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No. 10020283
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Kristen Schertzer v. Bank of America, Na
No. 10020283 · Decided July 29, 2024
No. 10020283·Ninth Circuit · 2024·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
July 29, 2024
Citation
No. 10020283
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
KRISTEN SCHERTZER; No. 23-55104
BRITTANY COVELL, individually
and on behalf of all others similarly D.C. No.
situated, 3:19-cv-00264-
JM-MSB
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
OPINION
BANK OF AMERICA, NA,
Defendant-Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of California
Jeffrey T. Miller, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted May 13, 2024
Pasadena, California
Filed July 29, 2024
Before: Ronald Lee Gilman, * Ronald M. Gould, and
Salvador Mendoza, Jr., Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Gould
*
The Honorable Ronald Lee Gilman, United States Circuit Judge for the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, sitting by designation.
2 SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA
SUMMARY **
Breach of Contract / California Law
The panel affirmed in part and reversed in part the
district court’s summary judgment in favor of Bank of
America (“BOA”), and vacated the district court’s denial of
class certification, in plaintiff’s putative class action alleging
claims for breach of contract and breach of the implied
covenant of good faith and fair dealing, based on fees BOA
charged when plaintiff used a non-BOA ATM.
BOA charged plaintiff, a BOA accountholder, two
separate out-of-network balance inquiry fees when she used
her BOA debit card at a non-BOA ATM. Plaintiff claimed
that only the first of two fees was permissible under the
parties’ contract.
The panel reversed the district court’s summary
judgment in favor of BOA on plaintiff’s claim for breach of
contract. The panel agreed with plaintiff that the term
“balance inquiry,” as used in the contractual documents,
means a customer-initiated transaction like a withdrawal,
where BOA can charge customers only when the customer
explicitly requests balance information. The panel rejected
BOA’s argument—that it lacked control over third-party
ATM operators or the fashioning of their screen prompts and
therefore cannot be held responsible for customer responses
to the screen prompts—because BOA’s level of control over
**
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA 3
the ATM operators has no effect on the question of contract
interpretation raised in this case.
The panel affirmed the district court’s summary
judgment in favor of BOA on plaintiff’s claim for breach of
the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing because
the claim is indistinguishable from plaintiff’s breach of
contract claim and therefore superfluous.
The panel rejected BOA’s argument that plaintiff’s
failure to follow the contract’s pre-dispute procedures
presented an independent ground for summary judgment
because there was no indication that these procedures
covered situations in which customers believe that BOA has
overcharged them in violation of the contract.
Finally, the panel vacated the district court’s denial of
class certification and remanded for the district court to
reconsider class certification.
COUNSEL
Jae K. Kim (argued), Lynch Carpenter LLP, Pasadena,
California; Todd D. Carpenter and Tiffine E. Malamphy,
Lynch Carpenter LLP, Del Mar, California; Sophia G. Gold
and Jeffrey D. Kaliel, KalielGold PLLC, Washington, D.C.;
for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
Shawn R. Obi (argued) and Amanda L. Groves, Winston &
Strawn LLP, Los Angeles, California, for Defendant-
Appellee.
4 SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA
OPINION
GOULD, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiff Brittany Covell, 1 a Bank of America (“BOA”)
accountholder, brought this putative class action against
BOA, asserting claims for breach of contract and breach of
the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, based on
fees BOA charged when Plaintiff used a non-BOA ATM.
The district court granted summary judgment in favor of
BOA and denied class certification. We have jurisdiction
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We affirm in part, reverse in
part, and remand for further proceedings.
BACKGROUND
BOA charged Plaintiff two separate $2.50 out-of-
network (“OON”) balance inquiry fees when she used her
BOA debit card at a non-BOA ATM. Plaintiff claims that
only the first of the two fees was permissible under the
parties’ contract. The contract allows BOA to charge OON
balance inquiry fees, but whether the fee at issue was
permissible depends on how “balance inquiry” is defined.
Under Plaintiff’s definition, she did not make a second
“balance inquiry” within the meaning of the contract; under
BOA’s definition, she did. The factual circumstances
surrounding Plaintiff’s transaction are undisputed.
1
At the time of the district court’s final order, Kristin Schertzer was also
a named plaintiff in the action, but this appeal is maintained solely by
Covell.
SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA 5
I. The ATM Transaction
A. First Balance Inquiry Charge
A customer initiates a transaction at a non-BOA ATM
by inserting her debit card. The ATM then prompts the
customer: “Would you like to view your Account Balance?”,
with buttons for “Yes” or “No.” If the customer selects
“Yes,” the next screen prompts the customer to “Select
inquiry account,” with buttons for “Checking,” “Savings,”
and “Credit Card.” Once the customer selects an account,
the ATM transmits an electronic “balance inquiry request”
to BOA, and BOA charges the customer a $2.50 OON
balance inquiry fee. The ATM then displays the customer’s
balance information for the account selected.
B. Second Balance Inquiry Charge
On the screen displaying the customer’s balance, the
ATM next prompts the customer: “Would you like to print
your Balance and continue the Transaction?”, with buttons
for “Continue” and “Cancel.” If the customer selects
“Continue,” the ATM transmits a second electronic balance
inquiry request to BOA, and BOA charges the customer
another $2.50 OON balance inquiry fee. The ATM then
displays a menu of transactions with which the customer can
proceed, including “Withdrawal,” “Transfer,” and
“Inquiry.” Once the customer completes one of these
transactions, the ATM prints a receipt displaying the
customer’s balance information.
Plaintiff does not dispute that the first OON fee—
incurred when she selected “Yes” to the prompt asking her
if she wanted “to view your Account Balance”—was
permissible under the parties’ contract as a balance inquiry
fee. But Plaintiff contends that the second OON fee was not
6 SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA
permissible under the contract, because she did not initiate a
“balance inquiry” when she elected to “print [her] Balance
and continue the Transaction.”
II. Governing Agreements
The parties agree that this case is governed by three
contractual documents (collectively, the “Account
Documents”): (1) the “Deposit Agreement and Disclosures”
(the “Deposit Agreement”); (2) the “Important Information
Brochure: Card Agreement and Disclosure” (the
“Brochure”); and the “Personal Schedule of Fees” (the “Fee
Schedule”). 2 The relevant provisions in each document are
as follows.
Deposit Agreement
ATM Fees. When you use an ATM that is not
prominently branded with the Bank of
America name and logo, you may be charged
a fee by the ATM operator or any network
used and you may be charged a fee for a
balance inquiry even if you do not complete
a fund transfer. We may also charge you fees.
Other Fees. For other fees that apply to
electronic banking services, please review
the Schedule of Fees for your account and
each agreement or disclosure that we provide
to you for the specific electronic banking
service, including the separate agreement for
2
The district court also referred to the “Schedule of Electronic Fees and
Dollar Limits on Transactions Supplement to Your Card Agreement,”
but this document is duplicative of the Fee Schedule.
SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA 7
Online and Mobile Banking services and the
separate agreement for ATM and debit cards.
Brochure
“You authorize us to act on the instructions
you give us through ATMs.”
Fee Schedule
Fee Fee Other Important
Name/Description Amount Information About
This Fee
Non-Bank of $2.50 each When you use a
America ATM Fee non-Bank of
for: America ATM, you
Withdrawals, may also be charged
transfers and balance a fee by the ATM
inquiries at a non- operator or any
Bank of America network used and
ATM in the U.S. you may be charged
a fee for a balance
inquiry even if you
do not complete a
funds transfer.
III. Procedural History
Plaintiff originally brought this action against not only
BOA, but also the operators of the non-BOA ATMs,
Cardtronics, FCTI, and Cash Depot (the “ATM Operators”).
The ATM Operators filed motions to dismiss under Rule
12(b)(6) arguing, inter alia, that Plaintiff had not alleged
damages because the OON fee at issue was charged by BOA
and not by the ATM Operators. Plaintiff settled with the
8 SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA
ATM Operators before their motions were decided. The
case now consists solely of claims against BOA for breach
of contract and breach of the implied covenant of good faith
and fair dealing.
Plaintiff contends that she was charged two OON fees by
BOA when she conducted a transaction at an ATM operated
by FCTI. She seeks to bring this action on behalf of all
similarly situated BOA customers. Plaintiff moved to certify
a class of:
All Bank of America, N.A., checking account
holders in the United States who since May
1, 2018 were assessed two (2) out-of-network
fees for a single balance inquiry undertaken
at FCTI, Inc.’s ATM machines located in 7-
Eleven stores.[ 3]
BOA opposed class certification and moved for summary
judgment on Plaintiff’s breach of contract and implied
covenant claims. The district court granted summary
judgment on both claims and denied class certification.
Schertzer v. Bank of America, Case No. 19-cv-264, 2022 WL
1004559 (S.D. Cal. Apr. 4, 2022). Shortly thereafter, the
district court denied Plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration.
Plaintiff timely appealed the district court’s summary
judgment, class certification, and reconsideration orders.
3
Then-plaintiff Schertzer also sought to certify a class of Cardtronics
ATM users, but Covell does not appeal the district court’s denial of
certification as to that class.
SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA 9
DISCUSSION
I. Breach of Contract
A. Parties’ Interpretations of “Balance
Inquiry”
The Account Documents do not define “balance
inquiry.” Schertzer, 2022 WL 1004559, at *8. As an initial
matter, we must clarify the parties’ competing definitions of
the term. The district court adopted BOA’s interpretation.
However, we conclude that the district court misunderstood
Plaintiff’s proposed interpretation.
Plaintiff had argued to the district court that to make a
“balance inquiry” under the contract “reasonably means that
customers must have affirmatively requested . . . their
account balance information” and that “the party that is
relevant in determining whether balance information has
been requested is the customer, not the ATM machine or
network.”
In rejecting this interpretation and adopting BOA’s
alternative, the district court relied on a provision in the
Deposit Agreement and Brochure that reads:
ATM Fees. When you use an ATM that is not
prominently branded with the Bank of
America name and logo, you may be charged
a fee by the ATM operator or any network
used and you may be charged a fee for a
balance inquiry even if you do not complete
10 SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA
a fund transfer. We may also charge you
fees.[ 4]
Referring to the first sentence of this paragraph, the
district court mistakenly characterized Plaintiff’s
interpretation of “balance inquiry” as “suggesting a
subjective consent/intent requirement into the ‘when you use
a non-Bank of America ATM’ clause for a ‘balance
inquiry.’” Schertzer, 2022 WL 1004559, at *9. The district
court rejected what it understood to be Plaintiff’s
interpretation, stating:
Reading the contract as a whole, and in a
commonsense manner, the phrase appears to
refer to a customer’s general use of the ATM.
That is when a customer places their
debit/credit card in an ATM machine and
enters their PIN and selects options on the
screen to access their bank account/s, they are
“using” a non-Bank of America ATM
machine. The fact that the actions are being
performed by the customer implicitly
signifies consent in the circumstances. In
other words, the “instruction”[ 5] is carried out
by the customer hitting buttons or prompts on
the ATM screen over which [BOA] has no
control. To require [BOA] to glean the
subjective intent of OON ATM users defies
4
The last sentence of the provision appears only in the Deposit
Agreement.
5
This is a reference to the Brochure, which states: “You authorize us to
act on the instructions you give us through ATMs.”
SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA 11
logic and common sense given the protocols
and mechanics of OON ATMs.
Id.
The district court concluded that the Account Documents
unambiguously allow BOA to charge an OON fee for each
electronic balance inquiry request transmitted by the ATM
in response to customer selections on the ATM screen,
regardless of whether those selections explicitly referred to
balance information. The district court reasoned that even if
the term were ambiguous and extrinsic evidence were
considered, the result would be the same. Id. at *9-12.
BOA and the district court misconstrue Plaintiff’s
interpretation as requiring BOA to divine a customer’s
subjective intent each time the customer presses a button on
an ATM. The district court misunderstood Plaintiff’s
interpretation to include a requirement that balance inquiries
be performed “knowingly” or “intentionally”—terms BOA
repeats on appeal to undermine Plaintiff’s arguments. But
these terms do not appear anywhere in Plaintiff’s briefs.
Plaintiff’s interpretation of “balance inquiry,” as
“reasonably mean[ing] that customers must have
affirmatively requested . . . their account balance
information,” does not in fact imply a subjective intent
requirement. Plaintiff simply argues that the customer must
make the balance inquiry, as opposed to the ATM
transmitting an inquiry to BOA with or without the customer
requesting one. Determining whether a customer has
initiated a balance inquiry does not require probing her
subjective intent; it merely requires that the consumer has
made the balance inquiry. Plaintiff concedes that when a
customer presses a button on an ATM that says “balance
12 SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA
information” (or something similarly explicit) it is
objectively clear that the customer has requested a balance
inquiry.
Plaintiff’s interpretation is based on objective
manifestations of consent commonly required in electronic
transactions. In cases where consumers interact with
websites, for example, this court and others have required
that the customer “take an[] affirmative action to
demonstrate assent” to terms of service. Nguyen v. Barnes
& Noble, Inc., 763 F.3d 1171, 1178-79 (9th Cir. 2014); see
also Reichert v. Rapid Investments, Inc., 56 F.4th 1220,
1230-31 (9th Cir. 2022); Knutson v. Sirius XM Radio Inc.,
771 F.3d 559, 565 (9th Cir. 2014) (“Courts must determine
whether the outward manifestations of consent would lead a
reasonable person to believe the offeree has assented to the
agreement.”); Specht v. Netscape Comms. Corp., 306 F.3d
17, 29, 31, 33-34 (2d Cir. 2002) (requiring “that a user’s act
. . . manifest assent to contract terms”). Although these
cases involve contract formation rather than performance,
they illustrate that there is nothing novel or unusually
burdensome about requiring a merchant to determine
whether a customer has objectively manifested consent to a
transaction. 6 These cases serve as a guide in assessing
consent to electronic transactions.
In summary, we are presented with two interpretations
of the term “balance inquiry.” Plaintiff’s interpretation
6
Indeed, a recent district court decision that considered a challenge to a
similar balance-inquiry fee rejected defendant FTCI’s contention that the
plaintiffs’ claims required “the Court [to] probe whether each individual
customer relied on the allegedly deceptive [ATM screen prompt].”
Polvay v. FTCI, Inc., 2024 WL 322050, at *2-3, 5 (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 29,
2024).
SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA 13
allows a customer to be charged for a “balance inquiry”
under the contract only if it is objectively clear that the
customer requested balance information from the ATM—for
example, by selecting “Yes” in response to a prompt reading
“Would you like to view your Account Balance?” Plaintiff
thus characterizes a “balance inquiry” as a customer-
initiated transaction in which the customer inquires about
her balance.
In sharp contrast, BOA’s interpretation, adopted by the
district court, allows BOA to charge a customer for a
“balance inquiry” anytime that an ATM sends an electronic
message to BOA requesting balance information, regardless
of what the customer pressed on the ATM screen. BOA and
the district court thus conceive of a “balance inquiry” as an
ATM-initiated transaction that occurs whether or not a
customer makes any inquiry at all.
We adopt Plaintiff’s interpretation and reverse the
district court’s grant of summary judgment for BOA.
B. Contract Interpretation
The parties agree that California law governs their
contract. Contract interpretation is a question of law, which
we review de novo. Atel Fin. Corp. v. Quaker Coal Co., 321
F.3d 924, 925-26 (9th Cir. 2003) (per curiam); Trustees of
S. Cal. IBEW-NECA Pension Trust Fund v. Flores, 519 F.3d
1045, 1047 (9th Cir. 2008).
“The fundamental goal of contract interpretation is to
give effect to the mutual intent of the parties as it existed at
the time of contracting.” U.S. Cellular Inv. Co. v. GTE
Mobilnet, Inc., 281 F.3d 929, 934 (9th Cir. 2002). “Such
intent is to be inferred, if possible, solely from the written
provisions of the contract, County of Fresno v. Frensno
14 SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA
Deputy Sheriff’s Ass’n, 51 Cal. App. 5th 282, 292 (2020), “if
the language is clear and explicit, and does not involve an
absurdity,” Cal. Civ. Code § 1638.
California law provides several principles that guide our
inquiry into what the parties mutually intended a contract
term to mean. Synthesizing these principles, we consider
whether a proffered interpretation: (1) aligns with the
ordinary and popular meaning of the term; (2) gives effect to
all of a contract’s provisions or renders some superfluous;
(3) is supported by reading the contract as a whole;
(4) would produce an absurd or inequitable result. We have
applied each of these principles to interpretation of the term
“balance inquiry” and conclude that these contract
interpretation principles all support Plaintiff’s interpretation
of the term.
i. The “Ordinary and Popular” Meaning of
“Balance Inquiry”
Under California contract law, applicable here, terms
must be “understood in their ordinary and popular sense
rather than according to their strict legal meaning; unless
used by the parties in a technical sense, or unless a special
meaning is given to them by usage.” Cal. Civ. Code § 1644.
The “ordinary and popular” meaning of a term is “the
meaning a layperson would ascribe to [it].” Sup. Ct. of
Alameda Cnty. v. County of Alameda, 65 Cal. App. 5th 838,
850 (2021) (quoting AIU Ins. Co. v. Sup. Ct., 51 Cal. 3d 807,
821-22 (1990)); see also Ray v. Farmers Ins. Exch., 200 Cal.
App. 3d 1411 (1988).
The district court’s interpretation of “balance inquiry,”
characterized to include an inquiry made by the ATM
computer, does not represent the “ordinary and popular”
meaning of the term. The district court defined “balance
SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA 15
inquiry” as an electronic transmittal between an ATM and
BOA that can occur even when a customer has not requested
balance information. See Schertzer, Case No. 19cv264, Dkt.
271 at 15-16. In adopting this interpretation, the district
court assumed that a layperson would be well-versed in the
electronic transmittals that occur between the ATM and
BOA. In the district court’s view, a layperson reading
BOA’s contract would understand that “balance inquiry”
could not refer to anything other than these electronic
transmittals. We conclude that these assumptions are
unreasonable and do not plausibly represent a layperson’s
understanding of “balance inquiry.”
BOA’s and the district court’s interpretation of “balance
inquiry” is more akin to a technical definition understood by
those in the industry familiar with how ATMs work. Indeed,
BOA submitted a lengthy expert report to the district court
describing the process that occurs when an ATM transmits a
balance inquiry request to a bank. The process was broken
down into no fewer than nine steps, complete with a
diagram. But nothing in the Account Documents tells a
consumer that the contract term “balance inquiry” refers to
such a complicated automated process. See Cal. Civ. Code
§ 1644 (technical meanings of terms do not apply “unless
used by the parties in a technical sense, or unless a special
meaning is given to them by usage”). BOA accountholders
are generally not sophisticated parties likely to be familiar
with the mechanics of ATM transmittals or the technical
meaning of the term “balance inquiry” proffered by BOA.
See Universal Cable Productions, LLC v. Atlantic Specialty
Ins. Co., 929 F.3d 1143, 1153–54 (9th Cir. 2019) (industry
usage of insurance term applied where insured was a
sophisticated party who conducted frequent business related
to the insurance trade); see also Cal. Civ. Code § 1645
16 SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA
(technical terms are “interpreted as usually understood by
persons in the profession or business to which they relate”).
In contrast, Plaintiff’s interpretation—that a “balance
inquiry” occurs when a customer objectively makes a
request for balance information—aligns with the ordinary
and popular meaning of the term. Consumers who use
ATMs and sign up for a debit card would be familiar with
the term “balance inquiry,” because it often appears as an
option on ATM screens alongside “withdrawal” and
“transfer,” and as a prompt that explicitly refers to “balance
information.” The “Network Rules” binding all of the
ATMs at issue require that ATMs offer a balance inquiry
option. A reasonable consumer would understand—without
need for an expert report—that by responding “Yes” to the
prompt “Would you like to view your Account Balance?”,
she is inquiring about her balance information. 7 A customer
reading the Account Documents would naturally associate
the term “balance inquiry” with this familiar ATM
transaction. 8
We conclude that the ordinary and popular meaning of
“balance inquiry” requires an objectively clear customer
request for balance information from the ATM. Only then
would it be reasonable for a bank to charge its customers a
balance inquiry fee.
7
Different ATM screens present the balance inquiry option in different
ways. Sometimes the screen will display an option labeled “inquiry,”
but at other times the ATM will prompt the customer “Would you like
to view your balance?”.
8
Consistent with the popular meaning of the term, Plaintiff does not
challenge the validity of the first OON charge, incurred when Plaintiff
selected “Yes” in response to the prompt: “Would you like to view your
Account Balance?”.
SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA 17
ii. Interpretation Should Not Render Part of
the Contract “Superfluous, Useless, or
Inexplicable”
“An interpretation which gives effect to all provisions of
the contract is preferred to one which renders part of the
writing superfluous, useless or inexplicable.” Carson v.
Mercury Ins. Co., 210 Cal. App. 4th 409, 420 (2012)
(citation omitted).
BOA’s and the district court’s interpretation of “balance
inquiry” violates this principle. The district court relied on
the “ATM Fees” provision in the Deposit Agreement and in
the Brochure, which reads:
ATM Fees. When you use an ATM that is not
prominently branded with the Bank of
America name and logo, you may be charged
a fee by the ATM operator or any network
used and you may be charged a fee for a
balance inquiry even if you do not complete
a fund transfer. We may also charge you fees.
Other Fees. For other fees that apply to
electronic banking services, please review
the Schedule of Fees for your account and
each agreement or disclosure that we provide
to you for the specific electronic banking
service, including the separate agreement for
Online and Mobile Banking services and the
separate agreement for ATM and debit cards.
The district court extrapolated from the “When you use”
language in the first sentence of the “ATM Fees” provision
to conclude that, “when a customer places their debit/credit
18 SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA
card in [a non-BOA] ATM machine . . . [,] they are ‘using’
a non-Bank of America ATM machine. . . . [and that] fact . . .
implicitly signifies consent.” Schertzer, 2022 WL 1004559,
at *9.
However, the district court ignored the phrase “We [(i.e.,
BOA)] may also charge you fees” at the end of the Deposit
Agreement provision. This phrase is critical. A statement
that “[BOA] may also charge you fees” indicates that the
preceding “When you use” language does not refer to BOA
fees. If the “When you use” language referred to fees that
BOA may charge, then the words “[BOA] may also charge
you fees” would be superfluous or inexplicable.
The district court also ignored that the clause it relied
upon explicitly states that, “[w]hen you use an ATM . . . ,
you may be charged a fee by the ATM operator.” The district
court nevertheless interpreted this clause as referring to
BOA-charged fees. This interpretation renders the “by the
ATM operator” language inexplicable.
A more natural reading of the provision giving effect to
all its parts is that the first (“When you use”) sentence refers
to fees charged by ATM operators, and the second sentence
refers to BOA fees that are detailed in a separate provision.
The provision that states “We may also charge you fees” is
immediately followed by the “Other Fees” provision that
refers to the Fee Schedule where BOA’s fees (including the
balance inquiry fee) are listed.
We conclude that the “When you use” provision cannot
be read to support BOA’s interpretation of the term “balance
inquiry” without rendering other provisions superfluous or
inexplicable.
SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA 19
iii. Reading the Contract as a Whole
Contracts are interpreted as a whole “so as to give effect
to every part, if reasonably practicable, each clause helping
to interpret the other.” Cal. Civ. Code § 1641. “The
meaning of the words contained in a contract is to be
determined not from a consideration of the words alone but
from a reading of the entire contract.” Brobeck, Phleger &
Harrison v. Telex Corp., 602 F.2d 866, 872 (9th Cir. 1976)
(quoting Sunset Sec. Co. v. Coward McCann, Inc., 47 Cal.
2d 907, 911 (1957)).
Reading the Account Documents as a whole supports
that “balance inquiry” refers to a customer-initiated request
for balance information. The Fee Schedule states that a
$2.50 OON fee may be charged for “Withdrawals, transfers
and balance inquiries.” Withdrawals and transfers are
unquestionably customer-initiated transactions. The
Account Documents make clear that an ATM cannot initiate
a withdrawal or transfer without a customer’s permission.
“Balance inquiry” is listed alongside these terms, which
reasonably suggests that it too is a customer-initiated
transaction. The customer would naturally assume that she
initiates a balance inquiry in the same way that she initiates
a withdrawal: by selecting an option that explicitly refers to
the desired transaction. Thus, in the normal case, a balance
inquiry is made by the customer, not by the bank. The
Account Documents do not mention ATMs’ electronic
transmittals to BOA or otherwise suggest that the balance
inquiry fee might be connected to them.
Plaintiff’s contention that “balance inquiry” refers to a
customer-initiated transaction is reinforced by language in
the Brochure that states: “You authorize us to act on the
instructions you give us through ATMs.” BOA’s
20 SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA
interpretation of “balance inquiry” explicitly maintains that
it acts on instructions it receives from the ATM. BOA states
that it does not know what customers are selecting on the
ATM screen; it knows only what messages the ATM is
sending to BOA. BOA’s interpretation of “balance inquiry”
contradicts the contractual provision that provides BOA will
act on the customer’s instructions.
iv. Interpretation Should Not Produce an
“Absurdity” or an “Inequitable” Agreement
Our interpretation of terms in a contract “must be fair and
reasonable, not leading to absurd conclusions.” State
Compensation Ins. Fund v. Dep’t of Ins., 96 Cal. App. 5th
227, 236 (2023) (citation omitted). We “avoid an
interpretation which will make a contract extraordinary,
harsh, unjust, or inequitable.” Barroso v. Ocwen Loan
Servicing, LLC, 208 Cal. App. 4th 1001, 1013 (2012)
(citation omitted).
BOA’s and the district court’s interpretation of the
contract produces an absurd and inequitable result. The
district court’s reasoning suggests that a customer
“implicitly . . . consent[s]” to fees associated with an ATM
transaction by “using” the ATM, even if the customer cannot
reasonably know that his actions are generating fees. See
Schertzer, 2022 WL 1004559, at *9. Under this
interpretation, a customer’s use of an ATM gives a blank
check to BOA for any fees BOA decides to charge. As
Plaintiff hypothesized before the district court, “[BOA]
could charge consumers for a balance inquiry if the Bank
receives notice from an ATM operator, even if a consumer
clicks ‘no’ and declines to perform a balance inquiry, or even
if the customer was prompted a different transaction than a
balance inquiry.” Id. (citation omitted).
SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA 21
The Account Documents do not indicate that customers
intended that their insertion of a debit card into an ATM
would give BOA such vast discretion. Plaintiff’s
interpretation avoids this inequitable result because it
understands a “balance inquiry” to be a customer-initiated
transaction like a withdrawal, where BOA can charge
customers only when the customer explicitly requests
balance information.
C. BOA’s Lack of Control over Third-Party
ATM Operators
BOA persuaded the district court that, because BOA
allegedly has no control over the ATM Operators or the
fashioning of their screen prompts, the court could not hold
BOA responsible for fees generated by customer responses
to the screen prompts. We reject this line of reasoning
because BOA’s level of control over the ATM Operators has
no effect on the question of contract interpretation before us.
BOA’s control over the ATM Operators does not speak
to what BOA and Plaintiff mutually intended when they
agreed to the Account Documents. BOA’s relationship with
the ATM Operators is not described in the Account
Documents. An ordinary consumer would not know of this
relationship when reviewing the Account Documents. There
is no reason to believe that BOA’s control over the ATM
Operators—totally unknown to ordinary consumers—bears
on a customer’s interpretation of the term “balance inquiry.”
This makes it irrelevant to the contract interpretation inquiry.
The district court framed BOA’s control over the ATM
Operators in terms reminiscent of the duty of care that arises
in tort cases. The district court reasoned that, “[w]hile the
practices of the ATM Operators may indeed be
questionable,” BOA has no control over the “buttons or
22 SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA
prompts on the ATM screen,” and “[a]bsent any agency
relationship, the court is loath to hold [BOA] responsible for
the actions of a third party.” Id. at 16, 20.
Yet there are no tort claims in this action. Plaintiff’s
claims arise from a contract dispute between Plaintiff and
BOA. The “practices of the ATM Operators” are not at
issue. Plaintiff does not allege that she was harmed by the
ATM Operators. Plaintiff alleges that she was harmed by
BOA. BOA—not the ATM Operators—charged the second
OON fee at issue. BOA’s control or lack of control over the
ATM Operators does not relieve BOA of its contractual duty
to charge only those fees permitted by the Account
Documents.
The district court’s passing reference to an “agency
relationship” is another inapposite allusion to tort law. An
agency relationship is relevant in cases where “[a] principal
who conducts an activity through an agent is subject to
liability for harm to a third party caused by the agent’s
conduct.” Restatement (Third) of Agency § 7.05 (2006)
(emphasis added); see also Jones v. Royal Admin. Servs.,
Inc., 887 F.3d 443, 448-49 (9th Cir. 2018). Here, Plaintiff
does not allege any harm caused by the ATM Operators,
whether they are BOA’s agents or not. Plaintiff’s suit seeks
to hold BOA responsible for BOA’s own alleged breach of
the parties’ contract.
D. Extrinsic Evidence
Under California law, we consider extrinsic evidence if
it supports a proffered interpretation of a disputed term.
Dore v. Arnold Worldwide, Inc., 39 Cal. 4th 384, 391 (2006).
“The test of admissibility of extrinsic evidence to explain the
meaning of a written instrument is not whether it appears to
the court to be plain and unambiguous on its face, but
SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA 23
whether the offered evidence is relevant to prove a meaning
to which the language of the instrument is reasonably
susceptible.” Id. (internal quotation marks and citation
omitted). If admitted, extrinsic evidence is used to ascertain
the “objectively reasonable expectation of the promisee.”
Buckley v. Terhune, 441 F.3d 688, 695 (9th Cir. 2006)
(internal quotation marks and citations omitted). If extrinsic
evidence does not help make sense of an ambiguous term,
then “the language of a contract should be interpreted most
strongly against the party who caused the uncertainty to
exist.” Id. at 695-66 (quoting Cal. Civ. Code § 1654).
To the extent that the parties proffered extrinsic evidence
before the district court, it took the form of (1) screenshots
of the ATM screen prompts; (2) testimony from BOA
employees; and (3) expert testimony on industry standards
for ATMs. See Schertzer, 2022 WL 1004559, at *9-12.
The district court evaluated the extrinsic evidence in
terms of whether it showed that BOA had control or
oversight over the ATMs. See id. Among other things, the
district court concluded that the evidence showed that
“[BOA] has no relationship with Cardtronics or FTCI that
would allow it to assert any control over the screens at
issue”; “[BOA] . . . must respond to OON requests for
balance information and cannot selectively respond based on
customer ‘intent’”; and, “[BOA] cannot distinguish whether
a customer using an OON ATM pressed a button asking to
have the balance printed on the screen or on a receipt.” Id.
at 11.
BOA’s control over the ATM Operators is not relevant
to the parties’ contract dispute. This case does not concern
the actions of a third party—it concerns BOA’s actions,
because it was BOA that charged Plaintiff the challenged
24 SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA
second OON fee. Extrinsic evidence of BOA’s control over
the ATM Operators is irrelevant.
There is also some extrinsic evidence that undermines
BOA’s interpretation of “balance inquiry.” For example, the
Network Rules allow BOA to decline ATM balance inquiry
requests under certain circumstances, such as when there is
“fraud or credit risk presented by individual cardholder
usage patterns.” None of these circumstances apply here,
but the provision demonstrates that BOA can and does
evaluate objective circumstances to determine whether a
customer actually made a particular transaction. This
undermines the credibility of BOA’s argument that it cannot
determine if a customer is making a balance inquiry without
probing their subjective intent. It also contradicts the district
court’s finding that BOA “must respond to OON requests for
balance information” without exception.
Because we conclude that extrinsic evidence does not
support a proffered interpretation of the contract, we must
construe any “ambiguous language against the interest of the
party that drafted it.” Juarez v. Wash Depot Holdings, Inc.,
24 Cal. App. 5th 1197, 1203 (2018) (citing Cal. Civ. Code
§ 1654). Further, “[t]his rule applies with particular force in
the case of a contract of adhesion.” Id. BOA does not
dispute that the Account Documents are a contract of
adhesion. None of its terms were negotiated, and Plaintiff
could only accept or reject it. See Badie v. Bank of America,
67 Cal. App. 4th 779, 785-86 (1998) (noting that contracts
between BOA and credit card holders were “undisputed[ly]
. . . contracts of adhesion”).
We do not see the term “balance inquiry” as an
ambiguous term. As discussed above, Plaintiff’s
interpretation of “balance inquiry” reflects its ordinary and
SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA 25
popular meaning. Even if the term “balance inquiry” were
to be considered ambiguous, it would then be construed
against its drafter, BOA, leading to the same conclusion we
reach on grounds of the language’s plain meaning.
II. Implied Duty of Good Faith and Fair Dealing
In addition to breach of contract, Plaintiff contends that
BOA breached the covenant of good faith and fair dealing,
which is implied in every contract in California. Foley v.
Interactive Data Corp., 47 Cal. 3d 654, 684 (1988). A
breach of the implied duty of good faith and fair dealing goes
beyond a breach of contract and involves “a failure or refusal
to discharge contractual responsibilities, prompted not by an
honest mistake, bad judgment or negligence but rather by a
conscious and deliberate act, which unfairly frustrates the
agreed common purposes and disappoints the reasonable
expectations of the other party thereby depriving that party
of the benefits of the agreement.” Careau & Co. v. Sec. Pac.
Bus. Credit, Inc., 222 Cal. App. 3d 1371, 1394 (1990).
A breach of this covenant is common in cases where one
party has discretionary power in the performance or
enforcement of the contract but abuses that discretion to
deprive the other party of a contractual benefit the other
reasonably expected. Acree v. Gen. Motors Acceptance
Corp., 92 Cal. App. 4th 385 (2001). However, “no
obligation can be implied that would result in the obliteration
of a right expressly given under a written contract.” New
Hampshire Ins. Co. v. Ridout Roofing Co., 68 Cal. App. 4th
495, 505 (1998) (internal quotation marks and citation
omitted). Also, “if the plaintiff’s allegations of breach of the
covenant of good faith ‘do not go beyond the statement of a
mere contract breach and, relying on the same alleged acts,
simply seek the same damages or other relief already
26 SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA
claimed in a companion contract cause of action, they may
be disregarded as superfluous as no additional claim is
actually stated.’” Bionghi v. Met. Water Dist. of S. Cal., 70
Cal. App. 4th 1358, 1370 (1999) (quoting Careau, 222 Cal.
App. 3d at 1395).
Plaintiff claims that BOA breached the covenant of good
faith and fair dealing by abusing the discretion purportedly
provided to BOA by the phrase “We may also charge you
fees.” Plaintiff further contends that BOA “interpret[ed] . . .
the undefined term ‘balance inquiry’ unreasonably” in a
manner that gave the bank “carte blanche discretion to assess
OON Fees anytime an ATM machine or network requested
a balance inquiry.”
This claim is indistinguishable from Plaintiff’s breach of
contract claim. It hinges on contract interpretation, and not
on any alleged attempt by BOA to frustrate “the agreed
common purposes” of the contract. Careau, 222 Cal. App.
3d at 1394. Plaintiff’s implied covenant claim is rendered
duplicative and unnecessary by our interpretation of
“balance inquiry” and our conclusion that Plaintiff had
properly alleged a claim of contract breach based on BOA’s
charging a second OON fee without authorization. By
concluding that BOA was permitted to charge OON fees
only for customer-initiated balance inquiries, we necessarily
conclude that BOA had an express duty to limit its fees to
such inquiries. This express duty renders the implied duty
of good faith and fair dealing superfluous. See New
Hampshire Ins. Co., 68 Cal. App. 4th at 505 (express rights
override implied rights); Bionghi, 70 Cal. App. 4th at 1370
(implied covenant claims that mirror breach claims are
superfluous).
SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA 27
We affirm the district court’s grant of summary
judgment for BOA on Plaintiff’s good faith and fair dealing
claim.
III. Pre-Dispute Procedures
BOA contends that Plaintiff’s failure to follow the
contract’s pre-dispute procedures presents an independent
ground for summary judgment. The district court rejected
this assertion, and we agree.
In a section titled “Reporting Problems,” the Deposit
Agreement states:
If you find that your records and ours
disagree, if you suspect any problem or
unauthorized transaction on your account or
you do not receive a statement when
expected, call us immediately at the number
for customer service on your statement.
***
Problems or unauthorized transactions
include: suspected fraud; missing deposits;
unauthorized electronic transfers; missing,
stolen, or unauthorized checks or other
withdrawal orders; checks or other
withdrawal orders bearing an unauthorized
signature, endorsement or alteration; illegible
images; encoding errors made by you to us;
and counterfeit checks. This is not a complete
list.
The Deposit Agreement gives customers 60 days to
notify BOA of such problems, after which point they “may
not bring any legal proceeding or action against us to recover
28 SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA
any amount alleged to have been improperly paid out of your
account.”
It is undisputed that Plaintiff here did not use these
procedures to report the second OON charge that she
incurred at a non-BOA ATM. Schertzer, 2022 WL 1004559,
at *14-15. The district court nonetheless correctly held that
the procedures do not apply to this case because, inter alia,
“the issues listed as ‘problems’ in the notice provisions seem
to relate to major issues such as fraud and unauthorized or
stolen checks.” Id. at *16. As the district court noted, every
example of “[p]roblems or unauthorized transactions” refers
to fraudulent activity in which another person gains
unauthorized access to the customer’s funds. There is no
indication that the reporting procedure covers situations in
which a customer believes that BOA has overcharged them
in violation of the contract. We affirm the district court’s
denial of summary judgment for BOA based on Plaintiff’s
not following these pre-dispute procedures.
IV. Class Certification
“Rule 23(b)(3) permits a party to maintain a class action
if . . . the court finds that the questions of law or fact common
to class members predominate over any questions affecting
only individual members, and that a class action is superior
to other available methods for fairly and efficiently
adjudicating the controversy.” Conn. Ret. Plans & Trust
Funds v. Amgen Inc., 660 F.3d 1170, 1173 (9th Cir. 2011)
(citing Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(b)(3)), aff'd, 133 S. Ct. 1184
(2013). The district court denied Plaintiff’s motion for class
certification because common questions of fact or law did
not predominate over individual ones. See Schertzer, 2022
WL 1004559, at *17-20. The district court broadly cited
three areas in which it had concluded that individual
SCHERTZER V. BANK OF AMERICA, NA 29
considerations predominated over common ones: (1) the
subjective intent of each class plaintiff; (2) variations in the
ATM prompts that different class plaintiffs saw; (3) different
states’ laws that applied to different plaintiffs. See id.
Our interpretation of “balance inquiry” ameliorates the
“subjective intent” concern. Our interpretation of the term
does not require probing the subjective intent of individual
ATM customers. For this reason, we vacate the district
court’s denial of class certification. It is unclear how our
holding might affect the other two concerns identified by the
district court. We remand for the district court to reconsider
class certification.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we: (1) REVERSE the district
court’s grant of summary judgment for BOA on Plaintiff’s
breach of contract claim; (2) REVERSE the district court’s
denial of Plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration; (3) AFFIRM
the district court’s grant of summary judgment for BOA on
Plaintiff’s claim for breach of the implied covenant of good
faith and fair dealing; (4) AFFIRM the district court’s denial
of summary judgment for BOA on the grounds that Plaintiff
did not follow pre-dispute procedures; (5) VACATE the
district court’s denial of class certification; and,
(6) REMAND with instructions for the district court to
reconsider class certification and for further proceedings
consistent with this disposition.
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT KRISTEN SCHERTZER; No.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT KRISTEN SCHERTZER; No.
0223-55104 BRITTANY COVELL, individually and on behalf of all others similarly D.C.
03Miller, District Judge, Presiding Argued and Submitted May 13, 2024 Pasadena, California Filed July 29, 2024 Before: Ronald Lee Gilman, * Ronald M.
04Opinion by Judge Gould * The Honorable Ronald Lee Gilman, United States Circuit Judge for the U.S.
Frequently Asked Questions
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT KRISTEN SCHERTZER; No.
FlawCheck shows no negative treatment for Kristen Schertzer v. Bank of America, Na in the current circuit citation data.
This case was decided on July 29, 2024.
Use the citation No. 10020283 and verify it against the official reporter before filing.