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Financial Services Law Insights and Observations

District Court says consumer not provided meaningful opportunity to opt-out of arbitration provision

Courts Arbitration Overdraft Consumer Finance Class Action

Courts

On December 9, the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York denied a defendant bank’s motion to compel arbitration in an action alleging the bank’s policy on overdraft fees caused customers to pay fees on accounts that were allegedly “never actually overdrawn.” Plaintiff filed a putative class action against the defendant seeking monetary damages from the defendant’s assessment and collection of these fees, and the defendant moved to compel arbitration. The court considered, among other things, whether 2014 and 2021 versions of the bank’s deposit account agreements constituted a request for the plaintiff to enter into a new agreement, in addition to whether “the extent to which a party subject to an agreement containing an arbitration provision with an optout clause . . . has a continuing obligation or opportunity to opt-out of arbitration each time the contract is amended or whether the party is bound by their assent to or rejection of arbitration at the first instance the opt-out procedure is offered.”

The court noted that the plaintiff’s account, which was opened in 2004, was governed by a 2002 version of an agreement that did not contain any dispute resolution provisions, nor did it require mandatory arbitration. However, the agreement did include a change of terms provision that stated customers “could be ‘bound by these changes, with or without notice.’” The agreement was amended in 2008 to include an arbitration provision and contained an opt-out clause allowing customers to reject the arbitration provision within 45 days of opening an account. In 2014, the defendant sent a notice to customers about further modifications made to initial account disclosures. The 2014 notice stated that customers could opt out of the entire amended agreement, which contained the arbitration clause, if they closed their account within 60 days. If they chose not to close the account, customers would be deemed to have accepted the amended agreement. A 2021 amendment agreement also included the arbitration provision. The defendant argued that the plaintiff is subject to the arbitration provision because he could have opted out as early as 2008 but chose not to and continued to use his account after receiving the 2014 notice.

The court disagreed, stating that the plaintiff would still have been obligated to arbitrate disputes under a survival clause in the 2008 contract, which said that the arbitration clause “shall survive the closure of your deposit account.” The court found that the 2014 notice did not provide the plaintiff a meaningful opportunity to opt out of arbitration. Moreover, because the plaintiff was unable to opt out under the 2008 agreement, “no contract to arbitrate was formed, and [the plaintiff] was not required to opt out again when [the defendant] amended the contract in or about January 2014 or thereafter.” “The lack of notice and absolute lack of opportunity for [the plaintiff] to opt out render the 2008 [agreement] unconscionable under New York law, which seeks to ‘ensure that the more powerful party’ — here, [the defendant] — ‘cannot ‘surprise’ the other party with some overly oppressive term,’ like an arbitration provision with an opt-out procedure that could never be exercised,” the court wrote.