Patricia Evankavitch v. Green Tree Servicing LLC , 793 F.3d 355 ( 2015 )


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  •                                             PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    ___________
    No. 14-1114
    ___________
    PATRICIA EVANKAVITCH,
    v.
    GREEN TREE SERVICING, LLC,
    Appellant
    ____________________________________
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of Pennsylvania
    (D.C. No. 3-12-cv-02564)
    District Judge: Honorable James M. Munley
    ____________________________________
    Argued: December 9, 2014
    Before: FUENTES, FISHER, and KRAUSE, Circuit Judges
    (Filed: July 13, 2015)
    _____________
    Carlo Sabatini, Esq.
    216 North Blakely Street
    Dunmore, PA 18512
    Deepak Gupta, Esq. [Argued]
    Gupta Wessler
    1735 20th Street, NW
    Washington, DC 20009
    Counsel for Appellee
    Barbara K. Hager, Esq.
    Henry F. Reichner, Esq.
    Reed Smith
    1717 Arch Street
    Three Logan Square, Suite 3100
    Philadelphia, PA 19103
    David J. Bird, Esq. [Argued]
    Reed Smith
    225 Fifth Avenue
    Suite 1200
    Pittsburgh, PA 15222
    Counsel for Appellant
    ___________
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    KRAUSE, Circuit Judge.
    Under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act
    (“FDCPA”), 
    15 U.S.C. § 1692
    , et seq., a debt collector is
    2
    liable to a consumer for contacting third parties in pursuit of
    that consumer’s debt unless the communication falls under a
    statutory exception. One of those exceptions covers
    communication with a third party “for the purpose of
    acquiring location information about the consumer” but, even
    then, prohibits more than one such contact “unless the debt
    collector reasonably believes that the earlier response of such
    person is erroneous or incomplete and that such person now
    has correct or complete location information.” 15 U.S.C. §
    1692b. In this appeal following a jury verdict and judgment
    entered against a debt collector for repeated contact with third
    parties, we consider a matter of first impression among the
    Courts of Appeals: whether the burden in such a case is on
    the debt collector to prove or the consumer to disprove that
    the challenged third-party communications fit within §
    1692b’s exception for acquisition of location information.
    We conclude that the debt collector bears that burden and
    will therefore affirm.
    I. Facts and Procedural History
    In 2005, Patricia Evankavitch executed a $43,300.00
    mortgage against her property so that she could, in turn, lend
    money to her son, Christopher.1 In order for Evankavitch to
    repay the loan, Christopher regularly deposited checks into
    her bank account, and she then paid the mortgage company.
    Eventually, however, Christopher had financial difficulties
    and stopped depositing his checks. As a result, Evankavitch
    fell behind on her loan payments. In May 2011, with
    1
    For ease of reference, we refer to Evankavitch’s
    children by their first names throughout this opinion.
    3
    Evankavitch four months behind, the mortgagee’s rights were
    assigned to Green Tree Servicing, LLC (“Green Tree”).2
    Green Tree and Evankavitch had periodic
    conversations about the loan over the next several months.
    Evankavitch initiated one of those discussions by calling
    Green Tree from a cell phone belonging to her daughter,
    Cheryl, which apparently led Green Tree to record Cheryl’s
    number as an additional number where it could reach
    Evankavitch. Thus, towards the end of 2011, Green Tree
    made numerous unsuccessful calls to Evankavitch at both
    Evankavitch’s and Cheryl’s numbers.
    In January 2012, Green Tree reached Cheryl on her
    cell phone. Cheryl said that she would ask her mother to call
    Green Tree. A month later, Evankavitch called Green Tree
    again from Cheryl’s cell phone. This time, she informed
    Green Tree that the number was her daughter’s and instructed
    Green Tree to stop using it. Instead, over the next several
    months, representatives from Green Tree continued to call
    both Evankavitch’s and Cheryl’s numbers and left several
    messages on Cheryl’s voicemail requesting that Evankavitch
    call Green Tree.
    2
    Ordinarily, creditors are not considered debt
    collectors under the FDCPA. See Pollice v. Nat’l Tax
    Funding, L.P., 
    225 F.3d 379
    , 403 (3d Cir. 2000). However,
    an assignee of a loan “may be deemed a ‘debt collector’ if the
    obligation is already in default when it is assigned.” 
    Id.
    Green Tree assumed the assignment under those
    circumstances and thus constitutes a debt collector for
    FDCPA purposes in this case.
    4
    In August 2012, after failing to reach Evankavitch,
    Green Tree began calling Evankavitch’s neighbors, Robert
    and Sally Heim. After a Green Tree employee asked Mr.
    Heim to have Evankavitch call Green Tree, Mr. Heim passed
    Green Tree’s contact information on to Evankavitch.3 After
    two more months without hearing from Evankavitch, Green
    Tree made at least three more calls to the Heims, leaving two
    messages and speaking with Mr. Heim once more. Mr. Heim
    told Green Tree in that final call that Christopher had moved
    to California and that Green Tree should stop calling the
    Heims. After learning of these communications, Evankavitch
    brought suit, claiming, among other things, that Green Tree
    impermissibly contacted Mr. Heim in its debt collection
    efforts, in violation of § 1692b-c of the FDCPA.
    A. The District Court’s Challenged Rulings
    With limited exceptions, the FDCPA forbids a debt
    collector from contacting third parties in its attempts to
    collect a consumer’s debt, 15 U.S.C. § 1692c(b), and makes
    the debt collector liable in an individual action for statutory
    damages up to $1,000, over and above any actual damages,
    id. at § 1692k(a). In both an in limine ruling and in its jury
    charge, the District Court took the position that when a debt
    collector alleges that it made a contact that falls within the
    3
    Although Green Tree suggests otherwise in its
    briefing, it cites little in the record that indicates that it
    actually attempted to discern the location of Evankavitch
    during this call or any subsequent call. Instead, these calls to
    the Heims appear to have been made with the same purpose
    as the calls made to Cheryl, i.e., for these third parties to
    function as Green Tree’s message service in soliciting a
    return call from Evankavitch.
    5
    exception for acquisition of location information, the debt
    collector has the burden to prove the exception as an
    affirmative defense. Specifically, the District Court advised
    the jury that Evankavitch and Green Tree “agree that the Fair
    Debt Collection Practices Act is violated in the sense that
    they agree that the Defendant contacted third parties and did
    so multiple times, . . . which is generally a violation of the
    Act.” App. 404-405. It went on to state that the “burden is
    on the Defendant to determine and establish that it sought
    location information.” App. 405. Thus, the District Court
    instructed:
    [T]he issues for you to decide are[:] one,
    whether the Defendant has established that it
    contacted the third parties to obtain location
    information; and two, whether the Defendant
    contacted the third party multiple times because
    the Defendant reasonably believed that the
    earlier response of the third party is incorrect or
    incomplete, and that the third party now has the
    correct or the complete location information.
    App. 408.
    The jury returned a verdict in favor of Evankavitch.
    The District Court entered judgment in her favor for $1,000,
    and this appeal ensued. Green Tree argues on appeal that
    both the in limine ruling and the jury instructions were
    improper, such that the verdict should be vacated and this
    matter re-tried with the burden of proof on Evankavitch to
    disprove that any exception applied.
    6
    II. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
    The District Court had jurisdiction pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1331
    . We have jurisdiction pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    .
    When reviewing a jury charge, “we exercise plenary
    review to determine whether the instruction misstated the
    applicable law.” Franklin Prescriptions, Inc. v. N.Y. Times
    Co., 
    424 F.3d 336
    , 338 (3d Cir. 2005).4 We also exercise
    plenary review over legal rulings made pursuant to an in
    limine order. United States v. Romano, 
    849 F.2d 812
    , 814 (3d
    Cir. 1988).
    4
    Evankavitch argues that Green Tree failed to preserve
    its objection to the charge so that we should reverse only if
    the error is “fundamental and highly prejudicial or if the
    instructions are such that the jury is without adequate
    guidance on a fundamental question and our failure to
    consider the error would result in a miscarriage of justice.”
    Fashauer v. N.J. Transit Rail Operations, 
    57 F.3d 1269
    , 1289
    (3d Cir. 1995) (internal quotation marks omitted). We
    disagree. After a careful review of the record, we conclude
    that Green Tree’s trial counsel adequately raised its
    objections and that the District Court made a definitive and
    “explicit rejection of [Green Tree’s] proposed instructions.”
    Collins v. Alco Parking Corp., 
    448 F.3d 652
    , 656 (3d Cir.
    2006).
    7
    III. Discussion
    A. The FDCPA and Its General Prohibitions on
    Third-Party Contacts
    The FDCPA was enacted in 1977 in response to “the
    abundant evidence of the use of abusive, deceptive, and unfair
    debt collection practices by many debt collectors.” Lesher v.
    Law Offices of Mitchell N. Kay, PC, 
    650 F.3d 993
    , 996 (3d
    Cir. 2011) (internal quotation marks omitted). The purpose of
    the Act is both to “eliminate abusive debt collection
    practices” and to “‘insure that those debt collectors who
    refrain from using abusive debt collection practices are not
    competitively disadvantaged.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting 
    15 U.S.C. § 1692
    (e)). As remedial legislation, the Act is construed
    broadly to effectuate those purposes. Caprio v. Healthcare
    Revenue Recovery Grp., LLC, 
    709 F.3d 142
    , 148 (3d Cir.
    2013).
    “[T]he invasion of privacy,” we recently explained, is
    “a core concern animating the FDCPA.” Douglass v.
    Convergent Outsourcing, 
    765 F.3d 299
    , 303 (3d Cir. 2014);
    accord 15 U.S.C. 1692(a) (stating that unfair debt collection
    practices lead to, among other things, “invasions of individual
    privacy”). One way Congress addressed this concern was to
    “prohibit[] a debt collector from communicating with third
    parties about the consumer’s debt.” Edwards v. Niagara
    Credit Solutions, Inc., 
    584 F.3d 1350
    , 1353 (11th Cir. 2009)
    (citing § 1692c(b)).      Legislative history indicates this
    prohibition was considered an “extremely important
    protection.” S. Rep. 95-382, at 4 (1977), reprinted in 1977
    U.S.C.C.A.N. 1695, 1699.
    8
    In recognition of a “debt collector’s legitimate need to
    seek the whereabouts of missing debtors,” id. at 4, however,
    the Act provides an exception to this general prohibition for
    communications made “for the purpose of acquiring location
    information about the consumer.” 15 U.S.C. § 1692b.5 In
    other words, a debt collector may contact third parties to
    ascertain where it may locate the consumer. That exception is
    itself limited, however, as debt collectors may “not
    communicate with any such person more than once . . . unless
    the debt collector reasonably believes that the earlier response
    of such person is erroneous or incomplete and that such
    person now has correct or complete location information.”
    Id. at § 1692b(3).
    None of our sister Circuits has yet addressed the
    question whether the consumer has the burden of disproving
    this exception as part of its case-in-chief, or whether the debt
    collector carries the burden of proving the exception as an
    affirmative defense, and the district courts have taken
    divergent approaches.6 It is to this question we now turn.
    5
    Other exceptions to the general prohibition on third-
    party communications include prior consent by a consumer,
    the express permission of a court of competent jurisdiction,
    and communications reasonably necessary for a debt collector
    to effectuate a post-judgment judicial remedy. 15 U.S.C. §
    1692c(b).
    6
    Compare, e.g., Williams v. Web Equity Holdings,
    LLC, No. 13-13723, 
    2014 WL 3845952
    , at *4 (E.D. Mich.
    Aug. 5, 2014) (“The language of § 1692b(3) creates an
    exception for debt collectors seeking to locate the debtor to
    contact persons they reasonably believe have such location
    9
    B. Determining Burdens of Proof
    We generally start our analysis with the plain text of a
    statute. But where, as here, that text “is silent on the
    allocation of the burden of persuasion,” we “begin with the
    ordinary default rule that plaintiffs bear the risk of failing to
    prove their claims.” Schaffer ex rel. Schaffer v. Weast, 
    546 U.S. 49
    , 56 (2005). This long-standing, common-sense rule
    stems from the understanding that “[t]he burdens of pleading
    and proof with regard to most facts have been and should be
    assigned to the plaintiff who generally seeks to change the
    present state of affairs and who therefore naturally should be
    expected to bear the risk of failure of proof or persuasion.” 2
    McCormick On Evid. § 337 (7th ed. 2013).
    information. This, in turn, imposes a pleading burden on
    plaintiffs alleging a violation of this section to provide facts
    to support an inference that the debt collector had no reason
    to believe that the person knew the whereabouts of the debtor
    or that they provided an incomplete or erroneous response.”),
    with Kempa v. Cadlerock Joint Ventures, L.P., No. 10-11696,
    
    2011 WL 761500
    , at *4 (E.D. Mich. Feb. 25, 2011)
    (“CadleRock has not provided any evidence to show that, in
    any of her messages or communications to Kempa’s parents,
    Hunt stated that she was confirming or correcting Kempa’s
    location information. . . . Since the FDCPA is a strict liability
    act, Kempa is entitled to summary judgment with regards to
    Kempa’s 15 U.S.C. § 1692c(b) claim.”), and Kasalo v.
    Monco Law Offices, S.C., No. 09-2567, 
    2009 WL 4639720
    , at
    *6 (N.D. Ill. Dec. 7, 2009) (“[W]e treat the exception in
    Section 1692b(3) on which defendant relies as an affirmative
    defense, which defendant has the burden of proving.”).
    10
    Green Tree essentially asks that we end our inquiry at
    this point and treat the default rule as an absolute one. We
    decline, for “when both a statute and its legislative history are
    silent on the question” of the burden of proof, “[i]t is common
    ground that no single principle or rule solves all cases by
    setting forth a general test.” Schaffer, 
    546 U.S. at 62
     (2005)
    (Stevens, J., concurring) (citing Alaska Dep’t of Envtl.
    Conservation v. E.P.A., 
    540 U.S. 461
    , 494 n.17).7
    Beyond the ordinary default rule that a plaintiff bears
    the burden of proving her claims, we glean from decisions of
    the Supreme Court, this Court, and other Courts of Appeals a
    7
    The FDCPA’s legislative history, while not
    completely silent on the subject, offers little insight into
    Congress’s intent. At the beginning of the legislative process,
    the House of Representatives placed the burden of proof on
    the debt collector after a minimal showing by the consumer.
    The House proposed a burden-shifting framework under
    which, if a consumer alleged that a debt collector
    inappropriately contacted a third party and pleaded that he or
    she did not consent to any third-party contacts, the burden of
    proof would shift to the debt collector. H. Rep. 95-131, 19
    (1977). Among other changes, and without a readily apparent
    explanation, the Senate did not include that subsection in its
    version of the Act, S. Rep. 95-382 (1977), reprinted in 1977
    U.S.C.C.A.N. 1695, which the House adopted in its entirety
    by floor amendment, avoiding a conference committee, 123
    Cong. Rec. 28109 (Sept. 8, 1977). Given this ambiguity, and
    lacking “that veritable Rosetta Stone of legislative
    archaeology, a crystal clear Committee Report,” United States
    v. R.L.C., 
    503 U.S. 291
    , 309 (1992) (Scalia, J., concurring in
    part), we do not accord weight to this legislative history.
    11
    number of factors relevant to our analysis here, including: (1)
    whether the defense is framed as an exception to a statute’s
    general prohibition or an element of a prima facie case; (2)
    whether the statute’s general structure and scheme indicate
    where the burden should fall; (3) whether a plaintiff will be
    unfairly surprised by the assertion of a defense; (4) whether a
    party is in particular control of information necessary to prove
    or disprove the defense; and (5) other policy or fairness
    considerations. We address each factor below.
    1. Statutory Exceptions
    The Supreme Court has instructed that while the
    default rule applies to “most” disputes about burdens,
    Schaffer, 
    546 U.S. at 57
    , another “general rule of statutory
    construction” provides “that the burden of proving
    justification or exemption under a special exception to the
    prohibitions of a statute generally rests on one who claims its
    benefits,” FTC v. Morton Salt Co., 
    334 U.S. 37
    , 44-45 (1948);
    see also Meacham v. Knolls Atomic Power Lab., 
    554 U.S. 84
    ,
    91 (2008) (repeating “the familiar principle that ‘[w]hen a
    proviso . . . carves an exception out of the body of a statute or
    contract those who set up such exception must prove it’”)
    (quoting Javierre v. Cent. Altagracia, 
    217 U.S. 502
    , 508
    (1910)); United States v. Taylor, 
    686 F.3d 182
    , 190 & n.5 (3d
    Cir. 2012) (compiling “numerous Supreme Court decisions”
    for the proposition that “where the statute contains . . . an
    exception, the defendant bears the burden of proving it”).
    This “longstanding convention is part of the backdrop against
    which the Congress writes laws, and we respect it unless we
    have compelling reasons to think that Congress meant to put
    the burden of persuasion on the other side.” Meacham, 
    554 U.S. at 91-92
    .
    12
    Here, § 1692c(b) states that “[e]xcept as provided in
    section 1692b . . . a debt collector may not communicate, in
    connection with the collection of any debt, . . . [with third
    parties].” 15 U.S.C. § 1692c(b). Thus, the FDCPA generally
    prohibits a debt collector from contacting third parties, with
    the debt collector’s ability to seek location information
    framed as an exception to this general prohibition. Repeat
    contacts made pursuant to that exception are even further
    limited, with telltale language likewise indicative of an
    affirmative defense:
    Any debt collector communicating with any
    person other than the consumer for the purpose
    of acquiring location information about the
    consumer shall . . . not communicate with any
    such person more than once unless requested to
    do so by such person or unless the debt
    collector reasonably believes that the earlier
    response of such person is erroneous or
    incomplete and that such person now has
    correct or complete location information[.]
    15 U.S.C. § 1692b(3) (emphasis added); see United States v.
    Franchi-Forlando, 
    838 F.2d 585
    , 591 (1st Cir. 1988) (Breyer,
    J.) (stating that introducing provisions with the words
    “unless” and “except” may indicate an affirmative defense).
    Moreover, in assessing which party has the burden of
    proof under this rule, courts often “focus[] on the relationship
    between the defense in question and the plaintiff’s primary
    case,” and “on whether a defense raises factual or legal issues
    other than those put in play by the plaintiff’s cause of action.”
    In re Sterten, 
    546 F.3d 278
    , 284 (3d Cir. 2008). Put
    differently, as we recently held in the criminal context,
    13
    “[w]hether a particular statutory phrase constitutes a defense
    or an element of the offense . . . turns on whether the statutory
    definition is such that the crime may not be properly
    described without reference to the exception.” Taylor, 686
    F.3d at 191 (internal quotation marks omitted). If that is the
    case, “the exception is an element of the crime”; if not, the
    exception is an affirmative defense. Id.
    In the case of the FDCPA, no reference to the Act’s
    exceptions is necessary to discern that calls to third parties in
    pursuit of collecting a consumer’s debt are prohibited.
    Instead, what constitutes a violation is apparent from the plain
    language of § 1692c(b). Thus, we find no compelling reason
    to reverse the “longstanding convention” that a party seeking
    shelter in an exception—here, the debt collector—has the
    burden to prove it. Meacham, 
    554 U.S. at 91
    .
    2. The Statutory Scheme
    The structure of the statute, another useful indicator of
    Congressional intent, also leads us to place the burden of
    proof on the debt collector. See United Sav. Ass’n of Tex. v.
    Timbers of Inwood Forest Assocs., Ltd., 
    484 U.S. 365
    , 371
    (1988) (“A provision that may seem ambiguous in isolation is
    often clarified by the remainder of the statutory scheme.”);
    Gwaltney of Smithfield, Ltd. v. Chesapeake Bay Found., Inc.,
    
    484 U.S. 49
    , 59-60 (1987) (analyzing statutory language in a
    way that is in accord with the “language and structure” of the
    section of law at issue).
    We find persuasive in this regard that the language and
    interaction of the general prohibition in § 1692c(b) and its
    exception for location information in § 1692b closely track
    the language and interaction of § 1692k, which imposes civil
    14
    liability for FDCPA violations, and its two exceptions, which
    are widely recognized as affirmative defenses. See Jerman v.
    Carlisle, McNellie, Rini, Kramer & Ulrich LPA, 
    559 U.S. 573
    , 578 (2010) (citing 15 U.S.C §§ 1692k(c) and (e) for the
    proposition that “[t]he Act contains two exceptions to
    provisions imposing liability on debt collectors”). The first of
    these is the so-called good faith error defense, which
    explicitly places the burden on the debt collector to prove that
    it acted unintentionally and had procedures in place to avoid
    such an error. 15 U.S.C. § 1692k(c).8 The second provides a
    safe harbor for a debt collector that seeks and receives legal
    opinions from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
    before they proceed. 15 U.S.C. § 1692k(e).9 Although this
    second exception lacks the explicit burden-shifting language
    of the first, both are delineated as affirmative defenses by §
    1692k(a)’s general statement that a debt collector shall be
    held liable “[e]xcept as otherwise provided by this section,”
    with the particular affirmative defenses described in separate
    subsections. 15 U.S.C. §§ 1692k(a), (c), (e).
    8
    15 U.S.C. § 1692k(c) states: “A debt collector may
    not be held liable . . . if [it] shows by a preponderance of
    evidence that the violation was not intentional and resulted
    from a bona fide error notwithstanding the maintenance of
    procedures reasonably adapted to avoid any such error.”
    9
    15 U.S.C. § 1692k(e) states: “No provision of this
    section imposing any liability shall apply to any act done or
    omitted in good faith in conformity with any advisory opinion
    of the [Consumer Financial Protection Bureau] . . . .”
    15
    The location-information exception at issue in this case
    qualifies § 1692c(b)’s general prohibition against third-party
    contacts in almost identical terms, providing that third-party
    contacts are forbidden “[e]xcept as provided in section
    1692b,” and setting off the description of the exception in that
    separate section. Such placement of the exception and the
    general prohibition in different parts of the statute has been
    recognized by the Supreme Court as indicative of an
    affirmative defense. See Meacham, 
    554 U.S. at 87, 91
    (concluding that an exception for employer conduct otherwise
    prohibited by the Age Discrimination in Employment Act
    constituted an affirmative defense based in part on “how the
    statute reads, with exemptions laid out apart from the
    prohibitions”). Thus, the statutory structure and the parallels
    between the language of § 1692c(b), with its exception for
    location-information in § 1692b, and § 1692k(a), with its
    well-established affirmative defenses in §§ 1692k(c) and
    1692k(e), strongly indicate that § 1692b also was intended to
    be an affirmative defense. See Kirtsaeng v. John Wiley &
    Sons, Inc., 
    133 S. Ct. 1351
    , 1362 (2013) (“[W]e normally
    presume that . . . words . . . carry the same meaning when
    they appear in different but related sections.”); Gwaltney, 
    484 U.S. at 59-60
     (interpreting statute in accord with its general
    language and structure).
    Green Tree attempts to differentiate § 1692k on the
    ground that its exceptions require a showing of subjective
    intent or good faith and thus are appropriately deemed
    affirmative defenses because the proof is in the possession of
    the debt collector. In contrast, Green Tree argues, one of §
    1692b’s subsections, the provision that allows for follow-up
    calls to obtain location information if the debt collector
    “reasonably believes” the third party did not originally
    16
    provide and now has complete or accurate information,
    imports an objective test into § 1692b, such that the exception
    can and should be disproven by the plaintiff.10 Green Tree’s
    argument proves too much, however, for the sine qua non of
    any communication that qualifies under § 1692b, whether
    initial or follow up, is that the communication was “for the
    purpose of” acquiring location information—a question of
    subjective intent that is appropriate, even by Green Tree’s
    logic, for treatment as an affirmative defense.
    3. Avoiding     Surprise     and    Undue
    Prejudice
    Another factor for our consideration in categorizing an
    exception as an affirmative defense is the need to avoid unfair
    surprise and undue prejudice. See Sterten, 
    546 F.3d at 285
    ;
    see also Ingraham v. United States, 
    808 F.2d 1075
    , 1079 (5th
    Cir. 1987). In examining this concern, we consider, given
    what a plaintiff is “already required to show” to prove its
    case, whether a defendant’s failure to raise the specific issue
    10
    In support, Green Tree cites to the Fourth Circuit’s
    unpublished, per curiam opinion in Worsham v. Accounts
    Receivable Management., Inc., 497 F. App’x 274, 277 (4th
    Cir. 2012). Worsham, however, did not address the burden of
    proof under § 1692b but only the standard for reasonableness
    under § 1692b(3), concluding “[t]he use of the word
    ‘reasonably’ indicates that this is an objective standard that
    the debt collector must meet to avoid liability under the
    FDCPA.” Id. Moreover, albeit in dictum, the court’s
    reference to the objective standard as one “the debt collector
    must meet,” would appear, if anything, to undermine Green
    Tree’s position.
    17
    would otherwise “deprive[] [a plaintiff] of an opportunity to
    rebut that defense or to alter her litigation strategy
    accordingly.” Sterten, 
    546 F.3d at 285
    .
    In Sterten, a consumer brought a case pursuant to the
    Truth in Lending Act (“TILA”), 
    15 U.S.C. § 1601
    , et seq.,
    alleging that a creditor failed to accurately disclose finance
    charges in connection with a home mortgage. 
    546 F.3d at 281
    . We found no unfair surprise when a defendant,
    referencing a general denial in its answer to the complaint,
    later sought shelter in TILA’s “tolerances provision,” a
    section of the statute that specifies the extent to which a
    lender may miscalculate a finance charge before incurring
    liability.11 See 
    id. at 285-87
     (examining 
    15 U.S.C. § 1605
    (f)).
    In concluding there was no undue prejudice to the plaintiff-
    consumer as a consequence of the defendant’s failure to raise
    the tolerances provision as an affirmative defense, we
    reasoned that the very same analysis that a consumer would
    undertake to prove that a disclosure was inaccurate would
    also reveal whether the inaccuracy fell within the tolerances
    provision. 
    Id. at 285
    . In other words, proving the claim
    would necessarily disprove the defense, and the consumer
    therefore would neither have sought different discovery nor
    altered her trial strategy had the defendant affirmatively
    pleaded the defense, rather than a general denial. 
    Id.
    11
    In Sterten, we addressed the burden of pleading
    rather than the burden of proof at trial, a distinction without a
    difference for purposes of today’s analysis. See Taylor v.
    Sturgell, 
    553 U.S. 880
    , 907 (2008) (stating that when a party
    seeks shelter in an affirmative defense it is “[o]rdinarily . . .
    incumbent on the defendant to plead and prove such a
    defense”).
    18
    The exception we consider here stands in stark
    contrast. If a debt collector acknowledges that it made a
    generally prohibited call, but contends it did so based on a
    purpose or reasonable belief that would exempt it from
    liability, a diligent consumer will need to explore the debt
    collector’s knowledge and intent. Thus, a consumer faced
    with the assertion that a call was made pursuant to the
    FDCPA’s location-information exception would reasonably
    change her discovery and trial strategy to prove that the debt
    collector was not seeking location information, or, in a
    follow-up call, did not have a reasonable belief that the earlier
    information was incorrect and likely to be corrected.
    Accordingly, considerations of unfair surprise and undue
    prejudice also counsel in favor of finding that § 1692b is an
    affirmative defense.
    4. The Party with Peculiar Knowledge
    of the Relevant Facts
    Another general rule of statutory construction, “that
    where the facts with regard to an issue lie peculiarly in the
    knowledge of a party, that party has the burden of proving the
    issue,” also indicates the burden rests with the debt collector.
    Dixon v. United States, 
    548 U.S. 1
    , 9 (2006) (internal
    quotation marks omitted); accord Nat’l Commc’ns Ass’n Inc.
    v. AT&T Corp., 
    238 F.3d 124
    , 130 (2d Cir. 2001) (noting that
    “all else being equal, the burden is better placed on the party
    with easier access to relevant information”). This “ordinary
    rule, based on considerations of fairness, does not place the
    burden upon a litigant of establishing facts peculiarly within
    the knowledge of his adversary.” Schaffer, 
    546 U.S. at 60
    (quoting United States v. N.Y., N.H. & H.R. Co., 
    355 U.S. 253
    , 256 n.5 (1957)); see also Gomez v. Toledo, 
    446 U.S. 635
    , 640-41 (1980) (holding that qualified immunity is an
    19
    affirmative defense to a § 1983 action in part because the
    facts that might support the defense are in the possession of
    the official asserting it).
    Here, Green Tree has unique access to the information
    at issue: its purpose for making the calls to third parties and
    its basis, if any, when making follow-up calls, to reasonably
    believe the third parties did not originally provide and later
    had correct or complete information. Where the consumer
    challenges a communication from a debt collector to the
    consumer herself under the FDCPA, the consumer can be
    expected to attach and offer into evidence a copy of a written
    communication, see, e.g., McLaughlin v. Phelan Hallinan &
    Schmieg, LLP, 
    756 F.3d 240
    , 243 (3d Cir. 2014) (examining
    letter from a law firm to a consumer), or to plead and testify
    about a verbal communication, see, e.g., Hoover v. Monarch
    Recovery Mgmt., Inc., 
    888 F. Supp. 2d 589
    , 596 (E.D. Pa.
    2012) (examining allegedly harassing telephone calls).
    Where the communication is from a debt collector to a third
    party, however, the consumer will have no first-hand
    knowledge of the conversation, and the third party cannot
    reasonably be expected to keep notes about or recall in detail
    random calls to his or her home. See Lupyan v. Corinthian
    Colls. Inc., 
    761 F.3d 314
    , 322 (3d Cir. 2014) (recognizing
    that only the most “enterprising (or particularly compulsive)
    individual” would “maintain logs of incoming”
    correspondence).
    This reality was laid bare when, at trial and in its
    briefing before us, Green Tree was unable to adduce any
    credible evidence—despite deposition testimony from
    multiple call-center employees, a corporate designee’s pretrial
    deposition, and two days of trial testimony with a recess for
    the express purpose of allowing that same corporate designee
    20
    to search Green Tree’s records yet again—that Mr. Heim
    originally gave incorrect or incomplete information or that the
    calls made to the Heims were for the purpose of acquiring
    new or updated location information about Evankavitch.12
    Moreover, when questioned at argument as to how
    Evankavitch would prove her claim if we were to remand and
    place the burden on her, Green Tree candidly acknowledged
    that her case would be difficult because Mr. Heim could not
    recall significant details about the conversations. Thus, if
    Green Tree’s reading of the statute were correct, the absence
    of information—seemingly caused by its own lax record-
    keeping—would inure to its benefit, and the only party with
    any realistic ability to document the conversation would be
    motivated to do the opposite. Common sense dictates against
    this result.
    The Federal Communications Commission’s (“FCC”)
    interpretation of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act
    (“TCPA”), an analogous consumer protection statute, rests
    upon the same premise. The TCPA makes it unlawful “to
    make any call (other than a call made for emergency purposes
    or made with the prior express consent of the called party)
    using any automatic telephone dialing system or an artificial
    or prerecorded voice . . . to any telephone number assigned to
    12
    Nor was Green Tree able to adduce such evidence
    with regard to the calls to Evankavitch’s daughter. Rather,
    because Evankavitch had placed two calls to Green Tree from
    Cheryl’s cellphone (albeit, in one of them, to advise Green
    Tree that the number was her daughter’s and should not be
    called), Green Tree urged the jury to conclude that the
    repeated calls to Cheryl did not constitute third-party calls at
    all.
    21
    a . . . cellular telephone service.”             
    47 U.S.C. § 227
    (b)(1)(A)(iii)). Put differently, the statute forbids, among
    other things, autodialing a person’s cell phone, with two
    exceptions: consent and emergency.
    Like the FDCPA, the TCPA is silent about the burden
    of proving these exceptions. However, pursuant to a
    declaratory ruling by the FCC, “the creditor should be
    responsible for demonstrating that the consumer provided
    prior express consent,” 23 F.C.C.R. 559, 565 (Jan. 4, 2008),
    and the courts generally have placed the burden to prove
    these TCPA exceptions on the creditor, see Osorio v. State
    Farm Bank, F.S.B., 
    746 F.3d 1242
    , 1253 (11th Cir. 2014);
    Hartley-Culp v. Credit Mgmt. Co., No. 14-0282, 
    2014 WL 4630852
    , at *2 (M.D. Pa. Sept. 15, 2014); Elkins v. Medco
    Health Solutions, Inc., No. 12-2141, 
    2014 WL 1663406
    , at *6
    (E.D. Mo. Apr. 25, 2014). The rationale for treating these
    TCPA exceptions as affirmative defenses applies as well to
    the FDCPA: To the extent a caller seeks to avail itself of an
    exemption to a general ban on a certain category of calls, the
    caller is in the best position to generate and maintain records
    of those communications.
    5. Other     Fairness       and      Policy
    Considerations
    The soundness of placing the burden on the debt
    collector is even more compelling when considered in the
    context of Congress’s concern, expressly stated in 
    15 U.S.C. § 1692
    (a), with the “invasions of individual privacy” of
    consumers. See Nat’l Commc’ns Ass’n, 
    238 F.3d at 131
    (“[T]he policies underlying the statute at issue are
    appropriately considered by courts when allocating the
    burden of proof.”); Ingraham, 
    808 F.2d at 1079
     (holding that
    22
    policy considerations are an appropriate factor in determining
    burdens of proof).
    While Mr. Heim may not have understood the precise
    details of his conversations with Green Tree, he clearly
    understood the subject matter to be private and sensitive—the
    very type of interaction the FDCPA is intended to limit. See,
    e.g., Tr. of Robert Heim, ECF No. 25-3, 9:14-17 (“If they
    were [calling] from Green Tree or whatever, [they would] ask
    if I would get Patty next door, I -- I wouldn’t go. I wouldn’t
    bother her with something like that. It’s her own business.”);
    id. at 13:6-9 (“I [kept] telling them, don’t call this house again
    for a message to go next door. I said, I have my own
    problems and she has hers.”). Saddling consumers with the
    burden to prove the absence of the debt collector’s proper
    purpose or reasonable belief, however, would mean that
    consumers like Evankavitch would endure the embarrassment
    of such calls to neighbors and other third parties with no
    means of proving a FDCPA violation unless those third
    parties took copious notes or recalled the conversations in
    detail or the debt collector offered up testimony or
    documentary proof of its own violation in discovery. It
    would also run contrary to the tenet that “all else . . . being
    equal, courts should avoid requiring a party to shoulder the
    more difficult task of proving a negative.” Nat’l Commc’ns
    Ass’n, 
    238 F.3d at 131
    ; see also Lupyan, 761 F.3d at 322
    (“The law has long recognized that such an evidentiary feat is
    next to impossible.”).
    In sum, allocating the burden to the consumer would
    be inconsistent with the Act’s remedial purpose and our duty
    to construe it broadly, see Lesher, 
    650 F.3d at 997
    , and we
    23
    therefore will place the burden where it belongs: on the debt
    collector.13
    IV. Conclusion
    We started our analysis with the default rule that a
    plaintiff bears the burden of proving her claim, but we end
    13
    Green Tree makes additional arguments, including
    (1) because Congress crafted two explicit affirmative
    defenses in the Act, we should not read other, implicit
    defenses into it; and (2) our holding would create a burden-
    shifting scheme too complex for a jury to apply. Neither is
    persuasive. First, “the canon that expressing one item of a
    commonly associated group or series excludes another left
    unmentioned is only a guide, whose fallibility can be shown
    by contrary indications that adopting a particular rule or
    statute was probably not meant to signal any exclusion of its
    common relatives.” United States v. Vonn, 
    535 U.S. 55
    , 65
    (2002). That is, we will not assume that Congress’s explicit
    apportionment of burden on a defendant in certain
    circumstances implies rejection of the apportionment of
    burden in other circumstances, unless we discern an
    indication that Congress considered and meant to exclude the
    latter. See Marx v. Gen. Revenue Corp., 
    133 S. Ct. 1166
    ,
    1175 (2013). We discern no such intent in the provisions of
    the FDCPA at issue. Second, juries are more than capable of
    evaluating basic justifications and affirmative defenses. See,
    e.g., Dixon, 
    548 U.S. at 17
     (affirming conviction where a jury
    charge stated the defendant had to prove affirmative defense
    of duress ); United States v. Dodd, 
    225 F.3d 340
    , 343 (3d Cir.
    2000) (affirming conviction where a jury charge “placed the
    burden of persuasion on the affirmative defense of
    justification on the defendant”).
    24
    with the canon that, absent compelling reasons to the
    contrary, a party seeking shelter in an exception to a statute
    has the burden of proving it. We find no such compelling
    reasons in this case. Accordingly, we conclude that the
    District Court’s jury instructions and in limine ruling properly
    placed the burden of proof on Green Tree, and we will affirm.
    25
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 14-1114

Citation Numbers: 793 F.3d 355

Filed Date: 7/13/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (28)

United States v. Orlando Franchi-Forlando , 838 F.2d 585 ( 1988 )

Edwards v. Niagara Credit Solutions, Inc. , 584 F.3d 1350 ( 2009 )

United States v. Reginald Dodd , 225 F.3d 340 ( 2000 )

National Communications Association, Inc., Plaintiff-... , 238 F.3d 124 ( 2001 )

Thomas Fashauer, Jr. v. New Jersey Transit Rail Operations, ... , 57 F.3d 1269 ( 1995 )

Lesher v. Law Offices of Mitchell N. Kay, PC , 650 F.3d 993 ( 2011 )

Sterten v. Option One Mortgage Corp. (In Re Sterten) , 546 F.3d 278 ( 2008 )

United States v. Lin M. Romano , 849 F.2d 812 ( 1988 )

Franklin Prescriptions, Inc., T/a Franklin Drug Center v. ... , 424 F.3d 336 ( 2005 )

John M. Collins v. Alco Parking Corporation , 448 F.3d 652 ( 2006 )

tito-pollice-violet-pollice-individually-and-on-behalf-of-all-others , 225 F.3d 379 ( 2000 )

Javierre v. Central Altagracia , 30 S. Ct. 598 ( 1910 )

Dwight L. Ingraham v. United States of America, Jocelyn ... , 808 F.2d 1075 ( 1987 )

Gomez v. Toledo , 100 S. Ct. 1920 ( 1980 )

Federal Trade Commission v. Morton Salt Co. , 68 S. Ct. 822 ( 1948 )

United States v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad , 78 S. Ct. 212 ( 1957 )

Gwaltney of Smithfield, Ltd. v. Chesapeake Bay Foundation, ... , 108 S. Ct. 376 ( 1987 )

United Sav. Assn. of Tex. v. Timbers of Inwood Forest ... , 108 S. Ct. 626 ( 1988 )

Meacham v. Knolls Atomic Power Laboratory , 128 S. Ct. 2395 ( 2008 )

Jerman v. Carlisle, McNellie, Rini, Kramer & Ulrich, L.P.A. , 130 S. Ct. 1605 ( 2010 )

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