Estate of Yevgenyi Scherban v. Suntrust Bank

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedJanuary 25, 2018
DocketCivil Action No. 2015-1966
StatusPublished

This text of Estate of Yevgenyi Scherban v. Suntrust Bank (Estate of Yevgenyi Scherban v. Suntrust Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Yevgenyi Scherban v. Suntrust Bank, (D.D.C. 2018).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

DEBORAH A. TRUDEL, et al.,

Plaintiffs, v. Civil Action No. 15-1966 (JEB) SUNTRUST BANK, et al.,

Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This case revolves around a decades-old family saga that, as this Court observed in a

previous Opinion, reads like the plot of one of John le Carré’s Cold War novels. It opens in 1996

with the airport assassinations of Yevgenyi Scherban, a Ukrainian politician and businessman,

and Nadejda Nikitina, his wife. Scherban left more than $100 million behind, along with three

sons — Evgenyi, Ruslan, and Yevgen — who have since engaged in a global hunt for their

missing inheritance.

This latest chapter concerns but a small sliver of the family fortune — namely, one

savings account held with Defendant SunTrust Bank at its Boca Raton, Florida, branch.

Scherban opened this account around 1994 and deposited more than a million dollars into it. In

2003, the account was apparently closed with no funds remaining, but SunTrust has little

explanation for what happened to its balance. More than twelve years later, Plaintiffs brought a

twelve-count Complaint, alleging foul play. The Court has since dismissed all but two of those

counts, leaving one claim for accounting and one for fraudulent concealment. After protracted

discovery, both parties now moves for summary judgment. The Court will grant SunTrust’s

Motion, thereby closing the book on the Bank’s role in this unfortunate tale.

1 I. Background

A. Factual Background

The Court outlined the Scherban family history in detail in its previous Opinion. See

Trudel v. SunTrust Bank, 223 F. Supp. 3d 71, 76-81 (D.D.C. 2016). It therefore limits the

discussion here to the aforementioned savings account (with terminal digits 5216) and its often

puzzling transactions. As SunTrust ultimately prevails, the Court recounts these facts in the light

most favorable to Plaintiffs, except to note disputes where relevant.

At the outset, the parties debate when exactly Scherban opened this joint savings account.

Plaintiffs plead that he did so around 1994, while SunTrust suggests it was opened on March 1,

1995. Compare Second Amended Complaint (SAC), ¶ 38 with ECF No. 79 (Def. MSJ), Exh. 3

(Affidavit of John A. Barry), ¶ 5. The ownership of that account is also somewhat murky, but

the Court has assumed (to Plaintiffs’ benefit) that Scherban designated two direct beneficiaries

on the account: Nikitina and Ruslan. See Trudel, 223 F. Supp. 3d at 78.

Regardless of Ruslan’s ownership status, he alleges that he “was not involved in

managing” the account, “did not get any copies of any statements from SunTrust,” and did not

review any such statements. See ECF No. 31-9 (First Affidavit of Ruslan E. Scherban), ¶¶ 4-5,

10. He lacked this knowledge because Scherban’s assistant, Alexei Alexeenko, was tasked with

keeping tabs on the family’s American financial interests. Id., ¶¶ 4, 10 (identifying Alexeenko as

the “manager” of the account and speculating that copies of statements from SunTrust were

“withheld by Alexeenko, who . . . concealed various documentation from [Ruslan] and from the

two other heirs”).

With Ruslan left in the dark, the account’s balance slowly dwindled. Before Scherban’s

and Nikitina’s deaths on November 3, 1996, Plaintiffs pled that the 5216 account contained over

one million dollars. See SAC, ¶ 41. On December 17 of that year, SunTrust received a fax 2 signed “N. Nikitina” requesting that the Bank transfer via wire $282,000 from Account 5216 to a

Czech Republic bank account held by a corporation, Gwynfe Holding Limited. See SAC, ¶¶ 45-

46. Among other suspicious circumstances (e.g., Nikitina was deceased), the fax misspelled the

name of the Czech bank and did not use SunTrust’s wire-transfer form. Id., ¶¶ 52-53. Yet

SunTrust employees approved the transfer anyway. Id., ¶¶ 48-51. The family discovered in

2014 or 2015 that Gwynfe was incorporated in the British Virgin Islands until its dissolution

sometime after 1999. Id., ¶¶ 57-58. In addition to suing SunTrust here, Plaintiffs named

Gwynfe as a Defendant, and the Clerk of Court recently entered default against it. See ECF No.

99. That transfer and Gwynfe’s culpability, however, are not before the Court now.

Given the counts that remain, the current controversy instead centers on one question:

what happened to the remaining $812,215.93 in the account? The answer is elusive. According

to SunTrust, any records related to the 5216 account are long gone, as it retained such

information for only seven years after closing the account. Plaintiffs have pieced together

several old bank statements, but those records paint only an incomplete picture of the account’s

activity. A June 30, 1997, statement, for example, shows an unexplained $50,000 debit, leaving

a balance (after accrual of interest) of approximately $771,000. See ECF No. 46-5 (Pl. Opp. to

MTD), Exh. A. Then, a statement dated March 31, 2001, shows $3,773.04 remaining. See ECF

No. 71-2 (Pl. Reply to Mot. to Reopen Discovery), Exh. 5. SunTrust has little explanation of

how roughly $767,000 went missing over those nearly four years, other than casually pinning the

blame on Alexeenko. See Def. MSJ at 5. For their part, Plaintiffs seem to allege that the Bank

has squirreled away the cash. See SAC, ¶¶ 62-65. Finally, SunTrust reports that the account

“was closed” in January 22, 2003, apparently with no money remaining. See Def. MSJ at 3; see

also id., Exh. 3. It again offers no explanation of where the $3,733 balance went, other than

3 speculating that the funds “were withdrawn,” perhaps by Ruslan. See ECF No. 87 (Def. Opp. to

Pl. MSJ) at 8-9.

Adding to the intrigue, Plaintiffs have also discovered a June 2002 letter, purportedly

from SunTrust, sent to lawyers for Nikitina’s estate. See ECF No. 81-5 (Pl. MSJ), Exh. B. The

letter reports that there has been no “client-initiated” activity in the account since March 1, 1995

(i.e., the day SunTrust says that Scherban opened the account), and that the Bank’s statements

were repeatedly returned in the mail. Id. Defendant has no record of sending this letter, which

contradicts Plaintiffs’ own evidence showing withdrawals from the account between 1997 and

2001.

B. Procedural History

On November 6, 2015, the three sons and Scherban’s and Nikitina’s estates filed the

present lawsuit against Defendants SunTrust, Alexeenko, Gwynfe, and Does 1 through 10 (ten

unnamed individuals, including Gwynfe employees, who had facilitated the allegedly fraudulent

transfer). See ECF No. 1. Since then, this suit has undergone several metamorphoses.

One month after filing, Plaintiffs apparently feared that the Court lacked personal

jurisdiction over Alexeenko, and so they stipulated to dismissing him without prejudice. See

ECF No. 11 (Notice of Voluntary Dismissal). Then, following SunTrust’s first motion to

dismiss, the Court issued an Opinion instructing Plaintiffs to remove the estates as parties, as

estates cannot bring a direct suit, and to designate instead the proper personal representative. See

Estate of Scherban v. SunTrust Bank, 2016 WL 777913, at *2 (D.D.C. Feb. 26, 2016). The

Second Amended Complaint, which is operative here, named Deborah Trudel (the estate

representative), Ruslan, Evgenyi, and Yevgen as Plaintiffs. The Court subsequently dismissed

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