NORTHAMPTON RESTAURANT GROUP, INC., and Hamburger Station, Inc., Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. FIRSTMERIT BANK, N.A., Defendant-Appellee.
No. 10-4056.
United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.
July 5, 2012.
492 F. Appx 518
Before: BOGGS and GIBBONS, Circuit Judges; RUSSELL, Senior District Judge.*
Furthermore,
For the reasons stated above, we find that the BIA‘s interpretation of
IV.
Accordingly, the BIA‘s decision is AFFIRMED.
Northampton Restaurant Group, Inc., and Hamburger Station, Inc., (collectively “Northampton” or the “restaurant“) brought suit against FirstMerit Bank, N.A. (“FirstMerit” or the “bank“) on behalf of themselves and several putative classes, alleging that the bank breached its contracts with its customers, wrongfully converted their property, and violated the implementing regulations of Electronic Funds Availability Act (“EFAA” or the “Act“),
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Northampton‘s primary business is the operation of restaurants in Ohio. To facilitate that business, Northampton maintains a commercial banking relationship with FirstMerit. Pursuant to contract, Northampton opened a deposit account (i.e., a checking account) with FirstMerit more than twenty years ago. Approximately ten years ago, Northampton also opened a credit line (i.e., a credit card) with the bank. Northampton opened the credit line, in part, to provide overdraft protection on its deposit account. If the assets of the deposit account were ever insufficient to cover the account‘s liabilities, the credit line would be used to cover any overdraft.
Northampton alleged that discrepancies in the deposit account and credit line began occurring in January of 2007. According to Northampton, the bank used the credit line to cover overdrafts in the deposit account even though that account held sufficient funds to pay some or all of the items presented for payment. Each time the credit line was used to cover an overdraft (regardless of whether sufficient funds were available to cover the item), FirstMerit charged Northampton two separate fees. First, the bank charged Northampton an overdraft fee on the deposit account. Second, FirstMerit charged a finance fee on the credit line when it was used to cover an item presented for payment on the deposit account. According to Northampton, the bank wrongfully charged overdraft and finance fees even though the restaurant had sufficient funds to pay some or all of the items presented for payment, and these wrongfully imposed fees constituted a breach of contract by FirstMerit.
Northampton‘s breach-of-contract claim centers on a banking practice known as “resequencing.” When a deposit account is resequenced, items presented for payment on the account during a twenty-four-hour period are not paid in the order in which they were received. Instead, the items are resequenced and paid in order of amount, largest to smallest. Thus, even if the largest item presented for payment on any particular day is the last item received, resequencing causes it to be paid first.
Banks justify resequencing as a means of protecting their customers’ interests. Because the largest items presented for payment on a deposit account are often those with the greatest consequences if left unpaid—a payment to a business‘s main supplier—banks resequence accounts to ensure that these “big ticket” items are
In the present case, Northampton alleged that its contracts with FirstMerit prohibited the bank from resequencing transactions in its deposit account. FirstMerit allegedly disregarded this prohibition and wrongfully charged overdraft and finance fees. Northampton also alleged that FirstMerit‘s practices were not restricted to its account but also extended to many of the bank‘s other commercial customers, who comprised the putative classes.
In addition to the breach-of-contract claim, Northampton asserted that FirstMerit wrongfully converted the restaurant‘s property. The conversion claim is closely related to the breach-of-contract claim. By wrongfully resequencing the accounts, Northampton claimed that FirstMerit converted its property in two ways. First, the bank used funds in Northampton‘s deposit account that were not used to pay items presented on the account to make investments for the bank‘s own benefit. Second, FirstMerit converted Northampton‘s funds when it charged finance fees on the credit line at a time that Northampton‘s deposit account contained sufficient funds to pay some or all of the items presented.
Finally, Northampton alleged that FirstMerit violated the EFAA,
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
This court reviews de novo a district court‘s dismissal of a case pursuant to
The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure require that pleadings, including complaints, contain a “short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief.”
Even though a “complaint attacked by a
III. ANALYSIS
The district court dismissed all of Northampton‘s causes of action under
As detailed above, Northampton alleged that FirstMerit‘s practice of resequencing the restaurant‘s deposit account was a breach of the parties’ contracts. Despite making this claim, Northampton did not attach any contracts to its complaint and did not include the language of any specific contractual provisions that had been breached by the bank. In its briefs on appeal, the restaurant admitted that it could not provide the contracts to the court because it no longer possessed copies of them. Instead, Northampton argued that dismissal was inappropriate because it should be allowed to conduct discovery in order to obtain the contracts that would show FirstMerit‘s actions violated their agreement. In a recent anti-trust case, a panel of this court affirmed a
[T]he language of Iqbal specifically directs that no discovery may be conducted in cases such as this, even when the information needed to establish a claim of discriminatory pricing is solely within the purview of the defendant.... [The] plaintiff must allege specific facts of price discrimination even if those facts are only within the head or hands of the defendants. The plaintiff may not use the discovery process to obtain these facts after filing suit.
In any event, attached to its motion to dismiss, FirstMerit included copies of the parties’ contracts, which expressly show that Northampton agreed that the bank could resequence the deposit account in the manner of its choosing.1 Furthermore, even in the absence of an agreement, the Ohio commercial code explicitly allows banks to reorder account transactions in any manner they see fit. See
Northampton also alleged a cause of action for conversion and for FirstMerit‘s
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
THOMAS B. RUSSELL
UNITED STATES SENIOR DISTRICT JUDGE
Notes
As between one item and another no priority rule is stated. This is justified because of the impossibility of stating a rule that would be fair in all cases, having in mind the almost infinite number of combinations of large and small checks in relation to the available balance on hand in the drawer‘s account; the possible methods of receipt; and other variables. Further, the drawer has drawn all the checks, the drawer should have funds available to meet all of them and has no basis for urging one should be paid before another; and the holders have no direct right against the payor or bank in any event, unless of course, the bank has accepted, certified, or finally paid a particular item, or has become liable for it under section 4-302. Under subsection (b) the bank has the right to pay items for which it is itself liable ahead of those for which it is not.
