Insights
Ninth Circuit Dismisses Session Replay Wiretap Case
September 4, 2025
Peter Espey (Of Counsel-Madison, NJ) and Brianna Cyr (Associate-Madison, NJ) successfully defended their client, a car dealership, in a putative class action.
The plaintiff alleged, on behalf of herself and others similarly situated, that the dealership was overcharging its customers for registration fees. She also brought individual claims related to alleged malfunctions in the vehicle she purchased. The plaintiff had signed an agreement to arbitrate and a waiver of the right to bring a class action when she bought the vehicle. In lieu of an answer, a motion to dismiss was filed.
The plaintiff vigorously opposed the motion. She argued the arbitration agreement was invalid because it allegedly impaired her statutory rights and precluded her from bringing a class action. Peter and Brianna filed a reply, and Peter argued the motion to dismiss. The Wilson Elser team maintained that the arbitration clause was unambiguous and easily located, rather than buried in the fine print. We also argued that the plaintiff's claims lacked merit, since she was charged the exact amount set by the State.
The Court agreed that the arbitration agreement and class action waiver were enforceable and concurred with Peter and Brianna’s arguments highlighting the strong public policy favoring arbitration. The plaintiff had a duty to read the contract she signed, and the statutes and case law required enforcement of the arbitration clause and class action waiver. The case was dismissed in favor of arbitration. This dismissal also means that the plaintiff cannot pursue her proposed class action.
Peter Espey and Brianna L. Cyr
Washington, D.C. partners David Ross and Kevin P. Farrell and associate Daniel Coffman secured a rare acknowledgement from the District of Columbia Superior Court, which conceded it committed a clear error in previously certifying a class in a case related to vehicle repossession practices. The court had found that proposed class members suffered similar injuries based on an alleged practice of overcharging for repossession and vehicle storage and other actions taken after a customer’s default. Wilson Elser filed a motion contending that the court did not address issues presented in its Opposition to Class Certification. The court agreed, finding that a class cannot be certified for several reasons: (1) plaintiff lacks standing because her claims are based entirely on past conduct; (2) plaintiff cannot serve as class representative or a member of a class because her claims are time-barred; (3) arbitration and class waiver clauses in the plaintiff’s and proposed class member’s contracts preclude class certification; and (4) the court’s sua sponte reliance on a municipal regulation was misplaced.
David M. Ross, Kevin P. Farrell and Daniel R. Coffman
Daniel Coffman (Associate-Washington, DC), Anjali Das (Partner-Chicago, IL), David Ross (Partner-Washington, DC), Kim Viergever (Of Counsel-Denver, CO) and Ryan Williams (Partner-Denver, CO) obtained dismissal with prejudice of a federal data breach class action filed against a services vendor for mental health care providers in the District of Colorado. The case comprised eight consolidated class actions brought by 15 named plaintiffs that arose out of a ransomware incident that involved the personal information of almost 4.3 million individuals and included sensitive information such as health information and Social Security numbers. The court agreed that all of the named plaintiffs lack Article III standing, dissecting each of their alleged theories of harm and coming down on the side of the more reasoned courts that have found these types of theories fail to establish standing – public disclosure of private information, increased spam, diminution in value of PHI/PII, emotional distress and future harm. The court concluded that “Plaintiffs have failed to allege injuries in fact that are fairly traceable to the Defendants’ complained-of conduct,” and issued a judgment dismissing the plaintiffs’ claims with prejudice and closing the case.
Daniel R. Coffman, Anjali C. Das, David M. Ross, Kimberly Viergever and Ryan A. Williams
Anjali Das (Partner-Chicago, IL), Brian Myers (Of Counsel-Washington, DC) and Tommy Spitaletto (Partner-Dallas, TX) obtained dismissal of a data breach class action filed against a mental health care provider in the Western District of Texas. The lawsuit arose out of a cyber-attack that involved personal information that included sensitive information such as health information and Social Security numbers. In support of our client’s motion to dismiss, Wilson Elser argued that the plaintiff lacked Article III standing to sue because she failed to allege any injury-in-fact in the form of identity theft fraud, or misappropriation as a result of the breach. Instead, the plaintiff alleged that her harm consisted of (1) lost time and out-of-pocket expenses spent dealing with the data breach; (2) diminished value of her personal, health and financial information; (3) anxiety; (4) violation of privacy rights; (5) loss of the benefit of the bargain made with our client and overpayment for services intended to include data security; and (6) increased risk of future fraud and identity theft. The District Court agreed with Wilson Elser’s position that the plaintiff lacked standing to bring suit and dismissed the case on the basis that the plaintiff failed to allege any actual injury in the form of identity theft, financial fraud or misuse of personal information that could be traced to the cyber incident.
Anjali C. Das, Brian H. Myers and Thomas M. Spitaletto
Benjamin Greenfield (Partner-Philadelphia, PA) and New York City partners Joshua Cash and Larry Lum succeeded in convincing the Kings County Supreme Court, Civil Term, to grant their pre-answer motion on behalf of the largest casino operator in New York City, to dismiss plaintiff’s claims in their entirety, including the dismissal of plaintiff’s individual and putative class action claims. Essentially, plaintiff, by and through her counsel, set forth conspiratorial claims that the casino is engaged in a deceptive practice to deprive patrons of their loose change. The plaintiff alleges that after receiving her cash-out voucher from the machine at the casino, she was only paid out the amount in whole dollars, and was not paid the full balance due, including the cents. The plaintiff sought to represent a class of all casino customers who were similarly deprived of their loose change. Notably, plaintiff’s counsel appeared to be taking the lead from similar attempted class actions claims sought to be certified against at least two other casinos in other jurisdictions around the country. Ben, Joshua and Larry obtained dismissal of the multiple causes of action set forth in plaintiff’s complaint, including violation of New York Business Law §§ 349 and 350, Breach of Contract, Conversion and Unjust Enrichment, and relied successfully on affidavits from casino personnel and photographic evidence that demonstrated conclusively there was nothing misleading about the defendant’s practices and that any forfeiture of such change was plaintiff’s own deliberate choice. The court also was convinced to dismiss plaintiff’s proposed class action claims insofar as the class definition was overbroad, sought to certify what was effectively a sham proceeding (the court specifically referenced within its 15-page decision the adage that “the law does not concern itself with trifles”), and would not be composed of persons with identical interests.
Benjamin D. Greenfield, Joshua Cash and Larry Lum
Jeremy Stephenson (Of Counsel-Charlotte) secured a reversal in the North Carolina Supreme Court of the trial court’s class certification made in a consumer fraud case against Wilson Elser’s client, an auto dealership event promoter. The plaintiffs claim to have received a promotional mailing from a car dealership that was allegedly deceptive and misled recipients into believing they had won a car or a significant cash award. The trial court issued a class certification order, and the plaintiffs brought a class action complaint against our client, the dealership and other parties connected to the sales promotion. Jeremy argued that the trial court’s certification order failed to comply with many aspects of the multi-step certification criteria. The Supreme Court found the certification order internally inconsistent regarding class definitions and vacated the order. “Specifically, the trial court’s order used one class definition to analyze the certification criteria, then changed the definition when actually certifying the class.” The rare, published opinion, a significant victory for businesses and civil defendants, looks at issues created by what the Supreme Court deemed “the mismatch in class definitions” in this matter, such as potential conflicts of interest and potential inefficiencies in the class. Diandria Rabsatt (Paralegal-Charlotte) assisted on the case.