DENISE COTE, District Judge.
Defendant Rado Limited Partnership ("Rado") held a nondiscretionary custody account ("Custody Account") at Deutsche Bank Trust Company Americas ("DBTCA") and gave Fernando Haberer ("Haberer") authority to direct the trading in the Custody Account. Haberer was related by marriage to the beneficial owners of the Rado funds and securities managed by Haberer. Haberer's relatives now contend Haberer defrauded them through a series of investment decisions that resulted in, among other things, an overdraft in the Custody Account. In opposition to DBTCA's efforts to collect on the overdraft in the Custody Account, Rado has filed four counterclaims ("Claims"), which in essence argue that DBTCA should have done more to protect Rado from Haberer and his investment decisions. DBTCA's motion to dismiss Rado's Claims is granted.
The following facts are taken from Rado's Claims and documents integral to those Claims. Those documents include the 2011 Worldwide Custody Account Agreement ("Custody Agreement") and Rado's 2012 and 2016 agreements granting Haberer a power of attorney (the "2012 POA" and the "2016 POA").
DBTCA is a New York banking corporation that is a subsidiary of Deutsche Bank AG, a Swiss entity. Rado is a limited partnership organized under the laws of New Zealand. Rado is wholly owned by the Diego Trust, a trust established to benefit Diego Romay and his family.
In March of 2011, Rado opened the Custody Account with DBTCA, which was governed by a Custody Agreement. Under the terms of the Custody Agreement, DBTCA agreed to "keep and protect, in the same manner as the Bank keeps and protects its own similar property, the securities, cash or other financial assets [Rado] deposit[s] in [its] Account(s)" in exchange for monthly fees based on the value of the property held by the DTBCA. DBTCA also agreed that, "[u]pon instructions from [Rado] or [its] Advisor, the Bank will buy or sell, for [Rado's] Account and at [Rado's] sole risk, securities or other financial instruments and any foreign currency needed to complete these transactions." Although Rado or its advisor was responsible for placing orders with DBTCA, the Custody Agreement provided that "[t]he Bank may effect orders to buy or sell securities [and other investments] in any commercially reasonable manner the Bank deems appropriate." This included, for example, DBTCA's right to "select, in the Bank's sole discretion, the brokers, dealers, counterparties or other intermediaries the Bank uses, including itself or its affiliates."
DBTCA also preserved its discretion to decline certain transactions by Rado or its advisor. The Custody Agreement provides, for example, that "[t]he Bank may decline to execute or settle a purchase order if the Bank is not satisfied, in the Bank's sole judgment, that [Rado] will have sufficient available funds or credit in [its] Account." Rado agreed "to indemnify and hold the Bank harmless for any losses, costs or expenses the Bank incurs if [Rado] fail[s] to furnish immediately available funds when required to pay for [its] transactions and expenses." Rado also agreed that any of Rado's property held by DBTCA "shall be security for . . . any loans, overdrafts or other credit extended to [Rado]."
In addition, the Custody Agreement describes the methods by which Rado and DBTCA may communicate regarding the Custody Account. For example, DBTCA agreed to provide written statements of all transactions for Rado's accounts on a monthly basis. Should there be any objections to the account statements, Rado agreed "to provide them to the Bank within thirty (30) days after the date of the Account Statement," and consented that "if [it] do[es] not do so, it will be agreed that [Rado] ha[s] no objections to the Account Statement."
Finally, the Custody Agreement enumerates the limited scope of DBTCA's duties with respect to the Custody Account. It provides that DBTCA's "sole responsibility, unless [it] expressly agrees otherwise, is to receive, keep and protect [Rado's] Property as custodian, to maintain financial assets (within the meaning of the New York Uniform Commercial Code ("NY UCC")) in the Account as security entitlements in [Rado's] favor, and to provide the execution services, as described in this Agreement." It also informed Rado that DBTCA would bear no responsibility for advising Rado on the merits of any investment decision:
Rado provided two powers of attorney to DBTCA, one in 2012 and a second in 2016, authorizing Haberer, through his company Biscayne Capital S.A. ("Biscayne"), to conduct the trading activity in the Custody Account. Haberer was related to the Romay family by marriage. Through the 2012 POA, Rado authorized Haberer "to buy, sell, and trade in securities" at DBTCA "for [Rado's] account and risk" and Rado agreed "to indemnify and hold [DBTCA] harmless from all claims that may arise in connection [with the 2012 POA]." Rado further agreed in the 2012 POA "to pay [DBTCA] promptly on demand any and all losses and liabilities arising [from the 2012 POA] or from any action taken or not taken by [Rado] in reliance [on the 2012 POA], including without limitation, any debit balance due with respect to the Account."
The 2016 POA also authorized DBTCA to accept instructions from Haberer with respect to the Custody Account. It provided that DBTCA "may conclusively assume that all actions taken and instructions given by each of the Authorized Signer(s) [such as Haberer] have been properly taken or given pursuant to authority vested in such Authorized Signer(s) . . . ." The 2016 POA also affirmed that Rado would "indemnify and hold the Bank harmless from all claims, liabilities, losses, costs, expenses (including attorneys' fees) related to or arising from any action or inaction by any such Authorized Signer(s)."
Biscayne and Haberer are associated with Biscayne Capital Holdings ("Holdings") and its affiliates. Deutsche Bank S.A., DBTCA's parent company, had a longstanding relationship with Holdings. DBTCA also carried accounts for some of Holdings's affiliates. DBTCA's relationship to Holdings and its affiliates was managed by DBTCA's employee, Reynaldo Figueredo ("Figueredo").
Among Holdings's affiliates is Biscayne Capital International LLC ("LLC"). In 2016, the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") ordered LLC to cease and desist "owning, creating and improperly selling what are now essentially worthless proprietary products." It is alleged that LLC and related Biscayne entities did not comply with the SEC Cease-and-Desist Order.
Following the SEC Cease-and-Desist Order, Deutsche Bank AG decided to close accounts held by affiliates of Holdings. Related accounts at DBTCA were also scrutinized but allowed to stay open. At the request of Figueredo, certain other accounts previously held in Deutsche Bank AG were transferred to DBTCA.
In January 2018, Haberer directed DBTCA to buy approximately $12 million in illiquid notes related to the "essentially worthless proprietary products" that were subject to the 2016 SEC Cease-and-Desist Order.
In March and April 2018, Haberer transferred cash and securities into the Custody Account in order to satisfy the deficit. These funds and assets principally belonged to third parties and other clients of Haberer. On June 1, 2018, DBTCA sent a letter to Rado demanding payment of $2,557,262.72, the remaining cash deficiency in the Custody Account.
On July 27, 2018, DBTCA brought suit against Rado for breach of the Custody Agreement, seeking damages in the amount of $2,557,262.72 plus interest. On September 12, Rado answered and brought four Claims for breach of contract, aiding and abetting fraud, aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty, and gross negligence. On December 5, DTBCA moved to dismiss all of Rado's Claims. That motion was fully submitted on January 15, 2019.
"To survive a motion to dismiss, a complaint must contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face."
When a party moves to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted under Rule 12(b)(6), Fed. R. Civ. P., a court must "constru[e] the complaint liberally, accept[] all factual allegations as true, and draw[] all reasonable inferences in the plaintiff's favor."
Claims that sound in fraud must be plead with particularity pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b).
Rado asserts four Claims for breach of contract, aiding and abetting fraud, aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty, and gross negligence. Each Claim is addressed in turn.
"To state a claim for breach of contract under New York law,
Under New York law, "a fundamental objective of contract interpretation is to give effect to the expressed intention of the parties."
"If a contract is clear, courts must take care not to alter or go beyond the express terms of the agreement, or to impose obligations on the parties that are not mandated by the unambiguous terms of the agreement itself."
Rado principally claims that DBTCA breached the Custody Agreement in January 2018 by failing to cancel or reverse Haberer's orders to purchase approximately $12 million of "essentially worthless proprietary products" related to securities subject to the 2016 SEC Cease-and-Desist Order. Rado contends that, because the purchase orders resulted in a deficit in the Custody Account, DBTCA's decision to execute the orders breached its obligation to "keep and protect" Rado's assets and to "effect [Rado's] orders . . . in [a] commercially reasonable manner." In addition, Rado argues that DBTCA breached the Custody Agreement by providing Rado inaccurate account statements. Because none of these theories alleges any conduct by DBTCA contrary to the terms of the Custody Agreement, Rado's Claim for breach of contract is dismissed.
The terms of the Custody Agreement, as well as the 2012 and 2016 POAs, are plain and unambiguous. DBTCA's responsibilities with respect to the Custody Account were strictly constrained by their terms. The Custody Account was a nondiscretionary account; DBTCA expressly disclaimed any responsibility for "advising [Rado] about securities or other investments" or "determining the suitability of any investment." Rado agreed to make its own investment decisions and DBTCA agreed to execute them "at [Rado's] sole risk." Pursuant to the 2012 and 2016 POAs, DBTCA was entitled to "conclusively assume" that Haberer's investment decisions were duly authorized. In this context, DBTCA's obligation to "keep and protect" Rado's assets did not impose on DBTCA any duty to investigate or prevent the investments that Haberer ordered in January 2018.
Nor did DBTCA breach its obligation by failing to "effect" Haberer's orders in a "commercially reasonable manner." That provision of the Custody Agreement grants DBTCA discretion regarding
Rado also cannot premise its breach of contract Claim on a theory that the Custody Agreement prohibited DBTCA from extending a credit to the Custody Account. Although the Custody Agreement provides that DBTCA "may" decline to execute Rado's purchase orders if DBTCA "is not satisfied . . . that [Rado] will have sufficient available funds or credit in [its] Account," it does not prohibit DBTCA from extending credit to the account. Instead, the Custody Agreement contemplates that the Custody Account may be overdrawn. It provides that Rado's property "shall be security for . . . any loans, overdrafts or other credit extended to [Rado]." It also assigns to Rado the obligation to indemnify DBTCA "for any losses, costs or expenses the Bank incurs if [Rado] fail[s] to furnish immediately available funds when required to pay for [its] transactions and expenses."
Finally, Rado's related contention that DBTCA issued "incomplete and inaccurate" account statements does not state a claim for breach of contract. The Custody Agreement specifies that any objections to an account statement must be provided "in writing within thirty (30) days after the date of the Account Statement," or else "it will be agreed that [Rado] ha[s] no objections to the Account Statement." Thus, none of Rado's breach of contract theories survives the plain terms of the Custody Agreement.
Rado attempts to bolster its claim for breach of contract by asserting that, through certain contract provisions and the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, the Custody Agreement incorporates various rules and laws with which DBTCA did not comply. For example, Rado asserts that the Custody Agreement incorporates all provisions of the Handbook for Custody Services published by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency ("OCC") in January 2002 (the "OCC Handbook"). Rado also asserts that the Custody Agreement incorporates certain "free-riding rules," including Regulation U, 12 C.F.R. § 221, and Regulation T, 12 C.F.R. § 220.
Rado is incorrect for several reasons. First, none of these provisions are expressly incorporated into the Custody Agreement. Nor does the Custody Agreement even reference these provisions. It contains an integration clause stating that the Custody Agreement "reflects the entire agreement between [Rado] and the Bank with respect to the subject matter hereof . . . ." "[B]y defining the scope of their agreement in a merger clause, [the parties] have intended to require the full application of the parol evidence rule in order to bar the introduction of extrinsic evidence to alter, vary or contradict the terms of the writing."
Second, to the extent Rado relies on the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, the covenant "can only impose an obligation consistent with other mutually agreed upon terms in [a] contract."
Third, to the extent Rado contends that these rules and laws explain the "reason for" certain contractual provisions, they cannot be used to create ambiguity in an otherwise unambiguous agreement. "Ambiguity is determined within the four corners of the document."
"Under New York law, the elements of aiding and abetting a breach of fiduciary duty . . . and aiding and abetting a fraud are substantially similar."
Under either cause of action, "[a]ctual knowledge is required to impose liability on an aider and abettor."
Both causes of action also require that the defendant "provide[ ] `substantial assistance' to the primary violator."
DBTCA does not dispute the existence of an underlying fraud by Haberer or Haberer's breach of the fiduciary duty he owed to Rado. DBTCA contends, however, that Rado has not sufficiently alleged that DBTCA either knew of or substantially assisted the underlying fraud or breach of fiduciary duty. DBTCA is correct.
Rado does not plead facts sufficient to give rise to a "strong inference" that DBTCA had actual knowledge of Haberer's underlying fraud or breach of fiduciary duty.
These allegations support little more than an inference that DBTCA had constructive knowledge that Haberer was affiliated with an entity subject to an SEC Cease-and-Desist Order. Rado does not allege that Haberer held himself out as an agent of LLC, the entity subject to the SEC Cease-and-Desist Order. Nor does Rado allege that LLC was counterparty to any of the purchase orders Haberer placed. Rado also does not allege that Haberer purchased notes that were in fact subject to the SEC Cease-and-Desist Order; it only alleges that the securities Haberer purchased were "related" to those notes or issued by entities subject to the SEC Cease-and-Desist Order. Finally, Rado's allegations that DBTCA did not inquire into the legitimacy of Haberer's purchase or sale orders despite knowledge of two failed sales transactions "does not constitute a factual basis for the assertion that the [DBTCA's] officials actually knew that the fraud was, in fact, occurring."
Rado also fails to allege that DBTCA provided "substantial assistance" to Haberer's fraud or breach of fiduciary duty. Rado principally alleges that DBTCA should have investigated or reversed Haberer's January 2018 purchase orders because Haberer's corresponding sell orders were failing to execute and, if Haberer did not execute the sales, the purchases would result in a deficit in the Custody Account. Rado does not allege, however, that DBTCA took any affirmative steps to further or conceal Haberer's fraud. Instead, it claims that Rado substantially assisted Haberer's fraud by failing to "properly monitor and oversee" Haberer's investment decisions and by executing his purchase orders in the ordinary course of business. As described above, however, "mere inaction" cannot constitute substantial assistance unless "the defendant owes a fiduciary duty directly to the plaintiff."
Rado argues that, even if DBTCA did not have a fiduciary duty, the Court of Appeals in
Generally, the scope of recovery in negligence actions in New York is limited by the economic loss rule. Under this rule, a defendant is not liable to a plaintiff for the latter's economic loss in the absence of any personal injury or property damage unless there exists "a special relationship that requires the defendant to protect against the risk of [such economic] harm to the plaintiff."
Rado's Claim for gross negligence is barred by the economic loss rule. Rado's Claim for gross negligence turns on its allegation that DBTCA "failed to adequately monitor and respond to red flags and suspicious activity within Rado's account." Specifically, Rado contends that DBTCA was grossly negligent for failing to cancel or reverse Haberer's purchase orders when it was aware that Haberer's corresponding sell orders were failing to execute. These allegations are substantively identical to those which underlie Rado's Claim for breach of contract.
The injuries that Rado alleges it suffered from DBTCA's gross negligence are economic in nature. Rado's ability to recover for these injuries is limited by the terms of the Custody Agreement, which defines the scope of DBTCA's duties to Rado. As discussed above, the Custody Agreement disclaims any duty of DBTCA to advise Rado or Haberer regarding the suitability of investment decisions "regardless of any information the Bank has about [Rado] or the investment or its issuer." It further provides that Rado, not DBTCA, would be liable for any debit or overdraft in the Custody Account. The 2012 and 2016 POAs affirm the limited scope of DBTCA's duties, requiring Rado to indemnify DBTCA for any losses or liabilities arising out of any action or inaction by Haberer. Because Rado's claims sound in contract and are governed by the terms of the Custody Agreement, DBTCA's motion to dismiss Rado's Claim for gross negligence is granted.
DBTCA's December 5, 2018 motion is granted and the Claims are dismissed.