JOSEPH W. DENAN, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. TRANS UNION LLC, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 19-1519
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
Argued November 4, 2019 — Decided May 11, 2020
Before WOOD, Chief Judge, and BAUER and BRENNAN, Circuit Judges.
I
Plaintiffs each obtained loans from online payday lenders affiliated with Native American tribes. Denan, a New Jersey resident, took out a loan of $1,600 from Plain Green, LCC (affiliated with the Chippewa Cree Tribe). The loan charged an interest rate in excess of 300% and, according to the loan agreement, its terms were “subject to and governed by tribal law[,] … not the law of the borrower’s resident state.” After Denan stopped making monthly payments, Plain Green reported to Trans Union that he owed $2,689. When Trans Union issued a credit report listing the Plain Green debt, Denan disputed the report’s accuracy, telling Trans Union that Plain Green “illegally issued” the loan so “there was no legal obligation for [him] to
Padgett, a Florida resident, borrowed $900 from Great Plains, LLC (affiliated with the Otoe-Missouria Tribe) and $1,600 from Plain Green.1 Each loan demanded an interest rate in excess of 300% and was “subject to and governed by tribal law and not the law of [the] resident state.” After Padgett stopped making monthly payments, the lenders reported to Trans Union delinquent amounts of $2,585 owed to Plain Green, and $1,042 owed to Great Plains. Unlike Denan, Padgett did not contact Trans Union to dispute her credit report.
Plaintiffs brought a putative class action against Trans Union, alleging it violated two FCRA provisions:
Plaintiffs believe loans issued by Plain Green and Great Plains are void ab initio under New Jersey and Florida usury laws, and therefore any debt incurred under those loans is “legally invalid.” True or not, plaintiffs did not sue the lenders to void their debts, nor did they seek an adjudication to invalidate them. That is beside the point, per plaintiffs, because “reasonable procedures designed to ensure the maximum possible accuracy of the information would have shown that [Plain Green and Great Plains’] purported loans … were void and uncollectible.”
To plaintiffs, Trans Union “knew or recklessly ignored” that loans made by Plain Green and Great Plains were unenforceable, which spawned a
Trans Union moved for judgment on the pleadings under
II
We review de novo a district court’s grant of judgment under
We begin with
The FCRA imposes duties on consumer reporting agencies and furnishers in a manner consistent with their respective roles in the credit reporting market. Furnishers—such as banks, credit lenders, and collection agencies—provide consumer data to consumer reporting agencies.2 In turn, those agencies compile the furnished data into a comprehensible format, allowing others to evaluate the creditworthiness of a given consumer. Consumer reporting agencies and furnishers, though interrelated, serve discrete functions: furnishers report data to incentivize the repayment of debts, while consumer reporting agencies compile and report that data for a fee. What results is a credit reporting system, producing a vast flow and store of consumer information. For example, according to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, each of the nationwide consumer reporting agencies receive information
from furnishers on over 1.3 billion consumer credit accounts or trade lines on a monthly basis.3
“[G]iven the complexity of the system and the volume of information involved,” “[o]ne can easily see how, even with safeguards in place, mistakes can happen.” Sarver, 390 F.3d at 972 (evaluating
Here, plaintiffs contend not only that Trans Union had a duty to verify plaintiffs’ debt liability, but that Trans Union “knew or recklessly ignored” that their loans “are void and uncollectible as a matter of clearly established law.” Their claims, though, attempt to graft responsibilities of data furnishers and tribunals onto a consumer reporting agency. Only furnishers are tasked with accurately reporting liability. See
Nor are consumer reporting agencies tribunals; they collect consumer information supplied by furnishers, compile it into consumer reports, and provide those reports to authorized users. See Carvalho v. Equifax Info. Servs., LLC, 629 F.3d 876, 891–92 (9th Cir. 2010) (explaining same and that a consumer reporting agency is merely “a third party, lacking any direct relationship with the consumer”). The collectability of plaintiffs’ loans here requires resolution of three legal issues: whether the choice-of-law provisions in plaintiffs’ loan agreements are enforceable; whether New Jersey and Florida lending laws render plaintiffs’ loans void; and whether tribal sovereign immunity shields Plain Green and Great Plains
from the application of New Jersey and Florida laws. The power to resolve these legal issues exceeds the competencies of consumer reporting agencies.
any facts that would support [their] claim for relief.” Buchanan-Moore, 570 F.3d at 827.4
In this conclusion we join the First, Ninth, and Tenth Circuits in holding that a consumer’s defense to a debt “is a question for a court to resolve in a suit against the [creditor,] not a job imposed upon consumer reporting agencies by the FCRA.” Carvalho, 629 F.3d at 892 (quoting DeAndrade, 523 F.3d at 68); accord Wright v. Experian Info. Sols., Inc., 805 F.3d 1232, 1244 (10th Cir. 2015) (citing Carvalho, 629 F.3d at 892) (“The FCRA expects consumers to dispute the validity of a debt with the furnisher of the information or append a note to their credit report to show the claim is disputed.”). The correct way to resolve legal defenses to Plain Green and Great Plains’ loans was in a lawsuit against those lenders. “If a court had ruled the [loans] invalid and Trans Union had continued to report it as a valid debt, then [plaintiffs] would have grounds
for a potential FCRA claim.” DeAndrade, 523 F.3d at 68. Because no formal adjudication discharged plaintiffs’ debts, no reasonable procedures could have uncovered an inaccuracy in plaintiffs’ credit reports.
The
The
which stands in a far better position to make a thorough investigation of a disputed debt than the [consumer reporting agency] does on reinvestigation.” Carvalho, 629 F.3d at 892 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted); DeAndrade, 523 F.3d at 68 (holding same).
Plaintiffs labor under the impression that our decision in Henson v. CSC Credit Servs., 29 F.3d 280 (7th Cir. 1994) compels a contrary outcome. In particular, plaintiffs read Henson as requiring consumer reporting agencies to consider both legal and factual accuracy of the data contained in their credit reports. Henson imposes no such requirement. In that case, consumer reporting agencies reported that the plaintiff owed a money judgment. Though the agencies obtained this information from a court record, it turned out that a court clerk erroneously entered the judgment. Id. at 282–83. The plaintiff sued the agencies alleging violations of
Henson never addressed the issue before us: whether
tion procedures: (1) “noti[ce] of potentially inaccurate information”; and (2) “resources … [to] conduct a more thorough investigation.” Id. at 286–87. Plaintiffs cannot overcome this second requirement for reasons already explained. No amount of resources could empower Trans Union to assume the role of a tribunal. And relatedly, because plaintiffs lack a formal adjudication voiding their debts, “a more thorough investigation” would not uncover an inaccuracy in their credit reports. It also bears mention that the inaccuracy challenged in Henson (whether a judgment was issued against the consumer) was straightforward, fact-based, and could be resolved through a reasonable investigation. But plaintiffs here insist Trans Union should settle legal issues involving choice-of-law clauses, state usury laws, and sovereign immunity doctrines—all issues only a court can resolve.
Last, plaintiffs argue that Trans Union failed to follow “reasonable procedures” in credentialing Plain Green and Great Plains as furnishers. As to that, we need not choose a side. Even if true, that quarrel concerns whether Trans Union should have allowed Plain Green and Great Plains to be furnishers; it is not an allegation that Trans Union prepared inaccurate credit reports. Plaintiffs only brought claims under
III
A plaintiff advancing
