I�ll tell you how it could be a lot clearer to you!
And that is to stopped being obsessed with the false notion that the decision in Baseline vs. Madison stands for the proposition that all actions seeking a deficiency judgement in Arizona are governed by the state�s Uniform Commercial Code four-year SOL!
It may not apply to ALL of them, but it does apply to MOST of them. If a person goes out and gets their own loan before buying a car, it does not apply to them. But what Madison did is what most people do when they buy a car. She went in to a dealership, found the car she wanted to buy, and then since you are such a stickler on using exactly the right words, she signed an "installment sales contract" with the dealership, which then turned around and sold off the loan to a bank and the loan continued to be sold off to other banks and finally ended up in the hands of a junk debt buyer who sued her. This is how MOST deficiency balance lawsuits go, so the 4 year S.O.L. applies to MOST of them.
What Baseline DOES stands for is that an action upon �a breach of a contract of sale� is subject to a four-year statute of limitations as per ARS 47-2725(A).
It DOES NOT say that all actions brought to recover a deficiency judgement are governed by ARS 47-2725(A)!!!
But MOST of them are.
If you read the case with more discernment, you will see that the Appeals Court expressly found that the claim for deficiency emanated from an �installment sales contract�.
You are likewise mistaken in reporting that:
This transaction was initially financed in house by Lund Cadillac as per the �installment purchase agreement�.
As are MOST car purchases when purchased at a car dealership. So, yes, again, the 4 year S.O.L. applies to MOST deficiency balances.
And it was only after successive assignments of the same �installment sales contract� that the successor owner of the contract (Bank of the West) in December 2007 proceeded with the repossession and sale of the Cadillac resulting in the $21,000 deficiency.
Hypothetically, if subsequent to her transaction with Lund Cadillac, Madison had obtained a loan to pay off the balance of installment contract of sale; had executed a UCC Security Agreement pledging the Cadillac as collateral for the loan . . . . .
Then had defaulted on that loan, the lender would have a cause of action against her based upon a �debt founded upon a written contract� and governed by ARS 12-548�s 6 year SOL.
And who would do something like that? Hardly anyone.
And not one for �breach of a contract of sale� as was found in Baseline; to-wit:
Having found that the deficiency arose out of a �contract of sale�, the Arizona court would have committed error in applying any Arizona period of limitations other than ARS 47-2725(a)!
Yes, and this is why people should fight back in court if it has been more than 4 years since their car was repossessed when a lawsuit gets filed against them. They have a very good chance of winning.
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As a side note, we did finally find the old contract from Courtesy Chevrolet in Phoenix, Arizona, and here is what is says right on it...
"MOTOR VEHICLE RETAIL INSTALLMENT SALES CONTRACT AND PURCHASE MONEY SECURITY AGREEMENT"
So, yes, the 4 year statute of limitations does apply to her situation.
And the Arizona Republic, Arizona's largest newspaper, was right after all.
EDIT: I wish she had found the contract earlier, I just read this part of her contract--
"Upon the happening of any of the foregoing Events of Default and at any time thereafter, we may, at our option, and without any notice to you, declare all of your indebtedness to us to be immediately due and payable, and we shall have the rights, duties and remedies of a secured party, and you shall have the rights and duties of a debtor, under the Uniform Commercial Code as adopted by the State of Arizona..."
That's it. It is over.
That debt is now worthless.
She is going to fax over a copy of that installment contract to the junk debt buyer and also a copy of the Baseline court ruling to them and tell them to cease and desist from any further communication with her.
If they take her to court now, she will fight it and she will win.
People out there reading this post-- go find your installment contract and read it for yourself. It's right there in plain sight.