CLARIFICATION: This article was updated to reflect that the judge granted the motion for summary judgment on the grounds the plaintiff lacked standing to sue in federal court.
Filing a lawsuit the day after being sued for an unpaid debt is not enough time for an individual to suffer emotional distress or financial loss, a District Court judge has ruled, granting a motion for summary judgment filed by two defendants in a Fair Debt Collection Practices Act case on the grounds the plaintiff does not have standing to pursue her claims in federal court.
The Background: A collection law firm hired a process server, which filed a summons and complaint against the plaintiff and obtained a case number. The process server sent the summons and complaint to the plaintiff via certified mail, but it did not have a case number on it.
- The day after she received the summons and complaint without the case number, the plaintiff filed her case against the defendants, alleging they violated the FDCPA by using false, deceptive, or misleading representations in attempting to collect on a debt.
- The plaintiff was able to retain an attorney and find the omitted case number between receiving the summons on one day and filing her complaint the next.
- A week later, the process server mailed the plaintiff a copy of the summons and complaint with the case number on it.
The Ruling: The fact that the original summons and complaint that the plaintiff received did not have a case number would likely not confuse a least sophisticated consumer, ruled Judge Adrienne Nelson of the District Court for the District of Oregon. That’s especially true in this case because the plaintiff did not assume that the summons and complaint were not legitimate.
- “Although the FDCPA protects against an individual’s concrete interest in being free from abusive debt collection practices, the omission of a case number — a seemingly unintentional omission — does not fall under the kinds of abusive practices Congress sought to protect against when passing the FDCPA,” Judge Nelson wrote.
- The plaintiff also could not demonstrate she was harmed by the lack of a case number, Judge Nelson ruled.