JOHN ROBERT CULPEPPER, PATRICIA STARNES CULPEPPER, on behalf of themselves and all others similarly situated, Plaintiffs-Appellees, v. IRWIN MORTGAGE CORPORATION, f.k.a. Inland Mortgage Corporation, Defendant-Appellant. BEATRICE N. HIERS, individually and as a representative of a class of similarly situated persons, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. IRWIN MORTGAGE CORPORATION, f.k.a. Inland Mortgage Corporation, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 99-13725
United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit
June 15, 2001
D. C. Docket No. 96-00917-CV-H-S; D. C. Docket No. 98-CV-2187; [PUBLISH]
Before EDMONDSON, COX and GIBSON*, Circuit Judges.
COX, Circuit Judge:
This action under § 8 of the Real Estate Settlement Practices Act1 is now on its second visit to our court. The plaintiffs, who have home mortgage loans from Irwin Mortgage Corporation, claim that certain payments, called “yield spread
One of those proceedings was a motion for class certification, which the district court granted. The plaintiff class now comprises
[a]ll persons who, from April 11, 1995, until this class is certified, [June 22, 1999], inclusive, obtained an FHA mortgage loan that was funded by Irwin Mortgage Corporation wherein the broker was paid a loan origination fee of 1% or more and wherein Irwin paid a “yield spread premium” to a mortgage broker.4
Background
The “yield spread premiums” at issue in this case,6 as the panel explained more fully in Culpepper I,7 are payments from Irwin to its mortgage brokers that the written agreement between them contemplates, but does not define.8 Each business day, Irwin distributes a rate sheet to its brokers, listing the terms of the loans Irwin is offering that day. The loans’ interest rates are set with reference to a “par rate.” If the broker originates a loan at a below-par rate, it gets no compensation from Irwin. On the other hand, originating a loan at an above-par rate garners the broker a yield spread premium, whose amount is determined by a formula that includes the amount of the loan and the difference between the loan rate and the par rate. The formula does not take into account the amount of work the broker actually performed in
Section 8(a) of the Real Estate Settlement Practices Act (RESPA) prohibits both the giving and acceptance of “any fee, kickback, or thing of value pursuant to any agreement or understanding, oral or otherwise, that business incident to or a part of a real estate settlement service . . . shall be referred to any person.”
Presented with this § 8 challenge to yield spread premiums, the Culpepper I panel read § 8(a) to prescribe a three-part test for prohibited payments. A payment is prohibited if “(1) a payment of a thing of value is (2) made pursuant to an agreement to refer settlement business and (3) a referral actually occurs.” Culpepper I, 132 F.3d at 696. The undisputed facts in this action are that Irwin offered to pay (and did pay) a yield spread premium to the broker here, under their agreement, which led the broker to choose Irwin. Those facts satisfy § 8(a), the panel concluded. That § 8(a) conclusion remains unchallenged on this appeal.
The court went on to reject Irwin‘s argument that yield spread premiums are nonetheless sheltered by § 8(c). Irwin‘s payments to brokers, the court concluded, resist characterization as payment for services.9 Nothing in their agreement, for instance, suggests that the amount paid is in any way dependent on the services provided; most significantly, nothing in the record suggests that the broker renders less service in originating a below-par loan than it does for an above-par loan, or that Irwin ever inquires into how much work the broker actually did. Rather, the payment rests solely on the value of the referral. Yield spread premiums, the panel concluded, are thus prohibited referral fees — or at least a jury could so find. Id. at 696-97; Culpepper II, 144 F.3d at 718.
Following this court‘s opinion in Culpepper I, Congress issued a conference report demanding that HUD “clarify” its position concerning the legality of yield
Contentions of the Parties
The parties agree that deciding whether class certification is appropriate — the ultimate issue in this appeal — requires us, in the end, to settle on a rule of liability under § 8(a) and (c). The reason is that Irwin attacks only the district court‘s conclusion that “the questions of law or fact common to the members of the class predominate over any questions affecting only individual members,” and that the class is thus certifiable under Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(b)(3). Irwin contends that evidence specific to each plaintiff‘s loan transaction will predominate at trial, making class treatment improper. Whether transaction-specific evidence is necessary or relevant, of course, depends on the rule of liability. See 2 Weinstein‘s Federal Evidence § 401.04[3][b] (Joseph M. McLaughlin ed., 2d ed. 1997). Hence we arrive at determining the rule of liability.
The centerpiece of Irwin‘s argument on this point is that the HUD Statement overrules Culpepper I‘s interpretation of § 8(c). According to Irwin, the Statement provides a two-step “reasonableness test”: (1) whether any services were performed by the broker, and (2) whether the yield spread premium and the fees the borrower
As a fallback position, Irwin argues that even Culpepper I‘s test for legality under § 8(c) — which asks whether the lender and the broker exchanged money for services, not just whether the broker‘s compensation was reasonable — requires us to determine whether the borrower and the broker subjectively intended, in each loan transaction, for the yield spread premium to be Irwin‘s payment for the broker‘s
The plaintiffs counter that Culpepper I and the HUD Statement are consistent. This is so, they say, because the first question in HUD‘s two-step analysis includes not just whether the broker really worked, but also whether Irwin paid the money specifically for those services and not for the loan referral. HUD‘s first question would thus be, in substance, no more than a re-articulation of Culpepper I‘s reason for rejecting Irwin‘s argument that yield spread premiums, even if otherwise prohibited by § 8(a), are protected compensation for services under § 8(c). Whether we use the first question in the HUD test or adhere to Culpepper I‘s reasoning, the plaintiffs say, the result is the same. And that result obviates Irwin‘s asserted need to probe the reasonableness of the total broker compensation in any individual transaction. Moreover, the plaintiffs add, it would be absurd to judge the nature of the payment on the basis of the broker and borrower‘s intent in a particular transaction, and thus Irwin‘s fallback argument is meritless. The plaintiffs conclude that there is accordingly no need to look at any individual transaction to determine liability, and that class certification is therefore appropriate.
Discussion
We agree with the plaintiffs’ view of the rule of liability. Reaching that conclusion requires us to answer two questions. The first is interpretation of the HUD Statement: What does “for compensation paid” mean when HUD asks us in the first step of its two-step test to determine “whether goods or facilities were actually furnished or services were actually performed for the compensation paid”? HUD Statement at 10084. On one hand, if “for compensation paid” means “in exchange for compensation paid,” then the plaintiffs correctly assert that the inquiry in this step includes not only whether the broker performed services, but also whether the broker performed the services as part of a services-for-money exchange. On the other hand, if “for compensation paid” means nothing at all, or if the phrase means “in connection with the loan transaction,” as one district court has read it,13 then Irwin is right that all we need to know for the first step is whether the broker did any work on a particular transaction. (They would also be right that Culpepper I
The second question arises from Irwin‘s fallback argument: Does the borrower and broker‘s subjective intent determine whether Irwin‘s payment to the broker is part of a services-for-money exchange? This question turns more on interpretation of Culpepper I because the HUD Statement is silent.
What does “for compensation paid” mean?
Three reasons persuade us that the plaintiffs’ construction of the HUD Statement, and their explanation of how it fits with Culpepper I, is superior to Irwin‘s.
First, Irwin‘s preferred construction of HUD‘s language simply does not fit the language, while the plaintiffs’ proposed reading fits very well. To begin with, it would be anomalous to ignore “for compensation paid” as sloppy drafting on HUD‘s part. Rational agency regulations have the force of law, and it is a “cardinal principle of statutory construction that we must give effect, if possible, to every clause and word of a statute.” Williams v. Taylor, 120 S. Ct. 1495, 1519 (2000) (quoting United States v. Menasche, 348 U.S. 528, 538-39, 75 S. Ct. 513, 520 (1953)) (internal quotation omitted)). To give the phrase the meaning that Irwin
Second, Irwin‘s reading of the Statement is not only inconsistent with the Statement itself; it also would make the Statement clash with § 8(c)‘s language. Section 8(c) authorizes “the payment of a fee . . . by a lender . . . for services actually performed.”
Third, accepting Irwin‘s view would have the HUD Statement create an inconsistency between § 8(a)‘s liability test and § 8(c)‘s exclusion from liability. Everything about § 8(c) suggests that it is an interpretive gloss on § 8(a) rather than a list of exemptions bestowed upon otherwise illegal conduct. Section 8(c)‘s language starts with “[n]othing in this section shall be construed as prohibiting,” not with “notwithstanding § 8(a)” or any other plain exception language.
That is exactly what Irwin‘s reading of the HUD Statement would do. The crux of § 8(a)‘s liability test, even when the suspected referral fee is dressed up as something else, is whether the payment is to compensate a referrer for referrals; the
We accordingly hold that the first step in the test for liability under § 8 is not only whether the broker performed some of the services described in the HUD Statement, but also whether the yield spread premium is payment for those services
How do we tell whether there is a services-for-money exchange?
That argument, as we explained above, is that the nature of the yield spread premium is a product of the subjective intent of the broker and borrower. That intent, Irwin continues, must be ascertained loan-by-loan because each loan of course has a different borrower. The plaintiffs counter that Culpepper I‘s analysis suggests that the standardized terms under which Irwin pays yield spread premiums can by themselves prove that yield spread premiums are fees for referrals.
We agree with the plaintiffs that Culpepper I does not imply Irwin‘s proposed rule, which (because of the element of a third party‘s subjective intent) would put
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the district court‘s certification of the described class is affirmed.
