Citizens Bank of Pennsylvania v. Reimbursement Technologies Inc

609 F. App'x 88
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedApril 30, 2015
Docket14-3320
StatusUnpublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 609 F. App'x 88 (Citizens Bank of Pennsylvania v. Reimbursement Technologies Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens Bank of Pennsylvania v. Reimbursement Technologies Inc, 609 F. App'x 88 (3d Cir. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION *

COWEN, Circuit Judge.

Citizens Bank (“Citizens” or the “Bank”) the plaintiff-appellant, filed suit in federal court against Reimbursement Technologies, Inc. (“RTI”), and Leah Brown, alleging a violation of the federal Stored Communications Act. It also alleged various state law claims against RTI. The District Court dismissed Citizens’ complaint, concluding that it failed to state a claim, and also denied its motion to amend its complaint for a third time. On appeal, Citizens does not challenge the dismissal of its federal claim, and thus all claims before us concern only RTI. It instead argues that, upon its dismissal of the federal claim, the District Court should not have considered its state law claims. It also argues that the District Court erroneously denied its motion to amend its complaint. For the reasons detailed below, we will affirm.

I.

Because we write solely for the parties, we will only set forth the facts necessary to inform our analysis.

RTI is a nationwide physician billing and financial management company, whose clients are emergency departments and other hospital-based physician practices. It manages, among other things, its clients’ patient billing services process, accounts receivable, submission of claims to Medicare, Medicaid, and other third-party pay-ors, registration and insurance verification and cash collection.

Citizens alleges that certain RTI employees and agents, including Brown, accessed non-public financial information of patients who utilized the services of RTI’s *91 clients. Among the patients whose information was accessed were at least 134 individuals who also had bank accounts with Citizens.

Brown provided this financial information to a third-party “organized fraud ring.” (Comply 14.) As a result of the disclosure, the fraud ring illegally withdrew money from the Bank’s customers’ accounts from branches in six different states, including Pennsylvania. Upon discovering the fraud, Citizens, in compliance with the Uniform Commercial C.ode (“UCC”), re-credited its customers’ • accounts for the amounts fraudulently withdrawn from their accounts and offered additional services to those affected. As a result of these fraudulent transactions, Citizens alleges losses totaling at least $390,506.84.

II.

Citizens argues for the first time on appeal that upon dismissing the Stored Communications Act claim — the sole basis for federal jurisdiction — the District Court abused its discretion by nonetheless ruling on the remaining state law claims. In this regard, it argues that judicial' economy, convenience, and fairness to the parties warranted dismissal and it faults the District Court for failing to consider these factors.

Because Citizens failed to raise the issue of the District Court’s supplemental jurisdiction below, it has waived any challenge. To avoid waiver, it must now demonstrate the existence of “special circumstances.” See N.J. Tpke. Auth. v. PPG Indus., Inc., 197 F.3d 96, 113 (3d Cir.1999) (“A district court’s decision to determine [state law] claims is discretionary, and where a party has failed to object to the district court’s exercise of this jurisdiction, in the absence of special circumstances, the challenge is waived.”) (emphasis added). Although we have not precisely defined what special circumstances comprises in this context, whatever the term entails, it is clearly something more than what Citizens would have been required to show had- it first raised the issue in the District Court. To be sure, we make no determination as to whether the District Court would have, or should have, dismissed Citizens’ state law claims had Citizens raised the issue below. But given Citizens’ failure to articulate any special circumstances, its waiver is not excused.

III.

Having determined that Citizens waived any challenge to the District Court’s supplemental jurisdiction, we turn to the merits of the District Court’s dismissal of the Bank’s state law claims.

Negligence

A. Common Law Negligence

To establish a claim of negligence under Pennsylvania law, Citizens has to demonstrate the following elements: (1) RTI owed it a duty of care, (2) RTI breached that duty, (3) the breach resulted in its injury, and (4) it suffered an actual loss or damage. Martin v. Evans, 551 Pa. 496, 711 A.2d 458, 461 (1998). The District Court concluded that Citizens failed to plead a plausible claim of negligence because RTI does not owe it a duty of care.

Pennsylvania’s Supreme Court has specified five factors that courts should consider in a negligence action when determining the existence of a common law duty of care: (1) the relationship between the parties, (2) the social utility of the actor’s conduct (3) the nature of the risk imposed and foreseeability of the harm incurred, (4) the consequences of imposing a duty upon the actor, and (5) the overall public interest in the proposed solution. Althaus v. *92 Cohen, 562 Pa. 547, 756 A.2d 1166, 1169 (2000). Whether a defendant owes a duty of care to a plaintiff is a question of law. Kleinknecht v. Gettysburg Coll., 989 F.2d 1360, 1366 (3d Cir.1993). While no individual factor is dispositive, “a duty will be found to exist where the balance of these factors weighs in favor of placing such a burden on a defendant.” Phillips v. Cricket Lighters, 576 Pa. 644, 841 A.2d 1000, 1008-09 (2003).

As an initial matter, Citizens does not challenge the District Court’s ruling that the mere coincidence it shares certain customers with RTI is insufficient to infer that a relationship existed between it and RTI. This is a significant factor that weighs against the existence of a duty. We do, however, agree that the social utility factor weighs in favor of finding a duty, given that whatever social utility is gleaned from RTFs data management services would be seriously undermined by its inability to safeguard the personal and financial information it receives to deliver those services. Nonetheless, neither party suggests that, in the current context, this factor is a particularly significant one.

We further conclude that Citizens’ harm was foreseeable. Foreseeability is a legal requirement before recovery can be had. See Kleinknecht, 989 F.2d at 1369. “The type of foreseeability that determines a duty of care, as opposed to proximate cause, is not dependent on the foreseeability of a specific event.” Id. (emphasis added). Rather, in the context of duty, “[t]he concept of foreseeability means the likelihood of the occurrence of a general type of risk rather than the likelihood of the occurrence of the precise chain of events leading to the injury.” Id.

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609 F. App'x 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-bank-of-pennsylvania-v-reimbursement-technologies-inc-ca3-2015.