RULING ON PLAINTIFF’S AND DEFENDANT’S CROSS-MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
Jean Clement sued American Honda Finance Corp. (“AHFC”) for failure of an AHFC automobile lease to comply with several disclosure requirements of the Truth-In-Lending Act, as amended by the Consumer Leasing Act. See 15 U.S.C. §§ 1640 and 1667d. Clement moved for summary judgment (doc. # 84) and AHFC cross-moved for summary judgment (doc. # 88). Because the AHFC lease failed to disclose the early termination penalties in a “clear and conspicuous manner” and failed to disclose adequately the available express warranties, summary judgment is granted in favor of Clement.
I. Standard of Review
Summary judgment is appropriate when the evidence demonstrates that “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R.Civ.P. 56(c);
see also Anderson v. Liber
“[A] party seeking summary judgment always bears the initial responsibility of informing the district court of the basis for its motion, and identifying those portions of ‘the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any,’ which it believes demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.”
Celotex,
Ordinarily, whether disclosures under the Truth-In-Lending Act (“TILA”) are inaccurate, misleading, or confusing is a question of fact for the factfinder.
Griggs v. Provident Consumer Discount Co.,
II. Consumer Leasing Act (“CLA”)
Congress enaсted the CLA as an amendment to the TILA and extended the TILA’s “credit disclosure requirements to consumer leases.”
Turner,
Its primary purpose is to “assure a meaningful disclosure of the terms of leases ... so as to enable the lessee to compare more readily the various lease terms available to him.” 15 U.S.C. § 1601(b). Because lease financing had become recognized as an alternative to credit financing and instаllment sales contracts, Congress also intended CLA disclosure requirements to “enable comparison of lease terms with credit terms where appropriate.” Id. The CLA thus requires lessors of personal property subject to its provisions to make specified disclosures when a lease is entered into. See 15 U.S.C. § 1667a (consumer lease disclosures).
Id.
“The requirements of the TILA are highly technical but full compliance is required, (citation omitted). Even minor violations of the Act can not be ignored.”
Griggs,
III. Analysis
A. Consumer Lease
AHFC challenges whether the CLA applies to the lease at issue because Clement has not sufficiently shown that she leased the vehicle at issue “primarily for personal, family, or household purposes.”
See Turner,
Contrary to AHFC’s assertion, Clement has adduced sufficient evidence to show that the lease at issue was primarily for consumer purposes. AHFC has not met its burden to show there is an absence of a genuine issue of material fact and has produced no contradictory evidence to create a genuine issue of material fact.
AHFC argues that “it would, be premature for the Court to rule on Plaintiffs motion for Summary Judgment until AHFC has been afforded the opportunity to take discovery with respect to the nature of the primary use that Plaintiff intended to make of the leased vehicle” because Clement has failed to respond to AHFC’s interrogatories. Def.Mem. at 6-7. Discovery in this case has been closed since October 13, 1995. See Amended Order on Pretrial Deadlines dated June 9, 1995. In the absence of any motion to compel Clement to answer the interrogatories or any attempt by AHFC to address Clement’s alleged failure to answer the interrogatories, AHFC’s argument fails. See also Ruling dated December 1, 1999. Accordingly, the court resolves the question of the applicability of the CLA to the lease at issue, in favor of Clement. 2
B. Required Disclosures Under the CLA
Clement claims that AHFC has violated the CLA by failing to comply with several of the CLA’s disclosure requirements.
1. Early Termination Within the First Twelve Months
Clement contends that “there is no explanation of the leasee’s [sic] liability for voluntary termination of the lease before the expiration of the first year.” AHFC is correct that this contention is meritless. Although the lease does not explicitly say so, the obviously applicable paragraphs— paragraphs 11, 16, and 23 — make clear that a lessee cannot voluntarily terminate in the first year, but the lessor can if the lessee is in default. No reasonable juror could find for Clement on this argument. Therefore, summary judgment is granted in favor of AHFC on this issue.
2. Early Termination Provision
Clement next contends that AHFC failed to disclose the early termination provisions of the lease in a “clear and conspicuous” manner, as required by the CLA.
AHFC’s lease provides in relevant part: 11. EARLY TERMINATION LIABILITY: At any time after 12 monthly lease payments have been paid, you may terminate this Lease on the due date of a monthly lease payment if this Lease is not in default. At any time after yousign this Lease, Lessor may terminate if the Lease is in default as stated in Item 23 or if the conditions stated in Item 16 occur. You agree that your payment liability upon early termination will be the sum of (a) any monthly leаse payments already due and unpaid and any other amounts owed arising from your failure to keep promises under this Lease; plus (b) any official fees and taxes imposed in connection with the termination; plus (c) the amount, if any, by which the then adjusted lease balance exceeds the realized value of the vehicle at early termination; plus (d) if you do not purchase the vehicle, a disposition fee of $400.
To figure the payment due upon early termination, a reader must refer back to paragraph 10 to determine her monthly lease payment amount. That section provides:
10. MONTHLY LEASE PAYMENT ALLOCATION: As indicated in Item 3a through 3c, portions of each Base Monthly Lease Payment are for depreciation and lease charge. While the total amount of each Base Monthly Lease Payment will be the same, the depreciation and lease charge portions will differ with each payment. This is why the amounts in Item 3a and 3b are labeled “Average Monthly” amounts. The next paragraph explains how the lease charge portion of any Base Monthly Lease Payment is figured. The lease charge for the entire lease term (Item 3a times the number of months in the lease term shown in Item 2) will be earned on a constant yield basis in relation to the “adjusted lease balance” as it declines during the lease term. The lease charge portion for any monthly lease payment is figured by multiplying the rate which provides a constant yield times the adjusted lease balance. At any given time the adjusted lease balance is the difference between the “Initial Lease Balance” and the sum of (1) all depreciation amounts to date and (2) the first Base Monthly Lease Payment shown in Item 3c. The “Initial Lease Balance” is the sum of (a) the product of the number of monthly lease payments due during the lease term shown in Item 2 times the Average Monthly Depreciation shown in Item 3b and (b) the Estimated End of the Lease Term Vehicle Value shown in Item 6. The monthly lease charge calculations are based on the assumption that you will make the monthly lease payments on their exact due dates and that the Lease goes full term. These calculations follow the rules for journal entries for Lessors as to the “direct financing leases” set forth in Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 13 issued by the Financial Accounting Standards Board.
The portion of a monthly lease payment which is not applied to lease chаrge or to items as shown in 3d through 3g will be credited to depreciation. The depreciation portions of the monthly lease payments reduces your liability if this Lease is terminated early and your purchase option price if the option is then available.
The early termination and adjusted lease balance language quoted above from AHFC’s automobile lease is almost identical to the language that the Court considered in
Lundquist See Lundquist,
The events at issue in
Lundquist
and in this case both occurred before the 1996 amendments to Regulation M (Revised Regulation M)
3
and the 1997 Official Staff Commentary to the Revised Regulation M that interprets the early termination disclosure requirements of Regulation M, 12 C.F.R. § 213.4.
4
See
Def.Mem. at 8. Although the court recognizes that the Regulations and the “Federal Reserve Board staff opinions construing the Act or Regulation should [generally] be dispositive,”
Ford Motor Credit Co. v. Milhollin,
Therefore, the 1992 version of Regulation M, which was the same version in place at the time the Second Circuit decided
Lundquist,
applies here.
5
Neither the Revised Regulation M nor the 1997 Official Staff Commentary to the Revised Regulation M applies to this case.
See Applebaum,
There is no question that if this case were decided in the Seventh Circuit a different outcome would be required.
See Clement v. American Honda Finance Corp.,
In reaching the conclusion that the AHFC lease violates the CLA, it is not necessary to accept Clement’s assertion that
Lundquist
holds that the “standard for determining whether a disclosure complies with the CLA is whether the formula is
‘beyond the understanding of the ordinary consumer.’ ”
PLMem. at 2 (quoting
Lundquist,
Although the court in Lundquist did not explain its reasoning in great detail, it did explain, relying under the then-existing regulatory framework, that:
Under the CLA and Regulation M, disclosures on a consumer lease must be made “accurately and in a clear and conspicuous manner,” 15 U.S.C. § 1667a, “in meaningful sequence,” 12 C.F.R. § 213.4(a)(1), and in “a reasonably understandable form,” 12 C.F.R. pt. 213, supp. I, § 213.4(a)(1) (official staff commentary). [W]e agree with the district court that the Security Pacific lease disclosures are not reasonably understandable. They are confusing, unduly complicated, and unnecessarily convoluted.
Lundquist,
Here, the language in the AHFC lease concerning early termination is not reasonably understandable in form and in substance. Paragraph 11 on its face is fairly straightforward and simple in its presentation, but it provides primarily the structure of the early termination payment liability, not the substanсe that gives meaning to that structure. Some of the necessary structure is found in paragraph 10. Paragraph ten, however, contains too many concepts piled into a single paragraph. As a matter of form, therefore, paragraph ten is complicated and unduly convoluted.
The reader must dig through the concepts of variable depreciation and lease charge portions of the monthly payment, the method of calculating the lease chargе portion of the monthly payment by “multiplying the rate which provides a constant yield times the adjusted lease balance,” the application of the Statement of the Financial Accounting Standards No. 13, and the manner in which credits to deprecation reduces early termination liability — in order to find the method for determining the adjusted lease balance, which is in turn dependent on the calculation of depreciation credits, the first base monthly payment and the calculation of the initial lease balance. Simply put, the presentation of the language in paragraph ten prevents the early termination penalties from being disclosed in “a reasonably understandable form.”
Lundquist,
AHFC mischaracterizes its early termination language as simply the name of a method — the constant yield basis — and a narrative explanation of that method.
See
Def.Mem. at 14. As in
Lundquist,
the language in paragraph ten of AHFC’s lease “involve[s] more steps and more complicated calculations, not [simply] a method of calculation such as the ‘constant yield method.’ ”
Applebaum v. Nissan Motor Acceptance Corp.,
Description of the method. Section 213.4(g)(1) requires a full description ofthe method of determining an early termination charge. The lessor should attempt to provide consumers with clear and understandable descriptions of its early termination charges. Descriptions that are full, accurate, and not intended to be misleading will comply with § 213.4(g)(1), even if the descriptions are complex. In providing a full description of an early termination method, a lessor may use the name of a generally accepted method of computing the unamortized cost portion (also known as the “adjusted lease balance”) of its early termination charges. For example, a lessor may state that the “constant yield” method will be utilized in obtaining the adjusted lease balance, blit must specify how that figure, and any other term or figure, is used in computing the total early termination charge imposed upon the consumer. Additionally, if a lessor refers to a named method in this manner, the lessor must provide a written еxplanation of that method if requested by the consumer. The lessor has the option of providing the explanation as a matter of course in the lease documents or on a separate document.
12 C.F.R. Pt. 213, Supp. I (1997 Official Commentary to Revised Regulation) (emphasis added).
The fact that AHFC refers to a defined term — the constant yield basis — does not save an otherwise obscure and convoluted paragraph. See 12 C.F.R. § 213.4(b) (“At the lessor’s option, additional information or explanаtions may be supplied with any disclosure required by this regulation, but none shall be stated, utilized, or placed so as to mislead or confuse the lessee or contradict, obscure, or detract attention from the information required to be disclosed.”).
In addition, the substance of paragraph ten does not provide “a meaningful disclosure of the terms of [a] lease[ ] ... so as to enable the lessee to compare more readily the various lease terms available tо him.”
Turner,
A lessee cannot determine, or even estimate, from that informatiоn what portion of the base monthly lease payment is for depreciation in any given month. AHFC’s averaging masks the effective rate of depreciation over the term of the lease. That use of averaging, therefore, raises “the possibility of deception, misinformation, or at least an obliviousness to the true costs’ of a credit transaction,” not only to the “inexperienced and uninformed consumer,” but to any consumer.
Griggs,
For the foregoing reasons, AHFC’s early termination language violates the CLA.
a. Express Warranty
AHFC’s warranty disclosure also violates the CLA. AHFC’s lease provides in relevant part:
13. VEHICLE WARRANTIES: YOU ACKNOWLEDGE THAT YOU ARE LEASING A VEHICLE AS IS AND THAT LESSOR MAKES NO WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, REGARDING THE VEHICLE, AND SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIMS ANY WARRANTIES IMPLIED BY LAW, INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. However, to the extent the vehicle is still subject to the manufacturer’s new vehicle warranty, Lessor assigns to you all the rights and remedies under that warranty, to the extent they are assignable.
AHFC’s lease does not contain “[a] statement identifying any express warranties ... available to the lessee made by the ... manufacturer with respect to the lеased property.” Regulation M, 12 C.F.R. § 213.4(g)(7) (1992). Although the phrase “to the extent the vehicle is still subject to the manufacturer’s new vehicle warranty” is brief and does refer to the manufacturer’s warranties,
see
Commentary to Regulation M, 213.4(g)(7)-l,
6
it does not identify which manufacturer’s warranties, if any, are available to the lessee. In fact, “it gives the lessee no information whatsoever.”
Highsmith v. Chrysler Credit Corp.,
The court agrees with the District Court in
Tarnojf v. American Honda Finance Corp.,
which found that the identical language in another AHFC car lease violated the requirement to disclose the identity of any available warranties.
b. Implied Warranty Disclaimer
Because AHFC’s disclosure for the express warranty violates the CLA, the court does not need to reach the issue of the implied warranty disclaimer.
The court has considered the parties’ remaining arguments and finds them to be without merit. Therefore, Clement’s motion for summary judgment is granted in part and denied in part and AHFC’s cross-motion for summary judgment is granted in part and denied in part. Because two of AHFC’s lease provisions violate the CLA, judgment on the issue of liability must enter in favor of the plaintiff.
See Griggs,
It is so ordered.
Notes
. The same general rules of construction applicable to the TILA apply to the CLA.
See Miller v. Nissan Acceptance Corp.,
. The court did not consider Clement’s Exhibit G and H attached to Plaintiffs Memorandum in Support of Plaintiff’s Motion for Summary Judgment ("Pl.Mem.”). Therefore, the court need not address AHFC’s assertion that those exhibits arе inadmissible as supporting evidence.
. The plaintiff in
Lundquist
signed the lease in June 1988,
Lundquist,
. Regulation M, codified at 12 C.F.R. § 213 et seq., are the regulations that the Federal Reserve Board issued to “update and clarify the requirements and definitions applicable to lease disclosures.”
Turner,
.Subsequent references to Regulation M and the Official Staff Commentary are to the 1992 version, unless otherwise indicated. The Revised Regulation M refers to the 1996 amended version.
. “The statement identifying warranties may be brief. For example, manufacturer's warranties may be identified simply by a reference to the standard manufacturer’s warranty.” Commentary to Regulation M, 213.4(g)(7)-! (1992).
