Karen Jones v. Federated Financial Reserve Corporation Randy Lind Trw, Inc. Janice Caylor

144 F.3d 961, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 10240, 1998 WL 256990
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 22, 1998
Docket96-1593
StatusPublished
Cited by104 cases

This text of 144 F.3d 961 (Karen Jones v. Federated Financial Reserve Corporation Randy Lind Trw, Inc. Janice Caylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Karen Jones v. Federated Financial Reserve Corporation Randy Lind Trw, Inc. Janice Caylor, 144 F.3d 961, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 10240, 1998 WL 256990 (6th Cir. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

COLE, Circuit Judge.

This appeal requires us to determine if civil liability under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (“FCRA”), 15 U.S.C. § 1681 et seq., may be imposed on an employer for its employee’s actions under a theory of apparent authority. Plaintiff-Appellant Karen Jones brought suit against defendants Federated Financial Reserve Corporation (“Federated”), TRW, Inc., Randy Lind and Janice Caylor, claiming that the defendants willfully and negligently violated the FCRA in connection with the acquisition of a report concerning Jones’s credit status. Jones appeals the district court’s entry of a directed verdict in favor of Federated on Jones’s willful noncomplianee claim under 15 U.S.C. § 1681n; the district court’s instruction to the jury on Jones’s negligent noncomplianee claim under 15 U.S.C. § 1681o; the district court’s denial of Jones’s motion for a new trial; and the district court’s exclusion of Jones’s expert witness. Because we disagree with the standard of liability relied on by the district court, we reverse the district court’s entry of a directed verdict on Jones’s willful noncomplianee claim as well as the jury’s verdict on the negligence claim, and remand for further proceedings.

I.

A. Background

Karen Jones married Randy Lind in May 1993, after a brief and largely long-distance relationship. Jones described her relationship with Lind as “weird, erratic, [and] strange” from the outset, and later claimed that Lind was demanding, controlling, and abusive. Upon their marriage, Jones moved to Oregon to live with Lind until October 1993, when she returned to Michigan without *963 him. At Jones’s request, her marriage to Lind was annulled on April 26, 1994. Notwithstanding the annulment, Lind and Jones stayed in contact, and sometimes discussed the possibility of a reconciliation. Eventually, however, Jones moved to a new apartment and took precautions to conceal her new address and phone number from Lind.

On June 17, 1994, Lind called Jones at work, offering to deliver a check representing a portion of their property division. After rejecting Lind’s proposal that they meet for lunch or dinner, Jones suggested that they meet at a bar and have a drink. Following an evening together, Lind and Jones quarreled in the morning over his desire to reconcile and her refusal to do so.

Several days later, on June 22,1994, Jones called Lind and apparently voiced her concern that Lind intended to harass her. Lind denied Jones’s assertion, stating “If I wanted to harass you, I’d harass you, because I’ve known since April 25th where you live.” J.A. at 239. After several unsuccessful efforts to learn how Lind obtained her address, Jones had a friend, whose employer had access to credit reporting agencies, check to see if anyone had requested a credit report on her. Further inquiries by Jones led her to discover that Janice Caylor, a Federated employee, whom she knew to be a friend of Lind, had likely procured a report on her credit status on Lind’s behalf. Jones later ascertained that Federated, at Caylor’s request, had obtained her credit report from TRW, a consumer reporting agency.

Federated is a lessor of a broad range of consumer and business equipment, such as computers, cellular phones, facsimile machines, and machine tools. To facilitate its credit approval and debt collection practices, Federated obtains approximately 25,000 credit reports annually concerning its customers through its on-line credit report request system. TRW supplies the credit reports to Federated, but requires Federated to certify that it will use those reports only for certain permissible business-related purposes.

Caylor, Lind’s roommate, was. hired as a full-time collector by Federated on June 14, 1994, after having worked for Federated for three months as a collector on a “temporary” basis. During Caylor’s temporary and full-time employment at Federated, she was authorized to request customer credit reports from clerks who operated Federated’s credit report request system. To obtain a credit report, Federated merely required Caylor to present a request form containing the customer’s name, address, and social security number. Federated neither required Caylor to get her supervisor’s approval to obtain a credit report, nor oversaw whether credit reports were actually placed in customer files.

Shortly after Lind’s marriage to Jones was annulled, Lind began pressuring Caylor to procure Jones’s credit report for him. Bowing to Lind’s pressure, Caylor obtained a copy of Jones’s credit report by completing a request form using information supplied by Lind, and attaching the form to an unrelated business file. Testimony did not suggest that any other Federated employee knew of Caylor’s improper request, and Jones’s credit report was never placed in the unrelated file that had been used to obtain the report.

B. Procedural History

On July 11,1994, Jones filed suit in federal court, alleging negligent and willful violations of the FCRA, 15 U.S.C. § 1681 et seq., and also asserting various state-law tort theories of relief. Jones named Federated, Lind, Caylor, and TRW as defendants. Following discovery, Lind and TRW moved for summary judgment, which the district court denied as to Lind, but granted as to TRW. In addition, all of Jones’s state-law tort claims were dismissed with prejudice.

At the inception of the trial, Jones voluntarily dismissed all claims against Lind and Caylor, neither of whom had appeared for the trial. Jones’s FCRA claims against the remaining defendant, Federated, were tried to a jury beginning on August 17,1995.

At the close of evidence, Federated moved for a directed verdict as to Jones’s claim against it for willful violation of the FCRA, 15 U.S.C. § 1681n, and for negligent violation of the FCRA, 15 U.S.C. § 1681o. The district court granted Federated’s motion as to the claim of willful violation. On the remaining negligent non-compliance claim, the dis *964 trict court submitted the question to the jury with an instruction, to which Jones objected, that it could find Federated vicariously liable for Caylor’s actions only if Caylor was acting within the scope of her employment or if Federated was negligent in allowing Caylor to obtain the credit report. Based on this instruction, the jury returned a verdict for Federated on August 22, 1995. On September 5, 1995, Jones moved for a new trial, arguing that the jury’s verdict was not supported by the evidence and that the district court erred by giving an erroneous jury instruction, by excluding the testimony of an expert witness, and by failing to allow Jones a fair trial in general. The district court denied Jones’s motion for a new trial on April 1, 1996.

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144 F.3d 961, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 10240, 1998 WL 256990, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/karen-jones-v-federated-financial-reserve-corporation-randy-lind-trw-inc-ca6-1998.