CFPB's First Jury Trial to Test Agency Overreach

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The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is set to face its first jury trial in April in what is shaping up to be a critical test of the agency's authority.

The CFPB sued Nationwide Biweekly Administration, in Xenia, Ohio, and its founder Daniel Lipsky in 2015 for allegedly making misleading claims about a program to help consumers pay off their mortgage faster and reduce interest payments. But Nationwide has countered that the CFPB used tactics that resemble "Operation Choke Point," a 2013 Justice Department initiative that critics say was overzealous and captured legitimate businesses in addition to shady ones.

The case marks the first time in the CFPB's six-year history that it is a plaintiff in a jury trial. But it also raises questions about how it enforces rules barring unfair, deceptive and abusive acts or practices, known as UDAAP. Critics of the CFPB are likely to seize on the case as an example of the bureau being a "rogue agency," a term repeatedly used by House Financial Services Committee Chairman Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas.

The company argues that the CFPB's actions led to its downfall. According to Sean Ponist, Lipsky's attorney, the CFPB named Nationwide's four bank partners — Bank of America, BMO Harris, TD Bank and U.S. Bank — in court filings, After being named, the four banks told Nationwide that it could no longer request new ACH debits for its 135,000 customers, effectively forcing the company to suspend its operations, Pontist said.

"The CFPB went out of its way to name each of [Nationwide's] banking partners and shortly after that is when the bottom fell out for the company and the banks terminated their relationships," said Ponist.

Lipsky said he was forced to lay off 140 employees and shut down a company he founded 2002 that grew to be the largest biweekly mortgage payment administrator, arguably a niche market. He has denied allegations that Nationwide misled consumers about the cost of its "Interest Minimizer" mortgage program. He also denies that the company misrepresented the amount of interest consumers could save by making biweekly, rather than monthly, mortgage payments.

At issue is whether CFPB overstepped a line by involving Nationwide's bank partners rather than just focusing on the company itself. The Justice Department was similarly accused by critics of going too far when it purposely targeted banks that did business with what it viewed as "high risk" businesses, a vaguely defined category that included gun dealers, pornographers and others.

The CFPB first issued guidance in 2012 on its expectations that supervised banks and nonbanks manage the risks of service providers, which may be unfamiliar with the law or may have weak internal controls that can harm consumers.

The CFPB declined to comment citing ongoing litigation.

In a six-page order on Feb. 6, District Court Judge Robert Seeborg allowed the case to proceed to trial, citing Nationwide's "allegations of an 'extra-judicial' effort by the CFPB to interfere with the defendant's banking relationships." The judge also refused the CFPB's request t to extend the trail date, now set for April 24.

But the judge also provided a caveat, stating in the order: "At this point, the direct evidence tying the CFPB to any actionable wrongs remains thin."

At its core, the CFPB alleged that Nationwide falsely promised immediate savings to consumers who enrolled in its automated biweekly mortgage program.

The company charged customers a $995 setup fee and a $3.50 biweekly processing fee. By making biweekly mortgage payments, the consumer is making 26 payments a year, or one extra annual payment, something any consumer could do on their own to accelerate paying off a loan. The CFPB also alleged Nationwide misled customers about the cost of the program, claimed that consumers could achieve savings without paying more and alleged it was affiliated with mortgage lenders or servicers.

The company has laid out an extensive defense on its web site. It claims that 1,000 customers who had been in the program for more than 10 years saved $34.5 million in interest over the life of their loans. Lipsky said he has saved his customers a total of $3 billion in interest charges since 2003.

Still, it is the company's counter-claim that pushed the case to trial. Nationwide alleged that it was denied due process and that the CFPB's Choke Point tactics had a chilling effect on the company's bank partners.

Pontist said he hoped to put the bureau's Choke Point tactics on trial, and prove that the CFPB failed to provide Nationwide with the opportunity to respond to the allegations before it filed its lawsuit.

"Our position is that it's not fair, it's just not right that the federal government came up with a way to pressure businesses that they do not like, for their own reasons, by putting pressure on their banking partners," Pontist said. "Rather than giving companies their day in court, what they do instead is threaten [their bank partners] with subpoenas, an investigation, an audit, if they don't comply."

A further wrinkle in the case is that Nationwide was the subject of an enforcement action in 2008 when Richard Cordray, the CFPB's director, was attorney general of Ohio. The company worked with the Ohio attorney general's office for two years to negotiate a settlement and made small changes to its marketing letters and sales scripts as a result.

The company was regulated by 40 states and claimed in court filings that it "had absolutely no reason to believe that its marketing materials violated any deception or unfairness standards and, indeed, received assurances to the contrary."

Still, many nonbank financial firms run into trouble by thinking a passing grade by state regulators shields them from a CFPB action.

"One of the mistakes people and companies make is that if they're in compliance with state law they think that somehow protects them from federal UDAAP claims and it does not," said Lucy Morris, a partner at Hudson Cook and a former deputy enforcement director at the CFPB. "Compliance with state law is not an absolute defense to a federal UDAAP violation."

The case still could be settled. The CFPB is seeking compensation for harmed consumers, a civil penalty and an injunction against the company and Lipsky.

Just two months after the CFPB sued Nationwide, the bureau obtained a settlement on similar claims of deceptive advertising against Paymap Inc., an Englewood, Colo., payment processor and unit of Western Union. Paymap agreed to return $33.4 million in fees to 125,000 customers who had enrolled in its "Equity Accelerator" program, and paid a $5 million penalty.

There are other companies that offer similar services to help consumers pay down their home loan. The goal is to hack away at the interest and principal on a loan, though making just one extra payment a year can only go so far.

Separately, Nationwide is contesting allegations by California's Department of Business Oversight that it charged consumers excessive fees and operated without a license. Nationwide got a license in 2004 by the California Bureau of Real Estate and claims it disclosed its fees, said a company attorney, Barbara Jacobson.

"The California Department of Business Oversight came along years later and claims that a different license applied," said Jacobson. "This really leaves Nationwide in the middle between two state agencies.”

A separate jury trial for the California case is scheduled for June 23.

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