Darla Legg and Jason T. Legg, on Behalf of Themselves and All Persons Similarly Situated v. West Bank

873 N.W.2d 763, 2016 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 3
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 22, 2016
Docket14–0692
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 873 N.W.2d 763 (Darla Legg and Jason T. Legg, on Behalf of Themselves and All Persons Similarly Situated v. West Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Darla Legg and Jason T. Legg, on Behalf of Themselves and All Persons Similarly Situated v. West Bank, 873 N.W.2d 763, 2016 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 3 (iowa 2016).

Opinion

ZAGER, Justice.

In this interlocutory appeal, we are asked to determine whether the district court properly denied the bank’s two motions for summary judgment. The plaintiffs filed a multiple-count consumer class action lawsuit against the bank challenging the one-time nonsufficient funds (NSF) fees it charged when the plaintiffs used their = debit cards to create bverdrafts in their checking account. For the reasons set forth below, we find that the district court erred in denying the motions for summary judgment except as to the good-faith claim involving the sequencing of the overdrafts. The decision of the district court is affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for further proceedings.

I. Background Facts.

West Bank is a state-chartered Iowa bank. Plaintiffs Darla and Jason Legg are former customers of West Bank. They opened a joint checking account with West Bank on November 26, 2002. They closed their last account with West Bank in April 2013. The claims, arising in this case, discussed in detail below, arise out of the payment of overdrafts and resulting NSF fees charged by West Bank.

West Bank issues bank cards to its customers. Customers use their bank cards in one of two ways: automatic teller machine withdrawals (ATM withdrawals) or point of sale purchases (POS purchases). Customers may also make electronic payments using their. West Bank accounts that are processed in the same way as ATM withdrawals and. POS purchases. All three of these transactions.are classified as “bank, card transactions.” When customers are issued a bank card, they receive a “Deposit- Account Agreement” (Agreement). The Agreement provides that West Bank “shall have an obligation to Depositor to exercise -good faith and ordinary care in connection with each account.”

When a customer of West Bank uses his or her bank card to begin a transaction, an electronic request is sent to Shazam. Sha-zam in turn sends an electronic request to Fiserv. Fiserv is a banking platform that processes payment requests for West *766 Bank. Based on the customer balance available at the time.the electronic request is made, Fiserv either denies .or allows the, transaction. The district court summarized what happens next as follows:

When a customer uses a Bank Card, once the transaction is approved at the point of sale the bank is required to pay the transaction when presented, even if there are not sufficient funds in the account by the time the transaction is posted to the account. Such posting typically occurs one to three days after the original transaction.
If West Bank is called upon to pay a Bank Card transaction whén there are insufficient funds in the account, the bank advances sufficient money, to cover the amount by which .the" account is short, and assesses a' non-sufficient funds (NSF) fee. Those advances are automatically deducted from the customer account .and repaid to the bank the next time a deposit sufficient to cover the advances is made to the account. 1

Debit card transactions are thus classified as “force-pay” transactions. Once they are authorized by Fiserv, West Bank is required to pay them, even if the customer’s account has insufficient funds at the time the transaction is processed. These transactions may be presented for payment up to three days after the transaction is approved. The decision to pay the bank card’transaction is made separately from the assessment of the NSF fee. ■ After the NSF fées are applied to a customer’s account, a reviewing West Bank employee has the discretion to waive the fees. The plaintiffs in this case had NSF fees waived on at least one occasion. The NSF fee West Bank charged customers was originally $27.00. It was later raised to $30.00. West Bank sets its NSF fee based on market studies of competitors.

West Bank does not post customer account balances in real . time. Rather, transactions are posted in a batch at the end of the day. Prior to July 1, 2006, West Bank posted bank card transactions with the lowest amount for each day’s debits posted first and the highest amount posted last (low-to-high sequencing). After July 1, 2006, West Bank reversed its posting sequencing and posted bank card transactions'with the highest amount posted first and the lowest amount posted last (high-to-low sequencing). Beginning October 1, 2010, West Bank changed its posting order back to low-to-high sequencing.

After the 2006 change, a Miscellaneous Fees document was provided to customers that included two footnotes relating to sequencing. The first footnote stated, “[Cjhecks written on your account will be paid in order daily with the largest check paid .first and the.smallest check paid last.” The second footnote provided that insufficient fund charges applied to “items” posted to accounts and defined items to include checks, money transfers, ATM debits, debit card debits, and ACH debit withdrawals.

In 2009, footnote .two on the Miscellaneous Fees document West Bank provided to customers was modified to state that overdrafts would be posted high to low, based on the amount of the transaction. It provided that

[e]hecks written on your account will be .paid in order daily with the .largest items paid first and the smallest items *767 paid last. NSF fees apply to overdrafts created by check, in person withdrawal, ATM withdrawal or other electronic means.

West Bank discussed in an internal memo that the low-to-high sequencing had created a business expectation for customers. West Bank acknowledged that an Iowa Bankers Association Compliance Officer had discussed the proposed high-to-low sequencing order with an attorney and concluded in an internal memo that customers would need to be notified of the change. The summary judgment record supported an inference that West Bank made the change'without adequately notifying its customers.

In August 2009, September 2009, and May 2010, the Leggs were charged NSF fees after West Bank instituted the new high-to-low sequencing. On August 31, the Leggs made two separate POS purchases in the amounts of $6.50 and $5.91, which resulted in overdrafts to their account. West Bank charged the Leggs $27.00 per POS purchase. On September 2, the Leggs made a $5.50 electronic payment which resulted in an overdraft to their account, and West Bank charged the Leggs ah NSF fee of $27.00. The Leggs repaid these amounts on September 4. On September 17, the Leggs wrote a check for $560, which overdrew their account. The Leggs also made two POS purchases in the amounts of $10.89 and $9.00. '■ West Bank charged the Leggs an NSF fee of $27.00 for each POS purchase, and the Leggs repaid both on September 18. 2 In' all of these transactions, West Bank paid for the purchases.

On September 17, if the bank card transactions had been posted in the low-to-high sequence, the Leggs would have only been charged one NSF fee for one overdraft.- On May 17, the Leggs were charged four NSF fees for- bank card transactions. The Leggs would have only been charged two NSF fees if the transactions were posted low-to-high. ■ ■ .

II. Course of Proceedings.

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873 N.W.2d 763, 2016 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darla-legg-and-jason-t-legg-on-behalf-of-themselves-and-all-persons-iowa-2016.