NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
File Name: 14a0041n.06
No. 13-3635
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED
Jan 16, 2014
JERRY S. ESTEP; AMBER ESTEP )
DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
)
Plaintiffs-Appellants, )
)
ON APPEAL FROM THE
v. )
UNITED STATES DISTRICT
)
COURT FOR THE
MANLEY DEAS KOCHALSKI, LLC )
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF
)
OHIO
Defendant-Appellee. )
)
)
BEFORE: SUHRHEINRICH, GIBBONS, and COOK, CIRCUIT JUDGES.
JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge. Two homeowners seek to use a consumer-
protection statute to hold lawyers accountable for their allegedly deceptive conduct in separate
foreclosure litigation. This case involves one small aspect of Wells Fargo’s effort to repossess
the home of plaintiffs Jerry and Amber Estep and then to sell their home to the United States
Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), which itself planned to resell the home
to an undetermined homebuyer. Defendant Manley Deas Kochalski (MDK), Wells Fargo’s law
firm, filed a state-court foreclosure action against the Esteps on Wells Fargo’s behalf. MDK
subsequently sent a letter to the Esteps stating that they would be required to vacate the home
unless they sought and received permission from HUD to remain in the home after its sale. The
Esteps believed the letter to be inaccurate and misleading, and they filed suit against MDK
pursuant to the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. The district court dismissed the Esteps’
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Estep v. Manley Deas Kochalski, LLC
claims, holding that the statute does not extend to MDK’s letter because that letter was not
intended to induce payment by the Esteps. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.
I.
Congress has authorized HUD to purchase certain repossessed homes and to resell those
homes to qualified homebuyers. To facilitate the prompt resale of these homes, HUD generally
will not purchase a home unless it is unoccupied. See 24 C.F.R. § 203.678. But HUD has
established certain exceptions to this rule. HUD will sometimes purchase an occupied home if
the occupant suffers from an illness or injury, for example, or if state laws prohibit the
foreclosing bank from evicting the occupant. See § 203.670(b). Even these exceptions are
subject to various conditions, however: The occupant must submit a timely continued-occupancy
application to HUD, for example, and when HUD agrees to purchase an occupied home, the
occupant generally may continue to live in the home only temporarily. See § 203.674.
Although a house is an asset, it is also a source of considerable expense. Until a
foreclosing mortgagee is able to sell a repossessed house, the mortgagee absorbs all of the costs
associated with the house. When HUD purchases a house from a mortgagee, those costs become
the responsibility of the United States. HUD therefore wants to minimize the time that a
repossessed house spends on the market, and the agency seeks to resolve occupancy disputes
during the foreclosure process—before HUD purchases the house from the mortgagee. To that
end, HUD regulations direct foreclosing mortgagees to inform occupant mortgagors of HUD’s
continued-occupancy requirements before the foreclosing mortgagee acquires title to the home.
“At least 60 days, but not more than 90 days, before the date on which the mortgagee reasonably
expects to acquire title to the property,” the foreclosing mortgagee must notify both the
mortgagor and the occupant (if they are separate people) that HUD might acquire the property.
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See § 203.675(a). That notice must inform the occupant that HUD will permit the occupant to
continue to live in the home only if the occupant submits a written request to HUD “within 20
days of the date of the mortgagee’s notice to the occupant.” § 203.675(b)(3). The mortgagee
must tell the occupant that “the property must be vacated before the scheduled time of
acquisition” unless the occupant submits, and HUD approves, a timely request for continued
occupancy. § 203.675(b)(5).
***
The Esteps owned and lived in a house on Murray Hill Road in Columbus, Ohio. Almost
three years ago, MDK filed a mortgage foreclosure action related to that house in Ohio state
court on behalf of their client, Wells Fargo. The Esteps retained counsel and answered Wells
Fargo’s complaint. Within several months, the parties were engaged in discovery.
The month after discovery began, MDK sent a letter to the Esteps declaring that the
mortgage on their home would be foreclosed and that “ownership of the property will be
transferred to Wells Fargo probably within the next 60 to 90 days.” Once Wells Fargo
repossessed the property, the letter stated, ownership likely would be transferred to HUD.
The letter informed the Esteps that “HUD generally requires that there be no one living in
properties for which it accepts ownership unless certain conditions are met.” The letter further
stated that the Esteps must submit a written request to HUD within twenty days if they wished to
continue to live in the property after HUD assumed ownership. MDK attached to the letter a
schedule listing HUD’s conditions of continued occupancy, a HUD form entitled “Request for
Occupied Conveyance,” a Fannie Mae “Request for Verification of Employment,” and a brief
notice explaining that continued occupancy of HUD properties is only temporary. The letter
explained how to complete these forms and provided an address to which the forms were to be
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sent. At the bottom of the letter, under the header “IMPORTANT NOTICE,” MDK wrote:
“YOU MUST REPLY TO THE HUD OFFICE IN WRITING WITHIN 20 DAYS OF THE
DATE ON THIS LETTER OR YOU WILL BE REQUIRED TO MOVE FROM THE
PROPERTY.”
The Esteps filed this action against MDK in federal district court one year later. The
complaint alleged five violations of the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1692–
1692p: (1) communicating directly with the Esteps despite having knowledge that they were
represented by counsel, in violation of 15 U.S.C. § 1692c(a)(2); (2) threatening to take action
that cannot legally be taken or that is not intended to be taken, in violation of 15 U.S.C. §
1692e(5); (3) falsely representing that ownership of the Esteps’ house would be transferred to
Wells Fargo within ninety days of the date of the letter, in violation of 15 U.S.C. § 1692e(10);
(4) falsely representing that the Esteps would be require to vacate their home if they did not
return the enclosed documents to HUD within twenty days of the date of the letter, in violation of
15 U.S.C. § 1692e(10); and (5) threatening to take possession of the Esteps’ home despite
lacking that right, in violation of 15 U.S.C. § 1692f(6)(A). MDK moved to dismiss for failure to
state a claim, and the district court granted the motion. The Esteps timely appealed.
II.
The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) prohibits debt collectors from using
unfair practices or making deceptive representations in connection with the collection of a debt.
See 15 U.S.C. §§ 1692c, 1692e, 1692f. The statutory language imposes two threshold criteria
that limit its scope: The FDCPA regulates only the conduct of “debt collectors” and only
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communications made “in connection with the collection of any debt.”1 The question posed to
this court is whether MDK’s letter to the Esteps was sent in connection with MDK’s effort to
collect the Esteps’ unpaid mortgage debt. Like the district court, we conclude that it was not.
“The text of § 1692e makes clear that, to be actionable, a communication need not itself
be a collection attempt; it need only be ‘connect[ed]’ with one.” Grden v. Leikin Ingber &
Winters PC, 643 F.3d 169, 173 (6th Cir. 2011) (alteration in original). “But it is just as clear that
‘the statute does not apply to every communication between a debt collector and a debtor.’” Id.
(quoting Gburek v. Litton Loan Servicing LP, 614 F.3d 380, 384–85 (7th Cir. 2010)). “[F]or a
communication to be in connection with the collection of a debt, an animating purpose of the
communication must be to induce payment by the debtor.” Id.; see also Simon v. FIA Card
Servs., N.A., 732 F.3d 259, 266 (3d Cir. 2013) (“Other circuits considering related questions have
similarly held that the FDCPA applies to litigation-related activities that do not include an
explicit demand for payment when the general purpose is to collect payment.”). This includes
communications that aim to make a separate collection attempt—including mortgage foreclosure
litigation—more likely to succeed. Grden, 643 F.3d at 173; see also Glazer v. Chase Home Fin.
LLC, 704 F.3d 453, 464 (6th Cir. 2013) (holding that mortgage foreclosure is debt collection
under the FDCPA).
The “animating purposes” of the communication is a question of fact that generally is
committed to the discretion of the jurors, not the court. Cf. Grden, 643 F.3d at 173 (“Thus, under
the circumstances present here, a reasonable jury could not find that an animating purpose of the
1
The Esteps assert claims under §§ 1692c, 1692e, and 1692f. Only §§ 1692c and 1692e
use the phrase “in connection with the collection of any debt.” Section 1692f says “[a] debt
collector may not use unfair or unconscionable means to collect or attempt to collect any debt.”
Despite this varying language, however, the meaning is the same: All three statutes apply only
to conduct undertaken or communications made in connection with the collection of a debt. We
therefore use one common test to determine whether all three statutes govern MDK’s letter.
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statements was to induce payment by [the debtor].”). Because this case comes before this court
on a motion to dismiss, we need not determine MDK’s actual purpose when sending the letter.
Rather, we ask whether it is plausible, based on the facts alleged in the complaint, that one of the
purposes animating MDK’s decision to send the letter was to induce payment by the Esteps. Cf.
Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 678–79 (2009).
At the outset, we emphasize that there can be more than one purpose behind a
communication. It is beyond dispute that the general purpose of MDK’s letter was to inform the
Esteps of HUD’s continued-occupancy requirements and to comply with the HUD regulations
that required Wells Fargo to send the letter. Wells Fargo intended to transfer the Esteps’ home to
HUD after taking possession, and the occupied-conveyance notice was a condition precedent to
such a transfer. The general purpose of MDK’s letter thus was not to collect any money. But
that is not the end of our inquiry. MDK and Wells Fargo could have had ancillary motives for
sending that specific letter at that specific time. We therefore look beyond the letter’s general
purpose and ask whether it is plausible that any animating purpose of the letter was to induce
some form of payment by the Esteps.2
The Esteps’ principal complaint is that MDK failed to comply with the HUD regulations
that govern the timing and content of occupied-conveyance notices. Failure to comply with
those regulations, of course, is not itself a legitimate basis for bringing suit under the FDCPA.
The FDCPA and the HUD occupied-conveyance regulations are two discrete regulatory schemes
that serve distinct purposes and operate independently of one another. But the extent to which
2
Grden and Gburek ask whether an animating purpose of the communication was to
induce payment by the debtor. The word “payment” should not be interpreted too narrowly. It
includes both direct payments and payments in kind. Thus, if the letter was intended to induce
the Esteps to leave their home prematurely, and Wells Fargo would receive some financial
benefit as a result of that outcome, then the letter would be sent in connection with MDK’s effort
to collect the debt owed to Wells Fargo.
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the timing and content of MDK’s letter deviated from the HUD requirements might shed light on
MDK’s animating purposes. We therefore must examine MDK’s letter in the context of the
HUD regulations to determine whether it is plausible that an animating purpose of the letter was
to induce payment by the Esteps.
We begin with the issue of timing. HUD regulations require foreclosing mortgagees to
send an occupied-conveyance notice not more than ninety days before the mortgagee reasonably
expects to acquire title to the property. 24 C.F.R. § 203.675(a). The Esteps contend that MDK
sent the letter more than ninety days before they reasonably expected Wells Fargo to acquire
title.3 Yet even if that is true, that amounts to a violation of the HUD regulation rather than the
FDCPA. The Esteps have not explained how MDK’s decision to send the letter prematurely
could be intended to induce payment. The Esteps argue only that the premature letter might have
been intended to permit Wells Fargo and MDK “to save the costs and time of obtaining and
serving a writ of possession to have Appellants leave the property, instead of permitting
Appellants to reside in the property until the confirmation of sale.” The implication is that MDK
hoped that if they sent the notice prematurely, the Esteps would just pack up and leave within
twenty days, saving Wells Fargo the expense of removing them from their home. But it is
simply implausible that a homeowner locked in foreclosure litigation with her mortgagee would
pack her belongings and vacate the house upon receipt of the HUD-mandated occupied-
conveyance notice, and it is concomitantly implausible that MDK sought that result when they
sent the letter. We therefore cannot accept the suggestion that MDK intentionally sent the letter
prematurely in an effort to convince the Esteps to leave their home.
3
This allegation appears in the Esteps’ brief rather than their complaint. We will
overlook that error, which would provide a separate basis for rejecting their argument.
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Nor are we able to conjure up a situation in which a mortgagee (or its agent) would
manipulate the timing of an occupied-conveyance notice to induce a mortgagor to pay the
outstanding mortgage debt. At most, a premature occupied-conveyance notice is likely to cause
the recipient to submit her occupied-conveyance application to HUD prematurely. It is not at all
clear how that might benefit the mortgagee. It is therefore implausible that the decision to send a
premature occupied-conveyance notice would be animated by an intent to induce payment of the
outstanding mortgage debt or to provoke some other action beneficial to the mortgagee, and
failure to comply with the HUD regulations governing the timing of the occupied-conveyance
notice thus does not subject a mortgagee or its agents to liability under the FDCPA.
The Esteps’ timeliness challenge amounts to a quibble with the reasonableness of MDK’s
assessment of the date on which Wells Fargo would acquire title to their property. But the
FDCPA is not the proper vehicle for homeowners to challenge the reasonableness of that
expectation. The HUD regulations commit that decision to the discretion of the foreclosing
mortgagee and its agents, see 24 C.F.R. § 203.675(a), and any challenge to the reasonableness of
the mortgagee’s assessment should not be brought under the FDCPA.
On the other hand, a foreclosing mortgagee—or a law firm acting on the mortgagee’s
behalf—might include certain content in an occupied-conveyance notice to induce payment of
the outstanding mortgage debt. The mortgagee might simply add language insisting on payment,
for example, or offering an incentive to settle the foreclosure litigation. Cf. Gburek, 614 F.3d at
385 (stating that § 1692e applies to “a communication made specifically to induce the debtor to
settle her debt”). Or the notice might include more subtle attempts to influence the homeowner’s
behavior vis-à-vis the mortgagee.
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Nothing in MDK’s letter, however, can be construed as an attempt to induce some sort of
payment by the Esteps. The Esteps point to two discrepancies between MDK’s letter and the
form notice provided in HUD Handbook 4330.1 Rev-5, Administration of Insured Home
Mortgages, § 9-11 & app. 40 (1994), available at http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD?src=/
program_offices/administration/hudclips/handbooks/hsgh/4330.1. Both discrepancies consist of
omissions from rather than additions to the form notice, however, and neither discrepancy
supports the inference that MDK sought to use the notice to induce payment.
The HUD Handbook requires foreclosing mortgagees to include the following disclaimer
at the end of an occupied-conveyance notice:
YOU MUST REPLY TO THE HUD FIELD OFFICE IN WRITING WITHIN
THE NEXT 20 DAYS OF THE DATE ON THIS LETTER OR YOU WILL BE
REQUIRED TO MOVE FROM THE PROPERTY BEFORE HUD BECOMES
OWNER OF THE PROPERTY.
See id. MDK’s letter to the Esteps omitted the last seven words of the disclaimer as well as the
words “field” and “the next.” The Esteps contend that the omissions change the notice’s
meaning and demonstrate that an animating purpose of the letter was to induce payment. We
reject that allegation. Although the disclaimer in MDK’s letter did not mirror the language in the
HUD Handbook, MDK’s omissions do not demonstrate an intent to induce payment by the
Esteps. The omission of the words “field” and “the next” has no effect whatsoever. MDK’s
letter still makes clear that the Esteps should return their occupied-conveyance forms to HUD
within twenty days.4 Nor was the omission of the words “before HUD becomes owner of the
property” likely to induce some action that the Esteps otherwise would not have taken. That
omission does not change the letter’s general meaning. With or without the last seven words of
4
MDK’s letter provided HUD’s mailing address, and the Esteps do not allege that MDK
provided the incorrect address.
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the disclaimer, the letter clearly states that HUD will require the Esteps to vacate the home upon
the transfer of title unless they submit a continued-occupancy application to HUD within twenty
days. It is therefore implausible that MDK manipulated the language of the disclaimer to
provoke a desired response.
MDK notes one other discrepancy. Homeowners are sometimes eligible to remain in
their homes after HUD takes possession if the homeowner suffers from an illness or injury. The
form notice provided in the HUD Handbook includes a two-sentence paragraph that explains
what information an applicant must provide to HUD to be eligible for this relief. See id. MDK’s
letter included the first sentence of this paragraph but omitted the second. The Esteps suggest
that MDK omitted that sentence to sabotage the Esteps’ application for relief. We think not.
The Esteps do not claim to suffer from an illness or injury, so it’s implausible that MDK made a
calculated decision to omit the sentence in order to harm the Esteps. And in all events, an
attempt to sabotage a HUD application is not an attempt to induce payment.
In sum, we reject as implausible the suggestion that an animating purpose of MDK’s
occupied-conveyance notice was to induce payment by the Esteps. The only purpose that
plausibly could have animated MDK’s decision to send the notice was to inform the Esteps of
their obligation to submit a timely application to HUD if they wished to continue to reside in
their house beyond the date on which ownership transferred to Wells Fargo. Cf. Bailey v. Sec.
Nat’l Servicing Corp., 154 F.3d 384, 388–89 (7th Cir. 1998) (holding that the communication
was not made in connection with the collection of a debt because it merely described the status
of the debtor’s account and the consequences of missing future payments). Nothing in MDK’s
occupied-conveyance notice can be interpreted to induce payment, nor can that letter be
interpreted as an effort to make MDK and Wells Fargo more likely to succeed in the foreclosure
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action. Accordingly, MDK’s occupied-conveyance notice was not sent in connection with the
collection of a debt, and the FDCPA does not govern the letter’s content.
III.
For these reasons, the decision of the district court is affirmed.
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