Settle (verb): “to conclude (a lawsuit) by agreement between parties usually out of court.
Merriam Webster Dictionary
The Third Circuit has refined its position as to whether
collection of time-barred debt may violate the FDCPA where the communication
involves an offer to settle. In doing
so, the Court joined the Fifth, Sixth and Seventh Circuits in holding that,
even absent a threat of litigation, offers to settle time-barred debts could
mislead the least sophisticated consumer.
In Tatis v. Allied
Interstate, LLC, 2018 U.S. App. LEXIS 3238 (3rd Cir. Feb. 12,
2018), the debt collector sent a letter that read
“[The creditor] is willing to accept
payment in the amount of $128.99 in settlement of this debt. You can take advantage of this settlement
offer if we receive payment of this amount or if you make another mutually
acceptable payment arrangement within 40 days.”
Tatis at *1-2. Tatis filed suit asserting that the letter
violated section 1692e of the FDCPA.
Specifically, the consumer alleged that the word “settlement” meant she
had a legal obligation to pay the debt and was a false, deceptive or misleading
representation or means to collect a debt.
Allied’s motion to dismiss was granted by the district court which
relied on prior Third Circuit precedent, Huertas
v. Galaxy Asset Management, 641 F.3d 28 (3rd Cir. 2011). The district court held that “an attempt to
collect a time-barred debt does not violate the FDCPA unless it is accompanied
by the threat of legal action.” Id. at *3.
On appeal, the
issue before the Court was “whether collection letters may run afoul of the
FDCPA by misleading or deceiving debtors into believing they have a legal
obligation to repay time-barred debts even when the letters do not threaten
legal action.” Id. at *8. The Court held they may.
At the outset,
the Court distinguished its prior opinion in Huertas by noting the language in that letter did not refer to a
settlement. Instead, in Huertas, the debt collector informed
Huertas that his debt had been reassigned and requested that he contact the
agency “to resolve the issue.” The Court
concluded that Huertas “stands for
the proposition that debt collectors do not violate 15 U.S.C. §1692e(2)(A) when
they seek voluntary repayment of stale debts so long as they do not threaten or
take legal action.” Id. at *7.
The Court then
rejected Allied’s argument that because the letter did not threaten legal
action, there was no violation of the statute.
Joining the Fifth, Sixth and Seventh Circuits, the Court was persuaded
by the fact that major dictionaries include within the meaning of “settle” and
“settlement” a definition that refers to the conclusion and/or avoidance of a
lawsuit. The Court noted that section 1692e contains three distinct categories
of prohibited conduct: false, misleading and deceptive representations and
noted that “misleading” representations can include more than falsehoods. Refusing to provide a narrow interpretation
of the FDCPA, the Court declined to require an actual threat of
litigation. Instead, the Court held that
“[b]ecause the words “settlement” and “settlement offer” could connote
litigation, the least-sophisticated debtor could be misled into thinking Allied
could legally enforce the debt.” Id. at *13.
For what it’s
worth, the Court then attempted to step back from its decision by stating the
following:
·
“We reiterate what we said both in Huertas and elsewhere: standing alone,
settlement offers and attempts to obtain voluntary repayments of stale debts do
not necessarily constitute deceptive or misleading practices.”
·
“Nor do we impose any specific mandates on the
language debt collectors must use, such as requiring them to explicitly
disclose that the statute of limitations has run.”
·
“We do not, therefore, hold that the use of the
word “settlement” is misleading as a matter of federal law.”
So, what are
the take-aways?
·
The use of words like settle and settlement are
increasingly thorny in the context of time-barred debt;
·
A reminder as to context (both procedural and
factual)
o
Tatis involved
reversal of a motion to dismiss. The
Court’s holding should be viewed in context: that the debtor plausibly stated a
claim under Rule 12 – nothing more.
o
The Court also makes clear that the letter must
be read in context. Plausibly, there are
circumstances where the use of words ‘settle’ and ‘settlement’ might, in
context, not be misleading.
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