Lawsuits
Charge Lenders with Exploiting Poor Consumers by Charging High
Interest Rates up to 500 Percent
Consumers
filed a series of lawsuits yesterday against three of North Carolina’s largest payday lenders – Advance America, Check
into Cash, and Check ’N Go – alleging that the lenders
exploit poor people by luring them into quick loans that carry exorbitantly
high interest rates of up to 500 percent. The three lawsuits were filed
in New Hanover County Superior Court by a team of consumer advocates
including three public interest organizations – the North Carolina
Justice Center in Raleigh, NC, the Financial Protection Law Center
(FPLC) in Wilmington, and Trial Lawyers for Public Justice (TLPJ) in
Washington, D.C. – as well as a number of private lawyers.
The consumer
complaints allege that since 1997, these companies have been targeting
low-
and moderate-income North Carolina families by
offering a check cashing service known as “deferred-deposit” or “payday” loans.
These loans are marketed as a quick, easy way to obtain cash without
undergoing a credit check.
“Companies like Advance America prey on consumers with offers
of quick cash, but the exorbitant interest rates trap people in a cycle
of long-term debt,” said co-counsel Carlene McNulty of the Justice
Center.
To get
a payday loan, a customer writes a check for the amount borrowed
(usually
between $200 and $500), which the payday lender “holds” until
the customer’s next payday, usually two weeks later. The customer
is charged a high fee for this loan. In a typical transaction involving
a loan for $425, for example, a customer writes a check for $500, which
includes a $75 fee. On the next pay day, the customer can either pay
$500 to get the check back, let the check clear the bank, or pay $75
to extend the loan for another two weeks. The fees for many consumers
translate into annual interest rates of more than 500%. Most borrowers
cannot afford to redeem their checks and are forced to choose the “roll-over” option.
“Too often the borrower ends up in a cycle of debt, repeatedly
rolling over the original loan to a point where the accumulated fees
and interest far exceed the amount borrowed,” said co-counsel
Mal Maynard of FPLC.
In 1997, payday lenders sought and received a special interest law
that permitted them to charge interest rates far above the normal North
Carolina usury rate. However, the law expired on August 31, 2001, thus
making the practice illegal under state law. Since then, payday lenders
have entered into affiliations with out-of-state banks in efforts to
evade the law. They are claiming a legal loophole allows them to continue
making these high interest loans to unsuspecting consumers in North
Carolina.
Each of
the payday companies being sued claims that its affiliation with
an out-of-state
bank allows it to make these loans. The consumer
attorneys who filed the lawsuits disagree. The payday lending companies
are the real lenders in the transactions and control the money and
the collection process. The payday lenders’ “rent-a-charter” practice
has been criticized by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency,
which is the federal agency that regulates national banks.
“These out-of-state banks provide cover, for a fee, so that
payday lenders can skirt state consumer protection laws,” said
TLPJ staff attorney F. Paul Bland, Jr., co-counsel in the cases. “I
see no difference between a loan shark and a corporation that lures
financially strapped and desperate people into taking out quick loans
with interest rates as high as 500 percent.”
State laws require loan companies to be licensed and permit only a
36 percent interest rate on loans under $600. State law also prohibits
licensed check cashing businesses, such as Advance America and the
other companies being sued, from making loans.
Advance
America has about 114 stores in North Carolina, and reports revenues
of more
than $30 million a year. Check ’N Go operates
almost 60 stores in the state, and gets revenues of about $14 million.
Check into Cash has more than 40 stores in North Carolina, and also
reports revenues of about $14 million.
In addition
to the three public interest organizations, the lawyers for the exploited
consumers in these cases include J. Jerome Hartzell
of Hartzell & Whiteman in Raleigh, NC, Mona Lisa Wallace and John
Hughes of Wallace & Graham in Salisbury, NC, Stephen Gardner of
Dallas, and Richard Fisher of Cleveland, TN. The complaints in McQuillan
v. Check ’N Go of North Carolina, Inc., Hager
v. Check into Cash of North Carolina, Inc., and Kucan v. Advance
America are posted on
TLPJ’s web site, www.tlpj.org.
###
The
North Carolina Justice Center is a statewide non-profit organization
working to eliminate poverty in North Carolina by ensuring that low-income,
working poor, and minority individuals have the resources they need
to move to economic security.
Financial
Protection Law Center is a non-profit organization devoted
to advocacy against predatory lending, including the provision of high-quality
legal services to loan borrowers who have encountered abusive lending
practices.
Trial
Lawyers for Public Justice is the only public interest law firm dedicated
to
using trial lawyers’ skills and resources to advance
the public good. Founded in 1982, TLPJ utilizes a network of more than
3,000 of the nation’s outstanding trial lawyers to pursue precedent-setting
and socially significant litigation. TLPJ has a wide-ranging litigation
docket in the areas of consumer rights, worker safety, civil rights
and liberties, toxic torts, environmental protection, and access to
the courts. TLPJ is the principal project of The TLPJ Foundation, a
not-for-profit membership organization headquartered in Washington,
DC, with a West Coast office in Oakland, California. TLPJ’s North
Carolina State Coordinator is Mona Lisa Wallace, tel. 704-633-5244.
The TLPJ web site address is www.tlpj.org.