JACOB Y. SHIMON, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. EQUIFAX INFORMATION SERVICES LLC, Defendant-Appellee.
Docket No. 20-689
United States Court of Appeals For the Second Circuit
April 9, 2021
August Term, 2020 (Submitted: January, 20, 2021)
B e f o r e:
KEARSE, LEVAL, and CARNEY, Circuit Judges.
Asset Acceptance, LLC (“Asset Acceptance“), brought a debt collection action against Plaintiff-Appellant Jacob Shimon in New York State court. In March 2013, the Clerk of Kings County Civil Court entered a $21,692.09 default judgment against Shimon in Asset Acceptance‘s favor. On the strength of the default, Asset Acceptance began garnishing Shimon‘s wages. Shimon then appeared in the action and, in December 2013, he and Asset Acceptance signed a stipulation of settlement. In 2014, Shimon learned that Defendant-Appellee Equifax Information Services LLC (“Equifax“), a credit reporting service, was including the 2013 default judgment on his credit report. Shimon objected, and Equifax updated its report to describe the default judgment as “satisfied.” Shimon corresponded with Equifax throughout 2016, disputing the accuracy of this description and asking for details regarding the source of Equifax‘s information.
Shimon then sued Equifax, alleging that, in reporting the judgment as “satisfied” and in its subsequent dealings with Shimon, Equifax willfully and negligently violated the source-disclosure, accurate reporting, and reinvestigation provisions of the Fair Credit Reporting Act (“FCRA“).
AFFIRMED.
Daniel Zemel, Zemel Law LLC, Clifton, NJ, for Appellant.
John Christopher Toro, Gabriel Krimm, Zachary Andrew McEntyre, Katherine M. Stein, King & Spalding, Atlanta, GA, Washington, D.C., and Austin, TX, for Appellee.
In this case, we apply the source-disclosure, accurate reporting, and reinvestigation provisions of the Fair Credit Reporting Act (“FCRA“),
BACKGROUND
Jacob Shimon was named as defendant in a 2012 New York state court action in which Asset Acceptance, LLC, sought to collect on a debt incurred with a credit card issued to Shimon. In March 2013, the Clerk of Kings County Civil Court entered a default judgment on the action against Shimon in the amount of $21,692.09 (the “Judgment“). On the strength of the Judgment, Asset Acceptance began to garnish Shimon‘s wages.
In October 2013, Shimon appeared in the action, moving for vacatur of the Judgment and asserting a counterclaim against Asset Acceptance. In December, however, before the state court acted on the vacatur motion, Shimon and Asset Acceptance jointly filed a stipulation that “resolved” the action and “discontinued” all claims “with prejudice” (the “Stipulation“). App‘x 166. Under the Stipulation, Asset Acceptance retained whatever sums it had collected by its garnishment of Shimon‘s wages and Shimon was precluded from further pursuing his counterclaim. The court “so-ordered” the Stipulation by a notation on the document, and, on the court‘s docket, the Clerk of Court entered the notation, “Settled.” App‘x 75-76.
In 2014, Equifax‘s credit report regarding Shimon showed that a judgment had been entered against him in a court proceeding. (The full text is set out in the margin.)1 By letter dated May 1, 2014, Shimon informed Equifax that the report was inaccurate because (as he phrased it) the judgment had been “dismissed after Trial.” App‘x 217. In the same letter, he also requested that this part of the report be “removed” and that Equifax “correct the information.” Id.
Equifax‘s records reflect that it received Shimon‘s May 1 request on May 12, and that, within days, it amended its notation regarding the Judgment to read “JUDGMENT SATISFIED.” App‘x 81.
The record is not clear about whether Shimon contacted Equifax again in 2014 or in 2015 to further dispute aspects of its credit report about him. The record is clear, however, that over the course of 2016, Shimon contacted Equifax repeatedly by phone and letter, disputing the accuracy of the “JUDGMENT SATISFIED” statement and asking Equifax how it had verified the statement. Equifax responded to Shimon‘s inquiries, advising him that the disputed entry was verified by the Kings County Civil Court and asserting that it was accurate. During this time, it continued to report that the Judgment was “satisfied.”
DISCUSSION
I. Standard of Review
We review de novo the dismissal of a complaint for failure to state a claim. Chambers v. Time Warner, Inc., 282 F.3d 147, 152 (2d Cir. 2002). We also review de novo a grant of summary judgment, drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of the non-moving party. Morales v. Quintel Ent., Inc., 249 F.3d 115, 121 (2d Cir. 2001). Although we generally review denials of leave to amend for abuse of discretion, in cases in which the denial is based on futility, we review de novo that legal conclusion. Starr v. Sony BMG Music Ent., 592 F.3d 314, 321 (2d Cir. 2010).
II. Shimon‘s FCRA Claims
The FCRA “was enacted in 1970 amidst concerns about the accuracy of information disseminated by credit reporting agencies.” Galper v. JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A., 802 F.3d 437, 444 (2d Cir. 2015). If a reporting agency “willfully fails to comply with any requirement” of the FCRA, it may be held liable for actual damages “of not less than $100 and not more than $1000” per consumer, as well as potentially for punitive damages.
A. Reporting Claims
Shimon maintains that Equifax‘s description of the Asset Acceptance Judgment as “satisfied” was inaccurate and rendered Equifax liable to him under
Shimon acknowledges that the New York court reported that the case against him was “settled.” Appellant‘s Br. 3. He also does not dispute that Equifax was following a standard practice in the credit reporting industry by reporting a settled debt-collection judgment as “satisfied.” Shimon nonetheless argues that, when the Kings Country Civil Court “so-ordered” the Stipulation, it also implicitly vacated the judgment. He accordingly maintains
Shimon contends further that, by denoting the judgment “satisfied,” Equifax misled its readers: it thereby “impl[ied] that a judgment remains.” Appellant‘s Br. 37. Describing a judgment as “satisfied,” however, does not imply that it “remains” - if anything, it implies the opposite. See Satisfy, Merriam-Webster‘s Collegiate Dictionary (11th ed. 2003), 1b: “to discharge, meet a financial obligation to.” Shimon advances no persuasive argument that Equifax‘s description of the Asset Acceptance Judgment as “satisfied” was “patently incorrect” or “misleading” in any way. Khan, 2019 WL 2492762, at *3.
The accuracy of Shimon‘s credit report is fatal to his
B. Source-Disclosure and Reinvestigation Negligence Claims
We also affirm the district court‘s judgment with respect to Shimon‘s claims that Equifax negligently violated the FCRA‘s source-disclosure and reinvestigation provisions. See
A successful claim for a negligent violation of an FCRA provision entitles the consumer plaintiff to recover “actual damages sustained . . . as a result of the failure.”
The district court granted summary judgment to Equifax on Shimon‘s
We agree that Shimon has failed to present any evidentiary basis for concluding that he suffered actual damages as a result of Equifax not disclosing or treating LexisNexis as a “source” or “furnisher” of information to it about the Judgment. Since the characterization provided by Equifax in its credit report was accurate, for Shimon to have learned that LexisNexis was the intermediary source of Equifax‘s information from the court would not have enabled Shimon to avoid the emotional damage he claims to have suffered as a result of Equifax‘s report that the debt was “satisfied.” Nor would he have avoided any of the costs he claims to have incurred in disputing the credit report. Shimon points to no damages to him arising from Equifax‘s failure to treat LexisNexis as a “source” or “furnisher” of the information and notify it of Shimon‘s dispute. Accordingly, Equifax is entitled to judgment with respect Shimon‘s
C. Source-Disclosure and Reinvestigation Willfulness Claims
Shimon also brought claims against Equifax for willful violations of
The district court dismissed Shimon‘s
The FCRA‘s reinvestigation provision requires that, under certain circumstances, consumer reporting agencies provide information about “any furnisher of information contacted in connection with such information,”
The FCRA‘s source-disclosure rule requires consumer reporting agencies to disclose to the consumer, on request, the “sources of the information” in the consumer‘s file.
We agree with Equifax that these are reasonable interpretations of both of these provisions. It is an objectively reasonable reading of these provisions to exclude from “furnisher” and “sources” a contractor such as LexisNexis working on the reporting agency‘s behalf when the information in question is contained in a particular set of files, the consumer reporting agency identified the court and its files as the “furnisher” or “source” of the information, and the function of the undisclosed contractor was to check those files to determine the accuracy of the report.
For Shimon, this conclusion does not exonerate Equifax. He parries that, even if, invoking Safeco, Equifax can point to reasonable interpretations of these statutes that support its conduct, the agency is entitled to the defense only if it can establish that it actually interpreted
Like the other Circuit Courts to have addressed this question, we reject the proposition that a defendant must show that it actually and contemporaneously adopted a particular statutory interpretation to avail itself of the Safeco defense. The Safeco Court emphasized that whether a company committed a willful violation of the FCRA must be an objective inquiry and dismissed arguments that “evidence of subjective bad faith” could create liability in the face of objectively reasonable interpretations. Safeco, 551 U.S. at 70 n.20. In the Court‘s view, “Congress could not have intended such a result for those who followed an interpretation that could reasonably have found support in the courts, whatever their subjective intent may have been.” Id.
Shimon‘s proposed reading of Safeco would introduce just the sort of subjective inquiry whose relevance the Safeco Court rejected. Accordingly, we conclude that Equifax did not need to prove that it actually adopted the interpretations that we conclude were “not objectively unreasonable” to avoid liability under
CONCLUSION
Shimon chose to expend considerable time and energy contesting an accurate credit report: when Equifax advised its customers that the judgment against Shimon was “satisfied,” it gave an accurate report. Further, in response to his repeated inquiries, Equifax told Shimon - accurately - that Equifax obtained the information that appeared in the credit report from the Kings County Civil Court. We do not decide whether the FCRA might be read to obligate Equifax to respond to Shimon‘s source-disclosure and reinvestigation requests by informing him of LexisNexis‘s role in gathering from the Kings County Civil Court and verifying the information. We decline to reach that question for two independent reasons: First, because
We have considered Shimon‘s remaining arguments on appeal and find in them no basis for reversal. The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
CARNEY
CIRCUIT JUDGE
