Michelle Echlin v. Peacehealth

887 F.3d 967
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedApril 17, 2018
Docket15-35324
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 887 F.3d 967 (Michelle Echlin v. Peacehealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michelle Echlin v. Peacehealth, 887 F.3d 967 (9th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

MICHELLE ECHLIN, on behalf of No. 15-35324 herself and all others similarly situated, D.C. No. Plaintiff-Appellant, 3:14-cv-05211- BJR v.

PEACEHEALTH, DBA PeaceHealth OPINION Southwest Medical Center; COMPUTER CREDIT, INC., Defendants-Appellees.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Washington Barbara Jacobs Rothstein, Senior District Judge, Presiding

Argued and Submitted December 5, 2017 Seattle, Washington

Filed April 17, 2018

Before: Diarmuid F. O’Scannlain, Richard C. Tallman, and Paul J. Watford, Circuit Judges.

Opinion by Judge O’Scannlain 2 ECHLIN V PEACEHEALTH

SUMMARY*

Fair Debt Collection Practices Act

The panel affirmed the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the defendants in an action under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act.

The panel held that the plaintiff did not establish flat- rating, a practice in which a third party sends a delinquency letter to a debtor, portraying itself as a debt collector, when in fact it has no real involvement in the creditor’s debt collection effort, in violation of 15 U.S.C. § 1682j. The panel concluded that the record supported the district court’s finding that defendant Computer Credit, Inc., meaningfully participated in defendant PeaceHealth’s debt-collection efforts, and thus did not engage in flat-rating, when its services included screening referred debtors for barriers to collection, independently composing and mailing collection letters, inviting and responding to customer questions on a variety of details about the collection process, and maintaining a website that allowed customers to access individualized information about their debts and to submit electronic files to the company.

The panel held that the district court properly struck a claim of threatening action that cannot legally be taken or that is not intended to be taken under § 1692e(5) because the complaint did not allege such a claim, and any amendment to

* This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader. ECHLIN V PEACEHEALTH 3

add the claim would be time-barred. The panel concluded that any claim under § 1692e(10) was waived.

COUNSEL

Brendan W. Donckers (argued) and Daniel F. Johnson, Breskin Johnson & Townsend PLLC, Seattle, Washington; Thomas J. Lyons Jr., Consumer Justice Center PA, Vadnais Heights, Minnesota; for Plaintiff-Appellant.

Bradley L. Fisher (argued), Davis Wright Tremaine LLP, Seattle, Washington, for Defendant-Appellee PeaceHealth.

Cassandra L. Crawford (argued) and Mark A. Stafford, Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP, Winston-Salem, North Carolina; Jeffrey I. Hasson, Davenport & Hasson LLP, Portland, Oregon; for Defendant-Appellee Computer Credit, Inc.

OPINION

O’SCANNLAIN, Circuit Judge:

We must decide whether, under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, a company that sent letters demanding that hospital patients pay their overdue medical bills meaningfully participated in the hospital’s efforts to collect debts.

I

Michelle Echlin is a former patient of PeaceHealth Southwest Medical Center (PeaceHealth) in Vancouver, 4 ECHLIN V PEACEHEALTH

Washington. Echlin received treatment at PeaceHealth on two different occasions but never paid the nearly $1,000 in medical bills she incurred as a result. After Echlin ignored multiple requests for payment, PeaceHealth referred her delinquent accounts to Computer Credit, Inc. (CCI), a purported collection agency, for further action.

A

For a number of years, CCI and PeaceHealth operated together under a “Subscriber Agreement” signed in 2004. Under the agreement, PeaceHealth would refer delinquent patient accounts to CCI and, for a fixed fee, CCI would perform various services related to the debt-collection process—primarily mailing letters demanding that the patients pay their bills. During the time that an account had been referred to CCI, PeaceHealth would suspend its in-house collection efforts.1

When it referred an account to CCI, PeaceHealth would give CCI the debtor’s name and address, the name of any guarantor, the date of the service in question, and the amount owed on the account. CCI would then independently screen each account for potential collection problems (such as staleness of the claim). CCI’s screening process was mostly automated, though a CCI employee would personally review at least some of the accounts for red flags. If an account passed CCI’s screening process, CCI would then send the

1 CCI maintained similar arrangements with many other companies, and held hundreds of thousands of active debtor accounts at a time. At any given time, approximately 2,000 to 3,000 of those were accounts referred from PeaceHealth, for a total of 17,500 to 18,000 PeaceHealth accounts in the year preceding this lawsuit. ECHLIN V PEACEHEALTH 5

debtor a letter advising her that the account had been assigned to CCI for collection purposes and demanding payment.

CCI controlled the largely formulaic letter-mailing process. Although PeaceHealth was generally aware of the standard format of CCI’s letters, CCI alone controlled the content of the letters it actually sent, and CCI did not seek PeaceHealth’s approval prior to mailing. The letters were written on CCI letterhead, they were mailed from CCI’s in- house mailing center, and they listed CCI’s address and phone number (along with PeaceHealth’s contact information under a section labeled “Creditor Detail”). The letters also directed debtors to visit a website maintained by CCI, where one could see more details about his or her debt, find information about how to repay or to dispute the debt, and submit electronic documents to CCI. Like the letters, the website encouraged debtors to contact CCI by phone, fax, or mail with questions.

CCI would mail up to two collection letters for each PeaceHealth account. The first letter informed the debtor that her account had been referred to CCI, “a debt collector,” for collection and requested payment either by check, by a credit card form included in the letter, or online at PeaceHealth’s website. CCI itself had no ability to process or to negotiate payments for PeaceHealth, but it would forward to PeaceHealth any payments it received, including endorsing checks made out to CCI, as necessary. CCI typically allowed the debtor two weeks to respond to its first letter. If a debtor made full repayment, CCI stopped all collection activity. But if the debtor failed to pay or to respond within two weeks, CCI would send a second letter, renewing its request that the debtor settle the account. If, after another two to three weeks, the debtor still had not paid her debt, CCI would refer the 6 ECHLIN V PEACEHEALTH

debt back to PeaceHealth and CCI’s activity on the account would end.

Accounts sent back to PeaceHealth would often then be referred to another company for additional action. As PeaceHealth describes it, CCI’s activities were the first step in a series of collections processes “up to and including the point of an additional agency obtaining and executing on a court judgment.” CCI did not participate in any of the later collection steps.

CCI also handled correspondence—both in writing and over the phone—from PeaceHealth debtors. In 2013, for instance, CCI received 440 pieces of mail from PeaceHealth debtors. When it received such mail, CCI would “review, act on it, copy it,” and then forward it to PeaceHealth, though CCI would not necessarily respond directly to the debtor herself.

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887 F.3d 967, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michelle-echlin-v-peacehealth-ca9-2018.