Lead Opinion
SUTTON, J., dеlivered the opinion of the court, in which KENNEDY, J., joined. MOORE, J. (pp. 914-15), delivered a separate opinion concurring in the judgment.
OPINION
Pamela Ruth contends that the district court should not have dismissed her lawsuit against Unifund, its general partners and National Check Bureau on statute-of-limitations grounds. Because Ruth failed to comply with the one-year statute of limitations and because Unifund did not fraudulently conceal any information that prevented Ruth from filing her claim, we affirm.
I.
Unifund is a general partnership specializing in debt collection. It conducts most of its business through its Cincinnati, Ohio office, and has done so since 2003. In 2005, Unifund purchased the right to collect a credit card debt that Ruth allegedly owed to Citibank.
In July 2007, Unifund sued Ruth in an Ohio court to collect the debt. Ruth received her summons oh August 29. In November, after retaining counsel, she raised Unifund’s lack of capacity to sue as an affirmative defense. See O.R.C. §§ 1329.10(B), 1777.04. At the same time, she filed a counterclaim, alleging Unifund violated the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA), 15 U.S.C. § 1692 et seq., by misrepresenting Ruth’s debt to Citibank. A month later, on December 12, apparently as a result of Ruth’s affirmative defense, Unifund registеred its name with the Hamilton County Recorder.
In late 2007 or early 2008, in connection with her defenses to Unifund’s action and with her counterclaim, Ruth served Uni-
In October 2008, Ruth sued Unifund again in state court in Ohio. She reasserted her counterclaims from the previous suit and her claim that Unifund violated the FDCPA by misrepresenting its capacity to sue. See 15 U.S.C. § 1692e. Her complaint also raised the claims on behalf of a class of similarly situated Ohio consumers.
Unifund removed the case to federal court and successfully moved to dismiss Ruth’s complaint on statute-of-limitations grounds. The district court reasoned that Ruth’s October 2008 suit came after the FD CPA’s one-year limitations period, which accrued at the latest on August 29, 2007, when she was served with Unifund’s original debt-collection complaint. See 15 U.S.C. § 1692k(d). And it rejected Ruth’s claim that Unifund had tolled the statute of limitations by fraudulently concealing its lack of capacity to sue.
II.
The general rule is that we will not extend the statute of limitations “by even a single day.” Graham-Humphreys v. Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, Inc.,
Applied here, the fraudulent-concealment doctrine triggers three questions: (1) Did Unifund actively conceal its wrongful conduct from Ruth? (2) Did that concealment prevent Ruth from discovering Uni-fund’s wrongdoing during the limitations period? and (3) Did Ruth “exercise[] diligence in trying” to uncover Unifund’s conduct? Egerer v. Woodland Realty, Inc.,
Even if we assume for the sake of argument that Unifund’s tardy discovery responses amounted to active concealment of its capacity to sue, Ruth’s claim still comes up short. She cannot show that the alleged concealment prevented her from discovering any wrongdoing during the limitations period or that she exercised diligence in trying to uncover Unifund’s conduct.
Ruth’s own actions show that Unifund’s alleged misconduct did not prevent her from raising this FDCPA theory within the limitations period. In a November 2007 state-court pleading, just two months after Unifund served her with the debt-collection action and before she served any
Rule 11 principles support this conclusion. The requirement that parties have a good-faith basis for their pleadings applies to answers every bit as much as it does to counterclaims. See Ohio R. Civ. P. 11; Stevens v. Cox, No. WD-08-020,
The public availability of the ostensibly concealed information supports this conclusion as well. When individuals have “the means of discovery in [their] power,” they generally are “held to have known it.” Wood v. Carpenter,
Several clues confirmed that Hamilton County was the place to look for Unifund’s registration, as opposed to one of Ohio’s 87 other counties. Unifund’s 2007 complaint against Ruth listed its address as a post-office box in Cincinnati. Unifund also filed a name registration with the Ohio Secretary of State in 2003 — another publicly available document — which listed a physical address in Cincinnati. See Amini v. Oberlin Coll,
No doubt, the mere availability of open and readily accessible public records may not suffice by itself to defeat a fraudulent-concealment claim. But, as Ruth’s own actions confirm, she had ample reason to look at these records. In November 2007, Ruth raised Unifund’s lack of capacity as an affirmative defense to its debt-collection suit. One way to bolster that defense, if not the only way tо bolster it in this case, was to investigate whether Unifund had complied with § 1777.02. Indeed, Unifund’s 2003 name registration, as Ruth acknowledges, is precisely what prompted her to assert a lack-of-capacity defense in No
So long as a plaintiff has a reason to investigate publicly available information, it is difficult to understand how a defendant could conceal it in a county recorder’s office any more than the defendant could conceal it in a telephone book. That makes particular sense here because Ohio imposed the registration requirement precisely so that parties could locate partnership information without relying on the partnership’s disclosure itself. See O.R.C. § 1777.02; Kaye v. Pawnee Const. Co., Inc.,
Case law points in the same direction. In Wood v. Carpenter, the plaintiffs filed an untimely fraud claim, alleging that the defendant misrepresented his ability to pay legal judgments by accruing sеveral large, sham judgments and hiding his real estate assets through sham sales. See
Our precedent suggests a similar conclusion. See Egerer,
Ruth attempts to head off this conclusion on several grounds. She argues that Unifund’s 2007 complaint lulled her into believing she did not need to inquire into whether Unifund registered its partnership information. The complaint says Unifund is “a New Yоrk partnership and is authorized to do business in Ohio.” R.l-1 Ex. C at 1. That description, Ruth claims, misled her into believing that Unifund — as an out-of-state partnership — did not need to register under § 1777.02. Only after she
That Ruth served interrogatories about “Unifund’s ownership structure,” Ruth Br. at 24, does not change matters. The fact remains that the information was readily accessible, and choosing to submit (or not submit) discovery on the point does not by itself allow a litigant to extend the statute of limitations^ Only “exceptional circumstances,” Gibson v. Am. Bankers Ins. Co.,
Ruth responds that asking her to consult public records would impose an unreasonable burden. Confirming whether Unifund had made the required filings, she says, would require consulting all 88 county recorder’s offices. But, as we have explained, she did not need to consult all 88 counties. She needed to consult one: Hamilton County. True enough, to know with certainty whether Unifund lacked the capacity to sue, Ruth would need to consult each county’s partnership-registration index. But Rule 11 requires reasonable inquiry into a complaint’s factual allegations, not absolute certainty. See Fed. R.Civ.P. 11(b); Ohio R. Civ. P. 11; Forbes,
Ruth asks us to excuse her failure to consult the public records because doing so would have been futile. Unifund eventually recorded its partnership information with the Hamilton County Recorder on December 12, 2007, but, acсording to Ruth, Unifund still lacks the capacity to sue because it failed to disclose David Rosenberg’s name and address. See O.R.C. §§ 1329.10(B), 1777.02, 1777.04. Ruth would have difficulty discovering this defect solely by examining the certificate, she says, and without more she would have no reason to doubt or investigate its validity. Searching Hamilton County’s records after December 12 thus would not have uncovered her FDCPA clаim.
This argument suffers from two flaws. The December 12 filing date would have tipped her off that Unifund misrepresented its capacity to sue in July when it filed its debt-collection suit. And Ruth at any rate never looked for Unifund’s partnership registration — before or after December 12th — so Unifund’s filing could not have misled her. We might toll a statute of limitations if a plaintiff diligently searches publicly available information but fails to discover a hidden defect. See Santos ex rel. Beato v. United States,
The concurrence suggests that Ruth’s 2007 affirmative defense by itself disposes
If we accept Ruth’s claims about what motivated the 2007 affirmative defense, as we must on a motion to dismiss, that defense standing alone cannot dispatch Ruth’s claims of diligence. Knowledge of one general legal theory and one possible claim under that theory does not establish knowledge of all possible claims under the theory, especially when a defendant actively conceals relevant information, as Ruth alleges. Knowledge of an obvious fraud, to use one example, does not prove knowledge of a more latent fraud. The publicly available records, then, respond to this argument and confirm that Ruth did not diligently pursue her FDCPA claim.
In resolving this appeal, we leave several questions for another day. We need not decide whether the FDCPA incorporates a discovery rule or permits equitable tolling. Compare Mangum v. Action Collection Serv., Inc., 575 F.3d 935, 939-41 (9th Cir. 2009) (finding the FDCPA incorporates both doctrines), with Johnson v. Riddle,
III.
For these reasons, we affirm.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in the judgment.
I concur in the judgment and join in the reasoning of the opinion only insofar as we hold that Ruth’s own actions — as provided in the well-pleaded facts in her complaint, the Unifund complaint, Ruth’s answer to the Unifund complaint, and the publicly available documents — demonstrate that she was on inquiry notice of Unifund’s potential lack of capacity to sue as of the time that she filed her answer and affirmative defense in November 2007. This is sufficient to contradict conclusively Ruth’s argument that Unifund’s alleged concealment prevented her from discovering Uni-fund’s misconduct, the required second element of fraudulent concealment. Egerer v. Woodland Realty, Inc.,
Based on the allegations in Ruth’s complaint, Ruth’s failure to consult public records for a partnership name registration in either the Ohio Secretary of State’s files or the Hamilton County Recorder’s Office at the time she filed her affirmative defense in Novembеr 2007 does not alter the fact that the documents that would have supported her FDCPA claim were available at that time such that Unifund’s alleged concealment could not have prevented her from discovering the misconduct. Ruth’s complaint alleges that Unifund violated the FDCPA because “they commenced and maintained debt collection lawsuits against Plаintiff ..., even though they did not have the legal capacity to do so.” Doc. 1-1 (Compl. ¶ 82(a)); see also id. at ¶¶ 47, 51-52. Nowhere in the complaint does Ruth distinguish between the factual predicates that supported her November 2007 affirmative defense and those that allegedly support her FDCPA claim. Because we are constrained to review only the allegations as presented in the complaint and any other appropriate documents when we review a motion to dismiss, Amini v. Oberlin College,
I therefore respectfully join only that part of the majority opinion that is necessary to decide the issue on appeal, i.e. insofar as the opinion affirms the district court’s dismissal pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim on the grounds that Ruth’s FDCPA claims are barred by the statute of limitations and she has not sufficiently pleaded facts to support her equitable tolling argument. I join the judgment affirming the district court’s judgment dismissing Ruth’s FDCPA claims under Rule 12(b)(6) on statute of limitations grounds.
