R.T.O., Inc. v. Santa Barbara Bank & Trust, N.A.

86 Va. Cir. 62, 2012 WL 10646655, 2012 Va. Cir. LEXIS 208
CourtNorfolk County Circuit Court
DecidedNovember 20, 2012
DocketCase No. (Civil) CL 12-0437
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 86 Va. Cir. 62 (R.T.O., Inc. v. Santa Barbara Bank & Trust, N.A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Norfolk County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
R.T.O., Inc. v. Santa Barbara Bank & Trust, N.A., 86 Va. Cir. 62, 2012 WL 10646655, 2012 Va. Cir. LEXIS 208 (Va. Super. Ct. 2012).

Opinion

By Judge Charles E. Poston

This action is before the Court upon the Defendants’ demurrer to the complaint exhibited against them. Having considered the written submissions of counsel, the papers filed in this action, and counsels’ oral arguments, the court will sustain the demurrer as to Count II: Promissory Estoppel and overrule it as to Count I: Breach of Contract and Count HI: Fraud and Concealment.

Restatement of Facts

The facts are recounted here in the light most favorable to the Plaintiffs. The Plaintiffs are R.T.O., Inc., R.T.O. Tax System, L.L.C., and Taxcelerator, L.L.C. R.T.O., Inc., provides tax preparation and electronic filing services directly to consumers at its own stores. R.T.O. Tax System is a tax business management and consulting company that provides guidance and support to clients that are or want to be engaged in a tax preparation service similar to R.T.O., Inc. Taxcelerator is a business that prepares tax returns for R.T.O., Inc., which R.T.O., Inc., prints for the taxpayer to sign. The same principles own all three Plaintiffs.

The Defendants are Santa Barbara Bank & Trust (SBBT) and Santa Barbara Tax Products Group, L.L.C. (SBTPG). SBBT is in the banking industry and provides tax refimd related services. In January 2010, SBBT’s e-filing tax products division was sold to SBTPG, which is the successor-in-interest to SBBT’s e-filing tax products division.

In 2008 and 2009, the Plaintiffs were partnered with Republic Bank, which assisted them with their tax preparation service. In 2009, Plaintiffs [63]*63began looking for new products to enhance their service to their clients. During their search, Plaintiffs discovered a program known as CrossLink Multi-Site Online (MSO), which Plaintiffs believed was the only 100% web-based professional tax preparation solution for multi-site deployments. In order to provide services through MSO, Plaintiffs would be forced to switch banks because SBBT was the exclusive provider of bank products and services for tax filers using MSO.

The primaiy reason a tax return service is required to partner with a bank is to provide the service’s clients expedited access to funds based upon their anticipated tax refund. The two products at issue in this case are Refund Transfers and Refund Anticipated Loans (RALs). A Refund Transfer is a bank product that allows the tax preparation service to issue a bank check to the taxpayer after the IRS deposits the tax refund into a bank account established solely for this purpose. When using a Refund Transfer, customers will not receive the refund payment for at least a week. With RALs, the tax preparation service (in this case, the Plaintiffs) can provide a loan to a customer who applies to and is approved by the bank. The customer will normally receive his or her funds within twenty-four hours. The Plaintiffs allege that, “because most taxpayers who use Plaintiffs’ services want access to funds based on their anticipated refunds as quickly as possible, the ability to offer RALs was critical to Plaintiffs’ business.” Complaint at ¶ 32, R.T.O., Inc. v. Santa Barbara Bank & Trust, N.A., No. CL12-437 (Va. Cir. Jan. 20, 2012).

Through a series of emails as early as October 15,2009, SBBT advised the Plaintiffs that SBBT would approve all of the Plaintiffs’ offices for RALs and RTs, even though this was not the general policy of SBBT for new customers. Plaintiffs allege that, by October 28,2009, they reasonably believed that they had reached an agreement for SBBT to provide both RALs and RTs for all of the Plaintiffs’ locations. Plaintiffs also began to receive materials that confirmed this belief, such as check stock from SBBT, which constituted a bank product under the Financial Services Agreement (FSA).

The FSA is the foundational contract between SBBT and the Plaintiffs, and it contains several provisions that are relevant to this case. First, the “FSA provides that the agreement is exclusive and precludes the Plaintiffs from submitting applications for RALs or Refund Transfers ‘to any entity other than SBBT’.” Id. at ¶ 50. Therefore, SBBT was the sole party with whom Plaintiffs were contractually allowed to do business under the terms of the contract. Plaintiffs would not have been able to contract with a secondary bank as a form of “insurance” in case SBBT was unable to offer RALs or Refund Transfers. Second, the FSA contains a California choice-of-law clause requiring all causes of action that arise from the contract to be governed by California law rather than Virginia law.

The conflict between the parties began on December 24, 2009, when the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency notified Pacific Capital Bank, [64]*64N.A. (the parent company of SBBT) that it would not receive regulatory approval to originate any RALs during the 2010 season. Plaintiffs were not made aware of this lack of regulatory approval until an email dated January 13, 2010, only two days before the start of the tax season; therefore, the Plaintiffs had no time to make alternative arrangements with another bank. In fact, emails dating December 26, 2009, December 28, 2009, December 30, 2009, January 6, 2010, and January 8, 2010, informed the Plaintiffs that, although SBBT would be selling its e-filing division to SBTPG, the Plaintiffs had been approved for RALs and there was no anticipation of any interruption of service. Despite knowing for three weeks that SBTPG would be unable to offer RALs for the 2010 tax season to the Plaintiff, SBBT and SBTPG continued to make misleading representations.

Count I: Breach of Contract

Because of the choice-of-law provision in the FSA, California law will apply to the breach of contract claim. In order to survive a demurrer under California law, a Plaintiff must plead (1) the existence of a contract, (2) Plaintiff’s performance or excuse for nonperformance, (3) Defendant’s breach, and (4) the resulting damages to the Plaintiff caused by that breach. See Reichert v. General Ins. Co. of Am., 442 P.2d 377, 381 (Cal. 1968). The Plaintiffs in this complaint adequately pleaded all four elements of a breach of contract cause of action. The Plaintiffs allege that the Plaintiffs and SBBT entered into a valid contract in the form of the FSA. As previously noted, SBTPG was the successor-in-interest to SBBT, so the FSA would apply to SBTPG as well. The Plaintiffs further allege that they fulfilled all of their obligations under the FSA and that SBBT and SBTPG breached their obligations under the FSA. Plaintiffs allege not only that SBBT and SBTPG breached the express terms of the contract, but also that the Defendants breached their implied obligations of good faith and fair dealing. Finally, the Plaintiffs allege that they have suffered, and continue to suffer, damages as a direct, proximate, and foreseeable result of SBBT’s and SBTPG’s breach of the FSA. Therefore, the demurrer as to the breach of contract claim will be overruled because the cause of action was sufficiently pleaded.

Count II: Promissory Estoppel

The Defendant’s demurrer to Count II of the complaint will be sustained. The Commonwealth of Virginia does not recognize the claim of promissory estoppel among its equitable claims. Mongold v. Woods, 278 Va. 196, 202-03, 677 S.E.2d 288, 292 (2009).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 Va. Cir. 62, 2012 WL 10646655, 2012 Va. Cir. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rto-inc-v-santa-barbara-bank-trust-na-vaccnorfolk-2012.