Ung v. Universal Acceptance Corp.
Ung v. Universal Acceptance Corp.
Opinion of the Court
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
In this action, Plaintiff Spencer Ung alleges that Defendant Universal Acceptance Corporation (“Universal”) made unauthorized calls to his cell phone, in violation of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (“TCPA”), 47 U.S.C. § 227 et seq, Presently before the Court is Universal’s Motion for Summary Judgment, For the reasons that follow, the Court will grant the Motion.
BACKGROUND
On the surface, this is (and should be) a relatively straightforward case; indeed, the events giving rise to the action are undisputed. As is often the case, however, things are not quite as simple as they might seem.
Universal is the financing arm of Interstate Auto Group, Inc., d/b/a CarHop (“CarHop”), an Edina, Minnesota company that sells used cars nationwide to people with poor or no credit. A person interested in buying a CarHop vehicle must submit a financing application listing credit refer-enees and the name of the buyer’s landlord. This provides Universal with contact information for persons who could pass along messages if the buyer were to fall behind on the vehicle’s payments.
Ung was one such individual whose contact information was provided by a car buyer. In 2013, Joseph Holley purchased a Kia Sorrento from a CarHop location in Crystal, Minnesota; he provided Ung’s name and cell-phone number, listing Ung as his landlord. Holley eventually fell behind on the Kia’s payments and Universal began placing calls to Ung. It is undisputed that between June and October 2014, Universal called him twelve times on his cell phone. Ung alleges that each of these calls was placed without his consent and, accordingly, violated the TCPA.
The foregoing is, in essence, the entire crux of this case. But against this simple backdrop, the parties have attempted to drag the Court down a rabbit hole, raising complex arguments about the intricacies and capabilities of the telephone system Universal used to call Ung.
STANDARD OP REVIEW
Summary judgment is proper if, drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of Ung, there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and Universal is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a); Ricci v. DeStefano, 557 U.S. 557, 586, 129 S.Ct. 2658, 174 L.Ed.2d 490 (2009). Universal bears the burden’ of showing the material facts in the case are undisputed. Torgerson v. City of Rochester, 643 F.3d 1031, 1042 (8th Cir. 2011) (en banc); Whisenhunt v. Sw. Bell Tel., 573 F.3d 565, 568 (8th Cir. 2009). The Court must view the evidence, and the inferences that may be reasonably drawn from it, in the light most favorable to Ung. Beard v. Banks, 548 U.S. 521, 529-30, 126 S.Ct. 2572, 165 L.Ed.2d 697 (2006); Weitz Co., LLC v. Lloyd’s of London, 574 F.3d 885, 892 (8th Cir. 2009). Ung may not rest on mere allegations or denials, but "' must show through the presentation of admissible evidence that specific facts exist creating a genuine issue of material fact for trial. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(e)(1)(A); Wood v. SatCom Mktg., LLC, 705 F.3d 823, 828 (8th Cir. 2013).
ANALYSIS'
Finding computerized telephone calls to be the “scourge of modern civilization,” 137 Cong. Rec. 30821 (1991) (statement of Sen. Hollings), Congress enacted the TCPA in 1991 in an attempt to end “the proliferation of intrusive, nuisance calls to [consumers’] homes from, telemarketers.-” 105 Stat. 2394 (Dec. 20, 1991), note following 47 U.S.C. § 227. As noted above, the statute bans, among other things, telephone calls to cell phones made using an ATDS, that is, “equipment which has the capacity (A) to store or produce telephone numbers to, be called, using a random or sequential number generator; and .(B) to dial such numbers.” 47 U.S.C. § 227(a)(1).
According to the Federal Communications Commission (“FCC”)—which is tasked with enacting regulations to implement the TCPA 47 U.S.C. § 227(b)(2)— the hallmark of.an ATDS is the ability to dial numbers without human involvement. As early as 2003, the FCC recognized that the “basic function” of an ATDS is “the capacity to dial numbers- without human intervention.” In re Rules & Regulations Implementing Tel. Consumer Prot. Act of 1991, 18 FCC Rcd. 14,014, 14,091-92 (July 3, 2003) (emphasis deleted). The FCC has never wavered from this “human intervention” requirement, repeatedly reiterating that the capacity to "independently place calls without the involvement of a live person remains central to determining whether' telephony qualifies as an ATDS, See In re Rules & Regulations Implementing Tel. Consumer Prot. Act of 1991, 23 FCC Rcd. 559, 566 (Jan. 4, 2008) (reiterating that basic function óf ATDS is “to dial numbers without human intervention”); In re Rules & Regulations Implementing Tel. Consumer Prot. Act of 1991, 27 FCC Rcd, 15,391, 15,392 n.5 (Nov. 29, 2012) (“The Commission has emphasized that this definition covers any equipment that has the specified capacity to generate numbers and dial them without human intervention regardless of whether the numbers called are randomly or sequentially - generated or come from calling lists.”) (emphasis deleted); In re Rules & Regulations Implementing Tel. Consumer Prot. Act of 1991, 30 FCC Rcd. 7961, 7975 (July 10, 2015) (“[T]he Commission has ... long held that
There are two key reasons for this. First, the FCC’s interpretation hews to the TCPA’s text, which requires that an ATDS have the “capacity” to “dial” telephone numbers. 47 U.S.C. § 227(a)(1) (emphasis added). Without the capacity to dial on its own, telephone equipment simply cannot be an ATDS. Second, the FCC’s interpretation hews to the purpose behind the TCPA, which was aimed at slowing (if not stopping) the rapid increase in telemarketing calls. Computerized dialers obviously are able to place substantially greater volumes of calls than individuals manually dialing phone numbers, and hence the FCC reasonably determined that manually dialed calls fell beyond the TCPA’s ambit.
The FCC’s understanding of this “basic function” of an ATDS proves critical in this case, because there is no genuine issue here that Universal’s calls to Ung— and every other landlord whose contact information was provided by a CarHop customer—required human intervention. The record reveals that Universal stored contact information for landlords in its customer management database, known as “DRIVE.” (See Volk Decl. ¶ 27; Volk Dep. at 40; Reply Mem. Ex. D.) The record further reveals that Universal employees could only call individuals entered into DRIVE’S “landlord” field by (1) manually entering a telephone number on a handset telephone (a “hard phone”) on the employee’s desk or (2) using a computer web application that required copying and pasting (or manually typing) the landlord’s phone number from DRIVE into the application, which would then dial the number and connect the call to the employee’s hard phone. (Volk Decl. ¶¶ 30-83; Volk Dep. at 121-22; Streiff Decl. ¶ 14.) In other words, a live human being was required to place calls to landlords such as Ung. This is not, to parrot the FCC, a system providing a way to “dial thousands of numbers in a short period of time.” In re Rules & Regulations Implementing Tel. Consumer Prot. Act of 1991, 30 FCC Rcd. at 7975. Accordingly, Ung was not called using an ATDS. See, e.g., Smith v. Stellar Recovery, Inc., No. 2:15-cv-11717, 2017 WL 955128, at *3 (E.D. Mich. Mar. 13, 2017) (granting summary judgment to defendant where its calling system was “characterized by one key factor that separates it from autodial-ers: it requires human intervention ... to launch an outgoing call”); Pozo v. Stellar Recovery Collection Agency, Inc., No. 8:15-cv-929, 2016 WL 7851415, at *3 (M.D. Fla. Sept. 2, 2016) (“Dialing systems which require an agent to manually initiate calls do not qualify as autodialers under the TCPA.”) (collecting cases); Luna v. Shac, LLC, 122 F.Supp.3d 936, 940 (N.D. Cal. 2015) (“[T]he capacity to dial numbers without human intervention is required for TCPA liability.”); Smith v. Securus Techs., Inc., 120 F.Supp.3d 976, 985 (D. Minn. 2015) (Nelson, J.) (dismissing TCPA claim “because Securus’s technology does not even have the capacity to dial numbers without human intervention”) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
Ung responds that human intervention is irrelevant to whether Universal’s telephone equipment qualifies as an ATDS. In support, he notes that in a July 2015 Order, the FCC declined to “adopt a ‘human intervention’ test” for whether telephony qualifies as an ATDS. In re Rules & Regulations Implementing Tel. Consumer Prot. Act of 1991, 30 FCC Rcd. at 7976. But contrary to Ung’s assertion, this does not render human intervention irrelevant to the inquiry. Rather, the FCC’s 2015 Order
Ung next argues that even if human intervention bears on the inquiry, summary judgment is still inappropriate because Universal has the facts wrong. He contends that his contact information was stored in the DRIVE system in a reference field and not a landlord field, citing certain of Universal’s discovery responses. (Mem. in Opp’n at 18.) And building on this argument, he contends that references were called using Universal’s “ShoreTel Enterprise Contact Center” telephone system, referred to by the parties as the “ECC,” which he argues at length is an ATDS. But there are several problems with these contentions.
First, to support his argument that he was listed as a reference and not a landlord in DRIVE, Ung cites Universal’s response to a discovery request asking the company to admit it contacted him “because [he] was listed as a reference by a debtor from whom [Universal] was attempting to collect a debt.” (Mem, in Opp’n Ex. 5 ¶ 3.) To be sure, Universal admitted that was the reason it contacted Ung. (Id.) But as the company points out, this says nothing about the method by which he was contacted or the manner in which it stored Ung’s information. Indeed, the fact that Holley listed Ung as a reference does not mean the company stored his information in the reference portion of the DRIVE system. Rather, the record clearly demonstrates that Ung’s information was stored in DRIVE in a landlord data field, not a reference data field. (See Volk Decl. ¶ 37; see also Reply Mem. Ex. D (screenshots showing Ung’s information was stored in data field “LL,” presumably standing for landlord).)
This also lays bare the second problem with Ung’s argument. He claims Universal “admitted” it called him using the ECC, relying upon the company’s response to an interrogatory. (Mem. in Opp’n at 18.) That interrogatory, however, asked the company to identify the means by which it had called every cell phone over a four-year period—whether for a customer, a reference, or a landlord—and it is undisputed that the ECC was used to call customers of Universal. (Mem. in Opp’n Ex. 7 ¶ 2.) In other words, the fact that Universal identified the ECC in response to this interrogatory does not mean it “called [Ung] using the ShoreTel ECC dialer,” as he contends. (Mem. in Opp’n at 18.)
Ung also makes much of the fact that in its 2015 Order, the FCC recognized that a telephone system may have the “capacity” to autodial calls even if not presently being used for that purpose. (Mem. in Opp’n at 6-7 (citing authority for the proposition that the “capacity of an autodialer is not limited to its current configuration but also includes its potential functionalities”).) Yet, by this logic, almost any telephone equipment could be considered an ATDS. It does not take a creative mind to envision a 1960s-era rotary phone attached to modern computer equipment, rendering the rotary phone capable of dialing telephone numbers, but no one would suggest a rotary phone is an ATDS because of this “potential functionality.” Indeed, the FCC cited this very example in its 2015 Order when cautioning against stretching the definition of an ATDS too far.
CONCLUSION
What started as a simple case more than two years ago has now wended its way through more than 200 docket' entries, including several Motions to Dismiss, a failed mediation, a Motion for Class Certification, and the instant Motion for Summary Judgment. In thé Court’s view, it is now time for this case’s journey to come to an end. Because the evidence does not suggest Ung was called using an ATDS, his TCPA claim fails as a matter of law, and Universal is entitled to summary judgment.
Based on the foregoing, and all the files, records, and proceedings herein, IT IS ORDERED that Universal’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. No. 194) is GRANTED, and Eng’s Complaint (Doc. No. 1) is DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE.
LET JUDGMENT BE ENTERED ACCORDINGLY.
. The parties’ arguments and blizzard of briefing remind the Court of Alice, having passed through the looking glass, exclaiming, "It seems very pretty .., but it's rather hard to understand! ,.. Somehow it seems to fill my head with ideas—only I don't know exactly what they are!" Lewis Carroll, Through the Looking Glass, ch. 1.
. Notably, Ung's own Complaint alleges that an ATDS is "equipment that has the capacity to dial numbers without human intervention.” (Compl. ¶ 12 (emphasis added).)
. Ung similarly distorts the record when
. Indeed, this fact renders largely irrelevant much of Ung's brief, which is devoted to arguing that the ECC is an ATDS because it can be configured to autodial calls. Whatever truth there may be to that assertion, the evidence shows the ECC was not used to call landlords such as Ung; rather, those calls were manually dialed through separate functionality, namely, either hard phones or the web application.
. See In re Rules & Regulations Implementing Tel. Consumer Prot. Act of 1991, 30 FCC Rcd. at 7975 ("We ... acknowledge that there are outer limits to the capacity of equipment to be an autodialer[, and] the outer contours of the definition of 'autodialer' do not extend to every piece of malleable and modifiable dialing equipment that conceivably could be considered to have some capacity, however
Opinion of the Court
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
In this action, Plaintiff Spencer Ung alleges that Defendant Universal Acceptance Corporation (“Universal”) made unauthorized calls to his cell phone, in violation of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (“TCPA”), 47 U.S.C. § 227 et seq, Presently before the Court is Universal’s Motion for Summary Judgment, For the reasons that follow, the Court will grant the Motion.
BACKGROUND
On the surface, this is (and should be) a relatively straightforward case; indeed, the events giving rise to the action are undisputed. As is often the case, however, things are not quite as simple as they might seem.
Universal is the financing arm of Interstate Auto Group, Inc., d/b/a CarHop (“CarHop”), an Edina, Minnesota company that sells used cars nationwide to people with poor or no credit. A person interested in buying a CarHop vehicle must submit a financing application listing credit refer-enees and the name of the buyer’s landlord. This provides Universal with contact information for persons who could pass along messages if the buyer were to fall behind on the vehicle’s payments.
Ung was one such individual whose contact information was provided by a car buyer. In 2013, Joseph Holley purchased a Kia Sorrento from a CarHop location in Crystal, Minnesota; he provided Ung’s name and cell-phone number, listing Ung as his landlord. Holley eventually fell behind on the Kia’s payments and Universal began placing calls to Ung. It is undisputed that between June and October 2014, Universal called him twelve times on his cell phone. Ung alleges that each of these calls was placed without his consent and, accordingly, violated the TCPA.
The foregoing is, in essence, the entire crux of this case. But against this simple backdrop, the parties have attempted to drag the Court down a rabbit hole, raising complex arguments about the intricacies and capabilities of the telephone system Universal used to call Ung.
STANDARD OP REVIEW
Summary judgment is proper if, drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of Ung, there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and Universal is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a); Ricci v. DeStefano, 557 U.S. 557, 586, 129 S.Ct. 2658, 174 L.Ed.2d 490 (2009). Universal bears the burden’ of showing the material facts in the case are undisputed. Torgerson v. City of Rochester, 643 F.3d 1031, 1042 (8th Cir. 2011) (en banc); Whisenhunt v. Sw. Bell Tel., 573 F.3d 565, 568 (8th Cir. 2009). The Court must view the evidence, and the inferences that may be reasonably drawn from it, in the light most favorable to Ung. Beard v. Banks, 548 U.S. 521, 529-30, 126 S.Ct. 2572, 165 L.Ed.2d 697 (2006); Weitz Co., LLC v. Lloyd’s of London, 574 F.3d 885, 892 (8th Cir. 2009). Ung may not rest on mere allegations or denials, but "' must show through the presentation of admissible evidence that specific facts exist creating a genuine issue of material fact for trial. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(e)(1)(A); Wood v. SatCom Mktg., LLC, 705 F.3d 823, 828 (8th Cir. 2013).
ANALYSIS'
Finding computerized telephone calls to be the “scourge of modern civilization,” 137 Cong. Rec. 30821 (1991) (statement of Sen. Hollings), Congress enacted the TCPA in 1991 in an attempt to end “the proliferation of intrusive, nuisance calls to [consumers’] homes from, telemarketers.-” 105 Stat. 2394 (Dec. 20, 1991), note following 47 U.S.C. § 227. As noted above, the statute bans, among other things, telephone calls to cell phones made using an ATDS, that is, “equipment which has the capacity (A) to store or produce telephone numbers to, be called, using a random or sequential number generator; and .(B) to dial such numbers.” 47 U.S.C. § 227(a)(1).
According to the Federal Communications Commission (“FCC”)—which is tasked with enacting regulations to implement the TCPA 47 U.S.C. § 227(b)(2)— the hallmark of.an ATDS is the ability to dial numbers without human involvement. As early as 2003, the FCC recognized that the “basic function” of an ATDS is “the capacity to dial numbers- without human intervention.” In re Rules & Regulations Implementing Tel. Consumer Prot. Act of 1991, 18 FCC Rcd. 14,014, 14,091-92 (July 3, 2003) (emphasis deleted). The FCC has never wavered from this “human intervention” requirement, repeatedly reiterating that the capacity to "independently place calls without the involvement of a live person remains central to determining whether' telephony qualifies as an ATDS, See In re Rules & Regulations Implementing Tel. Consumer Prot. Act of 1991, 23 FCC Rcd. 559, 566 (Jan. 4, 2008) (reiterating that basic function óf ATDS is “to dial numbers without human intervention”); In re Rules & Regulations Implementing Tel. Consumer Prot. Act of 1991, 27 FCC Rcd, 15,391, 15,392 n.5 (Nov. 29, 2012) (“The Commission has emphasized that this definition covers any equipment that has the specified capacity to generate numbers and dial them without human intervention regardless of whether the numbers called are randomly or sequentially - generated or come from calling lists.”) (emphasis deleted); In re Rules & Regulations Implementing Tel. Consumer Prot. Act of 1991, 30 FCC Rcd. 7961, 7975 (July 10, 2015) (“[T]he Commission has ... long held that
There are two key reasons for this. First, the FCC’s interpretation hews to the TCPA’s text, which requires that an ATDS have the “capacity” to “dial” telephone numbers. 47 U.S.C. § 227(a)(1) (emphasis added). Without the capacity to dial on its own, telephone equipment simply cannot be an ATDS. Second, the FCC’s interpretation hews to the purpose behind the TCPA, which was aimed at slowing (if not stopping) the rapid increase in telemarketing calls. Computerized dialers obviously are able to place substantially greater volumes of calls than individuals manually dialing phone numbers, and hence the FCC reasonably determined that manually dialed calls fell beyond the TCPA’s ambit.
The FCC’s understanding of this “basic function” of an ATDS proves critical in this case, because there is no genuine issue here that Universal’s calls to Ung— and every other landlord whose contact information was provided by a CarHop customer—required human intervention. The record reveals that Universal stored contact information for landlords in its customer management database, known as “DRIVE.” (See Volk Decl. ¶ 27; Volk Dep. at 40; Reply Mem. Ex. D.) The record further reveals that Universal employees could only call individuals entered into DRIVE’S “landlord” field by (1) manually entering a telephone number on a handset telephone (a “hard phone”) on the employee’s desk or (2) using a computer web application that required copying and pasting (or manually typing) the landlord’s phone number from DRIVE into the application, which would then dial the number and connect the call to the employee’s hard phone. (Volk Decl. ¶¶ 30-83; Volk Dep. at 121-22; Streiff Decl. ¶ 14.) In other words, a live human being was required to place calls to landlords such as Ung. This is not, to parrot the FCC, a system providing a way to “dial thousands of numbers in a short period of time.” In re Rules & Regulations Implementing Tel. Consumer Prot. Act of 1991, 30 FCC Rcd. at 7975. Accordingly, Ung was not called using an ATDS. See, e.g., Smith v. Stellar Recovery, Inc., No. 2:15-cv-11717, 2017 WL 955128, at *3 (E.D. Mich. Mar. 13, 2017) (granting summary judgment to defendant where its calling system was “characterized by one key factor that separates it from autodial-ers: it requires human intervention ... to launch an outgoing call”); Pozo v. Stellar Recovery Collection Agency, Inc., No. 8:15-cv-929, 2016 WL 7851415, at *3 (M.D. Fla. Sept. 2, 2016) (“Dialing systems which require an agent to manually initiate calls do not qualify as autodialers under the TCPA.”) (collecting cases); Luna v. Shac, LLC, 122 F.Supp.3d 936, 940 (N.D. Cal. 2015) (“[T]he capacity to dial numbers without human intervention is required for TCPA liability.”); Smith v. Securus Techs., Inc., 120 F.Supp.3d 976, 985 (D. Minn. 2015) (Nelson, J.) (dismissing TCPA claim “because Securus’s technology does not even have the capacity to dial numbers without human intervention”) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
Ung responds that human intervention is irrelevant to whether Universal’s telephone equipment qualifies as an ATDS. In support, he notes that in a July 2015 Order, the FCC declined to “adopt a ‘human intervention’ test” for whether telephony qualifies as an ATDS. In re Rules & Regulations Implementing Tel. Consumer Prot. Act of 1991, 30 FCC Rcd. at 7976. But contrary to Ung’s assertion, this does not render human intervention irrelevant to the inquiry. Rather, the FCC’s 2015 Order
Ung next argues that even if human intervention bears on the inquiry, summary judgment is still inappropriate because Universal has the facts wrong. He contends that his contact information was stored in the DRIVE system in a reference field and not a landlord field, citing certain of Universal’s discovery responses. (Mem. in Opp’n at 18.) And building on this argument, he contends that references were called using Universal’s “ShoreTel Enterprise Contact Center” telephone system, referred to by the parties as the “ECC,” which he argues at length is an ATDS. But there are several problems with these contentions.
First, to support his argument that he was listed as a reference and not a landlord in DRIVE, Ung cites Universal’s response to a discovery request asking the company to admit it contacted him “because [he] was listed as a reference by a debtor from whom [Universal] was attempting to collect a debt.” (Mem, in Opp’n Ex. 5 ¶ 3.) To be sure, Universal admitted that was the reason it contacted Ung. (Id.) But as the company points out, this says nothing about the method by which he was contacted or the manner in which it stored Ung’s information. Indeed, the fact that Holley listed Ung as a reference does not mean the company stored his information in the reference portion of the DRIVE system. Rather, the record clearly demonstrates that Ung’s information was stored in DRIVE in a landlord data field, not a reference data field. (See Volk Decl. ¶ 37; see also Reply Mem. Ex. D (screenshots showing Ung’s information was stored in data field “LL,” presumably standing for landlord).)
This also lays bare the second problem with Ung’s argument. He claims Universal “admitted” it called him using the ECC, relying upon the company’s response to an interrogatory. (Mem. in Opp’n at 18.) That interrogatory, however, asked the company to identify the means by which it had called every cell phone over a four-year period—whether for a customer, a reference, or a landlord—and it is undisputed that the ECC was used to call customers of Universal. (Mem. in Opp’n Ex. 7 ¶ 2.) In other words, the fact that Universal identified the ECC in response to this interrogatory does not mean it “called [Ung] using the ShoreTel ECC dialer,” as he contends. (Mem. in Opp’n at 18.)
Ung also makes much of the fact that in its 2015 Order, the FCC recognized that a telephone system may have the “capacity” to autodial calls even if not presently being used for that purpose. (Mem. in Opp’n at 6-7 (citing authority for the proposition that the “capacity of an autodialer is not limited to its current configuration but also includes its potential functionalities”).) Yet, by this logic, almost any telephone equipment could be considered an ATDS. It does not take a creative mind to envision a 1960s-era rotary phone attached to modern computer equipment, rendering the rotary phone capable of dialing telephone numbers, but no one would suggest a rotary phone is an ATDS because of this “potential functionality.” Indeed, the FCC cited this very example in its 2015 Order when cautioning against stretching the definition of an ATDS too far.
CONCLUSION
What started as a simple case more than two years ago has now wended its way through more than 200 docket' entries, including several Motions to Dismiss, a failed mediation, a Motion for Class Certification, and the instant Motion for Summary Judgment. In thé Court’s view, it is now time for this case’s journey to come to an end. Because the evidence does not suggest Ung was called using an ATDS, his TCPA claim fails as a matter of law, and Universal is entitled to summary judgment.
Based on the foregoing, and all the files, records, and proceedings herein, IT IS ORDERED that Universal’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. No. 194) is GRANTED, and Eng’s Complaint (Doc. No. 1) is DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE.
LET JUDGMENT BE ENTERED ACCORDINGLY.
. The parties’ arguments and blizzard of briefing remind the Court of Alice, having passed through the looking glass, exclaiming, "It seems very pretty .., but it's rather hard to understand! ,.. Somehow it seems to fill my head with ideas—only I don't know exactly what they are!" Lewis Carroll, Through the Looking Glass, ch. 1.
. Notably, Ung's own Complaint alleges that an ATDS is "equipment that has the capacity to dial numbers without human intervention.” (Compl. ¶ 12 (emphasis added).)
. Ung similarly distorts the record when
. Indeed, this fact renders largely irrelevant much of Ung's brief, which is devoted to arguing that the ECC is an ATDS because it can be configured to autodial calls. Whatever truth there may be to that assertion, the evidence shows the ECC was not used to call landlords such as Ung; rather, those calls were manually dialed through separate functionality, namely, either hard phones or the web application.
. See In re Rules & Regulations Implementing Tel. Consumer Prot. Act of 1991, 30 FCC Rcd. at 7975 ("We ... acknowledge that there are outer limits to the capacity of equipment to be an autodialer[, and] the outer contours of the definition of 'autodialer' do not extend to every piece of malleable and modifiable dialing equipment that conceivably could be considered to have some capacity, however
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Spencer UNG v. UNIVERSAL ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published