Deepening The Divide: Will The Sixth Circuit's Expansive Reading Of The ATDS Definition Survive? [telecom]

by Ian D. Volner , Daniel Blynn , Stephen R. Freeland and Michael Munoz

The issue of what exactly is an autodialer, subject to the restrictions of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act ("TCPA"), may eventually be resolved. But for now, the outlook is much like the long-ago Brooklyn Dodger's chance of winning the World Series: "Wait 'Til Next Year." On July 29, 2020, a divided, 2-1 panel in the Sixth Circuit issued its opinion in Allan v. Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency, deepening the circuit split over the breadth of the TCPA. Specifically, the Sixth Circuit held that any device that dials from a stored list of numbers is sufficient to constitute an "automatic telephone dialing system" ("ATDS" or "autodialer"). This decision comes on the heels of the Supreme Court granting certiorari in Facebook, Inc. v. Duguid, setting the stage for the high court to, hopefully, not only resolve the split among the circuits, but produce a definition of an autodialer that permits the responsible and efficient generation of calls for a broad array of legitimate reasons - indeed in some cases emergency. (Interestingly, in Allan, the defendant opposed the plaintiffs' motion to stay the appeal pending Duguid. That's likely because the defendant had previously prevailed on the ATDS issue in the Eleventh Circuit a few months earlier in a consolidated appeal.)

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