JOHN F. LEIBERT, Plаintiff-Appellee, v. FINANCE FACTORS, LIMITED, Defendant-Appellant
NO. 13590
Supreme Court of Hawaii
MARCH 14, 1990
285
LUM, C.J., PADGETT, HAYASHI, AND WAKATSUKI, JJ., AND RETIRED JUSTICE NAKAMURA, ASSIGNED BY REASON OF VACANCY
(CIV. NO. 84-1251)
OPINION OF THE COURT BY PADGETT J.
This is an appeal from a judgment in a case for unfair and deceptive business practices brought under
The case below was tried before a judge, who entered findings of fact and conclusions of law. On appeal, appellant Finance Factors, Ltd. (appellant) challenges findings of fact 12, 13, 23, 25, 31 and 32, and conclusions of law 2, 3, 4, 7, 8, 9, 11, 12 and 13.
Appellant‘s brief, in the statement of questions presented, asks six questions. Those questions and our answers thereto are as follows:
- Did the trial court err in concluding that the annual percentage rate (“APR“) was misstated in the education plan contracts executed by class members?
Answer. No. - Did the trial court err in concluding that Finance Factor‘s (“FF‘s“) conduct constituted a breach of contract and in awarding damages therefor?
Answer. Yes. - Did the trial court err in concluding that FF‘s conduct constituted unfair and deceptive acts and practices pursuant to
HRS §§ 480-2 and480-13 and in awarding damages thereunder?
Answer. No. - Did the trial court err in tolling the statute of limitations on grounds of fraudulent concealment under
HRS § 657-20 ?
Answer. No. - Did the trial court abuse its discretion in granting Plaintiff‘s Motion for Certification of Class Action?
Answer. No. - Did the trial court erroneously calculate Plaintiff‘s damages award?
Answer. Yes.
With respect to questions A and C, findings of fact 1 through 11, and 14 through 22, which are not specified as error pursuant to HRAP 28(b)(4)(C), and hence are unchallenged on this appeal, provide an adequate basis for challenged conclusions of law 2, 7 and 8, and for our answers to questions A and C above.
The factual picture painted by those findings is as follows: Appellant advertised and sold, to parents of children going to private schools, an education plan which it reрresented to be “prepaid.” Finding of Fact (FOF) 20. Appellant solicited the parents by direct mail, with advertising brochures, loan application forms, and a covering letter. FOF 4. The documentation of the transaction was prepared and handled by appellant. It sent the parents what it called “loan documents” which consisted of a retail installment contract form between the parent and the schools. When the parеnt had signed and returned this form to appellant, appellant had the school sign it. Appellant had a side deal with the schools which permitted it to pay the tuition in two installments. The “loan documents” however, charged the parents interest, at the stated rate in the documents, on the whole amount of the tuition from the inception of the school year. The schools, however, credited the parents’ account only with the pаyments as they actually were made by appellant.
Appellant‘s express purpose in arranging for the advance of one-half of the tuition at the inception of the school period, and the other half later, was to increase the yield to appellant from the transaction. FOF 14. The agreement between appellant and the schools for the payment of the tuition in two installments was not disclosed to the parents, and the parents were thereby misled into believing that their child‘s education was paid for, and thus secure for the entire term bargained for, when in fact the education could
Appellant has argued that these transactions were simply what they appeared to be on their face, retail installment contracts, made between the parents and the schools, which were assigned to appellant at what is, in effect, a discount, and that the parents have no interest in that discount, since they got what they bargained for. We cannot acceрt that argument. The plan originated with, was documented by, and carried out by appellant. The form it took, on paper, was appellant‘s choice. Appellant had deals with the schools before the contracts were sold to make the payments in installments. It did not disclose those deals to the parents at any time, and prepared papers which, based upon the annual percentage rate therein, аnd the amount to be advanced, required the parents to pay interest on the whole amount of the tuition for the term from the beginning. The unchallenged findings of fact are that appellant set up the transaction, in the manner it did, to increase its gain therefrom, did not reveal its side deal with the schools to the parents, and thereby misled them.
Appellant‘s argument that this is really two transactions, not one, overlooks (1) the unchallenged findings of fact, as to how appellant engineered the deal, and the paperwork, and what its purposes in doing so were, and (2) the fact that appellant, in the very retail installment contracts which it prepared, recognized, and made provision for the possibility that the form might be disregarded, and that the substance of the fact that there was a direct contract between the parents and appellant might be recognizеd, as the language from the contract quoted in finding of fact 7 clearly demonstrates.
The unchallenged facts establish that conclusion of law 2 is correct.
Appellant however argues that even if it violated the Hawaii statutеs prohibiting unfair and deceptive practices, the appellees lost nothing thereby, and hence no damages should be awarded, since appellees got the school services they bargained for, at the price they agreed to pay.
The court below found that if appellees had paid interest at the rates stated in the retail installment contract forms, on the amounts paid for tuition to the schools by appellant as those payments were actually made, the appellees would have paid $172,321.94 less interest than they actually paid. That amount was the basic damage figure found by the court below.
As we have said, this is in essence a fraud case. In 37 Am. Jur. 2d Fraud and Deceit § 342, at 458 (1968), it is stated:
Thus, as a general rule, one injured by the commission of fraud is entitled to recover such damages in a tort action as will compensate him for the loss or injury actually sustained and plаce him in the same position that he would have occupied had he not been defrauded.
(Footnotes omitted.) In Ellis v. Crockett, 51 Haw. 45, 451 P.2d 814 (1969), we said, by way of dictum:
The aim of compensation in deceit cases is to put the plaintiff in the position he would have been had he not been defrauded.
Id. at 52, 451 P.2d at 820.
The problem of how to measure damages, and how to establish them in fraud cases, is always a difficult one since the person defrauded has, because of the fraud, not pursued alternative cоurses of action, and the results of those untaken courses therefore remain speculative. In 3 Restatement (Second) of Torts (1977), a discussion of the problem of damages proof
When the plaintiff has made a bargain with the defendant, however, situations arise in which the rules stated in Subsection (1), and particularly that stated in Clause (a) of thаt Subsection, do not afford compensation that is just and satisfactory....
The frequency of these situations has led the great majority of the American courts to adopt a broad general rule giving the plaintiff, in an action of deceit, the benefit of his bargain with the defendant in all cases, and making that the normal measure of recovery in actions of deceit.
Under unchallenged findings of fact, the appellees thought that the tuition fоr their children was being prepaid by appellant. What the appellees bargained for, and thought they were receiving, was a finance charge based on that prepaid amount, at the annual percentage rates stated in the contracts. FOF 18. On the other hand, appellant knew, but did not disclose, that it, in fact, for the express purpose of increasing the yield to it (FOF 14), had made a side agreement with the schools allowing it to advance the tuition in two installments, thus enabling it to keep the use of the monies for the second installment until they were paid to the schools. Appellees therefore did not receive the value which they bargained for, and that value is properly measured by the difference in the amounts they paid as interest on the whole amount, at the stated percentage rate, and the amount they would have paid as interest at that stated percentage rate, had that amount been calculated upon the payments as, and when, actually made by appellant.
Accordingly, conclusion of law 7 is correct not only in holding appellant liable for unfair and deceptive business practices under
Question E is whether the trial court abused its discretion in granting the motion for certification of the class action. Appellant argues that affidavits were filed by some parents, who entered into contracts, indicating that they had knowledge of the installment payment arrangement. Whether that knowledge gave them an understanding of what it was that appellant was accomplishing, by the way it documented the transaction is a different question. Finding of fact 16 says that the matter was not disclosed to the parents and that finding is unchallenged. Finding of fact 17 notes that the matter, in the way it was presented, required specialized knowledge in order to be understood. Finding of fact 21 states, among other things, that the appellees were misled, as does finding of fact 22. In view of these unchallenged findings of fact, we cannot say that an abuse of discretion on the part of the trial court has been shown in certifying the class action. Accordingly the answer to question E is “No.”
The judgment below was for $1,118,847.50. In reaching this amount the court below committed two errors. First, it allowed the appellees to recover the $172,321.94 plus three times that amount under
Secondly, the court below erred in awarding prejudgment interest and then in trebling that amount under
Here, we are dealing with the award of treble damages. Prejudgment interest on the amount of the overcharge as calculated by the court to the time of judgment was $124,889.95. Because the actual damages as found by the court and as affirmed by us are properly trebled under
However, in our view, on remand it would not be inappropriate under
We hold that appellees are not entitled to statutory attorney‘s fees in assumpsit under
Conclusion of law 12 is however, correct and on remand the court below should determine the appropriate amount of attorney‘s fees to be paid by the appellant to the appellees.
Conclusion of law 13, as we have said, is erroneous.
There is much discussion in thе briefs of the Federal “Truth in Lending Act,” §§ 102 et seq.,
Reversed and remanded for the entry of an amended judgment and for the determination of reasonable attorney‘s fees and the determination of costs.
Richard Clifton (Ann M. Misura and Ernest H. Nomura, Cades Schutte Fleming & Wright; and Sherman S. Hee with him on the briefs) for appellant.
Charles H. Witherwax (Herbert J. Leider and M. Tyler Pottenger with him on the brief; Charles H. Witherwax & Associates) for appellee.
On the amicus curiae briefs:
Gordon M. Uechi for Hawaii Bankers Association.
Marvin S.C. Dang (Frank M. Salinger and Robert E. McKew with him on the brief; Washington D.C.) for Hawaii Financial Services Association and American Financial Services Association.
DISSENTING OPINION OF NAKAMURA, J., WITH WHOM WAKATSUKI, J., JOINS
The plaintiffs in this case are 2,500 parents “who executed a total of 5,067 separate contracts [with private schools in Honolulu for installment payments of tuition] under Defendant Finance Factors prеpaid education plan covering the school years 1971/72 through 1981/82.” My colleagues in the majority conclude “there was no breach of the contract documents as executed [and] there could not be a recovery under the contract[s].” But they view this case as “a suit in tort” and affirm the award of treble damages to each member of the plaintiff class pursuant to Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) chapter 480, Monopolies; Rеstraint of Trade. The case, however, was tried and decided in the Circuit Court of the First Circuit as one involving violations of “The Truth in Lending Act,”
I.
The majority acknowledges “[t]here is much discussion in the briefs of the Federal ‘Truth in Lending Act,’ §§ 102 et seq.,
20. Finance Factors advertised and represented its education plan as “prepaid“. In fact, the tuition was not prepaid in that only one-half was paid at the inception of the contract and the balance was paid at a later time, as aforesaid.
21. The contracts between Finance Factors and the schools further provided that in the event of a default by a parent in making installment payments to Finance Factors prior to the date of the second advance, then the second advance would not be made. This agreement between Finance Factors and the schools was not disclosed to the parents, either orally or in writing and was not mentioned in the contract [executed by the parents] as one of the remedies available in the event of default. The result of [the] agreement [between Finance Factors and the school] and its non-disclosure, coupled with the representation that the Finance Factors education plan was in fact “prepaid“, misled the parents into believing that their child‘s education was paid for and thus secure for the entire term bargained for, when in fact that education could have been placed in jeopardy by a default in payment to Finance Factors prior to thе second advance.
22. In addition, the parents were misled by the understated APR into believing that their Finance Factors prepaid education plan loan was obtained at a favorable annual percentage rate, and were thus dissuaded from doing any comparison shopping at other financial institutions.
23. Both the use of the term annual percentage rate and the standard method and formula for its computation werе mandated by the Consumer Credit Protection Act, otherwise known as “Truth in Lending Act“, enacted by
Congress of the United States and effective February 10, 1969, and Regulation Z promulgated by the Federal Reserve Board pursuant to its authority under the Truth in Lending Act, and revisions as they were in force through the 81/82 school year, the main purpose for the standardization of the annual percentage rate was to allow consumers to intelligently do compаrison shopping for credit. This purpose was circumvented by the manner in which the Finance Factors prepaid education plan was administered and the intentional non-disclosures and misdisclosures made thereunder.
These findings, of course, are consistent with the statement in the plaintiff-appellee‘s answering brief that “[t]his case involves a deliberate and intentional substantive circumvention of the Truth in Lending Act ... and the Hawaii State Installmеnt Sales Act ...,
II.
The record thus confirms that the judgment against the defendant for treble damages stems from its purported failure to disclose Annual Percentage Rates of Interest as required by The Truth in Lending Act in 5,067 separate contracts executed between 1970 and 1982. By virtue of
the limitation of time for commencing an action under a statute creating a new right enters into and becomes a part of the right of action itself and is a limitation not only of the remedy but of the right also; the right to recover depends upon the commencement of the action within the time limit set by the statute, and if that period of time is allowed to elapse without the institution of the action, the right of action is gone forever. The statute is an offer of an action on condition that it be commenced within the specified time, and if the offer is not accepted in the only way in which it can be accеpted, by a commencement of the action within the specified time, the action and the right of action no longer exist and the defendant is exempt from liability.
51 Am. Jur. 2d Limitation of Actions § 15, at 600 (1970) (footnotes omitted).
The record, as we observed, confirms that the plaintiff‘s action is premised on alleged violations of The Truth in Lending Act‘s requirement for disclosure of Annual Percentage Rates of Interest. A right of action for failing to disclose such rates, of course, did not exist at common lаw; the right was created by Congress. Thus “[t]he time element is an inherent element of the right so created, and such a provision will control, no matter in what form the action is brought.” 51 Am. Jur. 2d, supra, § 8, at 596 (footnotes omitted). Since the “right to recover depend[ed here] upon the commencement of the action within the time limits set by
I would therefore vacate the judgment and remand the case for entry of a judgment in favor of the defendant.
