DocketNumber: S17G2021
Judges: Blackwell
Filed Date: 10/22/2018
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
**574In Cherokee Funding v. Ruth,
1. According to the pleadings,
Hostilo (or someone at his firm) signed the initial financing agreement for Ruth in April 2012, after Ruth asked Hostilo about a loan to cover his personal expenses while his lawsuit was pending. Cherokee Funding then provided $5,550 to Ruth in several small installments between April 2012 and June 2013-each subsequent installment apparently was funded under a separate financing agreement, also signed by Hostilo (or someone at his firm)-and Cherokee Funding also assumed Ruth's obligations under a prior loan that he had secured for $2,500. Ruth settled his personal-injury lawsuit for an unspecified amount sometime in 2016, and Cherokee Funding then sought to recover more than $84,000 from Ruth pursuant to the terms of his financing agreement.
**576Hostilo (or someone at his firm) signed the financing agreement for Oglesby in or around 2013, after Hostilo advised her that she ought to seek medical treatment for the injuries that she sustained in the automobile accident,
2. In 2016, Ruth and Oglesby filed this lawsuit against Cherokee Funding, seeking relief for themselves and a putative class of similarly situated persons to whom Cherokee Funding provided funds under financing agreements facilitated by Hostilo.
The Court of Appeals concluded that neither statute applies, reasoning that the statutes apply only to "loans," that the provision of funds under an agreement that imposes only an uncertain and contingent repayment obligation is not a "loan," and that such a transaction is better characterized as an "investment contract." See Cherokee Funding,
3. We turn first to the Industrial Loan Act, and we begin with the familiar and settled principles that inform our consideration of statutory meaning:
A statute draws its meaning from its text. When we read the statutory text, we must presume that the General Assembly meant what it said and said what it meant, and so, we must read the statutory text in its most natural and reasonable way, as an ordinary speaker of the English language would. The common and customary usages of the words are important, but so is their context. For context, we may look to other provisions of the same statute, the structure and history of the whole statute, and the other law-constitutional, statutory, and common law alike-that forms the legal background of the statutory provision in question.
City of Marietta v. Summerour,
no person [within the scope of the Act] shall charge, contract for, or receive, directly or indirectly, on or in connection with any loan, any interest, charges, fees, compensation, or consideration which is greater than the rates for same provided in [the Act] or engage in the business of making such loans of $3,000 or less without a license from the Commissioner as provided in [the Act].
OCGA § 7-3-4. Ruth and Oglesby allege that Cherokee Funding provided funds to them under their financing agreements in installments of less than $3,000, and they allege that Cherokee Funding has no license under the Industrial Loan Act. Whether they have stated a claim for a violation of the Industrial Loan Act, therefore, depends upon whether their transactions with Cherokee Funding amount to "loans."
The Industrial Loan Act expressly defines a "loan" as "any advance of money in an amount of $3,000 or less under a contract requiring repayment and any and all renewals or refinancing thereof or any part thereof." OCGA § 7-3-3 (4). The financing agreements at issue in this case impose an obligation upon Ruth and Oglesby to repay Cherokee Funding, but that obligation is a contingent and limited one. The obligation of repayment attached only upon the successful resolution of their personal-injury lawsuits, *710and even then, Ruth and Oglesby were obligated to repay no more than the amounts recovered in their lawsuits. In the event that they had been altogether unsuccessful in their lawsuits, the financing agreements are clear that Cherokee Funding would have "receive[d] nothing." An agreement that involves such a contingent and limited obligation of repayment is not a "contract requiring repayment," as those words are commonly and ordinarily understood in the context of the law of usury.
4. We reach the same conclusion with respect to the Payday Lending Act, which was enacted in 2004 to "strengthen the penalties for those engaging in [illegal] activities" "commonly referred to as payday lending, deferred presentment services, or advance cash services and other similar activities" and to "reiterate" that those activities were already unlawful in Georgia. OCGA § 16-17-1 (e). Like the Industrial Loan Act, the Payday Lending Act governs "the making of loans of $3,000 or less," OCGA § 16-17-2 (a), and it generally prohibits "any person to engage in any business, in whatever form transacted, ... which consists in whole or in part of making, offering, arranging, or acting as an agent in the making of loans of $3,000.00 or less" subject to several enumerated exemptions. OCGA § 16-17-1 (a). Among the exemptions are loans authorized by the Industrial Loan Act or various other banking and financing statutes. See OCGA § 16-17-2 (a) (1)-(2). Also exempted are loans made by certain banks, OCGA § 16-17-2 (a) (3), and tax refund anticipation loans. OCGA § 16-17-2 (a) (4).
While the Payday Lending Act governs "the making of loans of $3,000 or less," it does not expressly define the term "loan." But it implicitly gives meaning to that term by its provision that it "shall apply with respect to all transactions in which funds are advanced to be repaid at a later date," OCGA § 16-17-2 (b), a provision that is most reasonably understood to contemplate an agreement that imposes an obligation to repay. We fail to see any meaningful distinction between a "contract requiring repayment" (as used in the Industrial Loan Act) and an agreement pursuant to which "funds are advanced to be repaid" (as used in the Payday Lending Act). When funds are advanced under an agreement that repayment is required only upon the occurrence of a contingency, and even then, perhaps only to a limited extent (depending upon the particulars of the contingency), the funds are not, we think, "advanced to be repaid" for purposes of the Payday **580Lending Act. See Walton Guano,
5. On appeal, Ruth and Oglesby argue that the contingent repayment obligation in their financing agreements is illusory because Cherokee Funding only makes loans, they say, when the risk that the contingency will fail to arise is close to null. It is easy to *711imagine an agreement with a sham contingent repayment provision that reflects an attempt to evade the usury laws. And a court properly presented with a claim that a contingent repayment provision is a sham should look beyond the text of the agreement to "penetrate to the substance" and perhaps find an unlawful loan, notwithstanding the contingency. See Pope v. Marshall,
But this case-at least based on the pleadings to this point-presents no such claim. Ruth and Oglesby's complaint does not allege that the contingencies contained in the financing agreements were illusory, nor does it allege that there was no chance that they would be unsuccessful in their underlying lawsuits.
6. Based on the allegations contained in Ruth and Oglesby's complaint, the Industrial Loan Act and the Payday Lending Act do not apply to the financing agreements at issue. The judgment of the Court of Appeals is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Nahmias, P. J., Benham, Hunstein, Boggs, Warren, JJ., and Judge George F. Hutchinson concur. Melton, C. J., concurs fully in Divisions 1-3 and 5-6 and in judgment only in Division 4. Peterson, J., not participating, and Bethel, J., disqualified.
The name "Payday Lending Act" does not appear in our Code but is used "simply as a convenient nickname" and should not suggest that the Act applies merely "to what is commonly referred to as payday lending." Western Sky Financial v. State,
This case came to the Court of Appeals as an interlocutory appeal from a ruling of the trial court on a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief might properly be granted pursuant to OCGA § 9-11-12 (b) (6). Accordingly, we view the pleadings in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, and we must accept the truth of the facts alleged in their complaint. See Atlanta Dev. Auth. v. Clark Atlanta Univ.,
It appears that Ruth and Oglesby dealt with three affiliated companies, all using the "Cherokee Funding" name-Cherokee Funding, LLC, Cherokee Funding II, LLC, and Cherokee Funding III, LLC. Each of these companies is a defendant in this lawsuit and a party to this appeal, as is Reid M. Zeising, the founding member of the Cherokee Funding companies. Nevertheless, for the purposes of this opinion, we need not distinguish among the three Cherokee Funding companies and Zeising, and we will refer to them simply as "Cherokee Funding."
According to the pleadings, Hostilo commonly directed his clients to Cherokee Funding if they needed "lawsuit loans or advances." When a client sought financing from Cherokee Funding, the law firm would consult with Cherokee Funding about the potential settlement value of the client's lawsuit. And when Cherokee Funding agreed to provide financing to a client, it typically would prepare and send a financing agreement to the law firm for execution on behalf of the client under a power of attorney.
Ruth and Oglesby both signed powers of attorney that gave Hostilo limited authority to act on their behalf. When Hostilo (or someone at his law firm) signed financing agreements for Ruth and Oglesby, he purported to act pursuant to these powers of attorney. We do not decide today whether the powers of attorney actually authorized Hostilo to enter into financing agreements with Cherokee Funding on behalf of Ruth and Oglesby, nor do we express any opinion about the extent to which Hostilo's dealings with Cherokee Funding on behalf of Ruth and Oglesby were consistent with his professional obligations as an attorney. Neither of those issues is presently before us, although we note that the pleadings in this case give cause to be concerned about the powers of attorney.
The financing agreements provide that, if Ruth or Oglesby were to discontinue their relationships with Hostilo and retain new counsel prior to the conclusion of their lawsuits, they would be obligated to pay "liquidated damages" to Cherokee Funding unless any new lawyer appearing for them in the lawsuits ratified and agreed to be bound by the terms of their financing agreements. The financing agreements otherwise made repayment contingent upon the success of the lawsuits.
The financing agreements refer not to "interest," but instead to a "use fee" of 4.99 percent per month. Notwithstanding the nomenclature of the financing agreements, the "use fee" is properly characterized as interest. See Black's Law Dictionary (10th ed.) at 935 ("interest" is "[t]he compensation fixed by agreement ... for the use or detention of money").
These other "fees" include a "Mailing Fee," a "Processing Fee," and an "Application Fee."
Ruth ended his relationship with Hostilo prior to the settlement of his lawsuit, but he does not allege that Cherokee Funding demanded payment from him under the "liquidated damages" provision of the financing agreement. See note 5 supra.
Hostilo explained to Oglesby that medical treatment would help to "substantiate her damage claim."
Ruth and Oglesby also sued Hostilo's law firm, but this appeal does not concern the claims against the law firm.
In particular, Ruth and Oglesby alleged that Cherokee Funding violated these statutes by engaging in the business of making small loans (less than $3,000) in Georgia without proper licensing and by charging an unlawful rate of interest. In addition to the claims alleging violations of the Industrial Loan Act and the Payday Lending Act, Ruth and Oglesby asserted claims in their initial complaint against Cherokee Funding for conspiracy and attorney fees, but those claims are not before us.
Pursuant to OCGA § 7-3-29 (a), "[a]ny person who shall make loans under [the Industrial Loan Act] without first obtaining a license ... shall be guilty of a misdemeanor; and any contract made under [the Industrial Loan Act] by such person shall be null and void." Similarly, OCGA § 16-17-3 provides that any person who violates relevant provisions of the Payday Lending Act is "barred from the collection of any indebtedness created by said loan transaction," and the "transaction shall be void ab initio." In addition, OCGA § 16-17-3 establishes that any offending lender shall "be liable to the borrower in each unlawful transaction for three times the amount of any interest or other charges to the borrower."
After the trial court denied the motion to dismiss in part, Ruth and Oglesby amended their complaint to add claims for charging usurious interest under OCGA § 7-4-18 and conspiracy to charge usurious interest. Those claims are not at issue in this appeal.
The Industrial Loan Act exempts certain businesses, such as banks, from its provisions, see OCGA § 7-3-6, but no one contends that Cherokee Funding is exempted from the Industrial Loan Act.
The general law of usury forms a significant part of the legal background for both the Industrial Loan Act and the Payday Lending Act, and the general law of usury, therefore, is important context that informs our understanding of the meaning of those statutes. See Summerour,
It is unclear whether the outcome of yet-to-be resolved litigation ever can be certain enough to render a contingency based on the result of pending litigation illusory. See Anglo-Dutch Petroleum,
In addition to the claims raised by Ruth and Oglesby that were not addressed in the trial court's order and are not at issue in this appeal (see footnotes 10, 11, and 13, supra), we do not address whether Cherokee Funding's actions violate OCGA § 44-12-24 (which prohibits the assignment of a right of action for personal torts) or OCGA § 13-8-2 (a) (5) (which prohibits contracts of maintenance and champerty).
Generally speaking, usury laws are designed to protect the vulnerable from exploitation by the unscrupulous. See Franklin W. Ryan, Usury and Usury Laws 74 (1924) (usury is "the unconscionable exploitation of a borrower's necessitous condition"). And not infrequently, personal-injury plaintiffs find themselves in circumstances that leave them vulnerable to exploitation by unscrupulous lenders. See Douglas R. Richmond, Other People's Money: The Ethics of Litigation Funding,