Lori Pettit claims that the Retrieval Masters Creditors Bureau (Retrieval) and its president — Russell Fuchs— violated the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) by using its name in a collection letter. Specifically, she contends that the name “Retrieval Masters Creditors Bu *1059 reau, Incorporated” is deceptive because it leads unsophisticated debtors to believe that Retrieval is a credit bureau rather than a collection agency. The district court granted summary judgment for Fuchs because he is not a “debt collector.” It also granted summary judgment for Retrieval based on its view that the letter was not deceptive as a matter of law. We affirm because under the FDCPA Fuchs is not a debt collector and because Pettit failed to create a genuine issue of material fact as to whether an unsophisticated debt- or would find Retrieval’s name misleading. We also reject her argument that her own subjective belief that all debt collectors are credit bureaus results in liability for Retrieval Masters.
A. Liability of the Debt Collector’s Shareholders or Officers Under the FDCPA
The FDCPA is designed to protect against abusive debt collection practices which would likely disrupt a debtor’s life.
Mace v. Van Ru Credit Corp.,
Pettit argues that Russell Fuchs — as the largest shareholder and president of Retrieval Masters — is a debt collector under the terms of the FDCPA, and thus is personally liable for any violations of the Act perpetrated by Retrieval, or at least for those violations in which he was intimately involved. The district court rejected this argument and held that Fuchs is not liable under the FDCPA because he exercised little or no day-to-day control over Retrieval Masters.
Pettit v. Retrieval Masters Creditors Bureau, Inc.,
B. The FDCPA and the Unsophisticated Debtor
The FDCPA specifically prohibits a “false representation or implication that a debt collector operates or is employed by a consumer reporting agency....” 15 U.S.C. § 1692e(16). A consumer reporting agency is “any person which, for monetary fees ... regularly engages in whole or in part in the practice of assembling or evaluating consumer credit information or other information on consumers for the purpose of furnishing consumer reports to third parties.... ” 15 U.S.C. § 1681a(f). The purpose of this provision is to prevent debt collectors from coercing payments from debtors by falsely leading them to believe that the failure to pay the debt will adversely affect the debtor’s credit rating and ability to obtain credit.
Cf. McKenzie v. E.A Uffman & Assocs., Inc.,
Practices purporting to violate the Act must be viewed from the objective standard of an “unsophisticated debtor.”
Bartlett v. Heibl,
C. No Genuine Issue of Material Fact
The first thing a person notices when reading the letter is the name “RETRIEVAL MASTERS CREDITORS BUREAU, INC.” which is prominently displayed, in capital letters, at the top of the correspondence. See Appendix. Almost as prominent are the words, also in capital letters, “RCMB COLLECTION AGENCY”. In smaller type, the letter also informs Pettit that Retrieval Masters is a member of the “American Collectors Association, Incorporated.” The body of the letter plainly states that “your account is now being handled by debt collectors ... ”, and it warns Pettit that a failure to pay the debt might result in her name being placed on the “National Delinquent Debtor File, which could affect your ability to obtain certain types of credit....” The letter is signed by a person identified as a “Collection Manager.” Finally, the letter instructs Pettit to examine the reverse side, *1061 which informs her in plain English that “[t]his is an attempt to collect a debt.”
The district court held that this letter would not dupe an unsophisticated debtor into believing that Retrieval Masters was a credit bureau.
Pettit,
Undeterred, Pettit points to the obvious similarity between the term “Creditors Bureau” in the defendant’s name and the term “credit bureau,” and argues that an unlearned debtor might mistakenly read the name as “credit bureau.” While it’s true that upon cursory review this or any other collection letter could be misread, as we mentioned above, even an unsophisticated debtor reads collection letters carefully so as to be sure of their content.
Gammon,
Pettit also argues that an unsophisticated debtor might believe that there is no difference between a creditors’ bureau and a credit bureau, or that the collection agency in question is both a credit bureau and a creditors’ bureau, and so the letter would be deceiving in this respect. While there may be some merit to this argument, Pettit cannot prevail because at the summary judgment stage of a case she must do more than merely speculate about how a naive debtor would interpret the letter. The non-moving party must offer sufficient evidence to create a genuine factual issue for trial.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(e). But Pettit presents little on this point. The best she could come up with was her own self-serving deposition testimony that Re
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trieval’s name led her to believe that the company was a credit bureau. This fails to create a genuine issue as to whether a significant fraction of the population would have believed the same thing after reading this letter.
Robin v. Espo Eng’g Corp.,
D. Imputation of Irrationality to the Unsophisticated Debtor
Another more substantial problem exists with Pettit’s reliance on her own deposition testimony. This court has held that it will not ascribe to the hypothetical unsophisticated debtor all of the irrational notions which FDCPA plaintiffs might suggest.
White,
Q: When you received this letter in August of 1997, what about the letter made you think that it was from a credit bureau?
Pettit: The name Creditors Bureau.
Q: Is that the only thing?
Pettit: Yes.
Q: But you also knew that it was from a debt collector, right?
Pettit: I thought they were the same thing.
Pettit Dep. p. 25.
Pettit’s self-serving testimony does not serve her well. Her proposed standard would create liability for debt collectors based on information which the Act requires debt collectors to place in their collection letters. 15 U.S.C. § 1692e(ll) (debt collector must inform the debtor that it is attempting to collect a debt, and thus that it is a debt collector);
Lewis v. ACB Business Servs., Inc.,
Affirm.
*1064 APPENDIX
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*1065 “This is an attempt to collect a debt. Any information obtained will be used for that purpose.”
New York City Department of Consumer Affairs License Number 808906.
Notes
. Prior to 1979, Retrieval’s official name was "Retrieval Masters Credit Bureau, Inc.” The name change was engendered by the Federal ' Trade Commission's suggestion that "Credit Bureau” was misleading. The FTC has made no complaint about Retrieval’s present name.
. This is not to say that Retrieval Masters couldn’t improve the letter. In the future, it might place in its collection letters an explicit statement that it is not a credit reporting agency. As we discuss below, this would not have mattered in Pettit’s case because she believed that all debt collectors were credit bureaus, but such a disclaimer may prove helpful to some debtors.
.Pettit attempts to support her argument with a Fifth Circuit opinion dealing with a collection agency that used the name "Collections Department, Credit Bureau of Baton Rouge.”
See McKenzie,
