Ives v. Ramsden

142 Wash. App. 369
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 2, 2008
DocketNo. 34446-7-II
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 142 Wash. App. 369 (Ives v. Ramsden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ives v. Ramsden, 142 Wash. App. 369 (Wash. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

[375]*375¶1 — David Ramsden, a registered securities broker, recommended that 75-year-old G. Jerome Ives buy investments that depleted nearly all of his liquid assets. Ramsden also induced Ives to personally loan Ramsden funds to purchase a home for a very low interest rate and then defaulted. Ives passed away and, on July 1, 1999, the Ives estate sued Ramsden, alleging: (1) breach of fiduciary duty, (2) breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing, (3) a violation of the Consumer Protection Act (CPA), chapter 19.86 RCW, (4) securities fraud contrary to RCW 21.20.010, and (5) violation of the suitability rule contrary to RCW 21.20.702. The trial court found that Ramsden violated his fiduciary duties and duties of good faith and fair dealing, committed securities fraud, violated the CPA, and violated the suitability rule. Both parties appeal.

Quinn-Brintnall, J.

¶2 Ramsden appeals, arguing that (1) the parties agreed to resolve any dispute through arbitration and he did not waive the parties’ arbitration agreement, (2) the statute of limitations bars this action, (3) the trial court should have allowed him to amend his answer to raise a failure-to-mitigate-damages defense, and (4) he is entitled to attorney fees below and here as the prevailing party. The Ives estate cross-appeals, arguing that the trial court erred when it found that foxir limited partnerships did not violate the suitability rule, RCW 21.20.702.1 As to Ramsden’s claims, we hold that because there is no private cause of action under the suitability rule, a trial court may not impose remedies under The Securities Act of Washington, chapter 21.20 RCW, for its violation. But we affirm the trial court’s decision awarding damages to the Ives estate for the Texas Keystone Natural Gas Drilling limited partnership and personal loan transactions because other violations support [376]*376the trial court’s damages award and the imposition of Securities Act remedies did not prejudice Ramsden. Also, we affirm the trial court’s grant of attorney fees to the Ives estate and award it further attorney fees on appeal. As to the cross-appeal, we hold that the findings of fact are insufficient to support the trial court’s conclusion that the investments, as evidence of Ramsden’s violation of his duty of care and fair dealing toward Ives, were not unsuitable. Thus, we remand to the trial court for proper findings of fact and conclusions of law regarding the suitability of the first four limited partnership investments and reconsideration of the related claims that Ramsden violated his duty of care and fair dealing regarding these investments.

FACTS

Background

¶3 The trial court found the following facts. For reasons discussed below, they are undisputed and verities on appeal.

¶4 Ramsden is a securities salesperson registered with the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD) and must comply with the NASD rules of fair practice and with the Securities Act. He associated with broker-dealer firms as an independent contractor and specialized in marketing limited partnership interests. Ramsden has a law degree but has never practiced law.

¶5 Around 1988, Ramsden moved to Sequim and befriended Ives, who was then 75 years old.2 Ives was retired and his income (from pensions, Social Security, and investments) was about $31,000 per year. As he explained to Ramsden, Ives also owned: (1) a mortgaged mobile home; (2) no real estate; (3) two cars worth about $10,000; and (4) about $105,000 in liquid assets, almost all in mutual funds. Although he was not totally naive and kept meticulous [377]*377financial records, Ives was an unsophisticated investor. Ives wanted to invest in order to generate cash flow with conservative investments. Ramsden recommended that Ives purchase several investments.

A. Limited Partnerships and Annuity

¶6 Ramsden sold Ives five limited partnerships and an annuity that were speculative and illiquid.3 Between 1989 and 1993, Ives sold mutual funds to get the cash necessary to purchase the five limited partnership investments for $47,150. Ramsden received an eight percent commission on the partnership sales, considerably higher than the rate brokers typically receive for the sale of stocks, bonds, and mutual funds. In 1992, Ramsden also sold to Ives an American Skandia annuity for $20,000. The annuity was also illiquid, with an annuity maturation date of 1999, when Ives would be 86 years old.

¶7 In 1993, the two men executed the last of the five limited partnerships, which included one for Texas Keystone. On the application, Ramsden intentionally misrepresented Ives’s annual income, net worth, investment goals, and investment experience in order to induce Texas Keystone to accept Ives’s offer even though he was not a qualified investor under the company’s criteria. Ives was then 80 years old and the investment nearly depleted his remaining liquid mutual funds.

B. Personal Loans

¶8 Ramsden also borrowed money from Ives to finance his own home. In 1990, Ramsden borrowed $40,000 from Ives and $30,000 from another individual. The loan matured in one year and was supposedly secured by a deed of trust on Ramsden’s home. Ramsden withdrew the money from Ives’s mutual funds. In lieu of interest, Ramsden promised to replace the mutual funds and any interest that [378]*378Ives would have received had he kept the money invested in mutual funds. Ramsden did not repay Ives at the year’s end, nor did he execute a deed of trust.

¶9 Instead of repaying Ives, Ramsden executed a 1991 promissory note. In this note, he added $2,000 to the principal already owed. That “payment” equaled a five percent annual interest rate on the $40,000 loan, substantially lower than the market rate for similar mortgages. In addition, in the 1991 note, Ramsden borrowed $30,000 from Ives to pay off the other individual who had financed Ramsden’s home. At this point, over 90 percent of Ives’s assets were illiquid. The 1991 promissory note totaled a $72,000 debt on a four-year term. The note was again supposedly secured by a deed of trust to Ramsden’s home.

¶10 Four years passed and Ramsden still had not paid the debt. Instead, he rolled the debt over into a 1995 promissory note totaling $86,900, including unpaid interest from the previous note. The 1995 note contained the following terms: (1) 8 percent interest (where the market rate was between 12 and 14 percent), (2) a maturity date of 2006 (when Ives would be 93 years old), (3) no acceleration clause, and (4) recited consideration of the deed of trust executed on the 1990 note. Ramsden never provided or recorded a deed of trust. He presented the loan offers as investment opportunities.

C. Ives’s Death and the Ives Estate’s Actions

¶11 Ives died in 1996. Ives’s son was appointed personal representative of Ives’s estate on July 9,1996. When Ives’s son learned of the questionable investments, he sold many at a substantial loss, reasonably concluding that the sales would most benefit the Ives estate.

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Bluebook (online)
142 Wash. App. 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ives-v-ramsden-washctapp-2008.