Article

The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) - Consumers Have Rights

Topic: Debt and Debt ConsolidationBy Ken GibertPublished Recently added

Legacy signals

Legacy popularity: 1,535 legacy views

The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act

The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) was enacted to put an end to some of the worst practices of the debt collection industry. It's been a very good law, but the debt collectors are still doing many of the things the law was designed to present. You may be able to sue them or prevent them from suing you..

The Debt Collection Industry

Before the act, the debt collection industry was routinely engaging in the most abusive sorts of behavior imaginable, from calling debtors at all hours of the day or night and subjecting them to streams of cursing and name-calling, to discussing their debt with children, neighbors, and employers. Debt collectors frequently misrepresented themselves as atto
eys and often threatened legal action which they were powerless to initiate. And they often attempted to, and did, collect debts that either never existed or were long unenforceable because of statutes of limitation or bankruptcy.

Whatever the staid spokespeople of the debt collection industry may say now, this is the background of their industry. The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, 15 U.S.C. Section 1692, et seq., was enacted to put a stop to these extreme behaviors in 1977. Because the people intended to be protected by the act are underrepresented by lawyers, and because of the explosion of debt litigation over the past decade, many of the old abuses still continue, and as people increasingly defend themselves from the debt collectors, they develop new tricks all the time. The debt collections industry routinely violates the law every day.

The FDCPA: A Pretty Good Law

Nevertheless, the FDCPA is in many ways a model piece of legislation. What makes the law so powerful is that, in addition to making certain enumerated acts illegal, the Act also more generally makes acts that are “oppressive,” “false or misleading representations,” or “unfair practices” illegal. This means that, whereas in most laws, the would-be wrongdoer is free to craft his actions around the specific language of the law and find “loopholes,” under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, at least, the consumer may argue that these actions are still unfair or oppressive. The Supreme Court has ruled that an “unfair” act can be shown by demonstrating that it is “at least within the penumbra” of some common law, statutory “or other established concept” of unfai
ess.

That's pretty broad. The price for this flexibility, however, is that the remedies—what you get if you prove the case—are less powerful. There are "statutory penalties" of up to $1,000 depending on the severity and frequency of violations by the specific collector, and if you can prove them, "actual" damages designed to compensate you for significant injuries, which might include emotional distress. The federal law does not provide punitive damages, however, so lawyers often are not attracted to the cases. And this may be why the practices are still occurring today.

Violations

As mentioned above, there are specific actions enumerated in the FDCPA, and these include most notably, suing on expired debts, filing suit in distant jurisdictions, publishing certain types of information regarding the debtor, calling outside of specified hours. And the list goes on. If the debt collector is acting in some highly offensive way, chances are he's within the specific provisions of the Act. These can be found at 15 U.S.C. 1692c, d, e and f. You can find the specifics by Googling the Act or provision and determining whether the specific action you're conce
ed about is within one of these provisions.

Article author

About the Author

I practiced law for over fifteen years in St. Louis, Missouri before stopping practice and shifting my efforts to my website, http://YourLegalLegUp.com. While practicing, I represented hundreds of clients in consumer law cases and won numerous awards of monetary compensation, damages and punitive damages, credit reparation, and release from contract.

Eventually I came to the conclusions that many citizens didn't know their rights and couldn't afford an atto
ey, but that they could effectively represent themselves against the debt collectors if they had a little help. Therefore, I created YourLegalLegUp.com, the YourLegalLegUp Litigation Manual and Forms, and other information available at my site.

My site has a great deal of information, much of it free, to help people understand their situation and begin to defend themselves from debt collectors. I have also posted extensive videos and articles on the subject.

Further reading

Further Reading

4 total

Article

Even for those Americans who have reached their wit's end trying to figure out any tactics able to properly compensate their credit card debt accounts or other outstanding loan balances, its no secret that Chapter 7 protection has suffered through a raft of changes over the past decade.

Related piece

Article

• Discharge Of The Light-Spending Brigade rnr

Related piece

Article

As Lisa Morshell drove home from the Georgia Dome on the I-75 expressway, returning from another glorious victory by her Atlanta Falcons, she made plans to attend the next home game in 2 weeks. She’d open the door, say hi her pets – a chocolate Schnauzer named Rico and a tabby cat she never got around to naming and still just called Kitty – then head straight to the computer to see what seats were still available for the upcoming game versus their hated division rivals.

Related piece

Article

For many consumers wearied to the bone of handling a number of separate credit card accounts – having to remember each and every due date and calculate household budgets on the fly – the most tempting part of a debt consolidation program could well be the singularly directed repayment plan.

Related piece