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District court: No subject-matter jurisdiction for unconstitutional TCPA section

Courts TCPA U.S. Supreme Court Subject Matter Jurisdiction Robocalls

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On September 28, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana granted in part and denied in part a motion to dismiss, concluding that the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction in a TCPA action over 129 out of 130 robocalls made prior to the U.S. Supreme Court’s July 6 decision in Barr v. American Association of Political Consultants Inc (AAPC) (covered by InfoBytes here). According to the opinion, the plaintiffs filed a putative class action against a telecommunications company for violating Section 227(b)(1)(A)(iii) of the TCPA, which prohibits robocalls to cell phones without prior express consent. The company moved to dismiss the action, arguing that the Supreme Court decision in AAPC—which concluded the government-debt exception in Section 227(b)(1)(A)(iii) is an unconstitutional content-based speech restriction—makes the alleged violations unenforceable in federal court because the provision was determined to be unconstitutional. In response, the plaintiffs argued that because the Supreme Court’s decision preserved the general ban on robocalls to cellphones by severing “the new-fangled government-debt exception,” the Supreme Court “confirmed that [Section] 227(b)(1)(A)(iii) was constitutional all along.”

The district court disagreed with the plaintiffs, concluding that during the years that Section 227(b)(1)(A)(iii) permitted robocalls for government-debt collection while prohibiting other categories of robocalls, the entirety of the provision was unconstitutional. The district court noted that the Supreme Court’s opinion in AAPC provided little guidance, only “dicta of no precedential force.” The court looked to Justice Gorsuch’s opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part, noting his reasoning was better “as a matter of law and logic.” Because the entirety of Section 227(b)(1)(A)(iii) was unconstitutional prior to the Supreme Court’s severance of the government-debt exception on July 6, the district court dismissed the action with respect to the alleged TCPA violations that occurred prior to that date, but denied dismissal for the one robocall made after July 6. Lastly, the court granted a stay of the action pending the Supreme Court’s decision in Duguid v. Facebook, Inc (covered by InfoBytes here and here).