THOMPSON, Circuit Judge.
Aresty International Law Firm deposited a check for $197,750.00 from a Citibank
Because this case comes to us on appeal from a dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6), we present the facts as alleged in the complaint.
Aresty, a Massachusetts law firm and professional corporation, received a check purportedly from Irwin International Global Trade & Logistics, which Aresty thought was a customer of one of its clients. The check apparently authorized the withdrawal of $197,750.00 from a Citibank account.
On "30, 2007"—apparently October 30, 2007—Aresty deposited the check in an Interest-on-Lawyers-Trust-Account (commonly called an IOLTA account) it maintained with Citizens. Citizens presented the check to Citibank, which received it "no later than November 1, 2007." On November 2, 2007, Aresty was "assured" by Citizens that it "could wire the funds" from the check "without liability for dishonor or loss of any nature" and therefore "instructed Citizens to wire the funds."
Citibank, however, "elected not to pay the check," instead returning it to Citizens unpaid and marked with the words "Sent Wrong."
Having wired the funds represented by the check, Citizens went after Aresty for the missing money. It charged back the amount of the check to Aresty's accounts and, on January 26, 2009, filed suit in U.S. District Court in Massachusetts.
Over a year and a half later, on October 29, 2010, Aresty filed this suit against Citibank.
None of this went well for Aresty. In the present case, the district judge granted Citibank's dismissal motion on September 29, 2011. The judge said that Aresty plainly knew the check had been dishonored within days of its deposit and well before Aresty filed suit against Citibank, and therefore that Aresty had not been sufficiently diligent to warrant tolling. The judge then rejected Aresty's negligence claim on the grounds that Regulation CC does not impose any duty for state-tort-law purposes, that any duty it does impose is to a bank on the receiving end of check funds but not to that bank's customers, and, finally, that any state law claim is preempted by federal law. As for the separate suit by Citizens against Aresty, on November 16, 2011, it ended in an agreed-upon judgment against Aresty for $192,334.91.
Aresty has appealed the dismissal of its case against Citibank, reprising its arguments that the limitations period should be equitably tolled and that the negligence claim—now definitively labeled as one under the UCC—survives Citibank's various legal assaults. We will address the arguments, sticking mostly to the material in the complaint but occasionally noting facts argued by the parties (none of which we rely on in the end).
The first hurdle Aresty must overcome is the seemingly time-barred nature of its federal claim. Summed up briefly, Aresty's claim is that Citibank is liable for the amount lost in the wire transfer because Regulation CC required Citibank to notify Citizens within two business days that it would not honor the fraudulent check. Had Citibank complied with Regulation CC, Aresty claims, Citizens could have halted the wire transfer. But suits under Regulation CC "shall be brought within one year after the date of the occurrence of the violation involved," 12 C.F.R. § 229.38(g), and Aresty did not meet this deadline. Nevertheless, Aresty argues that the district court should have equitably tolled its claim because the one-year filing period had already passed before Aresty discovered that Citizens would hold it liable for the lost funds.
To begin, we review a district court's decision to grant or deny equitable relief only for abuse of discretion. Ortega Candelaria v. Orthobiologics, LLC, 661 F.3d 675, 678 (1st Cir.2011). This deferential standard applies even if the district
Even if we grant Aresty the lofty benefit of tolling, its federal claim is still time-barred. Citizens sued Aresty to recover the lost funds on January 26, 2009. Aresty was then on notice of its potential liability for the lost funds, and reason dictates that the limitations period should begin on that date at the latest. Aresty might not have known then whether Citizens's claim had merit, but one year was plenty of time to probe its liability and use its evaluation to decide whether it should sue Citibank. Despite all this time, Aresty did not sue Citibank until October 29, 2010, and it has provided only a vague and unpersuasive explanation for why it waited so long.
Aresty presents several arguments in an attempt to save its state claim, but
The EFAA (which, again, is the source of statutory authority for Regulation CC), provides at 12 U.S.C. § 4007(b) that its terms and regulations "shall supersede any provision of the law of any State, including the Uniform Commercial Code as in effect in such State, which is inconsistent with this chapter or [its] regulations." See also 12 C.F.R. § 229.41 (providing that EFAA regulations supersede any inconsistent state law). Section 4007(a) creates only one exception to this express preemption provision: "[a]ny law or regulation of any State" may survive if it "requires that funds deposited or received for deposit . . . be made available for withdrawal in a shorter period of time" than the EFAA calls for; Aresty does not argue that this exception applies here.
Instead, Aresty argues that Regulation CC imposes a duty enforceable via a "supplemental" claim under state tort law. However, Aresty's purported state claim is not actually supplemental to but instead entirely dependent on Regulation CC: Aresty refers either to Regulation CC or to Citibank's failure to notify Citizens of nonpayment (the exact omission that Regulation CC addresses) in every relevant paragraph of its state-law claim. The claim is in fact nothing more than a transparent attempt to bypass Regulation CC's limitation on Aresty's time to file suit.
Indeed, Aresty's attempt to bypass Regulation CC's time limit highlights the inconsistency between Regulation CC and Aresty's state-law claim: Massachusetts law provides a significantly longer filing period than federal law does. Compare 12 C.F.R. § 229.38(g) (one year) with Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 106, § 4-111 (three years) and Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 260, § 2A (three years). The district court therefore disposed of this claim using plain language that we explicitly endorse: where a state-law negligence claim is based on the breach of a duty established by the EFAA, "[p]ermitting an action for negligence to be brought under general state-law tort principles and within time limits set by state law would expand the remedies possible against banks and thus would be inconsistent with the limitations provided in federal law." This reasoning applies with equal force whether Aresty frames its claim as common-law negligence or negligence under the UCC. Either way, the inconsistency pointed out by the district court brings Aresty's state-law claim squarely within the terms of the EFAA's express preemption provision and therefore is fatal to the claim.
Apparently the scam Aresty succumbed to is very sophisticated and difficult to detect until it is too late. And we do not downplay in the slightest the significant dent this scam made in Aresty's finances. Nevertheless, because Aresty has not shown that the district court abused its discretion in declining to find Aresty's federal claim timely on equitable-tolling grounds, and because Aresty's state claim is preempted by federal law, we affirm the dismissal of Aresty's complaint.