Jefferies & Company, Inc. v. Arkus-Duntov

357 F. Supp. 1206, 13 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 293, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14066
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 12, 1973
Docket73 Civ. 1407 (MIG)
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 357 F. Supp. 1206 (Jefferies & Company, Inc. v. Arkus-Duntov) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jefferies & Company, Inc. v. Arkus-Duntov, 357 F. Supp. 1206, 13 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 293, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14066 (S.D.N.Y. 1973).

Opinion

GURFEIN, District Judge.

Plaintiff (“Jefferies”), a broker member of the New York Stock Exchange, sues to rescind a transaction in which it acted as a broker for the defendant Arkus-Duntov (“Duntov”) in the sale of 24,475 .shares of common stock of Equity .Funding Corporation of America (“Equity Funding”). It also seeks to enjoin the payment of two certified checks made by it to Duntov and to the defendant United Missouri Bank of Kansas City (“United Bank”) in the respective amounts of $192,256.35 and $217,-448.08, drawn in payment for the stock sold.

A temporary restraining order was signed by this Court on April 3, 1973 enjoining the payment of the two checks by the Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A. (“Chase”) on condition that the plaintiff post a bond for the full amount of the checks, $409,704.43, and setting the matter down for hearing on a preliminary injunction on April 9, 1973 at 10 a. m. .

The hearing was begun on April 9 and was adjourned after the completion of the plaintiff’s case, subject to the immediate taking of the deposition of Duntov by the plaintiff and the resumption of the hearing on April 10 at 3 p. m. The hearing continued on April 10 and was concluded that evening.

The affidavits admitted in evidence by consent and the oral testimony reveals the following.

Duntov was on March 26, 1973 an Executive Vice-President of Equity Funding. He was also a member of its five man executive committee and of its nine member board of directors.

On March 26,1973 Jefferies was asked by North American Equity Corporation (“North American”), a broker dealer which was a 100% subsidiary of Equity Funding, to sell 24,475 shares of Equity Funding common stock on the Stock Exchange. Jefferies effected the sales on the New York Stock Exchange that day at prices ranging from 16% to 17%. There was no disclosure to Jefferies at the time of the order that the sale was for the account of Duntov, or that he was an Executive Vice President and a director of Equity Funding.

' The settlement date for the March 26 sales was April 2. Before the settlement date arrived, on March 27 at 12:45 p. m. E.S.T., the next day after the sales in question, the New York Stock Exchange halted trading in Equity Funding common stock. On March 28 the Securities and Exchange Commission (“Commission”) suspended trading in all securities of Equity Funding. On April 2, the board of directors, including Duntov, voted to have Equity Funding consent to a final judgment of permanent injunction sought by the Commission. They also “informed the corporation that they will resign their directorships upon the appointment of a new board of directors . ” (jf 3 of consent to final judgment).

On April 3, 1973 the Commission instituted an action in the United States District Court for the Central District *1209 of California charging that Equity-Funding was engaged in acts and practices constituting violations of Sections 10(b), 13(a) and (b) and 14(a) of the 1934 Act. Specifically, the complaint alleged that Equity Funding engaged in “a massive and prolonged effort to alter its books and records, principally those of Equity Funding Life Insurance Company (EFLIC), to show the sales of insurance policies, the receipt of premium payments, the creation of assets and the establishment of reserves, when, in fact, such insurance policies had not been sold, premium payments had not been received, assets did not exist, and the reserves had not been established.” The complaint further alleges that Equity Funding “acting through certain of its officers and employees and those of its subsidiaries, principally EFLIC, caused insurance policy files to be created and maintained in the names of fictitious persons, persons whose policies had lapsed, persons who had applied for but were denied insurance, [and] caused insurance policies to be issued to persons upon which no premiums were paid and caused the face amount of existing policies to be increased without the knowledge of the policyholder.” It is also alleged that Equity Funding “caused said policies and fictitious insurance policies to be sold or conveyed to co-insurers and re-insurers and received therefrom payments of monies in excess of premiums purportedly received by EFLIC on the initial sales” and that Equity Funding “caused death claims on said fictitious and false policies to be presented to the co-insurers and re-insurers in order to collect death benefits thereon, and surrendered a number of said fictitious and false policies in order to receive the cash surrender values thereon.” Finally, the Commission’s complaint asserts that Equity Funding “caused financial statements to be prepared and disseminated to the investing public reflecting substantial earnings which were in fact false and fictitious” and that it “caused such false and fictitious financial statements to be filed with the Commission and other regulatory agencies, including the New York Stock Exchange and the state insurance authorities, and in such manner did thereby willfully, fraudulently and falsely report and represent the financial condition of Equity Funding Corporation and its subsidiaries.”

As indicated, Equity Funding consented to the injunction on April 3.

Earlier on April 2 the California Insurance Department instituted an action in the Superior Court of the State of California entitled “Payne, Insurance Commissioner v. Equity Funding Life Insurance Company” in which the Commissioner asked the Court to appoint a conservator for EFLIC, a subsidiary of Equity Funding. The verified application stated that the California Insurance Commissioner had been notified by the Illinois Insurance Commissioner that $24,000,000 in bonds, represented by EFLIC to have been on deposit with the American National Bank of Chicago were not on deposit as represented. The California Commissioner also charged that there were life insurance policies recorded on the books of EFLIC which were wholly fictitious.

Other official actions occurred within a few days of the large stock sale by Duntov, with the likelihood that there were rumblings to important officers earlier. Moreover, on March 12, 1973 the Illinois Insurance Department had begun a surprise audit of the financial condition of EFLIC. Preliminary investigation disclosed that a substantial number of bogus policies had been issued by EFLIC and that 20 million dollars of bonds listed as its assets and purportedly held by the American National Bank of Chicago were not there. The investigation, commenced on March 12, had advanced so far by April 2 that on the latter date a verified petition was filed in the case of People ex rel. Fred A. Mauck, Director of Insurance of the State of Illinois v. Equity Funding Life Ins. Co., & Equity Funding Corp. of America (No. 73-1019-Cr) in the Circuit Court for the 18th Judicial Circuit, DuPage County, Illinois.

*1210 On April 3 Equity Funding and EFL-IC were ordered to 'cease and desist from various activities including the selling of life insurance in Illinois.

Although, in the time available, the plaintiff has been unable to pinpoint exactly when the executive officers and directors learned of the serious violations that were uncovered in the Illinois investigation, it is a fair inference that notice must have been brought home to the directors of Equity Funding that all was not ship-shape some time before the suspension of trading on March 28.

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Bluebook (online)
357 F. Supp. 1206, 13 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 293, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14066, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jefferies-company-inc-v-arkus-duntov-nysd-1973.