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PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 22-2256
CCWB ASSET INVESTMENTS, LLC; M.C. DEAN, INC.,
Claimants – Appellants,
EBC ASSET INVESTMENT, LLC; JEFFREY J. CONNAUGHTON; IWONA HOWLEY; RICHY CASTRO; TONY DAVIS; ROCHELLE KATZ; BARBARA LOUDERBACK; SCOTT D. OSER; OJAS PATEL; PULIN PATEL; DHAVAL SHUKLA; NISHANT SHUKLA,
Claimants,
and
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION,
Plaintiff,
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Intervenor/Plaintiff,
MASSACHUSETTS ATTORNEY GENERAL,
Intervenor,
v.
GREGORY S. MILLIGAN,
Receiver – Appellee,
RANDEL LEWIS,
Receiver, USCA4 Appeal: 22-2256 Doc: 97 Filed: 08/06/2024 Pg: 2 of 17
KEVIN B. MERRILL; JAY B. LEDFORD; CAMERON R. JEZIERSKI; GLOBAL CREDIT RECOVERY, LLC; DELMARVA CAPITAL, LLC; RHINO CAPITAL HOLDINGS, LLC; RHINO CAPITAL GROUP, LLC; DEVILLE ASSET MANAGEMENT LTD; RIVERWALK FINANCIAL CORPORATION; AMANDA MERRILL; LALAINE LEDFORD; MAUREEN STEPHENS; ERICKA JOHNSON,
Defendants.
No. 22-2296
JEFFREY J. CONNAUGHTON; TONY DAVIS; ROCHELLE KATZ; BARBARA LOUDERBACK; SCOTT D. OSER; OJAS PATEL; PULIN PATEL; DHAVAL SHUKLA; NISHANT SHUKLA,
CCWB ASSET INVESTMENTS, LLC; EBC ASSET INVESTMENT, LLC; M.C. DEAN, INC.; IWONA HOWLEY; RICHY CASTRO,
SECURITIES & EXCHANGE COMMISSION,
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Receiver,
KEVIN B. MERRILL; JAY B. LEDFORD; CAMERON R. JEZIERSKI; GLOBAL CREDIT RECOVERY, LLC; DELMARVA CAPITAL, LLC; RHINO CAPITAL HOLDINGS, LLC; RHINO CAPITAL GROUP, LLC; DEVILLE ASSET MANAGEMENT LTD; RIVERWALK FINANCIAL CORPORATION; AMANDA MERRILL; LALAINE LEDFORD; MAUREEN STEPHENS; ERICKA JOHNSON,
Appeals from the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, at Baltimore. Richard D. Bennett, Senior District Judge. (1:18-cv-02844-RDB)
Argued: January 25, 2024 Decided: August 6, 2024
Before KING and BENJAMIN, Circuit Judges, and KEENAN, Senior Circuit Judge.
Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Benjamin wrote the opinion, in which Judge King and Judge Keenan joined.
ARGUED: Monica Evan Miller, CUNEO GILBERT & LADUCA, LLP, Washington, D.C.; Rachel M. Clattenburg, LEVY FIRESTONE MUSE LLP, Washington, D.C., for Appellants. Daniel G. Solomon, HUSCH BLACKWELL LLP, Washington, D.C., for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Robert F. Muse, Ronald Kovner, LEVY FIRESTONE MUSE LLP, Washington, D.C., for Appellants CCWB Asset Investments, LLC and M.C. Dean, Inc. Jonathan W. Cuneo, CUNEO GILBERT & LADUCA, LLP, Washington, D.C. for Appellants Jeffrey J. Connaughton, et al. Buffey E. Klein, Dallas, Texas, Lynn H. Butler,
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Jameson J. Watts, HUSCH BLACKWELL LLP, Austin, Texas, for Appellee.
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DEANDREA GIST BENJAMIN, Circuit Judge:
This case is about a court-appointed receiver (“Receiver”) and his attempt to “divide
the pie,” or split funds recovered from a Ponzi scheme among swindled investors.
Appellants, the “Dean Investors” and the “Connaughton Investors,” appeal the district
court’s order approving Appellee’s—the Receiver’s—plan to distribute the assets. Finding
no abuse of discretion in the district court’s approval of the plan, we affirm.
I.
A.
Kevin Merrill, Jay Ledford, and Cameron Jezierski (“Defendants”) raised over $345
million from more than 230 investors in a fraudulent scheme. They lured investors by
touting significant returns from the purchase and resale of consumer debt portfolios. But
instead of investing the cash as promised, they stole a portion of it and used the remainder
to pay purported dividends, or “distributions,” to earlier investors. Appellants,
unfortunately, fell victim to the scheme.
The first group of Appellants, the Dean Investors, are institutional investors
managed by Eric Dean. The group includes CCWB Asset Investments, LLC (“CCWB”)
and Dean Capital Investments, LLC, the wholly owned subsidiary of M.C. Dean, Inc.
(“M.C. Dean”). 1
1 EBC Asset Investment, Inc. (“EBC”) was part of the Dean Investors group in the proceedings below, but it was voluntarily dismissed from this appeal.
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The Dean Investors established a pattern of investing, withdrawing, and reinvesting
their capital with Defendants. CCWB transacted with Defendants 57 times, with up to four
months passing between its withdrawals and subsequent investments. It commingled funds
from Defendants and other sources in a single bank account, and it dipped into that pool to
handle unrelated expenses, such as credit card and tax payments. M.C. Dean, for its part,
transacted with Defendants 19 times, but it maintained a separate bank account solely for
that purpose. Both CCWB and M.C. Dean instructed Defendants to “roll over” any
distributions to which they were entitled, or apply them to their investment accounts, rather
than pay them out as dividends.
The second group of Appellants, the Connaughton Investors, are individual
investors. The group includes Jeffrey Connaughton, Tony Davis, Barbara Louderback,
Rochelle Katz, Scott Oser, Ojas Patel, Pulin Patel, Dhaval Shukla, and Nishant Shukla.
The Connaughton Investors invested with Defendants through a third-party fund called the
Bethesda Group, which allegedly made misrepresentations to induce their investments.
The Connaughton Investors later settled a lawsuit against the Bethesda Group’s organizers.
B.
On November 6, 2018, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) brought a
civil action against Defendants and related parties (together, “Receivership Parties”) in the
District of Maryland, alleging that they violated federal securities laws. 2 The district court
2 Merrill, Ledford, and Jezierski each pled guilty to related criminal charges in the District of Maryland.
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froze the Receivership Parties’ assets (“Receivership Assets”) and appointed Gregory
Milligan as the Receiver. He was tasked with recovering, liquidating, and apportioning the
Receivership Assets among the defrauded investors (“Claimants”).
The Receiver identified 238 undisputed claims to the funds totaling
$166,022,249.69. He recovered various Receivership Assets, including real estate, luxury
cars, fine art, watches, and other jewelry. The Receiver marketed and sold those assets to
generate cash for the Claimants. He then created a distribution plan, which proposed five
ranked categories of Claimants and a $50,000,000 interim distribution.
Two additional aspects of the plan bear noting. First, to distribute funds to
Appellants’ Claimant category, the Receiver recommended the “Rising Tide” method. He
determined that more “Claimants will receive a greater distribution using” that approach.
J.A. 243. Under the Rising Tide method, a receiver distributes the assets such that no
investor recovers less than a certain percentage of her principal investment. Here, the
Receiver set that percentage—“the tide”—to 48.86%.
Importantly, however, the Rising Tide method deducts from that recovery pre-
Receivership withdrawals and distributions—unless they are rolled over. For instance,
suppose A invests $100 in a Ponzi scheme but withdraws $50 before the scheme crumbles.
Under the Rising Tide method, the receiver counts that $50-withdrawal as partial
compensation for A’s loss, meaning A will receive less from the receiver’s distribution of
the assets. Because the Rising Tide method requires subtracting previous withdrawals from
an investor’s receivership recovery, investors who make withdrawals fare worse under that
method than those who withdraw nothing.
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Second, the plan includes a “Collateral Offset Provision.” Thirty-eight Claimants
received a total of $2,882,787.66 from third parties to compensate them for their losses in
the Ponzi scheme (“Collateral Recovery Cohort”). Under the Collateral Offset Provision,
the Receiver proposed counting 100% of those payments from collateral sources as
withdrawals. The Receiver determined that “[t]reating settlements and other similar
recoveries as pre-Receivership withdrawals ensures . . . Claimants are treated equally with
respect to the total recovery of their principal investments.” Id. at 221.
C.
On November 18, 2022, the district court approved the distribution plan over
Appellants’ objections. The Dean Investors objected to the Receiver’s application of the
Rising Tide method. In their view, the Receiver should not have counted the withdrawals
they later reinvested as partial compensation. Instead, he should have used the “Maximum
Balance” approach to the Rising Tide method. See Sec. & Exch. Comm’n v. Huber, 702
F.3d 903, 907 (7th Cir. 2012) (“In cases of withdrawal followed by reinvestment, the
investor’s maximum balance in the Ponzi scheme . . . should be treated as his investment;
the withdrawals, having in effect been rescinded, should be ignored.”); see also infra Part
III.A.
The district court overruled that objection. First, it reasoned that the Maximum
Balance approach has “not been adopted by any other court to date.” Sec. & Exch. Comm’n
v. Merrill, Civil Action No. RDB-18-2844, 2022 WL 17582418, at *3 (D. Md. Nov. 18,
2022). Second, it found that the approach “would be extremely difficult from an
administrative perspective.” Id. And third, it noted that despite the Dean Investors’
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“emphasis on their own equitable distribution,” they omit that when they withdrew money,
“there was a benefit from that withdrawal, however big or small.” Id.
Next, the Connaughton Investors objected to the Collateral Offset Provision. They
explained that under that provision, if a Claimant “had already received $100,000 in a
[third-party] settlement, the amount of the [C]laimant’s distribution” from the Receivership
“will be effectively reduced by $100,000.” J.A. 279. In their mind, a 100% offset
disincentivizes Claimants from seeking third-party settlements. The Connaughton
Investors, therefore, requested that the Receiver ignore third-party settlements, or at least
not account for them on a dollar-for-dollar basis.
The district court overruled that objection, too. It found that without the Collateral
Offset Provision, the Connaughton Investors “would receive a disproportionately higher
recovery on their investment as compared to other victims.” Merrill, Civil Action No.
RDB-18-2844, 2022 WL 17582418, at *3 (internal quotation marks omitted). They already
received an average of 57.72% of their original investments in settlement monies;
meanwhile, other investors will only receive a 48.86% recovery per the tide. The offset,
the court reasoned, guards against this windfall.
Appellants timely appealed the district court’s order overruling their objections.
II.
Before we address the merits of the district court’s order, we must pause to
determine whether it is appealable. An order approving a receiver’s distribution plan is not
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a “final” order. See Sec. & Exch. Comm’n v. Wealth Mgmt. LLC, 628 F.3d 323, 330 (7th
Cir. 2010); Sec. & Exch. Comm’n v. Forex Asset Mgmt. LLC, 242 F.3d 325, 330 (5th Cir.
2001) (holding that an order approving a distribution plan is not final because it does not
“end the litigation on the merits” but “is only one part of the overall litigation by the SEC”
(internal quotation marks omitted)).
Because we cannot exercise jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 (granting appellate
courts jurisdiction over appeals from final decisions), we must determine another basis for
jurisdiction. For the following reasons, we hold that the collateral order doctrine grants us
jurisdiction over this appeal. See Sec. & Exch. Comm’n v. Torchia, 922 F.3d 1307, 1316
(11th Cir. 2019); Wealth Mgmt. LLC, 628 F.3d at 330–31; Sec. & Exch. Comm’n v. Basic
Energy & Affiliated Res., Inc., 273 F.3d 657, 667 (6th Cir. 2001); Forex Asset Mgmt. LLC,
242 F.3d at 330–31.
The collateral order doctrine permits interlocutory review of a small class of
collateral rulings: “only decisions that are conclusive, that resolve important questions
separate from the merits, and that are effectively unreviewable on appeal from the final
judgment in the underlying action.” Mohawk Indus., Inc. v. Carpenter, 558 U.S. 100, 106
(2009) (internal citation omitted).
Here, the district court’s order satisfies these criteria. First, it conclusively
determines the manner in which the Receivership Assets will be distributed. Second, it
resolves an important question for injured investors that is separate from the merits
question of whether Defendants committed securities fraud. And third, it would be
unreviewable on appeal because the Receivership Assets “will be distributed, and likely
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unrecoverable, long before the action brought by the SEC is subject to appellate review.”
Forex Asset Mgmt. LLC, 242 F.3d at 330. Thus, the district court’s order affirming the
Receiver’s distribution plan is appealable pursuant to the collateral order doctrine.
Turning to the merits, we review the decision below for abuse of discretion. Wealth
Mgmt. LLC, 628 F.3d at 332–33. We may only reverse “if we have a definite and firm
conviction” that there has been “a clear error of judgment.” Sec. & Exch. Comm’n v.
Johnson, 43 F.4th 382, 393 (4th Cir. 2022) (citation omitted). Because “most receiverships
involve multiple parties and complex transactions,” the district court’s power to supervise
a receivership is “extremely broad,” and “appellate scrutiny is narrow.” Sec. & Exch.
Comm’n v. Cap. Consultants, LLC, 397 F.3d 733, 738 (9th Cir. 2005) (citation omitted);
Wealth Mgmt. LLC, 628 F.3d at 332.
The goal of a receivership is “the fair distribution of the liquidated assets.” Wealth
Mgmt. LLC, 628 F.3d at 334. Of course, an “equitable plan is not necessarily a plan that
everyone will like.” Sec. & Exch. Comm’n v. Vescor Cap. Corp., 599 F.3d 1189, 1195
(10th Cir. 2010) (internal citation omitted). Rather, it is a plan that “grant[s] fair relief to
as many investors as possible.” Torchia, 922 F.3d at 1311. To that end, receivers “have a
duty to avoid overly costly investigations, and at a certain point, the costs of such
individualized determinations outweigh the benefits.” Wealth Mgmt. LLC, 628 F.3d at 336.
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III.
Against this backdrop, we first consider the Dean Investors’ objection. They
advance several arguments to support their view that the district court abused its discretion
in rejecting the Maximum Balance approach to the Rising Tide method. We address each
in turn.
First, the Dean Investors contend that in declining to apply the Maximum Balance
approach, the court focused too much on lack of precedent. The Maximum Balance
approach originated as dicta from the Seventh Circuit in Securities and Exchange
Commission v. Huber, 702 F.3d 903 (7th Cir. 2012). There, investors who withdrew their
investments from a Ponzi scheme challenged the receiver’s application of the Rising Tide
method. Id. at 904. The court rejected their arguments, but it found one hypothetical
situation troubling: that “of an investor who having withdrawn some money from the Ponzi
scheme then reinvests it.” Id. at 907. The court devised a novel solution to that scenario,
which it deemed the “Maximum Balance” approach:
In cases of withdrawal followed by reinvestment, the investor’s maximum balance in the Ponzi scheme . . . should be treated as his investment; the withdrawals, having in effect been rescinded, should be ignored. Or so it seems to us; we can’t find any discussion in case law or commentary of this “maximum balance” approach. We needn’t pursue the issue.
Id. at 907–08.
In almost twelve years since Huber, no court has adopted the “Maximum Balance”
approach, and the court below had no obligation to do so here. The Receiver determined
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that more “Claimants will receive a greater distribution” under the Rising Tide method
without the Maximum Balance calculations. J.A. 243. Therefore, the court did not abuse
its broad discretion in approving the plan, even if it leaves the Dean Investors wanting
more. See Torchia, 922 F.3d at 1311 (explaining that the purpose of “receiverships is to
grant fair relief to as many investors as possible”). Thus, we find no error in the court’s
reasoning that there is “no precedent for this maximum balance approach.” Merrill, Civil
Action No. RDB-18-2844, 2022 WL 17582418, at *3.
Second, the Dean Investors argue that the court erred in concluding that the
Maximum Balance approach would be administratively difficult. The court found that the
approach requires “tracing the origin of all of the . . . funds for each reinvestment,” and
that “the sheer number of transactions” between the Dean Investors and Defendants
rendered that impracticable. Id.
The Dean Investors, on the other hand, assure us that “tracing the flow of funds is
not necessary.” Dean Br. at 19. But that assertion is entirely unsupported. The court in
Huber proposed the Maximum Balance approach for “an investor who having withdrawn
some money from the Ponzi scheme then reinvests it”—“it” meaning the money the
investor withdrew, not other funds. Huber, 702 F.3d at 907. And when describing the
Rising Tide method generally, the court noted that “no part of whatever funds are recovered
is property of any investor,” because they are not “traceable to a particular investor.” Id.
at 906–07 (emphasis added). Thus, the district court did not abuse its discretion when it
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determined that tracing the funds is necessary to implement the Maximum Balance
approach.
Nor did it abuse its discretion when it held that doing so here would be
administratively difficult. Together, the Dean Investors transacted with Defendants 76
times, with up to four months passing between their individual withdrawals and
reinvestments. If the Receiver attempted to trace those funds, he would risk violating his
“duty to avoid overly costly investigations” to the benefit of individual Claimants rather
than the group. Wealth Mgmt. LLC, 628 F.3d at 336 (concluding that the district court
acted “within its discretion to reject a case-by-case determination as too costly and time
consuming”); see also Cap. Consultants, LLC, 397 F.3d at 745 (holding that the district
court did not abuse its discretion in rejecting a calculation that “would impose a massive
new administrative burden on the receiver”).
Finally, we recognize that tracing the funds for M.C. Dean, in particular, may be
manageable. After all, M.C. Dean maintained a separate bank account for transactions
with Defendants, while CCWB commingled withdrawals from Defendants with other
sources in a single bank account. However, the two investors are similarly situated, so they
should be treated comparably. See Commodity Futures Trading Comm’n v. Walsh, 712
F.3d 735, 754 (2d Cir. 2013) (“As the investors in both entities were . . . similarly situated,
it was well within the district court’s equitable authority to reject [one group’s] requested
premium distributions.”). The Dean Investors are both institutional investors with the same
manager, and they both invested, withdrew, and reinvested their capital in Defendants’
scheme. So, we discern no error in the district court’s finding of administrative difficulty.
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Third, the Dean Investors insist that they derived no benefit from their reinvested
withdrawals, so accounting for those withdrawals is unfair. Instead, they say, their
reinvestments should be treated the same as their rolled-over distributions. To the contrary,
we agree with the district court that when the Dean Investors withdrew their investments,
“there was a benefit from that withdrawal, however big or small.” Merrill, Civil Action
No. RDB-18-2844, 2022 WL 17582418, at *3.
For example, CCWB had a larger pot of money from which to make credit card and
tax payments than it would have enjoyed without the withdrawals. And at the very least,
both of the Dean Investors had access to newfound cash. Unlike their rolled-over
distributions, which were continually tied up in the scheme, the withdrawals gave them a
choice to save, spend, or invest that cash. Accordingly, we see no error in the court’s
conclusion that the Dean Investors benefitted—however slightly—from their withdrawals.
After considering the Dean Investors’ arguments, we are not left with “a definite
and firm conviction” that there has been “a clear error of judgment.” Johnson, 43 F.4th at
393. For that reason, we find no abuse of discretion in the district court’s order overruling
their objection.
IV.
We next consider the Connaughton Investors’ objection. They argue that the district
court abused its discretion in approving the plan’s Collateral Offset Provision. In their
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view, the Receiver should not have considered third-party recoveries in the distribution
plan, or at the very least, he should not have imposed a 100% offset.
In support, the Connaughton Investors principally rely on Securities and Exchange
Commission v. Capital Consultants, LLC, 397 F.3d 733 (9th Cir. 2005), a Ninth Circuit
case addressing a similar issue. There, defrauded investors complained about a 50% offset
provision, “whereby each dollar received through third-party recoveries would reduce the
distribution from the receiver by fifty cents.” Id. at 738. They asserted a familiar
argument—that the provision would discourage investors from pursuing third-party claims,
which would count against them in a receiver’s distribution. Id. at 741. The court,
however, found that argument unpersuasive. Id. It had previously approved plans with
100% offset provisions, so surely, a 50% offset was acceptable. Id. at 740.
Like the Ninth Circuit, we are not compelled to find an abuse of discretion, even in
the court’s approval of a 100% offset. The Receiver determined that “[t]reating settlements
and other similar recoveries as pre-Receivership withdrawals ensures” Claimants “are
treated equally with respect to the total recovery of their principal investments.” J.A. 221.
And that makes sense. The Receiver has a finite amount of “pie,” and he must decide how
to slice it fairly. If the Collateral Recovery Cohort received some compensation through
third-party settlements, and other Claimants received nothing, we see no issue prioritizing
those Claimants who received nothing. We therefore decline to disturb the district court’s
order overruling this objection.
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“[W]hen funds are limited, hard choices must be made.” Off. Comm. of Unsecured
Creditors of WorldCom, Inc. v. Sec. & Exch. Comm’n, 467 F.3d 73, 84 (2d Cir. 2006)
(internal quotation marks omitted). Here, the district court diligently considered, and
approved, those choices. In so doing, it remained well within its discretion. Accordingly,
the order of the district court is
AFFIRMED.