In Re Equity Funding Corp. of America Securities Litigation

416 F. Supp. 161, 22 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 368, 1976 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17010
CourtDistrict Court, C.D. California
DecidedJanuary 23, 1976
DocketM.D.L. 142
StatusPublished
Cited by86 cases

This text of 416 F. Supp. 161 (In Re Equity Funding Corp. of America Securities Litigation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, C.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Equity Funding Corp. of America Securities Litigation, 416 F. Supp. 161, 22 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 368, 1976 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17010 (C.D. Cal. 1976).

Opinion

LUCAS, District Judge.

Opinion on Motions Directed to Complaint

The occasion for this opinion is resolution of many defendants’ motions directed to the sufficiency of the pleadings in this litigation. The litigation arises out of an alleged securities fraud perpetrated through Equity Funding Corporation of America (hereinafter “EFCA”) and its subsidiaries. 1 After more than eight years of public trading in EFCA securities, the S.E.C. suspended trading in the company’s securities on March 27, 1973. On April 2, 1973, reports describing the alleged fraud at EFCA were published in the press, and numerous investor suits were filed throughout the country. 2 Most of the actions were transferred to the Central District of California for coordinated or consolidated pretrial proceedings before this Court, pursuant to the transfer and pretrial provisions of 28 U.S.C. § 1407. In Re Equity Funding Corporation of America Securities Litigation, 375 F.Supp. 1378 (J.P.M.L., 1974).

After transfer of the actions, this Court held a first preliminary pretrial conference to organize the conduct of discovery and other pretrial matters. Subsequently, the Court issued its General Management Order No. 1, which established the structure of these pretrial proceedings, set up certain discovery schedules, and required the plaintiffs to file a Unified and Consolidated Complaint. 3 The Court required that this *171 pleading be served on all the defendants or their counsel authorized to accept service.

The organized representatives of plaintiffs’ counsel thereupon filed the First Amended Unified and Consolidated Complaint (hereinafter the “Complaint”), the pleading to which the present motions are directed. The Complaint invokes subject matter jurisdiction of this Court pursuant to § 22 of the Securities Act of 1933, 4 § 27 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 5 and various other jurisdictional statutes. The Complaint also purports to state claims for relief under state and common laws, and the doctrine of pendent jurisdiction is invoked with regard to these claims. Paragraph 5 of the Complaint catalogues the federal securities laws and other theories under which claims are asserted. 6

In paragraphs 10-48, the Complaint sets out the alleged fraudulent activities related to EFCA and the acts of each defendant for which liability is claimed. 7 The scheme described by the Complaint was carried out by certain officers and directors of EFCA, designated in the Complaint as “primary defendants.” The conduct of these defendants caused the records and financial statements of EFCA to show continued false and inflated rates of growth in the stated assets, incomes, and earnings of the company and its subsidiaries. This was done to influence the price of EFCA securities traded on the national securities exchanges, to induce purchase of those securities by others, and to influence stockholders in other companies acquired by EFCA to exchange their stock in those companies for EFCA securities. From 1964 through April 2, 1973, the price of EFCA securities was inflated on account of the fraudulent activities at EFCA.

The misstatements about EFCA’s growth and financial condition were achieved, and EFCA’s true financial condition concealed through a number of fraudulent devices. These included false entries in the books, records, and financial reports of EFCA and its subsidiaries, use of foreign corporations to create fictitious and inflated assets for EFCA, and a method by which bogus life insurance policies were created for the files of Equity Funding Life Insurance Company (hereinafter “EFLIC”), a subsidiary of EFCA, then reinsured by unknowing companies or carried as assets by EFLIC. Loans were made to customers of EFCA and secured by mutual funds purchased by these same customers. These “premium funded loans” were listed as assets by EFCA, although by 1972, the amount of fictitious loans entered in the “premium funded loan” account reached a rate of $2,000,000 per month. Many filings were made with public agencies, all of which included false statements or misleading omissions necessary to conceal the scheme and inflate the value of EFCA securities. Other aspects of the scheme are also alleged in the Complaint.

The fraud at EFCA was continued for eight years with the aid, complicity, and neglect of many persons or business entities outside the EFCA structure that knew or should have known about the fraud. These persons or entities are named as “aider and abettor” defendants in the Complaint. They include the accountants for EFCA and its subsidiaries, underwriters for EFCA debenture issues, a firm that did actuarial work for EFLIC from 1966 on, a group of defendants that sold EFCA securities between March 6, 1973 and March 27, 1973, the national stock exchanges on which EFCA securities were traded, certain national banks that extended credit to EFCA, a non-subsidiary insurance company with which EFCA and EFLIC did business, the states of Illinois and California, in which *172 EFLIC was incorporated or did business, and a number of other defendants. According to the Complaint, there were certain “significant transactions” involved in the fraudulent scheme — a 1970 merger of Liberty Savings and Loan Association (hereinafter “Liberty”) with EFCA, EFCA’s 1971 merger with Bankers National Life Insurance Company (hereinafter “BNL”), and a 1969 EFCA acquisition of Ankony Angus, Inc. and Ankony Hyland Angus, Inc. (hereinafter collectively “Ankony”). The specific allegations with respect to these transactions and the conduct of each defendant will be described more fully below.

The Complaint sets out the plaintiffs’ claims in fourteen separate counts. Counts I through IV and XII are identical to the extent they purport to state claims against all the primary defendants and most of the aiders and abettors. Each of these counts incorporates the allegations described above, then states, “[t]he conduct of each defendant constitutes violations of the federal securities laws.” Common law negligence claims against the “aiders and abettors” and common law fraud and breach of fiduciary duty claims against the primary defendants are asserted. Each count says the primary defendants’ conduct was intended to deceive the plaintiffs and to induce plaintiffs’ trust in the market place. Plaintiffs say they relied on the integrity of the market place in their purchases of EFCA securities. The first four counts and Count XII differ only with regard to whom the plaintiffs are in each count.

Count I plaintiffs are described as “all open market purchasers of EFCA securities.” 8 No period limitations are placed on this group except insofar as EFCA securities were traded on the open market between 1964 and 1973. No distinction is made among purchasers of different types of securities. Attached to the Complaint is a list of the named plaintiffs who purportedly fall within the open market purchaser category.

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Bluebook (online)
416 F. Supp. 161, 22 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 368, 1976 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17010, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-equity-funding-corp-of-america-securities-litigation-cacd-1976.