Tom v. First American ( 1998 )


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  •                                                                      F I L E D
    United States Court of Appeals
    Tenth Circuit
    PUBLISH
    AUG 10 1998
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    PATRICK FISHER
    TENTH CIRCUIT                             Clerk
    BERTHA TOM,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.                                                No. 97-2244
    FIRST AMERICAN CREDIT UNION,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW MEXICO
    (D.C. No. CIV-96-1255)
    Thomas Lynn Isaacson (James Jay Mason on the brief), Mason, Isaacson, &
    Macik, P.A., Gallup, New Mexico, for Defendant-Appellant.
    Samuel D. Gollis, DNA-People’s Legal Services, Inc., Keams Canyon, Arizona,
    for Plaintiff-Appellee.
    Before BALDOCK , MAGILL , * and HENRY , Circuit Judges.
    HENRY , Circuit Judge.
    Honorable Frank J. Magill, Senior Circuit Judge, United States Court of
    *
    Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, sitting by designation.
    The district court granted plaintiff Bertha Tom summary judgment on her
    claim that defendant First American Credit Union improperly seized the funds in
    her bank account, and the Credit Union appeals that decision. We affirm the
    district court’s decision with respect to Mrs. Tom’s claims that the Credit Union
    violated the Social Security and Civil Service Retirement Acts when it seized the
    contents of her account. However, because Mrs. Tom waived her breach of
    contract claim by failing to raise it in her summary judgment papers, we reverse
    the district court’s ruling that the Credit Union’s seizure of funds constituted a
    breach of contract.
    BACKGROUND
    In 1989, Mrs. Tom opened an account at what would later become the First
    American Credit Union. When she opened this account, she signed a Revolving
    Credit Plan Agreement that provided as follows:
    [I] hereby pledge all shares and deposits and payments and earnings
    thereon which [I] have or hereafter may have . . . as security for any
    and all moneys advanced under this plan . . . and authorize the credit
    union to apply such shares, deposits and earnings to payment of said
    obligation. Such application may be pursuant to such pledge or as a
    right of offset.
    Aplt’s App. at 55. The Agreement also stated that “[i]n the event payment is not
    made when due, then the entire unpaid balance of all advances made plus interest
    shall become immediately due and payable without notice at the option of the
    credit union.”   
    Id. 2 In
    the fall of 1994, Mrs. Tom’s Credit Union account balance was $1,769, a
    sum that consisted entirely of funds she had received as payments under the
    Social Security and Civil Service Retirement Acts. The Credit Union informed
    Mrs. Tom that it intended to deduct funds from her account in order to satisfy an
    alleged $2,379.20 debt to the Credit Union. The Credit Union claimed this debt
    was attributable to several loans that Mrs. Tom and her late husband had obtained
    between 1974 and 1980 but had failed to repay. When Mrs. Tom demanded that
    the Credit Union turn over the entire balance of her account to her, the Credit
    Union refused. Some months later, the Credit Union, citing its right to use the
    funds in her account to offset her alleged $2,379.20 debt, seized the entire $1,769
    in Ms. Tom’s account.
    Mrs. Tom sued the Credit Union in federal court, alleging that the Credit
    Union’s actions (1) violated § 407(a) of the Social Security Act (Count I), (2)
    violated § 8346(a) of the Civil Service Retirement Act (Count II), (3) constituted
    a breach of contract (Count III), and (4) violated New Mexico’s Unfair Trade
    Practices Act (Count IV). The parties subsequently stipulated to all of the
    relevant facts, and both parties moved for summary judgment. The district court
    granted Mrs. Tom’s motion with respect to the first three counts of her complaint
    and awarded her $1,769 in damages. However, the court ruled for the Credit
    Union on Count IV, holding that it had not violated New Mexico’s Unfair Trade
    3
    Practices Act. The Credit Union appealed the district court’s ruling with respect
    to the first three counts. Because Mrs. Tom has not cross-appealed the decision
    regarding the Unfair Trade Practices Act claim, we will only examine the district
    court’s decision regarding the first three counts.
    DISCUSSION
    Standard of Review
    We review de novo the district court’s grant of summary judgment,
    applying the same legal standard as the district court.        Lowe v. Angelo’s Italian
    Foods, Inc. , 
    87 F.3d 1170
    , 1173 (10th Cir. 1996). Summary judgment is
    appropriate if the evidence, when viewed in the light most favorable to the non-
    moving party, demonstrates that no genuine issue of material fact exists and that
    the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.        Seymore v. Shawver
    & Sons, Inc. , 
    111 F.3d 794
    , 797 (10th Cir.),     cert. denied , 
    118 S. Ct. 342
    (1997).
    Count I: Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. § 407)
    The district court held that the Credit Union’s actions violated the Social
    Security Act’s anti-assignment provision. Under this provision, “none of the
    moneys paid or payable or rights existing under this subchapter shall be subject to
    execution, levy, attachment, garnishment, or other legal process.” 42 U.S.C. §
    407(a). Although the Credit Union argued that § 407 applied only to “legal” (i.e.,
    court-ordered) processes, the district court ruled that this anti-assignment
    4
    provision also applied to an equitable self-help remedy such as the setoff that the
    Credit Union employed. On appeal, the Credit Union once again contends that
    equitable self-help remedies are not “other legal process[es]” and are, thus,
    outside of the aegis of § 407.
    When it passed § 407 of the Social Security Act, Congress “impose[d] a
    broad bar against the use of any legal process to reach all social security
    benefits.” Philpott v. Essex County Welfare Bd.     , 
    409 U.S. 413
    , 417 (1973). The
    Supreme Court has affirmed that Social Security benefits, even when converted to
    “funds on deposit [that] [a]re readily withdrawable[,] retain[] the quality of
    ‘moneys’ within the purview of § 407.”      
    Id. at 416.
    In Philpott , the State of New Jersey required all welfare recipients to sign
    agreements promising that if they ever became fiscally capable of doing so, they
    would reimburse the county welfare board for all welfare payments they had
    received. When one such welfare recipient received retroactive disability benefits
    under the Social Security Act, the State sued him in attempt to collect those
    funds. The Court, however, ruled that § 407 foreclosed New Jersey from reaching
    a debtor’s Social Security payments.     See 
    id. at 417.
    The Credit Union now asks us to distinguish         Philpott because, unlike the
    agreement in that case, the Revolving Credit Plan Agreement permitted the Credit
    Union to collect its debts without resorting to the court system. However, while
    5
    Philpott involved an attempt by a creditor to use the court system rather than a
    self-help remedy to collect a debt, there is no principled difference between the
    agreement the State of New Jersey required welfare recipients to sign and the
    Revolving Credit Plan Agreement the Credit Union required Mrs. Tom to sign:
    Both were, in effect, contracts of adhesion that creditors attempted to use to get
    their hands on Social Security payments.
    We can see no reason why Congress would, on the one hand, choose to
    protect Social Security beneficiaries from creditors who utilized the judicial
    system, a system that is built upon principles of fairness and protection of the
    rights of litigants, yet, on the other hand, leave such beneficiaries exposed to
    creditors who devised their own extra-judicial methods of collecting debts.           See
    Crawford v. Gould , 
    56 F.3d 1162
    , 1166 (9th Cir. 1995) (rejecting a bank’s
    argument that setoff is outside the purview of § 407 and stating that such a
    “cramped reading of § 407 . . . would enable [creditors] to obtain Social Security
    benefits through procedures that afford less protection than judicial process
    affords”); but cf. Frazier v. Marine Midland Bank, N.A.        , 
    702 F. Supp. 1000
    , 1003
    (holding that setoff is not within § 407's definition of “legal process”);    In re
    Gillespie , 
    41 B.R. 810
    , 812 (Bankr. D. Colo. 1984) (same). Such a construction
    of § 407 would run contrary to both logic and the spirit underlying the Social
    Security Act. See Helvering v. Davis , 
    301 U.S. 619
    , 641 (1937) (“The hope
    6
    behind [the Social Security Act] is to save men and women from the rigors of the
    poor house as well as from the haunting fear that such a lot awaits them when the
    journey’s end is near.”). Moreover, if the Supreme Court did not see fit to carve
    an exception to § 407 where an important public interest–a state’s need to defray
    the costs of supporting indigent individuals–was at stake, we will not create an
    exception that would, for the most part, serve very private interests–banks’
    desires to cut their bad-debt losses.   See also Bennett v. Arkansas , 
    485 U.S. 395
    ,
    397-98 (1988) (per curiam) (rejecting Arkansas’s argument that § 407 contained
    an implied exception that would allow it to recover Social Security payments to
    prisoners in order to help offset the costs of imprisonment).
    Although the Credit Union emphasizes that courts have previously
    acknowledged banks’ common-law right to setoff,       see, e.g. , United States v.
    Butterworth-Judson Corp. , 
    267 U.S. 387
    , 394-95 (1925), this fact is of no import
    here. As the California Supreme Court recognized, the “right to setoff is not
    absolute.” Kruger v. Wells Fargo Bank , 
    521 P.2d 441
    , 450 (Cal. 1974). In
    Kruger , a bank attempted to exercise its common-law right to setoff against state
    disability and unemployment payments that a beneficiary had deposited in her
    account. Although a pair of California statutes exempted such funds from
    “attachment” and “execution,”      see Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 690.175 (superseded
    1987); Cal. Unemp. Ins. Code § 1342 (amended 1983), the bank contended that
    7
    setoff, as a common-law self-help remedy, was outside the purview of the
    statutes. The court, though, thought otherwise:
    Although the banker’s setoff differs from attachment and execution
    in that it does not require the aid of a state official, there is no
    relevant difference between the two procedures as to the state
    objective of protection of unemployment compensation and disability
    benefits from claims of creditors. The assertion of a banker’s setoff
    has exactly the same effect as a third party’s levy of execution on the
    account–it deprives the depositor of the income which the state
    provided him to meet subsistence expenses, compelling the state
    either to give him additional money or leave him without means of
    physical 
    survival. 521 P.2d at 452-53
    . We find this reasoning persuasive.
    The Credit Union also stresses the fact that setoff is a remedy that
    originated in equity rather than in law.    See Banco Central De Reserva v. Riggs
    Nat’l Bank , 
    919 F. Supp. 13
    , 17 (D.D.C. 1994). In light of Congress’s clear and
    compelling desire to protect retirees’ incomes,    see Bennett , 485 U.S. at 398, we
    find it highly implausible that Congress intended for the availability of such
    protection to hinge on the subtle distinction between law and equity, a distinction
    that can elude even the most capable of attorneys. Furthermore, the Credit Union
    has failed to explain why this hoary distinction   should govern the resolution of
    this question. Thus, we conclude that the equitable origins of setoff are of no
    consequence to our analysis under § 407.
    Finally, the Credit Union argues that without the availability of setoff, it
    and other financial institutions will no longer be able to afford to make loans to
    8
    many Social Security recipients. However, Social Security funds were never
    intended to serve as collateral for cars or homes in the first place; they were
    intended to provide the elderly with a means of subsistence.   See Act of Dec. 20,
    1977, Pub. L. No. 95-216, 1977 U.S.C.C.A.N. (95 Stat.) 4160 (“It has long been
    recognized that the primary objective of the social security program [is]
    preventing dependency.”). It is up to Congress, not us, to decide that such funds
    should be made available for things other than basic subsistence needs.
    When Congress enacted § 407, it intended to exempt Social Security funds
    from all creditors, regardless of whether they attempted to reach those funds by
    way of the court system or by way of self-help remedies. We thus hold that setoff
    constitutes “other legal process” under § 407 and that the Credit Union violated
    this section when it seized Mrs. Tom’s Social Security payments. Accordingly,
    we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Mrs. Tom on her
    Social Security Act claim.
    Count II: Civil Service Retirement Act (5 U.S.C. § 8346       )
    The district court also held that the Credit Union’s seizure of Mrs. Tom’s
    Civil Service pension payments violated § 8346 of the Civil Service Retirement
    Act. That section provides that “[t]he money mentioned by this subchapter is not
    9
    assignable, either in law or equity, . . . or subject to execution, levy, attachment,
    garnishment, or other legal process.” 5 U.S.C. § 8346(a). Our analysis in the
    foregoing section largely forecloses the Credit Union’s argument that it did not
    also violate the Civil Service Retirement Act when it seized the funds in Mrs.
    Tom’s account.    However, there is one distinction between the Social Security
    Act and the Civil Service Retirement Act that merits a brief discussion.
    The Social Security Act’s anti-assignment provision explicitly protects all
    “moneys paid or payable,” 42 U.S.C. § 407(a), thus making clear that its aegis
    extends not only to the future right to receive payments but also to any payments
    that a beneficiary has already received. The Civil Service Retirement Act, though,
    exempts only “[t]he money mentioned by this subchapter.” 5 U.S.C. § 8346(a).
    The Credit Union, seizing on the absence of the “paid or payable” language found
    in § 407, contends that the Civil Service Retirement Act, unlike the Social Security
    Act, does not protect funds that beneficiaries have already received.     See In re
    Prestien , 
    427 F. Supp. 1003
    , 1008 (S.D. Fla. 1977) (holding that § 8346 “exempts
    only future pension amounts and not those already paid and accumulated”);        In re
    Estate of McGreevy , 
    286 A.2d 355
    , 356-57 (Pa. 1971) (same).
    The Supreme Court has held that Social Security benefits, even when
    converted to “funds on deposit [that] [a]re readily withdrawable[,] retain[] the
    quality of ‘moneys’ within the purview of § 407.”       Philpott , 409 U.S. at 416. Both
    10
    § 407 and § 8346 are designed to guard the elderly from creditors who would
    separate them–through whatever means–from the money that they need to survive.
    Although not as precisely drafted as § 407, the broad language of § 8346 offers no
    hint that its protections are any narrower than those afforded to Social Security
    payments or that Congress intended to treat future payments any differently than
    payments already received. Moreover, the Credit Union fails to offer any rationale
    that would justify treating Civil Service pension payments any differently than
    Social Security payments. Accordingly, we conclude that § 8346, like § 407,
    protects both a beneficiary’s right to receive future pension payments and any such
    payments that she has already received.   See Waggoner v. Games Sales Co. , 
    702 S.W.2d 808
    (Ark. 1986) (reaching same conclusion);    State of Missouri ex rel.
    Nixon v. McClure , 
    1998 WL 261107
    (Mo. Ct. App. May 26, 1998) (same);        Joseph
    v. Giacalone , 
    637 N.Y.S.2d 391
    (N.Y. App. Div. 1996) (same);    Sears, Roebuck
    and Co. v. Harris , 
    854 P.2d 921
    (Okla. Ct. App. 1993) (same).
    In sum, because the Civil Service pension benefits that Mrs. Tom deposited
    in her Credit Union account retained the quality of “money[s]” within the purview
    of § 8346 and because we have already held that setoff constitutes “other legal
    process,” from which such funds are protected, we affirm the district court’s grant
    of summary judgment to Mrs. Tom on her Civil Service Retirement Act claim.
    Count III: Breach of Contract
    11
    The district court also granted summary judgment to Mrs. Tom on her
    breach of contract claim. However, there is no evidence in the record that Mrs.
    Tom ever raised this claim in her motion for summary judgment. Although Mrs.
    Tom points to both her motion for summary judgment and her brief in support
    thereof in attempt to demonstrate that she did, in fact, raise this argument on
    summary judgment, neither of those documents mention her contract claim. In
    fact, in the section of her brief to which she directs our attention, Mrs. Tom even
    acknowledges that the Credit Union enjoyed a “legitimate contractual right to
    setoff.” Aplt’s App. at 33.
    It is axiomatic that an appellate court generally “will not consider an issue
    raised for the first time on appeal.”   Hicks v. Gates Rubber Co. , 
    928 F.2d 966
    , 970
    (10th Cir. 1991). When Mrs. Tom failed to raise her contract claim in her
    summary judgment motion or brief, the Credit Union was entitled to presume that
    she had abandoned this claim. The fact that the district court may have sua sponte
    ruled on the contract claim is of no consequence; the Credit Union never had an
    opportunity to present any argument regarding this claim.
    Furthermore, even had Mrs. Tom raised this issue on summary judgment, the
    record contains no evidence supporting the district court’s judgment. In her brief,
    Mrs. Tom asserts that when she “requested that [the Credit Union] return her
    funds, [it] was contractually obligated to do so.” Aple’s Brief at 30. However,
    12
    neither Mrs. Tom nor the district court identifies any contract that might have
    given rise to such a duty. The Revolving Credit Plan Agreement is the only
    contract contained in the record before us, and Mrs. Tom has failed to identify any
    actions of the Credit Union that ran afoul of that Agreement. And while we agree
    with Mrs. Tom that our holding with respect to Counts I and II of her complaint
    voids the setoff provisions of the Agreement,    see Capo v. Century Life Ins. Co. ,
    
    610 P.2d 1202
    , 1207 (N.M. 1980), this conclusion in no way compels a holding
    that the Credit Union breached the remainder of the Agreement.
    In order to prevail on her contract claim, Mrs. Tom needed to do two things:
    (1) come forward with a contract (such as a depository agreement) that required
    the Credit Union to return her funds to her upon request and (2) raise this
    argument in her summary judgment motion. However, because she did neither, we
    reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Mrs. Tom on her breach
    of contract claim.
    CONCLUSION
    We hereby AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Mrs.
    Tom on her claims that the Credit Union violated the Social Security and Civil
    Service Retirement Acts (Counts I and II), REVERSE the grant of summary
    judgment to Mrs. Tom on her breach of contract claim (Count III), and REMAND
    this case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
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