In cursory fashion, a North Carolina District Court has
recognized a good faith defense to TCPA claims where the calls were made to a wrong
number. In Danehy v. Time Warner Cable Enterprises, a contractor acting on
behalf of Time Warner made six calls to plaintiff over the course of two
days. The calls were intended for a
third party Time Warner customer who had provided the cell number in question
to Time Warner as a secondary number at which he could be reached. The calls were made in response to a request
for service by the third party customer.
The plaintiff filed suit asserting two claims under the TCPA: (a)
placing unsolicited calls to a cell number through an ATDS without the
recipient’s prior express consent; and (b) calling a number listed on the
national do-not-call registry. On
summary judgment, Time Warner argued, among other things, that both of plaintiff’s
claims should be dismissed based upon Time Warner’s good faith reliance on its
customer’s consent to call the number in question. The motion was referred to a magistrate judge
who agreed and recommended that the motion for summary judgment be granted and
the claims dismissed. In reviewing the
magistrate’s recommendations, the district court found no clear error and
entered summary judgment in favor of Time Warner.
In its memorandum and recommendations, the magistrate judge noted
that “it is undisputed that defendant believed in good faith not only that it
did have consent to call the…number, but also that the calls were being made
for a service TWC’s Customer had requested.” Danehy,
Dkt No. 19, p. 11. After looking at the circumstances surrounding
the calls to the plaintiff, the magistrate judge found that “[u]nder the circumstances
presented, defendant’s good faith belied that it had consent to call the…number
would make imposition of liability under section 227(b) unjust.” Id.
The facts the court gave deference to were as follows:
·
Time Warner’s Residential Services Subscriber
Agreement with its customer expressly provided consent to be called at numbers
provided by the customer for any purpose.
The agreement further acknowledge Time Warner’s potential use of
automated telephone dialing systems and automated messaging;
·
The customer had provided the number at issue as
a secondary number at which he could be reached;
·
Time Warner had made calls to the customer and
received calls from the customer at the number in question over the course of
four years;
·
The calls in question were made after calls to the
customer’s primary number resulted in a busy signal;
·
The six calls made were made the night prior to
and the morning of the scheduled service;
·
Of the six calls made, the first two reached the
plaintiff’s cellular telephone, but no voice mail was left. The third call was answered by plaintiff, but
he took no action. The fourth and fifth
calls (both made the day of service) reached the cellular telephone, but no
voice mail was left. The final call
resulted in a voice mail;
·
The cellular number was obtained by the
plaintiff a few months before the calls occurred.
The case provides some cautious optimism for the debt
collection industry that under the right circumstances, a good faith defense
may have some traction in TCPA wrong number cases. It’s also worth noting that both the
magistrate judge and the district court cited favorably Chyba v. First Financial Asset Mgmt., 2014 WL 1744136 (S.D. Cal.
Apr. 30, 2014) (holding that the collection agency was not liable under the
TCPA for calls made to a wrong party where the agency was acting in good faith
based upon information provided to it).
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