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The Fair Credit Reporting Act of 1970, as amended by the Consumer Credit Reporting Reform Act of 1996, allows consumers to sue lenders who willfully or negligently supply false information about them to entities that generate credit reports. Respondent Reginald Kirtz secured a loan from a division of the United States Department of Agriculture and later sued the agency for money damages under the FCRA. Kirtz alleged that the USDA falsely told TransUnion--a credit reporting agency--that his account was past due, thus damaging his credit score and his ability to secure loans at affordable rates. The USDA moved to dismiss, invoking sovereign immunity. The District Court sided with the USDA. The Third Circuit reversed, holding that 15 U. S. C. §§1681n and 1681o authorize suits for damages against "any person" who violates the FCRA, and §1681a expressly defines "person" to include "any" government agency. 46 F. 4th 159, 164-166.
Held: A consumer may sue a federal agency for defying the FCRA's terms. Pp. 4-20.
(a) As a sovereign, the United States is generally immune from suits seeking money damages unless Congress chooses to waive that immunity. See, e.g., United States v. Testan,
Guided by these principles, this Court has found a clear waiver of sovereign immunity "in only two situations." Financial Oversight and Management Bd. for P. R. v. Centro De Periodismo Investigativo, Inc.,
Applying these principles leads to the conclusion that the FCRA clearly waives sovereign immunity in cases like this one. The FCRA's requirements apply to "person[s]" who, like the federal government here, furnish information to consumer reporting agencies. §1681s-2(b). Sections 1681n and 1681o create a cause of action for money damages to consumers injured by "[a]ny person" who willfully or negligently fails to comply with the statute's directive. Section 1681a provides a definition of "person" that includes "any . . . government . . . agency," §1681a(b), and that applies to the entire Act. That other statutory provisions in the FCRA and elsewhere address the question of sovereign immunity in arguably more obvious terms, see, e.g., §1681u, does not make the waiver of sovereign immunity in the provisions at issue here any less clear. Pp. 4-9.
(b) The government implies that a cause of action against the government is insufficient to effect a waiver unless accompanied by a separate provision addressing sovereign immunity, but the Court has held that sovereign immunity may be waived even without a separate waiver provision. Financial Oversight and Management Bd.,
(c) The government requests this Court to hold that §§1681n and 1681o do not clearly waive sovereign immunity because they do not "unambiguously incorporate" §1681a's definition of "person." But a court must respect definitions given by Congress as "virtually conclusive," Sturgeon v. Frost,
The government next points to §1681q, a criminal-enforcement provision, to argue that because the federal government cannot be subjected to criminal prosecution, it would be absurd to apply §1681a's definition of "person" to that provision. Even if the government is right, the power to correct for an absurdity "in one portion of a statute" does not imply a "license to distort other provisions of the statute." NLRB v. Health Care & Retirement Corp. of America,
46 F. 4th 159, affirmed.
Gorsuch, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
Opinion of the Court
601 U. S. ____ (2024)
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the United States Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Washington, D. C. 20543, pio@supremecourt.gov, of any typographical or other formal errors.
No. 22-846
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE RURAL DEVELOP-
MENT RURAL HOUSING SERVICE, PETITIONER v. REGINALD KIRTZ
on writ of certiorari to the united states court of appeals for the third circuit
[February 8, 2024]
Justice Gorsuch delivered the opinion of the Court.
A credit report can determine everything from whether a person can secure a credit card, purchase a home, win a new job, or start a small business. Recognizing the importance of accuracy in credit reporting, Congress adopted the Fair Credit Reporting Act in 1970 (FCRA). In its present form, the Act allows consumers to sue private lenders who willfully or negligently supply false information about them to agencies that generate credit reports. The question we face is whether one of the Nation's largest lenders--the federal government--is also susceptible to suit when it supplies false information, or whether it may invoke sovereign immunity to avoid liability.
I
This case arises from a loan Reginald Kirtz secured from the Rural Housing Service. The Service, a division of the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), "issues loans to promote the development of safe and affordable housing in rural communities." Kirtz v. Trans Union LLC, 46 F. 4th 159, 163 (CA3 2022). According to Mr. Kirtz, he repaid his loan in full by mid-2018. See Amended Complaint in No. 2:20-cv-05231 (ED Pa.), ECF Doc. 20, p. 3, ¶11. Despite this, the USDA repeatedly told TransUnion, a company engaged in the business of preparing consumer credit reports, that his account was past due. Ibid., ¶12. These misrepresentations damaged his credit score and threatened his ability to secure future loans at affordable rates. See id., at 3-4, ¶¶12-14. In an effort to resolve the problem, Mr. Kirtz alerted TransUnion to the error, and the company, in turn, notified the USDA. Id., at 5, ¶¶16, 20. But, Mr. Kirtz says, the USDA failed to take "any action to investigate or correct" its records. 46 F. 4th, at 163. So he eventually decided to sue the agency under the FCRA. Ibid.
As originally enacted in 1970, the FCRA focused largely on two groups. First, it addressed "consumer reporting agenc[ies]" like TransUnion, charging them with various new duties designed to ensure the accuracy and confidentiality of their work. See, e.g., 84 Stat. 1129, 1132; 15 U. S. C. §§1681b, 1681i. Second, it imposed new regulations on "person[s]" who procure credit information from consumer reporting agencies. So, for example, the Act provided that a "person" who requests "an investigative consumer report on any consumer" must inform the consumer in writing "not later than three days after the date on which the report was first requested." 84 Stat. 1130; see §1681d(a). The FCRA proceeded to define the term "person" broadly to "mea[n] any individual, partnership, corporation, trust, estate, cooperative, association, government or governmental subdivision or agency, or other entity." 84 Stat. 1128; see §1681a(b). The Act further authorized consumers to seek damages for violations of its terms, but only against consumer reporting agencies and those who use the information they produce. 84 Stat. 1134; see §§1681n, 1681o (1970 ed.).
In the Consumer Credit Reporting Reform Act of 1996, Congress amended the FCRA to broaden its reach. As relevant here, Congress added provisions addressing those who furnish information to consumer reporting agencies. Referencing the definition of "person" it had adopted in 1970, Congress instructed that, if a consumer disputes "the completeness or accuracy" of his credit information, the "person" who furnished it must investigate the matter and take steps to correct any mistake. 110 Stat. 3009-448; see §1681s-2(b). To enforce these new duties, Congress revised the 1970 Act's remedial provisions. Where it had once authorized consumer suits against only consumer reporting agencies and users of their information, Congress now authorized consumer suits against "[a]ny person" who willfully or negligently fails to comply with "any" of the law's "requirement[s]." 110 Stat. 3009-446; see §§1681n(a), 1681o(a).
Mr. Kirtz sought relief under these new provisions. According to his complaint, the USDA furnished information to TransUnion. The agency had notice that the information it supplied was false. That false information impaired Mr. Kirtz's ability to access affordable credit. Yet the agency failed to take any steps to correct its mistake--either willfully (in violation of §1681n) or negligently (in violation of §1681o). By way of remedy, Mr. Kirtz sought money damages consistent with what the FCRA allows. See Amended Complaint 12.
In response, the USDA moved to dismiss the complaint. The agency did not dispute that allegations like Mr. Kirtz's state a viable claim for relief. Instead, it pointed to this Court's precedents holding that, as sovereign, the federal government enjoys immunity from suits for money damages unless Congress waives that immunity. And, the agency contended, nothing in the FCRA purports to render the federal government amenable to suit. The district court sided with the USDA, but the Third Circuit reversed. Speaking for a unanimous panel, Judge Krause observed that §§1681n and 1681o authorize suits for damages against "any person" who violates the Act, and §1681a expressly defines "person" to include "any" government agency. 46 F. 4th, at 164-166.
The question whether Mr. Kirtz may sue the federal government holds significance for many. A 2021 study cited by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau "found that over 34% of consumers surveyed were able to identify at least one error in their credit reports." 87 Fed. Reg. 64689-64690 (2022). Mistakes like these can lead lenders to insist on higher interest rates or other terms that make it "difficult or impossible" for consumers "to obtain a mortgage, auto loan, student loan, or other credit." Id., at 64689. These days, too, federal agencies are among " 'the largest furnishers of credit information' " to consumer reporting agencies. Brief for Petitioner 38 (quoting Robinson v. Department of Education, 590 U. S. ___, ___ (2020) (Thomas, J., dissenting from denial of certiorari) (slip op., at 3)). Yet the lower courts have reached different views on the question whether federal agencies are answerable under the FCRA for their mistakes. Like the Third Circuit, the Seventh and D. C. Circuits have held that the FCRA authorizes suits against government agencies no less than it does private lenders. The Fourth and Ninth Circuits, by contrast, have held that sovereign immunity bars consumer suits against federal agencies. We agreed to hear this case to resolve that conflict. 599 U. S. ___ (2023).
II
The parties agree on the principles that guide our analysis even as they disagree on the answer those principles yield. Under this Court's precedents, both sides acknowledge, the United States, as sovereign, is generally immune from suits seeking money damages. See, e.g., United States v. Testan,
Necessarily, this inquiry trains on statutory text rather than legislative history. Because "[a]ny ambiguities in the statutory language are to be construed in favor of immunity," no amount of legislative history can "supply a waiver that is not clearly evident from the language of the statute." Cooper,
To date, this Court has found a clear waiver of sovereign immunity "in only two situations." Financial Oversight and Management Bd. for P. R. v. Centro De Periodismo Investigativo, Inc.,
The Court encountered a statute falling into this second category in Kimel,
Guided by these principles, we think the Third Circuit reached the right decision in this case: The FCRA effects a clear waiver of sovereign immunity. In §1681s-2, the Act requires "person[s]" who furnish information to consumer reporting agencies to investigate consumer complaints and make any necessary corrections. 15 U. S. C. §1681s-2(b). In §§1681n and 1681o, the Act authorizes consumer suits for money damages against "[a]ny person" who willfully or negligently fails to comply with this directive. §§1681n(a), 1681o(a). In §1681a, the Act defines the term " 'person' " to include "any . . . governmental . . . agency." §1681a(b). And the same provision instructs us to apply this definition throughout the entire "subchapter" where §§1681n and 1681o appear. §1681a(a). Through this series of statutory directions, no less than those we encountered in Kimel, Congress has explicitly permitted consumer claims for damages against the government. Dismissing suits like Mr. Kirtz's would effectively "negat[e]" suits Congress has clearly authorized. Financial Oversight and Management Bd.,
We need look no further to resolve this case. But if we do, other portions of the FCRA point to the same conclusion. Section 1681a(y) excludes from the definition of "consumer report" certain communications that "are not provided to any person except . . . any Federal or State officer, agency, or department, or any officer, agency, or department of a unit of general local government." (Emphasis added.) Section 1681b requires a "person" who intends to take an "adverse [employment] action" based on a consumer credit report to provide the affected individual with a copy of the report unless "an agency or department of the United States Government" seeks to use the report as part of a national security investigation. §§1681b(b)(3)(A), (4)(A). Both provisions thus exempt government agencies from the Act's otherwise-broad definition of "person" for particular reasons in particular contexts. All of which tends to confirm what the Act tells us explicitly: Throughout the Act, the term "person" includes the government unless otherwise noted. See Southwest Airlines Co. v. Saxon,
To be sure, there are other provisions in the FCRA--just as there are elsewhere in the U. S. Code--that address the question of sovereign immunity in different and arguably even more obvious terms. For example, Congress added §1681u to the FCRA as part of the Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1996. See 109 Stat. 974. That provision allows the Federal Bureau of Investigation to access consumer information, subject to a number of constraints. See §§1681u(a)-(d). At the same time, the statute indicates that the failure to respect those constraints can expose "[a]ny agency or department of the United States" to "liab[ility] to the consumer" for money damages. §1681u(j). While nothing in §1681u discusses sovereign immunity as such, everyone agrees its language clearly waives sovereign immunity.
None of that, however, makes the waiver of sovereign immunity reflected in the provisions now before us any less clear. "If no magic words are required" to waive sovereign immunity, then the clarity of "each statute must be evaluated on its own terms." Pennsylvania v. Union Gas Co.,
liability. Because they do, that is the end of the matter.1
III
A
While the government largely accepts our understanding of this Court's sovereign-immunity jurisprudence, it disputes some of the finer points. As an initial matter, the government asserts that, "to impose liability on a sovereign, a plaintiff must identify both a 'source of substantive law' that 'provides an avenue for relief' and 'a waiver of sovereign immunity.' " Brief for Petitioner 14 (quoting FDIC v. Meyer,
That implication is incorrect. At the risk of repeating ourselves, a cause of action authorizing suit against the government may waive sovereign immunity even without a separate waiver provision. Financial Oversight and Management Bd.,
Changing tack but pursuing the same end, the government points to the canon against superfluity. Proper respect for Congress cautions courts against lightly assuming that any of the statutory terms it has chosen to employ are "superfluous" or "void" of significance. TRW Inc. v. Andrews,
We cannot agree with this suggestion any more than the last. The canon against rendering statutory terms a nullity has a long lineage. But this Court has never endorsed the notion that a statute may effect a waiver of sovereign immunity only if that is the sole work it performs. Doing so would (again) effectively force Congress to address sovereign immunity in so many words in a discrete statutory provision. It would come perilously close, as well, to imposing a "magic-words" requirement. For good reason, then, the government's supposed rule appears in none of the decisions it directs us to--not in Seminole Tribe of Fla.,
The government has another theory to offer. We may not find a waiver of sovereign immunity, it suggests, "when a cause of action merely cross-references a general definition that includes sovereigns along with non-sovereigns." Id., at 22. Running with this idea, the government concedes that Congress would have clearly waived sovereign immunity if it had "plug[ged]" the full definition of "persons" from §1681a directly into §§1681n and 1681o. Tr. of Oral Arg. 7; accord, Brief for Petitioner 22. But, the government argues, a waiver of sovereign immunity cannot be effected by reading these provisions in combination.
This theory encounters its own difficulties. Under this Court's precedents, Congress need not "make its clear statement in a single section" adopted at a single moment in time. Kimel,
Alternatively still, the government points to Atascadero State Hospital v. Scanlon,
To appreciate the problem with this line of thinking, some background helps. For a period in the mid-20th century, this Court's approach to sovereign immunity looked considerably different than it does today (or did before). Back then, in cases like Parden v. Terminal R. Co. of Ala. Docks Dept.,
Atascadero was one of the decisions issued during the course of this journey--and it does nothing to help the government's cause. In Parden, the Court had held that a private individual could sue "a railroad owned and operated by Alabama . . . under the Federal Employers' Liability Act." College Savings Bank,
Employees was another case decided during the long retreat from Parden. And, on first encounter, it might seem more promising for the government. That case concerned the FLSA, which authorizes actions against "employer[s]" for unpaid overtime, and the question whether that law clearly permitted suit against state agencies. See Employees,
By its own terms, however, Employees is distinguishable. The Employees Court stressed that, while Congress amended the definitional section of the FLSA to include States, it had not made any changes to the underlying liability provision. And, the Court reasoned, "it would be surprising" to think Congress meant to deprive a State of immunity on the basis of a change to a definitional section alone, without any accompanying change to the pertinent liability provision.
There is another problem with the government's invocation of Employees. Despite recognizing that "the literal language of the" FLSA permitted suits against States, the Employees Court considered it all but dispositive that it could not find "a word" in the Act's legislative history indicating that Congress wanted "to make it possible for a citizen of that State or another State to sue the State in the federal courts."
In saying this much, we do not wash our hands of Employees. No one before us questions that the decision is entitled to stare decisis effect with respect to the portions of the FLSA it addressed. We recognize only that the Court has since repeatedly disavowed the decision's methodological approach and cautioned against its use when considering claims of sovereign immunity in other contexts.2
B
In a final set of arguments, the government pursues a different theme. Now accepting the contemporary sovereign-immunity principles we have outlined, the government contends the provisions of the FCRA before us are still insufficient to abrogate immunity. Here, the government acknowledges that §§1681n and 1681o expressly authorize suits against "any person." It acknowledges that §1681a expressly defines "person" to include "any" federal agency. But the government asks us to hold that §§1681n and 1681o do not clearly waive sovereign immunity because they do not "unambiguously incorporate" §1681a's definition. Brief for Petitioner 28.
That is no small ask. When Congress takes the trouble to define the terms it uses, a court must respect its definitions as "virtually conclusive." Sturgeon v. Frost,
The government does not even try to meet that standard in this case. How could it? The government acknowledges that federal agencies are among " 'the largest furnishers of credit information in the country.' " Brief for Petitioner 38 (quoting Robinson, 590 U. S., at ___ (opinion of Thomas, J.) (slip op., at 3)). So applying the Act's definitional and civil liability provisions as written and allowing suits against federal agencies to proceed would, if anything, seem consistent with the Act's goal of "ensur[ing] fair and accurate credit reporting." Safeco Ins. Co. of America v. Burr,
Recognizing this problem, the government suggests a different kind of "[i]ncongruit[y]" would arise if §§1681n and 1681o incorporated §1681a's definition of "person." Brief for Petitioner 33. The government focuses on the fact that §1681a's definition of "person" includes not just federal agencies but state entities as well. So giving that definition effect in §§1681n and 1681o would render "not just the federal government, but also individual States" susceptible to consumer suits for money damages. Ibid. And that result, the government contends, is unthinkable. Unthinkable because Congress enacted the FCRA pursuant to the Constitution's Commerce Clause--a provision this Court has held does not endow Congress with the power to abrogate state sovereign immunity. Id., at 34; see Florida Prepaid Postsecondary Ed. Expense Bd. v. College Savings Bank,
While the premise of the government's argument is correct, its conclusion is not. If the FCRA is a piece of Commerce Clause legislation, the waiver of sovereign immunity effected by §§1681n and 1681o might be constitutionally invalid as applied against individual States. But none of that means we may disregard the statute's clear terms. See Seminole Tribe,
Perhaps recognizing as much, the government pivots to a discussion of the Act's other enforcement mechanisms. Most notably, the government points to §1681q, which makes it a crime--punishable by a fine, imprisonment, or both--for "[a]ny person" to "knowingly and willfully obtai[n]" consumer information "under false pretenses." As the government sees it, the term "person" in this provision cannot possibly bear its statutory definition because it is "absur[d]" to think Congress might have authorized criminal enforcement against federal agencies. Brief for Petitioner 31 (internal quotation marks omitted). What's more, the government submits, because the term "person" cannot include "government" in §1681q, it cannot include "government" in §§1681n and 1681o either. Id., at 30-31.
Again, however, that much does not follow. Suppose, as the Third Circuit did when analyzing Mr. Kirtz's claim, that "[i]t would be absurd . . . to subject the federal government to criminal prosecution." 46 F. 4th, at 171-172. Suppose, too, that this absurdity supplies the exceptional reason necessary to deviate from §1681a's definition of "person" in §1681q's criminal-enforcement provision. Even spotting the government that much for argument's sake, absurdity is not contagious: The power to correct for an absurdity "in one portion of a statute" does not imply a "license to distort other provisions of the statute." NLRB v. Health Care & Retirement Corp. of America,
Consider the alternative. If we could ignore §1681a's definition of "person" when it comes to §§1681n and 1681o simply because applying that definition to other statutory provisions could lead to absurd results, where would §1681a's definition apply? Before the Seventh Circuit, the government proposed this solution: treating federal agencies as "person[s]" subject to all the Act's "substantive requirements" but exempt from any of its liability provisions. Bormes v. United States, 759 F. 3d 793, 795 (2014). That kind of "wholly artificial," if surely convenient, distinction lacks any grounding in the statutory text, 46 F. 4th, at 166, and has no proper place in our jurisprudence, cf. Niz-Chavez v. Garland,
Venturing even further from the relevant statutory text, the government offers one last argument. It observes that the Privacy Act of 1974 covers some of the same ground we attribute to the FCRA. Passed "to protect the privacy of individuals identified in [federal] information systems," 88 Stat. 1896, the Privacy Act addresses the government's retention and disclosure of personal information, see 5 U. S. C. §552a, including the disclosure of that information to consumer reporting agencies, see 31 U. S. C. §3711(e). If a federal agency supplies inaccurate information, the Privacy Act allows individuals to seek a court order requiring it to correct its records. See 5 U. S. C. §§552a(g)(1)-(2). Money damages are also sometimes available. §552a(g)(4). Because these remedies have long been available to address agency misconduct under the Privacy Act, the government reasons, there was no reason for Congress to supplement them with additional remedies under the FCRA.
That's an unusual argument. Even the government concedes that, the Privacy Act notwithstanding, it is subject to and liable under at least some provisions of the FCRA. E.g., Brief for Petitioner 34-35 (conceding the government may be held liable under §1681u); id., at 28 ("Sometimes," the Act's "use of the word 'person' . . . refers to the default statutory definition in [§]1681a(b)"). Nor is the need to juggle multiple and sometimes overlapping legal obligations an unusual feature of contemporary American life for the government any more than it is for the governed. Recognizing this fact--and mindful our role is to apply the law, not rewrite it--we approach federal statutes touching on the same topic with a "strong presumption" they can coexist harmoniously. See Epic Systems Corp. v. Lewis,
*
The Executive Branch may question the wisdom of holding federal agencies accountable for their violations of the Fair Credit Reporting Act; certainly the many and resourceful arguments it advances today suggest as much. But Congress's judgment commands our respect and the law it has adopted speaks clearly: A consumer may sue "any" federal agency for defying the law's terms. Because it faithfully followed this legislative direction, the judgment of the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit is
Affirmed.
The differences between §1681u (on the one hand) and §§1681n and 1681o (on the other) are in any event unremarkable. Section 1681u principally concerns the liability of the United States. Understandably, then, Congress singled out the United States by name in that section. Sections 1681n and 1681o, by contrast, address the liability of a broad array of government agencies, corporations, and natural persons. Understandably then, too, Congress chose a parsimonious approach in these sections by employing the term "person[s]"--one §1681a defines capaciously enough to capture them all.
Employees also appears to have rested in part on the Court's views about the constraints Congress faces when seeking to abrogate state sovereign immunity, given the Constitution's federal structure and the Eleventh Amendment.
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No. 22-846
Argued: November 06, 2023
Decided: February 08, 2024
Court: United States Supreme Court
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