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Date: 05-10-2018

Case Style:

Dolores Gutierrez v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.

United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida - Miami, Florida

Case Number: 16-16820

Judge: Tjoflat

Court: United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit on appeal from the Southern District of Florida (Miami-Dade County)

Plaintiff's Attorney: Andrew Ira Alperstein, Steve W. Berman, Mikaela Bernstein, James G. Bordas, III, David Buckner, Nicholas A. Carlin, Michael Ryan Casey, et al.

Defendant's Attorney: Michael P. Beder, David F. Adler, Marvin I. Bartel, Ronald E. Beard, Eric C. Bosset, et al.

Description: This appeal arises from five class actions brought by bank customers
(“Plaintiffs”) alleging that their banks unlawfully charged them overdraft fees.
These cases have been before this Court multiple times in recent years.1 In this
appeal, Wells Fargo appeals the District Court’s denial of its motion to compel
arbitration with the unnamed Plaintiffs comprising the classes. The District Court
denied the motion because it found that Wells Fargo waived its arbitration rights as
against those unnamed Plaintiffs. We hold that the District Court’s finding of
∗ Honorable John E. Steele, United States District Judge for the Middle District of
Florida, sitting by designation.
1 See, e.g., In re Checking Account Overdraft Litig. (Spears-Haymond I), 780 F.3d 1031
(11th Cir. 2015); Barras v. Branch Banking & Trust. Co., 685 F.3d 1269 (11th Cir. 2012);
Garcia v. Wachovia Corp., 699 F.3d 1273 (11th Cir. 2012); Given v. M&T Bank Corp., 674 F.3d
1252 (11th Cir. 2012); Hough v. Regions Fin. Corp., 672 F.3d 1224 (11th Cir. 2012).
Case: 16-16820 Date Filed: 05/10/2018 Page: 2 of 15
3
waiver with respect to the unnamed Plaintiffs was erroneous. We therefore vacate
the District Court’s order.
I.
Plaintiffs, all current or former checking account holders of Wells Fargo or
Wachovia (“Wells Fargo”),2 filed these class actions in 2008 and 2009. Plaintiffs
allege that Wells Fargo committed certain unlawful practices relating to the
charging of overdraft fees. Wells Fargo is one among dozens of banks accused of
such conduct: in June 2009, the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation
consolidated the class action here with numerous other cases throughout the
country in which plaintiffs accused various banks of the same or similar overdraft
practices. Garcia v. Wachovia Corp., 699 F.3d 1273, 1276 (11th Cir. 2012).
Wells Fargo’s accounts were governed by customer agreements that provided for
arbitration of disputes on an individual basis. In relevant part, the customer
agreements stated, “Either [the customer] or the Bank may require the submission
of a dispute to binding arbitration at any reasonable time notwithstanding that a
lawsuit or other proceeding has been commenced.” Id. at 1275. Additionally, the
customer agreements prohibited customers or Wells Fargo from consolidating any
disputes or “includ[ing] in any arbitration any dispute as a representative or
member of a class.” Id.
2 Wells Fargo acquired Wachovia in January 2009, and Wachovia no longer operates as a
separate bank. Accordingly, we refer to both banks jointly as “Wells Fargo.”
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4
After the cases were consolidated in late 2009, the District Court on
November 6, 2009, ordered all of the defendant banks to file all “merits and nonmerits
motions directed to the operative complaints,” including motions to compel
arbitration, by December 8, 2009. Wells Fargo did not move the named Plaintiffs
to arbitrate their claims. Instead, it joined several other banks in filing an omnibus
motion to dismiss.3
On April 14, 2010, the District Court observed that only a handful of the
defendant banks had moved to compel arbitration prior to its December 8, 2009
motions deadline. Accordingly, the Court ordered any defendant who intended to
seek arbitration to file a motion to compel by April 19, 2010. In response, Wells
Fargo filed a reply to the Court’s order which stated that it would not seek to
compel arbitration with the named Plaintiffs but wished to reserve its arbitration
rights against any plaintiffs “who [might] later join, individually or as putative
class members, in this litigation.” Wells Fargo explained that its “arbitration rights
as to a nationwide class, for newly added plaintiffs, and/or for plaintiffs from
newly added states are not yet at issue.” 4 Subsequently, Wells Fargo filed its
answers to the five complaints. In each of its five answers, Wells Fargo alleged
3 The District Court largely denied the motion on March 11, 2010. See In re Checking
Account Overdraft Litig., 694 F. Supp. 2d 1302, 1329 (S.D. Fla. 2010).
4 Wachovia filed a similar statement declining to seek arbitration against the named
Plaintiffs but reserving its right to arbitrate any claims which might be raised by other
accountholders in the future.
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5
that “[a]bsent members of the putative classes have a contractual obligation to
arbitrate any claims they have against Wells Fargo.”
Thereafter, the case proceeded toward class certification. The parties
commenced class-related discovery and motions practice, which continued for
about one year. Then, on April 27, 2011, the Supreme Court held that § 2 of the
Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. § 2, preempts state-law rules voiding consumer
arbitration agreements that bar class-wide arbitration procedures. AT&T Mobility
LLC v. Concepcion, 563 U.S. 333, 351–52, 131 S. Ct. 1740, 1753 (2011).
This decision prompted Wells Fargo to reconsider its arbitration strategy.
Two days after the Supreme Court issued its opinion in Concepcion, Wells Fargo
moved to compel the named Plaintiffs to arbitrate their disputes. The District
Court denied the motion, finding that Wells Fargo waived its arbitration rights as
against the named Plaintiffs by failing to timely move to compel arbitration prior to
extensive discovery and litigation proceedings. Wells Fargo appealed on the basis
that moving to compel arbitration against the named Plaintiffs prior to Concepcion
would have been futile. This Court affirmed the District Court’s decision, holding
that a motion to compel arbitration would not have been futile prior to Concepcion
because the question of whether federal law preempted state laws that voided
class-wide arbitration provisions was merely unsettled, not squarely adverse to
Wells Fargo’s rights. Garcia, 699 F.3d at 1275.
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On remand, the named Plaintiffs moved the District Court to certify the
class. Wells Fargo opposed certification. Among other arguments, Wells Fargo
contended that a lack of numerosity existed because all customers bound by
enforceable arbitration provisions would have to be excluded from the class and,
because all of Wells Fargo’s customers had signed such provisions, there simply
would not be enough class members to make a class action viable.
At the same time it filed its opposition to class certification, Wells Fargo
filed conditional motions to compel arbitration against the unnamed class members
in the event the District Court certified the class.5 On April 8, 2013, without ruling
on the named Plaintiffs’ motion for class certification, the District Court denied
Wells Fargo’s conditional motions to compel arbitration. Wells Fargo appealed,
and we vacated the decision. In re Checking Account Overdraft Litig. (Spears-
Haymond I), 780 F.3d 1031, 1037–39 (11th Cir. 2015). We held that because no
class including the unnamed putative class members had been certified, the District
Court “lacked jurisdiction to rule on the arbitration obligations of the unnamed
putative class members,” and further that the named Plaintiffs lacked third-party
5 The conditional motions stated in relevant part:
While the Absent Class Members are not yet part of this litigation, and are
therefore not currently subject to this Court’s jurisdiction, this will change if this
Court certifies one or more classes in response to plaintiffs’ pending motion for
class certification. Wells Fargo accordingly makes this arbitration motion at this
time so that if the Court does certify one or more classes in these cases, it can
address the arbitration obligation of the Absent Class Members at the first
possible moment. If the Court declines to certify any class . . . , this arbitration
motion will be moot.
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standing to assert waiver or other arguments against arbitration on behalf of the
unnamed putative class members. Id.
On remand, the District Court granted Plaintiffs’ motion for class
certification. Immediately thereafter, Wells Fargo moved to compel arbitration as
to the unnamed class members. The District Court denied that motion, holding that
Wells Fargo had waived its rights to demand arbitration as to the unnamed class
members because it “acted inconsistently with its arbitration rights” during its precertification
litigation efforts” and “significant prejudice would result” if the Court
were to permit Wells Fargo to invoke arbitration.6 Wells Fargo timely appealed.
II.
A.
We review the District Court’s denial of a motion to compel arbitration de
novo. Garcia, 699 F.3d at 1277. Like any other contractual right, “[t]he right to
arbitrate can be waived.” Benoay v. Prudential-Bache Sec., Inc., 805 F.2d 1437,
1440 (11th Cir. 1986). However, “because federal law favors arbitration, any party
arguing waiver of arbitration bears a heavy burden of proof.” Stone v. E.F. Hutton
& Co., 898 F.2d 1542, 1543 (11th Cir. 1990) (per curiam) (internal quotation
marks omitted) (alteration accepted). We conduct a two-part inquiry to determine
whether a party has waived its arbitration rights. First, we consider whether “under
6 The District Court added that Wells Fargo’s motions were “untimely” because they did
not meet the deadlines set by the Court earlier in the litigation.
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the totality of the circumstances, the party has acted inconsistently with the
arbitration right.” Ivax Corp. v. B. Braun of Am., Inc., 286 F.3d 1309, 1315–16
(11th Cir. 2002) (internal quotation marks omitted). A key factor in deciding this
is whether a party has “substantially invoke[d] the litigation machinery prior to
demanding arbitration.” S & H Contractors v. A.J. Taft Coal Co., Inc., 906 F.2d
1507, 1514 (11th Cir. 1990) (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted).
Second, if a party has done so, we consider whether the party’s conduct “has in
some way prejudiced the other party.” Ivax, 286 F.3d at 1316 (internal quotation
marks omitted). In considering the amount, if any, of prejudice imposed on the
plaintiffs, “we may consider the length of delay in demanding the arbitration and
the expense incurred by that party from participating in the litigation process.” S &
H Contractors, 906 F.2d at 1514.
Careful examination of our precedent reveals that the purpose of the waiver
doctrine is to prevent litigants from abusing the judicial process. Acting in a
manner inconsistent with one’s arbitration rights and then changing course midjourney
smacks of outcome-oriented gamesmanship played on the court and the
opposing party’s dime. The judicial system was not designed to accommodate a
defendant who elects to forego arbitration when it believes that the outcome in
litigation will be favorable to it, proceeds with extensive discovery and court
proceedings, and then suddenly changes course and pursues arbitration when its
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prospects of victory in litigation dim. Allowing such conduct would ignore the
very purpose of alternative dispute resolution: saving the parties’ time and money.7
From this purpose, we can deduce that the key ingredient in the waiver
analysis is fair notice to the opposing party and the District Court of a party’s
arbitration rights and its intent to exercise them. If the court and the opposing
party have such notice at an early stage in litigation, they can manage the litigation
with this contingency in mind. For example, if the court knows a party has
potential arbitration rights that could throw the case out of court, it can limit the
scope of early discovery with this possibility in view, in order to avoid significant
expenditures if it turns out that the arbitration provision governs.8 Accordingly,
fair notice at a relatively early stage of litigation is a primary factor in considering
whether a party has acted consistently with its arbitration rights.
7 See Concepcion, 563 U.S. at 344–45, 131 S. Ct. at 1749 (“The point of affording parties
discretion in designing arbitration processes is to allow for efficient, streamlined procedures
tailored to the type of dispute. It can be specified, for example, that the decisionmaker be a
specialist in the relevant field, or that proceedings be kept confidential to protect trade secrets.
And the informality of arbitral proceedings is itself desirable, reducing the cost and increasing
the speed of dispute resolution.”).
8 This is especially true in a class action like this one, which could involve innumerable
plaintiffs and extensive discovery. In such cases, early notice of arbitration rights works in
tandem with the class-certification process to avoid the accrual of heavy litigation costs while the
class is still putative. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(c) encourages courts to rule on class
certification “at an early practicable time.” Thus, both the arbitration-waiver doctrine and Rule
23’s exhortation to rule on certification further the purpose of avoiding wasteful expenditures of
time and money by nudging the district court to decide on class certification and arbitration
before the scope of discovery is expanded to its fullest extent.
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B.
Applying this analysis to the instant case, we conclude that Wells Fargo did
not act inconsistently with its arbitration rights as to the unnamed Plaintiffs. Its
conduct with respect to the unnamed Plaintiffs differed starkly from its conduct as
to the named Plaintiffs. 9 It stated expressly in its response to the District Court’s
scheduling order that it did not plan to seek arbitration with the named Plaintiffs,
and it thus joined other defendants in filing an omnibus motion to dismiss the
complaints. In that same response, however, which it filed well before any
discovery had been conducted, Wells Fargo explained to the District Court that it
was not in a position to assert its arbitration rights against the unnamed Plaintiffs
but wished to preserve those rights for when the matter became ripe for the Court
to consider them:
However, Wells Fargo reserves its rights to enforce its applicable
contractual dispute resolution procedures, including its right to
9 For this reason, our decision in Garcia, which held that Wells Fargo acted
inconsistently with its arbitration rights as to the named Plaintiffs, does not control our decision
as to the unnamed Plaintiffs. Nor can Plaintiffs invoke Garcia to claim collateral estoppel or
issue preclusion to support a finding of waiver with respect to the unnamed Plaintiffs. As we
noted in our prior opinion in this case, such arguments
would fail because the issue to which the named plaintiffs would have us give
preclusive effect—whether Wells Fargo had waived its rights to enforce the
arbitration provisions in its contracts with the named plaintiffs, which Garcia
resolved in the affirmative—is not the same as the relevant issue here: whether
Wells Fargo has waived its rights to enforce the arbitration provisions in separate
contracts with each of the unnamed putative class members.
Spears-Haymond I, 780 F.3d at 1038 n.9. This is because issue preclusion applies only
when “the issue at stake is identical to the one involved in the prior litigation.” Miller’s Ale
House, Inc. v. Boynton Carolina Ale House, LLC, 702 F.3d 1312, 1318 (11th Cir. 2012).
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compel arbitration, against other customers that were recently joined
as plaintiffs in the Gutierrez, Martinez or Zankich matters or who later
join, individually or as putative class members, in this litigation
against Wells Fargo. . . .
At this time Wells Fargo does not know whether other contractual
dispute resolution procedures issues may arise in this proceeding with
respect to any other customers. Wells Fargo’s arbitration rights as to
a nationwide class, for newly added plaintiffs, and/or for plaintiffs
from newly added states are not yet at issue. To the extent such issues
do arise in the future, Wells Fargo does not waive its rights to enforce
its contractual dispute resolution procedures, including its right to
compel arbitration where appropriate, by not joining in the motions
currently pending before the Court.
Shortly after that, it also cited the parties’ arbitration agreements as an affirmative
defense in its answers to Plaintiffs’ complaints. Fairly read, these actions had the
effect of putting both the Court and Plaintiffs on notice of Wells Fargo’s arbitration
rights against the unnamed Plaintiffs and its intent to invoke them.
Nevertheless, in finding that Wells Fargo waived its arbitration rights against
the unnamed Plaintiffs, the District Court relied heavily upon Wells Fargo’s failure
to move to compel the unnamed class members to arbitrate their claims after the
Court set a deadline to file merits and non-merits motions of December 8, 2009
and a deadline to join in with other defendants who filed arbitration-related
motions by April 19, 2010. Implicit in this analysis is the conclusion that Wells
Fargo’s failure to do so signaled to the Court and Plaintiffs that it would not seek
arbitration with respect to the unnamed class members. An immediate problem
with this is that both orders were unclear with regard to whether motions were due
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with respect to unnamed, putative class members. In fact, the first order suggested
the opposite. It stated:
On or before December 8, 2009, Defendants Wachovia Bank,
National Association, Bank of America, N.A., U.S. Bank National
Assocation, JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., Wells Fargo and Union
Bank shall file their merits and non-merits motions directed to the
operative complaints on file . . . .
(Emphasis added). At this point, the class had not been certified; hence, the class
was still putative and its potential members remained unidentified. As a result,
their complaints were not yet “on file.”
Moreover, the Court’s order of April 19 did not mention the unnamed class
members. The order simply invited any defendants who had not yet filed motions
to compel arbitration “to join in and be heard on the motions to compel arbitration”
filed by some defendants. To add to the uncertainty, at the time the Court issued
this order, the few motions to compel arbitration that had been filed were directed
at named plaintiffs. And multiple defendants in addition to Wells Fargo and
Wachovia responded to the Court’s order by announcing they would not seek
arbitration with respect to the named Plaintiffs in their cases but wished to reserve
their arbitration rights as against future plaintiffs that might join the litigation later.
Each indicated that asserting or foregoing arbitration rights as to those plaintiffs
was unripe at that point. Plaintiffs did not object to these responses, and the Court
did not respond to them. Given this uncertainty, Wells Fargo’s choice to inform
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the Court it would not seek to compel the named Plaintiffs to arbitrate but wished
to reserve its options with regard to the unnamed Plaintiffs can hardly be said to
have been inconsistent with its contractual arbitration rights.
Putting the ambiguity of the District Court’s orders aside, it cannot be said
that Wells Fargo’s failure to seek arbitration with the unnamed class members
prior to class certification manifested inconsistency with its arbitration rights,
considering that it would have been impossible in practice to compel arbitration
against speculative plaintiffs and jurisdictionally impossible for the District Court
to rule on those motions before the class was certified. As we held in Spears-
Haymond I, the District Court lacked jurisdiction to rule on any such motions. 780
F.3d at 1034. For another, the unnamed class members were putative at that point.
Class certification is the action that concretely identifies the plaintiffs; before that
point, any plaintiffs beyond those named in the complaint are speculative and
beyond the reach of the Court’s power. Id. at 1037. So Wells Fargo would not
even have been able to identify the specific plaintiffs against which it planned to
seek arbitration, much less ascertain its arbitration-related rights as to them. Thus,
framing an effective motion to compel arbitration was impossible.
As a result, by ordering Wells Fargo to move to arbitrate claims not yet
brought or else waive them, the District Court put Wells Fargo squarely between
Scylla and Charybdis. The Court’s scheduling order demanded one of two
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14
possible courses of action only. The first was a shotgun motion to compel in
which Wells Fargo would have made speculative arguments about speculative
customer agreements made with speculative plaintiffs, a document that could not
have provided any cognizable basis upon which the District Court could have ruled
(even assuming it had jurisdiction to rule—it did not). The second was what
happened here: a failure by Wells Fargo to raise those motions, and, according to
the District Court’s analysis, a consequent waiver of its contractual arbitration
rights altogether.
But, said the District Court, “Wells Fargo could have moved to compel
arbitration at the outset as to the named Plaintiffs, which if successful would have
had the practical effect of extinguishing the unnamed class members’ claims.” The
District Court further stated that Wells Fargo “might have, at the outset, put the
parties and the Court on notice—through filing a conditional motion, like the one
the Bank ultimately filed years later in 2013, or some other clear statement of its
intent—that it intended to request arbitration as to the unnamed class members if
and when the class was certified.” But we have found no authority that requires a
party to file a conditional arbitration motion against possible future adversaries—at
a juncture in which adjudicating, much less exercising jurisdiction over, those
claims is impossible—in order to avoid waiving its rights with regard to those
parties. Because the District Court lacked jurisdiction over such motions until the
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class was certified, such a placeholder document could only serve the purpose of putting the Court and the parties on notice of the moving party’s intent to invoke its arbitration rights upon certification of the class. But that same purpose was served by Wells Fargo’s express reservation of its arbitration rights as to future plaintiffs in response to the Court’s scheduling order. Accordingly, we conclude that Wells Fargo did not act inconsistently with its arbitration rights, and, consequently, it did not waive those rights.
10

* * *

10 Because we hold accordingly, we need not and do not address prejudice, the second prong of the waiver inquiry.
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Outcome: We accordingly vacate the District Court’s order and remand the case for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
SO ORDERED.

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