Case Information
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA CASE NO. 24-cv-21045-ALTMAN MARVIN REYES , individually
and on behalf of all others similarly
situated ,
Plaintiff ,
v.
TRANS UNION, LLC ,
Defendants .
_____________________________/
ORDER
The Defendant, Trans Union, LLC, has filed a Motion to Dismiss or Stay Under First-Filed Rule (“Motion”) [ECF No. 33], pending the resolution of a similar class action before the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, see Norman v. Trans Union LLC , No. 2:18-cv-05225 (E.D. Pa. filed Dec. 5, 2018) (the “ Case”). [1] After careful review of the Motion, the record, and the governing law, we hereby GRANT the Defendant’s Motion [ECF No. 33] and STAY this case.
T HE F ACTS
“This is a consumer class action brought for redress of violations of the Fair Credit Reporting Act . . . (“FCRA”), by Defendants Trans Union, LLC[.]” Amended Complaint [ECF No. 29] ¶ 1. The Plaintiff alleges that the FCRA imposes obligations on credit reporting agenсies (like Trans Union) to “conduct a reasonable reinvestigation to determine whether [ ] disputed information [in a credit report] is inaccurate and record the current status of the disputed information, or delete the item from the file,” and to provide notice “of the dispute to any person who provided any item of information in dispute[.]” Id. ¶¶ 9–10 (quoting 15 U.S.C. § 1681i(a)(1)(A), (2)(A)). Trans Union, the Plaintiff contends, has shirked its responsibilities under the FCRA by failing to “reinvestigate disputed inquiries” and instead “put[ting] the onus on the customer to investigate and rectify inаccurate inquiries with the furnisher.” Id. ¶¶ 13–14.
Our Plaintiff, Marvin Reyes, “reviewed his Trans Union consumer credit reports and noticed that two hard inquiries were being reported for Kohls/Capone. The inquiries reflected Kohls/Capone obtaining his credit reports on December 15, 2023 аnd January 20, 2024.” Id. ¶ 22. Reyes “had never applied for credit at these times, or anywhere around these times, with Kohls or Capital One[,]” and Kohls and Capital One confirmed that “they could find no application or documentation associated with Plaintiff in which he hаd given permission to access and obtain his consumer reports, nor indicated they had any record that they had obtained his credit reports.” Id. ¶¶ 23, 25. Reyes sent a letter to Trans Union, disputing “the unauthorized and inaccurate Kohls/Capone inquiries” on February 22, 2024, but Trаns Union refused to “conduct a reinvestigation of his dispute” and instead sent a “form letter” to Reyes, suggesting that Reyes “reach out to company who received your credit report,” so that they (not Trans Union) “can investigate and . . . determine [if] someone fraudulently applied for credit in [your] name[.]” Id. ¶¶ 28–30.
Reyes alleges that Trans Union purposely refused to investigate in order to avoid “expend[ing] additional financial and human resources[,]” id. ¶ 41, that it is willfully failing “to comply with [the] legal requirements” of the FCRA, id. ¶ 43, and that there is a viable class of individuals who (like Reyes) have been harmed because of Trans Union’s “standard policies and practices adopted in reckless disregard of consumers’ rights under the FCRA[,]” id. ¶ 44. Reyes proposes that he represent the following class:
During the рeriod beginning two years prior to the filing of this action and through the time of class certification, all persons residing in the United States and its Territories to whom Trans Union sent a letter materially identical to the letter it sent to Plaintiff.
Id. ¶ 45.
Trans Union filed a motion to dismiss or stay this case under the “first-filed rule.” According to Trans Union, Reyes’s case is “substantively identical” and involves “the same legal issues and substantial factual overlap” as the Norman Case pending in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. Motion at 1. Trans Union also avers that the district сourt in Norman certified a nationwide class that “overlaps” with Reyes’s proposed class. Id. at 1–2. Reyes responds that the “application of the first- to-file rule . . . would cause substantial prejudice to Plaintiff and the proposed class members” because the Case “involves an entirely exclusive and narrowly certified class, meaning neither Plaintiff’s nor the proposed class members’ interest are represented or preserved in that action.” Response at 2.
A NALYSIS
Where, as here, “two actions involving overlapping issues and parties are pending in two
federal courts, there is a strong presumption across the federal circuits that favors the forum of the
first-filed suit under the first-filed rule.”
Manuel v. Convergys Corp.
,
First , the Norman Case was filed nearly five-and-a-half years before ours and is scheduled for trial on January 21, 2025. See Apr. 8, 2024 Order, Norman v. Trans Union, LLC , No. 2:18-cv-05225 (E.D. Pa. Apr. 8, 2024), ECF No. 125 at 1 (“[I]t is hereby ORDERED that trial in this action shall commence with jury selection on Tuesday, January 21, 2025[.]”). Although Reyes concedes that the Norman Case was filed first, he argues that “the first-to-file doctrine is concerned with overlapping cases filed within a reasonably close period of time .” Response at 5. His contention is that the rule doesn’t (and shouldn’t) apply where the first case has nearly advanced to a jury trial and the second has only just begun. See ibid. (“Accordingly, the fact that Norman was filed nearly 6 years prior and is near the end of its litigation indicates a substantial unlikelihood of fragmented determinations on the overlapping issues, and that application of the rule would only hamper judicial efficiency.”); see also id. at 6 (“Where, as here, the “first-filed” action is on the eve of trial after substantial motion practice, there lacks any promotion of judicial efficiency in applying the first-to-file rule to join the actions.”).
But there’s no such exception to the first-to-file rule. The fact is the Case was filed
many years before our case, so the “chronology” factor weighs strongly in favor of a stay.
See, e.g.
,
Alers v. Robinhood Fin. LLC
,
And Reyes’s cases—intended to persuade us
not
to apply the chronоlogy factor mechanically
to avoid “hamper[ing] judicial efficiency[,]” Response at 5—are “entirely inapposite[,]” Reply at 5. In
Cardenas
, the mere fact that “the chronology of
Salas
[the earlier-filed case] and this lawsuit are not in
harmony” wasn’t the driving force behind the district court’s decision.
Second , although the parties in the two cases aren’t identical, they are sufficiently similar. See Chapman , 2017 3124186, at *2 (“[P]recise identity of the parties is not required under the first-filed rule.” (cleaned up)). Both cases involve the same defendant, Trans Union. And the plaintiffs, whilе not identical, significantly overlap. The certified class in the Case is “[f]or the period beginning two years prior to the filing of the Complaint and through the time of judgment, all persons residing in the United States and its Territories to whom Trans Union sent its ‘502 Letter’ in response to а written dispute of an inquiry.” Norman Case Order Certifying Class [ECF No. 33-3] ¶ 8. Here, the Plaintiff’s proposed class covers “the period beginning two years prior to the filing of this action and through the time of class certification” and includes “all persons residing in the United States and its Territories to whom Trans Union sent a letter materially identical to the letter it sent to Plaintiff.” Amended Complaint ¶ 45. Both classes are thus “made up of consumers that allegedly disputed hard inquiries and received form letters in response from TransUnion are, if not identical, substаntially overlapping.” Motion at 8.
Reyes counters that “[t]he
Norman
class is narrowly limited to those who received the specific
‘502 Letter’” and that the “differentiating language between the letter received by Plaintiff and the
‘502 Letter’ is facially material[.]” Response at 7–8. But the “502” letter and the letter our Plaintiff
received
are
substantively similar.
See
Reply at 7 (comparing the language from 502 Letter to Reyes’s
letter). As relevant here,
both
letters put the onus on the consumer to contact the creditor to correct
any errors—which (the plaintiffs in both cases suggest) еstablishes Trans Union’s unwillingness, in
violation of the FCRA, to conduct its
own
investigation.
Compare
502 Letter [ECF No. 37-3] at 2 (“If
you believe that an inquiry on your credit report was made without permissible purpose, then you may
wish to contact the creditor directly[.]”),
with
Reyes Letter [ECF No. 37-4] at 2 (“If you think an inquiry
was made without a permissible purpose, we strongly encourage you to reach out to company who
received your credit report to find out whether they have opened an account in your name.”). While
there may be a class of people who received a letter like Reyes’s, but
not
the “502” letter, and who are
thus
not
covered by the Case, there’s still a substantial overlap between our proposed class and
the
Norman
class. This factor thus likewise favors a stay.
See Figueroa v. Hertz Corp.
,
Third
, the issues presented in the two cases “are sufficiently similar or substantially overlap.”
Elliott v. Williams
,
All three factors, in sum, weigh heavily in favor of оur application of the first-filed rule.
There are “several avenues” available to a district court if it finds that the first-filed rule applies:
“dismiss, stay, or consolidate.”
Figueroa
,
* * *
After careful review—and for the reasons set out in this Order—we hereby ORDER and ADJUDGE as follows:
1. The Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss or Stay Under First-Filed Rule [ECF No. 33] is GRANTED . This case is STAYED and administratively CLOSED pending a final judgment in Norman. v. Trans Union LLC , No. 2:18-cv-05225 (E.D. Pa. filed Dec. 5, 2018)
2. Within fourteen days of an order entering final judgment in Norman v. Trans Union LLC , No. 2:18-cv-05225 (E.D. Pa. filed Dec. 5, 2018), the parties shall file a joint status repоrt, telling us what happened in that case and stating their positions on what should happen in our case.
3. All deadlines and hearings are TERMINATED , and any pending motions are DENIED as MOOT .
DONE AND ORDERED in the Southern District of Florida on November 12, 2024. _________________________________ ROY K. ALTMAN UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE cc: counsel of record
Notes
[1] The matter is fully briefed and ripe for adjudication. See Opposition to Defendant’s Motion to Stay (“Response”) [ECF No. 34]; Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss or Stay (“Reply”) [ECF No. 37].
