Plaintiff-appellant Ovidio A. DeAndrade brought an action against Trans Union, *63 LLC (“Trans Union”); Equifax Information Services, LLC (“Equifax”); and Key-Bank USA (“KeyBank”) in Rhode Island federal district court, alleging various violations of the Fair Credit Reporting Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1681-1681x (“FCRA”). 1 The suit followed a dispute over a loan repayment between DeAndrade and KeyBank, and the credit bureaus’ alleged failure to reinvestigate properly and delete the disputed debt from DeAndrade’s credit report. Trans Union moved for summary judgment, and the district court accepted the magistrate judge’s recommended decision granting the motion. DeAndrade now appeals. Finding that the material facts are undisputed and establish no FCRA violation, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Trans Union.
I. Background
DeAndrade purchased new windows for his home from a company called NESCOR in July of 2001. At DeAndrade’s request, NESCOR agreed to arrange mortgage financing for the windows, although it did not specify the identity of the lender. DeAndrade and his wife signed documents in connection with this financing, which created a lien on their home. 2 NESCOR initially organized the financing through Conseco Finance (“Conseco”). When DeAndrade received notice of the first payment owed to Conseco, however, the bill was greater than the amount that he had indicated to NESCOR thаt he would be willing to pay. DeAndrade complained, and NESCOR promised to remedy the situation, sending DeAndrade a check for $11,722.30 with instructions to use the funds to pay the balance due Conseco. Shortly thereafter, DeAndrade received an invoice from KeyBank for approximately $121, an amount consistent with the original terms of his agreement with NES-COR. 3
DeAndrade made twenty-two monthly payments to KeyBank, from September 2001 until June 2003. Thе DeAndrades had never received copies of the loan documents, and at some point, apparently after speaking with a consumer attorney, DeAn-drade’s wife contacted KeyBank to obtain copies of the documents. The DeAn-drades were “shocked” to discover that the documents granted a mortgage on their residence to KeyBank and that their signatures on the documents apрeared to have been forged. As a result, the DeAndrades filed suit against KeyBank in Rhode Island Superior Court on August 20, 2003, requesting declaratory relief as to the validity of the KeyBank mortgage. 4 In that complaint, DeAndrade alleged that he and his wife never signed any documents granting a mortgage on their home to *64 KeyBank and never authorized NESCOR to do so on their behalf.
DeAndrade maintains that when he commenced the state lаwsuit, he stopped sending the monthly payments to KeyBank and instead deposited them into an escrow account pending the resolution of that action. KeyBank notified the three major credit bureaus — Trans Union, Experian, and Equifax — of the alleged delinquent payments, and the bureaus updated DeAn-drade’s credit report accordingly. Through an attorney, DeAndrade then sent a letter dated July 16, 2004 to those three crеdit bureaus, advising them that the mortgage underlying the negative item reported by KeyBank had been fraudulently obtained and urging the bureaus to investigate the transaction. 5 Attached to the letter were forty-nine pages of documentation, including the Rhode Island Superior Court complaint, provided in support of DeAndrade’s allegations of fraud. Experian deleted the KeyBank item after receiving DeAndrade’s letter, but Trans Uniоn and Equifax did not.
On August 2, 2004, Trans Union sent a letter to DeAndrade indicating receipt of his request to investigate the disputed item. Trans Union then contacted Key-Bank to verify the accuracy of the item. Trans Union did not forward the documents it had received from DeAndrade to KeyBank, but rather sent KeyBank an automated dispute verification form (“ACDV”). The ACDV stated that the customer “[disputes present/prev Acct Status” and believed the account to be “not his/hers.” KeyBank’s response verified DeAndrade’s name, address, social security number, month and year of birth, telephone number, and delinquent payment history. Trans Union then sent DeAn-drade a notice, dated August 11, 2004, informing him that KeyBank had confirmed the item’s accuracy and advising him of his further rights under the FCRA. Trans Union continued to publish the Key-Bank debt on DeAndrade’s credit report, but DeAndrade did not contact Trans Union again bеfore initiating this lawsuit.
On December 21, 2004, DeAndrade filed suit in the United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island, claiming that Trans Union had violated a provision of the FCRA, 15 U.S.C. § 1681i, by “fading to conduct a lawful reinvestigation” of the disputed debt and failing to delete the allegedly inaccurate item from DeAn-drade’s credit report. DeAndrade maintained that Trans Union’s refusal to delete the disputed item harmed him by negatively impacting his ability to obtain needed credit, such as a home refinancing.
Trans Union moved for summary judgment, arguing that the suit was an impermissible collateral attack on the validity of the KeyBank loan through the FCRA, that DeAndrade had in any case ratified the loan and therefore the information published on his credit report was accurate, and that DeAndrade had failed to adduce evidence of negligent or willful noncompliance with the FCRA. 6 Considеring the ratification issue to be dispositive, the magistrate judge addressed that issue *65 only and found that DeAndrade had ratified the KeyBank debt, rendering Trans Union’s report of that debt accurate. Noting that inaccuracy is a necessary element of an FCRA claim, the magistrate judge recommended granting Trans Union’s summary judgment motion. The district court accepted the magistrate judge’s recommended decision and granted summаry judgment to Trans Union. 7
II. Discussion
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, with all reasonable inferences resolved in favor of the nonmoving party.
Fenton v. John Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
If a consumer disputes the accuracy or completeness of any item contained in his or her consumer report, 15 U.S.C. § 1681i(a) requires consumer reporting agencies to “conduct a reasonable reinvestigation to determine whether the disputed information is inaccurate.”
8
The magistrate judge reasoned that “[a] necessary element of Plaintiffs [§ 1681i] claim is that the information Trans Union reported was inaccurate.”
Deandrade v. Trans Union, LLC,
No. 1:04-cv-00534, slip op. at 9 (D.R.I. Nov. 29, 2006)(unpublished). This court has yet to opine on the question whether a plaintiff must show that the disputed information contained in a consumer report is inaccurate in order to prevail on a § 1681i FCRA claim.
9
The
*66
magistrate judge’s recommended deсision and Trans Union’s brief on appeal cite a string of cases in support of the proposition that a showing of inaccuracy is essential. The relevant language in those eases, however, largely addresses claims brought under § 1681e(b), not § 1681i; indeed, in most of the cases cited, either no § 1681i claim was asserted or the question of accuracy is not addressed directly.
See, e.g., Dalton v. Capital Associated Indus.,
It is thus clear that to prevail on a § 1681e(b) claim, a plaintiff must demonstrate that his or her credit report sports an
actual
inaccuracy. Looking at the statutory language, however, it is not immediately obvious that § 1681e(b) and § 1681i should be interpreted identically in this regard.
10
See Kaiser Aluminum & Chem. Corp. v. Bonjorno,
Nevertheless, the weight of authority in other circuits indicates that without a showing that the reported information was in fact inaccurate, a claim brought under § 1681i must fail.
See Dennis v. BEH-1, LLC,
We find the reasoning of the majority of other appellate courts persuasive. The FCRA is intended to protect consumers against the compilation and dissemination of
inaccurate
credit information.
See Equifax v. Fed. Trade Comm’n,
The magistrate judge reasoned that the KeyBank item reported by Trans Union was accurate because DeAndrade ratified the KeyBank loan, and the district court accepted the magistrate judge’s recоmmended decision. However, “[w]e are not committed to the district court’s reasoning, but, rather, may affirm its order on any independent ground made apparent by the record.”
United States v. Cabrera-Polo,
To determine whether a consumer has identified a factual inaccuracy on his or her credit report that would activate § 1681i’s reinvestigation requirement, “[t]he decisive inquiry” is whether the defendant credit bureau could have uncovered the inaccuracy “if it had reasonably reinvestigated the matter.”
Cushman,
We therefore find it unnecessary to reach the question of ratification. The information reported by Trans Union was accurate not because DeAndrade had ratified the loan (although that may also be true), but because it did not state any factual deficiency that could have been resolved by a reasonable reinvestigation conducted by the credit bureau. KeyBank did in fact have documentation granting it a mortgage on the residence of one DeAn-drade who was in fact the same DeAn-drade that had been making the loan payments and is the plaintiff in this case. Determining whether DeAndrade was entitled to stop making those payments is a question for a court to resolve in a suit against KeyBank-and DeAndrade did file a state suit against KeyBank-not a job imposed upon consumer reрorting agencies by the FCRA. If a court had ruled the mortgage invalid and Trans Union had continued to report it as a valid debt,
then
DeAndrade would have grounds for a potential FCRA claim. In essence, DeAn-drade has crossed the line between alleging a factual deficiency that Trans Union was obliged to investigate pursuant to the FCRA and launching an impermissible collateral attack against a lender by bringing an FCRA claim against a consumer reporting agency.
See Wadley,
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the summary judgment order of the district court.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The complaint also alleged а defamation claim against KeyBank. Trans Union is the only defendant remaining in this action; the claims against Equifax and KeyBank were dismissed after DeAndrade reached settlements with those parties.
. The record is somewhat unclear as to what documents the DeAndrades attest to signing and when they signed them. There is a contract with NESCOR for the installation of the windows, dated July 21, 2001, which both DeAndrade and his wife admit to signing. DeAndrade also recalled signing five or six documents proffered by a NESCOR representative, some of which may have related to a loan. His wife recalled signing blank sheets of paper at the request of that same representative.
. After two months, KeyBank replaced the invoices with a payment coupon book for monthly payments in the same amount.
. The state court complaint also lists "Barbara Andrade,” DeAndrade’s wife, as a plaintiff, but she is not named as a plaintiff in the federal case.
. The letter stated, in part:
My clients has [sic] alleged that the mortgage and the promissory note that was given in favor of Key Bank was procured by fraud.... I assume that you will do an investigation on this matter. Please do not verify the accuracy of the Key Bank trade-line until you receive sufficient information to satisfy you that the signatures on both the promissory note and mortgage arе valid.
. Trans Union also put forward an argument regarding DeAndrade’s “defamation” claim; however, as the magistrate judge noted, DeAndrade did not allege a defamation claim against Trans Union.
. In its order adopting the magistrate judge’s report and recommendation, the district court noted that during the hearing on plaintiff’s objection to the magistrate judge’s report, DeAndrade for the first time raised an argument predicatеd on the Federal Truth in Lending Act ("TILA”), 15 U.S.C. §§ 1601-1667f. DeAndrade argued that another factor militating against ratification was KeyBank’s alleged failure to comply with TILA disclosure requirements. The district court ruled that argument was waived because it was not raised before the magistrate judge.
See Fireman's Ins. Co. of Newark, N.J. v. Todesca Equip. Co.,
. 15 U.S.C. § 16811(a) states, in relevant part;
(a) Reinvestigations of disputed information
(1) Reinvestigation required.—
(A) In general. — Subject to subsection (f) of this section, if the completeness or accuracy of any item of information contained in a consumer’s file at a consumer reporting agency is disputed by the consumer and the consumer notifies the agency directly, or indirectly through a reseller, of such dispute, the agency shall, free of charge, conduct a reasonable reinvestigation to determine whether the disputed information is inaccurate and record the current status of the disputed information, or delete the item from the file in accоrdance with paragraph (5), before the end of the 30-day period beginning on the date on which the agency receives the notice of the dispute from the consumer or reseller.
.At the hearing on plaintiff's objection to the magistrate judge’s report, counsel for DeAn-drade appeared to concede the issue, stating "I think [the magistrate judge’s] approach was correct in that once hе found that the debt was ratified, it was a valid debt, that we *66 don’t have to get to the reinvestigation issue.” However, DeAndrade asserts in his reply brief on appeal that he has not conceded this issue, although his appellate briefs offer no developed argumentation on the subject. Nevertheless, because this is an important threshold question of law and the magistrate judge’s treatment of it warrants clarification, we will discuss it here.
. In fact, courts have been careful to draw distinctions between the burdens imposed by § 1681e(b) and § 1681i in other contexts.
See, e.g., Cushman v. Trans Union Corp.,
