MasterCard says $18
billion British class action lawsuit blocked
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[July 21, 2017]
By Kirstin Ridley
LONDON (Reuters) - A 14 billion pound ($18
billion) class action lawsuit against MasterCard for allegedly
overcharging more than 45 million people in Britain over a 16-year
period was blocked from proceeding by a judge, MasterCard said on
Friday.
The Competition Appeal Tribunal (CAT) has sided with MasterCard's
argument that the claims were unsuitable to be brought under a so-called
collective actions regime and has not allowed the case to go to trial,
the company said.
"We welcome the Competition Appeal Tribunal's judgment refusing
certification for the proposed collective action," a MasterCard
spokesman said in a statement.
Had it been allowed to proceed, the case would have been the largest and
most complex in UK legal history and would have tested the limits of the
new Consumer Rights Act, which introduced U.S.-style "opt-out"
collective class actions for breaches of UK or EU competition law in
2015.
U.S.-based litigator Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan launched the case
on behalf of adults in Britain after MasterCard lost a drawn-out appeal
against a 2007 European Commission decision that ruled its fees were
anti-competitive.
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A MasterCard credit card is pictured on this photo illustration
taken in Bordeaux, Southwestern France, August 22, 2016.
REUTERS/Regis Duvignau
The case centered on so-called interchange fees, the charges levied by credit
and debit card companies such as Mastercard on merchants' banks, which card
companies say cover the costs of operating card services, security and
innovation.
London-based Walter Merricks, a lawyer who once led the Financial Ombudsman
Service group that handles consumer disputes with banks and who is the
representative named on the class action, said he was considering an appeal.
He said he was surprised and disappointed at the ruling.
London's High Court ruled in January that MasterCard had charged interchange
fees at a lawful level and without restricting competition in a similar dispute
with retailers.
(Reporting by Kirstin Ridley; editing by Alexander Smith)
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