Consumers brought this class-action suit for “money had and received” to recover premiums they were charged pursuant to an allegedly misleading telemarketing scheme involving accidental death and dismemberment insurance.
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The trial court certified a statewide class, and the court of appeals affirmed.
Stonebridge Life Insurance Company 2 provides accidental death and dismemberment insurance nationwide through a uniform telemarketing effort. The company purchases personal information about potential customers, including their credit-card and bank-aсcount numbers, from other businesses and credit-card issuers. Telemarketers then call those customers and, using a standardized script, describe the insurance and the enrollment process. The insurance is offered on a sixty- or ninety-day trial basis free of charge, during which time the customer can decide whether to keep or cancel the coverage. The customer is informed that the premi *204 um will be automatically charged to the customer’s credit card or bank account when the “bonus” period ends unless the customer calls to cancel coverage. Customers who indicate they want the insurance are transferred to a licensed agent who enrolls them in the program. The agent confirms the customer’s understanding that the coverage is provided at no cost during the “bonus” period, and explains that unless the coverage is cancelled before the “bonus” period expires the premium will be charged to the customer’s account every month. Although the customer is told which account Stonebridge will charge, the agent does not disclose that Stonebridge already has thе specific account information or explain that there will be no further contact from the company before the account is charged.
Gayle G. Pitts and Mary Vanderford brought this suit against Stonebridge on behalf of a class of insurance customers who enrolled through thе telemarketing program. The class representatives claim they were never informed that the company already had their credit card or bank account information, nor were they told there would be no further contact before their accounts were charged for premiums when the trial period ended. The class seeks restitution of insurance premiums based on a single liability theory — “money had and received.” The trial court certified a statewide class, 3 identifying the common liability issue as:
[D]id the Defendants obtain money from the Plaintiffs by charging their credit cards or debiting their bank accounts for accidental death and dismemberment insurance premiums which in equity belongs to the Plaintiffs?
The court of appeals affirmed the trial court’s certification order.
The class members claim they were each subjected to essentially the samе telemarketing effort and initially consented to the trial program, and contend the only issue in the case is whether Stonebridge charged them credit cards or debited their bank accounts for premiums which “in equity and good conscience” belong to the class members. Beсause Stonebridge’s liability turns exclusively on the answer to that question, the class argues, common issues predominate over individual issues in the case. Stonebridge, on the other hand, contends class certification is inappropriate because the equitable claim thе class members assert requires resolution of individual issues that will predominate at trial. We agree with Stonebridge.
This Court reviews a trial court’s decision to certify a class under an abuse
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of discretion standard, but does so without indulging every presumption in favor of the trial court’s decision.
Henry Schein, Inc. v. Stromboe,
Because predominance is one of the most stringent prerequisites to class-action certification, it is considered first in our review and must be rigorously applied.
See Bernal,
The class contends the facts in this case present the precise scenario for which class actions were designed. Hоwever, due process requires that class actions not be used to diminish the substantive rights of any party to the litigation.
See Schein,
In this case, the only cause of action that the class asserts is for “money had and received.” Stonebridge does not argue in this appeal that no class member can state a viable claim.
Cf. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Lopez,
Equitable defenses raise important substantive issues that may have a significant effect on class-action litigation.
See BMG Direct Mktg., Inc.,
The court of appeals concluded that, because each class member was subjected to a common telemarketing effort with virtually indistinguishable telemarketing scripts, liability in each instance would turn exclusively on whether Stonebridge’s reliance on each class member’s enrollment in the trial program to debit their accounts was equitable and just.
In
Bernal,
we rejected the “certify now and worry later” approach, holding it is improper to certify a class when it cannot be determined from the outset that individual issues can be considered in a manаgeable, time-efficient, and fair manner.
As in Bernal, it is determinable from the outset that this case involves material issues common to the entire class, such as Stonebridge’s uniform telemarketing tactics and automatic billing of premiums without further customer contact. But also as in Bernal, there are inescapably individual differences between each class member’s experience with Stonebridge that could determine in whose favor the equities weigh in resolving their claims. Just as fairness and manageability concerns made Bernal inappropriate for class *207 certification, the importаnt and diverse individual issues involved in evaluating the class members’ money-had-and-received claim compel the same result.
Assuming that Stonebridge’s marketing tactics are unfair or misleading as the class representatives allege, the equitable claim they assert entitles Stonebridgе to bring forth facts or defenses that tend to show the policy premiums “in equity and good conscience” belong to the company under the particular circumstances of each case.
See Stone,
[I]n order to prevail on [“money had and received”], the plaintiffs will have to establish that they paid money to the defendants, either by mistake or fraud, that, in equity or good conscience, should be returned to the plaintiffs. This theory of recovery, therefore, requires individualized inquiry into the state of mind of each plaintiff.
Funliner of Ala., L.L.C. v. Pickard,
We conclude that the class representatives in this case failed to prove at the outset that individual issues can be considered in a fair, manageable, and time-effiсient manner on a class-wide basis. Accordingly, Rule 42(b)(3)’s predominance requirement is not satisfied, and the trial court erred in certifying the class. Because the predominance requirement is not met, we do not reach the other issues Stonebridge raises.
Accordingly, without hearing оral argument pursuant to Rule 59.1 of the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure, we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and remand the case to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. A claim for "money had and received” is equitable in nature. We have said that some equitable claims or defenses may be supplanted in certain contexts if an adequate legal remedy exists.
See BMG Direct Mktg., Inc. v. Peake,
. Stonebridge Life Insurance Company (f/k/a J.C. Pеnney Life Insurance Company), J.C. Penney Direct Marketing Services, Inc., and AEGON Direct Marketing Services, Inc. (f/k/a AEGON Special Markets Group, Inc.) were all named as defendants in the suit. We refer to them collectively as "Stonebridge.”
. The trial court initially certified a nationwide clаss asserting claims for conspiracy, "money had and received,” and violations of the Texas Theft Liability Act. Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code § 134.001. The court of appeals reversed and remanded the certification order, holding that the trial court had failed to analyze potеntial conflicts of law among the fifty states.
See J.C. Penney v. Pitts,
All individuals in Texas, (1) from whom Defendants received premium рayments for accidental death and dismemberment (ADD) insurance from November 28, 1996, until the date of certification, (2) by means of either a credit card charge or bank account debit initiated by any Defendant, (3) after a telemarketing contact initiated by Defendants, (4) who did not provide written authorization prior to Defendants’ receipt of payment, and (5) who have not made a claim or received benefits due to making any claim from Defendants under any ADD policy.
The trial court certified the amended class which is the subject of this appeal.
