The Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has vacated a lower court’s opinion in a Fair Debt Collection Practices Act case, but only to dismiss the complaint because the plaintiff lacked standing to sue, instead of dismissing the case because the plaintiff failed to state a claim.
The Background: Back in the fall of 2021, the plaintiff received a collection letter from the defendant, a healthcare provider named Garden State Healthcare Associates. According to the plaintiff, the letter failed to explicitly state whether the healthcare provider was the original creditor or the current creditor, which left the plaintiff confused and uncertain. She filed suit, alleging the defendant violated the FDCPA by failing to explicitly identify the current creditor to whom the debt was owed.
- The District Court dismissed the case on the grounds the plaintiff did not state a claim, a decision which the plaintiff subsequently appealed.
The Ruling: Being just confused is not enough for a plaintiff to have standing to sue, the Appeals Court ruled. Noting that the harm “could be small,” a plaintiff still “must suffer some cognizable harm that flows from [her] confusion.”
- It’s possible for a purported violation of the FDCPA to be a fraudulent misrepresentation, the Appeals Court noted, but not including statutorily required information in a debt collection letter doesn’t make the cut, the Appeals Court noted.
- In this case, the plaintiff did not plead any harm beyond being confused so the Appeals Court ruled it could not assess the merits of the plaintiff’s claim.