Correspondent Services Corp. v. First Equities Corp.

338 F.3d 119, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 14207
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 16, 2003
DocketDocket No. 02-7744
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 338 F.3d 119 (Correspondent Services Corp. v. First Equities Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Correspondent Services Corp. v. First Equities Corp., 338 F.3d 119, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 14207 (2d Cir. 2003).

Opinion

SOTOMAYOR, Circuit Judge.

Appellants J.V.W. Investment, Ltd. (“JVW”)1 and J. Virgil Waggoner, two of the several original defendants below, appeal from an order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Sweet, /.), dismissing an action in the nature of interpleader brought by Correspondent Services Corporation (“CSC”). With CSC’s action no longer before it, the district court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over appellants’ state law cross-claims against appellee Suisse Security Bank & Trust, Ltd. (“SSBT”), and therefore vacated an attachment of assets belonging to SSBT that had been entered in conjunction with these cross-claims. Although the substance of these cross-claims apparently remains viable for litigation in state court, the attachment, and especially its current priority in SSBT’s ongoing liquidation proceedings, might not be restored if this federal action were to be dismissed.

The district court dismissed CSC’s claims after both granting CSC’s Rule 41(a)(2) motion for voluntary dismissal and determining that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction over CSC’s original complaint, without considering CSC’s amended complaint. We vacate the dismissal and remand to the district court for the following proceedings: first, to clarify whether jurisdiction existed under CSC’s amended complaint and, if it did, whether the allegations establishing jurisdiction related back to the original complaint; and second, if the allegations sufficient to establish jurisdiction relate back to the original complaint, to consider whether the prejudice to appellants flowing from the vacating of the attachment precludes dismissal of either CSC’s action under Rule 41(a)(2) or the appellants’ cross-claim for lack of supplemental jurisdiction.

BACKGROUND

While the facts of this case illustrate one of the myriad ways in which complicated investment transactions can turn sour, the question that confronts us is much less complicated: whether the district court had jurisdiction over this action, and, if so, whether it abused its discretion by allowing CSC to withdraw the action or by declining to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the remaining claims amongst the interpleader and third-party defendants. Although the specifics of the investment scheme are neither uncontested nor necessary to resolve this case, in abbreviated form they serve the alternate purpose of introducing the relationships between the parties in this action.

I. The Investment Scheme

In 1998, Donald Kelleher, a United Kingdom citizen, undertook for a commission to realize enormous financial returns by investing $10 million belonging to J. [122]*122Virgil Waggoner, a Texas businessman. A Joint Participation Agreement memorializing this investment scheme implied that the investment would achieve a 500% profit within three to five months, and that Kelleher was to receive between twenty and twenty-five percent of these profits.

Kelleher and Waggoner established JVW, an alien corporation organized under the laws of the Republic of Dominica, with Waggoner as the sole shareholder and Kelleher as the director. Through JVW, Kelleher entered into an agreement with British Trade & Commerce Bank (“BTCB”), a Dominica bank, to invest the $10 million in a CD. BTCB issued the CD to JVW, and the CD was transferred to First Equities Corp. of Florida (“First Equity”), a Florida subsidiary of BTCB, which in turn placed the unfunded CD into the custody of CSC, a company that provided custodial services for First Equity. CSC is a citizen of New York and Delaware.

Meanwhile, Kelleher, through JVW, created a bank account at SSBT, an offshore bank organized under the laws of the Bahamas, and caused Waggoner’s $10 million to be deposited into this account. After several unsuccessful attempts to transfer this money from JVW’s SSBT account into BTCB’s SSBT account and thus to fund the CD, only approximately $7.7 million was transferred to BTCB/First Equity, leaving $2.3 million unaccounted for. Even after the CD was funded, however, CSC possessed only the physical CD document, and it never controlled any of the funds received by BTCB/First Equity.

Waggoner and Kelleher then had a disagreement, and Waggoner dissolved the Joint Participation Agreement, removed Kelleher as director of JVW, and appointed himself JVW’s sole director. Waggoner received the proceeds of the $7.7 million investment when the CD matured in June 1999. Kelleher, in turn, demanded from CSC, BTCB and First Equity not merely that sum but the entire $10.6 million that a fully funded $10 million CD would have yielded upon maturity. Kelleher continued to make this demand even after First Equity determined that its transfer of the CD proceeds to Waggoner was proper.

II. The Interpleader Action

In August 1999, still with custody of the physical CD and facing Waggoner’s and Kelleher’s apparently conflicting claims to it,2 CSC commenced a statutory inter-pleader action under 28 U.S.C. § 1335, naming Waggoner, Kelleher, JVW, BTCB and First Equity as potential claimants. CSC’s complaint made clear that it believed the stake was the CD itself, rather than proceeds from the CD.

A flurry of state-law cross-claims followed, contesting ownership of the CD, liability and responsibility for the $2.3 million loss. In one of these cross-claims, Waggoner and JVW brought a claim against Kelleher, added SSBT as a third-party defendant, and moved to attach approximately $3 million of SSBT’s assets located in New York. Based upon evidence that SSBT may have forged documents to conceal its potential wrongdoing, the district court found that Waggoner and JVW were likely to succeed on the merits of their claims against SSBT, and ordered the attachment.

After some litigation and significant discovery on the merits of the various cross-[123]*123claims, SSBT went into bankruptcy. SSBT’s liquidator in the Bahamas3 then moved to dismiss CSC’s interpleader action for lack of subject matter jurisdiction because the CD upon which the action was based had no value, and to vacate the attachment of SSBT’s assets. Dissolving the attachment, which had been granted prior to SSBT’s initiation of bankruptcy proceedings, would effect a subordination of JVW’s and Waggoner’s claim to the $3 million and might result in their receiving a smaller share of SSBT’s total assets than they would receive if the attachment remained in place. In response to SSBT’s motion, CSC initially argued that subject matter jurisdiction was proper and filed an amended complaint reasserting jurisdiction under § 1335 and also including a declaratory judgment claim, allegedly with diversity jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332. After obtaining a release of all claims from Kelleher, however, CSC subsequently filed a notice of voluntary dismissal with the court.

The district court dismissed the action as well as all of the cross-claims. It held that it did not have subject matter jurisdiction based on the original complaint, vacated the attachment because it had no jurisdiction at the time it was granted, and held that SSBT was entitled to attorney’s fees incurred defending against the wrongful attachment. The district court then granted CSC voluntary dismissal under Fed.

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Bluebook (online)
338 F.3d 119, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 14207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/correspondent-services-corp-v-first-equities-corp-ca2-2003.