Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge GARLAND.
Appellant Krishna Muir deposited $29,019.55 into a joint account that he held with his father at the Navy Federal Credit Union. The Credit Union refused to return the funds, using them instead to satisfy a debt owed to it by Muir’s father. Muir then sued the Credit Union and a debt collection firm, Patricia L. Dearing, LLC, seeking return of his deposit and additional damages. The district court held the Credit Union liable for tortious conversion in the amount of the deposit but denied Muir’s other claims.
Muir now appeals. We affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment for the Credit Union on Muir’s breach of fiduciary duty claim, as well as its denial of his request for punitive damages. We reverse the court’s dismissal of Muir’s claim against the Credit Union for tortious interference with a business expectancy, and its dismissal of his claims against Dearing under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. We also reverse the court’s summary denial of Muir’s claims for interest and lost profits with respect to the tortious conversion.
I
In November 1986, Krishna Muir’s father opened a joint share account at the Navy Federal Credit Union with Krishna, who at the time was a minor. Ten years later, Muir’s father obtained a consolidation loan of $28,705.47 from the Credit Union, with his joint share account as collateral. He stopped making payments on the loan after a year, at which point the principal balance was $25,125.42 and accrued interest approximately $12,000.
On October 2, 2002, Krishna Muir deposited $29,019.55 into the joint share account. According to his complaint, Muir needed those funds to pursue a business opportunity, and he so advised the Credit Union agent who accepted his deposit. When Muir later contacted the Credit Union to withdraw his funds, however, he learned that the Credit Union had removed $27,022.90 from the account, without notice, in order to satisfy his father’s debt. 1 Despite Muir’s repeated requests, the Credit Union refused to return the money, and a Credit Union employee informed him that Patricia L. Dearing, LLC, a debt collection firm, was counseling and directing the Credit Union in the matter.
Muir filed a complaint in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia against the Credit Union for tor-tious conversion, tortious interference with a business expectancy, and breach of fiduciary duty; and against Dearing for tor-tious conversion, tortious interference with a business expectancy, and violation of the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA), 15 U.S.C. § 1692 et seq. For each of his tort claims, Muir sought return of his deposit, interest, lost profits, and punitive damages. He demanded a jury trial on all issues.
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After the Credit Union moved for summary judgment on tortious conversion and breach of fiduciary duty, and Muir filed a cross-motion on the former, the district court granted summary judgment for Muir on his tortious conversion claim. The court noted the Credit Union’s argument that, because its Joint Account Agreement provides that all deposits are owned jointly by the account owners, Muir’s father was beneficially entitled to the funds Muir deposited and the Credit Union was entitled to set them off to satisfy his father’s debt. But the court further noted that the Account Agreement, which was not signed by Muir, also states: “[T]his agreement not valid without signature of member-owner.”
Muir v. Navy Fed. Credit Union,
Although the court entered judgment for Muir on his tortious conversion claim, it granted summary judgment for the Credit Union on his claim of breach of fiduciary duty, concluding that there was no fiduciary relationship between the parties.
Id.
at *2. The Credit Union then moved to dismiss Muir’s remaining claim-for tortious interference with a business expectancy-and the district court granted that motion as well, finding that Muir had not alleged sufficient facts regarding the business expectancy and his probability of realizing it.
Muir v. Navy Fed. Credit Union,
Meanwhile, Dearing, the debt collection firm, moved to dismiss all of Mum’s claims against it for lack of standing. Without addressing Muir’s tort claims, the district court held that Muir lacked standing to pursue his FDCPA claims.
Muir v. Navy Fed. Credit Union,
Muir then
appealed,
and this court remanded the case to the district court for three reasons.
Muir v. Navy Fed. Credit Union,
On remand, the district court dismissed all of Muir’s claims against Dearing, holding that Muir lacked standing to pursue his tort claims as well as his statutory claims.
Muir v. Navy Fed. Credit Union,
Muir now appeals several of the district court’s rulings. With respect to Dearing, Muir challenges the court’s ruling that he lacked standing to bring his statutory claims under the FDCPA; he does not appeal the court’s decision that he lacked standing to bring his tort claims. With respect to the Credit Union, Muir challenges the court’s adverse rulings on his claims for breach of fiduciary duty, tor-tious interference with a business expectancy, and additional damages for the tor-tious conversion in the form of interest, lost profits, and punitive damages. The Credit Union does not appeal the district court’s entry of judgment for Muir on his tortious conversion claim or the award of actual damages.
II
Muir brought claims against Dearing under four sections of the FDCPA. He alleged that Dearing: engaged in conduct that was harassing, oppressive, and abusive, in violation of 15 U.S.C. § 1692d; used false and deceptive means to collect a debt, in violation of § 1692e; used unfair and unconscionable means to collect a debt, in violation of § 1692f; and failed to provide Muir the notice required by § 1692g. Based on the allegations of the complaint alone, the district court dismissed all of Muir’s FDCPA claims for lack of both constitutional and prudential standing, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1).
Muir,
1. To establish constitutional standing, a plaintiff must show an injury in fact that is fairly traceable to the challenged conduct and that will likely be redressed by a favorable decision on the merits.
See, e.g., Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
Muir’s allegations are sufficient, at this pre-discovery stage, to meet the requirements of constitutional standing. He alleges that Dearing and the Credit Union worked together to unlawfully remove $27,022.90 from his account (injury and traceability), and he contends that the FDCPA provides monetary relief for that action (redressability). Although the district court agreed that Muir suffered an injury when he was deprived of $27,022.90, it ruled that the injury could not “be fairly traced to Defendant Dearing’s conduct because there are no allegations that Defendant Dearing made any direct, or indirect, attempt to collect the debt from Mr. Muir. To the contrary, Defendant Dearing’s com
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munications, according to the complaint, were limited to the bank and Mr. Muir’s father.”
Muir,
In basing its ruling on the ground that there were no allegations of communication between the two parties, the district court appears to have accepted Dearing’s contention that a plaintiff can only recover against a defendant under the FDCPA if the defendant communicated with him. In response, Muir points to several provisions of the FDCPA that do not expressly require communication to establish liability. Compare 15 U.S.C. § 1692d (providing that a “debt collector may not engage in any conduct the natural consequence of which is to harass, oppress, or abuse any person in connection with the collection of a debt”), and id. § 1692f (providing that a “debt collector may not use unfair or unconscionable means to collect or attempt to collect any debt”), with id. § 1692e(ll) (specifying what a debt collector must disclose in its initial communication), and id. § 1692g(a) (specifying what a debt collector must include in subsequent communications). Moreover, Muir contends that the statute’s definition of “communication,” as “the conveying of information regarding a debt directly or indirectly to any person through any medium,” id. § 1692a(2), is broad enough to cover what he says were indirect communications from Dearing to him through the Credit Union and his father, see, e.g., Compl. ¶¶ 29-31.
All of this, however, speaks not to standing but to the merits. As we explained in
Louisiana Energy & Power Authority v. FERC,
whether a statute has been violated “is a question that goes to the
merits ...
and not to constitutional standing,” because a “party need not
prove
that the ... action it attacks is unlawful ... in order to have standing to level that attack.”
2. The district court also found that Muir lacked prudential standing because “Dearing’s conduct does not fall within the zone of interests protected by the FDCPA.”
Muir,
The district court ruled that, because the FDCPA “was enacted ‘to eliminate abusive debt collection practices,’ ”
Muir,
Ill
Although the district court granted Muir summary judgment on his tortious conversion claim against the Credit Union, it found no breach of fiduciary duty to Muir and granted the Credit Union summary judgment on that claim.
Muir,
The district court held that a financial institution does not generally have a fiduciary duty to its depositors.
Muir,
The district court also found that Muir had failed to allege any other fact—beyond the insufficient fact that he was a depositor—that might establish a fiduciary relationship between him and the Credit Union.
Muir,
IV
The district court also granted the Credit Union’s motion to dismiss Muir’s claim for tortious interference with a business expectancy, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6).
Muir,
Muir’s complaint alleged that he “was in need of a portion of the funds he deposited in his Account for a then existing business opportunity,” Compl. ¶ 10, and that the Credit Union’s withholding of the deposit caused “the loss of that business expectancy,”
id.
¶ 140. As the district court acknowledged, Muir alleged “that he had a ‘viable business expectancy with a probability of future economic benefit,’ ” and he averred “to a reasonable certainty that absent the [defendant's intentional misconduct, he would have realized that expectancy.”
Muir,
But Muir was not required to provide specific information regarding the business expectancy in his complaint (although he would, of course, be required to do so in response to a motion for summary judgment). The allegations in Muir’s complaint—which we must take as true—stated a cause of action for tortious interference under Virginia law.
3
He alleged that
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he had an existing business opportunity with a probability of future benefit, that he was relying on the money he deposited at the Credit Union to pursue the opportunity, that the Credit Union knew of the business opportunity, that he would have realized the opportunity but for the Credit Union’s unlawful conduct, and that by withholding the deposit the Credit Union deprived him of that opportunity and caused him injury. Compl. ¶¶ 10-34, 136-145. Those factual allegations were sufficient to survive a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6).
See Swierkiewicz v. Sorema N.A.,
The district court also suggested that Muir “had an opportunity to flesh out [his] allegations in greater detail after receiving Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss, but failed to do so.”
Muir,
V
In the final order that it issued following our remand, the district court again entered judgment for Muir for the actual damages he sustained because of the Credit Union’s tortious conversion of his funds, and it directed the Credit Union to return Muir’s withheld deposit. But it denied Muir’s claims for interest, lost profits, and punitive damages. Under Virginia law, whether to award interest is a matter within the trial court’s discretion,
see Skretvedt v. Kouri,
Whether to award lost profits or punitive damages, by contrast, is a question for the jury.
See, e.g., Hamilton Dev. Co. v. Broad Rock Club, Inc.,
1. After this court remanded the case for the district court to consider Muir’s additional damages claims, the court ordered each party to “submit a proposed schedule of damages” and indicated that it would hold a “hearing to establish the damages and fees owed to plaintiff.”
Muir,
But there was no more that Muir needed to say. Muir deposited money in a credit union, which was obligated to pay interest, on that deposit. Instead, the credit union withheld both the deposit and the interest. Return of the deposit alone could not have made him whole. Muir clearly specified both the interest rate and the time period over which it should be applied. The Credit Union objected to neither. Under these circumstances — and in the absence of any further explanation as to why interest should not be awarded — denial of an award of interest exceeded the scope of the court’s discretion.
2. In the same schedule of damages, Muir requested $110,750 in lost profits. Although the Credit Union maintains that Muir “made no proffer of evidence during [the damages] hearing,” Appellee Credit Union’s Br. 13, that is simply not true. At the hearing, Muir’s counsel explained that Muir had intended to use his deposit as a downpayment on the purchase of real estate, which he had an opportunity to fix up and resell at a profit. Counsel further proffered that Muir had “already engaged in an agreement with a young woman whose property was in foreclosure,” Status Hr’g Tr. 11 (Feb. 6, 2007), and that he had several other opportunities “lined up,”
id.
at 10. Moreover, counsel advised the court that Muir had “a witness here today” to testify in support of his claims.
Id.
at 10-11. The court, however, adjourned the proceeding without hearing from the witness. In a subsequent order, the court denied Muir’s request for recovery of lost profits, stating that he had “failed to provide any factual or legal grounds for any lost profits” and had “provided no basis to demonstrate that [the Credit Union’s] actions were the proximate cause of any lost profits.”
Muir,
We disagree. Muir reasonably assumed that the schedule of damages the court directed him to file was to contain only a list of the types and amounts of damages he sought, and that he would have an opportunity to present supporting evidence and argument at the hearing the court set “to establish the damages and fees owed to plaintiff.”
Muir,
3. Finally, we consider the district court’s denial of Muir’s request for punitive damages.
Muir,
We affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment for the Credit Union on the former ground. The court held the Credit Union responsible for tor-tious conversion solely because Muir had not signed the joint account agreement that otherwise would have permitted the Credit Union to set off his deposit to satisfy his father’s debt.
Muir,
At the hearing on damages, the only argument that Muir made to support punitive damages was that the Credit Union knew he needed the money to pursue a business opportunity when it wrongfully withheld his funds. Status Hr’g Tr. 6-7 (Feb. 6, 2007). Although this may have been sufficient to create a genuine issue as to the defendant’s “knowledge and consciousness that injury w[ould] result,” it was not sufficient to create a genuine issue on the question of malice or conscious disregard of rights. Muir did not contend that the Credit Union knew it did not have a signed document from Muir or otherwise knew it was not entitled to set off his account. There was therefore no genuine issue of material fact on the required element of malice or conscious disregard of the rights of others, and the district court appropriately granted summary judgment for the Credit Union.
VI
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of Muir’s claim against the Credit Union for breach of fiduciary duty and its denial of his request for punitive damages for tortious conversion. We reverse and remand the court’s rulings that Muir lacked standing to bring his statutory claims against Dearing, that Muir failed to state a claim against the Credit Union for tortious interference with a business expectancy, and that Muir was not entitled to interest or lost profits with respect to the Credit Union’s tortious conversion.
So ordered.
Notes
. When the Credit Union removed Muir’s funds, his account balance was $27,027.90 due to an earlier cash withdrawal. The set-off, which covered the balance of Muir's father's loan plus part of the accrued interest, left only $5.00 in the account.
. On appeal, Dearing further argues that Muir lacks standing under certain sections of the FDCPA because he "cannot sustain ... causes of action” under those sections that are violated by conduct toward a "consumer.” Appellee Dearing’s Br. 11 (citing 15 U.S.C. § 1692e(l 1) and § 1692g). Muir responds that, although the cited sections do mention conduct toward a "consumer,” most FDCPA provisions do not and that, in any event, he readily qualifies as a "consumer” under the Act. See Appellant's Reply Br. 3 (quoting 15 U.S.C. § 1692a(3) (defining "consumer” as "any natural person obligated or allegedly obligated to pay any debt” (emphasis added))). Once again, however, whether Muir can sustain a cause of action is a merits question, not one of standing.
. “To prevail on a claim of tortious interference with business expectancy under Virginia
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Law, a plaintiff must prove: ‘(1) the existence of a business relationship or expectancy, with a probability of future economic benefit to plaintiff; (2) defendant's knowledge of the relationship or expectancy; (3) a reasonable certainty that absent defendant’s intentional misconduct, plaintiff would have continued in dle relationship or realized the expectancy; and (4) damage to the plaintiff.' "
Muir,
. The term "schedule of damages” is not defined in any court rule. Perhaps the closest reference is Local Civil Rule 16.5, which calls on each party to present "an itemization of damages” in its Pretrial Statement. D.D.C. Civ. R. 16.5. The Rule states that this itemization "shall set forth separately each element of damages, and the monetary amount thereof, the party claims to be entitled to recover of any other party, including prejudgment interest, punitive damages and attorneys' fees.” *1111 Id. That is what Muir's schedule of damages set forth.
