Time Warner Cable Owes Texas Woman $229,500 for 153 Wrong-Number Collection Calls
This piece originally appeared in Stop the Cap.
Time Warner Cable owes Araceli King $229,500 after bombarding her with 153 robo-collection calls intended for somebody else.
Last week a Manhattan judge, in a summary judgment, awarded triple damages amounting to $1,500 per call for Time Warner’s “willful violations” of the federal Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA), which forbids companies from placing unwanted calls.
King, of Irving, Tex., began receiving automated interactive voice response (IVR) collection calls from Time Warner Cable on her mobile phone that were intended for Luiz Perez, the former owner of her phone number. In less than one year, the cable company called King more than 150 times looking for Perez, even after King told the company the phone number it was using was not correct. King sued Time Warner Cable after it wouldn’t stop the calls.
Even after the lawsuit reached the cable operator, it called 74 more times.
“Defendant harassed plaintiff with robo-calls until she had to resort to a lawsuit to make the calls stop, and even then TWC could not be bothered to update the information in its IVR system,” wrote U.S. District Judge Alvin Hellerstein. “Treble damages are unquestionably appropriate to reflect the seriousness of TWC’s willful violations.”
Time Warner Cable has fought to have the case dismissed, claiming King cannot bring a claim under the TCPA because Time Warner was not placing automated telemarketing calls and had authorization from King to keep calling. The company also argued it didn’t realize it was calling the wrong number and only 70 of the calls were actually answered.
“Each of these arguments fails,” ruled an unimpressed Judge Hellerstein, who educated Time Warner Cable that under the TCPA, “TWC violated the statute each time it placed a call using its [automated dialer] without consent, regardless of whether the call was answered by a person, a machine, or not at all.”
He told the cable company a “responsible business” would have tried harder to find Perez’s correct number. Instead, Time Warner never bothered to update its records, even after King spent seven minutes on the phone with a representative who promised to correct the problem.
The judge called the 74 additional phone calls Time Warner Cable placed even after King sued the company a “particularly egregious violation of the TCPA” and demonstrated TWC “did not take this lawsuit seriously.”
King’s attorney said Time Warner Cable made life miserable for the Texas woman, a point the judge seemed to agree with.
“We’re thrilled that Ms. King got the justice she deserves,” said King’s lawyer, Sergei Lemberg. “And we’re proud every time we can hold big businesses accountable when they trample consumer rights.”
Original photo by Flickr user Pictures of Money