The Second Circuit Court of Appeals has overturned a lower court’s dismissal of a Fair Debt Collection Practices Act case in which a defendant was accused of overshadowing the validation notice in a collection letter by telling the letter’s recipient that a lawsuit may be filed against him without any further warning.
A copy of the ruling in the case of Mizrachi v. Wilson, Elser, Moskowitz, Edelman & Dicker can be accessed by clicking here.
The plaintiff received a collection letter from the defendant. The letter, in part, stated, “THERE MAY BE NO FURTHER NOTICE OR DEMAND IN WRITING FROM [WILSON ELSER] PRIOR TO THE FILING OF SUIT” and that, if he was sued, the plaintiff may also be responsible for paying attorneys’ fees. The letter also included the standard validation notice, informing the plaintiff of his 30-day window to dispute the debt.
The plaintiff filed suit, alleging the disclosure about threatening a lawsuit overshadowed the validation notice. A District Court judge dismissed the suit, which the plaintiff appealed to the Second Circuit.
Even though the letter did not demand immediate payment, the warnings — as well as the fact that the threat was made in all caps — “could have created the misimpression that immediate payment is the consumer’s only means of avoiding a parade of collateral consequences” the Appeals Court ruled in overturning the dismissal and remanding the case back to the District Court.
As well, the Appeals Court ruled the District Court erred in saying that the plaintiff lacked standing to sue based on the attorneys’ fees claim because of an unsigned agreement between the plaintiff and the original creditor — the school his children attended — that expressly disclosed that the plaintiff could be held liable for attorneys’ fees.
“More fundamentally, the unsigned document, even if considered, at most raises a factual dispute about whether Mizrachi ever signed a contract
providing for attorneys’ fees,” the Appeals Court ruled. “The district court should not have resolved this factual dispute at the motion to dismiss stage, and instead should have accepted as true the complaint’s well-pleaded allegation that Mizrachi had signed no such contract.”