Donald Burdick v. Rosenthal Collins Group, Llc

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 31, 2016
Docket73459-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of Donald Burdick v. Rosenthal Collins Group, Llc (Donald Burdick v. Rosenthal Collins Group, Llc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donald Burdick v. Rosenthal Collins Group, Llc, (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

v.; u; u

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DONALD BURDICK; SUSAN BYINGTON; LISA CARFAGNO; PETER DIVISION ONE and JANICE ELLIOT, and their marital community; BERNARD E. GOLDBERG; No. 73459-8- PAUL E. GOLSTEIN; TOM and LaVOE MULGREW, and their marital community; SUSAN ROSEN; MARTIN SILVERMAN; SHARON SILVERMAN; UNPUBLISHED OPINION and BARRY and ROBIN STUCK, and their marital community,

Appellants,

v.

ROSENTHAL COLLINS GROUP, LLC, an Illinois limited liability corporation,

Respondent. FILED: May 31, 2016

Dwyer, J. —This appeal arises from a trial court order granting summary judgment dismissal of securities and negligence claims brought against Rosenthal Collins Group, LLC (RCG) for its alleged role in a Ponzi scheme fraud perpetrated by Enrique Villalba.1 Because RCG was not involved in the sale of the securities herein at issue and owed no special duty to the investors in

Villalba's scheme, we affirm.

1Relief is also sought from a protective order obtained by RCG prohibiting discovery of certain information related to the account involved in the fraud. We conclude thatthis order was proper. No. 73459-8-1/2

A. Villalba's Ponzi Scheme

This case begins with the collapse of a Ponzi scheme perpetrated by

Villalba, through his company Money Market Alternatives, LLC (MMA), from late

1996 until September 2009.

Villalba held himself out to investors as an "investment manager" who

managed his clients' assets in accordance with their individual investment

objectives and by utilizing his trading strategy, which he referred to as the

"Money Market Plus Method." In reality, Villalba stole the money that he was

supposedly managing. After receiving investors' funds into his bank accounts,

Villalba used the funds to, among other things, pay himself huge management

fees, fund his lavish lifestyle and other business ventures, and make over $3

million in Ponzi-type payments to other investors. Villalba concealed his theft

from his clients with lies and false account statements reflecting steady gains in

their accounts.2 Based upon these fake statements and believing Villalba was

earning impressive returns, investors sent more and more money to Villalba for

him to manage on their behalf.

The 26 victims of the fraud, who include the appellants herein, lost more

than $30 million.

B. Appellants Invest With Villalba

Appellants (the investors) hired Villalba to manage their money and

deposited funds with him at different times between 1996 and 2009.

2There is no dispute that RCG played no role in creating (and had no knowledge of) these fake account statements. No. 73459-8-1/3

The investors had different relationships with Villalba and different

understandings of how he would manage their money. Bernard Goldberg, for

example, met Villalba years before Villalba opened an account at RCG.

Goldberg and Villalba formed a general partnership in 1996, through which

Goldberg effectively hired Villalba to manage certain assets in return for a share

of the trading profits. Given his close, longstanding relationship with Villalba,

Goldberg was able to convince many of his friends to hire Villalba as their

investment advisor, including (directly or indirectly) all of the other investors in

this case.

After being introduced to Villalba, the other investors each entered into Investment Management Agreements (IMA) with Villalba. The IMAs detailed Villalba's role as "investment manager" of individually managed accounts and expressly provided the investor with the right to manage his or her own account and change the investment strategy to conform with his or her investment objectives. The IMAs also gave each investor the right to choose or change the brokerage firm handling the investor's individual account. The IMAs made no mention of RCG3 and, by and large, the investors had

no knowledge of the brokerage firms that Villalba was using. The investors typically wired money to Villalba by sending money directly to one of his bank accounts. Villalba then transferred money from MMA's bank accounts to futures

accounts in MMA's name, including one at RCG, to trade futures. None of the investors sent any money to RCG. Indeed, the investors admitted that they had

3 RCG also had no knowledge of the IMAs. No. 73459-8-1/4

no interaction whatsoever with RCG, that they never had a written agreement

that mentioned RCG, and that RCG played no role in their decision to invest or in

the sale of securities.

C. Villalba's Futures Trading

In June 1998, 18 months after the first of the investors invested with

Villalba, RCG agreed to open a nondiscretionary commodityfutures trading

account for MMA. RCG is a Futures Commission Merchant (FCM) registered

with the Commodities Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and the National

Futures Association (NFA) to conduct trading of futures contracts. As a

"nondiscretionary" customer, MMA retained complete control over its futures account and had full responsibility and liability for all trading decisions.

RCG reviewed an offering circular that Villalba prepared to help him solicit $100 million from investors for the MMA account.4 According to the investment plan described in the circular, funds from Villalba's customers would be pooled to invest in treasury bills or money market funds "within a vehicle similar to a mutual fund." Villalba would also occasionally5 purchase S&P 500 futures contracts

based on his purported expertise in predicting certain market trends. Those transactions would supposedly add 2 percent to 5 percent additional value for his customers. The investment would have "minimal" risk, it asserted, because the

futures transactions would be made with "little or no leverage" and stop orders

would be used to limit losses.

4 None of the investors ever saw, received, or signed any subscription agreement or offering circular relating to their investment. 5The timing was variously described as "a few days per month," "on average a week per month," and "approximately [1]0% of the year." No. 73459-8-1/5

The circular claimed that the fund was not subject to state or federal

regulation. RCG recognized, however, that because it would contain pooled

investments, the fund would constitute a commodity pool.6 That made Villalba,

or his company, a commodity pool operator. Neither were registered as

commodity pool operators as required by the CFTC.

A form was provided to Villalba with the new account documents

identifying two potential exceptions to the registration requirement. RCG's file shows that Villalba selected an exemption that was only applicable if he neither

received any direct or indirect compensation for managing the anticipated $100 million pool, nor advertised for participants. The circular stated, however, that he expected to receive management fees from the proceeds and that MMA would be "offering these securities to the public." RCG's compliance procedures mandate that a new account should not be opened if illegal activity is suspected. After RCG's review of the offering circular and the other information provided by Villalba, it opened the MMA account for

trading.

Villalba never followed his purported investment plan. Instead of keeping

the investors' money in treasury bills with occasional transactions in S&P 500 futures contracts, Villalba traded futures with RCG almost daily.

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