Showing posts with label Tennessee Debt Collection Defense. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tennessee Debt Collection Defense. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Debt Collection Calls and Lawsuits in Tennessee –Call Barnette Law Offices

Consumer

Have you been getting too many automated debt collection calls? If so, you may be entitled to compensation under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) and the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA).

Illegal Debt Collection Practices

If you owe someone money, they have a right to try and collect it by calling you. However, it matters how many times they call you a day, week or month using , also known as robocalls, which are automated phone calls that use both a computerized autodialer and a computer-delivered pre-recorded message.  In fact, calling without your express prior consent is illegal under the .

A U.S. District Court judge in Tennessee recently ruled that 17 calls a month was too much and that consumers who received these calls are entitled to file suit against the debt collector. In his opinion, he reasoned:

"The frequency of [the defendant's] calls to [the plaintiff's] telephone and the manner in which [the defendant] called [the plaintiff's] cellular telephone using an automatic telephone dialing system could plausibly cause an unsophisticated consumer to feel harassed, oppressed or abused." It's that language which can be seen in several debt collection consumer laws.

Consumer Debt Protection Laws

Consumers are protected by several laws to make sure that debt collection practices are fair and reasonable. The and the Telephone Consumer Protection Act are two of those laws which, if violated, can result in up to $1,500 in fines per violation. Here's how they work:

  • FDCPA. The prohibits debt collectors from using telephone calls “repeatedly or continuously with intent to annoy, abuse or harass.”
  • TCPA. The prohibits calls using any automatic telephone dialing system or artificial or prerecorded voices to several cell phones and other places.

Debt Collector Violations Getting Worse

The number of debt collectors who violate these consumer protection laws has doubled over the past few years according to the Federal Trade Commission. However, debt collection lawyers say that consumers do not have to put up with this behavior and encourage them to seek the advice of an attorney to make the calls and harassment stop once and for all.

If a debt collector has engaged in any of these abusive or unfair debt collection practices, contact the and at  for a free evaluation!

Tennessee FDCPA Lawyers–Barnette Law Offices

Consumer

The (FDCPA) was enacted to stop abusive, deceptive, and unfair debt collection practices by debt collectors and debt purchasers such as Midland Funding, Asset Acceptance, CACH, Portfolio Recovery Associates, Cavalry Portfolio Services, etc. If you believe you have been a victim of unfair practices of a debt collector or if you’ve been sued by a debt collector or debt purchaser in a   you may be entitled to money damages and payment of your attorneys’ fees.

A Debt Collector cannot:

  • Call you on telephone repeatedly and at odd hours
  • Call you, but not announce who he/she is
  • Disclose information of your debts to third parties
  • Use abusive language
  • Contact you after written notification that you do not want to be contacted
  • Claim to be affiliated with any governmental organization
  • Misrepresent the character, amount or legal status of a debt
  • Threaten to take action not validated
  • Threaten or communicate false credit information
  • Use deceptive methods to collect debts
  • ... and more
You can:
  • Reduce or completely zero your interest payment
  • Avoid or reduce late payment fees
  • Combine several loans into a single low monthly payment plan
  • Get your credit reports corrected
  • Remove invalid or time-lapsed entries in your credit reports
  • ...and more

If a debt collector has engaged in any of these abusive or unfair debt collection practice, contact the at  for a free evaluation!

Thursday, June 12, 2014

Tennessee Debt Buyer’s Must Have A License

IWhite v. Sherman Financial Group, LLC, No. 3:12-cv-404, 2013 WL 5936679, *1 (E.D. Tenn. Nov. 4, 2013), the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee recently denied the plaintiff’s partial motion for summary judgment and granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants on all but one the plaintiff’s Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (“FDCPA”) claims and, in the process, rendered a significant decision regarding the interplay between the FDCPA and filing state collection actions in Tennessee.

In White, the plaintiff alleged the defendants, Sherman Financial Group, LLC (“Sherman”), LVNV Funding, LLC (“LVNV”), Resurgent Capital Services, L.P. (“Resurgent”), Tobie Griffin (“Griffin”), and Buffaloe & Associates, PLC (“Buffaloe”), of violating a number of FDCPA provisions when Buffaloe filed a civil warrant and sworn affidavit on behalf of LVNV. The civil warrant sought to collect the principal amount due on the debt “plus pre and post judgment interest accruing at the statutory rate of 10% and court costs.” Griffin signed the sworn affidavit, which stated the principal amount due “plus any additional accrued interest.” The plaintiff denied the existence of the debt and the state collection suit was eventually dismissed. The plaintiff then brought the federal suit asserting that the defendants violated the FDCPA by filing the state collection action and, thus, allegedly making false, misleading representations, taking an action which could not legally be taken by failing to obtain a proper license, failing to make requisite disclosures in the civil warrant and sworn affidavit, and filing the suit in an improper venue. The specific FDCPA provisions the plaintiff alleged were violated were as follows: 1692e(2)(A), 1692e(2)(B), 1692e(8), 1692e(10), 1692e, 1692e(5), 1692f, 1692f(1), 1692e(11), 1692g(1)(3)-(5), and g(1)(3)-(5), and 1692i(a)(2). At the outset of the opinion, the Court granted summary judgment in favor of Sherman as to all of the plaintiff’s claims because the plaintiff did not discuss Sherman’s liability and only briefly even mentioned Sherman. The court then addressed the plaintiff’s claims against the remaining defendants.

First, the plaintiff claimed that the defendants filed the collection suit without possessing competent evidence to establish the debt was owed to LVNV and while knowing that they did not intend to ever prosecute the case or validate the evidence. The court found that the plaintiff provided no evidence of any intent not to pursue the action or of a pattern of practice of doing so. Furthermore, the court found that, despite taking issue with the affiant’s level of personal knowledge, the plaintiff provided no evidence to counter the information in the affidavit. The court also found that “the mere fact defendants dismissed their collection action against plaintiff is insufficient to create a genuine issue of material fact.” Plaintiff also argued that the defendants violated a number of FDCPA provisions because the amount sought in the civil warrant was the principal plus pre and post judgment interest and court costs, while the affidavit only stated “[the principal amount] plus any additional accrued interest.” The court found this argument “meritless” because “the affidavit clearly states the amount due, including the possibility of interest, and was used to validate the debt on which the civil warrant is seeking to collect.” Furthermore, the court stated that “[t]he failure to include the court cost amount would not be misleading, nor would it be an attempt to collect on an amount not authorized by law, given that court costs are authorized by statute.” Therefore, the court found the statements were not inconsistent with each other and would not deceive the least sophisticated consumer. The court granted summary judgment for the defendants as to the 1692e, 1692e(2)(A), 1692e(2)(B), 1692e(5), 1692e(8), 1692e(10), 1692f, and 1692f(1) claims.

Second, the plaintiff claimed LVNV’s failure to obtain a license to be a debt collector under Tennessee law was a violation of the FDCPA. LVNV claimed it was exempt from Tenn. Code Ann. § 62-20-105 licensing requirement because it hired the law firm to carry out its collection efforts. The court recognized that Smith v. LVNV Funding, LLC, 809 F. Supp. 2d 1045, 1049 (E.D. Tenn. 2012), held that the failure to obtain the necessary licensing could give rise to a FDCPA violation for threatening and or taking legal action which it was not authorized to do. However, in this case, the court held that LVNV was not required to obtain a collection service license from the Tennessee Collection Service Board (“TCSB”). The court fully relied on a “clarification statement” issued by the TCSB, which states as follows:

It is currently the opinion of the Tennessee Collection Service Board that entities who purchase judgments or other forms of indebtedness will be deemed a ‘collection service’ if they collect or attempt to collect the debt or judgment subsequent to their purchase of the debt or judgment. However, entities who purchase debt or judgments in the manner described above but who do not collect or attempt to collect the purchased debt or judgment, but rather assign collection activity relative to the purchased debt to a licensed collection agency or a licensed attorney or law firm shall not be deemed to be a ‘collection service.’

The Court noted that the TCSB had reaffirmed the statement as recently as May 2012. Thus, because the only evidence on the record showed that the law firm conducted all collection activity related to the plaintiff’s account, then LVNV would not be a collection service according to the clarification statement and did not need a license. The court also recognized its own contrary finding in Lilly v. RAB Performance Recoveries, LLC, No. 2:12-CV-364, 2013 WL 38344008 (E.D. Tenn. Aug. 2013), this summer and stated simply that “the Court was not made aware of the existence or import of the Clarification Statement”. The court found LVNV was entitled to summary judgment on 1692e(5), 1692f, and 1692f(1) claims.

Third, the plaintiff argued that the civil warrant and affidavit were initial communications and that the defendants violated 1692e(11) and 1692g by failing to include the required disclosures. The court first granted summary judgment for the defendants on the plaintiff’s 1692g claim. The defendants submitted an affidavit testifying that the law firm had sent a letter prior to the filing of the civil warrant and affidavit. Despite having no copy of the letter, the court found that the affidavit testifying that the records indicated a letter was sent and that the same disclosures are included in all correspondence was sufficient to prove the civil warrant and affidavit were not the initial communications because the plaintiff offered no evidence to dispute that fact. Next, the court looked at the plaintiff’s 1692e(11) claims and found that both the civil warrant and the sworn affidavit are formal pleadings. The court even went on to analyze a contrary finding in Collins v. Portfolio Recovery Associates, LLC, No. 2:12-CV-138 (E.D. Tenn. June 7, 2013), and it picked apart its analysis there and found Collins is both non-binding and not persuasive. The court granted summary judgment in favor of defendants for the 1692e(11) and 1692g claims.

Fourth, the plaintiff claimed LVNV was responsible for the acts and omissions of the law firm it hired. The court found that the nature of the attorney-client relationship gives the client the power to control its agent. Thus, the court found simply that “LVNV may be held liable for any of [the law firm's] FDCPA violations, making summary judgment improper.”

Finally, the court ruled on the plaintiff’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. The plaintiff moved for summary judgment on the licensing, disclosure, and wrong venue claims. The court had already dealt with the licensing and disclosures issues, finding in favor of the defendants, and only had the venue issue to address. Section 1692i(a)(2) of the FDCPA requires a debt collector to bring an action in the judicial district where the consumer signed the contract or where the debtor resides. The plaintiff argued that the civil warrant was issued in Knox County, but listed the residence as Sevier County. The defendants acknowledged that the civil warrant may have been filed in the wrong county, but that they had a good faith belief as to the plaintiff’s address based on credit reports. The court made no determination as to whether the defendants could carry the burden of proving the bona fide defense at trial, but found that they had created a genuine issue of material fact. The court denied plaintiff’s motion in its entirety.

In conclusion, the only one of the plaintiff’s claims that survived was the 1692i(a)(2) claim.

Saturday, January 12, 2013

Tennessee FDCPA Lawyers

Has a debt collector or debt purchaser contacted or sued you?  Are you a consumer in Tennessee and need to stop unlawful debt collection action taken against you?  If so, contact Tennessee Consumer Protection lawyer Jason Barnette at Barnette Law Offices to stand up for you rights.

Did you know that in Tennessee, the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act imposes a standard of conduct that debt collectors and debt purchasers such as CACH, LLC, Asset Acceptance, LLC, Midland Funding, LLC, Portfolio Recovery Associates, LLC, LVNV Funding, and many more are supposed to abide by, but often do not.  Generally, neither debt collectors  or debt purchasers  can engage in harassing, abusive or unfair practices, nor make false or misleading statements; which includes inaccurate reporting on your credit reports.  The FDCPA provides that Tennessee consumers can recover actual damages incurred by a violation of the Act, plus an additional amount up to $1,000, plus attorney fees.

Contact the Tennessee FDCPA lawyers at 615-585-2245 or info@barnettelawoffices.com

 

Friday, July 13, 2012

LVNV Funding–Tennessee Court of Appeals

In a recent case of LVNV Funding, LLC v. Kevin Mastaw, the Tennessee Court of Appeals at Nashville struck a blow to all debt purchasers that sue Tennessee consumers.  No. M2011-00990-COA-R3-CV - Filed April 30, 2012.  The Court got it right and affirmed our position that – essentially – robo-signed Affidavits on sworn accounts are indeed hearsay inasmuch as they are not “business records”.  The ruling can be reviewed at http://www.tncourts.gov/sites/default/files/lvnvfunding_opn.pdf

When defending , we always object to any debt purchaser’s attempt to introduce Affidavits that are once removed or even twice removed from the personal knowledge of the witness.  While, “typically” gets most cases dismissed before hearing, he has made the argument time and time again that Affidavits submitted by debt purchasers are prepared for litigation and are therefore, not subject to the business record exception to hearsay.  Our Court of Appeals confirmed that.

What does that mean for you if you’ve been sued ?  It means that in order to win, a debt purchaser must now authenticate any document they intend to use to prove up the debt through witness testimony and said witness better of personal knowledge as to the contents of the documents.

If you’ve been sued by a debt purchaser or have one hounding you through a law firm, contact at Barnette Law Offices.  We can be reached at 615-585-2245 and .

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Debt Purchasers–If You’ve Been Sued Call Us!

Have you been sued in a General Sessions Court in Tennessee?  Is the Plaintiff a debt purchaser?  If so, call at 615-585-2245 or email us at info@barnettelawoffices.com.

Debt purchasers go by many names – Portfolio Recovery Associates, Midland Funding, Asset Acceptance, CACH, LLC, LVNV, Gault Financial – but there are many.  Essentially, they all have the same business model.  Buy old credit card debts – or any debt really – for cents on the dollar and sue you for it.  However, you have options and will fully explain those to you during  a free consultation.

Debt purchasers – regardless of their name – must show a chain of title in order to prove up their claim.  This is often difficult for them.  Moreover, they typically must authenticate said chain of title through witness testimony.  Some may argue that their affidavits are not hearsay and rather, “business records” but do businesses; i.e., make affidavits for all the accounts they have?  Of course, no they don’t because such documents are prepared for litigation alone.

Furthermore, debt purchasers are subject to the .  Chances are, the debt purchaser that is now suing you has violated one of the Acts cited above.  Indeed, they may not even be lawfully permitted to sue you in Tennessee.

If you’ve been sued by a debt purchaser, call us at 615-585-2245 or email us at info@barnettelawoffices.com.  We can help.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

BEEN SUED BY A DEBT PURCHASER?

Debt purchasers such as Midland Funding, LLC, Cavalry Portfolio Services, Gault Financial, Portfolio Recovery Associates, CACH, LLC, etc., use the General Sessions Courts of Tennessee to frequently sue consumers who may have defaulted on an account long ago.  Unfortunately, many of said consumers do not know what to do and simply fail to appear.  This is because most people feel that there is nothing they can do and moreover, there are very few attorneys such as in Tennessee which assist consumers when they’ve been sued.

Many times these junk debt purchasers will not have sufficient evidence.  They all file what are called “sworn accounts” which is essentially a Summons to appear on an account that someone has sworn an affidavit wherein they state the consumer owes the account and what amount.  However, the Tennessee Rules of Evidence do apply as does the Tennessee Collection Services Act.  Moreover, some debt purchasers violate consumer protection statutes by illegally collecting, collecting “actively” without a collection service license, and unlawfully reporting inaccurate information upon a consumers credit reports.  In short, you can successfully defend and even file counter-complaints if sued by a debt purchaser.

in defending consumers against debt purchasers.  He knows that an affidavit can be rebutted through a sworn denial.  He is aware that someone must authenticate any affidavit submitted as evidence in support of a sworn account.  He knows that affidavits should not be construed as business records – an exception to the hearsay rule – should a witness for a debt purchaser fail to appear.  Furthermore, he is cognizant that a right of assignment should be presented to show a chain of title that permits a debt purchaser to act as a real party in interest.

Moreover, knows how to counter-claim under the Fair Credit Reporting Act, the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, and the Tennessee Consumer Protection Act inside and out.  If the debt purchaser does not have a valid Tennessee collection service license and is actively collecting in violation of the Tennessee Collection Services Act, a dismissal is in order.  will utilize the aforesaid Acts to fight for you against debt purchasers. 

Again, debt purchasers must be able to prove what they allege in their cases against consumers.  At , we make them and if they can’t, we will assert counter-complaints.

Please contact at 615-585-2245 or http://www.barnettelawoffices.com if you’ve been sued by debt collectors such as Arrow Financial, Midland Funding, Asset Acceptance, Calvary Portfolio, Gault Financial, etc.  We can help you defeat the suit and sometimes, put cash in your pocket at the same time.