The Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit has vacated a lower court’s summary judgment ruling in favor of a plaintiff in a Fair Debt Collection Practices Act case and remanded the case back to the District Court so it can be dismissed because the plaintiff lacked standing to sue in the first place.
The Background: The plaintiff accumulated $7,500 in student loan debt during his first semester at college. The school withheld the plaintiff’s transcript, causing the plaintiff to interrupt his education. The plaintiff tried for several years to work out an agreement with the school. The school ultimately retained the defendant to file a collection lawsuit against the plaintiff.
- There were four documents served to the plaintiff — the summons, the complaint, a copy of the Payment Options Form that the plaintiff signed when he started taking classes, and a document that listed four requests for admission. Among the requests were asking the plaintiff to admit the allegations were true and that the plaintiff had no valid counterclaim.
- The plaintiff answered the complaint, but did not respond the requests for admission, which meant they were deemed admitted after 30 days. The plaintiff claimed he did not know that this would happen.
- The plaintiff then hired an attorney to file a class-action lawsuit against the attorney who filed the collection lawsuit, saying that serving the requests without a warning they would be deemed admitted was a violation of the FDCPA.
- The plaintiff worked out a settlement to repay the debt, but still pursued his suit against the attorney.
- After finding the plaintiff had standing to sue, the parties then stipulated to a statutory damages award of $1,000 and the judge awarded the plaintiff $58,475.32 in attorney’s fees, which the defendant appealed.
The Ruling: The plaintiff argued he had standing to sue because he would have denied the requests for admission had he been warned they would be deemed admitted even without a response, which would have been a different course of action. As well, the plaintiff’s inadvertent admissions cause him to lose negotiating leverage in the underlying collection suit and forced him to settle for the full amount that was originally owed.
- Neither of these arguments constitute a concrete injury, the Appeals Court ruled.
- The plaintiff may have harbored fears about the impact of the admissions, but that is no different than a plaintiff who attempts to claim that anxiety or confusion is enough to confer standing, which it isn’t, the Appeals Court wrote.
- Standing must also exist at the time the suit is filed, the Appeals Court noted. The plaintiff filed his FDCPA suit four months before he settled the underlying collection suit. The possibility that his admissions could be used against him was “neither concrete nor imminent,” wrote the panel.