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UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20580
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Division of Financial Practices
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November 5, 1998
Nancy S. Spritz, Esq.
Candle, Klitenic & Chernow, LLP
Woodholme Professional Building
1838 Greene Tree Road, Suite 370
Baltimore, Maryland 21208
- Re: Section 603(k)(1)(B)(iv) of the Fair
Credit Reporting Act --Adverse Action Notices to Co-Signers
/ Guarantors of Denied Rental Applications
Dear Ms. Spritz:
This letter responds to your letter asking for the staff's opinion
as to whether Section 615(a) of the Fair Credit Reporting Act
("FCRA") requires a landlord to provide notice of an
adverse action to a co-signer/guarantor of a rental application
when the landlord denies the prospective tenant's application
based in whole or in part on information in the co-signer/guarantor's
consumer report. Your letter suggests that the landlord should
not be required to provide an adverse action notice to the co-signer/guarantor
because the denial is only adverse to the primary applicant's
interest.
We disagree. Section 603(k)(1)(B)(iv) of the FCRA defines "adverse
action" to mean "an action taken or determination that
is (I) made in connection with an application that was made by
. . . any consumer . . . and (II) adverse to the interests
of the consumer." (Emphasis added.) A denial of a co-applicant's
rental application is clearly adverse to the interests of the
co-applicant. In the context of a transaction involving a consumer
who is a co-signer or a guarantor of another consumer's rental
application, the primary applicant and the co-signer/guarantor
may be equally liable. In the event of the primary applicant's
default, a co-signer/guarantor may step into the shoes of the
primary applicant, assuming personal liability for the default.
This constitutes a substantial and, in fact, legally recognized
"interest" in the rental transaction. The rejection
is "adverse" to that interest because, by voluntarily
assuming that liability, the co-signer/guarantor seeks to ensure
that the primary applicant receives housing, as in the case of
a parent who co-signs a rental application submitted by a son
or daughter.
The views set forth in this informal opinion letter are not binding
on the Commission.
Sincerely,
Jonathan A. Smollen
Attorney
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