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Date: 11-03-2015

Case Style: Palisades Collection, LLC, et al. v. Unifund CCR Partners, et al.

Case Number: N14C-08-036

Judge: E. Vincent Davis

Court: IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

Plaintiff's Attorney: Norman M. Monhait, Esquire, Carmella P. Keener, Esquire, Steven I. Adler, Esquire, Lauren X. Topelsohn, Esquire

Defendant's Attorney: Mary F. Dugan, Esquire, Alan H. Abes, Esquire

Description: The Palisades Parties and the Unifund Parties had a long-standing, continuous and
ongoing relationship. Pursuant to a Master Servicing Agreement, executed on May 28, 2003 (as
amended and restated, the “MSA”), the Palisades Parties purchased certain portfolios of
uncollected consumer debt, retained Unifund to service the portfolios for a Base Fee, and the
parties shared the profits based on collections.
Under the MSA, Unifund and/or Unifund Intrepid were to pay the Palisades Parties an
amount equal to one hundred percent (100%) of the purchase price paid by the Palisades Parties
and their cost of funds for any single portfolio (the “Purchase Price Threshold Amount”) within a
designated number of months from the purchase date of that portfolio. Unifund and/or Unifund
Intrepid paid this Purchase Price Threshold Amount through collecting on accounts contained in
the particular portfolio. Unifund was paid through “Servicing Fee Premiums” in the form of
portions of collections retained by Unifund and/or Unifund Intrepid. In the event that Unifund
and/or Unifund Intrepid failed to collect enough to pay the Purchase Price Threshold Amount
within the specified time, the Palisades Parties were entitled to fifty percent (50%) of the
Servicing Fee Premium on all portfolios that would have otherwise been paid to Unifund and/or
Unifund Intrepid.
The Palisades Parties contend that beginning on or about December 1, 2007 and
continuing to date, Unifund and/or Unifund Intrepid have failed to collect and pay to the
Palisades Parties the Purchase Price Threshold Amount for at least one portfolio at all times. The
Palisades Parties allege that despite their demands, the Unifund Parties continue to retain and
distribute to themselves the entire Service Fee Premium and have failed and refused to remit fifty
percent (50%) of that fee to the Palisades Parties. The Palisades Parties claim that the amount of
monies presently due and owing to them from Unifund and/or Unifund Intrepid exceeds $20
million.
Pursuant to the MSA, Unifund agreed to service certain portfolios of consumer
receivables purchased by Palisades and owned by Palisades’ wholly-owned subsidiaries
including, but not limited to, Cliffs. In accordance with the MSA, each subsidiary of Palisades would own a separate portfolio and would be considered a client (a “Client”) of Unifund.2 On
the date on which each portfolio was purchased, each Client was deemed to have retained
2 Master Servicing Agreement (“MSA”), at Introduction.
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Unifund as the “Servicer” for purposes of servicing the accounts receivables included in the portfolio.3
Section 2 of the MSA, subject to the amendments, stated that Unifund was generally
required to:
• Take such action to maximize the recovery of receivables by each Client, including the selection and engagement of third-party collectors, attorneys or servicers at Servicer’s expense or the sale, lease, assignment or liquidation of receivables;
• Settle and/or compromise any receivable and, if authorized by Palisades, bring collection actions;
• Maintain electronic data on the receivables including notes and documentation of all payments, credits, and any other servicing activities; and
• Cooperate with Palisades in connection with the review of the receivables and periodic audits by Palisades.4
As compensation for servicing the Portfolios, the parties agreed that Unifund would be
entitled to receive a “Base Fee” and a “Servicing Fee Premium” in such amounts as set forth on the fee schedule attached as Schedule 1 to the MSA.5 The Base Fee consisted of a fixed
percentage of the “Gross Collections,” as defined in the applicable schedule, of the receivables
collected on behalf of each Client. The Servicing Fee Premium was a contingent amount based
on a specified percentage of the applicable portfolio.
The MSA required that the proceeds of the receivables collected by Unifund were to be held in trust for the benefit of the Client.6 Unifund was to distribute the proceeds on a weekly basis to Unifund and Palisades, as the agent for each Client.7
3 Id. at ¶1. 4 Id., at §2. 5 Id., at §4. 6 Id., at §5(d). 7 Id.
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The MSA and payment schedules were amended several times over years. Ultimately, the MSA provided that, if by the end of the 27th month after the purchase date of a portfolio (the
“Threshold Date”), the Client had not received the Purchase Price Threshold Amount of that
Portfolio, then the “Client” would also be entitled to receive fifty percent (50%) of the Fee
Premium to be distributed to the “Servicer” of all portfolios being collected until such time as the
“Client” has received the Purchase Price Threshold Amount with respect to that particular Portfolio.8 According to the Amended Complaint, this means that the “Client” is entitled to
receive fifty percent (50%) of the Servicing Fee Premium that otherwise would have been
distributed to Unifund for other (i.e., all outstanding) portfolios until the shortfall, with respect to
a Purchase Price Threshold Amount, was made up (“Shortfall Premiums”).
Additionally, Unifund specifically “waived its right to withhold, or set off against, any Proceeds for claims that the Servicer may have against Palisades or any Client.”9
The Amended Complaint goes on to allege that, beginning on November 30, 2007 and
continuing at all times thereafter, at least one of the Portfolios did not generate a return rate that
resulted in the Palisades Parties receiving the Purchase Price Threshold Amount by the
Threshold Date. As such, under the MSA, the Palisades Parties should have been entitled to
Shortfall Premium payments by Unifund and/or Unifund Intrepid. The Palisades Parties allege
that instead of making such payments, Unifund and/or Unifund Intrepid retained Shortfall
Premium payments in violation of certain provisions of the MSA including Section 5(d) of the
MSA.
The Amended Complaint then goes on to contend additional facts that support Count III
and Count IV. According to the Amended Complaint, the Palisades Parties sold six debt
8 Id., Schedule 2 at ii. 9 Id., § 5(f).
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portfolios to Unifund and Port A. The six portfolios were sold as follows: (i) two on September
30, 2005; (ii) two on December 3, 2005; (iii) one on December 23, 2005; and (iv) one on
September 29, 2006 (each portfolio a “Sold Portfolio” and collectively, the “Sold Portfolios”).
The Palisades Parties provided Unifund and Port A with the relevant underlying account
documents as to the Sold Portfolios. The relevant underlying account documents included chains
of title, bills of sale, account files and other related information (the “Media”).
The Palisades Parties and Unifund and Port A purportedly agreed that the December 23,
2005 Sold Portfolio and the September 29, 2006 Sold Portfolio (collectively, the “Profit Share
Portfolios”) were more valuable than the other remaining Sold Portfolios. Here, the various
parties agreed that, in addition to the purchase price to be paid to the Palisades Parties, Unifund
and Port A would pay the Palisades Parties fifty percent (50%) of the profits realized after Port A
had recovered its costs of collection (the “Profit Share Agreement”). The parties do not seem to
have memorialized the Profit Share Agreement in writing.
Throughout, Unifund and Port A reviewed the accounts included in the Sold Portfolios
and rejected a certain number of those accounts. Unifund and Port A rejected the Shared
Portfolios’ particular accounts because Unifund and Port A determined these accounts were
uncollectable or potentially uncollectable. In total, Unifund and Port A rejected less than ten
percent (10%) of the Sold Portfolios’ accounts.
Thereafter, a dispute arose among the Palisades Parties, Unifund and Port A. Unifund
and Port A contended that the Palisades Parties failed to provide all of the Media necessary to
collect on the Sold Portfolios. As such, Unifund and Port A sought to return additional accounts
from the Sold Portfolios. The Palisades Parties continued to provide Media and Port A and
Unifund continued to ask for further documentation. The Amended Complaint then goes on --
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for 16 numbered paragraphs -- to list the various communications with respect to disputed
accounts and the attempts by the parties to resolve the issues.
The Amended Complaint claims that the Palisades Parties and Unifund and Port A never
agreed on the return of any additional Sold Portfolios’ accounts other than those initially rejected
during the initial review by Port A and Unifund.
When the Unifund Parties filed the Amended Answer, the Unifund Parties contended that
the Palisades Parties agreed to pay a ten percent (10%) premium, or “upcharge,” on future
portfolios purchased by the Palisades Parties from Unifund or Port A (the “Purchase Premium Agreement”).10 Moreover, as part of the Purchase Premium Agreement, the Unifund Parties
contend that the Palisades Parties actually paid a premium of $556,773 as part of a portfolio
purchased in October of 2007, and $636,363 in November of 2007 (collectively, the “Paid
Premiums”). The Palisades Parties claim that they never agreed to such a ten percent (10%)
premium for the reasons set forth in the Amended Answer. Moreover, the Palisades Parties
allege that they never agreed to the return of any accounts from the Sold Portfolios that would
have led to an agreement to pay a premium of future purchases of portfolios.
LEGAL STANDARD A party may move for judgment on the pleadings pursuant to Civil Rule 12(c).11 In
determining a motion under Civil Rule 12(c) for judgment on the pleadings, the Court is required
10 Like the Profit Sharing Agreement, the Court is not clear on whether the Purchase Premium Agreement was ever memorialized by a formal written agreement. 11 Civil Rule 12(c) provides: Motion for judgment on the pleadings. -- After the pleadings are closed but within such time as not to delay the trial, any party may move for judgment on the pleadings. If, on a motion for judgment on the pleadings, matters outside the pleadings are presented to and not excluded by the Court, the motion shall be treated as one for summary judgment and disposed of as provided in Rule 56, and all parties shall be given reasonable opportunity to present all material made pertinent to such a motion by Rule 56. Del. Super. Civ. R. 12(c).
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to view the facts pleaded and the inferences to be drawn from such facts in a light most favorable to the non-moving party.12 The Court must take the well-pleaded facts alleged in the complaint as admitted.13 When considering a motion under Civil Rule 12(c), the Court also assumes the
truthfulness of all well-pled allegations of fact in the complaint.14 The Court must, therefore, accord
plaintiffs opposing a Rule 12(c) motion the same benefits as a plaintiff defending a motion under Civil Rule 12(b)(6).15 The Court may grant a motion for judgment on the pleadings only when no material issue of fact exists and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.16
DISCUSSION
A. At this stage of the proceedings, the Court holds that too many contested issues of fact exist with respect to whether the statute of limitations has run on Counts I, II, III and IV. The Unifund Parties contend that the applicable three (3) year statute of limitations period17 bars all of the Palisades Parties’ claims to the extent that Count I, II, and III seek
recovery of any amount that accrued as of fixed dates prior to the applicable limitations period.
The Unifund Parties also claim that Count IV is barred in full as it is premised on payments
made more than seven years before the Palisades Parties brought this action.
The Palisades Parties argue that the MSA and the Profit Share Agreement are continuing
contracts. As continuing contracts, the Palisades Parties claim that the Unifund Parties’
respective breaches are continuous, and, as such, the statute of limitations has not run.
12 See Desert Equities, Inc. v. Morgan Stanley Leveraged Equity Fund, II, L.P., 624 A.2d 1199, 1205 (Del. 1993); see also Warner Commc’ns, Inc. v. Chris–Craft Indus., Inc., 583 A.2d 962, 965 (Del. Super.), aff’d without opinion, 567 A.2d 419 (Del. 1989). 13 See Desert Equities, Inc., 624 A.2d at 1205; Warner Commc’ns, Inc., 583 A.2d at 965. 14 See McMillan, 768 A.2d at 500. 15 Id. 16 See Desert Equities, Inc., 624 A.2d at 1205; Warner Commc’ns, Inc., 583 A.2d at 965. 17 10 Del. C. §8106.
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Delaware Courts have held that a cause of action for a breach of contract accrues at the time of the breach.18 Whether a contract is continuous or severable impacts the accrual date.19 If
the Court finds a contract continuous in nature, Delaware's statute of limitations does not typically begin to run until the termination of the entire contract.20 If the Court finds the contract
severable in nature, the statute of limitations generally begins to run on each severable portion when a party breaches that portion of the contract.21 The Court determines the continuous or severable nature of a contract by analyzing the intent of the parties.22 The Court must ascertain
this intent through the terms and subject matter of the contract, taken together with pertinent facts and circumstances surrounding the contract.23
In cases of continuous contract and continuing breach, the applicable statute of limitations begins to run only when full damages can be ascertained and recovered.24
The Unifund Parties argue that the Palisades Parties are substituting the parties’ ongoing
business relationship for a single continuous contract. The Unifund Parties claim that the MSA
or the Profit Sharing Agreement is not a continuous contract because, as to discrete account
portfolios, the MSA or the Profit Sharing Agreement sets forth obligations that can only be
breached separately. The Palisades Parties counter by arguing that the Amended Complaint and
Amended Answer set forth sufficient facts to support a conclusion, at least for purposes of Civil
Rule 12(c), that the MSA and the Profit Sharing Agreement -- as applied to the various
18 Kaplan v. Jackson, No. C.A. 90C-JN-6, 1994 WL 45429, at *2 (Del. Super. Ct. Jan. 20, 1994); Nardo v. Guido DeAscanis & Sons, 254 A.2d 254, 256 (Del. Super. Ct. 1969). 19 Kaplan at *2. 20 Id. 21 Id. 22 Id.; Tracey v. Franklin, 67 A.2d 56, 61 (Del. Supr. 1949). 23 Kaplan at *2. 24 Matter of Burger, 125 B.R. 894, 902 (Bankr. D. Del. 1991) (citing, Oliver B. Cannon & Son, Inc. v. Fid. & Cas. Co. of N.Y., 484 F. Supp. 1375, 1390 (D. Del.1980) (action not barred by Delaware statute of limitations)).
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Portfolios, Purchase Price Threshold Amount(s) and use of the Servicing Fee Premiums to
satisfy the Purchase Price Threshold Amount(s) – constitutes continuous contracts. In Matter of Burger,25 the case involved a Services Agreement pursuant to which
investors in a dairy herd agreed to finance the purchase of the herd, pay for its ongoing costs, and retained Burger to “manage, maintain and expand” the herd.26 In exchange, “Burger was entitled
to 50% of any annual cash revenues once the Investors had” received “a 15% annual return on their investment.”27 By 1989, Burger filed for bankruptcy, and the Investors filed a proof of
claim seeking damages based on Burger’s breach of the Services Agreement which Burger
contended was time-barred by 10 Del. C. §8106. According to the Court,
The initial and key question underlying Burger's statute of limitations defense is when did the statute of limitations begin to run for breach of the services contract. The general statute of limitations for contract actions is set forth in title 10, section 8106 of the Delaware Code which provides for a three-year limitation period . . . . Burger points to the Investors' allegations constituting breach of contract which occurred sometime between 1981–1983. The Investors contend that Burger's breach was ongoing in that he failed to expand the herd and committed other breaches of the Services Agreement which were continuous until the contract expired.28 The Court rejected Burger’s statute of limitations defense.29 In doing so, the Court
acknowledged that under Delaware law, a cause of action for breach of contract accrues at the time of the breach.30 However, the statute of limitations does not typically run against a continuing cause of action until the termination of the contract.31 Therefore, in cases of
25 Id. at 902. 26 Id. at 898. 27 Id. 28 Id. at 901. 29 Id. at 902. 30 Id. 31 Id.
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continuous contract and continuing breach, the statute begins to run only when full damages can be ascertained and recovered.32
The question becomes can the Court rule, at this early stage of the proceedings, whether
this situation involves a series of discrete contracts, or a continuous or series of continuous
contracts. The Court does not believe the record has been sufficiently developed for a ruling on
the statute of limitations issue at this time. In coming to this conclusion, the Court relies on the decision in SPX Corp. v. Garda USA, Inc.33
As set forth in SPX Corp, the moving party bears the burden of proving that a limitations period has lapsed and that claim is time-barred.34 “When a complaint asserts a cause of action
that on its face accrued outside the statute of limitations, however, the plaintiff has the burden of
pleading facts leading to a reasonable inference that one of the tolling doctrines adopted by Delaware courts applies.”35 According to SPX Corp., at this stage of the proceedings, this Court typically conducts a three-part analysis to determine whether a claim is time barred.36 From the
pleadings, the Court looks to determine: (i) the cause of action’s accrual date based on the
allegations; (ii) whether the plaintiff has plead facts sufficient to create a reasonable inference
that the statute of limitations has been tolled; and (iii) “assuming a tolling exception has been
pleaded adequately, when the plaintiff was on inquiry notice of a claim based on the allegations.”37
Although the allegations set forth in the Amended Complaint superficially appear to
have accrued outside the applicable statute of limitations without pleading a tolling exception, as 32 Id. 33 SPX Corp. v. Garda USA, Inc., C.A. No. N10C-10-162 WCC, 2012 WL 6841398 (Del. Super. Dec. 6, 2012). Although SPX Corp. involves a Civil 12(b) situation, the reasoning is applicable in a Civil Rule 12(c) situation. 34 Id. at *2. 35 Winner Acceptance Corp. v. Return on Capital Corp., No. 3088-VP, 2008 WL 5352063, at *14 (Del. Ch. Dec. 23, 2008). 36 SPX Corp., 2012 WL 6841398, at *2. 37 Id. (quoting from Winner, 2008 WL 5352063, at *14).
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in SPX Corp., the Court’s ability to apply the three-part analysis in this case is frustrated by the
Palisades Parties’ assertions that the MSA and the Profit Sharing Agreement are continuing
contracts. As a result, the Court’s inquiry is simply whether sufficient pleadings of the particular
Unifund Parties’ continuing obligations exist to support the Palisades Parties’ assertion. In other
words, the Amended Complaint can only be saved if the Court finds that the allegations set forth
in the complaint are sufficient to support that the MSA and/or the Profit Sharing Agreement is a
“continuing contract” and the applicable Unifund Parties’ obligations are ongoing.
To determine whether a contract is continuous or severable, the Court analyzes the intent of the parties.38 Specifically, “[t]he Court must ascertain this intent through the terms and
subject matter of the contract, taken together with pertinent facts and circumstances surrounding the contract.”39 However, the SPX Corp. Court noted that the question of the parties’ intent
usually cannot be resolved on a motion to dismiss, as it is a factual issue that must be resolved by additional discovery and trial.40 In SPX Corp., this Court declined to decide the case on a motion
to dismiss because it would have required the Court to make factual determinations concerning
the parties’ intent, taken together with the relevant circumstances surrounding the negotiations
and execution of the contract, which was clearly inappropriate at that stage of the litigation and against the “mountain of caselaw.”41
The Court finds the present litigation is in a similar litigation posture. While there
appears to be no dispute as to certain dates of entry into the MSA, the sale of Portfolios or to
certain payments (or non-payments) under the MSA or the Profit Sharing Agreement, the record
(as plead in the Amended Complaint and the Amended Answer) sets forth a interconnected and
38 Id., at *3. 39 Id. (quoting from Kaplan v. Jackson, No. 90C-JN-6, 1994 WL 45429, at *2 (Del. Super. Jan. 20, 1994). 40 Id. 41 Id., at *3-4 (and cases cited therein).
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continuous ongoing contractual arrangement between the Palisades Parties and the Unifund
Parties. The payment arrangements do not appear to be controlled by the MSA and the particular
Portfolio but also require reference to “all” the outstanding Portfolios when certain amounts –
i.e., the Purchase Price Threshold Amount – are not met. In those instances, the Servicing Fee
Premiums from other outstanding Portfolios are to be used, in part, to make up shortfalls. As for
the Profit Share Agreement, the allegations are of performance and continued performance.
As such, the Court is not in a position to find that there are no reasonably inferable facts
under which the Palisades Parties would be unable to prevail. Further, the Court finds that a
dismissal prior to additional discovery regarding the nature of the contract beyond the bare
allegations of the complaint would be premature at this stage of the proceedings and contrary to
decisional law that holds that disputes should be resolved on the merits and not on the technical allegations of a party.42 This is not to say that certain aspects of the Amended Complaint’s
claims cannot be handled prior to a trial on the merits. Instead, the Court is holding that a more
developed record – e.g., one that identifies (i) which Purchase Price Threshold Amounts were
satisfied as to a particular Portfolio or (ii) the intent of the parties – is necessary before the statute
of limitations can be applied here. For these reasons, the Court will deny the Motion with
respect to the statute of limitations arguments.
B. Count II fails to sets forth a viable claim for unjust enrichment and the Court will enter judgment in favor of the Unifund Parties. The Unifund Parties argue that Count II, for unjust enrichment arising out of alleged
shortfall premiums, should be dismissed because all of the Amended Complaint’s allegations
arise directly out of the Servicing Agreements, which constitute an undisputed written contract.
The Court agrees and will dismiss Count II under Civil Rule 12(c).
42 Id.
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“It is a well-settled principle of Delaware law that a party cannot recover under a theory
of unjust enrichment if a contract governs the relationship between the contesting parties that gives rise to the unjust enrichment claim.”43 As a general rule, recovery under a quasi-contract theory is unavailable where an express contract governs the subject matter at issue.22 However, a
quasi-contract claim may proceed where an express contract exists, so long as the rights and
obligations that are the subject of that claim are not governed exclusively by the contract at issue.44
The Palisades Parties contend that Unifund has wrongfully paid itself the Base Fee. The
Palisades Parties also claim that the MSA is silent as to what the parties’ rights, obligations and
remedies are in the event that Unifund wrongfully pays itself the Base Fee. The Palisades Parties
claim that this wrongful payment unjustly enriches Unifund and, without a contractual remedy
under the MSA, the Palisades Parties are entitled to an unjust enrichment claim as set forth in
Court II of the Amended Complaint. As the Court reads the various agreements, the Palisades
Parties should have a valid contractual remedy for recovery if the Unifund Parties breached the
Master Servicing Agreement concerning the Base Fee or any other “over-withholding” of
compensation under the agreement.
The Palisades Parties incorrectly rely on Avantix to support their arguments. In Avantix,
the plaintiffs argued their unjust enrichment claims as an alternative to the contract claims, not as a claim that could be sustained parallel to a breach of contract claim.45 In this case, the Palisades
Parties seek to pursue both a breach of contract claim and an unjust enrichment claim as to the
MSA. The Amended Complaint does not plead Count II in the alternative.
43 Vichi v. Koninklijke Philips Elecs. N.V., 62 A.3d 26, 58-59 (Del. Ch. 2012). 44 Avantix Labs., Inc. v. Pharmion, LLC, No. C.A. No. N10C-01-010, 2012 WL 2309981, at *9 (Del. Super. June 18, 2012). 45 Id.
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In Avantix the unjust enrichment claims were based on work performed by the defendants
for which the defendants did not receive written approval. As such, there was no clear contract
provision governing the claims for those amounts, and the court allowed plaintiffs to pursue the
claims under unjust enrichment. In this case, the Base Fee and Shortfall Premium Payments
underlying Count II are defined terms under the MSA. Accordingly, the MSA governs any
dispute arising out of any failure to make any Shortfall Premium Payment or “over-withholding”
any Base Fee, and a claim for these amounts can only be based on the contracts between the
parties.
The Court finds that Count II is not an alternative, independent theory of recovery.
Moreover, the Court finds no independent basis for an unjust enrichment claim arising out of the
Base Fee or the Shortfall Premium Payment. The Palisades Parties should be able to be made
whole through a breach of contract claim if the Palisades Parties can factually demonstrate a
breach of the MSA, or other related agreement and the claim is not barred by the applicable
statute of limitations. Accordingly, the Court will grant judgment in favor of the Unifund
Parties on Count II.
C. Count III sets forth, at this stage of the proceedings, a valid, separate claim for unjust enrichment. In their Counterclaim to the Complaint, Unifund and Port A alleged that the Palisades
Parties had previously agreed to repay, through the Purchase Premium Agreement, Unifund and
Port A approximately $4 million for certain accounts included in the Sold Portfolios. Unifund
and Port A further alleged that the Palisades Parties had agreed to pay such amount by paying a
ten percent (10%) premium or “upcharge” on future portfolios purchased by the Palisades Parties
from Unifund or Port A, and that the Palisades Parties had paid an upcharge of $556,773 as part
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of a portfolio purchased in late October 2007 and an upcharge of $636,363 in late November
2007 for a total of $1,193,136.
In response, in the Amended Complaint, the Palisades Parties asserted a cause of action
for unjust enrichment and sought the return of the ten percent (10%) premiums paid. In the
Amended Complaint, the Palisades Parties allege that they never agreed to accept the return of
any of the accounts included in the Sold Portfolios, other than those rejected during the review
period at about the time of the closing of each Sold Portfolio. In addition, the Palisades Parties
state that they never changed the designation on any of these accounts in their records to reflect
that such accounts were “unsold.”
The Palisades Parties contend that they undertook no collection efforts with regard to
those accounts and the accounts remain designated as “sold” in the Palisades Parties’ books and
records. The Palisades Parties state that to the extent Unifund or Port A added a ten percent
(10%) premium to the purchases made by the Palisades Parties in October 2007 and November
2007, there was no consideration for such premium paid. Through Court III then, the Palisades
Parties seek the return of the Paid Premiums made to the Unifund Parties purportedly without the
consent or agreement of the Palisades Parties.
In the Motion, the Unifund Parties contend that Count III is barred by the voluntary
payment doctrine, and because the facts alleged by the Palisades Parties do not constitute unjust
enrichment as a matter of law. A “payment voluntarily made with full knowledge of the facts cannot be recovered, in the absence of a contract to repay.”46 The Unifund Parties contend that
as the Palisades Parties never alleged a contract to repay they cannot recover these payments.
Unjust enrichment requires “the unjust retention of a benefit to the loss of another, or the
retention of money or property of another against the fundamental principles of justice or equity 46 Western Natural Gas Co. v. Cities Service Gas Co., 57 Del. 436, 445 (Del. 1964).
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and good conscience.47 A defendant’s simple receipt of money, goods or services is not the
same as “the unjust retention of a benefit to the loss of another, or the retention of money or property of another against the fundamental principles of justice or equity.48
In response to the Motion, the Palisades Parties now contend that they paid the Paid
Premiums to Unifund, but received nothing in return. The Palisades Parties argue that they made
the Paid Premiums based on the Unifund Parties’ claims that the Sold Portfolios were “impaired”
because those portfolios included accounts receivable that were close to the statutes of
limitations or already too old to sue on, and that the Palisades Parties had not provided sufficient
documentation to enable the Unifund Parties to file suit against the debtors. However, despite
the Paid Premiums, the Unifund Parties never returned the allegedly “impaired” accounts to the
Palisades Parties. As such, the Palisades Parties contend that it would be against the
fundamental principles of justice or equity and good conscience to allow the Unifund Parties to
retain the Paid Premiums since the Palisades Parties allegedly received no consideration for the
Paid Premiums.
Based solely on the papers, it appears unclear whether the parties agreed or even
contracted for a ten percent (10%) upcharge on either the terms alleged in the Amended
Complaint or the Amended Answer. Moreover, the Court cannot determine whether there was
any meeting of the minds on when a premium, like the Paid Premiums, would apply and be paid.
When the record is not properly developed or there is this type of lack of clarity, the Court will
not grant judgment on the pleadings.
The Court admits that the Palisades Parties seem to have developed Count III recently,
and only after the Amended Answer asserted a cause of action under the Purchase Premium
47 Vichi, 62 A.3d at 58. 48 Nemec v. Shrader, 991 A.2d 1120, 1130 (Del. 2009).
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Agreement, claiming that the Palisades Parties made the Premium Payments on terms other than
those suggested in the Amended Answer. This does not seem overly plausible. But, at this stage
of the proceedings, where well-pled factual allegations are admitted as true, the Court is not in a
position to find that there are no reasonably inferable facts under which the Palisades Parties
would be unable to prevail on Count III – whether (i) as a viable stand alone quasi-contract claim
exists, or (ii) the voluntary payment doctrine would apply to preclude the unjust enrichment
claim. The Court will, therefore, deny judgment in favor of the Unifund Parties on Count III.
D. The Court can reasonably infer, from the allegations made in the Amended Complaint, that the Palisades Parties have plead the necessary conditions precedent for breach of contract with respect to Count IV. The Unifund Parties contend that Count IV is barred for failure to plead a condition
precedent, specifically that Port A ever recovered its costs. The Palisades Parties counter by
claiming that the Unifund Parties’ recovery of the costs incurred in connection with the
collection of the portfolios is more than sufficiently pled.
The Palisades Parties stated in the Amended Complaint that “[t]o date, neither Unifund
nor Port A have paid to [the Palisades Parties] any part of the fifty percent (50%) profit share to which they are entitled after Port A had recovered its costs.” 49 The Palisades Parties also allege
that “Defendants have and continue to collect substantial monies with respect to” the Profit Share Portfolios. 50
The Palisades Parties contend that the fact that the Unifund Parties have recovered their
costs is implied in the Amended Complaint. In the alternative, the Palisades Parties have
requested that the Court permit them to replead Count IV, pursuant to Superior Court Rule 15(a),
49 Am. Compl. at ¶114. 50 Id. at ¶¶115.
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if the allegations in the Amended Complaint are insufficient to satisfy the condition precedent of
the Unifund Parties’ cost recovery.
Civil Rule 12(c) entitles the non-moving party to the benefit of any inference that can be
fairly drawn from its pleading. The Court can make a fair inference from the Amended
Complaint that the claim is that Port A has recovered its costs and that the Palisades Parties are
now entitled to the profit share agreed upon under the Profit Share Agreement. The Court
additionally believes that the Unifund Parties are on fair notice of the cause of action asserted in
Court IV and the basis for that cause of action – the purported Profit Share Agreement and the
breach of same. If in discovery the Unifund Parties develop a record that Port A did not recover
its costs, then the Unified Parties will be entitled to judgment on Count IV. The Court will deny
the Motion as to Court IV and whether the breach of contract is well plead, and it is not
necessary for the Palisades Parties to replead.

Outcome: For the foregoing reasons the Motion is GRANTED as to Court II and DENIED on all
other Counts of the Amended Complaint.

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Defendant's Experts:

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