JOHN CORBETT O'MEARA, District Judge.
This matter came before the court on defendant Experian Information Solutions' April 23, 2015 motion for summary judgment. Plaintiff Suzanne Fried filed a response May 13, 2015; and Defendant filed a reply May 27, 2015. Oral argument was heard September 17, 2015.
Plaintiff Suzanne Fried entered into a trial loan modification of her home mortgage with Bank of America, formerly a defendant in this suit, on July 22, 2011. According to the Loan Modification Agreement ("LMA"), Plaintiff's modified payments were to be made August through November 2011. The LMA provided the following:
Compl. at ¶ 7.
Pursuant to her modification agreement with Bank of America, Plaintiff made all of her payments to Bank of America in a timely manner. However, Bank of America reported those payments as delinquent "because the full payment [was] not being made."
In March 2014, Plaintiff, through Michigan Consumer Credit Lawyers, sent defendant Experian a letter disputing the Bank of America late payments for September, October, November and December 2011. Experian forwarded the dispute to Bank of America; and on March 25, 2014, Plaintiff received the results of Experian's reinvestigation, which showed that the Bank of America late payments remained on her credit report.
On June 5, 2014, Plaintiff, again through Michigan Consumer Credit Lawyers, sent Experian a second letter of dispute about the Bank of America account. Experian again investigated the dispute; and on June 24, 2014, Plaintiff was notified that the late payments remained on the credit report. Plaintiff filed this suit July 22, 2014, alleging violations of the Fair Credit Reporting Act against Experian, Trans Union, Equifax Information Services, and Bank of America. All defendants except Experian have been dismissed from this lawsuit. Against defendant Experian the complaint alleged negligent (Count V) and willful (Count VI) failure to conduct a proper reinvestigation of Plaintiff's disputes as required by 15 U.S.C. § 1681i
If a consumer notifies a reporting agency that any item of information on the consumer's file is disputed, the Fair Credit Reporting Act requires that the reporting agency conduct a reasonable investigation within 30 days. 15 U.S.C. § 1681i(a)(1). In this case plaintiff Fried alleges that the two reinvestigations conducted by Experian were not "reasonable."
Plaintiff's LMA with Bank of America specifically provided that during the loan modification period her loan would be reported as delinquent because the full payment was not being made. It further provided that after the loan modification period was over, Bank of America would report the loan as delinquent only if payments were not made in a timely manner. The language of the LMA is clear and unambiguous. Therefore, Experian's reporting of the delinquencies was accurate. Accurate reporting cannot give rise to an FCRA claim.
Even if the reporting were not accurate, the court would find that Experian's reinvestigations were reasonable under these circumstances. Although the question of reasonableness is often left to the jury, there are situations in which a court can determine that the procedures used by a reporting agency are reasonable as a matter of law.
The same is true in this case. Because plaintiff Fried failed to provide Experian with evidence to show that Bank of America was unreliable in its reporting of her delinquencies, this court can and does find that Experian's reinvestigations were reasonable as a matter of law. In this case in particular, in which the LMA between Plaintiff and Bank of America specifically provided that her payments would be reported as delinquent even if they were paid in a timely manner, there is no amount of investigating that could have been done by Experian that would have resulted in Plaintiff's payments being reported as anything other than delinquent. The court notes that the LMA's provisions are logical under the circumstances for the reason provided in the LMA itself. "Because full payment is not being made," it makes sense that other potential creditors will be made aware that Plaintiff had not met her full obligations under the terms of her initial mortgage agreement. If Plaintiff had not wanted her timely, though abridged, payments to be reported to the credit reporting agency as delinquent, she should have negotiated with Bank of America to modify the terms of the LMA.
Finally, in order to constitute a willful violation of the Act, the violation must be either intentional or a violation committed by the consumer reporting agency in reckless disregard of its duties under the Act.
It is hereby