The Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit has affirmed the dismissal of a Fair Debt Collection Practices Act case, but remanded the case back to the District Court to dismiss it without prejudice instead of with prejudice as it was originally adjudicated.
A copy of the ruling in the case of Davis v. Professional Parking Management Corp. et al. can be accessed by clicking here.
The defendant issued the plaintiff an $85 charge for parking in one of its lots. When the plaintiff did not pay the charge, the accounts was assigned to a collection agency for recovery. The collection operation sent the plaintiff a letter, at which point the plaintiff filed suit in Florida state court, accusing the agency and the parking company of violating the FDCPA as well as state law in Florida. The plaintiff alleged the parking charge was illegal. The defendants removed the case to federal court and sought to have it dismissed for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction and for failure to state a claim. The District Court judge granted the dismissal with prejudice, meaning the case was over and done with and the plaintiff could not file an amended complaint. The judge ruled that because the plaintiff was not misled into making any debt payments, the letters that were sent did not give rise to a concrete injury.
The plaintiff may have alleged potentially unlawful conduct, the Appeals Court noted, but failed to allege any harmful conduct. Citing its ruling in Hunstein v. Preferred Management & Collection Services, the Appeals Court noted that alleging a statutory violation that does not hurt anyone is not enough to have standing to sue.
“Even if we construe his complaint as alleging that he was injured by his receipt of Defendants’ letters, this harm is still purely statutory, without any allegations of justifiable reliance, actual damages, or other concrete injury,” the Appeals Court wrote. “Without a concrete injury, all Davis is left with is a letter allegedly misrepresenting his debt.”
The plaintiff did attempt to raise new arguments — that he wasted time by disputing the debt, the he faced additional stress because of the debt, and because his credit score might be impacted by the debt — but his complaint can not be amended at this stage of the process, the Appeals Court noted. But dismissals for lack of standing are equivalent to dismissals for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and should be made without prejudice, the Appeals Court noted.