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[PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
________________________
No. 19-10474
________________________
D.C. Docket No. 9:18-cv-80864-DMM
STEVEN J. PINCUS,
an individual, on behalf of himself and all others similarly situated,
Plaintiff - Appellant,
versus
AMERICAN TRAFFIC SOLUTIONS, INC,
a Kansas corporation,
Defendant - Appellee.
________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Florida
________________________
(February 2, 2021)
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Before ROSENBAUM, JILL PRYOR and BRANCH, Circuit Judges.
JILL PRYOR, Circuit Judge:
Steven Pincus appeals the district court’s dismissal of his complaint for
failure to state a claim. Pincus sued American Traffic Solutions, Inc. (“ATS”), a
red light camera vendor, alleging three counts of unjust enrichment after ATS
charged Pincus a fee for processing his payment of a traffic ticket issued through
an ATS red light photo enforcement system used in the City of North Miami
Beach. On appeal, Pincus argues that the district court erred in dismissing his
complaint because (1) the fee ATS charged him was an illegal commission under
Florida Statutes § 316.0083(b)(4); (2) the fee was a prohibited surcharge under
§ 318.121; and (3) ATS violated § 560.204(1) because it operated as an unlicensed
money transmitter, all violations that he contends support a claim for unjust
enrichment under Florida law.1
Each count of Pincus’s unjust enrichment claim turns on the proper
application of Florida statutory and common law.2 After careful review, we find
1
For the first time on appeal, Pincus argues that ATS’s imposition of the challenged fee
is also illegal based on a preemption theory, that the fee renders the sanction for Pincus’s traffic
violation “more severe than that imposed by [state] statute.” See Appellant’s Br. at 17–19.
Because Pincus did not raise this theory of conflict preemption below, we do not consider it here.
See Access Now, Inc. v. Sw. Airlines Co., 385 F.3d 1324, 1331 (11th Cir. 2004) (“An issue not
raised in the district court and raised for the first time in an appeal will not be considered by this
court.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
2
In his complaint, Pincus alleged one cause of action—unjust enrichment—that was set
forth in three different counts, each of which corresponded to one of Pincus’s theories of unjust
2
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an absence of guiding precedent on these questions of state law—questions that
may have sweeping implications for dozens of municipal traffic enforcement
regimes across Florida 3 and for the development of Florida’s common law. We
therefore certify the questions presented here to the Supreme Court of Florida—the
“ultimate expositor[]”—of Florida law. Mullaney v. Wilbur, 421 U.S. 684, 691
(1975).
I. BACKGROUND
ATS was the exclusive vendor for the City of North Miami Beach’s red light
photo enforcement program.4 Under its agreement with the City, ATS installed
and maintained the necessary equipment, including cameras to capture images of
motorists running red lights; monitored intersections for red light violations; issued
and mailed citations to violators; and processed violators’ payments of civil
penalties. ATS received a monthly service fee based on the number of cameras it
operated. In addition to the monthly fee, the agreement permitted ATS “to charge,
enrichment. For simplicity, we refer to Pincus’s various theories as “counts” of his unjust
enrichment “claim.”
3
See Florida Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles, Red Light Camera Summary Report 6
(2019), https://www.flhsmv.gov/pdf/cabinetreports/redlightcameraanalysis2019.pdf (reporting
that all 46 jurisdictions disclosing use of operational red light cameras between July 1, 2018 and
June 20, 2019 contracted with red light camera vendors and 65% of those jurisdictions
contracted with ATS).
4
The Supreme Court of Florida has held that these relationships—between Florida’s
cities and red light camera vendors—are permissible so long as a traffic enforcement officer
ultimately determines whether probable cause exists to issue traffic citations. See Jimenez v.
State, 246 So. 3d 219 (Fla. 2018).
3
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collect and retain a convenience fee of up to 5% of the total dollar amount of each
electronic payment processed” to be “paid by the violator.” Doc. 50-1 at 102.5
An ATS camera in North Miami Beach captured an image of Pincus’s
vehicle running a red light. Shortly afterward, Pincus received in the mail a Notice
of Violation from the City. 6 The notice informed Pincus that he was required to
pay a “statutory penalty” of $158.00. Doc. 50-2. The notice instructed Pincus that
he could pay the penalty online, by phone, or by mail using a check or money
order. According to the notice, the first two options required violators to pay a
“convenience/service fee for this service.” Doc. 50-2 at 3. In effect, ATS charged
a fee for the privilege of paying by credit card. Pincus could avoid the fee only if
he paid his penalty by mail using a check or money order. He paid the penalty
online with a credit card. The fee Pincus paid as a result of using his credit card
totaled $7.90—five percent of his $158.00 penalty. After paying the fee, Pincus
filed this putative class action in the United States District Court for the Southern
District of Florida, alleging three counts of unjust enrichment based on violations
of Florida Statutes §§ 316.0083(b)(4), 318.121, and 560.204.
5
“Doc.” numbers refer to the district court’s docket entries.
6
ATS sent the notice on the City’s behalf.
4
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ATS filed a motion to dismiss these counts, arguing that under Federal Rule
of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) Pincus failed to state a claim for relief. 7 The district
court granted the motion to dismiss on the ground that Pincus failed to state a claim
for unjust enrichment under Florida law. The district court reasoned that Pincus
failed to state a claim because: (1) the challenged fee was not a “commission”
within the meaning of § 316.0083; (2) the fee was not barred as a surcharge under
§ 318.121, as it was assessed exclusively under Chapter 316; and (3) a private
cause of action for unjust enrichment could not be maintained under § 560.240.
This appeal followed.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review de novo the district court’s grant of a motion to dismiss for
failure to state a claim, accepting the allegations in the complaint as true and
construing them in the light most favorable to the plaintiff. Hunt v. Aimco Props.,
7
ATS also moved to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) on the
ground that Pincus lacked standing to sue. The district court rejected this ground, and ATS has
not raised the issue on appeal. Nevertheless, “we must assure ourselves that we have jurisdiction
to hear the case before us,” an inquiry encompassing standing. Resnick v. AvMed, Inc., 693 F.3d
1317, 1323 (11th Cir. 2012). To satisfy the standing requirement, a “plaintiff must have
(1) suffered an injury in fact, (2) that is fairly traceable to the challenged conduct of the
defendant, and (3) that is likely to be redressed by a favorable judicial decision.” Spokeo, Inc. v.
Robins, 136 S. Ct. 1540, 1547 (2016). Pincus satisfied those requirements in this case. Financial
loss like Pincus’s is a paradigmatic example of an injury in fact that is redressable by a favorable
judicial decision. See Muransky v. Godiva Chocolatier, Inc., 979 F.3d 917, 926 (11th Cir. 2020)
(en banc). His injury is also fairly traceable to ATS, even though he elected to pay the penalty
by credit card. See Resnick, 693 F.3d at 1324 (explaining that the fairly traceable requirement
demands “less than a showing of proximate cause” and is satisfied when a defendant “indirectly
cause[s]” a plaintiff’s injury (internal quotation marks omitted)).
5
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L.P., 814 F.3d 1213, 1221 (11th Cir. 2016). To withstand a motion to dismiss
under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), a complaint must include “enough
facts to state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.” Bell Atl. Corp. v.
Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 570 (2007).
In this diversity case we must apply Florida law and decide issues of state
law “the way it appears the state’s highest court would.” Ernie Haire Ford, Inc. v.
Ford Motor Co., 260 F.3d 1285, 1290 (11th Cir. 2001) (internal quotation marks
omitted). On state law issues, we are “bound by the decisions of the state supreme
court.” World Harvest Church, Inc. v. Guideone Mut. Ins. Co., 586 F.3d 950, 957
(11th Cir. 2009). When the state’s highest court has not spoken to an issue, we
must adhere to the decisions of the state’s intermediate appellate courts addressing
it, “absent some persuasive indication that the state’s highest court would decide
the issue otherwise.” Ernie Haire Ford, 260 F.3d at 1290 (internal quotation
marks omitted). We are also bound by previous decisions of this Court on the
issue. See Venn v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 99 F.3d 1058, 1066 (11th Cir.
1996). But if subsequent decisions of “the Florida courts cast doubt on our [prior]
interpretation[s] of state law,” we should “reinterpret state law in light of the new
precedents.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
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III. DISCUSSION
This appeal raises three questions of Florida statutory law and two questions
of Florida common law that warrant certification to the Supreme Court of Florida.
The statutory interpretation questions arise because each count of Pincus’s unjust
enrichment claim was premised on an alleged violation of a different Florida
statute. The common law questions concern the scope of Florida’s unjust
enrichment cause of action and therefore affect each of Pincus’s counts identically.
Put differently, for Pincus to prevail on any of his counts, he must prevail on the
statutory interpretation issue underlying that count and the two common law
issues.
The statutory interpretation issues stem from the third element of Florida’s
unjust enrichment cause of action. 8 The third element of unjust enrichment under
Florida law is that “it would be inequitable for the defendant to retain the benefit
without first paying the value thereof to the plaintiff.” Agritrade, LP v. Quercia,
253 So. 3d 28, 33 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2017) (internal quotation marks omitted).
Pincus alleged this element was satisfied for each of his counts because it was
“inequitable” for ATS to collect and retain his fee in violation of three Florida
8
There is no dispute that Pincus satisfied the first two elements of unjust enrichment for
each count. Those elements are: (1) the plaintiff “conferred a benefit on the defendant, who has
knowledge thereof,” and (2) the defendant “voluntarily accept[ed] and retain[ed] the benefit
conferred.” Agritrade, LP v. Quercia, 253 So. 3d 28, 33 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2017) (internal
quotation marks omitted).
7
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statutes: §§ 316.0083 (Count I), 318.121 (Count II); and 560.204 (Count III).
Thus, the third element of each of Pincus’s unjust enrichment counts turns on the
proper interpretation of a different Florida statute.
All three counts also turn on issues of Florida common law. Even if Pincus
sufficiently alleged a statutory violation supporting each count, those counts can
survive a motion to dismiss only if they are not barred by Florida’s law of unjust
enrichment, which raises two open questions. First, does Florida law allow unjust
enrichment actions premised on violations of statutes that supply no private right
of action? Second, under Florida law was Pincus’s unjust enrichment claim
precluded because Pincus received adequate consideration in exchange for the fee?
We address each of the statutory interpretation issues before turning to the
common law issues.
A. Alleged Statutory Violations
To prevail on each of his three unjust enrichment counts, Pincus must
demonstrate that ATS violated the Florida statute underlying that count. Because
the alleged statutory violations raise unanswered questions of statutory
interpretation whose resolution may affect municipal traffic enforcement regimes
across Florida, we certify those questions to the Supreme Court of Florida.
8
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1. Count I: Violation of Fla. Stat. § 316.0083
In Count I, Pincus alleged that ATS’s retention of the fee he paid was
inequitable because the fee was an illegal commission prohibited by
§ 316.0083(1)(b)(4). Section 316.0083(1)(b)(4) provides:
An individual may not receive a commission from any revenue
collected from violations detected through the use of a traffic infraction
detector. A manufacturer or vendor may not receive a fee or
remuneration based upon the number of violations detected through the
use of a traffic infraction detector.
Fla. Stat. § 316.0083(1)(b)(4). 9 The district court dismissed this count after
interpreting the statutory term “commission,” concluding that the challenged fee
was not prohibited because § 316.0083(1)(b)(4) bars only “commission[s] derived
from the [statutory penalty],” not “surcharge[s]” that rest atop that penalty. Doc.
44 at 10–11. To reach this conclusion, the district court reasoned that the
distinction between commissions and surcharges is not foreign to the Florida
Legislature, which chose to prohibit surcharges elsewhere in the traffic laws. Id. at
11 (citing Fla. Stat. § 318.121). Because ATS took no cut of Pincus’s statutory
penalty but rather charged him a fee in excess of that penalty, the district court
concluded that ATS did not violate § 316.0083(1)(b)(4).
9
Pincus also argues that his fee was a prohibited commission under another statute,
§ 318.18(15)(d). Because that argument is indistinct from Pincus’s argument that the fee is a
prohibited commission under § 316.0083(1)(b)(4), we do not address it separately.
9
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ATS agrees, adding only that the district court’s conclusion is supported by
the preceding subsection, which specifically allocates each dollar of the $158.00
penalty to various funds. See Fla. Stat. § 316.0083(1)(b)(3) (providing for a
specific allocation of the $158.00 penalty across different departments and funds);
ATS argues that the allocation provision explains why commissions taken from the
penalty are barred: each dollar of the $158.00 penalty is already spoken for. Thus,
ATS contends, the allocation provision supports the district court’s distinction
between “commissions” and “surcharges.”
ATS’s argument is premised on its interpretation of the word “revenue” in
the statute to refer to the $158.00 penalty rather than the entire sum collected by
ATS. See Fla. Stat. § 316.0083(1)(b)(4) (“An individual may not receive a
commission from any revenue collected from violations . . .” (emphasis added)).
Pincus attacks that premise. He argues that “revenue” refers instead to the entire
sum collected by ATS (the penalty plus the fee); therefore, ATS’s argument that
the challenged fee cannot constitute a “commission” because it was not taken
“from” the revenue collapses, because the fee was taken from the entire sum of
money Pincus paid. Thus, Pincus argues that ATS’s fee was a “commission”
because the fee is a cut of the total “revenue collected from violations [like
Pincus’s].” Fla. Stat. § 316.0083(1)(b)(4).
10
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To prevail with this argument, Pincus must show that the word “revenue” in
the statute refers to the entire sum collected by ATS. For that proposition, he
offers two arguments. First, he relies on dictionary definitions of “revenue”
illustrating that the term is generally used to refer to “total” or “gross” income.
See, e.g., Revenue, Merriam–Webster Unabridged Online Dictionary,
https://unabridged.merriam-webster.com/unabridged/revenue (last visited February
2, 2021) (“[T]he total income produced by a given source.”). Second, he argues
that the language surrounding “revenue” in § 316.0083(1)(b)(4) supports his
interpretation. He contends that because “any” precedes “revenue,” we should
construe “revenue” broadly. See Fla. Stat. § 316.0083(1)(b)(4) (“An individual
may not receive a commission from any revenue collected.” (emphasis added));
Appellant’s Reply Br. at 2 (“The statute does not prohibit commissions from ‘some
revenue,’ or from [the] ‘civil penalty revenue’” but “from any revenue.”).
So, both parties maintain that the text of the statute supports their respective
positions about whether the fee charged by ATS qualified as a “commission” for
purposes of § 316.0083. After careful review, we could find no decision from the
Supreme Court of Florida, any Florida appellate court, or this Court answering
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whether the fee that ATS collected qualified as a “commission” for purposes of
this provision.10
2. Count II: Violation of Fla. Stat § 318.121
In Count II, Pincus alleged that ATS was unjustly enriched because its
collection of the fee he paid violated § 318.121. Section 318.121 provides:
Notwithstanding any general or special law, or municipal or county
ordinance, additional fees, fines, surcharges, or costs other than the
court costs and surcharges assessed under s. 318.18(11), (13), (18),
(19), and (22) may not be added to the civil traffic penalties assessed
under this chapter.
Fla. Stat. § 318.121. ATS does not dispute that the challenged fee was a
“surcharge” within the meaning of this provision. Nor does ATS argue that any of
the five exceptions to § 318.121’s no-surcharge rule apply to the challenged fee.
Rather, ATS argues that § 318.121’s surcharge prohibition does not apply here at
all because the prohibition applies only to “penalties assessed under this chapter,”
and Pincus’s penalty was assessed under Chapter 316, not Chapter 318.
Explaining ATS’s argument requires us to place Chapters 316 and 318 in the
context of Florida’s Motor Vehicle Code. See Fla. Stat. Ch. 316–324. Chapter
316, entitled the “Florida Uniform Traffic Control Law,” provides for “uniform
10
As the district court recognized, even if Pincus demonstrates that the challenged fee
was a “commission” from the “revenue collected [from his violation],” he must also demonstrate
that ATS is an “individual” regulated by the statute. See Doc. 44 at 11 n.4. The district court did
not rule on that question, and we leave it to the Supreme Court of Florida to assess whether and
how to address it.
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traffic laws” that apply throughout the state. See Fla. Stat. §§ 316.001, 316.002.
Chapter 318, entitled the “Florida Uniform Disposition of Traffic Infractions Act,”
provides for the “implementation of a more uniform and expeditious system for the
disposition of traffic infractions.” Id. §§ 318.11, 318.12. In 2010, the Florida
legislature amended both chapters to enable local governments to operate red light
camera enforcement systems on their roadways. See Mark Wandall Traffic Safety
Act, 2010 Fla. Sess. Law. Serv. Ch. 2010-80 (West). As amended, Chapter 316
provides that the penalty to be assessed for such an infraction is $158.00. See Fla.
Stat. § 316.0083(1)(b)(3)(a) (providing for the penalty and allocation of its revenue
when enforced by a state officer), 316.0083(1)(b)(3)(b) (providing for the penalty
and allocation of its revenue when enforced by a county or municipal officer).
The difficulty is that, as amended, Chapter 318 includes a pair of
functionally identical provisions. See id. §§ 318.18(15)(a)(2) (providing for the
same penalty and allocation as § 316.0083(1)(b)(3)(a), albeit in a rearranged
order), 318.18(15)(a)(3) (providing for the same penalty and allocation as
§ 316.0083(1)(b)(3)(b), albeit in a rearranged order). And it may matter which
provision gave rise to Pincus’s penalty because § 318.121’s surcharge prohibition
applies only to “penalties assessed under [Chapter 318].” Id. § 318.121. Pincus
argues that his penalty was assessed under the penalty provision of Chapter 318.
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ATS argues that the penalty was assessed under the similar provision in Chapter
316.
The district court sided with ATS. The court concluded that § 318.121’s
surcharge prohibition has no application here because Pincus’s penalty was not
“assessed under” Chapter 318. Doc. 44 at 12. This conclusion followed from the
district court’s determination that the “[t]he entire statutory scheme on which
[ATS’s] enforcement operation rests is contained in Chapter 316.” Chapter 316:
(1) authorizes counties and municipalities to use “traffic infraction detectors,”
(2) permits government entities to authorize traffic infraction enforcement officers,
(3) authorizes those officers to issue citations, (4) sets out the requirements for the
notice that Pincus received, and (5) establishes the $158.00 fine for a driver’s
“fail[ure] to stop at a traffic signal if enforcement is by a county or municipal
traffic infraction enforcement officer.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
Pincus contests this conclusion with four arguments. First, he argues that his
penalty was assessed under Chapter 318 because in the framework of the Florida
Motor Vehicle Code, Chapter 316 sets down prohibitions that are enforced by
Chapter 318. Second, he contends that the language of § 318.121 itself
demonstrates that the provision’s no-surcharge rule applies to his penalty. Third,
he argues that Chapters 316 and 318 are so “thoroughly interrelated” that the
district court erred by concluding that his penalty was assessed under one rather
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than the other. Appellant’s Br. at 24. Fourth, he argues that the absurdity canon
requires us to find that Chapter 318’s no-surcharge rule applies to his penalty.
Pincus’s first argument, that his penalty was assessed under Chapter 318, is
based on the relationship of the two chapters. He contends that Chapter 316 “sets
forth the rules of the road pertaining to photo-enforced red lights, while Chapter
318 contains the provisions relating to infractions and civil penalties.” Id. He
points to the fact that § 316.0083(1)(a) authorizes traffic enforcement officers to
issue citations for violations of § 316.074(1), which requires drivers to obey the
commands of “any official traffic control device,” and § 318.18 provides for
penalties “for a violation of § 316.074(1).” Fla. Stat. §§ 316.0083(1)(a),
316.074(1), 318.18(15)(a)(1). Pincus maintains that his violation of § 316.074(1)
was assessed under § 318.18, and therefore § 318.121’s no-surcharge rule applies.
Pincus’s second argument focuses on the text of the provision setting forth
the no-surcharge rule itself. He points out that § 318.121 exempts from its no-
surcharge rule costs imposed under five subsections. See id. § 318.121 (barring
“additional fees, fines, surcharges, or costs other than the court costs and
surcharges assessed under s. 318.18(11), (13), (18), (19), and (22)” (emphasis
added)). The last of these exceptions, for § 318.18(22), is relevant here. That
subsection provides:
In addition to the penalty prescribed under s. 316.0083 for violations
enforced under s. 316.0083 which are upheld, the local hearing officer
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may also order the payment of county or municipal costs, not to exceed
$250.
Id. § 318.18(22). Section 318.121, then, carves out only one exception to its
surcharge prohibition for penalties prescribed under § 316.0083—a payment of
municipal costs ordered by a local hearing officer. And that exception does not
apply to ATS’s fee. Pincus contends that § 318.121’s exception for § 318.18(22)
furthers his argument in two ways: (1) it demonstrates that, in general, § 318.121’s
no-surcharge rule applies to penalties enforced under § 316.0083, and (2) it shows
that, in the context of photo-enforced red light penalties, the Florida legislature
exempted only one type of additional fee from § 318.121’s general ban on
surcharges—and it is not the type of fee at issue here.
Third, Pincus argues that the chapters are “so deeply interrelated” that they
cannot be disentangled, and so, according to “any reasonable interpretation of
those words,” the district court erred in concluding that Pincus’s penalty was not
“assessed under” Chapter 318. Appellant’s Br. at 14, 26; see Doc. 44 at 11–13
(district court concluding that § 318.18(15)(a)(2) was “at most, a parallel cross-
reference” to the civil traffic penalty assessed under Chapter 316). In making this
argument, Pincus points out that both chapters are mere constituent parts of the
Florida Motor Vehicle Code. See Fla. Stat. § Ch. 316–324. He contends that the
district court’s interpretation of “assessed under,” which is tantamount to assessed
exclusively under, was not based on authority and is unreasonable. According to
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Pincus, when the chapters are read in context, with their division of labor in mind,
they require the conclusion that his penalty was to some extent “assessed under”
Chapter 318, which is all that is required for § 318.121 to bar ATS’s surcharge.
Fourth, Pincus resorts to the absurdity canon. He argues that if the district
court is correct that his penalty is not subject to § 318.121’s no-surcharge rule, then
“a local government or its vendors [could] impose literally any surcharge in
connection with a civil penalty, inflating the $158.00 statutory penalty by any
amount,” thereby “render[ing] the statutory sum meaningless.” Appellant’s Br. at
27.
ATS counters Pincus’s arguments by rejecting the view that the Florida
Motor Vehicle Act creates a dichotomy between rules, set forth in Chapter 316,
and penalties, set forth in Chapter 318. ATS then points to provisions in both
chapters suggesting that Pincus’s penalty was assessed under Chapter 316.
To rebut Pincus’s contention that Chapter 316 sets forth rules and Chapter
318 sets forth penalties for photo-enforced red light infractions, ATS points out
that traffic enforcement officers may issue traffic citations through Chapter 318 or
Chapter 316 and thus that enforcement may occur through either chapter. See Fla.
Stat. § 316.640(5)(a) (providing that traffic infraction enforcement officers may
issue citations for noncriminal traffic offenses “as defined in s. 318.14” or “under
s. 316.0083”). Then, ATS argues that the plain language of Chapters 316 and 318
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demonstrates that Pincus’s penalty was assessed under Chapter 316. For example,
§ 316.0083(5)(e) provides that if a Notice of Violation is upheld after a hearing,
the violator must “pay the penalty previously assessed under [Chapter 316].” Id.
§ 316.0083(5)(e) (emphasis added). And § 316.00831 provides for the allocation
of a collected penalty when a municipality “impose[s] a penalty under
s. 316.0083(1)(b).” Id. § 316.00831 (emphasis added). According to ATS,
Chapter 318 similarly suggests that Pincus’s penalty was assessed under Chapter
316. See id. § 318.18(22) (“In addition to the penalty prescribed under
s. 316.0083 for violations enforced under [§] 316.0083 . . . .” (emphasis added)).
ATS argues that these provisions are rendered a dead letter if Pincus is correct that
his penalty was assessed under Chapter 318.
In sum, each party presents reasonable arguments as to whether Pincus’s
penalty was assessed under Chapter 318 and thus whether § 318.121’s surcharge
ban applies. After careful review, we could find no decision from the Supreme
Court of Florida, any Florida appellate court, or this Court answering whether
Pincus’s penalty was assessed under Chapter 318 for purposes of § 318.121.
3. Count III: Violation of Fla. Stat. § 560.204
In Count III, Pincus alleged that ATS was unjustly enriched by his fee
because, in collecting it, ATS violated § 560.204(1). Section 560.204(1) provides:
Unless exempted, a person may not engage in, or in any manner
advertise that they engage in, the selling or issuing of payment
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instruments or in the activity of a money transmitter, for compensation,
without first obtaining a license under this part. For purposes of this
section, “compensation” includes profit or loss on the exchange of
currency.
Fla. Stat. § 560.204(1). The parties dispute whether ATS is exempt from this
statute’s licensing requirement, and, if not, whether ATS is a “money transmitter”
who must “obtain[] a license.”11 Id.
ATS argues that it did not violate § 560.204 for two reasons. First, ATS
points out that “political subdivision[s],” including cities, are exempt from all
provisions of Chapter 560, including § 560.204’s licensing requirement. See id. §§
560.204(1) (requiring licensure unless an exemption exists), 560.104(3)
(exempting “political subdivision[s]” of the state from Chapter 560), 1.01(8)
(including cities as “political subdivision[s]”). From there, ATS contends that it
enjoys the same exemption as the City because it is the “exclusive vendor for the
City,” it “operates pursuant to a contract that controls the services ATS provides to
the City,” and “Pincus’[s] theory is that ATS is an agent of the City.” Appellee’s
Br. at 27. For his part, Pincus responds that ATS’s status as an “agent of the City”
11
The district court, without ruling on whether ATS violated § 560.204(1), concluded
that § 560.204(1) “cannot serve as the basis for a common law unjust enrichment claim.” Doc.
44 at 17. Because that conclusion implicates issues of Florida unjust enrichment law, rather than
the proper interpretation of Fla. Stat. § 560.204(1), we address the district court’s conclusion on
this point below.
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does not transform it into a “political subdivision” that is exempt from § 560.204’s
licensing requirement. Reply Br. at 12.
Second, ATS argues that even if it cannot avail itself of the City’s
exemption, it nevertheless did not violate § 560.204 because it is not a “money
transmitter” that “receive[s]” currency “for the purpose of transmitting it.”
Appellee’s Br. at 27 (citing Pincus v. Speedway, Inc., 741 Fed. App’x 720, 721
(11th Cir. 2018) (unpublished)). To show that ATS is not a “money transmitter”
under the statute, ATS again seeks to use Pincus’s own words against him. ATS
argues that it is “impossible for [ATS] to receive [the penalty] for the purpose of
transmitting it to the City” because, according to Pincus’s own characterization of
the transaction, “the City has appointed ATS to fill this role as if it were a division
of the City itself.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). ATS adds that, Pincus’s
characterizations aside, “receipt by ATS constitutes receipt by the City” under
Florida law because when an “agent holds property on behalf of a principal, the
principal has constructive possession.” Id. (citing Phan v. Deutsche Bank Nat’l Tr.
Co., 198 So. 3d 744, 748 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2016)). Pincus’s response to this
argument—that ATS is not a “money transmitter” because it does not “receive”
currency “for the purpose of transmitting it”—is straightforward: Just because
ATS is the City’s agent does not mean that ATS did not receive Pincus’s penalty
for the purpose of transmitting it to the City. Reply Br. at 12.
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So, the parties dispute whether ATS acted as an unlicensed money
transmitter in violation of § 560.204. As with the first two statutory interpretation
issues, after careful review, we could find no decision from the Supreme Court of
Florida, any Florida appellate court, or this Court answering whether ATS’s
conduct was prohibited by § 560.204.
B. Common Law
Even if ATS’s collection of the fee violated a Florida statute, ATS argues,
Pincus nonetheless failed to state a claim for relief for two additional reasons based
on Florida’s common law: (1) a plaintiff may not assert an unjust enrichment
claim based on a statutory violation when the statute does not set forth a private
right of action, and (2) Pincus received adequate consideration in exchange for the
fee, meaning there was no inequity. We turn now to those issues.
1. Private Right of Action
We first examine whether, under Florida common law, a plaintiff may allege
unjust enrichment based on the violation of a statute that provides no private right
of action. 12 The district court addressed this issue, though only with respect to
ATS’s alleged violation of § 560.204, so we start there.
12
Pincus did not allege, and has never argued, that he could bring his counts directly
under the Florida statutes at issue, and we have found nothing to suggest that he could have.
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The district court concluded that § 560.204(1), which outlaws unlicensed
money transmitters, “cannot serve as a basis for a common law unjust enrichment
claim.” Doc. 44 at 17. The district court came to that conclusion after reviewing
Eleventh Circuit cases considering whether Florida law permits a plaintiff to state a
claim for unjust enrichment based on the violation of a statute that provides no
private right of action. Id. at 13–17 (citing State Farm Fire & Cas. Co. v. Silver
Star Health & Rehab, 739 F.3d 579 (11th Cir. 2013); Buell v. Direct Gen. Ins.
Agency, Inc., 267 F. App’x 907 (11th Cir. 2008) (unpublished)).
In Silver Star, the published case the district court discussed, we held that an
unjust enrichment claim could be grounded on a violation of a Florida statute that
provided no private right of action. In that case, State Farm sought to recover
payments made to a health clinic on behalf of its insureds who were patients of the
clinic. 739 F.3d at 582. State Farm sued the clinic for unjust enrichment
stemming from the clinic’s violation of the Florida Health Care Clinic Act. Id.
The clinic, State Farm contended, concealed its true owners to take advantage of an
exception to the Act’s licensing requirements. Id. The clinic argued, among other
things, that Florida law provided State Farm with no judicial remedy to enforce a
violation of the Act. Id. at 583. We disagreed. Looking to the Act, we concluded
that “[a]lthough the Act [did] not expressly refer to a judicial remedy,” it did
provide that reimbursement claims were “unlawful,” and therefore
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“noncompensable” and “unenforceable,” if they were made by clinics that were
unlicensed without a valid excuse. Id. (quoting Fla. Stat. § 400.9935(3)). Because
of this language, even though the Act did not provide a private right of action,
State Farm was “entitled to seek a judicial remedy” to recover the payments it
made to the clinic. Id. at 584.
The district court also discussed Buell, an unpublished and therefore
nonbinding case decided before Silver Star, in which we reached the opposite
result. In that case, we considered a claim that an insurance company had engaged
in the sale of insurance through unlicensed agents and deceptive trade practices
prohibited by the Florida Unfair Insurance Trade Practices Act (“FUITPA”).
Buell, 267 F. App’x at 908–09. The plaintiffs asserted common law claims for
“money had and received” 13 and recission based on the insurer’s unlawful activity,
even though the plaintiffs conceded that FUITPA included no private right of
action and Florida law expressly provided that an insurance contract is not invalid
merely because it was sold by an unlicensed agent. Id. at 909. We held that the
plaintiffs’ claims failed because (1) permitting their common law claims based on
statutory violations would “evade the Florida Legislature’s decision to withhold” a
13
Under Florida law, “money had and received” is synonymous with unjust enrichment
and restitution. See Kelly v. Palmer, Reifler & Assocs., P.A., 681 F. Supp. 2d 1356, 1384 (S.D.
Fla. 2010).
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private right of action, and (2) Florida law did not render the plaintiffs’ insurance
contracts unenforceable. Id. at 909–10.
The district court attempted to harmonize Silver Star and Buell, announcing
what it took to be the controlling rule: When the statutory scheme “indicates intent
to restrict a private right of action, as in Buell,” plaintiffs should not be permitted
to “evade the Legislature’s decision” not to provide a private right of action; but
when the scheme “opens a door for plaintiffs to assert their rights, [like] in Silver
Star,” common law claims may proceed even when premised on statutory
violations. Doc. 44 at 16–17 (internal quotation marks omitted). Applying that
rule to § 560.204, the district court dismissed Pincus’s count under Chapter 560
because the chapter provides only for administrative enforcement of its provisions.
See Fla. Stat. § 560.116 (providing that “[a]ny person having reason to believe that
a provision of this chapter is being violated, has been violated, or is about to be
violated, may file a complaint with the [Financial Services Commission’s Office of
Financial Regulation]”). The court noted that nowhere does Chapter 560 suggest
that a violation of § 560.204 may serve as a basis for a common law unjust
enrichment claim.
Pincus resists the district court’s reading of our cases, arguing that the
language of § 560.204 opens the door to an unjust enrichment action for him just
as the statutory language in Silver Star did for State Farm. He contends that the
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Florida Health Care Clinic Act’s treatment of claims made by wrongfully
unlicensed clinics as “unlawful,” “noncompensable,” and “unenforceable” is
analogous to § 560.204’s dictate that unlicensed money transmitters may not
operate “for compensation.” Thus, Pincus argues, by operating “for
compensation,” ATS made an unlawful, unenforceable transaction that can support
an unjust enrichment action.
We reiterate that each count of Pincus’s unjust enrichment claim—not just
his count based on § 560.204—raises the issue of whether plaintiffs may assert
unjust enrichment based on statutory violations with no private right of action.
Like § 560.204, neither § 316.0083 nor § 318.121 establishes a private right of
action for a violation. The parties do not directly address whether all of Pincus’s
counts fail for want of a private right of action, but they have pointed us toward
authorities that arguably support their respective positions. We review these
authorities now.
ATS directs us to a line of cases arguably supporting the proposition that
unjust enrichment claims cannot be premised on violations of statutes that provide
no private right of action. ATS cites the proposition that once a plaintiff “relies on
a wrong to supply the unjust factor,” the plaintiff must rely on a right “arising from
that wrong, not from unjust enrichment.” Appellee’s Br. at 28 (quoting State of
Fla., Office of Att’y Gen., Dep’t of Legal Affairs v. Tenet Healthcare Corp., 420 F.
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Supp. 2d 1288, 1309 (S.D. Fla. 2005)); see Guy. Tel. & Tel. Co., Ltd. v. Melbourne
Int’l Commc’ns, Ltd., 329 F. 3d 1241, 1245 n.3 (11th Cir. 2003). These cases
implicate the same concern as Silver Star and Buell: whether plaintiffs may use
unjust enrichment to vindicate violations of statutes that do not directly afford
them a cause of action.
By contrast, Pincus contends that unjust enrichment claims based on statutes
that provide no private right of action may proceed, so long as the underlying
statutes neither “explicitly preclude a claim for common law unjust enrichment,”
Appellant’s Br. at 34–35, nor are “so repugnant to the common law that [the statute
and the unjust enrichment claim] cannot coexist.” Id. (quoting Thornber v. City of
Fort Walton Beach, 568 So. 2d 914, 918 (Fla. 1990)). He argues further that
“[n]one of the statutes” he relies upon explicitly or implicitly precludes his unjust
enrichment claim. Id. at 35. To make this argument, Pincus relies on cases
holding that under Florida law the common law persists unless it is expressly
overridden by statute. See, e.g., State v. Ashley, 701 So. 2d 338, 341 (Fla. 1997)
(“Even where the legislature acts in a particular area, the common law remains in
effect in that area unless the statute specifically says otherwise . . . .”); Thornber,
568 So. 2d at 918 (“Whether a statutory remedy is exclusive or merely cumulative
depends upon the legislative intent as manifested in the language of the statute”).
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We are bound by Silver Star, where we held that an unjust enrichment action
could be grounded on a violation of a Florida statute that provided no private right
of action but deemed reimbursement claims made in violation of that statute
“noncompensable.” 739 F.3d at 583 (citing Fla. Stat. § 400.9935(1)). But there
are no cases from this Circuit nor from the Florida appellate courts that address
whether Silver Star’s reasoning extends to the Florida traffic statutes at issue in this
case.
2. Adequate Consideration
The second issue that implicates Florida’s common law of unjust enrichment
is whether Pincus’s claim fails because he received a benefit in exchange for the
fee he paid ATS. The district court did not consider the issue, but ATS raises it
here. We consider it because we “may affirm on any ground supported by the
record.” Welding Servs. v. Forman, 509 F.3d 1351, 1356 (11th Cir. 2007).
ATS argues that Pincus’s unjust enrichment claim fails because Pincus
“received what he bargained for.” Appellee’s Br. at 29–30. For this proposition,
ATS relies on Baptista v. JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., 640 F.3d 1194 (11th Cir.
2001).
In Baptista, the plaintiff complained of a fee she was charged by Chase
Bank in exchange for cashing a check. Id. at 1196. Baptista asserted a violation of
Fla. Stat. § 655.85 (1992), which provided that checks presented to paying
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institutions must be settled “at par,” and brought a claim for unjust enrichment
based on the same facts as her statutory claim. 640 F.3d at 1196.14 We rejected
Baptista’s claims because the Florida statute (and common law cause of action) she
invoked was preempted by federal regulations promulgated under a federal statute.
Id. at 1198. We held alternatively, in a footnote, that Baptista’s unjust enrichment
claim failed as a matter of law because she received “adequate consideration” for
the benefit she conferred upon Chase. Id. at 1198 n.3 (internal quotation marks
omitted). In other words, because Baptista exchanged the fee in question for the
privilege of “immediately” cashing her check despite not having an account at the
bank, it was not “inequitable” for the bank to retain the fee. Id. (“Baptista cannot
show that [the bank] failed to give consideration for [the fee],” for “[t]he fee was
only levied because [the bank] conferred an additional benefit on Baptista.”).
Baptista, ATS argues, is on all fours with this case. Pincus had the option to
pay his penalty without the challenged fee by sending a check by mail. Instead,
with notice of the fee, he chose to pay by credit card. Therefore, ATS contends,
Pincus’s unjust enrichment claim fails because he received a benefit—the
convenience of paying with a credit card, rather than having to mail a check—in
exchange for the fee he now challenges.
14
The statute has since been amended to clarify that it does not prohibit institutions from
deducting a fee from the face value of the check “if the check is presented to the institution by
the payee in person.” Fla. Stat. § 655.85 (2014).
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Pincus suggests that Baptista does not control. He urges us to consider that
ATS is not akin to a private entity offering a “service” to a “customer” in exchange
for payment. Reply Br. at 13. Instead, ATS is the “sole government interface for
violators to pay their civil penalties.” Id. at 14. Therefore, Pincus contends, he
could not have received the benefit of the bargain for his fee because there was no
bargain at all.
Since deciding Baptista, we have not addressed its reach. And we could find
no decisions from the Supreme Court of Florida or any Florida appellate court
answering whether an unjust enrichment claim fails because there is adequate
consideration when a vendor adds a surcharge to a state-backed financial penalty in
exchange for giving the plaintiff the benefit of paying that penalty with a credit
card.
IV. CONCLUSION
More than eight million notices have been issued for red light camera
violations in Florida, including 1,054,234 issued between July 1, 2018 and June 30,
2019. 15 In that period, at least 46 jurisdictions in Florida operated red light
cameras, all of which contracted with ATS or similar vendors. 16 Id. So, the
statutory issues raised by this case—which will determine whether a vendor may
15
Florida Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles, supra, at 2–3.
16
Id. at 2.
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add a surcharge to red light camera penalties in exchange for permitting
individuals to pay their penalties by credit card—may affect millions of Floridians
and dozens of Florida’s municipal traffic enforcement regimes. Resolution of the
common law issues may also reverberate throughout Florida, affecting Florida’s
unjust enrichment law across diverse contexts.
Principles of federalism and comity counsel us not to attempt to divine the
answers to these challenging and important questions of Florida statutory and
common law. See In re Cassell, 688 F.3d 1291, 1300 (11th Cir. 2012) (“When
there is substantial doubt about the correct answer to a dispositive question of state
law, a better option is to certify the question to the state supreme court.”).
Accordingly, we certify the following questions to the Supreme Court of Florida:17
(1) Did ATS violate Florida law when it imposed a five percent fee on
individuals who chose to pay their red light traffic ticket with a credit card?
In particular:
a. Does the challenged fee constitute a “commission from any
revenue collected from violations detected through the use of a
traffic infraction detector” under Fla. Stat. § 316.0083(1)(b)(4)?
17
See Fla. R. App. P. 9.150 (permitting us to, on our motion, certify questions of law to
the Supreme Court of Florida if the answers are “determinative of the cause and there is no
controlling precedent of the Supreme Court of Florida”).
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b. Was the fee assessed under Chapter 318 and therefore subject to
§ 318.121’s surcharge prohibition?
c. Was ATS a “money transmitter” that was required to be
licensed under Fla. Stat. § 560.204(1)?
(2) If there was a violation of a Florida statute, can that violation support a claim
for unjust enrichment? In particular:
a. Does Pincus’s unjust enrichment claim fail because the statutes
at issue provide no private right of action?
b. Does Pincus’s unjust enrichment claim fail because he received
adequate consideration in exchange for the challenged fee when
he took advantage of the privilege of using his credit card to
pay the penalty?
Of course, our statement of any of the questions certified does not “limit the
inquiry” of the Supreme Court of Florida or restrict its consideration of the issues
that it perceives are raised by the record certified in this case. Cassell, 688 F.3d at
1301 (internal quotation marks omitted). The entire record on appeal in this case,
including copies of the parties’ briefs, is transmitted along with this certification.
QUESTIONS CERTIFIED.
31