Fabio v. Credit Bureau of Hutchinson, Inc.
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Fabio v. Credit Bureau of Hutchinson, Inc.
Opinion of the Court
ORDER
I. Introduction
This matter came before the undersigned United States Magistrate Judge pursuant to a general assignment, made in accordance
II. Factual and Procedural Background
The Defendant Credit Bureau of Hutchinson, Inc. (“CBH”) was retained, by the TCF Bank, to collect an overdrawn checking account, belonging to the Plaintiff, in the amount of $1,345.29. According to the Record presented, collection letters were sent to the Plaintiff, by CBH, on May 22, 2001, June 5, 2001, and September 12, 2001. These letters appear to be computer generated, and bear the usual trappings of “dunning” letters. In addition, representatives of CBH had telephone contact with the Plaintiff on occasion.
As recounted by the Plaintiff, in his verified Amended Complaint, the Defendant Shawn Stewart (“Stewart”),
No other telephone contacts are specifically alleged in the Plaintiffs Amended Complaint. Rather, through artful drafting, an impression is left that phone calls, from CBH, were both oppressive and recurrent. For example, in an Affidavit of Matt C. Pierce (“Pierce”), which is attached to the Amended Complaint, Pierce attests to the fact that he was employed by CBH during the period from “March 2001 until around early June 2001.” Since the first telephone call, which the Plaintiff alleges to have been received from CBH, occurred after May 22, 2002, Pierce’s exposure to any exchanges, between Stewart and the Plaintiff, would have had to have occurred in a relative brief period of time. Unfortunately, neither Pierce, nor the Plaintiff, detail any other dates on which the Plaintiff was purported to have received an offending telephone call from Stewart, Johnson, or any other representative of CBH.
Instead, Pierce avers that “he was a witness to numerous acts, statements and telephone conversations between Defendant Shawn Stewart and the Plaintiff with regard to the above-named Plaintiff.” A close reading fails to disclose whether “numerous” modifies “acts,” “statements,” or “telephone conversations,” or whether the “telephone conversations” were about the Plaintiff, but not to the Plaintiff, by virtue of the closing prepositional phrase “with regard to the above-named Plaintiff.” In addition, Pierce avers that Stewart would remark about “Fa-bio-Time” on “virtually every shift” that Pierce worked with Stewart, and that “ ‘Fa-bio-Time’ occurred at or around 4:00 p.m. or 7:00 p.m.,” when Stewart is purported to call the Plaintiff to verbally harass him. Again,
Rather, Pierce baldly avers “[t]hat the level . of harassment which Defendant Shawn Stewart created for Plaintiff, and which I personally witnessed, was enough to drive Plaintiff insane, to file bankruptcy, or even to commit suicide.” Pierce asserts that “nearly every time Defendant Stewart initiated a new call to Plaintiff, Defendant Stewart would pretend that he had never spoken to Plaintiff,” that he did so even though “the Plaintiff had asked him not to call again,” and that, at times, the “Defendant Stewart would change his voice and pretend to be someone named ‘Tex’ and call Plaintiff to get him to respond.” While Pierce contends “[t]hat on numerous occasions [he] heard Defendant Stewart use profanities like ‘sh:!!t, d*mn and h*ll,’ ” there is no averment, by Pierce, that such language was directed at the Plaintiff.
Lastly, the Plaintiffs Amended Complaint states that two additional collection letters were sent to the Plaintiff on June 5, 2001, and on September 13, 2001.
III. Discussion
A. The Timeliness of the Plaintiff $ Motion to Amend.
On June 26, 2002, this matter was reassigned to this Court. In a Pretrial Order dated March 27, 2002, the previous Magistrate Judge directed that “[a]ll motions which seek to amend any pleading or to add any parties must be filed prior to May 1, 2002.” Although the Plaintiff did amend his Complaint on January 7, 2002, after the Defendant had filed a Motion to Dismiss, which prompted the Defendant to file its Answer to Amended Complaint, the Plaintiff now again seeks to further amend his Amended Complaint.
Since the Plaintiffs current Motion to Amend was not filed until August 7, 2002— some three months after the applicable deadline — his Motion is untimely given the unambiguous language of the operative Pretrial Order. The Plaintiff argues, however, that the Pretrial Order does not mean what it plainly says, as the previous Magistrate Judge excludes Motions to Amend, so as to plead a claim for punitive damages, from the pleadings deadline. Given the unambiguous language of the Pretrial Order, we have no occasion to ascertain the unexpressed intention of the previous Magistrate Judge. Upon our questioning, neither party represented that any such unexpressed intent was disclosed by the Magistrate Judge during the Initial Pretrial Conference, and no such intention is revealed in the Pretrial Order.
We do find cause for the late filing, however, on the basis of a letter that Plaintiffs counsel received from the previous Magistrate Judge, in unrelated litigation. In that letter, which is dated April 28, 1998, the previous Magistrate Judge stated, in part, as follows:
Please be advised that this letter should make clear that any cut-off on motions to amend the complaint does not refer to punitive damages. That motion can be sought at any time in the life of the pleading. I had hoped that we had made that clear at the time of our meeting and that it did not require further written amplification, but in any event this letter shall serve as a further written clarification on that point.
Although the Plaintiff presents no showing that the previous Magistrate Judge would hold the same vi'ew in this case — which was commenced several years after the Magistrate Judge’s amplification of his Pretrial Order — we can understand the Plaintiffs reliance on that amplification. Accordingly, we turn to the merits of the Plaintiffs Motion to Amend.
B. The Merits of the Plaintiff s Motion to Amend.
Since the Plaintiff seeks to append a punitive damage claim to his State law tort action for invasion of privacy, our analysis of that Motion is governed by Minnesota Statutes Sections 549.191 and 549.20. See, Hern v. Bankers Life Cas. Co., 133 F.Supp.2d 1130, 1134 (D.Minn. 2001). “Under the Section 549.20 standard, the Court ‘is required to search for evidence which is “clear and convincing,” ’ ” and “[t]o be ‘clear and convincing’ there must be ‘more than a preponderance of the evidence but less than proof beyond a reasonable doubt.’ ” Olson v. Snap Products, Inc., 29 F.Supp.2d 1027, 1036 (D.Minn. 1998), quoting Ulrich v. City of Crosby, 848 F.Supp. 861, 868 (D.Minn. 1994), quoting in turn, Weber v. Anderson, 269 N.W.2d 892, 895 (Minn. 1978). In addition, “[u]nder the strictures of Section 549.191, ‘the Court reviews the evidence in support of a Motion to Amend as the Court would review a Motion for a Directed Verdict
Accordingly, we look to the Plaintiffs Motion papers to ascertain whether he has alleged a valid entitlement to plead punitive damages. Under Minnesota law, “[i]ntrusion upon seclusion occurs when one ‘intentionally intrudes, physically or otherwise, upon the solitude or seclusion of another or his private affairs or concerns * * * if the intrusion would be highly offensive to a reasonable person.’ ” Lake v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 582 N.W.2d 231, 233 (Minn. 1998), quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts, § 652B (1977). “The tort has three elements: (a) an intrusion; (b) that is highly offensive; and (c) into some matter in which a person has a legitimate expectation of privacy.” Swarthout v. Mutual Service Life Ins. Co., 632 N.W.2d 741, 744-15 (Minn.App. 2001), citing Fletcher v. Price Chopper Foods, 220 F.3d 871, 875 (8th Cir. 2000).
Both the State, and Federal Courts of Minnesota, have recognized that there is some objectively-based threshold degree of repugnance that is required to sustain a claimed intrusion on seclusion. As the Court explained, in Bauer v. Ford Motor Credit Co., 149 F.Supp.2d 1106, 1109 (D.Minn. 2001), quoting Miller v. National Broad. Co., 187 Cal.App.3d 1463, 232 Cal.Rptr. 668, 678 (1986), rev. denied (March 11, 1997), “[w]hile what is ‘highly offensive to a reasonable person’ suggests a standard upon which a jury would properly be instructed, there is a preliminary determination of ‘offensiveness’ which must be made by the court in discerning the existence of a cause of action of intrusion.” See also, Swarthout v. Mutual Service Life Ins. Co., supra at 745 (“In the context of intrusion upon seclusion, questions about the reasonable person standard are ordinarily questions of fact, * * * but they become questions of law if reasonable persons can draw only one conclusion from the evidence.”), quoting Hougum v. Valley Mem. Homes, 574 N.W.2d 812, 818 (N.D. 1998). Indeed, in Phillips v. Grendahl, 2001 WL 1618593 *2 (D.Minn., May 3, 2001), the Court determined that the alleged invasion of privacy, which entailed a search into the background of a daughter’s fiancé, was not, “as a matter of law,” “highly offensive to a reasonable person.”
While, given the Record presented, we have grave doubt that the Plaintiff has alleged a viable intrusion on seclusion claim, we need not, and do not, proceed so far, as the Defendant has not moved to dismiss that claim, as it has been framed in the Plaintiffs Amended Complaint, and as the Plaintiff has, verbatim, alleged the claim in his proposed Second Amended Complaint. To be sure, a Motion to Amend may be granted on futility grounds, see Becker v. Univ. of Nebraska at Omaha, 191 F.3d 904, 908 (8th Cir. 1999), but we leave that issue unresolved, as unnecessary to our disposition of the Plaintiffs current Motion. Rather, we conclude that the Plaintiff has not demonstrated a “clear and convincing” showing that he is entitled to plead a claim for punitive damages.
As we have detailed, shorn of the hazy puffery of advocacy, the proposed Second Amended Complaint, and accompanying Exhibits, identify only two specific telephone exchanges between the Plaintiff and representatives of CBH, and only one of them could be properly characterized as an “intrusion.” As the Court recognized, in Bauer, “any contacts initiated by plaintiff[ ] [himself] cannot be included in the tally of intrusive contacts.” Bauer v. Ford Motor Credit Co., supra at 1110, citing Mlynek v. Household Fin. Corp., 2000 WL 1310666 * 3 (N.D.Ill.,
Rather, the Plaintiff, employing Pierce as some form of pleading surrogate, relies upon such eonelusory assertions as Pierce’s subjective reaction that Stewart’s harassment, which Pierce “personally witnessed, was enough to drive Plaintiff insane, to file bankruptcy, or even to commit suicide.” Unfortunately, Pierce does not relate the foundation upon which this pronouncement is based, and given the fact that, after May 22, 2001, when the Plaintiff alleges that he first received a telephone call from Stewart, Pierce was only in the employ of CBH until “early June 2001.” As we have related, our review of the showings, which underlie a Motion to plead punitive damages, is both exacting and thorough. To accept Pierce’s conclusions, without a particularized, and cogent basis to support them, would relegate our review to the “rubber stamp” that has been flatly denounced by the Minnesota Supreme Court.
The Restatement (Second) of Torts, upon which the Minnesota Supreme Court relied in adopting the tort of intrusion on seclusion, has illustrated the notion of repugnance, or offensiveness, as follows:
There is * * * no liability unless the interference with the plaintiffs seclusion is a substantial one, of a kind that would be highly offensive to the ordinary reasonable man, as the result of conduct to which the reasonable man would strongly object. Thus there is no liability for knocking at the plaintiffs door, or calling him to the telephone on one occasion or even two or three, to demand payment of a debt. It is only when the telephone calls are repeated with such persistence and frequency as to amount to a course of hounding the plaintiff, that becomes a substantial burden to his existence, that his privacy is invaded.
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 652B cmt. d.
Given the lack of particularization in the Plaintiffs Motion papers, we find no more than one telephone contact to have been identified, by the Plaintiff, as an unwanted intrusion — the return telephone call was initiated by the Plaintiff, and was not intrusive to his privacy. While we are mindful, that Stewart is alleged to have employed language, in the telephone conversation, that he initiated, that if accurate, is offensive and not to be condoned, we are unable to find that the language would have been “highly offensive to the ordinary reasonable man.” The language is both socially inappropriate, and unnecessary, but the same epithets are, unfortunately, strewn to society’s exposure in print, film, and television and radio dialogue. The employment of that language, as a single instance, is not the sort of “highly offensive” conduct that prompted the adoption of the intrusion on seclusion tort — Lake makes that plain.
In sum, the Plaintiffs Motion papers have not provided “evidence sufficient to permit
NOW, THEREFORE, It is—
ORDERED:
That the Plaintiffs Motion to Amend his Complaint to plead a claim for punitive damages [Docket No. 11] is DENIED.
. Notwithstanding the spelling of "Stewart” in the caption of this case, and in the Affidavit of Matt C. Pierce ("Pierce"), who avers, in his Affidavit, to know "Stewart,” it appears that the proper spelling of "Stewart,” is "Stuart.” In the 'interests of consistency, we spell Stuart’s name as it is contained in the caption, and in the averments of Pierce.
. The Affidavit of Pierce also recounts certain collection practices of CBH, but we note that these “practices” do not specifically relate to the Plaintiff, except insofar as Pierce alleges that, notwithstanding notations in the Plaintiff's account that the Plaintiff should not be called, the "Defendant Stewart repeatedly called Plaintiff anyway.”
. Originally, the Plaintiff had also sought to plead for punitive damages with respect to his claim under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, Title 15 U.S.C. § 1692 et seq., but he withdrew that aspect of his Motion to Amend during the course of the Hearing before this Court. Accordingly, we only address the Plaintiff’s Motion as it relates to his invasion of privacy cause of action.
. We accept that reasonable minds can differ as to the propriety of allowing amendments, so as to plead a punitive damage claim, after the amendment deadline. In our view, such a practice spawns delay, which can be particularly prejudi
. We note that, in opposing this Motion, the Defendants have proffered the Affidavit of Michael Peterson ("Peterson”), who is the President of CBH. Peterson avers that CBH sent collection letters to the Plaintiff on August 30, October 5, and November 6, 2000. In addition, Peterson details three telephone contacts with the Plaintiff. The first on "February 28, 2001, at 4:27 p.m.,” the second "on May 23, 2001, at 2:48 p.m.” — which was assertedly initiated by the Plaintiff — and the last on June 6, 2001, which, purportedly, was also initiated by the Plaintiff. Given the framework of our analysis, we have given Peterson’s averments no weight. We note these averments, in conjunction with those contained in the papers filed by the Plaintiff, as one, or the other set of representations, may well warrant future review under the proscriptions of Rule 11(b), Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
. We think it foolhardy to analogize the language said to have been uttered here, with the surreptitious exposure of nude photographs of an unsuspecting person to the general public. Some conduct is "highly offensive,” and some other conduct is flatly not. See, Lake v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 582 N.W.2d 231 (Minn. 1998).
Opinion of the Court
ORDER
I. Introduction
This matter came before the undersigned United States Magistrate Judge pursuant to a general assignment, made in accordance
II. Factual and Procedural Background
The Defendant Credit Bureau of Hutchinson, Inc. (“CBH”) was retained, by the TCF Bank, to collect an overdrawn checking account, belonging to the Plaintiff, in the amount of $1,345.29. According to the Record presented, collection letters were sent to the Plaintiff, by CBH, on May 22, 2001, June 5, 2001, and September 12, 2001. These letters appear to be computer generated, and bear the usual trappings of “dunning” letters. In addition, representatives of CBH had telephone contact with the Plaintiff on occasion.
As recounted by the Plaintiff, in his verified Amended Complaint, the Defendant Shawn Stewart (“Stewart”),
No other telephone contacts are specifically alleged in the Plaintiffs Amended Complaint. Rather, through artful drafting, an impression is left that phone calls, from CBH, were both oppressive and recurrent. For example, in an Affidavit of Matt C. Pierce (“Pierce”), which is attached to the Amended Complaint, Pierce attests to the fact that he was employed by CBH during the period from “March 2001 until around early June 2001.” Since the first telephone call, which the Plaintiff alleges to have been received from CBH, occurred after May 22, 2002, Pierce’s exposure to any exchanges, between Stewart and the Plaintiff, would have had to have occurred in a relative brief period of time. Unfortunately, neither Pierce, nor the Plaintiff, detail any other dates on which the Plaintiff was purported to have received an offending telephone call from Stewart, Johnson, or any other representative of CBH.
Instead, Pierce avers that “he was a witness to numerous acts, statements and telephone conversations between Defendant Shawn Stewart and the Plaintiff with regard to the above-named Plaintiff.” A close reading fails to disclose whether “numerous” modifies “acts,” “statements,” or “telephone conversations,” or whether the “telephone conversations” were about the Plaintiff, but not to the Plaintiff, by virtue of the closing prepositional phrase “with regard to the above-named Plaintiff.” In addition, Pierce avers that Stewart would remark about “Fa-bio-Time” on “virtually every shift” that Pierce worked with Stewart, and that “ ‘Fa-bio-Time’ occurred at or around 4:00 p.m. or 7:00 p.m.,” when Stewart is purported to call the Plaintiff to verbally harass him. Again,
Rather, Pierce baldly avers “[t]hat the level . of harassment which Defendant Shawn Stewart created for Plaintiff, and which I personally witnessed, was enough to drive Plaintiff insane, to file bankruptcy, or even to commit suicide.” Pierce asserts that “nearly every time Defendant Stewart initiated a new call to Plaintiff, Defendant Stewart would pretend that he had never spoken to Plaintiff,” that he did so even though “the Plaintiff had asked him not to call again,” and that, at times, the “Defendant Stewart would change his voice and pretend to be someone named ‘Tex’ and call Plaintiff to get him to respond.” While Pierce contends “[t]hat on numerous occasions [he] heard Defendant Stewart use profanities like ‘sh:!!t, d*mn and h*ll,’ ” there is no averment, by Pierce, that such language was directed at the Plaintiff.
Lastly, the Plaintiffs Amended Complaint states that two additional collection letters were sent to the Plaintiff on June 5, 2001, and on September 13, 2001.
III. Discussion
A. The Timeliness of the Plaintiff $ Motion to Amend.
On June 26, 2002, this matter was reassigned to this Court. In a Pretrial Order dated March 27, 2002, the previous Magistrate Judge directed that “[a]ll motions which seek to amend any pleading or to add any parties must be filed prior to May 1, 2002.” Although the Plaintiff did amend his Complaint on January 7, 2002, after the Defendant had filed a Motion to Dismiss, which prompted the Defendant to file its Answer to Amended Complaint, the Plaintiff now again seeks to further amend his Amended Complaint.
Since the Plaintiffs current Motion to Amend was not filed until August 7, 2002— some three months after the applicable deadline — his Motion is untimely given the unambiguous language of the operative Pretrial Order. The Plaintiff argues, however, that the Pretrial Order does not mean what it plainly says, as the previous Magistrate Judge excludes Motions to Amend, so as to plead a claim for punitive damages, from the pleadings deadline. Given the unambiguous language of the Pretrial Order, we have no occasion to ascertain the unexpressed intention of the previous Magistrate Judge. Upon our questioning, neither party represented that any such unexpressed intent was disclosed by the Magistrate Judge during the Initial Pretrial Conference, and no such intention is revealed in the Pretrial Order.
We do find cause for the late filing, however, on the basis of a letter that Plaintiffs counsel received from the previous Magistrate Judge, in unrelated litigation. In that letter, which is dated April 28, 1998, the previous Magistrate Judge stated, in part, as follows:
Please be advised that this letter should make clear that any cut-off on motions to amend the complaint does not refer to punitive damages. That motion can be sought at any time in the life of the pleading. I had hoped that we had made that clear at the time of our meeting and that it did not require further written amplification, but in any event this letter shall serve as a further written clarification on that point.
Although the Plaintiff presents no showing that the previous Magistrate Judge would hold the same vi'ew in this case — which was commenced several years after the Magistrate Judge’s amplification of his Pretrial Order — we can understand the Plaintiffs reliance on that amplification. Accordingly, we turn to the merits of the Plaintiffs Motion to Amend.
B. The Merits of the Plaintiff s Motion to Amend.
Since the Plaintiff seeks to append a punitive damage claim to his State law tort action for invasion of privacy, our analysis of that Motion is governed by Minnesota Statutes Sections 549.191 and 549.20. See, Hern v. Bankers Life Cas. Co., 133 F.Supp.2d 1130, 1134 (D.Minn. 2001). “Under the Section 549.20 standard, the Court ‘is required to search for evidence which is “clear and convincing,” ’ ” and “[t]o be ‘clear and convincing’ there must be ‘more than a preponderance of the evidence but less than proof beyond a reasonable doubt.’ ” Olson v. Snap Products, Inc., 29 F.Supp.2d 1027, 1036 (D.Minn. 1998), quoting Ulrich v. City of Crosby, 848 F.Supp. 861, 868 (D.Minn. 1994), quoting in turn, Weber v. Anderson, 269 N.W.2d 892, 895 (Minn. 1978). In addition, “[u]nder the strictures of Section 549.191, ‘the Court reviews the evidence in support of a Motion to Amend as the Court would review a Motion for a Directed Verdict
Accordingly, we look to the Plaintiffs Motion papers to ascertain whether he has alleged a valid entitlement to plead punitive damages. Under Minnesota law, “[i]ntrusion upon seclusion occurs when one ‘intentionally intrudes, physically or otherwise, upon the solitude or seclusion of another or his private affairs or concerns * * * if the intrusion would be highly offensive to a reasonable person.’ ” Lake v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 582 N.W.2d 231, 233 (Minn. 1998), quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts, § 652B (1977). “The tort has three elements: (a) an intrusion; (b) that is highly offensive; and (c) into some matter in which a person has a legitimate expectation of privacy.” Swarthout v. Mutual Service Life Ins. Co., 632 N.W.2d 741, 744-15 (Minn.App. 2001), citing Fletcher v. Price Chopper Foods, 220 F.3d 871, 875 (8th Cir. 2000).
Both the State, and Federal Courts of Minnesota, have recognized that there is some objectively-based threshold degree of repugnance that is required to sustain a claimed intrusion on seclusion. As the Court explained, in Bauer v. Ford Motor Credit Co., 149 F.Supp.2d 1106, 1109 (D.Minn. 2001), quoting Miller v. National Broad. Co., 187 Cal.App.3d 1463, 232 Cal.Rptr. 668, 678 (1986), rev. denied (March 11, 1997), “[w]hile what is ‘highly offensive to a reasonable person’ suggests a standard upon which a jury would properly be instructed, there is a preliminary determination of ‘offensiveness’ which must be made by the court in discerning the existence of a cause of action of intrusion.” See also, Swarthout v. Mutual Service Life Ins. Co., supra at 745 (“In the context of intrusion upon seclusion, questions about the reasonable person standard are ordinarily questions of fact, * * * but they become questions of law if reasonable persons can draw only one conclusion from the evidence.”), quoting Hougum v. Valley Mem. Homes, 574 N.W.2d 812, 818 (N.D. 1998). Indeed, in Phillips v. Grendahl, 2001 WL 1618593 *2 (D.Minn., May 3, 2001), the Court determined that the alleged invasion of privacy, which entailed a search into the background of a daughter’s fiancé, was not, “as a matter of law,” “highly offensive to a reasonable person.”
While, given the Record presented, we have grave doubt that the Plaintiff has alleged a viable intrusion on seclusion claim, we need not, and do not, proceed so far, as the Defendant has not moved to dismiss that claim, as it has been framed in the Plaintiffs Amended Complaint, and as the Plaintiff has, verbatim, alleged the claim in his proposed Second Amended Complaint. To be sure, a Motion to Amend may be granted on futility grounds, see Becker v. Univ. of Nebraska at Omaha, 191 F.3d 904, 908 (8th Cir. 1999), but we leave that issue unresolved, as unnecessary to our disposition of the Plaintiffs current Motion. Rather, we conclude that the Plaintiff has not demonstrated a “clear and convincing” showing that he is entitled to plead a claim for punitive damages.
As we have detailed, shorn of the hazy puffery of advocacy, the proposed Second Amended Complaint, and accompanying Exhibits, identify only two specific telephone exchanges between the Plaintiff and representatives of CBH, and only one of them could be properly characterized as an “intrusion.” As the Court recognized, in Bauer, “any contacts initiated by plaintiff[ ] [himself] cannot be included in the tally of intrusive contacts.” Bauer v. Ford Motor Credit Co., supra at 1110, citing Mlynek v. Household Fin. Corp., 2000 WL 1310666 * 3 (N.D.Ill.,
Rather, the Plaintiff, employing Pierce as some form of pleading surrogate, relies upon such eonelusory assertions as Pierce’s subjective reaction that Stewart’s harassment, which Pierce “personally witnessed, was enough to drive Plaintiff insane, to file bankruptcy, or even to commit suicide.” Unfortunately, Pierce does not relate the foundation upon which this pronouncement is based, and given the fact that, after May 22, 2001, when the Plaintiff alleges that he first received a telephone call from Stewart, Pierce was only in the employ of CBH until “early June 2001.” As we have related, our review of the showings, which underlie a Motion to plead punitive damages, is both exacting and thorough. To accept Pierce’s conclusions, without a particularized, and cogent basis to support them, would relegate our review to the “rubber stamp” that has been flatly denounced by the Minnesota Supreme Court.
The Restatement (Second) of Torts, upon which the Minnesota Supreme Court relied in adopting the tort of intrusion on seclusion, has illustrated the notion of repugnance, or offensiveness, as follows:
There is * * * no liability unless the interference with the plaintiffs seclusion is a substantial one, of a kind that would be highly offensive to the ordinary reasonable man, as the result of conduct to which the reasonable man would strongly object. Thus there is no liability for knocking at the plaintiffs door, or calling him to the telephone on one occasion or even two or three, to demand payment of a debt. It is only when the telephone calls are repeated with such persistence and frequency as to amount to a course of hounding the plaintiff, that becomes a substantial burden to his existence, that his privacy is invaded.
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 652B cmt. d.
Given the lack of particularization in the Plaintiffs Motion papers, we find no more than one telephone contact to have been identified, by the Plaintiff, as an unwanted intrusion — the return telephone call was initiated by the Plaintiff, and was not intrusive to his privacy. While we are mindful, that Stewart is alleged to have employed language, in the telephone conversation, that he initiated, that if accurate, is offensive and not to be condoned, we are unable to find that the language would have been “highly offensive to the ordinary reasonable man.” The language is both socially inappropriate, and unnecessary, but the same epithets are, unfortunately, strewn to society’s exposure in print, film, and television and radio dialogue. The employment of that language, as a single instance, is not the sort of “highly offensive” conduct that prompted the adoption of the intrusion on seclusion tort — Lake makes that plain.
In sum, the Plaintiffs Motion papers have not provided “evidence sufficient to permit
NOW, THEREFORE, It is—
ORDERED:
That the Plaintiffs Motion to Amend his Complaint to plead a claim for punitive damages [Docket No. 11] is DENIED.
. Notwithstanding the spelling of "Stewart” in the caption of this case, and in the Affidavit of Matt C. Pierce ("Pierce"), who avers, in his Affidavit, to know "Stewart,” it appears that the proper spelling of "Stewart,” is "Stuart.” In the 'interests of consistency, we spell Stuart’s name as it is contained in the caption, and in the averments of Pierce.
. The Affidavit of Pierce also recounts certain collection practices of CBH, but we note that these “practices” do not specifically relate to the Plaintiff, except insofar as Pierce alleges that, notwithstanding notations in the Plaintiff's account that the Plaintiff should not be called, the "Defendant Stewart repeatedly called Plaintiff anyway.”
. Originally, the Plaintiff had also sought to plead for punitive damages with respect to his claim under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, Title 15 U.S.C. § 1692 et seq., but he withdrew that aspect of his Motion to Amend during the course of the Hearing before this Court. Accordingly, we only address the Plaintiff’s Motion as it relates to his invasion of privacy cause of action.
. We accept that reasonable minds can differ as to the propriety of allowing amendments, so as to plead a punitive damage claim, after the amendment deadline. In our view, such a practice spawns delay, which can be particularly prejudi
. We note that, in opposing this Motion, the Defendants have proffered the Affidavit of Michael Peterson ("Peterson”), who is the President of CBH. Peterson avers that CBH sent collection letters to the Plaintiff on August 30, October 5, and November 6, 2000. In addition, Peterson details three telephone contacts with the Plaintiff. The first on "February 28, 2001, at 4:27 p.m.,” the second "on May 23, 2001, at 2:48 p.m.” — which was assertedly initiated by the Plaintiff — and the last on June 6, 2001, which, purportedly, was also initiated by the Plaintiff. Given the framework of our analysis, we have given Peterson’s averments no weight. We note these averments, in conjunction with those contained in the papers filed by the Plaintiff, as one, or the other set of representations, may well warrant future review under the proscriptions of Rule 11(b), Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
. We think it foolhardy to analogize the language said to have been uttered here, with the surreptitious exposure of nude photographs of an unsuspecting person to the general public. Some conduct is "highly offensive,” and some other conduct is flatly not. See, Lake v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 582 N.W.2d 231 (Minn. 1998).
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Jesse FABIO v. CREDIT BUREAU OF HUTCHINSON, INC., a Minnesota corporation, Shawn Stewart, Bruce Johnson, Tom Johnson, and Mr. Palmer
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published