Thеse cases involve the scope of the State’s authority to regulate so-called “payday loans” pursuant to OCGA § 16-17-1 et seq., which has come to be known as the Payday Lending Act. Pursuant to OCGA § 16-17-4 (b), the State of Georgia, acting through the Attorney General (“State”) filed a complaint in Fulton County Superior Court alleging that CashCall, Inc. (“CashCall”), Delbert Services Corporation (“Delbert Services”), Western Sky Financial, LLC (“Western Sky”), and Martin A. Webb (collectively “Defendants”) have violated OCGA § 16-17-2 (a) by engaging in a small-dollar lending enterprise
Initially, the trial court entered a temporary restraining order prohibiting Defendants from making loans in violation of the Act and from servicing such loans or collecting payments from borrowers. Defendants asserted that prohibiting them from servicing existing loans was beyond the purview of the Act. At a hearing addressing Defendants’ motion to dissolve or modify the temporary restraining order, the court engaged in a discussion with the parties regarding a compromise that would permit the servicing and collection of already existing loans to continue but would require Defendants to place into escrow an amount estimated to be the funds Defendants expected to collect from Georgia borrowers during the pendency of the litigation. At that hearing, a representative of Defendants stated to the judge that Defendants expected to make a “few hundred-thousand-dollars” per month during the pendency of the litigation. Accordingly, the trial court entered an interlocutory injunction prohibiting Defendants from making new loans or assigning existing loans to any third party, but not prohibiting them from servicing existing loans. The State and CashCall then entered into a joint agreement and consent order whereby CashCall was required to deposit $200,000 into an escrow account and provide quarterly summaries of all payments collected from Georgia borrowers until the claim was resolved. The order expressly contemplated a future motion to modify the amount of the escrow deposit.
Shortly thereafter, Defendants filed motions to compel arbitration and to dismiss the action. The trial court referred the case to a special master who recommended the case be dismissed, but the trial court rejected the special master’s recommendation and denied Defendants’ motion to dismiss, finding that the State’s claim was not barred by the language of OCGA § 16-17-1 (d) indicating that “[pjayday lending . . . does not encompass loans that involve interstate commerce.” Instead, the trial court found the State’s claim against Defendants was proper under OCGA § 16-17-2 (a), which states: “It shall be unlawful for any person to engage in any business [which involves] . . . the making of loans of $3,000.00 or less” except under certain circumstances that do not apply in this case. The trial court also: (1) rejected Defendants’ assertion that the claim is barred by operation of the Indian Commerce Clause because neither Mr. Webb nor Western Sky is entitled to tribal sovereign immunity simply
Upon learning through discovery that Defendants had actually collected millions of dollars from Georgia borrowers since the time the complaint was filed, the State filed a motion for modification of the injunction order and the consent order. After conducting a hearing, the trial court granted the State’s motion to modify the interlocutory injunction, finding that the amount Defendants had collected from Georgia borrowers during the pendency of the litigation to the date of the order to be approximately $15,279,872.95.
Defendants’ Appeal, Case No. S16A1011
1. (a) First, we address Defendants’ argument that the loans at issue in this case involve interstate commerce
Title 16 of the Georgia Code is the State’s Criminal Code, and we note that, unlike some legislative chapters, the legislature did not give Chapter 17 of that Title a name.
That this last language, relating to interstate commerce, is not intended to limit the scope of the chapter is expressly stated in subsection (e) of section 1 of the chapter, referring to the legislature’s intent:
Without limiting in any manner the scope of this chapter, the General Assembly declares that it is the general intent of this chapter to reiterate that in the State of Georgia the practice of engaging in activities commonly referred to as payday lending, deferred presentment services, or advance cash services and other similar activities are currently illegal and to strengthen the penalties for those engaging in such activities.
OCGA § 16-17-1 (e). The plain language of this subsection makes clear that the definition of “payday lending” is not intended to limit the scope of the chapter. Further, OCGA § 16-17-2 (a) specifically outlaws the making of loans prohibited by the Act by use of the “mail, electronic means, the Internet, or telephonic means . . . But the prohibited conduct involves interstate commerce whenever a lender utilizes these means to make an illegal loan to a Georgia borrower. See McLain v. Real Estate Bd. of New Orleans, Inc.,
Because of federal preemption rules limiting a state’s authority to regulate federally chartered banks or banks chartered by other states, the Act exempts such banks (OCGA§ 16-17-2 (a) (3)), but does not exempt out-of-state non-bank lenders, such as the lenders in this case. See Glenn v. State,
Indeed, this Court has long held that the legislature lacks the power to legislate the truth of facts. See TDGA, LLC v. CBIRA, LLC,
(b) According to Defendants, interpreting the Act to apply to loans involving interstate commerce requires a violation of the rules of statutory construction. Citing Kennedy v. Carlton,
(c) Regardless of whether the Act’s prohibitions apply to interstate loans, Defendants assert additional reasons why Georgia law does not apply to this dispute. Defendants first argue that contract formation law requires a finding that Georgia law does not apply to the loans in this case. Citing Gen. Tel. Co. of the Southeast v. Trimm,
Defendants also point to a choice-of-law clause in the loan agreements purporting to stipulate that tribal law controls these agreements. “The parties to a private contract who admittedly make loans to Georgia rеsidents cannot, by virtue of a choice of law provision, exempt themselves from investigation for potential violations of Georgia’s usury laws.” BankWest, Inc. v. Oxendine,
Defendants also assert that tribal sovereignty, recognized by the Indian Commerce Clause,
For these reasons, we affirm the trial court’s denial of Defendants’ motion to dismiss.
2. (a) Defendants also argue several reasons why the injunction order should be vacated. First, Defendants assert the Payday Lending Act confers no authority for the State to obtain injunctive relief. While the Act does not expressly authorize injunctive relief, we view
(b) Defendants, however, assert the injunction order entered in this case imposes an unlawful prejudgment attachment. The initial temporary restraining order entered shortly after the amended complaint was filed was replaced by an interlocutory injunction order (“Original Injunction”), dated August 23, 2013, that enjoined Defendants from making unsecured loans to Georgia borrowers in the amount of $3,000 or less and further enjoined them from selling or transferring to third parties the rights to such loans already made; but at the urging of Defendants, the order expressly did not prevent them from servicing the loans at issue in the litigation, meaning that
In response to the State’s motion to modify the interlocutory injunction order, the trial court entered its Order Granting Further Injunctive Relief (“Modified Injunction”), dated October 21, 2015. In the Modified Injunction the trial court found that, notwithstanding Defendants’ compliance with the Original Injunction, the State was entitled to additional equitable relief pursuant to OCGA § 16-17-3 because, the court found, “[tjhere is a substantial threat that [the State] will suffer irreparable injury if the injunction is not granted, as there may not be sufficient funds available to [the State] in the event final judgment is entered against Defendants.” In addition to other findings supporting the grant of the injunction, the trial court further found that the threatened injury outweighs the threatened harm to Defendants from the injunctive relief granted, and that “there is a substantial likelihood that [the State] will prevail on the merits of its claims at trial.” The trial court noted that modifications of injunctive orders “cannot be granted in the absence of a meritorious showing that such modification should be made.” Kelley v. Kelley,
Defendants assert this freezing of assets is an improper use of the court’s injunctive power and amounts, in effect, to an illegal prejudgment attachment. Defendants note that specific procedures must be followed before a writ of prejudgment attachment may be issued (see OCGA § 18-3-9), which the State did not follow. Further, injunctive relief is not available simply to ensure the availability of assets for collection in the event the plaintiff prevails in a case in which only monetary relief is sought and therefore an adequate remedy at law exists. See Century Bank of Ga. v. Bank of America, N.A.,
Likewise, this Court, applying Georgia law, has held that injunc-tive relief may be available in cases in which equitable relief is sought.
In deciding whether to issue an interlocutory injunction, the trial court should consider whether: (1) there isa substantial threat that the moving party will suffer irreparable injury if the injunction is not granted; (2) the threatened injury to the moving party outweighs the threatened harm that the injunction may do to the party being enjoined; (3) there is a substantial likelihood that the moving party will prevail on the merits of [the] claims at trial; and (4) granting the interlocutory injunction will not disserve the public interest. Although an interlocutory injunction is an extraordinary remedy, and the power to grant it must be prudently and cautiously exercised, the trial court is vested with broad discretion in making that decision. We will not reverse the trial court’s decision to grant or deny an interlocutory injunction unless the trial court made an error of law that contributed to the decision, there was no evidence on an element essential to relief, or the court manifestly abused its discretion.
While the State’s action in this matter does not allegе fraudulent transfers, it does allege illegal collection of principal and interest on illegal loans made to Georgia borrowers and is, therefore, analogous. In fact, this Court applied the same rule affirming injunctive relief in favor of the State in a case in which, like this one, the State sued alleged violators of a criminal statute. In Pittman v. State of Ga.,
where the [defendants] controlled the assets that are a subject of the litigation, raising the possibility that they could be dissipated before the litigation is resolved, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in enjoining the [defendants] from disposing of any of the . .. assets of the business and continuing the receivership.
Id. at 593 (2).
Here, the trial court expressly considered the factors set forth in SRB, supra, and concluded the evidence supported the grant of interlocutory injunctive relief. Defendants, however, assert the State failed to present competent evidence to support its request for injunc-tive relief and they claim the State relied solely on unfounded suspicions of Defendants’ insolvency. Defendants state that the only evidence presented was unauthenticated hearsay evidence submitted by attachments to affidavits filed after the motion hearing, to which they raised objections, that, for example, Western Sky had laid
Addressing the second factor, which requires a balancing of the relative equities of the parties, quoting Garden Hills Civic Assn., Inc. v. Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Auth., Defendants argue an injunction should not be granted if it “would operate oppressively on
Turning to the third factor, given the applicable law and facts of record, the trial court did not err in concluding a substantial likelihood exists that the State will prevail in this case. Nor did the trial court err in concluding the injunction will not disserve the public interest, thus satisfying the fourth factor set forth in SRB. In fact, since the trial court concluded the State was likely to prevail, the granted injunctive relief is likely to serve the public interest. Despite the hearsay nature of much of the State’s evidence relating to Defendants’ potential insolvency, we find the State presented sufficient evidence to demonstrate it was entitled to injunctive relief, and because we find the trial court did not manifestly abuse its discretion in granting the requested relief, we affirm the trial court’s grant of the Modified Injunction.
State’s Appeal, Case No. S16X1012
3. The State’s complaint, as amended, was filed on August 5, 2013. Reddam is the sole shareholder of Defendants CashCall and Delbert Services. Webb is the sole shareholder of Western Sky. In June and July 2015, in response to discovery, Defendants produced copies of certain written agreements, including agreements between Western Sky and WS Funding, which is a wholly-owned subsidiary of CashCall and, as alleged by the State, controlled, along with Cash-Call, by Reddam. Reddam executed these agreements on behalf of WS Funding, and Webb executed them on behalf of Western Sky The
One of the written agreements produced by Defendants is an assignment agreement whereby WS Funding agreed to the following: to fund a reserve account in Western Sky’s name that would be used by Western Sky to fund consumer loans; to purchase all loans made by Western Sky for a fixed perсentage of their face value; and to pay Western Sky monthly administration fees and reimburse it for other operating costs. In return, Western Sky agreed to sell all loans made in its name to WS Funding for a fixed percentage of their face value. Another agreement is one for services between CashCall and Western Sky whereby CashCall agreed to the following: to develop promotional materials for Western Sky; to provide customer service support for Western Sky, including underwriting review, marketing, and website hosting and support services; to assign Western Sky toll-free phone and fax numbers; and to provide Western Sky communication services such as e-mail and text correspondence with borrowers. In return, Western Sky agreed to pay CashCall a fixed percentage of the face value of the loans for the services CashCall would provide. Pursuant to these agreements, the loans Western Sky made were to be electronically signed by borrowers in a previously agreed-upon form, and would only be executed by Western Sky if borrowers met previously agreed-upon underwriting criteria. The State alleges these agreements govern the lending that Western Sky offered and made to Georgia borrowers, who applied for loans over the Internet or telephonically
Discovery in the action was stayed for periods of time while the trial court considered preliminary motions, while the parties attempted to reach a mediated settlement, and while Defendants previously sought interlocutory review of the order denying their motion to dismiss. When discovery resumed after this Court denied Defendants’ application for interlocutory appeal, Defendants produced the agreements described above. Asserting that these agreements reflected newly discovered evidence of the Proposed Defendants’ involvement
(a) While OCGA§ 9-11-15 (a) permits amendment of pleadings as a matter of right prior to the entry of a pretrial order, that provision must be read in pari materia with OCGA § 9-11-21, which provides that “[p]arties may be dropped or added by order of the court on motion of any party ... at any stage of the action and on such terms as are just.” See Clover Realty Co. v. Todd,
Among the factors to be considered by the trial court in determining whether to allow [an amendment to add a new party] are whether the new party will be prejudiced thereby and whether the movant has some excuse or justification for having failed to name and serve the new party previously.
Aircraft Radio Systems, Inc. v. Von Schlegell,
With respect to excusable delay, Defendants assert the State had notice from the time the amended complaint was filed in August 2013 that WS Funding was involved in the lending transactions with Georgia borrowers, and that WS Funding was a wholly owned subsidiary of CashCall, since those facts were alleged in the amended complaint.
Delay alone, however, is an insufficient ground for denying the addition of parties. In fact, “denial of joinder is an abuse of discretion where delay is the sole reason for denial; there must be more shown, i.e., prejudice to the additional defendant by delay.” Smith v. Vencare, Inc.,
(b) These legal rules support a finding of no unfair prejudice to the Proposed Defendants, however, only if the applicable statute of limitation has not expired. The issue becomes whether the State’s action is subject to the default twenty-year limitation period granted by OCGA § 9-3-22, or by the one-year statute of limitation found in OCGA§ 7-4-10, as Defendants urge.
The Payday Lending Act contains no express limitation period for asserting a claim under the Act. The State asserts this means the general statute of limitation for enforcement of statutory rights set forth in OCGA § 9-3-22 applies to its claims against Defendants and Proposed Defendants. That statute states, in pertinent part: “All actions for the enforcement of rights accruing to individuals under statutes . . . shall be brought within 20 years after the right of action has accrued...Pursuant to OCGA § 9-3-1, the State’s claims in this case are governed by the same limitations as those that apply to private persons.
Defendants, however, argue that because the State’s claims sound in usury, and the express purpose of the Payday Lending Act is to enforce violations of the usury statute,
By contrast, the Payday Lending Act sets forth an enforcement regime that imposes much harsher remedies against a lender that violates the usury laws by engaging in the type of predatory conduct described by the Act. A lender who violates the Payday Lending Act is barred from collecting any indebtedness created by the unlawful loan, not just interest, and declares such a loan transaction to be “void ab initio.” OCGA § 16-17-3. Such a lender is liable to the borrower for three times the amount of any interest or other charges imposed by the transaction (OCGA § 16-17-3) and is liable to the state for a civil penalty equal to three times that amount (OCGA§ 16-17-4). The Act also imposes a penalty in the form of a tax on all proceeds the lender receives from such a transaction. OCGA § 16-17-5. The remedial schemes of the two statutory provisions are distinct, and the Payday Lending Act expressly states that its purpose is to create new, different, and more onerous remedies and penalties upon lenders who engage in the conduct prohibited by the Act than those already in existence. “The General Assembly has . . . determined that substantial criminal and civil penalties over and above those currently existing under state law are necessary in order to prohibit [payday lending] activity in the State of Georgia and to cause the cessation of this activity once and for all.” OCGA § 16-17-1 (c). Additionally, the State is not a party to the lending transactions at issue in this case, and thus the remedies available to borrowers under OCGA § 7-4-10 are not available to the State. Either a borrower or the State, as a representative of borrowers or an ascertainable class of borrowers, may pursue the remedies available under OCGA §§ 16-17-3 and 16-17-4, however. We conclude both the purpose and remedies of the Payday Lending Act are distinct from those of the forfeiture provisions of OCGA § 7-4-10. It follows that the one-year statute of limitation set forth in OCGA § 7-4-10 does not apply to an action brought under the Payday Lending Act.
Citing Parker v. Fulton Loan and Bldg. Assn.,
As another ground for asserting a one-year statute of limitation should apply to the State’s action pursuant to the Payday Lending Act, Defendants point to OCGA § 9-3-28, which states: “All actions by informers to recover any fine, forfeiture, or penalty shall be commenced within one year from the time the defendant’s liability thereto is discovered or by reasonable diligence could have been discovered.” Since the State was or should have been aware of its claims against the Proposed Defendants more than one year before the State sought to add them, Defendants argue the claims against Proposed Defendants are now barred by application of OCGA § 9-3-28. Implicit in this assertion is the notiоn that the State may recover only for damages dating back one year from the date the action was filed against the original Defendants, as recovery of damages beyond the one-year limitation period, if it applies, would be barred. Informer actions, the subject of OCGA § 9-3-28, are a subset of qui tarn actions, which are
In Nixon v. Nixon,
In summary, we are not persuaded that the legislature intended the period of limitation for bringing an enforcement action pursuant to the Payday Lending Act to be governed by the one-year limitation period for forfeiture actions pursuant to the usury laws. Instead, we conclude the remedies set forth in the Payday Lending Act are governed by the twenty-year statute of limitation set forth in OCGA § 9-3-22.
Judgment affirmed in Case No. SI 6A1 Oil. Judgment reversed in Case No. S16X1012.
Notes
Although Defendants secured a certificate of immediate review of the order denying arbitration and the motion to dismiss, this Court denied the application for interlocutory appeal. See Western Sky Financial, LLC v. State of Ga., Case No. S15I1043 (order dated May 7, 2015).
The State represented in support of its motion to modify the injunction order that numerous records produced by CashCall demonstrate that Defendants made over 18,000 loans of $3,000 or less to Georgia borrowers, that Georgia borrowers still owed approximately $6.5 million on those loans, and that overtime these borrowers have paid in excess of $31.4 million in interest and in excess of $6.5 million in fees for the loans, although the trial court did not make findings with respect to these additional alleged facts.
Defendants are out-of-state persons or entities, and the record reflects they made loans to Georgia borrowers by use of the telephone, over the Internet, and by other electronic means across state lines. The State does not contest that these activities involved interstate commerce.
See, for example, OCGA § 7-3-1 et seq., to which the General Assembly gave the title “Georgia Industrial Loan Act.”
“ ‘A payday loan is a loan of short duration, typically two weeks [coinciding with the borrower’s next payday], at an astronomical interest rate. Payday loans are the current version of salary buying or wage buying.’ ” (Citation omitted.) Clay v. Oxendine,
See United States v. Marek,
The FAA, 9 USC § 1 et seq., applies to all contracts containing an arbitration clause that involve or affect interstate commerce. American Gen. Financial Svcs. v. Jape,
Defendants point to one federal court that, when examining the same Western Sky loan contract, concluded that the company’s contracts with borrowers were formed on the Reservation (FTC v. Payday Financial, LLC, 935 FSupp.2d 926, 938 (D.S.D. 2013)), but they also acknowledge that other courts have concluded that because the borrowers did not engage in any activities inside the Reservation, tribal law does not apply. See, e.g., Smith v. Western Sky Financial, LLC, 168 FSupp.3d 778 (E.D. Pa. 2016) and Jackson v. Payday Financial, LLC,
12 USC § 5536 (a) (1) (B).
The United States Constitution, in the section defining the powers of Congress, grants Congress the power “[t]o regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States and with the Indian Tribes.” U. S. Const, art. 1, § 8, cl. 3.
This assertion by Western Sky has been rejected by at least one other court. See State ex rel. Swanson v. CashCall, Inc.,
See, e.g., Colorado v. Western Sky Financial, LLC, 845 FSupp.2d 1178 (D. Colo. 2011) (in an action seeking injunctive relief and damages for alleged violation of Colorado laws, the federal court found that offering loans via the Internet constitutes off-reservation activity and remanded the case back to state court); State ex rel. Cooper, supra,
On motion for reconsideration, relying upon Rogers v. Tennessee,
A discussion of whether or not injunctive relief is barred because the State has an adequate remedy at law is discussed in Division 2 (b), infra.
CashCall, Inc. v. Morrisey,
We also note that at least seven federal circuit courts, applying the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the Federal Rules of Evidence, permit a trial court to rely on hearsay evidence for the purpose of ruling on a motion for preliminary injunctive relief. See Mullins v. City of New York,
(Citation and punctuation omitted.)
For this reason we also reject Defendants’ assertion that the Modified Injunction violates the principle that injunctive relief should maintain the status quo. An interlocutory injunction “is a stop-gap measure to prevent irreparable injury or harm to those involved in the litigation.” India-American Cultural Assn., Inc. v. iLink Professionals, Inc.,
2
Specifically, the amended complaint alleged that within days after Western Sky funded a loan, borrowers were notified the loan had been sold to WS Funding and that it would be serviced by CashCall.
OCGA § 9-3-1 states: “Except as otherwise provided by law, the state shall be barred from bringing an action if, under the same circumstances, a private person would be barred.”
Defendants note that OCGA § 16-17-1 (c) declares the types of loans covered by the Act to be those in violation of OCGA § 7-4-2.
1
This action was brought on behalf of the State “ex rel.” Attorney General Samuel S. Olens, meaning as a relator (see Black’s Law Dictionary, 10th ed. (2014)). Although, strictly speaking, this case was brought on behalf of the State by the Attorney General as relator, the
Finally, we reject Defendants’ assertion that the State is barred by the doctrine of invited error from asserting the trial court erred in denying the motion to add parties. Urging a trial court to decide a fully briefed motion so that it can be appealed, if necessary, at the same time other court orders are being appealed does not invite error.
