H. Davis v. Lifetime Capital, Inc.

560 F. App'x 477
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 18, 2014
Docket11-4442
StatusUnpublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 560 F. App'x 477 (H. Davis v. Lifetime Capital, Inc.) 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
H. Davis v. Lifetime Capital, Inc., 560 F. App'x 477 (6th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

CARR, District Judge:

Intervenor-Appellant, Natlis Capital, LLC (Natlis), appeals from an order denying its motion to intervene under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 24(a) and (b)(1). Natlis seeks to intervene in H. Thane Davis’s suit against Lifetime Capital, Inc. (Lifetime). In the underlying action, Davis alleged fraud and breach of contract against Lifetime. 1 At Davis’s request the court appointed a receiver, Thomas Moran, to protect Lifetime’s insurance policy portfolio pending a decision on the merits. Natlis seeks to intervene to recover money Moran seized while managing Lifetime’s portfolio.

Appellees contend that Natlis lacks constitutional standing and capacity to sue. Even if Natlis does not lack standing or capacity, appellees argue the lower court properly denied Natlis’s motion to intervene under both Fed.R.Civ.P. 24(a) and (b)(1) because it was untimely.

We hold that Natlis was not required to have constitutional standing to intervene, and that its motion meets the requirements of Fed.R.Civ.P. 24(a). Accordingly, we reverse the lower court’s decision denying intervention and hold Natlis has a right to intervene.

We remand the case to the district court to determine whether Natlis has capacity to sue and, if so, to determine the merits of Natlis’s conversion claim. Contrary to ap-pellees’ contention, the record does not reflect that they raised the issue of Nat-lis’s capacity to sue in the lower court. 2

*479 Factual Background

1. Overview

Natlis and Lifetime were viatical investment companies. 3 David Svete incorporated Lifetime in 1997 and Natlis in 1999.

Natlis is one of an unknown number of entities Svete formed or allegedly caused to be formed after forming Lifetime. Nat-lis’s ownership is complex. Svete’s father, William Svete (William), is the president of Gold Finch Investments. Gold Finch Investments is the general partner of the Svete Family Limited Partnership and DWS Enterprises Limited Partnership. The Svete Family Limited Partnership owns Natlis.

The extent of Natlis’s actual business operations and its connection to Lifetime is unclear. At its inception, Svete, William, and Kathleen LaFrance managed Natlis. On April 1, 2000, Natlis entered into an agreement to sell insurance policies to Lifetime. Less than one year later, on October 26, 2000, Lifetime terminated the agreement.

Both Svete and William resigned from Natlis on November 5, 2001.

Contrary to appellees’ contention, there is no evidence in the record that Natlis ever actually sold any policies to Lifetime under the agreement. Similarly, there is no evidence Natlis received any other loans or payments from Lifetime.

*480 The same cannot be said of other entities associated with Svete. It is clear that from 1997-2001, Svete defrauded Lifetime investors. He transferred money from Lifetime’s premium-reserve account to various entities, trusts, and bank accounts as “loans” and “payments” for a variety of services.

On January 1, 2004, a jury indicted Svete and seven co-conspirators on charges associated with the fraudulent transfers. The government alleged Svete and his co-conspirators funneled money from Lifetime’s premium-reserve account to a specific group of entities. However, the government did not allege that Natlis received funds, and William was not indicted as a co-conspirator. 4

On February 19, 2004, shortly after the indictment, Davis, one of an estimated 3,000 Lifetime investors, sued Lifetime. Davis represented that Lifetime had amassed a portfolio of insurance policies with a face value in excess of $150,000,000. Davis made two allegations in his complaint: 1) Lifetime and Medical Underwriters fraudulently misrepresented via-tors’ life expectancies, and 2) Lifetime misrepresented to investors that it es-crowed enough investor money to pay policy premiums, in breach of its contracts with investors.

Davis sought damages covering the value of the policies that Lifetime allowed to lapse and the value of policies likely to lapse in the near future because Lifetime had insufficient funds to pay premiums. In addition, Davis asked the court to appoint Moran to manage the remaining policies in Lifetime’s portfolio and prevent further losses to investors while the suit was pending.

To support his fraud and contract claims and request for a receiver, Davis informed the court of Svete’s recent indictment. He incorporated, by reference, the thirty-page grand-jury indictment issued approximately one month earlier in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Florida.

Lifetime’s president, Phyllis Lucas, consented to Moran’s appointment as receiver for Lifetime.

Moran’s mandate as receiver was to manage premium payments and thereby salvage, to the greatest extent possible, *481 Lifetime’s remaining insurance policy portfolio. To do so, Moran had to maintain premium payments on the policies to prevent their lapse and the ensuing loss to investors. He had three options for obtaining money to pay the policy premiums: 1) get loans from financial institutions, 2) use money from policies in Lifetime’s portfolio that matured and provided payouts during the receivership, or 3) track down money wrongfully transferred from Lifetime’s premium-reserve account to other accounts and entities prior to the receivership.

The final option for obtaining funds was arguably the most difficult. 5 Moran tried unsuccessfully to sue and recover money from the companies specifically alleged to have received funds. 6

Natlis was not sued, as Moran lacked sufficient facts to form a complaint against Natlis. Nonetheless, in 2005 he seized the company’s funds for the Lifetime receivership. His first request to “modify” the receivership order misrepresented that Natlis and other entities were among those actually alleged to have received Lifetime funds. See infra Section 2. A. ii. On the basis of this representation, the court gave Moran authority to seize the funds of any entity Svete created regardless of whether it had any ties to Lifetime.

In 2005, Moran seized $100,000 Natlis had on deposit with the Florida Secretary of State. In February 2008, William, acting on behalf of Natlis, sought to intervene in the suit to recover the funds. At that time, the receivership estate still contained $7,000,000.

The lower court waited three years and eight months to rule on Natlis’s motion to intervene.

2.

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Bluebook (online)
560 F. App'x 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-davis-v-lifetime-capital-inc-ca6-2014.