CLAIRE C. CECCHI, District Judge.
This matter comes before the Court on the motion of Investors Bank, successor-in-interest to Defendant Marathon Banking Corporation ("Marathon") to dismiss the Amended Complaint of Plaintiff Anna "Halya" Slinko-Shevchuk ("Plaintiff"). ECF No. 18. No oral argument was heard pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 78. For the reasons discussed below, Defendant's motion to dismiss is denied.
On September 20, 2013, Plaintiff filed the Complaint in the instant action against Defendants Marathon and Ocwen Financial Corporation. ECF No. 1 In Plaintiff's original Complaint, she alleged that several years after her father's death, she found a passbook showing that on March 21, 1988, her father, Nikifor Slinko, and her mother, Anna Slinko, had purchased an automatically renewing Certificate of Deposit ("CD"), with the account number ending-1017 (the "Account"), at a branch of the Berkeley Federal Savings Bank in Fort Lee, New Jersey. Compl. ¶ 17-18. According to the Complaint, the original amount of the CD was $1,000, with a 7.99% interest rate to be compounded and credited monthly, and it was scheduled to mature on March 21, 1991.
According to the Complaint, by the time Plaintiff discovered the passbook, Berkeley Federal Bank & Trust had merged into Ocwen Federal Bank FSB, a subsidiary of Ocwen Financial Corporation, and changed its name to Ocwen Federal Bank, FSB; then, "Ocwen Federal Bank sold all of its deposit accounts, including those held in New Jersey branches, to Marathon Bank of New York."
Plaintiff then demanded payment from Marathon in September 2011, but Marathon denied Plaintiff's request, advising her that it did not maintain and never maintained the Account in question, and denying that the Account was included in its acquisition of Ocwen Federal Bank FSB.
Defendants Marathon and OFC each filed separate motions to dismiss the Plaintiff's Complaint, and the Court granted those motions in an opinion dated June 9, 2014 (the "First Dismissal Op.").
Plaintiff then filed an Amended Complaint on July 8, 2014. ECF No. 17. In the Amended Complaint, Plaintiff contends that "[a]t the time of the filing of the original Complaint, Plaintiff incorrectly understood herself to be a successor to the Account at issue," but "[u]pon further inspection," Plaintiff discovered that she is actually an owner of the Account at issue, with an interest in the Account through a right of survivorship. Am. Compl. ¶ 2. Plaintiff explains that the confusion over her ownership of the Account resulted from the fact that her legal name is "Anna," while "Halya" is the "Ukranian name by which [she is] commonly called." Slinko Shevchuk Cert. ¶ 3. ECF No. 17-2. Plaintiff initially believed her mother to he the "Anna Slinko" referenced in the passbook at issue (her mother's name is Julianna) but upon further inspection, Plaintiff realized that she is the "Anna Slinko" who had joint ownership of the Account with her father. Am. Compl. ¶ 2, Plaintiff further states, in her certification submitted with the Amended Complaint: "As an owner of the Account, I hereby certify pursuant to N.J.S.A. 17:16W4(c) that neither my father nor I ever received payment of the Account or transferred the Account, my father or me." Slinko-Shevchuk Cert. ¶ 32. The statutory provision to which Plaintiff refers states, in relevant part:
N.J. Stat. Aim. § 17:16W-4(c). Finally, the Amended Complaint contains additional facts regarding the history of the Account at issue: Plaintiff now alleges that her father and her mother, Julianna Slinko, had opened a CD account ending in -0464 in the amount of $60,000 in 1984, and that by March 16, 1988, the balance of the -0464 account was $66,166.89; after withdrawing the interest from the -0464 account, Plaintiff contends, her father opened a new CD account, the Account at issue (ending in -1017), with Plaintiff as co-owner and with a principal balance of $66,000 (not $1,000 as originally alleged in the initial Complaint). Am. Compl. ¶¶ 18-21. Plaintiff contends that the last passbook relating to the Account at issue bears no stamp indicating that it was cancelled, the balance of the Account was $70,000 as of the date of the last entry in the passbook, and that the Account balance was never paid in full to its owners, Plaintiff and her father, Nikifor Slinko.
Defendant tiled the instant motion to dismiss the Amended Complaint on July 22, 2014. relying on the same argument that it made in support of its motion to dismiss the initial Complaint. ECF No. 18. Defendant argues that the presumption provided in N.J. Stat. Ann. § 17:16W-4(a)— i.e., that the account was paid in full if a successor of the owner presents the passbook to a financial institution more than 15 years after the date of the passbook—still defeats Plaintiff's claim. Def.'s Br. 6-7. Defendant argues that this presumption still applies to Plaintiff because Plaintiff has not presented sufficient evidence that she is the "Anna Slinko" referenced as a co-owner of the Account.
For a complaint to survive dismissal pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), it "must contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to `state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face."
Defendant does not argue that Plaintiff does not have a plausible claim for relief based upon the facts alleged in the Amended Complaint. Rather. Defendant argues that Plaintiff has not adequately supported the factual allegations in her Amended Complaint and that the Court should reject the new facts in the Amended Complaint because they contradict facts in the original Complaint.
The Court will not reject the facts in the Amended Complaint simply because they are contrary to facts in the original Complaint. The Third Circuit has held that "at the motion to dismiss stage, when the district court typically may not look outside the four corners of the amended complaint, the plaintiff cannot be bound by allegations in the superseded complaint."
The district court dismissed that count of the amended complaint, reasoning that "a plaintiff is not permitted to take a contrary position in a complaint in order to avoid dismissal."
Similarly in this case, it would be error for the Court to treat Plaintiff's contentions in the original Complaint as judicial admissions. Defendant cites several unpublished district court cases outside the Third Circuit, in which courts have rejected contradictory assertions in amended pleadings because the amendments were unexplained and appeared to be in bad faith.
Moreover, Plaintiff does not drastically change a previous recollection without explanation. Rather, Plaintiff appears to have discovered new facts surrounding the history of the Account at issue, including that the initial balance was greater than Plaintiff originally thought, and that prior to opening the Account at issue, her father and mother had opened a separate CD account in the names Nikifor Slinko and Julianna Slinko.
Finally, Plaintiff is not required to submit evidence at this stage proving that she is the Anna Slinko referenced in the passbook for the Account.
Based on the reasons set forth above, Defendant Marathon's motion to dismiss is denied. An appropriate order accompanies this Opinion.