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SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 17–1307
_________________
DENNIS OBDUSKEY, PETITIONER
v. McCARTHY
& HOLTHUS LLP
on writ of certiorari to the united states
court of appeals for the tenth circuit
[March 20, 2019]
Justice Breyer delivered the opinion of the
Court.
The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act regulates
“ ‘debt collector[s].’ ” 15 U. S. C. §1692a(6);
see 91Stat. 874, 15 U. S. C. §1692
et seq. A
“ ‘debt collector,’ ” the Act says, is “any person
. . . in any business the principal purpose of which is
the collection of any debts, or who regularly collects or attempts
to collect, directly or indirectly, debts.” §1692a(6). This
definition, however, goes on to say that “[f]or the purpose of
section 1692f(6)” (a separate provision of the Act), “[the] term
[debt collector] also includes any person . . . in any
business the principal purpose of which is the enforcement of
security interests.”
Ibid.
The question before us concerns this last
sentence. Does it mean that one principally involved in “the
enforcement of security interests” is
not a debt collector
(except “[f ]or the purpose of section 1692f(6)”)? If so,
numerous other provisions of the Act do not apply. Or does it
simply reinforce the fact that those principally involved in the
enforcement of security interests are subject to §1692f(6) in
addition to the Act’s other provisions?
In our view, the last sentence does (with its
§1692f(6) exception) place those whose “principal purpose
. . . is the enforcement of security interests” outside
the scope of the primary “debt collector” definition, §1692a(6),
where the business is engaged in no more than the kind of
security-interest enforcement at issue here—nonjudicial foreclosure
proceedings.
I
A
When a person buys a home, he or she usually
borrows money from a lending institution, such as a bank. The
resulting debt is backed up by a “mortgage”—a security interest in
the property designed to protect the creditor’s investment.
Restatement (Third) of Property: Mortgages §1.1 (1996)
(Restatement). (In some States, this security interest is known as
a “deed of trust,” though for present purposes the difference is
immaterial. See generally
ibid.) The loan likely requires
the homeowner to make monthly payments. And if the homeowner
defaults, the mortgage entitles the creditor to pursue foreclosure,
which is “the process in which property securing a mortgage is sold
to pay off the loan balance due.” 2 B. Dunaway, Law of Distressed
Real Estate §15:1 (2018) (Dunaway).
Every State provides some form of
judicial foreclosure: a legal action initiated by a creditor
in which a court supervises sale of the property and distribution
of the proceeds.
Id., §16:1. These procedures offer various
protections for homeowners, such as the right to notice and to
protest the amount a creditor says is owed.
Id., §§16:17,
16:20; Restatement §8.2. And in the event that the foreclosure sale
does not yield the full amount due, a creditor pursuing a judicial
foreclosure may sometimes obtain a deficiency judgment, that is, a
judgment against the homeowner for the unpaid balance of a debt.
National Consumer Law Center (NCLC), Foreclosures and Mortgage
Servicing §§12.3.1–2 (5th ed. 2014).
About half the States also provide for what is
known as
nonjudicial foreclosure, where notice to the
parties and sale of the property occur outside court supervision. 2
Dunaway §17:1. Under Colorado’s form of nonjudicial foreclosure, at
issue here, a creditor (or more likely its agent) must first mail
the homeowner certain preliminary information, including the
telephone number for the Colorado foreclosure hotline. Colo. Rev.
Stat. §38–38–102.5(2) (2018). Thirty days later, the creditor may
file a “notice of election and demand” with a state official called
a “public trustee.” §38–38–101. The public trustee records this
notice and mails a copy, alongside other materials, to the
homeowner. §§38–38–102, 38–38–103. These materials give the
homeowner information about the balance of the loan, the
homeowner’s right to cure the default, and the time and place of
the foreclosure sale. §§38–38–101(4), 38–38–103. Assuming the
debtor does not cure the default or declare bankruptcy, the
creditor may then seek an order from a state court authorizing the
sale. Colo. Rule Civ. Proc. 120 (2018); see Colo. Rev. Stat.
§38–38–105. (Given this measure of court involvement, Colorado’s
“nonjudicial” foreclosure process is something of a hybrid, though
no party claims these features transform Colorado’s nonjudicial
scheme into a judicial one.) In court, the homeowner may contest
the creditor’s right to sell the property, and a hearing will be
held to determine whether the sale should go forward. Colo. Rules
Civ. Proc. 120(c), (d).
If the court gives its approval, the public
trustee may then sell the property at a public auction, though a
homeowner may avoid a sale altogether by curing the default up
until noon on the day before. Colo. Rev. Stat. §§38–38–110,
38–38–104(VI)(b). If the sale goes forward and the house sells for
more than the amount owed, any profits go first to lienholders and
then to the homeowner. §38–38–111. If the house sells for less than
what is owed, the creditor cannot hold the homeowner liable for the
balance due unless it files a separate action in court and obtains
a deficiency judgment. See §38–38–106(6);
Bank of America v.
Kosovich, 878 P.2d 65, 66 (Colo. App. 1994). Other States
likewise prevent creditors from obtaining deficiency judgments in
nonjudicial foreclosure proceedings. Restatement §8.2. And in some
States, pursuing nonjudicial foreclosure bars or curtails a
creditor’s ability to obtain a deficiency judgment altogether.
NCLC, Foreclosures and Mortgage Servicing §12.3.2.
B
In 2007, petitioner Dennis Obduskey bought a
home in Colorado with a $329,940 loan secured by the property.
About two years later, Obduskey defaulted.
In 2014, Wells Fargo Bank, N. A., hired a
law firm, McCarthy & Holthus LLP, the respondent here, to act
as its agent in carrying out a nonjudicial foreclosure. According
to the complaint, McCarthy first mailed Obduskey a letter that said
it had been “instructed to commence foreclosure” against the
property, disclosed the amount outstanding on the loan, and
identified the creditor, Wells Fargo. App. 37–38; see
id.,
at 23. The letter purported to provide notice “[p]ursuant to, and
in compliance with,” both the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act
(FDCPA) and Colorado law.
Id., at 37. (The parties seem not
to dispute that this and other correspondence from McCarthy was
required under state law. Because that is a question of Colorado
law not briefed by the parties before us nor passed on by the
courts below, we proceed along the same assumption.) Obduskey
responded with a letter invoking §1692g(b) of the FDCPA, which
provides that if a con- sumer disputes the amount of a debt, a
“debt collector” must “cease collection” until it “obtains
verification of the debt” and mails a copy to the debtor.
Yet, Obduskey alleges, McCarthy neither ceased
collecting on the debt nor provided verification. App. 22–23.
Instead, the firm initiated a nonjudicial foreclosure action by
filing a notice of election and demand with the county public
trustee.
Ibid.; see
id., at 39–41. The notice stated
the amount due and advised that the public trustee would “sell
[the] property for the purpose of paying the indebtedness.”
Id., at 40.
Obduskey then filed a lawsuit in federal court
alleging that the firm had violated the FDCPA by, among other
things, failing to comply with the verification procedure.
Id., at 29. The District Court dismissed the suit on the
ground that the law firm was not a “debt collector” within the
meaning of the Act, so the relevant Act requirements did not apply.
Obduskey v.
Wells Fargo, 2016 WL 4091174, *3 (D
Colo., July 19, 2016).
On appeal, the Court of Appeals for the Tenth
Circuit affirmed the dismissal, concluding that the “mere act of
enforcing a security interest through a non-judicial foreclosure
proceeding does not fall under” the Act.
Obduskey v.
Wells Fargo, 879 F.3d 1216, 1223 (2018).
Obduskey then petitioned for certiorari. In
light of different views among the Circuits about application of
the FDCPA to nonjudicial foreclosure proceedings, we granted the
petition. Compare
ibid. and
Vien-Phuong Thi Ho v.
ReconTrust Co.,
NA, 858 F.3d 568, 573 (CA9 2016)
(holding that an entity whose only role is the enforcement of
security interests is not a debt collector under the Act), with
Kaymark v.
Bank of America,
N. A., 783
F.3d 168, 179 (CA3 2015) (holding that such an entity is a debt
collector for the purpose of all the Act’s requirements),
Glazer v.
Chase Home Fin. LLC, 704 F.3d 453,
461 (CA6 2013) (same), and
Wilson v.
Draper &
Goldberg,
P. L. L. C.,
443 F.3d 373, 376 (CA4 2006) (same).
II
A
The FDCPA’s definitional section, 15
U. S. C. §1692a, defines a “debt” as:
“any obligation or alleged
obligation of a consumer
to pay money arising out of a
transaction in which the money, property, insurance, or services
which are the subject of the transaction are primarily for
personal, family, or household purposes.” §1692a(5) (emphasis
added).
The Act then sets out the definition of the term
“debt collector.” §1692a(6). The first sentence of the relevant
paragraph, which we shall call the primary definition, says that
the term “debt collector”:
“means any person . . . in any
business the principal purpose of which is the collection of any
debts, or who regularly collects or attempts to collect, directly
or indirectly, debts owed or asserted to be owed or due another.”
Ibid.
The third sentence, however, provides what we
shall call the limited-purpose definition:
“For the purpose of section 1692f(6) [the]
term [debt collector] also includes any person . . . in
any business the principal purpose of which is the enforcement of
security interests.”
Ibid.
The subsection to which the limited-purpose
definition refers, §1692f(6), prohibits a “debt collector”
from:
“Taking or threatening to take any nonjudicial
action to effect dispossession or disablement of property if—
“(A) there is no present right to possession of
the property . . . ;
“(B) there is no present intention to take
possession of the property; or
“(C) the property is exempt by law from such
dispossession or disablement.”
The rest of the Act imposes myriad other
requirements on debt collectors. For example, debt collectors may
not use or threaten violence, or make repetitive annoying phone
calls. §1692d. Nor can debt collectors make false, deceptive, or
misleading representations in connection with a debt, like
misstating a debt’s “character, amount, or legal status.” §1692e.
And, as we have mentioned, if a consumer disputes the amount of a
debt, a debt collector must “cease collection” until it “obtains
verification of the debt” and mails a copy to the debtor.
§1692g(b).
No one here disputes that McCarthy is, by virtue
of its role enforcing security interests, at least subject to the
specific prohibitions contained in §1692f(6). The question is
whether
other provisions of the Act apply. And they do if,
but only if, McCarthy falls within the scope of the Act’s primary
definition of “debt collector.”
B
Three considerations lead us to conclude that
McCarthy is not subject to the main coverage of the Act.
First, and most decisive, is the text of
the Act itself. As a preliminary matter, we concede that if the
FDCPA contained
only the primary definition, a business
engaged in nonjudicial foreclosure proceedings would qualify as a
debt collector for all purposes. We have explained that a home loan
is an obligation to pay money, and the purpose of a mortgage is to
secure that obligation. See
supra, at 2. Foreclosure, in
turn, is “the process in which property securing a mortgage is sold
to pay off the loan balance due.” 2 Dunaway §15:1. In other words,
foreclosure is a means of collecting a debt. And a business
pursuing nonjudicial foreclosures would, under the capacious
language of the Act’s primary definition, be one that “regularly
collects or attempts to collect, directly or indirectly, debts.”
§1692a(6).
It is true that, as McCarthy points out,
nonjudicial foreclosure does not seek “a payment of money
from
the debtor” but rather from sale of the property itself. Brief
for Respondent 17 (emphasis added). But nothing in the primary
definition requires that payment on a debt come “from a debtor.”
The statute speaks simply of the “collection of any debts
. . . owed or due.” §1692a(6). Moreover, the provision
sweeps in both “direc[t]” and “indirec[t]” debt collection.
Ibid. So, even if nonjudicial foreclosure were not a
direct attempt to collect a debt, because it aims to collect
on a consumer’s obligation by way of enforcing a security interest,
it would be an
indirect attempt to collect a debt.
The Act does not, however, contain only the
primary definition. And the limited-purpose definition poses a
serious, indeed an insurmountable, obstacle to subjecting McCarthy
to the main coverage of the Act. It says that
“[f]or the purpose
of section 1692f(6)” a debt collector “
also
includes
” a business, like McCarthy, “the principal purpose
of which is the enforcement of security interests.” §1692a(6)
(emphasis added). This phrase, particularly the word “also,”
strongly suggests that one who does no more than enforce security
interests does
not fall within the scope of the general
definition. Otherwise why add this sentence at all?
It is logically, but not practically, possible
that Congress simply wanted to emphasize that the definition of
“debt collector” includes those engaged in the enforcement of
security interests. But why then would Congress have used the word
“also”? And if security-interest enforcers are covered by the
primary definition, why would Congress have needed to say anything
special about §1692f(6)? After all, §1692f(6), just like all the
provisions applicable to debt collectors, would have already
applied to those who enforce security interests. The reference to
§1692f(6) would on this view be superfluous, and we “generally
presum[e] that statutes do not contain surplusage.”
Arlington
Central School Dist. Bd. of Ed. v.
Murphy,
548 U.S.
291, 299, n. 1 (2006). By contrast, giving effect to every
word of the limited-purpose definition narrows the primary
definition, so that the debt-collector-related prohibitions of the
FDCPA (with the exception of §1692f(6)) do
not apply to
those who, like McCarthy, are engaged in no more than
security-interest enforcement.
Second, we think Congress may well have
chosen to treat security-interest enforcement differently from
ordinary debt collection in order to avoid conflicts with state
nonjudicial foreclosure schemes. As Colorado’s law makes clear,
supra, at 3–4, state nonjudicial foreclosure laws provide
various protections designed to prevent sharp collection practices
and to protect homeowners, see 2 Dunaway §17:1. And some features
of these laws are in tension with aspects of the Act. For example,
the FDCPA broadly limits debt collectors from communicating with
third parties “in connection with the collection of any debt.”
§1692c(b). If this rule were applied to nonjudicial foreclosure
proceedings, then advertising a foreclosure sale—an essential
element of such schemes—might run afoul of the FDCPA. Given that a
core purpose of publicizing a sale is to attract bidders, ensure
that the sale price is fair, and thereby protect the borrower from
further liability, the result would hardly benefit debtors. See 2
Dunaway §17:4. To be sure, it may be possible to resolve these
conflicts without great harm to either the Act or state foreclosure
schemes. See
Heintz v.
Jenkins,
514 U.S.
291, 296–297 (1995) (observing that the FDCPA’s protections may
contain certain “implici[t] exception[s]”). But it is also
possible, in light of the language it employed, that Congress
wanted to avoid the risk of such conflicts altogether.
Third, for those of us who use
legislative history to help interpret statutes, the history of the
FDCPA supports our reading. When drafting the bill, Congress
considered a version that would have subjected security-interest
enforcers to the full coverage of the Act. That version defined a
debt collector as “any person who engages in any business the
principal purpose of which is the collection of any debt
or
enforcement of security interests.” S. 918, 95th Cong., 1st
Sess., §803(f ) (1977) (emphasis added). A different version
of the bill, however, would have totally excluded from the Act’s
coverage “any person who enforces or attempts to enforce a security
interest in real or personal property.” S. 1130, 95th Cong., 1st
Sess., §802(8)(E) (1977). Given these conflicting proposals, the
Act’s present language has all the earmarks of a compromise: The
prohibitions contained in §1692f(6) will cover security-interest
enforcers, while the other “debt collector” provisions of the Act
will not.
These considerations convince us that, but for
§1692f(6), those who engage in only nonjudicial foreclosure
proceedings are not debt collectors within the meaning of the
Act.
III
Obduskey makes several arguments to the
contrary. But, on balance, we do not find them determinative.
First, Obduskey acknowledges that unless
the limited-purpose definition is superfluous, it must make some
kind of security-interest enforcer a “debt collector” who would not
otherwise fall within the primary definition. Reply Brief 11–13.
But, according to Obduskey, “repo men”—those who seize automobiles
and other personal property in response to nonpayment—fit the bill.
See Black’s Law Dictionary 1493 (10th ed. 2014) (explaining that
“repo” is short for “repossession,” which means “retaking property;
esp., a seller’s retaking of goods sold on credit when the buyer
has failed to pay for them”). This is so, he says, because
repossession often entails only “limited communication” with the
debtor, as when the repo man sneaks up and “tows a car in the
middle of the night.” Brief for Petitioner 25–26, and n. 13.
And because, according to Obduskey, the language of §1692f(6),
which forbids “[t]aking or threatening to take any nonjudicial
action to effect
dispossession or disablement of property,”
applies more naturally to the seizure of personal property than to
nonjudicial foreclosure. (Emphasis added.)
But we do not see why that is so. The
limited-purpose provision speaks broadly of “the enforcement of
security interests,” §1692a(6), not “the enforcement of security
interests
in personal property”; if Congress meant to cover
only the repo man, it could have said so. Moreover, Obduskey’s
theory fails to save the limited-purpose definition from
superfluity. As we have just discussed,
supra, at 7–8, if
the Act contained only the primary definition, enforcement of a
security interest would at least be an indirect collection of a
debt. The same may well be true of repo activity, a form of
security-interest enforcement, as the point of repossessing
property that secures a debt is to collect some or all of the value
of the defaulted debt. And while Obduskey argues that the language
of §1692f(6) fits more comfortably with repossession of personal
property than nonjudicial foreclosure, we think it at least
plausible that “threatening” to foreclose on a consumer’s home
without having legal entitlement to do so is the kind of
“nonjudicial action” without “present right to possession”
prohibited by that section. §1692f(6)(A). (We need not, however,
here decide precisely what conduct runs afoul of §1692f(6).)
We are also unmoved by Obduskey’s argument that
repossession would not fall under the primary definition because it
generally involves only limited communication with the debtor. For
one thing, while some of the FDCPA’s substantive protections apply
where there has been a “communicat[ion]” with a consumer, see,
e.g., §1692c, the primary definition of debt collector turns
on the “collection of . . . debts,” without express
reference to communication, §1692a(6). For another, while Obduskey
imagines a silent repo man striking in the dead of night, state law
often requires communication with a debtor during the repossession
process, such as notifying a consumer of a sale. NCLC,
Repossessions §10.4 (9th ed. 2017).
Second, Obduskey points to the Act’s
venue provision, 15 U. S. C. §1692i(a), which states that
“[a]ny
debt collector who brings any legal action on a debt
against any consumer shall . . . in the case of an action
to enforce an interest in real property securing the consumer’s
obligation, bring such action only in a judicial district” where
the “property is located.” (Emphasis added.) This provision, he
says, makes clear that a person who
judicially enforces a
real-property-related security interest is a debt collector; hence,
a person who
nonjudicially enforces such an interest must
also be a debt collector. Indeed, he adds, this subsection “only
makes sense” if those who enforce secu- rity interests in real
property are debt collectors subject to all prohibitions and
requirements that come with that designation. Brief for Petitioner
21.
This argument, however, makes too much of too
little. To begin with, the venue section has no direct application
in this case, for here we consider
nonjudicial foreclosure.
And whether those who judicially enforce mortgages fall within the
scope of the primary definition is a question we can leave for
another day. See 879 F. 3d, at 1221–1222 (noting that the
availability of a deficiency judgment is a potentially relevant
distinction between judicial and nonjudicial foreclosures).
More to the point, the venue provision does
nothing to alter the definition of a debt collector. Rather, it
applies whenever a “debt collector” brings a “legal action
. . . to enforce an interest in real property.”
§1692i(a)(1). In other words, the provision anticipates that a debt
collector can bring a judicial action respecting real property, but
it nowhere says that an entity is a debt collector
because
it brings such an action. Obduskey suggests that under our
interpretation this provision will capture a null set. We think
not. A business that qualifies as a debt collector based on
other activities (say, because it “regularly collects or
attempts to collect” unsecured credit card debts, §1692a(6)) would
have to comply with the venue provi- sion if it also filed “an
action to enforce an interest in real property,” §1692i(a)(1).
Here, however, the only basis alleged for concluding that McCarthy
is a debt collector under the Act is its role in nonjudicial
foreclosure proceedings.
Third, Obduskey argues that even if
“simply enforcing a security interest” falls outside the primary
definition, McCarthy engaged in
more than security-interest
enforcement by sending notices that any ordinary homeowner would
understand as an attempt to collect a debt backed up by the threat
of foreclosure. Brief for Petitioner 15–16; see Reply Brief 13. We
do not doubt the gravity of a letter informing a homeowner that she
may lose her home unless she pays her outstanding debts. But here
we assume that the notices sent by McCarthy were antecedent steps
required under state law to enforce a security interest. See
supra, at 4. Indeed, every nonjudicial foreclosure scheme of
which we are aware involves notices to the homeowner. See 2 Dunaway
§17:4 (describing state procedures concerning notice of sale). And
because he who wills the ends must will the necessary means, we
think the Act’s (partial) exclusion of “the enforcement of security
interests” must also exclude the legal means required to do so.
This is not to suggest that pursuing nonjudicial foreclosure is a
license to engage in abusive debt collection practices like
repetitive nighttime phone calls; enforcing a security interest
does not grant an actor blanket immunity from the Act. But given
that we here confront only steps required by state law, we need not
consider what
other conduct (related to, but not required
for, enforcement of a security interest) might transform a
security-interest enforcer into a debt collector subject to the
main coverage of the Act.
Finally, Obduskey fears that our decision
will open a loophole, permitting creditors and their agents to
engage in a host of abusive practices forbidden by the Act. States,
however, can and do guard against such practices, for example, by
requiring notices, review by state officials such as the public
trustee, and limited court supervision. See
supra, at 3–4,
9. Congress may think these state protections adequate, or it may
choose to expand the reach of the FDCPA. Regardless, for the
reasons we have given, we believe that the statute exempts entities
engaged in no more than the “enforcement of security interests”
from the lion’s share of its prohibitions. And we must enforce the
statute that Congress enacted.
For these reasons, the judgment of the Court of
Appeals is
Affirmed.