Jason DENNIS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. BEH-1, LLC, a limited liability company in the State of California, Defendant, and Experian Information Solutions, Inc., an Ohio corporation, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 04-56230
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted Aug. 17, 2006. Filed Sept. 25, 2007.
Meir Feder, Jones Day, New York, NY; Alexander Frid, Jones Day, Los Angeles, CA, for the defendant-appellee.
Before: ALEX KOZINSKI, DIARMUID F. O‘SCANNLAIN and JAY S. BYBEE, Circuit Judges.
ORDER
The petition for rehearing is granted. The previous opinion, 485 F.3d 443 (9th Cir.2007), is withdrawn and replaced by the opinion filed concurrently herewith. Either party may file a new petition for rehearing or petition for rehearing en banc.
OPINION
KOZINSKI, Circuit Judge:
We address whether a credit reporting agency can be liable under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA),
Facts
In October 2002, Jason Dennis was sued for unlawful detainer. Eventually, his landlord agreed to drop the suit, in exchange for $2,938.50, payable in installments. The parties agreed that no judgment would be entered against Dennis, and filed a written stipulation to that effect. The court‘s Register of Civil Actions inaccurately reports this event as: “11/25/2002 Court Trial Concluded—Judgment Entered.” Two months later, after Dennis paid the promised sums, the parties presented a “Request for Dismissal,” which the court clerk endorsed and filed. The corresponding Register entry accurately reports how this action resolved the dispute: “01/28/2003 Dismissal Without Prejudice—Entire Action, Filed & Entered.”
Defendant Experian Information Solutions, Inc. subsequently prepared a credit report on Dennis, which indicated that a “Civil Claim judgment” had been entered against him in the amount of $1,959. Dennis called Experian and informed it that the report was wrong, as he had settled the dispute and no judgment was ever entered against him.
Experian commissioned Hogan Information Services, a third-party public records vendor, to verify the disputed information. Hogan reported that the information Experian had was accurate and sent Experian a copy of the written stipulation between Dennis and his landlord, presumably as support for this conclusion. Experian thereupon advised Dennis that it would not amend the report.
Dennis sued Experian, alleging violations of the California Consumer Credit Reporting Agencies Act,
Analysis
1. The district court erred insofar as it held that Dennis couldn‘t make the prima facie showing of inaccurate reporting required by sections 1681e and 1681i. See Guimond v. Trans Union Credit Info. Co., 45 F.3d 1329, 1333 (9th Cir.1995) (section 1681e); Williams v. Colonial Bank, 826 F.Supp. 415, 418 (M.D.Ala.1993) (section 1681i creates no duty to reinvestigate where “the credit report accurately reflect[s] the status of the information contained in the public records“). Experian‘s credit report on Dennis is inaccurate. Because the case against Dennis was dismissed, there could have been no “Civil claim judgment” against him: “A dismissal without prejudice ... has the effect of a final judgment in favor of the defendant....” Gagnon Co. v. Nev. Desert Inn, 45 Cal.2d 448, 289 P.2d 466, 472 (1955) (emphasis added). Dennis has made the prima facie showing of inaccuracy required by sections 1681e and 1681i.2
The district court also seems to have awarded summary judgment to Experian because Dennis didn‘t offer evidence of “actual damages” as required by
Dennis has shown that Experian‘s credit report was inaccurate and he has offered credible evidence of actual damages. We therefore reverse the summary judgment for Experian. This doesn‘t mean that Experian is strictly liable for the inaccuracy of its reports. At trial on the section
2. After Dennis notified Experian of the error, Experian had a duty to “conduct a reasonable reinvestigation to determine whether the disputed information [was] inaccurate.”
Experian asked Hogan Information Services to review Dennis‘s court file. That file contained exactly what Dennis and the court Register said that it contained: the “Request for Dismissal,” which resulted in the dismissal of the entire action. Hogan‘s investigator seems to have overlooked this document, or failed to understand its legal significance, because he reported back that judgment had been entered against Dennis.
Experian could have caught Hogan‘s error if it had consulted the Civil Register in Dennis‘s case, which can be viewed free of charge on the Los Angeles Superior Court‘s excellent website.3 As described above, the Register clearly indicates that the case against Dennis was dismissed. Experian apparently never looked at the Register.
Experian also could have detected Hogan‘s mistake by examining the document Hogan retrieved from Dennis‘s court file. Hogan mistakenly believed that this document proved that judgment had been entered against Dennis; in fact, the document confirms Dennis‘s account of what happened. The document is a written stipulation between Dennis and his landlord that no judgment would be entered against Dennis so long as Dennis complied with the payment schedule. The parties couldn‘t have been clearer on this point: “If paid, case dismissed. If not paid, judgment to enter upon [landlord‘s] declaration of non-payment....” The parties altered the preprinted form accordingly. They crossed out part of the document‘s title (“STIPULATION FOR JUDGMENT“); wrote “NO JUDGMENT SO LONG AS PAYMENTS MADE” over “Judgment shall be entered in favor of plaintiff“; and struck the final line, “Judgment is hereby ordered,” replacing it with “Stipulation Approved.” Experian incorrectly interpreted this document as an entry of judgment against Dennis.
Ordinarily we would remand Dennis‘s claim for trial so that a jury could determine whether Experian‘s failure to reinvestigate was negligent. Here, however, a remand would be pointless. Even accepting as true everything Experian has claimed, no rational jury could find that the company wasn‘t negligent. The stipulation Hogan retrieved from Dennis‘s court file may be unusual, but it‘s also unambiguous, and Experian was negligent in misinterpreting it as an entry of judgment. Experian is also responsible for the negligence of Hogan, the investigation service it hired to review Dennis‘s court file. Hogan appears to have overlooked the legal significance of the Request for Dismissal and the Register entry showing that the case against Dennis was dismissed. See again
When conducting a reinvestigation pursuant to
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This case illustrates how important it is for Experian, a company that traffics in the reputations of ordinary people, to train its employees to understand the legal significance of the documents they rely on. See generally Rudy Kleysteuber, Note, Tenant Screening Thirty Years Later: A Statutory Proposal To Protect Public Records, 116 Yale L.J. 1344, 1356-64 (2007). Because Experian negligently failed to conduct a reasonable reinvestigation, we grant summary judgment to Dennis on this claim. We remand only so that the district court may calculate damages and award attorney‘s fees.4 As to all other claims under the Fair Credit Reporting Act, we reverse summary judgment for Experian and remand for trial. Dennis is also entitled to attorney‘s fees for an entirely successful appeal.
REVERSED and REMANDED. REFERRED TO THE APPELLATE COMMISSIONER FOR DETERMINATION OF ATTORNEY‘S FEES.
