BONILLA v. AMERICAN HERITAGE FEDERAL CREDIT UNION

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 22, 2021
Docket2:20-cv-02276
StatusUnknown

This text of BONILLA v. AMERICAN HERITAGE FEDERAL CREDIT UNION (BONILLA v. AMERICAN HERITAGE FEDERAL CREDIT UNION) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BONILLA v. AMERICAN HERITAGE FEDERAL CREDIT UNION, (E.D. Pa. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

MERSADIES BONILLA : CIVIL ACTION : v. : NO. 20-2276 : AMERICAN HERITAGE FEDERAL : CREDIT UNION :

MEMORANDUM KEARNEY, J. February 22, 2021 Mersadies Bonilla pro se claims her credit union, American Heritage Federal Credit Union, violated the Fair Credit Reporting Act by deliberately furnishing inaccurate information to credit reporting agencies regarding a criminal fraud charge pending against her in state court until March 11, 2020 when the state court judge granted the Commonwealth’s oral nolle pros motion during a pretrial status conference. She immediately demanded the credit reporting agencies remove the reference. A credit reporting agency requested the Credit Union reinvestigate. The Credit Union promptly investigated and confirmed no further fraud charges. But Ms. Bonilla believes the Credit Union should have directed removal of the fraud reference back in July 2019 when an assistant district attorney allegedly emailed a motion for nolle pros to the state court judge off the record. The state court judge never ruled on this alleged off-the- record motion. Ms. Bonilla also claims a supervisor in the District Attorney’s Office called her in July 2019 (even though Ms. Bonilla retained criminal counsel) and told her of the expected nolle pros. Even if we could credit this story absent evidence, there is no evidence a judge ever entered a nolle pros until March 11, 2020. There is also no evidence the Credit Union knew of this unique dismissal in July 2019. And Congress does not require the credit union call around to prosecutors to see if the public docket is wrong and the case is dismissed. We grant the Credit Union’s motion for summary judgment and deny Ms. Bonilla’s cross-motion. I. Undisputed Facts1 An unknown shareholder at American Heritage Federal Credit Union deposited money into Ms. Bonilla’s American Heritage Credit Union account in August 2016.2 Believing the

transfer fraudulent, the Credit Union “reversed” the payment back to the other person leaving Ms. Bonilla with a negative account balance.3 In January 2017, the Credit Union began furnishing to credit reporting agencies a charge-off on Ms. Bonilla’s overdrawn account.4 In addition to reversing the transaction leaving Ms. Bonilla’s account overdrawn, the Credit Union contacted the Philadelphia Police Department to report suspected fraud by Ms. Bonilla.5 On November 11, 2016, the Philadelphia Police Department issued an Affidavit of Probable Cause to arrest Ms. Bonilla for fraud and other charges relating to the August 2016 transactions.6 After a January 11, 2018 preliminary hearing, the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas found sufficient evidence to direct a trial be held on the charges.7

The Credit Union continued furnishing to credit reporting agencies the charged-off amount on Ms. Bonilla’s overdrawn account. In August 2018, Ms. Bonilla filed the first of her actions against the Credit Union alleging violations of a host of federal consumer protection statutes and banking regulations for its actions.8 We granted the Credit Union’s motion for judgment on the pleadings and dismissed Ms. Bonilla’s case with prejudice.9 In April 2020, Ms. Bonilla filed two new complaints against the Credit Union.10 In these actions, later consolidated before us, Ms. Bonilla alleged from July 2019 through early April 2020 the Credit Union deliberately furnished to credit reporting agencies a charge-off of her overdrawn account despite knowing in July 2019 the Philadelphia District Attorney’s office 2 planned to dismiss fraud charges against her. Ms. Bonilla alleged the Credit Union’s conduct in continuing to furnish inaccurate information regarding her account to credit reporting agencies violated, among other federal statutes, the furnisher liability provisions of the Fair Credit Reporting Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1681s-2(b).

The Credit Union moved to dismiss Ms. Bonilla’s consolidated complaints in June 2020. By that time, the District Attorney had nolle prossed the criminal fraud charges against Ms. Bonilla at a March 11, 2020 status conference in the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas.11 But faced at the motion to dismiss stage with Ms. Bonilla’s allegation the Credit Union knew in July 2019 of the District Attorney’s intention to nolle pros charges—eight months before the March 11, 2020 status conference—we denied the Credit Union’s motion to dismiss Ms. Bonilla’s furnisher liability claim against it under the Fair Credit Reporting Act. As we explained in our July 14, 2020 memorandum addressing the Credit Union’s motion to dismiss, our concern centered on the Credit Union’s knowledge in July 2019 and whether it failed to investigate and modify allegedly inaccurate information regarding the August

2016 transactions.12 This single issue survived the Credit Union’s motion to dismiss and went forward into discovery. The July 2019 emailed off-the-record motion for nolle pros.

Ms. Bonilla appears to base her allegation the Credit Union knew in July 2019 of a nolle pros from the transcript of the March 11, 2020 status conference with Assistant District Attorney Melody Reynolds and Leon Goodman, Ms. Bonilla’s counsel in the criminal matter.13 Assistant District Attorney Reynolds advised the court: Your Honor, if I may, back in -- I actually just found out about this. I don't have the file on me but at some point in the summer, the Commonwealth actually filed a motion to nolle pros with Judge Zito when he -- and I sent it by email and I asked if it could be 3 signed that way and then I guess in the interim he retired; so I actually was under the impression this was nolle prossed. I would just ask if I could orally nolle pros this matter based on that.14

The court agreed to grant the nolle pros motion on the record and asked Attorney Goodman if he agreed. Attorney Goodman responded: Yes, Your Honor. I was notified early of the Commonwealth’s attempt this past summer and I guess with the retirement of Judge Zito . . .15

THE COURT: Judge Zito’s retirement caused problems and not just here but he retired and never seemed to bother to let people know about it at certain times so . . . 16

The transcript shows as of March 11, 2020, Assistant District Attorney Reynolds believed the Commonwealth moved to nolle pros in the summer of 2019 when she emailed the motion to Judge Zito17 and “asked if it could be signed that way”; Judge Zito retired without granting the emailed motion; and she believed the matter had been nolle prossed and only “just found out” in March 2020 it had not been. There is no entry on the criminal docket showing the Commonwealth moved to nolle pros in the summer of 2019.18 The docket instead reflects Ms. Bonilla’s criminal counsel Attorney Goodman moved for Dismissal on June 21, 2019, but she does not provide us with the motion to determine if it is related to the nolle pros.19 In her Motion for summary judgment, Ms. Bonilla asserts she learned the District Attorney intended to dismiss the charges against her when Assistant District Attorney Reynold’s unnamed “Supervisor” called Ms. Bonilla “directly in July 2019.”20 There is no evidence Attorney Goodman followed up on the call received by Ms. Bonilla or any explanation why the unnamed Supervisor called Ms. Bonilla directly rather than Attorney Goodman who represented her. 4 Ms. Bonilla conceded at her deposition she does not have information to show the District Attorney’s office contacted the Credit Union between July 2019 and March 2020: Q. My question is this, between July of 2019 until March of 2020, do you have any information to show that the District Attorney’s Office contacted American Heritage Federal Credit Union?

A. I have no knowledge.21

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Bluebook (online)
BONILLA v. AMERICAN HERITAGE FEDERAL CREDIT UNION, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bonilla-v-american-heritage-federal-credit-union-paed-2021.