What Are Statutory Damages in a Federal case?
There are lots of federal consumer protection statutes that have what are called statutory damages.
What are those?
Statutory damages are where you do not need to prove that you've actually been injured or damaged.
Instead what you prove is that there's been a violation of the law, and that was by the defendant, and then usually the number of times that's happened gives us an idea of the amount of statutory damages.
I'll give a couple examples.
Under the
FDCPA,
Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, you can get a maximum of
1000 dollars for any number of violations that the defendant has committed, but it's only up to 1000 dollars, so it's a little bit unusual.
Under the
TCPA,
Telephone Consumer Protection Act, it's normally
500 dollars in statutory damages, per call or per text. It can be up to 1500 dollars per call or per text that are illegal when the calls were made intentionally.
Under the
Fair Credit Reporting Act it can be 1000 dollars per violation, and no cap on that.
It's not like the FDCPA where it's only 1000 dollars total; here it's per violation.
Under
RESPA, which has to do with your home mortgage, that can be
2000 dollars per violation.
Under
Truth in Lending in certain circumstances it can be 4000 dollars per violation.
There are all these different federal consumer protection acts that have these statutory damages.
The concept, the idea behind them is "
Hey, we the federal government, we can't possibly enforce all these laws, so we're going to tell consumers, 'Hey, if you've had your rights violated we want to encourage you to sue, and we'll make sure you can be paid for it, because that's what will discourage these mortgage companies, credit reporting agencies, credit card companies, debt collectors, whoever they are, it'll discourage them from violating the law, and instead it will encourage them to do the right thing.'"
That helps consumers, but it also helps other debt collectors, credit reporting agencies, mortgage companies, credit card companies, because the guys that are following the law, they're at a competitive disadvantage when you have these companies out there flagrantly violating the law.
Take a mortgage company that routinely violates RESPA. They may be making more money than the mortgage company that's actually hiring the people, enforcing the rules, making sure people follow RESPA, so we want to inflict damages on the company that is violating the law so they'll say, "Whoo, okay, I am not doing that again.
Let's follow the law."
That's the idea of statutory damages.
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Hope you have a great day.
Thanks.
John G.
Watts
205-879-2447
Watts &
Herring,
LLC
Birmingham and
Madison Alabama offices (Serving clients in all parts of Alabama)
http://www.alabamaconsumer.com/
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