Connell Foley Files a Petition for Writ of
Certiorari to the
United States
Supreme Court
Roseland,
N.J./May
19, 2011 ---
Connell Foley LLP attorneys Karen
P. Randall,
Andrew C. Sayles,
Thomas S. Cosma,
Thomas J. O'Leary, M.
Trevor Lyons, and
Meghan K.
Musso filed a Petition for a Writ of
Certiorari to the United States Supreme Court. The
Petition seeks the Court’s intervention to resolve a split
among four Circuit Courts of Appeal involving the
application of the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, 15
U.S.C. § 1692 et seq., (“FDCPA”) to communications issued to
a debtor’s attorney from a debt collecting attorney.
The submission to the nation’s highest
court stems from a case involving a residential mortgage
foreclosure. A homeowner/debtor defaulted on her note
and mortgage resulting in the commencement for foreclosure
proceedings. The debtor retained counsel, who then
contacted the foreclosing attorney to request payoff
information to resolve the foreclosure action.
The debtor’s attorney was provided with the payoff
information, but was cautioned that it was subject to audit
and verification. Three weeks later, the debtor, through her
attorney, filed a class action lawsuit under the FDCPA based
upon alleged inaccuracies within the payoff information
provided to her attorney. Although the debtor never
made any payments in response to the payoff information, she
proceeded with her lawsuit against the foreclosing
attorneys, the mortgage holder and the mortgage servicer.
The District Court for the District of
New Jersey ruled that any alleged inaccuracies within the
payoff information would have been recognized by any
competent attorney and, consistent with the Seventh Circuit
Court of Appeals, dismissed the Complaint. The Third
Circuit, in a matter of first impression, rejected the
holdings of the Seventh and Ninth Circuits and reversed the
District Court. Specifically, the Third Circuit sided
with the Fourth Circuit and found that a communication to a
debtor’s attorney warranted the same treatment as a
communication issued directly to the consumer and remanded
the matter to the District Court for determination as to
whether the fees and costs identified were appropriate.
Under the Third Circuit ruling, communications among
attorneys seeking to settle a pending litigation can now
result in liability for the debt collecting attorney under
the FDCPA.
If the Cert Petition is granted, various
industry and professional groups have expressed an interest
in filing amicus briefs.
According to
Connell Foley’s Managing Partner Michael X. McBride, “A
resolution relating to communications between debtor’s
attorney and debt collecting attorneys under the FDCPA holds
tremendous value to an array of parties and groups including
the legal, insurance and banking industries. This
issue duly merits the attention of the Supreme Court.”