Drennan v. Van Ru Credit Corp., 96 C 5789.

Citation950 F.Supp. 858
Decision Date30 December 1996
Docket NumberNo. 96 C 5789.,96 C 5789.
PartiesJohn C. DRENNAN, Jr., etc., Plaintiff, v. VAN RU CREDIT CORPORATION, et al., Defendants.
CourtUnited States District Courts. 7th Circuit. United States District Court (Northern District of Illinois)

O. Randolph Bragg, Chicago, IL, for Plaintiff.

John M. Hynes & Benjamin E. Patterson of Clausen Miller P.C., Chicago, IL, for Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

SHADUR, Senior District Judge.

John Drennan, Jr. ("Drennan") has brought a putative class action against Van Ru Credit Corporation ("Van Ru") and its principal Albert Rubin ("Rubin"), charging violations of the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act ("Act," 15 U.S.C. §§ 1692 to 1692o1) and invoking federal jurisdiction based on the federal questions thus involved. Van Ru and Rubin have moved under Fed. R.Civ.P. ("Rule") 12(b)(6) to dismiss the action, and their motion has been fully briefed and is ready for decision.2 For the reasons stated in this memorandum opinion and order, the motion is denied and Van Ru and Rubin are ordered to answer Drennan's Complaint.

Each side recognizes the basic Rule 12(b)(6) proposition that Drennan's allegations are to be accepted as true and that dismissal is appropriate "only if it is clear that no relief could be granted under any set of facts that could be proved consistent with the allegations" (Hishon v. King & Spalding, 467 U.S. 69, 73, 104 S.Ct. 2229, 2232, 81 L.Ed.2d 59 (1984), relying on Conley v. Gibson, 355 U.S. 41, 45-46, 78 S.Ct. 99, 101-02, 2 L.Ed.2d 80 (1957)). And in part because the Rules embody a notice-pleading rather than fact-pleading regime, plaintiff Drennan is also entitled to have his well-pleaded allegations construed in the most favorable light (Richmond v. Nationwide Cassel L.P., 52 F.3d 640, 644 (7th Cir.1995)).

In this instance Drennan targets two notices that he received from Van Ru as assertedly Act-violative: its September 14, 1995 "LEGAL REVIEW NOTIFICATION" ("September Notice," Complaint Ex. A, attached as Ex. 1 to this opinion) and its December 16, 1995 "NOTICE OF POSSIBLE WAGE GARNISHMENT" ("December Notice," Complaint Ex. B, attached as Ex. 2 to this opinion). Each Notice addressed Drennan's assertedly unpaid balance on a student loan obtained through NorthStar Guarantee, Inc. Although Drennan did not pay the alleged loan balance after receipt of either of the two Notices,3 no enforcement action of any kind was undertaken during the year-long period that elapsed between the September Notice and the September 11, 1996 filing of the Complaint (a period of nine months when measured from the date of the December Notice).

According to Drennan, that course of conduct involves violations of several provisions of the ActSections 1692e(4), (5), (9) and (13). And Rubin is joined as a defendant on the premise that as a Van Ru executive officer he "direct[s] its policies, practices and operations" (Complaint ¶ 29).

Viability of the Complaint

Both the September Notice and the December Notice must be measured against the yardstick of the "unsophisticated consumer," as announced by our Court of Appeals in Gammon v. GC Servs. Ltd. Partnership, 27 F.3d 1254, 1257 (7th Cir.1994) and reconfirmed earlier this year in an action successfully brought against Van Ru and Rubin themselves, Avila v. Rubin, 84 F.3d 222 (7th Cir.1996). As Avila, id. at 226 said of the applicable test:

After some anguish, we held in Gammon v. GC Servs. Ltd. Partnership, 27 F.3d 1254, 1257 (7th Cir.1994), that claims against debt collectors under the FDCPA are to be viewed through the eyes of the "unsophisticated consumer." We rejected what may be viewed as a somewhat lesser standard — the "least sophisticated consumer," used by other courts. We reiterate our standard today, but we don't want to be involved in the splitting of split hairs. Anyway it's viewed, the standard is low, close to the bottom of the sophistication meter.

Looked at through that "unsophisticated consumer" lens, Van Ru's September Notice flunks the test. What is such a consumer to understand as the meaning of "Legal Review Notification," the caption of that first document that was sent to Drennan? Here are the first three sentences of the notification that come immediately below that caption:

You have been given sufficient time to resolve this matter. The legal review process may may result in a recommendation to your creditor to file a lawsuit against you. Should our client authorize suit, your account may be referred to an attorney in your county to file suit at once for the above claim.

And importantly, after that statement and the ensuing detailed recital of the perils that the debtor faces if a judgment is then obtained, the notification makes its message unmistakable:

Please contact this office upon receipt of this notice or mail full payment to avoid the above.

Just what is meant by "[t]he legal review process," a term that is puzzling even to anyone schooled in the law and that surely must be an arcane mystery to the layperson? And although defendants urge that everything from there on is both conditional ("may result," "may be referred" and so on) and is successively so (as in the hip bone is connected to the thigh bone, and so on), defendants' characterization of the communication as a whole as not conveying a threat to the paradigmatic unsophisticated consumer is just not persuasive.

Unsophisticated consumers to whom Van Ru addresses such communications do not open their mail with Strunk and White's The Elements of Style at their elbows (for that matter, who does?).4 To the archetypical person whom Congress sought to protect by the Act, Van Ru's September Notice had to appear as an ominous harbinger of things to come unless the addressee complied with the directive of what had to be done "to avoid the above""the above" being the notification's recital of the successive parade of horribles that would follow should the "legal review process" trigger the first and ensuing steps in that process.5

Section 1692e(5) defines as a violation of the Act:

The threat to take any action ... that is not intended to be taken.

To the "unsophisticated consumer" the September Notice surely conveyed a threat — the realistic rather than any hypothetical prospect of enforcement action if payment were not made (see n. 5)6 — and the reasonable inference from Van Ru's having left Drennan waiting for the other shoe to drop during the ensuing months is that the threatened action was "not intended to be taken." As for Rubin individually, the reasonable inference from Complaint ¶ 29 (though stated in conclusory fashion, as notice-pleading principles permit) supports his individual inclusion as a defendant in the same way that Avila found him to be a proper target.7

Like the lawyer who views the Rules of Professional Conduct from the perspective that they mark out lines of impermissible conduct that are intended to be approached asymptotically — by coming as close as possible to engaging in actual impropriety, without quite touching the lines8 — so Rubin and Van Ru appear constantly to be pushing the envelope of the Act in hopes that their questionable activities will stay on the legal side rather than crossing over into illegality. Wholly apart from the unwholesomeness of such an approach in purely social terms (a consideration that may inform Congress' enactments, but that does not constitute the decisional criterion for this Court), there is little wonder that risk-takers of that nature have more than once come too close to the edge, falling off of the cliff of legality into the canyon of unlawfulness (as the decision in Avila graphically demonstrates).

As disclosed by Avila, Rubin is regrettably an Illinois lawyer. Although some of the things that have made him a discredit to the profession were curbed in Avila, he and his corporation continue (to shift metaphors) to play chicken with the Act. What is disclosed by the Complaint depicts additional collisions with its terms by both of the challenged documents:

1. This opinion's discussion up to this point has already identified the "threat" implicit in the September Notice within the meaning of Act § 1692e(5).

2. As for the December Notice, it plainly (perhaps even more plainly) contains a "representation or implication that nonpayment of any debt will result in...

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8 cases
  • Mace v. Van Ru Credit Corp.
    • United States
    • United States Courts of Appeals. United States Court of Appeals (7th Circuit)
    • March 17, 1997
    ...and could not have taken legally. This is not Van Ru's first encounter with the FDCPA. See Avila, 84 F.3d 222; Drennan v. Van Ru Credit Corp., 950 F.Supp. 858 (N.D.Ill.1996); Sower v. Van Ru Fin. Servs., Inc., 1995 WL 870853 (D.Minn.1995); Woolfolk v. Van Ru Credit Corp., 783 F.Supp. 724 (D......
  • Pettit v. Retrieval Masters Creditors Bureau, Inc., 98 C 1154.
    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — Northern District of Illinois
    • March 10, 1999
    ...that Fuchs is personally involved in drafting, approving, or reviewing the collection letter in question. In Drennan v. Van Ru Credit Corp., 950 F.Supp. 858 (N.D.Ill.1996), the court held that the plaintiff stated a cause of action against an executive officer of a agency for violations of ......
  • Dunbar v. Kohn Law Firm, S.C
    • United States
    • United States Courts of Appeals. United States Court of Appeals (7th Circuit)
    • July 19, 2018
    ...also invoke a handful of district-court decisions, but all are inapplicable or unpersuasive. In Drennan v. Van Ru Credit Corp. , 950 F.Supp. 858, 860 (N.D. Ill. 1996), the challenged collection letter stated: "The legal review process may ... result in a recommendation to your creditor to f......
  • Porter v. McCarthy
    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — Central District of Illinois
    • August 2, 2011
    ...Similarly, a threat to recommend referral to an attorney has been found to be an implicit threat to sue. Drennan v. Van Ru Credit Corp., 950 F. Supp. 858 (N.D.Ill.1996). While the second statement in the first letter appears to negate the first, it does not stand in isolation. When a collec......
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