Mario Loja sued Main Street Acquisition Corporation and law firm Shindler & Joyce (collectively, "Main Street") for violations of the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act ("FDCPA"),
I. Background
This case comes to us from a dismissal on the pleadings pursuant to FED. R. CIV. P. 12(b)(6), so we recount the facts as alleged in the complaint and the documents described in it, giving Loja the benefit of all reasonable inferences in his favor. Sloan v. Am. Brain Tumor Ass'n ,
In 2007, someone opened a Visa credit card with Washington Mutual Finance under the name "Mario Loja." After the card fell into default, the bank charged off the $4,018.07 debt and sold it to defendant-appellee Main Street Acquisition Corporation, a Nevada corporation registered as a collection agency in Illinois. Main Street then retained defendant-appellee Shindler & Joyce, a law firm, to file a collection action in DuPage County, Illinois small claims court in 2016.
Enter plaintiff-appellant Mario Loja. From the current state of the pleadings, Loja's relationship to the debt at issue is unclear. Regardless, Loja maintains he never opened an account with Washington Mutual and never accrued any credit card debt there. Believing that Loja owed the debt, Main Street named him in the small claims action and served him with the complaint. Loja appeared in court to insist the debt was not his, and that in any event the collection action was time-barred under Illinois *683law. After a bench trial, the small claims court dismissed the collection case with prejudice in favor of Loja.
Loja then filed this action seeking damages under the FDCPA and the Illinois Collection Agency Act. Main Street moved to dismiss, contending that Loja had failed to allege a qualifying debt, and therefore he could not sue under the FDCPA. Main Street argued that Loja failed to sufficiently allege that the credit card debt was "for personal, family, or household purchases," as required under § 1692a(5). Loja responded that he had alleged the debt was on a personal credit card, which was sufficient to meet this standard. Loja added that it would be impossible for him to allege additional details because he did not generate the underlying transactions.
At the initial hearing on the motion to dismiss, the district court indicated it was likely to deny the motion on the basis of § 1692a(5). At the second hearing, however, the district court did not discuss the § 1692a(5) argument, and instead granted the motion to dismiss on the alternate ground that Loja did not meet the definition of a "consumer" under § 1692a(3) of the FDCPA. Raising the issue sua sponte , the district court interpreted the phrase "obligated or allegedly obligated to pay any debt" to require that a plaintiff allege he actually owed a debt. Because Loja claimed he did not owe any debt, the district court concluded Loja did not meet the statutory standing requirements. Loja raised the possibility of amending the complaint to rectify the infirmity, but the court informed him that so long as Loja alleged he did not owe the debt, any amendment would be futile. This appeal followed.
II. Interpretation of 15 U.S.C. § 1692a(3)
We review appeals from a motion to dismiss de novo. Johnson v. Winstead ,
When interpreting a statute, we begin with the text. Hughey v. United States ,
The FDCPA defines "consumer" as "any natural person obligated or allegedly obligated to pay any debt." 15 U.S.C. § 1692a(3). The disjunctive "or" creates two categories of persons that qualify as consumers under the FDCPA. ANTONIN SCALIA & BRYAN A. GARNER, READING LAW 116 (2012) ("Under the conjunctive/disjunctive canon, and combines items while or creates alternatives.") (emphases in original). A person who is "allegedly obligated to pay" is therefore covered by the statute, just as is a person who is "obligated" to pay, to avoid rendering the phrase "or allegedly obligated" superfluous. See, e.g. , *684Corley v. United States ,
Significantly, the text of 15 U.S.C. § 1692a(3) does not limit "alleged" to obligations alleged by the consumer . The word applies generally and consequently includes obligations alleged by a debt collector as well. We therefore hold that the definition of "consumer" under the FDCPA includes consumers who have been alleged by debt collectors to owe debts that the consumers themselves contend they do not owe. This interpretation conforms to the structure and text of the rest of the FDCPA, which focuses primarily on the conduct of debt collectors, not consumers. Keele v. Wexler ,
This reading of the FDCPA comports with precedent from our own circuit and the Eighth Circuit. In Keele , we held that when evaluating claims under the FDCPA, "[w]e must focus on the debt collector's misconduct, not whether the debt is valid ..."
Alleging that Loja owed the debt, Main Street tried the case to the bench in small claims court, but failed to prove its claim. This allegation by Main Street sufficiently qualifies Loja as a consumer under the FDCPA.
III. Leave to Amend
We turn to Loja's ability to amend his initial complaint. Main Street contends that Loja, by failing to raise the issue in his initial brief, has waived it. But in a reply brief, an appellant generally may respond to arguments raised for the first time in the appellee's brief. See, e.g. , United States v. Feinberg ,
Main Street asserts that at the second hearing before the district court, Loja did not argue for leave to amend. Loja's counsel did raise the issue of amendment twice at the second hearing, but was informed by the court that amendment was futile given the court's interpretation of the FDCPA.
Loja's counsel did not neglect the issue at the hearing stage. Rather, recognizing the court had ruled against his client, he preserved for the record that he would have sought leave to amend had the court not pronounced it futile. Because our interpretation of the FDCPA negates this futility, we see no difficulty in granting Loja leave to amend the complaint, should he request it.
In the briefs and at oral argument the parties' counsel discussed the sufficiency of the pleadings with regard to the definition of consumer debt under § 1692a(5) of the FDCPA. Given our rulings, and the possibility that Loja will amend his complaint, at this time we decline to rule on the sufficiency of the pleadings. We do note that the district court will be guided by the standards set forth in Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly ,
For these reasons, we REVERSE the motion to dismiss and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
The DuPage County small claims court final judgment does not list the grounds on which Loja defeated the collection action, whether the statute of limitations precluded the claim, whether Loja did not owe the debt, or otherwise.
At the May 21, 2017 hearing, Loja's counsel asked, "But just to clarify for the record, your Honor, it seems to me based on your ruling that we could not amend to cure the defects that you just mentioned, correct?" "Yes." Hr'g on Mot. to Dismiss 12-13, ECF No. 19. Loja's counsel later clarified his question by asking, "So leave to amend, is it granted or denied, your Honor?" The district court did not reply directly. Hr'g on Mot. to Dismiss 15, ECF No. 19.
