SETTLEMENT FUNDING, LLC v. CARLA VON NEUMANN-LILLIE
Record No. 061373
Supreme Court of Virginia
June 8, 2007
Present: All the Justices. FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAIRFAX COUNTY. M. Langhorne Keith, Judge.
In this appeal we consider whether the circuit court erred in refusing to apply the law of the jurisdiction stipulated in the choice of law provision of a contract and in its application of Virginia‘s usury law to the provisions of that contract.
FACTS
On November 12, 1996, Carla Von Neumann-Lillie (Lillie) redeemed a winning ticket in the “Money for Life” instant win game of the Virginia Lottery. The prize was $1,000 per month for the duration of Lillie‘s life.
Lillie entered into a loan agreement with WebBank Corporation (WebBank) for $29,000 plus interest. Lillie was to repay the loan in monthly installments of $500 for a period of 178 months, commencing April 1999 and ending January 15, 2014. The loan agreement contained a choice of law provision, stating all disputes would be determined in accordance with the laws of the State of Utah. Lillie also executed a secured promissory note in which she promised to pay WebBank, its successors and assigns, the principal amount of $29,000 plus interest and a UCC-1 Financing Statement, which was filed in the Circuit Court of Prince William County on March 10, 1999. WebBank assigned its right, title, and interest in the loan to Settlement Funding, L.L.C. Lillie then submitted a change of address form to the Virginia Lottery directing the Lottery to send her award payments to a post office box in Georgia owned by Settlement Funding. Settlement Funding collected the loan payments from the Virginia Lottery checks and refunded to Lillie any amount received over the loan payment due.
After Lillie had paid $13,500 on the loan over 27 months, she contacted Settlement Funding to pay the balance of her loan. Settlement Funding informed Lillie that, including interest and fees, the prepayment amount was $67,023. Lillie claimed she was unaware that any interest was due under the loan and stopped all payments to Settlement Funding, thereby defaulting on the terms of the loan agreement. Subsequently, Settlement Funding notified the Virginia Lottery of its security interest in Lillie‘s Lottery prize, that Lillie had defaulted on her loan, and that all payments due to Lillie “must be paid and delivered” to Settlement Funding. On September 21, 2001, the Commonwealth of Virginia State Lottery Department filed a Bill of Complaint for Interpleader, asserting that pursuant to
On October 31, 2001, Settlement Funding filed an answer in the interpleader action and a Cross-Bill against Lillie. The Cross-Bill requested equitable relief in the form of a court order declaring Settlement Funding‘s security interest in the Lottery payments valid and enforceable and ordering the Virginia Lottery to pay the Lottery Prize Payments to Settlement Funding.
On May 15, 2002, Lillie filed an answer to Settlement Funding‘s Cross-Bill in which she asserted four affirmative defenses. First, Lillie asserted that under
In an opinion letter dated November 7, 2005, the circuit court held that the assignment of Lottery proceeds was unlawful pursuant to
Settlement Funding filed an amended “Cross-Claim” seeking judgment against Lillie for the loan‘s principal balance plus accrued interest and penalties for a total of $253,727.89 plus interest and legal expenses. Settlement Funding asserted four counts against Lillie: breach of contract, quantum meruit, promissory estoppel, and unjust enrichment. Lillie raised several affirmative defenses to the Cross-Claim including: usury, violations of the Truth in Lending Act, fraud, and unclean hands. At the hearing on Settlement Funding‘s Cross-Claim, Settlement Funding argued that Lillie‘s fraud claim should be stricken, that the Truth in Lending Act did not apply, and that Lillie‘s usury defense based on Virginia law was improper because the loan agreement contained a choice of law provision designating Utah law as controlling, and Utah does not recognize usury protections. The circuit court granted Settlement Funding‘s motion to strike Lillie‘s fraud count, but took the remaining matters under advisement. Following the hearing, Settlement Funding provided the court with supplemental memoranda detailing Utah law and the status of WebBank as a Utah industrial loan bank.
On February 10, 2006, the circuit court issued a letter opinion in which it declined to apply Utah law on the grounds that Settlement Funding produced no proper proof as to Utah law at trial. Without proof of Utah law, the circuit court reasoned it must presume Utah law to be identical to Virginia law and, under
The circuit court also held the loan agreement violated the Truth in Lending Act because WebBank failed to provide mandatory disclosures to Lillie. The circuit court held that because Lillie‘s statutory damages under the Truth in Lending Act would more than offset the amount Settlement Funding was entitled to recover under the loan agreement, Settlement Funding was not entitled to recover any amount from Lillie. The circuit court also awarded Lillie $47,164.60 plus interest in damages for usury under Virginia law, attorney‘s fees of $24,694.50 and costs.
We awarded Settlement Funding an appeal limited to whether the circuit court erred in (1) failing to construe the loan agreement under Utah law in accordance with the choice of law provision in the loan agreement and (2) applying Virginia usury statutes and concluding the interest rate for the subject loan was usurious.
DISCUSSION
If a contract specifies that the substantive law of another jurisdiction governs its interpretation or application, the parties’ choice of substantive law should be applied. Paul Bus. Sys., Inc. v. Canon U.S.A., Inc., 240 Va. 337, 342, 397 S.E.2d 804, 807 (1990) (citing Union Central Life Ins. Co. v. Pollard, 94 Va. 146, 151-52, 26 S.E. 421, 422 (1896)). Paragraph 13 of the loan agreement provides that the loan transaction was completed in Utah, that the lender, WebBank, was doing business in Utah, and that the borrower agrees that “any and all disputes arising from or concerning this Agreement . . . shall be determined in accordance with the laws of the State of Utah.”
At trial, when asked what the substance of Utah‘s usury law was, Settlement Funding‘s counsel responded that “[t]here is no usury in Utah” and that he would “have that statutory citation pulled” and “quickly sent over” to prove the absence of usury law in Utah. Settlement Funding then submitted two post-hearing memoranda. The circuit court, in its opinion letter specifically indicated that it considered the first memorandum. In that memorandum, Settlement Funding again asserted that Utah has not established any limits on maximum rates of interest for consumer loans. Rather, Settlement Funding pointed out, “the unconscionability provision at Section 70C-7-106 of the Utah Code provides that the ceiling interest rate be determined by the market conditions.” Settlement Funding also cited Utah Code 1943, 44-0-2, and Utah case law regarding usury. These citations to Utah law provided the circuit court with sufficient information regarding the substance of Utah law. See also
Accordingly, we will reverse those portions of the judgments of the circuit court entering judgment in favor of Lillie based on her claim of usury under
Reversed in part, and remanded.
