Turner v. Gene Dencker Buick-Pontiac, Inc.

2001 WI App 28, 623 N.W.2d 151, 240 Wis. 2d 385, 2000 Wisc. App. LEXIS 1108
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedNovember 16, 2000
Docket99-3174
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2001 WI App 28 (Turner v. Gene Dencker Buick-Pontiac, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turner v. Gene Dencker Buick-Pontiac, Inc., 2001 WI App 28, 623 N.W.2d 151, 240 Wis. 2d 385, 2000 Wisc. App. LEXIS 1108 (Wis. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

VERGERONT, J.

¶ 1. Tammy and Ronald Turner appeal the circuit court's judgment dismissing their claim that Blackhawk State Bank violated WlS. STAT. § 427.104(l)(f) (1997-98) 1 by disclosing to a credit bureau information concerning a debt of the Turners that was known to the Bank to be reasonably disputed without disclosing the fact of the dispute. The court concluded the Bank had satisfied its obligation under the statute by informing the credit bureau initially by telephone that the debt was disputed, even though the Bank thereafter sent to the credit bureau a monthly report of the increasing debt without an indication the *388 debt was disputed. We conclude that each monthly-report to the credit bureau of the debt was a disclosure of the existence of a debt within the meaning of § 427.104(l)(f), and the Bank violated this subsection by not disclosing with each report that the debt was disputed. We therefore reverse and remand.

BACKGROUND

¶ 2. The debt at the center of this dispute was a loan the Turners obtained to finance the purchase of an automobile from Gene Dencker Buick-Pontiac, Inc. The loan was assigned to the Bank. During the following months, a series of problems arose with the car, leading the Turners to suspend payment. The Turners sued both Gene Dencker and the Bank, but their claim against Gene Dencker was addressed in a separate trial and is not relevant to this appeal. The Turners' claim against the Bank for a violation of WlS. STAT. § 427.104(l)(f) was tried to the court, and the evidence was as follows. 2

¶ 3. The Turners notified the Bank of their dispute with Gene Dencker. The Bank contacted both the Turners and Gene Dencker and determined the Turners' dispute of the debt was reasonable.

¶ 4. At the time relevant to this dispute, the Bank provided debt information to the Credit Bureau of Madison by means of monthly electronic tape trans-mittals. The information the credit bureau received was in turn transmitted to another entity that supplied the information to vendors nationwide. The information transmitted each month to the credit bureau on the electronic tape replaced the information contained *389 in the previous month's transmission for that particular debt. The Bank's electronic tape system did not allow certain types of information to be included in the transmission. Although several "keyword changes" were available in the system for alteration of specific information, there were none to indicate that a debt was disputed. The Bank decided not to incur the additional expense required to mark a dispute on an account in the electronic tape system.

¶ 5. The credit bureau had the capacity to input a code on a debt for which it had received an electronic tape transmittal from the Bank to show the debt was disputed, but, unless the credit bureau then manually froze that account, the next monthly transmittal would override and replace the existing information on the debt. Thus, if the next transmittal did not indicate the debt was disputed, the credit bureau files would no longer contain the information that the debt was disputed. The credit bureau normally does not freeze an account unless the creditor requests it.

¶ 6. The Bank's practice was to telephone the credit bureau directly to inform them when a debt was reasonably disputed, and ask it to indicate that information in the credit bureau's file. It was not the Bank's practice to request in writing that the credit bureau do this nor to do any follow-up to its request. Consistent with this practice, Ed Hansen, a representative of the Bank, testified that he called the credit bureau in November 1997 and asked that the credit bureau place a dispute code on the Turners' account for this debt. Although the credit bureau coded the Turners' credit file as discussed in response to Hansen's call, the tape the Bank transmitted to the credit bureau the next month overrode that code: it replaced all the information about the Turners' debt, including the code *390 showing it was disputed, with new information on the debt, which did not include the information that the debt was disputed. The result was that after November the credit bureau's information on the Turners' debt, and thus, the information the credit bureau transmitted to others, did not indicate there was a reasonable dispute over the Turners' debt. Instead, each month's report carried with it mounting delinquency charges and an indication that the payments were an additional month past due.

¶ 7. Hansen testified it was his understanding that the information on the disputed status of the Turners' debt, which he conveyed to the credit bureau in the November 1997 phone call, would be permanently contained in the Turners' account with the credit bureau until he called to ask that it be changed. He did not specifically request the designation of disputed status be permanent because he assumed it would be. He also testified that the credit bureau employee with whom he spoke did not tell him a change would have to be made in the tape sent to the credit bureau to permanently reflect the debt was disputed, and he did not tell the employee the Bank's system could not do that. Nor did the employee tell him, he testified, that the Bank could ask the credit bureau to freeze the Turners' account.

¶ 8. Clara McFall testified she was the credit bureau employee with whom Hansen spoke in November 1997 about the Turners' account. She testified that her normal procedure, when a person asks that a particular debt be indicated as disputed, is to explain that the person has to ensure the same change is made in the following months unless the credit bureau manually freezes the account so subsequent tapes will not change the designation of the debt as disputed. At trial *391 she testified she could not recall whether she told Hansen this; however, in her deposition testimony, read at trial, she stated she had told Hansen the Bank had to correct its tape information and that the Bank had the option of freezing the account. It is not disputed that Hansen did not elect to have the Turners' account frozen.

¶ 9. After Hansen's November 1997 telephone call, the Bank did not attempt to verify the debt was designated as disputed on a continuing basis. The Bank did not learn until August 1998 that this had not been done. At that time, the Turners' account with the credit bureau, based on the transmissions from the Bank, had a delinquency rating that indicated the account was four months or more past due.

¶ 10. The trial court found the Bank reasonably believed that the designation of disputed status would stay in the credit bureau records of the Turners' debt. The trial court concluded the Bank did not violate WlS. STAT. § 427.104(l)(f). The court construed the statute to "not require the bank repeatedly to look into what the credit reporting agency is doing with [the debt information it provides]." The court determined the Bank's actions were reasonable with respect to its treatment of the Turners' account and it was not required to use "extraordinary practices" to assure that the disputed status of a debt was being accurately recorded by the credit bureau.

DISCUSSION

¶ 11.

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Bluebook (online)
2001 WI App 28, 623 N.W.2d 151, 240 Wis. 2d 385, 2000 Wisc. App. LEXIS 1108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-gene-dencker-buick-pontiac-inc-wisctapp-2000.