Claimants-Appellants Archer Investments S.a.r.l., Congor Investments Limited, Conset Investments S.a.r.l., and Southridge Management S.a.r.l. ("Claimants") appeal from the district court's order denying them the right to participate in proceeds under a settlement agreement of a class-action lawsuit. The suit was led by Plaintiffs-Appellees Local 282 Welfare Trust Fund and Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan Board ("Plaintiffs), who brought claims against Biovail Corporation and its officers for securities fraud. We assume the parties' familiarity with the underlying facts, the procedural history of the case, and the issues on appeal, and we discuss these only where necessary to explain our decision.
Claimants, four investment companies owned by certain Cayman Islands Trusts, contend that the district court erred by ignoring the law of the Cayman Islands when interpreting the terms of the Settlement Agreement. They also argue that the court erred in determining that a defendant in the lawsuit, Eugene Melnyk, had a "controlling interest" in the Trusts, which interest by the terms of the Settlement Agreement, disqualified Claimants from taking part in the proceeds.
The Settlement Agreement contains a New York choice of law provision. Claimants argue that the New York conflicts of law rule applicable to trusts requires us to apply the law of the situs, the Cayman Islands, to determine "the construction and validity of" the Trusts. This argument is without merit. Paragraph 38 of the Settlement Agreement provides: "The construction, interpretation, operation, effect and validity of this Stipulation, and all documents necessary to effectuate it, shall be governed by the internal laws of the State of New York without regard to conflicts of law, except to the extent that federal law requires that federal law governs." "Where, as here, the parties have agreed on the law that will govern their contract," that choice of law will be enforced. Finucane v. Interior Const. Corp., 264 A.D.2d 618, 620 (1st Dep't 1999). New York's conflict of law rule regarding trusts is not relevant to this case because paragraph 38 clearly states that in interpreting the Settlement Agreement, New York "internal" law applies "without regard to conflicts of law." By the terms of the Settlement Agreement, questions regarding whether Melnyk had a "controlling interest" in these Trusts are questions of contract interpretation to be determined under New York law. Cayman Islands law has no bearing on that interpretation.
"We review a district court's interpretation of a settlement agreement de novo . . . mindful that the consent decree is a contract between the parties, and should be interpreted accordingly." Waldman ex rel. Elliott Waldman Pension Trust v. Riedinger, 423 F.3d 145, 148 (2d Cir. 2005) (internal quotation marks omitted). The terms of the Settlement Agreement exclude "any entity in which any defendant has a controlling interest" from sharing in the settlement proceeds. The facts bearing on whether Melnyk controlled the Trusts are not in dispute, but the parties vigorously dispute the inferences that may be drawn from them and the importance of those inferences as applied to the terms of the Settlement Agreement. The proof includes the following:
Trusts were excluded from taking part in the settlement. One need only look at Plaintiffs' Second Amended Complaint, which alleges that (1) Melnyk exercised "control of the Trusts" and directed the very trading activities that made the Trusts eligible to participate in the settlement. and (2) Melnyk used the Trusts to generate proceeds that the Trusts in turn loaned to Melnyk. The Second Amended Complaint also pleads that "any entity in which any defendant has a controlling interest" would be excluded from the Class. It cannot seriously be argued that the drafters of the Settlement Agreement and the signatories to it did not understand that the Trusts were to be excluded by this very same language from the complaint that was later repeated in the Settlement Agreement.