Source: https://www.mayerbrown.com/en/perspectives-events/publications/2016/05/no-nora-no-problem-federal-district-court-strikes
Timestamp: 2019-04-21 16:22:29+00:00

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On May 23, 2016, a federal district court ruled that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s (CFPB) failure to provide a defendant with advance notice of suit was not a valid affirmative defense.1 While not surprising, the ruling should shine a spotlight on the CFPB’s pre-suit process in enforcement cases. Hopefully, the CFPB will continue its general practice of providing putative defendants with advance notice in those cases where the agency is not seeking immediate injunctive relief from the courts and will also provide greater clarity as to why it sometimes chooses to forgo this important process.
Both the CFPB’s NORA Bulletin and EO 12988 contain exceptions for cases where prior notice of the action would undermine its efficacy. The NORA process, for example, does not apply “in cases of ongoing fraud or when the Office of Enforcement needs to act quickly.”6 The pretrial notice and settlement provisions of EO 12988 similarly do not apply in actions to seize property; when assets are subject to flight, dissipation or destruction; when the defendant is subject to flight; when exigent circumstances make providing such notice impracticable or such notice would defeat the purpose of the litigation, “such as in actions seeking temporary restraining orders or preliminary injunctive relief;” and in those “limited classes of cases where the Attorney General determines that providing such notice would defeat the purpose of the litigation.”7 While both the NORA Bulletin and EO 12988 indicate that they do not create any private rights and that the processes they describe are discretionary, it is clear that providing such notice is intended to be the rule rather than the exception and that the exceptions are to be limited to those instances where notice would jeopardize the litigation.
And, indeed, in our experience the CFPB typically provides a NORA process and an opportunity to settle prior to initiating suit. But that is not always the case, for reasons that are not always clear. For example, the CFPB apparently did not provide a NORA to Nationwide Biweekly Administration (NBA) before it filed suit against the entity last May.8 In response, NBA included an affirmative defense in its answer based on the CFPB’s failure to follow its NORA process. The CFPB in turn moved to strike that affirmative defense.
Earlier this week, the federal district court hearing the case granted the CFPB’s motion to strike. The court’s opinion addressed this issue only briefly, noting that the CFPB’s motion argued that the affirmative defense was “legally unavailing, for a number of reasons, including that use of the NORA process is discretionary.”9 The court did not opine on the validity of the CFPB’s argument but instead granted the motion to strike the defense without prejudice to NBA re-pleading the defense with “additional factual underpinnings” beyond the lack of a NORA. Presumably, this means that the court found that the lack of a NORA by itself did not constitute a valid legal defense. Neither the court in its opinion nor NBA in its opposition to the motion to strike referenced EO 12988.
By its terms, the CFPB’s NORA process does not “create or confer upon any person, including one who is the subject of a CFPB investigation or enforcement action, any substantive or procedural rights or defenses that are enforceable in any manner.” In that respect, the district court’s decision is not surprising. But the rationale behind both the NORA process and EO 12988 suggests that the CFPB should have an articulable basis before denying a party pre-suit notice of the CFPB’s claims and an opportunity to convince the agency that action is unwarranted or a chance to settle the CFPB’s claims. Put plainly, that is what good government requires. Other than in cases involving the types of exigent circumstances described above, there is nothing lost by providing such notice, other than a potentially minor delay. But that is a small price to pay to help ensure that the government has all of the relevant facts and understands a defendant’s perspective before bringing to bear the full weight of its enforcement authority. Hopefully, the court’s ruling will not embolden the CFPB to further restrict the NORA process, but rather cause it to re-commit to providing such notice in all but the truly exceptional cases.
1 CFPB v. Nationwide Biweekly Administration, Inc., No. 15-cv-02106-RS (N.D.Cal.), slip op. at 9 (May 23, 2016).
2 See CFPB Bulletin 2011-04 (Enforcement), Nov. 7, 2011, available at http://www.consumerfinance.gov/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/Bulletin10.pdf.
3 See 17 C.F.R. § 202.5(c); SEC Enforcement Manual § 2.4.
5 EO 12988, § 1(a). The NORA process is distinct from the CFPB’s pre-complaint settlement process, which typically follows the NORA process and approval by the CFPB Director to file suit or settle claims. But the two processes are related in that they both reflect a pre-litigation process intended to ensure that defendants’ views are considered before litigation is filed. NORA is even more important than the pre-suit settlement process, as NORA provides an opportunity to convince the agency to not pursue enforcement at all or to drop claims or parties from the threatened action.
6 CFPB Bulletin 2011-04 at 1.
7 EO 12988, § 8(b).
9 CFPB v. Nationwide Biweekly Administration, Inc., No. 15-cv-02106-RS (N.D. Cal.), slip op. at 9 (May 23, 2016).

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