Court Opinion

ID: 4267295
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-04-24 00:01:51.037556+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:31:27.545165
License: Public Domain

State v. A&S Collections Associates, Inc., No. 521-8-05 Wncv (Toor, J., Dec. 16, 2005)

[The text of this Vermont trial court opinion is unofficial. It has been reformatted from
the original. The accuracy of the text and the accompanying data included in the Vermont
trial court opinion database is not guaranteed.]

                                         STATE OF VERMONT
                                       WASHINGTON COUNTY, SS

                                                       │
STATE OF VERMONT,                                      │
 Plaintiff                                             │
                                                       │        SUPERIOR COURT
    v.                                                 │        Docket No. 521-8-05 Wncv
                                                       │
A & S COLLECTION                                       │
ASSOCIATES, INC., et al.,                              │
 Defendants                                            │
                                                       │

           RULING ON MOTION OF A&S COLLECTION ASSOCIATES FOR
                          SUMMARY JUDGMENT

         The State has filed this case against A & S Collection Associates, Inc. (A&S) and

others, alleging unfair and deceptive practices under the Vermont Consumer Fraud Act.

A&S moves for summary judgment.

                                              Relevant Facts

         The following facts appear to be undisputed for purposes of this motion.1 A&S is

a Florida corporation with its principal place of business in Williamstown, Vermont. It is

in the business of debt collection and check processing. The other defendants in this case

are telemarketing companies based in Canada (Telemarketers). A&S began providing

1
  A&S did not submit a separate Statement of Material Facts as required by the rules. V.R.C.P. 56(c)(2).
Presumably as a result, the State did not submit a formal point-by-point response to the facts listed in the
body of the motion. Thus, the court is not bound to deem the listed facts as established as it would if there
had been strict compliance with Rule 56. However, the State not having raised any dispute over the facts,
the court proceeds on the assumption that they are at this stage undisputed.
what is referred to as “demand draft” services to the Telemarketers in or about May 2005.

Demand drafts are unsigned checks that are supposed to be authorized by the holder of

the account from which the funds are to be drawn. Instead of a signature, such a check

has language stating “Authorized by Account Holder,” “Signature Not Required,” or

similar language.

       The demand drafts at issue in this case were printed by A&S using the Magnetic

Ink Character Recognition (MICR) code (the numbers that appear at the bottom of

regular bank checks) and related information provided by the Telemarketers n electronic

file format. After printing the drafts, A&S deposited them in a Chittenden Bank account

in Barre, Vermont. When the drafts cleared, the accounts of the consumers were debited.

Periodically A&S wired funds from the account to the Bank of Montreal for the

Telemarketers. The drafts were processed by A&S both before and after July 1, 2005.

       The demand drafts were not pre-authorized in writing by the customers whose

accounts were debited. Instead, the Telemarketers sought only verbal authorizations from

the customers over the telephone. None of the customers were Vermont residents. Many

of the states in which the customers reside do not require written authorization for

demand drafts, and instead require only verbal authorization. The solicitations to

consumers were done solely by the Telemarketers, not by A&S.

                                  Conclusions of Law

       The Vermont Consumer Fraud Act (the Act) makes it an “unfair and deceptive

practice” for a telemarketer to “obtain or submit for payment a check, draft or other form

of negotiable instrument drawn on a person’s [bank] account without the consumer’s

express written authorization.” 9 V.S.A. § 2464(b)(2). Prior to July 1, 2005, it was

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apparently also an unfair or deceptive practice to “provide substantial assistance to a

telemarketer in violation of subsection (b) of this section when the person or the person’s

authorized agent knows or consciously avoids knowing that the telemarketer is engaging

in [an] unfair or deceptive act or practice in commerce.” Id. § 2464(c)2.

         As of July 1, 2005, the Act imposes strict liability on parties who process demand

drafts without written authorization:

           It is an unfair and deceptive act and practice in commerce for a party
           other than a federally-insured depository institution to process for
           payment from a consumer’s [bank] account, in connection with a
           telemarketer’s transaction with the consumer: (1) a check, draft, or
           other form of negotiable instrument drawn on or debited against such
           account without the consumer’s prior written authorization[.]

Id. § 2464(c)(1). “Process” is defined as follows:

           “Process” includes printing a check, draft or other form of negotiable
           instrument drawn on or debited against a consumer’s [bank] account,
           formatting or transferring data for use in connection with the debiting
           of a consumer’s account by means of such an instrument or an
           electronic funds transfer, or arranging for such services to be provided
           to a telemarketer.

9 V.S.A. § 2464(a)(3). A&S does not meet the definition of “telemarketer.” Its actions

do meet the definition of “process.”

         A&S raises two arguments in its motion. First, it argues that the processing done

by A&S was “perfectly legal under Vermont law.” Motion at 2. Second, it argues that the

Consumer Fraud Act applies only to consumers who live in Vermont, and thus is

inapplicable here.

2
  This section no longer appears either in the bound version or the pocket part of the statute, as it was
apparently printed only in the former pocket part. However, the State represents that this is the language of
the former version and A&S has not disputed that representation.

                                                      3
                             1. The Legality of the Processing

       A&S states in the introduction to the motion that its first argument is that the

processing done by A&S was “perfectly legal” under Vermont law. Although A&S

provides no argument or discussion of this claim in the body of the motion, it has

clarified in its reply that the argument is as follows: because the processing of demand

drafts only required telephone authorizations in most of the states in which the consumers

resided, the lack of written authorizations was not illegal in those states. Because the

transactions involving the authorizations themselves – done by the Telemarketers – were

legal in those states, A&S argues, the subsequent processing of those authorizations in

Vermont cannot be illegal.

       It is undisputed that the Telemarketers did the solicitations in this case, and that

A&S merely processed the demand drafts for the Telemarketers, after being provided

with the information obtained by the latter. It is also undisputed that the Telemarketers

never obtained the written authorizations that Vermont requires.

       The court agrees that A&S cannot be found liable for any transactions that

occurred prior to July 1 if the State cannot prove that the Telemarketers engaged in a

“deceptive act or practice,” because processors were at that time liable only if the

telemarketer was “engaging in [an] unfair or deceptive act or practice in commerce.” 9

V.S.A. § 2464(c). However, whether the actions of the Telemarketers themselves are

within the reach of the statute is a question not squarely before the court at this time.

Moreover, A&S concedes that some of the other states at issue also required written

authorizations. Thus, even if A&S can prove that some of the pre-July transactions were

not “deceptive acts or practices” because the other states’ laws permitted them, that

                                            4
argument would not resolve the claims involving states that do require written

authorizations.

       Moreover, for transactions on and after July 1, A&S can be liable for processing

drafts “drawn on or debited against such account without the consumer’s prior written

authorization,” regardless of whether the Telemarketers’ own acts were illegal. Id. §

2464(c)(1). It is undisputed that A&S processed drafts for payment without the

consumer’s express written authorization. Thus, regardless of whether the Telemarketers

can be found liable under the statute based upon their own conduct outside of Vermont –

an issue not before the court today -- A&S can be found liable for its own conduct inside

Vermont.3

                           2. The Location of the Consumers

       A&S argues that the Act cannot apply to this case, where it is undisputed that

none of the people whose accounts were debited were Vermont residents. It argues that

the statute shows an intent to limit its coverage to Vermont consumers.

       The court is not persuaded by A&S’s argument. First, it is undisputed that the

actions of A&S that are at issue – the processing of the demand drafts – took place in

Vermont. A&S has its principal place of business in Vermont. The drafts were deposited

in a Vermont bank. The funds A&S then sent to the Telemarketers were wired from the

Vermont bank. Thus, if A&S were correct about the scope of the statute, businesses could
3
  The State also argues that the complaint asserts an independent non-statutory claim that
A&S “made use of” the Telemarketer’s fraud by getting a financial benefit from the
processing. Supplemental Opposition, p. 3. The court does not see this as an independent
non-statutory claim, as the “made use of” language comes directly from the statute and
the case on which the State relies was construing the statute. 9 V.S.A. § 2458; State v.
Custom Pools, 150 Vt. 533 (1988). Moreover, the complaint describes the count to which
the State refers (Count 2) as “Second Count: Unfair and Deceptive Trade Practices under
the Consumer Fraud Act.”

                                            5
be situated in Vermont and conduct massive amounts of transactions that would be illegal

if directed at Vermont consumers but could not be restricted by the State from so doing

so long as they were careful to avoid any Vermont consumers. The court does not view it

as likely that the Legislature would have so intended. Whatever Vermont’s reputation for

disdaining “flatlanders,” the Legislature cannot have intended to permit Vermont

businesses to so freely prey upon non-Vermonters.

       Second, as A&S concedes, the Act does not expressly limit its scope to

Vermont consumers only. In fact, it contains certain specific provisions (inapplicable

here) in which it does so limit its coverage. See 9 V.S.A. §§ 2464a-2464d (the “do not

call” list provisions). While A&S argues that this shows an overall intent to be so

limited, the court construes it in precisely the opposite way: if the entire statute applied

only to Vermont consumers, there would have been no need for the Legislature to

specify that in certain specific sections. Moreover, by doing so in certain sections, by

implication its intent was different in the other sections. It is a basic tenet of statutory

construction that “[w]here the Legislature includes particular language in one section

of a statute but omits it in another section of the same act, it is generally presumed that

the Legislature did so advisedly.” Hopkinton Scout Leaders Association v. Guilford,

2004 VT 2, ¶ 8, 176 Vt. 577, 579 (2004).

       The Vermont Supreme Court has previously declined to read into the Act a

limitation that is not expressly stated. State v. International Collection Service, Inc., 156

Vt. 540 (1991). As the Court noted, “[a]lthough our overall aim is to give effect to the

intent of the legislature, we must first look to the plain meaning of the statutory wording.

… Nothing in the statutory wording limits the victims who may be protected by the

                                              6
Attorney General to exclude businesses.” Id. at 542 (citation omitted). The same is true

here: the language of the statute does not exclude non-resident consumers. Instead, the

statute declares that its intent is to protect “the public,” not merely Vermont residents. 9

V.S.A.§ 2451.

        A&S cites another case for the proposition that the Court has limited the scope of

the Act to “this state’s citizens.” Gramatan Home Investors Corp. v. Starling, 143 Vt.

527, 536 (1983). However, that reference was merely dictum. The Court was pointing to

the “protection of the public” language of the statute in determining that attorney’s fees

were mandated by the statute rather than discretionary with the court. The issue of

whether the statute reached beyond “this state’s citizens” was neither raised nor decided

in that case.

                                           Order

        For the foregoing reasons, A&S’s motion for summary judgment is denied.

Dated at Montpelier this 15th day of December, 2005.

                                              _____________________________
                                              Helen M. Toor
                                              Superior Court Judge

                                             7