German American Financial Advisors & Trust Co. d/b/a German American Investment Svcs., Primevest Financial Svcs., Inc., and Jeffery W. Tooley v. Dennis M. Reed

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 22, 2012
Docket19A01-1110-PL-428
StatusPublished

This text of German American Financial Advisors & Trust Co. d/b/a German American Investment Svcs., Primevest Financial Svcs., Inc., and Jeffery W. Tooley v. Dennis M. Reed (German American Financial Advisors & Trust Co. d/b/a German American Investment Svcs., Primevest Financial Svcs., Inc., and Jeffery W. Tooley v. Dennis M. Reed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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German American Financial Advisors & Trust Co. d/b/a German American Investment Svcs., Primevest Financial Svcs., Inc., and Jeffery W. Tooley v. Dennis M. Reed, (Ind. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

FILED FOR PUBLICATION Jun 22 2012, 9:06 am

CLERK of the supreme court, court of appeals and tax court

ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS: ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:

DAVID WILLIAMS RUSSELL MARIETTO V. MASSILLAMANY DAVID I. RUBIN Starr Austen & Miller, LLP Harrison & Moberly, LLP Logansport, Indiana Indianapolis, Indiana

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

GERMAN AMERICAN FINANCIAL ADVISORS & ) TRUST COMPANY d/b/a GERMAN AMERICAN ) INVESTMENT SERVICES, PRIMEVEST FINANCIAL ) SERVICES, INC., and JEFFERY W. TOOLEY, ) ) Appellants-Defendants, ) ) vs. ) No. 19A01-1110-PL-428 ) DENNIS M. REED, ) ) Appellee-Plaintiff. )

APPEAL FROM THE DUBOIS CIRCUIT COURT The Honorable William E. Weikert, Judge Cause No. 19C01-0904-PL-172

June 22, 2012

OPINION - FOR PUBLICATION

NAJAM, Judge STATEMENT OF THE CASE

German American Financial Advisors & Trust Company d/b/a German American

Investment Services (“GAFA”), PrimeVest Financial Services, Inc. (“PrimeVest”), and

Jeffrey W. Tooley (collectively “Appellants”) appeal the trial court’s denial of their

second motion to compel arbitration of Dennis M. Reed’s claims against them.

Appellants present the following issues for our review:

1. Whether the trial court erred when it denied their motion to compel arbitration.

2. Whether, assuming the trial court erred when it denied the motion to compel arbitration, Reed can be compelled to arbitrate his claims against GAFA.

We reverse and remand with instructions.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On March 13, 2003, Tooley, an employee of GAFA and PrimeVest,1 assisted Reed

in opening an IRA account with PrimeVest. Reed filled out a document entitled “IRA

New Account Application” (“2003 application”) on that date, and the following language

appeared directly above Reed’s signature:

I have read, understand and agree to the Important Disclosures and the Customer Agreement that are a part of this New Account Application packet, as well as the separate Privacy Policy.

I AM AWARE THAT SECTION 20 OF THE CUSTOMER AGREEMENT CONTAINS AN AGREEMENT TO ARBITRATE DISPUTES.

1 PrimeVest is a “registered securities broker/dealer” and had a “commission sharing agreement” with GAFA at all times relevant to this appeal. Appellant’s App. at 27. On appeal, the parties provide no further information regarding the relationship between PrimeVest and GAFA. 2 Appellants’ App. at 60. And Section 20 of the Customer Agreement incorporated by

reference in the application provided in relevant part that Reed agreed that “ANY

DISPUTE BETWEEN PRIMEVEST AND [REED] ARISING OUT OF THIS

AGREEMENT SHALL BE SUBMITTED TO ARBITRATION[.]” Id. at 48.

On April 19, 2006, Tooley advised Reed that he should “roll over” his existing

IRA accounts into a variable rate annuity, which Reed did. Id. at 12.2 Tooley told Reed

that the return on that investment after three years would be approximately $100,000.

And Tooley stated that Reed would be able to withdraw the full amount from the account,

without penalties, at that time. But when Reed sought to withdraw all of the funds from

the annuity in 2009, after Tooley had left his employment with GAFA, Frederick

Mattingly, a GAFA employee, informed Reed that he “would only be able to withdraw a

portion of the account without incurring significant penalties.” Id. at 13.

On April 15, 2009, Reed filed a complaint against Appellants alleging that they:

violated the Indiana Uniform Securities Act; committed fraud; committed constructive

fraud; were negligent; and breached their fiduciary duty. On June 10, Appellants filed

their first motion to compel arbitration. In support of that motion, Appellants submitted

the following: a copy of a new account application Reed had signed on March 11, 2008

(“2008 application”);3 and an affidavit executed by Andrew Krempp, the vice president of

GAFA. In support of his response in opposition to the motion to compel arbitration,

2 Reed’s complaint alleges facts that Appellants dispute. For purposes of this appeal, we need not resolve the factual disputes. For ease of discussion, we set out the basic facts as set out in Reed’s complaint. 3 Reed had signed a new account application in 2003, but Tooley asked him to sign another application in 2008. 3 Reed argued in part that “the clear language of the New Account Application’s

arbitration clause shows it is prospective only, not retroactive, and therefore does not

apply to the allegations of this lawsuit.” Appellee’s App. at 32. In particular, Reed

signed the 2008 new account application approximately two years after Tooley had

advised Reed to purchase the annuity, which was the subject matter of the lawsuit.

On July 23, 2009, Appellants filed their Reply in Support of Motion to Compel

Arbitration, and they attached as Exhibit I the 2003 application signed by Reed. In

addition, Appellants included a copy of the “Customer Agreement” incorporated by

reference in the new account application. Appellants argued that by signing the 2008

new account application, Reed “ratified” his 2003 agreement to arbitrate. Id. at 45.

After deposing Krempp, Reed filed a “Surreply in Opposition to Motion to

Compel Arbitration and Motion for Sanction Against Defendants of Denial of Their

Motion to Compel Arbitration Based on Defendant’s Submission of False Affidavits to

the Court in Support of that Motion.” In deposing Krempp, Reed had learned that neither

Krempp nor PrimeVest had maintained a complete copy of Reed’s new account

applications in their files. In particular, while the signature page of each application was

maintained in the files, a copy of the Customer Agreement incorporated by reference in

those applications was not kept in Reed’s files. And Krempp admitted during his

deposition that the copies of the Customer Agreement submitted to the trial court in

support of their motion to compel arbitration and reply in support of motion to compel

arbitration were not the correct versions of the Agreement.4 In other words, Appellants

4 PrimeVest modified the terms of the Customer Agreement periodically over the years. 4 had not yet produced an accurate copy of the document purporting to contain an

arbitration clause. And when Krempp submitted his affidavit identifying the attached

Customer Agreement as the one that was incorporated by reference in the application

Reed had signed, Krempp had been mistaken. Following a hearing, the trial court denied

Appellants’ motion to compel arbitration and denied Reed’s motion for sanctions.

On December 4, 2009, PrimeVest and Tooley filed a second motion to compel

arbitration, and, on November 12, 2010, GAFA joined that motion.5 In support,

Appellants submitted the affidavits of Tooley; Mark Stieve, President and CEO of GAFA

at all times relevant to Reed’s complaint; and Kimberly Holweger, Director of Operations

of PrimeVest, as well as “a true and correct copy of the IRA New Account Application

(the “Application”) executed by Dennis M. Reed (“Reed”) dated March 13, 2003, with

attached Customer Agreement (the “Agreement”) in which account, in 2006, Mr. Reed

purchased the John Hancock annuity at issue in this litigation.” Appellants’ App. at 42.

Section 20 of the Customer Agreement provided that “any dispute between PrimeVest

and [Reed] arising out of this agreement shall be submitted to arbitration[.]” Id. at 48.

In his response in opposition to that motion, Reed argued in relevant part:

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German American Financial Advisors & Trust Co. d/b/a German American Investment Svcs., Primevest Financial Svcs., Inc., and Jeffery W. Tooley v. Dennis M. Reed, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/german-american-financial-advisors-trust-co-dba-german-american-indctapp-2012.