In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
____________________
No. 13‐1821
MARK SUESZ, individually and on behalf of a class,
Plaintiff‐Appellant,
v.
MED‐1 SOLUTIONS, LLC,
Defendant‐Appellee.
____________________
Appeal from the United States District Court for the
Southern District of Indiana, Indianapolis Division.
No. 1:12‐cv‐1517‐WTL‐MJD — William T. Lawrence, Judge.
____________________
ARGUED OCTOBER 3, 2013 — DECIDED OCTOBER 31, 2013
____________________
Before POSNER, FLAUM, and WILLIAMS, Circuit Judges.
FLAUM, Circuit Judge. Defendant‐appellee Med‐1 Solu‐
tions bought the medical debt of Mark Suesz and filed a col‐
lection action in the Marion County Small Claims Court for
Pike Township. Med‐1 obtained a favorable judgment, but
Suesz then filed suit in federal district court seeking damag‐
es under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. The FDCPA
contains a venue provision requiring debt collectors to bring
suit in the “judicial district” where the contract was signed
2 No. 13‐1821
or where the consumer resides. Suesz asserts that Med‐1 vio‐
lated this provision because he lives in a neighboring county
and the debt was incurred in a township other than Pike.
The district court dismissed Suesz’s claim after finding Mar‐
ion County Small Claims Courts were not judicial districts
for the purposes of the FDCPA. We agree, and affirm the
dismissal of Suesz’s complaint.
I. Background
Med‐1 is in the business of buying delinquent debts. It
purchased Suesz’s debt from Community Hospital North in
Indianapolis. In March 2012 it filed a collection suit in the
Pike Township small claims court, located in Marion Coun‐
ty.1 Med‐1 prevailed in the small claims action, and received
a judgment against Suesz for $1,280.
Suesz lives one county over from Marion. Though he in‐
curred the debt in Marion County, he did so in Lawrence
Township, where Community North Hospital sits, and not
in Pike Township. Suesz says that it is Med‐1’s practice to file
claims in Pike Township regardless of the origins of the dis‐
pute.2
1 Marion County is coterminous with the City of Indianapolis and is
governed by a City‐County Council.
2 Suesz posits that this practice is an attempt at forum shopping. He cites
a study on the township courts commissioned by the Indiana Supreme
Court which came to a similar conclusion. See John G. Baker & Betty Bar‐
teau, Marion County Small Claims Courts Task Force, Report on the
Marion County Small Claims Courts (2012), available at
www.in.gov/judiciary/3844.htm.
No. 13‐1821 3
Suesz filed a putative class action3 alleging that Med‐1’s
suit in Pike Township violated the FDCPA’s venue provision.
The district court granted Med‐1’s motion to dismiss. It rea‐
soned that the Pike Township small claims court did not
constitute an FDCPA judicial district, but was instead an
administrative subset of the Marion County Circuit Court.
The court was guided by our decision in Newsom v. Friedman,
76 F.3d 813 (7th Cir. 1996). It noted that the township courts
were not courts of record and did not use juries, that liti‐
gants could file suit in any of the township courts in the
county, that the Marion County Circuit Court judge could
transfer cases between township courts for administrative
convenience, and that the circuit court judge aided the town‐
ship courts, including by establishing uniform township
court rules. Suesz now appeals the dismissal of his com‐
plaint.
II. Discussion
We review the district court’s dismissal of a complaint de
novo. Tamayo v. Blagojevich, 526 F.3d 1074, 1081 (7th Cir.
2008).
A. The policy behind § 1692i of the FDCPA
Congress enacted the FDCPA to curb abusive practices by
debt collectors, and § 1692i of the law punishes the “unfair
practice” of filing against consumers in “distant or inconven‐
ient forums that can make it difficult for debtors to appear.”
3 He moved for class certification, but the parties agreed to defer the is‐
sue. The district court’s ruling was explicitly limited to Suesz individual‐
ly.
4 No. 13‐1821
Hess v. Cohen & Slamowitz LLP, 637 F.3d 117, 120 (2d Cir.
2011) (quoting S. Rep. No. 95382, at 5 (1977), reprinted in 1977
U.S.C.C.A.N. 1695, 1699). To that end, debt collectors are
permitted to bring collection actions “only in the judicial dis‐
trict or similar legal entity in which such consumer signed
the contract sued upon; or in which such consumer resides
at the commencement” of the action. 15 U.S.C. § 1692i.
Congress did not specially define “judicial district” in the
statute, but that does not make the phrase vague. We simply
construe it according to its common meaning. Newsom, 76
F.3d at 817; see also Whitfield v. United States, 543 U.S. 209, 213
(2005) (noting the “settled principle of statutory construction
that, absent contrary indications, Congress intends to adopt
the common law definition of statutory terms”). Thus, in
Newsom, we first turned to the definition of “judicial district”
found in Black’s Law Dictionary at the time the FDCPA was
enacted. Id. at 817.4 As we shall fully detail below, that defi‐
nition framed our § 1692i analysis, and required a detailed
look at the details of the Cook County Circuit Court and Illi‐
nois’s broader judicial system.
We took this approach because debt collectors almost al‐
ways bring collection actions in state courts, and the specifics
of state judicial structures differ. Section 1692i’s check on fo‐
rum shopping thus requires us to consider these structures
as a whole. See, e.g., Newsom, 76 F.3d at 817–18. The dissent
would impose a one‐factor test asking only which court with
4 The new edition of Black’s omits the definition for “judicial district” for
reasons of which we are unaware. This is immaterial. The relevant ques‐
tion is how the term was defined at the FDCPA’s enactment.
No. 13‐1821 5
original jurisdiction over the collection action is closest to the
debtor.5 But if Congress had intended this, it could easily
have enacted such a provision. We continue to believe the
FDCPA requires a more searching analysis of the structure
and function of the state’s judicial organization. Although
Congress sought to aid unsophisticated parties who are the
target of unfair debt collection methods, it was aware that it
was imposing the FDCPA on our patchwork federal frame‐
work. Section 1692i may have been the legislature’s attempt
to balance its desire to aid debtors against the realities of our
varied state court systems.
At any rate, we see no reason to depart from our existing
approach in § 1692i cases. That requires us to undertake a
detailed examination of the structure of Indiana’s judiciary
before we can determine what units are FDCPA judicial dis‐
tricts.
5 The dissent also attempts to discredit our systematic approach with an
intended reductio ad absurdum. It posits that, in the unlikely event that a
federal court had jurisdiction over a collection action, and in a state with
only one federal district (Montana, in the dissent’s example), a debt col‐
lector could opt for the most inconvenient forum for the debtor possible
(the long road from Missoula to Billings). Slip op. at 19. This is an open
question that would depend on the particulars of the District of Mon‐
tana. But if, after conducting the analysis, it seemed that the District of
Montana did function as a single judicial district, the dissent would be
correct that a debt collector could file in either location. However, that
result would be faithful to the text of the § 1692 that Congress did enact.
This is not incongruous, considering Congress’s challenge in enacting a
venue provision that applies from Anchorage to Atlanta.
6 No. 13‐1821
B. The Indiana court system
Indiana has constitutionally established its courts of gen‐
eral and original jurisdiction: the circuit courts. Ind. Const.
art. 7. Layered on top is a patchwork of statutorily created
courts. These include superior courts, city and town courts,
and the Marion County Small Claims Courts (what we have
referred to as the “township courts”).
With the exception of one circuit, the circuit courts are
divided along county lines. Ind. Code § 33‐28‐1‐2(a)(1)–(2).
Each county contains only one circuit court. For this reason
the General Assembly created superior courts as trial‐level
courts to lessen the circuit court’s caseload. Ind. Code § 33‐
29‐1‐1.5. The number and functioning of superior courts and
their relationship with the circuit court varies from county to
county. But cases can typically be transferred between the
two courts as necessary and agreed upon by the various
judges. Ind. Code § 33‐29‐1‐9. Many counties, especially the
smaller ones, feature a so‐called “standard superior court” as
provided for in Indiana Code § 33‐29‐1‐1. Standard superior
courts contain a special small claims docket for civil actions
where the amount or value of the property sought is no
more than $6,000. Ind. Code § 33‐29‐2‐4. Both the superior
courts and the circuit court may exercise appellate de novo
review over the decisions of town or city courts within the
circuit or, in the case of Marion County, the township courts.
Ind. Code § 33‐34‐3‐15.
Another species of tribunal in Indiana is the city and
town courts. Cities and towns are authorized to establish
these courts by ordinance. Ind. Code § 33‐35‐1‐1. City courts
are helmed by a judge who is tasked with adopting rules for
the court’s functioning, and enjoys all the powers incident to
No. 13‐1821 7
a court of record (though they are not courts of record them‐
selves). Ind. Code § 33‐35‐2‐1. City courts enjoy jurisdiction
over all city ordinance violations, all misdemeanors, and
some small claims. Ind. Code § 33‐35‐2‐4, 2‐5. Once a case is
filed in city court, the venue cannot be changed. Ind. Code
§ 33‐35‐5‐2. Judges serve as triers of fact until a jury demand
is made, in which time six jurors from the community decide
the case. Ind. Code § 33‐35‐5‐5.
Finally, there are the township courts in Marion County.
These courts are unique in the state. They are established by
statute but supported by the nine townships, which are re‐
sponsible for providing facilities and paying the salaries of
officials. Ind. Code § 33‐34‐6‐1. All fees generated by these
courts are returned to the township coffers. Like the small
claims dockets of the superior courts, the township courts
have original and concurrent jurisdiction over civil actions
seeking up to $6,000, though they are limited in subject mat‐
ter jurisdiction to contract and tort cases. Ind. Code § 33‐34‐
3‐2. The Marion County Superior Court does not have a de‐
voted small claims docket (as many of its analogs do). Such a
docket would largely mirror the jurisdiction of the township
courts if it existed. Cf. John G. Baker & Betty Barteau, Marion
County Small Claims Courts Task Force, Report on the Mar‐
ion County Small Claims Courts 7 (2012), available at
www.in.gov/judiciary/3844.htm (noting that “[i]n Indiana’s
other counties [that is, other than Marion], small claims are
heard by … superior courts as part of a small claims/minor
offenses docket … .”). The township courts have countywide
jurisdiction, and litigants are free to file small claims cases in
any of the townships in the county. There is therefore no bar
to the courts’ hearing the cases where they are brought—but
if the defendant objects to venue, and the court finds that
8 No. 13‐1821
“required venue” lies elsewhere, it must transfer the case to
another township. Ind. Code § 33‐34‐3‐1(a). For debts, like
the one in this case, the preferred venue is the place where
the contract was signed, followed in priority by the township
where the transactions giving rise to the claim took place, or
where the defendants reside or do business. Ind. Code § 33‐
34‐3‐1(b).
The township courts are also distinct in their functioning.
They are not courts of record and claims may not be tried to
a jury—if a defendant seeks a jury trial the case is transferred
to the superior court. Ind. Code § 33‐34‐1‐3, 3‐11. Court rules
are created by the circuit court judge and uniform across the
nine courts. Ind. Code § 33‐34‐3‐6. The circuit judge also has
the discretion to transfer cases from one township to anoth‐
er. Ind. Code § 33‐34‐5‐1. Finally, as mentioned above, the
circuit and superior courts may both exercise de novo re‐
view over the decisions of the township courts.
C. The township courts are not FDCPA judicial districts
The district court focused on our decision in Newsom, 76
F.3d 813, our only previous foray into § 1692i. The case con‐
cerned a debt collection action filed in the first district of the
municipal department in downtown Chicago against a resi‐
dent of suburban Schaumburg. Id. at 815–16. The debtor filed
suit in the Northern District of Illinois under the FDCPA, al‐
leging that the debt collector should have instead filed the
debt collection action in the third district of the municipal
department, where she lived. Id. at 816. The district court
dismissed the case and we affirmed. Id.
As noted above, we defined “judicial district” by using
Black’s Law Dictionary. Id. at 817. The term was there de‐
No. 13‐1821 9
fined: “One of the circuits or precincts into which a state is
commonly divided for judicial purposes; a court of general
original jurisdiction being usually provided in each of such
districts, and the boundaries of the district marking the terri‐
torial limits of its authority … .” Id. (quoting Black’s Law
Dictionary 848 (6th ed. 1990)).
Using this definition for our analysis, we concluded that
the municipal department districts were not FDCPA judicial
districts. The key factor was the lack of territorially‐based
limits on the courts’ authority. The municipal department
had limited jurisdiction, and heard only smaller claims. For
cases eligible to be heard in the forum, an order of the circuit
court required actions to be filed in the district of the debt‐
or’s residence or where the transaction arose. Newsom, 76
F.3d at 818. Yet we did not consider this filing limitation to
be a venue requirement because a separate order permitted
cases to be heard anywhere in the county as necessary, and
to be freely transferred for administrative convenience. Id. at
819. Additionally, filing a case in the wrong district in viola‐
tion of the rules did not deprive the court of jurisdiction or
lead to dismissal—it led only to a transfer to the correct loca‐
tion. Id. In sum, the “boundaries between the Municipal De‐
partment administrative subdistricts [did] not set any terri‐
torial limits to the subdistrict’s authority within the Cir‐
cuit[,]” and the districts were therefore units of administra‐
tive convenience for the Circuit Court of Cook County. Id.
The only other court of appeals to give § 1692i a thor‐
ough treatment is the Second Circuit in its 2011 case, Hess v.
Cohen & Slamowitz LLP. 637 F.3d 117 (2d Cir. 2011). The court
found the Syracuse City Court to be a judicial district for
FDCPA purposes. The New York statute governing the city
10 No. 13‐1821
courts limited their authority to city residents or residents of
contiguous towns. Id. at 122. Defendants not subject to city
court jurisdiction were free to move for dismissal. Id. The
court found that where a court system “is governed by laws
that limit the territorial extent of those courts based on … a
defendant’s contacts with the forum[,]” those “laws delimit
the ‘judicial district’” for purposes of the FDCPA. Id. at 123.
The Second Circuit discussed our opinion in Newsom and
found our approaches consistent. Id. at 126–27. We agree.
The authority of the city courts in New York was circum‐
scribed by the statutorily required nexus between the de‐
fendant and the forum’s territorial boundaries. Id. at 127. It
was not so with the municipal district divisions we con‐
fronted in Newsom, where the venue rules did not subject
misfiled suits to dismissal. The Hess city courts also func‐
tioned more as independent judicial districts on the ground:
whereas Cook County municipal department suits could be
freely transferred between different courtrooms for adminis‐
trative convenience, this was not the case with New York’s
city courts and their county counterparts.
Like our decision in Newsom, the Second Circuit’s analy‐
sis highlights the importance of looking to the details of the
state court organizational apparatus in making the FDCPA
judicial district determination. Our nod in Newsom to the old
Black’s Law Dictionary definition of judicial district gives us
a starting point in our analysis, though it may not take us all
the way home. The first half of the definition, “[o]ne of the
circuits or precincts into which a state is commonly divided
for judicial purposes; a court of general original jurisdiction
being usually provided in each such districts” is unlikely to
do much independent work, other than to definitively iden‐
No. 13‐1821 11
tify the state’s primary judicial division—typically at the
county level—as an FDCPA judicial district. This is not con‐
troversial, and litigants are unlikely to assert a right under
the FDCPA to file debt collection actions in neighboring
counties.
But a court need not have general jurisdiction to be con‐
sidered an FDCPA judicial district. Though its decision does
not bind us, the Second Circuit found that a court of limited
jurisdiction could constitute a judicial district—and our
analysis in Newsom did not foreclose the idea. Indeed, if we
thought general jurisdiction an absolute prerequisite, we
could have ended our analysis of the municipal department
divisions upon noting their limited jurisdiction. General ju‐
risdiction is sufficient to make a court an FDCPA judicial
district, but it is not necessary.
We can glean additional guidance from the definition’s
tail end, which notes that the boundaries of a judicial district
typically mark “the territorial limits of its authority.” This is
the most salient difference between the city courts in New
York and the municipal department districts in Illinois. A
key indicator of judicial districts is whether there is a statu‐
torily required nexus between the defendant’s contacts with
the forum and the forum’s boundaries.
This definitional approach is only part of the equation,
however. In Newsom, we paid close attention to the practical
functioning of the court in question, as did the Second Cir‐
cuit in Hess. This approach makes sense, given the language
of § 1692i. Recall that the statute restricts filings to judicial
districts and “similar legal entities.” While the parties do not
urge any independent significance of this clause, we noted in
Newsom that it refers to entities “similar in structure and
12 No. 13‐1821
function to judicial districts.” 76 F.3d at 820. Thus, a forum
like the New York city courts in Hess that lacks one of the
touchstones in the Black’s definition could still be an FDCPA
judicial district if it “function[s] as [a] judicial district[].”
Newsom, 76 F.3d at 819.
So what are we to make of the Indiana township courts?
As we suggested above, our first indicator—whether the
court is one of general jurisdiction—does not take us far. The
circuit courts, as the repositories of general jurisdiction,
clearly qualify as FDCPA judicial districts. But this alone
does not disqualify the township courts if they otherwise
look like judicial districts. Newsom and Hess leave open the
possibility that courts of limited jurisdiction can properly be
FDCPA judicial districts.
Still, the township courts fall short of constituting free‐
standing judicial districts for several reasons. First, they fall
short under our definition, because the limitations on their
authority are not coterminous with township boundaries.
We find it especially significant that the statute permits debt
collectors to file actions anywhere in the county, rather than
limiting the township courts’ reach to township borders.
This makes the township courts similar to the municipal de‐
partment districts in Newsom where filing outside the district
did not compromise jurisdiction. 76 F.3d at 819. The statute
also distinguishes the township courts from the city courts in
Hess, where jurisdiction was more tightly circumscribed. 637
F.3d at 122–23. This filing flexibility suggests that the proper
judicial district is Marion County as a whole, rather than the
individual townships.
This conclusion is buttressed when we look at the way
the courts actually function: the township courts in practice
No. 13‐1821 13
are a component part of the Marion County Circuit Court.
Like the districts in Newsom, cases can be transferred be‐
tween township courts at the discretion of the circuit judge.
76 F.3d at 819. The circuit judge also has other administrative
authority over the township courts, including establishing
uniform rules of procedure and assisting in the preparation
of court records. External establishment of court rules is not
unique, of course, but this practice contrasts with the Indi‐
ana city and town courts, which are tasked with developing
their own sets of rules. It is also noteworthy that the Marion
County Superior Court lacks a small claims docket—which
every other superior court in Indiana has. This suggests that
the township courts, superior court, and circuit court are
meant to function as a symbiotic whole, with the township
courts obviating the need for a superior court small claims
docket.6
Suesz argues the township courts are better analogized to
the city courts in Hess. There, citizens not subject to the ju‐
risdiction of the court were deemed to have waived their ju‐
risdictional objection if they did not raise it, but if they did
raise it, they were entitled to mandatory dismissal. Suesz
says that the venue provisions here—which require the
township court to transfer the case automatically to a pre‐
ferred venue upon proper motion—are similar. We are un‐
convinced for two reasons. First, on a formal level, jurisdic‐
tion and venue are different creatures: the former deprives
the court of its authority to decide the case at all, while the
6 Though the township courts are financially supported by the town‐
ships and not the county, this is not enough to overcome the other fac‐
tors suggesting that they are not FDCPA judicial districts.
14 No. 13‐1821
latter is concerned with the parties’ convenience and evi‐
dence. Suesz’s argument breaks down on the practical level
as well. In Hess, the limitations on the place of filing were
statutory—the filing of a city court action outside the geo‐
graphical limits was improper, even if subject to waiver. In
contrast, the filing of a debt collection action in any of Mari‐
on County’s townships is not improper. In fact, it is perfectly
permissible under the text of the statute.7 Even if venue can
later be changed upon motion, this does not make the town‐
ship courts FDCPA judicial districts.
One final argument advanced by Suesz bears highlight‐
ing. At oral argument, counsel suggested a distinction be‐
tween Hess and Newsom based on the source of the court’s
creation. The courts in Hess were created by statute, while
the districts in Newsom were the product of an administra‐
tive order—which presumably means that the court would
be free to alter or abolish them as it saw fit. The township
courts, Suesz argues, are more like the city courts in Hess be‐
cause they too are creatures of statute. We agree that looking
to the source of court creation is appealing as a convenient
way to identify FDCPA judicial districts. But here the argu‐
ment proves too much. The Indiana General Assembly estab‐
lished not just township and city courts by statute, but also
the superior courts. It would be an absurd result if the supe‐
7 It is consistent with our analysis that the territorial limits on Syracuse
city court jurisdiction in Hess included both the town and towns contig‐
uous. The statute still required a territorial nexus between the defendant
and the forum. In other words, there was no reason that the FDCPA ju‐
dicial district could not be the town and surrounding ones, not just the
town itself.
No. 13‐1821 15
rior court were considered a separate judicial district from
the circuit court, as the superior courts are the handmaiden
to the circuit court, together creating the trial court of gen‐
eral jurisdiction in the counties. We thus decline Suesz’s invi‐
tation to look to the origins of the court as a dispositive fac‐
tor in our FDCPA analysis.
III. Conclusion
As we have seen, the township courts are not FDCPA ju‐
dicial districts, either in form or in function. We therefore
AFFIRM the district court’s dismissal of Suesz’s complaint.
16 No. 13‐1821
POSNER, Circuit Judge, dissenting. The panel majority, in
affirming the dismissal of this suit, understandably relies
heavily on Newsom v. Friedman, 76 F.3d 813 (7th Cir. 1996).
But Newsom is unsound and should be overruled. It inter‐
preted the same provision of the Fair Debt Collection Prac‐
tices Act that we’re asked to interpret in this case, but, like
this case, it did so without reference to the Act’s purpose. It
treated statutory interpretation as a purely semantic activi‐
ty—as it can be when the statutory language is extremely
clear; but when it is not, the purpose of the statute can’t be
ignored, as it was in Newsom and is again today. Echoing
Newsom, the opinion in the present case says that it “simply
construe[s the term ‘judicial district’] according to its com‐
mon meaning,” consistent with the principle that “Congress
intends to adopt the common law definition of statutory
terms.” But there is no “common meaning” of judicial dis‐
trict, let alone a “common law meaning.” And why would
Congress want to give a statutory term a common law mean‐
ing, anyway?
Purposive interpretation must not be confused with the
interpretive approach championed by the Supreme Court in
the 1960s, as in J.I. Case Co. v. Borak, 377 U.S. 426 (1964)—
finding implicit in statutes rights (for example, to seek dam‐
ages for a violation of a statute that does not specify damag‐
es as a remedy) that would make the statute more likely to
achieve its aim. That now‐abandoned approach overlooked
the fact that statutes are very often the product of compro‐
mise. It can’t be assumed that in passing a statute that cre‐
ates a remedy for a perceived wrong, Congress wants the
courts to amend the statute (in the guise of interpretation) by
adding remedies that will increase the statute’s severity, thus
overriding limitations on that severity that may have been
No. 13‐1821 17
the price for getting the statute enacted. But what our court
did in Newsom and does again today is not to strengthen a
statute that Congress might not have wanted strengthened,
but to weaken a statute that Congress had given no evidence
of wanting weakened.
The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act is designed to pre‐
vent excesses by debt collectors. 15 U.S.C. §§ 1692(a), (e) (“it
is the purpose of this subchapter to eliminate abusive debt
collection practices by debt collectors”); Muha v. Encore Re‐
ceivable Management, Inc., 558 F.3d 623, 629 (7th Cir. 2009);
Jacobson v. Healthcare Financial Services, Inc., 516 F.3d 85, 89
(2d Cir. 2008). By “debt collectors” is understood firms that
try to collect consumer debts, which usually are too small to
justify a lawsuit unless the debt is promptly defaulted,
thereby enabling the debt collector to obtain—without incur‐
ring significant litigation cost—a judgment that it can use to
collect the debt by garnishing the debtor’s wages. O’Rourke
v. Palisades Acquisition XVI, LLC, 635 F.3d 938, 940 (7th Cir.
2011) (“with the costs of litigation and the difficulties estab‐
lishing the debt, when a debt collector cannot get payment
through phone calls and letters and it has to go to court, the
debt collector will often rely on default judgments as the last
resort”); see Evory v. RJM Acquisitions Funding L.L.C., 505
F.3d 769, 775 (7th Cir. 2007); White v. Goodman, 200 F.3d 1016,
1019 (7th Cir. 2000); Bernice Yeung, “Some Lawyers Want to
Keep Debt Collection Out of the Courts,” New York Times,
Apr. 23, 2010, p. A21A, www.nytimes.com/2010/04/23/us/
23sfdebt.html (visited Oct. 30, 2013). Deprived of contested
litigation as a feasible means of obtaining repayment of a
small debt, debt collectors resort to substitutes, some unsa‐
vory, such as harassment, as noted in such cases as FCC v.
Pacifica Foundation, 438 U.S. 726, 749 n. 27 (1978), and Horkey
18 No. 13‐1821
v. J.V.D.B. & Associates, Inc., 333 F.3d 769, 771 (7th Cir. 2003);
see also W. Page Keeton et al., Prosser and Keeton on Torts
§ 12, pp. 61–62 (5th ed. 1984).
One harassing tactic is to file a claim against a debtor in a
court remote from his home or place of work, in the hope
that he’ll default rather than take the trouble to travel to the
remote site of the court, see Hess v. Cohen & Slamowitz LLP,
637 F.3d 117, 124 (2d Cir. 2011); or to file in a court in which
judges are unsympathetic to debtors. In short, debt collectors
shop for the most advantageous forum, abetted by decisions
such as the one in this case.
It is against this background, rather than in a vacuum,
that we should be interpreting the provision of the Fair Debt
Collection Practices Act at issue in this case. That provision
states that unless the debt sued on is secured by real estate, a
debt collector can bring a legal action to collect it “only in the
judicial district or similar legal entity—(A) in which such
consumer signed the contract sued upon; or (B) in which
such consumer resides at the commencement of the action.”
15 U.S.C. § 1692i(a)(2). (If real estate is security for the loan,
as it is not in this case, the action must be brought in the ju‐
dicial district or similar legal entity in which the property is
located, § 1692i(a)(1); that will usually be an advantageous
venue from the debtor’s standpoint.) The bigger the district
and therefore the more courts it contains and the farther the
debtor may have to travel to the court chosen by the debt
collector to sue the debtor in, the greater the debt collector’s
opportunity to forum shop. The natural objective to impute
to the quoted venue provisions, and thus to the key term
“judicial district or similar legal entity,” is to limit forum
shopping by debt collectors. A purposive interpretation of
No. 13‐1821 19
the phrase would ask what interpretation would protect
consumer debtors without crimping the collection efforts of
debt collectors beyond the point fixed or implied in the stat‐
ute.
Newsom did not take the approach I’ve suggested; nor
does the panel in this case. Both opinions take a purely se‐
mantic approach: the court asks what meaning can be as‐
signed to “judicial district” and “similar legal entity” with‐
out reference to statutory purpose. One possible outcome of
the semantic approach would be that “judicial district”
means anything called a “judicial district,” and “similar legal
entity” anything that is identical to some (maybe any) judi‐
cial district but called by a different name. Suppose a state
had a judicial structure identical to that of another state, but
the other state was divided into “judicial districts” while the
first state was divided the same way but its “districts” were
called “judicial divisions.” Those divisions would be similar
legal entities within the meaning of the Fair Debt Collection
Practices Act on the literalistic interpretation that I’m assum‐
ing, but divisions of federal districts would not be. The
Northern District of Illinois is divided into two divisions,
called the Western Division and the Eastern Division. Obvi‐
ously they are not identical to the Northern District; they are
components of it. So under the approach adopted in Newsom
and the present case, if a debtor lived in and had signed a
loan contract in Chicago (which is in the Eastern Division), a
debt collector could (in the unlikely event of being able to
find a federal jurisdictional basis for suing the debtor in fed‐
eral court) nevertheless sue the debtor in Rockford. That city
is in the Western Division—and is 89 miles by car from Chi‐
cago. In Montana, by the logic of Newsom and the majority
opinion in the present case, a resident of Billings could be
20 No. 13‐1821
made by a debt collector to drive 346 miles one way to the
federal courthouse in Missoula to defend against the debt
collector’s suit, even though Billings has its own federal
courthouse, because both courthouses would be in the same
“judicial district,” namely the District of Montana.
Newsom concerned debt collection in Illinois rather than,
as in this case, Indiana. The Illinois Constitution divides the
state into Judicial Circuits, which are analogous to federal
districts. The Circuit Court of Cook County (the most popu‐
lous Illinois county, as it is the county that contains Chicago)
has created six Municipal Department Districts. Newsom v.
Friedman, supra, 76 F.3d at 818. The First Municipal District is
Chicago, and has courts at nine locations.
www.cookcountycourt.org/aboutthecourt/
MunicipalDepartment/FirstMunicipalDistrictChicago.aspx
(visited Oct. 30, 2013). Suits for debts that do not exceed a
specified amount ($30,000 in Chicago, $100,000 in the sub‐
urbs, see Circuit Court of Cook County General Order Nos.
1.2, 2.3(b)(1), (2)) may be filed in a Municipal Department
court in the district in which either the debtor resides or the
transaction giving rise to the debt took place—venues simi‐
lar to those specified in the Fair Debt Collection Practices
Act. But the Cook County ordinance that creates these Mu‐
nicipal Department courts authorizes the Circuit Court to
transfer suits filed in a Municipal Department court to any
other court in the county, which needn’t be a Municipal De‐
partment court. Cook County General Order No. 1.3(a).
There is also authorization for transfer “to any other de‐
partment, division or district” of the Cook County Circuit
Court “for the convenience of parties and witnesses and for
the more efficient disposition of litigation.” Id., 1.3(d). This
provision seems to have been decisive in the ruling in New‐
No. 13‐1821 21
som that the Municipal Department Districts are not judicial
districts or similar legal entities within the meaning of the
Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. The “judicial district or
similar legal entity” is, according to Newsom, Cook County.
I don’t get it. The land area of Cook County is almost
1000 square miles. The county stretches 47 miles from its
southern to its northern border. Debt collectors can easily
find a court that is inconvenient to the debtor in which to sue
him. For example, while suburban Evanston Hospital is few‐
er than 5 miles from the Second Municipal District Court‐
house in Skokie, it is more than 40 miles from the Sixth Mu‐
nicipal District Courthouse in Markham. The debt collector
in Newsom sued the debtor in downtown Chicago, more than
30 miles from Schaumburg, where the debtor lived—and
where the debt collector could have sued her.
I can think of no reason related to the Fair Debt Collec‐
tion Practices Act for disqualifying the Cook County Munic‐
ipal Department Districts from being regarded as judicial
districts or similar legal entities. No reason is given in the
Newsom opinion or in the majority opinion in the present
case. To deem them judicial districts or similar legal entities
would prevent forum shopping by debt collectors that can
undermine the effectiveness of the federal act. It is especially
puzzling that the court in Newsom, committed as it was to a
literalistic approach to statutory interpretation, refused to
classify Cook County’s Municipal Department Districts as
judicial districts, while classifying Cook County Circuit as a
judicial district. So literalism went out the window.
The court thought that only a judicial entity created by
the Illinois Constitution could be a judicial district. (The
Municipal Department Districts had been created by the Cir‐
22 No. 13‐1821
cuit Court of Cook County.) Where does that idea come
from? There isn’t even a semantic basis for limiting the defi‐
nition of “judicial district” to a district created by state rather
than county law; the words “state,” “county,” “city,” or
“township” do not appear in section 1692i.
That is the section we’re interpreting, and Newsom should
have related it to what the Circuit Court of Cook County had
done. It had created Municipal Department Districts for the
convenience of litigants, lawyers, and judges. It had divided
the county into six districts and placed a courtroom near the
center of each, all for convenience’s sake. Section 1692i says
in effect: “debt collector, you must sue in the court most
convenient to the debtor.” The court in Newsom failed to put
two and two together.
Marion County, which is coterminous with the City of
Indianapolis, is Indiana’s most populous county, and is thus
to Indiana as Cook County (dominated by Chicago) is to Illi‐
nois. Alone among Indiana counties it has “Township Small
Claims Courts” (nine in number), which are similar to Cook
County’s Municipal Department District courts, although
their jurisdiction is limited to claims that do not exceed
$6,000. Ind. Code § 33‐34‐3‐2. A report commissioned by the
Indiana Supreme Court and authored by two Indiana appel‐
late judges found that debt collectors seek out judges who
favor debt collectors and are distant from the debtor’s resi‐
dence.
Although the right to a change of venue appears on the
Notice of Claim, many defendants are unaware that
they have a right to ask the court to transfer the case to
the townships where they live. Defendants without
private transportation face few realistic options for
No. 13‐1821 23
travel to township courts outside their own townships.
For example, it can take more than three hours, round‐
trip, to travel from Lawrence Township to the Decatur
Township Small Claims Court via city bus. Litigants
who choose to take a taxi instead will pay an extraor‐
dinary amount to travel from Lawrence Township to
Decatur Township.
John G. Baker & Betty Barteau, Report on the Marion County
Small Claims Courts 13–14 (May 1, 2012), www.in.gov/
judiciary/files/pubs‐smclaims‐rept‐2012.pdf (visited Oct. 30,
2013).
The named plaintiff in this case lives in Hancock County,
which adjoins Marion County on the east. There is, as noted
in the report on the County’s small claims courts, a Town‐
ship Small Claims Court in Lawrence, which is on the east
side of Marion County, close to the plaintiff’s residence. The
defendant debt collector could have sued him there because
that was where the debt had been incurred. Instead it sued
him in the Township Small Claims Court in Pike Township,
at the western end of Marion County, 20 miles from Law‐
rence and a 54‐mile round trip from the plaintiff’s home. A
debtor has a right to a change of venue to a more convenient
small‐claims court—but only if he files a motion within ten
days of service. Ind. Code § 33‐34‐3‐1(a). How many small
debtors have heard of “venue” or would think to ask for a
transfer of the suit against them to another court—much less
within ten days? Debt collectors have a wide choice of courts
in which to sue; in practice, even if not in principle, the
debtors do not.
The debt collector’s brief, dry as dust, makes no effort to
relate the meaning of “judicial district or similar legal entity”
24 No. 13‐1821
to the purpose of the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. The
plaintiff’s briefs are pretty dry as well, but do at least explain
how the forum shopping enabled by the approach taken in
Newsom denies important protections to debtors—though of
course the plaintiff tries to distinguish that decision from
this case. He points us to Hess v. Cohen & Slamowitz LLP, su‐
pra, which held that the City Courts of New York State,
which are similar to Cook County’s Municipal Department
District courts and Marion County’s Township Small Claims
Courts, are judicial districts under the Fair Debt Collection
Practices Act. But the court in Hess distinguished Newsom,
rather than rejecting it, on the ground that the Municipal
Department District courts had been created by the Circuit
Court of Cook County as a matter of administrative conven‐
ience and (as I noted earlier) the Circuit Court can reassign a
case from one divisional court to another, while the circum‐
stances in which reassignment of a case is possible from one
City Court to another in New York are “very limited.” 637
F.3d at 127. What any of this has to do with the concerns be‐
hind the venue provisions of the Fair Debt Collection Prac‐
tices Act escapes me. What’s true is that a debt collector is
free to choose a court system (federal, county, city, or town‐
ship, depending on jurisdictional requirements) in which to
file. But once it makes its choice, section 1692i requires it to
pick the most convenient court within the system’s territorial
limits. That would be Lawrence Township court in this case,
Clay town court in Hess (as that court held), and the Third
Municipal District in Newsom, contrary to our holding in that
case.
The defendant debt collector in the present case special‐
izes in collecting debts for medical treatment, and many of
the debtors are elderly or in poor health (often of course
No. 13‐1821 25
both), which makes them especially vulnerable to the de‐
fendant’s disreputable tactics.