Mirfasihi, Mav v. Fleet Mortgage

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 30, 2008
Docket07-3402
StatusPublished

This text of Mirfasihi, Mav v. Fleet Mortgage (Mirfasihi, Mav v. Fleet Mortgage) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mirfasihi, Mav v. Fleet Mortgage, (7th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SEVENTH CIRCUIT ________________________

No. 07–3402

MAV MIRFASIHI, individually and on behalf of all others similarly situated, Plaintiff‐Appellee,

v.

FLEET MORTGAGE CORPORATION, Defendant‐Appellee.

APPEAL OF: ANGELA PERRY and MICHAEL E. GREEN, Objectors‐Appellants. _________________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 01 C 0722—Joan Humphrey Lefkow, Judge. __________________________

Argued December 4, 2008—Decided December 30, 2008* __________________________

Before BAUER, POSNER, and WILLIAMS, Circuit Judges. POSNER, Circuit Judge. This class‐action suit is before us for the third time; our previous opinions are reported at 356 F.3d

* This opinion is being released in typescript. A printed copy will be issued shortly. No. 07–3402 2

781 (7th Cir. 2004), and 450 F.3d 745 (7th Cir. 2006). The current appeal like the previous ones presents questions concerning class‐action procedure. The suit was brought eight years ago on behalf of ap‐ proximately 1.6 million persons whose home mortgages were owned by Fleet Mortgage Corporation. The complaint charges that without their permission Fleet transmitted information about these persons’ finances (plus personal information such as phone numbers), obtained from their mortgage files, to tele‐ marketing companies which then, in conjunction with Fleet, used that information and deceptive practices to try to sell them financial and other services that they otherwise would not have been interested in. Fleet’s transmission of the information to the telemarketers was alleged to violate, among other laws, the fed‐ eral Fair Credit Reporting Act and state consumer protection statutes. Two plaintiff classes were proposed—a “pure” “in‐ formation‐sharing” class of 1.4 million customers of Fleet whose financial information Fleet transmitted to the telemarketers but who did not buy anything from them, and a separate “telemar‐ keting” class composed of 190,000 customers of fleet who made purchases from the telemarketers. The second class is not di‐ rectly involved in this appeal. The parties negotiated a settlement, which the judge ap‐ proved in 2002 simultaneously with certifying the classes. But he did not explain why he thought certification proper; he merely recited the criteria in Rule 23. The settlement gave noth‐ ing to the information‐sharing class, while barring its members from bringing individual suits. The treatment of that class was one of the grounds for our reversing, at the behest of two class members who had objected to the settlement and intervened in the litigation, the district court’s judgment approving the set‐ tlement. On remand the parties negotiated a new settlement, which the district court (a different judge) approved. This settlement No. 07–3402 3

required Fleet to pay to public interest law firms (or other chari‐ table groups) concerned with consumer privacy the $243,000 that Fleet had earned from its sale of information to the tele‐ marketers, plus any of the funds earmarked for the members of the telemarketing class that ended up being unclaimed, minus, however, considerable expenses. As far as the information‐ sharing class was concerned, the basis of the district judge’s ap‐ proval of the new settlement, which again gave that class noth‐ ing, was that the value of the class members’ claim was zero: they had no chance of obtaining damages if the case went to trial and judgment. We again reversed at the behest of the objecting class members, ruling that the district judge had not made an ade‐ quate effort to value the claims of the information‐sharing class. Among other things, she had considered the consumer protec‐ tion statutes of only a few states, even though there were mem‐ bers of the information‐sharing class in every state. On remand she conducted a more complete survey of state law and again concluded that the claims had no value. The ob‐ jecting class members again appeal, arguing not only that the claims have value (perhaps in excess of a billion dollars!) but also that the objectors should have been awarded a much larger legal fee than the $18,750 that the judge awarded them. There is no evidence that any members of the information‐ sharing class suffered any harm from Fleet’s disclosing informa‐ tion about them to telemarketers. Nineteen states plus the Dis‐ trict of Columbia, however, permit an award of statutory dam‐ ages, ranging from $25 in Massachusetts to $10,000 in Kansas but averaging $1,046.25, for violations of their consumer protec‐ tion statutes. (These figures are based on a table in the supple‐ mental appendix to the appellees’ brief in this court, and are not contested by the appellants. We exclude two states, California and Idaho, that allow a $1,000 award of statutory damages in a class action only to the entire class.) No. 07–3402 4

It is arguable that the unauthorized disclosure of financial information violated those statutes. But the statutes do not permit the award of such damages in a class action. The objec‐ tors do not challenge the application of that limitation to a class action filed in federal district court. Yet we have held unless based on state substantive law such a limitation does not bind a federal court in a class action litigated in that court. Thorogood v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 547 F.3d 742, 746 (7th Cir. 2008). Having failed to preserve the issue, the objectors cannot invoke that rul‐ ing—and anyway they haven’t tried to. They do argue that even if the claims of the members of the information‐sharing class have no value in a class action, they have value in individual actions. A number of states do as we just noted authorize statutory damages in such actions, and conceivably some of the 1.4 million members of the class (not all of whom live in such states, however) would sue if not pre‐ cluded by the settlement. That preclusion is a benefit to Fleet, and the objectors argue that Fleet should pay the class for it. But after eight years of litigation, the objectors are unable to identify a single member of the class who would sue on his own dime to collect the modest statutory damages available in an individual suit. Cf. id. at 747. The objectors point out that state consumer protection laws to one side, the federal Fair Credit Reporting Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1681 et seq., authorizes the award of statutory damages of not less than $100 or more than $1000 for a willful violation of the Act, without need to prove harm. § 1681n(a)(1)(A); see Safeco Ins. Co. v. Burr, 127 S. Ct. 2201, 2206 (2007); compare § 1681o(a). But although the Act was mentioned in the complaint, the ob‐ jectors first sought to apply it to the information‐sharing class after our first remand. That was too late. United States v. Hus‐ band, 312 F.3d 247, 251 (7th Cir. 2002) (a party “‘cannot use the accident of remand as an opportunity to reopen waived is‐ sues’”). On the second appeal, which followed that remand, the No. 07–3402 5

parties to the settlement pointed out that the objectors had in‐ deed forfeited their claim under the Act. We did not discuss the Act in our second opinion, but implicitly excluded it from fur‐ ther consideration by stating that “on remand, the district court should consider and analyze the full cross‐section of potentially applicable state law.” 450 F.3d at 751 (emphasis added).

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Bluebook (online)
Mirfasihi, Mav v. Fleet Mortgage, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mirfasihi-mav-v-fleet-mortgage-ca7-2008.