¶ 1. Sinсe 2007, Morgan Drexen, Inc., has provided debt settlement services in Wisconsin via a program that counsels debtors to stop paying creditors and channel their available funds into accounts controlled by Morgan Drexen. Morgan Drexen pays itself from these accounts and, once the accounts have accumulated sufficient funds, approaches creditors and solicits settlements on behalf of the debtors. By January 2012, this business model had allowed Morgаn Drexen to amass more than $4.2 million in fees while paying less than $4 million in settlements to creditors.
¶ 2. The Wisconsin Department of Financial Institutions' Division of Banking (Division) filed a complaint and notice of hearing against Morgan Drexen in October 2011 alleging violations of Wis. Stat. § 218.02(2)(a)l. (2013-14)
¶ 3. Morgan Drexen appeals, arguing that the hearing examiner erred in defining what qualifies as an adjustment service company under Wis. Stat. § 218.02(l)(a) and challenging the disgorgement order. Our deсision is dictated by the highly deferential standard that we grant such agency decisions. We affirm as Morgan Drexen has not shown that the hearing examiner's interpretation of § 218.02(l)(a) was unreasonable or that the disgorgement constituted an erroneous exercise of discretion.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶ 4. We review the decision of the hearing examiner and not of the circuit court. Hilton ex rel. Pages Homeowners' Ass'n v. DNR,
¶ 5. In employing great weight deference, we will reverse the hearing examiner's interpretation of the statute only if Morgan Drexen shows that the interpretation is unreasonable. See DOR v. River City Refuse Removal, Inc.,
¶ 6. Morgan Drexen's challenge to the disgorgement order implicates a discretionary decision under Wis. Stat. § 220.04(9)(d). In reviewing an exercise of discretion, we may reverse only if the hearing examiner failed to exercise his discretion or if he exercised his discretion in violation of the law or agency policy or practice. See Wis. Stat. § 227.57(8). We will affirm the decision if the recоrd shows that the hearing examiner considered the facts of the case and reached a reasonable conclusion consistent with applicable law. Galang v. Medical Examining Bd.,
DISCUSSION
¶ 7. Wisconsin Stat. § 218.02(l)(a) defines an "adjustment service company" as
а corporation, limited liability company, association, partnership or individual engaged as principal in the business of prorating the income of a debtor to the debtor's creditor or creditors, or of assuming the obligations of any debtor by purchasing the accounts the debtor may have with the debtor's several creditors, in return for which the principal receives a service charge or other consideration.
Morgan Drexen asserts that the hearing examiner's interpretation of § 218.02(l)(a) is wrong in two re
¶ 8. We acknоwledge that Wis. Stat. § 218.02(l)(a), which has remained virtually unchanged since its enactment in 1935, see 1935 Wis. Laws, ch. 515, is not a model of clarity. We reject, however, Morgan Drexen's attempt to capitalize on the language of what it derides as an "arcane" statute to argue for a meaning that would limit its application to only two types of Depression-era business practices. A broad interpretation of the statute is in keeping with the statutory intent expressed in § 218.02(7), in which the legislature granted the Division the power to issue orders to "protect debtors from oppressive or deceptive practices" and to "prevent evasions of this section." JK Harris,
"Prorating the Income of a Debtor to the Debtor's Crеditor or Creditors"
¶ 9. Morgan Drexen argues that the hearing examiner's interpretation unreasonably expands the definition of "prorating" to encapsulate "everyone in
¶ 10. Morgan Drexen's argument relies on a limited reading of JK Harris that ignores context, utilizing those parts of the decision that support its argument and disrеgarding those that do not. To clear up any misunderstanding, we briefly recite the relevant facts from JK Harris here. JK Harris involved a business that broadly described its own activities as: (1) "contact[ing] creditors and negotiating] a reduction or extended payment on behalf of the debtor for the debtor's outstanding debt with that creditor" and (2) "working] with the debtor directly to set up a self-established budget and financial plan to assist the debtor in managing his or her finances, including making payments to creditors who hаve reduced their indebtedness or extended the time for payments." JK Harris,
¶ 11. Contrary to Morgan Drexen's assertion, our decision in JK Harris does not define "prorating" to
"Engaged as Principal"
¶ 12. Morgan Drexen next argues that the hearing examiner's interpretation of Wis. Stat. § 218.02(l)(a) is unreasonable because it does not require that Morgan Drexen "own" the debt that it is in the business of settling. Morgan Drexen argues that is what it means for a company to be "engaged as principal" under the statute and that the hearing examiner erred in finding that the requirement does not apply to companies such as Morgan Drexen. We disagree.
¶ 13. As is relevant to this issue, in order to be an adjustment service company, Wis. Stat. § 218.02(l)(a) requires that an entity first be "a corporation, limited liability company, association, partnership or individual engaged as principal." The hearing examiner interpreted the reference to "engaged as principal" as
¶ 14. Thus, the phrase distinguishes an "individual" employed by an adjustment service company from an "individual engaged as principal," i.e., sole prоprietor, to settle debts on behalf of a debtor. This interpretation, as the Division states, "simply limits the scope of which individuals must be separately licensed under the statute; it has nothing to say about corporations like Morgan Drexen." The hearing examiner's interpretation is not unreasonable.
Disgorgement of Fees
¶ 15. The hearing examiner ordered Morgan Drexen to remit $4,253,081.93 "as restitution for fees illegally charged Wisconsin debtors." Morgan Drexen jumps on the hearing examiner's use of the wоrd "restitution" to argue that such an award should amount to the net loss experienced by debtors by taking into account the value of Morgan Drexen's services, see Restatement (Third) of Restitution & Unjust Enrichment § 49 (2011), and that it was a mistake of law for the hearing examiner to base a restitution amount on the total fees collected by Morgan Drexen. We again disagree with Morgan Drexen. The hearing
¶ 16. Morgan Drexen was alleged tо have received $8,072,442.04 from Wisconsin debtors, of which $4,253,081.93 went to its fees. Morgan Drexen did not contest the fee amount prior to the hearing, at the hearing, or in posthearing briefing.
¶ 17. Morgan Drexen has not shown that the hearing examiner's interpretation and application of Wis. Stat. § 218.02(l)(a) to its business activities was unreasonable оr unsupported by substantial evidence or that his discretion in ordering that Morgan Drexen disgorge itself of fees unlawfully collected from Wisconsin debtors was erroneously exercised. We affirm the circuit court.
By the Court. — Order affirmed.
Notes
All references to the Wisсonsin Statutes are to the 2013-14 version unless otherwise noted.
The only evidentiary dispute raised by Morgan Drexen was through its chief executive officer, Walter Ledda, who "caution[ed]" that the Division's figure could include "bankruptcy fees" that were not part of its debt settlement work. The hearing examiner found that Morgan Drexen was not credible in its representations about its fees and relationship with local counsel. The weight and credibility of the evidence is a decision we leave to the hearing examiner. Ide v. LIRC,
