Edith Young v. EOSCCA , 239 W. Va. 186 ( 2017 )


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  •          IN THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS OF WEST VIRGINIA
    January 2017 Term
    __________
    FILED
    No. 16-0151               May 17, 2017
    released at 3:00 p.m.
    __________                RORY L. PERRY, II CLERK
    SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
    OF WEST VIRGINIA
    EDITH YOUNG,
    Plaintiff below, Petitioner
    v.
    EOSCCA,
    Defendant below, Respondent
    ______________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Circuit Court of Kanawha County
    Honorable Charles E. King
    Civil Action No. 14-C-1326
    AFFIRMED
    _______________________________________________________
    Submitted: May 2, 2017
    Filed: May 17, 2017
    Benjamin M. Sheridan, Esq.              Nicholas P. Mooney, Esq.
    Klein & Sheridan, LC                    Nicholas S. Preservati, Esq.
    Hurricane, West Virginia                David L. Shuman, Jr., Esq.
    Counsel for Petitioner                  Spilman Thomas & Battle, PLLC
    Charleston, West Virginia
    Counsel for Respondent
    CHIEF JUSTICE LOUGHRY delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    SYLLABUS
    By limiting the right to recover for a violation of the West Virginia Consumer
    Credit and Protection Act to those persons defined as “consumers,” the Legislature has
    expressly prohibited any persons falling outside the definition of a “consumer” from seeking
    damages and statutory penalties pursuant to the provisions of West Virginia Code § 46A-5­
    101 (2015).
    LOUGHRY, Chief Justice:
    The petitioner, Edith Young, appeals from the February 2, 2016, order of the
    Circuit Court of Kanawha County granting summary judgment to the respondent, EOS
    CCA1 (“EOS”), in connection with her complaint against EOS asserting, inter alia,
    violations of the West Virginia Consumer Credit and Protection Act (the “Act”).2 Ms.
    Young challenges the circuit court’s ruling that she is not a “consumer” within the
    applicable definitions of the Act.3 Upon careful scrutiny of the Act’s provisions, we do not
    find that the circuit court committed error and, accordingly, affirm.
    I. Factual and Procedural Background
    Ms. Young filed her complaint against EOS on July 23, 2014, alleging that
    1
    According to respondent’s corporate representative, EOS USA, EOS CCA, and
    Collecto, Inc. are the same company and have the same parent company–EOS Group, which
    is based in Germany.
    2
    See W.Va. Code §§ 46A-1-1 to -8-102 (2015 & Supp. 2016).
    3
    Although the parties filed a motion to withdraw several days before the case was set
    for argument indicating they had reached a settlement agreement in this matter, we choose
    to address the statutory issue presented in this case to resolve a matter that is likely to be
    raised again and yet evade review by this judicial body. See Syl. Pt. 1, Israel by Israel v.
    W.V.S.S.A.C., 182 W.Va. 454, 
    388 S.E.2d 480
    (1989) (announcing three-part test for
    addressing technically moot issues); Syl. Pt. 1, State ex rel. M.C.H. v. Kinder, 173 W.Va.
    387, 
    317 S.E.2d 150
    (1984) (“A case is not rendered moot even though a party to the
    litigation has had a change in status such that he no longer has a legally cognizable interest
    in the litigation or the issues have lost their adversarial vitality, if such issues are capable of
    repetition and yet will evade review.”).
    1
    EOS, a debt collector, had violated the Act by engaging in unreasonable or oppressive or
    abusive conduct in an attempt to collect a debt. She averred that EOS had repeatedly called
    her home and continued to attempt to communicate with her after she indicated she was
    represented by counsel. In addition to asserting violations of the Act, Ms. Young alleged
    common law claims grounded in negligence, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and
    invasion of privacy.
    Discovery in this matter ensued in accordance with the trial court’s issuance
    of a scheduling order. When Ms. Young was deposed in November 2015, she answered
    preliminary questions to confirm that she resided with her husband, who was then eighty-
    three and suffering from Alzheimer’s,4 and to verify that she had the same telephone number
    for all times relevant to this case. Ms. Young testified regarding a document tendered
    through discovery on which she had recorded her receipt of numerous phone calls from the
    same 800 number.5 She testified that “Bank Americard” appeared on her caller ID when
    each of those phone calls rang into her home.6 According to her testimony, Ms. Young
    4
    Ms. Young indicated that she, too, suffered from some health problems and took
    medication that might have an affect on her recall abilities.
    5
    That number was 800-478-5852.
    6
    An affidavit prepared by Catherine Belmore, a business analyst for EOD CCA,
    averred that “EOS CCA does not cause ‘Bank of America,’ ‘Bank America Card,’ ‘Bank
    Americard,’ or any such similar moniker to be displayed on a caller identification device
    when it places telephone calls to collect on an account.”
    2
    never picked up the phone to speak with the caller; she just registered the caller’s identifying
    information that appeared on her phone. On one occasion, however, Ms. Young contends
    she did answer the phone. She purportedly informed the caller on August 13, 2013, when
    her caller ID revealed the caller as Bank Americard, that they should contact her attorney.7
    She further admits, however, that “I don’t know who was on the other end. I didn’t hear
    nobody.” Ms. Young also acknowledges that the call might have been for someone other
    than herself.
    While Ms. Young admittedly has a credit-related debt with Bank Americard,8
    she does not have any specific debt in connection with the calls that EOS made to her land
    line phone. The calls EOS made to Ms. Young’s home were in an attempt to locate an
    AT&T customer who was delinquent on his account.9 That entity is a non-party to this
    lawsuit, whose identity the trial court permitted the respondent to protect. Ms. Young
    asserts that seventy-three such calls were made by EOS. The corporate records of EOS
    7
    The record in this case contains an averment from Catherine Belmore, business
    analyst, that “EOS CCA has no record of receiving attorney notification from Edith Young.”
    8
    When asked why she filed suit against EOS, she testified, “I did not file against
    them.” Ms. Young insisted that her claim involved the credit card issuers such as Bank
    Americard to whom she owed money. The record is clear that EOS did not collect funds for
    Bank Americard at any time pertinent to this lawsuit; they stopped doing so on July 23,
    2010.
    9
    EOS believes that it retrieved the Young residence number from a skip trace service
    provided by LexisNexis.
    3
    reflect that same number of contacts being made to the phone number associated with Ms.
    Young’s residence.10
    During the deposition of Brian Soule, the corporate manager of training and
    development at EOS USA, the petitioner’s counsel played a recording of a purported
    telephone conversation between EOS and Ms. Young that allegedly occurred on September
    5, 2013. The caller asked for either “Jim” or “James,”11 to which Ms. Young responded that
    “he’s not home or he’s not available or he’s not there.”12 Mr. Soule explained that EOS
    would stop calling a third-party number such as Ms. Young’s where they were simply trying
    to gain information helpful to locate the actual consumer with the subject debt “if they
    indicated to us that the person does not live there and we have the wrong number or asked
    us to stop calling.” While Mr. Soule testified that their company records lacked any notation
    of this conversation, he indicated that such an omission may have been a systemic collection
    error.
    10
    As respondent’s corporate manager of training and development explained, the
    phone calls to Ms. Young’s residence–since she was not listed as the consumer on an AT&T
    account–were being made to locate the actual consumer.
    11
    During the hearing on EOS’ motion for summary judgment, the petitioner’s counsel
    argued that the recording suggests the caller asked if “GLEMP” was there. However, during
    the deposition of Mr. Soule, there was no discussion concerning the clarity of the recording
    in terms of the caller asking for either “Jim” or “James.”
    12
    Ms. Young testified that her husband, her son, and her grandson are all named
    James Young.
    4
    On December 11, 2015, EOS filed a motion for summary judgment in which
    it asserted Ms. Young lacked standing to seek relief under the Act because she failed to fall
    within the applicable definitions of “consumer” provided in the Act. In an attempt to defeat
    the standing argument, the petitioner filed an affidavit in which she avowed her status as a
    consumer in general due to debts she owed to Bank of America, Home Depot, Suddenlink
    Communications, and several other unnamed corporations.
    Following a hearing on the summary judgment motion,13 the trial court issued
    an order on February 2, 2016, granting summary judgment to EOS and dismissing the
    petitioner’s complaint. In its ruling, the trial court examined the definitions of the term
    “consumer” provided in the Act and concluded that the record is clear that the petitioner
    “does not owe a debt to Defendant [EOS].” As the circuit court reasoned, the “Defendant
    was calling the Number to collect a debt owed from a non-party to this case. There is no
    evidence on the record from which a jury could reasonably find that Defendant somehow
    alleged that Plaintiff owed a debt to it.” After finding that Ms. Young did not have standing
    to assert a claim under the Act based on her non-consumer status in connection with the
    referenced debt, the circuit court determined that she also could not succeed under a theory
    of common law negligence with regard to those same allegations. This ruling was based on
    a finding that Ms. Young had failed to show there was a legal duty on the part of EOS to
    13
    The hearing was held on January 12, 2016.
    5
    “train, supervise, monitor or otherwise control its employees” to ensure that those employees
    comply with the provisions of the Act. As to the intentional infliction of emotional distress
    claim, the circuit court found the absence of any evidence from which a jury could
    reasonably find that EOS intentionally harassed Ms. Young or caused her severe emotional
    distress. As the court’s ruling accurately reflects, “Plaintiff testified that she had no reaction
    to the phone calls about which she is complaining.” In dismissing the petitioner’s invasion
    of privacy claim, the trial court ruled there was a lack of evidence to support this claim.14
    It is from this grant of summary judgment that the petitioner seeks relief.15
    14
    In making this finding the trial court reasoned as follows:
    There is no evidence that Plaintiff advised or requested
    Defendant to stop calling the Number; no evidence that Plaintiff
    advised Defendant it had a wrong telephone number; no
    evidence that Plaintiff advised Defendant the person it intended
    to reach did not live at the residence. There is no evidence that
    Defendant even knew or had reason to know that the Number
    belonged, in part, to Plaintiff. There is not even evidence that
    Plaintiff ever spoke with Defendant. (emphasis supplied)
    The final sentence is disputed as the recording produced at Mr. Soule’s deposition purports
    to be a communication between Ms. Young and an employee of EOS.
    15
    The petitioner has only appealed the circuit court’s grant of summary judgment with
    regard to the claim she brought pursuant to the Act; she has not raised any error with regard
    to the dismissal of her negligence, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and invasion
    of privacy claims.
    6
    II. Standard of Review
    Our review of this matter is plenary. See Syl. Pt. 1, Painter v. Peavy, 192
    W.Va. 189, 
    451 S.E.2d 755
    (1994). It is axiomatic that a motion for summary judgment
    should only be granted when there is no genuine issue of fact to be tried and when further
    inquiry into the facts is not required for purposes of applying the law. See Syl. Pt. 3, Aetna
    Cas. & Surety Co. v. Fed. Ins. Co. of New York, 148 W.Va. 160, 
    133 S.E.2d 770
    (1963).
    Because we must resolve whether the circuit court correctly determined that the petitioner
    does not qualify as a “customer” under the Act, our review is further guided by this Court’s
    recognition that “[w]here the issue on an appeal from the circuit court is clearly a question
    of law or involving an interpretation of a statute, we apply a de novo standard of review.”
    Syl. Pt. 1, Chrystal R.M. v. Charlie A.L., 194 W.Va. 138, 
    459 S.E.2d 415
    (1995). With
    these principles in mind, we proceed to determine whether the circuit court committed error
    in its grant of summary judgment.
    III. Discussion
    Seeking to expand the term “consumer,” Ms. Young contends she should be
    permitted to pursue a cause of action against EOS under the Act despite the fact that EOS
    was not seeking to speak to her in connection with a debt she personally owed. According
    to Ms. Young, she qualifies as a “consumer” in a generic fashion based on debts she owes
    to creditors other than EOS’ client. Alternatively, she maintains that the Act can be read as
    7
    allowing a claim where abusive debt collection practices are being made in connection with
    the debt owed by a third party. Upon examination, each of these arguments fails.
    The right to seek relief under the Act is set forth in article five: “If a creditor
    or debt collector has violated the provisions of this chapter applying to . . . fraudulent or
    unconscionable conduct, any prohibited debt collection practice, . . . , the consumer has a
    cause of action to recover” actual damages and a penalty of $1,000 per violation. W.Va.
    Code § 46A-5-101(1) (2015). The Act provides two definitions of a “consumer.” Under
    the general definitions, the term “consumer” is defined as “a natural person who incurs debt
    pursuant to a consumer credit sale or a consumer loan, or debt or other obligations pursuant
    to a consumer lease.” 
    Id. at §
    46A-1-102(12) (2015). Article two contains a separate
    definition pertaining specifically to improper credit collection practices. For those specified
    provisions, a “consumer” is defined as “any natural person obligated or allegedly obligated
    to pay any debt.” 
    Id. at §
    46A-2-122 (2015).
    Because the petitioner specifically alleged violations of article two of the Act,
    the definition set forth in West Virginia Code § 46A-2-122 is the governing definition. In
    Ballard v. Bank of America, N.A., No. 2:12-2496, 
    2013 WL 5963068
    (S.D. W.Va. Nov. 7,
    2013), the district court examined the contention that a plaintiff could come within the
    article two definition of a “consumer” based on the “allegedly obligated to pay” language.
    8
    
    Id. at *11.
    The court rejected the plaintiff’s argument that although he was not actually
    obligated to repay the subject debt, he came within the purview of “allegedly obligated to
    pay” because of a foreclosure notice and his holding of an interest in the property that served
    as security for the note at issue. 
    Id. Differentiating this
    scenario from one in which a lender
    personally demanded payment from a non-debtor, the district court in Ballard underscored
    how Bank of America had made clear that the plaintiff addressee of its letters “had ‘no
    personal obligation’ to repay any money.” 
    Id. As a
    result, the plaintiff failed to meet the
    “critical element of the definition of ‘consumer’ found in section 122(a)”– to show that he
    was “obligated or allegedly obligated to pay any debt.” 
    Id., W.Va. Code
    § 46A-2-122.
    The petitioner attempts to insinuate herself as an “alleged debtor” based solely
    on the repetitive phone calls made to her household. According to Ms. Young, it is logical
    to presume that she qualifies as an alleged debtor based on the repeated occurrence of phone
    calls from EOS. Where this argument fails, however, is in its assumption that the phone
    calls were being made in an attempt to collect a debt from the petitioner. As this case
    demonstrates, a creditor or its agent may lawfully seek contact with a third party such as Ms.
    Young in an attempt to locate the actual debtor. Significantly, there is no evidence in the
    record submitted in this case that EOS ever identified Ms. Young as a debtor or sought to
    communicate that she personally owed money. In fact, the opposite is true as the one time
    that Ms. Young ostensibly spoke with an EOS employee, she learned instantly that she was
    9
    not the individual with whom they were seeking to communicate. Like the plaintiff in
    Ballard, the petitioner “is unable to show that [s]he was at least allegedly obligated.”
    Ballard, 
    2013 WL 5963068
    at *11.
    The parameters of what constitutes an “alleged obligation” was discussed in
    Fabian v. Home Loan Center, Inc., No. 5:14-CV-42, 
    2014 WL 1648289
    (N.D. W.Va. April
    24, 2014). The plaintiffs argued in Fabian that their home equity debt, while discharged in
    bankruptcy, was still an “alleged obligation” because to avoid foreclosure on their home–the
    collateral for the debt–they were required to make payments. Rejecting their argument and
    adopting the analysis in Ballard, the court reasoned:
    The phrase “alleged obligation” extends the reach of the Act to
    certain collection activities conducted without regard to whether
    the debt is actually owed–as in Croye,16 where the lender
    repeatedly asserted that the debtor was required to pay the debt
    although the debtor had no personal obligation, or as in Diaz v.
    D.L. Recovery Corp., 
    486 F. Supp. 2d 474
    , 475 (E.D. Pa. 2007),
    where the “debt” sought to be collected never actually existed
    at all. . . . Here, plaintiffs have made no allegation that
    LendingTree or BONY have represented to plaintiffs that they
    remain personally liable on the debt. Croye is therefore
    inapposite. Plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate that they are
    allegedly obligated to pay within the meaning of the Act.
    Fabian, 
    2014 WL 1648289
    at *6 (emphasis supplied and footnote added); accord McNeely
    v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., 
    115 F. Supp. 3d 779
    , 785-86 (S.D. W.Va. 2015) (finding that ex­
    16
    Croye v. GreenPont Mortg. Funding, Inc., 
    740 F. Supp. 2d 788
    (S.D. W.Va. 2010).
    10
    husband lacked standing under Act despite assumption of mortgage payments following
    divorce because he neither signed mortgage loan nor was treated by lender as personally
    obligated on debt); see also Ballard, 
    2013 WL 5963068
    at *11(finding that decision to
    continue making payments to retain collateral does not give rise to “alleged obligation”
    under the Act).
    In Payne v. Green Tree Servicing, No. 2:05-cv–00293 (S.D. W.Va. March 7,
    2006), the district court considered the precise issue presented in this case–the standing of
    a third party who received telephone calls related to a debtor’s financial obligation to pursue
    a claim under the Act. As in this case, the defendant argued that the plaintiff, as a non-
    consumer, lacked standing to bring an action under the Act. And, like Ms. Young, the
    plaintiff in Payne looked to the statutory usage of “any person” with regard to the prohibited
    actions set forth in West Virginia Code § 46A-2-125. Given that the statute prohibits debt
    collectors from oppressing or abusing “any person” in connection with the collection or
    attempt to collect any alleged debt, Ms. Young asserted that framing a statutory violation in
    such an expansive manner while limiting recovery under the Act to only “consumers”
    rendered West Virginia Code § 46A-2-125 meaningless to non-consumers.
    Rejecting this same argument in Payne, the district court explained that non-
    consumers do have a remedy for violations of the Act:
    11
    [T]his argument fails because other methods exist that validly
    can enforce the statute’s prohibition of this type of conduct to
    nonconsumers. For example, a nonconsumer can file a
    complaint with the Consumer Protection Division of the
    Attorney General[‘s] Office. Section 46A-7-103 of the West
    Virginia Code allows the Attorney General to “pursue any
    investigation, prosecute any suit and take any other proper
    action relating to the enforcement of any consumer protection
    provision in [the WVCCPA].” Moreover, because the West
    Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals has stated that a violation
    of any statute is a prima facie case of negligence, a
    nonconsumer can bring an action against a debt collecting
    company under a negligence theory. Accordingly, Ms. Payne’s
    claim that limiting suit under the WVCCPA to “consumers”
    would render the application of West Virginia Code Section
    46A-2-125 to nonconsumers “meaningless or useless” is
    without merit.
    Payne, slip op. at pp. 4-5 (internal citation omitted). The district court reasoned further that
    the Legislature intended to limit the ability to bring a private cause of action under the Act
    to consumers. See W.Va. Code § 46A-5-101(1). By expressly restricting such actions to
    consumers, the Legislature provided that not just “any person” but only those individuals
    qualifying as “consumers” may seek recovery under the Act. See 
    id. As the
    Court sagely
    intuited in Payne, “[w]hile the legislature may have wanted to prohibit excessive calls to
    those who were not ‘consumers’ as defined by the act, it also wanted to limit recovery under
    the act to actual ‘consumers’ because ‘consumers’ are the class of people most likely to be
    harmed by violations of the WVCCPA.” Payne, slip op. at p. 6. We agree.
    12
    Ms. Young would like to qualify in a generic fashion as a consumer based on
    the fact that she owes money to creditors other than AT&T. Her attempt to cast herself as
    a “consumer” under the Act fails because the statutes at issue are clear that the individual
    seeking civil recovery must owe or allegedly owe the debt at the center of the collection
    activity. That the Legislature designed the Act in terms of connecting the prohibited debt
    collection practices to the specific debt at issue is readily apparent. Each of the three
    sections under which Ms. Young asserts a violation of the Act links the prohibited conduct
    to the collection or attempt to collect a “claim.” See W.Va. Code §§ 46A-2-125, -127, -128.
    Critically, the term “claim” is defined for purposes of article two as
    any obligation or alleged obligation of a consumer to pay
    money arising out of a transaction in which the money,
    property, insurance or service which is the subject of the
    transaction is primarily for personal, family or household
    purposes, whether or not such obligation has been reduced to
    judgment.
    W.Va. Code § 46A-2-122(b) (emphasis supplied). This statutory definition leaves no doubt
    that a “consumer” seeking recovery under the provisions of West Virginia Code § 46A-5­
    101(1) “for any prohibited debt collection practice” must be obligated or allegedly obligated
    to owe the specific debt at issue. In the instant case, the record makes clear that Ms. Young
    was neither obligated to AT&T on the debt at issue nor was she ever advised by its debt
    collector EOS that she was obligated on the subject debt. As discussed above, nothing in
    the record of this case suggests that Ms. Young had any belief that EOS was seeking to
    collect a debt from her–alleged or otherwise.
    13
    In a final attempt to persuade us that she has standing under the Act, Ms.
    Young looks to federal case law in which nonconsumers have been recognized to come
    within the ambit of the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (“FDCPA”). See, e.g., Bridge v.
    Ocwen Fed. Bank, FSB, 
    681 F.3d 355
    , 361-62 (6th Cir. 2012); cf. Dunham v. Portfolio
    Recovery Assocs., LLC, 
    663 F.3d 997
    , 1001 (8th Cir. 2011) (observing that “‘[s]everal
    sections of the FDCPA . . . restrict the scope of [the FDCPA’s] application by including the
    word ‘consumer’ in the text”) (citations omitted). In contrast to our Act, the FDCPA
    broadly extends its rights of enforcement “with respect to any person.” 15 U.S.C. §
    1692k(a) (2012). As the Fourth Circuit recognized in Rawlinson v. Law Office of William
    M. Rudow, LLC, 460 Fed.Appx. 254 (4th Cir. 2012), “any aggrieved party, not just a debtor,
    may bring an action under the statute [FDCPA]” absent statutory limitation. 
    Id. at 257.
    In
    marked contrast to the authorizing language of the FDCPA, our Act expressly limits its grant
    of civil enforcement suits to “consumers.” See W.Va. Code § 46A-5-101(1). Given this
    incontestable enforcement limitation, Ms. Young’s contention that a coextensive grant of
    broad enforcement authority exists simply because the FDCPA and the Act both address
    debt collection practices is decidedly specious.17
    17
    Counsel for Ms. Young conceded during oral argument that no existing case law,
    federal or state, interprets the Act in the manner he was advocating. As the district court
    sagely recognized in Payne, “[i]f the legislature wished to create a cause of action for ‘any
    person’ . . . , it would have simply used the phrase ‘any person’ instead of the word
    ‘consumer’ as it did in West Virginia Code Section 46A-2-125.” 
    Payne, supra
    , at pp. 5-6.
    This judicial body has no authority to rewrite legislation that clearly limits civil recovery to
    “consumers.” If the Legislature wishes to broaden the reach of the Act’s enforcement
    14
    Under the Act, the term “consumer” has a specific definition and only those
    persons meeting that definition may bring a private cause of action. Accordingly, we hold
    that by limiting the right to recover for a violation of the Act to those persons defined as
    “consumers,” the Legislature has expressly prohibited any persons falling outside the
    definition of a “consumer” from seeking damages and statutory penalties pursuant to the
    provisions of West Virginia Code § 46A-5-101. Given that Ms. Young clearly does not
    come within the definition of “consumer” set forth in West Virginia Code § 46A-2-122, the
    circuit court correctly ruled that she lacked standing to pursue a claim under the Act.
    IV. Conclusion
    Based on the foregoing, the February 2, 2016, order of the Circuit Court of
    Kanawha County is affirmed.
    Affirmed.
    provisions to nonconsumers, it may easily amend the Act’s limiting language.
    15