An Ohio Appeals Court has upheld a summary judgment ruling in favor of a collection operation that filed a lawsuit seeking to collect on an unpaid debt.
The Background: In September 2022, the plaintiff filed a lawsuit against the defendant seeking to collect on an unpaid credit card debt. The plaintiff filed a motion for summary judgment in April 2023, which was granted by an Ohio state court judge in May 2023. The defendant filed his appeal a month later.
The Appeal: In the appeal, the defendant argued that the plaintiff never provided him with a validation notice or otherwise informed him of his right to be able to dispute the debt or seek verification, and that the venue that the collection lawsuit was filed in was improper.
- Section 1692g(d) of the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act specifically states that formal pleadings do not constitute initial communications and therefore do not trigger the validation and dispute notification requirements of Section 1692g, the Appeals Court pointed out. Because the defendant could not demonstrate that the debt validation requirements were triggered before the collection lawsuit was filed, the Appeals Court upheld the lower court’s ruling.
- The FDCPA requires collection agencies to ensure that any legal actions are filed in judicial districts in which the consumer signed the contract that he or she is being sued for violating or the district in which the consumer resides at the commencement of the action.
- In his answer to the original suit, the defendant admitted that he lived within the jurisdiction of Crawford County Municipal Court, where the collection lawsuit was filed. Unsure what the issue was, the Appeals Court overruled the defendant’s appeal and affirmed the lower court’s summary judgment ruling.