COMMONWEALTH Ex Rel. JOHAN ROSENBERG v. JPMORGAN CHASE & CO. & Others

CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedAugust 9, 2019
DocketSUCV2014-03323-BLS1
StatusPublished

This text of COMMONWEALTH Ex Rel. JOHAN ROSENBERG v. JPMORGAN CHASE & CO. & Others (COMMONWEALTH Ex Rel. JOHAN ROSENBERG v. JPMORGAN CHASE & CO. & Others) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
COMMONWEALTH Ex Rel. JOHAN ROSENBERG v. JPMORGAN CHASE & CO. & Others, (Mass. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

SUPERIOR COURT

COMMONWEALTH ex rel. JOHAN ROSENBERG vs. JPMORGAN CHASE & CO. & others[1]

Docket: SUCV2014-03323-BLS1
Dates: July 23, 2019
Present: /S/Mitchell H. Kaplan Justice of the Superior Court
County:
Keywords: MEMORANDUM OF DECISION AND ORDER ON DEFENDANTS' JOINT MOTION TO DISMISS THE SECOND AMENDED COMPLAINT

@COMMONWEALTH ex rel. JOHAN ROSENBERG vs. JPMORGAN CHASE & CO. & others[1]

@SUCV2014-03323-BLS1

@MEMORANDUM OF DECISION AND ORDER ON DEFENDANTS' JOINT MOTION TO DISMISS THE SECOND AMENDED COMPLAINT

The plaintiff and relator, Johan Rosenberg, filed this qui tam action on behalf of the Commonwealth against the defendants, JPMorgan Chase & Co.; JPMorgan Chase Bank, NA; J.P. Morgan Securities LLC; JPMorgan Securities, Inc.; Citigroup, Inc.; Citigroup Global Markets Inc.; Citibank NA; Citigroup Financial Products Inc.; Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc.; Bank of America Corporation; Bank of America NA; Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated; Morgan Stanley; Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC; Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC; Morgan Stanley Bank, N.A.; Morgan Stanley Capital Services Inc.; and Morgan Stanley Capital Group Inc., asserting a violation of the Massachusetts False Claims Act,

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 [1]JPMorgan Chase Bank, NA; J.P. Morgan Securities LLC; JPMorgan Securities, Inc.; Citigroup, Inc.; Citigroup Global Markets Inc.; Citibank NA, Citigroup Financial Products Inc.; Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc.; Bank of America Corporation; Bank of America NA; Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated; Morgan Stanley; Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC; Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC; Morgan Stanley Bank, N.A.; Morgan Stanley Capital Services Inc.; and Morgan Stanley Capital Group Inc.

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G.L. c. 12, §§ 5A-50 (the Act).[2] The relator alleges that the defendants engaged in fraud and collusion in connection with their obligations as "remarketing agents" (RMAs) for variable rate, tax exempt bonds, commonly referred to as Variable Rate Demand Obligations (VRD0s), issued by the Commonwealth or one of its cities, towns, counties, or government agencies. More specifically, he alleges that the defendants made false representations to the Commonwealth regarding their conduct in respect of their alleged obligation "to actively and individually reset and remarket VRDOs at the lowest possible [interest] rates." The relator contends that as a result of this fraudulent rate-setting conduct, the Commonwealth paid hundreds of millions of dollars in excess interest and fees since at least April of 2009. The relator's Second Amended Complaint (complaint) pleads a single count asserting a violation of the Act, premised upon this alleged fraudulent activity.

The case is presently before the court on a joint motion to dismiss filed by defendants JPMorgan, Citigroup, Merrill Lynch, and Morgan Stanley for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. See Mass. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6).[3]

[2] "A qui tam action is an action brought by an informer sometimes called a 'whistle blower' whose motive is to expose and redress a wrong, generally a fraud or false claim against the government and also to collect his bounty for his action." Phone Recovery Servs., LLC v. Verizon of New England, Inc., 480 Mass. 224, 225 n.3 (2018), quoting Scannell v. Attorney Gen., 70 Mass. App. Ct. 46, 49 (2007) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). The Act "encourages individuals with direct and independent knowledge of information that an entity is defrauding the Commonwealth to come forward by awarding to such individuals a percentage of the Commonwealth's recovery from the defrauding entity. See G.L. c. 12, §§ 5A, 5C(2), 5F." Scannell v. Attorney Gen., 70 Mass. App. Ct. at 48. "To be entitled to the bounty, an individual in possession of such knowledge must attain the status of a 'relator' by filing suit against the defrauding entity in Superior Court in the name of the Commonwealth or a subdivision thereof" Id. at 48-49.

[3] The defendants report that the relator named a number of entities affiliated with each defendant investment bank, but several of these entities are not properly defendants, and the parties are discussing which defendants should be voluntarily dismissed. In view of the court's ruling on this motion to dismiss, this issue is moot.

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While the defendants argue that the complaint should be dismissed for a number of reasons, including that the relator fails to allege a fraudulent claim actually made to any governmental body, or at least alleged it with the specificity required by Mass. R. Civ. P. 9(b), the court finds that one of the grounds for dismissal on which the defendants rest their motion is squarely applicable to the "facts" alleged by the relator. As will be seen, all of the factual allegations in the complaint are based upon information generally available to the public on websites maintained by the government, self-regulatory agencies established by the securities industry, or news media. The allegations of fraud are based upon the relator's individual analysis of this public data, and the conclusions that his analysis led him to are also based on this public data. While the issue is one of first impression under the Massachusetts version of the Federal False Claims Act, this court joins the majority of federal courts in holding that, under these circumstances, the factual allegations in the complaint are substantially the same as publicly disclosed transactions, and the relator is not the original source of the information alleged. In consequence, the Relator's qui tam complaint fails to state a claim based on the Act's public disclosure bar, and the motion to dismiss is ALLOWED.

BACKGROUND

The following facts are drawn from the allegations in the forty-page complaint and assumed to be true for the purposes of this motion. Because the motion turns on the question of public disclosure and original source, details concerning the relator's analysis of the data and

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why, in his opinion, that demonstrates fraud are only generally described.

The Parties

The relator, Rosenberg, is a Minnesota resident. He has over twenty years of experience advising municipalities and other clients on issuing securities, particularly VRDOs and other types of municipal bonds. Through his work in the industry, Rosenberg became suspicious that the defendants and other VRDO-RMAs were colluding to systematically reset the VRDO interest rates on an algorithmic or some other kind of mechanical basis, a practice he refers to as "RoboResetting."[4] According to the relator, this caused artificially high interest rates to be set for these securities and resulted in the Commonwealth paying fees for services that the RMAs were not actually providing. Rosenberg "confirmed his suspicions after performing an extensive forensic

 [4]`Robo-Resetting' is not a term generally in use in the securities industry, but rather one coined by the relator for this case.

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COMMONWEALTH Ex Rel. JOHAN ROSENBERG v. JPMORGAN CHASE & CO. & Others, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-ex-rel-johan-rosenberg-v-jpmorgan-chase-co-others-masssuperct-2019.