MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO DISMISS
Before the court is Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss for Failure to State a Claim Under Rule 12(b)(6). (Dkt. No. 62.) The court heard oral argument on the Motion on September 20, 2012, taking the matter under advisement at that time. For the reasons discussed below, the court GRANTS Defendants’ Motion (Dkt. No. 62) and dismisses Plaintiffs First Amended Complaint (Dkt. No. 49) in its entirety. The court also therefore DENIES AS MOOT Plaintiffs Motion for a Determination of Defendants’ Claim of Privilege Pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(b)(6)(B). (Dkt. No. 54.)
BACKGROUND
Plaintiff purchased a computer online in October 2008 for $1,068.08 using eBay/PayPal’s affiliated “Bill Me Later” program to finance the purchase. To effect this online loan transaction through Bill Me Later (“BML”), Plaintiff signed a contract identifying CIT Bank as the lender in the financing and as the owner of the account created by Plaintiff in using BML to purchase the computer. CIT Bank was an FDIC-insured bank chartered in Utah. The contract specified that Plaintiff was accepting the loan in Utah, credit was being extended from Utah, an annual interest rate of 19.99% would apply to outstanding loan amounts, and disclosed a schedule for late fees. CIT Bank funded Plaintiffs transaction by paying the merchant on'his behalf, then held the receivables for Plaintiffs account for at least two days before selling them to BML. On September 1, 2010, WebBank acquired all of CIT Bank’s rights to this lending program and became the owner of all existing accounts (including Plaintiffs account) and the sole entity to issue new accounts and fund extensions of credit. WebBank is also an FDIC-insured bank chartered in Utah that retains the receivables on the accounts consumers choose to open with it through the BML program for two days before selling those receivables to PayPal (Europe) S.A.R.L., ET CIE S.C.A., a Luxembourg Bank. (Defs.’ Mem. Supp. Mot. Dismiss 6 [Dkt. No. 63].) “WebBank retains a portion of the interest that accrues
BML facilitates this consumer financing for the lending bank. Consumers, including Plaintiff, provide BML with financial and other information at the point of online sale that allows BML, on the bank’s behalf as its service provider, to perform a real-time credit check for purposes of determining whether the consumer qualifies for the loan to finance the transaction. If the consumer qualifies for and reviews and accepts the terms and conditions of the loan, initially CIT Bank and now WebBank opens an account for the consumer and extends the consumer credit for the purchase, paying the merchant on the consumer’s behalf. The consumer-turned-borrower is then responsible for a loan account similar to a credit card account with a current balance.
If the borrower pays for the purchase in full within 30 days, there is no charge for using the service at all. If the borrower makes a payment by the due date but does not pay off the account in full, the disclosed 19.99% interest rate applies to the remaining balance. If the borrower does not make at least the minimum payment by the payment date, then just like with a typical credit card balance, a separate late fee is applied according to the disclosed late fee schedule in addition to the disclosed 19.99% interest rate that applies to the outstanding balance. Plaintiff acknowledges in the First Amended Complaint that, according to the Wall Street Journal Blog, most borrowers “pay on time and in full,” meaning that there is no cost at all to them for using the BML service. (First Amended Complaint ¶ 103 [Dkt. No. 49].)
The WSJ Blog post cited by Plaintiff in the First Amended Complaint notes that 35% of borrowers do not pay in full within the first 30 days, meaning they then carry a balance similar to a credit card balance with associated interest rate and late fees triggered by missing a payment due date. The First Amended Complaint cites a number of complaints from such users, including Plaintiff, who became subject to late fees based on the disclosed schedule upon missing the due date for payment on their balance, in addition to the disclosed 19.99% interest rate on that balance. Borrowers expressed outrage at the annualized “interest rates” that resulted when combining the late fees on an annual percentage basis based on the balance with the disclosed annual interest rate of 19.99%; the resulting combined annualized figure, expressed as an “interest rate,” ranged from “more than a 70 percent interest rate” for Plaintiff to as high as 180% in one anonymous consumer complaint cited in an online article. (See id. at ¶¶ 104-115 [Dkt. No. 49].)
Plaintiff, a consumer-borrower living in California, brought this suit on his own behalf and on behalf of a class of similarly situated California consumers for alleged breach of contract (id. at ¶¶ 116-19), violation of California’s Consumers Legal Remedies Act (California Civil Code sections 1750 et seq.) (id. at ¶¶ 120-23), violation of California’s Business and Professions Code sections 17200 et seq. by allegedly violating California’s Unfair Competition Law under (Cal. Civ.Code 1671 (c) — (d)), California’s Consumer Legal Remedies Act under Cal.
Judge Otero of the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California applied a choice of law analysis to Plaintiffs usury claims, which Plaintiff had brought under California law, and dismissed those claims with prejudice on the grounds that Utah law applied to and allowed the disclosed 19.99% interest rate applicable to balances under the program. (Order dated Dec. 14, 2010, at 10 [Dkt. No. 5-6].) WebBank moved to intervene, both permissively and as of right, as a Defendant in the matter. Judge Otero granted Web-Bank’s motion to intervene on August 8, 2011. (Civil Minutes dated Aug. 8, 2011, at 12 [Dkt. No. 11-21].) Judge Otero then granted Defendants’ Motion to Transfer Venue to the U.S. District Court for the District of Utah on October 21, 2011. (See Civil Minutes dated Oct. 21, 2011, at 3 & 10 [Dkt. No. 16-12].)
ANALYSIS
I. LEGAL STANDARD
“Thé court’s function on a Rule 12(b)(6) motion is not to weigh potential evidence that the parties might present at trial, but to assess whether the plaintiffs complaint alone is legally sufficient to state a claim for which relief may be granted.” Dubbs v. Head Start, Inc.,
The court agrees with Defendants that “after setting aside the rhetoric and irrelevant allegations, the [First Amendment Complaint] cannot support a verdict for Plaintiff in light of the admitted facts and the documents Plaintiff has relied upon in
II. EXPRESS FEDERAL PREEMPTION OF USURY AND LATE FEE CLAIMS
As Plaintiff necessarily admits in the First Amended Complaint, the BML program is intentionally structured to take advantage of the lending ability of FDIC-insured, state-chartered banks in Utah. (See First Amended Complaint ¶¶ 2, 6, 10, 55, 57 [Dkt. No. 49].)
“Sections 85 and 86 of the National Bank Act and § 1831d of the Depository Institution Deregulation and Monetary Control Act [“DIDA”] are virtually identical. The former applies to national banks while the latter applies to state-chartered federally-insured banks.” Beaumont v. Fortis Benefits Ins. Co., No. 07-CV-050-GKF-FHM,
Because Section 85 of the National Bank Act and Section 27 of the FDIA are “virtually identical,” the court looks for guidance to precedent in which the Supreme Court addressed the application of the state usury laws and late fee provisions of the state where a bank is located to consumers residing in a foreign state with greater consumer protections under Section 85 of the National Bank Act. As to usury laws, the
Closely examining the Congressional history of Section 30 of the National Bank Act of 1864 (the predecessor of Section 85 and which was “virtually identical” to Section 85 at issue in Marquette, id. at 312 n. 23,
Whether the inequalities which thus occur when the interest rates of one State are “exported” into another violate the intent of Congress in enacting § 30 in part depends on whether Congress in 1864 was aware of the existence of a system of interstate banking in which such inequalities would seem a necessary part.
Close examination of the National Bank Act of 1864, its legislative history, and its historical context makes clear that, contrary to the suggestion of petitioners, Congress intended to facilitate what Representative Hooper termed a “national banking system.” Cong. Globe, 38th Cong., 1st Sess., 1451 (1864).... Although in the debates surrounding the enactment of § 30 there is no specific discussion of the impact of interstate loans, these debates occurred in the context of a developed interstate loan market. As early as 1839 this Court had occasion to note: “Money is frequently borrowed in one state, by a corporation created in another. The numerous banks established by different states are in the constant habit of contracting and dealing with one another.... These usages of commerce and trade have been so general and public, and have been practiced for so long a period of time, and so generally acquiesced in by the states, that the Court cannot overlook them....” Bank of Augusta v. Earle,13 Pet. 519 , 590-591,10 L.Ed. 274 (1839). Examples of this interstate loan market have been noted by historians of American banking. Evidence of this market is to be found in the numerous judicial decisions in cases arising out of interstate loan transactions.... After passage of the National Bank Act of 1864, cases involving interstate loans begin to appear with some frequency in federal courts....
We cannot assume that Congress was oblivious to the existence of such common commercial transactions. We find it implausible to conclude, therefore, that Congress meant through its silence to exempt interstate loans from the reach of § 30. We would certainly be exceedingly reluctant to read such a hiatus into the regulatory scheme of § 30 in the absence of evidence of specific congressional intent. Petitioners have adduced no such evidence.
*1365 Petitioners’ final argument is that the “exportation” of interest rates, such as occurred in this case, will significantly impair the ability of States to enact effective usury laws. This impairment, however, has always been implicit in the structure of the National Bank Act, since citizens of one State were free to visit a neighboring State to receive credit at foreign interest rates. Cf. 38 Cong. Globe, 38th Cong., 1st Sess., 2123 (1864). This impairment may in fact be accentuated by the ease with which interstate credit is available by mail through the use of modern credit cards. But the protection of state usury laws is an issue of legislative policy, and any plea to alter § 85 to further that end is better addressed to the wisdom of Congress than to the judgment of this Court.
Id. at 314-19,
The usury analysis above is therefore controlling. The Supreme Court has also considered late fees under the analogous Section 85 of the National Bank Act, this time specifically relating to a California consumer affected by the disparate allowable fee rates as preempted by Section 85, in Smiley v. Citibank (South Dakota), N.A.,
The term ‘interest’ as used in 12 U.S.C. § 85 includes any payment compensating a creditor or prospective creditor for an extension of credit, making available of a line of credit, or any default or breach by a borrower of a condition upon which credit was extended. It includes, among other things, the following fees connected with credit extension or availability: numerical periodic rates, late fees, not sufficient funds (NSF) fees, overlimit fees, annual fees, cash advance fees, and membership fees. It does not ordinarily include appraisal fees, premiums and commissions attributable to insurance guaranteeing repayment of any extension of credit, finders’ fees, fees for document preparation or notarization, or fees incurred to obtain credit reports.
Id. at 740,
[t]he definition of “interest” that we ourselves set out in Brown v. Hiatts,82 U.S. 177 ,15 Wall. 177 ,21 L.Ed. 128 (1873), decided shortly after the enactment of the National Banking Act, likewise contained no indication that it was limited to charges expressed as a function of time or of amount owing: “Interest is the compensation allowed by law, or fixed by the parties, for the use or forbearance of money or as damages for its detention.” See also Hollowell v. Southern Building & Loan Ass’n,120 N.C. 286 ,26 S.E. 781 (1897) (“Any charges made against [the borrower] in excess of the lawful rate of interest, whether called ‘fines,’ ‘charges,’ ‘dues,’ or ‘interest,’ are in fact interest, and usurious.”).
Id. Though it is controlling for this case, and Defendants discussed it in their Motion to Dismiss (see, e.g., Defs.’ Mem. Supp. Mot. Dismiss 30 [Dkt. No. 63]), Plaintiff nowhere addresses Smiley in his Opposition. This was a fatal flaw in Plaintiffs argument.
The court also agrees with Defendants that the interest rate authority of 12 U.S.C. § 1831 d(a) “is part and parcel of the regulatory structure governing state banks under the FDIA.” (Defs.’ Mem. Supp. Mot. Dismiss 28 [Dkt. No. 63] (citing 12 U.S.C. §§ 1463(g) (savings banks), 1735f-7 (mortgage lenders), and 1785(g) (credit unions) as other areas of federal regulation of the banking industry added by the DIDA at the same time as § 1831d).) As Defendants note, the Congressional intent behind the DIDA, enacted in 1980 in response to the credit crunch of the late 1970s, was to promote lending by state-chartered banks and therefore gave the FDIC, as the federal regulator, regulatory oversight and authority over “all aspects of a bank’s operations.” (Id. at 28-29 (citing statement of Sen. Prox-mire, 126 Cong. Rec. 6900 (March 27, 1980)).) As the primary regulator of such federally insured, state-chartered banks, the FDIC is required to examine these banks and their business operations periodically for compliance with the governing federal regulatory framework. See, e.g.,
This finding also addresses Plaintiffs allegation that the structure in use in the BML program reveals that BML and not the state-chartered bank is the “true lender” and thus that the whole scheme is an obvious effort to circumvent state usury laws more protective of consumers than Utah’s. Even accepting this allegation as true — that this is a lending program of a non-bank attempting to circumvent California’s usury laws — the court would still be required to dismiss these claims as preempted by Section 27, as did the Southern District of Indiana in Hudson v. ACE Cash Express, Inc., No. 01-1336-C,
But as to the allegation that this is a lending program of a non-bank attempting to circumvent California’s usury laws, as Defendants note, the Eighth Circuit has expressly “rejected arguments that state usury laws should apply to receivables purchased from the bank on a daily basis by a non-bank participant in the credit card program (a store that accepted the credit cards).” (Defs.’ Mem. Supp. Mot. Dismiss 28) [Dkt. No. 63] (citing Krispin v. May Dep’t Stores Co.,
Based on this provision, therefore, loans serviced through contracts with third parties such as BML are included within the definition of “any loan” under Section 27 of the FDIA and are therefore expressly preempted by the federal statute. The BML program is therefore expressly subject to federal regulation and oversight. As Defendants explain,
WebBank’s conceded role in originating the loan subjects the program and BML to regulatory scrutiny and accountability under the FDIA — including the FDIC’s detailed and mandatory examination and supervision, which are part and parcel of the interest rate authority granted in Section 27 — and therefore a full panoply of loan regulation and consumer protection. Far from evading regulation, application of the FDIA results in extensive FDIC supervision of the loan program and examination for compliance with all applicable federal and state laws.
(Defs.’ Mem. Supp. Mot. Dismiss 37 [Dkt. No. 63].) The FDIC has created numerous methods of oversight and compliance with such arrangements involving credit card programs (which the court has found above are analogous to this framework for these purposes) in which banks that are covered “depositary institutions” contract with third party service providers in the framework of their lending programs. (See, e.g., id. at 27 & 32-34 (citing numerous provisions of the FDIC Credit Card Activities Manual and relevant FDIC enforcement orders).) As Defendants note, “[i]t would be anomalous for FDIC to treat the loans made pursuant to such lending programs as loans for examination purposes under the FDIA, and yet for courts, construing the sweeping language of Section 27 of the FDIA, not to treat them as falling within the rubric of ‘any loan or ... other evidence of debt.’ ” (Id. at 34 (quoting 12 U.S.C. § 1831d).) Accordingly, the court finds that, as suggested by Defendants, “[t]he FDIC — statutorily charged with responsibility for the safe and sound operation of banks, and possessing broad supervisory powers — is in a far better position than courts to oversee programs such as the one challenged here.” (Id. at 38.)
Plaintiff’s arguments that the banks in the BML program are not the true lender or the real party in interest are unavailing and cannot overcome this fundamental prudential argument. (See PL’s Opp. Mot. Dismiss 31-49 [Dkt. No. 82].) Plaintiff notes that Judge Otero rejected the express preemptive effect of Section 27 of the FDIA, finding that under Discover Bank v. Vaden,
More substantively, however, Plaintiff has alleged and must admit that FDIC-insured, state-chartered banks are parties to the relevant credit agreements under which the loans are made, funded the loans at issue and owned the credit accounts, and that WebBank holds the credit receivables for two days, continues to own the accounts, and shares in the financial upside of the program based on the amount of interest collected. (See First Amended Complaint ¶¶ 6, 8, 59, 86-87, 93, 95, 98 [Dkt. No. 49].) Also, Defendants have cited cases permitting non-bank assignees to continue to “charge” and “collect” the interest rates permitted by Section 27. See FDIC v. Lattimore Land Corp.,
More importantly, the court also finds Ubaldi v. SLM Corp.,
As alleged, Plaintiffs First Amended Complaint cannot satisfy the plausibility standard of Twombly and Iqbal sufficient for the allegations to state a claim for which relief can be granted in light of the express preemption of Section 27 of the FDIA of Plaintiffs usury and late fee claims. “Section 27 represents Congress’s considered judgment that banks, subject to extensive regulation and supervision, should be entitled to charge interest as allowed by the laws of their home states.” (Defs.’ Reply 18 [Dkt. No. 90].) CIT Bank and WebBank are FDIC-insured state-chartered banks in the State of Utah. Plaintiff cannot allege that Utah does not allow the interest rates and late fees disclosed and then charged under the BML program. Plaintiffs claims therefore fail as a matter of law and are dismissed with prejudice.
III. BREACH OF CONTRACT, CLRA, BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONS CODE, CALIFORNIA CONSTITUTION, AND AIDING AND ABETTING CLAIMS
The court considers the express preemption of Section 27 of the FDIA to be dispositive of the entire First Amended Complaint. Nevertheless, for the avoidance of doubt, the court separately addresses the Breach of Contract, CLRA, Business and Professions Code, California Constitution, and Aiding and Abetting claims, dismissing each in their own right.
Each of the above claims is premised on BML being the true lender or real party-in-interest, an allegation dismissed by the court under the Twombly and Iqbal standards above. Relatedly, the claims are further rooted in Plaintiffs theory that BML “operated an instant, transactional credit plan that consumers used at the point-of-sale to check out and make online purchases of particular goods and services.” (See First Amended Complaint ¶ 47 [Dkt. No. 49].) Plaintiff alleges in his breach of contract claim, for example, that as a provider of such “transactional credit,” BML’s late fees are an impermissible liquidated damages provision, thus voiding the contract under California Civil Code § 1671(d). (Id. at ¶¶ 116-19.) Setting aside the fact that this is in essence a claim that the contract is void or voidable rather than a breach of contract claim, it fails for the same reason as the CLRA claim even under California law — because Plaintiff has failed to allege facts sufficient to show that BML is plausibly the true lender under the BML program such that the program plausibly constitutes only a “transactional credit” arrangement, especially in light of the court’s finding above that based on the facts alleged in the First Amended Complaint, this program is analogous to credit card programs.
Further, although Plaintiff must admit that under well-established California precedent, California’s Consumers Legal Remedies Act (California Civil Code sections 1750 et seq.) (“CLRA”) does not apply generally to extensions of credit because California courts have refused to
Fairbanks involved life insurance policies which in many ways function like extensions of credit. The California Supreme Court disagreed with the plaintiffs argument that “if life insurance policies by themselves are not services as defined in the Consumers Legal Remedies Act, the work or labor of insurance agents and other insurance company employees in helping consumers select policies that meet their needs, in assisting policyholders to keep their policies in force, and in processing claims are services that are sufficient to bring life insurance within the reach of the Consumers Legal Remedies Act.” Id. Instead, the Fairbanks Court noted that “ancillary services are provided by the sellers of virtually all intangible goods — investment securities, bank deposit accounts and loans, and so forth. The sellers of virtually all these intangible items assist prospective customers in selecting products that suit their needs, and they often provide additional customer services related to the maintenance, value, use, redemption, resale, or repayment of the intangible item.” Id. Accordingly, Fairbanks held that “the ancillary services that insurers provide to actual and prospective purchasers of life insurance do not bring the policies within the coverage of the Consumers Legal Remedies Act.” Id.
The court agrees with Defendants that Fairbanks undermines the various cases Plaintiff cites in favor of his “transactional credit” theory of the credit extended by the Utah banks in the BML program. This is particularly the case with Plaintiffs attempted reliance on Berry v. American Express Publishing,
For instance, in Ball, the plaintiff tried to make a very similar argument to Plaintiff here, that “when [she] entered into the standard form credit card account agreement with Bank of America, it was a transaction intended to result in the sale or lease of goods o[r] services to [her].”
Even before the change in terms precipitated by CIT Bank (as the real party-in-interest) to make the BML program more explicitly open-ended rather than tied to a specific purchase, as referred to by Plaintiff (see Pl.’s Opp. Mot. Dismiss 19-20 [Dkt. No. 82]), the fact remains that the CLRA only applies where “the seller of the goods or services happens to be the one extending credit,” and the mere extension of credit is not considered a service under California law. Van Slyke,
Here, Defendants have not sold Plaintiff any goods or services. Plaintiff purchased his computer from Cyberpower Inc., a company completely unaffiliated with any of the Defendants. Cyberpower Inc., as the seller of the tangible good, neither extended credit to Plaintiff for the purchase of that good nor participated in a proprietary or tailored financing program for the purchase. Rather, BML connected Plaintiff with the lender (CIT Bank, later WebBank) and then paid the seller directly for the purchase. This explains why Judge Otero erred in'finding merit to the
The Third, Fourth, and Fifth Causes of Action arising under California’s Business and Professions Code (Cal. Civ.Code sections 17200 el seq.), the California Constitution art. XV § 1 (prohibiting usury), and for aiding and abetting (see First Amended Complaint ¶¶ 124-41; 142-47; and 148-52, respectively [Dkt. No. 49]) are similarly rooted in the preempted late usury/fee claims and the “real party in interest”/“transactional credit” claims (including claims rooted in the CLRA) that do not meet the Twombly and Iqbal plausibility standard and must be dismissed together with those claims for the reasons set forth above.
CONCLUSION
The court GRANTS Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss (Dkt. No. 62) for the reasons discussed above and dismisses Plaintiffs First Amended Complaint (Dkt. No. 49) in its entirety. The court also therefore DENIES AS MOOT Plaintiffs Motion for a Determination of Defendants’ Claim of Privilege Pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(b)(5)(B). (Dkt. No. 54.) This case is closed.
Notes
. Quoting Mary Pilon, Bill Me Later Can Ding Your Credit Score Now, WSJ Blogs: The Wallet (Dec. 9, 2008), http://blogs.wsj.com/walle1/ 2008/12/09/bill-me-later-can-ding-your-credit-score-now/ (last visited Feb. 1, 2012).
. Though Plaintiff characterizes this structure as "a financial shell-game” and "just a form of money laundering” (id. at ¶ 2), and the arrangement between the Utah banks and BML as a "rent-a-charter agreement” (id. ¶ 6) allegedly similar to the schemes used by "some unlawful payday lenders” (id. ¶ 68), the court looks to the substance of the facts alleged and not the rhetoric in which such facts are couched or the conclusory allegations pled, which, in the case of these descriptions the court finds "prolix and unnecessarily dramatic at this stage of the lawsuit.” See Benchmark Constr., LLC v. Scheiner Commer. Group, Inc., No. 2:12-cv-00762-CW,
. It is unclear whether Defendants have complied with 12 U.S.C. § 1867(c)(2), "the depository institution shall notify each such agency of the existence of the service relationship within thirty days after the making of such service contract or the performance of the service, whichever occurs first,” but that does not appear to be at issue in this lawsuit.
. As Defendants argue, "Even befor.e Twom-bly, the Tenth Circuit never adopted the Ninth Circuit’s practice of allowing complaints to survive the pleading stage merely because they present 'novel or extreme' theories,” which is the approach taken by the Northern District of California in Ubaldi. (See Defs.’ Mem. Supp. Mot. Dismiss 42 [Dkt. No. 63].)
. See, e.g., Van Slyke v. Capital One Bank,
. Plaintiff cites Corbett v. Hayward Dodge, Inc.,
