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SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 20–297
_________________
TRANSUNION LLC, PETITIONER
v. SERGIO L.
RAMIREZ
on writ of certiorari to the united states
court of appeals for the ninth circuit
[June 25, 2021]
Justice Kavanaugh delivered the opinion of the
Court.
To have Article III standing to sue in federal
court, plaintiffs must demonstrate, among other things, that they
suffered a concrete harm. No concrete harm, no standing. Central to
assessing concreteness is whether the asserted harm has a “close
relationship” to a harm traditionally recognized as providing a
basis for a lawsuit in American courts—such as physical harm,
monetary harm, or various intangible harms including (as relevant
here) reputational harm.
Spokeo, Inc. v.
Robins, 578
U.S. 330, 340–341 (2016).
In this case, a class of 8,185 individuals sued
TransUnion, a credit reporting agency, in federal court under the
Fair Credit Reporting Act. The plaintiffs claimed that TransUnion
failed to use reasonable procedures to ensure the accuracy of their
credit files, as maintained internally by TransUnion. For 1,853 of
the class members, TransUnion provided misleading credit reports to
third-party businesses. We conclude that those 1,853 class members
have demonstrated concrete reputational harm and thus have Article
III standing to sue on the reasonable-procedures claim. The
internal credit files of the other 6,332 class members were
not provided to third-party businesses during the relevant
time period. We conclude that those 6,332 class members have not
demonstrated concrete harm and thus lack Article III standing to
sue on the reasonable-procedures claim.
In two other claims, all 8,185 class members
complained about formatting defects in certain mailings sent to
them by TransUnion. But the class members other than the named
plaintiff Sergio Ramirez have not demonstrated that the alleged
formatting errors caused them any concrete harm. Therefore, except
for Ramirez, the class members do not have standing as to those two
claims.
Over Judge McKeown’s dissent, the U. S.
Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled that all 8,185 class
members have standing as to all three claims. The Court of Appeals
approved a class damages award of about $40 million. In light of
our conclusion that (i) only 1,853 class members have standing for
the reasonable-procedures claim and (ii) only Ramirez himself
has standing for the two formatting claims relating to the
mailings, we reverse the judgment of the Ninth Circuit and remand
the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I
In 1970, Congress passed and President Nixon
signed the Fair Credit Reporting Act. 84Stat. 1127, as amended, 15
U. S. C. §1681
et seq. The Act seeks to promote
“fair and accurate credit reporting” and to protect consumer
privacy. §1681(a). To achieve those goals, the Act regulates the
consumer reporting agencies that compile and disseminate personal
information about consumers.
The Act “imposes a host of requirements
concerning the creation and use of consumer reports.”
Spokeo,
Inc. v.
Robins, 578 U.S. 330, 335 (2016). Three of the
Act’s requirements are relevant to this case.
First, the Act
requires consumer reporting agencies to “follow reasonable
procedures to assure maximum possible accuracy” in consumer
reports. §1681e(b).
Second, the Act provides that consumer
reporting agencies must, upon request, disclose to the consumer
“[a]ll information in the consumer’s file at the time of the
request.” §1681g(a)(1).
Third, the Act compels consumer
reporting agencies to “provide to a consumer, with each written
disclosure by the agency to the consumer,” a “summary of rights”
prepared by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
§1681g(c)(2).
The Act creates a cause of action for consumers
to sue and recover damages for certain violations. The Act
provides: “Any person who willfully fails to comply with any
requirement imposed under this subchapter with respect to any
consumer is liable to that consumer” for actual damages or for
statutory damages not less than $100 and not more than $1,000, as
well as for punitive damages and attorney’s fees. §1681n(a).
TransUnion is one of the “Big Three” credit
reporting agencies, along with Equifax and Experian. As a credit
reporting agency, TransUnion compiles personal and financial
information about individual consumers to create consumer reports.
TransUnion then sells those consumer reports for use by entities
such as banks, landlords, and car dealerships that request
information about the creditworthiness of individual consumers.
Beginning in 2002, TransUnion introduced an
add-on product called OFAC Name Screen Alert. OFAC is the
U. S. Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control.
OFAC maintains a list of “specially designated nationals” who
threaten America’s national security. Individuals on the OFAC list
are terrorists, drug traffickers, or other serious criminals. It is
generally unlawful to transact business with any person on the
list. 31 CFR pt. 501, App. A (2020). TransUnion created the OFAC
Name Screen Alert to help businesses avoid transacting with
individuals on OFAC’s list.
When this litigation arose, Name Screen worked
in the following way: When a business opted into the Name Screen
service, TransUnion would conduct its ordinary credit check of the
consumer, and it would also use third-party software to compare the
consumer’s name against the OFAC list. If the consumer’s first and
last name matched the first and last name of an individual on
OFAC’s list, then TransUnion would place an alert on the credit
report indicating that the consumer’s name was a “potential match”
to a name on the OFAC list. TransUnion did not compare any data
other than first and last names. Unsurprisingly, TransUnion’s Name
Screen product generated many false positives. Thousands of
law-abiding Americans happen to share a first and last name with
one of the terrorists, drug traffickers, or serious criminals on
OFAC’s list of specially designated nationals.
Sergio Ramirez learned the hard way that he is
one such individual. On February 27, 2011, Ramirez visited a Nissan
dealership in Dublin, California, seeking to buy a Nissan Maxima.
Ramirez was accompanied by his wife and his father-in-law. After
Ramirez and his wife selected a color and negotiated a price, the
dealership ran a credit check on both Ramirez and his wife.
Ramirez’s credit report, produced by TransUnion, contained the
following alert: “***OFAC ADVISOR ALERT - INPUT NAME MATCHES NAME
ON THE OFAC DATABASE.” App. 84. A Nissan salesman told Ramirez that
Nissan would not sell the car to him because his name was on a
“ ‘terrorist list.’ ”
Id., at 333. Ramirez’s wife
had to purchase the car in her own name.
The next day, Ramirez called TransUnion and
requested a copy of his credit file. TransUnion sent Ramirez a
mailing that same day that included his credit file and the
statutorily required summary of rights prepared by the CFPB. The
mailing did not mention the OFAC alert in Ramirez’s file. The
following day, TransUnion sent Ramirez a second mailing—a letter
alerting him that his name was considered a potential match to
names on the OFAC list. The second mailing did not include an
additional copy of the summary of rights. Concerned about the
mailings, Ramirez consulted a lawyer and ultimately canceled a
planned trip to Mexico. TransUnion eventually removed the OFAC
alert from Ramirez’s file.
In February 2012, Ramirez sued TransUnion and
alleged three violations of the Fair Credit Reporting Act.
First, he alleged that TransUnion, by using the Name Screen
product, failed to follow reasonable procedures to ensure the
accuracy of information in his credit file. See §1681e(b).
Second, he claimed that TransUnion failed to provide him
with
all the information in his credit file upon his
request. In particular, TransUnion’s first mailing did not include
the fact that Ramirez’s name was a potential match for a name on
the OFAC list. See §1681g(a)(1).
Third, Ramirez asserted
that TransUnion violated its obligation to provide him with a
summary of his rights “with each written disclosure,” because
TransUnion’s second mailing did not contain a summary of Ramirez’s
rights. §1681g(c)(2). Ramirez requested statutory and punitive
damages.
Ramirez also sought to certify a class of all
people in the United States to whom TransUnion sent a mailing
during the period from January 1, 2011, to July 26, 2011, that was
similar in form to the second mailing that Ramirez received.
TransUnion opposed certification. The U. S. District Court for
the Northern District of California rejected TransUnion’s argument
and certified the class. 301 F.R.D. 408 (2014).
Before trial, the parties stipulated that the
class contained 8,185 members, including Ramirez. The parties also
stipulated that only 1,853 members of the class (including Ramirez)
had their credit reports disseminated by TransUnion to potential
creditors during the period from January 1, 2011, to July 26, 2011.
The District Court ruled that all 8,185 class members had Article
III standing. 2016 WL 6070490, *5 (Oct. 17, 2016).
At trial, Ramirez testified about his experience
at the Nissan dealership. But Ramirez did not present evidence
about the experiences of other members of the class.
After six days of trial, the jury returned a
verdict for the plaintiffs. The jury awarded each class member
$984.22 in statutory damages and $6,353.08 in punitive damages for
a total award of more than $60 million. The District Court rejected
all of TransUnion’s post-trial motions.
The U. S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit affirmed in relevant part. 951 F.3d 1008 (2020). The court
held that all members of the class had Article III standing to
recover damages for all three claims. The court also concluded that
Ramirez’s claims were typical of the class’s claims for purposes of
Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Finally, the court
reduced the punitive damages award to $3,936.88 per class member,
thus reducing the total award to about $40 million.
Judge McKeown dissented in relevant part. As to
the reasonable-procedures claim, she concluded that only the 1,853
class members whose reports were actually disseminated by
TransUnion to third parties had Article III standing to recover
damages. In her view, the remaining 6,332 class members did not
suffer a concrete injury sufficient for standing. As to the two
claims related to the mailings, Judge McKeown would have held that
none of the 8,185 class members other than the named plaintiff
Ramirez had standing as to those claims.
We granted certiorari. 592 U. S. ___
(2020).
II
The question in this case is whether the 8,185
class members have Article III standing as to their three claims.
In Part II, we summarize the requirements of Article III
standing—in particular, the requirement that plaintiffs demonstrate
a “concrete harm.” In Part III, we then apply the concrete-harm
requirement to the plaintiffs’ lawsuit against TransUnion.
A
The “law of Art. III standing is built on a
single basic idea—the idea of separation of powers.”
Raines
v.
Byrd,
521 U.S.
811, 820 (1997) (internal quotation marks omitted). Separation
of powers “was not simply an abstract generalization in the minds
of the Framers: it was woven into the document that they drafted in
Philadelphia in the summer of 1787.”
INS v.
Chadha,
462 U.S.
919, 946 (1983) (internal quotation marks omitted).
Therefore, we start with the text of the
Constitution. Article III confines the federal judicial power to
the resolution of “Cases” and “Controversies.” For there to be a
case or controversy under Article III, the plaintiff must have a
“ ‘personal stake’ ” in the case—in other words,
standing.
Raines, 521 U. S., at 819. To demonstrate
their personal stake, plaintiffs must be able to sufficiently
answer the question: “ ‘What’s it to you?’ ” Scalia, The
Doctrine of Standing as an Essential Element of the Separation of
Powers, 17 Suffolk U. L. Rev. 881, 882 (1983).
To answer that question in a way sufficient to
establish standing, a plaintiff must show (i) that he suffered an
injury in fact that is concrete, particularized, and actual or
imminent; (ii) that the injury was likely caused by the defendant;
and (iii) that the injury would likely be redressed by judicial
relief.
Lujan v.
Defenders of Wildlife,
504
U.S. 555, 560–561 (1992). If “the plaintiff does not claim to
have suffered an injury that the defendant caused and the court can
remedy, there is no case or controversy for the federal court to
resolve.”
Casillas v.
Madison Avenue Assocs., Inc.,
926 F.3d 329, 333 (CA7 2019) (Barrett, J.).
Requiring a plaintiff to demonstrate a concrete
and particularized injury caused by the defendant and redressable
by the court ensures that federal courts decide only “the rights of
individuals,”
Marbury v.
Madison, 1 Cranch 137, 170
(1803), and that federal courts exercise “their proper function in
a limited and separated government,” Roberts, Article III Limits on
Statutory Standing, 42 Duke L. J. 1219, 1224 (1993). Under
Article III, federal courts do not adjudicate hypothetical or
abstract disputes. Federal courts do not possess a roving
commission to publicly opine on every legal question. Federal
courts do not exercise general legal oversight of the Legislative
and Executive Branches, or of private entities. And federal courts
do not issue advisory opinions. As Madison explained in
Philadelphia, federal courts instead decide only matters “of a
Judiciary Nature.” 2 Records of the Federal Convention of 1787, p.
430 (M. Farrand ed. 1966).
In sum, under Article III, a federal court may
resolve only “a real controversy with real impact on real persons.”
American Legion v.
American Humanist Assn., 588
U. S. ___, ___ (2019) (Gorsuch, J., concurring in judgment)
(slip op., at 10).
B
The question in this case focuses on the
Article III requirement that the plaintiff ’s injury in fact
be “concrete”—that is, “real, and not abstract.”
Spokeo,
Inc. v.
Robins, 578 U.S. 330, 340 (2016) (internal
quotation marks omitted); see
Susan B. Anthony List v.
Driehaus,
573 U.S.
149, 158 (2014);
Summers v.
Earth Island
Institute,
555
U.S. 488, 493 (2009);
Lujan, 504 U. S., at 560;
Schlesinger v.
Reservists Comm. to Stop the War,
418 U.S.
208, 220–221 (1974).
What makes a harm concrete for purposes of
Article III? As a general matter, the Court has explained that
“history and tradition offer a meaningful guide to the types of
cases that Article III empowers federal courts to consider.”
Sprint Communications Co. v.
APCC Services, Inc.,
554 U.S.
269, 274 (2008); see also
Steel Co. v.
Citizens for
Better Environment,
523 U.S.
83, 102 (1998). And with respect to the concrete-harm
requirement in particular, this Court’s opinion in
Spokeo v.
Robins indicated that courts should assess whether the
alleged injury to the plaintiff has a “close relationship” to a
harm “traditionally” recognized as providing a basis for a lawsuit
in American courts. 578 U. S., at 341. That inquiry asks
whether plaintiffs have identified a close historical or common-law
analogue for their asserted injury.
Spokeo does not require
an exact duplicate in American history and tradition. But
Spokeo is not an open-ended invitation for federal courts to
loosen Article III based on contemporary, evolving beliefs about
what kinds of suits should be heard in federal courts.
As
Spokeo explained, certain harms
readily qualify as concrete injuries under Article III. The most
obvious are traditional tangible harms, such as physical harms and
monetary harms. If a defendant has caused physical or monetary
injury to the plaintiff, the plaintiff has suffered a concrete
injury in fact under Article III.
Various intangible harms can also be concrete.
Chief among them are injuries with a close relationship to harms
traditionally recognized as providing a basis for lawsuits in
American courts.
Id., at 340–341. Those include, for
example, reputational harms, disclosure of private information, and
intrusion upon seclusion. See,
e.g., Meese v.
Keene,
481 U.S.
465, 473 (1987) (reputational harms);
Davis v.
Federal Election Comm’n,
554 U.S.
724, 733 (2008) (disclosure of private information); see also
Gadelhak v.
AT&T Services, Inc., 950 F.3d 458,
462 (CA7 2020) (Barrett, J.) (intrusion upon seclusion). And those
traditional harms may also include harms specified by the
Constitution itself. See,
e.g., Spokeo, 578
U. S., at 340 (citing
Pleasant Grove City v.
Summum,
555 U.S.
460 (2009) (abridgment of free speech), and
Church of Lukumi
Babalu Aye, Inc. v.
Hialeah,
508
U.S. 520 (1993) (infringement of free exercise)).
In determining whether a harm is sufficiently
concrete to qualify as an injury in fact, the Court in
Spokeo said that Congress’s views may be “instructive.” 578
U. S., at 341. Courts must afford due respect to Congress’s
decision to impose a statutory prohibition or obligation on a
defendant, and to grant a plaintiff a cause of action to sue over
the defendant’s violation of that statutory prohibition or
obligation. See
id., at 340–341. In that way, Congress may
“elevate to the status of legally cognizable injuries concrete,
de facto injuries that were previously inadequate in
law.”
Id., at 341 (alterations and internal quotation marks
omitted); see
Lujan, 504 U. S., at 562–563, 578; cf.,
e.g., Allen v.
Wright,
468
U.S. 737, 757, n. 22 (1984) (discriminatory treatment). But
even though “Congress may ‘elevate’ harms that ‘exist’ in the real
world before Congress recognized them to actionable legal status,
it may not simply enact an injury into existence, using its
lawmaking power to transform something that is not remotely harmful
into something that is.”
Hagy v.
Demers & Adams,
882 F.3d 616, 622 (CA6 2018) (Sutton, J.) (citing
Spokeo,
578 U. S., at 341).
Importantly, this Court has rejected the
proposition that “a plaintiff automatically satisfies the
injury-in-fact requirement whenever a statute grants a person a
statutory right and purports to authorize that person to sue to
vindicate that right.”
Spokeo, 578 U. S., at 341. As
the Court emphasized in
Spokeo, “Article III standing
requires a concrete injury even in the context of a statutory
violation.”
Ibid.
Congress’s creation of a statutory prohibition
or obligation and a cause of action does not relieve courts of
their responsibility to independently decide whether a plaintiff
has suffered a concrete harm under Article III any more than, for
example, Congress’s enactment of a law regulating speech relieves
courts of their responsibility to independently decide whether the
law violates the First Amendment. Cf.
United States v.
Eichman,
496 U.S.
310, 317–318 (1990). As Judge Katsas has rightly stated, “we
cannot treat an injury as ‘concrete’ for Article III purposes based
only on Congress’s say-so.”
Trichell v.
Midland Credit
Mgmt., Inc., 964 F.3d 990, 999, n. 2 (CA11 2020) (sitting by
designation); see
Marbury, 1 Cranch, at 178; see also
Raines, 521 U. S., at 820, n. 3;
Simon v.
Eastern Ky. Welfare Rights Organization,
426 U.S.
26, 41, n. 22 (1976);
Muskrat v.
United States,
219 U.S.
346, 361–362 (1911).
For standing purposes, therefore, an important
difference exists between (i) a plaintiff ’s statutory cause
of action to sue a defendant over the defendant’s violation of
federal law, and (ii) a plaintiff ’s suffering concrete harm
because of the defendant’s violation of federal law. Congress may
enact legal prohibitions and obligations. And Congress may create
causes of action for plaintiffs to sue defendants who violate those
legal prohibitions or obligations. But under Article III, an injury
in law is not an injury in fact. Only those plaintiffs who have
been
concretely harmed by a defendant’s statutory
violation may sue that private defendant over that violation in
federal court. As then-Judge Barrett succinctly summarized,
“Article III grants federal courts the power to redress harms that
defendants cause plaintiffs, not a freewheeling power to hold
defendants accountable for legal infractions.”
Casillas, 926
F. 3d, at 332.
To appreciate how the Article III “concrete
harm” principle operates in practice, consider two different
hypothetical plaintiffs. Suppose first that a Maine citizen’s land
is polluted by a nearby factory. She sues the company, alleging
that it violated a federal environmental law and damaged her
property. Suppose also that a second plaintiff in Hawaii files a
federal lawsuit alleging that the same company in Maine violated
that same environmental law by polluting land in Maine. The
violation did not personally harm the plaintiff in Hawaii.
Even if Congress affords both hypothetical
plaintiffs a cause of action (with statutory damages available) to
sue over the defendant’s legal violation, Article III standing
doctrine sharply distinguishes between those two scenarios. The
first lawsuit may of course proceed in federal court because the
plaintiff has suffered concrete harm to her property. But the
second lawsuit may not proceed because that plaintiff has not
suffered any physical, monetary, or cognizable intangible harm
traditionally recognized as providing a basis for a lawsuit in
American courts. An uninjured plaintiff who sues in those
circumstances is, by definition, not seeking to remedy any harm to
herself but instead is merely seeking to ensure a defendant’s
“compliance with regulatory law” (and, of course, to obtain some
money via the statutory damages).
Spokeo, 578 U. S., at
345 (Thomas, J., concurring) (internal quotation marks omitted);
see
Steel Co., 523 U. S., at 106–107. Those are not
grounds for Article III standing.[
1]
As those examples illustrate, if the law of
Article III did not require plaintiffs to demonstrate a “concrete
harm,” Congress could authorize virtually any citizen to bring a
statutory damages suit against virtually any defendant who violated
virtually any federal law. Such an expansive understanding of
Article III would flout constitutional text, history, and
precedent. In our view, the public interest that private entities
comply with the law cannot “be converted into an individual right
by a statute that denominates it as such, and that permits all
citizens (or, for that matter, a subclass of citizens who suffer no
distinctive concrete harm) to sue.”
Lujan, 504 U. S.,
at 576–577.[
2]
A regime where Congress could freely authorize
unharmed plaintiffs to sue defendants who violate federal
law not only would violate Article III but also would infringe on
the Executive Branch’s Article II authority. We accept the
“displacement of the democratically elected branches when necessary
to decide an actual case.” Roberts, 42 Duke L. J.
, at
1230. But otherwise, the choice of how to prioritize and how
aggressively to pursue legal actions against defendants who violate
the law falls within the discretion of the Executive Branch, not
within the purview of private plaintiffs (and their attorneys).
Private plaintiffs are not accountable to the people and are not
charged with pursuing the public interest in enforcing a
defendant’s general compliance with regulatory law. See
Lujan, 504 U. S., at 577.
In sum, the concrete-harm requirement is
essential to the Constitution’s separation of powers. To be sure,
the concrete-harm requirement can be difficult to apply in some
cases. Some advocate that the concrete-harm requirement be ditched
altogether, on the theory that it would be more efficient or
convenient to simply say that a statutory violation and a cause of
action suffice to afford a plaintiff standing. But as the Court has
often stated, “the fact that a given law or procedure is efficient,
convenient, and useful in facilitating functions of government,
standing alone, will not save it if it is contrary to the
Constitution.”
Chadha, 462 U. S., at 944. So it is
here.[
3]
III
We now apply those fundamental standing
principles to this lawsuit. We must determine whether the 8,185
class members have standing to sue TransUnion for its alleged
violations of the Fair Credit Reporting Act. The plaintiffs argue
that TransUnion failed to comply with statutory obligations (i) to
follow reasonable procedures to ensure the accuracy of credit files
so that the files would not include OFAC alerts labeling the
plaintiffs as potential terrorists; and (ii) to provide a consumer,
upon request, with his or her complete credit file, including a
summary of rights.
Some preliminaries: As the party invoking
federal jurisdiction, the plaintiffs bear the burden of
demonstrating that they have standing. See
Lujan v.
Defenders of Wildlife,
504
U.S. 555, 561 (1992). Every class member must have Article III
standing in order to recover individual damages. “Article III does
not give federal courts the power to order relief to any uninjured
plaintiff, class action or not.”
Tyson Foods, Inc. v.
Bouaphakeo, 577 U.S. 442, 466 (2016) (Roberts, C. J.,
concurring).[
4] Plaintiffs must
maintain their personal interest in the dispute at all stages of
litigation.
Davis v.
Federal Election Comm’n,
554 U.S.
724, 733 (2008). A plaintiff must demonstrate standing “with
the manner and degree of evidence required at the successive stages
of the litigation.”
Lujan, 504 U. S., at 561.
Therefore, in a case like this that proceeds to trial, the specific
facts set forth by the plaintiff to support standing “must be
supported adequately by the evidence adduced at trial.”
Ibid. (internal quotation marks omitted). And standing is
not dispensed in gross; rather, plaintiffs must demonstrate
standing for each claim that they press and for each form of relief
that they seek (for example, injunctive relief and damages).
Davis, 554 U. S., at 734;
Friends of the Earth,
Inc. v.
Laidlaw Environmental Services (TOC), Inc.,
528 U.S.
167, 185 (2000).
A
We first address the plaintiffs’ claim that
TransUnion failed to “follow reasonable procedures to assure
maximum possible accuracy” of the plaintiffs’ credit files
maintained by TransUnion. 15 U. S. C. §1681e(b). In
particular, the plaintiffs argue that TransUnion did not do enough
to ensure that OFAC alerts labeling them as potential terrorists
were not included in their credit files.
Assuming that the plaintiffs are correct that
TransUnion violated its obligations under the Fair Credit Reporting
Act to use reasonable procedures in internally maintaining the
credit files, we must determine whether the 8,185 class members
suffered concrete harm from TransUnion’s failure to employ
reasonable procedures.[
5]
1
Start with the 1,853 class members (including
the named plaintiff Ramirez) whose reports were disseminated to
third-party businesses. The plaintiffs argue that the publication
to a third party of a credit report bearing a misleading OFAC alert
injures the subject of the report. The plaintiffs contend that this
injury bears a “close relationship” to a harm traditionally
recognized as providing a basis for a lawsuit in American
courts—namely, the reputational harm associated with the tort of
defamation.
Spokeo, Inc. v.
Robins, 578 U.S. 330, 341
(2016).
We agree with the plaintiffs. Under longstanding
American law, a person is injured when a defamatory statement “that
would subject him to hatred, contempt, or ridicule” is published to
a third party.
Milkovich v.
Lorain Journal Co.,
497 U.S.
1, 13 (1990) (internal quotation marks omitted);
Gertz
v.
Robert Welch, Inc.,
418 U.S.
323, 349 (1974); see also Restatement of Torts §559 (1938).
TransUnion provided third parties with credit reports containing
OFAC alerts that labeled the class members as potential terrorists,
drug traffickers, or serious criminals. The 1,853 class members
therefore suffered a harm with a “close relationship” to the harm
associated with the tort of defamation. We have no trouble
concluding that the 1,853 class members suffered a concrete harm
that qualifies as an injury in fact.
TransUnion counters that those 1,853 class
members did not suffer a harm with a “close relationship” to
defamation because the OFAC alerts on the disseminated credit
reports were only misleading and not literally false. See
id., §558. TransUnion points out that the reports merely
identified a consumer as a “
potential match” to an
individual on the OFAC list—a fact that TransUnion says is not
technically false.
In looking to whether a plaintiff ’s
asserted harm has a “close relationship” to a harm traditionally
recognized as providing a basis for a lawsuit in American courts,
we do not require an exact duplicate. The harm from being labeled a
“potential terrorist” bears a close relationship to the harm from
being labeled a “terrorist.” In other words, the harm from a
misleading statement of this kind bears a sufficiently close
relationship to the harm from a false and defamatory statement.
In short, the 1,853 class members whose reports
were disseminated to third parties suffered a concrete injury in
fact under Article III.
2
The remaining 6,332 class members are a
different story. To be sure, their credit files, which were
maintained by TransUnion, contained misleading OFAC alerts. But the
parties stipulated that TransUnion did not provide those
plaintiffs’ credit information to any potential creditors during
the class period from January 2011 to July 2011. Given the absence
of dissemination, we must determine whether the 6,332 class members
suffered some other concrete harm for purposes of Article III.
The initial question is whether the mere
existence of a misleading OFAC alert in a consumer’s internal
credit file at TransUnion constitutes a concrete injury. As Judge
Tatel phrased it in a similar context, “if inaccurate information
falls into” a consumer’s credit file, “does it make a sound?”
Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Assn., Inc. v.
United
States Dept. of Transp., 879 F.3d 339, 344 (CADC 2018).
Writing the opinion for the D. C. Circuit
in
Owner-Operator, Judge Tatel answered no. Publication is
“essential to liability” in a suit for defamation. Restatement of
Torts §577, Comment
a, at 192. And there is “no historical
or common-law analog where the mere existence of inaccurate
information, absent dissemination, amounts to concrete injury.”
Owner-Operator, 879 F. 3d, at 344–345. “Since the basis
of the action for words was the loss of credit or fame, and not the
insult, it was always necessary to show a publication of the
words.” J. Baker, An Introduction to English Legal History 474 (5th
ed. 2019). Other Courts of Appeals have similarly recognized that,
as Judge Colloton summarized, the “retention of information
lawfully obtained, without further disclosure, traditionally has
not provided the basis for a lawsuit in American courts,” meaning
that the mere existence of inaccurate information in a database is
insufficient to confer Article III standing.
Braitberg v.
Charter Communications, Inc., 836 F.3d 925, 930 (CA8 2016);
see
Gubala v.
Time Warner Cable, Inc., 846 F.3d 909,
912 (CA7 2017).
The standing inquiry in this case thus
distinguishes between (i) credit files that consumer reporting
agencies maintain internally and (ii) the consumer credit reports
that consumer reporting agencies disseminate to third-party
creditors. The mere presence of an inaccuracy in an internal credit
file, if it is not disclosed to a third party, causes no concrete
harm. In cases such as these where allegedly inaccurate or
misleading information sits in a company database, the plaintiffs’
harm is roughly the same, legally speaking, as if someone wrote a
defamatory letter and then stored it in her desk drawer. A letter
that is not sent does not harm anyone, no matter how insulting the
letter is. So too here.[
6]
Because the plaintiffs cannot demonstrate that
the misleading information in the internal credit files itself
constitutes a concrete harm, the plaintiffs advance a separate
argument based on an asserted
risk of future harm.
They say that the 6,332 class members suffered a concrete injury
for Article III purposes because the existence of misleading OFAC
alerts in their internal credit files exposed them to a material
risk that the information would be disseminated in the future to
third parties and thereby cause them harm. The plaintiffs rely on
language from
Spokeo where the Court said that “the risk of
real harm” (or as the Court otherwise stated, a “material risk of
harm”) can sometimes “satisfy the requirement of concreteness.” 578
U. S., at 341–342 (citing
Clapper v.
Amnesty Int’l
USA,
568 U.S.
398 (2013)).
To support its statement that a material risk of
future harm can satisfy the concrete-harm requirement,
Spokeo cited this Court’s decision in
Clapper. But
importantly,
Clapper involved a suit for
injunctive
relief. As this Court has recognized, a person exposed to a
risk of future harm may pursue forward-looking, injunctive relief
to prevent the harm from occurring, at least so long as the risk of
harm is sufficiently imminent and substantial. See
Clapper,
568 U. S., at 414, n. 5;
Los Angeles v.
Lyons,
461 U.S.
95, 102 (1983); see also
Gubala, 846 F. 3d, at
912.
But a plaintiff must “demonstrate standing
separately for each form of relief sought.”
Friends of the
Earth, 528 U. S., at 185. Therefore, a plaintiff ’s
standing to seek injunctive relief does not necessarily mean that
the plaintiff has standing to seek retrospective damages.
TransUnion advances a persuasive argument that
in a suit for damages, the mere risk of future harm, standing
alone, cannot qualify as a concrete harm—at least unless the
exposure to the risk of future harm itself causes a
separate
concrete harm. Brief for Petitioner 39, n. 4; Tr. of Oral Arg.
36.[
7] TransUnion contends that
if an individual is exposed to a risk of future harm, time will
eventually reveal whether the risk materializes in the form of
actual harm. If the risk of future harm materializes and the
individual suffers a concrete harm, then the harm itself, and not
the pre-existing risk, will constitute a basis for the person’s
injury and for damages. If the risk of future harm does
not
materialize, then the individual cannot establish a concrete harm
sufficient for standing, according to TransUnion.
Consider an example. Suppose that a woman drives
home from work a quarter mile ahead of a reckless driver who is
dangerously swerving across lanes. The reckless driver has exposed
the woman to a risk of future harm, but the risk does not
materialize and the woman makes it home safely. As counsel for
TransUnion stated, that would ordinarily be cause for celebration,
not a lawsuit.
Id., at 8. But if the reckless driver crashes
into the woman’s car, the situation would be different, and
(assuming a cause of action) the woman could sue the driver for
damages.
The plaintiffs note that
Spokeo cited
libel and slander
per se as examples of cases where, as
the plaintiffs see it, a mere risk of harm suffices for a damages
claim. But as Judge Tatel explained for the D. C. Circuit,
libel and slander
per se “require evidence of
publication.”
Owner-Operator, 879 F. 3d, at 345.
And for those torts, publication is generally presumed to cause a
harm, albeit not a readily quantifiable harm. As
Spokeo
noted, “the law has long permitted recovery by certain tort victims
even if their harms may be difficult to prove or measure.”
578 U. S., at 341 (emphasis added). But there is a significant
difference between (i) an actual harm that has occurred but is not
readily quantifiable, as in cases of libel and slander
per se, and (ii) a mere risk of future harm. By citing
libel and slander
per se,
Spokeo did not hold
that the mere risk of future harm, without more, suffices to
demonstrate Article III standing in a suit for damages.
Here, the 6,332 plaintiffs did not demonstrate
that the risk of future harm materialized—that is, that the
inaccurate OFAC alerts in their internal TransUnion credit files
were ever provided to third parties or caused a denial of credit.
Nor did those plaintiffs present evidence that the class members
were independently harmed by their exposure to the risk itself—that
is, that they suffered some other injury (such as an emotional
injury) from the mere risk that their credit reports would be
provided to third-party businesses. Therefore, the 6,332
plaintiffs’ argument for standing for their damages claims based on
an asserted risk of future harm is unavailing.
Even apart from that fundamental problem with
their argument based on the risk of future harm, the plaintiffs did
not factually establish a sufficient risk of future harm to support
Article III standing. As Judge McKeown explained in her dissent,
the risk of future harm that the 6,332 plaintiffs identified—the
risk of dissemination to third parties—was too speculative to
support Article III standing. 951 F.3d 1008, 1040 (2020); see
Whitmore v.
Arkansas,
495 U.S.
149, 157 (1990). The plaintiffs claimed that TransUnion could
have divulged their misleading credit information to a third party
at any moment. But the plaintiffs did not demonstrate a sufficient
likelihood that their individual credit information would be
requested by third-party businesses and provided by TransUnion
during the relevant time period. Nor did the plaintiffs demonstrate
that there was a sufficient likelihood that TransUnion would
otherwise intentionally or accidentally release their information
to third parties. “Because no evidence in the record establishes a
serious likelihood of disclosure, we cannot simply presume a
material risk of concrete harm.” 951 F. 3d, at 1040 (opinion
of McKeown, J.).
Moreover, the plaintiffs did not present any
evidence that the 6,332 class members even
knew that there
were OFAC alerts in their internal TransUnion credit files. If
those plaintiffs prevailed in this case, many of them would first
learn that they were “injured” when they received a check
compensating them for their supposed “injury.” It is difficult to
see how a risk of future harm could supply the basis for a
plaintiff ’s standing when the plaintiff did not even know
that there was a risk of future harm.
Finally, the plaintiffs advance one last
argument for why the 6,332 class members are similarly situated to
the other 1,853 class members and thus should have standing. The
6,332 plaintiffs note that they sought damages for the entire
46-month period permitted by the statute of limitations, whereas
the stipulation regarding dissemination covered only 7 of those
months. They argue that the credit reports of many of those 6,332
class members were likely also sent to third parties outside of the
period covered by the stipulation because all of the class members
requested copies of their reports, and consumers usually do not
request copies unless they are contemplating a transaction that
would trigger a credit check.
That is a serious argument, but in the end, we
conclude that it fails to support standing for the 6,332 class
members. The plaintiffs had the burden to prove at trial that their
reports were actually sent to third-party businesses. The
inferences on which the argument rests are too weak to demonstrate
that the reports of any particular number of the 6,332 class
members were sent to third-party businesses. The plaintiffs’
attorneys could have attempted to show that some or all of the
6,332 class members were injured in that way. They presumably could
have sought the names and addresses of those individuals, and they
could have contacted them. In the face of the stipulation, which
pointedly failed to demonstrate dissemination for those class
members, the inferences on which the plaintiffs rely are
insufficient to support standing. Cf.
Interstate Circuit,
Inc. v.
United States,
306 U.S.
208, 226 (1939) (“The production of weak evidence when strong
is available can lead only to the conclusion that the strong would
have been adverse”).
In sum, the 6,332 class members whose internal
TransUnion credit files were not disseminated to third-party
businesses did not suffer a concrete harm. By contrast, the 1,853
class members (including Ramirez) whose credit reports were
disseminated to third-party businesses during the class period
suffered a concrete harm.
B
We next address the plaintiffs’ standing to
recover damages for two other claims in the complaint: the
disclosure claim and the summary-of-rights claim. Those two claims
are intertwined.
In the disclosure claim, the plaintiffs alleged
that TransUnion breached its obligation to provide them with their
complete credit files upon request. According to the plaintiffs,
TransUnion sent the plaintiffs copies of their credit files that
omitted the OFAC information, and then in a second mailing sent the
OFAC information. See §1681g(a)(1). In the summary-of-rights claim,
the plaintiffs further asserted that TransUnion should have
included another summary of rights in that second mailing—the
mailing that included the OFAC information. See §1681g(c)(2). As
the plaintiffs note, the disclosure and summary-of-rights
requirements are designed to protect consumers’ interests in
learning of any inaccuracies in their credit files so that they can
promptly correct the files before they are disseminated to third
parties.
In support of standing, the plaintiffs thus
contend that the TransUnion mailings were formatted incorrectly and
deprived them of their right to receive information in the format
required by statute. But the plaintiffs have not demonstrated that
the format of TransUnion’s mailings caused them a harm with a close
relationship to a harm traditionally recognized as providing a
basis for a lawsuit in American courts. See
Spokeo, 578
U. S., at 341. In fact, they do not demonstrate that they
suffered any harm
at all from the formatting violations. The
plaintiffs presented no evidence that, other than Ramirez, “a
single other class member so much as
opened the dual
mailings,” “nor that they were confused, distressed, or relied on
the information in any way.” 951 F. 3d, at 1039, 1041 (opinion
of McKeown, J.) (emphasis added). The plaintiffs put forth no
evidence, moreover, that the plaintiffs would have tried to correct
their credit files—and thereby prevented dissemination of a
misleading report—had they been sent the information in the proper
format.
Ibid. Without any evidence of harm caused by the
format of the mailings, these are “bare procedural violation[s],
divorced from any concrete harm.”
Spokeo, 578 U. S., at
341. That does not suffice for Article III standing.[
8]
The plaintiffs separately argue that
TransUnion’s formatting violations created a risk of future harm.
Specifically, the plaintiffs contend that consumers who received
the information in this dual-mailing format were at risk of not
learning about the OFAC alert in their credit files. They say that
they were thus at risk of not being able to correct their credit
files before TransUnion disseminated credit reports containing the
misleading information to third-party businesses. As noted above,
the risk of future harm on its own does not support Article III
standing for the plaintiffs’ damages claim. In any event, the
plaintiffs made no effort here to explain how the formatting error
prevented them from contacting TransUnion to correct any errors
before misleading credit reports were disseminated to third-party
businesses. To reiterate, there is no evidence that “a single other
class member so much as opened the dual mailings,” “nor that they
were confused, distressed, or relied on the information in any
way.” 951 F. 3d, at 1039, 1041 (opinion of McKeown, J.).
For its part, the United States as
amicus
curiae, but not the plaintiffs, separately asserts that the
plaintiffs suffered a concrete “informational injury” under several
of this Court’s precedents. See
Federal Election Comm’n v.
Akins,
524 U.S.
11 (1998);
Public Citizen v.
Department of
Justice,
491 U.S.
440 (1989). We disagree. The plaintiffs did not allege that
they failed to receive any required information. They argued only
that they received it
in the wrong format. Therefore,
Akins and
Public Citizen do not control here. In
addition, those cases involved denial of information subject to
public-disclosure or sunshine laws that entitle all members of the
public to certain information. This case does not involve such a
public-disclosure law. See
Casillas v.
Madison Avenue
Assocs., Inc., 926 F.3d 329, 338 (CA7 2019);
Trichell v.
Midland Credit Mgmt., Inc., 964 F.3d 990, 1004 (CA11 2020).
Moreover, the plaintiffs have identified no “downstream
consequences” from failing to receive the required information.
Trichell, 964 F. 3d, at 1004. They did not demonstrate,
for example, that the alleged information deficit hindered their
ability to correct erroneous information before it was later sent
to third parties. An “asserted informational injury that causes no
adverse effects cannot satisfy Article III.”
Ibid.
* * *
No concrete harm, no standing. The 1,853 class
members whose credit reports were provided to third-party
businesses suffered a concrete harm and thus have standing as to
the reasonable-procedures claim. The 6,332 class members whose
credit reports were not provided to third-party businesses did not
suffer a concrete harm and thus do not have standing as to the
reasonable-procedures claim. As for the claims pertaining to the
format of TransUnion’s mailings, none of the 8,185 class members
other than the named plaintiff Ramirez suffered a concrete
harm.
We reverse the judgment of the U. S. Court
of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit and remand the case for further
proceedings consistent with this opinion. In light of our
conclusion about Article III standing, we need not decide whether
Ramirez’s claims were typical of the claims of the class under Rule
23. On remand, the Ninth Circuit may consider in the first instance
whether class certification is appropriate in light of our
conclusion about standing.
It is so ordered.