The topsy-turvy litigation involving the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's
A federal judge in Texas had
"This order should not be read to express any view on the transfer question, which has not been presented to this Court to decide," U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson wrote.
With the D.C. Circuit no longer involved, many legal experts think the credit card industry will prevail in getting an emergency stay to stop the $8 late fee rule from taking effect on May 14.
"The 5th Circuit has taken control and will issue a preliminary injunction," said Christopher Willis, a partner at Troutman Pepper, who is not involved in the case.
The CFPB's late fee rule, which was
Under the rule, issuers would still be able to charge more than $8 for late fees but only if they could prove to the bureau that higher fees are necessary to recoup costs associated with late payments. Credit card issuers bring roughly $14 billion a year in late fee revenue.
The case, Chamber of Commerce v. CFPB, is already notable for the massive number of docket entries — at 73 and counting. The flurry of legal moves and countermoves are an indication of the financial stakes.
"There's an enormous amount of money on the table," said Joe Lynyak, a partner at the law firm Dorsey & Whitney.
The 5th Circuit abruptly took control of the case on Friday despite an earlier ruling by Judge Mark T. Pittman of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, who declined to grant an emergency injunction and instead
The 5th Circuit is widely viewed as hostile to the CFPB and favorable to industry since it
"It's not a sure thing that the [$8 late fee] rule will be permanently stayed after the CFSA case shakes out in the Supreme Court, but it will likely be temporarily stayed," Willis said.
If the Supreme Court sides with the CFPB, as many experts expect, the $8 late fee rule then would still have to be decided on its merits by the District Court in Texas. The trade associations likely would ask for another emergency injunction to keep the rule from going into effect.
The litigation in the case took a surprise turn in mid-March when the CFPB accused the business trade groups of
The plaintiffs that sued the CFPB — including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, American Bankers Association and Consumer Bankers Association — have alleged that the agency engaged in regulatory overreach, lowered late fees to $8 using flawed data and issued the rule quickly without going through the normal rulemaking process. Further, the business groups claim the CFPB did so largely for political reasons to aid President Joe Biden ahead of the 2024 election.
The Biden administration