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Financial Services Law Insights and Observations

District Court: No private right of action under PA’s Motor Vehicle Sales Finance Act

Courts State Issues Auto Finance FCRA Repossession

Courts

On May 20, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania partially granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment in an action concerning alleged violations of the Pennsylvania Motor Vehicle Sales Finance Act (MVSFA) and the FCRA. The plaintiff filed an action against the defendants (an auto finance company and the three major consumer reporting agencies (CRAs) alleging he was unable to obtain credit and suffered loss of work, car rental expenses, and emotional distress following the repossession and sale of his vehicle after he allegedly breached his retail installment sale contract by exposing his vehicle to a lien for accumulated storage charges at a repair facility while waiting for a replacement part to arrive. After the vehicle was repossessed, the plaintiff sent letters to the CRAs disputing the reported information and asked that notations, including “voluntary surrender,” be removed from his credit file. According to the plaintiff, the disputed information was removed from his file well outside the 30-day timeframe required under the FCRA to reinvestigate and delete inaccurate information. The plaintiff also alleged that the auto finance company violated the MVSFA’s provisions governing notice of repossession. Upon review, the court granted defendants’ request for summary judgment on the MVSFA claim, agreeing with the auto finance company that the statute’s repossession notice provisions do not confer a private right of action. However, the court denied summary judgment on the FCRA claim, writing that “the record reflects genuine disputes of material fact as to whether [the auto finance company] reported inaccurate information and whether it reasonably investigated [p]laintiff’s disputes.”