Tag Archives: Debt Collection

The Least Sophisticated Podcast Features 2 New Episodes

June 28, 2018 — Maurice Wutscher attorneys Eric Rosenkoetter and Brent Yarborough are continuing their compliance podcast for the accounts receivable management industry, “The Least Sophisticated Podcast.”

Named as a nod to the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act’s least sophisticated consumer provisions, the podcast has released nine episodes so far.

The most recent episode discusses the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection’s June 13 consent order with a holding company and its affiliated operating entities engaged in consumer lending.  This is the second consent order entered by the Bureau under Acting Director Mick Mulvaney.

Episode 8, “State Round-Up With David Reid,” delves into a discussion on what’s going on at the state level in the ARM industry with one of the most respected experts in government affairs.

The podcast can be accessed for free on iTunes and Google Play or by clicking here.

Maurice Wutscher’s Donald Maurice to Speak at NIADA/NABD Convention

June 6, 2018 — Maurice Wutscher attorney Donald Maurice will discuss regulatory developments and compliance strategies in debt collection at the NIADA/NABD Convention & Expo in Orlando, June 18-21.

Mr. Maurice’s breakout session — Top Litigation Risks in Debt Collection — will examine the top risks in servicing BHPH accounts and the rules behind first-party debt collection.

The conference is presented by the National Independent Automobile Dealers Association and the National Alliance of Buy Here, Pay Here Dealers. For more information and to register, click here.

Maurice Wutscher Attorneys Author Article on State Debt Collection Rulemaking

Feb. 21, 2018 — Maurice Wutscher’s Donald Maurice, Eric Rosenkoetter and Brent Yarborough have written an article discussing the regulation of debt collection activity at the state level for the Feb. 20 issue of Consumer Financial Services Law Report.

In “States Advance Debt Collection Regulation as CFPB Rule Stalls,” the authors write that while rulemaking at the federal level remains uncertain, states are advancing their rulemaking efforts.

“Numerous states have undertaken or soon will create extraordinary legislative and regulatory measures that are changing the landscape of debt collection regulation,” they write.

Mr. Maurice, Mr. Rosenkoetter and Mr. Yarborough focus their practices in the areas of appellate, commercial, and consumer credit litigation, and regulatory compliance. They regularly represent consumer and commercial financial services companies, including financial asset buyers and sellers, depository institutions, third-party debt collectors, and other financial services providers and have significant experience working with federal and state legislators and regulators.

Consumer Financial Services Law Report is published by Thomson Reuters.

Maurice Wutscher Attorneys to Discuss Collection Law Compliance in CLE Seminar

Nov. 22, 2017 — Maurice Wutscher attorneys Thomas R. Dominczyk and Shannon P. Miller will be panel speakers in a one-day seminar focusing on compliance guidance for debt collectors on Dec. 7 in Philadelphia.

Presented by the National Business Institute, the seminar will cover all aspects of collections law including the latest developments with the FDCPA and TCPA; CFPB enforcement actions; locating assets, garnishing accounts and attaching liens; jurisdiction and venue issues; how bankruptcy affects collections; attorney’s fees; ethics matters and more.

Continuing legal education credits will be provided. For more information and to register, click here.

Maurice Wutscher Attorneys to Speak at Consumer Financial Services Conference in Texas

Oct. 19, 2017 — Several Maurice Wutscher attorneys will speak at the Consumer Financial Services Conference at Texas A&M University School of Law, Nov. 2-3.

Donald Maurice will discuss the evolving landscape of first party collections. Ernest P. Wagner will moderate a panel on cybersecurity. Ralph T. Wutscher will moderate a panel on mortgage origination and servicing compliance.

Conference attendees will also hear from other leaders in consumer financial services law on such issues as limited English proficiency, ADA accessibility, vendor management, CFPB actions, RESPA, mortgage servicing litigation, FinTech, arbitration, collateral protection insurance in auto finance, fair lending, and the TCPA.

The conference is organized by the Conference on Consumer Finance Law. Twelve CLE credits will be provided, including one hour of ethics. For more information and to register, click here.

Maurice Wutscher’s Alan Hochheiser, Donald Maurice to Speak at NABD Conference

Oct. 12, 2017 — Maurice Wutscher attorneys Alan Hochheiser and Donald Maurice will discuss regulatory developments and compliance strategies in debt collection and consumer bankruptcy law at the Orlando Conference for Buy Here, Pay Here on Oct. 23-25.

In Maximizing Recoveries through Debt Sales, Alan Hochheiser will explain how dealers can maximize their recoveries in bankruptcy matters.

In Collection Hot Spots – What You Should Be Doing Today to Avoid Litigation Tomorrow, Donald Maurice will discuss the state and local regulation of “first party” debt collection, the practices that tend to increase the risk of civil litigation and regulatory enforcement and what dealers can do now to protect their businesses.

The conference is presented by the National Alliance of Buy Here, Pay Here Dealers. Click here for more information.

Maurice Wutscher’s Alan Hochheiser, Donald Maurice to Speak at ABA Business Law Meeting

Sept. 12, 2017 — Maurice Wutscher attorneys Alan Hochheiser and Donald Maurice will discuss consumer bankruptcy law as well as developments in debt collection at the ABA Business Law Section Annual Meeting in Chicago this week.

Alan Hochheiser will join a panel of experts including a bankruptcy judge from the Eastern District of New York in examining recent developments in consumer bankruptcy law. Panelists will review U.S. Supreme Court decisions and Circuit Court decisions in consumer bankruptcy over the last year and provide guidance for business lawyers in their dealings with consumer debtors.

Donald Maurice will moderate a Consumer Financial Services Roundtable on newly enacted state laws, regulations and rules impacting the debt collection industry. The 2017 state legislative session brought new licensing schemes and new data and document requirements for debt collection. The roundtable will outline the active states, explore some of the most notable changes and discuss what may be in store for the 2018 legislative session.

These sessions are among more than 90 CLE business law programs as well as topical forums covering the latest business law issues to be offered at this year’s annual meeting.

Click here for more information.

Webinar to Examine Use of Bankruptcy Code to Impose Debt Collector Liability

March 21, 2017 — Maurice Wutscher’s Alan C. Hochhesier and Donald Maurice will discuss the CFPB’s and the U.S. Trustee’s use of Bankruptcy Code Section 105 as an enforcement tool in addressing the conduct of debt buying companies during a webinar March 29.

Section 105 provides a bankruptcy court with broad powers to carry out the provisions of the Bankruptcy Code. Recently, the U.S. Trustee filed two actions under the section concerning a debt buying company’s conduct in filing proofs of claim. The webinar will examine Section 105 and discuss what creditors need to know to avoid liability.

The webinar is being presented by Receivables Management Association and sponsored by The Bureaus, Inc. It will provide 1.5 education credits. For more information and to register, click here.

Maurice Wutscher Attorneys Discuss Debt Collection and Bankruptcy in Business Law Today

Oct. 21, 2016 — Maurice Wutscher attorneys Donald Maurice, Eric Rosenkoetter, Keith Wier and Brent Yarborough have written articles for Business Law Today’s mini-theme Debt Collection and Bankruptcy in its October issue.

Mr. Maurice, who is chair of the Bankruptcy and Debt Collection Subcommittee of the Consumer Financial Services Committee, introduces the mini-theme and gives historical context of the federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act and the changing face of the debt collection industry.

“When originally enacted, the FDCPA did not provide any agency with rulemaking authority. As a result, the statute has gone largely unaltered. But the debt collection industry has dramatically changed with the emergence of debt buying entities and large-scale securitization of consumer debt. New technologies such as paperless transactions, the ubiquitous use of cell phones, text messaging, and even voice mail hardly mesh with the 1970’s-era FDCPA,” Mr. Maurice writes.

With Dodd-Frank giving the CFPB the authority to promulgate rules under the FDCPA, this summer the CFPB released an outline of proposals subject to the FDCPA.

In The CFPB’s Outline of Debt Collection Proposals: A Look Into the Past and Future, Mr. Rosenkoetter and Mr. Wier provide a summary and analysis of the CFPB’s outline. Their article examines past events leading to the outline and the effect the proposals may have on debt collectors, debt buyers, and creditors.

“Fortunately, most estimates place implementation of the final rule in 2019, which provides ample time to consider what it would take to comply with rules similar to those in the Outline. Although it might be premature to implement changes based on mere proposals, time remains to develop implementation strategy, prioritization, and anticipated cost so that when the time comes, a plan is in place for quick implementation and testing of any new technologies, policies, and procedures,” write Rosenkoetter and Wier.

In Do You Think Banks Are Debt Collectors? The CFPB and the FTC Do, Mr. Yarborough, along with Jolina Cuaresma and Katherine Lamberth, discuss the CFPB’s debt collection rulemaking process. The CFPB’s outline of proposals is aimed solely at “debt collectors” subject to the FDCPA. However, due to a growing circuit split over the scope of the definition of “debt collector” for purposes of the FDCPA, it is unclear whether banks and other creditors that collect on debts acquired in default fall within the ambit of the CFPB’s proposals, they write.

Finally, Mr. Maurice looks at the intersection of the FDCPA and bankruptcy law, particularly when debt collectors file proofs of claim for consumer debts subject to expired statutes of limitations in The Growing Circuit Split on Proofs of Claim for Time-Barred Debt.Whether the filing of a proof of claim for a debt subject to an expired limitations period violates the FDCPA has divided four Circuit Courts of Appeals in the course of two years.

“The Fourth (Dubois v. Atlas Acquisitions, LLC), Seventh (Owens v. LVNV Funding LLC), and Eighth (Nelson v. Midland Credit Management Inc) Circuit Courts of Appeals all agreed that time-barred debts that can be lawfully collected under state law are claims, and a creditor’s mere filing of a proof of claim subject to an expired limitations period is not false, deceptive, or misleading. These decisions also point to the existing protections bankruptcy courts provide debtors under both the Bankruptcy Code and Rules, and to the desire to bring all claims that can be asserted against debtors within the bankruptcy process,” Mr. Maurice writes.

The issue is now before the U.S. Supreme Court. The article examines the controversy and its implications for creditors and debtors under the bankruptcy code.

Business Law Today is published by the American Bar Association’s Business Law Section.

Maurice Wutscher’s Brent Yarborough to Speak at Virginia Creditors Bar Association

BrentYarboroughOct. 18, 2016 — Maurice Wutscher attorney Brent Yarborough will discuss the CFPB’s proposed debt collection rules at the Virginia Creditors Bar Association’s annual Collections Seminar on Oct. 20 in Williamsburg, Virginia.

In addition to a review of the CFPB’s rulemaking process for debt collection, the seminar will offer comprehensive discussions on issues pertaining to creditors’ rights and collections law throughout Virginia, including FDCPA defense and recent FDCPA decisions, bankruptcy, post judgment collections, and ethics.

The seminar offers six hours of CLE, including one hour of ethics, For more information, click here.

Maurice Wutscher Attorneys to Speak at ABA Business Law Section Meeting

Sept. 7, 2016 — Maurice Wutscher attorneys Donald Maurice and Brent Yarborough will moderate a roundtable discussion on the latest developments in debt collection litigation and regulation on Sept. 8 at the American Bar Association’s Business Law Section Annual Meeting in Boston.

The discussion will cover the CFPB’s outline of proposed debt collection rules and its SBREFA panel. Also, Maurice and Yarborough will discuss recent circuit court decisions addressing whether the FDCPA prohibits the filing of “time-barred” proofs of claim in bankruptcy and other litigation developments.

The Consumer Financial Services Committee roundtable is among more than 80 CLE programs prepared and presented by practice-area experts; topical sessions covering the latest business law issues; social events designed to facilitate networking and establish new contacts; and hundreds of committee and subcommittee meetings addressing developments in all areas of business law.

Click here for more information.

Maurice Wutscher’s Brent Yarborough to Discuss CFPB’s Proposed Debt Collection Rules

Aug. 1, 2016 — Maurice Wutscher attorney Brent Yarborough will discuss the CFPB’s proposed debt collection rules in a members-only NARCA webinar today at 3 p.m. eastern.

Mr. Yarborough heads Maurice Wutscher’s Birmingham, Alabama office and is secretary of the Board of Directors of NARCA – The National Creditors Bar Association.

He was among a panel of invited speakers to give comments on the CFPB’s Outline at a CFPB field hearing in Sacramento, California on July 29.

For more information about today’s webinar, click here.