RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
File Name: 18a0133p.06
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
JAMES LOSSIA, JR.; ALEXANDRA PLAPCIANU, ┐
individually and on behalf of others similarly situated, │
Plaintiffs-Appellants, │
> No. 17-1468
│
v. │
│
│
FLAGSTAR BANCORP, INC., aka Flagstar Bank, │
Defendant-Appellee. │
┘
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Michigan at Detroit.
No. 2:15-cv-12540—George Caram Steeh, District Judge.
Argued: June 5, 2018
Decided and Filed: July 6, 2018
Before: BOGGS, SILER, and SUTTON, Circuit Judges.
_________________
COUNSEL
ARGUED: Ronald G. Acho, CUMMINGS, MCCLOREY, DAVIS & ACHO, P.L.C., Livonia,
Michigan, for Appellants. Sonal Hope Mithani, MILLER, CANFIELD, PADDOCK & STONE,
P.L.C., Ann Arbor, Michigan, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Ronald G. Acho, CUMMINGS,
MCCLOREY, DAVIS & ACHO, P.L.C., Livonia, Michigan, for Appellants. Sonal Hope
Mithani, Colin M. Battersby, Caroline B. Giordano, MILLER, CANFIELD, PADDOCK
& STONE, P.L.C., Ann Arbor, Michigan, for Appellee.
No. 17-1468 Lossia v. Flagstar Bancorp, Inc. Page 2
_________________
OPINION
_________________
BOGGS, Circuit Judge. This is a breach-of-contract case arising from the order in which
Flagstar Bank (Flagstar) processes Automated Clearing House (ACH) transactions. James
Lossia, Jr. and Alexandra Plapcianu are former checking-account customers of Flagstar. Lossia
asserts that his checking-account agreement required Flagstar to process his ACH transactions in
the order that he initiated them, which Flagstar admittedly did not do. But because the plain
language of the agreement does not require Flagstar to process transactions in the order that the
customer initiated them, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Flagstar.
I
a. The Agreement and NACHA Guidelines
Plaintiffs opened a joint checking account at Flagstar in December 2014. The checking
account was subject to the terms listed in Flagstar’s “Terms and Conditions” disclosure guide
(the Agreement). The Agreement discusses the method by which Flagstar will process
transactions, including ACH transactions. ACH transactions are electronic payments made from
one bank account to another and involve one party providing their account number and routing
number. Common ACH transactions include online bill pay and an employee’s direct deposit.
ACH Network: How it Works, NACHA The Electronic Payments Association,
https://www.nacha.org/ach-network (last visited June 14, 2018).
In the “Payment Order of Items” section, the Agreement states:
Our policy is to process wire transfers, phone transfers, online banking transfers,
in branch transactions, ATM transactions, debit card transactions, ACH
transactions, bill pay transactions and items we are required to pay, such as
returned deposited items, first—as they occur on their effective date for the
business day on which they are processed.”
(Emphasis added).
No. 17-1468 Lossia v. Flagstar Bancorp, Inc. Page 3
The Agreement also states that it is “subject to applicable federal laws, the laws of the
state of Michigan and other applicable rules such as the operating letters of the Federal Reserve
Banks and payment processing system rules (except to the extent that this agreement can and
does vary such rules or laws).” (Emphasis added). While not explicitly cited in the Agreement,
the National Automated Clearing House Association Operating Rules and Guidelines
(Guidelines) are the relevant payment-processing-system rules. See About NACHA–The
Electronic Payments Association, NACHA The Electronic Payments Association,
https://www.nacha.org/about (last visited June 14, 2018).
There are five parties to an ACH transaction: (1) the Originator (here, the individual
merchant with whom Lossia did business); (2) the Originating Depository Financial Institution,
or ODFI (the merchant’s bank); (3) the ACH Operator (the Federal Reserve); (4) the Receiver
(Lossia); (5) the Receiving Depository Financial Institution, or RDFI (Flagstar).
The term “Receiver” is something of a misnomer because the label does not necessarily
refer to the party who “receives” funds in a given ACH transaction. Instead, the Receiver is the
party who authorizes the Originator to introduce the transaction into the ACH Network—
regardless of whether that transaction will be a credit to or a debit from the Receiver’s account.
See PFG Precious Metals, Inc. v. SunTrust Bank, No. 10 C 7709, 2012 WL 401487, at *1–2
(N.D. Ill. Feb. 7, 2012) (providing an example of an ACH transaction in which the entity who
would receive the funds is the Originator). By providing his account number and routing number
to an online merchant, Lossia authorized the merchant (Originator) to initiate the ACH
transaction.1 Then the merchant’s bank introduced the transaction to the ACH Network by
sending the transaction to the Federal Reserve (the ACH Operator), which in turn forwarded the
transactions to the Receiver’s bank (Flagstar) so that Lossia’s account could be debited.2
1In payroll direct deposits between an employer and an employee, the employee is the Receiver because he
or she authorized the employer (the Originator) to initiate payroll transactions in the ACH Network. The employee
provided this authorization when he or she filled out payroll forms, listing his or her bank account number and
routing number. In a payroll ACH transaction, the transaction is a deposit to the Receiver’s account, while here
Lossia’s transactions were debits from his account. But in both cases, the party who provides his or her bank
account number and routing number, authorizing the Originator to begin the transaction, is the Receiver.
2The district court incorrectly labeled Lossia as the Originator rather than the Receiver. However, the
district court correctly described the sequence of events: the merchants (through their banks) initiated the
No. 17-1468 Lossia v. Flagstar Bancorp, Inc. Page 4
The Agreement states that ACH transactions will be processed “as they occur on their
effective date for the business day on which they are processed.” (Emphasis added). And the
Guidelines define the effective date of an ACH transaction as “the date specified by the
Originator on which it intends a batch of Entries to be settled.” In practice, this date is whatever
date the merchant or merchant’s bank chooses to submit the transaction to the ACH Operator
(the Federal Reserve). The ACH Operator then includes this settlement date in the batch records
that it submits to the RDFI (Flagstar). Finally, Flagstar processes the transactions in the order
that they were presented by the Federal Reserve in the batch files. In other words, Flagstar does
not re-sequence the ACH transactions that it receives from the Federal Reserve.3
The Agreement also states that “[t]here is a combined limit of five Non-Sufficient Funds
Charges per business day.”
b. Lossia’s ACH Transactions
Between Wednesday, February 25 and Saturday, February 28, 2015, Lossia authorized
merchants to initiate a series of ten ACH transactions to be debited from Lossia’s Flagstar
checking account. Each of the relevant transactions was ultimately processed by Flagstar on
Monday, March 2, 2015.4 However, much to Lossia’s chagrin, the transactions were not
processed in the order that he initiated them. Instead, they were processed in the order set forth
below.
transactions by sending them to the Federal Reserve, which in turn forwarded the transactions to Flagstar for
processing.
3Lossia states that he spoke with an assistant manager at his local Flagstar branch on March 2, 2015 who
told him that Flagstar does re-sequence ACH transactions and “typically” posts them in a high-to-low manger, with
the most expensive transactions first. This would result in the greatest number of overdraft fees against a customer.
However, the record evidence demonstrates that the assistant manager was simply incorrect about the bank’s current
method of processing transactions. Prior to 2012, Flagstar’s policy was to reorder ACH transactions from largest to
smallest, but that practice has been discontinued.
4Lossia asserts that he checked his online banking account throughout the day on March 2 and saw that the
order that the transactions were listed as pending was not the order that he initiated the transactions, and that the
listed order changed several times throughout the course of the day. Flagstar concedes that the transactions may be
temporarily displayed in a different order on the customer’s online account than the order that they are ultimately
processed. But because the Deposit Agreement addresses the order in which transactions will be “process[ed],” not
how they are initially displayed, the online display is immaterial to Lossia’s breach-of-contract claim, even if
Flagstar’s online listing could be made much more clear for customers.
No. 17-1468 Lossia v. Flagstar Bancorp, Inc. Page 5
Order that Order that Amount Description
Lossia initiated Flagstar processed
transaction the transaction
1 3 $200 CHASE–EPAY
2 4 $450 USAA.COM PAYMNT ACH PAYMENTS
3 2 $500 AMEX E Payment ER AM – ACH PMT
4 10 $185.71 BARCLAYCARD US – CREDITCARD
5 9 $200 DISCOVER DC PYMNTS DCIINTNET
6 5 $500 CHASE – EPAY
7 6 $200 CHASE – EPAY
8 7 $200 CITI CARD ONLINE – PAYMENT
9 8 $100 DISCOVER DC PYMNTS DCINTNET
10 1 $2,285.00 GOOGLE GOOGLE.COM/CH-WALLET/TOP
Lossia concedes that he did not have sufficient funds in his account to pay for all ten
transactions. However, Lossia argues that had the transactions been processed in the order that
Lossia initiated them, his largest transaction—the $2,285 Google Wallet payment—would have
been processed last rather than first. This would have resulted in Lossia committing just one
overdraft on March 2. Instead, because the largest transaction was processed first, Lossia
initially incurred eight overdraft fees on March 2. The next day, Flagstar manually reversed
three overdraft fees.
c. Procedural History
On October 25, 2016, Lossia filed his third amended complaint, alleging a federal
question under the Fair Credit Reporting Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1681(p), and state-law breach-of-
contract claims. Discovery had begun in November 2015 from previous iterations of the
complaint. Flagstar filed a motion for summary judgment on December 13, 2016, which was
granted by the district court. Lossia timely appealed, challenging the grant of summary judgment
as to his breach-of-contract claims but abandoning his Fair Credit Reporting Act claim.
II
We review de novo the trial court’s grant of summary judgment. Borman, LLC v. 18718
Borman, LLC, 777 F.3d 816, 821 (6th Cir. 2015). Summary judgment will be granted if “there is
no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of
law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). We must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the
No. 17-1468 Lossia v. Flagstar Bancorp, Inc. Page 6
nonmoving party. Latits v. Phillips, 878 F.3d 541, 547 (6th Cir. 2017). But in order to survive a
summary-judgment motion, the non-moving party “must do more than simply show that there is
some metaphysical doubt as to the material facts,” Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co., Ltd. v. Zenith
Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 586 (1986), and the “mere existence of a scintilla of evidence” in
support of the nonmoving party is not enough to demonstrate a genuine issue of material fact.
Anderson v Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 252 (1986).
Under Michigan law, a valid breach-of-contract claim must establish three elements:
(1) the existence of a contract; (2) a breach of that contract; and (3) damages suffered by the
nonbreaching party as a result of the breach. Miller-Davis Co. v. Ahrens Const., Inc.,
817 N.W.2d 609, 619 (Mich. Ct. App. 2012). In interpreting a contract, Michigan law requires
that a contract be construed as a whole, so we must “give effect to every word, phrase, and
clause . . . and avoid an interpretation that would render any part of the contract surplusage or
nugatory.” Klapp v. United Ins. Grp. Agency, Inc., 663 N.W.2d 447, 453 (Mich. 2003).
Lossia raises two separate breach-of-contract claims. First, he argues that Flagstar
breached the Agreement by failing to process his transactions in the order that he initiated them.
Second, Lossia asserts that Flagstar’s initial posting of eight overdraft charges on March 2
violated the Agreement’s cap of five overdraft charges per day.
a. Lossia’s Ordering-of-Transactions Claim
The Agreement states that Flagstar’s policy is to process ACH transactions “first—as
they occur on their effective date for the business day on which they are processed.” (Emphasis
added).
Lossia contends that because “occur” is defined in common parlance to mean “to come
into existence,” that “[a]ny reasonable person” reading the Agreement would conclude that
“occur” means the order that Lossia initiated the transaction. However, Lossia’s ordering-of-
transactions claim runs into two problems.
First, when read in context, the Agreement simply does not say what Lossia wants it to
say. The Agreement states that transactions will be processed as they occur “on their effective
No. 17-1468 Lossia v. Flagstar Bancorp, Inc. Page 7
date,” not necessarily the actual date that each transaction was initiated. And the payment
processing system rules (Guidelines)—validly incorporated into the Agreement—define the
phrase “effective date.” See Forge v. Smith, 580 N.W.2d 876, 881–82 (Mich. 1998) (“Where
one writing references another instrument for additional contract terms, the two writings should
be read together,” and noting that the original writing need not cite the title of the outside
document as long as it “clearly refers for some of its terms to an extraneous document.”)
(internal quotation marks omitted). The Guidelines define the effective date as the “date
specified by the Originator on which it intends a batch of Entries to be settled,” and note that that
date is passed along by the ACH Operator (the Federal Reserve) to the RDFI (here, Flagstar).
Unless Lossia reaches an agreement with the merchant as to when the merchant will send the
transaction to the Federal Reserve, the effective date for that transaction—and similarly, the
order that a customer’s various transactions will reach the RDFI (Flagstar) for processing—will
be dependent on the time and date that the individual merchant chooses to send the transaction to
the Federal Reserve. In short, that someone might initiate a series of ACH transactions in a
particular order, say, settling a brunch debt with a friend using PayPal at noon, paying rent online
at 2:00pm, then making a credit card payment at 5:00pm, does not guarantee that those
transactions will reach the customer’s bank in that order, or even on the same day.
Second, the unrebutted evidence demonstrates that Flagstar followed the terms of the
Agreement in how it processed Lossia’s ACH transactions. Flagstar produced copies of the
batch files that the Federal Reserve sent to Flagstar. Lossia’s relevant ACH transactions were
sent by the Federal Reserve to Flagstar in two waves: several transactions were included in a
9:06 pm Sunday, March 1 transmission and the remaining transactions were sent in a 3:31 am
Monday, March 2 transmission. Lossia’s billing statement confirms that his transactions were
processed precisely in the order that they occur in the Federal Reserve’s batch files, and
deposition testimony and an affidavit prepared by Flagstar confirmed that that is standard
practice. And of course, Lossia makes no argument that Flagstar breached the Agreement by
waiting to process the Sunday evening batch until Monday, since the Agreement notes that
Flagstar will process ACH transactions on “business day[s].”
No. 17-1468 Lossia v. Flagstar Bancorp, Inc. Page 8
To be sure, Flagstar’s ACH processing policy could have been more magnanimous to its
customers. Perhaps Flagstar’s policy could have been to process transactions in the order that
purposeful customers chose to initiate them (though it is unclear whether that information ever
reaches Flagstar). Or Flagstar’s policy could have been to re-order the transactions processed on
a given day in a low-to-high manner, guaranteeing that customers would be charged the fewest
possible number of overdraft fees. Indeed—Flagstar knew how to do such ordering, because it
used to do it in the most customer-unfriendly way possible. Flagstar could have been more like
George Bailey and less like Mr. Potter. 5 But failing to make such a choice does not mean that
Flagstar breached the Agreement. Flagstar processed Lossia’s transactions as they occurred on
their effective date for the business day on which they were processed.
Lossia does not offer any persuasive evidence to the contrary. Instead, Lossia argues that
he was not afforded sufficient discovery to confirm whether Flagstar actually processed Lossia’s
transactions in the order that they were received from the Federal Reserve. However, Flagstar
provided a copy of the batch files sent to Flagstar by the Federal Reserve, Lossia’s end-of-month
statement confirms that the transactions were processed in the same order as they were presented
in those batch files, and Flagstar provided deposition and affidavit testimony that the bank
automatically processes ACH transactions in exactly the manner that they are received in the
batch files. In response, Lossia relied on testimony from two banking experts who merely
opined that merchants generally submit their transactions as quickly as possible to the Federal
Reserve. This may be true as a general matter, but it says nothing about the practice of these
specific merchants on these particular transactions, nor does it undermine the accuracy of the
batch files that Flagstar presented. In response to overwhelming evidence submitted by Flagstar,
Lossia needed to do more than assert that there was “some metaphysical doubt as to the material
facts.” Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co., Ltd., 475 U.S. at 586.
Lossia also asserts that deposition testimony from Flagstar’s corporate designee that
described Flagstar’s ACH processing method was inadmissible hearsay. But Lossia’s argument
is unpersuasive for several reasons. First, as a threshold matter, the relevant portions of the
corporate designee’s deposition did not delve into any actual hearsay statements. Instead, she
5See IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE (Liberty Films 1946).
No. 17-1468 Lossia v. Flagstar Bancorp, Inc. Page 9
relayed her knowledge of the processing system that she had obtained, in part, from speaking
with other Flagstar employees. But more significantly, even if the relevant portion of her
deposition testimony included hearsay statements that would themselves be inadmissible in their
current form, evidence considered at the summary judgment stage need not be “in a form that
would be admissible at trial,” as long as the evidence could ultimately be presented in an
admissible form. Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 324 (1986); see Fed. R. Civ. P.
56(c)(2) (noting that the nonmoving party may object to the moving party’s summary judgment
evidence if it “cannot” be presented in a form that would ultimately be admissible). After all, the
use of a corporate designee under Fed. R. Civ. P. 30(b)(6) is for the convenience of the parties
for expeditious discovery and does not preclude Flagstar from calling multiple employee
witnesses at trial who would have first-hand knowledge of the bank’s ACH processing protocol.
Absent some suggestion to the contrary, it is reasonable to expect that these employees would
provide materially the same testimony that the corporate designee summarized in her deposition.
Finally, the corporate designee’s testimony on this point merely confirmed the evidence
contained in the batch files that Flagstar produced, which themselves would fall under the
business-records exception to the rule against hearsay. See Fed. R. Evid. 803(6).
There is no genuine dispute as to any material fact on Lossia’s ordering-of-transactions
claim.6
b. Lossia’s Overdraft-Fees Claim
Lossia also argues that Flagstar breached the Agreement by initially imposing eight
overdraft fees on March 2. The Agreement states that “[t]here is a combined limit of five Non-
Sufficient Funds Charges per business day.” But Flagstar provided unrebutted evidence that
Flagstar’s computer system is programmed to generate a list of customers who have had more
than five overdraft fees assessed in a day. Flagstar then manually reverses these additional fees
for all affected customers the next business day. And that is precisely what occurred here. Thus,
Lossia was not in fact required to pay more than five overdraft “charges,” so there was no
6Inso holding, we decline to decide whether Lossia’s ordering-of-transactions claim is separately barred by
the settlement reached in a class-action suit, of which Lossia was not a class member. See Faris v Flagstar Bank,
FSB, Oakland County, Michigan, Circuit Court Case No. 15-145287-CZ (Nov. 16, 2016).
No. 17-1468 Lossia v. Flagstar Bancorp, Inc. Page 10
breach. And even if we were to construe this initial posting of eight fees as a breach of the
Agreement, the next-business-day reversal eliminated Lossia’s damages, preventing Lossia from
establishing another element necessary for a breach-of-contract claim. See Miller-Davis Co.,
817 N.W.2d at 619.
Lossia attempts to sidestep this fact by arguing that not all prospective class members
may have had their charges reversed. After all, Lossia reasons, because Flagstar’s policy is to
manually reverse the excess charges, it is possible that some prospective class members may
have slipped through the cracks and not had their charges reversed. Thus, Lossia seeks class-
wide discovery to see whether other persons may not have had their charges reversed. But “[a]s
[the Supreme Court] has repeatedly held, a class representative must be part of the class and
possess the same interest and suffer the same injury as the class members.” E. Tex. Motor
Freight Sys. Inc. v. Rodriguez, 431 U.S. 395, 403 (1977) (internal quotation marks omitted).
Because neither Lossia nor his fellow plaintiff suffered any damages on this claim, they cannot
be valid class representatives to pursue it.
There is no genuine dispute as to any material fact on Lossia’s overdraft-fees claim.
III
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment to
Flagstar.