A District Court judge in New York has dismissed a Fair Debt Collection Practices Act class action case on the grounds the plaintiff lacked standing to sue and thus does not have subject matter jurisdiction, after accusing a collector of sending a Model Validation Notice that had two different balances in it.
The Background: The plaintiff received a Model Validation Notice that indicated the balance as of the itemization date was $1,232.38, but at the bottom of the itemization table, it read that the total amount of the debt now was $1,245.49, even though the rest of the line items in the table were empty.
- The plaintiff filed suit, indicating that the discrepancy left her confused and unable to pay the debt and that the letter was an unlawful attempt to collect on fees in excess of the lawful amount.
- The complaint also indicated the plaintiff expended time and money in a number of different ways — none of which were an attempt to repay the debt — and that she suffered from anxiety, difficulty sleeping, an increased heartrate, and other stress associated with the fear of a collector attempting to collect more than the legally authorized amount.
The Ruling: The different amounts confused the plaintiff into taking no action to repay the debt or learn more about the discrepancy, but none of her allegations demonstrate standing to pursue her claims in federal court, ruled Judge Pamela K. Chen of the District Court for the Eastern District of New York.
- Judge Chen goes into meticulous detail why each of the plaintiff’s arguments fail to demonstrate she has standing to sue, tossing out the time and money that was expended and the emotional harms because they do not meet the threshold for having standing to pursue her claims in federal court.