Scheel-Baggs v. Bank of America

575 F. Supp. 2d 1031, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 70585, 2008 WL 4194294
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Wisconsin
DecidedSeptember 15, 2008
Docket07-cv-671-bbc
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 575 F. Supp. 2d 1031 (Scheel-Baggs v. Bank of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scheel-Baggs v. Bank of America, 575 F. Supp. 2d 1031, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 70585, 2008 WL 4194294 (W.D. Wis. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

BARBARA B. CRABB, District Judge.

Plaintiff Bobbie Scheel-Baggs’s former husband seems to have subscribed to the philosophy that all is fair in love and war. He left her with a $16,000 credit card debt that he had accumulated and then discharged in a bankruptcy proceeding after the divorce. As a result, plaintiff was hounded by defendant FIA Card Services, NA and its agents for two years as they tried to collect the debt, even after an arbitrator had ruled it uncollectible from plaintiff.

It appears that plaintiffs ex-husband’s financial irresponsibility and defendant FIA’s attempts to collect the debt caused plaintiff no small amount of grief, but those issues are not the focus of this case. Rather, the question is whether defendants FIA and Trans Union, LLC violated the Fair Credit Reporting Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1681-1681u, by failing to take reasonable measures to determine that plaintiff was not liable for the debt, failures she contends were a factor in her inability to obtain credit and the cause of her physical and emotional distress. Defendants’ motions for summary judgment on those claims are now before the court. (Plaintiff included other claims in her complaint as well, but she has abandoned them by failing to respond to defendants’ motions for summary judgment with respect to those claims. Wojtas v. Capital Guardian Trust Co., 477 F.3d 924, 926 (7th Cir.2007).)

Defendants’ motions for summary judgment will be granted in part and denied in part. For much of the time that plaintiff was disputing the debt, she did not give defendants any reason to believe that her credit report contained any factual inaccuracies. She said generally that she was not responsible for the debt or more specifically that the debt had been assigned to her ex-husband as a result of a divorce decree. Neither of these reasons would lead defendants to believe that plaintiff had never applied to be included on the account, which is plaintiffs position now. However, FIA continued to report that plaintiff was liable for the debt, even after an arbitrator held to the contrary in August 2007. Around the same time, plaintiff informed defendant Trans Union that she had never been included on the account and that it belonged solely to her ex-husband. Trans Union failed to inform FIA of the nature of the dispute or take any other actions to verify the accuracy of the account. These actions are sufficient to support a finding by a jury that defendants violated plaintiffs rights under the Fair Credit Reporting Act.

Also before the court is plaintiffs motion for leave to file a “supplemental opinion,” which she filed several weeks after the parties completed briefing defendants’ motions for summary judgment. The motion *1035 will be denied as unnecessary because the opinion plaintiff asks the court to consider is an unpublished district court case from another state that does not provide any useful analysis.

From the parties’ proposed findings of fact and the record, I find that the following facts are undisputed.

UNDISPUTED FACTS

In March 1995, David Baggs opened a consumer credit account with MBNA America Bank, which is now defendant FIA Card Services, NA. (For the remainder of the opinion, I will refer to both MBNA and FIA as “defendant FIA.”) The last four digits of the account were 9512. Plaintiff Bobbie Seheel-Baggs married David Baggs in September 1996.

Defendant FIA’s records reflect that in June 2000 it received a call from a person named Bobbie who identified herself as Baggs’s wife and that upon her request it sent Baggs a letter to add another person to the account. (The parties dispute whether plaintiff made the phone call identified in FIA’s records.) The letter included the following:

You recently asked about adding someone to your account. There are two ways to do this.
To add a “joint Customer,” you and the co-applicant should fill out the top part of the enclosed form. Once your request is approved, the joint Customer will receive a card and both of you will be responsible for paying any balance due on the account. Each account can have only two joint Customers.
To add an “authorized user,” you should fill out the bottom part of the form. The authorized user will receive a card, but will not be responsible for paying the account balance.
When you have completed the appropriate section of the form, please mail it, or call to provide the information. When a representative has spoken to you (and the co-applicant, if you are adding a joint Customer), you will have a prompt answer to your request.

Defendant FIA’s records indicate that it “received an application requesting that plaintiff be added as a joint customer,” but FIA does not have a copy of such an application. The records do not indicate whether plaintiff signed the application. (Plaintiff denies that she completed or signed such an application.) On July 21, 2000, defendant FIA added plaintiff to the account as a joint customer. Defendant FIA’s records also indicate that a woman identifying herself as plaintiff called FIA on several occasions on matters relating to the 9512 account in 2000, 2001 and 2002. (Plaintiff denies that she had any communication with FIA during that time period.) Plaintiff never made a purchase on the 9512 account.

Plaintiff and Baggs divorced in June 2003. In October 2005, Baggs filed for bankruptcy. In January 2006, Baggs’s $16,000 debt on the 9512 account was discharged.

In response to the discharged debt, defendant FIA created a second account with the last four digits 4249 “for purposes of freezing activity on the existing account number and forwarding that account to the recovery department.” Defendant FIA knew that both account numbers would appear on plaintiffs credit report, suggesting that she had two adverse accounts instead of just one.

Defendant FIA called plaintiff about the debt on October 28, 2005, December 20, 2005, December 28, 2005 and “numerous” times in January 2006. During at least some of these phone calls, plaintiff disputed the debt, saying that it belonged to her *1036 ex-husband who had discharged it in his bankruptcy. (Plaintiff does say specifically what she told FIA.) When FIA called Baggs on October 28, 2005, he made similar statements. During one of these phone calls, plaintiff “demanded” that FIA provide proof that she was an obligor on the account.

Defendant FIA hired Mann Bracken to collect on the 4249 account. Between April 31, 2006 and August 26, 2006, Mann Bracken called plaintiff more than 90 times.

When plaintiff obtained her credit report from defendant Trans Union, it showed under “adverse accounts,” a debt of $16,140 under the 4249 account and a debt of $15,568 under the 9512 account. The “pay status” of the 4249 account was listed as “charged off as bad debt” and the status of the 9512 account was listed as “120 days past due.”

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Bluebook (online)
575 F. Supp. 2d 1031, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 70585, 2008 WL 4194294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scheel-baggs-v-bank-of-america-wiwd-2008.