Plaintiff-appellant Alberto Reyes, Jr., appeals a judgment of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Leonard D. Wexler, /.). Judgment was entered following the grant of summary judgment to the defendant-ap-pellee, Lincoln Automotive Financial Services (“Lincoln”), on Reyes’s claim for damages stemming from Lincoln’s alleged violation of the Telephone Consumer Protеction Act (“TCPA”), Pub. L. No. 102-243, 105 Stat. 2394 (1991) codified at 47 U.S.C. § 227. Reyes leased an automobile from Lincoln and, as a condition of the lease agreement, consented to receive manual or automated telephone calls from Lincoln. Lincoln called Reyes regularly after he defaulted on his lease obligations, and continued to do so after Reyes allegedly revoked his consent to be called. Reyes sued for damages under the TCPA. The district court granted summary judgment for Lincoln, on the basis that (1) the evidence of consent revocation was insufficient, and (2) in any event the TCPA does not permit revocation when consent is provided as consideration in a binding contract. We hold that (1) Reyes did introduce sufficient evidence from which a jury could conclude that he revoked his consent, but that (2) the TCPA does not permit a consumer to revoke its consent to be called when that consent forms part of a bargained-for exchange. We therefore AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
BACKGROUND
In 2012, Reyes leased a new Lincoln MKZ luxury sedan from a Ford dealership.
You [Reyes] also expressly consent and agree to Lessor [Ford], Finance Company, Holder and their affiliates, agents аnd service providers may use written,electronic or verbal means to contact you. This consent includes, but is not limited to, contact by manual calling methods, prerecorded or artificial voice messages, text messages, emails and/or automatic telephone dialing systems. You agree that Lessor, Finance Company, Holder and their affiliates, agents and service providers may use any email address or any telephone number you provide, now or in the future, including a number for a cellular phone or other wireless device, regardless of whether you incur charges as a result.
At some point after the lease was finalized, Reyes stopped making his required payments. As a result, on multiple occasions, Lincoln called Rеyes in an attempt to cure his default.
Reyes disputed his balance on the lease, and also claims that he requested that Lincoln cease contacting him. Reyes asserts that on June 14, 2013, he mailed a letter to Lincoln in which he wrote: “I would also like to request in writing that no telephone contact be made by your office to my cell phone.” Lincoln contends that it nеver received Reyes’s letter, or any other request to cease its calls. At his deposition, Reyes testified to mailing the letter to the P.O. box listed on Lincoln’s invoices and produced a copy of the letter that did not bear an address or postmark and referenced an incorrect account number. Despite his alleged revocation of consent, Lincoln continued to call Reyes. Following the close of discovery, Lincoln’s attorney confirmed that Lincoln had called him 141 times with a customer representative on the line, and had called him with pre-recorded messages an additional 389 times.
On February 6, 2015, Reyes filed a complaint against Lincoln in the Eastern District of New York, alleging violations of the TCPA and seeking $720,000 in damages.
Reyes now timely appeals both rulings.
DISCUSSION
A district court’s grant of summary judgment is reviewed de novo. Gallo v. Prudential Residential Servs., Ltd. P’ship,
On appeal, Reyes contends (1) that he introduced sufficient evidence to create a triable issue of fact as to whether he placed Lincoln on notice of his revocation of. consent; and (2) that the TCPA, con
I. Whether Reyes revoked his consent to be contacted was a triable issue of fact
As a preliminary matter, we agree with Reyes that the district court’s finding that he did not revoke his consent to be сontacted by telephone was improper on summary judgment. This material issue of fact was in dispute and raised a jury question. Reyes testified in a sworn deposition that he mailed a letter to Lincoln revoking his consent; submitted an affidavit to that effect; and introduced a copy of the letter as evidence in defending Lincoln’s motion for summary judgment. The district court discounted this evidеnce as “insufficient,” because Reyes “does not recall the address that he mailed the Letter to,” and because “he has no record that the Letter was actually sent to Defendant.” The district court also noted that Lincoln sent a letter to Reyes on December 1, 2014, stating that it had never received any revocation of consent from Reyes.
The district court’s conclusion that Reyes did not revoke his consent rested on an impermissible assessment by the court of Reyes’s credibility. See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
II. Under the TCPA a party is not able to revoke consent that is a term in a prior contract
We next turn to the district court’s determination that the TCPA does not permit Reyes to unilaterally revoke his consent. Congress enacted the TCPA to protect consumers from “[u]nrestricted telemarketing,” which it determined could be “an intrusive invasion of privaсy.” Mims v. Arrow Fin. Servs., LLC,
While the act requires that any party wishing to make live or prerecorded calls obtain prior express consent, the statute is silent as to whether a party that has so consented can subsequently revoke that consent. Two of our sister circuit courts hаve ruled that a party can revoke prior consent under the terms of the act. In Gager v. Dell Financial Services, the Third Circuit held that the plaintiff, who consented to be called in an application for a line of credit that she submitted to the defendant, was permitted to later revoke that consent after receiving harassing calls upon her default on the loan.
Gager, Osorio, and the 2015 FCC Ruling considered a narrow question: whether the TCPA allows a consumеr who has freely and unilaterally given his or her informed consent to be contacted can later revoke that consent. See Osorio,
Reyes contends that the same principles that the FCC and the Third and Eleventh Circuits relied on in their previous rulings apply to this situation as well. He argues that (1) under the common law definition of the term, which Congress is presumed to have adoptеd when it drafted the TCPA, any form of “coiisent” (whether contractual or not) is revocable by the consenting party at any time; and (2) permitting parties to revoke their consent to be called is consistent with the remedial purpose of the TCPA, which was designed by Con--gress to afford consumers broad protection from harassing phone calls.
We agree with the district court that thе TCPA does not permit a party who agrees to be contacted as part of a bargained-for exchange to unilaterally revoke that consent, and we decline to read such a provision into the act. As an initial matter, Reyes is correct that when Congress uses a term, such as “consent,” that has “accumulated [a] settled meaning un
“Consent,” however, is not always revocable under the common law. A distinction in this regard must be drawn between tort and contract law. In tort law, “consent” is generally defined as a gratuitous action, or “[a] voluntary yielding to what another proposes or desires.” Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014); see also Gager,
Reyes’s consent to be contacted by telephone, however, was not provided gratuitously; it was included as an express provision of a contract to lease an automobile from Lincoln. Under such circumstances, “consent,” as that term is used in the TCPA, is not revocable. The common law is clear that consent to another’s actions can “become irrevocable” when it is provided in a legally binding agreement, Restatement (Second) of Torts § 892A(5) (Am. Law Inst. 1979), in which case any “attempted termination is not effective,” id. at cmt. i. See also 13-67 Corbin on Contracts § 67.1 (2017) (noting that “a party who is under a legal duty [to perform a contractual obligаtion] by virtue of its assent” has the burden to prove that that duty was discharged by some subsequent event, such as recission by “mutual agreement” or by the exercise of a contractual right to terminate). This rule derives from the requirement that every provision of a contract — including any proposed modification — receive the “mutual assent” of every contracting party in order to have legal effect. Dallas Aerospace, Inc. v. CIS Air Corp.,
Reyes also argues that his consent to be contacted is revocable because that consent was not an “essential term” of his lease agreement with Lincoln. This argument is meritless. In contract law, “essential terms” are those terms that are necessary in order to lend an agreemеnt sufficient detail to be enforceable by a court. Brookhaven Hous. Coal. v. Solomon,
Reyes counters that because the TCPA is a remedial statute enacted to protect consumers from unwanted telephone calls, any ambiguities in its text must be construed to further that purpose. See Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. Buell,
We are sensitive to the argument that businesses may undermine the effectiveness of the TCPA by inserting “cоnsent” clauses of the type signed by Reyes into standard sales contracts, thereby making revocation impossible in many instances. See, e.g., Skinner v. Bluestem Brands, Inc., No. 3:14-CV-256-CWR-FKB,
CONCLUSION
We have considered Reyes’s remaining arguments, and we find them meritless. We therefore AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. “Lincoln Automotive Financial Services” is a registered trade name of Ford Motor Credit Company LLC, and not an independent company.
. Reyes also initially sought damages under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (''FDCPA”), but abandoned those claims prior to summary judgment because Lincoln is not a "debt collection agency” within the meaning of the FDCPA. Only his TCPA claims remain.
. Whatever impact the use of the wrong account number may be reasonably assumed to have on Reyes’s attempt at revocation, the district court did not rely on that fact.
