ABA Banking Journal
No Result
View All Result
  • Topics
    • Ag Banking
    • Commercial Lending
    • Community Banking
    • Compliance and Risk
    • Cybersecurity
    • Economy
    • Human Resources
    • Insurance
    • Legal
    • Mortgage
    • Mutual Funds
    • Payments
    • Policy
    • Retail and Marketing
    • Tax and Accounting
    • Technology
    • Wealth Management
  • Newsbytes
  • Podcasts
  • Magazine
    • Subscribe
    • Advertise
    • Magazine Archive
    • Newsletter Archive
    • Podcast Archive
    • Sponsored Content Archive
SUBSCRIBE
ABA Banking Journal
  • Topics
    • Ag Banking
    • Commercial Lending
    • Community Banking
    • Compliance and Risk
    • Cybersecurity
    • Economy
    • Human Resources
    • Insurance
    • Legal
    • Mortgage
    • Mutual Funds
    • Payments
    • Policy
    • Retail and Marketing
    • Tax and Accounting
    • Technology
    • Wealth Management
  • Newsbytes
  • Podcasts
  • Magazine
    • Subscribe
    • Advertise
    • Magazine Archive
    • Newsletter Archive
    • Podcast Archive
    • Sponsored Content Archive
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
Home Uncategorized

Eleventh Circuit affirms dismissal of FCRA lawsuit

In a 3-0 decision, an Eleventh Circuit Panel affirmed a district court’s dismissal holding alleged inaccurate information must be “objectively and readily verifiable” to support an FCRA claim.

June 3, 2024
Reading Time: 3 mins read
Eleventh Circuit affirms dismissal of FCRA lawsuit

FAIR CREDIT REPORTING ACT
Holden v. Holiday Inn Club Vacations Inc.
Date: April 24, 2024

Issue: Whether the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) requires furnishers to investigate and resolve legal disputes.

Case Summary: In a 3-0 decision, an Eleventh Circuit Panel affirmed a district court’s dismissal holding alleged inaccurate information must be “objectively and readily verifiable” to support a Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) claim.

Tanethia Holden sued Holiday Inn Club Vacations for allegedly reporting inaccurate information to Experian, failing to conduct an appropriate investigation, and failing to correct inaccuracies. Mark Mayer also sued Holiday Inn, claiming it violated the FCRA when it verified the accuracy of the information in his credit report. In both cases, the district court granted Holiday Inn summary judgment, holding disagreements over whether Holden and Mayer owed a debt is a legal dispute, rather than an “inaccuracy” under the FCRA. Holden and Mayer appealed the decisions, and the Eleventh Circuit consolidated the cases. The plaintiffs argued the FCRA imposes a duty on furnishers to ensure all information reported to credit reporting agencies is accurate and complete—whether characterized as “legal” or “factual.”

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) filed an amicus brief urging the Eleventh Circuit to reverse the district court’s decision. The CFPB argued the FCRA requires furnishers to investigate reasonable disputes, even if the inaccuracy is a legal dispute. The CFPB asserted the FCRA does not categorically exempt legal issues from the investigations furnishers must conduct. The bureau also emphasized the distinction between legal and factual issues is ambiguous and potentially unworkable. In response, the American Bankers Association filed a coalition amicus brief urging the Eleventh Circuit to reject the CFPB’s attempt to expand the FCRA’s obligations to require consumer reporting agencies (CRAs) and furnishers to resolve legal disputes. ABA argued the FCRA addresses factual inaccuracies, not legal disputes, and the CFPB’s contrary approach is unworkable and inefficient.

In affirming the district court, the Eleventh Circuit panel first examined how the FCRA operates. According to the panel, the FCRA imposes two duties on furnishers. A furnisher has a duty not to furnish information about a consumer to a reporting agency if the furnisher knows or has reasonable cause to believe the information is inaccurate. A furnisher must also act once notified a consumer disputes the accuracy or completeness of their furnished information. When notified of a dispute, the furnisher must: investigate disputed information; review all relevant information provided by the CRA; and report the results of the investigation to the CRA.

Next, the panel determined plaintiffs’ FCRA claims were not actionable because the alleged inaccuracies were not objectively and readily verifiable. The panel opined Holden and Mayer could not prevail because they could not identify inaccurate or incomplete information Holiday Inn provided to the CRAs. The panel explained a report must be factually incorrect or objectively likely to mislead its intended user to violate the FCRA. According to the panel, Holden and Mayer’s allegedly inaccurate information stemmed from a contractual dispute rather than a straightforward factual inaccuracy.

The panel also discussed whether furnishers must investigate legal disputes such as whether debts are due and collectible. The panel noted some circuits have reasoned the furnisher of credit information is better positioned to thoroughly investigate a disputed debt instead of a CRA. The panel concluded the FCRA sometimes requires furnishers to investigate and even resolve questions of legal significance. But here, the panel concluded Holiday Inn sufficiently assessed Holden and Mayer’s debts. The panel noted its decision did not mean furnishers are never required by the FCRA to accurately report information derived from the readily verifiable and straightforward application of law to facts.

Bottom Line: The panel declined to impose a bright-line rule declaring only purely factual or transcription errors are actionable under the FCRA.

Documents: Opinion

Tags: Banking Docket
ShareTweetPin

Related Posts

ABA Washington Summit begins today

ABA Washington Summit begins today

Uncategorized
March 9, 2026

More than 1,400 bank leaders from across the country are gathered in Washington, D.C. this week for the 2026 ABA Washington Summit. ABA will livestream the Tuesday and Wednesday general sessions on its X account, starting around 8:30...

Recent news from Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control: April 5

Recent news from Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control: March 9

Uncategorized
March 9, 2026

News items that are the most recent sanctions-related actions from the Office of Foreign Assets Control.

ABA DataBank: Services sector continues to expand

ABA DataBank: Services sector continues to expand

Economy
March 4, 2026

The ABA Office of the Chief Economist believes the data is pointing to continued strength in the services sector, a key driver of U.S. economic activity and recent gross domestic product growth.

Bank survey probes business owners’ views on tariffs

U.S. Supreme Court rules IEEPA does not authorize president to impose reciprocal or drug-trafficking tariffs

Uncategorized
March 2, 2026

In a 6-3 decision, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the IEEPA does not authorize the president to impose tariffs.

OCC files amicus brief supporting ABA

Northern District of Illinois partially upholds Interchange Fee Prohibition Act

Uncategorized
March 2, 2026

Judge Virginia Kendall of the Northern District of Illinois partially upheld the Illinois Interchange Fee Prohibition Act, ruling that federal law does not preempt the Interchange Fee Provision, but does preempt the Data Usage Limitation.

Ninth Circuit affirms dismissal of investor suit against Comerica

Ninth Circuit affirms dismissal of investor suit against Comerica

Uncategorized
March 2, 2026

In a unanimous decision, a Ninth Circuit panel affirmed the dismissal of a lawsuit alleging that Comerica violated the Securities Exchange Act by misleading investors about how it oversaw its U.S. Department of the Treasury contract.

NEWSBYTES

SEC, CFTC announce agreement to coordinate regulation, enforcement

March 12, 2026

Fed’s Bowman outlines proposed bank capital rules

March 12, 2026

Mortgage rates rise

March 12, 2026

SPONSORED CONTENT

How top agricultural lenders are approaching AI, automation and innovation in 2026

How top agricultural lenders are approaching AI, automation and innovation in 2026

March 2, 2026
Top 7 FP&A Trends in Banking for 2026

Top 7 FP&A Trends in Banking for 2026

March 1, 2026
How Instant Payments Can Accelerate B2B Payments Modernization

How Instant Payments Can Accelerate B2B Payments Modernization

February 3, 2026
Digital Banking: The Gateway to Customer Growth and Competitive Differentiation

Digital Banking: The Gateway to Customer Growth and Competitive Differentiation

February 1, 2026

PODCASTS

Podcast: How the SCAM Act would encourage platforms to go after scammers

February 4, 2026

A new kind of ‘community bank’ for small businesses

January 22, 2026

Podcast: A Lone Star banking perspective

January 15, 2026

American Bankers Association
1333 New Hampshire Ave NW
Washington, DC 20036
1-800-BANKERS (800-226-5377)
www.aba.com
About ABA
Privacy Policy
Contact ABA

ABA Banking Journal
About ABA Banking Journal
Media Kit
Advertising
Subscribe

© 2026 American Bankers Association. All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Topics
    • Ag Banking
    • Commercial Lending
    • Community Banking
    • Compliance and Risk
    • Cybersecurity
    • Economy
    • Human Resources
    • Insurance
    • Legal
    • Mortgage
    • Mutual Funds
    • Payments
    • Policy
    • Retail and Marketing
    • Tax and Accounting
    • Technology
    • Wealth Management
  • Newsbytes
  • Podcasts
  • Magazine
    • Subscribe
    • Advertise
    • Magazine Archive
    • Newsletter Archive
    • Podcast Archive
    • Sponsored Content Archive

© 2026 American Bankers Association. All rights reserved.