Schnall v. Amboy Natl Bank ( 2002 )


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  •                                                                                                                            Opinions of the United
    2002 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    1-29-2002
    Schnall v. Amboy Natl Bank
    Precedential or Non-Precedential:
    Docket 1-1502
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    Recommended Citation
    "Schnall v. Amboy Natl Bank" (2002). 2002 Decisions. Paper 52.
    http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2002/52
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    Filed January 28, 2002
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    No. 01-1502
    MARTIN SCHNALL, individually and on behalf
    of all others Similarly Situated, Appellant
    v.
    AMBOY NATIONAL BANK
    On Appeal From the United States District Court
    For the District of New Jersey
    (D.C. Civ. No. 99-cv-04908)
    District Judge: Honorable Katharine S. Hayden
    Argued: November 6, 2001
    Before: BECKER, Chief Judge, McKEE and
    RENDELL Circuit Judges.
    (Filed: January 28, 2002)
    STUART A. BLANDER, ESQUIRE
    (ARGUED)
    Alan A. Heller, Esquire
    Heller, Horowitz & Feit, P.C.
    292 Madison Avenue
    New York, NY 10017
    ABE RAPPAPORT, ESQUIRE
    David Kessler & Associates, L.L.C.
    1373 Broad Street
    Clifton, NJ 07013
    Counsel for Appellant
    DENNIS T. KEARNEY, ESQUIRE
    (ARGUED)
    HELEN A. NAU, ESQUIRE
    Pitney, Hardin, Kipp & Szuch, LLP
    P.O. Box 1945
    Morristown, NJ 07962-1945
    Counsel for Appellee
    DOLORES S. SMITH, ESQUIRE
    Director
    Board of Governors of the Federal
    Reserve System
    Division of Consumer and
    Community Affairs
    Washington, DC 20551
    Counsel for Amicus Curiae at the
    Invitation of the Court
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    BECKER, Chief Judge.
    In this putative class action, plaintiff Martin Schnall
    alleges that the newspaper advertisements and account
    disclosures of defendant Amboy National Bank ("the Bank")
    violated the Truth in Savings Act ("TISA"), 12 U.S.C.
    SS 4301-13, and regulations promulgated by the Federal
    Reserve Board pursuant to the Act. In particular, Schnall
    contends that the Bank failed to calculate the advertised
    annual percentage yield ("APY") on its money market
    savings accounts according to the methods prescribed by
    the regulations and required by the statute. The District
    Court granted summary judgment for the Bank, holding
    that the advertisements and disclosures at issue did not
    violate TISA or the relevant regulations, and that even if
    they did, Schnall had failed to show that he was misled by
    the advertised rates. Schnall appeals, and we reverse,
    holding that the advertisements and disclosures at issue
    violated TISA and the Act's implementing regulations. This
    holding is buttressed by the letter-brief of the Federal
    2
    Reserve Board of Governors, amicus curiae at the request
    of the Court, which endorses this position.
    Schnall brought this suit pursuant to 12 U.S.C.S 4310,
    which has since been repealed. See infra note 2. This
    section created a private cause of action for TISA violations,
    and provided for actual damages as well as statutory
    damages of between $100 and $1,000 in an individual
    action and "such amount as the court may allow" in a class
    action. See 12 U.S.C. S 4310. The Bank contends that even
    if there was a violation, Schnall may not recover statutory
    damages because he failed to establish that he was misled
    by or relied on the advertised rates or that he was
    financially harmed by the TISA violation. However, we hold
    that TISA imposes strict liability on depository institutions
    that violate its disclosure requirements, and that to recover
    statutory damages under S 4310, a plaintiff need not show
    that he relied to his detriment on the advertised APY, that
    he was misled by the advertised APY, or that he was
    financially harmed by the TISA violations. We therefore
    conclude that Schnall is entitled to partial summary
    judgment on the question of liability and will remand for a
    determination of damages.
    I.
    At various times between October 18, 1998 and October
    10, 1999, the Bank placed in the Newark Star-Ledger a
    number of substantially identical advertisements promoting
    its Money Market Accounts. In bold letters and large
    typeface, these advertisements offered "a 3-month bonus of
    6.00% APY." In smaller print, the advertisements stated
    that "[a]fter the bonus your yield is based on the 3-month
    Treasury Bill. Plus, we'll guarantee that the yield will
    always be higher than the combined average yield offered
    by the 3 largest NJ banks." The advertisements also set
    forth the APY that the accounts had earned during the
    previous year.
    Consumers who called the phone number listed on the
    advertisements would receive from the Bank an application
    and Disclosure of Account Terms and Fees ("account
    disclosure"), which stated the APY in the same manner as
    3
    the advertisements. In particular, the account disclosure
    stated that an APY of 6% would apply for a period of 90
    days from the date the account is opened. After that, "the
    Interest Rate paid on your account is based on the 3-month
    Treasury Bill and is guaranteed to be at least 1.00% higher
    than the average money market account yields of First
    Union/NJ, PNC Bank/NJ and Summit Bank as of the last
    business day of the previous month."
    On October 16, 1998, before any of the advertisements at
    issue had been published, Schnall called the Bank to
    request an account application. On October 26, 1998, after
    seeing the advertisements described above, Schnall again
    phoned the Bank to request an application. The Bank sent
    Schnall an account disclosure and application, which he
    executed and returned, together with a check for $20,000
    to open the advertised account. On or about October 28,
    1998, the Bank received Schnall's application and check,
    and opened a Money Market Account in his name.
    On October 18, 1999, Schnall filed this action on behalf
    of himself and a putative class of all persons who had
    deposited at least $20,000 into a Money Market Account
    with the Bank during the period from October 18, 1998 to
    October 18, 1999. The complaint alleged that the APY that
    appeared in the Bank's advertisements and account
    disclosures failed to comply with the required method of
    calculating the advertised APY under TISA and its
    implementing regulations. In particular, Schnall contends
    that under the regulations, the Bank may not advertise a
    6% APY for the first three months and a variable rate APY
    for the remainder of the account term. Rather, in Schnall's
    submission, the regulations require the Bank to advertise a
    single "blended," or "composite," APY that represents the
    total yield on the account over a term of one year.
    According to Schnall, the regulations require this blended
    APY to be computed by applying the introductory rate for
    the first three months and applying whatever the variable
    rate was at the time of the advertisements for the remaining
    nine months, even though the resulting blended APY, which
    the Bank is required to advertise, may differ from the
    actual APY at the end of the year, depending on whether
    the variable rate changes.
    4
    The District Court granted the Bank's motion for
    summary judgment and denied Schnall's cross-motion for
    partial summary judgment. In an oral opinion, the Court
    held that because the variable rate on the accounts is a
    function of both the 3-month Treasury Bill as well as the
    APY of three other banks, the requirement that
    advertisements disclose the APY as a single blended rate
    was inapplicable, and the advertisements therefore
    complied with TISA. The Court further concluded that even
    if the Bank's advertisements and account disclosures
    violated TISA, summary judgment in favor of the Bank was
    appropriate because Schnall had failed to produce
    sufficient evidence that he relied to his detriment on the
    advertised APY.
    The District Court had subject matter jurisdiction
    pursuant to 12 U.S.C. S 4310(e) and 28 U.S.C.S 1331, and
    this Court has appellate jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
    S 1291. We review de novo the District Court's disposition
    of the parties' cross-motions for summary judgment, see
    Woodside v. School Dist. of Philadelphia Bd. of Educ., 
    248 F.3d 129
    , 130 (3d Cir. 2001), under the familiar standard
    set forth in the margin.1 We turn first to whether the
    advertisements and disclosures in question violated TISA
    and the implementing regulations, and then address
    whether TISA imposes strict liability on depository
    institutions that violate its disclosure requirements or
    whether a plaintiff must also establish reliance or some
    form of financial injury.
    II.
    Schnall commenced this suit pursuant to a now-repealed
    provision of TISA, which created a private right of action
    _________________________________________________________________
    1. Summary judgment is proper if there is no genuine issue of material
    fact and if, viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the non-
    moving party, the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of
    law. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c); Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 
    477 U.S. 317
    (1986). The judge's function at the summary judgment stage is not to
    weigh the evidence and determine the truth of the matter, but to
    determine whether there is a genuine issue for trial. See Anderson v.
    Liberty Lobby, Inc., 
    477 U.S. 242
    , 249 (1986).
    5
    against "any depository institution which fails to comply
    with any requirement imposed under this chapter or any
    regulation prescribed under this chapter . . . ." 12 U.S.C.
    S 4310(a).2 Thus, Schnall may establish liability by showing
    that the Bank's advertisements and account disclosures
    _________________________________________________________________
    2. Section 4310 was repealed as of September 30, 2001. See Act of Sept.
    30, 1996, Pub. L. 104-208, S 2604(a), 
    110 Stat. 3009
    , 3009-470 (1996)
    ("Effective as of the end of the 5-year period beginning on the date of
    the
    enactment of this Act [September 30, 1996], section 271 of the Truth in
    Savings Act (12 U.S.C. S 4310) is repealed."). Although private parties
    may no longer sue for violations of TISA, the Federal Reserve Board
    retains authority to enforce compliance. See 12 U.S.C. S 4309.
    The Bank does not argue that S 4310 is inapplicable to this action,
    which was filed before S 4310 was repealed, and we believe that
    pursuant to 1 U.S.C. S 109, Schnall's action survives the repeal. Section
    109 provides that "[t]he repeal of any statute shall not have the effect
    to
    release or extinguish any . . . liability incurred under such statute,
    unless the repealing Act shall so expressly provide, and such statute
    shall be treated as still remaining in force for the purpose of sustaining
    any proper action . . . for the enforcement of such . . . liability."
    Since
    the repeal of S 4310 did not expressly provide for retroactive
    application,
    Schnall's claims survive under S 109.
    We acknowledge that it could be argued that S 109 does not apply in
    this case, because S 4310 contained, inter alia, a subsection conferring
    jurisdiction on district courts to hear private TISA actions. See 12
    U.S.C.
    S 4310(e). In repealing S 4310, Congress therefore withdrew jurisdiction,
    and the Supreme Court in Bruner v. United States , 
    343 U.S. 112
     (1952),
    held that S 109 does not apply to repeals that simply withdraw the
    jurisdiction of a federal district court without extinguishing any
    liability.
    
    Id. at 116-17
     ("[W]hen a law conferring jurisdiction is repealed without
    any reservation as to pending cases, all cases fall with the law."). We
    believe that Bruner is distinguishable, however, because unlike in
    Bruner, where the withdrawal of jurisdiction from federal district courts
    left the plaintiff with an alternate remedy in the Court of Claims, see
    
    343 U.S. at 115
    , the repeal of S 4310 not only withdrew the jurisdiction of
    federal district courts to hear private TISA enforcement actions, but also
    entirely eliminated the cause of action, thereby releasing banks from
    future claims of private parties to recover actual and statutory damages
    for TISA violations. See De La Rama Steamship Co., Inc. v. United States,
    
    344 U.S. 386
    , 390 (1953) (holding that under S 109, pending appeals
    survive "the repeal of statutes which create rights and also prescribe how
    the rights are to be vindicated," and distinguishing "the repeal of
    statutes solely jurisdictional in their scope") (emphasis added).
    6
    violated either a provision of TISA itself or a regulation
    promulgated pursuant to TISA. We consider first whether
    the Bank's disclosures violated requirements imposed by
    the regulations, and then turn to whether the disclosures
    also violated requirements imposed by TISA itself.
    A.
    1.
    The relevant regulations were promulgated by the Federal
    Reserve Board pursuant to 12 U.S.C. S 4308(a), and are
    found in 12 C.F.R. Part 230, known as Regulation DD.
    Under the regulations, account disclosures and
    advertisements that state a rate of return are required to
    state the account's annual percentage yield. See 12 C.F.R.
    S 230.4(b)(1)(i) ("Account disclosures shall include the
    following, as applicable: . . . The `annual percentage yield'
    and the `interest rate,' using those terms . . . ."); 12 C.F.R.
    S 230.8(b) ("If an advertisement states a rate of return, it
    shall state the rate as an `annual percentage yield' using
    that term."). The regulations define "annual percentage
    yield" as "a percentage rate reflecting the total amount of
    interest paid on an account, based on the interest rate and
    the frequency of compounding for a 365-day period and
    calculated according to the rules in appendix A of this
    part." 12 C.F.R. S 230.2(c).
    Part I.A of appendix A provides that "[f]or accounts
    without a stated maturity date (such as a typical savings or
    transaction account), the calculation shall be based on an
    assumed term of 365 days."3 Because the accounts at issue
    in this case lack a stated maturity date, the advertised APY
    must therefore assume a term of 365 days.
    Part I.B of appendix A specifically defines how the APY
    should be computed for "stepped-rate accounts," which are
    accounts that apply different interest rates during different
    _________________________________________________________________
    3. For such accounts, Part I.A provides that"the annual percentage yield
    can be calculated by use of the following simple formula: APY = 100
    (Interest/Principal)," where "Interest" is the total dollar amount of
    interest earned on the Principal during the 365 day term.
    7
    periods of the term: "For accounts with two or more interest
    rates applied in succeeding periods . . . an institution shall
    assume each interest rate is in effect for the length of time
    provided for in the deposit contract." If, for example, a bank
    offers a savings account with a 7% interest rate for the first
    six months and a 3% interest rate thereafter, appendix A
    requires the advertised APY to be the blended rate
    calculated by applying the 7% interest rate for the first six
    months and the 3% interest rate for the remaining six
    months.
    Finally, Part I.C of appendix A specifies how this blended-
    rate calculation should be performed for a variable rate
    account, which the regulations define as "an account in
    which the interest rate may change after the account is
    opened." 12 C.F.R. S 230.2(v). Part I.C specifically defines
    the method of calculation for accounts such as those at
    issue in this case, where an initial fixed rate applies for a
    given period, followed by a variable rate for the remainder
    of the term:
    Variable-rate accounts with an introductory premium
    (or discount) rate must be calculated like a stepped-
    rate account. Thus, an institution shall assume that:
    (1) The introductory interest rate is in effect for the
    length of time provided for in the deposit contract; and
    (2) the variable interest rate that would have been in
    effect when the account is opened or advertised (but for
    the introductory rate) is in effect for the remainder of
    the year. If the variable rate is tied to an index, the
    index-based rate in effect at the time of disclosure
    must be used for the remainder of the year.
    Part I.C illustrates the required method of calculation by
    using the example of an account that pays an introductory
    7% interest rate for the first three months and a variable
    rate thereafter, which at the time of the disclosure is 5%. In
    this example, the advertised APY must be computed by
    applying the 7% interest rate for the first three months and
    by applying the current 5% variable rate for the remaining
    nine months of the term, yielding an APY of 5.65%. Thus,
    in calculating the APY, a bank must assume that the
    variable rate that is in effect at the time of the disclosure
    will remain in effect throughout the term, even though this
    8
    assumption means that the APY that the regulations
    require the bank to advertise will differ from the actual APY
    that the consumer will earn on the account should the
    variable rate change.
    2.
    Applying this method of calculation to the Amboy Money
    Market Account, we agree with Schnall that the Bank's
    advertisements and account disclosures violate the
    regulations, since they fail to state the APY as a single
    composite rate computed on a one-year term, as required
    by appendix A. Instead of calculating the APY by applying
    the introductory 6% APY for the first three months and
    assuming that the variable rate at the time of the disclosure
    would remain in effect throughout the remaining nine
    months of the term, the Bank simply advertised an initial
    6% APY followed by a variable rate set by the 3-month
    Treasury Bill and guaranteed to exceed the combined
    average yield of New Jersey's three largest banks.
    The Bank contends that the District Court correctly
    concluded that the method of calculating the APY specified
    in appendix A is inapplicable because the variable rate in
    this case is determined not only by the 3-month Treasury
    Bill, but also by the average money market account yields
    of the three largest New Jersey Banks (First Union/NJ, PNC
    Bank/NH, and Summit Bank). We disagree.
    First, appendix A clearly states that with only one
    exception, not applicable to this case, the APY that is
    advertised must be calculated according to the specified
    method: "Except as provided in Part I.E. of this appendix,
    the annual percentage yield shall be calculated by the
    formula shown below."4 This statement definitively
    establishes that the specified formula must be applied in
    this case.
    Second, the regulations do not distinguish among
    different types of variable rates for purposes of computing
    the APY that must be advertised. Under Part I.C of the
    _________________________________________________________________
    4. The exception in Part I.E applies to "time accounts with a stated
    maturity greater than one year that pay interest at least annually."
    9
    appendix, "Variable rate accounts with an introductory
    premium (or discount) rate must be calculated like a
    stepped-rate account." And the definitions section of the
    regulations provides that "[v]ariable-rate account means an
    account in which the interest rate may change after the
    account is opened." 12 C.F.R. S 230.2(v). Thus, the
    regulations treat all variable rates alike, regardless whether
    the rates are a function of one variable, two variables, or
    twenty variables. That the variable rate in this case, rather
    than being solely a function of the 3-month Treasury Bill,
    is a function of both the 3-month Treasury Bill and the
    combined average yield of the three largest New Jersey
    Banks, is immaterial for purposes of the regulations.
    Regardless of what the variable rate depends on, under
    the regulations a bank must determine what the variable
    rate would be at the time of the advertisement, and assume
    that that rate will remain in effect throughout the relevant
    part of the term, for purposes of computing the APY that
    the bank may advertise. Thus, the regulations require
    Amboy to advertise a single blended APY calculated by
    applying the 6% APY for the first three months and by
    applying for the remaining nine months whatever the
    current variable rate was at the time of the advertisement.
    This it did not do.
    3.
    The Bank urges us to adopt the District Court's
    reasoning that the guarantee that the APY for the
    remainder of the term would exceed the average APY of the
    Bank's three competitors is pro-consumer, and therefore
    that it should be allowed to advertise that fact. In our view,
    this argument proves too much, since it would apply to any
    variable rate that is determined by reference to an index or
    a competing investment. For example, a variable rate that
    is set to the 3-month Treasury Bill is pro-consumer, since
    it guarantees that consumers will never earn less on their
    savings account than they would on the Treasury Bill.
    Nonetheless, the regulations require that variable rates be
    advertised according to a particular formula, regardless of
    how pro- or anti-consumer the rate is.
    10
    The District Court also worried that the APY that the
    Bank would be required to advertise under the regulations
    would be misleading because "[i]t would not help the
    consumer know whether this particular snapshot will turn
    out to be accurate for the long run . . . ." We agree that the
    advertised rate required by the regulations may mislead
    consumers, since the advertised APY could differ from the
    actual APY. Consider two banks, one of which offers a fixed
    rate account with a 4% APY and the other of which offers
    a variable rate account that, using the variable rate in effect
    at the time of the advertisement, would have a 4% APY.
    Under the regulations, both banks must advertise the same
    APY of 4%, which risks misleading consumers to believe
    that the two investments are of equal value. This risk is
    mitigated, however, by the requirement that advertisements
    for variable rate accounts "shall state . . . clearly and
    conspicuously . . . that the rate may change after the
    account is opened." 12 C.F.R. S 230.8(c)(1).
    Moreover, even if the regulations required rates to be
    advertised in a misleading manner, unless the defendant
    challenged the regulations' validity, the Court would be
    constrained to apply the regulations that exist. Whether
    these regulations make sense as a matter of policy is
    irrelevant in this case, since the Bank does not challenge
    the regulations' validity on the grounds that the Federal
    Reserve Board exceeded its authority under TISA, acted
    arbitrarily and capriciously in promulgating the regulations,
    or failed to comply with the procedural requirements
    imposed by the Administrative Procedure Act. Absent such
    a challenge, a court may not second-guess the policy
    choices made by an agency in a matter that Congress has
    committed to the agency's discretion.
    4.
    We therefore conclude that the Bank's advertisements
    and account disclosures violated the regulations
    promulgated under TISA by failing to advertise the APY as
    a single composite rate based on a one-year term,
    calculated by applying the 6% introductory rate for the first
    three months and by applying whatever the variable rate
    was at the time of the advertisements for the remaining
    11
    nine months. We note that this conclusion is supported by
    an amicus letter brief filed at the Court's invitation by the
    Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. Signed
    by the Director of the Division of Consumer and
    Community Affairs, the letter concludes that "Amboy did
    not comply with the requirements set forth in Regulation
    DD because . . . the advertisements did not disclose a
    single `composite' APY, based on an assumed term of 365-
    days, and taking into account both the introductory rate
    and post-introductory rate in effect for these accounts at
    the time they were advertised."
    B.
    The Bank argues that even if its advertisements and
    account disclosures failed to comply with the regulations,
    the advertisements nonetheless complied with the statutory
    disclosure requirements. Therefore, the Bank submits,
    Schnall's claims were properly dismissed. We disagree.
    Even if the Bank's advertisements complied with the
    statutory requirements, the Bank would still be liable for
    violating the regulations, since at the time this lawsuit was
    filed, TISA imposed civil liability on any bank"which fails to
    comply with any . . . regulation prescribed under this
    chapter." 12 U.S.C. S 4310(a).
    At all events, we conclude that the Bank violated the
    statutory disclosure requirements. The Bank argues that its
    advertisements fully complied with the disclosure
    requirements of TISA, which requires that
    Each advertisement . . . relating to any . . . interest-
    bearing account . . . which includes any reference .. .
    to a specific yield . . . shall state the following
    information, to the extent applicable, in a clear and
    conspicuous manner:
    (1) The annual percentage yield.
    (2) The period during which such annual
    percentage yield is in effect.
    (3) All minimum account balance and time
    requirements which must be met in order to earn the
    advertised yield . . . .
    12
    (4) The minimum amount of the initial deposit
    which is required to open the account in order to
    obtain the yield advertised . . . .
    (5) A statement that regular fees or conditions could
    reduce the yield . . . .
    (6) A statement that an interest penalty is required
    for early withdrawal.
    12 U.S.C. S 4302(a). In the Bank's submission, by
    disclosing in its advertisements that its accounts would
    earn a 6% APY for the first three months, followed by an
    APY based on the 3-month Treasury Bill but guaranteed to
    exceed the average yield of New Jersey's three largest
    banks, the Bank complied with the requirement of
    S 4302(a)(1) that advertisements disclose the"annual
    percentage yield."
    The problem with the Bank's argument, however, is that
    TISA defines "annual percentage yield" as:
    the total amount of interest that would be received on
    a $100 deposit, based on the annual rate of simple
    interest and the frequency of compounding for a 365-
    day period, expressed as a percentage calculated by a
    method which shall be prescribed by the Board in
    regulations.
    12 U.S.C. S 4313(2). This definition of "annual percentage
    yield" applies to the requirements in SS 4302(a)(1) and
    4303(c)(1) that advertisements and account disclosures
    state the annual percentage yield. Because, as explained
    above, the Bank failed to calculate the APY appearing in its
    advertisements and account disclosures according to the
    method prescribed by the regulations, the Bank failed to
    comply with the statutory disclosure requirements imposed
    by SS 4302(a)(1) and 4303(c)(1).
    The District Court focused on the language "to the extent
    applicable" in S 4302(a), and concluded that the required
    method of computing the advertised APY is not applicable
    here, because the variable rate is a function of both the 3-
    month Treasury Bill and the average yield of three other
    banks. The District Court further reasoned that the method
    of calculating the APY specified in the regulations is
    13
    inapplicable in this case because "blind adherence" to the
    regulation "would not assist [the] consumer in comparing"
    Amboy's account with accounts offered by competitors.
    According to the District Court, applying the formula
    specified in the regulations would thereby frustrate one of
    the stated purposes of TISA, which is to enhance"the
    ability of the consumer to make informed decisions
    regarding deposit accounts." 12 U.S.C. S 4301.
    We disagree with the District Court's interpretation of "to
    the extent applicable" as an invitation to courts to disregard
    the mandate of the regulations if doing so makes sense as
    a matter of policy. In our view, the language "to the extent
    applicable" was included in S 4302(a) because certain
    disclosure requirements enumerated in that provision may
    not apply to a particular account, given the nature of the
    account. For example, S 4302(a)(6) requires advertisements
    to include "[a] statement that an interest penalty is required
    for early withdrawal." This requirement, however, would
    obviously be inapplicable to an account that has no
    withdrawal penalty.
    In contrast, the requirement under S 4302(a)(1) that
    advertisements disclose the account's APY is applicable to
    all interest-bearing accounts, including the account at
    issue in this case. As discussed above, the formula in the
    regulations for computing an account's APY is fully
    applicable to accounts such as Amboy's, which include an
    introductory fixed interest rate followed by a variable rate
    for the remainder of the term.
    In sum, we hold that by failing to disclose the APY on its
    accounts as a single blended rate based on a 365-day term,
    the Bank's advertisements and account disclosures violated
    both the disclosure requirements found in the regulations,
    see 12 C.F.R. SS 230.2, 230.4, 230.8 & appendix A to part
    230, and the disclosure requirements imposed by the
    relevant statutory provisions, see 12 U.S.C.SS 4302, 4303,
    4305 & 4313, which incorporate the regulations by
    reference. Either the violation of the statute or the violation
    of the regulations provides an independent ground for
    liability under S 4310.
    14
    III.
    The Bank argues that even if its advertisements and
    account disclosures violated the requirements imposed by
    TISA and the implementing regulations, the District Court
    properly granted summary judgment on the ground that no
    reasonable jury could find that Schnall was harmed by the
    manner in which the Bank disclosed the APY on its
    accounts. The Bank frames this argument in various terms,
    arguing that Schnall did not rely on the manner in which
    the Bank advertised its APY, that Schnall was not misled by
    the advertisements and disclosures, and that Schnall
    suffered no financial injury as a result of the TISA
    violations. Each characterization relates to the same
    conceptual question whether a TISA plaintiff must show
    that he or she suffered some financial injury that he would
    not have incurred had the defendant complied with TISA.
    Schnall responds that TISA imposes strict liability on
    depository institutions that violate its disclosure
    requirements, and that to recover under S 4310, a plaintiff
    need not show that he or she was misled or financially
    harmed by the violation.
    The relevant provision of TISA, 12 U.S.C. S 4310(a), which
    has been repealed since the commencement of this lawsuit,
    see supra note 2, provided that:
    [A]ny depository institution which fails to comply with
    any requirement imposed under this chapter or any
    regulation prescribed under this chapter with respect
    to any person who is an account holder is liable to
    such person in an amount equal to the sum of --
    (1) any actual damages sustained by such person
    as a result of the failure;
    (2)(A) in the case of an individual action, such
    additional amount as the court may allow, except
    that the liability under this subparagraph shall not
    be less than $100 nor greater than $1,000; or
    (B) in the case of a class action, such amount as
    the court may allow, except that--
    (i) as to each member of the class, no minimum
    recovery shall be applicable; and
    15
    (ii) the total recovery under this subparagraph in
    any class action . . . arising out of the same failure
    to comply by the same depository institution shall
    not be more than the lesser of $500,000 or 1
    percent of the net worth of the depository
    institution involved; and
    (3) in the case of any successful action to enforce
    any liability under paragraph (1) or (2), the costs of
    the action, together with a reasonable attorney's fee
    as determined by the court.
    The question before us reduces to whether the language
    imposing liability for any violation "with respect to any
    person who is an account holder" requires account holders
    who bring suit to show that they would not have opened
    their account had the bank's disclosure complied with
    TISA, or that they were otherwise misled or financially
    harmed by the TISA violation.
    In deciding this question, we are writing on a clean slate,
    as this Court has not had occasion to construe S 4310. The
    only court squarely to address the issue was the District
    Court for the Southern District of New York in Hale v.
    Citibank, N.A., 
    198 F.R.D. 606
     (S.D.N.Y. 2001). In an
    opinion by Judge Rakoff, the court in Hale rejected
    defendants' claim that reliance is a necessary element of a
    cause of action under S 4310:
    [N]either the regulation nor TISA itself requires such a
    showing as a condition of liability, and such exacting
    notions of reliance, drawn from the common law, are
    inapplicable, so far as liability is concerned, to a
    regulatory statute like TISA whose stated purpose is"to
    require the clear and uniform disclosure of . . . the
    rates of interest which are payable on deposit accounts
    by depository institutions." 12 U.S.C. S 4301(b)
    (emphasis added); see also S. Rep. 102-167, at 80-82
    (1991).
    Id. at 607.5 We find this reasoning persuasive.6 As the
    _________________________________________________________________
    5. The court noted that reliance might be relevant, however, for purposes
    of determining actual (in contrast to statutory) damages. Id.
    6. The only other case to discuss the issue is Shelley v. AmSouth Bank,
    16
    Court in Hale noted, neither the statute nor the regulations
    explicitly require that a plaintiff show reliance or financial
    injury to recover statutory damages under S 4310.
    Moreover, the purpose of TISA is not only to prevent
    consumers from being misled by deceptive advertisements,
    but also to ensure uniformity in how banks advertise rates
    of return. See 12 U.S.C. S 4301 ("The Congress hereby finds
    that economic stability would be enhanced, competition
    between depository institutions would be improved, and the
    ability of the consumer to make informed decisions
    regarding deposit accounts, and to verify accounts, would
    be strengthened if there was uniformity in the disclosure of
    terms and conditions on which interest is paid and fees are
    assessed in connection with such accounts."). This
    consideration also supports the result reached in Hale.
    We read the regulations promulgated under TISA as
    representing a policy judgment by the Federal Reserve
    Board that even if consumers are not misled by
    advertisements that violate the regulations, they benefit
    from the requirement that banks advertise their returns
    according to a standard formula that allows quick and
    accurate comparison of the expected rates of return offered
    by different banks, thus promoting informed consumer
    choice and competition among banks. The harm that TISA
    is intended to prevent, therefore, is not only the financial
    harm that occurs when a consumer is misled by an
    advertisement, but also the information costs and anti-
    competitive effects created when banks advertise yields in
    non-uniform ways that make it difficult for consumers to
    compare the rates of return offered by competing banks.
    Contrary to the purpose of TISA, interpreting S 4310 to
    require reliance or financial injury would permit banks to
    violate TISA's uniform disclosure requirement as long as
    the advertisements issued by the banks were not
    themselves misleading. Indeed, the advertisements in this
    _________________________________________________________________
    No. 97-1170-rv-c, 
    2000 WL 1121778
     (S.D. Ala. July 24, 2000), aff 'd,
    
    247 F.2d 250
     (11th Cir. 2001), which briefly stated in dicta that
    "proximate cause and actual damages are not elements of a TISA claim
    for statutory damages." Id. at *14.
    17
    case, although they prominently feature the "6.00% APY,"
    are quite clear that this APY is in effect for only an
    introductory period of three months. It would therefore be
    difficult for a consumer to show that he was misled by the
    advertisement into believing that the 6% APY would be in
    effect for longer than three months. Schnall, as an M.B.A.
    and statistician, see infra note 7, could have easily
    computed from the information in the Amboy advertisement
    the blended APY that the Bank was required to disclose,
    and could have then compared that APY to those offered by
    other banks. One of the purposes of TISA, however, is to
    relieve consumers of this burden, for comparing the yields
    offered by different banks may be difficult for many
    consumers and will take unnecessary time if the yields are
    not advertised uniformly. In order for the regulations in this
    case to have any bite, they must therefore be enforced even
    when advertisements are not necessarily misleading.
    To be sure, violations of TISA that do not actually cause
    consumers to be misled could still be prosecuted by the
    Federal Reserve Board. But the structure of S 4310, which
    permitted a plaintiff to recover both actual damages and
    statutory damages, suggests that this provision served the
    dual purpose of both compensating plaintiffs who have
    been misled and deterring banks from advertising in ways
    that Congress and the Federal Reserve Board believe are
    socially harmful. Cf. Williams v. Pub. Fin. Corp., 
    598 F.2d 349
    , 356 (5th Cir. 1979) ("The remedial scheme in the
    [Truth in Lending Act] is designed to deter generally
    illegalities which are only rarely uncovered and punished,
    and not just to compensate borrowers for their actual
    injuries in any particular case.").
    We acknowledge that as a matter of policy, it seems odd
    to permit plaintiffs to sue banks for damages when they
    have personally suffered no financial loss as a result of the
    bank's TISA violation.7 This result, however, is what S 4310,
    _________________________________________________________________
    7. A law professor probably could not have imagined a better
    hypothetical than this case, in which the plaintiff, Martin Schnall, has
    an M.B.A. from NYU and masters degrees from Columbia University and
    University of Michigan in biostatistics. Indeed, it is possible that
    Schnall
    never intended to invest his money in a savings account, but saw an
    18
    as a "private attorney general" statute, contemplated.
    Although TISA authorizes the Federal Reserve Board to
    enforce the Act, see 12 U.S.C. S 4309, the Board has
    limited resources to devote to enforcement, and Congress
    may have deemed it more cost-effective to cede TISA
    enforcement to individuals in the private sector who stand
    to profit from efficiently detecting and prosecuting TISA
    violations.
    We also note that S 4310 provided an affirmative defense
    to defendants who unintentionally violate TISA. See 12
    U.S.C. S 4310(c) ("A depository institution may not be held
    liable in any action brought under this section for a
    violation of this chapter if the depository institution
    demonstrates by a preponderance of the evidence that the
    violation was not intentional and resulted from a bona fide
    error, notwithstanding the maintenance of procedures
    reasonably adapted to avoid any such error."). Since a
    plaintiff who suffers actual financial harm as a result of
    being misled by a TISA violation will go uncompensated if
    the violation is inadvertent under S 4310, the primary
    purpose of S 4310 may not have been compensation, but
    rather deterrence. This deterrent purpose is furthered
    under S 4310 by permitting account holders to bring TISA
    actions even if they have not suffered any financial harm as
    a result of the violation.
    Finally, our conclusion is consistent with the
    jurisprudence construing the provision of the Truth in
    Lending Act ("TILA") upon which S 4310 appears to have
    been modeled. The private enforcement provision of TILA
    uses almost the same language as S 4310 in creating a
    private right of action:
    [A]ny creditor who fails to comply with any requirement
    imposed under this part . . . with respect to any person
    _________________________________________________________________
    advertisement that he knew violated TISA, and opened an account
    precisely so that he could then sue the bank under TISA and earn
    statutory damages. Under our construction of S 4310, such a plaintiff
    would nonetheless be entitled to statutory damages, making him better
    off than he would have been had TISA not been violated.
    19
    is liable to such person in an amount equal to the sum
    of --
    (1) any actual damage sustained by such person as
    a result of the failure;
    (2)(A)(i) in the case of an individual action twice the
    amount of any finance charge in connection with the
    transaction . . . ; or
    (B) in the case of a class action, such amount as
    the court may allow, except that as to each member
    of the class no minimum recovery shall be
    applicable, and the total recovery under this
    subparagraph in any class action or series of class
    actions arising out of the same failure to comply by
    the same creditor shall not be more than the lesser
    of $500,000 or 1 per centum of the net worth of the
    creditor . . . .
    15 U.S.C. S 1640(a). A comparison of the language and
    structure of this provision with the language and structure
    of S 4310, quoted supra at 15-16, leaves little doubt that
    Congress, in enacting S 4310 in 1991, consciously borrowed
    the language of TILA.
    This Court has squarely held that reliance is not an
    element of a cause of action under TILA. See Manning v.
    Princeton Consumer Disc. Co., 
    533 F.2d 102
    , 106 (3d Cir.
    1976) ("Although it is extremely unlikely that the purchaser
    was not aware of the undisclosed terms, i.e., selling price,
    down payment and balance, we cannot say that the district
    court erred in imposing the penalty and attorneys' fees
    under the circumstances here."); see also Dzadovsky v.
    Lyons Ford Sales, Inc., 
    593 F.2d 538
    , 539 (3d Cir. 1979)
    (per curiam) (rejecting "the requirement of financial loss
    before a borrower may bring an action" under TILA).
    Indeed, as noted in the margin, those Courts of Appeals
    that have considered the issue are nearly unanimous that
    to recover statutory damages under TILA, plaintiffs need
    not show that they would not have agreed to the
    transaction had the lender's disclosure complied with TILA
    20
    or that they were otherwise misled or suffered financial
    injury as a result of the TILA violation.8
    Given the similar purposes of TISA and TILA and the
    _________________________________________________________________
    8. See, e.g., Mars v. Spartanburg Chrysler Plymouth, Inc., 
    713 F.2d 65
    , 66
    (4th Cir. 1983) ("The district court held that these violations were only
    technical and because [plaintiff] sustained no actual injury as a result
    of
    them, no liability on the part of the creditors arose. We disagree and
    reverse the judgment of the lower court."); Brown v. Marquette Sav. &
    Loan Ass'n, 
    686 F.2d 608
    , 614 (7th Cir. 1982) ("As an initial matter we
    note that the violation before us is a purely technical one, and that the
    plaintiffs do not claim that they were misled or suffered any actual
    damages as a result of the statutory violation. It is well settled,
    however,
    that a borrower need not have been so deceived to recover the statutory
    penalty."); Dryden v. Lou Budke's Arrow Fin. Co., 
    630 F.2d 641
    , 647 (8th
    Cir. 1980) ("TILA plaintiffs, otherwise entitled to recover, need not show
    that they sustained actual damages stemming from the TILA violations
    proved before they may recover the statutory damages the Act also
    provides for."); Smith v. Chapman, 
    614 F.2d 968
    , 971 (5th Cir. 1980) ("It
    is not necessary that the plaintiff-consumer actually have been deceived
    in order for there to be a [TILA] violation."); Hinkle v. Rock Springs
    Nat'l
    Bank, 
    538 F.2d 295
    , 297 (10th Cir. 1976) ("It is apparent that no
    showing of actual damages is required and instead the recovery is fixed
    by statute.").
    The only case to depart from strict liability under TILA is Streit v.
    Fireside Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc., 
    697 F.2d 193
     (7th Cir. 1983), in which
    the defendant, a car dealer, allegedly violated TILA by neglecting to
    provide the plaintiff with a duplicate of the retail installment contract.
    
    Id. at 194
    . After paying a portion of the down payment, the plaintiff
    returned the car claiming that it was defective and refused to pay any
    installments. 
    Id. at 194-95
    . The court rejected the plaintiff's TILA
    claim:
    [I]t is not good policy and is not required by a reasonable
    construction of the Act to hold a creditor liable for a technical
    violation of the sort here involved: where the consumer was not
    misled nor financially harmed and where the consumer unilaterally
    breached the contract almost immediately after it was entered. The
    purposes of the Act and the respect the Act is due are not served
    by
    a rigid application that results in an unjustified windfall to the
    consumer.
    
    Id. at 197
    . The holding in Streit therefore appears confined to the
    specific
    facts of that case -- namely the hyper-technical nature of the violation
    (failure to provide a duplicate of the finance agreement) and the
    plaintiff's own actionable conduct (breach of contract).
    21
    fairly substantial body of TILA caselaw that existed at the
    time Congress enacted TISA in 1991, we presume that
    Congress was aware of the judicial interpretation of TILA
    and that in borrowing language from TILA, Congress
    intended that language to have the same meaning that
    courts had given TILA.9 Cf. Northcross v. Bd. of Educ., 
    412 U.S. 427
    , 428 (1973) (per curiam) (noting that "similarity of
    language . . . is, of course, a strong indication that . . . two
    statutes should be interpreted pari passu," particularly
    where "the two provisions share a common raison d'etre"
    (internal quotations omitted)). Since the TILA jurisprudence
    overwhelmingly rejects any reliance requirement, it seems
    likely that Congress did not intend to impose any such
    requirement under the similarly-worded provision of TISA.
    For the foregoing reasons, we hold that to recover
    statutory damages under S 4310, a plaintiff need not show
    that he relied on the advertised APY, that he would not
    have opened the account had the advertisement complied
    with TISA, or that he was otherwise misled or financially
    harmed by the failure to comply with TISA's disclosure
    requirements.10
    IV.
    Because we hold that the Bank's advertisements and
    account disclosures violated TISA and the implementing
    regulations, and because we hold that to recover statutory
    _________________________________________________________________
    9. The stated purpose of TISA is "to require the clear and uniform
    disclosure of . . . the rates of interest which are payable on deposit
    accounts by depository institutions . . . and the fees that are assessable
    against deposit accounts so that consumers can make a meaningful
    comparison between the competing claims of depository institutions with
    regard to deposit accounts." 12 U.S.C. S 4301(b). Similarly, the stated
    purpose of TILA is "to assure a meaningful disclosure of credit terms so
    that the consumer will be able to compare more readily the various
    credit terms available to him and avoid the uninformed use of credit, and
    to protect the consumer against inaccurate and unfair credit billing and
    credit card practices." 15 U.S.C. S 1601(a).
    10. To recover actual damages, however, a plaintiff must obviously show
    that he suffered some financial harm that he would not have suffered
    had the advertisements and disclosures in question complied with TISA.
    22
    damages an account holder need not show that he was
    misled or financially harmed by the defendant's failure to
    comply with TISA, we hold that Schnall is entitled to partial
    summary judgment on the question of liability. See Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 56(c) ("A summary judgment, interlocutory in
    character, may be rendered on the issue of liability alone
    although there is a genuine issue as to the amount of
    damages.").
    Accordingly, the order of the District Court granting the
    Bank's motion for summary judgment and denying
    Schnall's cross-motion for partial summary judgment will
    be reversed, and this case will be remanded for further
    proceedings to determine the amount of damages to be
    awarded.
    A True Copy:
    Teste:
    Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    23