Metropolitan
News-Enterprise
Monday,
August 27, 2001
Page
1
Court of Appeal Upholds Two-Tier System of Gasoline Pricing
By
a MetNews Staff Writer
Gas
stations may continue to charge higher prices to customers who use credit cards
rather than cash as long as the differential reflects the actual cost of
processing credit transactions, this district’s Court of Appeal ruled Friday.
Div.
One granted a writ of mandate directing that summary adjudication be granted in
favor of Thrifty Oil Co., which successfully argued that its practice of
charging four cents per gallon more for credit card sales represented a legal
discount and not an illegal surcharge.
Los
Angeles Superior Court Judge Morris B. Jones had denied the company’s motion,
ruling that the issue of whether the differential was a surcharge or a discount
was a question of fact.
The
ruling is the latest in a six-year-old class action against Thrifty, which no
longer operates retail stations. The Court of Appeal previously ruled that the
suit could not proceed as a class action, but the state Supreme Court reversed
last year in Linder v. Thrifty Oil Co.
(2000) 23 Cal.3d 429.
Legal
Provisions
Named
plaintiff Rochelle Linder accused Thrifty of violating two provisions of the
Song-Beverly Credit Card Act of 1971—Civil Code Sec. 1748.1, prohibiting
surcharges for the use of credit cards, and Sec.1747.8(a)(3), prohibiting the
use of a form which requires the customer to provide any “personal
identification number,” including a telephone number.
She
asked the court to certify a class made up of all persons who used credit cards
at Thrifty stations during a three-year period beginning in May 1992 and had to
pay more than the cash price, or who had to fill out “prohibited credit card
transaction forms.”
Linder
contended that although the section prohibiting surcharges specifically permits
discounts for using cash if “offered to all prospective buyers,” Thrifty was in
violation because it did not offer such discounts at all of its stations.
Following
remand, Jones granted summary adjudication as to the forms, but denied it as to
the surcharges. Friday’s ruling leaves only one cause of action remaining, a claim
that offering two-tier pricing at some but not all stations constituted unfair
competition.
Available
to All
Justice
Miriam A. Vogel concluded Friday that Thrifty’s two-tier pricing didn’t violate
the credit card statute, noting that it was available to all customers at each
station that employed it, and that prices were displayed, “clear as day,” on
signs at each station as well as at each pump.
The
plaintiff, Vogel noted, didn’t refute Thrifty’s evidence that the price
differential reflected its actual costs of processing the transactions, nor was
there evidence that the price structure was established with the design of
earning additional profit from credit card customers.
The
justice rejected Linder’s reliance on an economist who declared that a “normal
price” for gas could be determined by analyzing the company’s retail
operations, leading to a valid conclusion as to whether the company was
offering a cash discount or a credit card surcharge.
Since
the expert did no such analysis, he didn’t establish the existence of a
material factual dispute, Vogel concluded. “The expert’s musings about the
various means by which a retailer’s “normal price.”
Copyright
2001, Metropolitan News Company