The Supreme Court of the US (SCOTUS) has agreed to hear a case challenging the debit card interchange fee cap set by the Federal Reserve.
Last Friday (September 29), SCOTUS聽 it would hear a lawsuit by Corner Post claiming that the US debit card interchange fee cap is set too high.
The case concerns the Federal Reserve鈥檚聽 adopted in 2011, which established that the interchange fee on debit card transactions must not exceed 21 cents plus 1 cent, set aside for fraud prevention, and 0.05 percent of the transaction value, reserved for fraud loss recovery. The cap applies only to large banks with more than $10bn in assets.
The Fed set the regulatory cap in accordance with the post-financial crisis Dodd-Frank Act, which directed the central bank to limit the fee at an amount that is 鈥渞easonable and proportional to the cost incurred by the bank issuer with respect to the transaction鈥.
Corner Post, a convenience store and truck post in North Dakota, argues that the interchange cap gives enormous profits to banks and is neither reasonable nor proportional to the costs.
Although issuers can charge 21 cents for a debit card transaction, their actual costs range between 3.9 and 5 cents, according to the most recent聽 from the Fed in 2019.
That means big banks have made an average profit of between 16 cents and 17.4 cents 鈥渇or virtually every one of 80bn debit-card transactions every year since 2011 鈥 or at least $12bn per year in profits鈥, Corner Post wrote in its聽 to SCOTUS.聽
鈥淭he [Fed] has never explained how a fee cap resulting in bank profits of between 320 percent and 483 percent per transaction is 鈥榬easonable and proportional to the cost鈥,鈥 it went on.
The statute of limitations question
Corner Post is one of the North Dakota plaintiffs who filed a lawsuit against the Fed rule in May 2021, as聽reported by 91天堂原創.
The challenge was聽 at the district court in March 2022, a decision that was later聽 by the court of appeals in December 2022.
The courts agreed that the claims were barred as retailers had filed the case outside the six-year statute of limitations, which passed in July 2017.
However, Corner Post argues that it opened business only in March 2018 and it would have been 鈥渁bsurd鈥 to require the firm to challenge the rule before that.
According to the retailer, the clock for challenging an agency rule actually starts 鈥渦pon injury to the plaintiff鈥 rather than 鈥渢he publication of the agency action鈥, its petition shows.
This interpretation means that the six-year statutory deadline started to run on the first day Corner Post opened its doors in 2018.
Corner Post stressed that this review regime 鈥渋s essential鈥 for businesses seeking judicial recourse against 鈥渢he administrative state, which now wields vast power and touches almost every aspect of daily life鈥.
A SCOTUS decision will resolve a split between various appellate courts which, over time, have come to different conclusions on this question.
Previously, five federal appeals courts have ruled against this argument, while a Sixth Circuit Court聽 confirmed it, ruling that 鈥渁 federal regulation that makes it six years without being contested does not enter a promised land free from legal challenge鈥.
The National Retail Federation (NRF) welcomed the SCOTUS decision to take up the case.
鈥淏asic concepts of due process and fairness require federal agencies to adhere to the laws that Congress drafts regardless of when the rules to implement those laws were issued,鈥 said NRF chief administrative officer and general counsel Stephanie Martz in an emailed statement.
鈥淚t鈥檚 been a dozen years since the Fed promulgated these rules, but Corner Post was harmed by them only recently and has every right to challenge them,鈥 Martz added.


