LVNV Funding LLC v. Finch ( 2019 )


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  • LVNV Funding LLC v. Larry Finch, et al., No. 46, September Term, 2018. Opinion
    by Wilner, J.
    COLLATERAL ATTACK ON ENROLLED JUDGMENTS
    MARYLAND COLLECTION LICENSING ACT – PRIVATE ACTIONS FOR
    DAMAGES IN VIOLATION OF ACT
    This is a class action suit by individuals against whom an unlicensed debt buyer
    (LVNV) obtained judgments in the District Court in 2008. Because LVNV was unlicensed,
    the plaintiffs sought to have the judgments declared void and sought monetary damages.
    The Circuit Court dismissed the action on the ground that it was an impermissible collateral
    attack on enrolled judgments. The Court of Special Appeals reversed, holding that the
    enrolled judgments were void and remanded for trial. The jury returned verdicts for the
    representative plaintiffs and the class. In a second appeal, the Court of Special Appeals
    again held the District Court judgments void but remanded for a new trial on damages. On
    cross petitions for certiorari, the Court of Appeals held:
    (1) The Court of Special Appeals erred in holding the District Court judgments void.
    Collateral attacks on enrolled judgments are not allowed unless the court that
    entered the judgment had no fundamental jurisdiction to do so, and that was not
    the case with respect to the judgments in question.
    (2) The licensing statute did, however, permit a private cause of action for acting as
    a collection agency without a license and remanded the case for a new trial on
    damages. In light of the remand, the Court did not address issues raised in
    respondents’ cross-petition,
    Circuit Court for Baltimore City                                                    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    Case No. 24-C-11-007101
    Argued: January 31, 2019
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 46
    September Term, 2018
    LVNV FUNDING LLC
    Case No. 419686V
    Argued 1/7/19                                                                                  vs.
    LARRY FINCH, et al.
    Barbera, C.J.
    Greene
    McDonald
    Hotten
    Getty
    Adkins, Sally D. (Senior Judge,
    Specially Assigned)
    Wilner, Alan M. (Senior Judge,
    Specially Assigned)
    Opinion by Wilner, J.
    Filed: April 22, 2019
    Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal
    Materials Act
    (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.
    2019-04-22
    11:14-04:00
    Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk
    This is a class action lawsuit filed in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City against
    petitioner LVNV Funding LLC (LVNV) that resulted in (1) money judgments against
    LVNV in favor of two of the named representative plaintiffs, and (2) after a remittitur
    ordered by the court, a separate money judgment against LVNV in the amount of $25
    million in favor of the class. In an unreported Opinion, the Court of Special Appeals
    affirmed the Circuit Court’s rulings with respect to LVNV’s liability under the Maryland
    Consumer Debt Collection Act (Md. Code, Title 14, Subtitle 2 of the Commercial Law
    Article) but remanded the case for retrial on the issue of damages.
    Neither side is entirely happy with the appellate decision, and we granted cross-
    petitions for certiorari to review it. There are four principal issues before us, each
    encompassing sub-issues. To put it all in context, some background is necessary – the
    corporate structure within which LVNV operates, the nature of the business that LVNV
    conducts, how LVNV conducts its business, regulation of that business by the State of
    Maryland, and the procedural history of what is now before us.
    LVNV AND ITS AFFILIATES
    LVNV is a limited liability company that was organized in Delaware in 2005, is
    headquartered in Las Vegas, Nevada, and appears to be managed from South Carolina. It
    claims to have no employees of its own. Its only business is to purchase consumer debts
    that are in default, mostly from affiliated entities that purchased the debts from others, and
    attempt to collect those debts through litigation. As determined by the Maryland
    Commissioner of Financial Regulation in a 2011 enforcement action (and not contested by
    LVNV in this appeal), LVNV is part of an integrated conglomeration of affiliated entities
    that include:
    • Sherman Capital, LLC and Meeting Street Partners II, Inc., which own and
    operate Sherman Financial Group (SFG) and Sherman Capital Markets
    (SCM).     SCM provides management services for SFG, which the
    Commissioner of Financial Regulation found to be “an integrated financial
    services company engaged in purchasing and servicing portfolios of
    consumer debt that it acquires at a large discount.” 1
    • Sherman Originator LLC (Originator), which is a wholly-owned subsidiary
    of SFG. Originator is headquartered in South Carolina. LVNV is a wholly
    owned subsidiary of Originator. LVNV’s Board of Managers, which has
    day-to-day supervision over LVNV, also is based in South Carolina.
    • Sherman Acquisition Limited Partnership (SALP), Sherman Acquisition II
    Limited Partnership (SAIILP), Sherman Acquisition II General Partner LLC
    (SAIIGPLLC), and Sherman Acquisition LLC (SALLC), which also are
    subsidiaries of SFG. The first two are debt purchasers. SALLC is involved
    with the management of LVNV; SALP and SAIILP have traded as LVNV;
    and
    1
    In the Matter of LVNV Funding, et al., Md. Comm. Fin. Reg., Case No. DFR-FY2012-
    012, 
    2011 WL 5894366
    at 5-7 (2011) (hereafter LVNV Enforcement Action).
    2
    • Resurgent Capital Services Limited Partnership, a/k/a Resurgent Capital
    Services LP, f/k/a Alegis Group Limited Partnership (Resurgent), which acts
    as the master servicer for charged-off consumer debt owned by LVNV and
    is headquartered in South Carolina. Resurgent is a limited partnership in
    which Alegis is the general partner that owns one percent, and SFG, which
    is a limited partner that owns 99 percent. Both Resurgent and Alegis are
    subsidiaries of SFG. 
    Id. Though only
    a one percent owner, Alegis is
    responsible for the management of Resurgent.2
    What the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) referred to as “Sherman Financial”
    (presumably SFG) was the largest buyer of charged-off credit card debt directly from credit
    card issuers from 2005 to 2011, except for 2010, when it was the second largest buyer. See
    The Structure and Practices of the Debt Buying Industry, Federal Trade Commission,
    January 2013, at 16 and Table 5 (hereafter 2013 FTC Report). During an overlapping
    period, LVNV played an active role in Maryland with respect to some of those accounts.
    In the LVNV Enforcement Action, the Commissioner found that between 1996 and 2011,
    LVNV was the named plaintiff in nearly 26,000 actions in the District Court of Maryland
    seeking affidavit judgments.3 In the great majority of those cases, no response was filed
    by the defendant, no trial was held, and judgments were entered on LVNV’s affidavit.
    2
    The description of this structure is taken from findings made in LVNV Enforcement
    
    Action, supra
    . It is not clear whether any of that structure has changed since then.
    3
    Cases filed between 1996 and 2004 – prior to LVNV’s founding – had been filed by
    SALP and SAIILP and later assigned to LVNV. See LVNV Enforcement Action, ¶ 13a.
    3
    THE DEBT-BUYING INDUSTRY
    Traditionally, when a borrower or customer failed to pay a debt on time, the creditor
    would do what was needed to collect the debt either by engaging with the debtor directly
    or by employing an attorney or outside debt collector to do so. That still occurs, of course,
    but a new business model that first developed in the late 1980s has become predominant in
    the debt collection universe, largely because (1) so much of the debt arrearage in the United
    States, and in Maryland, is credit card debt, and (2) Federal banking regulations require
    credit card companies that are bank-related to charge off credit card debt that has been
    delinquent for six months.4
    The new model, for those companies, and others, is to sell their delinquent accounts
    to debt buyers for pennies on the dollar – normally between four and five cents but less for
    older accounts – and thereby recoup at least something without having to bear the expense
    of further collection efforts. The sales are in bulk. A three-year study by FTC revealed
    the sale of more than 5,000 “portfolios” containing nearly 90 million consumer accounts
    with a face value of $143 billion at a cost of $6.5 billion. 2013 FTC Report at ii, 8, and
    Table 2.
    While beneficial to the initial creditor in light of the charge-off requirement and
    lucrative to the debt buyer, the manner in which this new model developed and debt buyers
    4
    Based on information supplied by the nation’s largest debt buyers, FTC estimated that
    62 percent of all charge-offs were of credit card debt. See 2013 FTC Report Table D2.
    4
    carried on their business created significant consumer protection issues. In its 2013 Report,
    based in part on a 2009 Study, FTC observed that it received “more consumer complaints
    about debt collectors, including debt buyers, than about any other single industry.” 2013
    FTC Report at i.    See also Collecting Consumer Debts – The Challenges of Change, A
    Workshop Report. Federal Trade Commission, February 2009 (hereafter 2009 FTC
    Report).
    In its 2013 Report, FTC noted that, in its 2009 Report, it had expressed concern that
    debt buyers “may have insufficient or inaccurate information when they collect on debts,
    which may result in collectors seeking to recover from the wrong consumer or recover the
    wrong amount.” 2013 FTC Report. The Commission found that, although debt buyers
    normally receive from the initial creditor the information needed to be disclosed to the
    debtor under the Federal Debt Collection Practices Act (15 U.S.C. § 1692g) they often do
    not receive data relating to disputes raised by the debtor or a breakdown of how much of
    the debt is for interest, fees, or penalties, and that they rarely disclose to the debtor other
    information, such as data indicating that collection may be barred by limitations, that may
    be relevant to whether the alleged debtor is the actual debtor or owes the money and, if so,
    how much. 2013 FTA Report at iii-iv.
    Those concerns, and others, were relayed to this Court by its Standing Committee
    on Rules of Practice and Procedure in the Committee’s 171st Report dated July 1, 2011,
    which led the Court to adopt amendments to Md. Rules 3-306, 3-308, and 3-509 dealing
    with judgments entered on affidavit rather than trial. The Rules Committee noted that
    5
    “[b]oth nationally and in Maryland, there have been a multitude of cases in which the
    ultimate owner of the account sues the person it believes to be the debtor, knowing from
    experience that the defendant often does not file a notice of intention to defend or appear
    for trial,” that it had been well-documented that the plaintiff often has insufficient reliable
    information regarding the debt or the debtor, and “had the debtor challenged the action, he
    or she would have prevailed.” 171st Report at 7. Indeed, the Committee added that “[i]n
    many instances, when a challenge is presented, the case is dismissed or judgment is denied.
    
    Id. STATUTORY REGULATION
    Three Maryland consumer protection statutes govern debt collection activity – the
    Maryland Collection Agency Licensing Act (MCALA) (Md. Code, Business Regulation
    Article (BR), §§ 7-101 through 7-502); the Maryland Consumer Debt Collection Act
    (MCDCA) (Md. Code, Commercial Law Article (CL), §§ 14-201 through 14-204); and the
    State Consumer Protection Act (CPA) (Md. Code, CL §§ 13-101 through 13-501).
    MCALA is the most direct. With two exceptions not relevant here, BR § 7-301(a)
    provides that “a person must have a license [issued by the State Collection Agency
    Licensing Board] whenever the person does business as a collection agency in the State.”
    Section 7-401 adds that, except as provided in that title, “a person may not knowingly and
    willfully do business as a collection agency in the State unless the person has a license.”
    Section 7-101(c) defines “collection agency” as including “collecting for, or soliciting from
    another, a consumer claim” and “collecting a consumer claim the person owns, if the claim
    6
    was in default when the person acquired it.” Although LVNV began its debt collecting
    activity upon its founding in 2005, it did not obtain a collection agency license until
    February 18, 2010.
    MCDCA also deals with consumer debt collection. CL § 14-202(8) provides that,
    in attempting to collect an alleged debt, a collector may not “[c]laim, attempt, or threaten
    to enforce a right with knowledge that the right does not exist.” Section 14-203 provides
    that “a collector who violates any provision of this subtitle is liable for any damages
    proximately caused by the violation, including damages for emotional distress or mental
    anguish suffered with or without accompanying physical injury.” Section 14-201(b)
    defines “collector” as “a person collecting or attempting to collect an alleged debt arising
    out of a consumer transaction.”
    CL § 13-303, which is part of the CPA, prohibits a person from engaging in an
    “unfair or deceptive trade practice” in “the collection of consumer debts.” Section 13-301
    defines “unfair or deceptive trade practice” as including any violation of “Title 14, Subtitle
    2 of this Article, the Maryland Consumer Debt Collection Act.” Section 13-408 permits a
    person to bring an action to recover for injury or loss sustained as the result of a practice
    prohibited by CPA and, if the person prevails, to be awarded attorneys’ fees.
    PROCEDURAL HISTORY OF THIS CASE
    This case was preceded by another class action suit filed against LVNV by Jason
    Hauk and Freddy Velazquez in the Circuit Court for Frederick County in October 2009.
    The gravamen of that action was largely the same as the one now before us, namely that
    7
    LVNV, acting as an unlicensed debt collector, had pursued consumer debt collection
    actions against the defendants in the District Court of Maryland in violation of MCALA
    (BR § 7-301) and that it threatened or took action it had no right to take in violation of
    MCDCA and its Federal counterpart, the Federal Debt Collection Practices Act (15 U.S.C.
    § 1692). One difference was that LVNV never recovered a judgment against Hauk or
    Velazquez; the action against Hauk ended with a verdict for Hauk, and LVNV dismissed
    the action against Velazquez when he filed a notice of intent to defend.
    The Complaint contained four counts: for declaratory and injunctive relief ordering
    LVNV to disgorge all amounts it obtained while acting illegally as a collection agency
    (Count I); for money damages and attorneys’ fees for violation of MCDCA (Count II); for
    money damages and attorneys’ fees for violation of CPA; and for statutory damages under
    the Federal Debt Collection Practices Act (Count IV).
    The alleged class in that action included all persons in the State of Maryland who,
    within three years prior to the filing of the complaint, “were contacted by the Defendant in
    connection with any effort to collect a debt.” That action was removed to Federal court by
    LVNV, where, after the court granted a motion to dismiss Count I but denied the motion
    to dismiss the State law claims in Counts II, III, and IV, it eventually was settled. See Hauk
    v. LVNV Funding, 
    749 F. Supp. 2d 358
    (D. Md. 2010). The settlement agreement narrowed
    the class to persons who, from October 1, 2007 through February 17, 2010, were sued by
    LVNV in Maryland to collect on a debt, but excluded persons against whom a judgment
    had been entered or who had filed for bankruptcy protection.
    8
    The next event that preceded the filing of the instant complaint was the LVNV
    Enforcement Action commenced by the Commissioner of Financial Regulation against
    LVNV and its various affiliates in July 2011. On October 25, 2011, a Summary Order was
    entered requiring LVNV to cease its collection activities and suspending LVNV’s belatedly
    obtained collection agency license. A year earlier, on May 5, 2010, the State Collection
    Agency Licensing Board had issued an Advisory to purchasers of consumer claims in
    default clarifying that it had been the Board’s “consistent position that a Consumer Debt
    Purchaser that collects consumer claims through civil litigation is a ‘collection agency’
    under Maryland law and required to be licensed as such, regardless of whether an attorney
    representing the Consumer Debt Purchaser in the litigation is a licensed collection agency,”
    citing BR § 7-101(c).
    As noted, in the LVNV Enforcement Action, the Commissioner found that, since
    2005, LVNV had been acting as an unlicensed debt collection agency in violation of
    MCALA and MCDCA, that “tens of thousands” of actions brought by LVNV in the District
    Court of Maryland requesting judgment on affidavit “knowingly contained false,
    deceptive, or deficient complaints and supporting affidavits,” and that, in some of those
    actions, LVNV had claimed and received pre-judgment interest amounts that included
    compound interest, which is prohibited by Maryland law. The Summary Order directed
    LVNV to cease and desist its efforts and suspended the collection agency license that it
    had obtained in 2010.
    9
    The Enforcement Action ended on June 28, 2012 with a Settlement Agreement in
    which, without acknowledging any wrongdoing, LVNV agreed to pay a penalty of one
    million dollars, dismiss with prejudice all collection cases filed in a Maryland court prior
    to the date of the agreement, and, with certain exceptions, provide restitution to all
    consumer debtors against whom a judgment had been obtained or whose case had been
    settled prior to the date of the agreement by crediting their accounts for prejudgment
    interest and attorneys’ fees awarded by the court or that were part of the settlement.
    This action, initially by Larry Finch and Kurt Dorsey as representative plaintiffs,
    was filed on November 9, 2011. LVNV had filed collection suits against Finch and Dorsey
    in the District Court in 2008 – prior to obtaining a collection agency license. It obtained
    default judgments against them and had garnished Finch’s wages. The class consisted of
    those persons sued by LVNV in Maryland courts from October 30, 2007 through February
    17, 2010 against whom LVNV obtained a judgment in its favor in an attempt to collect a
    consumer debt.5 The complaint sought the disgorgement of all sums LVNV received as a
    result of the judgments it improperly obtained and an injunction against any attempt to
    collect further amounts on those judgments.
    On LVNV’s motion, the Circuit Court dismissed that complaint on the ground that
    it amounted to an impermissible collateral attack on enrolled District Court judgments. In
    5
    By limiting the class to those persons against whom LVNV had obtained a judgment,
    the complaint excluded those persons who had remained as class members in the Federal
    action and had participated in the settlement of that case.
    10
    a reported Opinion, the Court of Special Appeals reversed that judgment and remanded the
    case for further proceedings. Finch v. LVNV Funding, 
    212 Md. App. 748
    (2013).
    LVNV conceded that it did not have a collection agency license when it obtained
    its judgments against Finch and Dorsey but claimed that, as a “passive” debt buyer, it was
    “confused” as to whether it needed one. Relying in part on Bradshaw v. Hilco Receivables,
    LLC, 
    765 F. Supp. 2d 719
    (D. Md. 2011), the appellate court rejected that defense. The
    issue then became whether the violation of MCALA made the District Court judgments
    void or merely voidable and, if void, whether those judgments could be collaterally
    attacked.
    Following the view of an intermediate appellate court in Illinois (LVNV Funding,
    LLC v. Trice, 
    952 N.E.2d 1232
    (Ill. App. 2011)), the Court of Special Appeals reached the
    conclusion that proceeding to collect a consumer debt without a license constituted an
    attempt to enforce a right that did not exist and made the resulting judgments void and not
    merely voidable. A judgment that is void, it continued, may be collaterally attacked at any
    time in any court.
    Upon that ruling and the denial of certiorari by this Court (
    435 Md. 266
    (2013)),
    the case returned to the Circuit Court, where a six-count amended complaint was filed.
    Ronald Jackson was added as a representative plaintiff. LVNV had sued Jackson in 2008.
    A judgment on affidavit that included pre-judgment interest and attorneys’ fees was entered
    against him, and his wages were garnished. The amended class action complaint proposed
    a class consisting of those persons sued by LVNV in a Maryland court between October
    11
    30, 2007 through February 17, 2010 against whom LVNV obtained a judgment in its favor
    in an attempt to collect a consumer debt, and a subclass consisting of all members of the
    class who had paid any amounts to LVNV.
    Count I sought a declaratory judgment that the District Court judgments against the
    class members were void because they were obtained when LVNV was acting unlawfully
    as an unlicensed collection agency. Count II sought a declaration on behalf of the named
    plaintiffs and the subclass that LVNV is liable for prejudgment interest on the amounts of
    interest and attorneys’ fees it refunded to class members. Count III sought a money
    judgment in favor of the subclass for all judgment sum interest it had collected from the
    subclass. Count IV asserted that LVNV’s conduct was in violation of MCDCA and CPA
    and sought a money judgment in favor of Finch, Jackson, and the subclass for violations
    of MCDCA. Count V sought a money judgment in favor of Finch, Jackson, and the
    subclass for money had and received by LVNV plus interest and costs. Finally, Count VI
    sought money damages for the named plaintiffs and the class for the cost of proceeding to
    have the District Court judgments against them declared void.
    Through interlocutory rulings, the court ruled, consistent with the Court of Special
    Appeals Opinion, that judgments obtained by LVNV in a Maryland court between October
    30, 2007 and February 17, 2010 in an attempt to collect a consumer debt were void, and
    certified the class and subclass, the latter consisting of all members of the class who paid
    any amounts to LVNV.
    12
    The case was submitted for trial by a jury, but it is not entirely clear whether the
    trial, verdict, and judgment involved the claims of all members of the class or only the
    claims of members of the subclass.6 In accordance with the court’s instructions, the jury
    was asked to determine, separately, (1) whether Finch and Jackson proved that LVNV was
    unjustly enriched (money had and received) by its collection of monies from them, (2)
    whether they proved that LVNV violated MCDCA,7 (3), if the answer to (1) or (2) was
    “yes,” what damages should be awarded and whether they were entitled to prejudgment
    interest, and (4) what sum of restitution the class should recover from LVNV for monies
    obtained or received from the class.8
    The jury said “no” to prejudgment interest but awarded specific amounts of damages
    to Finch and Jackson and $38,630,344 to the class. Judgments were entered in accordance
    with those verdicts, but, pursuant to a motion for judgment NOV, the court granted a
    remittitur and reduced the judgment in favor of the class (or subclass) to $25 million.
    6
    The words “class” and “subclass” were used interchangeably throughout the case. The
    amended complaint sought declaratory relief and damages in favor of both the class and
    the subclass. Compare the verdict sheet, which refers to “the class,” with the
    Administrative Order of November 10, 2015 at E298-99 and Motion in Limine at E389-
    93, which set for trial only actions by the subclass. We note also that, in its instructions
    to the jury, the court referred to “the class” as consisting of 1,589 individuals. See E647,
    p. 44. Those were the members of the subclass; the class contained more than 2,800
    persons. See E596, p.116.
    7
    MCDCA was the only statute mentioned on the verdict sheet, and it was mentioned only
    in connection Jackson and Finch, not the class.
    8
    The jury was not asked to return a verdict as to Dorsey. He was included as a named
    plaintiff in the amended complaint but must have dropped out of the case at some point.
    13
    That produced another appeal, which challenged the Circuit Court’s rulings (1) that
    LVNV was a collection agency subject to MCALA, (2) that the District Court judgments
    obtained by LVNV during the period it was not licensed were void and therefore subject
    to collateral attack, (3) that there was sufficient evidence to support the jury’s verdict of
    liability, (4) that excluded evidence proffered by LVNV regarding its liability for violating
    MCDCA and for unjust enrichment, (5) that omitted an instruction on the proper method
    for determining a monetary award for unjust enrichment, (6) that certified the class and
    subclass, (7) regarding the appropriate limitations period in defining the class and subclass,
    and (8) that granted a remittitur and reduced the judgment in favor of the class to $25
    million.
    The Court of Special Appeals considered all but the last of those challenges. As
    noted, it affirmed the finding of liability on the part of LVNV for violating MCDCA but
    remanded the case for a new trial on damages. The Court declined to revisit its holdings
    in the first appeal that LVNV was required to be licensed, that its pursuit of collection cases
    without a license constituted a violation of both MCALA and MCDCA, and that, as a
    result, the judgments it obtained in the District Court were void. It concluded that there
    was sufficient evidence of unjust enrichment to submit that issue to the jury but that the
    Circuit Court’s instructions on the calculation of damages were too imprecise to give
    sufficient guidance to the jury on the appropriate method of calculating a monetary award
    under the theory of unjust enrichment.
    14
    LVNV raised three issues in its petition for certiorari – whether a judgment in favor
    of an unlicensed collection agency is void; whether the lower courts erred in finding a
    private right of action in MCALA or MCDCA; and whether MCALA was intended to
    apply to entities such as LVNV that “passively” own consumer debt but retain licensed
    collection agencies to collect it. In their cross petition, the plaintiffs complain only about
    LVNV’s limitations defense, which is relevant only to the scope of the class. We shall deal
    with these issues in a different order.
    WAS LVNV REQUIRED TO BE LICENSED DURING THE RELEVANT PERIOD
    LVNV continues to argue that, because it is a “passive” debt buyer and owner,
    because it has no employees, and because it does nothing more than refer debts to
    Resurgent for collection, it does not constitute a collection agency for purposes of MCALA
    and therefore was never required to obtain a collection agency license, even though it
    eventually did so in 2010. That claim was rejected twice by the Court of Special Appeals
    and three times by the Commissioner of Financial Regulation, but it has yet to be
    considered on its merits by this Court. We shall reject it as well.
    The issue hinges on a construction of MCALA, in particular BR § 7-107(c), which
    defines the term “collection agency.” We recently explored in some detail the text and
    legislative history of that section, and MCALA in general, in Blackstone v. Sharma, 
    461 Md. 87
    (2018). The issue there was whether MCALA required foreign statutory trusts
    that acted as a repository for defaulted real estate mortgage debts to have a collection
    agency license before their trustees could institute foreclosure actions against the
    15
    mortgaged property. Upon concluding that the General Assembly had chosen an entirely
    different method of regulating real property foreclosures, the Court held that MCALA was
    not intended to apply to that activity by those trusts.
    The relevance of Blackstone to this case lies in the Court’s analysis of MCALA,
    which points to a different result with respect to debt buyers like LVNV. The statute was
    first enacted in 1977 and, for 30 years, focused on persons who directly or indirectly
    solicited from or collected for others consumer debt – initially debts arising from the
    acquisition of property or services for personal, family, or household purposes. The
    version in place in 2006 defined “collection agency” in relevant part as a person who
    “engages directly or indirectly in the business of collecting for, or soliciting from another,
    a consumer claim.” (Emphasis added).
    As we pointed out in Blackstone, by 2007, regulators, and ultimately the General
    Assembly, recognized the impact of the new business model of creating companies that,
    instead of collecting debt for the creditor, usually on a contingent fee basis, purchased that
    debt (which, with respect to credit card debt, the creditor otherwise would have to charge
    off) for their own account and either pursued collection on their own behalf or resold the
    debt to other debt buyers who pursued collection for their benefit. The impact was that
    these debt buyers were not required to be licensed and thus were free to engage, at least on
    a State level, in activities that were largely unregulated and often bordered on fraud.
    To deal with that, at the urging of the Commissioner of Financial Regulation, the
    General Assembly added to the definition of “collection agency” a person “who engages
    16
    directly or indirectly in the business of . . . collecting a consumer claim the person owns, if
    the claim was in default when the person acquired it.” The testimony given to the
    Legislature in support of that bill was that the intent of the amendment was to “close a
    loophole” and require that buyers of consumer debt in default be licensed before engaging
    in collection efforts. 
    Id. at 129.
    Although there was no intent to extend the law to real
    property mortgage foreclosures, the plain language of the amendment, coupled with the
    legislative history of it, unmistakably shows an intent to include entities like LVNV. The
    2007 amendment took effect October 1, 2007. From that date, debt buyers who engaged
    directly or indirectly in the business of collecting consumer debt that they owned and that
    was in default when they acquired it needed to be licensed.9
    9
    In arguing that it was not required to be licensed, or at least was “confused” regarding
    that matter, LVNV relies on a June 20, 2007 letter addressed to a representative of a debt
    buyer trade association by Kelly Mack. Ms. Mack, an employee of the Department of
    Labor, Licensing, and Regulation, wrote the letter purportedly on behalf of the Chair of
    the Collection Agency Licensing Board. The letter stated that “it is the position of the
    Commissioner that a debt buyer who purchases debt in default, but is not directly
    engaged in the collection of these purchased debts, is not required to obtain a collection
    agency license provided that all collection activity performed on behalf of such debt
    buyer is done by a properly licensed collection agency in the State of Maryland.”
    LVNV neglects to mention two critical facts. First, Ms. Mack filed an affidavit in
    this case attesting that (1) her letter was in response to the trade association’s request for
    an opinion, (2) that request did not refer to collecting consumer claims through civil
    litigation in Maryland courts, (3) her response “was directed exclusively at traditional
    collection activities not involving the use of Maryland courts or any other judicial
    process,” (4) her letter referred to an exception for business entities who were not directly
    engaged in the collection of these purchased debts,” (emphasis in original), and (5) “as
    Consumer Debt Purchasers who bring debt collection actions in Maryland State courts
    are directly involved in the collection of consumer debts (usually as the named Plaintiff
    in a legal action), they would be outside the scope of the exception discussed in my
    letter.” Second, also filed in the action was an affidavit of Gordon Cooley, the
    Commissioner of Financial Regulation, who attested that “[t]he [Department of Labor,
    17
    DID LVNV ACT UNLAWFULLY ACT AS A COLLECTION AGENCY
    Shooting the last arrow in this quiver, LVNV claims that it was not engaging in that
    business because it had no employees and did nothing more than turn accounts over to
    Resurgent, which was a licensed collection agency, and that it was Resurgent that did the
    collection work. Apart from the conclusion reached above, the evidence belies that
    contention in a number of respects. LVNV and Resurgent are not independent entities with
    entirely separate missions but integral parts of a composite corporate structure that sought
    to avoid regulation of the very kind of activity that the General Assembly believed needed
    regulation.
    We have described the interconnections within the Sherman family of companies,
    as found by the Commissioner of Financial Regulation, which LVNV has not contested.
    In its brief, it claims that it merely “serves as a special purpose financing vehicle to hold
    debt purchased and collected by affiliates in order to facilitate asset-based financing for the
    benefit of the larger corporate group” and “has no offices and no employees.” (Emphasis
    added). That last part is belied by findings made by the Commissioner of Financial
    Regulation in the LVNV Enforcement Action that, in the consumer actions filed by LVNV
    Licensing and Regulation] and the [Collection Agency Licensing Board] have
    consistently taken the position that Consumer Debt Purchase[r]s i.e. persons who acquire
    consumer debt which is in default at the time of acquisition and who collect such debt
    through civil litigation are ‘collection agencies’ and are subject to the licensing
    requirements of [MCALA].” In light of this evidence and the plain wording of the
    statute, neither the Circuit Court nor the Court of Special Appeals erred in concluding
    that, as of October 1, 2007, LVNV was required to be licensed before engaging in its
    collection activities.
    18
    in the District Court of Maryland, affidavits supporting their quest for judgment were
    submitted by various individuals claiming to be “authorized representatives” of LVNV
    who were “authorized to execute the affidavit on behalf of LVNV,” were “familiar with
    the books and records” of LVNV, and claimed personal knowledge of the facts. 
    Id. at 10,
    11.
    With respect to employees and offices, LVNV has a Board of Managers located in
    South Carolina that exercises immediate control over whatever exists in Maryland.
    Presumably, there is an office where the members of that Board meet and decide which
    debts to turn over to its sister company, Resurgent, and when. We note as well the evidence
    that LVNV is a subsidiary of and controlled by Originator, which in turn is controlled by
    SFG which, through its other subsidiaries, purchases the debt that LVNV holds and
    sometimes has actually traded as LVNV. (Emphasis added).
    From and after October 1, 2007, LVNV was required to be licensed before engaging
    in efforts to collect consumer debt.10 Its collection activity from and after that date until it
    obtained its license in February 2010 was unlawful under MCALA, MCDCA, and CPA.
    10
    We reach this conclusion upon our own analysis. We have noted that the
    Commissioner of Financial Regulation has reached the same conclusion on multiple
    occasions, including three that involved LVNV. We observe that, “[a]lthough no
    deference is required to be given to the [agency’s] conclusions of law, as issues of law
    are ultimately within the domain of the Judicial Branch, courts normally give some
    deference to the [agency’s] interpretations of the laws it is authorized to administer.”
    Nat’l Waste Mgrs v. Forks of the Patuxent, 
    453 Md. 423
    , 441 (2017); Kim v. Board of
    Physicians, 
    423 Md. 523
    , 535 (2011).
    19
    WERE THE DISTRICT COURT JUDGMENTS OBTAINED BY LVNV VOID
    In their initial Complaint, the plaintiffs did not claim that the judgments obtained by
    LVNV were void but only that LVNV, as an unlicensed consumer debt collector, had no
    right to pursue collection activity and should be made to disgorge any amounts collected.
    LVNV argued that such a claim amounted to an impermissible collateral attack on those
    judgments, and the Circuit Court agreed. The Court of Special Appeals held to the
    contrary, that “a judgment obtained by an unlicensed collection agency is void.” Finch v.
    LVNV 
    Funding, supra
    , 212 Md. App. at 759. When this Court denied certiorari, that
    ruling, in a reported Opinion, became binding on the Circuit Court, which duly followed it
    when the case was remanded. When raised again in the second appeal, the Court of Special
    Appeals found no reason to depart from its earlier ruling and confirmed it. The issue is
    now properly before us.11
    11
    In a motion to dismiss this appeal, respondents argue that the issue of whether the
    District Court judgments were void is not properly before us because (1) that issue was
    decided by the Court of Special Appeals in the first appeal, (2) it was raised in LVNV’s
    petition for certiorari from that decision, (3) we denied that petition, and (4) having
    decided to raise that issue in its certiorari petition and having the petition denied, LVNV
    may not relitigate it. For that proposition, they rely on Jones v. State, 
    357 Md. 408
    (2000). We find Jones to be distinguishable, however.
    The appeal in Jones raised the issue of whether the defense of self-defense applied
    to a charge of reckless endangerment. The Circuit Court refused to instruct the jury that
    the defense applied. The Court of Special Appeals agreed and affirmed the judgment of
    conviction. We granted Jones’s petition for certiorari to determine whether that
    conclusion was correct. The State had filed a cross-petition claiming that the issue was
    waived in the Circuit Court. We denied the cross-petition and then precluded the State
    from pursuing the waiver argument in its brief. The basis for that ruling was that
    “[u]nder our certiorari process, this Court will only consider matters in a petition for
    certiorari that we have granted.” 
    Id. at 419.
                                                 20
    Judgments, by and large, are meant to be final. Even the court that rendered them
    has but a limited ability to open and revise them. That is because, as this Court said 141
    years ago and has repeated several times since, “[i]t is most desirable of course that there
    should be an end to litigation, and a judgment is presumed to be a settlement of all matters
    in dispute in that particular case; and once entered, parties are no longer under the necessity
    of preserving the evidences upon which their claims rested. By it new rights are acquired,
    and if stricken out other claims may intervene, and the plaintiff may not only lose his lien,
    but in many cases the entire debt.” Abell v. Simon, 
    49 Md. 318
    , 324 (1878); Penn Central
    Co. v. Buffalo Spring, 
    260 Md. 576
    , 584-85 (1971).
    In furtherance of that principle, the ability to challenge a civil judgment, other than
    by an appeal, is limited, even in the court that entered it. The court that rendered the
    judgment has discretionary revisory power over it for only 30 days. On the 30th day, the
    judgment becomes “enrolled,” and after that time, the court may revise it only upon a
    finding of fraud, jurisdictional mistake, or irregularity, which are narrowly construed. Md.
    Rules 2-535 and 3-535; Andresen v. Andresen, 
    317 Md. 380
    , 388-89 (1989); Tandra S. v.
    Tyrone W., 
    336 Md. 303
    , 315 (1994).
    We adhere to that ruling, which is central to certiorari practice. In this case,
    although we denied LVNV’s petition for certiorari in the first appeal, we granted its
    petition in this one. There is no inconsistency in doing so. The case was in a very
    different posture the first time. Res judicata principles do not preclude this Court from
    agreeing to review an issue that it declined to review at an earlier stage or time. The
    motion to dismiss is denied.
    21
    Collateral attacks, whether in the court that entered the judgment or in any other
    court, are even more severely limited and are permitted only when the court that rendered
    the judgment had no jurisdiction to do so. Indeed, there are few principles of law that are
    so firmly and consistently entrenched in our jurisprudence, and for good reason. As early
    as 1824, this Court drew a distinction between judgments that were merely voidable
    because of irregularities in the proceeding that produced them and those that were
    absolutely void ab initio. See Barney v. Patterson, 
    6 H. & J. 182
    , 204 (1824). In Ranoul
    v. Griffie, 
    3 Md. 54
    , 60 (1852), the Court explained:
    “The principle is well settled, that the judgment of a court of competent
    jurisdiction, when incidentally in question, or offered as evidence of title in
    any court, is conclusive upon the question decided, and cannot be impeached
    on the ground of informality in the proceedings, or error or mistake of the
    court, in the matter which has been adjudicated.”
    Cases confirming that principle and elucidating it further are found throughout the
    Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries and into our own. See Dorsey v. Thompson, 
    37 Md. 25
    , 49 (1872); Fook’s Executors v. Ghingher, 
    172 Md. 612
    (1937) and County
    Commissioners v. Carroll Craft 
    384 Md. 23
    (2004). In Carroll Craft, we explained:
    (1) “A judicial decree or judgment made by a court lacking jurisdiction to enter it is
    void.”
    (2) “The term ‘jurisdiction’ can have different meanings [ ] depending on the
    context in which it is used. It can refer to either the power of the court to render
    a valid decree, or the propriety of granting the relief sought.” [cleaned up].
    (3) “It is only when the court lacks the first kind of jurisdiction which [ ] this Court
    termed ‘fundamental jurisdiction’ that its judgment is void.” [cleaned up].
    22
    (4) “[F]undamental jurisdiction refers to ‘the power to act with regard to a subject
    matter which is conferred by the sovereign authority which organizes the court,
    and is to be sought for in the general nature of its powers, or in authority specially
    conferred.’ . . . It is the power that the law confers on a court to render judgments
    over a class of cases, within which a particular case may fall.”
    (5) “Thus, the main inquiry in determining ‘fundamental jurisdiction’ is whether or
    not the court in question had general authority over the class of cases to which
    the case in question belongs.”
    (6) “[A] court still retains its ‘fundamental jurisdiction’ though its ability to exercise
    that power may be ‘interrupted’ or circumscribed by statute or Maryland Rule.
    Indeed, this Court has repeatedly declined to hold void court or agency decisions
    that exceeded statutory limits but fell within the basic or fundamental
    jurisdiction of the court or agency.”
    
    Id. at 44-45.
    These principles, of course, apply only to collateral attacks on enrolled
    judgments. A claim that the court is without non-fundamental jurisdiction certainly may
    be raised as a defense in a pending action seeking the judgment or while the court retains
    revisory power over a judgment it has issued.
    In its two decisions, the Court of Special Appeals recognized the distinction
    between void and voidable judgments but, relying on Stein v. Smith, 
    358 Md. 670
    (2000),
    Turkey Point Property v. Anderson, 
    106 Md. App. 710
    (1995), Harry Berenter v. Berman,
    
    258 Md. 290
    (1970), and McDaniel v. Baranowski, 
    419 Md. 560
    (2011) concluded that an
    enrolled judgment may be void for reasons other than a lack of fundamental jurisdiction as
    defined in Carroll County and its predecessors. It erred in doing so. None of those cases
    involved a collateral attack on an enrolled judgment.
    In Stein, an action was filed by a corporation whose charter had been revoked and
    which, as a result, was not authorized to file the action. When that defense was raised, an
    23
    amended complaint was filed, in that case, by an individual who claimed to be doing
    business in the corporate name. The problem was that limitations had run by then, and the
    question was whether the individual could get the benefit of a relation back to when the
    initial complaint was filed. Relying on language in Atlantic Mill & Etc., Co. v. Keefer, 
    179 Md. 496
    , 500 (1941) that a mechanics lien filed by a corporation whose charter had been
    revoked was “inoperative, null, and void,” we concluded that there was no relation back
    and that the amended complaint was properly dismissed.
    Turkey Point involved a similar situation. The owners of waterfront property sought
    rezoning and a variance, which the county zoning authority granted over the objection of a
    property owners association. The association petitioned for judicial review and then
    appealed the Circuit Court’s affirmance. The association, however, was not represented
    by an attorney, as required by law, and the Court of Special Appeals, in a direct appeal
    from the Circuit Court’s judgment, concluded that the association’s petition for judicial
    review was a “nullity.”
    Harry Berenter was a direct appeal from a judgment refusing to enforce a
    mechanics’ lien filed by an unlicensed contractor. The Court did hold that, “if a statute
    requiring a license for conducting a trade, business or profession is regulatory in nature for
    the protection of the public, rather than merely to raise revenue, an unlicensed person will
    not be given the assistance of courts in enforcing contracts within the provisions of the
    regulatory statute because such enforcement is against public policy.” We confirm that
    ruling in the context it was made, but it does not extend to allowing collateral attacks on
    enrolled judgments. That is true as well with McDaniel.
    24
    None of those cases, nor any like them, persuade us to depart from the principle we
    have adhered to for well over a century stressing the importance of preserving enrolled
    civil judgments from collateral attack on any ground other than the lack of fundamental
    jurisdiction to render those judgments. This is not a matter of blind adherence to an
    outmoded juridical policy. Enrolled judgments create important vested rights that not just
    the parties, but the entire public, have a right to rely upon. The District Court clearly had
    fundamental jurisdiction over the collection actions filed by LVNV, notwithstanding that
    LVNV had no legal authority to file them, and the two lower courts in this case erred in
    declaring them void.
    WHERE DOES THAT LEAVE US – PRIVATE RIGHT OF ACTION
    Relying on the Court of Special Appeals’ first Opinion, respondents, on remand,
    did seek a declaration that the District Court judgments were void, but that was not the only
    relief sought or necessarily critical to the affording of other relief. The larger issue, raised
    by LVNV, is whether MCALA or MCDCA (or CPA) permit a private cause of action for
    violation of those statutes. LVNV asserts in its brief that neither the text nor the legislative
    history of MCALA demonstrates an intent by the General Assembly to allow a private right
    of action for violation of the statute. If the Legislature had such an intent, contends LVNV,
    it would have said so.         The General Assembly did say so, unmistakably and
    unambiguously.
    As we have pointed out, MCALA, with exceptions that do not apply here,
    requires that a person have a collection agency license whenever the person does business
    25
    as a collection agency and makes it a criminal offense for a person knowingly and willfully
    to do business as a collection agency in Maryland without one. BR §§ 7-301 and 7-401.
    CL § 14-202, which is part of MCDCA, expressly prohibits a debt collector from claiming,
    attempting, or threatening to enforce a right with knowledge that the right does not exist.
    An unlicensed debt collector who, in the furtherance of its business, attempts to
    collect a debt through litigation unquestionably is attempting to enforce a right that, for it,
    does not exist. CL § 14-203, also part of MCDCA states that “[a] collector who violates
    any provision of this subtitle is liable for any damages proximately caused by the violation,
    including damages for emotional distress or mental anguish suffered with or without
    accompanying physical injury.” Mostofi v. Midland Funding, 
    223 Md. App. 687
    , 702-03
    (2015). It is hard to imagine, notwithstanding LVNV’s importuning, a clearer expression
    of an intent to provide a private remedy for the violation of MCALA – a remedy that
    permits recovery of “any damages,” including for emotional distress.
    LVNV is correct in asserting that “[t]his case went to the jury on the mistaken
    theory that the underlying debts owned by LVNV were void.” LVNV Brief at 25. It must
    be remanded, once again, for a reassessment of damages in accordance with what is
    allowed under CL § 14-203 which, as happened in the earlier remand, may involve the
    filing of an amended complaint and, absent a settlement, will require a retrial on the
    damages issues. Although the District Court judgments may not be collaterally attacked,
    BR § 7-401, read in conjunction with § 7-101(c), would permit declaratory and injunctive
    relief precluding LVNV from taking any action to enforce those judgments and for any
    damages incurred by the plaintiffs as the result of LVNV’s collection efforts. Because of
    26
    this remand for further proceedings with respect to damages, we need not address the issues
    raised in respondent’s cross petition. If raised again in the Circuit Court, the context may
    be different.
    JUDGMENT OF COURT OF SPECIAL
    APPEALS VACATED; CASE REMANDED TO
    THAT COURT WITH INSTRUCTIONS TO
    REMAND TO THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
    BALTIMORE    CITY    FOR   FURTHER
    PROCEEDINGS IN CONFORMANCE WITH
    THIS OPINION; COSTS IN THIS COURT
    AND IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    TO BE PAID BY PETITIONER/CROSS-
    RESPONDENT.
    27