Full opinion text
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER YOUNG, District Judge. I. INTRODUCTION This case raises a variety of novel and complex issues involving the interstate extension of consumer credit via credit cards and the concomitant regulation of the issuers of such credit cards by the several states. As the parties and the amici point out, this appears to be a case of genuine first impression, both in this Circuit and throughout the United States. The parties and amici have extensively and skillfully briefed the primary issue as they conceive it: May Greenwood Trust Company (“Greenwood”), a federally-insured, state-chartered bank located in Delaware, assess its “Discover” credit card holders located in Massachusetts a late charge on delinquent accounts, a charge permitted in Delaware but prohibited in Massachusetts? Resolution of this important question necessarily requires the Court to address two subsidiary issues — a major question of federal preemption that concerns both the parties and the amici, and a lesser but potentially pivotal question of statutory interpretation of Massachusetts banking legislation, a matter that concerns the parties alone. The major question requires the Court to determine whether Massachusetts banking law is preempted under the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution, U.S. Const, art. VI, cl. 2., by section 521 of the Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act of 1980, United States Pub.L. No. 96-221 § 521, 94 Stat. 132 (1980) (“DIDA”). If so, the prohibition of the Massachusetts usury law against such late charges must yield. If not, it would appear that Greenwood must prevail unless, of course, the Massachusetts usury law itself, Mass.Gen.L. ch. 140, § 114B, does not contemplate regulation of out-of-state credit card issuers such as Greenwood. Greenwood makes this argument, and the Commonwealth and its Attorney General demur. Where, then, ought analysis begin? If Massachusetts law does not reach out-of-state credit card issuers, then this Court need not address the thorny issue of federal preemption — an issue of nationwide significance. Conversely, if federal law preempts state regulation, this federal court need not — and should not — undertake to analyze the legislative intent of the Massachusetts legislature. Here the Court ultimately concludes, first, that federal law does not preempt Massachusetts from barring late charges in credit card agreements; and second, that Massachusetts may prohibit Greenwood from collecting the presently disputed late charges under credit card agreements with Massachusetts citizens. Accordingly, though the outcome thus turns ultimately upon state law, resolution of the federal preemption issue is likewise necessary to determine whether to engage in an analysis of the Massachusetts statute. II. STATEMENT OF MATERIAL UNDISPUTED FACTS The plaintiff Greenwood is a Delaware banking corporation insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. Greenwood, through its wholly-owned subsidiary, Discover Card Services, Inc., located in Illinois, issues the “Discover” credit card to customers nationwide, including several hundred thousand residents of Massachusetts. Greenwood actively solicits card-member applications nationwide through direct mail, telemarketing, and “take one” applications; it also conducts multi-media advertising nationwide. (Plaintiff’s Answer to Interrog. No. 4). Though Greenwood does not directly employ personnel in Massachusetts to make loans, Discover Card Services maintains a Massachusetts office with approximately eight employees. (Plaintiffs Answer to In-terrog. No. 13[c]). That office solicits merchants in Massachusetts to accept the Discover Card. Id. Pursuant to its Cardmember Agreement, Greenwood charges a monthly periodic rate of 1.5 percent to accounts in all states which have opted out of DIDA and 1.65 percent to accounts in all other states. Cardmember Agreement (“Agreement”) 1115. Greenwood also imposes a $10.00 “late charge” if a required payment is not made within 20 days after the payment due date in any month. (Agreement 1117). Failure to make at least the minimum payment due by the due date in any month puts the cardmember in default. (Agreement MI 11, 18). Greenwood does not include late charges in its computation or disclosure of the Annual Percentage Rate in either the Cardmember Agreement or monthly billing statement. (Plaintiff’s Answer to Interrog. No. 15). It does separately identify the late payment charge in the Cardmember Agreement, and separately identifies finance charges and late payment charges on the monthly billing statement as “Finance Charges” and “Late Charges.” Id.; (Agreement MI 13, 17). A Discover Card finance charge is imposed on unpaid balances which include unpaid late charges. (Dep. of Robert Stormoen at 86-88). Multiple late fees are assessed in successive billing cycles for continuing unpaid balances past the 20-day period. Id. at 88-90. A finance charge is then imposed on unpaid balances, including multiple late charges. Id. at 89-90. The purposes of Greenwood’s late charges are to deter default, compensate it for additional collection expenses, and provide it with a source of revenue in addition to interest charges. (Plaintiff's Answer to Interrog. No. 5; Stormoen Dep. at 62-63). The payment of a late charge per se does not influence Greenwood’s decision as to whether to extend further credit or suspend credit privileges. (Stormoen Dep. at 26). Greenwood’s late charges to Massachusetts residents involve a substantial sum of money, the amount of which the parties have agreed to keep confidential. (Statement H 2). The Cardmember Agreement contains a choice of law provision specifying that the Agreement “will be governed by the laws of the State of Delaware and applicable federal laws.” (Agreement II25). Greenwood has never permitted a Massachusetts resident to enter into a Discover Cardmember Agreement on terms different from those on its printed form agreement, including the choice of law provision. III. ANALYSIS A. Preemption: The Federal DIDA Statute and State Usury Laws 1. Background of Federal and Massachusetts Legislation. The present controversy between Greenwood and Massachusetts traces to the increasingly unsettled relations among banks, state regulators, and federal authorities over the last decade, since abrupt changes in Federal Reserve monetary policies and bank deregulation have intensified interstate competition among financial institutions. The fast-growing credit card industry is a sphere of particular importance and interstate conflict as cards issued by 50,000 financial institutions and offices are now carried by over seventy million Americans, who used them in transactions amounting to well over $400,000,000,000 in 1989. Since the early years of the Republic, the states have generally resisted the development of national banks and favored their own state chartered banks through regulatory legislation and the Supreme Court has, since M’Culloch v. Maryland, 17 U.S. (4 Wheat.) 316, 4 L.Ed. 579 (1819), generally limited federal statutory involvement by construing preemption narrowly and giving relatively free rein to state usury law regulations. See Anderson Nat’l Bank v. Luckett, 321 U.S. 233, 64 S.Ct. 599, 88 L.Ed. 692 (1944); McClellan v. Chipman, 164 U.S. 347, 17 S.Ct. 85, 41 L.Ed. 461 (1896). The National Bank Act of 1864, ch. 106, 13 Stat. 99 (1864), favored the national banks and protected them from discriminatory state laws; and since 1933 they have been allowed to charge interest at one percent above the Federal Reserve discount rate or at the highest rate available to competing state banks under laws of the state named in their charter. Banking Act of 1933, ch. 89, § 25, 48 Stat. 191. The interest rates of state and national banks were comparable until 1979, when the Federal Reserve rate rose sharply, giving national banks a competitive advantage in states with lower usury law interest ceilings. The national banks’ advantages were further enhanced through the Supreme Court’s decision in Marquette Nat’l Bank v. First of Omaha Service Corp., 439 U.S. 299, 99 S.Ct. 540, 58 L.Ed.2d 534 (1978). The Marquette Court held that national banks were only required to comply with interest restrictions of their charter state when doing business in that state; and that they could disregard other states’ interest ceilings when doing business outside their home state. The bleeding of capital from state banks to the national banks created a serious shortage of mortgage loan monies in many states by the late 1970s. The housing industry was especially affected by high interest rates and the dwindling of state bank mortgage capital. Congress responded to the unprecedented crisis of simultaneous recession and inflation by enacting DIDA — the Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act of 1980. Section 521 of DIDA allowed state banks, like the national banks, to charge interest at the federal rate and thereby preempted state usury laws. 12 U.S.C. § 1831d. At the same time, Congress also recognized the continued importance of state consumer protection laws. Section 525 of DIDA gave states three years to enact legislation to override the preemption provisions of the federal Act. 12 U.S.C. § 1730g note. Spurred by the same financial crisis, Massachusetts in 1981 joined other states in amending its usury statute to raise the ceilings on interest rates for state-chartered financial institutions. The Commonwealth and 14 other states elected to opt out of DIDA preemption as allowed under section 525. Massachusetts raised its usury limit on open end credit card accounts to an across-the-board level of 18% and prohibited the levy of late charges on Massachusetts credit card customers. In contrast to the efforts of Massachusetts and states which sought to preserve usury laws through reform, a handful of states, most notably Delaware and South Dakota, responded to the credit crisis and the Marquette decision by passing laws which virtually eliminated interest rate and other usury restrictions. Delaware, in an effort to attract credit card issuers, completely deregulated its credit card issuers, encouraging banks such as Greenwood to locate there. (Def’s Mem.Supp.Summ.J. at 2-3; Amici States Br. at 6). The controversy presently before this Court is most immediately concerned with the preemptive sweep of DIDA’s section 521 and the reach of the Massachusetts usury law, Mass.Gen.L. ch. 140, § 114B. But this case, in a larger sense, is part of the constant challenge to strike the proper balance of federalism in a society of constantly evolving needs and aspirations. 2. Pathways to Preemption and Comparative Burdens. Greenwood argues that the Commonwealth’s enforcement of the late charge provisions of its consumer protection statute would conflict with the anti-discriminatory consumer lending provisions of Section 521 of DIDA, 12 U.S.C. § 1831d (“section 521”). That section allows state-chartered banks insured under the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, to charge interest at a federal rate and preempts conflicting state laws, as follows: (a) Interest rates In order to prevent discrimination against State-chartered insured depository institutions, including insured savings banks ... with respect to interest rates, if the applicable rate prescribed in this subsection exceeds the rate such State bank ... would be permitted to charge in the absence of this subsection, such State bank ... may, notwithstanding any State constitution or statute which is hereby preempted for the purposes of this section, ... charge on any loan or discount made ..., interest at a rate of not more than 1 per centum in excess of the discount rate on ninety-day commercial paper in effect at the Federal Reserve bank in the Federal Reserve district where such bank ... is located or at the rate allowed by the laws of the State ... where the bank is located, whichever may be greater, (emphasis added) By these literal terms, preemption under section 521 is limited to state interest rates which conflict with the federal rate permitted by that provision. It was, as noted above, the unprecedented rise in the Federal Reserve discount rate in the late 1970’s which gave rise to DIDA. The plain meaning of section 521 does not evince Congressional intent to preempt state regulation as to other credit terms, apart from interest rates, such as the late charges challenged by Massachusetts. Greenwood and its allied amici argue that section 521’s stated purpose, “... to prevent discrimination against State-chartered insured depository institutions” translates into a “national policy of providing [federally] insured [state] banks competitive ‘rate’ parity with national banks.” (Def’s Mem.Opp’n.Summ.J. at 8). Such an ambitious policy, it is said, necessitates broad preemption of not only numerical interest rates, but all state restrictions on credit terms (including late charges) which affect the profits of lenders. Id. at 8-9. This larger Congressional intent is said by Greenwood to be manifest in the legislative history of section 521 and unmistakably implied by Congressional policy objectives advanced in other provisions of DIDA, from interpretive decisions of various administrative agencies, and from court decisions interpreting either the National Bank Act or the meaning of “rates” under that or other federal consumer protection statutes. Massachusetts, countering, essentially relies upon the plain meaning of the “interest rate” language in section 521 and the history of Congressional deliberations prior to enacting DIDA. That evidence is said to demonstrate that Congressional concern was limited to discriminatory interest rates favoring national banks, and that preemption was intended to apply only to state interest rate ceilings. State usury laws thus would remain vital and controlling over non-interest rate credit terms. The amici states also assert that consumer credit protection is a fundamental local interest, long recognized by Congress, and not displaced by the sweeping preemption urged by Greenwood. This Court’s assessment of preemption under section 521 is framed by two essential questions: First, did Congress intend a limited or broad incursion upon state usury laws? Was the aim to cure interstate discrimination only in interest rate ceilings (based upon the literal language of section 521) or is it implicit that the larger Congressional aim was to establish a more uniform national credit card lending framework? Second, did Congress impliedly intend by its use of the term “rates” in DIDA to preempt state law restrictions on all credit terms (including late charges) as well as state regulation of numerical interest rates standing alone? The Court, in considering preemption claims, is cautioned by the longstanding presumption that “Congress did not intend to displace state law,” Maryland v. Louisiana, 451 U.S. 725, 746, 101 S.Ct. 2114, 2129, 68 L.Ed.2d 576 (1981), and that it should not unnecessarily disturb “the federal-state balance.” United States v. Bass, 404 U.S. 336, 349, 92 S.Ct. 515, 523, 30 L.Ed.2d 488 (1971). Indeed, greater restraint ought apply to preemption of spheres traditionally occupied by the states, as noted in the oft-cited language of Rice v. Santa Fe Elevator Corp., 331 U.S. 218, 230, 67 S.Ct. 1146, 1152, 91 L.Ed. 1447 (1947): Where ... the field that Congress is said to have preempted has been traditionally occupied by the states ... we start with the assumption that the historic police powers of the States were not to be superseded by the Federal Act unless there was the clear and manifest purpose of Congress. It is well settled that state usury law restrictions on lending practices are so extensive and historically rooted as to form part of the consumer protection terrain “traditionally occupied” by the states. Accordingly, “[b]ecause consumer protection is a field traditionally regulated by the states, compelling evidence of an intention to preempt is required in this area.” General Motors Corp. v. Abrams, 897 F.2d 34, 41-42 (2d Cir.1990) (upholding New York’s “Lemon Law” against a claim that a Federal Trade Commission consent decree preempted major elements of the local law). Moreover, preemption analysis requires consideration of several distinct criteria. See Palmer v. Liggett Group, Inc., 825 F.2d 620, 624-25 (1st Cir.1987). The crucial question underlying such an inquiry is always “whether Congress intended that federal regulation supercede state law.” Id., quoting Louisiana Public Service Comm’n v. Federal Communications Comm’n, 476 U.S. 355, 369, 106 S.Ct. 1890, 1899, 90 L.Ed.2d 369 (1986). Of course, express statutory terms are the surest indicator of preemptive intent. Where provisions are unclear or fail to address the preemption question, a cautious resort to legislative history is called for. American Tobacco Co. v. Patterson, 456 U.S. 63, 75, 102 S.Ct. 1534, 1540-41, 71 L.Ed.2d 748 (1982). Implied preemption is more difficult to establish; one must consider “the relationship between state and federal laws as they are interpreted and applied, not merely as they are written [and] determine whether ... [they] are so inconsistent that the state law must give way....” Jones v. Rath Packing Co., 430 U.S. 519, 526, 97 S.Ct. 1305, 1310, 51 L.Ed.2d 604 (1977); see also Florida Lime & Avocado Growers, Inc. v. Paul, 373 U.S. 132, 142-43, 83 S.Ct. 1210, 1217-18, 10 L.Ed.2d 248 (1963) (pointing to the “physical impossibility” of simultaneous compliance with federal and state laws as a directive for preemption). Further, preemption may be inferred from the overall scope of a statute if Congress has legislated so comprehensively as to occupy the entire field and leave no room for interstitial regulation by the states, Rice, 331 U.S. at 230, 67 S.Ct. at 1152. Finally, a litigant not anchored to specific federal provisions may argue that preemption is implicit because “state law stands as an obstacle to the accomplishment of the full purposes and objectives of Congress” as generally discerned in a federal statute. Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee Corp., 464 U.S. 238, 248, 104 S.Ct. 615, 621, 78 L.Ed.2d 443 (1984); Hines v. Davidowitz, 312 U.S. 52, 67, 61 S.Ct. 399, 404, 85 L.Ed. 581 (1941). Greenwood embarks upon two routes to preemption. First, selected aspects of the legislative history of DIDA are singled out and highlighted as explicit indications of Congress’ broad preemptive intent. In the alternative, Greenwood and its amici banks seek to travel a more precarious route, attempting to imply preemption from the contradiction between the Massachusetts usury law against late charges and the accomplishment of what Greenwood calls a broad Congressional purpose to develope “competitive parity” between federal and state banks through a more uniform credit system. (Greenwood’s Mem.Opp’n.Summ.J. at 8-9; Mastercard and VISA Br. at 3). Accomplishment of this larger Congressional purpose, according to Greenwood, requires that federal law preempt all state usury restrictions which “affect a lender’s economic return.” (Greenwood Br. at 13). Greenwood’s case for this overriding Congressional purpose depends substantially upon an expansive reading of the “most favored lender” doctrine established by the National Bank Act of 1864 and elucidated in the landmark case of Marquette Nat’l Bank v. First of Omaha Service Corp., 439 U.S. 299, 99 S.Ct. 540 (1978) which antedated the enactment of DIDA by two years. The Commonwealth, defending its usury restrictions, argues that Congress intended, when enacting DIDA and section 521 in particular, to preempt state laws restricting only numerical interest rates and “not those laws concerning non-interest rate loan terms.” (Commonwealth’s Mem.Supp. Summ.J. at 9). Championing the vitality of state prohibitions against late charges, the Commonwealth and the amici states cite the express terms of section 521, the legislative history of section 501 of DIDA, additional federal consumer statutes, and two state supreme court decisions. 3. Legislative History of DIDA and its Section 521. The record of Congressional debate and deliberation concerning the enactment of DIDA is generally supportive of the Commonwealth’s argument that preemption of credit card regulation under DIDA is confined to numerical interest rates. The central unifying purpose of DIDA was to provide for increased access to home mortgage loans. Section 501 of DIDA provided for preemption of state usury limits on mortgage loans in a manner virtually identical to the treatment of other loans (including credit card agreements) in Title V, which contains the disputed section 521. Massachusetts cites the Senate Report of deliberations over section 501 of DIDA which limits preemption and expressly exempts “late charges.” Senate Report No. 96-368, 96th Cong., 2d sess. 19 (reprinted in 1980 U.S.Code Cong, and Ad.News, Vol. 2, 236, 255): In exempting mortgage loans from state usury limitations, the Committee intends to exempt only those limitations that are included in the annual percentage rate. The Committee does not intend to exempt limitations on prepayment charges, attorney fees, late charges or similar limitations designed to protect borrowers. Greenwood dismisses this Senate Report as irrelevant because it was prepared prior to consideration of section 521. Greenwood’s view, however, disregards the subsequent legislative history which links preemption concerns in section 501 both to the consideration of section 521, and to DIDA in its entirety as passed on March 27-28, 1980. Massachusetts points out that Congress passed section 501 at the same time, and in the same title (Title V) of the same act, as section 521. (Commonwealth Reply at 2). During discussion on the Senate floor of the various bills which figured in the development of DIDA, Senators Pryor and Bumpers proposed an amendment to give state-chartered institutions “competitive equality” with national banks by allowing them to charge interest at one percent above the federal discount rate. S.1988, 125 Cong.Rec. 30655 (November 1, 1979). Senator Proxmire, floor manager of the Senate bills under discussion, and chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, understood the proposed amendment to override state usury laws and emphasized that there was “a sharp division and difference of opinion in the Senate.” Id. Separate hearings on the Pryor-Bumpers initiative, S.1988, 96th Cong. 1st Sess. (1979) were held on December 17, 1979, and, though it was not reported out of committee, the bill’s language was substantially incorporated into House Bill 4986, H.R. 4986, 96th Cong., 1st sess. (1979), which was, in turn, enacted as DIDA. Burke & Kaplinsky, supra, at 1096-97 and n. 102; Usury Lending Limits Hearings. Greenwood and its amici assert that Congressional commitment to a “national policy” of “competitive rate parity” through uniform national credit terms is manifest in the Senate consideration of the Pryor-Bumpers bill, S.1988. They have emphasized certain testimony at the Usury Lending Limits Hearings from various agency administrators and financial industry officials as evidence of a sweeping intent to eliminate all discrimination in credit terms between state banks and national banks. (Consumer Bankers Association’s Br. at 13 [citing Usury Lending Limits Hearings at 2, 19, 20-21, 32, 36, 37, and 153-54]; American Financial Services Association’s Br. at 8-11). A fair reading of the legislative history, however, indicates that Congressional concern was focused with particularity on numerical interest rates. In introducing S.1988, Senator Pryor noted, “A national bank may charge one percent above the Federal discount rate, notwithstanding any State laws setting an interest-rate ceiling ... [which] obviously discriminates in the strongest possible way against State banks.” 125 Cong.Rec. 30655 (November 1, 1979). The great bulk of the subsequent committee testimony and discussion indicates that the proposed preemption amendment was limited since, in Senator Pryor’s words, it “would merely allow State chartered, federally insured banks ... to charge the same interest rate as national banks.” Id. In fact, there were only two references to wider displacement of state law through expansion of the “most favored lender doctrine;” and these are the references upon which Greenwood relies so heavily in inferring a broader Congressional purpose. Senator Bumpers, co-sponsor of the preemption amendment, confined his remarks to numerical interest rate disparities and remarked pointedly, “I do not think it is particularly healthy to be overriding state law.” Id. Even if the sponsors and supporters of DIDA preemption provisions were shown to be committed to achieving total competi-five equality of all lending terms offered by state banks and national banks, Greenwood fails to come to terms with the simultaneous and persistent concerns of the bill’s sponsors to preserve state consumer protection. During Senate consideration of the conference report on March 27, 1980, Senator Proxmire emphasized the limited preemptive scope of Title V. This limitation in DIDA’s Title V is clear from the Senate floor discussions of mortgage loans, from the Senate Banking Committee Report, and from the hearings on DIDA in the House of Representatives. Greenwood’s arguments for implied preemption as necessary to implement a clear Congressional goal can hardly stand if Congress actually sought to accommodate state usury restrictions in section 521. It is not surprising, therefore, that Greenwood and its amici ignore entirely the significance of the override provision of section 521, codified at 12 U.S.C. § 1735Í-7 Note, which is also common to section 501 and other sections of the statute. Those provisions expressly provided that states could, within three years of April 1, 1980, declare that they wished not to be bound by the Act’s limited preemption of their states’ laws. Massachusetts so declared on June 4, 1981. By April 1, 1983, 14 other states and Puerto Rico had similarly chosen not to be bound by DIDA preemption. The Commonwealth, relying on this history, argues that in the face of Congressional silence as to the specific preemptive intent of section 521, the Court may reasonably infer that Congress intended to give the same limited meaning to preemption provisions throughout Title V of DIDA. See Firestone v. Howerton, 671 F.2d 317, 320 n. 6 (9th Cir.1982) (“We follow the well-known maxim of statutory construction that, when the same terms are used in different sections of a statute, they receive the same meaning”); accord, Little People’s School, Inc. v. United States, 842 F.2d 570, 573 (1st Cir.1988). Post-DIDA legislative history tends to confirm the conclusion that Congress in 1980 did not intend to bar states from prohibiting late fees by credit card issuers. In 1981 and in 1983-84 the Senate (but not the House) passed amendments to DIDA which would have expanded preemption of state usury laws, but would have expressly exempted late charges from preemption. Hearings on S. 730 Before the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs, April 12,1983; Hearings on S. 1720, 1981. The failed S. 730 bill also expressly granted States the right to override preemption. The consistent and express limitations of these later bills certainly comport with Massachusetts’ reading of the predecessor section 521 as confined to preemption of interest rates only. Both the California and Texas Supreme Courts, after reviewing the legislative history of DIDA, afforded Title V only a narrowly construed preemption of their states’ usury laws. In Seiter v. Veytia, 756 S.W.2d 303, 304-05 (Tex.1988), the court held that section 501 did not preempt Texas law relating to usurious late charges. There, a seller of residential property, while conceding that DIDA was not intended to cover late charges on mortgage loans, argued that state law was nonetheless preempted since under Texas law late charges are considered interest and thus a part of the annual percentage rate. The court rejected the contention that state law could be used to define interest more broadly than Congress had intended. Id. at 305. In Perdue v. Crocker Nat’l Bank, 38 Cal.3d 913, 216 Cal.Rptr. 345, 702 P.2d 503 (Cal.1985), appeal dismissed, 475 U.S. 1001, 106 S.Ct. 1170, 89 L.Ed.2d 290 (1986), the California Supreme Court considered another section of DIDA which provided for gradual removal of federal regulations limiting interest paid to depositors. The court held that neither DIDA nor the National Bank Act preempted state regulation of bank service charges for overdrafts, relying on the language of the Senate Report regarding “late charges or similar limitations designed to protect borrowers.” Id. at 522-23 and n. 37 (quoting Sen.Rep. No. 96-368, 1st Sess., p. 19 [1979]). Though not squarely on point here, Perdue does reinforce skepticism that in enacting DIDA Congress intended more than a limited intrusion into state substantive regulation of consumer transactions. 4. An Evolving Preemptive Purpose? The “most favored lender” doctrine under the National Bank Act, Marquette, and administrative decisions. Greenwood and its amici argue that the statutes, administrative and court decisions which preceded DIDA point to a Congressional commitment to the equalization of credit terms in interstate banking and a legacy of widening preemption. Congress’ purported intent to encourage uniform lending practices through section 521 is said to be a logical consequence of the “most favored lender” doctrine created in the National Bank Act of 1864 and developed in jurisprudence capped by the Marquette decision of 1978. Greenwood’s Reply at 2; Greenwood’s Mem.Opp’n.SummJ. at 13-14. Greenwood would have this Court apply the familiar rule that “Congress is presumed to be aware of an administrative or judicial interpretation of a statute and to adopt that interpretation when it reenacts a statute without change.” Merrill Lynch, Pierce Fenner & Smith, Inc. v. Curran, 456 U.S. 353, 382 n. 66, 102 S.Ct. 1825, 1841 n. 66, 72 L.Ed.2d 182 (1982) (citations omitted) (quoting Lorillard v. Pons, 434 U.S. 575, 580-81, 98 S.Ct. 866, 870, 55 L.Ed.2d 40 [1978] ). The available legislative history, discussed above, affords little support for Greenwood’s argument that Congress, in enacting section 521, sought to develop fully the most favored lender doctrine and thereby eliminate all differences in national and state restrictions on credit card lending terms. However, some friendly authority is found in administrative decisions which deem the most favored lender doctrine from section 85 of the National Bank Act to have been incorporated in section 521 of DIDA. Greenwood notes that the language of section 30 of the National Bank Act which, as amended, is today 12 U.S.C. 85, closely parallels that of DIDA section 521, authorizing state-chartered banks to charge interest “at the rate allowed by the laws of the State ... where the bank is located.” Since 1936, the Comptroller of the Currency, the agency charged with enforcement of the National Bank Act, has interpreted section 85 as allowing a national bank to “export” to its operations in other states any interest rate permitted to competing lenders by the state law of the state in which the national bank is chartered. See 12 C.F.R. § 7.7310(a) (1978). This is the “most favored lender doctrine” as originally enunciated in Tiffany v. National Bank of Missouri, 85 U.S. [18 Wall] 409, 21 L.Ed. 862 (1874). The Supreme Court, in Marquette, 439 U.S. at 314 n. 26, 99 S.Ct. at 548 n. 26 (noting, with apparent approval, the Comptroller’s interpretation) relied on the National Bank Act and its most favored lender doctrine, to allow a national bank chartered in Nebraska to charge its credit card customers in Minnesota a rate of interest authorized in Nebraska, but prohibited by usury law restrictions in Minnesota. 439 U.S. at 313-15, 99 S.Ct. at 548-49. The Marquette court recognized that the “exportation” of interest rates from a national bank’s “home State” (where chartered) into a foreign state would “significantly impair the ability of States to enact effective usury laws,” but it found that such impairment “has always been implicit in the structure of the National Bank Act since citizens of one State were free to visit a neighboring State to receive credit at foreign interest rates.” Marquette, 439 U.S. at 318, 99 S.Ct. at 550 (citation omitted) (footnote omitted). The Court suggested Congressional action would be necessary to check the preemptive effect of the National Bank Act in a time of national bank deregulation, tightened credit availability, and an increasingly nationalized credit card lending system: This impairment may in fact be accentuated by the ease with which interstate credit is available by mail through the use of modern credit cards. But the protection of state usury laws is an issue of legislative policy, and any plea to alter § 85 to further that end is better addressed to the wisdom of Congress than to the judgment of this Court. Id. at 318-19, 99 S.Ct. at 550. The decision in Marquette has been taken by lenders and issuers of credit cards to establish a de facto national interest rate, with exportation of the most profitable credit terms allowed under laws of lender-friendly states such as Delaware. It is notable that section 521, in seeming response to Marquette, contains express preemption language (“notwithstanding any State ... statute which is hereby preempted for the purposes of this Section”) which reaches beyond the preemptive scope of section 85 of the National Bank Act. Greenwood’s projections of sweeping Congressional purpose implying wholesale preemption are undone, however, by a closer reading of the reasoning in Marquette. The driving concern there was protection of the system of national banks established by the National Bank Act — banks which have long been “National favorites” of Congress. Id. at 313-14, 99 S.Ct. at 548. Congress assumed that each national bank was “located” in the state named in its organization certificate, with lending terms governed by the laws of that “home state”. Id. at 310, 99 S.Ct. at 546. If the Nebraska-based national bank was obliged to conduct its business in Minnesota under the latter's laws, its “location ... [would] depend on the whereabouts of each credit card transaction,” id. at 312, 99 S.Ct. at 547, and such a result would “throw into confusion the complex system of modern interstate banking.” Id. The factual underpinning of Marquette cannot be ignored in the rush of lenders to embrace the Supreme Court’s general recognition of “the interstate nature of American banking” and the displacement of some state laws governing ‘interstate loans’ by the National Bank Act. Id. at 315, 318, 99 S.Ct. at 547, 550. Marquette preemption is limited factually to numerical interest rates, with no mention of the exportation of other credit card terms, such as late charges. Greenwood, as a Delaware-chartered state bank, is no “National favorite” as was the Nebraska bank, nor can Massachusetts’ defense of its usury laws be equated with the position taken by Minnesota with respect to the Marquette bank, a position which the Supreme Court held so directly threatened the structure of the national bank system established under the National Bank Act. Delaware does not enact law on behalf of Congress. The export of Delaware law to control the credit transactions of its banks in other states is not essential to preserve the legal identity of Delaware banks or the state banking system. Even if it is accepted that section 521 is an outgrowth of Marquette, it does not follow that the particular Congressional purpose and preemptive sweep of the National Bank Act extend through Marquette to section 521 of DIDA. The Civil War Congress that enacted the original National Bank Act in 1863 expressly intended to create a national banking system, and exportation of rates by national banks was essential to prevent the discriminatory effects of state usury laws which traditionally favored state-chartered banks. 439 U.S. at 314-17, 99 S.Ct. at 548-50. In contrast, the legislative history of DIDA, as already noted above, is extremely deferential to the state-federal balance, and the exportation of credit terms by state banks was apparently intended to prevent intrastate discrimination by state laws favoring local banks against foreign state banks doing interstate business. The most notable divergence between the National Bank Act and DIDA, of course, is that states were given no escape from National Bank Act supremacy, while section 525 of DIDA allows states to override the preemptive effect of DIDA by reasserting state usury ceilings otherwise preempted. 12 U.S.C. § 1730g note. (See Commonwealth’s Mem.Supp.SummJ. at 8 n. 11). Indeed, it is not at all clear that section 521 allows state banks to export even numerical interest rates to a state which, like Massachusetts, has opted out of DIDA preemption under section 525. The transubstantiation of the sweep of preemption under the National Bank Act via the blessing of Marquette into a like preemption under DIDA falters on this point. It is hard to square Greenwood’s view that Marquette inspired section 521 with the fact that, “[t]here is only one reference to Marquette in the legislative history of sections 521 through 523 of the Act.” Greenwood’s portrayal of Marquette as the preemptive bridge over state usury laws which spans the distance from the National Bank Act to DIDA, does draw some support from one federal court and several agency informal interpretive rulings. In Gavey Properties/762 v. First Financial Sav. & Loan Ass’n, 845 F.2d 519 (5th Cir.1988), the court held that under section 522 of DIDA, 12 U.S.C. § 1730g(a), a savings and loan institution located in Illinois could export its most-favored lender rate on commercial mortgages to a resident of Texas, a state which had a lower ceiling. This, the court held, was not a usurious practice under Illinois law. The court in Gavey arrived at its result partly in deference to a 1982 advisory opinion of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board (“FHLBB”). 845 F.2d at 521. In 1988, staff counsel of the FDIC issued an advisory opinion which also stated that section 521 incorporated Marquette: Section 521 preempts State usury laws in two ways. It gives insured State banks the right [to] charge a Federally-prescribed rate on loans. It also says an insured State bank may ‘export’ its home state’s interest rate — i.e., that the bank may charge the highest rate allowed in the State where the bank is located, no matter where the borrower may be located. Opinion of Douglas H. Jones, Deputy General Counsel, FDIC-88-45 (June 29, 1988) Fed.Banking L.Rep. (CCH) § 81.110. The FDIC opinion further stated that the State’s right under section 525 to “countermand” federal preemption “belongs to the State where the loan is made.... The fact that a State has countermanded under section 525 should not affect the usury preemption of section 521 for a bank not located in that State, so long as the loan is not made in the State that has countermanded.” Id. On its face, this opinion seems to support Greenwood’s view that the Commonwealth’s having opted-out of DIDA cannot trump Greenwood’s right to export its interest rates pursuant to Delaware law and Marquette. The opinion also noted, however, that the purpose of section 525 was to “preserve principles of federalism. Recognizing that section 521 deprived States of authority over matters traditionally committed to State control, Congress enacted section 525 in order to enable States to recover authority that section 521 had taken away.” Id. It seems difficult to square the result reached by the FDIC counsel with his concerns for federalism: that is, why should Massachusetts, a sovereign state, be deprived of authority over the traditional matter of setting its own usury limits on the ground that Congress prohibited Delaware from maintaining laws discriminating against its own state-chartered banks such as Greenwood? In sum, notwithstanding the scattered suggestions in informal administrative interpretations, Marquette's discussion of the National Bank Act does not teach a general dynamic of ever-expanding preemption or a Congressional strategy of uniform credit regulation which extends irresistibly to displace all state restrictions on state banks. Nor can preemption by necessity be implied logically from Gavey, based as it is upon deferential incorporation of FDIC administrative opinions which are themselves contradictory as to the scope of preemption and the breadth of Congressional purpose in enacting DIDA. 5. Exportation of Non-Interest Rate Terms. Even if it were established that Congress intended to establish full parity between national and state banks and that the Massachusetts opt-out legislation to avoid sweeping preemption was entirely ineffective, the imposition of late charges on Massachusetts credit card customers would still not be assured. The displacement of state law under DIDA’s section 521 is limited to “Interest rates” or “the rate allowed by laws of the state,” virtually the same language as is found in the National Bank Act. The Commonwealth argues that “rate” refers to numerical periodic interest rates, while Greenwood understands it to be an inclusive term extending to, “all provisions [including late charges] that affect the economic return ‘on a loan’ to a lender.” (Greenwood’s Mem.Supp.Summ.J. at 12-13). This point is at the heart of the dispute, and it is here that the law is most unsettled and support for Greenwood most attenuated. As noted above, neither the plain meaning of the terms “rates” and “interest rates” in section 521 of DIDA and section 85 of the National Bank Act, nor the legislative history of section 521 indicate that these terms carry the expansive meaning inferred by Greenwood. Alternatively, it is argued that an inclusive definition of “rates” is implied by the extension of “most favored lender” status to insured state banks through DIDA and the capacity of such banks to export credit terms through Marquette. (Greenwood’s Mem. Supp.Summ.J. at 12-16; Greenwood’s Mem.Opp’n.Summ.J. at 13-15). But the national bank’s authorized exportation of lending terms in Marquette (under National Bank Act provisions) like the state bank’s exportation in Gavey Properties (under DIDA) was, as a factual matter, strictly limited to numerical interest terms. Greenwood relies on cases arising under the National Bank Act which did not involve exportation of terms to establish that “ ‘the rate allowed by the laws of the State’ ” is recognized to include, “any charge, fee or expense which affect [sic] the economic return a lender may receive.” (Greenwood’s Mem.Supp.Summ.J. at 7). The first cited decision, First Nat’l Bank v. Nowlin, 509 F.2d 872, 876 (8th Cir.1975), does not offer an expanded definition of the term “rates,” but rather shows only that calculation of chargeable interest rates must take “the case law of the state” into account. Likewise, while the Sixth Circuit in Northway Lanes v. Hackley Union National Bank & Trust Co., 464 F.2d 855, 864 (6th Cir.1972) did allow a national bank operating in Michigan to charge closing costs in conformity to Michigan state law governing state banks, it did not determine whether such charges were “interest” or another aspect of “rates.” Greenwood claims Massachusetts law itself supports a flexible conception of chargeable “rates” under DIDA. It notes the collection of an annual credit card fee is allowed in spite of Massachusetts usury laws because such a fee is not a “finance charge” and “bears no relationship ... to any unpaid balance.” Northampton Nat’l Bank v. Attorney General, 8 Mass.App.Ct. 809, 812, 397 N.E.2d 1149 (1979) (Grant, J.). Such a ruling is hardly relevant here, however, where Greenwood contends that late charges are collectible precisely because they arise out of or in connection with the lending of money. (Greenwood’s Mem. Opp’n.SummJ. at 2). Reliance on Rock-land-Atlas Nat’l Bank v. Murphy, 329 Mass. 755, 760, 110 N.E.2d 638 (1953), is likewise misplaced, since that case emphasizes that, “Elimination of all other expenses is an essential and natural part of the legislative scheme for prescribing the allowable rates of interest.” True, some authority supporting a more flexible and inclusive formulation of a chargeable “interest rate” is found in an interpretive ruling of the most favored lender doctrine by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (“Comptroller”) which provided: If State law permits a higher interest rate on a specified class of loans, a national bank making such loans at such higher rate is subject only to the provisions of State law relating to such class of loans that are material to the determination of the interest rate. 12 C.F.R. § 7.7310 (1971) (emphasis added). While the administrative opinions of the Comptroller are persuasive only, they do provide a useful framework of analysis, one frequently employed by the courts in “rate” determinations. Under this analysis, the question is whether a given provision of Delaware lending law is “material” to determining an interest rate and therefore fully exportable by Greenwood to supplant Massachusetts usury law. A broad interpretation of what is “material” is found in Equitable Trust Co. v. Sachs, A-60063/120-1/Fol.713 (Circuit Court of Baltimore City, Md., June 28, 1981 and September 16, 1981), cited in Burke & Kaplin-sky, 1106, where the Court allowed a national bank to export an annual credit card fee to a state which prohibited such fees on the ground that the fee was “material” to the determination of “interest” under laws of the bank’s home state. This result is unusual, since such fees have not traditionally been considered as “interest” by courts or state legislatures. See Northampton Nat’l Bank, 8 Mass.App.Ct. at 813, 397 N.E.2d 1149. The Comptroller has more recently opined that state law provisions defining the “category” or “classification” of a loan are “material” and therefore “exportable” by a national bank under the National Bank Act. Comptroller Op. Letter no. 178, Fed.Banking L.Rep. (CCH) ¶ 85,259 (Jan. 12, 1981). Late charge provisions would not be material under this analysis since they are not germane to classification of a loan or the computation of numerical interest. The Commonwealth argues that late charges are functionally distinct from interest since, it says, the imposition or payment of the late charge does not result in Greenwood’s forbearance of asserting its right of collection. See Perry v. Stewart Title Co., 756 F.2d 1197, 1207-08 (5th Cir. 1985) (Late charge of 4% on mortgage loan which is merely a bona fide fee for servicing late payments, is “not properly characterized as ‘interest’ ”). Indeed, a Greenwood vice-president recognized this distinction when he testified at his deposition as follows: The payment of a late fee per se does nothing to change the decision on whether we would extend further credit or suspend credit privileges, except that it relates to his overall payment pattern on his account.... In my mind, finance charge is something that, as a consumer, I would expect to pay for having the privilege of extending my payments over a period of time. If I break my contractual arrangement and default ... I would expect to either pay a penalty or have the right for someone else to charge me a penalty for the extra cost that they have experienced in trying to enforce their contract with me. (Stormoen Dep. at 26, 62-63). In sum, regardless of whether certain finance charges may be exported under Marquette and DIDA, the late charges here at issue do not involve the facilitation of credit which undergirds the preemption provision of Title V of DIDA. Rather, they implicate a technical default and breach of the cardholder agreement. Whatever may be the merits of the financial or policy arguments that non-rate provisions are “material” to determination of interest rates, Congress regards late charges such as these in a class apart from interest rates generally. Thus, whatever the merits of Greenwood’s case for untrammeled interstate lending, DIDA preemption does not prohibit Massachusetts from enforcing its statute. Greenwood, in effect, asks this Court to take several unwarranted interpretive leaps to conclude that it has met its burden of establishing preemption. Prior case law under the National Bank Act, the legislative history of DIDA itself, and recent scholarly commentary all demonstrate the unsettled character of the law in this area generally. Principles of federalism operate with particular force to preserve traditional spheres of state regulation such as consumer protection through usury laws. The Commonwealth is entitled to enforce its laws absent a clear showing of preemption or interference with interstate commerce. The inclusion of a preemption override provision in DIDA, of which Massachusetts took advantage, underscores the presumption that the Commonwealth’s law must be given force here. Greenwood has not met its heavy burden of showing preemption, and the Court declines, itself, to create the sweeping policy of preemption which Congress since 1980 has refused to enact. B. Choice of Law — Delaware or Massachusetts? Balked at preempting the Massachusetts usury law, Greenwood argues that under applicable conflict of laws rules, Delaware substantive law ought apply. Under generally accepted conflicts rules, the forum state (Massachusetts here) applies its own choice of law rules to determine whether its substantive law or that of another state (Delaware here) governs the issue in question. Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 187(3) and cmt. h (1989 Supp.). See, e.g., Bushkin Associates, Inc. v. Raytheon Co., 393 Mass. 622, 473 N.E.2d 662 (1985) (Following the general rule of the Restatement, Massachusetts’ choice of law rules applied to determine whether Massachusetts or New York law applied to enforce an oral contract). Thus, this Court looks primarily to Massachusetts law to analyze the conflicts issue. In Bushkin, the leading Massachusetts conflict of laws case, the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts has provided some general guidance with respect to conflict of law, though it has not addressed the type of issue involved here. Thus, this Court must determine how it believes the Supreme Judicial Court would rule on the question at hand. In Bushkin, the court rejected traditional single-factor choice of law doctrine, such as the place of the making of the contract, or the State with the greatest “interest” in the issue, and instead used a broad, “functional” approach that looked to “various choice-influencing considerations.” Id. at 630-31, 473 N.E.2d 662; see Travenol Laboratories, Inc. v. Zotal, Ltd., 394 Mass. 95, 99, 474 N.E.2d 1070 (1985). See also Shinberg v. Bruk, 875 F.2d 973, 975 (1st Cir.1989); Bi-Rite Enterprises, Inc. v. Bruce Miner Co., 757 F.2d 440, 442-43 (1st Cir.1985); Choate, Hall & Stewart v. SCA Services, Inc., 378 Mass. 535, 540-41, 392 N.E.2d 1045 (1979). For guidance, the court in Bush-kin looked to the general choice of law principles set forth in section 6 of the Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws (1971) and to R.A. Leflar, American Conflicts Law (3d ed. 1977). The issue in Bushkin was whether the Massachusetts or the New York Statute of Frauds should be applied to an alleged oral agreement between two parties where such an agreement was barred under the New York statute, but not under the Massachusetts statute. Unlike the case at hand, however, the parties in Bushkin were business entities engaged in a commercial contract who had not specified a choice of law therein. These crucial factual differences limit the precedential effect of Bushkin to its multi-factor analysis. The issue here is rather whether Massachusetts law applies to prohibit Greenwood from enforcing the late charge provisions of the Discover Cardmember Agreement, notwithstanding the choice of law provision of the Agreement. That provision specifies that the Agreement “will be governed by the laws of the State of Delaware and applicable federal laws.” Under the Delaware statute, a credit card issuer located in Delaware may contract with cardmembers to charge any agreed-to interest rate, plus late payment fees on unpaid balances. Del.Code Ann. tit. 5, §§ 943, 950 (1990). Emphasizing the disparity in bargaining power between Greenwood — the Discover Card colossus — and a credit card applicant, the Commonwealth maintains that “Massachusetts will not enforce a contractual choice of law clause where it is one of the ‘boiler plate’ terms in an adhesion contract between parties of disparate bargaining power.” (Commonwealth’s Mem. Opp’n.Summ.J. at 15). It cites Ernest & Norman Hart Bros., Inc. v. Town Contractors, Inc., 18 Mass.App.Ct. 60, 463 N.E.2d 355, review den. 392 Mass. 1103, 465 N.E.2d 262 (1984), and In re Maxcy, 45 B.R. 268, 270 (Bankr.D.Mass.1985) for this proposition, but neither of those cases clearly establish that adhesion contracts are per se unenforceable under Massachusetts law. In Ernest, a contract between a Massachusetts subcontractor and a Connecticut subcontractor contained both a choice of forum clause that “Connecticut law shall have jurisdiction in disputes between the parties” and a choice of law clause that “[t]he law of the place of the building (Massachusetts) shall govern.” Id. at 62, 463 N.E.2d 355. The court treated the first clause as one for forum selection and refused to enforce it primarily on waiver grounds, although it also noted that the contract was one of adhesion. Id. at 66-68. The Massachusetts Appeals Court recognized, however, that the modern view holds forum selection clauses generally enforceable, citing Fireman’s Fund American Ins. Co. v. Puerto Rican Forwarding Co., 492 F.2d 1294, 1296-97 (1st Cir. 1974). Ernest at 64-65, 463 N.E.2d 355. In Maxcy, the Bankruptcy court refused to enforce a contract primarily on a ground other than adhesion, though it used adhesion as an alternative basis for its holding. The Bankruptcy judge simply asserted that adhesion contracts are unenforceable, however; he engaged in no analysis of Massachusetts law. This Court finds these decisions unpersuasive. Contrary to the Commonwealth’s assertions, the law in Massachusetts is that generally a court will not deny enforcement of a contract of adhesion unless it is unconscionable or in some other way fundamentally unfair. See Santos v. Lumbermen’s Mutual Casualty Co., 408 Mass. 70, 86, 556 N.E.2d 983 (1990); Lechmere Tire & Sales Co. v. Burwick, 360 Mass. 718, 720-21, 277 N.E.2d 503 (1972). This is the approach of the Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws (1989 Supp.), which Massachusetts decisions follow without exception since Bushkin. Under the Restatement, a contract of adhesion is enforceable unless the consent of the adherent was “obtained by improper means, such as by misrepresentation, duress, undue influence, or by mistake.” Restatement, § 187 cmt. b. There is no such evidence here. True, section 187 of the Restatement permits a Court to consider, as one factor, whether a choice of law provision is found in an adhesion contract, “namely one that is drafted unilaterally by the dominant party and then presented on a ‘take-it-or-leave-it’ basis to the weaker party who has no real opportunity to bargain about its terms.” Restatement, § 187 cmt. b. Though “[c]hoice-of-law provisions contained in such contracts are usually respected ... the forum will scrutinize such contracts with care and will refuse to apply any choice-of-law provision they may contain if to do so would result in substantial injustice to the adherent.” Id. Here, while the Cardmember Agreement is a contract of adhesion, its provision for late charges is neither unconscionable nor does it result in substantial injustice to the adherent. What’s more, in view of the protection of the Commonwealth’s consumer disclosure statute, Mass.Gen.L. ch. 140, § 114C, the Court rules that the consent of the cardholders to such charges was not obtained by improper means. Here, the choice of law provision unmistakably directs the parties to the law of Delaware. Still, analysis cannot end at this point. Under section 187(2) of the Restatement, The law of the state chosen by the parties to govern their contractual rights and duties will be applied ... unless ... (b) application of the law of the chosen state would be contrary to a fundamental policy of a state which has a materially greater interest than the chosen state in determination of the particular issue and which, under the rule of § 188, would be state of the applicable law in the absence of an effective choice by the parties. Under the Restatement, “[the] forum will apply its own legal principles in determining whether a given policy is a fundamental one within the meaning of the present rule and whether the other state has a materially greater interest than the state of the chosen law in the determination of the particular issue.” Restatement § 187, cmt. g. See Kronovet v. Lipchin, 288 Md. 30, 415 A.2d 1096, 1105 (1980) (citing § 187). Thus, under section 187, a key consideration is whether the Commonwealth’s usury statute, particularly its prohibition of late charges, amounts to a fundamental policy which it has a materially greater interest in enforcing than the policy by which Delaware permits a bank located in that state to assess late charges as interest. The Commonwealth claims that under section 187(b) of the Restatement the Massachusetts usury statute itself expresses the “fundamental policy” of Massachusetts, a policy which outweighs Delaware’s interest in permitting its banks to assess late charges in foreign states. This Court agrees. Not every statutory enactment expresses a fundamental policy. “On the other hand, a fundamental policy may be embodied in a statute which makes one or more kinds of contracts illegal or which is designed to protect a person against the oppressive use of superior bargaining power.” Restatement § 187, cmt. g. See, e.g., Business Incentives Co. v. Sony Corp. of America, 397 F.Supp. 63, 67 (S.D.N.Y.1975) (Despite agreement that New York Law apply, New Jersey has a strong public policy to protect relatively powerless consumer or small businessperson from more powerful commercial giants); O’Brien v. Shearson Hay den Stone, Inc., 90 Wash.2d 680, 586 P.2d 830, 833-34 (1978), on recons., 93 Wash.2d 51, 605 P.2d 779, 780-83 (1980) (Disregarding a choice of law provision in a broker’s contract and holding that the state of Washington has a materially greater interest in protecting its consumer-citizens than New York has in charging interest to Washington citizens); North American Bank, Ltd. v. Schulman, 123 Misc.2d 516, 474 N.Y.S.2d 383, 386-87 (Co.Ct.1984) (Foreign law chosen permitted usury against a fundamental policy of the forum); Whitaker v. Spiegel, Inc., 623 P.2d 1147, 1153— 54 (Wash.1981), app. dismd. Spiegel, Inc. v. Whittaker, 454 U.S. 958, 102 S.Ct. 496, 70 L.Ed.2d 374 (1981). Turner v. Aldens, Inc., 179 N.J.Super. 596, 433 A.2d 439, 442-44 (1981) (Usury provision of New Jersey Retail Installment Sales Act applied to out-of-state creditors despite silence of statute and choice of law clause to the contrary in an adhesion contract, in view of the evil legislature sought to remedy). In light of the significant body of authority on this point and the evident concern of Massachusetts with the protection of its consumers generally, and through its usury statute in particular, this Court rules that Massachusetts law applies in