Gross v. Weingarten

217 F.3d 208
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJune 30, 2000
Docket98-2000, 98-2393, 98-2405
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 217 F.3d 208 (Gross v. Weingarten) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gross v. Weingarten, 217 F.3d 208 (4th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded by published opinion. Judge MICHAEL wrote the opinion, in which Chief Judge WILKINSON and Judge TRAXLER joined.

OPINION

MICHAEL, Circuit Judge:

Steven T. Foster, in his capacity as the deputy receiver for Fidelity Bankers Life Insurance Company (Fidelity Bankers), brought this lawsuit in federal court against Robert Weingarten, Gerry R. Ginsberg, Leonard Gubar, and Shearson Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc. (Shear-son). 1 The deputy receiver’s sixteen-count complaint alleged that Weingarten, Ginsberg, and Gubar controlled Fidelity Bankers as directors of Fidelity Bankers itself and as directors and shareholders of its parent company, First Capital Holdings, Inc. (First Capital), and caused Fidelity Bankers to commit securities violations, various forms of fraud, and violations of Virginia corporate and insurance law. Shearson was sued on the theory that it was a controlling person by virtue of its ownership stake in First Capital. The deputy receiver further alleged that Wein-garten, Ginsberg, and Gubar breached their fiduciary duty to Fidelity Bankers and that Shearson aided and abetted that breach. The defendants asserted counterclaims for exoneration, indemnification, and contribution based on their prior settlement of a policyholder class action involving many of the same claims. The counterclaims in this action were severed. After a twelve-day trial on the deputy receiver’s sixteen claims, the deputy receiver voluntarily dismissed six of those claims, and the district court awarded judgment as a matter of law to the defendants on a seventh. The jury returned a verdict for the defendants on all nine of the remaining claims. Thereafter, on motion of the deputy receiver, the district court dismissed all of the counterclaims for want of jurisdiction, holding that the state receivership court had exclusive jurisdiction over all claims against Fidelity Bankers.

The deputy receiver appeals the judgment in favor of the defendants, arguing that the district court committed reversible error in certain evidentiary rulings and in its award of judgment to the defendants on the one count. The defendants cross-appeal the dismissal of their counterclaims. After considering the direct appeal, we find no reversible error and therefore affirm the jury verdict and judgment in favor of the defendants. With respect to the cross-appeal, we hold that the dis *212 trict court erred in concluding that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction, and we reverse on that point.

I.

We begin with the winding history of this case, which has involved proceedings before three federal district judges and the Virginia State Corporation Commission. The business in federal court has included class action settlement proceedings and a twelve-day jury trial. There was also a nine-day insolvency and rehabilitation proceeding before the State Corporation Commission.

Defendants Weingarten, Ginsberg, and Gubar were directors and shareholders of First Capital, a financial services and insurance holding company. In 1985 First Capital, acting through its subsidiaries, acquired Fidelity Bankers, an insurance company based in Richmond, Virginia, for $75 million. 2 After First Capital bought Fidelity Bankers, Weingarten, Ginsberg, and Gubar became directors on Fidelity Bankers’ ten-member board. Fidelity Bankers and First Capital then entered into an “Investment Advisory Agreement,” in which First Capital agreed to counsel and advise Fidelity Bankers in its investment program, to conduct research and make recommendations for the purchase and sale of securities, and to execute buy and sell orders for Fidelity Bankers. For these services First Capital was paid a sum equal to 0.5 percent of Fidelity Bankers’ invested assets each month.

After the change in ownership Fidelity Bankers began to emphasize the sale of annuities. To that end, the company introduced annuities featuring relatively high crediting rates (rates of return) and low surrender charges. The purchaser of one of these annuities paid a single premium in advance and received a guaranteed minimum rate of return over a one-year period. Bach year on the anniversary date of the annuity, the purchaser had the option to either keep the annuity at whatever rate Fidelity Bankers was then offering or get his money back. A purchaser who decided to get his money back, that is, “surrender” his policy, paid little or no penalty. These annuities were extremely popular, so popular, in fact,' that the company’s assets increased from approximately $228 million in 1985 to approximately $4 billion by the end of 1990.

The statutory accounting rules applicable to insurance companies require that the entire cost of issuing a policy be charged in the year of sale rather than amortized, so liabilities in a growing company typically increase faster than assets. In order to pay the guaranteed rate on the annuities and to cover the expenses of writing the policies, Fidelity Bankers (like any other insurer) took the premiums that it received from annuitants and reinvested them. Acting under the Investment Advisory Agreement, First Capital substantially increased the percentage of high yield, non-investment grade (junk) bonds in Fidelity Bankers’ portfolio until 38 percent of Fidelity Bankers’ assets were junk bonds. These investment decisions were approved by Fidelity Bankers’ investment committee (Weingarten, Ginsberg, and Edward Simon, Fidelity Bankers’ president) and were ratified by the Fidelity Bankers board.

On November 15, 1988, defendant Shearson purchased 44 percent of the stock of First Capital, which constituted *213 36.6 percent of the voting stock. Under its stock purchase agreement Shearson gained the right to appoint four of the six directors on First Capital’s board, two of whom were Shearson employees. The following year Shearson’s stock interest was diluted to 28 percent, but Shearson’s four directors remained on the board.

In April 1991 a downturn in the junk bond market and adverse publicity about Fidelity Bankers’ sister company in California, First Capital Life Insurance Co., sparked a substantial increase in the number of surrender requests at Fidelity Bankers. The Virginia Bureau of Insurance became concerned that Fidelity Bankers would be unable to meet the surrenders as they were tendered and that a “run on the bank” would result. Fidelity Bankers’ junk bonds, if sold at that time, would have been worth considerably less than their book value and might have been insufficient to satisfy the surrenders. 3 On May 13, 1991, the Circuit Court of the City of Richmond entered an order placing Fidelity Bankers in receivership and appointing the State Corporation Commission (Commission) as receiver. Acting in its capacity as a court, see Va.Code Ann. § 38.2-1508, the Commission issued its own order appointing a deputy receiver.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
217 F.3d 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gross-v-weingarten-ca4-2000.