Linwood COWEN and Jean Cowen, on behalf of themselves and
all others similarly situated, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
BANK UNITED OF TEXAS, FSB, doing business as Commonwealth
United Mortgage, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 95-1334.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Argued Sept. 15, 1995.
Decided Nov. 22, 1995.
Daniel A. Edelman, Cathleen M. Combs, Tara G. Redmond, J. Eric Vander Arend, Michelle A. Weinberg (argued), O. Randolph Bragg, Tara L. Goodwin, Edelman & Combs, Chicago, IL, Charles M. Baird, Miami Beach, FL, for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
Leo J. Asaro (argued), Elizabeth C. Carver, Dan M. Lesicko, Bryan Cave, St. Louis, MO, Daniel Cummings, Elizabeth Porter Staggs, Rothschild, Barry & Myers, Chicago, IL, for Defendant-Appellee.
Before POSNER, Chief Judge, and CUDAHY and MANION, Circuit Judges.
POSNER, Chief Judge.
The Truth in Lending Act requires lenders covered by the Act to disclose to the borrower at the time of making the loan not only the interest rate but also any "finance charge," defined as a charge that is payable directly or indirectly by the borrower and imposed directly or indirectly by the lender as an incident to or condition of the loan. 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1605(a); 12 C.F.R. Sec. 226.4(a). The concern behind this specific requirement is that a lender might try to make the interest rate look lower than it really is by charging part of the interest in the form of fees for services rendered in connection with the closing of the loan. Rodash v. AIB Mortgage Co.,
The plaintiffs borrowed money from the bank in order to refinance their home, on which they had two mortgages that they wanted to replace with a single mortgage from Bank United. The proceeds of the loan secured by this mortgage therefore went to the prior mortgagees to pay off their mortgages. The title insurance company that handled the closing hired an overnight courier to carry Bank United's checks to the mortgagees. The courier's fee was $14, which the title company charged to the plaintiffs. The bank did not disclose the fee on the Truth in Lending disclosure form that it furnished the plaintiffs, and the plaintiffs claim that the omission violated the Act because the fee was really a finance charge. By using an overnight courier rather than the mails the title company actually saved the plaintiffs money, because the extra expense was less than the interest saved by paying off the two mortgages sooner. So the plaintiffs incurred no loss--in fact received a windfall gain--as a result of the bank's alleged violation of the Act. Ordinarily one cannot seek damages (other than, in some cases, punitive damages) unless one has suffered a loss, but the Truth in Lending Act allows a monetary recovery even if the failure to disclose the charge caused the borrower no harm. 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1640(a)(2); Brown v. Marquette Savings & Loan Ass'n,
One case, as it happens one of ours, made an exception for the case in which the violation is "hypertechnical." Herbst v. First Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n,
Even with these issues set to one side, a suit for $14 (or $24--for the plaintiffs contend that a $10 assignment fee should also have been disclosed) may seem a quixotic project. Not so. First of all, the plaintiffs, if they win, would be entitled to statutory damages of $1000 without any proof of injury, because 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1640(a)(2)(A) allows the recovery of twice the finance charge up to $1000, and the finance charge here exceeded $500 (by quite a bit--$45,027.32, to be exact). Mars v. Spartanburg Chrysler Plymouth, Inc., supra,
When the procedure that we have just described is followed, the defendant loses the preclusive effect on subsequent suits against him of class certification but saves the added expense of defending a class action and may be content to oppose the members of the class one by one, as it were, by moving for summary judgment, every time he is sued, before the judge presiding over the suit decides whether to certify it as a class action. If we reverse, the plaintiffs will be able to renew their motion for class certification; that is no doubt why they appealed the adverse judgment in this ostensibly trivial case.
On to the merits. A bank when it refinances a home has, of course, an interest in the prompt repayment of the mortgage or (as here) mortgages that its mortgage is replacing. For until those mortgages are repaid they will not be discharged, and until they are discharged they will remain listed in the title registry as liens senior to the refinancing bank's new mortgage lien. 1 Grant S. Nelson & Dale A. Whitman, Real Estate Finance Law Sec. 1.1, p. 5 (3d ed. 1993). It is true, as the bank emphasizes, that the title insurance policy issued to the bank by the title company that handled the closing went into effect at the closing, so that the bank was protected by the title insurance if the title company tarried in paying off and obtaining the discharge of the prior mortgages. But an insured ordinarily and we assume here would prefer to avoid a loss rather than to enforce an insurance contract. So, as the plaintiffs argue, it was surely in the bank's interest that the title company use a fast method of repayment. An affidavit submitted on the plaintiffs' behalf by an experienced real estate lawyer states, plausibly enough, that "lenders require that the closing attorney ensure that all outstanding liens be discharged," and here an attorney employed or retained by the title company was acting as the closing attorney. Given its interest in prompt discharge of outstanding liens, the bank itself might have decided to send the checks directly to the mortgagees rather than sending them via the title company, and if it had done so by courier and charged the expense to the borrowers, the plaintiffs, this would have been classified as a finance charge because it would have been a charge for a service that was a condition of making the loan. The statute would be squarely applicable. 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1605(a); Rodash v. AIB Mortgage Co., supra,
It would not have made a difference, if the bank had directed the title company to send the checks by overnight courier and bill the borrowers. The bank would simply have been delegating to an agent one of the chores in the making of a loan, and the receipt by the agent would be imputed to the principal. First Acadiana Bank v. FDIC,
This conclusion is too quick. The title company in this case was wearing two hats. Primarily it was an insurance company, with its own interest in removing the prior liens. In this respect it was a principal in the transaction. It was also the closing agent, which means that it was the agent of the bank. Sibley v. Federal Land Bank,
We have not found any previous decision under the Truth in Lending Act that deals with an activity undertaken in dual roles. The closest is First Acadiana Bank, supra, where the lender required the borrower to use a lawyer of the bank's choice, and the lawyer's fee, though paid by the borrower, was deemed a finance charge. If the lawyer was to be the borrower's agent, the decision is wrong; if the bank's agent, cf. Sibley v. Federal Land Bank, supra, it was right. The court did not discuss the issue of agency, so we may assume, giving our respected sister court the benefit of the doubt, that the lawyer was to be the bank's agent. The case is then distinguishable from ours because in hiring a courier the title company was protecting its own interest as an insurance company as well as the bank's interest as lender.
In this welter of doubt we turn with relief to the staff of the Federal Reserve Board, which in "official staff commentary," to which the Supreme Court has emphatically told us to give great weight in interpreting the Truth-in-Lending Act and the regulations under it, Ford Motor Credit Co. v. Milhollin,
The title company was not required by Bank United to use an overnight courier. Had the company used an even faster method, such as an electronic funds transfer or a same-day messenger, the bank would not have complained. It would be contrary to the intended meaning of the staff commentary to construe "required" loosely, as "anticipated"; for it is plain that the staff was contemplating a case exactly like the present. We can stop right here, if the staff commentary is authoritative. If not, if it is merely persuasive, then we are persuaded. The difficulty that has given rise to this case comes from the fact that many of the services rendered at a closing, such as paying off prior mortgagees, benefit all the participants, including the lender. Were there no title companies the charges that these companies make at closings would be imposed by the lenders and would be finance charges within the meaning of the Truth in Lending Act because the services are a condition of the loan. But when the title company is making its own decisions on how to carry out its responsibility as settlement agent at a closing the lender is not responsible and the Act is not in play, even if the lender has a perfectly clear idea of what the title company is going to do. Any other conclusion would rapidly expand the concept of "finance charge" to encompass every fee by whomever charged in connection with the making of a loan.
This completes our discussion of the courier fee. As for the $10 assignment fee, the evidence is indisputable that it was in fact disclosed, and anyway the regulations provide a safe harbor for mistakes that do not exceed $10 in a loan of the size involved here. 12 C.F.R. Sec. 226.18(d) n. 41.
The remaining issues are procedural. Although the district judge's action in dismissing the plaintiff's pendent (or as they are now called, "supplemental") state law claims on the merits, even though the federal claim had not gone to trial, was unusual and may even have been precipitate, Olive Can Co. v. Martin,
The plaintiffs complain that the judge should not have denied their motion to file an amended complaint, adding further allegations of violation of the Truth in Lending Act, without giving them more time to conduct pretrial discovery. When as in this case the motion to amend is filed after a responsive pleading has been served, permission to amend is discretionary with the district judge. Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(a); Perrian v. O'Grady,
The plaintiffs complain that in refusing to allow them to amend their complaint the judge was not exercising discretion, but instead applying a "rule" of the First Circuit that when an amendment to a complaint is proposed after the defendant has moved for summary judgment, the plaintiff must show that the amendment is supported by "substantial and convincing evidence." That is indeed what Resolution Trust Corp. v. Gold,
AFFIRMED.
