READ, J.
We hold that The RGH Liquidating Trust (the Trust or the Liquidating Trust), established under the bankruptcy reorganization plan of Reliance Group Holdings, Inc. (RGH) as the debtor's successor, is "one person" within the meaning of the single-entity exemption in the Securities Litigation Uniform Standards Act of 1998 (Pub L 105-353, 112 US Stat 3227 [SLUSA]; see 15 USC § 77p [f] [2] [C]; § 78bb [f] [5] [D]).
RGH, a publicly held company, owned 100% of the stock of RFS, which, in turn, owned 100% of the stock of Reliance Insurance Company (RIC). RIC generated upwards of 90% of the income of RGH, whose principal business was its ownership, through RFS, of RIC and its property and casualty insurance subsidiaries. Deloitte was the independent outside accountant and auditor for RGH, RFS and RIC and its subsidiaries, supplying annual audits of their financial statements; Lommele served as RIC's appointed actuary, responsible for assessing the adequacy of the company's loss reserves.
By the end of 1999, the Reliance companies, their financial condition deteriorating, were edging toward insolvency. RGH suffered an operating loss of $318.3 million in 1999, and, in February 2000, announced that it was suspending its quarterly dividend and extending the maturity of its bank loans. Then in May, RGH reported a $36.5 million operating loss (before gains on sales of investments) for the first quarter of 2000. Sometime in June 2000, RIC stopped underwriting property and casualty insurance. In July, a deal for a major holding company to acquire RGH collapsed, and Moody's Investors Service downgraded its ratings for the company. By December 5, 2000, RGH's shares had fallen 99.9% during the year, closing at 39 cents. On December 6, 2000, the New York Stock Exchange suspended trading of RGH's securities.
On June 22, 2000, certain RGH common stockholders filed a class action complaint (the first of several) in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York against RGH and three former directors and officers of RGH and RIC. These stockholder plaintiffs alleged that RGH and the individual defendants violated federal securities laws by making false and misleading statements regarding RGH's financial condition, thereby artificially inflating the company's stock price. Subsequently, bondholders launched similar federal securities class actions against RGH and individual directors and officers in the same court. All the cases were consolidated in October 2000. On July 16, 2001, an amended class action complaint was filed on behalf of stockholders who purchased common stock during the period from February 8, 1999 through December 6, 2000, and bondholders who purchased 9% senior notes due November 15, 2000 (hereafter, the senior bondholders) or 9.75% senior subordinated debentures due November 15, 2003 (hereafter, the
On May 29, 2001, the Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania placed RIC in rehabilitation, and named the Pennsylvania Insurance Commissioner as RIC's rehabilitator. RIC entered liquidation on October 3, 2001, and the Commissioner was appointed liquidator. Meanwhile, on June 12, 2001, RGH and RFS filed voluntary petitions in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York, seeking chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. For administrative and procedural purposes, the court consolidated the two bankruptcies.
On April 22, 2005, RFS's plan of reorganization, approved by the bankruptcy court, went into effect and RFS emerged from bankruptcy as Reorganized RFS Corporation. Under RFS's bankruptcy plan, its litigation claims and those of its general unsecured creditors were assigned to RGH. The bankruptcy court subsequently confirmed RGH's bankruptcy plan—the First Amended Plan of Reorganization of Reliance Group Holdings, Inc. (the Plan), effective December 1, 2005—which created the Trust as successor to RGH pursuant to a Liquidating Trust Agreement and Declaration of Trust (the Trust Agreement). The Plan transferred the bankruptcy estate's assets, which included the litigation claims of RGH, RFS and their respective general unsecured creditors who did not opt out of the Plan, to the Trust.
Specifically, the Plan stated that the Trust was established for the "primary purpose" of "the liquidation of the assets transferred to it." Concomitantly, the Trust Agreement specified that the Trust's "primary purpose" was to "receive the Trust Property and assume the Assumed Liabilities, and thereafter liquidate and distribute the Trust Property for the benefit
In furtherance of the Trust's primary purpose, the Plan authorized it to
Under the Trust Agreement, the Trust was permitted to exercise any powers consistent with its powers under the Plan and the Trust Agreement, including investing the Trust's assets; making distributions; paying taxes and any other obligations owed or incurred by the Trust; creating and administering reserves in accordance with the Plan; filing tax returns; and acting in accordance with the various court-approved settlements forming the Plan's basis. The Plan also clarified that the Trust was empowered to object to and/or otherwise resolve any disputed claims against RGH's bankruptcy estate.
On January 6, 2006, the Trust filed an action in Supreme Court against Deloitte and Lommele on behalf of RGH, RFS and their general unsecured creditors, alleging causes of action for actuarial fraud, accounting and auditing fraud, breach of contract and fraudulent conveyance. Defendants moved to dismiss on various grounds, and Supreme Court granted the motion on September 27, 2006; however, as for the creditors' fraud claims, Supreme Court granted the Trust leave to serve and file an amended complaint to plead "reliance and the consequence of that reliance with more specificity" (13 Misc.3d 1219[A], 2006 NY Slip Op 51908[U], *6 [Sup Ct, NY County 2006]). The Trust appealed (except as to the creditors' fraud
On November 2, 2006, the Trust filed an amended complaint, which alleged two causes of action: one for actuarial fraud against Deloitte and Lommele, and one for accounting and auditing fraud against Deloitte. The Trust asserted these claims for the benefit of unidentified general unsecured creditors; the senior and subordinated bondholders; 15 bank lenders; former employees; and the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC), a wholly owned United States government corporation and agency of the United States. The Trust committed to distribute any monies recovered on the bondholders' claims on a pro rata basis to a "participant list" maintained by a depository trust company, as well as to those who "have identified [themselves] as bondholders by filing proofs of claims with the Bankruptcy Court." Deloitte again moved to dismiss, now arguing that SLUSA preempted the lawsuit. The Trust countered that it qualified for the so-called single-entity exemption that SLUSA affords "a corporation, investment company, pension plan, partnership, or other entity ... not established for the purpose of participating in the action" (see 15 USC § 77p [f] [2] [C]; § 78bb [f] [5] [D]).
In a decision dated November 7, 2007, Supreme Court held that the Trust was a single entity within the meaning of SLUSA because its primary purpose was broader than the pursuit of the state law fraud claims. Accordingly, the court granted the motion only as to the Trust's claims on behalf of the unidentified general unsecured creditors, whose reliance was not specifically pleaded (17 Misc.3d 1128[A], 2007 NY Slip Op 52181[U] [Sup Ct, NY County 2007]). Deloitte appealed; the Trust did not cross-appeal.
On December 8, 2009, the Appellate Division modified Supreme Court's order by granting the motion to dismiss the Trust's claims for the benefit of the bondholders (71 A.D.3d 198 [1st Dept 2009]). The court took the position that the Trust was not exempt from SLUSA as a single entity because "the bondholders' claims against Deloitte [were] not being asserted on behalf of the Reliance bankruptcy estate; the claims originally belonged to the bondholders, not Reliance" (id. at 214). The Appellate Division agreed, however, that Supreme Court properly declined to dismiss the Trust's claims for the benefit of the other groups of creditors—i.e., the 15 banks, two former employees and the PBGC (71 AD3d at 215). On July 8,
To combat the perceived harm to markets from frivolous private securities fraud class actions, Congress enacted the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (Pub L 104-67, 109 US Stat 737, codified in part at 15 USC §§ 77z-1, 78u-4 [the PSLRA]; see HR Rep 104-369, at 31-32 [1995]). The PSLRA created hurdles to discourage strike suits,
But passage of the PSLRA created an incentive for plaintiffs' attorneys to shift class action litigation against publicly traded issuers from federal to state courts (see S Rep 105-182, at 3 [1998] [noting that during the course of hearings to review the effect of the PSLRA, "one disturbing trend became apparent; namely, that there was a noticeable shift in class action litigation from federal to state courts"]). Congress worried that this migration endangered "the benefits flowing to investors from a uniform national approach," and, "beyond the number of, and dollar amounts involved, ... created a ripple-effect that ... inhibited small, high-growth companies in their efforts to raise capital, and ... damaged the overall efficiency of our capital markets" (id. at 3-4 [internal quotation marks omitted]). To close this "`federal flight' loophole," Congress enacted SLUSA,
SLUSA provides that no state or federal court may entertain a "covered class action" brought by a private party and based on state statutory or common law, which alleges fraud (misrepresentation or omission of a material fact) or manipulation in connection with the purchase or sale of a "covered security" (15 USC § 77p [b]).
SLUSA defines a "covered class action" as a "single lawsuit" or "group of lawsuits" in which "damages are sought on behalf of more than 50 persons or prospective class members, and questions of law or fact common to those persons or members... predominate over any questions affecting only individual persons or members" (see 15 USC § 77p [f] [2] [A] [i] [I]; § 78bb [f] [5] [B] [i] [I]); a "covered security" is one traded nationally and listed on a regulated national exchange (see 15 USC § 77p [f] [3]; § 78bb [f] [5] [E]; § 77r [b]). As relevant to this appeal, SLUSA specifies that, for purposes of counting whether there are more than 50 persons or prospective class members, "a
Finally, SLUSA makes all "covered class action[s]" removable to the federal district court for the district in which the action is pending (15 USC § 77p [c]; § 78bb [f] [2]). "Congress inserted this provision so that federal courts, rather than state courts, would interpret the scope of the preemption under the statute" (M. Perino, Securities Litigation Under the PSLRA [formerly Securities Litigation After the Reform Act] § 11.03, at 11-14-11-15 [2010]; see also HR Rep 105-640, at 16 [noting that the removal provision was meant "to prevent a State court from inadvertently, improperly, or otherwise maintaining jurisdiction over an action" precluded by SLUSA]). The district court must dismiss any removed action that SLUSA precludes (see Romano v Kazacos, 609 F.3d 512 [2d Cir 2010]). Conversely, the district court must remand a removed action to state court if it decides that SLUSA does not bar the suit; federal appeals courts lack jurisdiction to review an order directing remand (see Kircher v Putnam Funds Trust, 547 U.S. 633 [2006]).
The question presented by this appeal is a difficult one, which will ultimately be resolved by the federal courts.
In this case, the Trust is the successor of RGH, the debtor, under the Plan and the Trust Agreement, which were endorsed by the bankruptcy judge in the chapter 11 bankruptcy proceeding. The assets of RGH's bankruptcy estate vested in the Trust, and these assets included claims of the bankruptcy estate's creditors, who are the beneficiaries of any recoveries from Deloitte and Lommele. Thus, it could
Moreover, chapter 11 plans apparently often call for this type of postconfirmation liquidation vehicle (PCLV) to collect, administer and distribute estate assets after the debtor's plan has been confirmed. Indeed, "[t]he shortening of Chapter 11 timelines" effected by the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 (Pub L 109-8, 119 US Stat 23 [BAPCPA]) may have "increas[ed] the importance and prominence of PCLVs" because they "allow a Chapter 11 debtor to focus preconfirmation on the more pressing needs of its reorganization or liquidation while deferring issues regarding illiquid estate assets, causes of action, and claims reconciliation until after confirmation of its plan" (Thau, Friedland and Geekie, Postconfirmation Liquidation Vehicles [Including Liquidating Trusts and Postconfirmation Estates]: An Overview, 16 J Bankr L & Prac 2 art 4 [2007]).
Further, liquidating trusts and postconfirmation estates seem to have grown in popularity because of the "post-Enron/WorldCom world of Sarbanes-Oxley" in which we live, "where claims might exist against the debtor's former insiders, accountants, financiers, and others" (id.). Because this kind of litigation is "complicated, expensive, and time-consuming," it "can take years to get to trial and many months to try, not something that fits with BAPCPA's contemplated timeline for plan confirmation" (id.). These issues may be resolved
SLUSA's single-entity exemption was first examined in the bankruptcy context in Cape Ann Invs. LLC v Lepone (296 F.Supp.2d 4 [D Mass 2003]). There, Cape Ann, an investor syndicate, and other shareholders assigned their claims to a litigation trust created by the bankruptcy court to pursue any potentially recoverable assets of the bankruptcy estate. When the trustee of the litigation trust brought a state court action on the shareholders' behalf against the defunct company's accountants, the accounting firm (Deloitte, as in this case) removed the complaint to the federal district court, and moved to dismiss on the ground of SLUSA preclusion. In response, the trustee moved to remand. There were more than 50 of these shareholders (although Cape Ann itself was acknowledged to be a single entity).
The United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts held that the trust was not "one person" within the meaning of SLUSA's single-entity exemption (296 F Supp 2d at 10). The Judge was principally persuaded that the trust was not "a unitary entity" because "[t]he Trust Agreement describe[d] the primary purpose of the Trust as prosecuting the Causes of Action contributed to it ... and distributing to the [beneficiaries; i.e., the shareholders] the assets of the Trust remaining after payment of all claims against or assumed by the Trust" (id. [internal quotation marks omitted]).
Similarly, in LaSala v Bank of Cyprus Pub. Co. Ltd. (510 F.Supp.2d 246 [SD NY 2007]), the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York looked to the "primary purpose" of a trust to decide whether it qualified for treatment as "one person" under SLUSA.
The Judge concluded, based on various provisions in the trust agreement, that "the [AremisSoft] Trust was formed for the primary purpose of engaging in litigation" on behalf of more than 6,000 beneficiaries, and therefore "the entity exception [did] not apply" (LaSala, 510 F Supp 2d at 270). The same court, in another case involving the AremisSoft Trust, distinguished Smith v Arthur Andersen LLP (421 F.3d 989 [9th Cir 2005]), discussed infra, on the ground that "the prevalence of ordinary bankruptcy-related tasks in the mandate of the trust [in Smith] precluded a finding that it was organized for the primary purpose of litigating trust claims" (LaSala v UBS, AG, 510 F.Supp.2d 213, 237 [SD NY 2007]). The United States District Court for the District of New Jersey—which approved the creation of the AremisSoft Trust in the first place— distinguished that trust from the trust in Smith on the basis that the latter
In Smith, the Ninth Circuit cited the reasoning of the District Court in Cape Ann with approval, noting that the Cape Ann court's "suggest[ion] that an entity is not one person if its `primary purpose' is to pursue causes of action" was "sensible" (Smith, 421 F.3d 1007). Further, a
The Smith court concluded that "pursuing causes of action" was not the trustee's "`primary' purpose" because
The court held that "[b]ecause the Trustee [was] to `act as the Estates' representative for all purposes,' and not just for the purpose of pursuing causes of action, the Trustee [was] one person, and the Trustee's Action [was] not a `single lawsuit' barred by SLUSA" (id.). In Smith, unlike Cape Ann (and LaSala), the trustee was not asserting claims assigned to a trust by a debtor's creditors, although this was not the reason given by the court for its decision.
More recently, the Third Circuit examined the single-entity exemption in LaSala v Bordier et Cie (519 F.3d 121 [3d Cir 2008], cert dismissed 555 U.S. 1028 [2008]), an appeal from the District Court's dismissal (discussed earlier) of the state and Swiss law fraud claims brought by the trustees of the AremisSoft Trust against two banks. The defendants allegedly assisted the debtor's officers and directors in a "pump and dump" scheme whereby after "pumping" the stock's price by misrepresenting the company's finances, the insiders "dumped" the stock on the market for unsuspecting investors to purchase
The Third Circuit observed that the trustees were claiming damages "in their capacity as assignees of the true injured parties," and that "the injured party [was], at least in the first instance, AremisSoft," while the banks asserted that the injured parties were, in fact, the "[p]urchasers in their individual capacities as purchasers of securities" (id. at 131). "Reading the complaint against the background of Delaware law," the court first concluded that the complaint's aiding-and-abetting claims were "originally owned by AremisSoft, and assigned to the Trust by the AremisSoft bankruptcy estate" (id. at 132). Put another way, the claims originally "belonged to AremisSoft, not to the purchasers of AremisSoft stock" (id.).
Turning to SLUSA, the Third Circuit then considered that the single-entity exemption, by its wording, directed judges "to follow the usual rule of not looking through an entity to its constituents unless the entity was established for the purpose of bringing the action, i.e., to circumvent SLUSA" (id. at 132-133; see also id. at 134 ["SLUSA's single exception to this rule is that when (a) corporation is established for the purpose of litigation, i.e., when plaintiffs try to avoid SLUSA by running their securities claims through a corporate entity, the court should look to the corporation's constituents"]). To evaluate the District Court's ruling, the court opined that it was
The court then observed that "[t]hough the parties do not go into detail on this point, one would assume that this deal was
The Third Circuit concluded that it was, in fact, irrelevant whether the AremisSoft Trust was established for the purpose of litigation; the purchasers were simply the beneficial owners of the claims assigned by the true injured party, AremisSoft, to the AremisSoft Trust. The banks argued that "allowing these claims to go forward [would] re-create a loophole for abusive securities litigation that Congress intended, through SLUSA, to close," to which the court replied that it was difficult to "imagin[e] such assignments occurring outside very special contexts, such as bankruptcy, a context in which Congress clearly intended fiduciary-duty actions to go forward" (id. at 142).
Thus, the majority of the federal courts to have considered whether a liquidating trust may press state law fraud claims against a bankrupt corporation's outside counselors and consultants for the benefit of the corporation's creditors have zeroed in on whether the trust's "primary purpose" is litigation of such claims. This was the analytical test applied by Supreme Court to decide that SLUSA does not preclude this action, and we agree with that court that, judged by the language in the Plan and the Trust Agreement, the "primary purpose" of the Trust is far broader than the pursuit of creditors' causes of action.
There are many reasons why a liquidating trust appeals to debtors, creditors and bankruptcy courts. As the Third Circuit noted in LaSala, bankruptcy is a "very special context[]" where Congress clearly intended to preserve the prerogative of bankruptcy trustees to assert claims of bankruptcy estates (id. at 135-136). In short, the Liquidating Trust was not a device created by plaintiffs or their attorneys to circumvent SLUSA, which is what the statutory language precluding unitary status for entities created for "the purpose of participating in the action" was designed to forestall.
The dissent favors the approach taken by the Third Circuit, which did not assess the "primary purpose" of the particular trust at issue. Instead, based on an assessment of the pleadings in light of Delaware law, that court determined that AremisSoft, the bankrupt corporation, was the true "injured party" on
In LaSala, the bankruptcy estate assigned the debtor's claims to the purchasers and the purchasers separately assigned these claims (which were originally the debtor's claims) to the AremisSoft Trust. Here, as previously discussed, the Plan transferred the bankruptcy estate's assets, which included the litigation claims of RGH, RFS and their respective general unsecured creditors who did not opt out of the Plan, to the Trust. Under section 541 (a) (7) of the Bankruptcy Code, a bankruptcy estate includes "[a]ny interest in property that the estate acquires after the commencement of the case" (11 USC § 541 [a] [7]; see In re CBI Holding Co., Inc., 529 F.3d 432, 457-458 [2d Cir 2008] [discussing the legislative history of section 541 (a) (7)]). In other words, the bondholders' claims were property within the estate, and the Trust brought this action on behalf of the estate for the benefit of the bondholders. Put yet another way, in LaSala the creditors (i.e., the purchasers) owned the debtor's (i.e., AremisSoft's) claims and enlisted the AremisSoft Trust to prosecute the debtor's claims for their benefit. Here, the debtor's estate owned the creditors' (i.e., the bondholders') claims and enlisted the Trust to prosecute the estate's claims for their benefit. We assume the Third Circuit would not have even needed to analyze the identity of the true injured party in LaSala if the purchasers' claims had been included within a bankruptcy estate, rather than separately assigned by the purchasers to the AremisSoft Trust.
Finally, we have decided in this appeal, involving a pre-answer motion to dismiss, only that SLUSA does not preclude the bondholders' lawsuit against Deloitte and Lommele, which adequately pleaded fraud. We do not opine on any issues related to the merits of these claims. When defendants interpose their answers they are, of course, free to plead any potentially applicable affirmative defense.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division, insofar as appealed from, should be reversed, with costs, the order of Supreme Court reinstated, and the certified question answered in the negative.
More than 50 bondholders of Reliance Group Holdings, Inc. (RGH) assigned claims to The RGH Liquidating Trust, which agreed to distribute to those bondholders the net proceeds resulting from any recovery on those claims. The Trust then brought this action asserting the claims of the bondholders (among others) against Deloitte & Touche and a Deloitte principal under New York law. The Trust alleges that Deloitte, as RGH's auditor, fraudulently caused RGH's financial condition to be misstated, thus inducing the bondholders to buy, or to refrain from selling, RGH bonds. The reason for bringing the case under state law is apparent: a federal securities law claim against Deloitte would have been time-barred (see Lampf, Pleva, Lipkind, Prupis & Petigrow v Gilbertson, 501 U.S. 350, 364 [1991]; 28 USC § 1658 [b]).
Congress enacted the Securities Litigation Uniform Standards Act of 1998 (15 USC § 78bb [SLUSA]) to prevent exactly this kind of evasion of federal securities law barriers to suit. The majority nevertheless finds the Trust's action on behalf of the bondholders permissible under SLUSA. It does so through a narrow reading of the statute that is inconsistent with the approach taken to similar questions by the federal courts.
SLUSA says: "No covered class action based upon the statutory or common law of any State ... may be maintained in any State or Federal court . . . alleging . . . a misrepresentation or omission of a material fact in connection with the purchase or sale of a covered security" (15 USC § 78bb [f] [1] [A]). It is undisputed that RGH's bonds are covered securities; the issue here is whether the Trust's lawsuit is a "covered class action." SLUSA defines that term, in relevant part, as:
This is a covered class action if the Trust is seeking damages "on behalf of more than 50 persons." In common sense, of course it is: it is the assignee of more than 50 bondholders, and any damages it recovers will be distributed to those bondholders. Indeed, the Trust's amended complaint says that it is suing
But the Trust argues, and the majority holds, that the action may be treated as though it were brought on behalf of only one person, the Trust, because of the following SLUSA provision, captioned "Counting of certain class members": "For purposes of this paragraph, a corporation, investment company, pension plan, partnership, or other entity, shall be treated as one person. . . but only if the entity is not established for the purpose of participating in the action" (15 USC § 78bb [f] [5] [D]).
Deloitte argues, persuasively it seems to me, that this provision is not relevant to this case, because even if the Trust is "treated as one person" it is still suing "on behalf of" more than 50 others—just as a class representative may be one person, but a class action will still be barred by SLUSA. If the "counting" provision is controlling here, however, that should not change the result.
The counting provision means, as the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has explained, "that the court is to follow the usual rule of not looking through an entity to its constituents unless the entity was established for the purpose of bringing the action, i.e., to circumvent SLUSA" (LaSala v Bordier et Cie, 519 F.3d 121, 132-133 [3d Cir 2008]). The record makes clear that bringing actions like this one—and thus circumventing SLUSA—was an important part of the reason for the Trust's creation. That was not, it is true, the Trust's sole purpose. According to the Plan of Reorganization that brought the Trust into existence, it was "established . . . for the purposes of receiving the Trust Property and assuming the Assumed Liabilities, and liquidating and distributing the Trust Property for the benefit of the Trust Beneficiaries." But the bondholders are "Trust Beneficiaries" and the "Trust Property" includes what the Plan calls "Creditor Litigation Claims"— among them the claims that the Trust is now asserting. Indeed, Creditor Litigation Claims, and the resulting proceeds, were viewed as a very significant part of the Trust's assets. The Disclosure Statement prepared in connection with the Plan of Reorganization says: "on the Effective Date, the primary assets of the Liquidating Trust will consist of: (i) Causes of Action, including, but not limited to, the D & O Litigation Proceeds and the Creditor Litigation Proceeds."
In short, bringing lawsuits like this one was one of the major purposes of the Trust. To treat the Trust as a single person
The majority reaches another conclusion through what seems to me a confused reading of SLUSA's legislative history. It is true, as the majority says, that the legislative history shows that SLUSA's authors did not want to bar litigation by trustees in bankruptcy and similar entities "duly authorized by law . . . to seek damages on behalf of another person or entity" (S Rep 105-182, at 8 [quoted in majority op at 407]). That is why language in the draft legislation that might have been read to bar an action by a trustee in bankruptcy was deleted. But the majority ignores the difference, critical for SLUSA purposes, between a trustee in bankruptcy—who sues, ordinarily, on behalf of a single entity, the debtor—and a liquidating trust like this one, which is bringing claims assigned to it for the purpose of suit by more than 50 potential plaintiffs. Nothing in either the language or the legislative history of SLUSA suggests that Congress meant to grant an exemption to any "liquidation vehicle" that is doing precisely what SLUSA was enacted to prevent.
The federal cases dealing with this sort of question are consistent with the distinction I have made between the successor in interest to a single entity (e.g. a trustee in bankruptcy) and the assignee of many (e.g. the Trust here). That distinction is explicitly drawn by Judge Pollak's opinion for the Third Circuit in LaSala.
LaSala was, in a critical way, the mirror image of this case: the claims being litigated there had originally belonged not to many entities, but to one, a bankrupt company called Aremis-Soft. The claims had passed, as the court explained, "from a corporation to its bankruptcy estate to a trust" (519 F3d at 126). That was the critical fact supporting the Third Circuit's holding that the case was not barred by SLUSA. The court concluded, after a careful analysis, that the claims it was analyzing "originally belonged to AremisSoft, not to the purchasers of AremisSoft stock" (id. at 132). If the claims had originally belonged to the purchasers (of whom there were more than 50) the LaSala court would have come out differently. Interpreting the words of SLUSA that are critical here—"on behalf of more than 50 persons"—the court explained that that phrase
The majority takes a contrary view of LaSala's application to this case, based, apparently, on the majority's belief that the claims of the bondholders here were momentarily included in "the bankruptcy estate's assets" (majority op at 414)—i.e., that the claims passed through the estate's hands on their way from the bondholders to the Trust, rather than being directly assigned to the Trust by the bondholders. Even if true, that would be irrelevant under the LaSala court's reasoning: it would not alter the fact that the bondholders were the injured parties. But I believe the majority is factually wrong: I see nothing in the record to support the assertion that the RGH bankruptcy estate ever owned these claims. The majority is correct in saying that the assignment of the claims from the bondholders to the Trust was effected in RGH's Plan of Reorganization—but why this purely formal distinction would change the LaSala court's analysis is something the majority does not explain.
Other federal cases are consistent with the LaSala approach. In Smith v Arthur Andersen LLP (421 F.3d 989 [9th Cir 2005]), the action was brought by a trustee in bankruptcy, the successor in interest to a single entity, Boston Chicken, Inc. The court held the action not barred by SLUSA, observing that a contrary holding "could potentially deprive many bankruptcy trustees of the ability to pursue state-law securities fraud claims on behalf of an estate" (id. at 1008). By contrast, in Cape Ann Invs. LLC v Lepone (296 F.Supp.2d 4 [D Mass 2003]), the court dismissed under SLUSA claims that had been assigned to a litigation trust by shareholders who claimed they had been induced to purchase, or to refrain from selling, stock in a company that went bankrupt. The trustee, as the court pointed out, had a duty to act "for the benefit of the . . . Shareholders. In that respect, his
The Smith and Cape Ann opinions, like the majority opinion here, speak of the "primary purpose" for which a particular entity is formed. But unlike today's majority, these federal cases address the "primary purpose" question with reference to the particular purpose being carried out in the lawsuit at hand— i.e., they in substance ask whether the lawsuit is an evasion of SLUSA or not. The Third Circuit in LaSala adopted what seems to me a more useful interpretation of SLUSA's "established for the purpose of participating in the action" language: "when the corporation is established for the purpose of litigation, i.e., when plaintiffs try to avoid SLUSA by running their securities claims through a corporate entity, the court should look to the corporation's constituents" (519 F3d at 134). Because that is exactly what happened here—the bondholders have tried to avoid SLUSA by running their claims through a liquidation trust—I would affirm the Appellate Division's order dismissing those claims.
Order, insofar as appealed from, reversed, etc.
In Dabit, the Supreme Court interpreted SLUSA to preclude suits by "holders" of securities (i.e., those allegedly induced by fraud to retain or delay selling) as well as suits by purchasers or sellers.
By adding a single-entity exemption in the final bill to cover legal entities that may act on behalf of numerous beneficiaries, Congress made sure that, in bringing suits in their own names, these entities would be counted as one person, unless they were "established for the purpose of participating in the action" (see 15 USC § 77p [f] [2] [C]; § 78bb [f] [5] [D]).