Gordon v. Dadante

294 F. App'x 235
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 23, 2008
Docket07-3560
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 294 F. App'x 235 (Gordon v. Dadante) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gordon v. Dadante, 294 F. App'x 235 (6th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

*236 RYAN, Circuit Judge.

This appeal involves the arbitration rights of H & R Block Financial Advisors, Inc. (HRBFA), a stakeholder-defendant in a complex securities action. In the course of the litigation, HRBFA attempted to arbitrate certain claims relating to the margin debt held in its accounts and moved the district court to issue a stay of this lawsuit pending arbitration. The district court denied the motion to stay, ruling that HRBFA had waived its right to arbitration by virtue of its participation in the litigation. The court also enjoined HRBFA from pursuing arbitration. HRBFA now appeals the judgment.

I.

On November 21, 2005, Sheldon Gordon filed suit against David Dadante and various investment funds Dadante managed (Funds). Gordon’s complaint also named four brokerage firms, one of which was HRBFA, as stakeholder-defendants in the suit.

Gordon’s complaint alleged that Dadante solicited approximately $50 million from various individuals and used the money to fund a classic “Ponzi” scheme, whereby original investors were enticed to invest even greater sums upon receiving very high returns on their original investments. The “high returns,” of course, were really new investment capital contributed by subsequent investors. Dadante allegedly paid $26 million to some of the early investors in this way. Gordon’s complaint also alleged that Dadante fabricated account statements, manipulated accounts, and engaged in numerous acts of self-dealing.

As part of the alleged “Ponzi” scheme, Dadante opened numerous accounts at several brokerage firms, including HRBFA, and through these accounts purchased a considerable amount of stock for the Funds he was managing. When Da-dante opened an account with HRBFA, he signed an Account Agreement that, among other things, permitted HRBFA to grant margin loans on the accounts; provided HRBFA with a general lien and security interest in all the assets in the accounts for the margin loans; and subjected all claims arising out of the relationship to mandatory arbitration.

The Funds’ primary asset is common stock in a company called Innotrac Corporation, of which the Funds own approximately $10 million worth of shares. Dadante purchased stock in Innotrac, Rambus, Inc., and Taser International, Inc., through the HRBFA account on its margin borrowing privileges. Consequently, the shares are encumbered by hundreds of thousands of dollars in margin debt.

Shortly after Gordon filed this lawsuit, the district court appointed Mark Dottore as the Receiver of the Funds to collect and preserve assets, to investigate investor losses, and to identify the victims of Da-dante’s alleged fraud. On the same day, the court also enjoined the stakeholder-defendants, including HRBFA, from liquidating any of the Funds’ assets without the permission of the court, reasoning that immediate liquidation of the shares would be severely detrimental to the Funds’ investors. Nevertheless, the Receiver instructed HRBFA to sell all of the Rambus and Taser stock held in one of its accounts and requested that HRBFA transfer the proceeds from the sale to an account at another firm. HRBFA resisted this instruction by filing a motion to quash the transfer. HRBFA requested the court to issue an order preventing the Receiver from forcing the transfer on the ground that it would negatively impact HRBFA’s security interest in the assets. The district court denied the motion.

*237 In the meantime, Gordon amended his complaint by adding all the investors in the Funds as plaintiffs in the suit. On May 1, 2006, HRBFA responded by filing its answer, expressly reserving its right to compel arbitration.

On July 17, 2006, a group of the Funds’ investors, who were added as plaintiffs in the amended complaint, filed a separate lawsuit against two fellow investors, Frank and Mike Regalbuto. See Small v. Regalbuto, No. l:06-cv-01721 (N.D.Ohio July 17, 2006). The Small complaint alleged that the Regalbutos made false representations to the other investors about the Funds and breached their fiduciary duty to the others whom the Regalbutos solicited to invest millions of dollars in the Funds. In October 2006, the Regalbutos filed an answer denying the allegations in the Small complaint, filed a third-party complaint against all of the stakeholders, including HRBFA, as well as various other defendants, alleging that all the named defendants committed fraud. In response, HRBFA filed a motion to compel arbitration. The district court then stayed the Small lawsuit indefinitely and has never ruled on HRBFA’s motion.

Between the time the complaint in the Gordon case was filed and the time the Regalbutos filed their third-party complaint in the Small case, HRBFA had been in communication with the Receiver, providing him with information about the accounts on an informal basis. However, when the Regalbutos alleged a claim against HRBFA, it ceased providing information to the Receiver. This prompted the Receiver to pursue formal discovery, which HRBFA promptly opposed.

Meanwhile, HRBFA had filed a motion in the underlying Gordon case requesting the court to order that the proceeds generated from the earlier sale of stock be applied against the margin debt. HRBFA argued that the money was generating significantly less interest than the debt on the margin loan was accumulating. The district court granted this motion and applied the total amount from the sale, $670,162.33, towards reducing the margin debt on HRBFA’s accounts.

On December 5, 2006, the Receiver filed a notice to depose William Salem who was employed by HRBFA, but was not personally a party to the suit. HRBFA responded by filing a motion to quash the notice of deposition, arguing that the Receiver was attempting to use the discovery process to identify potential claims, rather than investigating actual claims. HRBFA also stated in its motion that it would litigate any claims in arbitration if claims were actually brought against it. The district court denied this motion.

On January 19, 2007, another group of the plaintiffs in the Gordon case moved the court for leave to file a second amended complaint to assert claims similar to those alleged by the plaintiffs in the Small case, against, inter alia, HRBFA and the other stakeholder-defendants. However, the court never ruled on this motion and no claims have ever been filed against HRBFA in this case.

On February 1, 2007, HRBFA initiated NASD arbitration against the Funds and Dadante, asking for a judgment award in the amount of $814,379.79, based upon the outstanding margin debt, with interest, as well as related costs and expenses. HRBFA also moved the court to stay all adversarial proceedings against it in the Gordon case pending resolution of the arbitration. The Receiver responded by filing a “Motion to Show Cause and for Preliminary Injunction” seeking to enjoin the NASD proceedings.

The district court granted the motion, ruling sua sponte that HRBFA waived its *238 right to arbitration by failing to raise it earlier and by its participation in the litigation.

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Bluebook (online)
294 F. App'x 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-dadante-ca6-2008.