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Wells Fargo Overdraft Lawsuit: Bank Ordered To Pay $203 MILLION In Fees Over 'Unfair' Charges

First Posted: 08/11/10 06:26 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 06:20 PM ET

Wells Fargo Overdraft

NEW YORK (AP, Eileen Aj Connelly) -- A federal judge in California ordered Wells Fargo & Co. to change what he called "unfair and deceptive business practices" that led customers into paying multiple overdraft fees, and to pay $203 million back to customers.

In a decision handed down late Tuesday, U.S. District Judge William Alsup accused Wells Fargo of "profiteering" by changing its policies to process checks, debit card transactions and bill payments from the highest dollar amount to the lowest, rather than in the order the transactions took place. That helped drain customer bank accounts faster and drive up overdraft fees, a policy Alsup referred to as "gouging and profiteering."

The ruling detailed the experiences of two Wells Fargo customers who used their debit cards for multiple small purchases, and were then charged hundreds in overdraft fees because the order the purchases were cleared by the bank depended on the amounts. The judge found the customers, who were part of a class action, were not properly informed of the bank's policies on processing payments and were unaware the bank would allow debit purchases to go through when their accounts were overdrawn.

"Internal bank memos and e-mails leave no doubt that, overdraft revenue being a big profit center, the bank's dominant, indeed sole, motive was to maximize the number of overdrafts," Alsup wrote. That policy would "squeeze as much as possible" from customers with overdrafts, in particular from the 4 percent of customers who paid what he called "a whopping 40 percent of its total overdraft and returned-item revenue."

The judge dismissed Wells Fargo's arguments that customers wanted and benefited from the policies, and detailed evidence he said showed efforts to obscure the practices in statements and other materials. Wells Fargo's online banking system, for example, would display pending purchases in chronological order, "leading customers to believe that the processing would take place in that order."

"The supposed net benefit of high-to-low resequencing is utterly speculative," he wrote. "Its bone-crushing multiplication of additional overdraft penalties, however, is categorically assured."

Alsup also criticized the bank for allowing overdraft purchases after accounts had been drained by offering a "shadow line of credit" that customers were unaware existed.

The decision noted that the Federal Reserve has outlawed some of the practices detailed in the case, most notably debit card overdrafts permitted without customers agreeing to accept overdraft protection.

Judge Alsup ordered Wells Fargo to stop posting transactions in high-to-low order by Nov. 30 and to reverse overdraft fees charged to customers from Nov. 15, 2004, to June 30, 2008, as a result of the policy. A study cited in the decision by a Wells Fargo witness put the restitution at "close to $203 million."

Wells Fargo spokeswoman Rochele Messick said the bank is "disappointed" with the ruling. "We don't believe the ruling is in line with the facts of this case and we plan to appeal," she said.

Messick noted that Wells Fargo changed its policies earlier this year, and customers can no longer incur more than four overdraft charges in one day.

Wells Fargo shares closed Wednesday trading down $1.47, or 5.3 percent, at $26.30, as the broader markets dropped sharply on economic concerns, with banks being particularly hard hit.

The case, heard in the U.S. District Court for Northern California, is Gutierrez vs. Wells Fargo.


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12:36 PM on 08/14/2010
The funniest, most ridiculous thing about many of the comments on this and other sites that vociferously defend overdraft fees is the fact that they almost invariably originate from people who can only be described as spoiled middle- and upper-class brats.

Really, they know very LITTLE about the cold hard realities of survival, in stark and comic contrast to the glowing manner in which they portray themselves in many of their comments. Few of them have had to genuinely worry about rent, energy use, food, healthcare, and the other vital necessities of modern life. Spoiled and adolescent-minded, they've been taken care of and shielded since birth.

And yet they ignorantly rush to defend predatory bank practices, like Wells Fargo's, which shamelessly altered the true order of customer transactions from the highest to the lowest, purely for its own financial benefit.

These kinds of commentators see absolutely no problem with the fact that the 20% of bank customers who pay 80% of overdraft fees are banks’ poorest customers: contemptibly self-serving of them, since overdraft fees represent such a large percentage of bank revenues that they essentially subsidize fees for the banks' remaining -- wealthier -- customers.

This phenomenon is not too dissimilar from one recently identified in a F.R.B. of Boston study that found that people who pay cash in retail stores, thus concomitantly likelier to be poorer, SUBSIDIZE those who use credit cards, since merchants increase prices for ALL consumers to cover the costs of credit card transaction fees.
12:29 PM on 08/20/2010
I grew up with nothing... Poor family in the rural South... When I went off to college, I had to pay my own way: tuition, housing, everything. And I'm still paying for it. It's not all rich people who don't support this lawsuit! I was raised to be smart with my money... To not spend money I didn't have... If these people lived by the same principles, this lawsuit wouldn't exist. If you can't afford food or bills, try to get some help from friends, family, churches, shelters, etc... Don't write a hot check! It's not about being rich or poor... It's about being stupid! I don't care how the banks process transactions, because I'm not going to spend money I don't have! I guess these people who have overdraft problems have learned from the practices of our wonderful government: Let's just get trillions of dollars in debt and keep spending money. Grow up people!
06:26 PM on 08/21/2010
Bizzle, that's not the point of the lawsuit. Jesus. It's about the scam practice of stacking the higher charges first so that they can maximize their fees, and no offense, but are you from the moon? like where do you get your logic, The people who's accounts are in danger of being over-withdrawn are the least likely to be able to pay these kinds of outrageous fees. Mistakes happen, if you spend more then you have in your account, then yes, sure, take a slap on the wrist and pay the 35 bucks, but if they stack the deck against you, so that a 1 dollar cup of coffee you buy before your rent check clears is deliberately shifted so that it clears after your account is in the negative so you get hit with two over draft fees instead of one. That's wrong and predatory, and that's what the lawsuit is about. it's not just "People writing hotchecks" they teach you to read in college?
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southingtonian
"I'm a Capricorn and you can't make me do sh*t.."
04:01 AM on 08/14/2010
PNC bank which just took over the service-oriented National City Bank in Ohio, has the same policy. Be assured, I will apprise them of my knowledge of this ruling. ( I'm sure they are well aware of it.)
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Conan Neutron
Rocker, rabble rouser, Victory and Associates
03:36 PM on 08/13/2010
It's amazing to me that the default response for many is to assume a lack of personal responsibility on the part of the customer. Pious sanctimony that firmly wags a finger at the customer.

Having worked in the financial industry and THIS particular bank for many years, I can tell you flat out that it is not a mistake when people get caught up in the system.

There's a documentary called MAXED OUT that came out not so long ago that tackles this kind of usury, although as you can imagine it focuses on lending and credit cards more than overdraft fees.

This is a revenue source for the banks, period. It's not only expected, it is more money for their bottom line. It's not an accident that these fees happen to co-incide with holds, double deposits. Because of the nature of these fees and the embarrassing social stigma that comes with them (Meaning the assumption of being a cavalier child) there are few advocate groups against these types of fees. There has been an organized campaign of shame directed towards the working class and working poor that allows these banks to rob people of millions.

As a country, we have to get beyond blaming the victim, over and over again and rewarding organizations that prey upon our working poor.
01:13 AM on 08/20/2010
nope.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Yikes11
Elbows off the Table
12:40 PM on 08/13/2010
We've got good news and bad news to report. The good news is that Elizabeth Warren was spotted leaving the White House yesterday, following a meeting.

The bad news is that President Obama is still dragging his feet on appointing her. White House spokespeople told the Huffington Post yesterday:

"The President has not yet made a decision and no announcement is imminent."

Americans can't afford more delay. How many more consumers will be duped into mortgages, credit cards and other financial products they can't afford while President Obama drags his feet on appointing Elizabeth Warren?

Can you call the White House and tell President Obama to nominate Elizabeth Warren now? It takes 30 seconds -- click here for a script and the number
12:14 PM on 08/13/2010
Really people? Stop blaming the bank and learn to balance a check book! Stop spending money that you don't have! Why do you think we are in a recession?
04:28 PM on 08/13/2010
I balanced my checkbook every month. All it takes is one person to write you a bad check and bam! the four transactions you had that day have caused you to overdraft four times and now you have $140 in overdraft fees.
08:22 PM on 08/14/2010
Really Amy???? Well, maybe before you point that finger at just about every person in the US, maybe you need to check that hand of yours and see that you have 3 fingers pointing right back at YOU! Also, watch out as the stones are flying fast and furious at your "glass" home. WF is taking the higher dollar transactions and putting them through 1st, not your credits as is what most banks do, or they put in the transactions as they are dated. Get off your soap box AMY and start living in the real world with the rest of us. If you have such a good job and are not affected by the recession..I am truely happy for you, but, in my opinion you are one of those that look down on people or kick em when they are down just for a laugh. BAD things happen to GOOD people Amy...one day maybe you will understand and grow out of your ignorance.
11:19 AM on 08/13/2010
Of course another unstated concern related to Wells Fargo, BofA, and other big banks (and which I'm stating here) are the historical phenomena called "bank runs". A bank run occurs when a large number of bank customers withdraw their deposits because they believe the bank is, or might become, insolvent. As a bank run progresses, it generates its own momentum, in a kind of self-fulfilling prophecy (or positive feedback): as more people withdraw their deposits, the likelihood of default increases, and this encourages further withdrawals. This can destabilize the bank to the point where it faces bankruptcy.

Should banks such as Wells Fargo antagonize enough customers with questionable business practices like these overdraft fees, then it is logically conceivable that Wells Fargo and similar big banks could subject themselves to upcoming bank runs arising from their active customer base.

IMHO, it may even be better to ask WHEN such bank runs will occur rather than IF such bank runs can occur.
(And BTW, this is not to suggest that Wells Fargo and other big banks actually DESERVE the bank runs they'll bring upon themselves!!)
08:10 AM on 08/13/2010
And what are the punitive damages for this corporate robbery of the customers.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
waynesmyer
07:43 AM on 08/13/2010
Was Wells-Fargo also busted for washing drug money???
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mariusvinchi
Saint Lucia is looking better and better every day
05:10 AM on 08/13/2010
Wells Fargo is by no means the only banking institution engaging in unscrupulous business practices. Even with the new regulations, banks will find loopholes to exploit. If for this reason and no other, we need a strong consumer advocate in Washington.
I propose that everyone of like mind on HufPo, write an email to President Obama asking him to nominate/appoint Warren...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
merger
02:55 AM on 08/13/2010
Yeah!!!!!!!
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fromdnorth
OK I checked my micro-bio (didn't know I had one
01:58 AM on 08/13/2010
Note to trolls and banking shills:
In the interest of time and space and mood of the country for full disclosure, may I respectfully suggest you begin your posts with "Once upon a time..."
and end it with "...and they all lived happily ever after..."

You live in a fantasy world and we should be warned...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Snwbnny9
All I can say is that my life is pretty plain
09:04 PM on 08/12/2010
In my opinion, Wells Fargo is a truly horrible bank. Thank you Judge. I miss WaMu.
07:47 PM on 08/12/2010
Suck it WellsFargo!
05:02 PM on 08/12/2010
Just got a response from WF on my request for a refund on my families $1700.00 of overdraft charges. They wrote back: We are disappointed with Judge Asup's ruling and plan to appeal. It is therefore too soon to discuss when or if fee reimbursements will be made....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Goldmel
Can't spell nor punctuate
04:00 PM on 08/12/2010
This whole article warmes my heart, it couldn't happen to a nicer (!@#%) bank! It's about time those cheating bastards paid back the public for their fees and their outright stealing.