Christina Spicer  |  October 18, 2017

Category: Consumer News

Top Class Actions’s website and social media posts use affiliate links. If you make a purchase using such links, we may receive a commission, but it will not result in any additional charges to you. Please review our Affiliate Link Disclosure for more information.

Young woman holding a cell phone with loading Wells Fargo mobile app. Conceptual editorial imageWells Fargo faces yet another class action lawsuit, this one alleging the bank forces customers to purchase auto insurance they don’t actually need.

Plaintiff Tianna Membreno alleges in her class action lawsuit that Wells Fargo’s practice of forcing 800,000 customers to pay for excessive auto insurance policies left nearly 300,000 people delinquent on their loans and caused 25,000 vehicle repossessions.

The plaintiff claims the bank forced auto loan customers to purchase additional auto insurance through a third-party vendor, even if they already had insurance.

Membreno says she purchased a vehicle in 2014 with a Wells Fargo loan. She allegedly had her own auto insurance, but Wells Fargo placed an extra policy on her account, charging her an extra $179.67 per month for eight months, in addition to financing fees and late fees.

The plaintiff claims she presented proof of insurance, but Wells Fargo refused to remove the insurance or credit her account. Further, alleges the plaintiff, her car was repossessed because the bank said that she failed to pay for the insurance she did not need.

“Not only were the CPI policies unnecessary, they were more expensive than the coverage borrowers obtained on their own,” alleges the Wells Fargo class action complaint. “These unlawful deductions resulted in account delinquencies, overdrawn payment accounts, increased interest rates, late fees, repossessed vehicles, and damage to borrowers’ credit.”

According to the class action lawsuit, The New York Times revealed in a July 2017 story that Wells Fargo admitted in response to customer complaints, that it had unfairly charged customers for the extra auto insurance. The complaint notes that in response to the story, the head of consumer lending at Wells Fargo admitted to misconduct at the most senior levels of the bank.

The Wells Fargo class action alleges that Collateral Protection Insurance (CPI) auto insurance policies were sold to Wells Fargo customers from Jan. 2012 to July of 2016. However, Wells Fargo’s own review determined that the application of CPI policies were misapplied to customers who had other insurance. As a result, Wells Fargo customers were charged for an extra CPI policy. In some cases, alleges the plaintiff, the extra CPI premium lead to default and repossession of the vehicle.

Well Fargo auto loan customers were required to show proof of insurance and in cases where consumers did not have proof, Wells Fargo was required to send the customer a request to provide that proof. “However, Defendants engaged in a practice of secretly and automatically imposing these CPI policies on borrowers who, in many instances, already had auto insurance,” the Wells Fargo lawsuit states. “Thus, borrowers were paying premiums and interest on redundant policies they did not need or request.”

“The CPI insurance policies coupled with Wells Fargo’s internal rules about the order in which payments are applied to a customer’s account further exacerbated the problem,” alleges the complaint. “When Wells Fargo received a payment on an auto loan account, they applied it in the following order: interest on the auto loan, interest on the CPI insurance, principal on the auto loan, and then premium on the CPI policy.”

This is the second class action to hit the beleaguered bank over the alleged excessive auto insurance policies. This past summer, a class action was filed in federal court in California alleging that Wells Fargo and National General Insurance Company conspired to force auto loan customers to pay for insurance they did not need.

Membreno seeks to represent a nationwide Class of Wells Fargo auto loan customers who were charged for CPI auto insurance as well as a California subclass.

She is seeking damages as well as treble damages, an injunction against Wells Fargo, and an order requiring the bank to disgorge all profit from the alleged insurance scheme.

The plaintiff is represented by Azra Mehdi of The Mehdi Firm PC, and Peter Safirstein of Safirstein Metcalf LLP.

The Wells Fargo Auto Insurance Class Action Lawsuit is Membreno v. Wells Fargo & Company, et al., Case No. 2:17-cv-07561, in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California.

UPDATE: On April 20, 2018, a group of plaintiffs have asked a California federal judge to deny a motion by Wells Fargo and National General Insurance to dismiss a consolidated class action lawsuit accusing them of charging auto loan borrowers for unnecessary collateral protection insurance (CPI).

UPDATE 2: On June 6, 2019, customers accusing Wells Fargo and National General Insurance of tacking on unnecessary auto insurance to boost car loan bills are requesting approval of a $393.5 million settlement.

UPDATE 3: August 2019, the Wells Fargo auto loan insurance class action settlement is now open. Click here to learn more.

We tell you about cash you can claim EVERY WEEK! Sign up for our free newsletter.

48 thoughts onClass Action: Wells Fargo Pushes Unneeded Auto Insurance

  1. manuel says:

    PLEASE ADD ME TO ,WENT I BUY USED CAR WELL FARGO
    TOLD ME I NEED INSURANCE GAP OR CPI I PAY
    2012 OR BEFORE THANK YOU

  2. BOBBI BRANTLEY says:

    I would like to be added to this class action suit as I was charged for this insurance after proving I already had coverage.

  3. Wendy Linley says:

    Add me bc this happened to me!

  4. Letisia says:

    Omg!! Please add me. I had this done to me as well!!!!

  5. Shelia says:

    Please add me

    1. Augustine E.Uwandu says:

      Please add me to the list, I currently have auto payment with wells Fargo right now.

  6. Wendy Tchinski says:

    Please add me

  7. Denise wilks says:

    Please add me

  8. Janet Wilks says:

    This happened to me in 2016. I was told that I had to have this insurance and it was never taken off even after I demanded it to be taken off. Please add me to the lawsuit

  9. Barb Smith says:

    This happened to me as well I purchased my car in 2005 and 2012 at payoff they could not give me a correct amount because I refused to pay the difference they put it up as a charge off and I finally wound up having to pay off what they call paying charge-off settled for less than balance owed and it is on my credit report I sent them proof of insurance numerous times which they of course never received. I can easily buy a car from any Tote The Note lot now thanks to Wells Fargo’s deceptive practices. Don’t know if there’s any help out there for me but if so it would be appreciated.

  10. Mary Williams says:

    This happened to me please add me to the class action lawsuit

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. By submitting your comment and contact information, you agree to receive marketing emails from Top Class Actions regarding this and/or similar lawsuits or settlements, and/or to be contacted by an attorney or law firm to discuss the details of your potential case at no charge to you if you qualify. Required fields are marked *

Please note: Top Class Actions is not a settlement administrator or law firm. Top Class Actions is a legal news source that reports on class action lawsuits, class action settlements, drug injury lawsuits and product liability lawsuits. Top Class Actions does not process claims and we cannot advise you on the status of any class action settlement claim. You must contact the settlement administrator or your attorney for any updates regarding your claim status, claim form or questions about when payments are expected to be mailed out.