Computerworld — For all the concern expressed about companies' exposure to lawsuits in the wake of data breaches, a decision earlier this week by a federal appeals court shows yet again what a challenge it can be for consumers to actually win redress when one occurs.
The United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit on Thursday rejected a proposed class-action lawsuit against Evansville, Ind.-based Old National Bancorp (ONB) over a 2005 data-breach incident.
In dismissing the proposed suit, the judges argued that damages were unavailable to the plaintiffs in this case because they had failed to show how they had been monetarily affected by the breach at the bank.
The lawsuit was filed on behalf of tens of thousands of customers of Old National Bancorp whose personal and financial data had been exposed by an intrusion that in the court's ruling was described as "sophisticated, intentional and malicious."
The complaint charged ONB with failing to properly secure personal data that it had solicited from customers through its website. The plaintiffs in the case sought compensation from ONB for past and future credit monitoring services that they said they needed to obtain in response to the compromise.
The three judges of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit who heard the case ruled that mere "allegations of increased risk of future identity theft" were insufficient grounds for claiming damages from ONB. "The plaintiffs have not suffered a harm that the law is prepared to remedy," the judges wrote in their decision.
The judges pointed to Indiana's existing data breach disclosure law and said that statute required companies to inform individuals only of compromises involving personal data. The law does not require "the database owner to take any other affirmative act in the wake of a breach," the judges noted. It's only in situations where a breached entity fails to notify affected individuals that the law can be enforced, and that too only by Indiana's attorney general, the judges noted.
The law does not provide for private right of action by consumers, nor does it allow them to ask for compensation in breach situations, they noted.
"Had the Indiana legislature intended that a cause of action should be available against a database owner for failing to protect adequately personal information, we believe that it would have made some more definite statement of that intent," the judges said.


