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UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISISON
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20580
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Division of Credit Practices
Bureau of Consumer
Protection
Cynthia S. Lamb
Investigator
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July 16, 1998
Sam Kelley, Esq
815 Brazos, Suite 702
Austin, TX 78701
Section 603(d)(2)(C) of the Fair Credit Reporting
Act
Dear Mr. Kelley:
This is in response to your recent letter in which you ask whether
the Fair Credit Reporting Act ("FCRA") requires a seller
of consumer merchandise ("merchant") to give advance
notification to a consumer of the name of each financing source
("creditor") to whom the consumer's application may
be submitted.
There is no provision in the FCRA that specifically requires
a merchant to disclose to its customers the names of the creditors
to whom the merchant may refer credit applications. However, the
creditors themselves may require merchants to make these disclosures
to ensure that the creditors are not considered "consumer
reporting agencies" for the FCRA purposes when they inform
merchants of their decisions to grant or deny credit.
Under the definition of "consumer report" and "consumer
reporting agency" in Section 603 of the FCRA, a creditor
may be considered a "consumer reporting agency" when
it conveys to a merchant its decision whether or not to grant
credit to the merchant's customers, unless it comes within the
exclusion set forth in Section 603(d)(2)(C). That subsection provides
that the term "consumer report" does not include a report
in which a person who has been requested by a third party to make
a specific extension of credit directly or indirectly to a consumer
conveys his or her decision with respect to such request, if the
third party advises the consumer of the name and address of the
person to whom the request was made, and such person makes the
disclosures to the consumer required under Section 615. In essence,
this provision exempts from the Act communications between creditors
and merchants concerning extensions of credit to the merchant's
customers if the merchant informs these customers of the name
and address of each creditor to whom the application is being
forwarded and the creditor gives a Section 615 notice.
As you can see, the finance company with whom your client is
dealing is undoubtedly requiring the disclosure of its name and
address in order to qualify for the exemptions set forth in Section
603(d)(2)(C). Thus, although the merchant is not required to make
these disclosures under the FCRA, any creditor may by contract
require merchants with whom it has a business relationship to
make these disclosures to ensure its compliance with the FCRA.
The opinions set forth in this informal staff letter are not
binding on the Commission.
Yours truly,
Cynthia S. Lamb
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