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Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Mass justice (or not) for future tort claimants

That's the topic of Future Claimants and the Quest for Global Peace, a new article by prolific law prof Rhonda Wasserman. Here's the abstract:

In the mass tort context, the defendant typically seeks to resolve all of the claims against it in one fell swoop. But the defendant’s interest in global peace is often unattainable in cases involving future claimants – those individuals who have already been exposed to a toxic material or defective product, but whose injuries have not yet manifested sufficiently to support a claim or motivate them to pursue it. The class action vehicle cannot be used because it is impossible to provide reasonable notice and adequate representation to future claimants. Likewise, non-class aggregate settlements cannot be deployed because future claimants will not have contacted attorneys whose participation is critical to those alternative methods of dispute resolution. In lieu of class actions and non-class aggregate settlements, this Article proposes a hybrid public-private claims resolution process designed to provide many of the benefits of global peace, while preserving the constitutional rights of future claimants and ensuring them fair compensation as their injuries manifest. Under this proposal, defendants would secure judicial approval of a fair and reasonable class action settlement of the current claims and then, through an extra-judicial process, make fair offers on comparable terms to future claimants as their claims mature, adjusted to take into account the time value of money and intervening changes in legal doctrine and medical advances. Since the class action settlement would not purport to bind the future claimants, their constitutional rights would be protected. And even though the future claimants would not be bound by the class action judgment nor obligated to accept the fair offers on comparable terms, they would have an incentive to accept them, rather than sue in tort, because they would be assured fair compensation without incurring the costs of litigation.

Posted by Brian Wolfman on Wednesday, August 13, 2014 at 02:52 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

Payday lending and disparate effects on communities of color

Following up on Deepak's post earlier this week flagging John Oliver's hilarious takedown of the payday lending industry, check out this post from our friends at Public Justice, discussing the impact of payday lending on minority communities (which are disproportionately targeted by these businesses) and the pernicious business model that relies on trapping borrowers in a cycle of debt.

who is most likely take out that fateful first payday loan? Those living in neighborhoods with the highest numbers of payday loan stores: statistically, people of color. This means that, in the longer term—the circle of debt that traps so many—those who have the most access to payday loans will end up having a harder time paying their bills, putting off seeking medical care they need, and even losing their homes because they don’t have the financial resources.  - See more at: http://publicjustice.net/content/shark-week-let%E2%80%99s-look-closely-at-who%E2%80%99s-preying-on-whom#sthash.XkKNgtaO.dpuf
who is most likely take out that fateful first payday loan? Those living in neighborhoods with the highest numbers of payday loan stores: statistically, people of color. This means that, in the longer term—the circle of debt that traps so many—those who have the most access to payday loans will end up having a harder time paying their bills, putting off seeking medical care they need, and even losing their homes because they don’t have the financial resources.  - See more at: http://publicjustice.net/content/shark-week-let%E2%80%99s-look-closely-at-who%E2%80%99s-preying-on-whom#sthash.XkKNgtaO.dpuf

Posted by Scott Michelman on Wednesday, August 13, 2014 at 08:51 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

CFPB Fines Bait-and-Switch Mortgage Scheme $19M

...reports the National Law Journal, here (subscription required).

In a consent order (available here), the CFPB found that Amerisave Mortgage Corporation violated numerous federal consumer protection and lending-related laws by luring borrowers to its services with inaccurate rates then overcharging them and misleading them into paying fees they did not need to pay.

Of the money the company will pay under today's order, almost $15 million will be refunded to consumers; the remainder constitutes a fine. The company will also be required to reform its practices.

 

Posted by Scott Michelman on Tuesday, August 12, 2014 at 04:47 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

New York Prosecution Against Payday Lending Syndicate

The Manhattan District Attorney has brought criminal charges against a payday lending syndicate, alleging that an intricate corporate structure was established to to make payday loans with interest rates in violation of the state's usury cap and to shield its principals from detection by law enforcement. Those charged include the owner, the chief operating officer, and the syndicate's counsel.The indictment is described as a "harbinger" of others that may be brought against payday lenders.

Posted by Jehan Patterson on Tuesday, August 12, 2014 at 08:35 AM | Permalink | Comments (1)

Monday, August 11, 2014

The CFPB warns consumers about bitcoin and other virtual currencies

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has just issued this consumer advisory about the risks of bitcoin and other virtual currencies. The agency has also begun accepting consumer complaints on the topic.

Today’s advisory warns that virtual currencies carry significant risks, including:

·      Exchange rates are volatile and costs unclear: The exchange rate of Bitcoins to U.S. dollars in 2013 fell as much as 61 percent in a single day. In 2014, the value of Bitcoins has dropped by as much as 80 percent in a single day. The advisory explains that consumers who buy virtual currencies should be prepared to weather this kind of volatility. Consumers should also consider whether there are mark-ups or other fees when using an exchange or digital wallet provider. Companies may be charging consumers to buy, spend, or accept virtual currencies.

 

·      Hackers and scammers pose serious security threats: Virtual currencies are targets for highly sophisticated hackers and scammers. Individuals, digital wallet providers, and exchanges are all at risk. For example, if a hacker gains access to a consumer’s Bitcoin “private keys,” which are 64-character codes that unlock the consumer’s funds, the consumer can lose all their virtual currency. Fraudsters are also taking advantage of the hype surrounding virtual currencies to pose as Bitcoin exchanges, Bitcoin intermediaries, and Bitcoin traders in an effort to lure consumers to send money, which is then stolen.

 

·      Companies may not offer help or refunds for lost or stolen funds: Some virtual currency companies do not identify their owners, provide phone numbers and addresses, or even specify the country in which they are located. Before using a company’s products or services, consumers should carefully consider if they know how to contact the company in question, and if they know their contractual rights. If a consumer trusts a company to hold their virtual currencies and something goes wrong, the company may not offer the kind of help the consumer would expect from a bank, debit card, or credit card provider. In fact, some virtual currency companies disclaim responsibility for consumer losses if funds are lost or stolen.

 

 

Posted by Brian Wolfman on Monday, August 11, 2014 at 03:24 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

John Oliver on Payday Loans

John Oliver's comedy news-in-review show on HBO, "Last Week Tonight," had an excellent segment on payday loans last night. The show was well researched and probably exposed many people to these issues for the first time. Among other things, it covers the payday industry's reliance on recidivism (citing Center for Responsible Lending research and an exhibit from a recent CFPB enforcement action), its ability to skirt state-level regulation (citing a clip of oral argument in the Ohio Supreme Court), and its attempt to hide behind tribal sovereign immunity. Great stuff. Comedian Sarah Silverman also makes an appearance with a mock public-service ad about payday loans. Watch here:

 

 

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Posted by Public Citizen Litigation Group on Monday, August 11, 2014 at 09:36 AM in Consumer Legislative Policy, Predatory Lending | Permalink | Comments (0)

NYT's consumer advocate "The Haggler" speaks with Ira Glass on This American Life

Worth a listen (about 7 minutes), here.

Posted by Scott Michelman on Monday, August 11, 2014 at 09:26 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

Sunday, August 10, 2014

Radin Essay on Ben-Shahar's & Schneider's Book on Disclosure

Last year, we posted a link to Omri Ben-Shahar's review of Margaret Jane Radin's Boilerplate. Now she returns the favor by comenting on More Than You Wanted to Know: The Failure of Mandated Disclosure, the book he co-authored with Carl Schneider in her essay, Dismissing Disclosure?  Here is the abstract:

This essay responds to a new book by Omri Ben Shahar and Carl E. Schneider, entitled MORE THAN YOU WANTED TO KNOW: THE FAILURE OF MANDATED DISCLOSURE (Princeton, 2014).  The book is an elaborate disclosure of why disclosure fails. It is hard to disagree with the fact that widespread deficits in consumer reading, understanding and decisionmaking undermine the efficacy of disclosures, and the book provides plenty of data to show this. But the authors do not much confront the fact that many mandates for disclosures are a response to what happens when firms are free to design their own fine print. The same consumer decisionmaking deficits the authors here elaborate exist when the disclosure (allegedly contractual) is created by private firms; and firms take advantage of those deficits. If mandated disclosure is abandoned, as the authors recommend, do the authors think recipients of bad boilerplate should just be on their own?  The authors did not consider that question as part of their project in this book.

Posted by Jeff Sovern on Sunday, August 10, 2014 at 11:32 AM in Consumer Law Scholarship | Permalink | Comments (0)

Saturday, August 09, 2014

Times Coverage of Predatory Subprime Auto Lending

The New York Times has run several troubling pieces recently on predatory subprime car lending, most notably here.  Today's Times includes an editorial that states:

 Dealers who can offload loans to banks before the loans fail take the same rapacious approach that mortgage lenders took in the run-up to the recession. They prey on less sophisticated borrowers, falsifying the borrower’s income information and writing loans with astronomical interest rates and hidden fees that deliver a quick profit to the dealers.

* * *

The government also must require that auto dealers, like mortgage lenders, verify that borrowers have the ability to repay their loans and meet their other expenses. In addition, regulators should bar the dealers from gaining additional profit by manipulating interest rates. Beyond this, banks that buy auto loans should be held strictly accountable for any irregularities.

Posted by Jeff Sovern on Saturday, August 09, 2014 at 09:21 AM in Auto Issues, Predatory Lending | Permalink | Comments (0)

Friday, August 08, 2014

Ching Paper: What We Consent to When We Consent to Form Contracts: Market Price

Kenneth K. Ching of Regent has written What We Consent to When We Consent to Form Contracts: Market Price. Here is the abstract:

Contracts require consent, yet no one reads form contracts. So what do we consent to when we consent to form contracts? Scholarly answers to this question range from “we consent to everything but the radically unexpected” to “we consent to nothing but the specifically negotiated.” This essay offers a new answer: when we consent to form contracts we consent to pay market price.

Part I of this essay discusses Randy Barnett’s argument that consent to form contracts is consent to be legally bound, which raises the question of whether there are any limits on what can be consented to via form contract. Part II discusses Carnival Cruise Lines v. Shute as illustrative of Barnett’s theory and argues that Carnival’s approach should be rejected. Part III of this essay argues that consent to form contracts should be construed as consent to pay market price.

Posted by Jeff Sovern on Friday, August 08, 2014 at 10:17 AM in Consumer Law Scholarship | Permalink | Comments (0)

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