Plaintiff, a credit union, processed a fraudulent wire transfer request, sustaining a loss of around $243,700, and sought to recover its loss under a credit union bond issued by defendant, which declined to pay. The credit union filed this action, seeking to recover under the bond for its monetary loss and requesting an award of punitive damages.
The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of defendant, concluding that the credit union had not complied with the security procedures set forth in the bond. We agree with the trial court's reasoning and affirm.
This court accepts as true the following facts and reasonable inferences supported by the parties' undisputed evidence on the motion for summary judgment. (See Raghavan v. Boeing Co. (2005) 133 Cal.App.4th 1120, 1125 [35 Cal.Rptr.3d 397].)
For more than 10 years, defendant CUMIS Insurance Society, Inc. (CUMIS), provided plaintiff Universal City Studios Credit Union (Credit Union) with annual credit union bond coverage. The Credit Union typically renewed its bond coverage in February of each year. The bond at issue was effective from February 2007 to February 2008 (February 2007 bond).
In or around October 2006, CUMIS sent the Credit Union a three-page cover letter with a five-page enclosure entitled "Credit Union Bond Changes Executive Summary." The executive summary read: "This summary provides your credit union with a high-level summary of the revisions to the Credit Union Bond effective with renewal and new business issued starting July 1, 2006 in most states. This high-level summary document is not the full and complete text of the Credit Union Bond. Your credit union may or may not carry all the coverages listed in this document. No coverage is provided in this summary, nor does it replace any provision in the Credit Union Bond.
"Please read the actual Credit Union Bond and any endorsements carefully to determine your rights, duties and to determine what is and is not covered. Coverage will be determined by the unique individual facts of each claim.
"The Credit Union Bond program is underwritten by CUMIS Insurance Society, Inc. (CUMIS), a member of the CUNA Mutual Group.
"This coverage now requires either a callback verification security procedure, or a signed written agreement with the member agreeing to another type of security procedure. The prior language specified a commercially reasonable security procedure, which was less clear and may have led to less secure credit union practices. This change is consistent with industry standards, most of which impose even greater requirements, such as always requiring written agreements or recording of telephone conversations.
"Losses over the past year have increased significantly. Many of these can be attributed to identity theft. Some of the recent losses involve situations where the perpetrator requests a telephone number change on the member's account just prior to requesting the transfer, in an attempt to circumvent callback security. Losses under this coverage tend to be severe, with single losses in the $100,000 to $500,000 range.
"The new language specifies that a callback verification must result in a positive confirmation from the member indicating the request was authorized prior to processing the request. The new language also requires that the callback be made to a secure telephone number, which must meet any one of the following qualifications: [¶] Was provided when the account was opened[;] [¶] Was provided at a later date by the member when physically present with valid ID[;] [¶] Was provided in a signed written funds transfer agreement[;] [¶] Was a replacement telephone number that you confirmed by contacting the member at the previous number[;] [¶] Was obtained from a public or private telephone directory[;] [¶] Was a number you had on file at least
The Credit Union received a reminder about the change in coverage when the February 2007 bond was delivered. As alleged in the operative complaint: "On or about May 2007, CUMIS delivered to Plaintiff a new BOND and a two-page document entitled `IMPORTANT NOTICE TO POLICYHOLDERS.' This latter document contained a provision entitled
At some point, CUMIS e-mailed a "risk alert" to at least six Credit Union employees, notifying them of a sophisticated fraudulent funds transfer scheme in which a credit union attempts to verify a funds transfer request by calling a member's "secure telephone number" but the call is forwarded to a "fraudster." Although a credit union's "Caller ID" shows that the call is going to the member's telephone number of record, the call is actually being forwarded to the fraudster's telephone. According to the e-mail, this scheme typically involved a member's homeowner's line of credit and frequently exceeded the transfer of $100,000. The e-mail contained a "Reminder": "Mutual Bond coverage for Funds Transfers provides credit unions with definitive requirements by specifying
On January 9, 2008, the Credit Union received a telephone call from an individual who identified himself as William Ryder (Ryder), a Credit Union member. The individual requested that the Credit Union change his telephone number. The Credit Union asked the individual to state Ryder's Social Security number, date of birth, mother's maiden name, and current transaction activity. After the individual provided correct answers, the Credit Union changed the telephone number on Ryder's account.
Five days later, on January 14, 2008, the Credit Union received via facsimile a completed wire transfer request form directing that $243,678.19 be transferred from Ryder's homeowner's line of credit to an account held by Fuji Bullion Ltd. at HSBC Bank in Hong Kong. The form had a signature on the line for the "Member's Signature." On the day the form was received, the Credit Union conducted its standard security procedure to verify the information on the form. For example, the Credit Union cross-referenced the information on the form — Ryder's name, address, account number, type of account, and telephone number — to ensure it matched the information in his file. The Credit Union determined that Ryder's account had sufficient funds.
On January 30, 2008, Ryder's wife contacted the Credit Union by telephone to inquire about refinancing a loan. During the conversation, she was told about the wire transfer and replied that neither she nor her husband had requested a change in their telephone number or a transfer of funds. On February 1, 2008, Ryder provided a sworn written statement to the Credit Union, confirming what his wife had said. He further attested: "I did not authorize anyone to use my name, or represent my signature, or in any way have access to this account." The Credit Union investigated the matter and unsuccessfully tried to recover the transferred funds.
The Credit Union made a claim under its credit union bond for the loss. CUMIS conducted an investigation, which it completed in early April 2008. By letter dated April 8, 2008, CUMIS informed the Credit Union's chief executive officer that the bond did not cover the loss because the Credit Union had not verified the wire transfer request by using a "secure telephone number" within the meaning of the bond, namely, a "replacement telephone number for the member ... that [the Credit Union] received at least 30 days prior to receipt of the [wire transfer] instruction." Instead, the Credit Union had used a telephone number that had been changed on Ryder's account five days before the wire transfer was processed.
On February 3, 2009, the Credit Union filed this action against CUMIS, seeking to recover its monetary loss as well as punitive damages. A first amended complaint followed and became the operative complaint. It contained two causes of action against CUMIS: breach of contract and breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing. CUMIS filed an answer.
On February 3, 2010, CUMIS moved for summary judgment or, in the alternative, for summary adjudication as to (1) each cause of action and (2) the request for punitive damages. The Credit Union filed opposition.
"`"A defendant seeking summary judgment has met the burden of showing that a cause of action has no merit if that party has shown that one or more elements of the cause of action cannot be established [or that there is a complete defense to that cause of action].... Once the defendant's burden is met, the burden shifts to the plaintiff to show that a triable issue of fact exists as to that cause of action.... In reviewing the propriety of a summary judgment, the appellate court independently reviews the record that was before the trial court.... We must determine whether the facts as shown by the parties give rise to a triable issue of material fact.... In making this determination, the moving party's affidavits are strictly construed while those of the opposing party are liberally construed."... We accept as undisputed facts only those portions of the moving party's evidence that are not contradicted by the opposing party's evidence.... In other words, the facts [set forth] in the evidence of the party opposing summary judgment and the reasonable inferences therefrom must be accepted as true.'" (Buxbaum v. Aetna Life & Casualty Co. (2002) 103 Cal.App.4th 434, 441 [126 Cal.Rptr.2d 682], italics added.)
Consistent with (1) the advance notice the Credit Union received about changes in funds transfer coverage under the February 2007 bond and (2) the "IMPORTANT NOTICE TO POLICYHOLDERS" accompanying the delivery of the bond, the coverage provision of the February 2007 bond read:
"or
"`Callback verification' means an outgoing telephone call placed by you to verify the identity and authority of the member, the member's authorized representative, or your `employee' which: [¶] a. You performed prior to executing the instruction; and [¶] b. You placed to a `secure telephone number'; and [¶] c. Resulted in confirmation that the instruction was sent by the member, the member's authorized representative, or your `employee,' who you believed to be the authorized sender to initiate such instruction." (Italics added.)
"`Secure telephone number' means a phone number that: [¶] a. Was provided by the member or member's authorized representative when the account was opened; or [¶] b. Was provided after the account was opened, in person by the member or member's authorized representative who was physically present on your `premises' and who presented to you government-issued photo identification; or [¶] c. Was provided in a signed written funds transfer agreement with the member or the member's authorized representative; or [¶] d. Was a replacement telephone number for the account, provided that you confirmed the legitimacy of the change through direct contact with the member or member's authorized representative at the previous telephone number on record; or [¶] e. You obtained from a public or private telephone directory that lists the member's name; or [¶] f. Was a replacement telephone
On appeal, the Credit Union does not contend it was entitled to recover under the bond provision requiring the use of a "callback verification" procedure. In verifying the information on the completed wire transfer request form, the Credit Union used a telephone number on Ryder's account that had been changed five days before the Credit Union received the wire transfer request form. In contrast, the bond provided coverage for verification by telephone if a member's new telephone number had been on his or her Credit Union account for at least 30 days before receipt of the wire transfer request.
The Credit Union asserts it was entitled to coverage under the alternative security measure permitted by the bond for a funds transfer: the use of "a commercially reasonable security procedure set forth in a written funds transfer agreement, signed by the member or the member's authorized representative, that governs the transaction and instruction." (Italics added.)
As the Credit Union explains, when an individual signed a Credit Union wire transfer request form, he or she expressly agreed to the terms set forth in an accompanying two-page "Funds Transfer Agreement," which stated: "The following rules shall apply to all funds transfer orders (ACH, Wire Transfers, or other electronic services) processed by Universal City Studios Credit Union. [¶] ... [¶] In general, we will accept funds transfer orders only if you agree to the terms of this Wire Transfer Agreement, and for wire transfers, have signed [a] Wire Transfer Request form, have sufficient funds available in the appropriate account to execute the funds transfer order plus the appropriate fee ..., and produce acceptable identification. [¶] You hereby acknowledge that the security procedures described are commercially reasonable and that you have agreed to the security procedure offered by the Credit Union and agree to follow the security procedure when making a funds transfer order via fax."
But, contrary to the alternative of using a callback verification procedure, the Credit Union did not obtain Ryder's signature on a funds transfer agreement setting forth the Credit Union's security procedure. The signature on the January 14, 2008 wire transfer request form — by which the signer consented to the accompanying funds transfer agreement — was a forgery. Thus, the Credit Union did not satisfy the bond's alternative security procedure for funds transfers: It did not obtain "a written funds transfer agreement,
The Credit Union also argues that Ryder agreed to its funds transfer security procedure when he signed the application to open an account. The application stated that the applicant "agree[d] to be bound by the bylaws, regulations, policies and rules, and any amendment thereof, of [the Credit Union]." But the bond's funds transfer coverage required that the agreement signed by the member or an authorized representative "set forth" the "security procedure." Even if the account application bound Ryder to the Credit Union's security procedure for wire transfers, it did not "set forth" that procedure. In short, the bond did not cover the Credit Union's loss under the funds transfer provision.
Putting aside coverage for a funds transfer, the Credit Union asserts that its loss came within the coverage for "Forgery" or "Unauthorized Signatures." Not so.
But the bond also contained a funds transfer exclusion. Under the
Accordingly, the trial court properly granted CUMIS's motion for summary judgment.
The judgment is affirmed.
Rothschild, J., and Chaney, J., concurred.