Brooks v. Euclid Systems Corp.

827 A.2d 887, 151 Md. App. 487, 2003 Md. App. LEXIS 76
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 26, 2003
Docket0298, Sept. Term, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 827 A.2d 887 (Brooks v. Euclid Systems Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooks v. Euclid Systems Corp., 827 A.2d 887, 151 Md. App. 487, 2003 Md. App. LEXIS 76 (Md. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

ADKINS, J.

When he retired at age 55, welder Richard E. Brooks, appellant, decided to invest some of his accumulated retirement savings through his investment and financial advisor Michael P. Keating. Like many other unfortunate investors, Brooks later learned that Keating materially misrepresented the nature and suitability of the investments that he arranged for Brooks to purchase. Instead of the low risk, modest income portfolio that Brooks requested, Keating succeeded in investing, and ultimately losing, Brooks’ retirement savings in *494 unregistered, illiquid, speculative, high risk securities that were to be offered and sold only to “accredited investors.” 1

Brooks understandably sued Keating and made a claim against Keating’s employer, Delta Equity Services Corporation (“Delta”). 2 He also sued the issuers of the securities, including appellees Euclid Systems Corporation (“Euclid”), Ridgewood Power Trust IV/Ridgewood Power LLC (“Ridge-wood”), and Cyclean, Inc./Cyclean of Los Angeles, LLC (“Cy-clean”)(collectively sometimes referred to as “Issuers”). The Circuit Court for Baltimore County granted summary judgment in favor of all three Issuers. Brooks then obtained a judgment against Keating.

Brooks now appeals the judgments entered in favor of all three Issuers, 3 claiming that the summary judgment record presented a jury question on the following issues:

I. Was Keating, in his capacity as an employee of Delta, acting as an agent of the Issuers?

II. Was either Keating or Delta an implied agent of the Issuers based on apparent authority to conduct the Issuers’ business?

III. Did the Issuers fail to disclose material facts in connection with their offer and sale of the securities that Brooks purchased?

IV. Were the Issuers negligent in the manner in which they offered and sold their securities?

We agree with the circuit court that Keating was neither an actual nor an apparent agent of the Issuers, and that there was no material dispute of fact preventing summary judgment on Brooks’ vicarious liability negligence claims against them. *495 We agree with Brooks, however, that the circuit court failed to address his direct liability claims based on the nondisclosure allegations in his complaint. Accordingly, we must vacate the judgments on Counts I and II. We shall remand those counts for further proceedings consistent with our discussion of the substantive question that the circuit court did not decide.

FACTS AND LEGAL PROCEEDINGS 4

After retiring from 28 years of work at Baltimore Air coil, Inc. on August 31, 1995, Brooks took a lump sum distribution totaling $260,000 from his retirement account. Following through on recommendations from co-workers, he sought investment advice from Keating. Brooks told Keating that he wanted his retirement funds invested safely to preserve principal and to generate some income. Keating assured Brooks that he would find investments that protected his capital but yielded a modest return. As a result, Brooks placed his trust in Keating’s investment advice, and employed him as a tax preparer as well.

Keating undisputedly recommended and arranged Brooks’ purchases of inappropriate securities, including the securities offered by these three Issuers. Keating told Brooks that each of these investments was safe and suitable. He informed Brooks that he would have to sign or initial certain “paperwork,” which was merely a routine procedure that did not require him to actually review the wording of the documents. Keating only showed Brooks the pages that needed a signature or initial, and did not give Brooks an opportunity to review the entire document.

Brooks signed and initialed these pages on the understanding that he was simply indicating his willingness to purchase the securities based on the information supplied by Keating. The documents that Keating fraudulently induced Brooks to *496 sign were actually “Subscription Agreements” for the Issuers’ securities, and documents giving false information about Brooks’ income and assets.

All of these securities were unregistered, illiquid, speculative, and high risk investments designed solely for “accredited investors” with substantial income, assets, and investment experience. Brooks, a high school graduate with no investment experience, was not the type of wealthy and “sophisticated” investor who qualified as an accredited investor and generally purchased such high risk securities as part of a balanced portfolio of investments. He did not realize the high risk nature of these securities, or that Keating misrepresented information about the securities and his qualification to buy them. Nor, he claimed, did he understand that the Issuers would rely on his execution of these documents as verification that he appreciated the risky nature of the investment and that he had the income and assets that Keating listed in the subscription documents.

Brooks lost his entire $25,000 investment in each of the securities offered by the three Issuers. 5 He filed a complaint in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, asserting claims for intentional misrepresentation, negligent misrepresentation, and negligence in the offer and sale of the securities. In addition to suing Keating and Delta, Brooks named these three Issuers as defendants. Admitting that there was no direct misrepresentation by the Issuers, he sued them for misrepresentation on the theory that Delta and Keating were their actual or apparent agents.

Each of the Issuers moved for summary judgment on the ground that they did not have a principal-agent relationship with Delta or its employee Keating. In opposition to these motions, Brooks pointed to the selling agreements that each Issuer had with Delta as evidence of a principal-agent relationship. He also pointed to other evidence of direct contact between the Issuers and Keating, which he asserted was *497 sufficient to raise an inference that there was an actual or apparent agency relationship.

The circuit court rejected that theory. It concluded that the Issuers could not be vicariously liable for any intentional or negligent misrepresentation that Keating made, because neither Keating nor Delta was an actual or apparent agent of these Issuers. In addition, the court found that there were no “allegations that written materials issued by these [defendants were false or misleading.” It granted summary judgment in favor of each Issuer on all of Brooks’ claims.

After settling with Delta and obtaining a judgment against Keating, Brooks noted this appeal. We shall discuss additional facts and documents as they pertain to the individual Issuers.

DISCUSSION

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Bluebook (online)
827 A.2d 887, 151 Md. App. 487, 2003 Md. App. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-euclid-systems-corp-mdctspecapp-2003.