Bankatlantic v. Blyth Eastman Paine Webber, Inc.

127 F.R.D. 224, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8523, 1989 WL 82317
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedJuly 10, 1989
DocketNo. 87-6643-CIV
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 127 F.R.D. 224 (Bankatlantic v. Blyth Eastman Paine Webber, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bankatlantic v. Blyth Eastman Paine Webber, Inc., 127 F.R.D. 224, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8523, 1989 WL 82317 (S.D. Fla. 1989).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM ORDER

SCOTT, District Judge.

The complaint in this action raises serious issues about the duties of a financial advisor to a federal savings and loan association. Even for a commercial dispute, the stakes are high—twenty-nine million dollars.1 Plaintiff, BankAtlantic, claims that Defendant, PaineWebber, Inc.,2 has attempted to reduce the risk of loss on the merits by concealing damaging evidence in defiance of a prior Order. Plaintiff has moved to strike Defendant’s pleadings and enter a default. Defendant denies any wrongdoing.

The Court is therefore faced with a delicate task. Our mission is to preserve the integrity of the discovery process while protecting Defendant’s right to a full and fair trial on the merits. These important values sometimes conflict. When presented with such a case, the Court must balanee the competing interests to reach a fair result.

The Court fully appreciates the personal, professional and financial interests affected by this motion. For that reason, we have been careful to afford both sides great latitude in their presentation of the issues, and we have given serious consideration to the product of their efforts. The parties have fully briefed the issues raised. The Court conducted a preliminary and full evidentiary hearing, where the parties questioned witnesses and introduced evidence over a period of three days. The transcript itself is over six hundred pages.

In addition, the Court has reviewed in detail all documents produced by Defendant in response to the Order to Show Cause issued after the preliminary hearing. Moreover, we have respected Defendant’s assertion of various privileges pending in camera review. We have taken judicial notice of the entire record for the purpose of this motion. In sum, the parties have been given every possible opportunity to enlighten the Court on the facts and applicable law. After serious deliberation, we now render our decision.

I. BACKGROUND

The-Court will briefly review the history of this case to provide a sense of perspective. Thus, before assessing Plaintiff’s motion, we first discuss the underlying dispute and the ensuing discovery battle.

A. Factual Allegations

This litigation arises out of the triangular relationship between Plaintiff BankAtlantic, Defendant PaineWebber, Inc., and Homestead Savings (“Homestead”). Plaintiff is a federal savings and loan association. Plaintiff alleges that it retained Defendant as a financial advisor pursuant to an Engagement Letter executed on March 20, 1984. According to Plaintiff, Defendant suggested that Plaintiff agree to make certain investments known as interest rate swaps with Homestead to pro[226]*226vide a beneficial hedge against interest rate risk.

Simply put, Plaintiff would swap some of its variable-rate interest obligations for Homestead’s fixed-rate interest obligations. While the parties would not actually transfer their principal obligations, they would agree to compensate each other as interest rates fluctuated. Thus, if interest rates rose above the fixed rate, Homestead would pay Plaintiff the difference between the amount due on the variable rate obligations and the amount due on the fixed rate obligations. Similarly, if interest rates fell, Plaintiff would pay Homestead the difference.

Plaintiff claims that in reliance on Defendant’s advice, it agreed to two interest rate swaps with Homestead on March 23 and August 3, 1984, in the principal amounts of thirty-five and fifty million dollars, respectively. According to Plaintiff, the match was arranged by Defendant’s agent, Butch Tharp, and Defendant received a $225,000 fee.

The investment soon proved disastrous for Plaintiff. As interest rates fell, Plaintiff was forced to pay millions of dollars to Homestead. Plaintiff now estimates its losses at twenty-nine million dollars to date.

Plaintiff seeks to hold Defendant liable for these continuing losses based on various theories of fraud and breach of fiduciary duty. Plaintiff’s entire case is grounded in one basic charge, however—conflict of interest. According to Plaintiff, Defendant had a longstanding but undisclosed relationship with Homestead which directly conflicted with Defendant’s role as Plaintiff’s financial advisor. Plaintiff claims that this conflict precluded Defendant from warning Plaintiff about the immense risks of interest rate swaps. Plaintiff contends that Homestead was an improper swap partner, and that Defendant breached its duties by recommending the arrangement.

Defendant maintains that Plaintiff fully understood the risks of the investment. Moreover, by way of defense, Defendant argues that Plaintiff failed to mitigate its damages by selling the swaps or entering into reverse swaps. As to this defense, Plaintiff claims that no other financial institution was willing to assume Plaintiff’s obligations, because Homestead was uncreditworthy. Defendant disputes this contention, and suggests that Plaintiff is speculating on the investment with future profits in mind.

B. The Discovery Dispute

Plaintiff filed this action against Defendant on August 25, 1987. With the complaint, Plaintiff served Defendant with its first request for production. Two paragraphs of that request are at issue here:

8. All correspondence between you and Homestead Savings.
9. All documents relating to your association with Homestead Savings, including, but not limited to any contracts or engagement letters and any written or typed drafts of those contracts or engagement letters between you and Homestead Savings, and any correspondence, internal correspondence, notes or memoranda relating to your association with Homestead Savings.

Plaintiff defined “you” and “your” to include all affiliates of Defendant. Defendant filed various objections to paragraphs eight and nine, including a claim that the request was overbroad in requiring Defendant to ensure production from its affiliates.

Plaintiff filed a motion to compel production soon thereafter. At the hearing, Defendant promised to produce all documents in its “custody, control or possession.” Based on that representation, the Court denied the motion to compel from Defendant’s affiliates, but granted the motion in all other respects. The parties also agreed that for purposes of production, Blyth Eastman Paine Webber, Inc., and the successor corporation, PaineWebber, Inc., would be treated as parties to the action. See Letter of October 4, 1988 at 3.

The parties proceeded with discovery and prepared for trial, which had been specially set for June 19, 1989, after two prior trial [227]*227dates were continued. While the parties had the normal discovery battles of commercial litigation, the pretrial phase was rather uneventful overall.

This relative quietude was not to last, however. On the eve of trial, Plaintiff learned through independent investigation that Defendant and its affiliates had been involved in bitter litigation with Homestead in three separate lawsuits in the Northern District of California. Defendant had not produced a single document evidencing the California litigation.

II. ANALYSIS

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Bluebook (online)
127 F.R.D. 224, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8523, 1989 WL 82317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bankatlantic-v-blyth-eastman-paine-webber-inc-flsd-1989.