In the Matter of Cash-N-Go ( 2022 )


Menu:
  • In the Matter of Cash-N-Go, Inc., et al., No. 1012, September Term, 2021. Opinion by
    Ripken, J.
    EQUITABLE ESTOPPEL – MARYLAND REGULATORY AGENCIES –
    APPLICABILITY
    State regulatory agencies should not be estopped from enforcing a valid law or regulation
    within the scope of their authority regardless of a claimant’s contention that unlawful
    business practices were justified by reliance upon prior statements or conduct of state
    employees.
    EQUITABLE ESTOPPEL – MARYLAND REGULATORY AGENCIES –
    AFFIRMATIVE MISCONDUCT
    A state regulatory agency becoming aware of a claimant’s illicit behavior and subsequently
    holding the claimant accountable for such behavior does not amount to the type of
    “affirmative misconduct” by the State that is required to support an estoppel claim.
    CONSUMER PROTECTION ACT – MARYLAND CONSUMER LENDING
    LAW – GOOD FAITH EXEMPTION
    The good faith exemption under CL § 12-316.1 does not limit the imposition of any civil
    penalty for a knowing or willful violation of the Consumer Loan Law or limit the power
    of the Commissioner or the courts to order restitution to a borrower of moneys collected in
    violation of the Consumer Loan Law.
    CONSUMER PROTECTION ACT – MARYLAND CONSUMER LENDING
    LAW – RESTITUTION AND CIVIL PENALTIES
    Section 12-314 of the Maryland Consumer Lending Law permits the Consumer Protection
    Division to order restitution amounts that include the principal, interest, and fees with
    respect to any loan deemed void or unenforceable under the Consumer Protection Act.
    Section 13-410 allows for a maximum civil penalty amount of $10,000 per violation of the
    Consumer Protection Act.
    Circuit Court for Allegany County
    Case No. C-01-CV-20-000101
    REPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 1012
    September Term, 2021
    ______________________________________
    In the Matter of CASH-N-GO, INC., ET AL.
    ______________________________________
    Kehoe,
    Ripken,
    Tang,
    JJ.
    ______________________________________
    Opinion by Ripken, J.
    ______________________________________
    Filed: November 30, 2022
    Pursuant to the Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State
    Government Article) this document is authentic.
    2022-11-30 13:21-05:00
    Gregory Hilton, Clerk
    On April 1, 2019, the Consumer Protection Division (“the Division”) of the Office
    of the Attorney General of Maryland filed a statement of charges against Cash-N-Go, Inc.,
    Cash-N-Go Pawnbrokers, LLC, Cash-N-Go Pawnbrokers, Inc., and the three business
    entities’ sole owner, Brent Jackson (“Jackson”) (collectively referred to as “Cash-N-Go”),
    for violations of several Maryland consumer protection laws. Cash-N-Go denied all
    allegations, and the Division referred the case to the Office of Administrative Hearings
    (“OAH”). After conducting a contested case hearing, the administrative law judge (“ALJ”)
    filed a proposed decision, finding that Cash-N-Go had engaged in unfair or deceptive trade
    practices in violation of the Maryland Consumer Protection Act (“CPA”).1 The Division
    subsequently adopted the ALJ’s proposed factual findings and conclusions of law, issued
    a cease-and-desist order prohibiting Cash-N-Go from continuing its unlawful consumer
    lending practices, and held all Cash-N-Go parties jointly and severally liable for restitution
    payments and civil penalties.2
    On March 16, 2020, Cash-N-Go filed a petition for judicial review of the Division’s
    final order in the Circuit Court for Allegany County. The circuit court held a hearing on
    July 9, 2021, and subsequently affirmed the Division’s findings and assessment of
    penalties. Cash-N-Go now appeals to this Court. For the reasons that follow, we
    shall affirm.
    1
    Md. Code Ann., Com. Law (“CL”) §§ 13-101–13-501.
    2
    The Division imposed $2,200,00 in restitution and $1,200,750 in civil penalties.
    ISSUES PRESENTED FOR REVIEW
    Cash-N-Go presents the following issues for our review:3
    I.     Whether the Division must be estopped from enforcing Maryland’s
    consumer protection laws against Cash-N-Go.
    II.    Whether the Division’s assessment of the penalties and restitution
    levied against Cash-N-Go violates the Excessive Fines Clause of the
    Eighth Amendment.
    III.   Whether the circuit court erred in identifying Cash-N-Go, Inc. as the
    sole petitioner for judicial review of the Division’s final order.
    We hold (1) that the Division is not estopped from ordering penalties against
    Cash-N-Go for violating Maryland’s consumer protection laws; (2) that the
    Division’s assessment of penalties and restitution did not violate the Excessive Fines
    Clause of the Eighth Amendment; and (3) that the circuit court did not err in
    3
    Condensed, rephrased, and reordered from the following:
    I.     Did the Circuit Court err in excluding certain Cash-N-Go entities and
    Brent Jackson, individually, from participating in the administrative
    appeal by finding that prior counsel did not properly petition for
    judicial review on their behalf?
    II.    Should the CPD be estopped from bringing claims against Appellants,
    given that multiple Maryland regulators had reviewed Appellants’
    business practices and explicitly or implicitly endorsed them, and
    given that Appellants ceased any disputed transactions at the first
    instance of any constructive notice that a “title pawn” transaction may
    be construed as violative of any Maryland law?
    III.   Did the Circuit Court err in determining that the restitution and other
    penalties ordered in the administrative action were substantially
    justified by failing to take into account that nearly half of the alleged
    “restitution” funds were, in fact, monies legally owned by and
    originally advanced to consumers by the Cash-N-Go Appellants?
    2
    identifying Cash-N-Go, Inc. as the sole petitioner seeking judicial review of the
    Division’s order.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    The Division adopted all factual findings made by the ALJ at the conclusion of an
    evidentiary hearing; no party objected to those factual findings. Therefore, the following
    statement of facts is largely derived from the Division’s final order.
    Cash-N-Go is a Maryland company that was incorporated in January of 1998 as
    “Cash & Go, Inc.” before changing its name to “Cash-N-Go, Inc.” in May of 2010. Cash-
    N-Go, Inc. has also conducted business as Cash-N-Go Pawnbrokers, Inc., Cash-N-Go
    Pawnbrokers LLC, and Cash-N-Go. Jackson is the sole owner and President of all Cash-
    N-Go business entities, and he has directed, overseen, and managed the business activities
    of each entity since their inceptions. Cash-N-Go obtained a check cashing license from the
    Maryland Commissioner of Financial Regulation (“CFR”) and subsequently obtained a
    second-hand precious metal and pawnbroker license. Cash-N-Go has never been licensed
    by the CFR as an installment or consumer lender.
    Cash-N-Go began offering financial services that it referred to as “title loans,” “title
    pawns,” or “cash advances,” in 2007. The services were advertised as “loans, pawns, or
    purchasing valuables” at “the best value for [Cash-N-Go’s] customers.” Regarding “car
    title pawns,” specifically, Cash-N-Go’s website used language such as: “Need fast cash
    and [to] be able to keep your car? No worries! Our services allow you to continue to use
    your vehicle while we hold the title – a winning deal for our customers.” Since Cash-N-Go
    began offering financial services in 2007, it has completed 1601 title pawn transactions,
    3
    ranging in amount from $140 to $6,000 each.
    Generally, consumers would drive to a Cash-N-Go location to request a loan for
    personal, family, or household purposes. In turn, Cash-N-Go would lend them the money
    with the expectation of repayment on the principal amount of the loan plus interest. In
    accordance with Cash-N-Go’s standard operating procedures, employees were instructed
    to base the amount of money they could offer for title pawns on the vehicle’s condition,
    the consumer’s ability to pay back the loan, and up to 30% of the vehicle’s rough value.
    As a prerequisite to receiving a loan, the consumer was required to provide a Cash-N-Go
    employee with a free and clear title to his or her vehicle, proof of current vehicle
    registration, proof of current insurance, a spare key to the consumer’s vehicle, a valid
    driver’s license, proof of social security number, a current utility bill, and a current
    pay stub.4
    Once the consumer provided the requisite documents, the employee would conduct
    a cursory inspection of the consumer’s vehicle to record any preexisting damage and ensure
    that the provided spare key unlocked and started the car. Thereafter, the employee would
    prepare the loan paperwork, which included a contract, bill of sale, and a Maryland daily
    transaction report form. The employee would show the consumer where to sign, sometimes
    without giving the consumer a chance to review the documents. In order to “speed up the
    process” employees were instructed that consumers were not required to wait while the
    4
    In contrast, consumers who wanted to pawn non-vehicle items of personal property were
    only required to provide Cash-N-Go with a driver’s license, the property itself, and a signed
    pawn form.
    4
    employees filled out their portion of the daily transaction forms, “as long as [the
    consumers] sign[ed][.]” The employee would then deliver the cash advance or issue a
    check made payable directly to the consumer, who was then free to leave, loan in hand.
    Next, the employee would register the vehicle titles as pawned property with Maryland’s
    Regional Automated Property Information Database (“RAPID”).5 Afterward, the
    employee would file a lien on the vehicle with the Maryland Motor Vehicle Administration
    (“MVA”) and log the transaction in an internal spreadsheet.
    Every title pawn contract that Cash-N-Go entered with consumers conveyed that the
    consumer would be required to make a payment within 30 days of receiving the loan. The
    contract contained a payment schedule, titled “minimum amount due,” indicating a
    monthly charge of 30% of the loan principal (labeled “pawnshop charge”). The fine print
    at the bottom of the contract indicated that paying the pawnshop charge would allow
    consumers to extend their obligation to repay the loan principal by another month.
    Extending the loan each month by payment of the pawn charge would amount to an annual
    interest rate of 360%.
    Notably, the contract did not accurately convey the structure of the loan. To pay off
    their loans, consumers were required to pay the entire principal amount plus 30% interest
    within 30 days. The loan documents did not indicate that minimum payments (the
    pawnshop charge) would not be subtracted from the principal amount owed. Nor did the
    documents adequately inform the consumer that if they only made the minimum monthly
    5
    RAPID is a database that the state police use to track stolen property.
    5
    payment on their loan, the repayment terms would extend indefinitely. When consumers
    made monthly payments on the loans, they rarely received receipts. If a receipt was issued,
    it did not clearly indicate that the consumer’s payment was being credited toward interest
    rather than the loan principal.
    One consumer who contracted with the Cash-N-Go location in Hagerstown
    expressed that the “receipts” he received after making monthly payments relayed nothing
    more than his “loan number, the payment date, the amount of [his] payment, and the
    remaining loan balance,” and that it “seemed like [his] loan balance never went down[.]”
    Another consumer who contracted with Cash-N-Go’s Westminster location stated that he
    “had no idea what the total cost of the loan would be” and that he “did not know how long
    [he] would have to make payments on the loan.” Another Westminster consumer testified
    that he knew “something [was not] right” when he noticed that, even after several months
    of paying more than the contracted minimum amount on his loan, his “principle [sic] was
    the same.”
    Consumers were thus faced with either paying significantly more money on their
    loans than they originally understood or risking repossession of their vehicles. The grace
    period for late payments was typically two weeks, whereafter an officer or agent of Cash-
    N-Go would, without written notice, repossess the consumer’s vehicle using the spare key
    that the consumer provided to obtain the loan. In order to recover their repossessed vehicles
    from Cash-N-Go, consumers were required to pay the outstanding balance on their loans
    plus additional fees. Occasionally, Cash-N-Go would sell a repossessed vehicle without
    providing the consumer with a full accounting of the sale proceeds. Additionally, Cash-N-
    6
    Go failed to return to consumers any proceeds that exceeded the outstanding balances of
    their loans. Cash-N-Go collected a total of over $2.2 million in repayment funds on the
    1,601 loans it made between 2007 and 2016 and repossessed 147 vehicles.
    On April 1, 2019, the Division filed a statement of charges against Cash-N-Go,
    asserting that the company was in violation of Maryland consumer lending laws for unfair
    and deceptive trade practices, such as providing loans and offering credit without a license,
    charging usurious interest rates, and taking prohibited security interests in consumers’
    personal property. Cash-N-Go denied all allegations of wrongdoing, and the Division
    referred the case to the OAH to conduct a contested case hearing and render proposed
    findings of fact and conclusions of law. The presiding ALJ conducted a hearing on July 16,
    2019, in which extensive evidence was presented.6 At the conclusion of the hearing, both
    Cash-N-Go and the Division filed proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law with
    the OAH.
    On October 25, 2019, the ALJ filed a proposed decision, finding that Cash-N-Go
    had engaged in unfair or deceptive trade practices that violated the CPA by:
    6
    There was live testimony from a Cash-N-Go general manager; a Cash-N-Go consumer; a
    former examiner for the Office of the Commissioner of Financial Regulation (“CFR”); the
    Division’s Chief Investigator; the Assistant Commissioner of Finance at the Department
    of Labor, Licensing, and Regulation (“DLLR”); and a DLLR investigator. An additional
    Cash-N-Go consumer testified via telephone. The Division offered over 100 exhibits into
    evidence, including but not limited to: transcript excerpts of depositions examining Jackson
    and Cash-N-Go’s general manager; several title pawn contracts and consumer files; Cash-
    N-Go advertising materials; an affidavit by an examiner from the CFR Compliance Unit;
    Cash-N-Go’s pawnbroker’s licensing files with the DLLR; Cash-N-Go’s licensing files
    with the CFR; several CFR check cashing examination reports; and seven consumer
    affidavits.
    7
    (1) misrepresenting illegal consumer loans as “pawn” transactions; (2) offering consumers
    credit without the required licenses; (3) charging usurious interest rates; (4) otherwise
    failing to comply with Maryland consumer lending laws; and (5) illegally repossessing
    consumers’ vehicles. The Division subsequently adopted the ALJ’s proposed factual
    findings and conclusions of law and issued a cease-and-desist order prohibiting Cash-N-
    Go from continuing its unlawful consumer lending practices without first obtaining the
    appropriate licenses. After evaluating the ALJ’s findings and conclusions, the Division
    held all Cash-N-Go parties, including Jackson in his individual capacity, jointly and
    severally liable for the violations and ordered Cash-N-Go to pay restitution, civil penalties,
    and costs.
    On March 16, 2020, Cash-N-Go filed a petition in the Circuit Court for Allegany
    County for judicial review of the Division’s final order. The petition’s caption listed “Cash-
    N-Go, Inc., et al.” as the Petitioner. The circuit court conducted a hearing on July 9, 2021.
    On August 10, 2021, the circuit court issued a memorandum in which it found that Cash-
    N-Go, Inc. was the sole petitioner for judicial review and affirmed the Division’s findings
    and assessment of penalties.
    A. Involvement of State Agencies
    1. Commission of Financial Regulation
    On January 29, 2009, two examiners from the CFR’s Compliance Unit conducted
    an examination of the check cashing services at Cash-N-Go’s Westminster location. One
    of the CFR examiners testified that the “purpose and scope of the examination was the
    check cashing business with regard to their check cashing license, which include[ed]
    8
    debt[,] the cash checking statute[,] and any money laundering statutes that were
    applicable.” The examiner testified that she was not authorized to investigate anything
    related to consumer lending or pawnbroking because a separate unit within DLLR was
    responsible for monitoring such activities. After completing an examination of the check
    cashing “operations, money services business status, record retention, consumer
    complaints[,] and fee structure,” the examiner indicated in her January report that Cash-N-
    Go’s check cashing services were “unsatisfactory.”
    During the CFR investigation, an examiner inquired about a neon sign in the shop’s
    window advertising “title loans.” The manager there at the time informed the examiner that
    Cash-N-Go did not offer “title loans” but “title pawns,” with the appropriate license. The
    examiner instructed the manager to remove the sign because title loans were “not permitted
    under the Maryland law as the usury limits restrain car title loans.” The examiner testified
    that she did not inquire further about the company’s “title pawn” practices because that
    “was not the scope of why [she] was there.” Rather, she took the manager’s word at face
    value that the title pawn transactions were in accordance with Cash-N-Go’s pawnbroker
    license. On December 26, 2009, the Cash-N-Go manager informed the CFR that all neon
    signage had been changed from “title loans” to “title pawns.”
    On November 7, 2014, CFR examiners met with the same manager at Cash-N-Go’s
    Hagerstown location. The examiners inquired “why Cash-N-Go, which held pawnbroker
    and check-casher licenses, did not possess a consumer lender license” if they were offering
    “title pawn loans.” The manager responded that he “believed the pawnbroker license was
    all that was required” to conduct the title pawn transactions. The CFR examiner(s) warned
    9
    the manager that Cash-N-Go’s “ongoing business as a title pawn lender”—without a
    consumer lender license—“plac[ed] the business in conflict with Maryland consumer
    lending laws.”
    2. Motor Vehicle Administration
    As part of the title pawn transaction procedures, Cash-N-Go employees were
    instructed to file liens with the MVA on every vehicle title they obtained. The lien amount
    reflected the total amount the consumer owed on the loan (principal plus 30% interest).
    The MVA did not advise Cash-N-Go that taking such liens through title pawn transactions
    was a violation of Maryland law.
    3. Maryland State Police
    In 2009, the Maryland State Police (“MSP”) began utilizing and maintaining
    RAPID to track and recover stolen property. As per Cash-N-Go’s operating procedures,
    employees were instructed to input each title pawn transaction into RAPID and log
    information such as the consumer’s name, the make and model of the vehicle, the vehicle’s
    identification number, that Cash-N-Go was the purchaser, and the location at which the
    transaction occurred. An MSP employee would be able to see that Cash-N-Go’s logged
    transaction was listed as a “pawn,” but there was nothing in RAPID that screened for
    whether the “pawn” transaction was valid or was actually a loan. The MSP did not monitor
    for, nor did it advise Cash-N-Go that providing title pawns was a violation of
    Maryland law.
    B. West Virginia Case
    The Cash-N-Go President and sole owner, Jackson, was formerly investigated and
    10
    charged with engaging in illicit vehicle title loan transactions in West Virginia under the
    business name Pawn America. See State ex rel. McGraw v. Pawn Am., 
    205 W. Va. 431
    (1998). In March of 1997, the West Virginia Attorney General’s Office filed a complaint
    and petition for injunction against Pawn America for violations of the West Virginia
    Consumer Credit and Protection Act (“CCPA”). Complaint and Petition for Injunction,
    State ex rel. McGraw v. Pawn Am., 
    205 W. Va. 431
     (1998) (No. 97-C-125). The CCPA
    required consumer lenders to be licensed and limited the interest rate that they could charge
    on consumer loans. See Pawn Am., 205 W. Va. at 433; see also W. Va. Code § 46A-4-101,
    § 46A-3-104. In a defense comparable to that asserted in this case, Jackson denied the
    allegations of wrongdoing. Pawn Am., 205 W. Va. at 433. He claimed that the CCPA was
    inapplicable to Pawn America’s title lending activities because they were pawn
    transactions and not consumer loans. Id. The Circuit Court of Berkeley County, West
    Virginia, issued a final order in which it described Pawn America’s title loan transactions
    in the following way:
    A consumer approaches Pawn America with the intent to borrow money; in
    exchange for the money being lent, the consumer is required to deliver to
    Pawn America a clear certificate of title to his/her motor vehicle and to
    endorse the title in blank; the consumer is required to pay a fee of 25% of the
    loan amount for a two week loan (which translates into an interest rate of
    65% when annualized); that the loan may be renewed for additional two-
    week periods so long as the consumer pays an additional 25% ‘finance
    charge’ for each such two-week period; that the consumer is permitted to
    retain possession of the vehicle unless, and until, he/she defaults on a
    payment; and Pawn America does not store the motor vehicle on which it
    loans money at its Martinsburg location, rather if the consumer does not pay
    the amounts owed to Pawn America in a timely fashion, then Pawn America
    ‘repossesses’ the consumer’s vehicle.
    11
    Id. at 432. After Pawn America appealed the circuit court’s order, the Supreme Court of
    Appeals of West Virginia issued an opinion, holding that Pawn America’s title lending
    activities were “a ‘pawn’ in name only, and in reality a consumer loan with an usurious
    interest rate—not a true pawn.” Id. at 434.
    The West Virginia case resulted in a consent order and permanent injunction under
    which Pawn America was “permanently ENJOINED and RESTRAINED from making any
    title pawns, original or renewal, in West Virginia, through a pawnshop or otherwise . . .
    until they have complied with appropriate provisions of the [CCPA].” Consent Order and
    Permanent Injunction at 3, State ex rel. McGraw v. Pawn Am., 
    205 W. Va. 431
     (1998) (No.
    97-C-125) (emphasis in original). Consequently, Pawn America was required to return all
    vehicles and keys it had obtained through its title loan transactions and was ordered to pay
    the State a fine as settlement. 
    Id.
     at 3–4.
    DISCUSSION
    At the outset we note that we rely upon the following definition of
    “pawn” transaction:
    a loan of money by a dealer on deposit or pledge of personal property or other
    valuable thing other than securities or printed evidences of indebtedness, or
    a purchase by a dealer of personal property or other valuable things on
    condition of selling the same back at a stipulated price.
    
    Md. Code Ann., Bus. Reg. § 12-101
    (h). Furthermore, we adopt the definition of “loan” as
    articulated in the Division’s final order and relied upon by the circuit court:
    “[L]oan” or “consumer loan” means any loan or advance of money or credit
    made, provided, advertised, offered, or made available to any Maryland
    consumer regardless of what the loan is called or how it is characterized, and
    thus includes, for example, any secured consumer loan that permits a
    12
    consumer to retain use and control of their vehicle or other secured personal
    property while repaying the loan, including, but not limited to, transactions
    characterized as “vehicle title loans,” “title loans,” “vehicle title pawns,” or
    “title pawns.” A loan that is primarily for personal, household, family, or
    agricultural purposes constitutes “consumer credit” within the meaning of
    § 13-101(d)(1) of the CPA.
    The purpose of the CPA is to “set certain minimum statewide standards for the
    protection of consumers across the State,” CL § 13-102(b)(1), by which the State “should
    take strong protective and preventive steps to investigate unlawful consumer practices, to
    assist the public in obtaining relief from these practices, and to prevent these practices from
    occurring in Maryland.” CL § 13-102(b)(3). As such, the General Assembly intended the
    CPA to be “construed and applied liberally to promote its purpose.” Goshen Run
    Homeowners Ass’n v. Cisneros, 
    467 Md. 74
    , 94 (2020) (quoting CL § 13-105). Thus, the
    statute covers a broad range of “unfair, abusive, or deceptive trade practices,” including, in
    pertinent part:
    (1) False, falsely disparaging, or misleading oral or written statement, visual
    description, or other representation of any kind which has the capacity,
    tendency, or effect of deceiving or misleading consumers;
    (2)(ii) Representation that . . . [a] merchant has a sponsorship, approval,
    status, affiliation, or connection which he does not have; [and]
    (3) Failure to state a material fact if the failure deceives or tends to deceive[.]
    CL §§ 13-301(1), (2)(ii), (3). Violations of the CPA encompass violations of the Maryland
    Consumer Lending Law (“MCLL”) and related statutes, including the Maryland Interest
    and Usury Law (“MIUL”) and the Installment Loan-Licensing Provisions (“ILLP”). The
    13
    MCLL governs “any loan or advance of money or credit” of $6,000 or less7 when said loan
    is made primarily for “personal, family, or household purposes.” See CL § 12-314(a)
    (2018); CL §§ 12-301, 12-303(a)(1). Under the MCLL, “[a] person may not engage in the
    business of making loans under this subtitle unless the person is licensed under or is exempt
    from the licensing requirements of Title 11, Subtitle 2 of the Financial Institutions Article,
    the Maryland Consumer Loan Law – Licensing Provisions.” CL § 12-302; Fin. Inst. § 11-
    201(c); see also CL § 12-314(a)(3) (2018).
    I.     THE DIVISION IS NOT ESTOPPED FROM ORDERING AND ENFORCING
    RESTITUTION AND OTHER PENALTIES AGAINST CASH-N-GO FOR VIOLATING
    MARYLAND CONSUMER PROTECTION LAWS.
    Cash-N-Go argues that the Division should be estopped from bringing claims
    against it under the CPA because Cash-N-Go detrimentally relied upon the “implicit[] or
    explicit[]” endorsement of “three separate Maryland administrative agencies.” In response,
    the Division contends that the doctrine of equitable estoppel cannot be asserted against the
    State in this context and that, even if the doctrine could apply, Cash-N-Go failed to
    establish the elements necessary to invoke equitable estoppel.
    We begin by addressing whether the doctrine of equitable estoppel may be asserted
    against the Division under these circumstances. Then, we discuss whether Cash-N-Go
    successfully established the elements of equitable estoppel: (1) a voluntary representation
    of one party; (2) that is relied upon by the other party; (3) to the other party’s detriment.
    7
    The MCLL has since been amended to govern any such loans of “$25,000 or less[.]” See
    CL § 12-314(a) (2019).
    14
    Reichs Ford Rd. Joint Venture v. State Rd. Comm’n of the State Highway Admin., 
    388 Md. 500
    , 524 (2005).
    Standard of Review
    Whether the Division properly applied the doctrine of equitable estoppel to the
    evidence in the record is a mixed question of law and fact. Typically, this Court will affirm
    a circuit court’s judgment concerning a mixed question of law and fact “when we cannot
    say that its evidentiary findings were clearly erroneous, and we find no error in that court’s
    application of the law.” See Fischbach v. Fischbach, 
    187 Md. App. 61
    , 88 (2009).
    However, “an agency’s interpretation of the meaning and intent of its own regulation is
    entitled to deference.” Pollock v. Patuxent Inst. Bd. of Rev., 
    374 Md. 463
    , 505 n.6 (2003)
    (quoting Changing Point, Inc. v. Md. Health Res. Planning Comm’n, 
    87 Md. App. 150
    ,
    160 (1991)). Therefore, when faced with a mixed question of law and fact arising from an
    agency decision, as here, we apply the substantial evidence test—that is, the same standard
    of review we would apply to an agency’s purely factual finding.8 See Charles Cnty. Dept.
    of Soc. Servs. v. Vann, 
    382 Md. 286
    , 296 (2004) (citing Pollock, 
    374 Md. at
    469 n.3;
    Ramsay, Scarlett & Co. v. Comptroller, 
    302 Md. 825
    , 837–38 (1985)).
    Under the substantial evidence test, this Court’s “review of the agency’s factual
    findings entails only an appraisal and evaluation of the agency’s fact finding and not an
    8
    The ALJ addressed Cash-N-Go’s equitable estoppel argument in its proposed decision to
    the Division. The ALJ considered the doctrine’s applicability according to three elements:
    (1) voluntary representation; (2) good faith reliance; and (3) detriment. Because the
    Division adopted and incorporated all of the ALJ’s factual findings and conclusions of law,
    we review the equitable estoppel claim as though the Division itself had conducted the
    analysis.
    15
    independent decision on the evidence.” Catonsville Nursing Home, Inc. v. Loveman, 
    349 Md. 560
    , 568–69 (1998). In this context, the substantial evidence test “has been defined as
    ‘such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a
    conclusion[.]’” 
    Id. at 569
     (quoting Bulluck v. Pelham Wood Apts., 
    283 Md. 505
    ,
    512 (1978)).
    A. The Doctrine of Equitable Estoppel May Not Be Invoked Against the
    Division in this Case.
    “Equitable estoppel operates as a technical rule of law to prevent a party from
    asserting his rights where it would be inequitable and unconscionable to assert those
    rights.” Salisbury Beauty Schs. v. State Bd. of Cosmetologists, 
    268 Md. 32
    , 62 (1973)
    (citing, e.g., Fitch v. Double ‘U’ Sales Corp., 
    212 Md. 324
    , 339 (1957)). Generally, “the
    doctrine of estoppel will not be applied against the State in the performance of its
    governmental, public[,] or sovereign capacity or in the enforcement of police measures.”
    Salisbury Beauty Schs., 
    268 Md. at 63
    ; see also ARA Health Servs., Inc. v. Dep’t of Pub.
    Safety & Corr. Servs., 
    344 Md. 85
    , 96 (1996) (“Ordinarily, the doctrine of estoppel does
    not apply against the State[.]”). The State “cannot be estopped by the acts and conduct of
    its officers or agents in the performance” of their legal duties because “no administrative
    officer is vested with the power to abrogate the statute law of the State, nor grant to an
    individual an exemption from the general operation of the law.” Salisbury Beauty Schs.,
    
    268 Md. at 64
     (quoting Comptroller of Treasury, Retail Sales Tax Div. v. Atlas Gen. Indus.,
    
    234 Md. 77
    , 84 (1964)). Thus, the State should not be estopped from “applying an
    otherwise valid law or regulation because of the prior statements or conduct of public
    16
    employees, upon which the claimant detrimentally relied, which led the claimant to assume
    that the applicable law was otherwise.” Md. Transp. Auth. Police Lodge 34 of Fraternal
    Ord. of Police, Inc. v. Md. Transp. Auth., 
    195 Md. App. 124
    , 219 (2010), rev’d on other
    grounds, 
    420 Md. 141
     (2011). To do so would “deprive the public of the protection of a
    statute because of mistaken action or lack of action on the part of public officials.”
    Salisbury Beauty Schs., 
    268 Md. at
    64–65.
    Cash-N-Go argues that the circumstances of this case move it beyond the
    “ordinary.” Relying on Deese v. Esper, 
    483 F. Supp. 3d 290
     (D. Md. 2020), Cash-N-Go
    postulates that an estoppel claim against the State may succeed where it does not threaten
    state resources or public policy and the claimant can prove the “traditional” elements of
    estoppel in addition to some “affirmative misconduct.” Id. at 316 (quoting Angeles v.
    District Director, 
    729 F. Supp. 479
    , 485 (D. Md. 1990)).
    We disagree that Cash-N-Go’s circumstances move it beyond the ordinary. Even if
    we agreed with Cash-N-Go’s claim that the Maryland state regulatory authorities failed to
    alert the company that its business practices were unlawful, estopping the Division from
    enforcing the CPA would certainly “deprive the public of the protection of [the] statute[.]”
    Salisbury Beauty Schs., 
    268 Md. at 64
    . Therefore, we refrain from applying the doctrine of
    equitable estoppel against the Division in this case.
    B. Cash-N-Go Failed to Establish the Requisite Elements to Invoke Equitable
    Estoppel.
    Supposing we were to accept Cash-N-Go’s argument that equitable estoppel can be
    invoked against the Division in this case, Cash-N-Go has nonetheless failed to establish
    17
    the elements necessary to invoke the doctrine. There was no misrepresentation; there was
    no good faith reliance; and Cash-N-Go suffered no detriment because of the
    Division’s actions.
    1. Maryland state agencies did not misrepresent the legality of Cash-N-Go’s cash
    lending practices.
    Cash-N-Go contends that the state regulatory agencies committed “affirmative
    misconduct by misleading Cash-N-Go in multiple written representations that they could
    continue with ‘Title Pawn’ transactions, and then years later changing this posture and
    charging them with significant and willful violations of Maryland law.” In support, Cash-
    N-Go references several audits from 2011 in which the CFR reported “satisfactory” ratings
    and that “there were no State or Federal violations discovered during this examination
    period.” Cash-N-Go also highlights an inspection report from 2009, in which CFR
    examiners stated that Cash-N-Go “maintains a Second Hand Precious Metal Object Dealer
    license issued by the State of Maryland which allows for the processing of Title Pawns.”
    In addition to the CFR’s representations, Cash-N-Go argues that “Maryland State Police
    and MVA both implicitly endorsed Cash-N-Go’s title pawn practice” because they failed
    to raise any complaints or concerns regarding the company’s title pawn transactions “at
    any time.”
    The Division responds by emphasizing that the scope of the CFR investigations was
    limited to Cash-N-Go’s check cashing activities. Consequently, “[t]he CFR never
    requested, reviewed, or inspected any records related to any of Cash-N-Go’s other business
    activities, including any pawnbroker or lending activities.” Concerning MSP and the MVA,
    18
    the Division similarly argues: “Neither of these state agencies were tasked with
    investigating or approving Cash-N-Go, Inc.’s lending activities.” Consequently, the
    Division contends that there were no circumstances in which the regulatory authorities
    would have had grounds to file complaints prior to the CFR investigating Cash-N-Go’s
    title pawn transactions in depth in 2014. We agree.
    The crux of Cash-N-Go’s estoppel claim rests upon the inaccurate premise that the
    title pawn transactions it was engaging in were true pawn transactions rather than unlawful
    consumer loans governed by the CPA. There is substantial evidence in the record—that
    both the Division and the circuit court discussed at length—to support the conclusion that
    Cash-N-Go’s title pawn transactions were pawns in name alone. Over a century of
    Maryland precedent establishes that courts must “look[] beneath the form of the transaction
    at issue, into its ‘true nature,’ in determining whether it was a ‘loan.’” B&S Mktg. Enters.,
    LLC v. Consumer Prot. Div., 
    153 Md. App. 130
    , 154 (2003) (citing Andrews v. Poe, 
    30 Md. 485
    , 487 (1869)). In Hoffman v. Key Federal Savings & Loan Ass’n, the Court of
    Appeals made clear:
    [N]o device or subterfuge of the lender will be permitted to shield him in
    taking more than the legal interest on a loan. In whatever part of the
    transaction usury may lurk, or in whatever form it may take, or under
    whatever guise the lender may attempt to evade the law, the court will seek
    to ascertain what the contract actually was between the parties and give the
    debtor relief.
    
    286 Md. 28
    , 34 (1979) (quoting Brenner v. Plitt, 
    182 Md. 348
     (1943)).
    A state agency’s representation that Cash-N-Go’s “title pawns” were legal did not
    equate to a representation that the conduct behind the façade—offering title loans without
    19
    the appropriate license—was legal. A state agency becoming aware of a party’s illicit
    behavior and subsequently holding it accountable for such behavior does not amount to the
    type of “affirmative misconduct” by the State that is required to support an estoppel claim.
    2. Cash-N-Go did not rely upon the State’s conduct in good faith.
    An estoppel claim may be supported when the “acts of one party cause a prejudicial
    change in the conduct of the other.” Bean v. Steuart Petroleum Co., 
    244 Md. 459
    , 469
    (1966) (citing Harrison v. McCarty, 
    178 Md. 377
     (1940)). The Court of Appeals has
    reiterated this Court’s interpretation of “good faith” as “an intangible and abstract quality
    that encompasses . . . an honest belief, the absence of malice and the absence of design to
    defraud or to seek an unconscionable advantage.” See Rite Aid Corp. v. Hagley, 
    374 Md. 665
    , 680–81 (2003) (citing Catterton v. Coale, 
    84 Md. App. 337
    , 342 (1990)); see also Md.
    Reclamation Assocs. v. Harford Cnty., 
    414 Md. 1
    , 58 (2010) (“At the heart of establishing
    ‘good faith’ is proof that the claimant lacked knowledge of those facts that would have put
    it on sufficient notice that it should not rely on the government action in question.”). The
    very existence of the element “good faith reliance” implies that one can rely upon the
    representations of another in bad faith—that is, dishonestly, with the intent to defraud or
    to seek an unconscionable advantage. See Bricker v. Warch, 
    152 Md. App. 119
    , 133 (2003)
    (“‘Bad-faith’ is the opposite of good faith; it is not simply bad judgment or negligence, but
    it implies a dishonest purpose or some moral obliquity and a conscious doing of wrong.”
    (Emphasis in original)). Thus, the element of good faith reliance essentially “focuses upon
    the mental attitude of the [person] when he acted.” Md. Reclamation Assocs., Inc., 
    414 Md. 20
    at 55 (citing Sycamore Realty Co. v. People’s Couns. of Balt. Cnty, 
    344 Md. 57
    , 64 (1996)
    (discussing estoppel in the context of zoning restrictions)).
    Cash-N-Go argues that it “made no secret that it was conducting ‘Title Pawn’
    transactions and legitimately believed that such transactions were allowable under known
    or existing interpretations of statutory and regulatory authority.” It further claims that
    “Cash-N-Go relied on its numerous interactions with Maryland authorities to conclude that
    ‘Title Pawn’ transactions were not violative of any Maryland legal prohibitions.”
    Specifically, Cash-N-Go says it relied upon CFR examiners stating in a 2009 audit report
    that “[t]he licensee maintains a Second Hand Precious Metal Object Dealer license issued
    by the State of Maryland which allows for the processing of Title Pawns. . .. The license
    allows CASH-N-GO, INC. to conduct title pawn business for secondhand precious metal
    objects dealer and pawnbrokers.” (Emphasis in original).
    The Division argues that Cash-N-Go misrepresents the evidence when discussing
    its interactions with the CFR, MSP, and MVA. It is the Division’s view that by “relying
    upon” the state agencies’ so-called “endorsements,” Cash-N-Go ignored the undisputed
    factual findings in the record. The Division maintains that the record shows that the state
    agencies did not alert Cash-N-Go to any unlawfulness because the company’s illicit
    behavior was beyond the scope of the state agencies’ regulatory authority. We agree.
    First, the CFR does not regulate pawnbrokers. Rather, DLLR’s Secondhand
    Precious Metal Objects and Pawnbrokers Licensing Unit is responsible for licensing,
    auditing, and investigating pawnbroker activities. The CFR’s inspections were therefore
    limited by the scope of the agency’s regulatory authority, which only encompassed Cash-
    21
    N-Go’s check cashing activities. Both the CFR inspection reports and testimony by the
    examiners show that the CFR examiners “only requested, reviewed, and inspected Cash-
    N-Go’s check cashing records” and that they “did not request, review, or inspect records
    related to any of Cash-N-Go’s other business activities, including any pawnbroker or other
    lending activities.” At 16 different points in her testimony, the CFR examiner told the ALJ
    that her examinations were limited to Cash-N-Go’s check cashing activities or that she
    lacked the authority to draw conclusions about Cash-N-Go’s pawnbroking or lending
    activities. Every report that Cash-N-Go received from the CFR was titled “Check Cashing
    Services Report of Examination,” and the contents therein illustrated that the scope of the
    inspection was the company’s check cashing services. For example, the first substantive
    page of every CFR report that was issued to Cash-N-Go reads:
    The Commissioner of Financial Regulation for the State of Maryland
    authorized an on-site examination of Cash-N-Go, Inc. The examination was
    conducted . . . pursuant to the Annotated Code of Maryland Financial
    Institution Law Article, Title 12, Subtitle 1, Check Cashing Services.
    The scope of the examination included a review of operations; records
    retention; fee structure; policies and procedures addressing consumer
    complaints; and money services business status.
    (Emphasis added). Under the “Compliance” section of the reports, there is no mention of
    Cash-N-Go’s title pawn activities, neither affirming nor negating whether Cash-N-Go’s
    title pawn activities comply with federal laws. Rather, the reports merely state: “The
    Licensee is in compliance with all federal laws concerning money laundering.” (Emphasis
    added). In all the reports cited by Cash-N-Go in which the CFR found no state or federal
    law violations, the only mention of title pawns is in the overview of Cash-N-Go’s
    22
    operations, where the reports state, “Cash-N-Go, Inc. is a check cashing store with a
    network of nine stores that are located throughout Maryland. The Licensee’s services
    include: vehicle title pawns, and check cashing. The licensee’s primary source of revenue
    is generated with the fees charged for cashing personal checks.” Notably, the CFR reports
    distinguish between Cash-N-Go’s vehicle title pawn and cash checking activities. This
    distinction further supports that the two types of business activities are governed by
    different authorities altogether. As the ALJ astutely noted in her proposed decision,
    subsequently adopted by the CPD, “[i]t would be incredible to accept that because of [the
    CFR employees’] examination in the Respondents’ check cashing activities, the CFR is
    bound to approve of each of the Respondents’ business activities, including those that were
    not even examined.”
    The CFR first put Cash-N-Go on notice that its title loan practices were unlawful in
    2009, during a routine inspection of Cash-N-Go’s check cashing operations. A CFR
    examiner told the general manager of Cash-N-Go’s Westminster location that the store was
    out of compliance because it had a neon sign in the window advertising “Title Loans.” This
    observation about the signage was listed under “Other Findings” in her inspection report.
    The report read: “[T]itle loans are not permitted under the Maryland law as the usury limits
    restrain car title loans.” The examiner testified that she noticed the sign during her
    inspection and subsequently had a brief conversation with the general manager about the
    sign. The manager told her, “[W]e don’t do title loans, we do title pawns.” Subsequently,
    the examiner warned him that he “need[ed] to take the title loans sign down because I know
    your interest rates are usually higher than our usury rates.” The examiner further testified
    23
    that “as long as they were doing pawns with a pawn license, [she] took them at their word.”
    In response to the 2009 CFR inspection, Cash-N-Go replaced its signage to read “Title
    Pawns”; however, Cash-N-Go made no change to its business operations.
    The CFR warned Cash-N-Go about its potential violations for a second time in
    2014. While investigating another title pawn lender, the CFR learned that Cash-N-Go was
    offering unlicensed consumer loans under the guise of “title pawns.” The CFR initiated an
    investigation into Cash-N-Go, after which the CFR explicitly warned Cash-N-Go that
    “ongoing business as a title pawn lender place[d] the business in conflict with Maryland
    consumer lending laws.” Cash-N-Go’s contention that the CFR “endorsed” its title pawn
    transactions is therefore unfounded. There was no endorsement. Cash-N-Go was expressly
    warned that its business practices violated Maryland law, but Cash-N-Go nonetheless
    continued to issue title loans.
    Cash-N-Go’s argument that it relied upon “implicit endorsements” from the MSP
    and MVA is no more persuasive. Cash-N-Go claims that the MSP endorsed its title pawn
    practice “on a regular basis” because the state police reviewed the pawn transaction
    information that Cash-N-Go regularly uploaded to RAPID. Similarly, Cash-N-Go argues
    that the MVA endorsed its title pawn practices because the MVA raised no complaints,
    despite reviewing every Notice of Lien that Cash-N-Go filed for its title pawn transactions.
    According to Cash-N-Go, the MSP and MVA’s failure to complain or initiate an
    investigation into the company’s title pawn transactions was functionally equivalent to an
    endorsement of those transactions.
    Cash-N-Go’s arguments are unfounded. As established at the administrative
    24
    hearing, “RAPID does not determine whether a ‘pawn’ transaction is valid or is actually a
    loan.” An employee reviewing an entry in RAPID would merely see that the transaction
    was listed as a “pawn,” the vehicle’s make and model, an identification number, the
    consumer’s name, that Cash-N-Go was the purchaser, and the location at which the
    transaction occurred. Such information would have been and is insufficient to form an
    opinion about whether the transaction itself was legal. Similarly, as the circuit court
    explained, “[t]he MVA is not responsible for reviewing every lien filed to determine the
    legality of the underlying contract, including interest rates, loan terms, and the lender’s
    license.” Therefore, Cash-N-Go’s filing of liens with the MVA does not establish an
    endorsement of Cash-N-Go’s conduct.
    Finally, the role of Jackson’s prior litigation in West Virginia is not insignificant.
    Jackson’s West Virginia company, Pawn America, operated identically to Cash-N-Go.
    After the West Virginia Attorney General’s Office became aware of Pawn America’s
    business practices, the company was investigated and found in violation of consumer
    protection laws in West Virginia that are comparable to those in Maryland. The West
    Virginia court found that “Pawn America’s activities were “a ‘pawn’ in name only, and in
    reality a consumer loan with an usurious interest rate—not a true pawn.” Thus, Jackson
    was on notice of the potential illegality of Cash-N-Go’s title pawn transactions.
    We, therefore, conclude that there is substantial evidence in the record
    demonstrating that Cash-N-Go did not rely upon the state agencies’ actions in good faith.
    25
    3. Cash-N-Go did not suffer a detriment because of the State’s representations.
    Cash-N-Go contends that, due to its reliance upon state regulatory agencies’
    representations, it now faces the “detriment of civil prosecution by the CPD” and “financial
    penalties in the form of restitution of $2,200,000.00 and sanctions in the amount of
    $1,200,750.00.” However, it is important to distinguish between suffering a detriment in
    the context of an estoppel claim and incurring penalties for ongoing illegal business
    practices. To reiterate, parties attempting to invoke equitable estoppel “must have been
    misled to [their] injury and have changed [their] position for the worse, having believed
    and relied on the representations of the party sought to be estopped.” Dickerson v.
    Longoria, 
    414 Md. 419
    , 454 (2010) (citing Creveling v. GEICO, 
    376 Md. 72
    , 102 (2003)).
    At no point did Cash-N-Go change its position for the worse. To the contrary, Cash-N-Go
    began offering title loans in Maryland in 2007—two years before the company claims to
    have relied upon the CFR’s reports to its detriment—and it continued to conduct the same
    business, in the same manner, despite its alleged reliance on the representations of the
    state agencies.
    Because the doctrine of equitable estoppel cannot be applied to the Division in this
    case and, furthermore, because Cash-N-Go failed to establish the elements to support an
    estoppel claim, we hold that the Division is not estopped from imposing restitution and
    civil penalties against Cash-N-Go for its violations of consumer lending laws.
    26
    II.    THE DIVISION’S ASSESSMENT OF PENALTIES WAS PROPER UNDER THE CPA
    AND DID NOT VIOLATE THE EXCESSIVE FINES CLAUSE OF THE
    EIGHTH AMENDMENT.
    Cash-N-Go argues that “the draconian and illogical combination of the restitution
    award and the fines levied in this case shock the conscience and bear little relationship to
    either truly compensating individual consumers who may have suffered pecuniary loss, nor
    deterring the Cash-N-Go entities or Jackson from engaging in ongoing activities.” Per
    Cash-N-Go, the restitution and civil penalties the Division ordered amount to the type of
    “excessive fines” prohibited by the Eighth Amendment. Furthermore, Cash-N-Go argues
    that the Division’s calculation of restitution was inequitable and irrational because
    “order[ing] ‘restitution’ of amounts of monies which were lawfully possessed by Cash-N-
    Go and were never repaid to consumers who in fact, suffered no loss whatsoever” is
    contrary to the “commonly accepted definition” and purpose of restitution as a remedy.
    In response, the Division argues that the Eighth Amendment does not apply to the
    restitution ordered pursuant to section 13-403 of the CPA nor the civil penalties ordered
    pursuant to section 13-410 of the CPA. Furthermore, the Division argues that, even if an
    Eighth Amendment analysis was applicable to the penalties imposed in this case, the
    analysis would not benefit Cash-N-Go because the fines were not “grossly
    disproportionate” based on the facts of this case and the statutory limits set by the
    legislature in the CPA.
    We first address the Eighth Amendment’s applicability to the Division’s imposition
    of penalties. Then, we discuss the validity of the Division’s calculation of restitution and
    27
    civil penalties under the CPA.9
    Standard of Review
    When reviewing an agency decision, this Court’s primary goal is to decide “whether
    a reasoning mind reasonably could have reached the factual conclusion the agency
    reached.” Motor Vehicle Admin. v. Carpenter, 
    424 Md. 401
    , 412 (2012). As such, we are
    “limited to determining if there is substantial evidence in the record as a whole to support
    the agency’s findings and conclusions, and to determine if the administrative decision is
    premised upon an erroneous conclusion of law.” Bd. of Physician Quality Assurance v.
    Banks, 
    354 Md. 59
    , 67-68 (1999) (quoting United Parcel v. People’s Couns., 
    336 Md. 569
    ,
    577 (1994)). Therefore, this Court should defer to the agency’s fact-finding and inferences
    if they are supported by the record. Motor Vehicle Admin., 
    424 Md. at 413
    .
    A. The Eighth Amendment Does Not Apply.
    The Eighth Amendment states: “Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive
    fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.” U.S. Const. amend. XIII. As
    the Supreme Court articulated in United States v. Bajakajian, “[A]t the time the
    Constitution was adopted, the word ‘fine’ was understood to mean a payment to a sovereign
    9 As a preliminary matter, Cash-N-Go did not raise an Eighth Amendment claim before the
    ALJ or in the Division proceedings below; therefore, Cash-N-Go is precluded from raising
    it here. See Finucan v. Md. State Bd. of Physician Quality Assurance, 
    151 Md. App. 399
    ,
    423 (2003) (“It has consistently been held that ‘questions, including Constitutional issues,
    that could have been but were not presented to the administrative agency may not ordinarily
    be raised for the first time in any action for judicial review.’” (quoting Bd. of Physician
    Quality Assurance v. Levitsky, 
    353 Md. 188
    , 208 (1999))). However, because the Division
    did not object to Cash-N-Go raising the Eighth Amendment in its appeal, and because both
    sides put forth arguments regarding the issue, we substantively address the claim.
    28
    as punishment for some offense.” 
    524 U.S. 321
    , 327 (1998) (internal quotations and
    citation omitted). While the Eighth Amendment has historically been applied to criminal
    fines and punishment, it also “protects against excessive civil fines[.]” Hudson v. United
    States, 
    522 U.S. 93
    , 103 (1997) (citing Alexander v. United States, 
    509 U.S. 544
     (1993));
    see also Wemhoff v. City of Balt., 
    591 F. Supp. 2d 804
    , 808 (D. Md. 2008) (stating that the
    Excessive Fines Clause “reaches those civil fines designed at least in part to punish”)
    (citing Austin v. United States, 
    509 U.S. 602
    , 610 (1993)).
    However, courts have distinguished between civil fines serving remedial as opposed
    to pecuniary purposes. See U.S. ex rel. Drakeford v. Tuomey, 
    792 F. 3d 364
    , 387 (4th Cir.
    2015) (“Civil fines serving remedial purposes do not fall within the reach of the Eighth
    Amendment.”); cf. Garrity v. Md. State Bd. of Plumbing, 
    447 Md. 359
    , 384 (2016)
    (rejecting the contention that the Division’s imposition of a large civil penalty for multiple
    violations “transform[ed] what was clearly intended as a civil remedy into a criminal
    penalty” subject to Eighth Amendment prohibition). Courts are tasked with applying the
    “principle of proportionality” when determining whether a civil remedy is, instead, a
    criminal penalty in disguise. Bajakajian, 
    524 U.S. at 334
    . In defining “proportionality,” the
    Supreme Court held, in Bajakajian, that a punitive fine is violative of the Excessive Fines
    Clause “if it is grossly disproportional to the gravity of a defendant’s offense.” 
    Id.
     The
    Court has additionally clarified that “‘only the clearest proof could suffice to establish the
    unconstitutionality’ of sanctions imposed by the government[.]” Garrity, 447 Md. at 384
    (quoting United States v. Ward, 
    448 U.S. 242
    , 249 (1980)).
    29
    In this case, as set forth more fully below, the Division’s imposition of restitution
    and remedial fines does not amount to the “gross disproportionality” contemplated by the
    Supreme Court. As such, no application of the Eighth Amendment’s Excessive Fines
    Clause is warranted or appropriate.
    B. The Division’s Restitution and Civil Penalty Calculations Were Supported
    by Substantial Evidence.
    The CPA expressly authorizes the Division to order restitution. See CL § 13-
    403(b)(1) (“If . . . the Division determines on the preponderance of the evidence that the
    alleged violator violated this title, the Division shall state its findings and issue an order
    requiring the violator . . . to take affirmative action, including the restitution of money or
    property.”). Separately, section 13-410 outlines the guidelines for calculating civil
    penalties against merchants in violation of the CPA, allowing for fines up to $10,000 per
    violation. CL § 13-410(a). The Division sets the amount of an imposed penalty according
    to its assessment of the following factors:
    (1) The severity of the violation for which the penalty is assessed;
    (2) The good faith of the violator;
    (3) Any history of prior violations;
    (4) Whether the amount of the penalty will achieve the desired
    deterrent purpose; and
    (5) Whether the issuance of a cease and desist order, including
    restitution, is insufficient for the protection of consumers.
    CL § 13-410(d). The authority by which the Division ordered restitution and civil penalties
    against Cash-N-Go are discussed below, in turn.
    30
    1. Restitution
    In Consumer Protection Division Office of the Attorney General v. Consumer
    Publishing Co., the Court of Appeals of Maryland adopted Professor Dan B. Dobbs’s
    distinction between civil restitution and a damages action: “The damages recovery is to
    compensate the plaintiff and it pays him, theoretically, his losses. The restitution claim, on
    the other hand, is not aimed at compensating the plaintiff but at forcing the defendant to
    disgorge benefits it would be unjust for him to keep[.]” 
    304 Md. 731
    , 776 (1985) (quoting
    Dan B. Dobbs, Law of Remedies § 4.1 at 224 (1973)). Maryland’s appellate courts have
    repeatedly affirmed this application of restitution. See Luskin’s, Inc. v. Consumer Prot.
    Div., 
    353 Md. 335
    , 383 (1999) (quoting Dobbs, Law of Remedies § 4.1); Consumer Prot.
    Div. v. Morgan, 
    387 Md. 125
    , 165 (2005) (“When a violator’s misrepresentations and
    deceptions affect a number of similarly situated individuals, like the purchasers of diet pill
    plans in Consumer Publishing and spa memberships in Andrews, the Division may issue a
    general order of restitution.”); Linton v. Consumer Prot. Div., 
    467 Md. 502
    , 519–20 (2020)
    (noting that the underlying principle of the disgorgement remedy in restitution is that “a
    claimant potentially recovers more than a provable loss so that the defendant may be
    stripped of a wrongful gain” because “[a] person is not permitted to profit by his own
    wrong” (quoting Restatement (Third) of Restitution & Unjust Enrichment § 3, cmt. a
    (2011))); see also State v. Andrews, 
    73 Md. App. 80
    , 86 (1987) (“[T]he Division may enter
    a general order of restitution without proof of purchaser reliance, as long as the order
    31
    provides a mechanism for processing individual claims.” (quoting Consumer Publ’g,
    
    304 Md. at 775
    )).
    Cash-N-Go asserts that the Division should have applied the “commonly accepted”
    definition of restitution. Cash-N-Go cites the Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary,
    which defines restitution as “the restoration of something lost or stolen to the proper owner;
    or recompense for injury or loss.” Restitution, Oxford Learner’s Dictionaries (May 19,
    2022). Viewing the Division’s restitution order through this lens, Cash-N-Go argues that
    the Division’s calculation was inequitable. In support, Cash-N-Go points to the Division’s
    Exhibit 20 at the administrative proceeding, which is a list comprised of all title pawn
    transactions Cash-N-Go entered into with consumers between 2007 and 2016. The exhibit
    denotes the record number of each transaction, the name of the consumer, the transaction
    date, the principal amount on the loan, and the total amount paid by the consumer. Based
    on its preferred definition of restitution, Cash-N-Go suggests that a proper calculation of
    restitution would have subtracted the total principal amount on the loans ($963,355.29)—
    “Cash-N-Go’s own money that was advanced to consumers”—from the total gross amount
    that consumers ultimately paid ($2,225,823.12) to equal the “actual amount of interest,
    fees, or other charges in excess of the principal amount,” or net proceeds, from their loans
    ($1,262,467.83). According to Cash-N-Go, it is inequitable to compel the company to
    repay “nearly One Million Dollars of funds” to consumers who “suffered no loss
    whatsoever” because they “never repaid a penny” of their loans.
    Cash-N-Go further relies upon B&S Marketing in arguing that the appropriate
    restitution remedy would be a disgorgement of the net, as opposed to gross, proceeds from
    32
    the pawn transactions. 
    153 Md. App. 130
     (2003). In B&S Marketing, this Court addressed
    whether the Division exceeded its authority by ordering violators of Maryland’s consumer
    loan and protection laws to pay restitution to consumers without a showing of individual
    reliance by those consumers. Id. at 138. This Court explained that the Division need not
    show consumer reliance to order restitution, only that the appellants had made unlicensed
    usurious loans under section 12-314(b)(2) of the Consumer Loan Law. Id. at 168–69.
    However, Cash-N-Go highlights that, in B&S Marketing, the Division only required the
    appellants to pay, as restitution, the “net monetary gain” they received by violating the
    CPA. Id. at 169. The Division called this restitution order a “middle course,” which was,
    as this Court articulated, a “less drastic [approach] than other alternatives[.]” Id. This Court
    reasoned that the Division’s “less drastic” remedy was appropriate in that case because it
    still had “the desirable and lawful effect of preventing appellants from being unjustly
    enriched by their wrongful conduct.” Id. (citing Consumer Publ’g, 
    304 Md. at 776
    ). Based
    on its reading of B&S Marketing, Cash-N-Go concludes that “[i]f the CPD is simply
    allowed on their own ipse dixit to decide to require the full disgorgement of an allegedly
    violative lender’s own monies . . . logic, due process, and equal protection
    are meaningless.”
    In response, the Division argues that its restitution order lawfully required Cash-N-
    Go to disgorge all amounts it would otherwise be precluded from keeping under section
    12-314(b)(2) of the MCLL. Section 12-314(b)(2) states that “[a] person may not receive or
    retain any principal, interest, fees, or other compensation with respect to any loan that is
    void and unenforceable under this subsection.” CL § 12-314(b)(2). The subsection then
    33
    defines a “loan that is void and unenforceable” as “[a] loan made in the amount of $25,000
    or less” that, among other things, was made without the required license or with a usurious
    interest rate attached. See CL § 12-314(b)(1)(i). Based on these statutes and the ALJ’s
    finding that Cash-N-Go’s title pawn transactions were, in actuality, loans subject to
    Maryland’s consumer loan and protection laws, the Division argues that Cash-N-Go’s loan
    transactions are void. Consequently, the Division contends that “any principal, interest,
    fees, or other compensation” Cash-N-Go earned with respect to its title pawn transactions
    may be considered in the Division’s restitution calculation.10 We agree.
    The purpose of restitution, which has been established and affirmed throughout
    decades by Maryland’s appellate courts, must not be ignored. Dobbs’s distinction between
    damages and restitution bears repeating: while the purpose of the damages remedy is to
    “compensate the plaintiff” and "pay[] him . . . his losses,” the purpose of restitution is
    “aimed at . . . forcing the defendant to disgorge benefits . . . in the avoidance of unjust
    enrichment[.]” Consumer Publ’g, 
    304 Md. at 776
    . We can find no legal authority nor has
    any been provided for adopting what Cash-N-Go deems the “commonly accepted
    10
    The Division further argues that, in addition to Cash-N-Go’s legal analysis being
    incorrect, the description of the Division’s restitution calculation in Cash-N-Go’s appeal is
    “blatantly false.” According to Cash-N-Go, the Division’s restitution calculation included
    amounts for some consumers who never made any payments. However, per Footnote 4 of
    the Division’s Brief:
    The $2,225,823.12 restitution amount ordered by the Agency is based on data
    compiled by the Division from the Cash-N-Go businesses’ records . . ., the
    accuracy of which Cash-N-Go, Inc. has stipulated to. . . . While it is correct
    that some of the entries in the data reflect that consumers made no payments
    to the Cash-N-Go businesses, . . . in totaling the amounts paid to the Cash-
    N-Go businesses for purposes of calculating its restitution amount, the
    Agency credited $0 for all entries where a consumer made no payment.
    34
    definition” of restitution. The purpose of restitution in the CPA context is to “disgorge
    benefits it would be unjust for [the violator] to keep.” 
    Id.
    There is similarly no support for Cash-N-Go’s contention that B&S Marketing
    establishes that the Division’s restitution remedy must be limited to a disgorgement of the
    interest payments or net proceeds. Under the plain language of the MCLL, “[a] person may
    not receive or retain any principal, interest, fees, or other compensation” with respect to
    void loans. CL § 12-314(b)(2) (emphasis added). That the Division in B&S Marketing
    chose to order a lesser remedy than what is statutorily permitted did not thereafter bind the
    Division to ordering the same in this case, particularly given the severity of Cash-N-
    Go’s violations.
    In the alternative, Cash-N-Go suggests that, if it was found in violation of the
    MCLL, it should have been granted an exemption under section 12-316.1. Specifically,
    Cash-N-Go argues that section 12-316.1 provides that “the principal of a disputed loan
    transaction could not be forfeited if the alleged violator availed themselves of a ‘good faith’
    exemption.” However, the record fails to adequately support this claim made by Cash-N-
    Go. The statute provides, in pertinent part:
    A licensee . . . exempt from licensing under this subtitle is not subject to a
    penalty involving the forfeiture of interest or principal for a violation that
    arises because the licensee . . . exempt from licensing in good faith . . .
    [p]erformed or omitted to perform an act in conformity with or in reliance
    upon . . . [a] written opinion by the Commissioner given on request of the
    licensee . . . exempt from licensing[.]
    CL § 12-316.1(a)(1)(ii). Cash-N-Go neither made such a request nor was provided such a
    written opinion sanctioning its business practices. Furthermore, Cash-N-Go claims that it
    35
    could rely on the satisfactory reports and absence of state regulatory complaints as evidence
    that its actions were lawful under Maryland consumer protection laws. This argument fails
    for two reasons: (1) Cash-N-Go provides no support for its contention that periodic CFR
    examination reports amount to the type of “written opinion” that might warrant an
    exemption under section 12-316.1, and (2) the regulatory agencies were not responsible for
    investigating Cash-N-Go’s title pawn activities, thus making any reliance upon their
    reports unjustified. See discussion supra Section I.B. Additionally, there is substantial
    evidence in the record demonstrating that Cash-N-Go was on notice that its title pawn
    practices were unlawful. The good faith defense “does not limit the imposition of any civil
    or criminal penalty for a knowing or willful violation of the Consumer Loan Law[] or limit
    the power of the Commissioner or the courts to order a refund to a borrower of moneys
    collected in violation of the Consumer Loan Law.” Eric C. Surette, Md. Law Encyclopedia,
    Consumer & Borrower Protection § I.A.11 (citing CL §§ 12-316.1(c)(1)–(2)).
    2. Civil Penalties
    Preliminarily, the Court of Appeals has established that “the grounds . . . for
    reversing or modifying an adjudicatory administrative decision do not include
    disproportionality or abuse of discretion.” See Md. Transp. Auth. v. King, 
    369 Md. 274
    ,
    291 (2002) (citing the Administrative Procedure Act, State Gov. Art. § 10-222(h)). The
    Court further explained,
    [a]s long as an administrative sanction or decision does not exceed the
    agency’s authority, is not unlawful, and is supported by competent, material
    and substantial evidence, there can be no judicial reversal or modification of
    the decision based on disproportionality or abuse of discretion unless, under
    the facts of a particular case, the disproportionality or abuse of discretion was
    36
    so extreme and egregious that the reviewing court can properly deem the
    decision to be “arbitrary or capricious.”
    Md. Transp. Auth., 
    369 Md. at 291
    .
    In setting the civil penalties against Cash-N-Go, the Division considered, in depth,
    the circumstances surrounding the violations. As a guide, the division relied upon the
    factors set out in section 13-410(d) of the CPA: (1) the severity of the violation; (2) whether
    the violation was made in good faith; (3) whether there is a history of prior violations;
    (4) whether the penalty will adequately deter the violator from repeat offenses; and (5)
    whether the issuance of a cease-and-desist order, including restitution, would be
    insufficient to protect consumers. CL § 13-410(d). Acting within its discretion, the Division
    imposed a fine of $750 for each of the 1,601 title pawn transactions found to be in violation
    of the CPA (totaling $1,200,750). Notably, the maximum amount that the Division may
    impose per violation is $10,000. CL § 13-410(a). The circuit court affirmed the Division’s
    final order.
    In consideration of the section 13-410(d) factors, we hold that there was substantial
    evidence to support the Division’s imposition of a $750 fine per violation. First, there is
    substantial evidence that Cash-N-Go’s violations were severe. For a span of at least nine
    years Cash-N-Go provided loans—without the requisite license—to Maryland consumers
    under the guise of “title pawn” transactions. The company stipulated to the fact that each
    of its title pawn transactions included a monthly fee of 30% of the principal amount,
    amounting to 360% annually. This is in stark contrast to the maximum allowable interest
    rate that a lender may charge under the MIUL, which is 24% or 33%, depending on the
    37
    unpaid principal amount and unpaid principal balance on the loan. See CL §§ 12-306, 12-
    314. Cash-N-Go failed to adequately and accurately disclose its rates to its consumers. As
    a result, 1601 consumers, many of whom had approached Cash-N-Go because they were
    in economic distress, were deceived into paying hundreds and sometimes thousands of
    dollars more than the principal amount on their loans. Every affidavit that a Cash-N-Go
    consumer submitted in the administrative proceeding emphasized that, at the time the
    consumer accepted Cash-N-Go’s title pawn service, they understood the transaction to be
    a loan. In their affidavits, every consumer complained that the terms of their loan were
    insufficiently explained and that they were unaware that their interest rates were usurious.
    Consumers were additionally unaware that Cash-N-Go was not licensed to make such loans
    under Maryland law.
    In addition to the unfair and misleading practices mentioned above, Cash-N-Go took
    security interests in 1155 consumers’ vehicles for loans under $700 in value (over 70% of
    Cash-N-Go’s total title loan transactions), in violation of the MCLL. See CL § 12-
    311(c)(1). Over the nine-year span, 147 vehicles were illegally repossessed, often without
    written notice, when consumers were unable to make the usurious payments. The impact
    of these practices was severely felt by consumers who relied upon their vehicles to get to
    their jobs and doctor’s appointments, to shop for food and necessities, and to visit friends
    and relatives.
    Second, there is sufficient evidence that Cash-N-Go was not a good faith violator.
    The evidence shows that Jackson, Cash-N-Go’s sole owner and President, engaged in a
    similar scheme in West Virginia in the 1990s, offering illegal loans to consumers under the
    38
    façade of “title pawns.” At that time, Jackson and his company, Pawn America, were found
    to be in violation of consumer protection laws in West Virginia that are comparable to
    those in Maryland. However, rather than modifying his business practices with consumer
    protection in mind or ceasing his title pawn scheme altogether, Jackson simply relocated
    across the border and, by 2007, was offering the same loans to Maryland consumers. As
    the ALJ duly noted, there is no evidence in the record that Jackson or any other principal
    Cash-N-Go employee confirmed with the CFR, the Second Hand Precious Metals and
    Pawnbrokers Unit, or any other division within DLLR that Cash-N-Go was lawfully
    permitted to provide title loans under its pawnbroker license.
    Third, though this is the first time that Cash-N-Go has been charged with violating
    Maryland consumer protection laws, there is substantial evidence demonstrating a history
    of disregard for such laws. Notwithstanding the West Virginia violations, the CFR warned
    Cash-N-Go on multiple occasions that its title pawn practices put the company at risk of
    violating Maryland consumer lending laws. First, in 2009, a CFR examiner questioned
    Cash-N-Go’s manager about neon signage advertising “title loans” at Cash-N-Go
    locations. When the manager represented that Cash-N-Go did not offer title loans but,
    rather, title pawns that were not subject to state consumer protection laws, the examiner
    took the manager at his word. Nonetheless, the examiner conveyed that the signage needed
    to be removed or replaced with the accurate term because “title loans are not permitted
    under the Maryland law as the usury limits restrain car title loans.” Cash-N-Go replaced its
    signage to read “title pawns,” but it did not heed the examiner’s warning about the
    underlying transactions and continued to conduct business as usual. Five years later, in
    39
    2014, the CFR again warned Cash-N-Go that its “pawn” transactions were illegal consumer
    loans which required additional licensing. Nevertheless, Cash-N-Go continued to offer its
    title loan services until the Division commenced the investigation giving rise to
    this litigation.
    Finally, there is substantial evidence to conclude that significant penalties are
    necessary to achieve the desired deterrent effect. Cash-N-Go failed to alter its practices
    despite multiple warnings from the CFR. Neither did Cash-N-Go terminate or modify its
    illegal business model after receiving a cease-and-desist order and being charged with civil
    penalties in West Virginia. There is no evidence to suggest that minimal retribution would
    sufficiently deter Cash-N-Go from continuing its unlawful practices elsewhere. As such,
    the issuance of another cease-and-desist order or restitution alone would be insufficient for
    the protection of consumers.
    Accordingly, we hold that there is substantial evidence to establish that the amount
    that the Division ordered in civil penalties was justified and neither excessive nor
    arbitrary and capricious.
    III.   ANY ERROR MADE BY THE CIRCUIT COURT IN EXCLUDING CASH-N-GO
    PAWNBROKERS, INC., CASH-N-GO PAWNBROKERS, LLC, AND BRENT JACKSON
    FROM PARTICIPATING AS PARTIES TO THE PETITION FOR JUDICIAL REVIEW
    WAS HARMLESS.
    Whether the circuit court erred in finding only Cash-N-Go, Inc. as a party to the
    petition for judicial review despite the case caption reading “Petition of Cash-N-Go, Inc.,
    et al.” is a question of law, which we review de novo. See Schisler v. State, 
    394 Md. 519
    ,
    535 (2006); see also Beall v. Holloway-Johnson, 
    446 Md. 48
    , 76 (2016).
    40
    Cash-N-Go initially argues that the use of “Cash-N-Go, Inc., et al.,” in the caption
    of the petition for judicial review, created a “clear inference” that the petition was on behalf
    of each of the Cash-N-Go entities and Jackson, all of whom participated in the
    administrative proceedings. Cash-N-Go further argues that the circuit court’s application
    of Maryland Rule 7-204(a), which governs responses to petitions for judicial review rather
    than the initial petitions themselves, was erroneous. To support its argument, Cash-N-Go
    relies upon Colao v. County Council of Prince George’s County, in which this Court
    explained that “mere technical defects respecting the petition for review will not cause an
    appeal from an administrative agency to be dismissed if the petitioner has otherwise
    substantially complied with the procedural rules and there is no prejudice to the
    respondent.” 
    109 Md. App. 431
    , 445 (1996). Cash-N-Go claims that the exclusion of the
    remaining Cash-N-Go entities and Jackson from the petition caption was merely a technical
    irregularity that should not have resulted in the circuit court eliminating each entity’s right
    to fully participate in judicial review of the Division’s order.
    The Division responds that the designation “et al.” was ambiguous because it did
    not adequately specify which Cash-N-Go respondents in the administrative action were
    seeking judicial review of the Division’s final order. According to the Division, “merely
    listing the parties from the administrative caption of a judicial review petition . . . does not
    establish that the listed parties are in fact seeking judicial review of an agency order.” The
    Division further argues that Cash-N-Go’s reliance upon Colao is misplaced.
    In Colao, this Court held that a failure to identify the second of two distinct zoning
    orders in an otherwise effective petition for judicial review of the first zoning order was
    41
    more than an excusable technical irregularity. 
    Id.
     at 450–52. This Court thus reversed the
    circuit court’s finding that it had the authority to review the second zoning order despite
    the petitioner’s error. 
    Id.
     The Division argues that Cash-N-Go’s failure to identify the other
    parties to the administrative proceeding as petitioners seeking review is factually similar
    to the error in Colao and distinguishable from cases in which the Court of Appeals
    identified mere technical irregularities. See, e.g., Border v. Grooms, 
    267 Md. 100
    , 103–05
    (1972) (holding that a timely petition that was served on counsel for the agency instead of
    the agency itself was a technical error); Town of Somerset v. Montgomery Cnty. Bd. of
    Appeals, 
    245 Md. 52
    , 61 (1966) (holding that a timely filed petition in which all parties
    were listed would not be dismissed simply because the petition failed to explicitly allege
    that the parties were aggrieved by the agency decision).
    It is well-established under Maryland law that “it is the substance of the pleading
    that governs its outcome, and not its form. . . . [T]he nature of a motion is determined by
    the relief it seeks and not by its label or caption.” Hill v. Hill, 
    118 Md. App. 36
    , 44 (1997)
    (citing Alitalia v. Tornillo, 
    320 Md. 192
    , 195–96 (1990) (“Courts and administrative
    agencies are expected to look at the substance of the allegations before them, not merely at
    labels or conclusory averments.”)). The Cash-N-Go entities were demonstrably intertwined
    throughout the administrative hearings below. Many of the court documents preceding
    Cash-N-Go’s petition for judicial review listed all Cash-N-Go entities as individual parties.
    However, the captions used in the OAH proceedings and ALJ’s proposed decision read
    “Cash-N-Go, Inc., et al.” The record therefore suggests that there was little question as to
    whether all Cash-N-Go entities were involved at each stage of the proceedings. Under these
    42
    circumstances, we view the use of “et al.” in a petition’s caption, as a technical irregularity
    and not a substantive error.
    Nevertheless, assuming that the circuit court erred in finding that Cash-N-Go, Inc.
    was the sole party to the petition for judicial review, such an error had no effect on the
    proceedings in the circuit court. See Schneider v. Little, 
    206 Md. App. 414
    , 443 (2012)
    (“A verdict will not be overturned unless the error was likely to have affected the verdict
    below; and ‘an error that does not affect the outcome of the case is harmless error.’”
    (quoting Flores v. Bell, 
    398 Md. 27
    , 33 (2007))). Despite its ruling, the trial court heard
    and addressed the arguments raised by and related to all Cash-N-Go entities.11 Hence, any
    error was harmless.
    JUDGMENTS OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
    FOR ALLEGANY COUNTY AFFIRMED;
    COSTS TO BE PAID BY APPELLANT.
    11
    The Division persuasively argues that the only additional issue that the excluded Cash-
    N-Go entities might have raised on appeal relates to the Division’s finding that Jackson
    was individually liable. Any argument against Jackson’s personal liability would be
    without merit because the Division “may hold individuals jointly and severally liable for
    restitution for the [CPA] violations of corporations, when the Division proves that (1) the
    individual participated directly in or had authority to control the deceptions or
    misrepresentations, and (2) the individual had knowledge of the practices.” Consumer Prot.
    Div. v. Morgan, 
    387 Md. 125
    , 176 (2005); see also MaryCLE, LLC v. First Choice Internet,
    Inc., 
    166 Md. App. 481
    , 528 (2006) (“Officers of a corporation may be individually liable
    for wrongdoing that is based on their decisions. . . If an officer either specifically directed,
    or actively participated or cooperated in the corporation’s tort, personal liability may be
    imposed.” (quoting T-Up, Inc. v. Consumer Prot. Div., 
    145 Md. App. 27
    , 72–73 (2002),
    cert denied, 
    369 Md. 661
    )). There is substantial evidence in the record to show that
    Jackson, as the President and sole owner of Cash-N-Go, had the authority to control the
    company’s title pawn business model. He testified himself, “I’m Cash-N-Go.”
    Furthermore, one of Cash-N-Go’s general managers repeatedly testified that any decisions
    concerning business operations were made or approved by Jackson.
    43