Thursday, January 19, 2017

FYI: SCOTUS to Decide Whether Entity is FDCPA "Debt Collector" Merely Because It Purchases Defaulted Debt

The Supreme Court of the United States recently decided that it will review the decision of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit in Henson v. Santander Consumer USA, Inc., a ruling discussed in our prior update below.

 

As you may recall from our prior update, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit held that the fact that a debt is in default at the time it is purchased by an entity does not necessarily make that entity a "debt collector" subject to the federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1692 et seq. ("FDCPA"). 

 

A link to the docket is available here:  Link to Docket

 

The plaintiff consumer filed a petition for a writ of certiorari with the Supreme Court of the United States, asking the Court to resolve a "deep, mature circuit conflict that has only become more entrenched with time." The conflict refers to a circuit split over whether a creditor, such as a bank or finance company, collecting on a debt acquired in default is a "debt collector" subject to the FDCPA.

 

As you may recall, the FDCPA generally governs the activities of "debt collectors," not "creditors." Under the definition provided in the FDCPA, the following are defined as debt collectors:

 

- Any person whose principal purpose is to collect debts;

- Any person who regularly collects debts owed to another; or

- Any person who collects its own debts, using a name other than its own.

 

The FDCPA also provides that a person is not a debt collector if that person is "collecting or attempting to collect any debt owed or due or asserted to be owed or due another to the extent such activity concerns a debt which was not in default at the time it was obtained by such a person."

 

The FDCPA defines a "creditor" as:

 

- Any person who offers or extends credit creating a debt; or

- Any person to whom a debt is owed.

 

But the FDCPA further provides that a person is not a creditor if that person "receives an assignment or transfer of a debt in default solely for the purpose of facilitating collection of such debt for another."

 

The Fourth Circuit, along with the Ninth and Eleventh Circuits, has held that an entity is not a debt collector unless its principal purpose is to collect debt, it regularly collects debts owed to another, or it is collecting debt using a name other than its own.

 

In these circuits, if the entity does not meet the definition of a "debt collector" under one of those three tests, then it matters not that the entity is excluded from the definition of a "creditor" on the basis that the debt in question was in default at the time it was acquired. As the Eleventh Circuit put it, the exclusion from the definition of "debt collector" is not a "trap door" and it should not be "interpreted to bring entities that do not meet the definition of 'debt collector' within the ambit of the FDCPA solely because the debt on which they seek to collect was in default at the time they acquired it."

 

The Fourth, Ninth, and Eleventh Circuits also reject the argument that an entity that takes assignment of debts in default is regularly collecting debts owed to another because the debts were owed to a different creditor at the time of default.  Under this view, as long as the entity is not collecting using a name other than its own, an entity taking assignment of accounts in default is not a "debt collector" because its principal purpose is not to collect debt, nor does it regularly collect debts owed to another.  But, under this view, a debt buyer is a "debt collector" if, for instance, the debt buyer's principal purpose is to collect debt.

 

On the other side of the circuit split, the Third, Sixth and Seventh Circuits have focused on the exclusions from the definitions of "debt collector" and "creditor;" and reasoned that an entity that takes assignment of a debt in default is a debt collector, while an entity that takes assignment of a debt that is not in default is a creditor with respect to that debt. The Seventh Circuit explained that "[i]f the one who acquired the debt continues to service it, it is acting much like the original creditor that created the debt. On the other hand, if it simply acquires the debt for collection, it is acting more like a debt collector."

 

Also, both the CFPB and the FTC have adopted the view that the default status of the debt at the time of acquisition determines whether the entity is a "creditor" or a "debt collector." The CFPB took this approach in a recent consent order with a large bank, finding that the bank violated the FDCPA by failing to send validation notices on student loan accounts that were in default at the time they were acquired from another bank.

 

In an amicus brief, the FTC urged the Eleventh Circuit to find that a bank that acquired a portfolio of credit card accounts from another bank was a "debt collector" with respect to those accounts that were in default at the time of acquisition.

 

With the CFPB working to promulgate rules for first- and third-party collectors, finance companies, banks and other companies will be looking to the Supreme Court for clarity on whether they will be considered FDCPA debt collectors with respect to accounts that are in default at the time they are acquired from other lenders. 

 

 

 

Ralph T. Wutscher
Maurice Wutscher LLP
The Loop Center Building
105 W. Madison Street, 18th Floor
Chicago, Illinois 60602
Direct:  (312) 551-9320
Fax: (312) 284-4751

Mobile:  (312) 493-0874
Email: rwutscher@MauriceWutscher.com

 

Admitted to practice law in Illinois

 

 

 

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From: Ralph T. Wutscher
Date: Sun, Apr 10, 2016 at 10:43 PM
Subject: FYI: 4th Cir Confirms Entity Is Not FDCPA "Debt Collector" Merely Because It Purchases Defaulted Debt
To: Ralph T. Wutscher
Cc: DC Office, San Diego Office, San Francisco Office, Chicago Office, Cincinnatti Office, Cleveland Office, New York Office, Boston Office, New Jersey Office, Philadelphia Office, Indiana Office, Texas Office, Florida Office

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit recently held that the fact that a debt is in default at the time it is purchased by a third party does not necessarily make that third party a "debt collector" subject to the federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1692 et seq. ("FDCPA"). 

Instead, the Court held that the respective definitions of "creditor" and "debt collector" under the FDCPA control whether an entity is a debt collector subject to the FDCPA.

A copy of the opinion is available at:  Link to Opinion

Four Maryland consumers took out separate loans with a lender to purchase their respective automobiles.  The loans were originally made by a lender that was not a defendant in this action.  After the plaintiffs were unable to make payments, the lender foreclosed on the loans, leaving the plaintiffs obligated to pay deficiencies.

The company then sold the defaulted loans to the defendant finance company ("Finance Company") as part of an investment bundle of receivables, and the Finance Company thereafter attempted to collect on the loans it had purchased.

The plaintiffs filed a class action complaint against the Finance Company, alleging that the Finance Company violated the FDCPA by supposedly engaging in various prohibited collection practices. 

The plaintiffs alleged that the Finance Company was a "debt collector" under the FDCPA because:  (1) the debt they were attempting to collect was in default at the time the Finance Company purchased it; (2) the debt was originally "owed or due [to] another"; and (3) that because the Finance Company had been a debt collector prior to purchasing their loans, the Finance Company remained a debt collector after purchasing those same loans from the lender.

The Finance Company moved to dismiss on the ground that the plaintiffs "did not allege facts showing that…[it] qualified as a 'debt collector' subject to the FDCPA."  As you may recall, the FDCPA generally covers only the conduct of debt collectors, not creditors, "generally distinguishing between the two based on whether the person acts in an agency relationship with the person to whom the borrower is indebted."

The lower court agreed and dismissed the complaint, holding that the Finance Company "was collecting debts on its own behalf as a creditor and that the FDCPA generally does not regulate creditors collecting on debt owed to themselves."   

In affirming the dismissal, the Fourth Circuit held that after the Finance Company purchased the plaintiffs' loans, it became a creditor, and that because the Complaint only alleged collection activity after it became a creditor, its collection activity was not subject to the FDCPA. 

The Fourth Circuit rejected each of the plaintiffs' arguments, noting that each argument "contains several interpretational and logical flaws such that their interpretation of the FDCPA ultimately stands in tension with its plain language."

Rejecting the plaintiffs' first argument that the Finance Company was a "debt collector" because the loans it purchased had been in default, the Court held that the "default status of a debt has no bearing on whether a person [or entity] qualifies as a debt collector under the threshold definition set forth in 15 U.S.C. § 1692a(6)." 

The plaintiffs asserted that because 15 U.S.C. § 1692a(4) "excludes from the definition of creditor 'any person to the extent that he receives an assignment of a debt in default solely for the purpose of facilitating collection of such debt for another' such person must of logical necessity be a debt collector." 

The Fourth Circuit held that the plaintiffs argument was flawed in that it (1) ignores the requirement that the person must have received the debt "solely for the purposes of facilitating collection"; and (2) because it fails to address whether the Finance Company actually fits the definition of "debt collector" (and instead appears to attempt to prove a "negative pregnant"). 

Accordingly, the Court held that the default status of the debt is not determinative as to whether an entity is a debt collector subject to the FDCPA.

Importantly, the Fourth Circuit held that the determination of whether an entity is a debt collector "is ordinarily based on whether a person collects debt on behalf of others or for its own account."  And, that the "main exception" to that general rule is "when the 'principal purpose' of the person's [or entity's] business is to collect debt." 

The Court further noted, "[w]ith limited exceptions a debt collector [subject to the FDCPA] thus collects debt on behalf of a creditor.  A creditor, on the other hand, is a person to whom the debt is owed, and when a creditor collects its debt for its own account, it is not generally acting as a debt collector." 

Moreover, Fourth Circuit noted, the FDCPA in § 1692a(6) "defines a debt collector as (1) a person whose principal purposes is to collect debts; (2) a person who regularly collects debts owed to another; or (3) a person who collects its own debts, using a name other than its own as if it were a debt collector."

Applying this definition to the Finance Company, the Court held that the Finance Company did meet any of the above three definitions of "debt collector" under the FDCPA. 

For one, its "principal purpose" was not to collect debts because it also engaged in a substantial amount of direct lending and investing.  In addition, as alleged in the complaint, the Finance Company was not collecting on debts "owed to another," but instead collecting own "debts for its own account" because its collection activity only occurred after it purchased the defaulted debt from the lender. 

Thus, the Fourth Circuit held that the Finance Company did not fit the first definition of a "debt collector" provided in the FDCPA.

The Court also held that the Finance Company did not meet the second definition of "debt collector" because the plaintiffs had not (and could not) show that the Finance Company "regularly" collected debts "owed to another" or that it was "doing so here."  Rather, as the Court explained, the Finance Company was plainly collecting debts "owed to it…not to another…making it a creditor" and thus not subject to the FDCPA.

Finally, the Fourth Circuit held that the Finance Company plainly did not meet the third definition of "debt collector" because it was not using a name other than its own in collecting the debts.

In rejecting the plaintiffs' argument that the debt was originally due or owed to another, the Court held that there was no support for that argument in the plain language of the FDCPA itself. 

Instead, the Court held, to the extent "Congress was regulating debt-collector conduct, defining the terms 'debt collector' to include a person who regularly collects debts owed to another, it had to be referring to debts as they existed at the time of the conduct that is subject to regulation."  Thus, the Court held, as the debts were not "owed to another" but instead owned by the Finance Company at the time it engaged in the allegedly prohibited practices, those alleged practices were not subject to FDCPA regulation.

Likewise, in rejecting the plaintiffs' remaining arguments that the Finance Company had previously been a debt collector (or acted as a debt collector for other loans), the Fourth Circuit held that the plaintiffs grossly misinterpreted the FDCPA:

Under the plaintiffs' interpretation, a company such as [the Finance Company]—which as a consumer finance company, lends money, services loans, collects debt for itself, collects debt for other, and otherwise engages in borrowing and investing its capital—would be subject to the FDCPA for all of its collection activities simply because one of its several activities involves the collection debts for others.

The Court held that "Congress did not intend this."  Rather, the Fourth Circuit held that Congress "aimed [the FDCPA] at abusive conduct by persons who were activing as debt collectors" as explained in § 1692(e) of the FDCPA.  Thus, the Court held that the Finance Company is "therefore subject to the FDCPA only when acting as a 'debt collector' in § 1692a(6)" and not when it is engaging in activity to collect on its own debts "as a creditor." 

Accordingly, the Court affirmed dismissal of the complaint.

 

Ralph T. Wutscher
Maurice Wutscher LLP
The Loop Center Building
105 W. Madison Street, 18th Floor
Chicago, Illinois 60602
Direct:  (312) 551-9320
Fax: (312) 284-4751

Mobile:  (312) 493-0874
Email: rwutscher@MauriceWutscher.com

 

Admitted to practice law in Illinois

 

 

 

Alabama   |   California   |   Florida   |   Georgia   |   Illinois   |   Indiana   |   Maryland   |   Massachusetts   |   Michigan   |   New Jersey   |   New York   |   Ohio   |   Pennsylvania   |   Texas   |   Washington, DC

 

 

NOTICE: We do not send unsolicited emails. If you received this email in error, or if you wish to be removed from our update distribution list, please simply reply to this email and state your intention. Thank you.


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and

 

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