Elliott Levin v. William Miller

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 17, 2018
Docket17-1775
StatusPublished

This text of Elliott Levin v. William Miller (Elliott Levin v. William Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elliott Levin v. William Miller, (7th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 17-1775 ELLIOTT D. LEVIN, as Chapter 7 Trustee for Irwin Financial Corporation, Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

WILLIAM I. MILLER, GREGORY F. EHLINGER, and THOMAS D. WASHBURN, Defendants-Appellees. ____________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, Indianapolis Division. No. 1:11-cv-01264-SEB-MPB — Sarah Evans Barker, Judge. ____________________

ARGUED OCTOBER 25, 2017 — DECIDED AUGUST 17, 2018 ____________________

Before KANNE and SYKES, Circuit Judges, and DARROW, District Judge.*

* Of the Central District of Illinois, sitting by designation. 2 No. 17-1775

SYKES, Circuit Judge. Irwin Financial Corporation was a holding company for two banks that failed in the wake of the 2007–2008 financial crisis. When the crisis began, regula- tors and Irwin’s outside legal counsel both advised the company to buoy up its sinking subsidiaries. Irwin’s Board of Directors therefore instructed the officers to do everything they could to save the banks. The officers tried to raise capital and applied for government aid, but the chances of success were slim. Private investors showed little interest in the company, and federal regulators signaled that a bailout was unlikely. A small glimmer of hope flickered in 2009: Irwin received a $76 million tax refund. The Board authorized Irwin’s officers to transfer the refund to the subsidiary banks and for good reason: The Board believed that the refund legally belonged to the banks and hoped the cash infusion would keep them above water long enough for help to arrive. But the refund was not enough to save the day. Management could not raise sufficient capital, the hoped-for government relief never materialized, the banks failed, and Irwin filed for bankruptcy. Elliott Levin was appointed as Chapter 7 trustee for Ir- win’s bankruptcy estate, and he promptly filed suit against three of Irwin’s former officers. The suit alleged, among other things, that the officers breached their fiduciary duty to provide the Board with material information concerning the tax refund. Levin’s legal theory rested on an elaborate chain of assertions. He claimed the officers should have known the banks were going to fail, so they should have investigated alternatives to transferring the tax refund— specifically, an earlier bankruptcy—despite the Board’s clear No. 17-1775 3

directive to support the banks. Had the officers done so, they would have discovered that Irwin might be able to claim the $76 million tax refund as an asset in bankruptcy. And if the officers had presented this information to the Board, the Board would have declared bankruptcy before transferring the refund to the banks, thereby maximizing the holding company’s value for creditors. The district judge didn’t buy Levin’s speculative theory and neither do we. Corporate officers have a duty to furnish the Board of Directors with material information, but that duty is subject to the Board’s contrary directives. The record clearly establishes that on the advice of government regula- tors and expert outside legal counsel, the Board had priori- tized saving the banks. The officers had no authority to second-guess the Board’s judgment with their own inde- pendent investigation. We affirm. I. Background Before its bankruptcy, Irwin was the holding company for two subsidiary banks: Irwin Union Bank and Trust Company, which we’ll call the “Bank and Trust,” and Irwin Union Bank, FSB, which we’ll call the “Savings Bank.” William Miller was Irwin’s CEO and Gregory Ehlinger was its CFO. Irwin’s Board of Directors was largely independent: A supermajority of ten members were independent outside directors, and the Board held an executive session without Irwin’s officers after each meeting. At the executive sessions, the directors discussed concerns and developed recommen- dations for management. Lance Odden, the designated lead director, would pass along these directives to Irwin’s offic- ers. 4 No. 17-1775

As financial institutions, Irwin and the banks were, of course, subject to considerable governmental oversight. Irwin was registered as a bank holding company with the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. As a state-chartered member of the Federal Reserve System, the Band and Trust answered to both the Federal Reserve and the Indiana Department of Financial Institutions. The Sav- ings Bank was a federally chartered savings bank regulated by the Office of Thrift Supervision. Finally, because the banks held federally insured deposits, both fell under the supervision of the FDIC. In the midst of the 2007–2008 financial crisis, the Bank and Trust began to flounder. Regulators insisted that Irwin had a duty to support its struggling subsidiary. On February 28, 2008, a representative from the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago attended a board meeting to discuss “regu- latory concerns about [the Bank and Trust’s] liquidity and [Irwin’s] expected role as a source of strength for the [b]ank[s].” The representative “emphasized the preservation of capital at the [b]ank and the need to maintain liquidity.” Heeding the regulator’s advice, Irwin adopted a resolu- tion affirming its commitment to keeping the Bank and Trust capitalized. Among other things, the resolution emphasized “the importance of ensuring that the enterprise maintains adequate capital to support its business operations.” As the crisis raged on, Irwin turned to independent legal counsel for advice. The Board retained Rodgin Cohen and other attorneys at Sullivan & Cromwell for advice on the Board’s duties in the fraught regulatory landscape. The Board began meeting every Friday with outside counsel present. Cohen and his colleagues reported directly to the No. 17-1775 5

Board, and the Board expected Irwin’s management to follow their advice. Cohen urged the Board to support the banks. He advised the directors of their duty under the Source of Strength Doctrine, which requires bank holding companies to provide assistance to subsidiaries in times of financial distress. The Board members apparently took his advice to heart. Accord- ing to one director, the Board was committed to saving the banks because it “was the prudent course of action and consistent with our fiduciary duties based on Mr. Cohen’s counsel [and] statements from regulators.” That commitment was soon put to the test. In May 2008 the Chicago Federal Reserve and Indiana Department of Financial Institutions advised Irwin that the Bank and Trust was in trouble and supervisory action would follow. Two months later the regulators sent a Memorandum of Under- standing demanding that Irwin obtain a $50 million cash infusion by the end of August. On Cohen’s advice the Board directed management to sign and deliver the memorandum. Irwin failed to raise $50 million by the deadline. Regula- tors then sent the Board a formal Written Agreement requir- ing Irwin and the Bank and Trust to develop a plan to “improve management of [their] liquidity positions” and “maintain sufficient capital.” Faced with these demands and uncertain of its duties, the Board again turned to outside counsel for advice. At the October 10, 2008 meeting, counsel advised the Board to “be actively engaged in doing whatev- er [it] can to ensure the bank remains solvent.” That same day the Board approved the Written Agreement and author- ized Miller, the CEO, to execute it. 6 No. 17-1775

In the meantime Irwin began looking to federal programs for relief. In October 2008 Congress created the Troubled Asset Relief Program (“TARP”), which authorized the Treasury Department to purchase troubled assets from financial institutions after considering various factors, including the “long-term viability of the financial institu- tion.” 12 U.S.C.

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