San Francisco,
Jan 5 : A US appeals court vacated an injunction and a $203 million
restitution order against Wells Fargo & Co (WFC) in consumer litigation over
the bank's overdraft policies, according to a ruling issued.
But the 9th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco also found Wells had violated
part of California's unfair competition law, and sent the case back to trial
court in San Francisco to determine what relief is appropriate.
A
spokesman for the bank, Ancel Martinez, said Wells was pleased with the
decision. Plaintiff attorney Michael Sobol said he was confident the damages
could be reinstated by the lower court judge.
"The misrepresentations
found by the district court have been affirmed," Sobol said.
Wells Fargo,
prior to April 2001, posted customer debit card purchases to their bank accounts
in order of lowest charge to highest, which minimized the number of overdrafts,
according to the ruling.
But beginning in April 2001, the bank began
posting debit card purchase from highest to lowest, which maximized the number
of overdrafts, the 9th Circuit wrote.
A San Francisco federal judge
certified a class action on behalf of Wells Fargo customers, who incurred
overdraft fees because of high-to-low sequencing. The judge then issued an
injunction ordering the bank to cease the practice, as well as a $203 million
restitution award.
In its ruling, the 9th Circuit found that federal law
preempted part of the California statute on which the injunction was
based.
"Federal law does not, however, preempt California consumer law
with respect to fraudulent or misleading representations concerning posting,"
the court wrote.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Wells Fargo doesn't have to pay clients $203 million
Wells Fargo doesn't have to pay clients $203 million
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