This is a putative class action involving alleged overcharges by a title insurer and its agents, in violation of the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA) § 8(b), 12 U.S.C. § 2607(b). We affirm the district court’s threshold dismissal of the case.
I.
On review of a Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) dismissal, we, like the district court, assume the factual allegations in the complaint are true and give the plaintiff the benefit of reasonable factual inferences. Then we review de novo whether the complaint, so construed, alleges a basis for relief.
See, e.g., Rivell v. Private Health Care Systems,
According to the complaint, Lori Haze-wood obtained a federally related loan of $98,000 from defendant Foundation Financial Group LLC. The loan was secured by a mortgage in favor of Foundation Financial Group on Hazewood’s residence. Meridian Title Services LLC and Network Closing Services Inc. 1 acted as settlement agents for Hazewood in closing on the loan. Network also sold title insurance as an agent for defendant Ticor Title Insurance Inc.
In connection with this loan, Ticor, through its agent Network, issued Haze-wood a title insurance policy. The premium was paid to Network, not Ticor, but the complaint alleges that the premium was, or may have been, split between the two companies. It is this premium that allegedly violated RESPA.
Alabama law requires title insurers to submit their rates to the Insurance Commissioner, who must then approve the “fairness and justness” of this “filed rate.” Ala.Code. § 27-25-6(e). Title insurers are prohibited from charging customers premiums in excess of the filed rate. Ala.Code § 27-25-6(a). In this case, Hazewood was *1225 charged a title insurance premium in excess of the filed rate, and thus, in excess of the maximum rate permitted by Alabama law. According to the complaint, this overcharge, along with the permissible portion of the insurance premium, may have been split between Network (the settlement agents) and Ticor (the title insurer).
Hazewood’s theory of the case is that the over charge&emdash;that is, the portion of the premium in excess of the filed rate&emdash;was a “portion, split, or percentage of any charge made or received for the rendering of a real estate settlement service ... other than for services actually performed,” and thus prohibited by RESPA. See 12 U.S.C. § 2607(b). Put differently, Hazewood contends that the overcharge was, as a matter of law, “other than for services actually performed.” The RESPA claims were raised against Ticor (the title insurer) and Network (the title insurance agents).
In addition to the RE SPA claims, the complaint also raised various claims under state law, chiefly unjust enrichment, as well as a federal Truth in Lending Act claim against Foundation Financial (the lender). The alleged overcharges for title insurance were also the factual basis for the putative class’s various claims under RESPA and Alabama law.
The district court dismissed all the claims at issue on appeal. 2 Construing our RESPA caselaw, the district court concluded that the statute provides a remedy only when fees are charged in exchange for no services at all, not for mere overcharges or excessive fees. Because Hazewood alleged she was charged an unlawfully high premium, but that premium was for title insur-anee rather than for nothing at all, the district court held she did not state a RESPA claim. The district court further concluded that the state law claims were barred by the Alabama statute prohibiting title insurance premiums in excess of the filed rate, as that statute explicitly provides that it does not create any privately enforceable rights. This appeal followed.
II.
Hazewood argues that dismissal of her RESPA claims 3 was erroneous because her complaint alleges that a portion of her title insurance premium was unearned. We disagree.
RESPA § 8(b) provides that
No person shall give and no person shall accept any portion, split, or percentage of any charge made or received for the rendering of a real estate settlement service in connection with a transaction involving a federally related mortgage loan other than for services actually performed.
12 U.S.C. § 2607(b). As we have previously held, RESPA § 8(b) does not provide a cause of action for excessive fees&emdash;that is, charges where a service was performed, but the plaintiff feels she was overcharged by the service provider.
Friedman v. Market Street Mortg. Corp.,
Hazewood argues that her complaint should survive dismissal because it contains factual allegations that a
portion
of the title insurance fee was unearned or not for services actually performed.
See generally Sosa v. Chase Manhattan Mortg. Corp.,
Hazewood also argues that our previous cases, such as
Friedman,
enunciating the prohibition on dividing settlement fees into reasonable and unreasonable components are inapposite. In those cases, she argues, the plaintiff was asking a court to make an arbitrary determination that some portion of a putatively excessive fee was unearned. But in this ease, Hazewood argues such line-drawing is not at all arbitrary: the filed rate provides a ready benchmark by which we may divide the title insurance premium into earned and unearned components. The distinction she seeks to draw is unpersuasive. The notion that Congress intended RESPA § 8(b) to implicitly create a federal remedy for overcharges under state insurance laws — in circumstances when the state itself does not recognize a private right of action, at that — is simply too much to swallow. As we have emphasized, § 8(b) “is not a price control provision.”
Friedman,
*1227
Finally, Hazewood urges us to overrule, modify, or distinguish
Friedman
” so that her claim may proceed on the authority of a HUD policy statement which would permit § 8(b) claims for “unreasonable” or excessive fees, and which we rejected in
Friedman
as contrary to § 8(b)’s plain meaning.
Friedman,
In sum, Hazewood has alleged no § 8(b) claim, and the dismissal of her complaint is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The relationship between Meridian and Network Closing is unclear from the complaint; the parties appear to treat the two companies as joint actors or as alter egos of one another. Their relationship is not material to the disposition of this appeal. Hereinafter, this opinion will refer to them jointly as "Network.”
. The district court did not dismiss the Truth in Lending Act claim against Foundation Financial; however, it appears from the record that this claim has settled. Our jurisdiction would have been unaffected in any event, as final judgment was separately entered as to the claims and parties on appeal.
. Hazewood has abandoned any argument concerning the dismissal of her state law claims.
