Pollice v. Natl Tax Funding , 225 F.3d 379 ( 2000 )


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  •                                                                                                                            Opinions of the United
    2000 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    8-29-2000
    Pollice v. Natl Tax Funding
    Precedential or Non-Precedential:
    Docket 99-3856
    Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2000
    Recommended Citation
    "Pollice v. Natl Tax Funding" (2000). 2000 Decisions. Paper 182.
    http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2000/182
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    Filed August 29, 2000
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    Nos. 99-3856, 99-3857, 99-4049,
    99-3858, 99-3859 and 99-3998
    TITO POLLICE; VIOLET POLLICE, individually and on
    behalf of all others similarly situated; LINDA MANSFIELD,
    Appellants in No. 99-3856
    v.
    NATIONAL TAX FUNDING, L.P.;
    CAPITAL ASSET RESEARCH CORPORATION, LTD.
    TITO POLLICE; VIOLET POLLICE, individually and on
    behalf of all others similarly situated; LINDA MANSFIELD,
    v.
    NATIONAL TAX FUNDING, L.P.;
    CAPITAL ASSET RESEARCH CORPORATION, LTD.
    Appellants in No. 99-3857
    TITO POLLICE; VIOLET POLLICE, individually and on
    behalf of all others similarly situated; LINDA MANSFIELD,
    Appellants in No. 99-4049
    v.
    NATIONAL TAX FUNDING, L.P.;
    CAPITAL ASSET RESEARCH CORPORATION, LTD.
    GLADYS HOUCK; MARIE DEMITRAS; BRAGETTE
    PARKER; MARY WALSH, on their own behalf and on
    behalf of all others similarly situated; MARY TABB,
    Appellants in No. 99-3858
    v.
    CAPITAL ASSET RESEARCH CORP., LTD.;
    NATIONAL TAX FUNDING, L.P.;
    CAPITAL ASSET HOLDINGS GP INC.
    GLADYS HOUCK; MARIE DEMITRAS; BRAGETTE
    PARKER; MARY WALSH, on their own behalf and on
    behalf of all others similarly situated; MARY TABB,
    v.
    CAPITAL ASSET RESEARCH CORP., LTD.;
    NATIONAL TAX FUNDING, L.P.;
    CAPITAL ASSET HOLDINGS GP INC.
    Appellants in No. 99-3859
    GLADYS HOUCK; MARIE DEMITRAS; BRAGETTE
    PARKER; MARY WALSH, on their own behalf and on
    behalf of all others similarly situated; MARY TABB,
    Appellants in No. 99-3998
    v.
    CAPITAL ASSET RESEARCH CORP., LTD.;
    NATIONAL TAX FUNDING, L.P.;
    CAPITAL ASSET HOLDINGS GP INC.
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Pennsylvania
    (D.C. Civ. Nos. 98-00813 and 98-00850)
    District Judge: Honorable Donald E. Ziegler
    2
    * Honorable Louis F. Oberdorfer, Senior Judge of the United States
    District Court for the District of Columbia, sitting by designation.
    Argued: June 22, 2000
    BEFORE: BARRY and GREENBERG, Circuit Judges, and
    OBERDORFER,* District Judge
    (Filed: August 29, 2000)
    Michael P. Malakoff
    Rudy A. Fabian (argued)
    Malakoff Doyle & Finberg, P.C.
    Suite 200--The Frick Building
    Pittsburgh, PA 15219
    Bernard S. Rubb
    434 Oliver Road
    Sewickley, PA 15143
    Attorneys for Appellants and
    Cross-Appellees Tito Pollice,
    Violet Pollice and Linda Mansfield,
    individually and on behalf of all
    others similarly situated
    Donald Driscoll (argued)
    Laurence Norton
    Community Justice Project
    1705 Allegheny Building
    429 Forbes Avenue
    Pittsburgh, PA 15222
    Attorneys for Appellants and
    Cross-Appellees Gladys Houck,
    Marie Demitras, Bragette Parker,
    Mary Walsh and Mary Tabb, on
    their own behalf and on behalf of
    all others similarly situated
    3
    Robert L. Byer (argued)
    Terry Budd
    David M. Aceto
    Joseph R. Gette
    Kirkpatrick & Lockhart LLP
    Henry W. Oliver Building
    535 Smithfield Street
    Pittsburgh, PA 15222
    Attorneys for Appellees and
    Cross-Appellants Capital Asset
    Research Corp., Ltd., National Tax
    Funding, L.P. and Capital Asset
    Holdings GP Inc.
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    GREENBERG, Circuit Judge.
    These appeals present certified questions arising from
    two actions, Pollice v. National Tax Funding, L.P. et al. and
    Houck v. Capital Asset Research Corp., Ltd. et al. , which
    have been consolidated before the district court for pretrial
    purposes. The subject matter of both actions concerns the
    assignment of delinquent municipal tax and utility claims
    to defendant National Tax Funding, L.P. ("NTF "). We set
    forth the relevant factual and procedural background
    below.
    I. BACKGROUND
    For years, the City of Pittsburgh ("City"), the School
    District of Pittsburgh ("School District"), and the Pittsburgh
    Water and Sewer Authority ("PWSA") (collectively, the
    "government entities") accumulated a backlog of thousands
    of claims against homeowners who did not fully pay their
    property taxes or water or sewer bills. In order to eliminate
    this backlog, the government entities decided to sell the
    claims and the liens arising therefrom to NTF, which is in
    the business of purchasing such delinquent claims from
    municipalities in several states. App. at 135, 514. 1 In
    _________________________________________________________________
    1. Appendix references are to the appendix filed in Nos. 99-3858 and 99-
    3859.
    4
    September 1996, the City and the School District entered
    into a Purchase Agreement whereby existing claims and
    liens for unpaid taxes and sewer charges were assigned to
    NTF.2 App. at 517. The Purchase Agreement also called for
    the City and the School District to sell NTF subsequent
    claims for the years 1996, 1997 and 1998. Under the
    agreement, the City and the School District retained the
    right to service the claims, and accordingly they entered
    into a Servicing Agreement with Capital Asset Research
    Corp., Ltd. ("CARC")3 pursuant to which CARC was to
    collect the claims for the benefit of NTF. App. at 859. The
    Servicing Agreement allowed the City and the School
    District to retain some measure of control over CARC's
    collection activities; for example, the agreement required
    CARC to make monthly reports to the City and the School
    District and it required CARC to offer homeowners
    "payment plans" having particular terms.
    In April 1997, NTF entered into a similar Purchase
    Agreement with PWSA involving the assignment of unpaid
    water claims. App. at 886. Like the agreement with the City
    and the School District, the PWSA Purchase Agreement
    called for the assignment of not only existing claims but
    also future claims. Under the agreement, PWSA retained
    the right to service the claims, and it entered into a
    Servicing Agreement with CARC similar to the agreement
    between CARC and the City and School District. App. at
    1099.
    CARC then set about contacting homeowners in order to
    collect on the delinquent claims. According to defendants,
    NTF, through CARC, has endeavored to collect from the
    homeowners the same interest and penalties on the claims
    which the government entities collect under applicable local
    law. See app. at 139, 1141, 1146, 1151, 1196, 1198, 1221-
    23. Specifically, a City ordinance provides for a twelve
    percent annual rate of interest on unpaid property taxes,
    along with a one-half percent per month penalty. App. at
    _________________________________________________________________
    2. The sewer claims had been assigned to the City by the Allegheny
    County Sanitary Authority.
    3. Like NTF, CARC is a limited partnership. Both partnerships share a
    common general partner, Capital Asset Holdings GP Inc. App. at 1355.
    5
    1385. Another ordinance provides for a twelve percent
    annual rate of interest on claims for unpaid sewer charges
    assigned by the Allegheny County Sanitary Authority
    ("ALCOSAN") to the City, along with a one-timefive percent
    penalty. App. at 1128. In addition, a PWSA resolution calls
    for interest at the rate of one-half percent per month and
    penalty at the rate of one percent per month on unpaid
    water and sewer charges. App. at 1119. At approximately
    the same time as the 1996 assignment, the City amended
    the ordinance regarding unpaid property taxes so as to
    permit interest and penalties to be compounded on a
    monthly basis. See app. at 444, 471-72, 487, 492-93, 502,
    506-07.4
    In response to CARC's collection efforts, some
    homeowners entered into payment plans permitting them to
    pay their debts--together with interest and penalty--over a
    period of time ranging from six to twenty-four months.
    Others paid the claims in full immediately.
    On April 17, 1998, Gladys Houck and others (the"Houck
    plaintiffs") filed suit against NTF, CARC and Capital Asset
    Holdings GP Inc. ("CAH"), the general partner in NFT and
    CARC, in the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County.
    The action was removed to the district court on May 14,
    1998. App. at 49. The complaint, as amended, asserted
    claims on behalf of homeowners under the United States
    and Pennsylvania Constitutions, the Pennsylvania Second
    Class City Treasurer's Sale and Tax Collection Act, the
    Pennsylvania Unfair Trade Practices and Consumer
    Protection Law ("UTP/CPL"), the Pennsylvania Loan Interest
    Protection Law ("LIPL"), the federal Fair Debt Collection
    Practices Act ("FDCPA"), and the Pennsylvania Municipal
    Claims and Tax Liens Law. App. at 107-20. On May 8,
    1998, Tito Pollice and others (the "Pollice plaintiffs") filed an
    action on behalf of property owners against NTF and CARC
    _________________________________________________________________
    4. The Houck plaintiffs contend that "[a]t least to an extent, the rates
    and other charges imposed by Creditors [defendants] exceeded those
    which the municipal entities . . . claimed authority to charge and had in
    fact charged." See br. of appellants/cross-appellees in Nos. 99-3858 and
    99-3859 at 9. Nevertheless, for purposes of this opinion, we will assume
    that NTF in fact has charged the same interest and penalties as the local
    ordinances and resolution authorize the government entities to charge.
    6
    in the district court asserting claims under the FDCPA and
    the federal Truth-in-Lending Act ("TILA"), along with claims
    for unjust enrichment and fraud. App. at 79-96. The
    central allegation in both cases, as relevant to these
    appeals, is that NTF, through CARC, has collected
    unlawfully high interest and penalties on the assigned
    claims.5 We will at times refer to the Houck plaintiffs and
    the Pollice plaintiffs as "homeowners" or"plaintiffs,"
    collectively, even though the Pollice class includes property
    owners who are not homeowners, and we will at times refer
    to NTF, CARC and CAH as "defendants," collectively.
    On July 20, 1998, the district court consolidated the
    Pollice and Houck matters for pretrial purposes. Defendants
    then moved for summary judgment on all claims in both
    actions, app. at 134-44, while the Houck plaintiffs moved
    for summary judgment on their FDCPA, UTP/CPL and LIPL
    claims.6 The district court ruled on the motions in an
    opinion and order dated July 29, 1999 and entered August
    2, 1999. See Pollice v. National Tax Funding, L.P., 59 F.
    Supp.2d 474 (W.D. Pa. 1999). Relying on the recent
    decision of the Commonwealth Court in Maierhoffer v. GLS
    Capital, Inc., 
    730 A.2d 547
    (Pa. Commw. Ct. 1999), appeal
    denied, 
    749 A.2d 473
    (Pa. 2000), the district court
    indicated that the claims and liens in fact could be
    assigned to NTF under Pennsylvania law. See Pollice, 59 F.
    Supp.2d at 477 n.3. The court further indicated that NTF,
    as assignee of the government entities, is subject to a
    statutory provision permitting the collection of interest on
    municipal tax and utility claims at a rate not to exceed ten
    percent per year. See Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 53, S 7143. The
    court rejected the argument that the City's status as a
    home rule municipality conferred the authority to pass
    _________________________________________________________________
    5. The Houck action has been brought on behalf of owner-occupants of
    homes in Pittsburgh. The Pollice class is broader, involving all owners of
    real property in Pittsburgh subject to the assigned claims and liens. See
    oral arg. tr. at 5; app. at 81-82, 110. The Houck class thus is subsumed
    within the Pollice class.
    6. On October 30, 1998, the district court approved a partial settlement
    in the Houck action relating to plaintiffs' constitutional claims and
    their
    claim under the Second Class City Treasurer's Sale and Tax Collection
    Act. See 
    Pollice, 59 F. Supp. 2d at 477
    n.2.
    7
    ordinances setting higher rates on the claims. See 
    Pollice, 59 F. Supp. 2d at 478
    .
    The court then addressed the merits of the homeowners'
    claims in light of its conclusion that NTF is subject to the
    ten percent interest cap. The court held that the Houck
    plaintiffs cannot recover excess interest paid under the LIPL
    because they have not paid interest as consideration for the
    "loan or use of money." In this regard, the court construed
    the term "use of money" in the LIPL to mean an agreement
    by a creditor to forbear from immediate action to collect a
    debt. The court indicated that the payment plans offered by
    defendants constitute such a forbearance, but it
    nevertheless concluded that those homeowners who entered
    into plans cannot recover because they have not paid any
    additional interest or penalties as consideration for this
    forbearance. See 
    id. at 482-83.
    The court then turned to the FDCPA claims (raised by
    both sets of plaintiffs). Defendants argued (1) that the
    water, sewer and tax obligations do not constitute"debts"
    under the FDCPA, (2) that NTF, CAH and CARC are not
    "debt collectors," (3) that defendants have not violated the
    substantive provisions of the FDCPA, and (4) that
    defendants in any event are protected by the FDCPA's
    "bona fide error" exclusion. See 
    id. at 484-85.
    The court
    dismissed the claims of both sets of plaintiffs as against
    NTF and CAH and with respect to defendants' conduct in
    collecting the tax claims. The court held that NTF and CAH
    are not "debt collectors" under the FDCPA because "they
    are not in the business of collecting debts and do not in
    fact collect debts." 
    Id. at 486.
    By contrast, the court
    concluded that CARC is a "debt collector" subject to liability
    under the statute and that CARC does not fall within a
    provision exempting government officers or employees.
    Relying on our decision in Staub v. Harris, 
    626 F.2d 275
    (3d Cir. 1980), the court further held that the water and
    sewer obligations constitute "debts" for purposes of the
    FDCPA but that the tax obligations do not. See 
    Pollice, 59 F. Supp. 2d at 485
    . The court then indicated that CARC has
    acted in violation of the FDCPA by seeking to collect rates
    of interest and penalties for the water and sewer claims in
    excess of that authorized by state law. See 
    id. Finally, the
    8
    court found material questions of fact regarding the"bona
    fide error" defense, and it denied the Houck plaintiffs'
    motion for summary judgment. See 
    id. at 486-87.
    With respect to the Pollice plaintiffs' TILA claim,
    defendants argued (1) that NTF and CARC are not
    "creditors" under TILA, (2) that TILA's public utility
    exemption is applicable with respect to the water and sewer
    claims, and (3) that no "consumer credit transactions"
    within the meaning of TILA ever took place. The court
    granted summary judgment in favor of CARC and
    additionally dismissed the claim with respect to defendants'
    conduct relating to the tax obligations. The court indicated
    that NTF acted as a "creditor" under TILA by entering into
    payment plans with homeowners, but it concluded that
    CARC is not a "creditor" because "it is merely an agent,
    rather than the entity to which the debts are payable." 
    Id. at 488
    n.14. Influenced again by Staub, the court indicated
    that the payment plans constitute "consumer credit
    transactions" under TILA, but only with respect to the
    water and sewer claims and not the tax claims. See 
    id. at 490-91.
    The court further held that TILA's public utility
    exemption is inapplicable. See 
    id. at 489-90.
    Finally, the district court granted summary judgment in
    favor of defendants with respect to the Pollice plaintiffs'
    unjust enrichment claim. In the district court's view, this
    claim is "largely dependant on the argument that the
    original owners of the liens and claims [the government
    entities] could not assign their right to charge higher
    interest and penalties to National Tax." 
    Id. at 491.
    The
    court rejected this argument in light of Maierhoffer, and
    thus it dismissed the unjust enrichment claim.7 See 
    id. The Pollice
    and Houck plaintiffs subsequently moved to
    alter or amend the July 29, 1999 judgment, but the district
    court denied their motions in orders dated September 20,
    1999 and entered September 21, 1999. The district court
    then modified the July 29 and September 20 orders to
    _________________________________________________________________
    7. In addition, the court dismissed the Houck plaintiffs' UTP/CPL claim
    and the Pollice plaintiffs' fraud claim. These rulings are not challenged
    on appeal.
    9
    certify various questions for appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
    S 1292(b). We granted petitions for permission to appeal.
    II. JURISDICTION and STANDARD OF REVIEW
    The district court had jurisdiction over both actions
    pursuant to 28 U.S.C. SS 1331 and 1367. We have
    jurisdiction over these appeals pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
    S 1292(b). " `As the text of S 1292(b) indicates, appellate
    jurisdiction applies to the order certified to the court of
    appeals, and is not tied to the particular question
    formulated by the district court.' " Abdullah v. American
    Airlines, Inc., 
    181 F.3d 363
    , 366 (3d Cir. 1999) (quoting
    Yamaha Motor Corp. v. Calhoun, 
    516 U.S. 199
    , 205, 
    116 S. Ct. 619
    , 623 (1996)). We may address "any issue fairly
    included within the certified order because it is the order
    that is appealable, and not the controlling question
    identified by the district court." 
    Id. (citation omitted).
    Our
    standard of review in this appeal involving only questions of
    law is plenary. 
    Id. III. DISCUSSION
    A. State Law Issues
    We are called upon to determine whether the district
    court erred in its disposition of the LIPL and unjust
    enrichment claims. Before doing so, we must address two
    preliminary questions of Pennsylvania law: (1) the
    assignability of governmental rights relating to tax and
    utility claims and liens, and (2) the applicability of the ten
    percent interest provision under Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 53,
    S 7143.
    1. Assignability
    Homeowners argue that governmental rights relating to
    tax and utility claims and liens may not be assigned to
    private entities under Pennsylvania law. As the district
    court correctly noted, however, the Pennsylvania
    Commonwealth Court recently held that municipal claims
    and the liens arising therefrom are assignable to private
    entities under a provision of the Municipal Claims and Tax
    Liens Law, Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 53, S 7147. See Maierhoffer,
    
    10 730 A.2d at 549-51
    ("[U]nder [section 7147], a municipality
    may assign any claim, tax or municipal, to a party that is
    a stranger to the original transaction . . . ."). Section 7147
    provides in pertinent part:
    Any claim filed or to be filed, under the provisions of
    this act, and any judgment recovered thereon, may be
    assigned or transferred to a third party, either
    absolutely or as collateral security, and such assignee
    shall have all the rights of the original holder thereof.8
    Homeowners argue that Maierhoffer is contrary to prior
    decisions of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court and therefore
    we should not follow it. In addition, they request that we
    certify this issue to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. The
    Supreme Court, however, denied a petition for allowance of
    appeal in Maierhoffer on January 20, 2000. See 
    749 A.2d 473
    (Pa. 2000). Accordingly, we believe that the Supreme
    _________________________________________________________________
    8. The term "tax claim" is defined as"the claim filed to recover taxes."
    Pa.
    Stat. Ann. tit. 53, S 7101. The term "municipal claim" is defined as
    follows:
    (1) the claim arising out of, or resulting from, a tax assessed,
    service
    supplied, work done, or improvement authorized and undertaken, by
    a municipality, although the amount thereof be not at the time
    definitely ascertained by the authority authorized to determine the
    same, and a lien therefor be not filed, but becomes filable within
    the
    period and in the manner herein provided, (2) the claim filed to
    recover for the grading, guttering, macadamizing, or otherwise
    improving, the cartways of any public highway; for grading,
    curbing,
    recurbing, paving, repaving, constructing, or repairing the
    footways
    thereof; for laying water pipes, gas pipes, culverts, sewers,
    branch
    sewers, or sewer connections therein; for assessment for benefits
    in
    the opening, widening or vacation thereof; or in the changing of
    water-courses or the construction of sewers through private lands;
    or in the highways of townships of the first class; or in the
    acquisition of sewers and drains constructed and owned by
    individuals or corporations, and of rights in and to use the same;
    for
    the removal of nuisances; or for water rates, lighting rates, or
    sewer
    rates, and (3) the claim filed to recover for work, material, and
    services rendered or furnished in the construction, improvement,
    maintenance, and operation of a project or projects of a body
    politic
    or corporate created as a Municipal Authority pursuant to law.
    
    Id. (emphasis added)
    11
    Court would not accept certification of this issue and thus
    we will not certify the question and delay these proceedings.9
    We have reviewed Maierhoffer carefully and have concluded
    that it was decided correctly. Thus, we follow Maierhoffer in
    concluding that the government entities had the power to
    assign their rights relating to the tax, water and sewer
    claims and liens to NTF, and that NTF as assignee thereby
    stands in the shoes of the government entities with respect
    to these claims and liens. Therefore, NTF is entitled to
    collect interest and penalties on the assigned claims to the
    same extent as the government entities are entitled under
    relevant state and local law.
    2. Applicability of ten percent interest provision
    Homeowners contend that the combined interest and
    penalty charges imposed by NTF on the assigned claims are
    unlawful under the Municipal Claims and Tax Liens Law.
    Section 7143 which is a provision of that law reads in
    pertinent part:
    Interest as determined by the municipality at a rate not
    to exceed ten per cent per annum shall be collectible on
    all municipal claims from the date of the completion of
    the work after it is filed as a lien, and on claims for
    taxes, water rents or rates, lighting rates, or sewer
    rates from the date of the filing of the lien therefor.
    Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 53, S 7143 (emphasis added).10
    Like the district court, we conclude that NTF, as assignee
    of claims belonging to the government entities, is subject to
    section 7143. The plain language of section 7143 permits
    the collection of interest on a municipality's claim for taxes,
    _________________________________________________________________
    9. The decision to allow an appeal from the Commonwealth Court -- like
    the decision to accept a certification petition from a federal court -- is
    a
    matter of the Supreme Court's discretion. See Pa. R. App. P. 1114.
    10. The term "taxes" is defined as "any county, city, borough,
    incorporated town, township, school, bridge, road, or poor taxes." Pa.
    Stat. Ann. tit. 53, S 7101. The term "municipality" is defined as "any
    county, city, borough, incorporated town, township, school district,
    county institution district, and a body politic and corporate created as a
    Municipal Authority pursuant to law." 
    Id. 12 water
    rents or rates, or sewer rates,11 but the rate is limited
    to ten percent per annum. The term "municipality" includes
    not only cities, but also school districts and municipal
    authorities. See Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 53,S 7101. Thus, NTF,
    as assignee of the City, the School District, and the PWSA,
    is entitled to collect interest on the assigned claims up to
    this ten percent cap. See Horbal v. Moxham Nat'l Bank, 
    697 A.2d 577
    , 583 (Pa. 1997) ("Under the law of assignment,
    the assignee succeeds to no greater rights than those
    possessed by the assignor."). There can be no dispute that
    NTF has exceeded the cap.
    Defendants argue that the City, as a home rule
    municipality, acted within its power in passing the
    ordinances setting the interest and penalty rates at issue
    here. Yet, it is clear that under the Home Rule Charter and
    Optional Plans Law (the "Home Rule Law") a home rule
    municipality may not act in contravention of state laws
    applicable to municipalities. Under the Home Rule Law, "[a]
    municipality which has adopted a home rule charter may
    exercise any powers and perform any function not denied
    by the Constitution of Pennsylvania, by statute or by its
    home rule charter." 53 Pa. Cons. Stat. Ann. S 2961.
    Further, the Home Rule Law provides that, "[w]ith respect
    to the following subjects, the home rule charter shall not
    give any power or authority to the municipality contrary to,
    or in limitation or enlargement of, powers granted by
    _________________________________________________________________
    11. In City of Philadelphia v. Holley, 
    220 A.2d 396
    (Pa. Super. Ct. 1966),
    the court construed the term "rents or rates" as used in section 7143:
    The words `rents or rates' are not defined by the act and must be
    given their plain everyday meaning. Webster's Third New
    International Dictionary defines a `rate' as`a charge per unit of a
    public-service commodity (as electricity, gas, water)', and defines
    `water rate' or `water rent' as `a rate or tax for supply of
    water'. To
    the average householder, his water rent or rate means either a flat
    charge for the water furnished him or a charge for each unit of
    water coming into his home. He understands his gas and electric
    rate the same way. Our Supreme Court gave judicial approval to
    this general usage in Jolly v. Monaca Borough , 
    216 Pa. 345
    , 
    65 A. 809
    (1907), where the court defined a water rate as the price paid
    for water as a commodity.
    
    Id. at 398
    (citations omitted).
    13
    statutes which are applicable to a class or classes of
    municipalities"; among the listed subjects is"[t]he filing and
    collection of municipal tax claims or liens and the sale of
    real or personal property in satisfaction of them." 53 Pa.
    Cons. Stat. Ann. S 2962(a)(1). Clearly, the assessment of
    interest and penalties on delinquent tax obligations falls
    within the scope of "collection of municipal tax claims."
    Another provision of the Home Rule Law states that"[a]
    municipality shall not . . . [e]xercise powers contrary to, or
    in limitation or enlargement of, powers granted by statutes
    which are applicable in every part of this Commonwealth."
    53 Pa. Cons. Stat. Ann. S 2962(c)(2). Based on the clear
    language of the Home Rule Law, we conclude that a home
    rule municipality may not exceed the ten percent interest
    limit set forth in section 7143.
    Defendants argue that the interest and penalty rates set
    by the City with respect to the tax claims are lawful under
    the following provision of the Home Rule Law:
    Establishment of rates of taxation.--No provision of
    this subpart or any other statute shall limit a
    municipality which adopts a home rule charter from
    establishing its own rates of taxation upon all
    authorized subjects of taxation . . . .
    53 Pa. Cons. Stat. Ann. S 2962(i).12 Defendants contend
    that "rate of taxation" includes the rate of interest and
    penalties on delinquent tax obligations. Plaintiffs respond
    that "establishing the rate of taxation is not the same as
    assessing a rate of interest on an already delinquent tax."
    See reply br. of appellants/cross-appellees in Nos. 99-3856
    and 99-3857 at 15.
    _________________________________________________________________
    12. The Home Rule Law defines "rate of taxation" as "[t]he amount of tax
    levied by a municipality on a permissible subject of taxation." 53 Pa.
    Cons. Stat. Ann. S 2902. "Subject of taxation" is defined as follows:
    Any person, business, corporation, partnership, entity, real
    property, . . . personal property, property interest, transaction,
    occurrence, privilege, transfer, occupation or any other levy which
    is
    determined to be taxable by the General Assembly. The term shall
    not be construed to mean the rate of tax which may be imposed on
    a permissible subject of taxation.
    
    Id. 14 Like
    the district court, we agree with plaintiffs that a
    home rule municipality's authority to set "rates of taxation"
    does not include the authority to set interest and penalty
    rates on delinquent taxes. "Rate of taxation" undoubtedly
    means the rate which is applied to the value of property in
    order to determine the amount of the tax owed; its plain
    meaning does not include the rate of interest or penalty on
    overdue tax obligations. The rate of interest on tax
    obligations is directly governed by Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 53,
    S 7143, which expressly limits "[i]nterest" on "claims for
    taxes."
    Finally, defendants argue that the interest and penalty
    rates on water and sewer claims set by the PWSA resolution
    do not violate section 7143 because the annual rate of
    "interest" under the resolution is less than ten percent. As
    stated, under the resolution, the "interest" charge is one-
    half percent per month while the "penalty" charge is one
    percent per month. App. at 1119. Defendants argue that
    section 7143 by its terms limits only the rate of"interest"
    and not the rate of "penalty."13 The district court rejected
    defendants' argument, finding that "this distinction
    [between interest and penalty] rings hollow when applied to
    the instant set of facts." 
    Pollice, 59 F. Supp. 2d at 479
    . The
    court stated that no municipality "may evade the
    requirements of the Municipal Claims Act [section 7143] by
    converting interest in excess of that which is statutorily
    authorized to a `penalty.' " 
    Id. We agree
    with the district
    court's reasoning. There appears to be no actual distinction
    between the monthly "interest" charge and the monthly
    "penalty" charge under the PWSA resolution; indeed, there
    would be no practical difference if the one percent"penalty"
    rate were labeled an "interest" rate and the one-half percent
    "interest" rate were labeled a "penalty" rate.
    In attempting to draw a valid distinction between
    "interest" and "penalty," defendants argue that the former
    _________________________________________________________________
    13. This argument is applicable only to the rates set by the PWSA
    resolution. Under the City ordinances applicable to unpaid property
    taxes and unpaid sewer claims assigned to the City by ALCOSAN, the
    rate of "interest" is twelve percent annually, leaving aside the
    "penalty."
    See app. at 1128, 1385.
    15
    "compensates the government for the lost time-value" of
    unpaid obligations, while the latter "does not necessarily
    compensate the government for the lost value of money,
    and generally imposes an added cost on the delinquent
    party as punishment for noncompliance with the law." Br.
    of appellees in No. 99-3998 at 40-41. We, however,find this
    distinction to be artificial and thus we agree with the
    district court that a municipality should not be permitted to
    avoid the ten percent limit by arbitrarily labeling some
    portion of the monthly charge as "penalty" rather than
    "interest."
    In sum, we conclude that NTF, as assignee of the
    government entities, is subject to section 7143 and that it
    has violated that provision by imposing interest charges on
    the assigned claims in excess of ten percent per annum.
    3. The LIPL claim
    Homeowners seek relief under the Loan Interest
    Protection Law ("LIPL"), Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 41, S 101 et seq.14
    Under that law, "the maximum lawful rate of interest for
    the loan or use of money in an amount of fifty thousand
    dollars ($50,000) or less in all cases where no express
    contract shall have been made for a less rate shall be six
    per cent per annum." Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 41,S 201. The law
    further provides that "[i]f any maximum lawful rate of
    interest provided for in this act is inconsistent with the
    provision of any other act establishing, permitting or
    removing a maximum interest rate . . . then the provision
    _________________________________________________________________
    14. In Appeal No. 99-4049, the Pollice plaintiffs present arguments
    regarding the LIPL. Yet, at the time of the district court's July 29, 1999
    ruling on the motions for summary judgment, only the Houck plaintiffs
    had asserted a claim under the LIPL. The Pollice plaintiffs later amended
    their complaint to add such a claim, but the district court never made
    any disposition of the Pollice plaintiffs' claim. Defendants contend that
    we lack jurisdiction to hear the Pollice plaintiffs' arguments regarding
    the LIPL because the certified orders did not address their LIPL claim.
    We agree that we lack jurisdiction to make any ruling regarding the
    Pollice plaintiffs' LIPL claim. See Zulkowski v. Consolidated Rail Corp.,
    
    852 F.2d 73
    , 75-76 (3d Cir. 1988) (jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. S 1292(b)
    is "limited to a review of the order of the district court").
    Nevertheless, in
    the course of our discussion of the LIPL, we will consider some of the
    points raised in the Pollice plaintiffs' briefs.
    16
    of such other act shall prevail." Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 41, S 604.
    The LIPL provides a cause of action to recover usurious
    interest:
    A person who has paid a rate of interest for the loan or
    use of money at a rate in excess of that provided for by
    this act or otherwise by law or has paid charges
    prohibited or in excess of those allowed by this act or
    otherwise by law may recover triple the amount of such
    excess interest or charges in a suit at law against the
    person who has collected such excess interest or
    charges . . . .
    Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 41, S 502 (emphasis added). Homeowners
    argue that they have "paid [to NTF] a rate of interest for the
    loan or use of money . . . in excess of that provided for . . .
    otherwise by law" because the interest and penalty rates
    exceeded the ten percent limit of Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 53,
    S 7143. Alternatively, homeowners argue that they have
    "paid charges prohibited or in excess of those allowed . . .
    otherwise by law."
    As set forth in the preceding section, we agree with
    plaintiffs' contention that NTF has charged interest and
    penalties at a rate in excess of the ten percent permitted by
    section 7143. The district court nevertheless held that
    homeowners cannot recover under the LIPL because they
    have not paid the interest and penalties as consideration
    "for the loan or use of money." In this regard, the district
    court recognized a distinction between, on the one hand,
    charges imposed on account of a debtor's failure to make
    timely payment of money when due ("detention"), and on
    the other, money received by a creditor as consideration for
    agreeing to refrain from immediately collecting a debt
    ("forbearance"). Relying largely on cases construing usury
    statutes from other jurisdictions, the district court
    indicated that only in the latter situation has there been a
    "use of money" under the LIPL. The court then indicated
    that no forbearance occurred here until NTF, through
    CARC, entered into payment plans with some of the
    homeowners. See 
    Pollice, 59 F. Supp. 2d at 482
    ("[T]he
    terms provided in the payment plans should be read as
    constituting a forbearance under the Pennsylvania usury
    17
    law. A forbearance is widely considered a `use of money' for
    the purposes of usury law.").
    The district court further concluded, however, that even
    those homeowners who have entered into payment plans
    cannot recover under the LIPL. The court reasoned as
    follows:
    [W]e believe that an interest rate beyond that allowed
    by law can only be considered usurious if it exists as
    consideration for the creditor's forbearance.
    While it has been established that the interest rate
    charged by defendants is beyond that allowed under
    Pennsylvania law, and that defendants, through the
    payment plans, are forbearing on collecting the money
    owed, it has not been shown that the rate being
    charged is in any way consideration for this
    forbearance. The facts presented illustrate that
    defendants have received no additional consideration in
    return for the terms offered under the payment plans.
    The interest rate charged for late payment is not
    consideration for the payment plans, but a part of the
    consideration for the original transaction.
    Further, defendants are not charging plaintiffs a rate
    for participating in the plans which is higher than
    plaintiffs would be charged if they did not participate.
    This is therefore not the typical forbearance situation,
    in which the debtor could not pay his or her obligation
    upon its due date and the creditor agreed to extend the
    period of repayment of the debt for additional
    consideration.
    Thus, the facts of this case preclude us fromfinding
    that defendants, by offering the payment plans and
    thus forbearing on the immediate collection of the debt
    owed, modified the original transaction so as to bring
    it within the ambit of the Pennsylvania Loan Interest
    Protection Law.
    
    Id. at 483
    (citations omitted).
    Pennsylvania courts have not specifically addressed
    whether there has been a "loan or use of money" under the
    LIPL in the detention context. Several cases from other
    18
    jurisdictions indicate that usury laws apply only when a
    creditor agrees to take interest in exchange for making a
    loan or promising to forbear from the immediate collection
    of a debt; there is no usury when a creditor simply charges
    a debtor for failure to make timely payment of a debt when
    due. For example, in Smith Machinery Co. v. Jenkins, 
    654 F.2d 693
    (10th Cir. 1981), the court considered a
    promissory note which called for interest at the rate of
    twelve percent to accrue after maturity. 
    Id. at 694.
    Reasoning as follows, the court held that the New Mexico
    usury statute was inapplicable to such postmaturity
    charges:
    In the absence of language in the usury statutes that
    compels a different conclusion, the courts have
    generally held the limitations on interest rates charged
    do not apply to postmaturity charges. The rationale is
    that because postmaturity charges are within the
    debtor's control they are penalties for nonpayment
    rather than charges for the use of money and,
    therefore, they are not affected by usury laws. Such
    charges may be deemed usurious, however, when state
    laws limit interest rates which can be applied on the
    `detention' as well as the use of money.
    N.M.Stat.Ann. S 56-8-9 A (1978) indicates the scope
    of coverage of the usury limits of the New Mexico
    provisions cited above. [The statute provides:] `(N)o
    person, corporation or association, directly or
    indirectly, shall take, reserve, receive or charge any
    interest, discount or other advantage for the loan of
    money or credit or the forbearance or postponement of
    the right to receive money or credit except at the rates
    permitted in Sections 56-8-1 through 56-8-21 NMSA
    1978.'
    All the terms of the statute denote consensual
    agreements between the parties, indicating that a
    withholding or detention by the borrower not consented
    to by the lender is not within the statute's purview. The
    mere fact that the parties have agreed to the rate to be
    paid after the debt is due does not make an
    arrangement a forbearance. In the instant case there
    was no agreement that [the debtor] could defer
    19
    payment after maturity; the situation was a `detention'
    of money rather than a `forbearance' and, as such, we
    do not think the New Mexico courts would hold it is
    covered by the statute.
    
    Id. at 696
    (citations and footnote omitted); see also
    Scientific Prods. v. Cyto Med. Lab., Inc., 
    457 F. Supp. 1373
    ,
    1379 (D. Conn. 1978) ("[I]t does not necessarily follow that
    charges at a rate in excess of that prohibited at the
    inception of a loan are usurious when imposed only on the
    unpaid balance after the loan has matured . . . . Here there
    was no agreement that the [debtor] could defer payment.
    Many cases have held that since charges of this nature are
    within the borrower's control, they are penalties for non-
    payment, rather than charges for the use of money, and,
    therefore, not affected by the usury laws."); Rangen, Inc. v.
    Valley Trout Farms, Inc., 
    658 P.2d 955
    , 960 (Idaho 1983)
    ("[The creditor] was imposing a late charge on accounts in
    arrears . . . . [W]e agree that the usury laws are
    inapplicable to this type of transaction. The charge was a
    valid late charge which could have been avoided if[the
    debtor] had paid its account when due. There was neither
    an express or an implied agreement to forbear or extend the
    time for payment."); Widmark v. Northrup King Co., 
    530 N.W.2d 588
    , 591 (Minn. Ct. App. 1995) ("[W]e conclude that
    the `late charges' assessed by [the creditor] did not
    constitute a usurious rate of interest. [The creditor] never
    actually agreed to forego an immediate action on[the
    debtor's] account if it became overdue in exchange for a late
    charge. Unlike typical credit arrangements, [the creditor]
    did not encourage late payments in order to recover the
    additional charge . . . . Consequently, we hold that there
    was no forbearance here within the meaning of the usury
    laws."); see also 47 C.J.S. Interest & Usury S 122 (1982)
    ("[Usury statutes] apply only to those contracts which in
    substance involve a loan of money or forbearance to collect
    money due, and so, where there is no loan or forbearance,
    there can be no usury . . . . A charge imposed because of
    the late payment of a debt comes within the definition of
    interest under a usury statute only where it is paid as
    20
    consideration for the creditor's forbearance of asserting his
    right of collection.").15
    Of course, cases from other jurisdictions are not
    controlling with respect to the meaning of a Pennsylvania
    statute. Nevertheless, in the absence of Pennsylvania case
    law directly on point, we predict that the Pennsylvania
    Supreme Court would follow the approach taken by these
    other courts. The phrase "paid a rate of interest for the loan
    or use of money" under section 502 of the LIPL implies that
    there is some consensual arrangement between the parties;
    that is, an agreement by the lender or creditor to make a
    loan, or to grant the debtor the "use" of money by
    promising to forebear from taking immediate action to
    collect a debt, in exchange for interest. We believe there has
    been no "loan or use of money" under section 502 when a
    debtor simply detains money which the creditor wishes to
    receive immediately.
    In re Kenin's Trust Estate, 
    23 A.2d 837
    (Pa. 1942),
    supports our conclusion. In that case, a trustee failed to
    make proper delivery of trust proceeds. The Supreme Court
    addressed the question whether "damages for the[trustee's]
    detention of funds" should be measured by the legal rate of
    interest set forth in the Act of May 28, 1858, P.L. 622, a
    predecessor to the current LIPL. 
    Id. at 844.
    As paraphrased
    by the court, P.L. 622 "fix[ed] at 6% the lawful rate of
    interest for the loan or use of money, in all cases where no
    express contract shall have been made for a less rate." 
    Id. at 844
    n.4. The court indicated that the statute was
    inapplicable, and instead held that damages should be
    measured by "what the money so detained would have
    produced if it had been delivered to those entitled to it." See
    
    id. at 844-45.
    The court commented as follows:
    The Act of May 28, 1858, P.L. 622 . . . does not rule
    the question of `damages for detention'. The word `use'
    _________________________________________________________________
    15. Of course, there may be other limits on a creditor's ability to
    collect
    charges for detention. For example, a provision in an agreement calling
    for unduly high late payment charges may be unenforceable as a penalty
    under general liquidated damages principles. See 
    Rangen, 658 P.2d at 958
    , 963. The sole question before us here is whether the usury law is
    applicable in the detention situation.
    21
    when referring to money is often employed as a
    synonym for `loan'. Money is not `used' within the
    meaning of this act when it is detained under the
    circumstances here present.
    
    Id. at 844
    n.4 (emphasis added).16
    Homeowners present a somewhat complex argument in
    an attempt to demonstrate that Kenin is not controlling
    here. They point out that Pennsylvania law draws a
    distinction between (1) "interest as such or interest eo
    nomine," which is recoverable "when afixed sum is due
    from a date certain," and (2) "damages for detention or
    delay," which are recoverable "when the amount or onset of
    the obligation is not certain." Reply br. of appellants/cross-
    appellees in Nos. 99-3858 and 99-3859 at 8; see American
    Enka Co. v. Wicaco Mach. Corp., 
    686 F.2d 1050
    , 1056-57
    (3d Cir. 1982); Peterson v. Crown Fin. Corp., 
    661 F.2d 287
    ,
    292-95 (3d Cir. 1981); Frank B. Bozzo, Inc. v. Electric Weld
    Div. of the Fort Pitt Div. of Spang Indus., Inc., 
    498 A.2d 895
    ,
    898-901 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1985); 20 Pennsylvania Law
    Encyclopedia Interest and Usury SS 4, 6-8 (1990). In the
    former situation--where there has been a failure to pay a
    fixed or liquidated sum due on a certain date--the party to
    whom the sum is owed may as a matter of right recover
    prejudgment interest at the legal rate of six percent running
    from the date the sum is due. See American Enka , 686 F.2d
    at 1056-57; 
    Peterson, 661 F.2d at 293
    ; Miller v. City of
    Reading, 
    87 A.2d 223
    , 225 (Pa. 1952) ("[I]t is the law of
    Pennsylvania that a debtor who defaults in the payment of
    the principal of an obligation when due and payable
    becomes liable for interest from the date of such default at
    _________________________________________________________________
    16. A statement in another Pennsylvania decision supports the
    conclusion that the Pennsylvania usury statute applies only where there
    has been a loan or a forbearance. See Equipment Fin., Inc. v. Grannas,
    
    218 A.2d 81
    , 82 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1966) ("[T]he law seems to be settled
    that usury can only attach to a loan of money or to the forbearance of
    a debt . . . .") (citation omitted); see also 20 Pennsylvania Law
    Encyclopedia Interest and Usury S 22 (1990) ("Usury contemplates the
    existence of a loan, and when there is no loan, usury cannot arise.").
    Although Grannas addressed the LIPL's predecessor statute, that statute
    --like the current LIPL--contained the "loan or use of money"
    requirement.
    22
    the legal rate of 6% per annum until payment is made,
    irrespective of the rate prescribed in the obligation itself for
    the period prior to maturity . . . . [I]n the absence of an
    agreement to the contrary, a liquidated claim carries
    interest at the legal rate from the time the debt becomes
    due."); Daset Mining Corp. v. Industrial Fuels Corp., 
    473 A.2d 584
    , 594-95 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1984) ("In claims that
    arise out of a contractual right, interest has been allowed at
    the legal rate from the date that payment was wrongfully
    withheld, where the damages are liquidated and certain,
    and the interest is readily ascertainable through
    computation."); see also Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 41, S 202 (setting
    the "legal rate of interest" at six percent per annum). In the
    latter situation--where the breach involves something other
    than an obligation to pay a liquidated sum on a certain
    date--recovery of delay damages "will not be a matter of
    right, . . . [but] will be an issue for thefinder of fact, the
    resolution of which depends upon all the circumstances of
    the case." Frank B. 
    Bozzo, 498 A.2d at 900
    (citation and
    internal quotation marks omitted).
    According to the homeowners, there has been a "use of
    money" under the LIPL when money is detained in the
    former situation; that is, prejudgment interest is due for the
    debtor's "use of the liquidated amount due the creditors
    from the date due." Reply br. of appellants/cross-appellees
    in Nos. 99-3858 and 99-3859 at 8. Homeowners contend
    that this case falls into the former category, i.e., interest as
    such, because it involves their failure to pay liquidated
    sums for tax, water and sewer obligations which were due
    on a certain date; they further contend that interest is
    recoverable but only at the legal rate of six percent per
    annum unless otherwise permitted by law. They argue that
    Kenin falls under the latter category, i.e. , damages for
    detention or delay, and therefore is not applicable here.
    Despite the homeowners' argument, we adhere to our
    belief that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court would hold
    that there has been no "loan or use of money" within the
    meaning of Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 41, S 502 in the absence of a
    loan or an agreement by the creditor to forbear. Plaintiffs'
    argument revolves around the concepts of prejudgment
    interest and damages for delay, both of which are awarded
    23
    by a court to compensate a prevailing party for the lost
    time-value of money running from the date of the opposing
    party's breach of contract or breach of duty. See American
    
    Enka, 686 F.2d at 1056
    ("Common law pre-judgment
    interest is based on the principle of compensation and the
    understanding that a plaintiff wrongfully deprived of a sum
    of money is not made whole unless the delay in recovery is
    accounted for."). We are not concerned here, however, with
    the proper amount of prejudgment interest which
    defendants might be awarded by a court. Rather, we are
    called upon to address whether homeowners may employ
    section 502 to recover interest and penalties already paid to
    NTF. We believe they cannot in the absence of a loan or a
    forbearance. Further, we note that case law indicates that
    a creditor may collect interest at a rate higher than six
    percent in situations involving the failure to pay a
    liquidated sum, if the parties have agreed to such higher
    rate. See 
    Miller, 87 A.2d at 225-26
    ; Daset 
    Mining, 473 A.2d at 595
    . If such agreements are permitted, then it is
    apparent that there has been no "use of money" within the
    meaning of sections 201 and 502 of the LIPL--otherwise,
    such agreements would be usurious.
    We further agree with the district court's conclusion that
    the payment plans constitute a forbearance giving rise to
    the "use of money" for purposes of the LIPL. See 47 C.J.S.
    Interest & Usury S 131 (1982) ("The forbearance, or giving
    time for the payment, of a debt is, in substance, a loan, and
    when there is an existing and matured debt, a charge made
    by the creditor for his binding promise to forbear for a
    definite period to collect it, greater than that allowed by
    law, will subject the debt forborne to all the penalties
    prescribed by the law for usury."). A letter from CARC to
    the Pollices stated as follows with regard to the payment
    plans:
    The full amount of the [assigned] Claims is due
    immediately. Please make your check payable to
    National City Bank of Pennsylvania as custodian for
    NTF . . . .
    In the event you are currently unable to satisfy this
    obligation in full, you may pay the Claims over a longer
    period of time in accordance with the installment
    24
    purchase payment plan (the "Payment Program") . . . .
    The longer you wait to pay the Claims, the more you
    accumulate in additional interest, penalties, filing fees
    and costs (including attorney's fees). Interest and
    penalties are added to the total amount of the Claims
    at a rate, not to exceed, 1.5% per month (compounded
    monthly).
    There are two different payment plans, 1) Water[and]
    2) City, School and Sewer. Under the Payment
    Program(s), you may choose to pay the Claims over
    time in monthly installments . . . . Payments will be
    calculated to ensure that the full amount of the
    Claims, plus all interest, penalties and costs, will be
    paid in full with the last payment you agree to make
    . . . .
    . . . If you successfully complete the Payment Program,
    and the total amount of Claims, plus all acquired[sic]
    interest, penalties and costs are paid in full, the liens
    securing Claims against the Property will be removed
    and marked satisfied. If you default under the Payment
    Program, the money you have previously paid will not
    be returned, but will instead be applied against the
    Claims . . . .
    App. at 97. A payment plan enrollment form included with
    the letter provided as follows:
    I understand that if I do default in the payment of
    installments as provided above . . . all payments that
    I have made under the Payment Program will be
    applied pro rata to the principal, interest and penalty
    due on the claims and thereafter NTF or agents may
    take legal action against me or the Property to satisfy
    the outstanding amounts owed on the Claims . . . .
    App. at 98. Thus, by virtue of the payment plans, NTF has
    agreed to forbear from taking immediate action to collect on
    the assigned claims.17
    _________________________________________________________________
    17. It is evident that no forbearance occurred prior to the payment plans;
    prior to the plans, neither the government entities nor defendants had
    granted homeowners any right to defer payment of their debt. The fact
    that the government entities sat idle for periods of time without taking
    any action with respect to the claims does not mean that there was a
    forbearance.
    25
    The district court concluded, however, that "an interest
    rate beyond that allowed by law can only be considered
    usurious if it exists as consideration for the creditor's
    forbearance." 
    Pollice, 59 F. Supp. 2d at 483
    (emphasis
    added). The court stated that "it has not been shown that
    the rate being charged is in any way consideration for this
    forbearance" because "defendants are not charging
    plaintiffs a rate for participating in the plans which is
    higher than plaintiffs would be charged if they did not
    participate." 
    Id. We agree
    with the district court. " `Usury'
    has been variously defined as contracting for or reserving
    something in excess of the amount allowed by law for the
    forbearance of money, the exaction of more than lawful
    interest in exchange for the loan or use of money, directly
    or indirectly, and as an excessive charge for the loan or
    forbearance of money." 47 C.J.S. Interest & Usury S 4
    (1982). Thus, "[i]n general, the elements of usury consist of
    an unlawful intent, money or its equivalent, a loan or
    forbearance, an understanding that the loan shall or may
    be returned, and the exaction for the use of the loan of
    something in excess of what is allowed by law." 
    Id. S 119.
    Here, no price in the form of heightened interest or
    penalties has been extracted or charged in exchange for the
    right to enter into a payment plan--rather, it appears
    undisputed that those homeowners who have entered into
    payment plans have been charged the same interest and
    penalty rates as those who did not enter into a plan. See
    br. of appellants/cross-appellees in Nos. 99-3858 and 99-
    3859 at 9, 28-30; substituted br. of appellants/cross-
    appellees in No. 99-4049 at 7. Thus, NTF simply has
    continued to collect what it would have sought to collect
    had the homeowners not entered into payment plans."The
    prime purpose of [usury] statutes is the protection of weak
    and needy borrowers from extortion and outrageous
    demands of unscrupulous lenders who are ready to take
    undue advantage of the necessities of others . . . ." 47
    C.J.S. Interest & Usury S 88 (1982). Here, NTF has made no
    "outrageous demands" for additional interest or penalties in
    exchange for agreeing to forbear. Accordingly, the purposes
    of the usury law are not implicated.18
    _________________________________________________________________
    18. Homeowners argue that "[i]t is inconceivable that the legislature
    could have intended to protect debtors who agree to pay an excessive
    26
    Homeowners contend that NTF has received
    consideration that is non-monetary in form; specifically,
    they assert that the payment plans require homeowners to
    agree to be personally liable for the delinquent obligations
    and to be liable for attorneys' fees. Homeowners argue that
    usurious "interest" can "take many forms other than
    money." Substituted br. of appellants/cross-appellees in
    No. 99-4049 at 33. They argue that "collateral
    consideration for a forbearance, in addition to the interest
    rate itself, should be taken into account" and that
    "requiring a personal obligation as a consideration for a
    _________________________________________________________________
    interest rate in return for forbearance, but only if this excessive rate
    was
    not already being charged them." They contend that, "[b]ased on the
    District Court's holding, . . . no sophisticated creditor would fail to
    unilaterally impose excessive interest pre-forbearance agreement, if only
    to avoid a usury claim." Reply br. of appellants/cross-appellees in Nos.
    99-3858 and 99-3859 at 13-14. As we have indicated, sections 201 and
    502 of the LIPL do not apply to charges which are imposed for a debtor's
    detention of money owed. If a creditor who collects such charges for
    detention subsequently agrees to forbear without imposing greater
    charges, then the post-forbearance charges are still in effect charges for
    detention, and the forbearance has not changed the relationship so far
    as the usury law is concerned. The situation is fundamentally different
    where a new or higher rate is charged in connection with the
    forbearance.
    In essence, those homeowners who made the decision to enroll in
    payment plans found themselves in the same position with regard to the
    payment of interest and penalties as homeowners who did not. It
    appears that the payment plans do not prohibit homeowners from paying
    their debts ahead of the schedule set forth in the plans. Thus, like those
    homeowners who did not enter into plans, those who did could pay their
    debts immediately and thus avoid the accrual of additional interest and
    penalties; alternatively, both sets of homeowners could choose to delay
    full payment of their debts and thereby accrue interest and penalties at
    the same rate. The primary difference between the two sets of
    homeowners lies in NTF 's promise to forbear from immediate action on
    the liens--those who entered into payment plans could claim the comfort
    of NTF 's forbearance, while those who did not ran the risk of losing
    their
    homes if they did not pay the claims in full immediately. Under these
    circumstances, we do not believe that one set of homeowners should
    have an LIPL claim in relation to the interest and penalty charges while
    the other does not.
    27
    loan, may be sufficient additional consideration when
    added to interest, to exceed the maximum allowable rate."
    Substitute reply br. of appellants in No. 99-4049 at 24.
    We do not question the proposition that non-monetary as
    well as monetary consideration may be taken into account
    in determining if a creditor has extracted an unlawful
    amount of value in return for a loan or a forbearance. See
    47 C.J.S. Interest & Usury S 154 (1982) ("Usury may be
    paid and received in property as well as in money. In order
    to determine whether the interest received by a lender, in
    the form of property, is usurious, the medium of payment
    is reduced to its equivalent in dollars . . . and if the value
    of the medium when so ascertained is more than the lawful
    rate on the debt or obligation on which the interest is paid,
    it amounts to the collection of usury."); see also Hartranft
    v. Uhlinger, 
    8 A. 244
    , 246 (Pa. 1887) ("It is, indeed, wholly
    immaterial under what form or pretense usury is concealed,
    if it can by any means be discovered, our courts will refuse
    to enforce its payment."); Smith v. Smith, 
    45 Pa. Super. 353
    (1911) (indicating that usury law was applicable where "the
    defendant [borrower], in consideration of the loan, agreed to
    give to the plaintiff [lender] something more than the
    interest fixed by law as the compensation due to the
    plaintiff, to wit, four atlases."). We believe, however, that
    the usury analysis should take into account only those
    items (be they monetary or non-monetary in form) which
    actually are paid as consideration for the loan or
    forbearance. We have concluded that the interest and
    penalties paid by those who entered into payment plans
    have not been paid as consideration for NTF 's forbearance;
    thus, the interest and penalties should not be considered in
    the usury analysis, regardless of the fact that other things
    of value (such as personal liability or liability for attorneys'
    fees) may have been given as consideration.19 Therefore, we
    reject the position that Judge Oberdorfer takes in his
    partial dissent.
    In sum, we conclude that homeowners (including those
    who entered into payment plans) have not "paid a rate of
    _________________________________________________________________
    19. We note that defendants dispute that the payment plans give rise to
    personal liability or liability for attorney's fees.
    28
    interest for the loan or use of money" under Pa. Stat. Ann.
    tit. 41, S 502 when paying the interest and penalties at
    issue. Homeowners argue that they are nevertheless
    entitled to recover under section 502 because they have
    "paid charges prohibited or in excess of those allowed . . .
    otherwise by law." We reject this argument. The term
    "charges" in section 502 must refer to something other than
    "interest," as the word "interest" is listed in section 502
    separately from the word "charges." See section 502 ("A
    person who has paid a rate of interest for the loan or use
    of money . . . or has paid charges .. . may recover triple the
    amount of such excess interest or charges . . . .").
    Homeowners have paid "interest," but such interest has not
    been paid "for the loan or use of money." See br. of
    appellees in No. 99-4049 at 38-39. If we were to read
    "charges" to include interest that is not paid"for the loan
    or use of money," then the "loan or use of money" language
    in section 502 would be superfluous.
    We thus conclude that homeowners are without a remedy
    under the LIPL, and we will affirm the dismissal of the
    Houck plaintiffs' LIPL claim.20
    4. Unjust enrichment
    The district court viewed the Pollice plaintiffs' unjust
    enrichment claim21 as "largely dependant on the argument
    _________________________________________________________________
    20. Defendants also rely on a line of cases holding that the usury statute
    does not apply to a sale of goods on credit. See In re Estate of Braun,
    
    650 A.2d 73
    , 77 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1994); Grannas , 218 A.2d at 82 ("[T]his
    act [the predecessor to the LIPL] does not apply to a bona fide sale of
    goods on credit. Such sales are the result of a decision by a buyer to
    purchase property on credit at a higher price than he would pay if he
    paid cash. There is no loan or use of money on the part of the buyer.").
    In light of our conclusion that homeowners are not entitled to relief
    under the LIPL in any event, we need not address this line of cases.
    21. In Appeal No. 99-3998, the Houck plaintiffs present arguments
    regarding unjust enrichment. Yet, at the time of the district court's July
    29, 1999 ruling on the motions for summary judgment, only the Pollice
    plaintiffs had asserted an unjust enrichment claim. It was not until
    some two months later that the Houck plaintiffs were granted leave to
    amend their complaint to add an unjust enrichment claim. As was the
    case with the Pollice plaintiffs' LIPL claim, we lack jurisdiction to make
    any ruling regarding the Houck plaintiffs' unjust enrichment claim
    because the certified orders did not address that claim. As the unjust
    enrichment issue is the only issue raised by the Houck plaintiffs in
    Appeal No. 99-3998, we will dismiss that appeal.
    29
    that the original owners of the liens and claims[the
    government entities] could not assign their right to charge
    higher interest and penalties to National Tax." Pollice, 59 F.
    Supp.2d at 491. In light of the Maierhoffer ruling on
    assignability, the court dismissed the unjust enrichment
    claim. While the district court viewed this claim as limited
    to what may be termed a "non-assignability" theory, the
    Pollice plaintiffs' complaint appears broad enough to
    encompass a claim based on an "illegal rate" theory--i.e.
    that the defendants have been unjustly enriched by virtue
    of their collection of interest and penalties beyond that
    allowed by Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 53, S 7143. See app. at 93.
    The district court did not address such a theory. Under the
    circumstances, we will reverse the grant of summary
    judgment in defendants' favor and allow further
    proceedings with respect to the unjust enrichment claim.
    The district court should consider whether the Pollice
    plaintiffs have waived the illegal rate theory by choosing to
    proceed on a non-assignability theory.22 The district court
    also may consider any other defenses to an unjust
    enrichment claim which have been properly preserved by
    defendants.
    B. FDCPA Issues
    1. Whether the water, sewer and tax obligations
    constitute "debts"
    The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act ("FDCPA"), 15
    U.S.C. S 1692 et seq., provides a remedy for consumers who
    have been subjected to abusive, deceptive, or unfair debt
    collection practices by debt collectors. See Zimmerman v.
    _________________________________________________________________
    22. Defendants contend that the Pollice plaintiffs are estopped to pursue
    the illegal rate theory based on an interrogatory response in which the
    plaintiffs stated as follows: "There is no authority under state law for
    the
    City, the School District and the Water Authority to assign the right
    possessed by each of them to assess interest and penalties at an
    aggregate rate of 1.5% per month." See app. at 1327 (emphasis added);
    br. of appellees in No. 99-4049 at 22. The Pollice plaintiffs contend that
    their response inadvertently omitted the word "allegedly" from the
    emphasized phrase. On remand, the district court should consider this
    interrogatory response, as well as other relevant factors, to determine if
    the Pollice plaintiffs in fact waived the illegal rate theory.
    30
    HBO Affiliate Group, 
    834 F.2d 1163
    , 1167 (3d Cir. 1987). "A
    threshold requirement for application of the FDCPA is that
    the prohibited practices are used in an attempt to collect a
    `debt.' " Id.; see 15 U.S.C. SS 1692e-f. The FDCPA defines
    "debt" as "any obligation or alleged obligation of a consumer
    to pay money arising out of a transaction in which the
    money, property, insurance, or services which are the
    subject of the transaction are primarily for personal, family,
    or household purposes, whether or not such obligation has
    been reduced to judgment." 15 U.S.C. S 1692a(5).
    Like the district court, we conclude that homeowners'
    water and sewer obligations meet the definition of"debt";
    indeed, these obligations constituted "debts" from the time
    they initially were owed to the government entities, and
    they retained that status after their assignment to NTF. At
    the time these obligations first arose, homeowners
    ("consumers" of water and sewer services) had an
    "obligation . . . to pay money" to the government entities
    which arose out of a "transaction" (requesting water and
    sewer service) the subject of which was "services. . .
    primarily for personal, family, or household purposes."23
    Defendants, relying on a statement in our Zimmerman
    decision, argue that the water, sewer and tax claims are not
    "debts" because there was no "offer or extension of credit"
    to homeowners. See 
    Zimmerman, 834 F.2d at 1168
    ("We
    find that the type of transaction which may give rise to a
    `debt' as defined in the FDCPA, is the same type of
    transaction as is dealt with in all other subchapters of the
    Consumer Credit Protection Act, i.e., one involving the offer
    or extension of credit to a consumer.") (emphasis added). As
    the district court noted, see 
    Pollice, 59 F. Supp. 2d at 484
    n.9, this statement from Zimmerman has been widely
    _________________________________________________________________
    23. As mentioned, the Pollice class includes all owners of real property
    in
    Pittsburgh subject to the assigned claims and liens, while the Houck
    class is limited to owner-occupants of homes. We are certain that the
    water and sewer obligations owed by members of the Pollice class who
    own their property for business purposes are not "debts" because the
    services are not "primarily for personal, family, or household purposes."
    On remand, the district court will be required to distinguish any such
    members of the Pollice class from those members who are owner-
    occupants of homes for purposes of the FDCPA claims.
    31
    disavowed by several other courts of appeals, which have
    taken the broader view that the FDCPA applies to all
    obligations to pay money which arise out of consensual
    consumer transactions, regardless of whether credit has
    been offered or extended. See, e.g., Romea v. Heiberger &
    Assocs., 
    163 F.3d 111
    , 114 n.4 (2d Cir. 1998) (noting that
    several circuits have "disavowed" the "dicta" in Zimmerman
    that the FDCPA applies only to transactions involving the
    "offer or extension of credit"); Brown v. Budget Rent-A-Car
    Sys., Inc., 
    119 F.3d 922
    , 924 n.1 (11th Cir. 1997) (rejecting
    Zimmerman "[t]o the extent that it read an extension of
    credit requirement into the definition of debt"); Bass v.
    Stolper, Koritzinsky, Brewster & Neider, 
    111 F.3d 1322
    ,
    1325-26 (7th Cir. 1997) (rejecting Zimmerman and
    indicating that "[a]s long as the transaction creates an
    obligation to pay, a debt is created"); see also Wayne Hill,
    Annotation, What Constitutes "Debt" for Purposes of Fair
    Debt Collection Practices Act, 159 A.L.R. Fed. 121, 131
    (2000) ("The term `debt' as used in the [FDCPA] has been
    construed broadly to include any obligation to pay arising
    out of a consumer transaction.").
    We are not bound by the "disavowed" statement in
    Zimmerman, as it was dictum.24 In our view, the plain
    meaning of section 1692a(5) indicates that a "debt" is
    created whenever a consumer is obligated to pay money as
    a result of a transaction whose subject is primarily for
    personal, family or household purposes. No "offer or
    extension of credit" is required. Accordingly, homeowners'
    original obligations to pay the government entities for water
    _________________________________________________________________
    24. In Zimmerman, we held that the FDCPA did not apply to attempts to
    collect money from persons who allegedly had committed cable television
    theft. See 
    Zimmerman, 834 F.2d at 1167-69
    . We indicated that the
    FDCPA was intended to protect those who have "contracted for goods or
    services and [are] unable to pay for them," and that the statute was not
    intended to "protect against a perceived problem with the use of abusive
    practices in collecting tort settlements from alleged tortfeasors through
    threats of legal action." 
    Id. at 1168.
    Clearly, there was no "debt" in
    Zimmerman because the obligations arose out of theft rather than a
    "transaction." This was our holding and we certainly adhere to it. The
    further statement that a transaction must involve the "offer or extension
    of credit" in order to be covered by the FDCPA was not necessary to the
    decision.
    32
    and sewer service constituted "debts," even though the
    government entities did not extend homeowners any right
    to defer payment of their obligations.
    We further agree with the district court's conclusion that
    homeowners' property tax obligations do not constitute
    "debts" under the FDCPA. In Staub v. Harris, 
    626 F.2d 275
    ,
    we specifically held that a per capita tax obligation is not a
    "debt" for purposes of the FDCPA. 
    Id. at 276-79.
    We stated
    that "at a minimum, the statute contemplates that the debt
    has arisen as a result of the rendition of a service or
    purchase of property or other item of value. The
    relationship between taxpayer and taxing authority does
    not encompass the type of pro tanto exchange which the
    statutory definition [of `debt'] envisages." 
    Id. at 278;
    see
    also Beggs v. Rossi, 
    145 F.3d 511
    , 512 (2d Cir. 1998)
    (following Staub and stating that in the tax situation
    "[t]here is simply no `transaction' . . . of the kind
    contemplated by the statute"). Staub is controlling here.
    Simply put, property taxes are not obligations "arising out
    of a transaction in which the money, property, insurance,
    or services which are the subject of the transaction are
    primarily for personal, family, or household purposes."
    The Houck plaintiffs contend that the property tax
    obligations are "debts" because they arise out of the
    "transaction" in which each property owner acquired his or
    her property. See reply br. of appellants/cross-appellees in
    Nos. 99-3858 and 99-3859 at 47-48. We reject this
    argument. Unlike a sales tax, for example, which arguably
    arises from the sale transaction, the property taxes at issue
    here arose not from the purchase of property but from the
    fact of ownership. In Beggs, the Court of Appeals for the
    Second Circuit rejected an argument similar to that of the
    Houck plaintiffs regarding a tax on automobiles. See 
    Beggs, 145 F.3d at 512
    . The court stated that "the tax is not levied
    upon the purchase or registration of the vehicle per se, but
    rather upon the ownership of the vehicle by the citizen";
    thus, the court held that there was no "transaction" for
    purposes of the FDCPA. 
    Id. (emphasis added)
    . We agree
    with this reasoning.
    In attempting to distinguish Staub, the homeowners
    argue that the tax obligations changed in character and
    33
    became "debts" when they were assigned to NTF. We
    disagree. Although the tax claims were transferred to a
    private entity, the homeowners' obligation to pay the claims
    still did not "aris[e] out of a transaction in which the
    money, property, insurance, or services which are the
    subject of the transaction are primarily for personal, family,
    or household purposes." Rather, the obligation to pay arose
    from the levying of taxes upon the ownership of property.
    After assignment of the claims to NTF, there still had not
    been a "transaction" involving the homeowners; their
    obligation to pay NTF still arose from the levying of taxes.25
    The Houck plaintiffs contend that the creation of the
    payment plans distinguishes this case from Staub --that is,
    the payment plans for the tax obligations represent
    "transactions" giving rise to "debts" covered by the FDCPA.
    See reply br. of appellants/cross-appellees in Nos. 99-3858
    and 99-3859 at 44-45, 49. While we do not doubt that the
    _________________________________________________________________
    25. Plaintiffs rely on our decision in Simon v. Cebrick, 
    53 F.3d 17
    (3d
    Cir.
    1995), in arguing that the tax claims changed in character upon their
    assignment to NTF. The plaintiff in Simon was a private purchaser of tax
    lien certificates on certain real property in New Jersey. 
    Id. at 19.
    The
    plaintiff requested the FDIC--which held mortgages on the property--to
    consent to foreclosure of its mortgage interests. 
    Id. The FDIC
    refused.
    
    Id. The plaintiff
    commenced foreclosure proceedings in state court; the FDIC
    removed to federal court, where it argued that federal law precluded the
    plaintiff from extinguishing its mortgages without its consent. 
    Id. The plaintiff
    argued that the Tax Injunction Act ("TIA") divested the district
    court of jurisdiction. 
    Id. at 22.
    We disagreed:
    We do not necessarily agree with plaintiff that the district
    court's
    application of [12 U.S.C.] S 1825(b)(2) to protect the mortgage
    interests of the FDIC violates the TIA because it suspends the
    collection of taxes under state law until the FDIC consents to
    foreclosure of the tax liens. Withholding consent to foreclose from
    a
    private citizen does not implicate the assessment, levy, or
    collection
    of any tax. The statute is intended to prevent interference with
    taxation by governmental entities; however, upon the sale of the
    tax
    certificate, the tax obligation is satisfied. The holder's
    inability to
    foreclose does not affect the governmental entity's ability to
    assess,
    levy, or collect any tax, and thus, the TIA is not applicable.
    
    Id. We believe
    Simon is inapposite here, as it involved an entirely
    different federal statute (the TIA) with different underlying purposes.
    34
    payment plans are "transactions," we do not believe the
    plans serve to bring defendants within the coverage of the
    FDCPA with respect to the tax obligations. The FDCPA is
    aimed at the conduct of debt collectors who are seeking to
    collect "debts." See 15 U.S.C. S 1692 (statement of
    congressional findings and purpose); Zimmerman , 834 F.2d
    at 1167. For purposes of the FDCPA, we view the payment
    plans simply as one aspect of defendants' course of conduct
    in attempting to collect the original water, sewer and tax
    obligations which were owed to the government entities and
    then assigned to NTF; that is, all of defendants' debt-
    collection activity (including the creation of the payment
    plans and subsequent conduct) has been directed toward
    the collection of the original obligations, not any obligations
    which may have arisen from the payment plans. As we have
    concluded, in their original form, the water and sewer
    obligations were "debts" under section 1692a(5) but the tax
    obligations were not. Accordingly, we hold that the FDCPA
    is inapplicable to all of defendants' conduct relating to the
    tax obligations, including conduct occurring after the
    creation of the payment plans.
    In sum, we will affirm the dismissal of the FDCPA claims
    with respect to the tax obligations, and we further will
    affirm the district court's determination that the water and
    sewer obligations constitute "debts" under the FDCPA.
    2. Whether NTF and CAH are "debt collectors" under the
    FDCPA
    The district court accepted defendants' argument that
    NTF and CAH "cannot be considered `debt collectors'
    because they are not in the business of collecting debts and
    do not in fact collect debts." 
    Pollice 59 F. Supp. 2d at 486
    .
    The court agreed with defendants' contention that CARC is
    "the sole defendant which has contracted with the
    [government entities] to service and collect the claims
    owned by [NTF]." 
    Id. Accordingly, the
    court dismissed the
    FDCPA claims against NTF and CAH. 
    Id. at 491.
    The Houck
    plaintiffs argue on appeal that NTF and CAH, along with
    CARC, are "debt collectors" under the FDCPA.
    The FDCPA's provisions generally apply only to "debt
    collectors." Pettit v. Retrieval Masters Creditors Bureau, Inc.,
    35
    
    211 F.3d 1057
    , 1059 (7th Cir. 2000). Creditors--as opposed
    to "debt collectors"--generally are not subject to the
    FDCPA. See Aubert v. American Gen. Fin., Inc. , 
    137 F.3d 976
    , 978 (7th Cir. 1998) ("Creditors who collect in their own
    name and whose principal business is not debt collection
    . . . are not subject to the Act . . . . Because creditors are
    generally presumed to restrain their abusive collection
    practices out of a desire to protect their corporate goodwill,
    their debt collection activities are not subject to the Act
    unless they collect under a name other than their own.");
    
    Staub, 626 F.2d at 277
    ("The [FDCPA] does not apply to
    persons or businesses collecting debts on their own
    behalf."); Hon. D. Duff McKee, Liability of Debt Collector to
    Debtor under the Federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act,
    41 Am. Jur. Proof of Facts 3d 159, at S 3 (1997) [hereinafter
    McKee] ("[I]nterestingly, the term `debt collector' does not
    include the creditor collecting its own debt.").
    The FDCPA contains a detailed definition of "debt
    collector." See 15 U.S.C. S 1692a(6). The term means "any
    person who uses any instrumentality of interstate
    commerce or the mails in any business the principal
    purpose of which is the collection of any debts, or who
    regularly collects or attempts to collect, directly or
    indirectly, debts owed or due or asserted to be owed or due
    another." 
    Id. The definition
    excludes several categories of
    persons, including officers or employees of government. See
    
    id. We conclude
    that NTF is a "debt collector," and
    accordingly the district court should not have dismissed the
    FDCPA claims against it. Courts have indicated that an
    assignee of an obligation is not a "debt collector" if the
    obligation is not in default at the time of the assignment;
    conversely, an assignee may be deemed a "debt collector" if
    the obligation is already in default when it is assigned.26
    _________________________________________________________________
    26. The FDCPA's definition of "creditor" is "any person who offers or
    extends credit creating a debt or to whom a debt is owed, but such term
    does not include any person to the extent that he receives an assignment
    or transfer of a debt in default solely for the purpose of facilitating
    collection of such debt for another." 15 U.S.C.S 1692a(4). The definition
    of "debt collector" excludes "any person collecting or attempting to
    collect
    any debt owed or due or asserted to be owed or due another to the
    extent such activity . . . (iii) concerns a debt which was not in default
    at
    the time it was obtained by such person." 15 U.S.C. S 1692a(6)(F).
    36
    See Bailey v. Security Nat'l Servicing Corp., 
    154 F.3d 384
    ,
    387-88 (7th Cir. 1998); Whitaker v. Ameritech Corp., 
    129 F.3d 952
    , 958-59 (7th Cir. 1997); Wadlington v. Credit
    Acceptance Corp., 
    76 F.3d 103
    , 106-07 (6th Cir. 1996);
    McKee S 3 ("[O]ne who acquires the debt after it is in default
    is deemed a debt collector, and is subject to the provisions
    of the Act. Conversely, the assignee of a debt who acquires
    it before default is considered the owner of the debt and
    may pursue collection without concern for the limitations of
    the FDCPA."). Here, there is no dispute that the various
    claims assigned to NTF were in default prior to their
    assignment to NTF. Further, there is no question that the
    "principal purpose" of NTF 's business is the "collection of
    any debts," namely, defaulted obligations which it
    purchases from municipalities.27
    As mentioned, the district court was influenced by the
    fact that only CARC contracted to undertake debt-collection
    activity in connection with the assigned claims. We believe,
    however, that NTF may be held vicariously liable for CARC's
    collection activity. Although there is relatively little case law
    on the subject of vicarious liability under the FDCPA, there
    are cases supporting the notion that an entity which itself
    meets the definition of "debt collector" may be held
    vicariously liable for unlawful collection activities carried
    out by another on its behalf. In Fox v. Citicorp Credit
    Services, Inc., 
    15 F.3d 1507
    (9th Cir. 1994), the court
    indicated that a company which had been asked to collect
    a defaulted debt could be held vicariously liable for its
    attorney's conduct which was in violation of the FDCPA.
    See 
    id. at 1516.
    By contrast, in Wadlington , supra, the
    Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit declined to impose
    vicarious liability on a company for the actions of its
    attorney; in the court's view, vicarious liability could not be
    imposed because the company itself did not meet the
    definition of "debt collector":
    _________________________________________________________________
    27. Defendants' motion for summary judgment before the district court
    stated that "NTF exists solely for the purpose of holding claims for
    delinquent taxes and municipal obligations." App. at 135. Further, an
    affidavit of a CARC officer provides that "NTF purchases liens and claims
    from municipal entities across the country" and it refers to "the
    delinquent liens and claims [NTF] owns." App. at 514.
    37
    We do not think it would accord with the intent of
    Congress, as manifested in the terms of the [FDCPA],
    for a company that is not a debt collector to be held
    vicariously liable for a collection suit filing that violates
    the Act only because the filing attorney is a`debt
    collector.' Section 1692k imposes liability only on a
    `debt collector who fails to comply with [a] provision of
    this subchapter . . . .' The plaintiffs would have us
    impose liability on non-debt collectors too. This we
    decline to do.
    
    Wadlington, 76 F.3d at 108
    (citation omitted) (emphasis
    added). The Wadlington court specifically distinguished Fox
    because in Fox the entity allegedly vicariously liable for the
    attorney's conduct was itself a debt collector. See 
    id. The rule
    to be gleaned from Fox and Wadlington has been
    summarized by a state court decision as follows:
    [F]ederal courts that have considered the issue have
    held that the client of an attorney who is a `debt
    collector,' as defined in S 1692a(6), is vicariously liable
    for the attorney's misconduct if the client is itself a debt
    collector as defined in the statute. Thus, vicarious
    liability under the FDCPA will be imposed for an
    attorney's violations of the FDCPA if both the attorney
    and the client are debt collectors as defined in
    S 1692a(6).
    First Interstate Bank of Fort Collins v. Soucie , 
    924 P.2d 1200
    , 1202 (Colo. Ct. App. 1996) (emphasis added).
    Although these cases involved the attorney-client
    situation, we believe they may be applied here. Thus, we
    conclude that NTF--which itself meets the definition of
    "debt collector"--may be held vicariously liable for CARC's
    collection activity. We believe this is a fair result because
    an entity that is itself a "debt collector"--and hence subject
    to the FDCPA--should bear the burden of monitoring the
    activities of those it enlists to collect debts on its behalf.
    We now turn to the status of CAH as a "debt collector."
    As mentioned, CAH is the common general partner of CARC
    and NTF, both of which are limited partnerships. App. at
    1355. Some district courts have indicated that a general
    partner of a "debt collector" partnership may be vicariously
    38
    liable for the partnership's FDCPA violations under general
    principles of partnership law.28See Peters v. AT&T Corp., 
    43 F. Supp. 2d 926
    , 930 (N.D. Ill. 1999); Randle v. GC Servs.,
    
    25 F. Supp. 2d 849
    , 850-52 (N.D. Ill. 1998); see also Miller
    v. McCalla, Raymer, Padrick, Cobb, Nichols, and Clark, 
    214 F.3d 872
    , 876 (7th Cir. 2000) (stating in an FDCPA case
    that "[t]he liability of a partnership is imputed to the
    partners, and so the plaintiff was entitled to sue the
    partners as well as the partnership"). The Houck plaintiffs,
    however, indicate that they "do not rely on [CAH's] vicarious
    liability" in this case. See reply br. of appellants/cross-
    appellees in Nos. 99-3858 and 99-3859 at 57. Instead, they
    argue that CAH is directly liable because it "is involved [in
    the collection of debts] through the corporations[sic] it has
    set up and fully control." 
    Id. Despite the
    Houck plaintiffs' conclusory statement that
    they do not rely on vicarious liability, in effect their
    argument that CAH is directy liable seems to us in fact to
    implicate vicarious liability principles because they contend
    that CAH's involvement in the debt collection is through the
    other defendants. Thus, we consider the case on that basis
    and conclude that the general partner of a "debt collector"
    limited partnership may be held vicariously liable for the
    partnership's conduct under the FDCPA. In light of the
    _________________________________________________________________
    28. As we have indicated, NTF meets the definition of "debt collector." It
    is clear that CARC meets the definition as well. An affidavit of a CARC
    officer states that "NTF does not service or collect the . . . claims it
    owns," but instead "[t]he collection or servicing . . . is done by CARC,
    NTF 's servicing agent." App. at 514. CARC does not argue on this appeal
    that it does not meet the primary definition of"debt collector"; it merely
    argues that it falls under an exclusion for government officers or
    employees. We reject that contention in the succeeding section of this
    opinion.
    We note that the FDCPA contains the following exemption from the
    definition of "debt collector": "[A]ny person while acting as a debt
    collector for another person, both of whom are related by common
    ownership or affiliated by corporate control, if the person acting as a
    debt collector does so only for persons to whom it is so related or
    affiliated and if the principal business of such person is not the
    collection of debts." See 15 U.S.C. S 1692a(6)(B). This exemption has not
    been raised in this case.
    39
    general partner's role in managing the affairs of the
    partnership, we see no reason why the general partner
    should not be responsible for conduct of the partnership
    which violates the FDCPA. Liability for the general partner
    is particularly appropriate under the facts of this case--NTF
    has no employees, app. at 514, and accordingly we
    presume that its actions are taken through the personnel of
    CAH. Indeed, an officer of CAH executed the Purchase
    Agreements on behalf of NTF, as well as the Servicing
    Agreements on behalf of CARC. See app. at 540, 874, 906,
    1113. Accordingly, we conclude that CAH may be held
    liable for any conduct of NTF and CARC which violated the
    FDCPA.29
    In sum, we conclude that NTF and CAH may be held
    liable under the FDCPA, and accordingly we will reverse the
    grant of summary judgment in their favor.
    3. Whether CARC is exempt as a government officer or
    employee
    CARC argues that it is exempt from the definition of "debt
    _________________________________________________________________
    29. The Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit has stated as follows
    regarding the liability of shareholders and employees of "debt collector"
    corporations:
    Because such individuals do not become `debt collectors' simply by
    working for or owning stock in debt collection companies, we held
    [in a prior decision] that the [FDCPA] does not contemplate
    personal
    liability for shareholders or employees of debt collection
    companies
    who act on behalf of those companies, except perhaps in limited
    instances where the corporate veil is pierced . . . . Individuals
    who
    do not otherwise meet the statutory definition of`debt collector'
    cannot be held liable under the Act . . . . FDCPA suits against the
    owners of a debt collection company who are not otherwise debt
    collectors are frivolous and might well warrant sanctions.
    
    Pettit, 211 F.3d at 1059
    (citations omitted). Here, we do not deal with
    the
    liability of a shareholder of a "debt collector" corporation, nor do we
    deal
    with the liability of a person who merely works for a "debt collector"
    company. Rather, we deal with the liability of the general partner where
    the limited partnership meets the definition of"debt collector." We
    believe that a general partner exercising control over the affairs of such
    a partnership may be held liable under the FDCPA for the acts of the
    partnership. See 
    Miller, 214 F.3d at 876
    .
    40
    collector" under 15 U.S.C. S 1692a(6)(C) because it is "in
    effect acting as an `officer or employee of the United States
    or any State' pursuant to the Servicing Agreements with the
    City and the PWSA." Br. of appellees/cross-appellants in
    Nos. 99-3856 and 99-3857 at 44-45. Section 1692a(6)(C)
    provides:
    The term [`debt collector'] does not include-- . . . (C)
    any officer or employee of the United States or any State30
    to the extent that collecting or attempting to collect any
    debt is in the performance of his official duties.
    Like the district court, we reject this argument. The
    exemption expressly is limited to "any officer or employee of
    the United States or any State." CARC is not an"officer or
    employee" of any government entity. The exemption does
    not extend to those who are merely in a contractual
    relationship with the government. See Brannan v. United
    Student Aid Funds, Inc., 
    94 F.3d 1260
    , 1263 (9th Cir. 1996)
    ("This exemption applies only to an individual government
    official or employee who collects debts as part of his
    government employment responsibilities. USA Funds is a
    private nonprofit organization with a government contract;
    it is not a government agency or employee.") (emphasis
    added).
    4. Substantive FDCPA violations
    The homeowners claim that defendants have violated 15
    U.S.C. S 1692f(1), which provides:
    A debt collector may not use unfair or unconscionable
    means to collect or attempt to collect any debt . . . .
    [T]he following conduct is a violation of this section: (1)
    The collection of any amount (including any interest,
    fee, charge, or expense incidental to the principal
    obligation) unless such amount is expressly authorized
    by the agreement creating the debt or permitted by law.
    S 1692f(1) (emphasis added). The homeowners contend that
    defendants have violated this provision by collecting
    interest and penalty rates which are neither authorized by
    _________________________________________________________________
    30. The term "State" includes political subdivisions. See 15 U.S.C.
    S 1692a(8).
    41
    agreement nor permitted by law--that is, rates in excess of
    the ten percent limit set forth in Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 53,
    S 7143. The Pollice plaintiffs further claim that the
    defendants have violated 15 U.S.C. S 1692e, which
    prohibits the use of various "false, deceptive, or misleading"
    representations or means by debt collectors. The district
    court held that CARC has violated section 1692f(1)"to the
    extent that it charged a rate of interest and penalties for
    water and sewer claims not authorized by law," but it
    expressly declined to rule on the section 1692e claims in its
    summary judgment ruling. See 
    Pollice, 59 F. Supp. 2d at 486
    . In light of the district court's decision not to address
    the section 1692e claims, we will not address them on
    appeal. Further proceedings with respect to such claims
    will be required on remand.
    With regard to section 1692f(1), the question is whether
    the rates of interest and penalties the defendants charged
    are "expressly authorized by the agreement creating the
    debt or permitted by law." We agree with the district court
    that the rates are not "permitted by law" because they are
    in excess of the ten percent limit set forth in Pa. Stat. Ann.
    tit. 53, S 7143. Although the rates charged by the
    defendants are in a sense authorized by the local
    ordinances and resolution, we cannot say that they are
    "permitted by law" as they are in direct violation of a state
    statute.31
    _________________________________________________________________
    31. The defendants raised before the district court the FDCPA's "bona
    fide error" defense. A provision of the FDCPA states:
    A debt collector may not be held liable in any action brought under
    this subchapter if the debt collector shows by a preponderance of
    evidence that the violation was not intentional and resulted from a
    bona fide error notwithstanding the maintenance of procedures
    reasonably adapted to avoid any such error.
    15 U.S.C. S 1692k(c). The defendants argued that "in determining the
    rates to be charged plaintiffs, it relied on the representations of the
    City,
    School District and PWSA that the rates were appropriate, as well as the
    fact that these entities had empirically been charging these rates."
    
    Pollice, 59 F. Supp. 2d at 486
    -87. The district court indicated that the
    bona fide error defense may apply to errors of legal judgment as well as
    clerical errors, but it denied summary judgment because "questions of
    42
    Defendants argue, however, that the rates are "expressly
    authorized by the agreement creating the debt." In this
    regard, defendants contend that "[w]here rates are set by
    municipal ordinance or regulation, the ordinance or
    regulation should be considered the `agreement creating the
    debt.' " Br. of appellees/cross-appellants in Nos. 99-3856
    and 99-3857 at 39. In other words, they contend that a
    consumer who subscribes to water or sewer service
    impliedly agrees to pay the rates set forth by local laws.
    Defendants further contend that the rates are "expressly
    authorized" by the payment plans.
    The Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit recently
    addressed section 1692f(1) in a case involving a debt
    collector's imposition of a service charge for a dishonored
    check. See Tuttle v. Equifax Check, 
    190 F.3d 9
    (2d Cir.
    1999). The court commented as follows:
    Under the FDCPA, [the debt collector] may impose a
    service charge if (i) the customer expressly agrees to
    the charge in the contract creating the debt or (ii) the
    charge is permitted by law. See 15 U.S.C.S 1692f(1). In
    other words,
    If state law expressly permits service charges, a
    service charge may be imposed even if the contract is
    silent on the matter;
    _________________________________________________________________
    material fact exist concerning those measures which were taken by
    defendants to insure that they are entitled to charge a rate of over 10%
    in interest and penalties for past-due tax debts, water charges and sewer
    charges." 
    Id. at 487.
    The district court's ruling on the bona fide error
    defense is not at issue on appeal, and accordingly we do not address the
    matter. It suffices to say that defendants may argue at trial that they
    cannot be held liable under the FDCPA based on their reliance on the
    local ordinances and resolution and the representations of the
    government entities. For purposes of section 1692f(1), however, we must
    conclude that defendants' rates are not "permitted by law."
    The defendants further contend that the Pollice plaintiffs are estopped
    from challenging the legality of the interest and penalty rates based on
    a statement in an interrogatory response. See reply br. of cross-
    appellants in Nos. 99-3856 and 99-3857 at 12-13. As we indicated with
    regard to the unjust enrichment claim, see supra note 22, we leave it to
    the district court to determine if the Pollice plaintiffs in fact are
    estopped.
    43
    If state law expressly prohibits service charges, a
    service charge cannot be imposed even if the contract
    allows it;
    If state law neither affirmatively permits nor
    expressly prohibits service charges, a service charge
    can be imposed only if the customer expressly agrees
    to it in the contract.
    
    Id. at 13.32
    The court further indicated that an agreement
    authorizing a particular charge need not be in writing;
    thus, a debt collector " `may collect a service charge on a
    dishonored check based on a posted sign on the merchant's
    premises allowing such a charge, if he can demonstrate
    that the consumer knew of the charge.' " 
    Id. at 15
    (quoting
    Federal Trade Commission Staff Commentary on the
    FDCPA, 53 Fed. Reg. 50,097, 50,108 (1988)).
    Under the interpretation set forth in the Staff
    Commentary and Tuttle, the defendants presumably have
    violated section 1692f(1) regardless of the presence of any
    agreement authorizing the rates of interest and penalties,
    because state law specifically prohibits charging interest in
    excess of ten percent on the assigned claims. In any event,
    we do not believe the rates defendants charged are
    "expressly authorized by the agreement creating the debt."
    Although the agreement need not be in writing, we believe
    the term "expressly authorized by the agreement creating
    the debt" requires some actual knowledge or consent by the
    consumer during the course of the transaction which gives
    _________________________________________________________________
    32. The court relied on a Federal Trade Commission Staff Commentary
    on the FDCPA. See 53 Fed. Reg. 50,097 (1988). The commentary
    provides:
    A debt collector may attempt to collect a fee or charge in addition
    to
    the debt if either (a) [sic] the charge is expressly provided for
    in the
    contract creating the debt and the charge is not prohibited by
    state
    law, or (B) the contract is silent but the charge is otherwise
    expressly permitted by state law. Conversely, a debt collector may
    not collect an additional amount if either (A) state law expressly
    prohibits collection of the amount or (B) the contract does not
    provide for collection of the amount and state law is silent.
    53 Fed. Reg. at 50,108.
    44
    rise to the debt. As we have indicated, the "debts" which
    defendants have undertaken to collect are homeowners'
    original obligations arising out of their subscription to
    water and sewer services. The "agreement creating the
    debt" therefore was the transaction between each
    homeowner and the relevant government entity relating to
    the provision of water and sewer services. Defendants do
    not contend that the interest and penalty rates were
    "expressly" set forth in these agreements or transactions,
    nor do they contend that homeowners actually consented to
    or were aware of the rates when they subscribed to the
    services. The most defendants can say is that the rates
    were made an implicit part of such transactions because
    they are set forth in municipal ordinances and resolutions.
    We do not believe this suffices. Nor can defendants rely on
    the payment plans, as the plans are not the "agreement
    creating the debt." Rather, as stated, the "debts" to which
    all of defendants' collection activities have been directed are
    the original water and sewer obligations, which arose out of
    the transactions between homeowners and the government
    entities.
    Thus, we conclude that defendants have violated section
    1692f(1) by collecting amounts not expressly authorized by
    the agreement creating the debt or permitted by law.
    5. Summary of conclusions regarding FDCPA claims
    We will affirm the grant of summary judgment in favor of
    defendants with respect to the tax obligations, and we
    further will affirm the district court's determination that the
    water and sewer obligations constitute "debts" under the
    FDCPA. We will reverse the grant of summary judgment in
    favor of NTF and CAH, and we will affirm the district court's
    determination that CARC is not exempt from the definition
    of "debt collector." We further conclude, as did the district
    court, that defendants have violated section 1692f(1). We
    will remand for further proceedings on the FDCPA claims in
    light of these rulings.33
    _________________________________________________________________
    33. As mentioned, such further proceedings will include a determination
    of defendants' entitlement to the "bona fide error" defense.
    45
    C. TILA Issues
    1. Whether the payment plans constitute "consumer
    credit transactions"
    The Pollice plaintiffs' claim under the Truth-in-Lending
    Act ("TILA"), 15 U.S.C. S 1601 et seq., arises under 15
    U.S.C. S 1638, which requires certain disclosures by a
    "creditor" in connection with a "consumer credit
    transaction." Plaintiffs argue that they entered into
    "consumer credit transactions" when they entered into the
    payment plans.
    TILA defines "credit" as "the right granted by a creditor to
    a debtor to defer payment of debt or to incur debt and defer
    its payment." 15 U.S.C. S 1602(e) (emphasis added). It
    further defines "consumer":
    The adjective `consumer', used with reference to a
    credit transaction, characterizes the transaction as one
    in which the party to whom credit is offered or
    extended is a natural person, and the money, property,
    or services which are the subject of the transaction are
    primarily for personal, family, or household purposes.
    15 U.S.C. S 1602(h).
    We believe that "consumer credit transactions" arose
    when homeowners entered into payment plans with respect
    to the water and sewer obligations. As to these obligations,
    NTF has extended "credit" (the "right . . . to defer payment
    of debt") to homeowners ("natural person[s]"), and the
    "services" which are the subject of the credit transaction
    (water and sewer) are "primarily for personal, family, or
    household purposes." See sections 1602(e), (h).34
    As to the tax obligations, however, the district court
    concluded that the payment plans do not constitute
    _________________________________________________________________
    34. This conclusion does not apply with respect to members of the Pollice
    class who own property for business purposes, as opposed to owner-
    occupants of homes. Water and sewer services provided to businesses
    are not "primarily for personal, family, or household purposes." On
    remand, the district court will have to distinguish between those who
    own property for business purposes and those who are owner-occupants
    of homes with respect to the TILA claim.
    46
    "consumer credit transactions." The court reasoned as
    follows:
    National Tax [NTF] claims that it is [not subject to
    TILA liability], at least with respect to the tax liens at
    issue, on the basis that the Court of Appeals has
    determined that a tax debt is not considered primarily
    for personal, family or household purposes under the
    FDCPA. See Staub, 
    626 F.2d 275
    . Defendants further
    contend that Regulation Z expressly states that the
    payment of tax liens is not considered `credit' subject
    to the TILA. The Federal Reserve Board Official Staff
    Commentary to Regulation Z, 12 C.F.R. Pt. 226, Supp.
    I at 299 (1998), concerning exclusions from the
    definition of credit found at 12 C.F.R. S 226.2(a)(14),
    provides that `tax liens, tax assessments, court
    judgments, and court approvals of reaffirmation of
    debts in bankruptcy' are excluded from the definition.
    The Staff Commentary continues, noting that `third-
    party financing of such obligations (for example, a
    bank loan obtained to pay off a tax lien) is credit for
    the purposes of the regulation.' 12 C.F.R. Pt. 226,
    Supp. I at 299 (1998).
    . . . National Tax, as the legal holder of the tax liens
    at issue, maintains the rights of the original holder of
    the liens. Such liens are not considered any less tax
    claims by virtue of their assignment to National Tax.
    This holding is consistent with Maierhoffer v. GLS
    Capital, Inc., where the court found that tax liens are
    assignable as a matter of law under the Municipal
    Claims and Tax Liens Act.
    While we have found that the payment plans offered
    by defendants altered the relationship between the
    parties so as to create a forbearance where none
    otherwise existed, we did not conclude that the nature
    of the underlying claim had been extinguished. Thus,
    we cannot agree with plaintiffs' contention that
    defendants somehow altered the nature of the tax liens
    by offering payment plans. The forbearance by National
    Tax under the terms of the payment plans does not
    constitute third-party financing as contemplated under
    Regulation Z. Further, National Tax, as the owner of
    47
    the tax liens, is not a third party lender. Accordingly,
    we will grant defendants' motion for summary
    judgment with respect to the tax liens at issue . . . .
    
    Pollice, 59 F. Supp. 2d at 490-91
    .
    We agree that the payment plans do not constitute
    "consumer credit transactions" with respect to the tax
    obligations. A "consumer credit transaction" involves the
    offer or extension of "credit" to a consumer. See section
    1602(h). "Credit" is defined as "the right granted by a
    creditor to a debtor to defer payment of debt or to incur
    debt and defer its payment." See section 1602(e) (emphasis
    added). As we have concluded with regard to the FDCPA, a
    tax obligation is not a "debt"; thus, the payment plans do
    not involve an extension of "credit" under TILA with regard
    to the tax obligations. Although section 1602 does not
    contain a definition of the term "debt," we believe the term
    as used in section 1602(e) should be construed as it is
    defined in the FDCPA.35 Simply put, the payment plans
    with respect to the tax obligations do not involve the
    granting of a right to defer payment of "debts," but rather
    the granting of a right to defer payment of tax obligations,
    which are not "debts."
    We agree with the district court's interpretation of the
    Staff Commentary to Regulation Z, TILA's implementing
    regulation. See 12 C.F.R. pt. 226 (2000). The commentary
    provides as follows:
    The following situations are not considered credit for
    purposes of the regulation: . . . . Tax liens, tax
    assessments, court judgments, and court approvals of
    reaffirmation of debts in bankruptcy. However, third-
    party financing of such obligations (for example, a
    bank loan obtained to pay off a tax lien) is credit for
    purposes of the regulation.
    12 C.F.R. pt. 226, supp. I at 299 (2000). The commentary
    thus implies that the granting of a right to defer payment
    of a tax obligation is not "credit" for purposes of TILA. We
    _________________________________________________________________
    35. Such a construction is logical in light of the similarity between the
    definition of "consumer" in section 1602(h) and the definition of "debt"
    under the FDCPA. See 15 U.S.C. S 1692a(5).
    48
    believe the payment plans are not analogous to the
    situation in which a third party, such as a bank, makes a
    loan to a consumer which is then used to satisfy a tax
    obligation. In that situation, the third party's loan to the
    borrower constitutes an extension of "credit" which is
    independent of the tax obligation--the lender grants the
    borrower the right to "incur debt [the loan] and defer its
    payment," see section 1602(e), and the loan is "for
    personal, family, or household purposes," see section
    1602(h), because it is used to satisfy an obligation on the
    borrower's home.
    Our reasoning with regard to the tax obligations is
    supported by Bonfiglio v. Nugent, 
    986 F.2d 1391
    (11th Cir.
    1993). In that case, state courts twice ordered the plaintiff
    to pay sums of money for fees and costs directly to the law
    firm which had represented his wife in divorce proceedings.
    
    Id. at 1392.
    The law firm agreed to allow the plaintiff to pay
    the sums in installments. 
    Id. The plaintiff
    then sued the
    firm under TILA, claiming that the firm had failed to
    provide him with a financial disclosure statement when it
    agreed to allow him to pay in installments. 
    Id. The Court
    of
    Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, relying on the above-
    quoted commentary to Regulation Z, affirmed the dismissal
    of the plaintiff 's suit. The court commented:
    It is frivolous to contend that the Truth in Lending
    Act applies either to a debt created by a court order
    requiring one party to pay another's fees and costs, or
    to a related payment plan ordered by the court or
    worked out by the parties. `Credit,' as that term is used
    in the Truth in Lending Act, manifestly does not
    include court judgments or orders. [Citing commentary
    to Regulation Z]. [Plaintiff 's] court-ordered obligation to
    pay the two sums to his ex-wife's law firm, and the
    resulting installment plans, were clearly not`consumer
    credit transactions' within the meaning of the Truth in
    Lending Act.
    
    Id. at 1393
    (citations omitted) (emphasis added). We believe
    the same reasoning should apply to defendants' payment
    plans relating to the tax obligations.
    In sum, we conclude that the payment plans constitute
    49
    "consumer credit transactions" under TILA with respect to
    the water and sewer obligations, but not the tax
    obligations. Accordingly, we will affirm the dismissal of the
    Pollice plaintiffs' TILA claim with respect to the tax
    obligations.36
    2. Whether NTF is a "creditor"
    NTF argues that it is not a "creditor" under TILA.
    "Creditor" is defined in pertinent part as follows:
    The term `creditor' refers only to a person who both (1)
    regularly extends, whether in connection with loans,
    sales of property or services, or otherwise, consumer
    credit which is payable by agreement in more than four
    installments or for which the payment of a finance
    charge is or may be required, and (2) is the person to
    whom the debt arising from the consumer credit
    transaction is initially payable on the face of the
    evidence of indebtedness or, if there is no such
    evidence of indebtedness, by agreement.
    15 U.S.C. S 1602(f). Regulation Z provides:
    Creditor means: (i) A person (A) who regularly extends
    consumer credit that is subject to a finance charge or
    is payable by written agreement in more than 4
    installments (not including a downpayment), and (B) to
    whom the obligation is initially payable, either on the
    face of the note or contract, or by agreement when
    there is no note or contract.
    12 C.F.R. S 226.2(a)(17)(i) (2000).37 "[W]hether one is a TILA
    _________________________________________________________________
    36. While we affirm the dismissal of the claim relating to the tax
    obligations, we do not characterize the claim as"frivolous" as did the
    court in Bonfiglio.
    37. Regulation Z further addresses the meaning of"regularly extends":
    A person regularly extends consumer credit only if it extended
    credit
    (other than credit subject to the requirements ofS 226.32) more
    than 25 times (or more than 5 times for transactions secured by a
    dwelling) in the preceding calendar year. If a person did not meet
    these numerical standards in the preceding calendar year, the
    numerical standards shall be applied to the current calendar year.
    A person regularly extends consumer credit if, in any 12-month
    50
    creditor is a bifurcated question, requiring a person both to
    be a `creditor' in general, by extending credit in a certain
    minimum number of transactions, and to be the `creditor'
    in the specific transaction in dispute." James Lockhart,
    Annotation, Who is "Creditor" within Meaning of S 103(f) of
    Truth in Lending Act, 157 A.L.R. Fed. 419, 443 (1999).
    NTF does not present an argument on appeal, and
    apparently did not present an argument in the district
    court, regarding the first prong of the definition requiring
    that a person "regularly extends" consumer credit. Rather,
    NTF limits itself to the second prong of the definition. It
    contends that, even assuming the payment plans constitute
    "consumer credit transactions," there are no"debt[s] arising
    from" the payment plans. In this connection, NTF argues
    that the only "debts" involved are the water, sewer and tax
    obligations, which were "initially payable" to the
    government entities, not NTF.
    Like the district court, we reject NTF 's arguments and
    thus hold that it is a "creditor" with respect to the water
    and sewer payment plans.38 The payment plans are the only
    "consumer credit transactions" involved here, as they
    represent the first time that anyone extended the
    homeowners the right to defer payment of their water and
    sewer obligations. On the face of the payment plan
    enrollment forms, they are directed to make payments to
    NTF through a custodian. See app. at 98, 213-21.
    Accordingly, any debts "arising from" these"consumer
    credit transactions" are "initially payable" to NTF.39
    _________________________________________________________________
    period, the person originates more than one credit extension that
    is
    subject to the requirements of S 226.32 or one or more such credit
    extensions through a mortgage broker.
    12 C.F.R. S 226.2(a)(17)(i) at n.3 (2000).
    38. The district court accepted CARC's argument that it is not a
    "creditor" under TILA because "it is merely an agent, rather than the
    entity to which the debts are payable." 
    Pollice, 59 F. Supp. 2d at 488
    n.14. This holding has not been challenged on appeal.
    39. The Staff Commentary to Regulation Z provides that "[i]f an
    obligation is initially payable to one person, that person is the creditor
    51
    The question arises, then, whether there are any debts
    "arising from" the payment plans. We have given due
    consideration to NTF 's argument that there are no debts
    "arising from" the plans because the plans merely provide
    for the extended payment of debts which previously arose
    from homeowners' dealings with the government entities.
    The definition of "credit," however, encompasses not only a
    right granted by a creditor to "incur debt and defer its
    payment" but also a right to "defer payment of debt." See
    section 1602(e). This latter phrase must encompass
    situations in which a debtor is granted the right to pay over
    time a pre-existing debt. See Bright v. Ball Mem'l Hosp.
    Ass'n, Inc., 
    616 F.2d 328
    , 336 (7th Cir. 1980) (indicating
    that a hospital which reached agreements with its patients
    prior to discharge to pay their bills in more than four
    installments was a "creditor" under section 1602(f)); Rogers
    Mortuary, Inc. v. White, 
    594 P.2d 351
    , 353 (N.M. Ct. App.
    1979) ("Credit is extended [under TILA] when a consumer
    incurs a debt and the parties agree to a repayment
    schedule which allows for the deferred payment of the
    debt."). Yet, in such situations, the argument may be raised
    that the grantor of the right to defer payment is not a
    "creditor" under section 1602(f) because the debt does not
    "aris[e] from the consumer credit transaction." We reject
    such a construction, as we believe the term "creditor" was
    intended to apply to one who confers such a right to defer
    the payment of a pre-existing obligation.
    We believe the statutory definition of "creditor" is satisfied
    in such cases because there is in essence a new"debt"
    which "aris[es] from" the "consumer credit transaction."
    Thus, there really are two types of "debt" at issue here. The
    first is the original "debt" owed by a homeowner to one of
    the government entities and later assigned to NTF. It is this
    "debt" as to which NTF has granted the "right . . . to defer
    _________________________________________________________________
    even if the obligation by its terms is simultaneously assigned to another
    person." 12 C.F.R. pt. 226, supp. I at 300 (2000). Although NTF is an
    assignee of claims from the government entities, plaintiffs' theory is
    that
    NTF is an initial creditor for purposes of TILA, rather than an assignee,
    because the first "consumer credit transactions" (the payment plans) are
    initially payable to NTF. See 
    Pollice, 59 F. Supp. 2d at 488
    n.12.
    52
    payment" within the meaning of section 1602(e), and in
    turn the granting of this right gives rise to a"consumer
    credit transaction" within the meaning of section 1602(h).
    The second "debt" is the new "debt" which "aris[es] from the
    consumer credit transaction [the payment plan]" within the
    meaning of section 1602(f). It is this "debt" which is
    "initially payable" to NTF.40
    NTF contends that a person who grants a right to defer
    payment of a pre-existing debt is a "creditor" only if he
    agrees to modify the relationship so as to give rise to some
    new obligation which is "initially payable" to him. According
    to NTF,
    the `right to defer' portion of section 1602(e) applies
    where an existing creditor agrees to modify a
    previously-agreed consumer debt, for example, by
    extending maturity of the debt in exchange for a higher
    interest rate. In that situation, there is (1) `credit'
    within the meaning of section 1602(e), (2) a `consumer
    credit transaction' under section 1602(h), and (3) a
    `creditor' under section 1602(f), because the new
    interest obligation is a `debt arising from' the new
    extension of credit, which is initially payable to the
    creditor.
    _________________________________________________________________
    40. We point out that there is no inconsistency between our conclusion
    here that there is a "debt arising from" the payment plans for purposes
    of TILA and our prior rejection of the Houck plaintiffs' argument that the
    payment plans served to bring the tax obligations within the scope of the
    FDCPA. 
    See supra
    part III.B.1. As stated, for purposes of the FDCPA, we
    view all of defendants' collection activity (including post-payment plan
    conduct) as activity undertaken for purposes of collecting the original
    obligations which were owed to the government entities and then
    assigned to NTF--the first type of debt described above. As discussed,
    the original tax obligations do not meet the FDCPA's definition of "debt,"
    and therefore the FDCPA is inapplicable to defendants' conduct relating
    to the tax obligations regardless of the presence of payment plans.
    Unlike the FDCPA, which is directed at debt-collection activity, TILA
    focuses on the conduct of "creditors" who extend credit to consumers.
    Accordingly, for TILA purposes, we must consider the second type of
    "debt" which arises from the payment plans as"consumer credit
    transactions."
    53
    Reply br. of cross-appellants in Nos. 99-3856 and 99-3857
    at 2. We reject NTF 's argument, as we see nothing in the
    language of section 1602 imposing such a requirement.
    Indeed, the language of section 1602(f) indicates that a
    person may be a creditor even if he does not impose any
    charge for the extension of credit--the first prong of the
    definition of "creditor" refers to a person who regularly
    extends consumer credit which either involves a finance
    charge or is payable in more than four installments. See
    section 1602(f). Thus, the definition contemplates that one
    who confers a right to pay a pre-existing debt in more than
    four installments will be a "creditor" regardless of whether
    any charge is imposed as an incident to such extension of
    credit.41 See 
    Bright, 616 F.2d at 334
    n.2 ("Even if these
    agreements [to pay a hospital bill over time] did not involve
    an agreement to pay a monthly 3/4% finance charge, they
    could still be a `credit' agreement requiring disclosures
    since payment was to be in more than four installments.").
    We believe that a consumer who is given the right to pay a
    pre-existing debt in installments may benefit from TILA-
    mandated disclosures even if no charge is imposed for the
    extension of credit.
    In sum, we conclude that NTF is a TILA "creditor" with
    respect to the payment plans for the water and sewer
    obligations, and accordingly the district court did not err in
    denying NTF summary judgment.
    3. Applicability of the public utility exemption
    NTF argues that TILA's public utility exemption is
    applicable with respect to the water and sewer claims. See
    15 U.S.C. S 1603(4) ("This subchapter does not apply to the
    following: . . . (4) Transactions under public utility tariffs,
    if the Board [of Governors of the Federal Reserve System]
    determines that a State regulatory body regulates the
    charges for the public utility services involved, the charges
    for delayed payment, and any discount allowed for early
    payment."). Regulation Z provides:
    _________________________________________________________________
    41. "Finance charge" is defined generally as "the sum of all charges . . .
    imposed directly or indirectly by the creditor as an incident to the
    extension of credit." See 15 U.S.C. S 1605(a).
    54
    This regulation does not apply to the following: . .. (c)
    Public utility credit. An extension of credit that involves
    public utility services provided through pipe, wire,
    other connected facilities, or radio or similar
    transmission . . ., if the charges for service, delayed
    payment, or any discounts for prompt payment are
    filed with or regulated by any government unit.
    12 C.F.R. S 226.3(c) (2000) (footnote omitted); see Aronson
    v. Peoples Natural Gas Co., 
    180 F.3d 558
    (3d Cir. 1999)
    (discussing this exemption).
    NTF contends that it has charged the same interest and
    penalty rates with respect to the water and sewer claims as
    the rates established by City ordinance and PWSA
    resolution; thus, NTF contends that the rates are"filed with
    or regulated by" the government entities. NTF further
    contends that the Purchase Agreements and Servicing
    Agreements between the government entities and NTF and
    CARC have imposed tight governmental "oversight" over
    NTF 's and CARC's conduct.
    The district court held that the exemption is not
    applicable:
    Defendants argue that . . . when a debt arises from
    public utility services, it cannot constitute consumer
    credit. We disagree. While we recognize that a public
    utility is exempt from TILA disclosures upon extending
    credit to a debtor for utility services, the exemption is
    applicable only if the charges are filed [with] or
    regulated by a governmental unit.
    In the instant case, as we have established, the
    payment plans offered by defendants constituted a new
    extension of credit. This new extension was made well
    after the liens and claims were acquired by National
    Tax [NTF]. Defendants cannot claim reliance on the
    public utility exemption, despite the fact that the
    nature of the utility claims and liens have not changed
    in essence by the assignment to National Tax. The
    distinction here is that utilities are overseen and
    regulated by a governmental unit to which National
    Tax is not subject.
    55
    The credit charges assessed by National Tax are not
    `filed with or regulated by any government unit,' as
    required under Regulation Z. While defendants argue
    that the City and relevant authorities approved all
    payment plans and charges, this type of contractual
    relationship is too tenuous to constitute the
    governmental unit regulation required for the
    exemption.
    
    Pollice, 59 F. Supp. 2d at 490
    (footnote omitted).
    We agree with the district court that the public utility
    exemption is not applicable. It is true that 12 C.F.R.
    S 226.3(c) does not contain an explicit requirement that the
    credit be extended by a public utility; the extension of
    credit must simply "involve[ ] public utility services."
    Nevertheless, we believe that Congress and the Board
    intended the exemption to apply only to public utilities--
    entities which are highly regulated by the government. See
    66 Pa. Cons. Stat. Ann. S 1301 et seq. (regulating public
    utility rates and rate-making). Although NTF is an assignee
    of claims arising from public utility services, and thereby
    stands in the shoes of the assignors, we reject its attempt
    to invoke the public utility exemption.
    4. Summary of conclusions regarding TILA claim
    We will affirm the dismissal of the Pollice plaintiffs' TILA
    claim as it relates to the tax obligations. We further
    conclude that the court did not err in holding that NTF is
    a TILA creditor, nor did it err in holding the public utility
    exemption inapplicable.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    In view of the aforesaid, we will affirm in part and will
    reverse in part. We will remand the case to the district
    court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.42
    The parties will bear their own costs on these appeals.
    _________________________________________________________________
    42. In addition, we will dismiss the appeal at No. 99-3998. See n. 
    21, supra
    .
    56
    OBERDORFER, J., concurring in part and dissenting in
    part.
    I fully agree with Judge Greenberg's masterful analysis of
    this very complex matter with one exception. I would also
    reverse and remand the district court's grant of defendants'
    motion for summary judgment dismissing the claim of the
    Houck plaintiffs under Pennsylvania's Loan Interest
    Protection Law ("LIPL"), Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 41, S 101 et seq.
    See majority op. Part III.A.3. I am persuaded that if
    homeowners who agreed to payment plans assumed a
    personal liability in addition to any imposed incident to an
    original lien in rem, those homeowners have by those
    agreements given the creditor valuable additional
    consideration to forbear collection. If the payment plans
    created an additional personal liability, that liability
    imposed a detriment on the debtor by exposure of any free
    assets, future earnings and expectancies to the risk of a
    judgment, and reciprocally enhanced the value of the
    creditor's claim. The addition of this value to the creditor's
    claim together with the pre-existing interest obligation of
    the Houck payment plan participants could be in
    consideration "for the . . . use of money" within the
    meaning of the LIPL. As the Court has noted,
    If a creditor who collects [damages for detention, as
    distinguished from forbearance] agrees to forbear
    without imposing greater charges, then the post-
    forbearance charges are still in effect charges for
    detention . . . . The situation is fundamentally different
    where a new or higher rate is charged in connection
    with the forbearance.
    Maj. op. note 18.
    My colleagues "do not question the proposition that non-
    monetary as well as monetary consideration may be taken
    into account in determining if a creditor has extracted an
    unlawful amount of value in return for a . . . forbearance."
    Maj. op. p. 28. They conclude, however, that
    the interest and penalties paid by those who entered
    into payment plans have not been paid as
    consideration for NTF 's forbearance, . . . regardless of
    57
    the fact that other things of value . . . may have been
    given as consideration.
    Maj. op. p. 28.
    I do not believe that the present record supports this
    conclusion. Indeed, it is undisputed that payment plan
    participants assumed a new obligation to pay attorneys'
    fees. In addition, there is a fact dispute as to whether they
    also assumed a personal liability. See maj. op. note 19.
    Most important, whether or not the parties intended any
    non-monetary thing of value to be consideration for
    forbearance by the creditor is a quintessential question of
    fact to be resolved in the first instance by a trier of fact.
    Accordingly, I would also reverse and remand the district
    court's grant of summary judgment dismissing the claim of
    the Houck plaintiffs under "LIPL." To this limited extent, I
    respectfully dissent.
    A True Copy:
    Teste:
    Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    58
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 99-3856

Citation Numbers: 225 F.3d 379

Filed Date: 8/29/2000

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

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