Moore-Dennis v. Franklin

201 So. 3d 1131
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 26, 2016
Docket1131142 and 1131176
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 201 So. 3d 1131 (Moore-Dennis v. Franklin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore-Dennis v. Franklin, 201 So. 3d 1131 (Ala. 2016).

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MOORE, Chief Justice.

PNC Bank, National Association, and Sonja Moore-Dennis separately appeal the order of the Mobile Circuit Court denying their motion to compel arbitration as to Joseph A. Franklin’s claims against them. For the reasons stated herein, we affirm the order of the trial court.

I. Facts and Procedural History

Franklin had three bank accounts with the predecessor bank to PNC Bank, RBC Bank (USA), before RBC Bank merged with PNC Bank. Shortly before the merger, PNC Bank, in January 2012, allegedly mailed a welcome letter and a PNC Bank Account Agreement (“the account agreement”) to Franklin at his home in Mobile. [1133]*1133After the two banks merged, Franklin’s accounts were converted to PNC Bank accounts on March 2, 2012. The account agreement did not contain an arbitration provision. However, the account agreement did provide, in relevant part:

“STATEMENTS
“We will make available or send to you a monthly statement (whether in paper form, or if authorized by you, in electronic form)....
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“JOINT ACCOUNTS
“To be considered a joint depositor, you must have signed the signature card for the Account. Notice provided by us to any one joint owner shall be considered notice to all joint owners.
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“AMENDMENT, WAIVER
“We reserve the right to amend this Agreement ... from time to time. Unless such change is favorable to you or is required by an emergency situation (in which case we shall give you such notice as we may deem practicable), an amendment will become effective 30 days (or such later time if required by law) after notice of the amendment is posted in our branches, or by such other method of notice as we may deem appropriate or as may be specifically required by applicable law. If this is a joint Account, then notice of an amendment provided to one joint depositor shall be deemed to be notice to all joint depositors.
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“NOTICES
“Any written notice that you give to us is effective when we have actually received it. Any written notice that , we give to you is effective when it is deposited in the United States mail and will be sent to your last known address which appears in our records.
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“GENERAL PROVISIONS
“1. The signing of a signature card, your request for a card, the use of a card, the use of Online Banking services and/or the use of Online Banking through Quicken® shall mean that you agree to the content of this Agreement and to any modification thereof. Any such modification shall become effective and be binding 15 calendar days (or such later time-if required by law) after notice of the modification is posted in our banking centers, or by such other method of notice as we may deem appropriate or as may be specifically required by the applicable law.”

(Boldface type and capitalization in original.) Franklin denies ever seeing or receiving the account agreement until after litigation began. It is undisputed that the account agreement did not contain an arbitration provision.

On January 20, 2013, Tamara Franklin (“Tamara”), Franklin’s niece who lives in Atlanta,' came to Mobile to visit Franklin. While at Franklin’s house, Tamara noticed a document that she thought was a bank statement from PNC Bank. Tamara asked Franklin what the document was, and Franklin said it was his “savings account.” It appears that Tamara was concerned that Franklin owed money to PNC Bank. Franklin said he did not owe PNC Bank any money but that Tamara could call his financial advisor, Sonja Moore-Dennis, if she had any concerns. Franklin alleges that Moore-Dennis was a PNC Bank agent or employee at this time; PNC Bank denies that it had ever employed Moore-Dennis.

After investigating the matter, Franklin and Tamara came to the conclusion that Moore-Dennis had been stealing funds [1134]*1134from Franklin’s accounts.1 Additionally, it appeared to Franklin and Tamara that Moore-Dennis had created an online-banking profile for Franklin but had set up the profile so that account notifications were sent to her e-mail address, Franklin, who is elderly,2 does not have Internet access or an e-mail address and does not know how to use online banking.

On February 13, 2013, Franklin and Tamara met with Jessica Ellis, a branch manager for PNC Bank, about their concerns. Two days later, at the request of PNC Bank, Franklin and Tamara returned to PNC Bank and met with Ellis and two others, who told them that PNC Bank’s investigation into the matter was ongoing and that Franklin needed to have another person added to his existing accounts. Franklin chose Tamara. Both Franklin and Tamara signed a document entitled “Account Registration and Agreement,” which PNC Bank refers to as a “signature card.” That document provided, in relevant part:

“Account Agreement: By signing this Account Registration and Agreement and/or by using the account, by requesting and/or using and/or later adding any account related services, including but not limited to Debit Card/ATM Card, Overdraft Protection, PNC Bank Online services, I agree to be bound by the terms and conditions of PNC Bank’s Account Agreement for Checking Accounts and Savings Accounts ... as well as any other terms and. conditions that may apply to my PNC Bank account, account features and/or services.”

Shortly thereafter, PNC Bank sought to amend its agreement with Franklin to include a predispute arbitration provision,3 which reads as follows:

“READ THIS ARBITRATION PROVISION CAREFULLY: IT WILL IMPACT HOW LEGAL CLAIMS YOU AND WE HAVE AGAINST EACH OTHER ARE RESOLVED. Under the terms of this Arbitration Provision, and except as set forth below, Claims (as defined below) will be resolved by individual (and not class-wide) binding arbitration in accordance with the terms specified herein, if you or we elect it.”

(Boldface type and capitalization in original.) The arbitration provision also included an opt-out, which had to be exercised “within forty-five (45) days after either (i) the date of the mailing to you of this Arbitration Provision or (ii) the day you open your Account, whichever is later.”

According to Anita Bloss, a PNC Bank loss-prevention manager, PNC Bank sent [1135]*1135Franklin three bank statements in February 2013, which, she said, notified him of the arbitration provision. However, all three of the statements provided by Bloss affirmatively stated that no enclosures were included with the bank statements. Franklin and Tamara denied that they received either the statements or the enclosure.

Franklin sued PNC Bank and Moore-Dennis on November 27, 2013, alleging fraud, suppression, breach of fiduciary duty, and various forms of negligence and wantonness. On January 3, 2014, PNC Bank moved to compel arbitration, which Moore-Dennis joined.

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201 So. 3d 1131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-dennis-v-franklin-ala-2016.