Under Florida law, and more specifically the Florida Consumer Collection Practices Act (“FCCPA”), a “debt collector” is defined as: “any person who uses any instrumentality of commerce within
this state, . . . in any business the
principal purpose of which is the collection of debts, or who regularly
collects or attempts to collect, directly or indirectly, debts owed or due or
asserted to be owed or due another. The
term ’debt collector’ includes any
creditor who, in the process of collecting her or his own debts, uses any
name other than her or his own which would indicate that a third person is
collecting or attempting to collect such debts.”
So, the FCCPA applies to any person or
persons, collecting his/her own debts.
Under that broad definition, the FCCPA would apply to alaw firm
attempting to collect its own fees, as well as the employees engaged in such
collection activity on the law firm's behalf.
Robin Morgan retained the law firm of Arnold &
Wilkins. Morgan did not pay the law
firm and they sued her is Small Claims Court.
She counterclaimed against the law firm, as well as the attorney and his
assistant, individually, for violations of the FCCPA. The law firm
and the individuals moved to dismiss the counterclaim because they were not
“debt collectors” under the FCCPA. Morgan responded to the motion to dismiss by
arguing that the FCCPA applies not only to a collection agency, but to any
party seeking to collect a consumer debt. The trial court granted the motion to dismiss finding
that the FCCPA only apples to debt collectors not creditors collecting their
own accounts as Morgan has alleged counter-defendants were doing.
On appeal, the law firm and the individual counterdefendants
conceded that the trial court was in error when it ruled that FCCPA pertains only
to debt collectors, however, they argued that that the trial court reached the
right result for the wrong reason because Morgan’s debt was not a debt within
the purview of the FCCPA since the debt did not flow from an extension of
credit. The appellate court reversed
holding that that the obligation to the law firm was a debt covered by the
FCCPA.
Morgan v. Wilkins,
74 So. 3d 179 (Fla. 1st DCA 2011).
For more information about the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, or, its state law counterpart, the Florida Consumer Collection Practices Act, visit us at: Stop Collection Harassment; or Consumer Rights Orlando
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