SOUTHFIELD, Mich. -

Another day, another finance company acknowledges it has received a subpoena from the U.S. Department of Justice.

Credit Acceptance Corp. posted a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission late on Friday stating the company that specializes in subprime auto financing received a civil investigative subpoena from the Justice Department pursuant to the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989.

The subpoena is directing Credit Acceptance to produce certain documents relating to subprime automotive finance and related securitization activities.

In the same SEC filing, Credit Acceptance also revealed that it received a civil investigative demand from the Office of the Attorney General of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

The CID that arrived earlier this month is relating to the origination and collection of non-prime auto loans in Massachusetts, according to the filing.

“The company intends to cooperate with these inquiries,” Credit Acceptance said.

Credit Acceptance is coming off of a third-quarter performance that included loan unit and dollar volumes growing by 4.7 percent and 6.1 percent, respectively, on a year-over year basis. The company also watched its network of active dealers rise 9.8 percent in Q3.

Friday’s development continues a string of reports and regulatory filings that have included the captive arms of Toyota and Honda as well as report about four other captive finance companies and two banks being asked about its practices.

According to Experian Automotive’s third-quarter data, Credit Acceptance held the No. 8 spot for market share in the used-vehicle financing space, holding at 1.37 percent to land between CarMax and Bank of America.