JAMES P. O'HARA, Magistrate Judge.
This lawsuit arises from the debt collection practices of defendant Morgan & Associates PC, in attempting to collect a debt owed by plaintiff Sandra Braden to Citibank N.A. Plaintiff asserts claims under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act
Defendant is a law firm that specializes in collecting unpaid consumer debt. Specifically, defendant provides debt collection and legal services for Citibank, N.A. as an independent contractor. In December 2013, Citibank, N.A. engaged defendant to collect a debt owed by plaintiff. On December 23, 2013, defendant sent a letter (the "Letter") directly to plaintiff notifying her that the account had been referred to defendant for collection and provided her with the creditor's name, the creditor account number, and the amount owed. According to defendant, it had no knowledge that plaintiff was represented by counsel with respect to the debt when it sent the Letter. However, plaintiff had retained counsel in September 2013 to represent her in litigation initiated by Citibank, N.A. regarding the same account, which was pending in the District Court of Johnson County, Kansas when defendant sent the Letter.
Plaintiff filed suit against defendant on May 1, 2014 in the District Court of Wyandotte County, alleging two claims for violations of the FDCPA and the KCPA. The FDCPA establishes civil liability for debt collectors who attempt to collect amounts not permitted by law.
On October 1, 2014, defendant filed a motion for summary judgment, asserting that defendant had no actual knowledge that plaintiff was represented by an attorney when it sent the Letter directly to her.
In her proposed amended complaint, plaintiff seeks to add an additional claim for a separate and alternative violation of the FDCPA
Under Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a)(2), once a responsive pleading has been filed and twenty-one days have passed, "a party may amend its pleading only with the opposing party's written consent or the court's leave." The scheduling order set a deadline of October 20, 2014, for amending the pleadings.
Rule 15 dictates that the court "should freely give leave when justice so requires."
Plaintiff asserts that the information giving rise to her new claims and allegations was not known until October 1, 2014, when defendant filed its motion for summary judgment and supporting affidavit. Defendant disagrees. Defendant asserts that Mr. Irby was identified in its Rule 26 disclosures, which were served on August 18, 2014. Defendant asserts that account notes were included in the disclosures and Mr. Irby was identified in those notes. Further, defendant states that the account notes state that on December 23, 2013, plaintiff's account was reviewed and the Letter was signed and sent by Mr. Irby. Therefore, defendant argues that plaintiff cannot claim to have been surprised when defendant submitted the affidavit of Mr. Irby with its motion for summary judgment, stating that Mr. Irby reviewed the account and approved and signed the Letter. Because plaintiff waited two months to request leave to amend after receiving defendant's disclosures and twenty days after defendant filed its motion for summary judgment, defendant argues plaintiff's motion is unduly delayed.
Plaintiff responds that the defendant cannot claim undue delay because the deadline for amendments has not passed. Plaintiff insists that the information giving rise to the new claim was solely in the possession of defendant and plaintiff had no way of knowing that the signature on the Letter was not James Nelson's until defendant filed its motion for summary judgment. Plaintiff asserts that she diligently moved to amend as soon as it became apparent that the amendment was necessary. Because the deadline to amend has not passed and the discovery period is still open, plaintiff asserts her motion is not unduly delayed. Further, plaintiff insists that the "code" in defendant's collection notes was insufficient to put her on notice that Mr. Nelson did not sign the Letter.
Plaintiff argues that she learned through defendant's motion for summary judgment that a different attorney, one not licensed in Kansas, was responsible for reviewing the account and signing and submitting the Letter. Defendant claims plaintiff has had this information for two months per its initial disclosures. Regardless, plaintiff has filed her motion to amend within the deadline for amending the pleadings set forth in the court's scheduling order. Discovery is still ongoing and is not set to close until January 30, 2015. The parties will have ample time to conduct discovery, and defendant will have significant time to prepare dispositive motions relating to the propriety of plaintiff's additional claim as the dispositive motion deadline is not until March 3, 2015. As plaintiff filed her motion prior to the deadline set forth in the scheduling order and there is ample time for the parties to conduct discovery and for defendant to file dispositive motions, the court does not find that the amendment should be disallowed on the basis of undue delay.
Defendant claims it would be prejudiced by the assertion of an "entirely new action" by plaintiff.
Plaintiff's amendment is not based on information she had prior to filing her original complaint. It is based on information she learned as early as August when defendant submitted its initial disclosures, or as late as October when defendant filed its affidavit in support of its motion for summary judgment. Plaintiff's new claim and allegations arise from the same set of facts as those set out in her original complaint— they are just refined facts with more detail than before because she did not learn who actually signed the Letter until recently. Defendant has failed to show how or why this unfairly affects its ability to prepare a defense to the new allegations. This is especially true in light of the fact that defendant has almost two months to conduct additional discovery, three months to file dispositive motions, and the trial date has not been set yet. And while it's true that defendant will have to file an amended answer, possibly conduct additional discovery, and may choose to file another dispositive motion, the increase in the cost of litigation does not rise to the level of undue prejudice. Further, the additional discovery needed in light of the new allegations appears nominal at best. Defendant has not shown that it will be unduly prejudiced if the court grants plaintiff leave to file the proposed amended complaint.
If plaintiff fails on the merits of her original claims, defendant argues that plaintiff should be prohibited from seeking fees for the efforts expended in prosecuting those claims in the event she is successful with her new claim in the amended complaint. Defendant asserts that it would be prejudiced if the court does not agree to the foregoing. Defendant's argument is premature and premised on too many "what-if" theories. As discussed above, plaintiff's amendments are not unduly delayed or unduly prejudicial. The court denies plaintiff's request to deny plaintiff the right to seek attorneys' fees if she is successful with her amended claim, which is based on information she learned recently.
The court concludes defendant's arguments regarding futility are issues that should be addressed at a later stage of the case. Discovery is still ongoing and defendants have until March 3, 2015 to file dispositive motions. The court would prefer to address all dispositive arguments in a single dispositive motion. This approach conserves judicial resources and prevents the procedural posture of this case from getting unnecessarily complicated. Based on these procedural concerns, and because plaintiff's amendments do not appear clearly frivolous, the court exercises its discretion and grants plaintiff leave to file the amended compliant attached to this motion.
To be clear, the undersigned is
Accordingly, consistent with the long-standing policy that leave to amend should be freely given under the discovery rules contained in the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the court grants plaintiff's motion for leave to file an amended complaint
IT IS SO ORDERED.