Debt Collector's Assessment of Collection Fees it Has Not Incurred Violates FDCPA
SEEGER v. AFNI, INC. (December 8, 2008)
AFNI is a debt collector. Cingular is (or was) a cellular telephone service provider. Cingular contracts with individuals to provide telephone service. It typically includes in its contracts a provision that its customer is obligated to pay the fees of a collection agency and other costs Cingular incurs in enforcing its rights under the contracts. In 2004-05, Cingular sold some delinquent customer accounts to AFNI. AFNI sent collection letters to plaintiff Seeger and others. The letters stated that the recipient was responsible for collection fees. In 2005, Seeger and other plaintiffs filed suit. They alleged that AFNI’s actions violated the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (“FDCPA”) and the Wisconsin Consumer Act (“WCA”). The district court certified a class and granted summary judgment to the class. It held that AFNI’s action violated both the FDCPA and WCA because the owner of a debt is not allowed to impose a collection fee for its own benefit (as opposed to that it pays a third-party collector). AFNI appeals.
In their opinion, Judges Bauer, Cudahy and Wood affirmed. The Court agreed that AFNI could prevail if the fee was allowed either by the contract or by Wisconsin law. It turned first to the law. Wisconsin does permit recovery of losses that are the natural and probable result of a breach of contract. The Court noted, however, that the record was silent on the issue of AFNI’s cost of debt collection and could not support a characterization of the fee as a form of allowable damages. Turning to the contracts, the Court agreed with the court below that the contracts allowed Cingular only to collect fees it “incurred” in collecting a debt. The way the parties structured their arrangement, neither Cingular nor AFNI “incurred” any collection fees. Finally, the Court addressed AFNI’s argument that it was entitled to the bona fide defense in the FDCPA. The Court identified a growing split in the circuits on the issue of whether the bona fide defense applies to mistakes of law. It did not express an opinion on that issue, however. Rather. it decided that AFNI did not maintain reasonable procedures to prevent the error, which is an element of the defense.
Michael Rigney practices in the law offices of GVC Ltd. in Chicago. In this blog, he reports on select