Josephthal & Co., Inc. v. Cruttenden Roth Inc.

177 F. Supp. 2d 232, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19763, 2001 WL 1466041
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 20, 2001
Docket01 CIV. 4551(RWS)
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 177 F. Supp. 2d 232 (Josephthal & Co., Inc. v. Cruttenden Roth Inc.) 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
Josephthal & Co., Inc. v. Cruttenden Roth Inc., 177 F. Supp. 2d 232, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19763, 2001 WL 1466041 (S.D.N.Y. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

SWEET, District Judge.

Defendant Cruttenden Roth Incorporated (“CRI”) has moved to enforce an arbitration award, Cruttenden Roth Incorporated v. Josephthal & Co., Inc., NASD No. 99-02841 dated April 26, 2001 (the “Award”), in its favor against plaintiff Josephthal & Co., Inc. (“JCI”). JCI has cross-moved to vacate or modify the Award. For the reasons set forth below, the motion of CRI is granted, the Award is enforced, and the cross-motion of JCI is denied.

Prior Proceedings

This action was commenced on May 29, 2001 by the petition of JCI to vacate or modify the Award. The instant motion and cross-motion were heard and marked fully submitted on September 6, 2001.

The Dispute

JCI and CRI are registered broker/dealers which are engaged in public equity transactions and have co-managed equity transactions together.

Beginning in 1995 through February 1999, CRI and JCI worked together on eleven different transactions, including two public offerings of InterVu stock, the *234 transactions giving rise to the underlying arbitration. JCI had compensation sharing arrangements with respect to all of their transactions that typically involved fees and warrants. The warrants afforded the warrant holder the right to purchase the securities subject to the offerings at a modest amount and/or through a “cashless exercise,” and had significant potential value. The fee and warrant sharing arrangements between CRI and JCI for their various transactions were initially determined by oral agreements made on a transaction-by-transaction basis. By the time of the first InterVu offering in November 1997, however, CRI and JCI agreed to a 60/40 split of the underwriting compensation, 60% was allocated to the firm that introduced the transaction to the other, and 40% was allocated to the co-manager.

In November 1997, JCI introduced CRI to an InterVu public in an offering of 2,000,000 shares. CRI was entitled to 40% of the compensation. InterVu delivered 200,000 warrants in connection with the offering; however, CRI received only 60,-000 warrants, 30%, and JCI retained 70%, or 140,000 warrants.

After the 1997 InterVu offering, CRI and JCI then co-managed two other offerings during the first part of 1998. These two offerings were also subject to the 60/40 division of underwriter compensation, including warrants.

In 1996 CRI and JCI had co-managed an offering of SkyMall stock and as part of the compensation for the deal, 200,000 warrants were issued and a dispute developed over the allocation of warrants which was resolved upon a JCI commitment as to the warrant allocations for all of their co-managed offerings, including InterVu. On December 30,1998, JCI and CRI approved a schedule reflecting their prior agreements to divide warrants on all of the public offerings they co-managed. The schedule was incorporated into a written mutual “Release of Claims” also dated December 30, 1998 (the “Release”) and signed by principals of the respective firms.

JCI and CRI co-managed InterVu’s second public offering of 1,300,000 shares (plus an over-allotment option) in June 1998. This offering involved 130,000 In-terVu warrants. JCI received and kept 78,000 warrants and CRTs 52,000 warrant share.

The price of InterVu stock and, therefore, the value of the InterVu warrants rose substantially beginning in March 1999. JCI refused to deliver CRTs Inter-Vu warrants and sought to renegotiate the Release. JCI exercised CRTs 20,000 warrants from the first offering and sold the stock.

The Arbitration

CRI instituted an action in arbitration before the NASD against JCI in June 1999 alleging that JCI had wrongfully withheld 72,000 InterVu warrants. CRI and JCI are both members of the NASD and, therefore, pursuant to section 10101(a) of the NASD Code of Arbitration Procedure, were required to submit their dispute to binding arbitration. The Statement of Claim alleged three causes of action: breach of express and/or implied contract, intentional, wrongful and tortious exercise of dominion and control over property conversion, and declaratory relief. CRI sought monetary damages based on CRTs trading of the warrants it did receive in April 1999, recovery of the actual 52,000 InterVu warrants still held by JCI and interest, punitive damages and attorneys’ fees and costs.

JCI denied all material allegations and further asserted a third-party claim against Scott Weisman, the JCI principal *235 who signed the Release for breach of fiduciary duty.

Before JCI responded to the arbitration, CRI commenced a proceeding in the New York State Supreme Court in July 1999 pursuant to CPLR Section 7502 to obtain a preliminary injunction to preserve the 52,-000 warrants from the second InterVu offering so that the warrants could be delivered to CRI at the time of the arbitration award. The New York State Supreme Court froze the warrants pending the award, and JCI agreed to a stipulation preserving the 52,000 warrants.

In mid-December 1999, JCI asked the Arbitration Panel for an order authorizing it to exercise the 52,000 warrants and sell the stock received. CRI consented to the exercise and in late December 1999, the 52,000 warrants were exercised on a cashless basis (no cost to either party) and 44,448 InterVu shares were received.

The arbitrators issued a ruling on January 17, 2000, permitting JCI, through its affiliate WBM 1 to sell the 44,448 shares and ordered JCI and WBM to place the proceeds in an unencumbered separate escrow account. JCI immediately sold 4,448 InterVu shares at $91.65560 per share and the proceeds of this transaction, $407,705.39, were placed in escrow.

Despite the arbitrators’ ruling, CRI continued to believe the InterVu stock should not be sold and urged JCI to agree to a “collar” hedging strategy that used call and put options to preserve the value of the stock and at the same time provide protection against the risk that the market price of the stock might decline. JCI agreed and the parties formalized their agreement in a January 27, 2000 Collar Agreement (“Collar Agreement”).

In addition to option strategy, the Collar Agreement provided that the proceeds of the options would be placed in the existing escrow and “follow” to the firm the arbitrators determined was the owner of the underlying InterVu warrants. Specifically, the Collar Agreement states in relevant part:

Each party agrees that, upon a resolution of the ownership of the InterVu shares by a NASD arbitration panel confirmed by a judgment, the call and put option contracts described will “follow” the owner of the InterVu shares such that, if [Josephthal] retains ownership of the InterVu Shares, it will retain ownership of the options contracts described above and, if Cruttenden obtains ownership of the InterVu Shares, it will retain ownership of the options contracts. If the InterVu shares are divided between [Josephthal] and Crutten-den, each party will retain or assume ownership of the options contracts rat-ably.

Id. (emphasis added).

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Bluebook (online)
177 F. Supp. 2d 232, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19763, 2001 WL 1466041, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/josephthal-co-inc-v-cruttenden-roth-inc-nysd-2001.