Supreme Court Opens the Door for Swipe Fee Revisions
The Supreme Court has ruled that a convenience store has the right to challenge a 2011 Federal Reserve ruling setting a cap on debit card swipe fees. Corner Post, a truck stop based in North Dakota, argued that the Fed’s swipe fee cap was higher than the “reasonable” limit established by the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act.
The decision reversed a lower court’s dismissal of the 2021 lawsuit by Corner Post, based on the store missing a six-year statute of limitations that generally applies to such litigation. The Supreme Court stated that this period under the Administrative Procedures Act does not start ticking “until the plaintiff is injured by final agency action.”
The North Dakota Retailers Association and the North Dakota Petroleum Marketers Association had initially filed the suit, which was dismissed for being outside the limitation period. The groups then added Corner Post as a party to the suit, with the idea being that it hadn’t been harmed by the regulations until the store’s debut in 2018. The ruling opens the door for future challenges to even longstanding federal regulations, simply by recruiting newly incorporated plaintiffs.