New text-spam rules issued by the Federal Communications Commission are facing a court challenge from the debt collection association ACA International.
The trade group
says in a lawsuit filed on Monday that the rules are “arbitrary” and “capricious,” and that the FCC exceeded its authority in passing them. The organization is asking the D.C.
Circuit Court of Appeals to vacate the FCC's order, which was passed by a 3-2 vote and officially released on Friday.
The order implements the Telephone Consumer Protection Act, which
prohibits companies from using automated dialers to place robocalls or send text messages without recipients' consent. Numerous Web companies -- including Yahoo, Twitter, Facebook, and Lyft -- have
been sued for allegedly violating that law by sending unwanted text messages.
The FCC's most recent order contains several provisions that could make it harder for those companies and
others to defend themselves.
Among others, the FCC now says that companies can only send one autodialed text (or make one robocall) to a reassigned number. If companies continue to
send SMS messages to reassigned numbers, they could face damages of up to $1,500 per message.
The ACA says in its court papers that the decision to limit companies to one call to a
reassigned number was “arbitrary, capricious, and an abuse of discretion, and does not comport with a caller's constitutional right of due process.”
The organization wants
the appellate court to require the FCC to either “establish a viable safe harbor” for reassigned numbers, or to declare that companies only violate the law if the intended recipients
didn't consent to receive texts or robocalls.
The ACA also objects to the FCC's definition of “autodialer” as equipment capable of generating, storing or calling phone
numbers automatically -- even if equipment actually is used to call numbers from a list.
FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler said in a statement issued on Friday that the rules “interpret
the TCPA in a commonsense way that benefits both callers and consumers.”
But Republican FCC Commissioner Ajit Pai, who voted against the recent order, warned in a written
dissent issued on Friday that the rules will make it easier for class-action lawyers to “abuse” the Telephone Consumer Protection Act.
“Rather than focus on the
illegal telemarketing calls that consumers really care about, the Order twists the law’s words even further to target useful communications between legitimate businesses and their
customers,” he stated. “This Order will make abuse of the TCPA much, much easier. And the primary beneficiaries will be trial lawyers, not the American public.”