Mazie Green v. Portfolio Recovery Associates, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 20, 2024
Docket0144223
StatusPublished

This text of Mazie Green v. Portfolio Recovery Associates, LLC (Mazie Green v. Portfolio Recovery Associates, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mazie Green v. Portfolio Recovery Associates, LLC, (Va. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Malveaux, Ortiz and Causey PUBLISHED

Argued at Lexington, Virginia

MAZIE GREEN OPINION BY v. Record No. 0144-22-3 JUDGE DORIS HENDERSON CAUSEY FEBRUARY 20, 2024 PORTFOLIO RECOVERY ASSOCIATES, LLC

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ALLEGHANY COUNTY Edward K. Stein, Judge

Mazie Green, pro se.

L. Steven Emmert (James K. Trefil; Jonathan P. Floyd; Sykes, Bourdon, Ahern & Levy, PC; Troutman Pepper Hamilton Sanders LLP, on brief), for appellee.

Mazie Green, pro se, appeals the circuit court order ruling for Portfolio Recovery

Associates, LLC (“PRA”) in a debt-collection action. The circuit court granted judgment to PRA in

the amount of $8,914.31. On appeal, Green argues that PRA did not have standing to sue, that the

court erred by failing to consider her counterclaim alleging PRA violated the Fair Debt Collections

Practices Act (“FDCPA”), and that by releasing her cash bond to PRA, the General District Court of

Alleghany County violated the Fourteenth Amendment and FDCPA by issuing a recognizance on

PRA’s behalf. Finding that PRA failed to prove it owned Green’s debt, we reverse the circuit

court’s decision. BACKGROUND1

In December 2020, PRA, a debt buyer,2 filed a warrant in debt against Green in Alleghany

County General District Court,3 “alleging that she had defaulted on a [CIT] Bank credit card debt,

with an original account ending number of 7068 and a balance due of $8,914.31.” PRA asserted

that it was the assignee of the debt. In support of its claim, PRA filed a bill of particulars, which

had the following documents attached as exhibits:

• A February 2020 letter from PRA to Green, listing the original creditor as CIT Bank and an “[o]riginal [a]ccount [n]umber” ending in 7068, and demanding payment on a balance due of $8,914.31

• A September 2010 document labeled “bill of sale” from CIT Bank to Webbank

• An August 2013 document labeled “bill of sale” from Webbank to Comenity Capital Bank

• A July 2018 document labeled “bill of sale” from Comenity Capital Bank to Synchrony Bank

1 Because PRA prevailed at trial, “we recite the relevant facts in the light most favorable” to PRA and presume the factfinder accepted any reasonable inferences from those facts. See Nichols Constr. Corp. v. Va. Mach. Tool Co., 276 Va. 81, 84 (2008). The record contains a written statement of facts in lieu of a transcript from trial, as permitted by Rule 5A:8(c). The statement of facts was prepared by Green and adopted by the circuit court over PRA’s objection. Accordingly, we accept the court’s signed statement of facts as the established facts of the case. See Rule 5A:8(d) (“The judge’s signature on a transcript or written statement, without more, constitutes certification that the procedural requirements of this Rule have been satisfied.”). 2 Although Virginia has not adopted a definition of “debt buyer,” we may rely on other jurisdictions’ definitions as persuasive authority. Thorne v. Commonwealth, 66 Va. App. 248, 255 (2016) (relying on out-of-state cases as persuasive authority). A debt buyer is a person or entity that engages in the business of purchasing charged-off (charged-off means the act of a creditor that treats an account receivable or other debt as a loss or expense because payment is unlikely, Md. Rule 3-306) consumer debt for collection purposes, whether it collects the debt itself, hires a third party for collection, or hires an attorney-at-law for collection litigation. Cal. Civ. § 1788.50. 3 This case involved a de novo appeal from the Alleghany County General District Court. The filings of the general district court are those relied upon in the circuit court. -2- • A June 2019 document labeled “bill of sale” from Synchrony Bank to PRA

• A two-column spreadsheet for an account number ending in 7068 with Green’s name, but no creditor name, headings identifying the source or purpose of the document, or means of tying the record to any of the bills of sale

• An August 2020 declaration of James O’Toole, custodian of records for PRA, stating: “According to the records transferred to the Account Assignee from Account Seller, and maintained in the ordinary course of business by the Account Assignee, there was due and payable from Mazie Green . . . to the Account Seller the sum of $8,914.31 with respect to the account number ending in 7068.” The affidavit stated that this finding was “based upon a review of the business records of the Original Creditor CIT BANK/PAYPAL and those records transferred to [PRA] from SYNCHRONY BANK . . . , which have become a part of and have integrated into [PRA]’s business records, in the ordinary course of business.”

• A Synchrony Bank pricing information addendum for “PayPal credit account ending in 7068”

• Monthly PayPal billing statements, spanning July 2017- September 2018, listing customer name Mazie Green and an account number ending in 8616.

The “bills of sale” did not mention any specific debtor names or account numbers or include

any attachments with that information. None of the bills of sale listed Green’s name or account

number. Additionally, transfer agreements identifying which specific accounts were sold were not

attached to any bill of sale. PRA’s custodian of records claimed that such records (which perhaps

identified Green, or any accounts/agreements) were confidential. The PayPal billing statements

showed that someone named Mazie Green last used the account on March 3, 2018, and that the last

payment on the account was on February 12, 2018.

-3- In response to the complaint, Green filed a grounds of defense asserting that PRA lacked

standing to sue her because it had not produced evidence of chain of title4 to prove its ownership of

the debt. Prior to this, Green had asked repeatedly for the debt to be validated. Green also filed a

counterclaim for $1,000 under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA). She argued that

PRA violated the FDCPA by “not reviewing their business records or ones they have been allegedly

assigned,” “robo-signing” the affidavit of James O’Toole, and attaching “a deceptive, misleading,

and undated letter” to the warrant in debt informing her that a lawsuit had been filed. Green also

sought a declaratory judgment that PRA violated the FDCPA.

In April 2021, Green sent a request for a continuance to the general district court. Green

“received no response to her request and appeared, prepared for trial on May 24, 2021.” At trial,

PRA “said they were not prepared for trial because of . . . Green’s letter and their witness was not

there.” Green signed a recognizance, promising to appear for a hearing in July 2021.

Following an agreed-upon continuance, the general district court conducted a hearing in

September 2021. The general district court ruled for PRA and dismissed Green’s FDCPA

counterclaim. The general district court set an appeal bond of $8,977.31, which Green posted when

she appealed the ruling to the circuit court.

Green moved for summary judgment in the circuit court, asserting that PRA lacked

standing. Green informed the circuit court that “[t]he original account ending number was 7068, but

[PRA] provided the [c]ourt with a Pay[P]al Credit statement account number ending in 8616.”

Green argued that PRA had “(1) no valid proof of assignment [validation of the debt], (2) no proof

that the original account number ending in 7068 changed to account number ending in 8616, and

4 Chain of title is admissible documentation establishing that the debt buyer is the owner of the specific debt at issue. The chain of title must be unbroken.

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Mazie Green v. Portfolio Recovery Associates, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mazie-green-v-portfolio-recovery-associates-llc-vactapp-2024.