Belen v. Herman

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 17, 2024
Docket1:22-cv-06455
StatusUnknown

This text of Belen v. Herman (Belen v. Herman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Belen v. Herman, (S.D.N.Y. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK ee ree re ee ae ere re ee ee a ne ee x ARIEL E. BELEN, as Temporary Co-Trustee of : the Trust created by Harold Herman dated March |, : ORDER GRANTING IN PART 1990 and as Temporary Trustee of the Trust : AND DENYING IN PART created by Rosemarie Herman dated November 27, : DEFENDANTS’ MOTIONS TO 1991, and ROSEMARIE HERMAN, as Co-Trustee : DISMISS of the Trust created by Harold Herman dated March 1, 1990, 22 Civ. 6455 (AKH) Plaintiffs, : -against- JULIAN M. HERMAN, ROCLA, LLC, ROCLAB, : LLC, THE VANGUARD GROUP, INC., : OAK WORTH CAPITAL BANK, DENTONS : SIROTE, PC, DENTONS US LLP, and HOWARD : NEISWENDER, : Defendants. ee ee ee ee ee ee x ALVIN K. HELLERSTEIN, U.S.D.J.: Plaintiffs, as trustees, are judgment creditors of Defendant Julian M. Herman, in the amount of $103,637,208.44, pursuant to a judgment of the New York Supreme Court entered September 17, 2017, Efforts to obtain payment have failed. Plaintiffs allege that defendants, individually and as part of an elaborate and fraudulent scheme carried out in 2016 and 2017, caused Julian Herman to be judgment proof by moving his assets overseas, to accounts in Liechtenstein and other sheltering havens. Plaintiffs, in eight counts of a First Amended Complaint against eight defendants, scek recovery from each defendant, Defendants removed this case from the Supreme Court and, in four motions, seek to dismiss the lawsuit for failure to state a legally sufficient claim for relief. A fifth motion seeks, alternatively, to dismiss Defendant Oakworth for lack of personal jurisdiction, or to

transfer the case to the United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama. The several motions are granted in some respects and denied in others, as described below. THE AMENDED COMPLAINT The following facts are alleged in a First Amended Complaint (FAC), which I must “accept{] as true” for the purpose of these motions. Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 678 (2009). I have disregarded defendants’ affidavits stating additional facts, since I am asked to rule on motions to dismiss, and I have not converted them to motions for summary judgment. Fed. R. Civ, P. 12(d). In 2011, Plaintiffs sued Julian M. Herman (“Julian”) in New York Supreme Court for defrauding Rosemary Herman (“Rosemary”), Julian’s sister, of her fifty percent interest in six Manhattan apartment buildings.! On September 19, 2017, the Supreme Court entered judgment in favor of Rosemary and her co-trustee, Ariel Belen, in the amount of $103,637,208.44. In anticipation of the judgment, Julian initiated steps to insulate his assets. He retained Howard Neiswender, a partner and shareholder of Defendant Dentons Sirote (“Sirote”),” a law firm located in Birmingham, Alabama, because of his expertise in asset protection. In December 2015, Neiswender formed multiple limited liability companies and trusts, including Defendants Rocla LLC, and Roclab LLC, limited liability companies organized under the laws of South Dakota. Their stated address was that of Sirote, in Alabama, and they were managed, indirectly, by Neiswender. Julian held his cash in a number of accounts to be opened in UBS Bank in New York City, in the names of limited liability companies he had created for that purpose. Among

’Rosemary’s 50 per cent ownership was in a trust. Plaintiffs Belen and Rosemary were co-trustees of the trust set up by Rosemary and Julian’s father for the benefit of Rosemary and her children. * The FAC alleges Defendant Dentons Sirote is the successor-in-interest to Sirote & Permutt, PC.

them were Defendants Rocla and Roclab, both limited liability companies created in South Dakota. In April 2016, Julian, with Neiswender’s guidance and participation, opened brokerage accounts with The Vanguard Group, Inc. in the names of two of these companies, Rocla and Roclab, and gave his name and social security number as the controller of the accounts. The next day, Julian instructed Vanguard to close the two accounts and open two new accounts for Rocla and Roclab, this time making the controller of the accounts “Maurice J. Herman,” Maurice being Julian’s real middle name, and providing a false social security number. FAC 410, Neiswender instructed Vanguard to conceal that Julian signed for the new accounts, and Vanguard complied, In May 2016, Julian funded the Vanguard accounts with over $150 million in securities, transferring the assets from his companies’ accounts at UBS. In September 2017, Plaintiffs learned from a UBS interpleader complaint (“UBS complaint”) that Julian held his assets in shell companies with accounts at UBS, and that those assets were transferred to accounts at Vanguard. The UBS Complaint also alleged that Defendants Neiswender and Sirote were involved with these accounts.’ After Plaintiffs’ judgment against Herman became final, they then served a restraining notice on Vanguard’, requiring it to “restrain all accounts in which [Herman] had an ownership interest or for which he was a signatory,” and an information subpoena requesting information about accounts for which Herman “may have an interest, whether under the name of the debtor, under a trade or corporate name, or in association with others, as of the date of the subpoena or within three (3) years prior thereto, including but not limited to any account for which the judgment debtor has or had

[take judicial notice of the UBS complaint, since it is a public record that was filed in this court. Additional _ matters stated in affidavits are disregarded. 4 CPLR § 5222 authorizes restraining notices supplementary to judgments. A party that is served with such a notice may incur personal liability if it fails to make proper disclosure and restrain the debtor’s assets.

signatory power.” FAC 9714, 15. Vanguard responded that it had no open accounts, and one closed account with an amount on deposit of zero dollars. Two weeks later, Neiswender, on behalf of Julian, instructed Vanguard to liquidate the accounts and to transfer the funds (approximately $150 million) to Defendant Oakworth Capital Bank, a small Alabama bank that held only $500 million in customer assets in 2017. Neiswender then instructed the bank to make fifteen wire transfers of $10 million each to an account in Liechtenstein, by way of Citibank in New York. Oakworth sent a confirmation of each transaction to Herman. On January 19, 2018, the Oakworth accounts were closed. On July 1, 2021, Rocla and Roclab were dissolved. Plaintiffs continued to pursue their recovery efforts. On February 9, 2021, Plaintiffs again served an informational subpoena on Vanguard, asking “does Vanguard have, or did it ever have, any account held by or in the name of any of the following entities: ... Rocla, LLC, Roclab, LLC... .” FAC 9208. Vanguard responded in May and July 2021 that its records “listed [Herman] as ‘Signator[ies]’ to the Rocla and Roclab Accounts,” and stated that those accounts were in existence when Plaintiffs had served Vanguard with a restraining notice and informational subpoena in 2017. FAC § 210. Plaintiffs allege that this was the first time they became aware that Julian hid his money in Rocla and Roclab accounts in Vanguard. On June 24, 2022, Plaintiffs filed this lawsuit in New York Supreme Court against all the parties involved in sheltering Julian’s assets: Julian Herman, Rocla LCC, Roclab LLC, The Vanguard Group, Inc., Oakworth Capital Bank, Dentons Sirote, Dentons U.S. LLP®, and Howard Neiswender. Following Defendants’ removal of the action, Plaintiffs filed a First Amended Complaint alleging eight claims for relief: 1) violation of a restraining order pursuant

5 Plaintiffs allege that Dentons U.S. LLP is liable derivatively because of the wrongs committed by Dentons Sirote. See discussion infra.

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Belen v. Herman, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belen-v-herman-nysd-2024.