NOEL L. HILLMAN, District Judge.
In this class action for claims concerning "junk" faxes, presently before the Court is Plaintiff's motion for summary judgment. For the reasons expressed below, Plaintiff's motion will be granted as to liability only.
On January 24, 2007, Plaintiff, Sparkle Hill, Inc., a dry cleaning store, received an unsolicited telephone facsimile on its fax machine from Defendant, Invecor, LLC, d/b/a AMB Business Supply, which was in the business of selling cash register and office supplies. The fax was an advertisement selling paper rolls for cash register and credit card machines. Defendant had engaged Business to Business Solutions ("B2B"), which sold fax blasting services, to send out faxes to advertise its business.
B2B gathered a list of targets from a database purchased from InfoUSA, and after payment from Defendant and Defendant's approval of the content of the fax, B2B successfully faxed 34,668 faxes to 28,836 different fax numbers. The fax did not contain the proper out-opt information, and Plaintiff claims that it, as well as the 28,835 other recipients, did not consent to receiving the fax.
Plaintiff filed a putative class action complaint against Defendant for violations of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act ("TCPA"), 47 U.S.C. § 227.
(Docket No. 134 at 3, Amended Order Granting Class Certification.)
Plaintiff, through a claims administrator, mailed the Court-approved notice (Docket No. 136) to the class members — i.e., owners of 28,836 fax numbers that were sent Defendant's fax. Plaintiff has now moved for summary judgment in the class's favor in the amount of $17,334,000, which is $500 in statutory damages for each time Defendant's unsolicited fax advertisement was successfully sent to a class member's fax machine. Defendant has opposed Plaintiff's motion.
This Court has jurisdiction over Plaintiff's federal claim under 28 U.S.C. § 1331, and supplemental jurisdiction over Plaintiff's state law claims under 28 U.S.C. § 1367.
Summary judgment is appropriate where the Court is satisfied that the materials in the record, including depositions, documents, electronically stored information, affidavits or declarations, stipulations, admissions, or interrogatory answers, demonstrate that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.
An issue is "genuine" if it is supported by evidence such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict in the nonmoving party's favor.
Initially, the moving party has the burden of demonstrating the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.
Under the TCPA, it is unlawful "to send, to a telephone facsimile machine, an unsolicited advertisement." 47 U.S.C. § 227(b)(1)(C). The "person or entity" that receives an unsolicited fax may seek to enjoin the violations, and the recipient may recover for its actual monetary loss, or receive $500 per fax, whichever is greater. 47 U.S.C. § 227(b)(3). That amount can be trebled if the violation was willful or knowing. 47 U.S.C. § 227(b)(1)(C), (b)(3)(B).
The alleged actual damages in this case, as in most other junk fax cases, concern the cost of the recipient's paper and toner, the recipient's loss of use of its fax machine to conduct legitimate business, and the recipient's employees' wasted time in considering the junk fax. Exceptions to liability under the TCPA are if:
However, even if the unsolicited fax meets these exceptions, a sender is still liable under the TCPA if the fax fails to include an opt-out statement that enables the recipient to easily remove itself from any future unsolicited advertisements. "[T]he advertisement must clearly and conspicuously notify a recipient that it may opt out of receiving any future unsolicited advertisements, must state that the sender's failure to comply with a request for removal within 30 days violates applicable law, and must contain a `cost-free mechanism,' including a domestic phone number and fax machine number, for the recipient to transmit its removal request."
In order to grant summary judgment on a TCPA claim, the plaintiff must point to specific evidence in the record sufficient to establish that: (1) the defendant utilized a "telephone facsimile machine" to send "one or more faxes;" (2) that the transmissions constituted "`advertisements;'" and (3) that the defendant sent the transmissions without the recipient's consent, absent application of one of the statutory exceptions.
In conjunction with this TCPA violation, or in the alternative, a plaintiff may obtain summary judgment by pointing to evidence in the record that: (1) the defendant utilized a "telephone facsimile machine" to send "one or more faxes;" (2) that the transmissions constituted "`advertisements;'" and (3) the advertisements failed to contain a statutorily-compliant opt-out notice.
Plaintiff has provided the following facts to support its claim that Defendant violated the TCPA:
1. Defendant, through B2B, used a fax machine to send 34,668 unsolicited faxes.
2. Defendant's fax constituted an advertisement for the sale of cash register and credit card paper rolls.
3. Plaintiff, and all others similarly situated, did not consent to receive Defendant's fax.
4. The fax failed to contain the proper opt-out notice.
Based on these facts, Plaintiff argues that it is entitled to judgment in the class's favor for statutory damages of $500 for each unsolicited advertisement faxed by Defendant.
Defendant has opposed Plaintiff's motion on several bases. First, Defendant argues that because B2B faxed the advertisements, it cannot be held liable as the "sender" of the unsolicited faxes. Defendant also argues that Plaintiff has not provided proof to establish that Defendant directed B2B to target unconsenting recipients. The TCPA explicitly rejects this attempted defense to liability.
"The TCPA prescribes two parallel, and often blended, theories of `sender' liability . . .: the first applies to `the person or entity' on `whose behalf' a third party transmits an unsolicited facsimile advertisement; the other applies to the person or entity `whose goods or services are advertised or promoted in the unsolicited advertisement.'"
Additionally, a defendant cannot exculpate itself "from liability simply by hiring an independent contractor for the purposes of transmitting unsolicited facsimiles on their behalf," and instead "a person whose services are advertised in an unsolicited fax transmission, and on whose behalf the fax is transmitted, may be held [strictly] liable under the TCPA's ban on the sending of faxes, despite not physically transmitting the fax."
Without dispute, the fax at issue here advertised Defendant's services, Defendant designed the fax, and Defendant hired B2B to fax its advertisement. Simply arguing that Defendant did not provide B2B with the fax numbers to which B2B sent the fax does not absolve Defendant from liability under the TCPA.
Second, Defendant argues that it is not clear whether any of the fax numbers B2B purchased from InfoUSA, and to which B2B sent the fax, met the exceptions to liability under the TCPA — i.e., whether the numbers were of established business customers, generated from the voluntary communication of such number, or from a directory, advertisement, or site on the Internet to which the recipient voluntarily agreed to make available its facsimile number for public distribution.
As to the named Plaintiff, Defendant has not provided any evidence to refute that Plaintiff did not consent to the fax. Thus, because Defendant's fax to Plaintiff fails to meet the exceptions to liability under 47 U.S.C. § 227(b)(1)(C), Plaintiff has established Defendant's liability for its individual claim. The same can be said for any member of the class who is similarly situated — i.e. any non-consenting member of the class who received a fax from the Defendant's agent.
However, how many members of the class, or which members of the class, actually fit that definition of non-consenting has not been established in the record. Plaintiff argues that Defendant's fax sent to all of the other 28,335 fax numbers were similarly unconsenting under § 227(b)(1)(C), but Defendant argues that some portion of those numbers might actually meet the exception to liability. Neither party has provided concrete proof to support its position.
Moreover, the law is not clear whether on summary judgment it is Plaintiff's burden to show as part of its affirmative claim that the exception to liability provision does not apply, or whether it is Defendant's burden as part of its defense to liability to show that the exception to liability provision does apply.
The Court does not have to reach that issue, however, because even if one or all of the 34,866 faxes met the exception to liability provision, none of the sent faxes contained a complete and statutorily required opt-out statement, which would have enabled the recipient to easily remove itself from any future unsolicited advertisements. Several different versions of the fax were sent, and many did not contain any opt-out language at all. While it is true that a couple of versions contained the following statement at the bottom of the fax: "If you received this fax in error and would like to be removed from our database, call toll free 1-800-511-8261].", see Docket No. 111-4, this language is not sufficient under the TCPA. To be compliant, the fax transmission must also include a statement that the sender's failure to comply with a request for removal within 30 days violates applicable law, and provide a domestic fax machine number for the recipient to transmit its removal request. 42 U.S.C. § 227(b)(2)(D)(i)-(v); 47 C.F.R. § 64.1200(a)(4)).
In sum, none of the transmitted faxes satisfied the statute and accompanying regulations and therefore each violated the TCPA.
Consequently, the certified class is entitled to judgment in its favor for each advertisement faxed that failed to contain the proper opt-out notice to each class member.
For the reasons expressed above, Plaintiff's motion for summary judgment on its class action complaint that Defendant violated the TCPA must be granted. Within 15 days of the date of this Opinion and accompanying Order, Plaintiff is directed to (1) inform the Court on the status of its state law claims, (2) provide documentation to demonstrate class member opt-out notices, if any; and (3) provide a proposed form of judgment as to the TCPA claims, along with a justification for its request for statutory damages for each violation.
An appropriate Order will be entered.