L.C., 
    809 N.W.2d 546
    , 550–51 (Iowa Ct. App. 2011)
    (“Implied contractual duty of good faith and fair dealing in commercial
    contracts does not support an independent cause of action for failure to
    act in good faith under a contract; instead, the duty of good faith is meant
    to give the parties what they would have stipulated for at the time of
    contracting   if   they   could   have    foreseen   all   future   problems   of
    performance.” (quoting 13 Richard A. Lord, Williston on Contracts § 38.15,
    at 24 (4th ed. Supp. 2011))). Personal jurisdiction in an Iowa forum under
    these facts and circumstances certainly cannot be considered unfair,
    unreasonable, or unjust. Karon, 937 N.W.2d at 346. Finally, NCMIC and
    PSFS 3 have not acted in any way that has prevented the defendants from
    performing under the contract or from defending the underlying Iowa
    actions. See Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 205(d), at 99–104 (Am.
    L. Inst. 1981) (citing interference with or failure to cooperate in the other
    party’s performance as violations of good faith and fair dealing).
    28
    III. Defendant-Specific Issues of Personal Jurisdiction.
    A. Introduction.      Aside from the common issues of personal
    jurisdiction arising from the assignment of interests in the finance
    agreements to PSFS 3, the defendants on appeal raise two challenges to
    personal jurisdiction specific to individual defendants.
    First, with respect to eleven defendants, the defendants note that
    the actions against them were filed before the March 30, 2010 assignments
    and that at the time of the filing of those actions, there was no basis for
    personal jurisdiction over them in Polk County. The efforts to amend the
    originally filed claims to name PSFS 3 as the real party in interest,
    according to these defendants, was a nullity and the actions should have
    been dismissed.
    Second, with respect to the two Wineinger defendants, they point
    out that they entered into a unique finance agreement with NCMIC that
    had no provision related to venue of any kind.        And, as a result, any
    assignment of interest from NCMIC to PSFS 3 was meaningless as to them.
    B. Preassignment Claims Brought by NCMIC.
    1. Overview. Prior to the formation of PSFS 3 on March 30, 2010,
    NCMIC filed actions in Polk County District Court against eleven
    defendants.   After the March 30 assignment, the plaintiff amended its
    pleadings to name PSFS 3 as the real party. The district court granted the
    amendments. The only basis for personal jurisdiction asserted in these
    cases by PSFS 3 was the floating forum-selection clause which was
    triggered after the petitions in these cases were filed.
    The individual defendants assert that because the original pleadings
    were filed at a time when there was no personal jurisdiction over the
    defendants, the original filings by NCMIC were a nullity from the
    beginning. Because the original filings were nullities for lack of personal
    29
    jurisdiction when filed, the individual defendants assert they could not be
    later amended to add PSFS 3 as a party and assert personal jurisdiction
    under the floating forum-selection clause. If the original pleadings were a
    nullity, according to these individual defendants, they could not be later
    amended. Further, they claim, the assertion of personal jurisdiction based
    on the original petition is a violation of due process of law.7
    In support of their argument, defendants cite Evans v. Ober, 
    256 Iowa 708
    , 
    129 N.W.2d 78
     (1964). In that case, we found that an original
    notice that indicated the defendant should appear at the Lee County
    courthouse in Fort Madison when the action itself was filed in the Lee
    County courthouse in Keokuk was invalid. 
    Id.
     at 709–10, 
    129 N.W.2d at 79
    . In Evans, we emphasized that the notice in the case was not merely
    voidable but void. Id. at 711, 
    129 N.W.2d at 80
    .
    On appeal, PSFS 3 does not brief the issue.                The district court,
    however, rejected the claim. According to the district court, Iowa Rule of
    Civil Procedure 1.201 provides that when an action is initially commenced
    by a party other than the real party in interest, it is not to be dismissed
    “until a reasonable time has been allowed after objection for ratification of
    commencement of the action by . . . the real party in interest.” (Omission
    in original) (quoting Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.201). According to the district court,
    ratification of the prior action occurred when PSFS 3 sought to be
    substituted as the real party in interest in the litigation. The district court
    noted that “[i]t would serve nothing to dismiss any actions filed before the
    creation of PSFS 3, just to have them refiled in an identical pleading post-
    creation.” The district court cited Hammond v. Florida Asset Financial
    7The defendants do not identify whether their claim is brought under the United
    States Constitution or the Iowa Constitution. As a result, we consider the claims
    preserved under both the Federal and State Constitutions. See, e.g., State v. Harrington,
    
    805 N.W.2d 391
    , 393 n.3 (Iowa 2011); King v. State, 
    797 N.W.2d 565
    , 571 (Iowa 2011).
    30
    Corp., 
    695 N.W.2d 1
    , 8 (Iowa 2005), for the proposition that any dismissal
    of the original claims would be without prejudice, implying that there
    would be no barrier to refiling an essentially identical complaint.
    2. Discussion. The preassignment individual defendants raise an
    interesting point, but ultimately their due process claim does not carry the
    day. The point of due process is to ensure that a party is not unfairly
    hauled into a distant forum without either sufficient minimum contacts to
    support personal jurisdiction or consent to jurisdiction in the distant
    forum. Here, the defendants received full notice of the action through the
    original petitions. While there might have been a question of personal
    jurisdiction at that point, the later assignment of the interest in the finance
    agreements from NCMIC to PSFS 3 removed that question. PSFS 3 could
    have been required to file a new original action against the defendants after
    the March 30 assignment, but that would have achieved nothing of
    substance as the defendants had notice of the action and knew that
    personal jurisdiction was being claimed by virtue of the assignment and
    the floating forum-selection clause. Under the circumstances, we think
    the district court’s interpretation of Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.201 as
    permitting the curing of a potential personal jurisdiction issue in a validly
    served original petition by later substitution of a real party in interest did
    not violate due process in this case. The resolution of the issue may not
    approach perfection, but the basic principles of fairness—the heart of due
    process—have not been offended here under the facts of the case.
    C. Wineinger Defendants’ Claims. Defendants Cedar Park Vision
    Center, P.A. and Jeff Wineinger (Wineinger defendants) have a unique
    claim related to personal jurisdiction. The plaintiff’s petition against the
    Wineinger defendants alleged:
    31
    [E]ach agreed to personal jurisdiction and venue in any State
    or Federal Court located where the Lessor’s or Assignee’s
    principal corporate headquarters is located. The corporate
    headquarters of the Plaintiff is located in Clive, Polk County,
    Iowa. The Iowa District Court in Polk County is therefore the
    proper court in which to bring this action under the floating
    forum selection clause contained in the lease agreement.
    But unlike the other defendants, the Wineinger defendants signed a
    unique finance agreement with PSFS (NCMIC).        The unique Wineinger
    finance agreement did not contain any clause related to choice of forum.
    In their answer and affirmative defenses, the Wineinger defendants
    made the same allegations regarding personal jurisdiction that were made
    by many of the defendants: “With respect to those allegations concern[ing]
    the personal jurisdiction of this court, Defendants affirmatively aver that
    the written contract speaks for itself, and denies that this court has
    personal jurisdiction over Defendants.”
    According to the Wineinger defendants, when documentation
    attached to a petition contradicts the underlying allegations, the contrary
    allegations are void. WINBCO Tank Co. v. Palmer & Cay of Minn., L.L.C.,
    
    435 F. Supp. 2d 945
    , 955 (S.D. Iowa 2006). Therefore, the Wineinger
    defendants reason that PSFS 3 has failed to allege an adequate basis for
    jurisdiction and has failed to carry its burden of showing any basis for
    personal jurisdiction over the Wineinger defendants. Shams, 829 N.W.2d
    at 853.   As a result, the Wineinger defendants seek reversal of the
    judgment entered against them on appeal.
    PSFS 3 claims that the Wineinger defendants failed to preserve their
    claim. According to PSFS 3, Wineinger did not raise the issue in district
    court and instead simply joined the motion attacking the assignment from
    NCMIC to PSFS 3 in the consolidated case. PSFS 3 claims that by failure
    of the Wineinger defendants to raise the issue, PSFS 3 was prevented from
    claiming that the Wineinger defendants’ financing with NCMIC, an Iowa
    32
    corporation, and their thirty-one payments to an Iowa company, is
    sufficient to establish jurisdiction in Iowa courts. See, e.g., State Cent.
    Bank v. Berzanskis, 
    149 F. Supp. 3d 1121
    , 1125–28 (S.D. Iowa 2015);
    Agricredit Acceptance Co. v. Goforth Tractor, Inc., No. 00–1694, 
    2002 WL 1973195
    , at 3 (Iowa Ct. App. Aug. 28, 2002).
    Based on our review of the record, we conclude that the Wineinger
    defendants in their answer denied that “the court ha[d] personal
    jurisdiction over Defendants.” That is enough to raise the issue of personal
    jurisdiction.
    But other than to file an answer generally denying personal
    jurisdiction, Wineinger took no further affirmative steps to obtain a district
    court ruling on the question. When the district court received a proposed
    judgment from the plaintiffs, no resistance was filed asserting that there
    was an unresolved claim of lack of personal jurisdiction.
    Under the circumstances, with hundreds of cases pending, there
    was simply no way for the district court to know there was an underlying
    unique personal jurisdictional issue in the Wineinger matter. When the
    district court asked for proposed judgments in the cases, including the
    case involving the Wineinger defendants, it was incumbent upon them to
    speak up. When they did not, we conclude they failed to preserve their
    personal jurisdiction claim.
    IV. Due Process Challenge to Damages.
    A. Introduction. By the time of trial of the bellwether cases, there
    were hundreds of enforcement actions pending in Polk County District
    Court. The district court was clearly and appropriately trying to manage
    the litigation in an expeditious fashion without truncating the ability of the
    parties to litigate their claims and defenses.        A key aspect of the
    management of the cases was the stipulation in which the parties agreed
    33
    to a determination of common issues through the trial of two bellwether
    cases.     Although the stipulation stated that common issues would be
    resolved in the bellwether cases, the stipulation did not identify the
    common issues. The question here is whether the district court’s method
    of calculating damages and the implementation of that method serially
    through the hundreds of pending cases deprived individual defendants of
    their day in court on damages.
    B. Standard of Review. We review constitutional issues, such as
    whether due process rights have been violated, de novo. State v. Clark,
    
    814 N.W.2d 551
    , 560 (Iowa 2012); In re Marriage of Seyler, 
    559 N.W.2d 7
    ,
    8 (Iowa 1997).
    C. Positions of the Parties.
    1. The defendants. The defendants declare that the district court’s
    method of calculating damages in the cases of individual defendants
    violated due process of law.        First, they contend that the individual
    defendants were deprived of the opportunity to contest how much money
    they paid, and how much was owing, under their individual contracts.
    Second, the defendants contend that final judgments were entered against
    as many as seventy-three defendants who were not parties to any contract.
    The defendants claim that they were not allowed to press these individual
    claims by the district court’s action on damages in this case.
    2. The plaintiff.   The plaintiff begins by asserting that while the
    Charlip defendants asserted a right to have an individual trial on damages,
    the Gossett defendants did not preserve error on the question related to
    “the district court’s alleged misnomer of several [defendants] in those
    judgments.”
    On the merits, PSFS 3 claims that contract damages for each
    defendant was not disputed. PSFS 3 begins its argument by canvassing
    34
    events surrounding the district court proceedings on May 17, 2018. On
    that date, PSFS 3 provided the district court and the parties with the
    simple mathematical formula for calculating damages in the bellwether
    cases—the number of monthly payments remaining multiplied by the
    monthly payment amount. Also on May 17, PSFS 3 filed a motion for
    enforcement of the stipulation and entry of judgment in the remaining
    cases. PSFS 3 notes that it attached to the motion a chart supported by a
    sworn declaration listing each defendant along with the applicable
    contractual monthly payment amount and the number of months
    outstanding.
    Although PSFS 3 recognizes that some defendants on May 30 and
    May 31 objected to enforcement of the stipulation as depriving them of
    their ability to contest damages, the defendants did not provide any
    evidence that the damages calculations were inaccurate.       In response,
    PSFS 3 urged the court to treat its filing as a motion for summary
    judgment on the damages question. In support of its argument that the
    district court could consider the filings as a motion for summary judgment,
    PSFS 3 cites Stotts v. Eveleth, 
    688 N.W.2d 803
    , 811–12 (Iowa 2004)
    (treating a motion to dismiss as if it was a motion for summary judgment
    and in an effort to conserve judicial resources, declining to remand the
    case to district court).
    PSFS 3 further cites developments at the December 14 district court
    hearing on all pending motions. PSFS 3 notes that the defendants at the
    hearing made no argument that the PSFS 3 submission on damages was
    factually incorrect. PSFS 3 urged the district court to enter judgments
    against the remaining defendants. The defendants argued that the motion
    to enforce the stipulation was not styled as a “motion for summary
    judgment.”     According to PSFS 3, the district court directed PSFS 3 to
    35
    submit proposed judgments for the remaining cases and offered
    defendants the opportunity to contest the number of remaining payments.
    When PSFS 3 submitted proposed judgments, the defendants did not
    respond.
    Under the circumstances, PSFS 3 asserts that the defendants’ due
    process claims are without merit. According to PSFS 3, the defendants
    were entitled under due process to notice and an opportunity to be heard
    on the question of damages, and the defendants certainly had both.
    Johnson v. Mitchell, 
    489 N.W.2d 411
    , 414–15 (Iowa Ct. App. 1992).
    D. Discussion.     The defendants claim that they had a right to
    dispute the number and amount of payments owed by them to PSFS 3.
    We do not doubt the general proposition that the defendants were entitled
    by due process to a hearing on the issue of individual damages if they
    chose to put the question at issue in this litigation.      The question is
    whether the defendants were in fact provided with the opportunity for their
    individualized damages claims.
    The parties, of course, stipulated to a resolution of the common
    issues in the bellwether cases. We think the manner in which damages
    are calculated was a common issue that was decided in the bellwether
    cases. But the amount of damages, namely, how many payments were
    missed and in what amount, is not a common issue across the cases. After
    the resolution of the bellwether cases, each individual defendant was
    entitled to a hearing on the question of damages.
    After the bellwether cases were decided, the district court invited the
    plaintiffs to submit individualized judgments in each case where the
    damages would be calculated under the methodology accepted in the
    bellwether cases. The inputs for the calculation came from one party,
    36
    PSFS 3.   Again, the defendants were clearly entitled to contest these
    claimed amounts.
    The district court seems to have recognized the need to provide the
    defendants with their day in court on the issue. At the hearing inviting
    PSFS 3 to submit proposed judgments, the district court expressly stated
    that once the proposed judgments were submitted, the district court would
    “give the defendants an opportunity to respond.”           Here, once the
    judgments were submitted, the district court seems to have put the burden
    of affirmatively filing a resistance on the defendants. When no resistances
    were filed, the district court, without a hearing, began entering a series of
    judgments against the individual defendants.
    This procedure was a reasonable effort by the district court to
    manage a massive piece of consolidated litigation. When the proposed
    judgments were submitted, the defendants knew they had an opportunity
    to respond but chose not to file any resistance to the specific calculations
    in any individual case. The district court regarded the occasion as “put
    up or shut up” time on the question of factual challenges to individual
    damages. After nearly thirty days had passed without any resistances, the
    district court began entering judgments in the individual pending cases.
    Under the circumstances, it cannot be said that the defendants were
    deprived of notice and an opportunity to be heard on the issue of individual
    damages. When the proposed judgments were submitted, they had an
    opportunity to object to the calculations or to offer any other objections to
    entry of judgment. The fact that they chose not to avail themselves of the
    opportunity they were provided does not create a problem of fundamental
    fairness in the litigation which was already eight years old at the time the
    district court fashioned its approach to the remaining cases.
    37
    V. Validity of Finance Agreements Under Iowa Code Chapter
    535.
    A. Introduction.   The legal obligations that arise from finance
    agreements have been the subject of a number of important recent
    opinions of this court. See generally GreatAm. Fin. Servs. Corp. v. Natalya
    Rodionova Med. Care, P.C., 
    956 N.W.2d 148
     (Iowa 2021); C & J Vantage
    Leasing Co. v. Wolfe, 
    795 N.W.2d 65
     (Iowa 2011); C & J. Vantage Leasing
    Co. v. Outlook Farm Golf Club, L.L.C., 
    784 N.W.2d 753
     (Iowa 2010). In
    these types of three-party transactions, a vendor ordinarily solicits sales
    of certain equipment from a potential purchaser.       Once a purchaser
    expresses interest, the purchaser completes a finance agreement with a
    third party obligating the purchaser to make a series of monthly payments
    for a period of time.     The third-party financer then purchases the
    equipment from the vendor, executes a finance agreement with the
    purchaser, and looks to the purchaser to fulfill the obligation to make the
    payments required under the finance agreement. The finance agreement
    often has a hell-or-high-water provision that obligates the purchaser to
    make the payments required under the finance agreement absolutely and
    unconditionally.   Although often characterized in the documents as a
    “finance lease,” the labels in the documents are not determinative and the
    transactions may be treated as a sale with a security interest
    notwithstanding language to the contrary in the documentation. Wolfe,
    
    795 N.W.2d 65
    , 73–75.
    As in this case, disputes may arise when the purchaser claims that
    the vendor made false representations or promises regarding the purchase
    and seeks to stop making payments to the finance company. The finance
    company may defend by asserting that the payments under the finance
    38
    agreement are unconditional in light of the hell-or-high-water clause in
    the financing agreement.
    In this case, in order to avoid an obligation to continue making
    payments to the finance company, the purchaser seeks to invalidate the
    finance agreement by claiming two of its provisions violate Iowa Code
    chapter 535 related to money and credit. They claim that by failing to
    disclose an interest rate, the plaintiff violated Iowa Code section 535.17(1)
    which requires that the material terms of credit transactions be disclosed.
    Second, the defendants assert that the actual rate of interest charged in
    the transaction was usurious under Iowa Code section 535.2(1).
    B. Standard of Review. We review issues of statutory construction
    for errors at law. Wolfe, 795 N.W.2d at 73.
    C. Positions of the Parties.
    1. The defendants.       The defendants assert that the finance
    agreements involved in this matter are “credit agreements” under Iowa
    Code chapter 535. They note that under Iowa Code section 535.17(5)(c),
    a “ ‘[c]redit agreement’ means any contract made or acquired by a lender
    to loan money, finance any transaction, or otherwise extend credit for any
    purpose, and includes all of the terms of the contract.” The defendants
    assert that the finance agreements in this case, regardless of their label as
    leases, fall within the scope of the definition of a credit agreement under
    the statute.
    Under Iowa Code section 535.17(1), a credit agreement must provide
    “all of the material terms of the agreement.” The statute does not define
    material. But the defendants argue that the material terms of the finance
    agreements in this case include the amount loaned and the interest rate
    on the loan. Fairfield Six/Hidden Valley P’ship v. Resol. Tr. Corp., 
    860 F. 39
    Supp. 1085, 1089 (D. Md. 1994); T.O. Stanley Boot Co. v. Bank of El Paso,
    
    847 S.W.2d 218
    , 221 (Tex. 1992).
    The defendants cite the Wineinger contract as an example of an
    equipment financing agreement that satisfies the requirements of Iowa
    Code section 535.17(1).     The Wineinger agreement discloses the total
    amount financed, the monthly payment, and the number of months over
    which the payments are to be made. From this information, the parties
    can calculate the rate of interest on the loan.
    But in the other finance agreements in this case, it is not possible
    to calculate the interest rate on the loaned amount. To buttress their
    argument that the interest rate is a material term, the defendants point to
    Iowa’s usury statute, which permits the parties obtaining credit for
    business purposes to agree in writing to pay a rate of interest higher than
    the statutorily established rate. 
    Iowa Code § 535.2
    .
    The defendants also point to the terms of the finance agreement as
    establishing that there is, in fact, an interest rate on the loaned amounts,
    even though it is not disclosed. Paragraph 1 of the finance agreement
    states that:
    If it is determined that your total payments result in an
    interest rate higher than allowed by applicable law, then any
    excess interest collected will be applied to the repayment of
    principle [sic] and interest will be charged at the highest rate
    allowed by law.
    Further, the defendants point out that prior to the assignment of the
    finance agreements to PSFS 3, NCMIC prepared amortization schedules
    for each transaction that contained principal and interest calculations.
    2. The plaintiff.   At the outset, the plaintiff claims that the
    defendants failed to preserve error on the issue of whether the finance
    agreements violate the credit agreement disclosure provision of Iowa Code
    40
    section 535.17 or the usury provision of Iowa Code section 535.2. The
    plaintiff claims that these issues should have been litigated in the Florida
    district court litigation, where the federal court considered the common
    issues of enforceability among the mass participants in the litigation. As
    a result, the plaintiffs claim the defendants are precluded from raising the
    issue in the Iowa actions. See Van Haaften, 815 N.W.2d at 22–23.
    On the merits, the plaintiff does not contest the applicability of Iowa
    Code chapter 535 to the finance agreements. Instead, the plaintiff points
    out that each finance agreement contains the equipment being financed,
    the number of payments to be made (60), the frequency of each payment
    (monthly), and the amount of each payment (which was typically $508).8
    These disclosures, according to the plaintiff, are sufficient to satisfy the
    requirements of Iowa Code section 535.17(1).
    The plaintiff cites C. & J. Vantage Leasing Co. v. Wolfe, 
    795 N.W.2d 65
    , in support of their argument.              In Wolfe, the finance agreement
    contained the same key terms as the finance agreement in this case. 
    Id.
    at 71–72. On the question of lack of disclosure of interest rate, the Wolfe
    court observed:
    Although the agreement did not expressly list an interest rate,
    it did provide Lake MacBride was to make sixty monthly
    payments of $299 to C & J. Section 535.17(1) contains no
    requirement that the interest rate must be listed separate
    from the total payment required under the agreement.
    Id. at 82. The Wolfe case further compared Iowa Code section 535.17(1)
    with federal law which expressly requires the disclosure of interest rates
    8The agreements are labeled “Equipment Lease Application and Agreement.”
    Regardless of their label, they operate as finance agreements supporting the purchase of
    the equipment in this case. We therefore characterize the documents as finance
    agreements rather than leases.
    41
    in consumer leases and consumer credit transactions. Id. at 82 (citing 
    5 U.S.C. § 1632
    .
    The plaintiff further argues that there is no requirement that the
    finance agreement disclose the purchase price paid by a finance company
    to the vendor of commercial equipment as a material term under Iowa
    Code section 535.17(1). According to the plaintiff, the price paid by the
    finance company to the vendor was not disclosed in Wolfe. While there is
    reference to the term “price” in Wolfe, in context, the term is in reference
    to the total amount to be paid under the finance agreement. See generally
    Wolfe, 
    792 N.W.2d 65
    .
    Next, on the question of the usury statute in Iowa Code section
    535.2, the plaintiff argues that the statute simply does not apply. The
    plaintiff again cites Wolfe, which noted that a beverage cart was used in
    connection with a business purpose and that, as a result, a business could
    agree to pay any rate of interest and thus could not invoke the usury
    statute. Wolfe, 795 N.W.2d at 82.
    In the alternative, the plaintiff claims that even if the finance
    agreements were required to disclose a higher rate of interest, the finance
    agreements would remain enforceable. According to the plaintiff, Iowa law
    provides that if the interest rate in a business transaction is usurious or
    if a creditor fails to provide in a written agreement for any rate of interest,
    the remedy is interest awarded at the lower statutory interest rate of 5%.
    Power Equip., Inc. v. Tschiggfrie, 
    460 N.W.2d 861
    , 863 (Iowa 1990).
    D. Discussion. We think there is a serious question of whether the
    defendants can raise the disclosure and usury issues in light of the Florida
    declaratory judgment action in which the parties litigated common issues
    related to enforcement of the finance agreements. Ordinarily, a litigant
    does not get two bites of the apple in different fora.
    42
    In any event, on the chapter 535 issues, we find that the Wolfe case
    is controlling. The issues in Wolfe were identical to those posed in this
    case. The finance agreement simply disclosed that the purchaser was
    required to make “sixty monthly payments of $299.” Wolfe, 795 N.W.2d
    at 82. We declined to impose a requirement that interest rate also be
    disclosed. Id. We held that the terms contained in the agreement were
    sufficient to satisfy the requirements of section 535.17(1). Id. Although
    there is no direct mention in Wolfe of a claim that the purchase price paid
    by the finance company to the vendor was required to be disclosed, the
    logic of the decision clearly compels a negative answer. The number of
    payments over time and the amount of each payment is sufficient
    disclosure of material terms under the statute.
    Wolfe also disposes of the usury argument. In Wolfe, we noted that,
    as here, the transaction was for a business purpose.       Id.   Under the
    statute, a person borrowing money for a business purpose is permitted in
    writing to agree to any rate of interest in a credit transaction. Iowa Code
    section 535.2(2)(a)(5). In Wolfe, we concluded that because the business
    purchaser could agree in writing to any rate of interest, there was no
    violation of the usury statute. 795 N.W.2d at 82. Therefore, whatever the
    interest rate might have been or however the interest rate would have been
    calculated would not be usurious. See id. The reasoning applies in this
    case with full force.
    VI. Failure to Prove Damages Arising from Breach of Contract.
    A. Introduction. The defendants challenge whether the plaintiff
    proved the fact of damages in these cases. The district court accepted the
    basic methodology of the plaintiff in calculating base damages, namely, by
    multiplying the number of missed payments by the amount of each
    43
    payment.    The defendants claim that this approach to damages was
    improper.
    B. Standard of Review. The standard of review on the question of
    whether damages were proven in this case is for correction of errors at law.
    Flom v. Stahly, 
    569 N.W.2d 135
    , 139 (Iowa 1997).
    C. Positions of the Parties.
    1. The defendants.    The defendants argue that PSFS 3 failed to
    prove damages arising from the alleged breach of contract. With respect
    to damages, the defendants emphasize that damages are limited to those
    that are “foreseeable or reasonably contemplated by the parties” when they
    entered into the agreement. (Citing Kuehl v. Freeman Brothers Agency,
    Inc., 
    521 N.W.2d 714
    , 718 (Iowa 1994).) They note that damages must be
    proven with “reasonable certainty.” Dopheide v. Schoeppner, 
    163 N.W.2d 360
    , 367 (Iowa 1968).
    The defendants proceed to project these general principles against
    the record developed in the bellwether cases. The defendants assert that
    PSFS 3 witnesses could not explain, for instance, when exactly monthly
    payments were due under the contract. The defendants note that the
    software program used to compute damages was a program designed to
    manage leases and not equipment finance agreements.           Further, the
    defendants observe that while NCMIC had software that could calculate
    amortization schedules for each contract, no such calculations were
    produced. Thus, the defendants argue that while the payments consisted
    of both principal and interest, PSFS 3 failed to provide a calculation
    allocating the payments. According to the defendants, the mere proof of
    missing contractual payments does not amount to a prima facie case of
    damages.
    44
    The defendants assert that the damages awarded by the district
    court—a simple calculation of unpaid monthly payments multiplied by the
    amount of each payment—was inconsistent with the default clause in the
    finance agreement. The default provision states: “If You default, We may
    require that You pay 1) all past due amounts under this Lease, and 2) all
    future amounts owed for the unexpired term, discounted at the rate 6%
    per annum.”
    The defendants claim that future amounts “owed for the unexpired
    term” can only refer to future principal amounts.      Because the future
    principal amounts due under each finance agreement have not been
    calculated, the defendants claim damages in these cases cannot be
    calculated.
    2. The plaintiff. The plaintiff responds that the basic starting point
    for the calculation of damages in this case is a simple calculation of the
    amount of the monthly payment multiplied by the number of missed
    payments. The plaintiff asserts that a commonplace measure of damages
    is to put the plaintiff in the place he or she would have occupied had the
    contract been performed. Aurora Bus. Park Assocs., L.P. v. Michael Albert,
    Inc., 
    548 N.W.2d 153
    , 157 (Iowa 1996) (en banc). Further, the parties
    expressly contracted for the acceleration of balances and the remedy of
    payment of all amounts that the plaintiff would have received under the
    contract. Parties are generally free to provide for their own remedies for
    breach of contract. Wolfe, 795 N.W.2d at 77.
    D. Discussion.    On this issue, we agree with the plaintiff.     The
    contract itself called for a number of payments over a period of years in a
    specific amount. Providing the plaintiff with the payment it was entitled
    to if the contract had been honored is an appropriate approach to damages
    in this case.   See Aurora Bus. Park Assocs., L.P., 
    548 N.W.2d at 157
    .
    45
    Further, the parties expressly agreed to this remedial provision in the
    contract. The argument of the defendants that the plaintiff failed to prove
    damages is without merit.
    VII. Unconscionability of Default Interest Rate.
    A. Introduction. Under Paragraph 9 of the finance agreements,
    the defendants agreed to pay interest on all past due amounts at the rate
    of 1.5% per month or the highest amount permitted by law.              The
    defendants attack this provision as unconscionable under Iowa Code
    section 554.13108(1).
    B. Standard of Review. Unconscionability is a question of law and
    is subject to review for correction of errors at law.     See 
    Iowa Code § 554.2302
    (1); Casey v. Lupkes, 
    286 N.W.2d 204
    , 207 (Iowa 1979).
    C. Positions of the Parties.
    1. The defendants.     The defendants assert that the damages
    calculation imposed by the district court included approximately an 8.99%
    per annum undisclosed nondefault interest rate arising from the finance
    agreement and an additional 18% per annum penalty for late payment.
    According to the defendants, the total default interest rate was thus
    26.99% per annum not including any late fees.
    The defendants assert that under Iowa law, the propriety of
    awarding default interest is subject to review by the court. Carson Grain
    & Implement, Inc. v. Dirks, 
    460 N.W.2d 483
    , 486 (Iowa Ct. App. 1990).
    According to the defendants, the default interest rate must amount to an
    appropriate liquidated damages provision and not a penalty.             By
    accelerating the monthly payments after default which included the
    undisclosed 8.99% interest rate, and then adding an additional 18%
    interest rate, the defendants have obtained an unlawful double recovery.
    46
    In the alternative, the defendants claim that default interest may be
    recovered only after accelerating the debt. The defendants claim PSFS 3
    accelerated the principal amounts only by filing suit and that, as a result,
    any interest penalty should arise only as of the month following the filing
    of the action.   But because the interest rate was not disclosed in the
    finance agreements, and no amortization schedule was provided, it is not
    possible to know the real amount of total interest if the 18% default penalty
    is imposed.      Because the damages calculation is speculative, the
    defendants ask that the default interest portion of the final judgments be
    stricken as an unenforceable penalty under Iowa law.
    2. The plaintiff.   The plaintiff responds by arguing that there is
    nothing unlawful about an acceleration clause. On the issue of triggering
    acceleration, the plaintiff states there is no requirement that the creditor
    take action to accelerate the amount due. Aurora Bus. Park Assocs., L.P.,
    
    548 N.W.2d at 154
    . Once the actions were filed, according the plaintiff,
    the future payments were accelerated.
    The plaintiff points out that the parties agreed to an 18% default
    interest. The plaintiff notes that the defendants have been in default for
    ten years and that the plaintiff has been burdened by the need to track
    the defaulted accounts as impaired assets, monitor their status, and
    monitor the defendants’ ability to pay. The plaintiff further notes that Iowa
    courts have long upheld an increased rate of interest upon default. See
    Fed. Land Bank of Omaha v. Wilmarth, 
    218 Iowa 339
    , 343, 
    252 N.W. 507
    ,
    510 (1934); see also In re Johnston, No. 03–03495S, 
    2004 WL 3019472
    , at
    *2, *7 (Bankr. N.D. Iowa Dec. 20, 2004). The plaintiffs claim that default
    interest rates of 18% or higher are standard in the equipment finance
    industry. See Sec. State Bank v. Soults Farms, Inc., No. 03–0494, 
    2004 WL 792673
    , at *4 (Iowa Ct. App. Apr. 14, 2004). The plaintiff claims that in
    47
    Wolfe, the court held a substantially similar agreement was not
    unconscionable. 795 N.W.2d at 80–81.
    D. Discussion.       On this issue, we look first to the contractual
    terms. The parties agreed that in the event of a default, there would be an
    acceleration of all the amounts due, discounted by 6% per year on future
    payments. Upon that amount, the parties agreed that a default interest
    rate of 18% per year would apply. Certainly, in a business contract, a
    presumption arises that the agreement of the parties on financial terms is
    enforceable.
    A party must climb a tall hill to establish that a term of a business
    agreement is unconscionable. In order to be unconscionable, a provision
    must be such that no person in his or her right senses “would make [it] on
    the one hand, and . . . no honest and fair [person] would accept [it] on the
    other.” Smith v. Harrison, 
    325 N.W.2d 92
    , 94 (Iowa 1982) (quoting Casey,
    
    286 N.W.2d at 207
    ). As noted in Wolfe, factors to be considered include
    “assent, unfair surprise, notice, disparity of bargaining power, and
    substantive unfairness.” 795 N.W.2d at 80 (quoting C & J Fertilizer, Inc.
    v. Allied Mut. Ins., 
    227 N.W.2d 169
    , 181 (Iowa 1975) (en banc).               The
    doctrine of unconscionability is an extreme one.            It is not available to
    rescue a party from a bad bargain. Wolfe, 795 N.W.2d at 80; Smith, 
    325 N.W.2d at 94
    .
    We find nothing in the record, either procedurally or substantively,
    to support a claim that the default interest rate meets the demanding
    standards of unconscionability. We note that a number of other courts
    have upheld 18% interest rates in a variety of contexts. See Cheshire
    Mortg. Serv., Inc. v. Montes, 
    612 A.2d 1130
    , 1135–38 (Conn. 1992)
    (determining    an   18%    interest   in   real   estate    contract   was   not
    unconscionable); In re White River Conservancy Dist. v. Commonwealth of
    48
    Eng’gs, Inc., 
    575 N.E.2d 1011
    , 1017 (Ind. Ct. App. 1991) (determining 18%
    interest rate not unconscionable). We also note that while the finance
    agreement also provides for a late fee on unpaid balances, the plaintiff did
    not seek to enforce that provision in this proceeding.
    The defendants claim that the plaintiff is collecting “double interest”
    because the payments made to them are, in fact, a combination of interest
    and principal. We do not find that this theory makes the 18% default
    interest rate unconscionable. Defendants cite Carson Grain & Implement,
    Inc. v. Dirks, 
    460 N.W.2d 483
    . But Carson Grain is plainly distinguishable.
    In Carson Grain, the court determined that it would not apply both the
    default rate of 18% interest and the statutory rate of judgments. 
    Id. at 486
    . We do not face this kind of double interest situation here.
    VIII. Award of Attorney Fees.
    The defendants suggest that the district court erred in determining
    PSFS 3 was entitled to an award of attorney fees.         According to the
    defendants, there was no proof at trial that PSFS 3 paid any attorney fees
    and that PSFS 3 has no obligation to indemnify NCMIC for attorney fees
    that it may have incurred in connection with the litigation.
    While the district court did enter an attorney fees order in the two
    bellwether cases, those matters have been resolved and their appeals
    dismissed. With respect to the other cases, the district court has not
    entered a court order on that issue. Once the district court rules, the
    question of attorney fees is separately appealable. Iowa R. App. P. 6.103(2)
    (“A final order or judgment on an application for attorney fees entered after
    the final order or judgment in the underlying action is separately
    appealable.”).
    49
    IX. Conclusion.
    For the above reasons, we affirm the district court’s rulings and
    judgments.
    AFFIRMED.