WASHINGTON, D.C. — The U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments on Nov. 28 on whether a property owner suffered an injury in fact under the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA) when she bought title insurance from a company that allegedly paid kickbacks to get business from title insurance agents in Ohio (First American Financial Corp. v. Denise P. Edwards, No. 10-708, U.S. Sup.).
(Transcript. Document #85-111223-001T.)
Denise P. Edwards sued First American Financial Corp. in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California. She alleged that First American violated RESPA’s anti-kickback provision by entering into exclusivity agreements with thousands of title insurance agencies that are authorized to sell First American title insurance policies. Under RESPA’s remedies, Edwards seeks treble damages for the $455 cost of her title insurance.
The District Court denied First American’s motion to dismiss for lack of standing. On appeal, the Ninth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals affirmed.
Questions Presented
The Supreme Court agreed to hear two questions: whether the Ninth Circuit erred in holding that Edwards has standing to sue under RESPA when she does not claim that the violation affected the price, quality or other characteristic of the settlement services, and whether Edwards has standing to sue under Article III, Section 2, of the U.S. Constitution when she does not have an injury in fact.
Justice Stephen G. Breyer questioned whether Edwards was suing because she was exposed to a transaction that Congress “said was harmful.” Aaron M. Panner of Kellogg, Huber, Hansen, Todd, Evans & Figel in Washington, arguing for First American, said no, because Edwards paid the only rate for title insurance that is available under Ohio state law.
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said Edwards’ claim “does seem to fit the bill of restitution, unjust enrichment cases, where the plaintiff doesn’t have to prove any harm, she just gets back what the defendant should not have received.” Panner said Edwards is not “worse off” because there is no allegation that the insurance was lacking.
‘Prearranged, Tied Product’
Justice Sonia Sotomayor said Panner seems to be arguing that “Congress can’t ever presume damages or injury, that even in those cases plaintiff has to come in and prove that they would have paid less.” She continued: “So what more does this plaintiff have to allege other than, if I had been told that this was a prearranged, tied product between the mortgage and the title company, but that I had a right to get an untied product even at the same price, and I would have exercised that right if I had known – would that be enough?”
Panner said that is not what Edwards is alleging. He said a “violation of the statutory right does not create an injury for constitutional purposes.”
Justice Breyer told Panner “there is no doubt that the plaintiff here suffered the harm that Congress sought to forbid. That harm was being engaged in a transaction where the title insurance company was not chosen on the merits, but partly in terms of a kickback.” He asked what was unconstitutional about that.
Panner said there was no injury in fact under Article III “and Congress cannot create that injury legislatively.”
Trust Violation?
Justice Antonin Scalia asked if Congress could create a trust relationship between title insurance agents and property purchasers that would constitute an Article III injury in fact. “If you become a trustee by contract you get one result, but if you are a trustee by government decree so that you must be a trustee, contract or not, somehow the situation changes?” he asked.
Justice Elena Kagan said Panner’s argument that there is a difference depending on the source of the law is “very much inconsistent with our case law.” She said her reading of Edwards’ complaint is that she doesn’t have to prove injury because “there’s been a judgment made that these kinds of practices tend to decrease service and tend to increase price and therefore I don’t have to prove those matters. And that’s the exact same judgment that is made in the trust cases, for example.”
Panner said that Congress could broaden the law to require enforcement of violations by the executive branch. “But what Congress cannot do is to dictate in advance that a particular practice has cause injury to a particular plaintiff.”
‘Duty Of Loyalty’
Jeffrey A. Lamken of MoloLamken LLP in Washington, arguing for Edwards, said that breaches of a duty of loyalty by taking kickbacks have been a part of common law for which a plaintiff can sue without showing an economic harm.
Justice Scalia told Lamken: “There is no duty of loyalty owned here.” The justice added: “I’m not even sure it’s proper to call it a kickback. It’s a commission.”
Lamken told Justice Scalia that Congress gave consumers a right to “freedom from a particular conflict of interest, and that is the kickbacks that undermine their incentive to serve your best interest, that undermine their incentive to choose the insurer that provides the best quality and the best service.”
Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. said he doesn’t see a fiduciary relationship and doesn’t see where a duty of loyalty comes from. He added that he does not see an injury in fact.
Permit Private Suits?
Justice Scalia told Lamken: “The issue isn’t whether Congress can achieve that result [of legal protection]. It’s whether they can achieve it by permitting private suits.”
Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. questioned whether Edwards suffered an injury in fact or an injury in law. He said he thinks it is the latter.
The chief justice also told Lamken that Edwards claim of “potential value” “sounds to me like possible future injury.”
‘Circular’
Justice Anthony M. Kennedy told Lamken, “[i]t’s circular for you to say that he was denied something that he is entitled to. The question is whether there is an injury. The Constitution requires an injury.”
Appearing on behalf of the federal government, Assistant Solicitor General Anthony A. Yang of the U.S. Department of Justice in Washington, told the court: “When an individual has a statutory right to a kickback-free referral in a financial transaction, she participates in a particular financial transaction in which her right is violated and she pays money for the service unlawfully referred, she has sustained an Article III injury in fact based on, as this Court in its repeatedly explained test, an invasion of a legally protected interest.”
Posted via email from Title Insurance The American Land Title Association (ALTA), a national trade association representing members of the title insurance industry, announced that veteran land title insurance industry professional Christopher Abbinante has been named president for the 2011-2012 year. “It is a privilege to represent an industry whose purpose is to protect consumers against legal challenges to their homeownership,” Abbinante said. “I am honored to serve as president of a growing and vibrant association, now representing more than 4,000 member companies. The American Land Title Association is committed to constantly improving its representation and service to our industry.” The 11-member ALTA Board of Governors is responsible for creating association policy, managing the financial health of the association, and ensuring the overall welfare of the association. According to a Nov. 1 release, Abbinante, formerly the president of Eastern Operations for Fidelity National Title Group, Inc., has been involved in the title industry for over 35 years. During that time, he has worked with agents and direct operations across the United States, Canada, and the Caribbean. Abbinante started in the land title industry in 1975, working for a law firm in Chicago that also had a small title agency. In 1976, he joined Chicago Title, serving in many different capacities. In 2001, Chicago Title became part of the Fidelity National Financial Family of Title Companies. Abbinante now focuses on Fidelity’s Canadian operations as well as with U.S.-based operations located primarily in the eastern and central parts of the country. “Chris is the right person to lead our association through the challenges we currently face. His talents as a title insurance executive are well regarded throughout the industry and he inspires confidence as we work to better serve consumers,” said Michelle Korsmo, chief executive officer of ALTA. Posted via email from Title Insurance WFG National Title Insurance Company has announced Ravi Bapodra as its new VP and managing director of TitleNet. The Williston Financial Group family of title insurers is currently licensed and operating in 40 jurisdictions nationwide. TitleNet, a division of WFG National Title, is a national provider of title, closing and settlement services comprised of a national network of independent providers using a centralized technology platform. The operation processes residential and commercial transactions, as well as loss mitigation, default and real estate-owned (REO) transactions. Bapodra will oversee the growth of TitleNet and maintain its relationship with its network of independent providers and clients. He comes to WFG National Title and TitleNet with 13 years of industry experience. He was most recently vice president of default product services with one of the nation’s largest title underwriters. He has spent the majority of his career in executive positions with two other large national underwriters. “Ravi excels at harnessing the strength of independent businesses, and connecting them to national and regional banks, REO firms, GSEs and other companies to meet or exceed their performance standards, the concept at the core of the TitleNet model,” said Joseph Drum Esq., EVP of WFG National Title. “His role will be to allow our independent agencies to do what they do best, while supplementing them with top-flight resources, guidance and coordination. Our agencies will quickly find Ravi and TitleNet to be outstanding assets.” Posted via email from Title Insurance
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