Arlington Video Productions, Inc. v. Fifth Third Bancorp

515 F. App'x 426
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 14, 2013
Docket11-4077
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 515 F. App'x 426 (Arlington Video Productions, Inc. v. Fifth Third Bancorp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arlington Video Productions, Inc. v. Fifth Third Bancorp, 515 F. App'x 426 (6th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

JANE B. STRANCH, Circuit Judge.

Arlington Video Productions, Inc. (“Arlington”) filed suit against Fifth Third Bank (“the Bank”) 1 alleging individual and class claims for breach of the Bank’s contractual obligation to inform customers in advance that certain service fees would be charged to their accounts. The district court denied Arlington’s motion for class certification and subsequently granted the Bank’s motion for summary judgment on Arlington’s individual claim. Arlington appeals both decisions. We conclude that the district court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of the Bank on Arlington’s individual claim and in denying class certification under Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 23(a) & (b)(3). Because it is the district court’s prerogative to define the class in accordance with this opinion and to make any refinements to the class definition that may be necessary to manage the litigation, we REVERSE and REMAND for further proceedings.

I. FACTS

Arlington is an Ohio corporation that provides video services to clients. Arlington’s sole shareholder is Evan Newman, who at all times conducted Arlington’s business affairs. The Bank is an Ohio corporation conducting business in twelve states: Ohio, Kentucky, Michigan, Tennessee, Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, North Carolina, Georgia, and Florida.

Arlington opened a business checking account with the Bank on August 3, 2000, known as a Business 5/3 account. Newman signed a signature card that included seven paragraphs of “TERMS AND CONDITIONS,” the first two of which read:

1. The terms and conditions stated herein, together with resolutions or authorizations which accompany this signature card, if applicable, and the Rules, Regulations, Agreements, and Disclosures of Bank constitute the Deposit Agreement (“Agreement”) between the individual(s) or entity(ies) named hereon (“Depositor”) and the Bank.
2. This Agreement incorporates the Rules, Regulations, Agreements, and Disclosures established by Bank from time to time, clearing house rules and regulations, state and federal laws, recognized banking practices and customs, service charges as may be established from time to time and is subject to laws regulating transfers at death and other taxes.

R. 83-1, Page ID 3303 (emphasis added). When Newman signed the signature card, Arlington granted the Bank a security interest in the account and agreed to allow the Bank at any time to “set off, against any balance in this account ... any debt owed to Bank by any entity listed” on the account. Id. ¶ 6. Arlington further agreed to all of the specified terms and conditions listed on the signature card, acknowledged receipt of a “copy of the Rules and Regulations, Agreements, and Disclosures of Bank,” and further agreed “to the terms set forth therein.” Id. ¶ 7.

*429 The phrase “Rules and Regulations” referred to the Bank’s “Rules & Regulations Applicable To All Fifth Third Accounts and Cards June 1, 2000” (hereinafter “Rules & Regulations”). R. 88-1, Page ID 8304-3838. Paragraph 9 of that document provided:

These Rules and Regulations, as well as fees and charges contained on the Fee Schedule may be altered or amended at any time by the Bank and as altered or amended shall be binding on all Customers after having been made available in the offices of the Bank for fifteen (15) days or by such other method as specifically provided by law.

Id., Page ID 3307 (emphasis added). Paragraph 23 of the document specifically concerned a “returned item fee” and provided: “When a deposited item is returned unpaid and charged back to your account, the Bank reserves the right to charge a returned item fee.” Id., Page ID 3310. The Rules & Regulations also included a “Fee Schedule,” which listed the fee amounts to be charged for at least twelve different bank services, but it did not include the “returned item fee” mentioned in paragraph 23 of the Rules & Regulations, nor did it list a “deposit adjustment fee” or the amount to be charged for that fee. Id., Page ID 3334. As Newman later learned, the Bank charged a “deposit adjustment fee” if a business customer tendered multiple items for deposit, but totaled the items incorrectly, requiring a bank employee to reconcile the deposit. Between August 2000, when Arlington opened its account, and December 2007, when Arlington filed this lawsuit, the Bank issued revised versions of the Rules & Regulations.

On several occasions beginning in January 2001 and continuing through early 2007, the Bank posted a non-itemized “service charge” on Arlington’s monthly account statement and deducted the amount of that charge from Arlington’s account. Upon receiving many of these statements, Newman visited the Bank to inquire about the service charge. He learned that a “service charge” is comprised of separate fees. The two most often at issue were the “deposit adjustment fee” and the “returned item fee.” Although Newman asked Bank employees to produce documentation confirming that Arlington’s business account was subject to a “deposit adjustment fee,” the Bank could not present any such writing. On most, if not all, of these occasions, Newman asked the Bank to reverse the service charges, and the Bank did so. According to Newman, the Bank reversed the service charges either because the Bank could not determine what the charges were for or the Bank could not produce any documents to confirm that the fees applied to Arlington’s account. The Bank asserts that it waived the service charges as a courtesy to its customer.

In January 2007, the Bank sent Arlington a letter asking it to choose one of three business checking accounts listed in the letter. The Bank indicated its intent to assign Arlington to one of the three accounts starting that month if Arlington did not make a choice. Arlington did not make an election, and the January 2007 statement revealed that the Bank had placed Arlington in a “Business Preferred Checking” account. Newman later changed the account to a “Business Advantage” account and then to a “Business Basics” account. He did not execute any new documents when these changes were made, nor did he receive any documentation relating to the changes to the account.

In June 2007 the Bank revised the Rules & Regulations. The paragraph referring to fees and charges, now paragraph 8 instead of paragraph 9, provided:

*430 These Rules and Regulations, as well as fees and charges contained on the Fee Schedule associated with your accounts) may be altered or amended at any time by the Bank and as altered or amended shall be binding on all Customers after having been made available in the offices of the Bank for fifteen (15) days or by such other method as specifically provided by law.

Appellant’s App’x, Vol. 1 at 130 (emphasis added). Like the 2000 version of the Rules & Regulations, the 2007 version included a paragraph explaining the “returned item fee.” Id. at 134, ¶ 21.

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Related

Arlington Video Productions, Inc. v. Fifth Third Bancorp
569 F. App'x 379 (Sixth Circuit, 2014)
Miri v. Dillon
292 F.R.D. 454 (E.D. Michigan, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
515 F. App'x 426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arlington-video-productions-inc-v-fifth-third-bancorp-ca6-2013.