Fractured ATDS Landscape: This Graphic Explains Why SCOTUS is Taking Another Look at the TCPA

Editor’s note: This article is provided through a partnership between insideARM and Squire Patton Boggs LLP, which provides a steady stream of timely, insightful and entertaining takes on TCPAWorld.com of the ever-evolving, never-a-dull-moment Telephone Consumer Protection Act. Squire Patton Boggs LLP—and all insideARM articles—are protected by copyright. All rights are reserved. 


The Supreme Court has accepted cert. on a petition brought by Facebook to resolve an ongoing circuit split over the proper application of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act’s (TCPA’s) automated telephone dialing system (“ATDS”) definition. This decision comes on the heels of another Supreme Court ruling issued just this Monday in which the high court determined the TCPA is unconstitutional as written, but can be saved by altering First Amendment doctrine and giving the TCPA a haircut.

While the TCPA has certainly been in the Supreme Court’s gaze as of late, that is not particularly surprising. The TCPA is the single broadest restriction on constitutionally-protected speech in our nation’s history and also produces piles of the most complex (and expensive) class action litigation out there. Indeed, it is not uncommon for Defendants caught in the grips of a TCPA class action to face billions or even tens of billions in potential exposure based upon the statute’s immense statutory damages. And since no one really knows what technology the TCPA applies to, the statute raises a host of constitutional issues—from First Amendment implications, void for vagueness problems, excessive fine issues and due process concerns.

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Indeed, the TCPA is an absolute junker of a statute from a Constitutional perspective, and it is requiring much upkeep by the Supreme Court to keep running. While SCOTUS dodged precedent to keep the statute on the books in Barr v. AAPC, the next go at the TCPA might not be so lucky. Eventually, the Supreme Court is going to get tired of wasting its time on a statute that doesn’t even work the way it is supposed to. 

While some issues applicable to the TCPA are esoteric, one is seemingly rather mundane: what technology does this thing even apply to?  That question is trickier than it seems.

Some Background

The statute’s language appears to apply only to calls made using a random or sequential number generators. The TCPA is the only tool Congress gave to the FCC or the Courts to regulate unwanted calls to cell phones. In the face of a barrage of robocalls in recent decades, that just isn’t much of an arsenal.

Although the TCPA is a bad fit for the job—again, its language is very narrow—past administrations of the FCC and some courts have taken it upon themselves to expand the statute to apply to all mass-dialed calls and texts. Without this expansion, they would allegedly be wholly empty-handed in the fight against robocalls.

The FCC rulings were recently set aside, however, throwing TCPAWorld into complete disarray with some courts applying the statute as written (i.e. to only apply to random-fired calls) and some courts applying the statute more broadly (i.e. to all automated calls). 

This fracture has led to extremely unusual—and highly problematic—circumstances. Some speakers are being held liable for speech they made years ago that was perfectly legal at the time, only to see the law change in a way that makes their conduct potentially unlawful only in retrospect. Other speakers are being sued in far-off jurisdictions for speech that was legal both in the jurisdiction where the speech took place and in the jurisdiction where some unnamed class members reside. Some speakers have seen their speech deemed perfectly legal in some jurisdictions and the exact same speech is deemed illegal in separate jurisdictions. And all of this has been capitalized on by the Plaintiff’s bar that is happy to sue in favorable jurisdictions, even if the bulk of the conduct at issue took place in a jurisdiction with more defense-favored law. 

ATDS Heatmap

Just how fractured is the TCPA ATDS landscape? I put together this handy heat map as a visual.  Check it out:

heatmap.jpeg

Key:

  • Dark green: jurisdictions (the 7th and 11th Circuits) that follow the statutory definition (i.e. requiring random or sequential number generation to trigger the TCPA).
  • Dark red: jurisdictions (the 2nd and the 9th Circuit) that eschew the statutory language in favor of an “all automated calls” approach to the TCPA.
  • Light green:  jurisdictions (3rd and 5th) that lean toward the statutory definitions
  • Light red: jurisdictions (1st and 8th) that lean toward the expanded approach.
  • Yellow: jurisdictions (4th, 6th and 10th) that may be the most problematic of all for speakers—whether the TCPA applies to their speech still very much depends on what courtroom they are sued in.

What ultimately matters for determining liability is not where the calls were made, or even where the calls were directed. The only thing that matters is where the resulting lawsuit is filed. Companies making calls from green jurisdictions to other green jurisdictions may still be sued in red jurisdictions by clever—or calculating—Plaintiff’s lawyers. It’s despicable stuff but so long as the split of authority endures, so will these tactics.

The TCPA landscape is fractures, and it badly needs clarity


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Fractured ATDS Landscape: This Graphic Explains Why SCOTUS is Taking Another Look at the TCPA
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