Life Partners, Inc. and milkie/ferguson Investment, Inc. v. Michael Arnold, Janet Arnold, Steve South as Trustee and on Behalf of the South Living Trust, John S. Ferris, M.D., Christine Duncan, and All Others Similarly Situated

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 8, 2015
Docket14-0122
StatusPublished

This text of Life Partners, Inc. and milkie/ferguson Investment, Inc. v. Michael Arnold, Janet Arnold, Steve South as Trustee and on Behalf of the South Living Trust, John S. Ferris, M.D., Christine Duncan, and All Others Similarly Situated (Life Partners, Inc. and milkie/ferguson Investment, Inc. v. Michael Arnold, Janet Arnold, Steve South as Trustee and on Behalf of the South Living Trust, John S. Ferris, M.D., Christine Duncan, and All Others Similarly Situated) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Life Partners, Inc. and milkie/ferguson Investment, Inc. v. Michael Arnold, Janet Arnold, Steve South as Trustee and on Behalf of the South Living Trust, John S. Ferris, M.D., Christine Duncan, and All Others Similarly Situated, (Tex. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS ════════════ NO. 14-0122 ════════════

LIFE PARTNERS, INC. AND MILKIE/FERGUSON INVESTMENT, INC., PETITIONERS, v.

MICHAEL ARNOLD, JANET ARNOLD, STEVE SOUTH AS TRUSTEE AND ON BEHALF OF THE SOUTH LIVING TRUST, JOHN S. FERRIS, M.D., CHRISTINE DUNCAN, AND ALL OTHERS SIMILARLY SITUATED, RESPONDENTS ═════════════════════════════════════════ ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS ═════════════════════════════════════════

~ consolidated for oral argument with ~

════════════ NO. 14-0226 ════════════

LIFE PARTNERS HOLDINGS, INC., LIFE PARTNERS, INC., BRIAN. D. PARDO, R. SCOTT PEDEN, ADVANCE TRUST & LIFE ESCROW SERVICES, L.T.A., AND PURCHASE ESCROW SERVICES, LLC, PETITIONERS, V.

STATE OF TEXAS, RESPONDENT ═════════════════════════════════════════ ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD DISTRICT OF TEXAS ═════════════════════════════════════════

Argued January 15, 2015 JUSTICE BOYD delivered the opinion of the Court.

The primary issue in these two separate cases is whether a “life settlement agreement” or

“viatical settlement agreement” is an “investment contract” and thus a “security” under the Texas Securities Act. We hold that the agreements at issue are investment contracts because they

constitute transactions through which a person pays money to participate in a common enterprise

with the expectation of receiving profits, under circumstances in which the failure or success of

the enterprise and the person’s realization of the expected profits is at least predominately due to

the entrepreneurial or managerial efforts of others. We decline to give today’s holding only

prospective application, and we decline to consider the merits of the “relief defendants’”

evidentiary arguments. In short, we affirm the courts of appeals’ judgments in both cases.

I. Background

In Life Partners, Inc. v. Arnold, Michael and Janet Arnold and others1 (collectively, the

Arnolds) filed a class action lawsuit in Dallas County, seeking rescission and damages based on

claims that Life Partners, Inc. and others2 (collectively, Life Partners) violated the Texas Securities

Act by selling unregistered securities and materially misrepresenting to purchasers that they were

not, in fact, securities. 416 S.W.3d 577. Meanwhile, in Life Partners, Inc. v. State, the State of

Texas filed a separate suit in Travis County, seeking an injunction and other relief based on

allegations that Life Partners and others3 had committed fraud in connection with the sale of

securities.4 ____S.W.3d____. Before a class was certified in Arnold, both district courts entered

judgments in favor of Life Partners, holding that Life Partners had not promoted or marketed any

1 The “others” include Steve South as Trustee and on behalf of South Living Trust, John S. Ferris, M.D., and Christine Duncan.

2 The “others” include Milkie/Ferguson Investment, Inc. 3 The “others” include Life Partners Holdings, Inc., Brian D. Pardo, R. Scott Peden, Advance Trust & Life Escrow Services, L.T.A., and Purchase Escrow Services, LLC.

4 The State had previously sued Life Partners for violations of the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act in a case based on different underlying facts and presenting different legal issues than those presented here. See State v. Life Partners, Inc., 243 S.W.3d 236, 244 (Tex. App.—Waco 2007, pet. denied) (reversing summary judgment in Life Partners’ favor and remanding for further proceedings).

2 “securities” and thus could not be liable under the Texas Securities Act. The Dallas Court of

Appeals reversed in part, affirmed in part, and remanded, holding that the life settlement

agreements are securities under the Texas Securities Act. 416 S.W.3d at 592. The Austin Court of

Appeals soon followed suit, “agree[ing] with the conclusions reached by the Dallas Court and fully

incorporat[ing] its analysis.” ___ S.W.3d at ___. Life Partners filed a petition for review in both

cases, which we granted and consolidated for purposes of oral argument.

Since 1991, Life Partners has been engaged in the business of buying existing life insurance

policies from those whose lives the policies insure, and then selling interests in those policies to

others. These types of transactions are generally referred to as “life settlements” when the insured

is elderly or “viatical settlements” when the insured is terminally ill. We will refer to both types

collectively as “life settlement agreements.” According to Life Partners, many people with life

insurance desire to sell their policies so that they or their family members can enjoy the proceeds

while the insured is still living. Life Partners purchases the policy from the insured for a “cash

settlement” that is less than the amount the policy will pay at the time of the insured’s death. To

fund these purchases and its own business operations, Life Partners sells interests in the policies’

future benefits to “investors” or “purchasers.”5 The process thus involves at least two distinct

business transactions, the first being Life Partners’ purchase of the policy from an insured and the

second being Life Partners’ sale of interests in the policy to its purchasers. The issue here is

whether the second transaction constitutes the sale of a “security” under the Texas Securities Act.

Life Partners advertises life settlement agreements as a “sure” investment. Its sales

pamphlet asserts: “There’s no need to worry about which way the wind is blowing. The returns on

5 Although even Life Partners refers to those who buy interests in its insurance policies as “investors,” we will use the term “purchasers” to avoid confusion, since the issue here is whether their agreement to buy the interests is an “investment contract.”

3 life settlements, unlike stocks, mutual funds and other investments, are unaffected by market

fluctuations, business cycles, the economy or global unrest.” Life Partners assures purchasers that,

“[n]ot only are your investments safe from these market risks, they have the opportunity to provide

exceptional return on investment.” If investments in a life settlement are indeed “safe from these

market risks,” however, they are not free from all risks. In particular, because Life Partners

calculates a policy’s value based on the insured’s life expectancy and must pay the policy’s

premiums until the insured’s death to collect on the policy, the anticipated returns are diminished,

and sometimes lost, when the insured lives longer than Life Partners projects.

When selecting policies to purchase, Life Partners identifies insureds who are interested in

selling their policies, evaluates their medical condition, predicts their life expectancy, and

evaluates the policies’ terms and conditions to ensure they are assignable. It then determines how

much to pay for the policy based on the insured’s life expectancy, the amount of the benefit, and

related factors. Life Partners acknowledges that those who purchase an interest in the policies

“depend upon [Life Partners’] ability to predict life expectancies and set the appropriate prices.”

If Life Partners accurately predicts the insured’s life expectancy and negotiates a favorable

purchase price, those who purchase an interest in the policy will receive a profit when the policy

is paid. But if Life Partners’ prediction is inaccurate or its negotiations ineffective, the purchasers

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Life Partners, Inc. and milkie/ferguson Investment, Inc. v. Michael Arnold, Janet Arnold, Steve South as Trustee and on Behalf of the South Living Trust, John S. Ferris, M.D., Christine Duncan, and All Others Similarly Situated, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/life-partners-inc-and-milkieferguson-investment-inc-v-michael-arnold-tex-2015.