We’ve been trying to keep up! The number of class action lawsuits against Chase is growing. Here is information that has been excerpted from The Sturdevant Law Firm’s site (and we think it is Chase class action lawsuit #10 — the double-digit talley has a nice ring to it — ready to go for 100?):
Sauer v. Chase Bank USA, N.A.
U.S. District Court, Northern District of California Case Number CV 09-0809 BZ
Case Type: Nationwide Class Action – Consumer fraud, unfair business practices
Status: Class action filed on February 26, 2009
On February 26, 2009, The Sturdevant Law Firm and Co-Counsel, Donovan Searles, LLC filed a class action on behalf of Chase credit card customers whose credit card terms and conditions were unilaterally changed with little or no notice. Plaintiff Timothy Sauer had transferred his balance to a Chase credit card based on Chase’s promise of a low 2.99%-4.99% APR. For several years, Sauer made timely payments of his monthly minimum payment. Recently, Chase more than doubled Sauer’s, and thousands of other similarly situated individuals minimum payment and imposed a monthly fee. The lawsuit challenges this unfair business practice and breach of contract.
If you would like more information about this case, please contact Whitney Huston or Kathy Becker at (415) 477-2410. Thank you.
The lawsuit came to our attention due to coverage by Anna Werner, with San Francisco’s KPIX CBS 5.



on Mar 6th, 2009 at 11:01 am
[...] announced class action lawsuit #10, putting the number of lawsuits in the double-digits. Now we present #11, filed by Milberg [...]