FRANCINA SMITH, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. GC SERVICES LIMITED PARTNERSHIP and ORG GC GP BUYER, LLC, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 19-3494
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
SUBMITTED JANUARY 4, 2021 — DECIDED JANUARY 21, 2021
Before EASTERBROOK, KANNE, and BRENNAN, Circuit Judges.
We put Smith‘s appeal on hold while the court considered several other cases that presented questions about standing to sue under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA or the Act). See Larkin v. Finance System of Green Bay, Inc., 982 F.3d 1060 (7th Cir. 2020); Gunn v. Thrasher, Buschmann & Voelkel, P.C., 982 F.3d 1069 (7th Cir. 2020); Brunett v. Convergent Outsourcing, Inc., 982 F.3d 1067 (7th Cir. 2020); Spuhler v. State Collection Service, Inc., 983 F.3d 282 (7th Cir. 2020); Bazile v. Finance System of Green Bay, Inc., 983 F.3d 274 (7th Cir. 2020). See also Nettles v. Midland Funding LLC, No. 19-3327 (7th Cir. Dec. 21, 2020). Now that those opinions have issued, and the parties have filed supplemental memoranda, the appeal is ready for decision.
Smith complains that GC Services violated
If you dispute this balance or the validity of this debt, please let us know in writing. If you do not dispute this debt in writing within 30 days after you receive this letter, we will assume this debt is valid.
As Smith sees things, these sentences conflict with
Spokeo holds that the requirement of injury as an element of standing is essential to suits under consumer-protection statutes, and Casillas applies that holding to the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. In the wake of Spokeo and Casillas, many litigants and some district judges distinguished between “procedural” claims, which would be governed by Spokeo and Casillas, and “substantive” claims, for which any asserted violation of the statute would be treated as an injury. Larkin and its successors in this circuit disapprove that distinction and hold that injury in fact is essential to standing, whether the asserted violation is best understood as substantive or procedural. Several of these decisions, such as Larkin and Gunn, add that a consumer‘s assertion that she was confused by a debt-collection letter does not show injury unless the confusion leads the consumer to take some detrimental step. Smith, who says that she was confused by the letter she received, does not contend that the letter‘s supposed lack of clarity led her to take any detrimental step, such as paying money she did not owe. She therefore needs some other way to show injury.
Smith seizes on the fact that Casillas wasn‘t planning to communicate at all and thus could not have been harmed by what the debt collector said (or didn‘t say) about the right way to communicate. In her supplemental filing after we issued Larkin, Smith proposes to distinguish Casillas on the ground that, if she had known that she could dispute the debt orally, she would have done so. We doubt that this belated position is proper. Smith‘s complaint does not contain such an assertion. Indeed, when her standing was challenged in the district court, Smith replied: “[W]hether Ms. Smith, herself, intended to dispute the debt cannot be said at this point in the litigation“. If she had not made up her mind even after filing suit, she cannot have had an intent to dispute the debt within 30 days of receiving the letter.
No matter. Even in her supplemental memorandum, Smith has not tried to explain how a need to use a writing deterred her from disputing a debt (she does not claim to be illiterate) or what good a dispute would have done her. The district judge observed that Smith “did not allege she had any doubt that she owed the creditor the stated amount of
Statutory rights such as the power to dispute the validity of an asserted debt can be valuable if the debt collector is mistaken about how much the consumer owes, or to whom. But when the debt collector is not mistaken—and Smith does not allege that GC Services has been trying to collect anything that she does not owe—a given statutory right may have little or no value.
Standing often depends on what theory a plaintiff advances and how injury would be proved. See Thornley v. Clearview AI, Inc., No. 20-3249 (7th Cir. Jan. 14, 2021). We do not hold that someone asserting a violation of
AFFIRMED.
