HAIGHT, Senior District Judge:
Plaintiff in this case has filed a second amended complaint ("SAC") [Doc. 91]. Defendants have filed motions to dismiss the entire pleading. [Docs. 93 & 94]. Plaintiff resists those motions. This Ruling resolves them.
The case had its inception in November 2009, when Plaintiff L.S., then a minor, made an internet online purchase of a video game. Plaintiff used a debit card to pay for the purchase. There is no suggestion in this energetically fought litigation that Plaintiff did not get the video game he paid for. This lawsuit arises because the transaction had an additional consequence: a monthly fee charged by a third party, ostensibly for membership in a discount and money-saving program in respect of future internet purchases.
Plaintiff challenges the legality of those monthly charges, and sues to recover them. Plaintiff also purports to sue on behalf of "all others similarly situated," by which his counsel means all persons or entities whose credit or debit cards were used in an online electronic commercial transaction with the parties defendant in the case, and were in consequence subjected to the same monthly membership fees.
The present motions seek to dismiss a second amended complaint (sometimes, "the SAC") [Doc. 91]. The Plaintiff's first amended complaint was the target of an earlier motion to dismiss by Defendants. In a Ruling reported at L.S. v. Webloyalty.com, Inc., No. 3:10-CV-1372 CSH, 2014 WL 3547640 (D.Conn. July 17, 2014) ("the July 17 Ruling"), familiarity with which is assumed, the Court granted that motion in part, with leave to the parties to conduct additional limited discovery, and leave to Plaintiff to replead his complaint. Additional discovery has been conducted, and Plaintiff has repleaded, in the form of the SAC. The July 17 Ruling recites in detail the facts and circumstances of the case, and sets forth the Court's reasoning with respect to a number of issues that arise again on the present motions. The recitations and reasoning of the July 17 Ruling are incorporated by reference into this Ruling and are not repeated here, except as necessary for clarity.
Plaintiff's first amended complaint contained 14 counts, against one or another or all of the three Defendants: Webloyalty, Inc., a self-styled "online savings service"; GameStop Corp., a retail store and online merchant of electronic products; and Visa, Inc., the well-known progenitor of credit
The SAC contains the same 14 counts, alleged against the same defendants, as did the first amended complaint. The two pleadings differ in the details and arrangement of the factual allegations upon which these several claims are said to be based. The July 17 Ruling's disposition of Defendants' earlier motion to dismiss the first amended complaint is of core importance to the Court's disposition of Defendants' present motions to dismiss the second amended complaint. It is necessary to consider the July 17 Ruling with care.
Defendants' motion to dismiss Plaintiff's first amended complaint was based on the premise that every count alleged in the pleading was a claim of fraud, either explicitly or by its inescapable nature. Proceeding from that premise, Defendants contended that every count failed to comply with the heightened standard for pleading fraud claims contained in Fed. R.Civ.P. 9(b).
In the July 17 Ruling I said that "I will defer decision on that issue," but held that "Defendants' motion to dismiss Plaintiff's claims sounding in fraud will be granted, for failure to plead fraud with the specificity required by Rule 9(b)." Id. One could not avoid the conclusion that some of Plaintiff's claims "sounded in fraud" because Count IX of the first amended complaint, against Defendants Webloyalty and Gamestop, was captioned "For Fraud." As to those claims sounding in fraud which the July 17 Ruling dismissed for failure to comply with Rule 9(b), the Ruling granted Plaintiff leave to replead, and also granted leave for limited additional discovery within the context of possible further amendments to the complaint. That was the course followed by District Judge Huff in the virtually identical case of Berry v. Webloyalty.com, Inc., No. 10-CV-1358-H (CAB), 2010 WL 8416525 (S.D.Cal. Nov. 16, 2010), whose reasoning and result I found persuasive. Judge Huff held that the fraud allegations in the first complaint were insufficient under Rule 9(b), granted additional discovery and leave to replead, considered the additional evidence (including the plaintiff's deposition) and an amended complaint, and in a subsequent opinion, dismissed the amended complaint and the action with prejudice. See 2011 WL 1375665.
2014 WL 3547640, at *9 (emphasis omitted). Winiarski and Pipkin are Webloyalty employees, previously identified in affidavits.
Taking Plaintiff's deposition was crucial to the continuing consideration of the case because of factors identified in the July 17 Ruling. That Ruling said of the 14-count first amended complaint:
2014 WL 3547640, at *6. That initial pleading was deficient because conclusions of counsel, rather than factual allegations by Plaintiff, were the sources upon which the complaint based its descriptions of the fraudulent scheme by which Webloyalty ensnared Plaintiff. "What Plaintiff was aware of," I wrote in the July 17 Ruling, "what he intended, what he consented to, what he authorized: these are the ultimate questions in the case." Id., at *7. I reasoned that since "Rule 9(b) provides that a fraud plaintiff must `state with particularity the circumstances' that constitute a fraud perpetrated by these Defendants upon this Plaintiff," it was "not sufficient for L.S. to simply to state the desired conclusions — `I did not know, I did not intend, I did not consent, I did not authorize' — while omitting a statement of the circumstances justifying those disclaimers." Id.
The July 17 Ruling also noted on this point that "Judge Huff's instructive reasoning in Berry, quoted supra, admirably summarizes the circumstances that a plaintiff in a case of this nature must state with particularity," 2014 WL 3547640, at *7. The quotation from Judge Huff's Berry opinion, 2010 WL 8416525, at *5, appeared in the July 17 Ruling at *6, and it is useful to quote her language again:
Within the past three months, another district court has analyzed the deficiencies of a comparable claim in similar fashion. The case is Park v. Webloyalty.com, Inc., No. 12-cv-1380 (LAB), 2015 WL 4560567 (S.D.Cal. June 22, 2015). The online "membership" program implemented by Webloyalty in Park is the same as the one Webloyalty employed in the case at bar. District Judge Burns dismissed the initial complaint in Park, granted plaintiff leave to seek to remedy the pleading's deficiencies in an amended complaint, and then, in the cited opinion, rejected the proposed amendment as futile and dismissed the action with prejudice. Judge Burns reasoned that the proposed amended complaint (the "TAC")
2015 WL 4560567, at *3. Judge Burns, having analyzed what a plaintiff must specifically allege to state a claim in a case such as this one, rejected as insufficient for that purpose the plaintiff's "generalized allegation that context could have rendered disclosures inadequate," and was equally dismissive when the plaintiff "adds his own unwarranted conclusions about the effect of those allegations and asserts Webloyalty had the intent to deceive." Id., at *4.
The quoted reasoning of the district judges in Berry and Park is entirely persuasive. I unblushingly extend that praise to my own reasoning in the July 17 Ruling, which set the stage for the deposition of Plaintiff L.S. I turn to that deposition testimony.
Attorneys from the Boston firm representing Defendants Webloyalty and GameStop took Plaintiff L.S.'s deposition on September 16, 2014. The deposition took place in an office in Denver, Colorado. L.S., who resides in Greenwich, Connecticut, was attending the University of Colorado at Boulder, and had returned to the University from Connecticut during the preceding month of August. The New York attorney for Plaintiff appeared at the deposition in Denver. The New York attorney for Defendant Visa appeared telephonically.
Counsel for the parties have not furnished to the Court the full transcript of this deposition. Their papers on the present motion attach selected pages — some
The appealing portrait that emerges from this deposition is one of a supportive and sensible family. It was supportive for L.S.'s parents to furnish their 16-year-old adolescent son with a Visa debit card he could use as he chose. It was sensible for the parents to review the monthly card statements to monitor the purchases L.S. made. The vigilance of L.S.'s mother detected the conduct by Defendants of which complaint is made in this action. L.S., returning to college some years later, received his copy of the second amended complaint from his father.
Counsel for Defendants Webloyalty and GameStop, who took the lead on this discovery deposition, established this background at the beginning of the deposition and then turned to the events which occurred during L.S.'s online purchase in November 2009 which gave rise to this litigation. I will preface an analysis of L.S.'s relevant testimony on those events by recalling that in the July 17 Ruling, I introduced the case as one which involved "an asserted fee-paying membership in a discount or other benefit program generated during the course of an otherwise unrelated online purchase of a product," and added: "Typically, the consumer's membership in the program is claimed to have been created as the combined result of language appearing on the consumer's computer screen, arrows with instructions for the consumer to follow by clicking on them, requests for information from the consumer, and buttons reciting `I accept' for the consumer to click on." 2014 WL 3547640, at *3. I further observed in the July 17 Ruling that Judge Huff's opinion in Berry v. Webloyalty was a useful source of information and guidance for the present action since "the defendant marketer-programmer in Berry was Webloyalty, just as it is in this case, and the computer screen pop-up displays and instructions to consumers were the same in Berry as they are in the case at bar." Id., at *4.
Counsel for Defendants Webloyalty and GameStop placed a copy of the SAC before L.S., called his attention to a number of allegations in the pleading, and asked L.S. questions about them. I will quote a typical exchange:
Tr. 48-49.
Plaintiff gave comparable testimony with respect to several other allegations in the SAC about what he understood or believed at the time of his November 2009 online transaction with GameStop. The focus of defense counsel's questioning at the deposition then turned to a key document in the case: the so-called "Enrollment Page," a graphic reproduction on paper of a display that appeared on L.S.'s computer screen during the transaction. The Enrollment Page (whose name describes its intended function) referred to the "Shopper Discounts and Rewards" plan, which L.S. accepted by clicking on the "Yes!" button at the bottom of the Enrollment Page, thereby planting (in a manner this teen-age electronic consumer could not have foreseen) the acorn from which this towering litigation tree eventually grew.
The case for Defendants is that the Enrollment Page's factually accurate descriptions of the discounts and reward plan, including the $12 monthly fee to be charged against a participating consumer's credit or debit card, when coupled with the consumer's option to reject plan participation by simply clicking on the "No thanks, not right now" line displayed on the screen, combine to preclude any claim that L.S.'s signing up for the plan by clicking on the "Yes!" button was procured by fraud.
Tr. 59-60.
Tr. 83.
The deposition of Plaintiff and related additional discovery having been accomplished, the question presented on this aspect of the case is whether Plaintiff's claims sounding in fraud, as pleaded in his Second Amended Complaint, survive Defendants' renewed motions to dismiss those claims under Rules 9(b) and 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
The Second Circuit has said recently, in Financial Guaranty Insurance Company v. Putnam Advisory Company, LLC, 783 F.3d 395 (2d Cir.2015): "A claim for common law fraud is subject to the particularity pleading requirements of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b), which requires that the plaintiff (1) detail the statements (or omissions) that the plaintiff contends are fraudulent, (2) identify the speaker, (3) state where and when the statements (or omissions) were made, and (4) explain why the statements (or omissions) are fraudulent." 783 F.3d at 402-03 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
These heightened pleading standards apply to L.S.'s claims against the Defendants at bar, to the extent that those claims are grounded in fraud. In Berry v. Webloyalty.com, Inc., No. 10-CV-1358-H (CAB), 2011 WL 1375665 (S.D.Cal. April 11, 2011), which involved the same principal defendant and online discount plan as does the case at bar, Judge Huff applied the Rule 9(b) standards "to the following causes of action that are grounded in fraud: (1) negligent misrepresentation, (2) fraudulent misrepresentation," and claims for (3) "false advertising" and (4) "unfair competition" under California statutes. 2011 WL 1375665, at *3. I agree with Judge Huff's reasoning with respect to
While the submissions of Plaintiff's counsel condemn Defendants' conduct with an articulate intensity bordering on passion, I find myself unable to discern in the recently enhanced record either pleadings or proof sufficient to satisfy the heightened standards for fraud claims imposed by Rule 9(b) and summarized by the Second Circuit in a case like Financial Guaranty.
Rule 9(b) and Financial Guaranty require the Plaintiff to plead and prove in detail the statements or omissions said to be fraudulent, who spoke them, when and where the statements or omissions were made, and why the statements were fraudulent. L.S. is the only individual who can give admissible evidence about those factors. The underlying transaction in this case occurred when L.S. clicked on the "Yes" button at the bottom of the computer-screen displayed Enrollment Page. Only L.S. is in a position to testify about how he understood the statements on the Page at the time of the transaction and why he believes they were fraudulent.
In Berry, another action against Webloyalty, Judge Huff concluded that a particular disclosure appearing on an identical Enrollment Page "is sufficient to place reasonable consumers on notice that they are entering into the Shopper Discounts & Rewards Club and that they are accepting the offer by clicking on the `YES' button." 2011 WL 1375665, at *4. "In addition," Judge Huff went on to say, the Enrollment Page "has five other disclosures that inform the consumer that by choosing to join the club, the consumer will be charged $12 a month after an initial free thirty-day trial. The enrollment page also discloses
These circumstances in Berry are the same as those in the case at bar, and also in Park, another action against Webloyalty, where Judge Burns said in dismissing the third amended complaint:
2015 WL 4560567, at *3.
Upon examining the deposition testimony of L.S., the present Plaintiff, one is struck by L.S.'s virtual silence about the factual issues which Rule 9(b) and Second Circuit case law deem essential to a viable fraud claim. The deposition transcript consists of 84 pages (its length somewhat extended by running exchanges of verbal small-arms fire between counsel). Mr. Prendergast, counsel for Webloyalty and GameSport, asked almost all the questions put to Plaintiff during the course of a discovery deposition noticed by Defendants. Mr. Eisenstein, counsel for Visa, participated telephonically, asked L.S. one question, repeated it in slightly different form, and declared himself satisfied. Tr. 72. The witness was then tendered to Mr. Katz, counsel for Plaintiff, who said "I just have a couple of questions.... This will just take a second." Tr. 72-73. The questions Mr. Katz asked and the answers L.S. are not included in the pages submitted by the parties on these motions, but they could not have been extensive; Mr. Prendergast, who had resumed questioning at some point unrevealed by the submitted pages, was able to say as soon as Tr. 83, line 22-23: "Okay. Then I have no further questions." Mr. Katz said: "I have nothing to follow up." Tr. 83, line 24. Mr. Eisenstein said: "Nothing else here." Tr. 84. The deposition concluded.
The striking aspect of L.S.'s testimony is that nowhere does he identify a statement or statements, among the several included in the Enrollment Page, which L.S. regards as false or misleading, and upon which he relied in joining the discount and rewards plan by clicking on the "Yes" button: an action which, had L.S. been defrauded, he would not have taken if the identified statements had not been fraudulent. In short: If the viability of Plaintiff's fraud claim depends upon Plaintiff's deposition testimony, there is a near-total failure of proof on essential elements upon which Plaintiff bears the burden of proof, if he is to succeed on the claim.
The second amended complaint attempts to avoid this gap in the proof by allegations that (1) attribute to Plaintiff L.S. relevant beliefs, expectations or states of mind; (2) describe in detail the Defendants' allegedly fraudulent manner of conducting the discount and rewards plan; and (3) call attention to a May 2010 report of the U.S. Senate Commerce Committee
These allegations, separately or in combination, do not suffice to cure the failure of proof that is revealed by L.S.'s deposition. The case turns upon whether the conduct of Defendants Webloyalty, GameStop, and Visa, or any of them, on November 27, 2009 worked a fraud upon Plaintiff L.S. during the course of his online purchase on that date. To sustain that claim of fraud, Rule 9(b) and Second Circuit authority require Plaintiff to plead and prove the particular circumstances described supra. That proof must be found, if it is found at all, in the testimony of L.S., the allegedly defrauded victim and plaintiff. Attacks upon a defendant or its witnesses cannot substitute for proof a plaintiff is required to make to sustain his burden. In Bose Corporation v. Consumers Union of United States, 466 U.S. 485, 512, 104 S.Ct. 1949, 80 L.Ed.2d 502 (1984), the Supreme Court said: "When the testimony of a witness is not believed, the trier of fact may simply disregard it. Normally the discredited testimony is not considered a sufficient basis for drawing a contrary conclusion." For that proposition the Court cited Moore v. Chesapeake & O. Ry. Co., 340 U.S. 573, 575, 71 S.Ct. 428, 95 L.Ed. 547 (1951).
Moore involved the death of a railroad employee who fell from and was struck by a moving train. Plaintiff's theory of negligence was that the train engineer made a sudden and unexpected stop without warning, thereby causing the employee to fall from the engine tender and into the path of the train. The engineer was the only witness to the accident. Called to testify by plaintiff, the engineer testified that he saw the decedent fall from the tender and that he made an emergency stop in an unsuccessful attempt to avoid injuring him. Plaintiff argued at trial that owing to certain other circumstances, "the jury was entitled to disbelieve the engineer's version" and to accept the plaintiff's. 340 U.S. at 576, 71 S.Ct. 428. The jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff, the district judge granted a defense motion for judgment n.o.v., the Fourth Circuit affirmed, and the Supreme Court affirmed the court of appeals. It is instructive to consider the Court's reasoning:
Id. at 576-78, 71 S.Ct. 428 (citations omitted).
While one would not mistake a 20th century railroad accident for a 21st century website online purchase, Moore is instructive
The evidence of Defendants' internal documents in the record shows that L.S. did indeed click on the "YES" button on the Enrollment Page at the end of his November 27, 2009 visit to the GameStop website. On that date he was listed as enrolled in the Webloyalty discount and reward plan, which would have occurred only if L.S. clicked on the "Yes" button. L.S. accordingly authorized (in accordance with the disclosures made on the Enrollment Page) the $12 monthly charges against his card of which complaint is now made. There is no evidence about whether L.S. noticed these disclosures at the time or what he thought about them, since at his deposition he could not remember having ever seen the Enrollment Page at all. It is to the credit of L.S., who presents himself throughout the deposition as an intelligent and articulate young man, that he did not embroider or expand upon his testimony and attempt to supply some of the particulars of fraudulent inducement by a defendant that the governing law requires. But whether L.S. read and considered these statements is not dispositive. The Park and Berry cases involve the same Webloyalty discount and reward plan, and online consumer plaintiffs similarly situated to L.S. In Park, Judge Burns said:
2015 WL 4560567, at *4. As Judge Burns had noted earlier in his opinion:
Id., at *3.
In re Vistaprint, MDL No. 4:08-md-1994, 2009 WL 2884727, at *6 (S.D.Tex. Aug. 31, 2009) is to the same effect ("A consumer cannot decline to read clear and easily understandable terms that are provided on the same webpage in close proximity to the location where the consumer indicates his agreement to those terms and then claim that the webpage, which the consumer has failed to read, is deceptive.").
In Berry, another action against Webloyalty with a similarly situated consumer plaintiff, Judge Huff said in dismissing an amended complaint:
2011 WL 1375665, at *5 (citation, internal quotation marks, and parentheses omitted). During the course of her analysis on this point, Judge Huff cited and quoted Vistaprint.
While these district court opinions from a different circuit are not binding upon this Court, Berry and Park were both brought against Webloyalty, and they arose out of facts virtually identical to those in this case. The trial judges' reasoning in Berry and Park seem to me entirely persuasive. The able briefs of counsel cite a myriad of federal appellate and district court cases from several circuits. It would seem that this sort of fee-charging membership club arrangement, attendant upon an online purchase transaction, is a fertile ground for litigation. It may not be possible to reconcile all these cases with each other. However, the conclusion this Court reaches in this case follows from familiar and well-established principles of law.
I conclude that in order to succeed against these Defendants on a claim sounding in fraud, it is incumbent upon Plaintiff to plead and prove that the disclosures, representations and statements presented to him on the Enrollment Page were false or materially misleading, and had the causative effect of deceiving L.S. into accepting enrollment in the Webloyalty membership program. It is apparent from L.S.'s deposition and other evidence in the record that he does not and cannot make that necessary proof. The fraud-related claims in the case at bar will be
The consequence of the conclusions reached in Part IV of this Ruling is that Plaintiff L.S. cannot prove that the consent he gave to the terms and conditions of the discount and award plan by clicking on the "YES" button was induced by fraud on the part of the Defendants. It follows that Plaintiff must be regarded in law as having authorized the Defendants to act in accordance with those terms and conditions. It remains to consider the effect of that conclusion upon the other counts in the second amended complaint.
With one exception, this conclusion of authorization precludes all the other claims asserted in the SAC. Those additional claims do not bear the label "fraud" or "misrepresentation," but each depends upon the presence of deceit, or unjust behavior, or wrongdoing of some sort, sufficient to vitiate the disclosures to and consent given by Plaintiff found in the record.
Thus, Count One alleges that Webloyalty and GameStop violated the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, 18 U.S.C. § 2510, when they "intentionally intercepted and/or procured by interception" Plaintiff's electronic communications "without Plaintiff's ... knowledge, authorization or consent." SAC ¶ 139. In Berry, on facts indistinguishable from those at bar, Judge Huff held:
2011 WL 1375665, at *8 (citation omitted). The documentation and mechanics in the case at bar were the same as in Berry. I agree with Judge Huff's conclusion.
Count Two of the SAC alleges that Webloyalty violated the Electronic Funds Transfer Act ("EFTA"), 15 U.S.C. § 1693, "by charging or debiting Plaintiff's ... account" without Plaintiff's "knowledge, consent or permission," thereby committing "unauthorized electronic funds transfers" within the meaning of 15 U.S.C. § 1693(a)(12).
Congress's purpose in enacting the EFTA was "to provide a basic framework establishing the rights, liabilities, and responsibilities of participants in electronic fund and remittance transfer systems." 15 U.S.C. § 1693(b). The statute acknowledges the existence of a "preauthorized electronic fund transfer," which is defined to mean "an electronic fund transfer authorized in advance to recur at substantially regular intervals." § 1693a(10). The electronic funds transfers at issue in this case are the $12 monthly charges Webloyalty made against Plaintiff's debit card, pursuant to the previously described communications at the time of the November 2009 GameStop purchase. The SAC alleges that these were "unauthorized electronic fund transfers" under § 1693a(12). That subsection provides in pertinent part:
In Berry, Judge Huff was required to consider an identical claim on indistinguishable facts. She held that "Plaintiff Berry's entry of his email address twice and clicking on the `YES' constitutes authorization given the various disclosures made on the enrollment page." 2011 WL 1375665, at *7. In consequence, the charges Webloyalty made against L.S.'s debit card were authorized electronic fund transfers sanctioned by § 1693a(10), rather than unauthorized electronic fund transfers condemned by § 1693a(12). I reach the same conclusion in the case at bar, and will dismiss Count Two. The same result applies to Count Three, which alleges an EFTA § 1693a(12) claim against Defendant Visa.
The additional counts in the SAC do not survive the failure of Plaintiff's fraud claim and the consequent conclusion of authorization. The counts as pleaded in the first
Plaintiff's remaining claim is based upon this provision of the EFTA: "A preauthorized electronic fund transfer from a consumer's account may be authorized by the consumer only in writing, and a copy of such authorization shall be provided to the consumer when made." 15 U.S.C. § 1693e. The regulations promulgated pursuant to the statute's authority state the provision somewhat differently: "[p]reauthorized electronic fund transfers from a consumer's account may be authorized only by a writing signed or similarly authenticated by the consumer. The person that obtains the authorization shall provide a copy to the consumer." 12 C.F.R. § 205.10(b). Unlike the other counts in the SAC, this claim does not depend upon fraudulent conduct on the part of a defendant. Accordingly the Court considers it separately.
Plaintiff alleges in the SAC at ¶ 5 that during the checkout process of a consumer's online purchase of a GameStop item, Webloyalty "arranged with GameStop to insert an interstitial page" containing blanks in which the consumer was asked to type in his e-mail address and last four digits of his credit or debit card number (in the case at bar, L.S.'s Visa number). The "interstitial page" to which the pleading refers is in fact the Enrollment Page previously described, whose completion by L.S. at the conclusion of the transaction in question is proclaimed by Defendant Webloyalty to constitute the authorization by Plaintiff which precludes his claims. Webloyalty disputes the characterization by Plaintiff of this computer screen display as an "interstitial page." Meghan Pipkin, the Webloyalty employee familiar with the online operation, testified at her deposition that "an interstitial page is put inside a transaction, so it actually appears in the same window." By this definition, Pipkin explained, Webloyalty's offer to L.S. was not an interstitial page because L.S. had completed his GameStop order before the Enrollment Page was displayed to him. Pipkin testified: "Q. Was there anything left for the plaintiff to do on the GameStop page to complete his order before moving on to the Webloyalty enrollment page? A. No." Tr. 104.23-105.2.
The quarrel is interesting, but more semantic than substantive. However the Enrollment Page is characterized, Plaintiff's theory of statutory liability on this aspect of the case is that Webloyalty was required to send L.S. a reproduction of the Enrollment Page itself: nothing else. Thus ¶ 9 of the SAC alleges: "Though Webloyalty claims that the Plaintiff entered
Webloyalty responds to this charge of a statutory violation by arguing that Plaintiff exalts form over substance. Webloyalty contends: "What matters for EFTA purposes is disclosure of the substantive billing terms, as opposed to the form in which the disclosure is provided." Reply Brief [Doc. 102] at 10. In that regard, Webloyalty establishes through the declaration of Meghan Pipkin [Doc. 53-3] that immediately following L.S.'s execution of the Enrollment Page by typing in his e-mail address and his final Visa card four numbers, Webloyalty presented to L.S. online an "Acknowledgment Page" which set forth the terms and conditions of L.S.'s enrollment in the plan, including the $12 monthly charges to his debit card. Webloyalty also emailed to L.S. on that day (November 27, 2009) a "Join Email" setting forth the same terms, conditions and charges.
I am satisfied by Pipkin's evidence (sworn declarations and deposition) that these accounts are accurate. The briefs of counsel debate at length whether (as Webloyalty contends) under the statutory and regulatory scheme these contemporaneous recitations to L.S. of the terms and conditions of the Enrollment Page constitute compliance with EFTA's mandate that "a copy of such authorization shall be provided to the consumer when made"; or whether (as Plaintiff contends) the plain wording of the statute required that Webloyalty send a copy of the Enrollment Page itself to L.S.
Plaintiff's briefs do not cite any case supporting their statutory interpretation. In contrast, Defendants rely again on Judge Huff's opinion in Berry. On indistinguishable facts, Judge Huff rejected the plaintiff's claim that Webloyalty had violated EFTA. She reasoned:
2011 WL 1375665, at *7-8 (citations omitted).
It does not unequivocally appear from the opinion in Berry that the plaintiff placed explicit reliance upon the "copy of such authorization" provision in § 1693e(a). But Judge Huff may well have rejected that particular theory; and I think it clear from her analysis that she would have rejected the argument if made. In any event, I must deal with the case
It would be an entirely different case if Webloyalty had contented itself with Plaintiff's entries on the Enrollment Page as a preauthorization of electronic fund transfers and embarked upon monthly transfers, with no further communication to Plaintiff. However, on the same day as the Plaintiff's online acceptance of the Enrollment Plan, Webloyalty displayed the Acknowledgment Page and e-mailed Plaintiff the Join Email notice. These additional and contemporaneous communications fully revealed the terms, conditions, and monthly debit card charges under the program in question. I conclude that in these circumstances, Webloyalty complied with the requirements of EFTA, 15 U.S.C. § 1693e(a). Plaintiff's claim of a violation of the statute will be dismissed, together with Plaintiff's claims sounding in fraud.
For the foregoing reasons, the Defendants' motions to dismiss the Plaintiff's Second Amended Complaint [Doc. 93 & 94] are GRANTED in all respects and as to all counts pleaded therein, without leave to replead.
The Clerk of the Court is directed to close the case.
It is SO ORDERED.
The issuance of the Commerce Committee report and the resulting remedial legislation illustrate the difference between the legislative and judicial branches of government. If citizens convince the Congress that identified entities are subjecting the public at large to unfair and wrongful loss, Congress can enact remedial legislation. That is apparently what happened in the world of fee-charging membership clubs attendant upon an internet online purchase transaction, of which Webloyalty was a prominent figure. The Commerce Committee's report is captioned: "Aggressive Sales Tactics on the Internet and their Impact on American Consumers." Perhaps senior Webloyalty executives, having read the Committee's criticism of their conduct, were visited at 3:00 a.m. by those unwanted inner doubts about our rectitude that come to us all on occasion. But judges are not legislators (as we are frequently reminded). Our function is not to fashion remedies to benefit the general public. Rather, we preside over fact-intensive cases, where a particular plaintiff undertakes to prove that the specific conduct of an identified defendant gives rise to a viable claim under the governing law. For the reasons stated in text, the plaintiff in the case at bar cannot prove a viable claim sounding in fraud.