Acevedo v. Citibank, N.A.

2024 NY Slip Op 24091
CourtNew York Supreme Court, Bronx County
DecidedMarch 25, 2024
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 NY Slip Op 24091 (Acevedo v. Citibank, N.A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court, Bronx County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Acevedo v. Citibank, N.A., 2024 NY Slip Op 24091 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2024).

Opinion

Acevedo v Citibank, N.A. (2024 NY Slip Op 24091) [*1]
Acevedo v Citibank, N.A.
2024 NY Slip Op 24091
Decided on March 25, 2024
Supreme Court, Bronx County
Hummel, J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on March 25, 2024
Supreme Court, Bronx County


Celinda Acevedo and Angelica Acevedo, individually
 and on behalf of all other similarly situated, Petitioners,

against

Citibank, N.A., Respondent.




Index No. 802892/2021E

Plaintiff's attorney
Daniel f. Schreck, Esq.
Law offices of G. Oliver Koppell & Associates,
212-867-3838

Defendants
Yoa M. Griver, Esq.
Zeichner Ellman & Krause, LLP
730 Third Avenue,
New York, NY 10017
212-223-0400 Veronica G. Hummel, J.

In accordance with CPLR 2219(a), the decision herein is made upon consideration of all papers filed by the parties in NYSCEF in connection with: (1) petitioners CELINDA ACEVEDO's ("C. Acevedo") and ANGELICA ACEVEDO's ("A. Acevedo"; and, together with C. Acevedo, "Petitioners") motion (Seq. No. 1) seeking an order certifying proposed classes, finding that respondent CITIBANK, N.A. ("Citibank") violated the Exempt Income Protection Act, and awarding Petitioners and the certified class members damages and injunctive relief; and (2) Citibank's motion (Seq. No. 2) seeking an order, pursuant to CPLR § 7503, compelling arbitration of the dispute between Petitioners and Citibank.

Oral argument on the motions was held before the Court virtually via Microsoft Teams on October 24, 2023.


I. Introduction

Citibank's motion raises a matter of apparent first impression: whether a judgment-debtor's claims against a bank, pursuant to CPLR §§ 5239 and 5240, for violations of the Exempt Income Protection Act (the "EIPA"), 2008 NY Sess. Laws ch. 575, may be arbitrated pursuant to written agreement.

Through the EIPA, the New York Legislature sought to curtail improper pre-execution restraint of exempt judgment-debtor funds held by banks. It did so by creating a notice-and-claim procedure, as well as by establishing certain minimum amounts of funds held in a judgment-debtor's bank account that are automatically exempt from restraint by a judgment-creditor's restraining notice.

Petitioners maintained banking accounts with Citibank. Funds held in those accounts were allegedly restrained by Citibank, after it received restraining notices from judgment-creditors, in violation of the EIPA. Specifically, Petitioners allege that Citibank improperly restrained funds statutorily exempt from restraint, aggregated funds held across Petitioners' multiple accounts in applying the statutory threshold for automatic exemption from restraint, improperly charged Petitioners fees associated with implementing the restraints, and improperly prevented Petitioners from normal banking access to exempt funds by only permitting withdrawal in person at branch locations.

Citibank, however, claims that whether its actions violated the EIPA is a matter to be resolved in arbitration. Citibank points to written arbitration agreements to which Petitioners allegedly agreed when they opened their accounts and argues that this dispute falls within the scope of those agreements.

Petitioners do not dispute that they are subject to arbitration agreements between them and Citibank. Nor do they dispute that their claims fall within the scope of those agreements. Instead, Petitioners argue principally that arbitration of EIPA claims like theirs is barred by the New York Court of Appeals' decision in Cruz v. TD Bank, N.A., 22 NY3d 61 (2013), and the statutory judgment-enforcement regime set forth in CPLR Article 52. Petitioners also contend that the arbitration agreements are unconscionable.

Cruz, however, does not support Petitioners' position here. Contrary to Petitioners' contentions, that decision did not intend to preclude arbitration by deciding that an Article 52 special proceeding is the "exclusive" means of relief for a judgment-debtor seeking redress against a bank for violations of the EIPA. To so interpret Cruz would be to ignore the context in which that decision was rendered: in response to certified questions asking whether a private right of action for judgment-debtors could be implied in the EIPA and whether a judgment-debtor could seek relief against a bank for EIPA violations via an Article 52 special proceeding and, if so, whether the judgment-debtor could also seek relief in a plenary action. Thus, Cruz concerned only the alternatives of an Article 52 special proceeding and a plenary action, not whether arbitration of a judgment-debtor's EIPA claims against a bank was unavailable.

Petitioners' other arguments concerning Cruz are also meritless. Simply because a judgment-creditor could not be joined to an arbitration between a judgment-debtor and a bank because the creditor is not a party to the arbitration agreement, does not mean that the judgment-debtor's EIPA claims become entirely nonarbitrable. Rather, it means only that the debtor's claims against the creditor concerning any funds transferred in violation of the EIPA must be [*2]separately litigated in a special proceeding. Likewise, arbitration offers benefits similar to a special proceeding in terms of speed and complexity, and a subsequent special proceeding pursuant to CPLR Article 75 to confirm any arbitration award is not the kind of back-end litigation that the Court of Appeals found that the Legislature had sought to avoid by declining to create a private right of action in the EIPA.

Petitioners also advance a number of arguments as to why their claims are nonarbitrable based on the text and "practical application" of Article 52, but each of those arguments is also meritless. Petitioners' reliance on the Legislature's use of the term "court" throughout Article 52 is misplaced. The U.S. Supreme Court has, in fact, rejected the contention that the use of such language in a statute alone evidences the legislature's intent to preclude arbitration of a claim pursuant to that statute. Here, there is no indication that the Legislature sought to create a nonwaivable right to adjudication of EIPA disputes in a court by use of the term "court" in CPLR §§ 5222-a, 5239, and 5240.

Further, the potential unavailability in arbitration of certain remedies provided by CPLR §§ 5239 and 5240—remedies that Petitioners do not even seek in this proceeding—does not militate against the arbitrability specifically of claims, like Petitioners', in which a judgment-debtors seeks damages for EIPA violations and limited related injunctive relief. The applicable arbitration agreements, as well as the rules of the arbitral forums selected in those agreements, grant an arbitrator sufficient power to award Petitioners their requested relief, to the extent such relief is authorized under Cruz.

Moreover, the venue provision in CPLR § 5239 becomes inapplicable when a party waives initial adjudication of an EIPA claim in a court in favor of adjudication in arbitration, as Petitioners have done here.

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Bluebook (online)
2024 NY Slip Op 24091, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/acevedo-v-citibank-na-nysupctbrnx-2024.