A District Court judge in Pennsylvania has ruled that a plaintiff has standing to pursue a Fair Debt Collection Practices Act case in federal court because the plaintiff purchased Tylenol to help deal with symptoms after receiving a collection letter that contained a misleading communication, but granted the defendant’s motion for summary judgment.
The Background: The plaintiff received a collection letter from the defendant in January 2022 saying that the total amount of the debt now was $22.95. The letter also said that the plaintiff owed $271.34. The letter told the plaintiff she had until March 14, 2022 to dispute the debt.
- The plaintiff sought verification of the debt via email and a letter to the defendant. The defendant responded back, but send the response to an email address that was owned by the plaintiff, but was not the address used to send the dispute to the defendant.
- The plaintiff filed suit, accusing the defendant of violating Section 1692e(2)(A) of the FDCPA because it misrepresented the amount of debt the plaintiff owed; second, that it violated Section 1692g(b) because it restarted collection activity prior to sufficiently validating the debt; and third, that it violated Section 1692f because it sent its debt validation response to the plaintiff’s secondary email address rather than her primary email or via United States mail
The Ruling: After first ruling the plaintiff had standing to sue on the 1692e and 1692g claims, but not the 1602f one, Judge Christy Criswell Wiegand of the District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania turned to the merits of the case.
- Judge Wiegand ruled that a least sophisticated debtor would not be confused by seeing different amounts for the total amount of the debt due now and the total balance. The letter “unambiguously” represented the amount of the debt owed is $22.95 and anyone would understand that, she wrote.
- Also, regardless of what the plaintiff claims should have happened after she disputed the debt, the defendant met its obligations under the FDCPA for responding to a dispute, the judge ruled. In response, the defendant provided information about the debt amount, the services provided, and the dates the debts were incurred. It also attached statements from the creditor lising the services provided and the unpaid monthly balances.