Owner-Operator Ind. Drivers Assoc. v. Concord EFS ( 2000 )


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  •            IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT NASHVILLE
    OWNER-OPERATOR                           )
    INDEPENDENT DRIVERS                      )
    ASSOCIATION, INC., HAROLD
    LAN DRY , JIMM Y HU X d/b/a
    HUX TRUCKING, RICHARD
    )
    )
    )
    FILED
    KERSHMAN, and LAUREL                     )                 February 29, 2000
    BAR RICK , Individually and On Be half   )
    of All Others Similarly Situated,        )                Cecil Crowson, Jr.
    )              Appellate Court Clerk
    Plaintiffs/Appellants,             )     Appeal No.
    )     M1999-02560-COA-R3-CV
    VS.                                      )
    )     Williamson Ch ancery
    CONCORD EFS, INC., EFS                   )     No. 125387
    NATION AL BAN K, FLYING J,               )
    INC., and PILOT CORPORATION,             )
    )
    Defendants/Appellees.              )
    APPEALED FROM THE CHANCERY C OURT
    OF WILLIAMSON COUNTY AT
    FRANKLIN, TENNESSEE
    THE HONORABLE CORNELIA A. CLARK, CHANCELLOR
    FOR THE APPELLAN TS:                     FOR THE APPELLEES
    W. GARY BLACKBURN                        CONCOR D EFS, INC. and
    JOHN R. CALLCOTT                         EFS NATIONAL BANK:
    Nashville, Tennessee                     J. RICHARD BUCHIGNANI
    DOUGLAS A. BLACK
    PAUL D. CULLEN, SR.                      Memphis, Tennessee
    AMY IRENE WASHBURN
    Washington, DC                           FOR APP ELL EE FL YING J, INC .:
    J. O. BASS, JR.
    Nashville, Tennessee
    JONATHAN A. DIBBLE
    ERIC D. BARTON
    Salt Lake City, Utah
    FOR APP ELL EE PI LOT COR P.:
    ROBERT R. CAMPBELL
    AMY V. HOLLARS
    Knoxville, Tennessee
    AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART;
    AND REMANDED
    BEN H. CANTRELL,
    PRE SIDIN G JU DGE , M.S.
    OPINION
    The primary question in this breach of contract case is whether the
    plaintiff independent truckers were third-party beneficiaries of promises made
    by the defendant truck stop owners to the defendant bank and the credit card
    organizations that they would not add a surcharge to purchases. The trial court
    found that they were not third-party beneficiaries and granted summary judgment
    to the defendants. We believe, however, that as holders of credit cards issued by
    Visa and MasterCard, the truckers were intentional beneficiaries of the no-
    surcharge provisions in those contracts. We accordingly reverse the trial court’s
    award of summary judgment to the defendant truck stop owners. We affirm the
    trial court in other respects, including its dismissal of claims by the truckers’
    organization.
    I. A CLASS ACTION LAWSUIT
    Harold Landry, Jimmy Hux, Richard Kershman and Laurel Barrick
    were independent truckers who used credit cards issued by Visa and MasterCard
    to purchase diesel fuel at truck stop chains owned by two of the defendant
    companies. Contracts between the Visa and MasterCard organizations, the
    defendant bank, and the truck stop operators all provided that no surcharge
    would be imposed against users of the cards. Nonetheless, the truckers had to
    pay at least three cents more for each gallon of fuel than did customers who paid
    by other means.
    The above named truckers are members of the Owner-Operator
    Independent Drivers Association (OOIDA). On April 7, 1998 OOIDA joined
    with them in a class action lawsuit to enjoin the practice of imposing a surcharge
    on the use of the credit cards. The individual truckers also asked for damages
    resulting from the practice. The plaintiffs’ claims were based on the theory that
    they were third-party beneficiaries of the contracts in question. The defendants
    were truck stop operators Flying J and Pilot Corporation; EFS National Bank
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    (EFSNB), which processes Visa and MasterCard charges for the truck stop
    operators; and Concord EFS, Inc., the parent company of EFSNB. Visa and
    MasterCard were not named as defendants.
    The plaintiffs filed a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on the
    issue of liability. They contended that as there was no dispute that the truck stop
    operators breached their contracts not to impose surcharges on credit card
    transactions, the cardholders were entitled to prevail. The defendants filed a
    Motion to Dismiss, arguing that since the plaintiffs were not parties to the
    contracts at issue, they had no standing to sue.
    After two hearings and a vigorous struggle about discovery of
    contract documents (which continued even after the final order was filed), the
    trial court finally granted summary judgment to the defendants on all claims, and
    dismissed the plaintiffs’ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. The court
    agreed with the defendants that the plaintiff truckers association and the
    individual plaintiffs had no standing to sue, finding that they were not intended
    third-party beneficiaries of the contracts. The court also found that Concord EFS,
    as a parent corporation, could not be held liable for the actions of its subsidiary.
    This appeal followed.
    II. THE CREDIT CARD SYSTEM
    It is not possible to discuss the contracts at issue without reference
    to the complex web of contractual obligations between banks, merchants, and
    individual cardholders which makes modern consumer credit possible. The
    structure of the system is something like a pyramid, with the credit card
    associations at the top. Only banks and other financial institutions are eligible
    for membership in the voluntary Visa and MasterCard associations.
    -3-
    The member banks, which number in the thousands, constitute the
    second level of the pyramid. The credit card associations recognize two kinds
    of members, each performing a different function within the system: issuing
    banks contract with customers such as the plaintiff drivers and issue credit cards
    to them; acquiring banks, also known as merchant banks, process credit card
    transactions for merchants, such as Flying J and Pilot.
    Hundreds of thousands of retail merchants make up the next level
    of the pyramid. When a cardholder uses his credit card to buy something from
    a merchant, the merchant must of necessity contact both an issuing bank and a
    merchant bank, for the issuing bank must approve the credit of the cardholder
    before the merchant bank can process the transaction through its electronic
    communications network.
    The lowest level of the pyramid is made up of many millions of
    cardholders. When a cardholder desiring to make a purchase presents his card
    to a participating merchant, the merchant “swipes” the card through the point of
    sale device supplied by the merchant bank. The information on the card’s
    magnetic stripe, together with information about the intended purchase, is
    transmitted to the Visa or MasterCard association, then to the issuing bank.
    If the issuing bank approves the sale, an intricate sequence of
    electronic transactions is set into motion which involves the issuing bank, the
    Visa or MasterCard association, the merchant bank, and the merchant.
    Essentially, the merchant bank pays the merchant a discounted sum, and is
    subsequently reimbursed by the issuing bank, which makes payment through the
    credit card association. The issuing bank then bills the cardholder for the full
    amount of the transaction. The merchant bank, the issuing bank, and the credit
    card association each make a small profit from the sale, but action by the
    cardholder is necessary to both open and close the sequence of transactions.
    -4-
    III. THE CONTRACTS
    There are four separate contracts at issue in this case. The contracts
    between Visa and EFSNB (the merchant bank) and between MasterCard and
    EFSNB are both made up of several documents, including the by-laws and rules
    promulgated by the respective credit card associations.            Both Visa and
    MasterCard prohibit surcharges. Rule 9.04 of the MasterCard rules demonstrates
    the comprehensiveness of the prohibition:
    Charges to Cardholders. The merchant shall
    not directly or indirectly require any MasterCard
    cardholder to pay a surcharge, to pay any part of any
    merchant discount, whether through an increase in
    price or otherwise, or to pay any contemporaneous
    finance charge in connection with the transaction in
    which a MasterCard is used. A surcharge is any fee,
    charged directly or indirectly, deemed by this
    corporation to be associated with the use of a
    MasterCard card that is not charged if another
    payment method is used.
    The MasterCard rules further specify how the desired result is to be
    achieved:
    Because an issuer must be able to rely on certain basic
    terms in merchant agreements that affect the use of its
    MasterCard cards in interchange transactions, each
    merchant agreement must contain the substance of the
    prohibitions set forth in Rule 9.04(b) . . .
    Each member and each affiliate shall use its best
    efforts to cause each of its merchants to observe the
    provisions of the merchant agreement required by
    Rule 9.04(b) . . .
    The MasterCard rules also state that “these rules are intended to be
    solely for the benefit of the Corporation [MasterCard] and its members.” A
    similar provision is found in the Visa by-laws. However, the record shows that
    both organizations used several methods to notify consumers of the benefits of
    the no-surcharge provision, including publication of those provisions on their
    internet sites.
    -5-
    The contracts between EFSNB and Pilot, and between EFSNB and
    Flying J specifically reference the documents that make up the Visa-EFSNB and
    the MasterCard-EFSNB contracts, and require the merchants to comply with
    those contracts. They both also state that “Merchant . . . shall not impose any
    surcharge on transactions,” and warrant that “each Sales Draft prepared and each
    transaction transmitted to EFSNB represents a valid obligation for the amount
    set forth therein, . . . and that there have been no services, carrying or any special
    charges or any special agreements, conditions or securities extracted in
    connection with the sale . . . .” It is undisputed that Pilot and Flying J charged
    more for fuel purchased with Visa and Mastercard than for fuel purchased by
    other means.
    IV. THE CARDHOLDERS AS THIRD-PARTY BENEFICIARIES
    The law presumes that a contract has been executed solely for the
    benefit of those who are parties to it. Thus, the general rule is that an individual
    who is not a party to a contract cannot sue for its breach. However, the general
    rule gives way when a non-party can prove that he is an intended beneficiary of
    the contract. First Tenn. Bank Nat’l Ass’n v. Thoroughbred Motor Cars, Inc.,
    
    932 S.W.2d 928
    , 930 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1996). A non-party who wishes to enforce
    a contract has the burden of proving that he is entitled to recover as a third-party
    beneficiary. Moore Construction Co. v. Clarksville Dept. of Electricity, 
    707 S.W.2d 1
    , 9 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1985).
    The law draws a sharp distinction between an intentional beneficiary
    (who may maintain an action on the contract) and an incidental beneficiary (who
    may not). The fact that a party may reap a substantial benefit from the
    performance of a contract does not, in and of itself, entitle it to the status of an
    intentional beneficiary. United American Bank of Memphis v. Gardner, 
    706 S.W.2d 639
     (Tenn. Ct. App. 1985). Rather, he must show that the contract was
    -6-
    entered into, at least in part, for that party’s benefit (the “intent to benefit” test)
    or that one party to the contract assumed a duty that the other party owed to the
    third-party (the “duty owed” test). Moore Construction v. Clarksville Dept. of
    Electricity, supra at 9. The appellants contend that they satisfy both of these
    tests.
    Although the intent to benefit test may sound as if it sets out a clear
    standard to follow, its application still begs the question of just what constitutes
    an intent to benefit. In attempting to answer the question, courts frequently find
    themselves having to apply definitions that suffer from an unhelpful circularity.
    The following excerpt from Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 302 (quoted in
    footnote 18, Moore Construction Co. v. Clarksville Dept. of Electricity, 
    707 S.W.2d 1
    , 9 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1985) serves as an example:
    (1) Unless otherwise agreed between promisor
    and promisee, a beneficiary of a promise is an
    intended beneficiary if recognition of a right to
    performance in the beneficiary is appropriate to
    effectuate the intention of the parties and either
    (a) the performance of the promise will satisfy
    an obligation of the promisee to pay money to the
    beneficiary; or
    (b) the circumstances indicate that the promisee
    intends to give the beneficiary the benefit of the
    promised performance. . . (emphasis added)
    While acknowledging the validity of the general principles stated
    above, the court did not attempt to more precisely define how one determines
    what “the promisee intends,” but concluded that ultimately, “[e]ach case must be
    decided on its own unique facts considered in light of the specific contractual
    agreements and the circumstances under which they were made.” 707 S.W.2d
    at 10.
    With respect to the merchants (Pilot and Flying J) we think that the
    truckers were clearly third-party beneficiaries of the merchants’ contract with the
    -7-
    merchant bank. In that agreement the merchants said in effect, “We promise not
    to add a surcharge to purchases made with your credit cards.” Only if the
    merchants now say “Well, we never intended to keep that promise” can they
    escape the conclusion that the benefit of the agreement was intended for the card
    holders. They do not insist that they were that cynical. We accordingly find that
    the truckers have standing to maintain this suit against Pilot and Flying J, and
    that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment to those defendants.
    With respect to the merchant bank (EFSNB) its promise does not
    affect the cardholders so directly. Its promise to Visa and MasterCard was to
    “use its best efforts to cause each of its merchants to observe the provisions of
    the merchant agreement required by Rule 9.04(b).” Does that promise give the
    cardholders a right to sue the merchant bank for failing to prevent the merchants
    from adding a surcharge to credit card purchases?
    We are convinced that the merchant bank’s promise only
    incidentally confers a benefit on the cardholders. “Using my best efforts to
    prevent” another from adding a surcharge is a far different thing from the
    merchant’s promise of “I will not add a surcharge.” Therefore, we think the
    lower court properly granted summary judgment to the merchant bank. It follows
    that EFSNB’s parent company, Concord EFS, was also entitled to summary
    judgment.
    V. THE STANDING OF THE OWNER-OPERATORS DRIVERS ASSOCIATION
    The trial court explicitly found that aside from the question of third-
    party beneficiary status, OOIDA lacked standing to maintain a class action in its
    own name on behalf of its members, because it did not meet all three
    requirements set out for such standing in Redbud Cooperative Corporation v.
    Clayton, 
    700 S.W.2d 551
     (Tenn. Ct. App. 1985).
    -8-
    As stated in Redbud, the three requirements a membership
    association must meet before it can maintain suit in its own name are (1) its
    members would otherwise have standing to sue in their own right; (2) the
    interests it seeks to protect are germane to the organization’s purpose; and (3)
    neither the claim asserted, nor the relief requested, requires the participation of
    individual members in the lawsuit. 
    700 S.W.2d at 556
    . The court correctly
    found that OOIDA met the first two requirements, but not the third.
    We have already determined that the four OOIDA members have
    standing to sue in their own right. It is also apparent that OOIDA is seeking to
    protect the interests of its members. OOIDA is a national trade organization of
    independent truckers. Its members each drive on average more than 100,000
    miles per year, and surcharges of even a few cents per gallon on the fuel they use
    can result in substantial monetary damages to their operations. Because of their
    geographic dispersion, it is difficult for members to pursue claims for relatively
    small sums of money. OOIDA has accordingly set up a department to help
    owner-operators collect funds rightfully due to them, and this department handles
    an average of 140 phone calls a day from members.
    As appropriate as it may be for OOIDA to pursue claims on behalf
    of its individual members, it cannot maintain this suit without the participation
    of those members. In the Redbud case, the court ruled that a homeowner’s
    association could maintain suit against residential developers who had
    negligently planned and executed a drainage system to carry rainwater away from
    the development. The developers themselves had incorporated the homeowner’s
    association to own, maintain and control the common areas of the development
    for the benefit of the homeowners. Thus the homeowner’s association could be
    considered an injured party when the development (including the common areas)
    repeatedly flooded.
    -9-
    The truck drivers’ association cannot claim any similar relationship
    to the defendants, and it has not claimed any injury to itself, apart from the injury
    to its members. OOIDA is not mentioned in the contracts at issue, and cannot be
    considered a third-party beneficiary of those contracts. There are also no
    allegations in the record that it purchased gas from the defendants using Visa or
    MasterCard.
    Although OOIDA lacks several ingredients required for standing,
    we see no obstacle to prevent it from continuing to support its members in their
    attempt to obtain redress. Our holding does not prevent the individual plaintiffs
    from seeking class certification “on behalf of all those similarly situated,”
    whether members or non-members of OOIDA, nor does it prevent them from
    continuing to seek the same remedy OOIDA sought, an injunction, in addition
    to their damages.
    VII.
    The trial court’s grant of summary judgment to Flying J, Inc., and
    Pilot Corporation is reversed, and the claims of Harold Landry, Jimmy Hux,
    Richard Kershman and Laurel Barrick against those entities are reinstated. We
    affirm the summary judgment in favor of EFSNB and Concord EFS. Remand
    this cause to the Chancery Court of Williamson County for further proceedings
    consistent with this appeal. Tax one-half the costs on appeal to the Owner-
    Operator Independent Drivers Association, and one-half to Flying J, Inc., and
    Pilot Corporation.
    _______________________________
    BEN H. CANTRELL,
    PRESIDING JUDGE, M.S.
    CONCUR:
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    ___________________________
    WILLIAM C. KOCH, JR., JUDGE
    ____________________________
    WILLIAM B. CAIN, JUDGE
    -11-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: M1999-02560-COA-R3-CV

Judges: Judge Ben H. Cantrell

Filed Date: 2/29/2000

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014