An inside look into excessive overdraft fee lawsuits from Kopelowitz Ostrow Ferguson Weiselberg Gilbert (KO)
Ft. Lauderdale, FLWhen people come to talk to Jonathan Streisfeld, a KO partner, about excessive bank overdraft fees and returned item fees, “they feel frustrated with the number of fees assessed on what should be a small dollar transaction. They are confused about their bank’s practices.” More than anything, they just want their money back. The problem occurs with banks and credit unions alike.
But for the Fort Lauderdale law firm, getting the money back takes the right argument for the right facts. Streisfeld shared with LAS three possible approaches. For an angry and frustrated checking account customer, sometimes one works better than the others. It largely depends on what the contract governing the account says. Sometimes more than one theory works because it is common for customers whose accounts overdraft to also have items returned for insufficient funds. These customers typically do not have a cushion of funds in their accounts because they cannot afford to do so. What follows is a deep dive into some of the ways that consumers can fight back when banks charge unfair overdraft fees.
Two sets of books – or the “ledger balance” argument
This is a banking practice that permits banks to charge overdraft and return item fees on transactions that arguably do not overdraw a customer’s account.
In one recent situation described by Streisfeld, the bank determined whether an account balance was negative (and thus subject to overdraft fees) by using a calculation that deducted pending debit card items. This manufactured balance, sometimes referred to as the “available balance,” was often less than the balance provided to accountholders in their monthly statements or when they check their account balances online, which is sometimes referred to as the “ledger balance.”
Problems arise when the contract between the financial institution and the customer describes the use of the ledger balance to determine if an overdraft exists, when in fact the institution uses the lower available balance as the trigger to assess overdraft fees.
The counterargument to be made by customers focuses on misleading or incomplete disclosures in the contractual agreements. These agreements, which have various names, such as an account agreement, membership agreement or a separate overdraft protection agreement, can be difficult to read, may incorporate other undisclosed bank documents by reference, and are often unilaterally updated by the bank, without ever being read or fully understood by the average account holder. The contracts are often ambiguous. Whether that ambiguity is intentional or not, the accountholders should get the benefit of the doubt because they cannot control what language goes in the contract.
Enough money in your account? Never mind, we’ve changed our mind.
Another variation on the same theme involves re-casting the financial institution’s decision to pay a particular debit card transaction as a two-step process. These are often referred to as “Authorize Positive Purportedly Settle Negative Transactions,” or “APPSN Transactions.”
In this scenario, when a debit card transaction is authorized on an account with positive funds to cover the transaction, the financial institution immediately reduces the consumer’s checking account balance in the amount of the transaction, sets aside funds to cover the transaction, and as a result, the customer’s displayed “available balance” in the account reflects that subtracted amount. Because the funds have been sequestered for payment, the account will always have sufficient available funds available to cover the positive balance transaction.
However, sometimes transactions actually settle and the funds are transferred from the customer’s account to the merchant’s account several days later. During that period of days, several more account transactions may occur.
On the settlement date, when the financial institution pays the merchant, the bank or credit union assesses an overdraft fee on the transaction that authorized against a positive balance, but settled against a negative available balance. This happens despite the fact that the funds to pay for the transaction had been sequestered since the date the transaction was authorized, and that the financial institution “must pay” the transaction. Once the institution authorizes the debit card transaction, it is not permitted to deny payment to the merchant that has already provided the good or service.
The Consumer Finance Protection Bureau expressed concern about the deceptive nature of APPSN transactions as long ago as 2015.
Broken or misleading promises about multiple return item (or NSF) fees for the same transaction
In the first two overdraft fees situations, the financial institution is paying the transaction and charging a fee. Another pernicious practice that Streisfeld regularly sees harms accountholders when the institution has returned an ACH debit or check payment request due to insufficient funds in the account to cover the payment. A $30 insufficient funds fee (a/k/a return item fee or NSF fee) can easily become a charge of $60 or $90 when the merchant tries to reprocess the initial failed payment request on its own initiative and not at the request of the accountholder. Simply put, the accountholder is charged multiple fees on the same transaction.
In one recent situation described by Streisfeld, the bank’s fee schedule indicated that only a single insufficient funds fee would be assessed per item returned due to insufficient funds. According to the account agreement in the same case, “Your account may be subject to a charge for each Overdraft regardless of whether we pay or return the Overdraft.” Another contract document stated, “You will be charged a non-sufficient funds (NSF) fee of $30 for each item returned.”
A reasonable consumer would conclude that the terms “item” and “each” referred to only one NSF fee. The plaintiff in that case did not dispute the bank’s right to charge the first NSF fee but was startled by the repeated fees for a single item. She believed the additional charges violated the terms of her agreement with the bank.
This is a basic breach of contract argument, although it may also support a violation of state consumer protection laws and the financial institutions obligation to deal with its customers in good faith. The same is true with the overdraft fee theories discussed above. Similar cases have been brought for contractual violations of banks’ promises to refrain from charging overdraft fees on one-time transactions when the customer has not opted-in to the financial institution’s overdraft fee service, a federal requirement for all banks and credit unions.
These approaches to excessive overdraft fee lawsuits hardly exhaust the range of remedies available to consumers who believe that they have been victimized by their financial institutions. Nonetheless, they reflect some of issues seen by Streisfeld and his KO partners in their practice.
If you or a loved one have suffered losses in this case, please click the link below and your complaint will be sent to a consumer banking lawyer who may evaluate your Excessive Overdraft Fee claim at no cost or obligation.