Dloogatch v. Brincat - Corrected 01/15/10

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 16, 2009
Docket1-08-0168 & 1-08-0281 Cons. Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Dloogatch v. Brincat - Corrected 01/15/10 (Dloogatch v. Brincat - Corrected 01/15/10) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dloogatch v. Brincat - Corrected 01/15/10, (Ill. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

THIRD DIVISION DECEMBER 16, 2009

Nos. 1-08-0168 and 1-08-0281 (Consolidated)

MICHAEL DLOOGATCH, DAVID BIRNBAUM, ) Appeal from the HERBERT LEDERER, and VICTOR R. FERNITZ,) Circuit Court of on Behalf of Themselves and All Others Similarly ) Cook County. Situated, ) ) Plaintiffs-Appellants, ) ) v. ) No. 97 CH 8790 ) JOHN N. BRINCAT, JOHN N. BRINCAT, JR., ) JAMES A. DOYLE, WILLIAM C. CROFT, ) MERCURY FINANCE COMPANY, and KPMG ) PEAT MARWICK, L.L.P., ) ) Defendants-Appellees ) ) (Terra Foundation For The Arts, ) ) Honorable Intervening Class Member and ) Daniel A. Riley, Separate Appellant). ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE COLEMAN delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiffs, a class of individual investors, appeal from an order of the circuit court of Cook

County granting defendant KPMG's motion to dismiss pursuant to section 2-615 of the Illinois

Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/2-615 (West 2006)) for failing to state a claim upon which

relief may be granted. This appeal was consolidated with the separately filed appeal by Terra

Foundation for the Arts (Terra), a purported intervening class member. Plaintiffs claim that they

retained their stock in Mercury Finance Company (Mercury) based on fraudulent financial reports Nos. 1-08-0168 and 1-08-0281 (Consolidated)

prepared by Mercury's auditor, KPMG, and suffered pecuniary damage as a result of the fraud.

KPMG is the only remaining defendant. On appeal, plaintiffs argue that the trial court erred in

dismissing their fourth amended complaint because they adequately plead reliance and damage to

maintain their common law fraud claim; they are not required to plead the precise method to be

used at trial to calculate damages; and the fourth amended complaint does pled a method of

calculating damages. Terra joined in plaintiffs' arguments and wrote separately to further argue in

support of an alternate measure of out-of-pocket damages articulated by plaintiffs. Defendant

contends that plaintiffs' theories for calculating damages are invalid, reliance has not sufficiently

been pled, and the complaint only asserts derivative claims.

The instant appeal presents a case of first impression in Illinois. Our courts have never

considered whether the "holder" of securities may bring a common law fraud claim and what the

pleading requirements are for such a claim, as well as which method of calculating damages is

appropriate. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the trial court's order dismissing the

complaint.

PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Prior to February 23, 1994, the members of the class purchased publicly traded common

stock in Mercury Finance Company. Mercury was a consumer finance company engaged in the

business of purchasing individual installment sales finance contracts from automobile dealers,

extending short-term installment loans to consumers, and selling credit insurance. Defendant

KPMG is an accounting firm that Mercury hired to perform audits of Mercury's financial

statements from 1993 to 1997. On January 29, 1997, Mercury publicly reported that the financial

reports from 1993 to 1996 had been overstated due to accounting errors. That same day the New

-2- Nos. 1-08-0168 and 1-08-0281 (Consolidated)

York Stock Exchange suspended trading on Mercury stock. On January 28, 1997, the stock was

trading at $14.875 per share. When trading of Mercury stock reopened on January 31, 1997, the

price had dropped to $2.125 per share.

On July 16, 1996, plaintiffs filed a class action complaint against Mercury's chief executive

officer and directors, Mercury, and KPMG alleging negligence, negligent misrepresentation,

breach of fiduciary duty (except against KPMG), and common law fraud. The original complaint

was dismissed and plaintiffs filed a first amended complaint alleging negligence, negligent

misrepresentation, and common law fraud as well as a count against KPMG for aiding and

abetting the perpetration of a fraud. William C. Croft, one of Mercury's outside directors, was

dismissed. Mercury was also dismissed after filing for bankruptcy protection.

KPMG filed a motion to dismiss the first amended complaint. During argument on the

motion, the trial court sua sponte raised the issue of federal preemption based upon the Securities

Exchange Act of 1934. Although all the parties agreed that plaintiffs' claims were not preempted,

the trial court dismissed on that basis.

Plaintiffs appealed the order dismissing the first amended complaint and this court reversed

and remanded after concluding that the claim was not preempted by federal law. In Dloogatch v.

Brincat, No. 1–98–3139 (1999) (unpublished order under Supreme Court Rule 23), this court

explicitly stated that it expressed no opinion on whether any of plaintiffs' allegations were

sufficient to withstand a motion to dismiss.

Following remand to the trial court, defendant filed another motion to dismiss, which was

denied as to negligence, negligent misrepresentation and fraud, but was granted on the count

KPMG for aiding and abetting a fraud.

-3- Nos. 1-08-0168 and 1-08-0281 (Consolidated)

On December 7, 1999, plaintiffs reached a settlement with Mercury's bankruptcy estate and

the directors and officers. Plaintiffs filed a motion to certify the class. Judge McGann granted the

motion and certified the class.1 In the order certifying the class, Judge McGann stated that the

court need not determine the appropriate measure of damages at that instant, but the "benefit of the

bargain" was not the appropriate measure in this case.

KPMG filed a motion to dismiss plaintiffs' second amended complaint, which the trial

court granted. The trial court directed plaintiffs to replead certain allegations to make it clear that

they were only being pled to preserve the record. The trial court also instructed plaintiffs that

Baughman needed to specify the value of his stock at the time the fraud began and the price at

which he sold it. The trial court rejected the "benefit of the bargain" and the "yardstick" alternative

as appropriate measures of damages. In its order dismissing the second amended complaint, the

trial court stated generally that in "holder claims" plaintiffs could plead damage through

"allegations that demonstrate out of pocket damages proximately caused by the fraudulent

inducement to refrain from selling."

On September 20, 2005, plaintiffs filed the third amended complaint. Defendants filed a

motion to dismiss, which the trial court denied in substantial part with directions to further comply

with the previous order to "clean up" the complaint. In its order, the trial court noted that plaintiffs

complied with the court's previous directions regarding pleading damage by alleging two methods

of measuring "out-of-pocket" damages. The trial court also ruled that "benefit of the bargain" was

an inappropriate measure of damages based on the Illinois Supreme Court's then-recent decision in

1 David Baughman replaced Michael Dloogatch as class representative after the trial court granted KPMG's motion for summary judgment and dismissed Dloogatch.

-4- Nos. 1-08-0168 and 1-08-0281 (Consolidated)

Price v. Philip Morris, Inc., 219 Ill. 2d 182 (2005). The trial court further directed the parties to

brief the issue of whether Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith v.

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