Grace Solis v. Global Acceptance Credit Company, L.P.

601 F. App'x 767
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 28, 2015
Docket14-12973
StatusUnpublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 601 F. App'x 767 (Grace Solis v. Global Acceptance Credit Company, L.P.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grace Solis v. Global Acceptance Credit Company, L.P., 601 F. App'x 767 (11th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Grace Solis, proceeding pro se, appeals the district court’s dismissal of her complaint, which alleged violations of various federal and state consumer-protection laws, and the denial of her motion for leave to amend. The district court determined that Solis’s claims against the same parties had previously been adjudicated on the merits, so it dismissed the complaint as barred by the doctrine of res judicata. Solis argues that res judicata does not apply because no final adjudication on the merits occurred in the previous action and because the instant complaint was based on newly discovered facts and did not raise the same causes of action. The district court also should have allowed her to amend her complaint, she asserts, because she is a pro se party whose pleadings are liberally construed. After careful consideration, and for the reasons explained below, we affirm.

I.

Solis filed two consumer-protection suits in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida against defendants Global Acceptance Credit Company, L.P. (“Global”); and the law firm of Hayt, Hayt & Landau, P.L., and several of its attorneys, Jason Dragutsky, Dana Stern, and Robert Orovitz (collectively “Hayt”). Solis filed the first action pro se in March 2012 (“Solis /”). She filed the second action through counsel in August 2013 (“Solis II ”). The propriety of the dismissal of Solis II is the subject of his appeal.

The relevant allegations from the complaint in Solis I are as follows. On February 2, 2011, Solis received a telephone call about a debt from a Global representative. In response, Solis sent Global a debt-validation letter, requesting documentation proving the authenticity and amount of the alleged debt. She also requested that Global have the disputed debt removed from her credit report. According to the complaint, Global did not provide Solis all of the documents she requested, conduct an adequate investigation of the debt, or ask the credit-reporting agencies to delete the disputed debt from Solis’s report. Then, Global hired Hayt to pursue the debt, and Hayt called Solis multiple times to collect the debt. On September 7, 2011, Solis sent a debt-validation letter to Hayt, but, the complaint avers, Hayt did not provide Solis with the documents she requested. Later in September 2011, Solis received notice that Hayt had filed suit on the debt against her in state court. According to Solis, she did not have an account with or owe a debt to Global.

Based on these allegations, Solis stated four counts. Count I alleged that Global and Hayt violated the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (“FDCPA”), 15 U.S.C. §§ 1692-1692p, by making false representations about the debt and continuing to pursue a disputed debt through harassing phone calls and the state suit. Count II asserted that Global and Hayt violated the Florida Consumer Collection Practices Act *769 (“FCCPA”), Fla. Stat. § 559.72, by disclosing a disputed debt to the credit bureaus. Count III alleged that Global violated the Federal Credit Reporting Act (“FCRA”), 15 U.S.C. §§ 1681-1681x, by knowingly furnishing inaccurate information to the credit bureaus. Finally, Count IV claimed that the defendants violated the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (“TCPA”), 47 U.S.C. § 227(b), by using an automated telephone-dialing system to call and harass Solis.

The district court in Solis I granted the defendants’ motions to dismiss for failure to state a claim under Rule 12(b)(6), Fed. R.Civ.P. The court also denied Solis leave to amend her complaint, stating,.

Plaintiff has been given the opportunity to amend her complaint and correct the deficiencies following the filing of Defendants’ Motions to Dismiss. The First Amended Complaint has proffered nothing to convince me that an additional attempt would cure the deficiencies. See Jemison v. Mitchell, 380 F. App’x [Fed.Appx.] 904, 907 (11th Cir.2010) (“Dismissal with prejudice is proper, however, ... if a more carefully drafted complaint could not state a valid claim.”)..

Thus, on November 30, 2012, the court dismissed the action for failure to state a claim, denied all pending motions as moot, and directed the Clerk to close the case. In December 2012, Solis moved to reconsider the judgment and requested permission to file a second amended complaint. Later, Solis filed a “Motion for Voluntary Dismissal Without Prejudice.” The court denied both motions on August 28, 2013.

Solis did not appeal the dismissal of Solis I. Instead, on August 26, 2013, two days before the district court’s final order in that case, Solis filed with the assistance of counsel a new complaint — the subject of this appeal — against the same defendants. In it, Solis acknowledges that she previously sued the same defendants and that the “[cjourt dismissed Plaintiffs complaint on November 30, 2012.”

The new complaint’s factual allegations largely mirror the complaint in Solis I. Namely, the complaint recounts that Global called Solis about a disputed debt on February 2, 2011, failed to provide her with documentation of the debt’s authenticity in response to her debt-validation letter, improperly reported the disputed debt to credit-reporting agencies, and then, to collect the debt, retained Hayt, which also failed to validate the debt in response to Solis’s request, used an automatic telephone-dialing system to call Solis’s cell phone about the debt, and then filed suit in state court against Solis on Global’s behalf. Based on these allegations, Solis again asserted various violations of the FDCPA, the FCCPA, the FCRA, and the TCPA.

The defendants moved to dismiss the complaint in Solis II as barred by the doctrine of res judicata, pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), asserting that Solis’s claims had already been decided in Solis I. Global attached to its motion Solis’s amended complaint and the district court’s dismissal order in Solis I, among other exhibits. Solis’s counsel moved to withdraw shortly after the first motion to dismiss was filed.

In a pro se response to the motions to dismiss, Solis argued that the prior case had not been dismissed with prejudice and that the new complaint remedied the deficiencies identified by the district court in Solis I. Because of her pleading errors, Solis contended, the court never addressed the merits of her claims in Solis I. Solis also stated that the new complaint contained additional facts, learned during discovery in the original action, which were not included in the original complaint.

*770 In June 2014, the district court in Solis II

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601 F. App'x 767, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grace-solis-v-global-acceptance-credit-company-lp-ca11-2015.