Ernst & Young v. Depositors Economic Protection Corp.

45 F.3d 530, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 1387, 1995 WL 20852
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJanuary 25, 1995
Docket94-1749
StatusPublished
Cited by224 cases

This text of 45 F.3d 530 (Ernst & Young v. Depositors Economic Protection Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ernst & Young v. Depositors Economic Protection Corp., 45 F.3d 530, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 1387, 1995 WL 20852 (1st Cir. 1995).

Opinion

SELYA, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff-appellant Ernst & Young (E & Y), an accounting firm, asked the United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island to strike down R.I.Gen.Laws § 42-116-40 (1993) (the Depco Act) on constitutional grounds. The district court dismissed the complaint because the controversy lacked ripeness, and, alternatively, because it invited abstention. E & Y appeals. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

In January 1991, Bruce Sundlun, newly inaugurated Governor of Rhode Island, proclaimed a banking emergency precipitated by the collapse of the Rhode Island Share and Deposit Indemnity Corporation (RISDIC), a *532 firm that had insured deposits at no fewer than 45 Rhode Island-based financial institutions. 1 Since those institutions could not operate legally without deposit insurance, see R.I.Gen.Laws § 19-11-9, the Governor closed them.

The lockout provoked a financial crisis, preventing depositors from withdrawing their funds and causing consternation in a myriad of other ways. Over time, many of the affected institutions obtained insurance from sources such as the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and resumed operations. Others were absorbed by insured entities. In the end ten financial institutions were unable to reopen. These financial institutions had something in common: each of them had followed uncommonly adventurous lending practices, and had become insolvent. They were all placed into conservatorship. The Rhode Island General Assembly created a public corporation, the Depositors Economic Protection Corporation (Depco), to act as the receiver, manage the failed banks’ estates, marshal and liquidate their assets, repay depositors, and seek recovery from those responsible for the fiasco. 2 In addition, Dep-co served as the receiver for RISDIC.

A special state commission charged with investigating the banking crisis found no shortage of miscreants. The commission assigned blame, inter alia, to former officers and directors of the failed institutions, certain large borrowers, the state Department of Business Regulation, the General Assembly, and a former governor. The commission reserved some of its most stinging criticism for RISDIC and those persons who occupied prominent positions in the RISDIC hierarchy. The commission included E & Y, which had provided accounting services to RISDIC and to many of its insureds, as among the parties deserving special opprobrium.

The banks’ collapse proved to be a depositor’s nightmare but a lawyer’s dream, spawning a plethora of lawsuits. For the most part, the depositors’ and creditors’ suits were consolidated in a series of master complaints (one for each failed institution) docketed in the state superior court. Then, in early 1992, Depco and other plaintiffs filed a civil action in superior court against E & Y and sundry other defendants. In that suit, the plaintiffs charged E & Y with negligence and professional malpractice. Among other things, they alleged that E & Y issued unqualified (or insufficiently qualified) audit opinions to RISDIC and a number of RIS-DIC-insured institutions despite obvious patterns of pervasive lending irregularities and other clear portents of impending financial disaster.

In July of 1993, the General Assembly revised state law as it pertained to the RIS-DIC cases by passing the Depco Act, Pub.L. 1993, ch. 85. The Act provides that potentially responsible parties who in good faith achieve judicially approved settlements with Depco will not be liable for contribution to other joint tortfeasors; and that, if a putative defendant settles with Depco on this basis, the potential liability of other joint tortfea-sors will be reduced only by the dollar amount of the settlement, not by the settling party’s pro rata share of the aggregate liability. 3

*533 The Act transmogrifies the law of contribution for purposes of the RISDIC cases. Prior to its passage, a non-settling defendant in a negligence action — including a non-settling defendant in a RISDIC case — could, if found liable, seek contribution according to proportionate fault from all other joint tort-feasors, save only those who had entered settlements that explicitly released all claims against all potentially responsible parties for the settling tortfeasor’s proportionate share of the overall liability. See R.I.Gen.Laws §§ 10-6-7, 10-6-8, 10-6-11 (1993). In other words, prior law ensured that, if a joint tortfeasor were held responsible for (and paid) more than its ratable share of damages, it could seek contribution from other joint tortfeasors who had carried less than their fair share of the load. Under the Depco Act, however, a non-settling tortfeasor can be held liable for more than its pro rata share of damages, yet find that it has no remaining right of contribution as to some (or, conceivably, all) of the coverage paid.

E & Y did not go quietly into this dark night. It promptly sued in the federal district court, 4 seeking a declaration that the Depco Act, on its face and as applied to E & Y, transgresses the Federal Constitution. Specifically, E & Y urged the court to find that the Act violates the due process and equal protection clauses, and that it constitutes an unlawful bill of attainder.

In its complaint, E & Y makes various allegations designed to highlight the ostensible unfairness of the legal predicament it now faces. Stripped of animadversions, the complaint brands the Depco Act as special legislation drafted for the specific purpose of depriving E & Y of preexisting substantive rights in order to intimidate E & Y and thereby force a lucrative settlement of Dep-co’s negligence action. 5 Depco’s strategy, E & Y alleges, is to reach early settlements with most potentially responsible parties, limited to the face value of their respective liability insurance policies, but to treat E & Y as a “deep pocket” from whom a huge settlement can be extracted. E & Y asserts that the doubts surrounding the viability of this strategy, and particularly the profound uncertainties about the Act’s constitutionality, are currently imposing a substantial hardship on E & Y in at least two ways. First, the situation creates coercive pressure on E & Y to settle the pending state court suit. Second, it deprives E & Y of the ability adequately to appraise its potential exposure.

The defendants moved to dismiss the complaint for want of subject matter jurisdiction on the ground that the ease lacked ripeness, 6 and, as a back-up, invoked several abstention theories. The district court referred the motion to a magistrate judge, see Fed.R.Civ.P.

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Bluebook (online)
45 F.3d 530, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 1387, 1995 WL 20852, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ernst-young-v-depositors-economic-protection-corp-ca1-1995.