Introduction
The State of Missouri, through the attorney general (State), appeals from the circuit court’s dismissal of its action alleging violations of Missouri’s Merchandising Practices Act (MPA) by Portfolio Recovery Associates, LLC, (Portfolio, LLC). The State had filed a Petition against both Portfolio, LLC and its parent company, Portfolio Recovery Associates, Inc. (Portfolio, Inc.). The circuit court granted Portfolio, LLC’s motion to dismiss on the grounds that the MPA does not apply to the collection of debts and against the parent company, Portfolio, Inc. on the grounds that the court lacked personal jurisdiction over Portfolio, Inc. The State appeals with regard to Portfolio, LLC only on the grounds that the MPA does not apply to the collection of debts. Because the alleged acts of deception and unfair practices were not committed in connection with the sale or advertising of merchandise as required by the plain and ordinary language of the MPA, we affirm the trial court’s ruling.
Baclcground
On August 19, 2009, the State filed a Petition for Permanent Injunctions, Restitution, Civil Penalties, and Other Court Orders (Petition) against Portfolio, Inc. and Portfolio, LLC, the parent and subsidiary corporation, respectively. In its Petition, the State alleged that both defendants violated the MPA, Sections 407.020, et al., by repeatedly using deception and unfair practices to collect debts that are not owed or are past the relevant statute of limitation; misrepresenting actions that can be taken against alleged debtors; engaging in deception by filing cases in Missouri without documentation supporting a good faith basis for the suit and dismissing when the consumer contests the action; engaging in unfair practice through unethical, oppressive and unscrupulous conduct in forcing consumers to choose between paying a debt they do not owe and having false collection information on their credit *663 reports; and assessing fees and interest above the usury limit without written documentation evidencing an agreement to pay the higher interest or fees. The State made no allegations that defendants were a party to the initial transactions with the consumers, or that there were any unfair practices or acts of deception made with regard to the initial consumer transactions.
Portfolio, Inc. and Portfolio, LLC filed a motion to dismiss on April 6, 2010, arguing that the State’s Petition failed to meet the pleading requirements of Rules 55.05 and 55.15, and that it failed to state a claim under the MPA because the MPA does not apply to the debt collection activities, and the conduct alleged in the State’s Petition is not illegal under any debt collection law. Additionally, defendants argued that the court lacked personal jurisdiction over the parent company, Portfolio, Inc.
In its Memorandum, Order and Judgment entered on June 25, 2010, the court concluded first that the State “failed to carry his burden of proving that the Court can exercise personal jurisdiction over [Portfolio], Inc.,” citing
State ex rel. Nixon v. Beer Nuts, Ltd.,
This appeal follows with regard to the State’s claim against the subsidiary, Portfolio, LLC.
Point on Appeal
In its sole point on appeal, the State alleges that the trial court erred in finding the MPA has no application to the collection of debts and its dismissal of the State’s case on that basis. The State argues that the MPA, by its terms, applies to unfair and deceptive practices in connection with the sale of merchandise, “whether committed before, during or after the sale.” The State contends that post-sale unfair practices and deceptive acts and practices perpetrated on consumers, which occur after the sale in the debt collection process, fall within the MPA’s coverage.
Standard of Review
Appellate review of a trial court’s grant of a motion to dismiss is
de novo. Lynch v. Lynch,
Discussion
The threshold issue to be addressed in this appeal is whether the broad reach of the MPA extends to unfair or deceptive debt collection activities that are alleged to have occurred after the initial transactions, and by a third-party debt collector who was not a party to the original consumer transaction. The State suggests the statute’s intentionally broad language and the courts’ liberal construction of that language support its position that the MPA extends its reach to include such third-party debt collection activities. As a means of comparison and guidance, the State presents in its brief examples of several other state statutes, as well as federal legislation, which have been determined to apply to post-sale debt collection activities; however, we find no reported Missouri cases that provide clear precedent for this question, which we consider a matter of first impression. After a thorough review of the applicable case law and statutes, this Court is guided by the unequivocal plain language of the MPA as drafted by the legislature, and holds that the debt collection activities alleged in the Petition are not activities “in connection with” the sale or advertisement of merchandise, and thus, do not state a claim under the MPA.
The Missouri Merchandising Practices Act (MPA) provides, in relevant part, as follows:
The act, use or employment by any person of any deception, fraud, false pretense, false promise, misrepresentation, unfair practice or the concealment, suppression, or omission of any material fact in connection with the sale or advertisement of any merchandise in trade or commerce ... in or from the state of Missouri, is declared to be unlawful practice. The use by any person, in connection with the sale or advertisement of any merchandise in trade or commerce ... in or from the state of Missouri of the fact that the attorney general has approved any filing required by this chapter as the approval, sanction or endorsement of any activity, project or action of such person, is declared to be an unlawful practice. Any act, use or employment declared unlawful by this subsection violates this subsection whether committed before, during or after the sale, advertisement or solicitation.
Section 407.020.1 (emphasis added). Section 407.100 allows the attorney general to seek injunctions prohibiting such unlawful practices, orders or judgments to prevent such continued acts, and restitution, including civil penalties.
The MPA was created to supplement the common-law definition of fraud.
Danforth v. Independence Dodge, Inc.,
“Absent a statutory definition, this Court considers the plain and ordinary meaning of the words themselves, which, in this case, are unrestricted, all-encompassing and exceedingly broad.” Ports Petroleum Co., Inc. of Ohio v. Nixon, 37 S.W.3d 237, 240 (Mo. banc 2001). As the Missouri Supreme Court recognized in Ports Petroleum, the attorney general’s regulation, 15 CSR 60-8.020, reflect the “literal words [that] cover every practice imaginable and every unfairness to whatever degree.” The regulation describes an “unfair practice” as:
a practice which—
Either—
Offends any public policy as it has been established by the Constitution, statutes or common law of this state, or by the Federal Trade Commission, or its interpretive decisions; or
Is unethical, oppressive or unscrupulous; and
Presents a risk of, or causes, substantial injury to consumers.
Id.
While we acknowledge the Supreme Court’s broad description of the term “unfair practices” under the MPA, this Court does not find an equivalent broad interpretation by the Supreme Court of the phrase “in connection with” the sale or advertisement of any merchandise in trade or commerce. The phrase “in connection with,” for purposes of the MPA, is not statutorily defined. “Connection” is defined in Webster’s dictionary as meaning “relationship in fact.” Merriamr-Webster Online Dictionary, http://www.merriam-webster.com/ dictionary/ connection, accessed March 3, 2011. Applying this definition, we look for a “relationship in fact” between the advertising and sale of the merchandise at issue in the State’s Petition and the unfair practices alleged against Portfolio, LLC. The unfair practices as detailed in the Petition are not alleged to have been made before or at the time of the advertising or purchase of the merchandise, and Portfolio, LLC is not alleged to have been a party to or have had any involvement with the initial sales transaction between the buyer and seller. Upon reviewing the Petition and record before us, we do not find allegations of the “relationship in fact” required to state a cause of action under the MPA.
The State argues that the MPA is made “particularly expansive” by the use of the phrase “in connection with” and cites unreported cases as support for its position. The State acknowledges that the Missouri Supreme Court has not yet addressed the applicability of the MPA to “a consumer fraud that flows forward from the central transaction, as opposed to a fraud that began before the central transaction.” Finding no reported case on point, the State analogizes the case at bar to
Gibbons v. Nuckolls,
The State also cites
Fielder v. Credit Acceptance Corp.
as support for its argument that the collection of a debt arising out of a sale of goods or services is subject to the provisions of the MPA, even when the consumer’s debt is assigned to a third party who was not a party to the initial sales transaction.
While we agree with Fielder that the MPA applies to the sale of services as well as tangible goods, Fielder nevertheless offers no support for the State’s position here because the alleged wrongful conduct in Fielder related to the initial consumer transaction, i.e. inducing consumers to enter into the financing transaction by deceptively stating “the original terms of payment” in the retail installment sales contract. Fielder is distinguished from the case at bar because the purchasers in Fielder were not alleged to have encountered any deceptive or unfair practice in connection with the subsequent debt collection activities; rather, the deceptive conduct that was alleged to violate the MPA in Fielder occurred during the original sales transaction. The State’s Petition contains no such allegations against Portfolio, LLC.
The State also cites
Consumer Finance Corp. v. Reams,
The facts in each case upon which the State relies to show that the practices alleged in its Petition were made “in connection with the sale” are significantly distinguishable from the facts presented here. The State has provided no judicial authority, and we are aware of none, supporting its claim that the deception or unfair practices alleged in its Petition occurred in connection with the sale or advertisement of merchandise. We are not persuaded that actions occurring after the initial sales transaction, which do not relate to any claims or representations made before or at the time of the initial sales transaction, and which are taken by a person who is not a party to the initial sales transaction, are actions made “in connection with” the sale or advertisement of merchandise as required by the MPA.
Declining to find the State’s Petition alleges unfair practices that were made “in connection with” the sale or advertisement of merchandise, we now address the State’s argument that the MPA’s language “before, during, or after” the sale extends the reach of the MPA to third-party debt collectors who acquire the debt
after
the sale is completed, and who have no other involvement with the sales transaction under the MPA. Finding no relevant judicial authority to support its position, we again reject the State’s argument. As shown by
Schuchmann v. Air Services Heating & Air Conditioning, Inc.,
actions relating to warranties occurring
after
the sale, but which were made in connection with the sale, provide context for the MPA’s plain language allowing statutory violations to occur after the sale.
The State contends that the MPA defines its scope of coverage by the relationship between the consumer and the transaction, not by the relationship of the parties to each other. We agree with the State and do not limit the reach of the MPA to only the merchant, seller and consumer. We recognize that an assignee or a party in a privity relationship may be held liable for its conduct under the MPA, as the Supreme Court specifically held in
Gibbons,
We acknowledge and commend the State’s efforts to aggressively police the marketplace of trade and commerce. With our holding, we do not suggest that the actions alleged in the Petition are not actionable. However, we cannot undertake a legislative role and write into the MPA language that simply does not exist. We do not read the plain language of the MPA to provide that debt collection by a third party as alleged in the Petition is “in connection with” the sale of merchandise, and is included among the activities prohibited by the MPA. In so holding, we address only whether Portfolio, LLC’s alleged abuses state a cause of action under the MPA as presently written, and do not address whether a cause of action exists against Portfolio, LLC under other federal or state statutes, or common law.
The State’s point on appeal is denied.
Conclusion
We affirm the trial court’s judgment dismissing the State’s cause of action.
Notes
. In its brief the State cites cases from various other jurisdictions under differing state laws. None of the cases or statutes offer guidance to this Court given the precise language of the MPA.
