A Godiva Chocolatier Inc. consumer lacked standing to bring claims that the company violated a federal law by including too many digits on credit card receipts, the full Eleventh Circuit said, definitively scuttling a $6.3 million privacy class settlement.
Although the receipt violated the law, David Muransky failed to allege he suffered concrete harm or a material risk of harm stemming from the violation, a majority of the en banc U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit said Wednesday.
Because the alleged wrong amounts to nothing more than a “bare procedural violation, divorced from any concrete harm,” Muransky failed...