Los Angeles Times

Bill opening Wells Fargo to suits by customers revived

Rep. Brad Sherman reintroduc­es a measure spawned by the accounts scandal.

- By James Rufus Koren

Wells Fargo & Co. has pledged to reimburse customers harmed when its employees opened unauthoriz­ed accounts in their name — but it has been unwilling to allow lawsuits for damages, which are barred by the bank’s standard arbitratio­n clause.

On Tuesday, Rep. Brad Sherman (D-Sherman Oaks) reintroduc­ed a bill he wrote last year that would allow customers to have their cases heard in court.

Arbitratio­n is a private venue that supporters say is quicker and cheaper than the public court system, but critics say it is stacked in corporatio­ns’ favor and allows them to keep disputes under wraps.

Wells Fargo’s arbitratio­n practices, detailed by The Times in 2015, have been in the spotlight since the San Francisco bank agreed to pay $185 million in fines last year after employees were found to have created as many as 2 million checking, savings and other accounts without authorizat­ion.

The accounts often came with fees and other charges the bank has agreed to refund, but some customers have sought to sue the bank — only to be rebuffed by the courts.

Bank attorneys have successful­ly argued that when customers opened legitimate accounts, they signed contracts agreeing to settle all disputes in arbitratio­n. Courts have agreed that because those contracts apply to “all disputes,” customers must go to arbitratio­n to settle claims even over unauthoriz­ed accounts.

Sherman’s bill, and a matching Senate version sponsored by Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), called the Justice for Victims of Fraud Act, would amend two federal banking laws to say that arbitratio­n clauses are not enforceabl­e in relation to accounts created without customers’ authorizat­ion. It would apply to all banks, not just Wells Fargo.

“If customers never authorized the opening of a phony credit card or checking account, there is no reason they should be bound by the arbitratio­n agreement they were forced to sign when they set up a legitimate account,” Sherman said in a statement.

Sherman’s bill was reintroduc­ed Tuesday along with a host of other proposals by Democratic members of the House and Senate that seek to rein in arbitratio­n clauses. Some of the bills are broad, while others target specific types of contracts, such as those signed by students enrolling in forprofit colleges.

Aaron Brodie, a 911 dispatcher in Texas, said that an unauthoriz­ed credit card account opened for him by a former Wells Fargo employee led him into debt and harmed his credit score, resulting in years of higher interest rates and other costs.

He said he has since tried to join in a class-action suit against the bank, but that Wells Fargo is trying to push him and other plaintiffs into arbitratio­n.

“The only way we’ll be able to achieve justice is through the courts,” said Brodie, who spoke at a Washington news conference in support of the bills, which face an uphill battle to become law because the GOP controls both houses of Congress.

Wells Fargo spokeswoma­n Jennifer Dunn said the bank is trying to work directly with customers to address problems with unauthoriz­ed or unwanted accounts.

If customers are not satisfied with the bank’s response, they can go to an outside mediator hired by the bank. If they’re still not happy, they can go to arbitratio­n, she said.

“We believe that these steps are in the best interest of our customers and provide numerous opportunit­ies for them to be made whole,” Dunn said.

james.koren@latimes.com

 ?? J. Scott Applewhite Associated Press ?? REP. BRAD SHERMAN is seeking to allow Wells Fargo customers who had unauthoriz­ed accounts to have their cases heard in court instead of in arbitratio­n.
J. Scott Applewhite Associated Press REP. BRAD SHERMAN is seeking to allow Wells Fargo customers who had unauthoriz­ed accounts to have their cases heard in court instead of in arbitratio­n.

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