22
Jul

Payday lenders covered by FTC Act even if affiliated with American Indian Tribes

tribe payday loans

Payday lenders covered by FTC Act even if affiliated with American Indian Tribes

  • By Lesley Fair

In an FTC action challenging allegedly illegal business practices by a
payday loan operation affiliated with American Indian Tribes, a United States Magistrate Judge just issued a report and recommendation on the scope of the FTC Act.  Attorneys will want to give the order a careful read, but here’s the need-to-know nugget:  Over the defendants’ vigorous opposition, the Magistrate Judge concluded that the FTC Act “gives the FTC the authority to bring suit against Indian Tribes, arms of Indian Tribes, and employees and contractors of arms of Indian Tribes.”  Most importantly, the Judge’s finding confirms that the FTC’s consumer protection laws apply to businesses regardless of tribal affiliation.  The FTC sees that as a key step in protecting consumers from deceptive and unfair practices.

The FTC sued a web of defendants — including AMG Services, Inc., 3 other Internet-based lending companies, 7 related companies, and 6 individuals, including race car driver Scott Tucker and his brother Blaine Tucker — for violating Section 5 of the FTC Act, the Electronic Fund Transfer Act, and the Truth in Lending Act in their payday loan practices.  Some of the defendants tried to get the FTC case dismissed, claiming that their affiliation with American Indian Tribes makes them immune from those federal statutes.

Not so, urged the FTC.  True, the FTC Act makes no specific reference either way to its applicability to tribal entities.  But citing Supreme Court and Ninth Circuit precedent, the FTC reasoned that “statutes of general applicability that are silent on tribal issues presumptively apply to tribes and tribal businesses.”

The defendants responded that the FTC Act isn’t a “statute of general applicability” because Congress wrote certain exemptions into the law.

“Exemptions alone aren’t dispositive,” said the FTC, quoting the Ninth Circuit’sChapa De case.  As the Court held in Chapa De, “The issue is whether the statute is generally applicable, not whether it is universally applicable.  We have previously held that other federal statutes that contain exemptions are nevertheless generally applicable.”

Citing that decision and others, the Magistrate Judge’s report and recommendation rejected the defendants’ immunity theory and concluded that “the FTC Act has a broad reach and is one of general applicability.”  The order reserves judgment on whether the defendants are “not for profit” corporations for purposes of the FTC Act, but held that TILA and EFTA apply regardless of the defendants’ disputed for-profit status.

The Magistrate Judge’s report and recommendation is now subject to review by United States District Judge Gloria M. Navarro.

A related update:  The FTC reached a partial settlement with the principal defendants in the case.  Under the terms of the order, those defendants will be barred from using threats of arrest and lawsuits as a tactic for collecting debts, and from requiring all borrowers to agree in advance to electronic withdrawals from their bank accounts as a condition of getting credit.  The FTC continues to litigate other counts against the AMG defendants, including that they deceived consumers about the cost of their loans by charging undisclosed charges and inflated fees.

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Comments ( 6 )
  • Michael says:

    Tribes should be able to participate in eCommerce. Few are able to participate in the gaming industry due to poor geographic location. Drug and alcohol abuse is rampant on the majority of Indian reservations due to high unemployment. E commerce will help tribes overcome more than a few of their economic difficulties.

  • Steve Hodgdon says:

    If you read the FTC site, this decision is specific to misrepresentation of terms, extortion (rather than ethical collection), and an antiquated banking rule. All this brought about because one lender thumbed his nose at US laws.
    It’s EASY (yes, easy) to be compliant and profitable. You’ll have to leave a little on the table for the consumer and treat people as you would if you were face to face.
    While internet money is expensive, it’s still in demand.
    Sovereign models avoid certain state rules, but the law of the land is just that.
    Comply and thrive.

  • Carl S says:

    “FTC reasoned that “statutes of general applicability that are silent on tribal issues presumptively apply to tribes and tribal businesses.”

    The way I hear this ruling is that the precedent now is that in the US, ANY law that’s silent on anything can still be applied against anyone at any time depending on the federal governments interpretation of who or what it applies to at the time of application?

    What a country …

  • Frank M. says:

    Brick-n-mortar operators must be LOVING this!!

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