RODNEY W. SIPPEL, District Judge.
Plaintiff Steve Gray's amended complaint asserts that Defendants violated the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA), 15 U.S.C. ¶ 1692, et seq. by filing a debt collection lawsuit against Gray in state court. Defendants have moved for summary judgment arguing that their filing of a lawsuit in an attempt to collect the debt owed by Gray is not a violation of the FDCPA as a matter of law. I will grant Defendants' motion because they did not violate the FDPCA by filing their collection action in state court.
Defendant CACH, LLC buys consumer credit accounts that are in default and attempts to collect the debt.
CACH purchases consumer credit accounts in default from CitiFinancial, Inc.
The documents provided to CACH by CitiFinancial state that Plaintiff Gray had an account with CitiFinancial. On June 29, 2012, the account was charged off by CitiFinancial with an outstanding balance of $9,856.13. [Doc. # 29, Defs.' Statement of Undisputed Facts, Ex. 6, Redacted Schedule of Account p.9] CACH purchased Gray's account in July 27, 2012. [Doc. # 29, Defs.' Statement of Undisputed Facts, Ex. 5, Bill of Sale]
Defendant John C. Bonewicz is an attorney. Defendant John C. Bonewicz, P.C. is Bonewicz's firm. Plaintiff Gray alleges that Bonewicz is a debt collector himself and was acting as CACH's agent in the actions that give rise to this lawsuit.
On November 12, 2013, Bonewicz's law firm filed a lawsuit on behalf of CACH against Gray to collect the charged-off account in the Circuit Court of St. Louis County's Associate Division in the case styled
The underlying lawsuit in associate circuit court was filed on November 11, 2013 and a hearing was set on January 15, 2014. [Doc. # 37, Pl.'s Response to Defendants' Statement of Undisputed Facts, Ex. B] On January 15, 2014, counsel for Gray entered an appearance in the case, Gray served discovery on CACH and the hearing was reset to February 19, 2013. CACH served its discovery on Gray on February 14, 2014. The February 19
On December 11, 2014, Gray filed the present lawsuit against CACH in the Circuit Court of St. Louis County, Associate Division. Gray claims that CACH violated the FDCPA in filing the collection lawsuit against Gray. The case was removed to this Court on February 3, 2015. CACH has moved for summary judgment which has been fully briefed.
Summary judgment is appropriate if the evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, demonstrates that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
The undisputed evidence in this matter establishes that CACH had a business relationship with CitiFinancial in which CACH purchased defaulted accounts and attempted to collect the outstanding account balances from the account holders. CitiFinancial represented to CACH that the accounts sold to CACH were legal, valid, and binding obligations of the account holders; the past due balance provided to CACH was correct; and the information about the accounts provided to CACH in an electronic data file was materially true and correct.
When CACH filed its lawsuit against Gray in state court on November 12, 2013, CACH had purchased Gray's account from CitiFinancial, knew that the account was charged-off, and knew the outstanding balance on the account was $9,856.13. CACH also had CitiFinancial's transaction history for Gray's account before the trial setting on August 20, 2014. CACH never responded to Gray's discovery requests and dismissed the case without prejudice on August 20, 2013.
Gray asserts in the present lawsuit that CACH's lawsuit violated the FDCPA because CACH did not have a copy of the loan agreement/contract between Gray and CitiFinancial. Gray asserts that the allegations in the state lawsuit that Gray and CitiFinancial entered into a contract wherein credit was extended to Gray was false and misleading because CACH did not have a copy of the contract (and has never received a copy of the contract). Gray also asserts that the Affidavit of Claim attached to the state court petition was misleading because it was prepared by a CACH employee verifying the debt when the debt verification should have been prepared by CitiFinancial.
Although CACH did not have the contract between Gray and CitiFinancial it did have the bill of sale and the schedule of Gray's account. The affiant of the Affidavit of Claim states that she reviewed the records provided to CACH which indicated that Gray owed $9,856.13 on the account. The fact that CACH did not have the contract before the state lawsuit was filed does not, by itself, support a claim of bad faith against CACH. CACH had a general sale agreement with CitiFinancial and relied on the information CitiFinancial provided regarding the Gray account to initiate the lawsuit against Gray.
The record does not reveal why CitiFinancial failed to provide its contract with Gray to CACH. Nothing in the record indicates that CACH knew that it would not receive the contract. Nor does the record reveal why CACH decided to voluntarily dismiss its lawsuit against Gray without prejudice. Under Missouri law, CACH had the unequivocal right to dismiss the lawsuit prior to the swearing in of a jury panel for voir dire or, in cases tried without a jury, prior to introduction of evidence at trial. Mo. Sup. Ct. R. 67.02. Moreover, Gray's challenges to the Affidavit of Claim and to CACH's failure to produce the contract with Gray were issues to be raised in summary judgment and other motion practice with the state trial court. CACH's failure to obtain the contract between CitiFinancial and Gray did not violate the FDCPA.
Filing a collection lawsuit does not give rise to an FDCPA case merely because the factual allegations in the lawsuit were not adequately supported.
The Court of Appeals for Eighth Circuit Court indicated in
Moreover, in the present lawsuit Gray has not come forward with any evidence that he did not owe a debt to CitiFinancial or dispute, with admissible evidence, the amount of the debt alleged in CACH's state court lawsuit. Gray is the plaintiff in this case and it is his burden to prove that CACH was attempting to collect a debt that did not exist or made material misrepresentations in the collections lawsuit in violation of the FDCPA. Gray has failed to carry that burden. Gray has never filed an affidavit or other evidence that he did not get a loan from CitiFinancial.
Accordingly,