Introduction
This review article does not set out to retell the story of Anne Fleming’s life in a chronological fashion, but rather it engages intellectually with the themes in Anne’s scholarship. Anne’s passing means that her thoughts, guidance, and encouragement are lost to the scholarly communities of which she was a part. Over the course of her career, Anne offered sage advice, she helped others to develop their work, and she supported them wherever she could.Footnote 1 Now, there will no longer be that voice in the conference room, the office, or the lecture hall. We will not know how her presence would have influenced the field in the years to come and how her engagement with other scholars would have shaped them. So I write to gather together the ideas within Anne’s work, hoping to provide a fuller set of insights than can be gleaned by reading pieces of her scholarship individually. This integrated and coordinated view is the sort of comprehensive thinking that she would have given in her interactions.
Given that my aim here is both a professional and personal one, this also means that I will follow another unconventional pattern that those writing life stories actively discourage: I will refer to Anne by her first name throughout. This is not anachronistic. I knew Anne simply as Anne. By doing this, I hope that it may be easier to engage with a strong, insightful, and supportive voice that has now been lost. Although this piece has a biographical aim, it is not littered with personal remarks or anecdotes. The theory and methodology of biographical scholarship is now sufficiently developed that it has a critical component rather than hagiographic aim. Academic writers should no longer retell the life story of the “great and the good.”Footnote 2 It is now customary and, indeed, even expected that authors—including those writing In Memoria—should avoid narrating a story of heroes and heroines. They should comment on all aspects of one’s character, not just those of positive note.Footnote 3 The absence of such a personal commentary in this case should not be read to mean that I have adopted this “other” format in order to avoid writing objectively.Footnote 4
There are other resources that offer insights into Anne’s personality, manner, and her style; they remark keenly on her interactions with others and the esteem in which she was held. Her colleagues as Climenko Fellows have authored a piece,Footnote 5 Dan Ernst’s tribute appears in the first few pages of the recent issue of the Georgetown Law Review,Footnote 6 and Edward Balliesen has written in the Business History Conference’s Exchange blog.Footnote 7 Of all of these sources, most notable are the entries on Georgetown Law’s In Memoriam webpage and also on the Legal History Blog. Footnote 8 The latter is authored by the leading legal historians Dan Ernst, Mitra Sharafi, and Karen Tani. The In Memoriam webpage is reflective and open for others to comment. As it has been used in this way frequently and continues to be updated, this piece has a life force of its own. The notes placed there from friends, colleagues, and students capture Anne’s character perfectly.Footnote 9 No static single authored piece can claim to improve upon it.
This article has three sections. It begins by briefly explaining the issues at the core of Anne’s research and the subjects of her scholarly focus. It addresses not only what she had published thus far but also what Anne had planned for the future. This is followed by a section that considers her unique methodology. It does so by comparing and contrasting various different approaches and their disciplinary guises. The final part considers the historiographic debates for which Anne’s work had most significance. Anne made a central contribution to several bodies of scholarship. I outline three key themes and the questions that Anne’s work spoke to most definitively, although her work touched on many other areas of research.
Focus
Anne’s academic gaze was almost universally focused on legal issues involving individuals in poverty. Her first published note considered the termination of tenancy agreements of mentally disabled tenants in federally subsided housing.Footnote 10 She looked at the legal issues that affected working-class households through the lens of contract law and consumer law. This meant that she investigated policy making as well as law. Her later work considered the regulation of lending at the fringes, which is otherwise thought of in different temporal or international contexts as the business of loan sharks, payday lending, salary loans, and small-sum loans. Although Anne had published her monograph City of Debtors only three years ago, in 2018,Footnote 11 she looked to embark on a new research project.
While Anne had not yet published her new research on consumer bankruptcy law, she had discussed some of these ideas with colleagues and had begun to present them at conferences. She planned to examine the new system of consumer bankruptcy, which became Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Act. To do this, she explored bankruptcy docket books from the 1930s. Her early research on this project focused on Alabama. In doing so, she highlighted inequalities in race, class, and gender. Race and discrimination were important and logical components when looking at the legal history of poverty in this region. She intended to show Chapter 13’s origins in the American South and looked to use this background to explain some of the system’s deviations from past practices. She would have written about how Chapter 13 effectively exported nationwide one region’s highly segregated attitudes toward consumer debt and its forgiveness. With its use of mapping software, this was a different style of research; but this project was a natural next step for her. It stemmed from Anne’s interest in civil liberties and civil rights as well as poverty.
Approach
Anne’s methods caught attention. Banking historian Sharon Ann Murphy described Anne’s approach as one of “uniqueness.”Footnote 12 Indeed, Anne combined law with business history profitably. For those historians interested in the economy and society, in particular, Anne’s work had the highest appeal. Anne explained that her style was integrating “the ‘bottom-up’ approach of social historians with the ‘top-down’ perspective of traditional legal and political history.”Footnote 13 Anne was not interested in communicating only with those in the law field in a somewhat “internal” manner; she aimed explicitly and clearly to engage with “external” audiences and with the methods of other disciplines.Footnote 14
This open approach can be seen throughout her work. Her work on the leading American case Williams v. Walker-Thomas Furniture Co. (1965)Footnote 15 was not the typical law review piece, but it could well have been.Footnote 16 Her article focused on the legal principles surrounding unconscionability. The doctrine of unconscionability allowed courts to overturn agreements where parties had unequal bargaining power and the agreement was favorable to the stronger party.Footnote 17 Anne utilized her strengths as a business historian to dig deep into the archival record of the leading cases and the case law. With that, she built a new “narrative” of the events.Footnote 18 Anne, like most historians, recognized that she was engaged in the construction of historical narratives.Footnote 19 Her article on legal doctrine and Williams v. Walker-Thomas Furniture Co. (1965) remains, at this point in time, her most cited piece.Footnote 20
For all of her interdisciplinary work, openness to using nonlegal methods and speaking to those in different disciplines, Anne was undoubtedly a legal scholar at heart, and an exceptional one at that. Anne’s chapter on legal history and economic history in the Oxford Handbook of Legal History focused on how economic history could be brought into debates in legal history.Footnote 21 Of course, one might well see matters in the opposite direction on which discipline was at the core of the debate and which at the periphery,Footnote 22 but, for Anne, law was center stage. In Anne’s research on the history of mandatory disclosure rules in lending, she revealed a history that had been forgotten.Footnote 23 History thus gave new insights into contemporary legal questions and other ways of approaching the same question. She did not seek to unpick the intellectual or contextual background of law or unearth the motivations behind the ruling of judges, as others had done using the method of judicial biography.Footnote 24 She analyzed law not on the ideas behind it or in a way that might re-create the legal debate between opposing counsel in the courtroom.Footnote 25
How did Anne analyze the history of consumer law? Anne focused on law’s impact on people and groups.Footnote 26 It is for this reason that Anne’s work was held in such high esteem by business historians. Her focus was plainly and clearly on the consumers themselves.Footnote 27 She did not, for example, venture into quantitative studies or adopt the macro-approach of law and economics.Footnote 28 Anne explained the circumstances in which individuals came to seek a payday loan, why they could not repay it, and when a legal case for default was filled and how it unfolded. The life stories of litigants were recounted personally, recreating the social life of the borrower and their communities.Footnote 29 Anne was able to weave together a story of legal rules that had failed to protect vulnerable individuals with key debates in legal history, business history, and economic history.
Themes
Anne’s scholarship also advanced several substantive claims about the history of lending, the state’s role in protecting the poor, and the regulation of capitalism, more generally. This section proceeds to consider each of these points in turn. Her work added much to these discrete areas of research, but it was equally powerful in terms of recalibrating trends and the direction of future scholarship.
A Social History of Finance
First, Anne’s work made a distinctive impact on financial history. For those looking for a more traditional firm- or sector-level approach to banking, Anne’s work said little. It is difficult to build a debate about facts or their interpretation between Anne’s scholarship and, for example, the recent work of Louis Hyman or Scott Reynolds Nelson, or the stalwart texts on American banking by Howard Bodenhorn or Eugene White.Footnote 30 As one reviewer, Simone Selva, said of the book City of Debtors, “[d]espite what the title might imply, this book does not add to the banking history of modern America. It contains neither a statistical survey of small banks, lending institutions, and intermediary moneylenders, nor detailed case studies of such institutions. Likewise, the author does not examine the monetary and banking technicalities of the lending transactions that she depicts.”Footnote 31 It would be perhaps difficult to engage in this—especially for the types of businesses in Anne’s study. This would be, after all, a business history of loan-sharking.
To have engaged in a study of these firms would have been an analysis of how lenders marketed themselves to this segment of consumers; that is, to customers experiencing financial hardship or were otherwise faced with destitute circumstances.Footnote 32 It would have also involved studying the process through which these lenders assessed creditworthiness (and then based on that assessment, charged borrowers exorbitant rates of interest).Footnote 33 Enforcement mechanisms and their effectiveness (e.g., suing the debtor or their employer for nonrepayment) would have been considered.Footnote 34 I am not sure what the readership for such a book might be. Anne would either have had to have written a history to help future loan sharks improve their business or to have understood firm growth. Business growth would have been due to excessively high rates of interest and aggressive enforcement mechanisms. High profits from these endeavors was at the expense of the end user—it pushed those on the breadline further into poverty. As Anne put it: we might “consider the rules that determine how the fruits of American capitalism are distributed across the spectrum of American households, leaving some to teeter on a tightrope while others are granted a wider, surer path to prosperity.”Footnote 35 Anne placed these firms and their activities into the context of American society.
Anne’s focus on the consumer and society as opposed to the firm was engaging. Studies in banking history that use an explicit Chandlerian framework are rare,Footnote 36 although management accounting techniques (and their link to firm growth or economic stability) are usually the subject of examination.Footnote 37 Anne did not follow these traditional routes. She showed that, for the most part, those who sought payday loans were working-class individuals who found themselves in desperate need of quick money; and they struggled to deal with lenders, who pressed the advantage of unequal bargaining power.Footnote 38 It is often not clear why loan applicants sought credit, and if this was granted, what the loan was used for.Footnote 39 The social context of banking is essential in understanding the way in which the industry operated and how lenders came to function in the way that they did. This socio-economic context is much stronger when looking to the business history literature on savers rather than debtors.Footnote 40
State and Regulation
Second, Anne added much to the debate about the state’s role in protecting consumers. This was a shift from the dominant debate in finance and economics, which hitherto focused on how the state might regulate banking in order to produce economic growth.Footnote 41 The legal scholar Mehrsa Baradaran explained in her review of City of Debtors that “what this particular fight and Fleming’s illuminating history reveal is the space between justice and liberty in a free market economy. What is the meaning of freedom to contract for desperate borrowers on the fringe with limited options? And short of more robust reforms ensuring economic equality, can the sharpest edges of capitalism be constrained by law?”Footnote 42 It is not always clear when the state should intervene in private agreements.Footnote 43 The view that courts should protect individuals, but thus also curb their freedoms, was hotly contested both through time and space.
Indeed, Anne considered freedom to contract in the guise of lending at rates above the usury laws in the Lochner era. The case of Lochner v. New York (1905)Footnote 44 closely resembled the litigation Anne examined between borrowers and loan sharks. The case became so influential in legal thinking that its name now defines an era of law making, with Lochner being commonly used to describe the period at the turn of century. Much work has been devoted to studying the intellectual historical element,Footnote 45 rejection of class legislation,Footnote 46 Social Darwinism and the survival of the fittest mentality,Footnote 47 and its impact in other regions of the United States.Footnote 48 As Victoria Nourse said in 2009, “the Lochner era’s conception of fundamental rights parallels that of today.”Footnote 49 This legal underpinning can be seen in Anne’s doctoral work that later became City of Debtors. Anne saw her PhD dissertation as offering a historical lens into the issues raised by People by Schneiderman v. Western Sky Financial, LLC et al. (2014).Footnote 50 The case involved a contract for a loan with excessively high interest rates that were well above the legal limit. The legal question concerned the court’s role in overturning a private agreement. What role should the state have to regulate these disputes? Should it even have one? Why should it intervene? The contract had, after all, been signed and agreed by both parties. Anne explained that “such questions have arisen repeatedly over the past century in different forums and have continued to challenge policymakers.”Footnote 51
Anne neither offered a solution to these policy questions nor a simplistic answer on how to fix and regulate finance.Footnote 52 These were tricky questions. She remarked that “to policymakers, small-sum lending has exemplified both the promise and the perils of modern American capitalism for low-income households.”Footnote 53 In other words, there were arguments to be had on both sides. Anne’s analysis struck a balance between, on the one hand, the social benefit that these lenders provided and, on the other hand, the moral hazard of allowing the consumer to take on further debts. There was also in Anne’s mind a sharp and clear distinction between the past and present. She believed that “although the past cannot foretell the future, it does reveal some obstacles that may lie ahead. It shows that governing small-sum lending has been difficult from the very beginning and that recent struggles are rooted in old challenges.”Footnote 54 Anne did not see history as offering neat stories of regulatory success or failure that might be learned from. The legal contestations over liberty to contract were reoccurring historic debates, but not necessarily ones that could be instructive for the present. Anne offered a cautionary note to those who looked to use the past for future purposes.
The political scientist Howard Schweber explained the importance of such a distinction when he distinguished between “law school historiography” and “law office history.” “Practitioners of law office history,” he said, “cherry-pick the historical record to support a position in a current controversy. Law school historiography does not imply any similar motivation. The impulses involved are directed toward academic scholarship.” This scholarly literature, Schweber commented, appears “to be motivated by the construction of a certain kind of historical narrative, one that accords with the author’s ideas about how ‘law’ works and develops.”Footnote 55 Anne unpacked pivotal moments and explained path dependency in the way a historian might.Footnote 56 It was to this wider historiographic debate that she contributed the most. Anne’s scholarship deepened our understanding of the period rather than using the past to deploy arguments for the present. Anne’s written work dealt with “historiography,” as Scheweber notes. Yet, on a professional level, Anne also had an eye to present-day law and policy making and used her knowledge of the past in these discussions. As an attorney, Anne represented homeowners facing foreclosure and later, as a legal academic, she was also involved in commenting on the legal work undertaken by those at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.Footnote 57
Even so, in tracing the lives of those on the weaker end of the contractual bargain, Anne said much that should be noted by policy makers. Anne’s work, which explained pathways to litigation, emphasized the vulnerability of borrowers. It showed understanding and compassion, revealing that borrowers were destitute and in desperate need for a quick loan, often through no fault of their own. Anne, in sum, suggested that these individuals needed to be protected. It equally noted that consumers did not know their legal position; there were key intermediaries who acted to advise individuals and protect them from rogue traders. Today, we might think of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, in the United States, and of Which? or of Citizen’s Advice in the United Kingdom, as obvious examples. These entities are, of course, recent additions in an era of consumer rights and increasing class-based legal protections. Anne’s work spoke of the historic forerunners in consumer advocacy, legal representation, and access to justice, such as the Consumer Federation of America and the National Consumer Law Center. Murphy noted the importance of legal intermediaries in Anne’s work. She said that “Fleming’s is a legal history told mainly from the point of view of the debtors and their legal advocates, with the purveyors of fringe finance largely reacting to this consumer advocacy.”Footnote 58 These advocates were not always lawyers.
David Sugarman notes that the traditional dichotomy between the worlds of law and business means that lawyers were more involved in business dealings than has traditionally been acknowledged.Footnote 59 Recent work, however, has also challenged our definition of advocacy and widened it beyond lawyers and those in the legal profession. Felice Batlan explains that in the first half of the twentieth century it was not lawyers that helped those in poverty; it was in fact those who were not legally trained and, in particular, it was women. These individuals offered legal advice to working-class households.Footnote 60 Anne said more about the negotiation of everyday economic relationships than legal principles. She did not investigate invisible means of regulation, such as a code of professional ethics, corporate social responsibility, transaction costs, or internal market mechanisms, as others have.Footnote 61 Here, her work spoke of people rather than “soft law” and other faceless regulatory forces. As the legal historian David Tanenhaus noted, Anne showed that creating more law was not seen by those at the time as the answer to remedy regulatory failure. He said that Anne’s article showed that market participants “looked beyond the state for solutions, relying instead on other market participants and corporate employers to police the small-sum lending industry.”Footnote 62
Capitalism and State-level Economic Governance
Finally, the relationship between law and economics has changed over time, and Anne saw future research in this area being one that focused on capitalism as a unit of analysis. Capitalism, on the one hand, has been a topic of discussion among business historians more generally, and it was central in Anne’s work. Others, such as Barbara Hahn, on the other hand, argue that the history of capitalism agenda bears similarity to the aims of previous generations of scholarship, which used a Marxist frame.Footnote 63 Some also question whether this qualitative method has the empirical component to substantiate claims about systematic industrial and economic development.Footnote 64 Anne considered “capitalism” as a broader concept and a framework for analysis, and engaged with this critique.
To analyze capitalistic endeavors, Anne used the concepts of justice, equality, and fairness. In her monograph, Anne wrote: “For decades, little loans have troubled Americans because they raise a big, vexing policy question: what is the meaning of justice within capitalism?”Footnote 65 In other work, Anne commented that the term “capitalism” was challenging to use owing to its broad, all-encompassing nature. She argued that “the tendency of recent work to disaggregate capitalism into its many varieties—such as war capitalism and corporate capitalism—indicates that the analytic work done by ‘capitalism’ alone is limited.”Footnote 66 Anne advocated “drilling down to the specifics, setting aside the abstraction of ‘capitalism,’ and instead focusing on how particular capitalist societies operate and especially on how law allocates decision-making authority among economic actors.”Footnote 67 Justice was, therefore, equated to decision making, and Anne was interested in the body or person that was given those decision-making powers. When looking to payday lending, economic actors in Anne’s story were not only individuals but also regulators at the state and federal levels. She played with this dichotomy and the overlapping functions and interplay at both levels.
Anne noted that “to date, historians of law and modern American capitalism have underemphasized the challenges of state-level economic governance in the modern era.”Footnote 68 She thought that her work showed “what insights can be gleaned by exploring this unfamiliar terrain, chronicling the history of modern American capitalism within federalism.”Footnote 69 She was documenting “how each generation of Americans has redefined the meaning of justice within capitalism for those on the economic margins.”Footnote 70 Delehanty, in his review of City of Debtors, said that “Fleming’s discussion of federalism is at its best in the final chapter when she turns her attention to the post-1970 period.”Footnote 71 Anne would have probably agreed with this. This chapter was also carefully blended with a discussion of changes in the banking system that led borrowers to struggle to access finance. The process of deregulatory federalism not only allowed interstate lending but also permitted banks to circumvent the usury laws and, in effect, to charge the level of interest that they liked.Footnote 72 Banks moved toward higher-income borrowers through the introduction of credit cards because this form of credit involved a lower cost to the bank.Footnote 73 Branch closures also resulted in low-income consumers seeking finance from alternative sources.Footnote 74 This meant that “so-called ‘fringe’ lending is no longer marginal,” and Anne added that “it has become a staple of mainstream American capitalism.”Footnote 75 Payday lending ceased to be a concern for individual states; the potential furthering of economic inequality had thus become a problem for the nation as a whole.
Conclusion
This article has teased out Anne’s interests and the overarching themes in her research. It shows how these themes and interests influenced the direction of her research in the hope that these ideas will continue to be influential in the years to come. Her scholarship tells a compelling story of individual lives, consumerism, and the pitfalls of leaving capitalism unbowed. The significance of Anne’s scholarship is not only owing to her substantive claims but also to her approach. She mapped out elaborate histories of lending, although she primarily assessed consumer finance law and economic policy by looking at their impact on the end user. There is much to be gained by taking such an approach and from using the consumer as a lens to examine banking and financial regulation.