Paul Tassin  |  October 25, 2017

Category: Consumer News

Top Class Actions’s website and social media posts use affiliate links. If you make a purchase using such links, we may receive a commission, but it will not result in any additional charges to you. Please review our Affiliate Link Disclosure for more information.

BLOOMINGTON, MN/USA - August 12, 2015: The Home Depot exterior. Home Depot is an American retailer of home improvement and construction products, supplies and services.A Florida man says Home Depot solicits background checks on job applicants without making the disclosures required by federal law.

Plaintiff Michael Hamilton says defendant Home Depot USA has been violating the Fair Credit Reporting Act with the way it conducts background checks on potential employees.

These alleged violations leave applicants in the dark as to their rights to challenge or correct the information in those reports, he claims, and they may lead Home Depot to reject job applicants based on erroneous information.

Background checks like these qualify as “consumer reports” that are governed by the terms of the Fair Credit Reporting Act, Hamilton says.

Under the FCRA, Home Depot may not procure such a report without first satisfying certain specific disclosure requirements designed to make the job applicant aware of their rights regarding the report. These rights include the applicant’s right to get a copy of the report and to challenge the information contained in it, all before the party procuring the reports takes an adverse action based on its contents.

The FCRA says the required disclosures must be “clear and conspicuous” and “made in writing to the consumer at any time before the report is procured or caused to be procured.” The disclosures must also be made in a “stand-alone” document, one that consists only of information about the disclosure.

Hamilton says he applied for a job with Home Depot in June 2016. As part of the application process, he signed a disclosure form authorizing Home Depot to obtain a consumer report on him for use as a background check.

Home Depot allegedly does not conduct these background checks in-house but instead solicits them from an outside consumer reporting firm.

According to Hamilton, the disclosure form contained “extraneous provisions” in addition to those that purported to authorize the background check. He says these extraneous provisions left him confused about the nature and scope of the background check and about his rights under the FCRA.

“If Plaintiff was aware Defendant had presented him with an unlawful disclosure form, Plaintiff would not have authorized Defendant to procure a consumer report and dig deep into his personal, private and confidential information,” the Home Depot class action states.

Hamilton argues the conduct at issue here was willful. Home Depot is a large and sophisticated business with access to its own attorneys, he says, and it has been the subject of similar FCRA class action lawsuits before – all of which gives Home Depot reason to know whether its background check procedures comply with federal law.

The plaintiff seeks to represent a Class that would include all employees and job applicants of Home Depot USA who were the subject of a consumer report procured by Home Depot within two years before the filing of this action.

He seeks a declaration that Home Depot has committed multiple and separate violations of the FCRA, an award of statutory and punitive damages, and reimbursement of court costs and attorney fees.

Hamilton is represented by attorneys Marc R. Edelman, C. Ryan Morgan and Andrew Frisch of Morgan & Morgan PA.

The Home Depot Background Check Disclosure Class Action Lawsuit is Hamilton v. Home Depot USA Inc., Case No. 8:17-cv-02468, in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida.

We tell you about cash you can claim EVERY WEEK! Sign up for our free newsletter.

70 thoughts onHome Depot Class Action: Background Checks Violate Federal Law

  1. Marty Pedicini says:

    I applied in Ohio

  2. Amy Riederer says:

    I ve applied 2 or 3 times since 2011 and never got past the background or credit check

  3. Charles says:

    More info please

  4. Tracy Bravo says:

    I have applied and worked in California.

  5. Tomesa Warren says:

    I have applied several times in Bossier City, LA.

  6. ag. says:

    please add me

  7. Matt Coyne says:

    I applied in Bluffton, SC.

  8. Kalinda Stewart says:

    I’ve applied many times in Cleveland Ohio

  9. Jason Tomkiewicz says:

    I have applied there many times in Massachusetts

  10. Anita says:

    I applied at Leominster Ma add me in

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. By submitting your comment and contact information, you agree to receive marketing emails from Top Class Actions regarding this and/or similar lawsuits or settlements, and/or to be contacted by an attorney or law firm to discuss the details of your potential case at no charge to you if you qualify. Required fields are marked *

Please note: Top Class Actions is not a settlement administrator or law firm. Top Class Actions is a legal news source that reports on class action lawsuits, class action settlements, drug injury lawsuits and product liability lawsuits. Top Class Actions does not process claims and we cannot advise you on the status of any class action settlement claim. You must contact the settlement administrator or your attorney for any updates regarding your claim status, claim form or questions about when payments are expected to be mailed out.