Jerry Crabill appeals from the grant of summary judgment to a credit agency, Trans Union, the defendant in Crabill’s suit under Fair Credit Reporting Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1681-1681t. The Act creates a federal remedy against a credit reporting agency that fails to follow “reasonable procedures to assure maximum possible accuracy” of the information contained in a consumer’s credit report. 15 U.S.C. §§ 1681e(b), 1681o, 1681n;
Henson v. CSC Credit Services,
Jerry Crabill has a brother whose first name is John, and the similarity in names (including first initials) and the fact that their social security numbers differ by a single digit (Jerry’s ends in 9, John’s in 8) resulted on several occasions in Trans Union’s furnishing a credit report on John when it had been requested for information on Jerry’s creditworthiness, in addition to furnishing the requested report on Jerry. Denied credit several times, Jerry complained to Trans Union, which began adding at the end of its credit reports on Jerry the notation (in capital letters): “do not confuse with brother John D. Crabill.”
Only one creditor who denied credit to Jerry received a report that mistakenly attributed information about John to Jerry. And he received it not from Trans Union but from a seller of credit reports who, having received separate reports on Jerry and John from Trans Union, mistakenly merged the information in the two reports into a report that it sent the creditor, who on the basis of the inaccurate report decided not to extend credit to Jerry. The inaccuracy cannot be attributed to Trans Union. Other creditors of Jerry, however, who requested a report on him also received from Trans Union John’s report unsolicited, albeit with the notation quoted above. The reason is that Trans Union’s computer treated requests for a credit report on Jerry as requests for a credit report on John as well. If any of these creditors missed the notation and erroneously supposed that both reports pertained to Jerry, the mistake was the creditor’s. It is true that if Trans Union had programmed its computer differently, and as a result had not sent the creditors John’s report along with Jerry’s when only Jerry’s had been requested, they could not have been confused by receiving both reports. But Trans Union defends its program, pointing out that two files with similar though not identical identifying data may actually be referring to the same person, the differences in data being the result of errors in data collection or compilation, and so it was useful for creditors to have both Crabills’ files and make their own judgment of whether they were different persons. We think this is right, and that the statutory duty to maintain reasonable procedures to avoid inaccuracy does not require a credit agency to disregard the possibility that similar files refer to the same person.
Neither report contained any inaccurate information, or information that though literally correct was misleading, as in
Sepulvado v. CSC Credit Services, Inc.,
Jerry has failed, however, to present evidence that any of the creditors who denied him credit after receiving a report on him and his brother from Trans Union did so because of the report on John. Without a causal relation between the violation of the statute and the loss of credit, or some other harm, a plaintiff cannot obtain an award of “actual damages,”
Philbin v. Trans Union Corp.,
Cahlin v. General Motors Acceptance Corp., supra,
These cases (all but
Johnson
of course) say that a “successful” action within the meaning of these statutes is merely one that establishes liability. That the plaintiff has no or merely nominal damages is irrelevant. E.g.,
Mace v. Van Ru Credit Corp., supra,
What is true is that if no injury is alleged (or, if the allegation is contested, proved,
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
Might the consumer-protection cases that we have cited be interpreted to hold that Congress created a bounty system in
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the Truth in Lending and Fair Debt Collection Practices Acts and, following
Gui-mond,
the Fair Credit Reporting Act, a sister of the FDCPA and cousin of the TILA, as well? On this view, the attorneys’ fees are the bounty (or part of the bounty — a qualification that will become clear in the next sentence), their award to the plaintiff who proves a violation being intended to deter future violations and by deterring them to avert injury, just as in an explicit bounty system. This is actually a more persuasive interpretation of the FCRA than of the other two statutes because they authorize statutory damages, see 15. U.S.C. § 1640(a)(2)(A) (TILA), § 1692k(a)(2)(A) (FDCPA), and the FCRA does not; its only “bounty” is costs and attorneys’ fees. The attorney for the plaintiff is made a private attorney general, compensated for bringing suits that while they may not yield a tangible recovery for the client operate to deter violations by imposing a cost on the defendant even if his misconduct imposed no cost on the plaintiff. A number of the cases describe all three statutes in just this way. See
Tolentino v. Friedman, supra,
There are several problems with this approach, however. One is that attorneys’ fees are not really a bounty. They are intended not to reward the plaintiff who brings a successful suit but merely to defray the expense of doing so. Attorneys’ fees are — attorneys’ fees, and we know from
Steel Co.
that the prospect of an award of attorneys’ fees does not create a justiciable controversy if nothing else is at stake in the litigation. In addition, the Supreme Court appears to have limited the right to create a bounty system enforceable in federal courts to the situation in which the bounty deters the defendant from inflicting a future injury on the particular plaintiff bringing the suit,
Friends of the Earth, Inc. v. Laidlaw Environmental Services (TOC), Inc.,
Most important, the pertinent judicial landscape has changed with the Supreme Court’s decision this past term in
Buckhannon Board & Care Home, Inc. v. West Virginia Dept. of Health & Human Resources,
Affirmed.
