This is a diversity case based on state law theories of defamation and negligence. The plaintiff, Alice Rhodes, appeals from the grant of summary judgment by the *906 District Court 1 in favor of the defendant, Ford Motor Credit Company (FMCC). We affirm.
In June 1985, Rhodes purchased a Ford automobile from an Arkansas retailer. The sales contract was assigned to FMCC. In October 1985, FMCC incorrectly informed Chilton Credit Bureau and possibly other credit reporting agencies that Rhodes had been delinquent on three payments. This information eventually was provided by Chilton Credit Bureau to a lending institution, which then denied Rhodes credit for another automobile purchase. In compliance with the Fair Credit Reporting Act (hereinafter “Act”), 15 U.S.C. § 1681 et seq., the lending institution identified the agency that made the derogatory credit report and notified Rhodes that she could request the institution’s reasons for denying credit. When Rhodes did so, she was told the denial was based on her record of payments to FMCC.
Rhodes complained to FMCC. FMCC promptly notified Chilton Credit Bureau of the error in FMCC’s records and sent Rhodes a letter explaining that error and apologizing for the mistake. Rhodes, however, continued to experience denials of credit. Her inquiries disclosed each denial was caused by an incorrect report that she had been delinquent in paying her debt to FMCC. Rhodes eventually sued FMCC in state court in Arkansas seeking a recovery under state law for defamation and negligence. FMCC properly removed this suit to the District Court on diversity-of-citizenship grounds.
Whether the district court properly granted summary judgment "is a question of law to be reviewed
de novo.” Leasamerica Corp. v. Norwest Bank Duluth, N.A.,
FMCC supported its summary judgment motion with Rhodes’s admission that FMCC did not act from malice or willfully intend to injure her; Rhodes said she believed FMCC had been only negligent. The District Court entered summary judgment for FMCC because Rhodes had failed to counter FMCC’s submissions with evidence creating a genuine issue of fact as to FMCC’s possession of malice or willful intent. Before the District Court and in her brief on appeal, Rhodes cited
Equifax, supra,
in which a panel of this Court discussed the rule of
New York Times v. Sullivan,
*907 We agree with the District Court that there was no genuine issue of material fact as to whether FMCC acted with malice or willful intent. As this Court recently has said:
It is enough for the movant to bring up the fact that the record does not contain [a genuine issue of material fact] and to identify that part of the record which bears out his assertion. Once this is done, his burden is discharged, and, if the record in fact bears out the claim that no genuine dispute exists on any material fact, it is then the respondent’s burden to set forth affirmative evidence, specific facts, showing that there is a genuine dispute on that issue.
City of Mount Pleasant, IA. v. Associated Elec. Coop.,
As to the disputed passage in Equifax, we need not decide whether the Sullivan standard is the law of this Circuit regarding the definition of malice as used by the Act. Even if that standard were used to examine FMCC’s actions, we agree with the District Court that Rhodes failed to make a sufficient showing to avoid summary judgment. The record shows that FMCC, upon discovering its error, promptly credited Rhodes’s account, and that, upon learning of Rhodes’s credit problem, wrote Rhodes to admit its error and apologize and notified Chilton Credit Bureau of its mistake. Evidence in the record indicates that FMCC did not furnish the erroneous information after October 1985. Rhodes submitted no evidence to prove otherwise; her claim that FMCC subsequently transmitted the false information is merely an inference from the fact that other reporting agencies possessed the information at later dates. Rhodes’s showing before the District Court failed to create a genuine issue even under the Sullivan standard, and therefore summary judgment was proper.
The decision of the District Court is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable George Howard, Jr., United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Arkansas.
. Exceptions to this rule exist when a plaintiff sues over failure to follow the express commands of the Act. See, e.g., 15 U.S.C. § 1681o (liability for negligent non-compliance with the Act). Rhodes has made no claim under these exceptions, and she concedes FMCC is entitled to the immunity from suit that the Act provides unless that immunity is overcome by a showing FMCC acted with malice or willful intent.
