RealPage Inc v. National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh PA

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedFebruary 24, 2021
Docket3:19-cv-01350
StatusUnknown

This text of RealPage Inc v. National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh PA (RealPage Inc v. National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh PA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
RealPage Inc v. National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh PA, (N.D. Tex. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS DALLAS DIVISION REALPAGE INC., § § Plaintiff, § § v. § CIVIL ACTION NO. 3:19-CV-1350-B § NATIONAL UNION FIRE § INSURANCE COMPANY OF § PITTSBURGH, PA and BEAZLEY § INSURANCE COMPANY, INC., § § Defendants. § MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Before the Court is Plaintiff RealPage, Inc. (“RealPage”)’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (Doc. 75), Defendant National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (“National Union”)’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 80), and Defendant Beazley Insurance Company, Inc. (“Beazley”)’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 72). These cross-motions require the Court to determine whether RealPage is entitled to coverage under commercial-crime insurance policies for the loss of its clients’ funds, which were diverted through a phishing scheme. The central issue to the coverage determination is whether RealPage held these funds despite its use of a third-party payment processor, Stripe, Inc. (“Stripe”). Because the Court concludes that RealPage did not hold the stolen funds at issue, the Court GRANTS summary judgment in favor of National Union and Beazley on all claims against them. Accordingly, the Court DENIES RealPage’s motion (Doc. 75) and GRANTS National Union’s motion (Doc. 80) and Beazley’s motion (Doc. 72). Further, because this Order disposes of all claims - 1 - asserted by RealPage, the Court DENIES National Union’s pending motions to exclude expert testimony (Docs. 106 & 109) as MOOT. I. BACKGROUND1

A. Factual Background This is an insurance dispute regarding whether RealPage sustained a covered loss under commercial-crime policies issued by National Union and Beazley when it fell victim to a phishing scheme. The Court first provides background on RealPage’s services. Then, it describes how Stripe, a third party, assisted with these services. Thereafter, the Court explains the phishing scheme giving rise to RealPage’s claim for coverage, as well as the relevant provisions of the commercial-crime

policies and National Union’s denial of coverage at issue here. 1. RealPage’s Services RealPage provides several services for property owners and managers in the real estate industry. Doc. 76, Pl.’s Mot., 5–6 (citations omitted). One such service is “the collection of rental and other payments from residents and the transfer of those payments to clients.” Id. at 6 (citations omitted). To facilitate these transfers, RealPage’s clients (the property-management companies)

entered contracts with RealPage authorizing it to “act as an agent on [the] Client’s behalf,” “manage and collect monies debited from the Client’s customers[’] . . . accounts, and to credit [the] Client’s identified bank account less any transaction fees[.]” Doc. 77-1, Pl.’s Mot. App., 219.2 Through these

1 The Court draws its factual account from the summary-judgment evidence and briefing. 2 On-Site Manager, Inc., the named party in this contract, is a wholly owned subsidiary of RealPage. Doc. 76, Pl.’s Mot., 6. - 2 - contracts, RealPage’s clients also authorize RealPage “to complete the merchant account application process with a third[-]party bank with which [RealPage] has a relationship on [the] Client’s behalf.” Doc. 77-1, Pl.’s Mot. App., 220. Finally, as part of the agreements, RealPage’s clients warrant to

RealPage that their tenants authorize the transactions processed by RealPage, and the clients provide RealPage with their own bank account information. See id. 2. RealPage’s Payment Processing Through Stripe With respect to RealPage’s payment-processing services relevant here, RealPage contracted with Stripe, a third party, for Stripe to provide “software services that enable payment processing and related functions[.]” Id. at 281. Pursuant to this arrangement, funds flowed as follows: A tenant would log in to an interface called “Resident Passport” to make a payment to one of RealPage’s

clients. Id. at 308–09. Resident Passport was a “RealPage website that was designed to look like a client website[.]” Doc. 98, Pl.’s Resp., 6; Doc. 99, Pl.’s Resp. App., 599–600. Upon initiation of a payment by a tenant, RealPage would send application programming interface (API) calls to Stripe’s server in one of two ways—either through an interface between Stripe and RealPage called the “Stripe Dashboard,” which was accessible only to RealPage employees, or through use of the On-Site application, an application developed by RealPage that utilized APIs from Stripe. Doc. 96, Def.’s

Resp. App., 412; Doc. 77-1, Pl.’s Mot. App., 298–99, 308–10. The API calls sent from RealPage to Stripe provided information about the tenant’s account, the client’s destination account, and the amount due to the client. Doc. 96, Def.’s Resp. App., 412–13. Upon receipt of an API call, for an automated clearing house (ACH) transaction, Stripe would direct Wells Fargo, its bank, to “process an ACH [transfer] that would pull money from the [tenant]’s bank account” and place these funds in Stripe’s Wells Fargo bank account. Doc. 77-1, Pl.’s - 3 - Mot. App., 324; Doc. 74, Def.’s Mot. App., 180.3 Thereafter, Stripe would direct Wells Fargo to complete another ACH transfer to pay these funds to the clients in accordance with RealPage’s instructions. Doc. 77-1, Pl.’s Mot. App., 324–25; Doc. 74, Def.’s Mot. App., 180. Additionally, to

process fees owed to RealPage from the tenant’s payment, Stripe would conduct “a separate step” through Wells Fargo of transferring the fees owed to RealPage’s “parent account[.]” Doc. 77-1, Pl.’s Mot. App., 325–26. Stripe followed RealPage’s instructions as to where funds should land—without these instructions, Stripe “would not know where [the] funds are . . . meant to go.” Id. at 577. Stripe is the account holder of its account at Wells Fargo, a “collective merchant bank account” that contains the funds related to transactions of various merchants utilizing Stripe, such as RealPage. Doc. 101, Def.’s Sealed Resp. App., 402; Doc. 74, Def.’s Mot. App., 213. The funds

pertaining to the various merchants are commingled within Stripe’s account. Doc. 101, Def.’s Sealed Resp. App., 405–06. Stripe’s account is for the benefit of (FBO) its users and merchants such as RealPage. Id. If there was a balance owed to a client of RealPage, the funds for that balance in Stripe’s account “would be for the benefit of that property management company[.]” Id. at 404. Pursuant to one of RealPage’s contracts with Stripe, RealPage had “no rights to [Stripe’s account] or to any funds held in the [account],” RealPage was “not entitled to draw funds” from the account,

and RealPage did “not receive interest from funds maintained in” the account. Doc. 82, Def.’s Mot. App., 219. Though a Stripe representative characterizes its role as that of an “agent,” Doc. 99, Pl.’s Resp. App., 623, RealPage’s contracts with Stripe disclaim an agency relationship and state that Stripe

3 If a tenant pays by credit card, the client’s funds “first land” in another Wells Fargo account before transfer into Stripe’s Wells Fargo account. Doc. 74, Def.’s Mot. App., 213. - 4 - serves as an independent contractor. Doc. 77-1, Pl.’s Mot. App., 273 (“Except as expressly stated in this Agreement, nothing in this Agreement serves to establish [an] . . . agency relationship between you and us . . . . Each party to this Agreement . . . is an independent contractor.”), 282 (“You and

Stripe are independent entities, and this [agreement] does not create any partnership, agency, or employment relationship between you and Stripe[.]”). One of the contracts recognizes an exception to this disclaimer by stating that Stripe is RealPage’s agent for holding the funds that are ultimately owed to RealPage. Id. at 260–61 (stating that RealPage appoints Stripe as its agent “for the limited purpose of . . . holding . . . proceeds” that are “owed to” Realpage (emphasis added)). 3.

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RealPage Inc v. National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh PA, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/realpage-inc-v-national-union-fire-insurance-company-of-pittsburgh-pa-txnd-2021.