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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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Helen Goff Foster
Attorney
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November 20, 1998
Ms. Linda J. Throne
Bodman, Longley & Dahling
229 Court Street
Cheboygan, Michigan 49721
Re: "Joint users" -- FCRA §§603(f) and
604(a)(3)(A)
Dear Ms. Throne:
This is in response to your correspondence concerning the Fair
Credit Reporting Act ("FCRA"). You indicate that your
bank client uses a loan application format which includes a section
where the consumer may request that the bank forward the application
to another lender if the bank is unable to make the loan. You
ask whether the joint user exception to the definition of consumer
reporting agency, found in the Federal Trade Commission Commentary
on the FCRA ("the Commentary"), requires the disclosure
to the consumer of the identity of the additional lenders to whom
a loan application may be forwarded. We conclude that it does
not.
As you note, Comment 603(f)-(8) takes the view that the FCRA
definition of consumer reporting agency does not include a creditor
that qualifies as a "joint user" with another party
involved in evaluating a consumer's loan application. It states,
in pertinent part:
Entities that share consumer reports with others that
are jointly involved in decisions for which there are permissible
purposes to obtain reports may be "joint users" rather
than consumer reporting agencies. For example, if a lender forwards
consumer reports . . . to another creditor for use in considering
a consumer's loan application at the consumer's request, the
lender does not become a consumer reporting agency by virtue
of such action.
16 C.F.R. 600 Appendix; 55 Fed. Reg.. 18,813 (May 4, 1990). In
short, the Commentary treats entities as "joint users"
when both parties are considering the same loan application and
both have a permissible purpose.(1)
The situation you present is the one set forth in the commentary
example -- your client and the additional creditors to whom they
forward a consumer's loan application are involved in the evaluation
of a particular consumer loan application. Further, there is no
doubt that your client has a permissible purpose in obtaining
a consumer report in connection with a consumer's application
for credit under Section 604(a)(3)(A). However, in order for the
additional creditors to whom your client forwards the loan application
to have a permissible purpose to obtain a consumer report, the
potential credit transaction must be initiated by the consumer.
For this reason, the Commentary notes that a lender may forward
a loan application to another lender at the consumer's request.
Accordingly, your client must obtain the consumer's consent prior
to forwarding such information to additional lenders.
The FCRA and the Commentary are uniformly silent on what form
such authorization should take. In light of this, we conclude
that the inclusion in your client's loan application of a section
which enables the consumer to indicate consent for the loan application
file to be forwarded to "other lenders" would be sufficient
to satisfy the requirement that subsequent creditors have a permissible
purpose to receive the consumer report included in the file. Such
action can only be taken, however, in pursuit of the approval
of the loan application.
I hope that this information is helpful to you. The views expressed
in this letter are those of the staff and do not necessarily represent
the views of the Commission or of any individual Commissioner.
Sincerely,
Helen G. Foster
1. Although the Commentary employs
the term "joint user" to describe the two parties, its
focus is not the use two parties make of a consumer report,
but rather to determine whether one user is to be considered a
"consumer reporting agency" under Section 603(f) if
it simply forwards the report to a second such party.
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