Bancroft Life & Casualty ICC, Ltd. v. GRBR Ventures, L.P.

12 F. Supp. 3d 980, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 44090, 2014 WL 1322984
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedMarch 31, 2014
DocketCivil Action No. 4:12-cv-2252
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 12 F. Supp. 3d 980 (Bancroft Life & Casualty ICC, Ltd. v. GRBR Ventures, L.P.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bancroft Life & Casualty ICC, Ltd. v. GRBR Ventures, L.P., 12 F. Supp. 3d 980, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 44090, 2014 WL 1322984 (S.D. Tex. 2014).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

KEITH P. ELLISON, District Judge.

Before the Court is Plaintiff Bancroft Life & Casualty ICC, Ltd.’s (“Bancroft”) Motion to Dismiss GRBR Ventures, L.P.’s (“GRBR”) Second Amended Counterclaims (Doc. No. 76).1 The Court is persuaded that GRBR has failed to state a claim upon which relief can be granted in the challenged counterclaims in its Third Amended Answer and Counterclaim and Third-Party Complaint (“Third Amended Answer,” or “TAA”; Doc. No. 87-1). Therefore, the Court GRANTS Bancroft’s Motion.

I. BACKGROUND2

This ease arises from a complex foreign tax advantaged investment scheme between Bancroft and GRBR. GRBR is a family limited partnership organized for George and Beverly Reuter by their corporate and tax attorney and accountant Loren R. Cook. TAA, Section II ¶ 15. According to GRBR, Bancroft, a Saint Lucia-based firm, sold this investment scheme to GRBR through Mr. Cook and some United States-based Bancroft affiliates. Id. ¶ 11. In selling this scheme for Bancroft, at least in GRBR’s case, Mr. Cook also worked with several of his own affiliates. GRBR alleges that, while it was Mr. Cook’s client, Mr. Cook was also being paid by Bancroft for his services selling the investment scheme. Id. ¶ 13.

In November 2005, Mr. Reuter, as principal of GRBR, met with Mr. Cook, who offered GRBR Bancroft’s investment scheme. Id. ¶ 15. The investment scheme was marketed by Bancroft through Mr. Cook as a “no-risk tax-deferral investment in a captive insurance company — an investment specifically suited for retirees to use to invest the retirement funds they needed to live on immediately and in the near future.” Id. ¶ 16. The investment scheme was purportedly approved by the Green-berg Traurig law firm. Id. ¶ 12. As Mr. Cook explained it, GRBR would purchase Bancroft’s Premium Lite Insurance product. Bancroft would deposit the insurance premiums GRBR paid into a reserve account. This arrangement would allow GRBR to deduct the premium payments as business expenses on its tax return. GRBR could then borrow, tax-free, up to seventy-five percent of the premiums paid back for its own use. Meanwhile, Bancroft would hold the remaining reserve balance in the reserve account, and would pay insurance claims from that account. GRBR was to pay interest on the loan amounts, and Bancroft was to deposit that interest into GRBR’s reserve account. Bancroft was to return three percent interest on the individual reserves. GRBR would pay an initial six percent fee on the net reserves, and an annual 1.6 % fee on the cash balance in the reserve account. After a five-year investment period elapsed, GRBR could terminate its investment and Bancroft would return GRBR’s [987]*987individual reserve account balance, including the repaid loan principal and interest, and the three percent guaranteed return rate, less any claims, and less any authorized fees. Then, and only then, would GRBR pay the appropriate deferred taxes. Importantly, “there were no conditions under which the loanback amounts would ever be payable to Bancroft for Bancroft’s own use.” Id. ¶¶ 15-17.

Based on this explanation from Bancroft through Mr. Cook, as well as on Mr. Cook’s advice, GRBR decided to make the investment. Around December 2005, GRBR paid $500,000 in Premium Lite insurance premiums. GRBR then immediately borrowed back $350,000 of that premium amount. Around December 2006, GRBR paid $900,000 in Premium Lite insurance premiums and then borrowed back $630,000. GRBR paid additional premiums, as invoiced, in the ensuing years: $5,000 each in December 2007, December 2008, and December 2009. For its insurance premium payments, GRBR received ten different insurance certificates from Bancroft. In total, from December 2005 through December 2010, GRBR invested nearly $1.4 million with Bancroft, borrowed back $980,000, and paid over $200,000 in interest on those loans. Bancroft collected fees throughout this period; GRBR does not know the precise amount Bancroft collected in fees. Id. ¶¶ 18-20.

Throughout this period, GRBR monitored its Bancroft reserve account, and came to believe that Bancroft’s accounting of it was incorrect, and that Bancroft was mismanaging it. Specifically, GRBR came to believe that Bancroft was deducting improper fees and was not including in its reserve account the interest GRBR paid on the premiums it borrowed back. In April 2008, GRBR requested more information from Mr. Cook on the quarterly statements it was receiving from Bancroft, noting the discrepancies it observed. Nevertheless, on Mr. Cook’s own advice, GRBR continued to make regularly invoiced premium payments through November 2010. Mr. Cook argued that GRBR’s calculations were correct and that Bancroft’s statements were wrong, but said he could resolve the issue. Relying on this advice, GRBR continued to make its payments. However, by December 2010, Bancroft had not corrected its paperwork concerning GRBR’s reserve account balance. At that time, Mr. Cook advised GRBR not to pay its 2010 premium or the 2010 interest on the loans, and GRBR did not make either payment. On or about March 8, 2011, upon Mr. Cook’s instructions, GRBR prepared a letter terminating its participation in the investment scheme; that termination letter was delivered to Bancroft on or about March 24, 2011. Id. ¶ 22-25.

According to the investment scheme as Mr. Cook had explained it to GRBR, upon termination, “pursuant to the Premium Lite policies, legal ownership of the entire reserve account, including the loanback principal and interest, shifted to GRBR.” Id. at 27. As GRBR understood it, at that point, Bancroft had no legal right to retain any of GRBR’s account, including the loan principal and interest, nor did it have any right to demand payment of the principal “without guaranteed immediate refund of the loanback principal and interest amounts to GRBR.” Id. Fundamentally, as GRBR understood the operation of the investment scheme, “GRBR’s termination letter should have resulted in a ‘true-up’ of GRBR’s reserve account at Bancroft, in which GRBR would pay the December 2010 interest and the loanback principal into GRBR’s segregated, protected reserve account; and then Bancroft immediately would pay the final reserve balance to GRBR — including the entire amount of loanback principal and interest.” Id. Ac[988]*988cording to GRBR’s calculations, its reserve account, at that time, should have held the premiums GRBR paid, along with the interest GRBR paid on the loans, and the guaranteed three percent return on the funds in the reserve account, less any claims (GRBR did make a claim in March 2009, which Bancroft paid, id. ¶ 21) and relevant fees. Bancroft has refused to act according to GRBR’s understanding of their agreement, and, because of this, GRBR continues to withhold the December 2010 premium and interest payment. Id. ¶¶ 27, 32.

Bancroft filed this action in July 2012, seeking to collect on the loans it made to GRBR. GRBR answered, asserting several defenses, counterclaims against Bancroft and its affiliates, and third-party claims against Mr. Cook and his affiliates. Bancroft previously filed a motion to dismiss based on the forum selection clause in the insurance program’s contract, which requires claims arising under the insurance program to be litigated in St. Lucia. Following extensive briefing and oral argument, this Court found that GRBR had constructive notice of the insurance program’s forum selection provision and granted Bancroft’s motion.

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Bluebook (online)
12 F. Supp. 3d 980, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 44090, 2014 WL 1322984, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bancroft-life-casualty-icc-ltd-v-grbr-ventures-lp-txsd-2014.