The
Sixth Circuit recently weighed in on whether there is a “benign language”
exception to Section 1692f(8) of the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (the “FDCPA”). In Donovan v. FirstCredit, Inc., No. 20-3485,
2020 U.S. App. LEXIS 39798 (6th Cir. Dec. 18, 2020), the Court
joined the Third and Seventh Circuits in holding that Section 1692f(8)’s plain
text unambiguously prohibits markings on envelopes other than those necessary
for sending communications through the mail.
In
Donovan, the debt collector sent a letter with two glassine
windows. One of the windows revealed the
consumer’s name and address. The other window revealed an empty checkbox followed
by the phrase “Payment in full enclosed.”
Depending on how the letter was situated, this second window sometimes also
revealed an additional empty checkbox followed by “I need to discuss this
further. My phone number is __________.” Id. at *2-3. The consumer filed suit alleging that the envelope
created a risk that third parties would recognize that she was receiving mail
from a debt collector and asserting, among other things, a violation of 15
U.S.C. § 1692f(8). After pleadings
closed, the district court granted the debt collector’s motion for judgment on
the pleadings concluding that Section 1692f(8) should be read to include a “benign
language” exception, relying upon 2004 decisions from the Fifth and Eighth Circuits.
On
appeal, the Sixth Circuit reversed and sided with the more recent and contrary positions
of the Third and Seventh Circuits. See
Douglass v. Convergent Outsourcing, 765 F.3d 299 (3d Cir. 2014); Preston
v. Midland Credit Mgmt., Inc., 948 F. 3d 772 (7th Cir. 2020). In doing so, the Court determined that the
plain text of §1692f(8) forecloses a “benign language” exception because: (a) the
section is unambiguous; and (b) a literal reading of the section does not lead
to an absurd result.
In
determining that the section was unambiguous, the Court dismissed the Fifth
Circuit’s rationale for applying a “benign language” exception. The Court noted
that the canons of statutory construction refute the Fifth Circuit’s
interpretation of §1692f(8) which would prohibit “marking on the outside of the
envelope that are unfair or unconscionable, such as markings that would signal
that it is a debt collection letter and tend to humiliate, threaten, or
manipulate debtors.” Goswami c.
American Collections Enter., 377 F.3d 488, 493 (5th Cir. 2004). The Court went on to state that the Fifth
Circuit’s interpretation was unreasonable because §1692f(8)’s more specific
provision takes precedence over the preface of §1692f and to read it otherwise,
would violate the canon of surplusage.
The
Court likewise was dismissive of the debt collector’s argument (and by the same
token, the rationale of the Eighth Circuit) that a literal reading of §1692f(8) would lead
to an absurd result. The debt collector
argued that a literal reading of §1692f(8) would lead to an absurd result
because the provision simultaneously endorses the use of mail communications
while prohibiting debt collectors from including language and symbols on their
envelopes that are necessary for communicating by mail, including the consumer’s
address. The Court disagreed and held that:
the provision's blanket
prohibition is best understood as forbidding "any language or symbol"
on the envelope other than "language or symbols to ensure the successful
delivery of the communication," with
a statutory carve-out for the debt collector's return address and its name
(where the name does not indicate that the sender is a debt collector).
Donovan,
2020 U.S. App. LEXIS 39798, at *15 (internal citations omitted). The Court supported its rationale by looking
to the stated purposes of the FDCPA. The
Court noted that “[p]rohibiting language and symbols on envelopes aside from what
is required for efficient mail delivery furthers the ‘purpose of preventing
embarrassment resulting from conspicuous language visible on an envelope that
indicates that the contents of the envelope pertain to debt collection.’"
Id. at *16 (internal citations omitted).
Donovan is
the third circuit court in recent years to examine §1692f(8). Each of these circuits has taken a
restrictive view of the section - a trend the receivables industry should note
and weigh when assessing the risks and conveniences of glassine envelopes, bar
codes and the like.