4th Circuit Considers Whether the FDCPA Protects Discharged Debtors From Improper Collection

Posted by Jim Haller - July 31, 2024

The 4th Circuit Court is considering an appeal from the District Court for the Northern District of West Virginia which dismissed the Debtor’s FDCPA complaint due to lack of standing since his debt was discharged in a prior chapter 7 bankruptcy.

Facts

John Koontz entered into a mortgage loan with CitiFinancial, which was later serviced by SN Servicing Corporation (SNSC) and then by Land Home Financial Services (LHFS). After Koontz received a Chapter 7 bankruptcy discharge in 2017, he continued to make voluntary payments on the loan. He alleged that SNSC and LHFS charged excessive late fees and failed to respond to his requests for information.

Analysis

The district court analyzed whether Koontz had standing to pursue claims under the FDCPA and WVCCPA, given his bankruptcy discharge. Under the FDCPA, the court determined that Koontz was not obligated or allegedly obligated to pay the debt because the bankruptcy discharge extinguished his personal liability. The court referenced the Fourth Circuit’s decision in Lovegrove v. Ocwen Home Loans Servicing, LLC, where post-discharge mortgage statements containing disclaimers were not considered attempts to collect a debt. The court concluded that SNSC’s and LHFS’s communications, which included similar disclaimers, were not attempts to collect a debt under the FDCPA.

For the WVCCPA claims, the court held that Koontz was not a “consumer” as defined by the statute because his personal obligation to pay the mortgage debt was discharged in bankruptcy. The court referenced its previous decision in Fabian v. Home Loan Center, Inc., which held that a discharged debtor is not a “consumer” under the WVCCPA and therefore lacks standing to bring claims under the Act. The court rejected Koontz’s reliance on other federal court cases, noting that many involved phone calls rather than written correspondence and did not alter the applicability of Fabian.

The court dismissed Koontz’s claims, reaffirming that a bankruptcy discharge eliminates personal liability for the debt, thereby negating standing under the FDCPA and WVCCPA. The court emphasized the importance of clear and unequivocal disclaimers in post-discharge communications to avoid violating debt collection laws.

NCBRC along with the National Association of Consumer Bankruptcy Attorneys and the National Consumer Law Center filed a brief in support of the Debtor.

Amici Brief in Support of Appellant – Koontz vs SN Servicing

Post a Comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.