JAMES B. ZAGEL, District Judge.
Plaintiff Liquidation Trustee alleges the following counts against Defendants: (1)
A bench trial was set in this matter for April 19, 2010. A few weeks prior to the trial date, Defendants moved for summary judgment. I granted Plaintiff's request to take the motion with the case. The following opinion and ruling addresses both the motion for summary judgment and the bench trial.
1. The Sentinel Liquidation Trust (the "Trust") is a liquidating trust created under the Fourth Amended Chapter 11 Plan of Liquidation (the "Plan") for Sentinel Management Group, Inc. ("Sentinel"). The effective date of the Plan was December 17, 2008. Plaintiff Frederick J. Grede was formerly the chapter 11 trustee for Sentinel. On December 17, 2008, pursuant to the terms of the Plan, Grede was appointed Liquidation Trustee of the Trust (the "Trustee").
2. Defendant The Bank of New York (n/k/a The Bank of New York Mellon) is a state-chartered bank with its principal
3. Defendant The Bank of New York Mellon Corp. is a corporation organized under the laws of Delaware, with its principal place of business located in New York, New York. It is the successor-in-interest to The Bank of New York, Inc. and was formed in July 2007 through a merger between The Bank of New York, Inc. and Mellon Financial Corporation.
4. Sentinel was registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") as an Investment Adviser. (TTX 93A; Tr. 196:5-12.)
5. Sentinel was registered with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission ("CFTC") as a futures commission merchant ("FCM"). (TTX 93A; BTX 1.)
6. On May 7, 1981, Sentinel received a "no-action" letter from the Division of Trading and Markets ("Division") of the CFTC that exempted Sentinel from the net-capital requirements applicable to registered FCMs. (TTX 1; Bjarnason Dep. Tr. 29:21-32:16.)
7. The Division's no-action letter required that Sentinel meet certain conditions in order to remain exempt from the CFTC's net-capital requirements. (TTX 1.)
8. Sentinel never solicited or accepted "orders for the purchase or sale of any commodity for future delivery, or involving contracts for the sale of any commodity for future delivery, on or subject to the rules of any contract market." (TTX 1; TTX 93A; Tr. 2313:16-18.)
9. Sentinel's Designated Self-Regulatory Organization was the National Futures Association ("NFA"). (Tr. 772:17-19.)
10. Sentinel invested FCM's customer money. (TTX 93A; TTX 925; Tr. 234:22-235:23.)
11. Sentinel represented to the public and regulators that its Seg I portfolio consisted of funds and property of customers of other FCMs. (TTX 11; TTX 93A; Tr. 234:22-235:23.)
12. Sentinel had several customer groups with different investment strategies within the Seg I portfolio. (Tr. 311:1-15.)
13. Sentinel also invested proprietary or "house" funds of FCMs and hedge funds. (TTX 93A; Tr. 239:16-22.)
14. Sentinel represented to the public and regulators that its Seg III portfolio consisted of funds and property of FCM proprietary or "house" funds, as well as funds and property of hedge funds, trusts, and individuals. (TTX 93A; Tr. 239:16-22.)
15. Sentinel had several customer groups with different investment strategies within the Seg III portfolio. (TTX 925; Tr. 311:1-15.)
16. Sentinel had two principal investment portfolios: a "125 Portfolio" and a "Prime Portfolio." (TTX 925; BTX 314.) Sentinel represented that the 1.25 Portfolio's and Prime Portfolio's stated investment objectives were preservation of capital and liquidity and to achieve competitive yields. (TTX 925.)
17. Sentinel represented to its customers that the minimum credit rating for securities purchased for the 125 Portfolio would be A1/P1 for short term investments and AA for longterm investments. (TTX 925; BTX 109; BTX 314; Tr. 236:7-16.)
18. Sentinel represented to its customers that the minimum credit rating for securities purchased for the Prime Portfolio would be investment grade, typically defined as BBB or better. (TTX 925; BTX
19. By the end of 2005, Sentinel had begun to represent that it purchased securities for its own house account. (TTX 930; TTX 983.)
20. Sentinel filed a Form 1-FR on a monthly basis with the CFTC. (Tr. 255:8-14.)
21. Sentinel filed its audited financial statements on an annual basis with the CFTC. (TTX 85; TTX 118; TTX 120; TTX 165; TTX 225; Tr. 256:21-257:5.)
22. On October 7, 2003, the Division provided Sentinel with a list of questions about its business that it wanted Sentinel to answer. (BTX 71.)
23. On October 24, 2003, Sentinel responded to the Division's questions. (BTX 74.)
24. On November 21, 2003, Sentinel responded to additional follow-up questions that had been posed by the Division. (BTX 75.)
25. On January 21, 2004, the Division issued a letter confirming its view that funds deposited at Sentinel in Seg I would continue to count towards Sentinel's customers' segregation requirements under the Commodity Exchange Act and CFTC Rules and that Sentinel's client FCMs' house funds held in Seg III would qualify, for the purpose of computing their minimum adjusted net capital pursuant to CFTC requirements, as current assets. (TTX 93A; TTX 188; Tr. 217:7-227:9.)
26. The Division received a copy of the 1997 Securities Clearing Agreement between BNYM and Sentinel. (BTX 11.)
27. The Division received a copy of TTX 11. (TTX 93A; BTX 74.)
28. The NFA conducted examinations of Sentinel including in 2003, 2004, and 2006. (BTX 60; BTX 63; BTX 105; BTX 106; BTX 107; BTX 108; BTX 111; BTX 179; BTX 193; BTX 226; BTX 531.) The last NFA examination of Sentinel was in 2006. (BTX 179; BTX 193; BTX 226.)
29. In connection with the NFA's examination of Sentinel's books and records as of July 31, 2003, BNYM responded to the NFA's account balance confirmation requests. (BTX 60.)
30. In connection with the NFA's examination of Sentinel's books and records as of September 30, 2004, BNYM responded to the NFA's account balance confirmation requests. (BTX 105; BTX 106; BTX 107.)
31. In connection with the NFA's examination of Sentinel's books and records as of March 31, 2006, BNYM responded to the NFA's requests for confirmation of certain account balances. (BTX 193.)
32. In August 2003, NFA employees drafted a memorandum intended to provide an overview of Sentinel and its operations. (BTX 531.)
33. The NFA received a copy of the 1997 Securities Clearing Agreement between BNYM and Sentinel. (BTX 111.)
34. Sentinel's independent outsider auditor, McGladrey & Pullen LLP and its predecessor Altschuler, Melvoin and Glasser LLP (collectively, "McGladrey"), issued an annual unqualified audit opinion attesting that Sentinel's statement of financial condition presents fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Sentinel as of the respective year-end date for 2003-2006. (TTX 85; TTX 118; TTX 120; TTX 165; TTX 225.)
36. In connection with McGladrey's audit of Sentinel's financial statements as of December 31, 2006, BNYM responded to McGladrey's account balance confirmation requests. (BTX 213; BTX 214; BTX 215; BTX 219.)
37. Sentinel filed a Form ADV with the SEC on an annual basis. (BTX 121; BTX 249; BTX 757.)
38. Sentinel's independent auditor, McGladrey, filed with the SEC, on an annual basis, an Independent Accountant's Report stating that it had examined on a test basis Sentinel's books and records and that in its opinion Sentinel had complied with certain provisions of rules 204-2(b) and 206(4)-2 of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as of and during the respective period. (BTX 204.)
39. On December 13, 1996, Debra Coscia (of BNYM) sent a letter to Barbara Sapienza (of Sentinel) regarding Sentinel's transition from First Chicago National Bank to BNYM and certain draft "CFTC compliance letters" that Sentinel had provided to BNYM. (BTX 390.)
40. Ms. Coscia told Sentinel that the draft "CFTC compliance letters" were sent to BNYM's legal department for review. (BTX 390.)
41. On March 13, 1997, Sentinel and BNYM executed the Global Custody Agreement, pursuant to which Sentinel became a customer of BNYM's Institutional Custody Division ("Custody Division"). (BTX 5; Tr. 373:19-374:10.)
42. On March 31, 1997, Joseph Ciacciarelli, who ran BNYM's relationship with Sentinel, signed TTX 11, 12 and 13, dated March 14, 1997. (TTX 11; TTX 12; TTX 13.)
43. On May 20, 1997, Joseph Ciacciarelli sent an email to Jeffrey Tessler, Mike Burns, Charles McGraw, Martin Geffon, and A. Lucia Ferrara, copying John Bhonslay. (TTX 18; Tr. 602:6-607:7.)
44. In the May 20, 1997 email, Mr. Ciacciarelli recommended that Sentinel be transitioned to Broker Dealer Services ("BDS"). (TTX 18.)
45. Mr. Bhonslay responded to Mr. Ciacciarelli's May 20, 1997 email and explained that he agreed. (Id.)
46. In September and August 1997, Eric Bloom (a Sentinel Insider) and Glenn Colletti corresponded regarding the Securities Clearing Agreement and Sentinel's transition from the Custody Division to BDS. (BTX 9; BTX 435; Tr. 608:8-12; Tr. 611:19-612:2.)
47. On October 21, 1997, Sentinel signed the Securities Clearing Agreement and related Security Agreement. (TTX 21; BTX 14; Tr. 387:6-10.)
48. On January 9, 2003, Sentinel signed the Global Clearing and Custody Agreement in connection with its opening of certain Euroclear accounts. (TTX 43.)
49. As of August 13, 2007, Sentinel maintained, among others, the following accounts at BNYM:
50. Beginning in at least 2003, BNYM received copies of Sentinel's annual audited statements of financial condition that were prepared by its independent outside auditor, McGladrey. (TTX 85; TTX 118; TTX 120; TTX 165; TTX 225; TTX 441; TTX 930.)
51. Joseph Ciacciarelli, Terence Law (a BNYM client executive), and Stephen Brennan (a BNYM managing director) reviewed Sentinel's audited financial statements. (Tr. 447:9-22; Tr. 458:8-14; Tr. 1070:14-1071:6; Tr. 1304:7-1305:7.)
52. On July 23, 2004, Mark Rogers (a BNYM managing director) sent an email to Joseph Ciacciarelli regarding Sentinel. (TTX 113.)
53. On January 6, 2005, Joseph Ciacciarelli and Mark Rogers exchanged emails regarding Sentinel. (TTX 123.)
54. On February 4, 2005, Mark Rogers sent an email to Joseph Ciacciarelli and
55. On February 16, 2005, Stephen Brennan sent an email to Joseph Ciacciarelli regarding Sentinel. (TTX 128.)
56. Beginning in November 2005, BNYM received copies of Sentinel's monthly Form 1-FR that Sentinel filed with the CFTC. (TTX 140; TTX 155; TTX 164; TTX 175; TTX 182; TTX 189; TTX 197; TTX 199; TTX 202; TTX 203; TTX 211; TTX 214; TTX 218; TTX 220; TTX 224; TTX 235; TTX 247; TTX 392.)
57. Joseph Ciacciarelli, Terence Law, and Stephen Brennan reviewed Sentinel's Form 1-FRs. (Tr. 449:9-450:12; Tr. 1236:2-11; Tr. 1243:25-1244:2; Tr. 1287:18-1288:14; Tr. 1290:13-22.)
58. From October 2004 through June 2007, Sentinel's 1-FRs and BNYM's credit reviews of Sentinel reflected that Sentinel had approximately $3 million in net capital or less. (TTX 115, 140; TTX 155; TTX 164; TTX 171; TTX 172; TTX 175; TTX 182; TTX 185; TTX 189; TTX 197; TTX 199; TTX 202; TTX 203; TTX 211; TTX 214; TTX 218; TTX 220; TTX 224; TTX 235; TTX 247; TTX 392.)
59. On November 22, 2005, Terence Law circulated a call report regarding his November 9, 2005 visit to Sentinel. (TTX 150.)
60. On November 23, 2005, Mark Rogers sent Stephen Brennan an email regarding Sentinel. (TTX 732.)
61. On January 24, 2006, Terence Law circulated a call report pertaining to his visit to Sentinel in November, along with Theresa Arana's phone number. (TTX 170.)
62. TTX 171 and 172 are versions of BNYM credit review write-ups of Sentinel dated January 25, 2006. (TTX 171; TTX 172.)
63. On January 26, 2006, Theresa Arana sent an email to Bernard Lambert attaching a copy of Sentinel's revised audited statement of financial condition and Sentinel's most recent monthly 1-FR. (BTX 156.)
64. TTX 179 is a BNYM credit review write-up of Sentinel dated February 6, 2006. (TTX 179.)
65. On February 22, 2006, Joseph Ciacciarelli, Brian Ruane (a BNYM executive vice president), and Mike Burns exchanged emails regarding Sentinel. (TTX 181.)
66. On March 15, 2006, Mark Rogers sent an email to Stephen Brennan and Joseph Ciacciarelli requesting a meeting to discuss Sentinel. (TTX 183.)
67. On March 28, 2006, Bernard Lambert circulated the February 6, 2006 credit review write-up to Stephen Brennan, Joseph Ciacciarelli, Terence Law and Mark Rogers in advance of a meeting regarding Sentinel. (TTX 185.)
68. On March 30, 2006, Mark Rogers met with Stephen Brennan, Joseph Ciacciarelli, Terence Law and Bernard Lambert to discuss Sentinel. (Tr. 2655:1-19.)
69. On March 31, 2006, Mark Rogers sent an email to Joseph Ciacciarelli, Terence Law, Stephen Brennan and Bernard Lambert raising certain questions regarding Sentinel and forwarded a copy of the January 21, 2004 letter from the Division. (TTX 188; Tr. 2664:8-2666:5.)
70. On April 6, 2006, Terence Law scheduled a conference call with Eric Bloom. (BTX 323.)
71. On April 10, 2006, BNYM had a conference call with Sentinel. (BTX 324; BTX 325; Tr. 634:9-16.)
72. There is no evidence that BNYM received or reviewed Sentinel's Active and Matured Securities Report. (Tr. 280:17-23.)
74. There is no evidence that BNYM received or reviewed Sentinel's daily statement of segregation. (Tr. 286:25-287:13.)
75. Prior to May 1, 2004, Sentinel's guidance line was $30 million. (TTX 88; TTX 1000; Tr. 254:15-20.)
76. On or about May 2004, BNYM increased Sentinel's guidance line from $30 million to $55 million. (TTX 88; TTX 1000.)
77. On or about December 2004, BNYM increased Sentinel's guidance line from $55 million to $95 million. (TTX 88; TTX 1000.)
78. On or about June 2005, BNYM increased Sentinel's guidance line from $95 million to $175 million. (TTX 88; TTX 1000.)
79. On or about September 2006, BNYM increased Sentinel's guidance line from $175 million to $300 million. (TTX 88; TTX 1000.)
80. The average daily loan balance from November 4, 2005 through August 13, 2007 was $292,632,224. (TTX 1000.) The lowest daily loan balance during that period was $225,983,000. (Id.)
81. The average daily loan balance from June 1, 2007 through August 13, 2007 was $369,084,986. (TTX 1000.) The lowest daily loan balance was $312,945,000. (Id.) The highest daily loan balance was $573.8 million. (Id.)
82. When Sentinel requested a loan in excess of its guidance line, someone from Credit Risk and someone from SIBD would have to approve the loan. (Tr. 836:17-838:16.)
83. Prior to February 2005, BNYM charged Sentinel its cost of borrowing (typically fed funds rate), plus a spread of 50 basis points. (TTX 125; Tr. 858:6-8.)
84. After February 2005, BNYM charged Sentinel its cost of borrowing, plus a spread of 75 basis points. (TTX 125; Tr. 858:6-8.)
85. Sentinel's customers wired money from their accounts at other institutions into the accounts at BNYM called "Sentinel Mgmt Group as agt Cust Seg FDS # 1/E. Bloom," "Sentinel Mgmt Group as agt Cust Seg Funds 11 30.7," and "Sent Mgmt Group as agt Cust Seg FDS 3/E Bloom". (TTX 93A; TTX 611; Tr. 219:12-18; Tr. 723:24-724:11; Tr. 776:4-777:8; Tr. 795:25-797:1; Tr. 1468:3-25.)
86. Cash from multiple sources was commingled in the SEN account. (Tr. 1798:9-1799:12.)
87. Sentinel treated its and its customers' assets as a single, undifferentiated pool of cash and securities. (Tr. 1795:25-1796:12.)
88. In response to inquiries from current and prospective customers, Sentinel provided copies of its audited statements of financial condition. (BTX 183; BTX 218; BTX 231; Tr. 763:4-18; Tr. 1517:5-12; Tr. 2317:22-2318:8; Tr. 2318:20-25.)
89. Capital Fund Management did not raise any concerns regarding the contents of Sentinel's 2005 audited financial statements. (Tr. 1517:5-1518:17.)
90. It was Sentinel's practice to provide a copy of its current Form ADV to its prospective customers. (BTX 216; BTX 388; BTX 411; Tr. 811:16-812:4; Tr. 2328:10-14.)
91. It was Sentinel's practice to provide its customers with the most current Form ADV on an annual basis. (BTX 109; Tr. 1501:25-1502:1; Tr. 2328:15-18.)
93. Capital Fund Management, Kottke and TransAct Futures did not inquire into Sentinel's disclosures in its Form ADV. (Tr. 761:2-763:3; Tr. 1509:12-1510:2; Tr. 1516:9-20.)
94. Sentinel sent daily statements to its customers in substantially the format reflected in TTX 958, TTX 961, and TTX 963.
95. Capital Fund Management had more than $400 million invested with Sentinel at the time of Sentinel's bankruptcy. (Tr. 1499:15-18.)
96. Kottke's balance with Sentinel on August 13, 2007 was approximately $53 million. (Tr. 741:18-21.)
97. TransAct filed a proof of claim in connection with the Sentinel bankruptcy for approximately $13.7 million, reflecting its balance in TransAct's customer segregated funds account (Tr. 804:19-805:4.)
98. Starting in 2001, Sentinel entered into numerous repurchase agreements with repo lender FIMAT USA ("FIMAT"). (BTX 20; A. Byrne Tr. 37:19-38:8.)
99. In spring of 2007, FIMAT became more conservative regarding the type of collateral that it would accept as security for its repurchase transactions and closed out certain repurchase transactions with Sentinel. (A. Byrne Tr. 131:19-135:19; A. Byrne Tr. 161:5-162:12.)
100. Starting in October 2004, Sentinel entered into numerous repurchase agreements with repo lender Cantor Fitzgerald & Co. ("Cantor"). (BTX 110.)
101. In spring 2007, Cantor became more conservative regarding the collateral pool that it accepted from its counterparties, including Sentinel and closed out certain repurchase transactions with Sentinel. (J. Miller Tr. 89:13-90:8; J. Miller Tr. 90:18-92:8; J. Miller Tr. 92:21-93:22; J. Miller Tr. 94:21-95:11; J. Miller Tr. 96:12-19.)
102. Sentinel had segregated cash accounts at JPMorgan Chase. (BTX 436-468; BTX 470-475; BTX 792; BTX 800.)
103. In 2004, the average monthly balance in Sentinel's segregated accounts at JPMorgan Chase ranged from $27 million to $87 million. (BTX 817A.)
104. In 2005, the average monthly balance in Sentinel's segregated accounts at JPMorgan Chase ranged from $55 million to $139 million. (BTX 817A.)
105. In 2006, the average monthly balance in Sentinel's segregated accounts at JPMorgan Chase ranged from $107 million to $306 million. (BTX 817A.)
106. In 2007, the average monthly balance in Sentinel's segregated accounts at JPMorgan Chase ranged from $3 million to $201 million. (BTX 817A.)
107. From March 2004 through August 2007, a total of approximately $23 billion was deposited into and withdrawn from Sentinel's segregated accounts at JPMorgan Chase. (BTX 823A.)
108. On May 31, 2007, Sentinel obtained a $259.7 million loan from BNYM. On the loan card for May 31, 2007, BNYM priced certain of the securities held in lienable accounts, including $304.8 million in government securities, and gave those securities
109. On June 1, 2007, FIMAT returned to Sentinel approximately $100 million in physical securities. (TTX 1002; Tr. 1174:1-21; Tr. 1833:17-1834:11; Tr. 2891:7-17.)
110. On June 1, 2007, Sentinel transferred approximately $26 million in securities from its GSCX Seg 1 account to its SEN account and approximately $62 million in securities from its GSCX Seg 3 account to its SEN account. (TTX 266; TTX 267; TTX 1002.)
111. There is a recorded phone call on June 1, 2007 at 4:17 p.m. (CDT), between Sentinel Operations Associate Caleb Castillo and GSCX Administrator Kathiann Warren. (TTX 646.)
112. On June 1, 2007, Sentinel obtained a $353 million loan from BNYM. On the loan card for June 1, 2007, BNYM priced certain of the securities held in lienable accounts, including $385 million in government securities, and gave those securities a margined value of $355 million. (TTX 269; Tr. 992:15-993:15.)
113. On June 13, 2007, Mark Rogers sent an email to Terence Law, Stephen Brennan, Joseph Ciacciarelli, and others regarding Sentinel. (TTX 287.)
114. On June 13, 2007, Terence Law replied to Mark Rogers' June 13, 2007 email. (Tr. 1371:3-14; Tr. 1372:7-9; Tr. 1444:2-13.)
115. On June 25, 2007, Sentinel obtained a $358 million loan from BNYM. On the loan card for June 25, 2007, BNYM priced certain of the securities held in lienable accounts, including $388 million in government securities, and gave those securities a margined value of $359 million. (TTX 288; Tr. 1002:23-1003:19.)
116. On June 26, 2007, FIMAT returned to Sentinel approximately $166 million in physical securities. (TTX 649; TTX 1004; Tr. 1174:1-21; Tr. 1373:10-21; Tr. 1840:13-23; Tr. 2891:7-17.)
117. On June 26, 2007, Sentinel transferred approximately $11 million in securities from its GSCX Seg 1 account to its SEN account and approximately $55.6 million in securities from its GSCX Seg 3 account to its SEN Account. (TTX 307; TTX 308; TTX 1004.)
118. On June 26, 2007, Sentinel obtained a $497.5 million loan from BNYM. On the loan card for June 26, 2007, BNYM priced certain of the securities held in lienable accounts, including $426 million in government securities and $165 million in physical securities, and gave those securities a margined value of $394 and $156.8 million, respectively. (TTX 309.)
119. There is a recorded phone call on June 26, 2007 at 4:00 p.m. (CDT), between Sentinel Back-Office Manager Crystal York and GSCX Administrator Steven Johnson. (TTX 649.)
120. There is a recorded phone call on June 26, 2007 at 4:02 p.m. (CDT), between Sentinel Back-Office Manager Crystal York and GSCX Administrator Steven Johnson. (TTX 650.)
121. There is a recorded phone call on June 26, 2007 at 4:13 p.m. (CDT), between Sentinel Back-Office Manager Crystal York and GSCX Administrator Steven Johnson. (TTX 651.)
122. On June 27, 2007, Sentinel obtained a $573 million loan from BNYM. On the loan card for June 27, 2007, BNYM priced certain of the securities held in lienable accounts, including $424 million in government securities, $61 million in DTC securities, and $170 million in physical securities, and gave those securities a margined value
123. There is a recorded phone call on June 27, 2007 at 3:49 p.m. (CDT), between Sentinel Back-Office Manager Crystal York and GSCX Administrator Steven Johnson. (TTX 653.)
124. There is a recorded phone call on June 27, 2007 at 3:54 p.m. (CDT), between Sentinel Back-Office Manager Crystal York and Terence Law. (TTX 842.)
125. There is a recorded phone call on June 27, 2007 at 3:56 p.m. (CDT), between Sentinel Assistant Trader Jeff Logan and Terence Law. (TTX 654.)
126. There is a recorded phone call on June 28, 2007 at 8:44 a.m. (CDT), between Sentinel Back-Office Manager Crystal York and Terence Law. (TTX 657.)
127. During the June 28, 2007 call, Terence Law notified Sentinel for the first time that its internal guidance line at the Bank was $300 million. (TTX 657; Tr. 1402:8-10.)
128. There is a recorded phone call on June 28, 2007 at 4:09 p.m. (CDT), between Sentinel Back-Office Manager Crystal York and GSCX Administrator Vicky Vargas. (TTX 655.)
129. On June 28, 2007, Theresa Arana sent to Terence Law the first of several emails regarding Sentinel's efforts to reduce the size of its loan. (TTX 352; TTX 353.)
130. Ms. Arana and Eric Bloom sent additional email updates to Terence Law throughout the summer of 2007. (TTX 373; TTX 374; TTX 393; TTX 397; TTX 400A; TTX 402; TTX 405; TTX 442; TTX 485; TTX 506-508; TTX 512-513; TTX 518; TTX 522; Tr. 504:17-22.)
131. On June 29, 2007, Sentinel transferred approximately $166 million in securities from its DTC Seg 1 account to its DTC Clearing Account (FC1). (TTX 371; TTX 376; TTX 1006.)
132. On June 29, 2007, Sentinel obtained a $400 million loan from BNYM. (Tr. 1847:23-1848:7.) On the loan card for June 29, 2007, BNYM priced certain of the securities held in lienable accounts, including $404 million in government securities, $116 million in DTC securities, and $127 million in physical securities, and gave those securities a margined value of $374, $93, and $2 million, respectively. (TTX 372; Tr. 913:9-914:17.)
133. On June 29, 2007, Sentinel incurred an additional obligation of $44.5 million from the Bank which was booked as an overdraft. (Tr. 1847:27-1848:3.)
134. There is a recorded phone call on June 29, 2007 at 4:44 p.m. (CDT), between Sentinel Back-Office Manager Crystal York and GSCX Administrator Vicky Vargas. (TTX 661.)
135. There is a recorded phone call on June 29, 2007 at 4:47 p.m. (CDT), between Sentinel Assistant Trader Jeff Logan and DTC Administrator Walter Reid and DTC Manager Mike Scarry. (TTX 662.)
136. There is a recorded phone call on June 29, 2007 at 4:51 p.m. (CDT), between Sentinel Assistant Trader Jeff Logan and DTC Manager Mike Scarry. (TTX 663.)
137. There is a recorded phone call on June 29, 2007 at 5:13 p.m. (CDT), between Sentinel Back-Office Manager Crystal York and GSCX Administrator Kathiann Warren. (TTX 664.)
138. Beginning in late June 2007, BNYM employees, including Stephen Brennan, Joseph Ciacciarelli, Evan Fraser, Terence Law, Mark Rogers and Brian Ruane, had conversations regarding Sentinel's loan and the collateral pledged to secure that loan. (Tr. 870:23-871:20; Tr. 1158:6-9; Tr. 1382:2-1382:21.)
140. There is a recorded phone call on July 13, 2007 at 12:44 p.m. (CDT), between Terence Law and Eric Bloom. (BTX 354; Tr. 1411:13-20.)
141. Stephen Brennan, John Vricella and Terence Law participated in a July 13, 2007 conference call with Eric Bloom. (TTX 644.115-116; Tr. 1403:10-13; Tr. 1411:21-1412:11.)
142. On July 17, 2007, Cantor returned to Sentinel approximately $150 million in DTC securities. (TTX 1008; Tr. 508:6-9; Tr. 1855:4-13.)
143. On July 17, 2007, Sentinel transferred approximately $84 million in securities from its DTC Seg 1 Account to its DTC Clearing Account (FC1). (TTX 423; TTX 425; TTX 1008; Tr. 1855:20-25.)
144. On July 17, 2007, Sentinel obtained a $366 million loan from BNYM. On the loan card for July 17, 2007, BNYM priced certain of the securities held in lienable accounts, including $395.8 million in government securities and $169.7 million of DTC securities, and gave those securities a margined value of $366 and $93 million, respectively. (TTX 424; Tr. 1033:7-1034:10.)
145. There is a recorded phone call on July 17, 2007 at 3:53 p.m. (CDT), between Sentinel Back-Office Manager Crystal York and DTC Administrator Walter Reid and DTC manager Ron Silk. (TTX 671.)
146. There is a recorded phone call on July 17, 2007 at 4:09 p.m. (CDT), between Sentinel Back-Office Manager Crystal York and GSCX Administrator Kathiann Warren. (TTX 672.)
147. There is a recorded phone call on July 17, 2007 at 4:16 p.m. (CDT), between Sentinel Back-Office Manager Crystal York and GSCX Administrator Steven Johnson. (TTX 673.)
148. On July 30, 2007, Sentinel obtained a $362 million loan from BNYM. On the loan card for July 30, 2007, BNYM priced certain of the securities held in lienable accounts, including $384.9 million in government securities and $35.5 million of DTC securities, and gave those securities a margined value of $354 and $30 million, respectively. (TTX 462; Tr. 1039:13-1040:13.)
149. On July 30, 2007, Sentinel transferred approximately $248 million in securities from its DTC Clearing Account (FC1) to its DTC Seg 1 account. (TTX 464; TTX 463; TTX 1010.)
150. On July 31, 2007, Sentinel transferred approximately $289 million in securities from its DTC Seg 3 account to its DTC Clearing Account (FC1). At 5:27 p.m. (EDT), Sentinel transferred approximately $263 million in government securities from its GSCX Clearing Account (SEN) to its GSCX Seg 1 account. (TTX 482; TTX 483; TTX 489; TTX 497; TTX 676; TTX 1012; Tr. 928:19-930:9.)
151. At 5:34 p.m. (EDT) on July 31, 2007, a call was placed from Terence Law's line to Eric Bloom's line at Sentinel. (TTX 929.) At 5:35 p.m. (EST), a call was placed from Mr. Law's line to T.C. Arana's line. (Id.)
152. On July 31, 2007, Sentinel obtained a $356 million loan from BNYM. On the loan card for July 31, 2007, BNYM priced certain of the securities held in lienable accounts, including $127 million in government securities and $323.9 million in DTC securities, and gave those securities a margined value of $122 and $275 million, respectively.
153. There is a recorded phone call on July 31, 2007 at 12:09 p.m. (CDT), between Sentinel Assistant Trader Jeff Logan and DTC Administrator Denise Starks. (TTX 676.)
154. There is a recorded phone call on July 31, 2007 at 3:05 p.m. (CDT), between Sentinel Back-Office Manager Crystal York and DTC Administrator Walter Reid. (TTX 678.)
155. There is a recorded phone call on July 31, 2007 at 4:03 p.m. (CDT), between Sentinel Back-Office Manager Crystal York and GSCX Administrator Steve Johnson. (TTX 679.)
156. On August 1, 2007, Mark Rogers sent Stephen Brennan an email regarding Sentinel. (TTX 503.)
157. There is a recorded phone call on August 9, 2007 at 3:22 p.m. (CDT), between Sentinel Back-Office Manager Crystal York and DTC manager Ron Silk. (TTX 680.)
158. BNYM was over-secured at all times between May 31 and July 31, 2007. (TTX 906A; TTX 883; Tr. 1762-63.)
159. On August 13, 2007, Sentinel told its customers that due to issues in the credit markets it was temporarily halting customer redemptions. (TTX 523.)
160. On August 14, 2007, Sentinel sent to BNYM a copy of its August 13, 2007 letter notifying its customers that Sentinel was temporarily halting customer redemptions. (TTX 523.)
161. After BNYM obtained a copy of the August 13th letter, it established an ad hoc crisis team to manage the Sentinel relationship. (Tr. 1233:13-1233:24.)
162. On August 14, 2007, BNYM turned off Sentinel's remote access to BNYM's systems, which prevented Sentinel from automatically executing transactions and required Bank officer approval in order to execute Sentinel's instructions. (Tr. 527:2-14; Tr. 933:11-934:6; Tr. 1233:25-1234:15.)
163. There is a recorded phone call on August 14, 2007 at 2:39 p.m.(CDT), between Joseph Ciacciarelli and Sentinel Back-Office Manager Crystal York. (BTX 378.)
164. On August 14, 2007, there were numerous calls placed between Joseph Ciacciarelli's line and Eric Bloom's line. (TTX 929.)
165. On August 15, 2007, Terence Law and Brian Ruane arrived at Sentinel's offices. (Tr. 1415:19-24.)
166. On August 15, 2007, Joseph Ciacciarelli approved the movement of eight securities from Sentinel's DTC Seg 1 Account to its DTC Clearing Account. (BTX 294; BTX 295; TTX 553; TTX 554.)
167. On August 15, 2007, Ron Silk informed Crystal York by email that eight securities had been transferred from Sentinel's DTC Seg 1 account to its DTC Clearing account. (TTX 554; BTX 294; BTX 295; Tr. 955:3-956:5.)
168. On August 15, 2007 at approximately 6:13 p.m. (CDT), Joseph Ciacciarelli received a voicemail from Eric Bloom. (TTX 931; Tr. 665:8-666:1.)
169. On August 15, 2007 at 6:17 p.m. (CDT), Joseph Ciacciarelli called Terence Law. (TTX 931.)
170. On the morning of August 16, 2007, the eight securities that were moved from Sentinel's DTC Seg 1 account to its DTC Clearing account on August 15, 2007 were moved back to Sentinel's DTC Seg 1 account. (BTX 299; BTX 300.)
172. On August 16, 2007, Joseph Ciacciarelli sent a letter to Sentinel requesting that it immediately repay its loan in full, and notifying Sentinel of BNYM's intention to commence liquidating the collateral that was pledged to secure the loan. (BTX 579.)
173. On August 17, 2007, Joseph Ciacciarelli sent another letter to Sentinel notifying it that due to its failure to repay its loan, on or after August 22, 2007, BNYM would liquidate the collateral pledged to secure the loan. (BTX 580.)
174. On August 17, 2007, Sentinel filed for bankruptcy. (TTX 867.)
175. On August 28, 2007, the United States Trustee for Region 11 appointed Frederick J. Grede to act as chapter 11 Trustee for Sentinel. (TTX 934; Tr. 187:23-188:4.)
176. On August 29, 2007, the bankruptcy court approved the United States Trustee's appointment of Mr. Grede as chapter 11 Trustee for Sentinel. (TTX 934; Tr. 187:23-188:4.)
177. On October 19, 2007, the bankruptcy court entered an order permitting the Trustee to transfer the cash and securities held in segregated accounts at BNYM to accounts at JPMorgan Chase. (TTX 934; Tr. 1705:5-1706:24.)
178. On December 13, 2007, the bankruptcy court entered an order authorizing the sale of certain securities held in the segregated account. (TTX 935; Tr. 1708:3-17.)
Counts I & II of the complaint against the Bank consist of claims brought pursuant to Section 548(a)(1)(A) of the Bankruptcy Code and Section 5(a) of the Illinois Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act ("UFTA") to avoid and recover allegedly fraudulent transfers that Sentinel made to BNYM. The Trustee seeks to avoid the following six transfers identified by date: (1) June 1; (2) June 26; (3) June 29; (4) July 17; and (5) July 31 (collectively, the "Transfers"). In order to avoid these transfers as actually fraudulent, Plaintiff must demonstrate that: (1) Sentinel had an interest in the transferred property; (2) Sentinel transferred the property with actual intent to hinder, delay or defraud its creditors; and (3) the Transfers occurred within the applicable statutory period. 11 U.S.C. § 548(a)(1)(A); 740 ILL. COMP. STAT. 160/5(a)(1).
To prevail, the Trustee must prove that Sentinel made the Transfers to BNYM with the intent to hinder, delay or defraud its creditors. The Trustee may do
Proof of a Ponzi scheme is also sufficient to establish that the scheme's orchestrators acted with the actual intent to hinder, delay or defraud creditors pursuant to § 548(a)(1). Plotkin v. Pomona Valley Imps., Inc. (In re Cohen), 199 B.R. 709, 717 (9th Cir. BAP 1996). A Ponzi scheme is:
BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY (8th ed. 2004). Transfers in furtherance of a Ponzi scheme "have achieved a special status in fraudulent transfer law" from which intent may be inferred. Id. By nature, a Ponzi scheme will eventually collapse, and perpetrators must know that the investors at the end of the line will lose their investment. Martino v. Edison Worldwide Capital (In re Randy), 189 B.R. 425, 438 (N.D.Ill.1995) (citation omitted). "Knowledge to a substantial certainty constitutes intent in the eyes of the law. Cf. Restatement (Second) of Torts, Sec. 8A (1963 & 1964), and a debtor's knowledge that future investors will not be paid is sufficient to establish his actual intent to defraud them." Id. (quoting Merrill v. Abbott (In re Independent Clearing House Co.), 77 B.R. 843, 860 (D.Utah 1987)).
Based on the evidence presented at trial, Trustee has failed to prove that Sentinel made the Transfers with the actual intent to hinder, delay or defraud its creditors. Trustee presented little direct evidence of Sentinel's intent at trial and claims that the elements of fraudulent transfer are largely uncontested here, asserting that "there is no serious doubt that the Sentinel Insiders acted with the requisite intent to hinder, delay, or defraud customers in de-segregating securities and pledging them as collateral for the [BNYM] loan." However, Trustee has failed to demonstrate that the requisite intent may be inferred through the existence of the badges of fraud. It is true that Sentinel was insolvent at the time of the transfer, and Trustee argues that Sentinel concealed the transfers from its creditors. But a review of the financial statements and forms 1-FR demonstrates that the loan interest was documented and that a significant portion of customer cash and
Trustee argues that where a debtor perpetrates a fraudulent scheme involving the misuse of creditor assets, it is presumed to have acted with actual intent to defraud those creditors. In support of this argument, Trustee cites Cuthill v. Greenmark, LLC, (In re World Vision Entm't), 275 B.R. 641 (Bankr.M.D.Fla.2002), a case involving a Ponzi scheme; however, this case has no application here. An argument may be made that such a rationale applies in this case, since, as Trustee argues, Sentinel was already insolvent at the time of the transfers. See Martino v. Edison Worldwide Capital (In re Randy), 189 B.R. 425, 438 (N.D.Ill.1995) (citation omitted) (the perpetrator of a Ponzi scheme knows that the scheme will eventually collapse and future investors will not be paid). But Trustee presented no evidence at trial that Sentinel was engaged in a Ponzi scheme, nor did the Trustee prove that Sentinel Insiders knew or should have known that their scheme would collapse and that investors would go unpaid. In fact, the evidence at trial proved that Sentinel was engaged in a scheme
Trustee also cites In re Model Imperial, 250 B.R. 776 (Bankr.S.D.Fla.2000), and McGraw v. Allen (In re Bell & Beckwith), 64 B.R. 620 (Bankr.N.D.Ohio 1986). In In re Model Imperial, the court inferred fraudulent intent where there was direct evidence of fraud as well as the existence of five badges of fraud. 250 B.R. at 792. In this case, no direct evidence of fraud was presented, and at most, one badge of fraud.
In re Model Imperial, 250 B.R. at 792.
Significantly, those "badges of fraud" that are more likely to demonstrate fraudulent intent, e.g., whether the debtor retained control of the asset or transferred the asset to an insider; whether the debtor received consideration for the transfer; and whether the debtor made the transfer before or after being threatened with suit by creditors, are missing from the analysis.
In In re Bell & Beckwith, the court found that a stock broker's diversion and use of customer funds for his own purposes was "part of a continuing course of conduct which was intended to defraud [his customers]." 64 B.R. at 629. Although the broker did not spend the diverted funds with the intent to defraud, "the availability of those funds was accomplished by and [was] the product of a deliberate fraud." Id. This fraud, together with the broker's deposition testimony, his conviction, the evidence at trial, and the defendants' admission that the broker indeed intended to defraud creditors all led the court to the conclusion that the transfers of the diverted funds were avoidable under section 548(a)(1). Id.
In re Bell is not this case. Here, the Bank has not admitted that Sentinel insiders acted with intent to defraud, nor have the Insiders been convicted or deposed (although Eric Bloom and Charles Mosley have been charged by the SEC with certain securities violations involving the misuse of customer assets). To the extent that In re Bell is analogous, I decline to apply it here. While the evidence at trial revealed the Bank's knowledge that Sentinel insiders were using at least some of the loan proceeds for their own purposes, and, we can assume for purposes of argument, that the Bank was aware that availability of those proceeds was, in part, the product of fraud, this alone does not lead to an inference of actual intent. "Section 548 and fraudulent transfer law generally attempt to protect creditors from transactions which are designed, or have the effect, of unfairly draining the pool of assets available to satisfy creditors' claims, or which dilute legitimate creditor claims at the expense of false or lesser claims." 5 COLLIER ON BANKRUPTCY ¶ 548.01[1][a] (16th ed. 2009).
Estate of Klein v. Klein, (In re Klein), Nos. 86 B 19937, 88 A 357, 1991 WL 242169, at *8 (Bankr.N.D. Ill. June 21, 1991).
Trustee's own expert witness James Feltman ("Feltman") testified that three of the transfers in question "had to do with closing out of repo positions[,]" and the remaining two were related to what Feltman called "structuring of collateral, the movement of securities between accounts." According to Feltman, the latter transfers were made in response to BNYM's rejection of physical securities as collateral. While Sentinel insiders may have misused the proceeds of the loan, there is no evidence that the transfers to BNYM were made with the actual intent to defraud, hinder or delay creditors. Sentinel's use of the loan proceeds to pay the repo counterparties is no more than a "hindrance or delay greater than that implicit in a preferential transfer to certain creditors by an insolvent debtor." If Trustee is correct that Sentinel was insolvent at the time of the Transfers, it is equally reasonable to infer that the Transfers were made to secure the loan in an attempt to continue conducting business and paying off existing creditors. Even if the Transfers were not designed to drain the assets, they can still be voidable if they result in the draining of the asset pool. But here, this was not the case — in exchange for the collateral, BNYM gave a loan of significant value, thereby adding to the pool.
Although "[a] general scheme or plan to strip the debtor of its assets without regard to the needs of its creditors can support a finding of actual intent[,]" see Wieboldt Stores, Inc. v. Schottenstein, 94 B.R. 488, 504 (N.D.Ill.1988) (citing Freehling v. Nielson (In re F & C Servs.), 44 B.R. 863, 872 (Bankr.Fla.1984)), the evidence does not support a finding that Sentinel was engaged in a scheme to strip itself of assets. Rather, Sentinel schemed to pay certain creditors — the repo counterparties — and to keep its line of credit open presumably in an attempt to stay in business, not to drain its assets and make them unavailable to other creditors. Furthermore, it appears that adequate consideration was given in exchange for the Transfers. For these reasons, BNYM is entitled to judgment on Counts I and II.
In Count III, Trustee seeks to avoid the June 29 and July 31 Transfers as preferential under Section 547(b) of the Bankruptcy Code. Section 547(b) allows a trustee to avoid a transfer to a creditor on account of an antecedent debt, a transfer made while the debtor was insolvent and within 90 days of the date of the filing of the petition. In order to be avoided, the transfer must enable the creditor to receive
On summary judgment, BNYM first maintains that the transfers did not improve BNYM's position since BNYM was already fully secured on the date each transfer was made. Had the allegedly preferential transfers not occurred, BNYM contends that it would have simply closed out its position, foreclosed on its collateral, and recovered its full claim. Next, BNYM argues the transfers were substantially contemporaneous exchanges for new value. Regardless of how Sentinel used the loan proceeds, it is clear that the two transfers at issue here were contemporaneous with advances on the BNYM loan or the release of existing collateral securing the BNYM loan. Finally, BNYM urges that because the securities transferred have already been returned to Sentinel, the Trustee is not entitled to recover the transfers even assuming that they could be avoided.
Trustee mainly disputes BNYM's contention that it was oversecured at the time of the transfers. Trustee points first to BNYM's demand for additional collateral prior to the June 29 transfer to replace certain physical securities that BNYM would no longer accept as collateral. Because BNYM would no longer accept the physical securities as collateral, Trustee contends that they should not be considered in any collateral calculation. Similarly, the DTC securities that BNYM would not price should also be excluded. Finally, Trustee contends that the securities that were fraudulently transferred to the lienable accounts in earlier Transfers cannot be considered as part of BNYM's collateral base for purposes of assessing whether subsequent Transfers were preferences.
BNYM takes issue with the Trustees's use of the Bank's daily loan cards to support the claim that BNYM was undersecured on the loans. The loan cards, they maintain, were not daily inventories of collateral, and the Bank's collateral was not limited to the securities listed on the loan cards. They were used "simply to ensure that the BNYM loan was adequately collateralized for the night." BNYM notes that the subjective understanding of bank employees as to what was or should have been collateral is irrelevant, but such an understanding may be relevant to exactly how loan cards were used in the valuation process. Trustee provides no valuation analysis of the securities in the lienable accounts on the date of the Transfers,
In Count IV, Trustee seeks equitable subordination, pursuant to section 510(c) of the Bankruptcy Code, of all of BNYM's claims in Sentinel's Chapter 11 case to a level below all other creditors' claims and to transfer any liens supporting BNYM's claims to Sentinel's estate. Claims for equitable subordination are evaluated using the three-part test set forth in Benjamin v. Diamond (In re Mobile Steel Co.), 563 F.2d 692, 699-700 (5th Cir.1977). See United States v. Noland, 517 U.S. 535, 538-39, 116 S.Ct. 1524, 134 L.Ed.2d 748 (1996); In re Kreisler, 546 F.3d 863, 866 (7th Cir.2008). Under this test, for a court to subordinate a claim, it must conclude that: (1) the claimant engaged in some type of inequitable conduct; (2) the misconduct resulted in injury to the creditors or conferred an unfair advantage on the claimant; and (3) subordination is not inconsistent with the provision of the Bankruptcy Code. In re Mobile Steel Co., 563 F.2d at 699-700; see In re Kreisler, 546 F.3d at 866. Equitable subordination is an "extraordinary remedy" that "should be invoked only in extreme circumstances and only where a clear inequity has been wrought." Aetna Bank v. Dvorak, 176 B.R. 160, 166 (N.D.Ill.1994). "Absence of statutory criteria commits the subject to the courts, to be worked out in the common law fashion." Kham & Nate's Shoes No. 2, Inc. v. First Bank of Whiting, 908 F.2d 1351, 1356 (7th Cir.1990) (citations omitted).
"Traditionally, equitable subordination has been limited to cases involving (1) fraud, illegality or breach of fiduciary duty, (2) undercapitalization, or (3) control or use of the debtor as an alter ego for the benefit of the claimant." In re Granite Partners, L.P., 210 B.R. 508, 514 (Bankr.S.D.N.Y.1997) (citations omitted). "Where noninsider, non-fiduciary claims are involved, the level of pleading and proof is even higher." Id. at 515. "Courts have described the degree of wrongful conduct warranting equitable subordination of an ordinary creditor's claim as `gross and egregious', `tantamount to fraud, misrepresentation, overreaching or spoilation' or `involving moral turpitude.'" Id.
Trustee maintains that BNYM acted inequitably by: (1) taking customer securities as collateral without investigating Sentinel's authority to pledge them; (2) failing to establish a process designed to carry out segregation; (3) demanding additional collateral despite being over secured, and using proceeds of securities sales to pay down the loan; and (4) lying
The evidence made clear that BNYM knew that Sentinel was subject to the CEA and that its customer assets had to be segregated. In March 1997, Joseph Ciacciarelli signed, on behalf of BNYM, three letters referred to as Seg Letters. In those letters, the Bank acknowledged that the funds held in Sentinel's customer accounts would be "segregated and treated as belonging to [Sentinel's] customers" and would "not be subject to [BNYM's] lien or offset for, and on account of, any indebtedness now or hereafter owing [by Sentinel] to [BNYM]." These acknowledgment letters were necessary to demonstrate to the NFA, Sentinel's designated self-regulatory organization, that the accounts opened at BNYM met the legal requirements for segregation of customer funds. If BNYM had been unwilling to make such acknowledgments, Sentinel would have been required by the NFA to find a different depository.
In 2006, Mark Rogers circulated to Ciacciarelli, Law and Brennan, a 2004 no-action letter which states that the funds maintained in the Seg I accounts are held pursuant to relevant provisions of the CEA for the benefit of Sentinel's customers, that BNYM could not use the funds in either the Seg I or the Seg III accounts for its own purposes, and that BNYM cannot offset any Sentinel obligation by funds maintained in the Seg I account. In his accompanying e-mail, Rogers asked the recipients "Operationally: Have we set up the seg accounts and operate them as outlined in the letter? I assume the collateral we lend against is not in the seg accounts." (TTX-188). Finally, in an April 10, 2006 conference call with Law, Rogers, Ciacciarelli, and Brennan, Eric Bloom made clear that money being held by Sentinel on behalf of its FCM clients qualified for those clients' segregation requirements, which is why Sentinel itself was registered as an FCM. Not only was Sentinel registered as an FCM, but Sentinel and its customers relied on and benefitted from its FCM status, largely, if not entirely, because it is simpler for an FCM to park its assets with another FCM than in most other places.
Throughout the litigation, BNYM has maintained that although Sentinel was registered as an FCM, its FCM status was a fiction, and it was reasonable for BNYM to view Sentinel as an investment manager. While it is true that Sentinel was not a traditional FCM, the evidence shows that BNYM employees knew it was registered
Against the back-drop of the evidence, the issue of whether the Bank knew or suspected that Sentinel was engaged in a fraud is a close question. BNYM argues that in order for a creditor's claim to be subordinated, the creditor must have actual knowledge that Sentinel was engaging in improper behavior. See, e.g., Stratton v. Equitable Bank, N.A., 104 B.R. 713, 731 (D.Md.1989) (granting summary judgment to lender on an equitable subordination claim where the lender was not certain that debtor was engaging in fraud but may have acted negligently in continuing to lend to a grossly undercapitalized debtor committing potential illegalities). But a creditor cannot be willfully blind to the details of a fraud to avoid actual knowledge. Mishkin v. Siclari (In re Adler, Coleman Clearing Corp.), 277 B.R. 520, 554, 566 (Bankr.S.D.N.Y.2002) (subordinating the claim of a defendant who "knowingly closed his eyes to" a fraud).
According to BNYM, proof is wanting that the Bank actually knew of Sentinel's improper conduct. BNYM had representations and warranties from Sentinel that Sentinel had the right to pledge the securities and it is undisputed that Sentinel used a leveraged investment strategy for certain of its portfolios, a fact which the Bank knew. According to BNYM, it had no duty to monitor Sentinel's compliance with the CEA.
The remaining "red flags," BNYM argues, were not red flags for these reasons. It was not unusual for a BNYM customer to have relatively little capital and a large loan, especially when the customer is an investment manager, whose purpose is to invest its clients' funds. Furthermore, once Sentinel began employing a leveraged trading strategy (which was disclosed to its clients), it was not unusual that the loan
Trustee contends that BNYM employees either knew or turned a blind eye to the fact that Sentinel had used misappropriated securities as collateral for the loan. BNYM had Sentinel's audited financial statements and monthly 1-FRs. For example, the 2005 financial statements showed customer securities "segregated and held in trust" to be approximately $1.14 billion, but that approximately $156 million of this total was pledged as collateral for a $280 million short-term bank loan.
Law and Ciacciarelli, both of whom reviewed these monthly statements, admitted that securities pledged as collateral could not simultaneously be held in segregation.
According to Trustee, other "red flags" include BNYM's awareness that massive amounts of securities were being desegregated for the sole purpose of collateralizing BNYM's loan. BNYM also knew that Sentinel had little capital, a relatively large loan which was being used to fund payments to repo counterparties returning physical securities. Trustee maintains that because there were no segregated accounts for physical securities, BNYM would have known that those securities were house positions, and they could not be placed back in segregation. Therefore, the trustee reasons, BNYM must have known that Sentinel was moving securities out of segregation in order to finance the repurchase of its house positions. BNYM employees also knew that Sentinel was using a leveraged trading strategy and had been conducting proprietary trading.
On June 13, 2007, after reviewing Sentinel's holdings and the large size of the loan, Rogers asked the Sentinel team at BNYM how Sentinel was able to put up as much collateral as it had, with only $2 million in capital. Rogers wrote "... I have to assume most of this collateral is for somebody else's benefit. Do we really have rights on the whole $300MM?" Law testified that he consulted with a number of colleagues prior to responding: "Hello. We have a clearing agreement which gives is a full lien on the box position outlined below." According to Law, this was a well-advised and carefully worded statement. But both Rogers and Law knew
Two competing inferences may be drawn from Law's response. The response may be viewed as an effort to halt Rogers' inquiry into the matter, for fear of what BNYM might find. Or, the response can be interpreted to mean that these are questions with which BNYM need not concern itself — the clearing agreement allows the Bank to lien on assets in the box and contains representations and warranties from Sentinel that they had rights to pledge the collateral to the Bank. In either case, Rogers' inquiry is certainly evidence that he had a suspicion that the securities were not Sentinel's to pledge and he shared this suspicion with Law. But if the response was basically that any further inquiry is unnecessary based on the clearing agreement, then the question is whether Law and BNYM generally were entitled to rely on Sentinel's representations and warranties contained in the Global Clearing and Custody Agreement that
Rogers and Ruane both acknowledged that it would have been improper for BNYM to rely on such representations and warranties in the face of certain misrepresentations or misconduct by Sentinel.
At the April 2006 conference call, Bloom explained: "We never act as principal, only as agent." Law, though, testified that at that time he knew that Sentinel was engaged in proprietary trading, and to conduct proprietary trading, Sentinel would have to act as principal. Bloom later admitted to moving money from segregation to meet margin requirements, but also explained that an investor "can take their entire investment same day." The team knew that same-day liquidity was part of Sentinel's agreement with its customers, which also suggests that Sentinel may not have had the right to pledge customer assets, especially in light of the fact that Sentinel stopped paying the loan off on a daily basis, indicating that the loan was no longer being used only for failed trades and liquidity. It is true that BNYM employees were also aware that some of Sentinel's clients were hedge funds and that the loan was being used for leverage as well as liquidity (both presumably for the benefit of the customers), as had been discussed on the call. But the 1-FRs reviewed by Law and Ciacciarelli in and of themselves contained significant improper reporting, demonstrating that Sentinel was violating its segregation requirement.
It is clear to me that by June 13, 2009, certain BNYM employees had suspicions that Sentinel may not have had rights to the collateral. Members of the Sentinel team also had access to forms 1-FR which, with relatively cursory review, revealed that Sentinel was violating its segregation requirements. BNYM argues that their employees were not looking at the forms
To secure a finding of equitable subordination, Trustee must prove that BNYM knew of or was deliberately indifferent to Sentinel's misconduct. Trustee maintains that the Bank must be found to know what a reasonable person under the same circumstances should have known, sometimes called an objective standard.
BNYM contends that the standard is more subjective, where, in order to find that BNYM knew of the misconduct, Trustee would have to show that the Bank appreciated the significance of what was before it.
This question of law is quite significant. Under BNYM's standard, it prevails. It was not looking at the forms 1-FR in an effort to determine whether BNYM was violating its segregation requirements. It had a relatively unremarkable ten-year relationship with Sentinel. For years, the overnight loan made to Sentinel was frequently paid back the next day, signaling that the securities used as collateral were going back into segregation. BNYM had assurances from Sentinel that it was authorized to use customer securities for collateral, and customers were aware that Sentinel was using a leveraged trading strategy. From the collateral reports it had, BNYM would not have seen the movement of collateral to and from seg accounts, and it is unreasonable to expect that the Bank should have sought the information it needed to track each movement. Indeed, the long-standing, untroubled nature of the banking relationship led Trustee to decide, for tactical reasons, to challenge only those transactions that occurred in the few weeks before Sentinel failed.
If BNYM should have been more diligent with regard to verifying the source of collateral, such a lack of care does not rise to the level of the egregious misconduct necessary for equitable subordination. The fact remains that BNYM had little reason to conduct such a verification and could rely on representations and warranties. Notwithstanding the evidence that demonstrates that at least one BNYM employee was suspicious, several of the facts that Trustee maintains support a finding of knowledge do not necessarily suggest that Sentinel was misusing customer assets. "[K]nowledge of bookkeeping irregularities of a depositor or suspicions of a few employees of a large banking institution are not the equivalent of knowledge that another party doing business with the bank's depositor is being defrauded." Stratton v. Equitable Bank, N.A., 104 B.R. 713, 731 (D.Md.1989) (citation omitted).
Furthermore, the issue of BNYM's motivation is problematic for Trustee's theory that BNYM employees turned a blind eye to facts of Sentinel's fraud. The Bank argues that it had no motivation to participate in or turn a blind eye to Sentinel's misconduct, and points out that its employees' compensation was not pegged to credit-related revenue. Trustee claims that members of the Sentinel team were pressured to increase loan revenue, but it is implausible that to do this, career bank employees would put their jobs at risk to lend money to a company that they knew to be stealing from its customers. During the summer of 2007, the Sentinel team at BNYM was working with Sentinel to reduce the size of the loan. BNYM reaped
Under Trustee's more objective standard Trustee prevails for some of the time periods at issue, even despite these counter indications. The facts demonstrate that by the middle of June, at least one BNYM employee was suspicious, and others should have known that Sentinel was violating segregation requirements. In light of such notice, it is difficult to see how reliance on Sentinel's representations and warranties contained in the clearing agreement is objectively appropriate. While the size of the loan relative to the capital might, at the time, not have been noteworthy,
There were instances during trial in which bank employees gave testimony I did not believe. Yet, in this case, lies on the witness stand coming from the mouths of some BNYM witnesses do not lead me to infer that the truth would help Trustee.
In this case, it was in the Bank's interest to have been significantly more careful in administering its loan to Sentinel. The Bank employees who ran the Sentinel lending program could defend the Bank here by testifying that they did precisely, and diligently, what good bankers would do, but that the loan went off the tracks anyway. Or, they could say they checked all the procedural boxes but not so diligently; everything was going smoothly, there was good collateral, but a lot of other things on their plate. Both of these versions can be the basis for a defense against the specific claims here. So too would be an admission that Sentinel just outsmarted the bankers.
It often runs against the personal interests of any employee to say anything other than "I did my job perfectly but the train wreck happened anyway. I did not forget to pull the track switch; it was the switch that failed." At times the best retreat is to say "I don't remember why I did what I did or why I accepted someone's word" rather than say "Those things didn't seem significant to me, so I let them go and turned to more important matters." No employee wants to say "I just dropped the ball," even if admitting negligence is the truth. There are a lot of reasons for inattentiveness and failure to follow up. Few, if any, are harmless to employee status. Lies are sometimes told, as they were here, not to help the employer in a lawsuit, but rather to help the employee's career.
One significant employee of the bank exhibited a demeanor and offered answers so preposterous that I thought he was in imminent fear of being fired. Upon questioning he denied this. But I do not believe that he was covering up his or the Bank's knowledge of the pre-collapse mess at Sentinel. He was simply unwilling to concede that he had not performed well in protecting his employer's interests.
I give some small weight to the fact that, had the affected employees wished to cobble together a better, credible version of history, there was at least one plausible one — that the collapse of Sentinel, a solid, long-time client, came rather quickly, and that by early August, BNYM employees, namely Rogers, were concerned that Sentinel might go bankrupt, but at that point it was too late in the game to take preventative measures. On occasion, I regard the failure to offer a readily available, nicely turned defensive tale as a minor reason to conclude that the witnesses were not determined liars. This case is one such occasion. The nervousness and demeanor of the witnesses on the stand, together with their failure to put forth a more plausible and coherent narrative of the events of the summer of 2007, leads me to conclude that the witnesses were not covering up wrongdoing, but were rather worried about the professional consequences of their failure to look more closely at the situation as it unfolded.
BNYM's reaction to the failure of Sentinel is quite consistent with angry surprise.
I do find credible, if not at all admirable, the testimony of the Bank employees that they neither knew nor turned a blind eye to the improper actions of Sentinel. The fact that they would have been better bankers if they had made a more rigorous inspection of Sentinel's operations or its reporting is not enough to hold BNYM liable. If some degree of negligence were enough to establish inequitable conduct, the result might be different.
In an effort to demonstrate liability, Trustee relies on the objective test. But the cases he cites do not.
Each equitable subordination case cited by Grede that involved non-insiders addressed creditors that willfully engaged in inequitable conduct. Mishkin v. Siclari (In re Adler, Coleman Clearing Corp.), 277 B.R. 520, 566 (Bankr.S.D.N.Y.2002) (creditor "willingly" and "knowingly" engaged in conduct that amounted to "fraud, illegality, [and] breach of fiduciary duty"); Granite Partners, 210 B.R. at 511, 515 (creditor "was not only aware of the [debtor's] fraudulent scheme; it actively participated in it"); Aluminum Mills Corp. v. Citicorp N.A., Inc. (In re Aluminum Mills Corp.), 132 B.R. 869, 894-5 (Bankr.N.D.Ill. 1991) (lender paid debtor's principals to induce them to breach fiduciary duties to debtor); Lichtenstein v. MBNA Am. Bank, N.A. (In re Computer Personalities Sys., Inc.), 284 B.R. 415, 428 (Bankr. E.D.Pa.2002) (lender made loans to debtor's customers to finance purchase of debtor's products knowing that debtor would be unable to ship products and that debtor was violating state and federal consumer protection laws); In re Model Imperial, Inc., 250 B.R. 776, 804 (Bankr.S.D.Fla. 2000) (lender made loans to shell corporation to circumvent restrictions on additional borrowing in debtor's existing loan facility); Capitol Bank & Trust Co. v. 604 Columbus Ave. Realty Trust (In re 604 Columbus Ave. Realty Trust), 968 F.2d 1332, 1338-39, 1361-62 (1st Cir.1992) (creditor-bank misappropriated loan proceeds and then charged interest on the very proceeds it misappropriated from borrower); Miller v. Greenwich Capital Fin. Prods., Inc. (In re Amer. Bus. Fin. Servs.), 362 B.R. 149, 165 (Bankr.D.Del. 2007) (defendant intentionally suppressed the value of debtor's assets).
Some courts have employed a more objective standard, whereby the claimant's knowledge of the debtor's misconduct or the circumstances supporting the subordination was viewed from the perspective of a reasonable person.
The purpose of the equitable subordination is to remedy the inequity that has resulted from the misconduct of a creditor. 4 COLLIER ON BANKRUPTCY ¶ 510.05[2] (16th ed. 2009). I find that the pure objective standard does not fit well with the concepts of inequity and misconduct. This is why the cases which apply objective standards rest on the premise that bankers and businessmen are to be judged in terms of what they should have known as opposed to what they could have known. To simply combine the presumed ability of a banker to evaluate risk with the facts that the banker could have discovered in order to anticipate bankruptcy is not enough. There has to be an element of "should" rather than could. In the circumstances of this case I am persuaded that the bankers had no legal obligation — no "should" — to seek out or analyze the data which Trustee claims would have led it down the correct path. Even my criticism of the Bank is based, not on what it should have done, but what it could have done even if it were not bound by the law to do it.
Where the debtor and creditor have dealt at arm's length, "subordination depends on a combination of inequitable conduct, unfair advantage to the creditor, and injury to the other creditors." Kham & Nate's Shoes No. 2, Inc. v. First Bank of Whiting, 908 F.2d 1351, 1356 (7th Cir. 1990). There is no duty of "kindness" among non-fiduciaries. Id. at 1357. Merely enforcing the terms of a contract does not give rise to an equitable subordination claim. Id. Indeed, a non-fiduciary may act strategically to protect itself to the potential detriment of others. Badger Freightways v. Continental Ill. Nat. Bank, 106 B.R. 971, 976 (Bankr.N.D.Ill.1989). Inequitable conduct for a non-fiduciary means "breach plus some advantage-taking," Kham & Nate's, 908 F.2d at 1357, or else "gross misconduct tantamount to
In order to decide whether BNYM's claim should be subordinated, I consider (1) whether BNYM violated any duties; (2) whether BNYM's conduct shocks the conscience; and (3) whether BNYM'S misconduct conferred an unfair advantage or caused harm to creditors. Trustee maintains that BNYM has violated several duties, that its conduct is egregious, and that Sentinel's customers have been harmed. Significant to each argument is whether BNYM knew of Sentinel's misconduct.
First, Trustee maintains that BNYM not only knew of but actively participated in Sentinel's misappropriation of customer securities. In the alternative, Trustee maintains that BNYM was willfully blind, and should have known of Sentinel's misconduct. There is little dispute that negligence and breach of contract alone do not satisfy the equitable subordination standard. In Stratton, the court found that "knowledge of bookkeeping irregularities of a depositor or suspicions of a few employees of a large banking institution are not the equivalent of knowledge that another party doing business with the bank's depositor is being defrauded." Stratton, 104 B.R. at 731 (citation omitted).
BNYM contends that the extent of its duty was not to use funds maintained in the segregated accounts to offset any debt not incurred by Sentinel's customers. BNYM complied with the segregation requirements under the CEA and in the segregation letter, (discussed infra) and never liened on any securities in the segregated accounts. Moreover, even assuming that BNYM knew that Sentinel was violating its segregation requirements, BNYM was largely unaware of Sentinel's investment decisions, what Sentinel did with the loan, or how securities were allocated among clients and the house account. From BNYM's perspective, it was giving
Trustee points out that BNYM had a contractual right to require Sentinel to "take any and all additional steps which [BNYM] requires[,]" to assure itself that Sentinel has the right to pledge customer-owned securities and had an unencumbered "first lien and security interest" in pledged securities, including notifying third parties or obtaining their consent. No one at the Bank took any action, e.g. speaking or emailing a customer, to confirm that Sentinel's customers knew that their assets were being pledged as collateral. But BNYM had no duty to Sentinel to take action, and in practice, it is difficult to see what BNYM's should have done under the circumstances. In closing, Trustee (implicitly recognizing the difficulty and impracticality of direct contact with Sentinel's clients) argued that BNYM employees should have at least asked Eric Bloom whether he had the authority to pledge the securities at issue or asked Bloom to produce customer agreements authorizing the pledge. But would such action have led to a different result? BNYM had a clearing agreement representing that Sentinel had the right to pledge the securities. The agreement was, in effect, Sentinel's position on the issue. BNYM had a ten-year relationship with Sentinel during which time it had no reason to believe that Sentinel was acting inappropriately.
Throughout the litigation, Trustee maintained that Bloom, allegedly engaged in misappropriation, was vague and misleading in his responses, and that as a result of Sentinel's misconduct, BNYM was not entitled to rely on Sentinel's representations and warranties. It is just too difficult to infer, in these circumstances, that had he been asked, Bloom would have said that he had no authority to pledge the assets. It is far more likely that Bloom would have maintained that he was legally allowed to rehypothecate customer securities — something he did, in fact, say during the April 10, 2006 conference call. Moreover, the no-action letter made clear that "[c]lient FCMs do not obtain a direct interest in any particular security or other investments maintained in the Seg I or Seg III Accounts. Client FCM's share in the profits and losses on the investments made by Sentinel on a pro-rata basis[.]" This would have made individual assurances from clients with regard to specific transfers of securities impracticable or impossible, since none of the securities within those accounts could be traced to individual investors. In addition, BNYM employees knew that Sentinel was regularly audited by outside firms and regulated by the NFA-facts from which BNYM employees did take comfort.
In Kham & Nate's Shoes, the Seventh Circuit expressed its unwillingness to "to embrace a rule that requires participants in commercial transactions not only to keep their contracts but also do `more' — just how much more resting in the discretion of a[] judge assessing the situation years later." 908 F.2d at 1357. Here, BNYM was under no obligation to monitor Sentinel's transactions, and to do so would have been nearly impossible given the speed and number of transactions involved in investment management generally. BNYM exercised its contractual right to lien on the assets Sentinel placed in the collateral account. It is true that BNYM had in its possession several pieces of evidence which, especially in light of the totality of the circumstances, indicated misconduct. In fact, the circumstances raised such a suspicion in Rogers, but BNYM employees had little reason to believe that they could not rely on the representations and warranties contained in the contract that Sentinel had the authorization of its
Second, Trustee maintains that BNYM violated certain provisions of the CEA. Section 6d(a) requires FCMs to segregate customer assets. Trustee argues that FCMs are specifically permitted to invest commodity customer funds in securities and are required to segregate those securities even when they are not dealing in futures. As such, the segregation requirements of this section should apply. However BNYM disputes Sentinel's status as an FCM. Even though it was registered as one, it was not acting as one,
The evidence demonstrates that Sentinel considered itself subject to the CEA, and it reaped the benefits of being registered as an FCM. BNYM was aware of both of these facts. But not only was Sentinel subject to segregation requirements, BNYM was independently required to segregate pursuant to section 6d(b) of the CEA. That section provides:
7 U.S.C. § 6d(b) (emphasis added). According to Trustee, this section does not apply only to depositories receiving monies from FCMs, and to the extent that it does, Sentinel's Seg 1 clients — all of whom were FCMs — wired money directly to BNYM. Privity is not required in order for this section to apply. Even if BNYM's narrow interpretation is correct, Sentinel itself may be a "person" that received commodity customer funds from a "depositing futures commission merchant." In its amicus curiae memorandum, the CFTC agrees with the Trustee that (1) Sentinel should be treated as an FCM; (2) BNYM is independently required to segregate pursuant to section 6d(b); (3) no privity is required for duty to attach.
BNYM maintains in no way did it violate this provision of the CEA. It was not BNYM that ordered the desegregation of the accounts. In certain circumstances (e.g., where it was oversegregated), Sentinel was within its rights to transfer excess funds, and it would be impossible for a bank to determine whether an FCM was undersegregated. Sentinel warranted that it had the right to desegregate customers' securities and pledge them as collateral. Moreover, BNYM placed no liens on any of the segregated accounts.
Neither Trustee nor CFTC cite authority in support of this position.
The Trustee and CFTC do suggest that BNYM may be liable for aiding and abetting Sentinel's breach of the CEA. In support, the CFTC cites a 1979 interpretative letter which states as follows:
CFTC Interpretative Letter No. 79-1 (Responsibilities of Banks as Depositories of Customers' Segregated Funds), Comm. Fut. L. Rpt. (CCH) 20,835 (May 29, 1979). But the CFTC fails to cite the preceding sentence which states: "There is no case law discussing whether a bank has authority to assure that customers' funds are not misappropriated by futures commission merchants." Id.
Because BNYM violated no duty under the CEA, its conduct does not warrant the subordination of its claim.
Third, Trustee maintains that regardless of whether the CEA actually governed, BNYM agreed to segregate Sentinel's customer assets as part of the 1997 letter agreements.
Fourth, Trustee asserts that under the IAA, BNYM "had both a direct obligation" and "an obligation not to subvert the IAA segregation requirement." A plain reading of the relevant section suggests that only investment advisors and not depositories have duties under the IAA. That section reads:
17 C.F.R. § 275.206(4)-2(a) (emphasis added). Trustee derives BNYM's duty from a parenthetical reference in a footnote of a 2009 notice of proposed rulemaking. Custody of Fund or Securities of Clients by Investment Advisers, 2009 SEC LEXIS 1645, at 5 n. 4 (May 20, 2009). There, the SEC suggests that the requirement that funds be maintained with a qualified custodian protects customers because such "institutions' custodial activities are subject to extensive regulation and oversight." In the relevant footnote, the SEC notes that banks have adequate systems in place to monitor risk in custody services areas and ensure segregation of customer accounts. While this note lays out important justification for the requirement of a qualified custodian, I do not see how the IAA directly imposes a duty on BNYM. BNYM's claim cannot be subordinated on this basis.
Fifth, Trustee contends that pursuant to industry practice, BNYM had custodial obligations where special deposits are involved. But only segregated accounts arguably qualify as special deposits, not the clearing accounts which were lienable. Therefore, even assuming that banks are "absolutely prohibited from asserting a lien over assets deposited in a special purpose account," BNYM did not violate that prohibition because it at no time liened on assets in the segregated accounts.
Sixth, Trustee asserts that BNYM was on notice of facts indicating a diversion of customer assets and had a duty to investigate. In Lerner v. Fleet Bank, N.A., 459 F.3d 273, 287-88 (2d Cir.2006), the Court held that a bank which has actual or constructive knowledge of the diversion of customer assets "may be liable for participation in [such a] diversion, either by
BNYM maintains that Lerner does not apply here because a duty exists only if the "sole inference" from a customer's action is that it is misappropriating customer funds. Moreover, Lerner involves a negligent failure to detect misappropriation, which Sentinel admits is insufficient for equitable subordination. In its defense, BNYM further argues that (1) Sentinel agreed that it was acting lawfully and with authority; (2) BNYM did not know how Sentinel used the loan proceeds; (3) Sentinel made general disclosures that it might use some leverage in some manner; and (4) no other regulatory bodies caught the fraud.
BNYM's actions or inaction cannot support equitable insubordination unless it is egregious or conscience shocking. Negligence, which is the most that can be said of the conduct at issue, does not satisfy the requirements of equitable subordination.
In making my finding in this case, I have considered what damages were caused by the conduct of the Bank. I do this partly to weigh the equities involved in subordinating the entire lien the Bank holds. Trustee asks in equity for a subordination of the entirety of a lien, which I do not find to be an equitable result. In the course of reaching this conclusion I made a calculation of the amount of the lien that should be subordinated if Trustee prevailed, and I find it prudent to include the calculation in this order. It is, of course, possible that a reviewing court may conclude that BNYM should be held liable. In the event it does so, the existence of a damage calculation might, under certain circumstances, speed disposition of the case as a whole without the necessity for a hearing on remand.
Trustee argues that BNYM's conduct conferred an unfair advantage on the Bank as well as caused harm to creditors. While it is true that the BNYM liens placed assets out of creditors' reach, BNYM did provide significant (if not full) value in exchange. It received relatively little advantage in such an exchange. BNYM benefited from the interest it received
I assume arguendo that beginning on June 26, BNYM's use of customer assets to pay down the loan further damaged creditors. In response, BNYM notes that it was fully secured at the time, and there was no harm to creditors. Had Sentinel gone into bankruptcy at the end of June, BNYM would have been fully secured and would have recovered the full loan balance. And finally, according to Trustee, Sentinel's July 31 transfer from the Seg 3 account to the lienable clearing account injured Seg 3 customers. But just before the transfer, Sentinel had segregated $512 million in the Seg I account. Because the liquidation plan in this case contemplates pro rata distribution, the Seg 3 customers will benefit just as much as the Seg 1 customers.
Trustee claims that creditors were also harmed when BNYM continued to lend to Sentinel after June 29, 2007. Had BNYM refused to lend to Sentinel, Sentinel would have been forced to liquidate, and creditors would have been spared further losses attributable to the diminution in value of certain securities. BNYM notes that this "deepening insolvency" theory of damages has been disfavored by some courts. As the Seventh Circuit noted in Fehribach v. Ernst & Young LLP, the theory makes little sense "to fix liability on a third party for lending or otherwise investing in a firm and as a result keeping it going, when `management ... misused the opportunity created by that investment.... [T]hey [management] could have instead used that opportunity to turn the company around and transform it into a profitable business. They did not, and therein lies the harm to [the company].'" 493 F.3d 905, 908-09 (7th Cir.2007) (citing and quoting Seitz v. Detweiler, Hershey and Assoc., (In re CitX Corp.), 448 F.3d 672, 678 (3d Cir.2006)). But these cases do not involve claims for equitable subordination, or the kind of misconduct alleged here, and were not intended to so apply.
In this case, it is true that BNYM gave Sentinel cash for the securities and it was Sentinel insiders who used the cash for their own purposes. BNYM had no hand in determining how Sentinel used the loan proceeds. The direct cause of the harm to creditors came from Sentinel. But BNYM can, in an uncommon sense, be considered the proximate cause for the reason that had Sentinel insiders been unable to use the securities as collateral, Sentinel would not have received the loan.
BNYM's expert at trial testified that the delay in liquidating the securities caused little additional harm to Sentinel's customers, and that any damages in this case are de minimis at best. Trustee's expert, Feltman, presented two methods to measure harm to creditors. The first is simply that customers were damaged in the amount of BNYM's final lien ($312 million plus interest), and that subordination of BNYM's entire claim is appropriate, but I disagree. BNYM was not the sole cause of harm to creditors. It was Sentinel that took the cash and used it for its own relatively risky purposes. BNYM had no hand in how the loan proceeds were used. In addition, the parties who stand to benefit from any subordination are sophisticated investors such as FCMs and hedge funds, who had substantial sums at stake. In fact, Discus Fund had invested more than $500 million by the end of 2006. These parties had signed agreements that disclosed that Sentinel might employ a leveraged investment strategy. Many of
Trustee's second method, the liquidation shortfall method, is more appropriate to determine damages here. This method attempts to measure the incremental harm to customers between various knowledge dates (dates by which BNYM, one hypothesizes, was on actual or constructive notice of the misuse of customer securities, should have declared a default and begun liquidation, selling enough collateral to pay down the loan and returning any excess to Sentinel) and various trigger dates (dates when the Trustee would have been able to begin liquidating the portfolio).
The analysis conducted by Feltman, however, appears to be flawed in that it compares hypothetical prices on the knowledge date against the value of the actual portfolio on the trigger date—a portfolio which, by the time of the trigger dates, was substantially liquidated at actual, not hypothetical prices.
BNYM's expert, Professor Cornell, conducted the same analysis using the same knowledge dates, but trigger dates that were 15 weeks from the knowledge date, to account for the time it would take for a court-appointed fiduciary to obtain authority to liquidate the portfolio. This analysis used a 10.2% discount (just as in the sale to Citadel), and the trigger date preceded the sale to Citadel and the liquidation by repo counterparties. The calculations demonstrate no damages. Cornell applied the discount because the same discount was actually applied in the sale to Citadel, but Trustee takes issue with its, claiming that the Citadel transaction "was not an arm's-length transaction conducted by trustee, but was a coerced fire-sale conducted by a crook who acceded to pressure by regulators in a vain attempt to curry favor and hide his wrongdoing." For this reason, Trustee maintains that no discount should apply, or, any discount should be limited to 3%, resulting in the subordination of $240 million. But this figure appears to be arbitrary, and Trustee presents no support for the use of a 3% discount.
These calculations present a significant question: what discount should apply and why?
The calculations demonstrate that the difference in shortfall between a May 31, 2007 liquidation, a June 29, 2007 liquidation, and an August 14, 2007 liquidation. The value of Sentinel's portfolio on August 14, the day BNYM called the loan, was $61,592,452 less than it was on May 31. Assuming, as Trustee argues, that by June 1, 2007, BNYM employees should have known that Sentinel was misappropriating customer securities, this is the calculation that would apply had BNYM stopped lending on May 31, the value of the securities that day would have been approximately $62 million more than the value on August 14, when the Bank called the loan. This was the harm the Bank caused by continuing to lend, as well as the $4,699,796.67 in interest it secured for itself that summer. If I assume that BNYM should have known of Sentinel's fraud by June 1 and should be held liable for its failure to call the loan, the $66,292,248.67 of the Bank's claim should be subordinated.
By June 13, Rogers had expressed his suspicion that the collateral was not Sentinel's to pledge, despite not having seen the 1-FRs to which Law and Ciacciarelli had access. Trustee argues in the alternative that at that point, BNYM employees should have taken a closer look at the 1-FRs and noticed the reported segregation violations. According to Trustee, on June 29, when BNYM was taking a closer look at the collateral it was holding and deciding whether or not to accept as collateral the physical securities posted by Sentinel, it should have been in a position to understand the extent of Sentinel's misconduct. The value of Sentinel's portfolio on June 29, was $37,543,407 less than it was on August 14, and during this period, BNYM secured for itself $2,894,507.80 in interest. Assuming that BNYM employees should have known of Sentinel's fraud by June 29 and should be held liable for its failure to call the loan by that date, $40,437,914.80 of BNYM's claim should be subordinated.
Defendants filed a counterclaim seeking declaratory judgment that Defendants have a valid, first-priority, perfected security interest in the lien that is the subject of the litigation. Defendants also allege breach of contract (based on the falseness of Sentinel's representations and warranties), request indemnification for attorneys' fees and expenses, and, if liable to Trustee, request a setoff of any damages due to the Bank as a result of Sentinel's alleged breach of contract and indemnification of fees and expenses. The total amount of Sentinel's outstanding indebtedness to BNYM is $312,247,000.00.
On June 27, 2009, Trustee answered the claims, but there has been no briefing since then and they were not addressed in the post-trial briefs. Almost all of the counterclaims, except for indemnification, are the converse of the Trustee's claims. However, I am severing the counterclaims and decline to rule on indemnification at this time as it is my intent to enter my findings in this order as final pursuant to
I also incorporate by reference the contents of the various documents cited in the statement of facts. While I quote or describe these documents in this order, most of the documents admitted as exhibits are standard forms containing a large amount of language immaterial to this dispute. Including them verbatim in the order or appending them to the order would not be of value to understanding the ruling and its basis.
To the extent that any conclusions of law may be deemed findings of fact, or vise versa, they should be considered as such, and the labels used herein need not be controlling. See 9 Wright & Miller, Federal Practice & Procedure, § 2579 (3d ed. 2008).
The citations referred to herein include the trial transcript, (Tr. ___), Trustee's exhibits (TTX ___), and the Bank's exhibits (BTX ___), as well as other reports referred to by name.
We propose to maintain accounts with yourselves, which shall be designated as "Sentinel Management Group, Inc. Customer Segregated Funds. ... In this account we, as futures commission merchants, under the Commodity Exchange Act, shall deposit money, investment securities, and customer-owned securities. Such funds are money and securities deposited by or accruing to our customers which are commodity customers. In addition, all investments shall be made in accordance with the Commodity Exchange Act.