This case is a companion of
St. Germain v. Bank of Hawaii
(9th Cir. 1977)
Kessler entered a loan transaction with Associates Financial Services Co. of Hawaii, Inc. (“Associates”) on May 29, 1975, in connection with an automobile purchase. The disclosure statement shows that Associates paid to third persons on Kessler’s behalf $1,715.95. Including finance charges, insurance charges, and other miscellaneous charges, Kessler thus obligated himself to pay Associates $2,664.00.
Kessler executed a promissory note to Associates which contained an acceleration clause, similar to the clause in St. Germain. As in St. Germain, the disclosure statement did not reveal the creditor’s right to accelerate the debt, nor did it disclose the consequences of acceleration upon the unearned finance charges.
Kessler brought this action under TILA and Regulation Z, claiming that the nondisclosure violated the statute and the regulation, for which he claimed statutory damages in the sum of twice the amount of the finance charge, but not less than $100.00, nor more than $1,000.00, together with reasonable attorney’s fees and costs. Both parties moved for summary judgment. Although the district court held that Associates violated TILA, it entered summary judgment for Associates because the court thought that imposition of liability would be unfair to the creditor under the circumstances.
We share the district court’s concerns that the vagaries of the construction of TILA and Regulation Z can be traps for even wary lenders and that the end product of requiring more and more revelations in disclosure statements can ultimately defeat the informative purposes that Congress had in mind because the disclosure statements will become as complex, unreadable, and often as unread as the underlying contracts. As real as those concerns are, however, redress lies with Congress and the Federal Reserve Board, not with the courts.
Congress confined the good faith compliance defense to those creditors who acted or
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failed to act in good faith reliance upon “any rule, regulation or interpretation” formally adopted by the Federal Reserve Board, which thereafter was rescinded by the Board or invalidated judicially. (15 U.S.C. § 1640(f).
See Pennino v. Morris Kirschman & Co., Inc.
(5th Cir. 1976)
The district court’s declaration that its interpretation of TILA and Regulation Z would be prospective only is a nullity. The application of doctrines limiting the retro-activity of judicial decisions is restricted to appellate courts. These doctrines have been developed to create some flexibility in controlling the impact of
stare decisis (Chevron Oil Co. v. Huson
(1971)
The district court’s statement that it would apply the law prospectively only is thus based on a misapprehension of judicial process. The functions of the district court do not encompass making pronouncements on future law of precedential value. In fact, what the district court did was to refuse to apply the law as the court found it to the case before it. The district court is not empowered to make that choice.
REVERSED.
Notes
. The district court’s opinion is reported. :
Kessler v. Associates Financial Services Co. of Hawaii, Inc.
(D.Hawaii) 1975)
. Doctrines that loosen the bounds of the general rule that all judicial decisions are fully retrospective have been subject to severe criticism, even when applied by courts of last resort.
(E. g., James v. United States
(1961)
. In this context, we are not at all concerned with the law of judgments, res judicata, law of the case, or comity.
