Loreley Fin. (Jersey) No. 28, Ltd. v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc.

2021 NY Slip Op 04413
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 15, 2021
DocketIndex No. 652732/11 Appeal No. 13595 Case No. 2020-03832
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2021 NY Slip Op 04413 (Loreley Fin. (Jersey) No. 28, Ltd. v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Loreley Fin. (Jersey) No. 28, Ltd. v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc., 2021 NY Slip Op 04413 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Loreley Fin. (Jersey) No. 28, Ltd. v Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc. (2021 NY Slip Op 04413)
Loreley Fin. (Jersey) No. 28, Ltd. v Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc.
2021 NY Slip Op 04413
Decided on July 15, 2021
Appellate Division, First Department
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.


Decided and Entered: July 15, 2021
Before: Renwick, J.P., Gische, Moulton, Mendez, JJ.

Index No. 652732/11 Appeal No. 13595 Case No. 2020-03832

[*1]Loreley Financing (Jersey) No. 28, Limited, Plaintiff-Appellant,

v

Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated, et al., Defendants-Respondents, Auriga CDO, Ltd, Defendant.


Meister Seelig & Fein LLP, New York (James M. Ringer of counsel), for appellant.

Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP, New York (Roger A. Cooper of counsel), for respondents.



Order, Supreme Court, New York County (Andrea Masley, J.), entered on or about May 8, 2020, which, insofar as appealed from, granted the motions of defendants Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc., Merrill Lynch International Inc., Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc., and 250 Capital LLC for summary judgment dismissing the first amended complaint, reversed, on the law, without costs, the motions denied, and plaintiff's fraud claim reinstated to the extent it relies on an omission as opposed to a representation.

Dismissal of the fraud claims, on the grounds that plaintiff did not raise issues of fact on the fraud elements of loss causation and justifiable reliance on misrepresentations, was not warranted. As to loss causation, Supreme Court found that plaintiff could not establish that its loss was caused by anything other than the intervening events of the 2008-2009 financial crisis.

Plaintiff argues, among other things, that there were no intervening events between defendants' fraud and the loss because it suffered the out-of-pocket loss on the very day in December 2006 when it bought the Auriga securities at an inflated price. Plaintiff, however, is judicially estopped from arguing that it suffered a loss at the inception of the transaction because, in successfully defeating a prior motion to dismiss the fraud claim on the pleadings, plaintiff argued that it suffered a loss in 2008 at the earliest (see Loreley Fin. [Jersey] No. 28, Ltd. v Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc., 117 AD3d 463 [1st Dept 2014]).

Even if plaintiff was not judicially estopped, plaintiff's argument, that it suffered a loss at the inception of the transaction, is untenable as a matter of law because plaintiff has to prove not only that defendants' misrepresentation caused plaintiff to buy the Auriga securities at an inflated price, but also that the fraud caused the eventual price decline. Other cases involving collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) (see e.g. Basis PAC-Rim Opportunity Fund [Master] v TCW Asset Mgt. Co., 149 AD3d 146 [1st Dept 2017], lv denied 30 NY3d 903 [2017]) — indeed, a case involving another "constellation," Magnetar-influenced CDO like Auriga (see Loreley Fin. [Jersey] No. 3 Ltd. v Wells Fargo Sec., LLC, 797 F3d 160, 186-189 [2d Cir 2015]) — have required the plaintiff to prove loss causation, i.e., that the fraud caused the eventual price decline.

Nevertheless, plaintiff has raised triable issues of fact about loss causation, namely whether defendants' alleged fraudulent conduct, rather than the the 2008-2009 financial crisis, was the proximate cause of plaintiff's loss (see China Dev. Indus. Bank v Morgan Stanley & Co., 183 AD3d 504, 506 [1st Dept 2020]).

Unlike the expert affidavit in Basis PAC-Rim Opportunity Fund [Master] v TCW Asset Mgt. Co. (149 AD3d 146, 150-151 [1st Dept 2017], lv denied 30 NY3d 903 [2017]), which offered only a conclusory analysis of the quality or performance of the RMBS CDO's assets, here plaintiff's expert [*2]analyzed how defendants' conduct exposed plaintiff to undisclosed investment risks. In a dialogic exchange of several reports with defendants' experts, he examined the component assets in the Auriga securities to explain how defendants' conduct exposed plaintiff to undisclosed investment risk. Plaintiff's expert conducted regression analyses to determine the degree to which the alleged fraud by defendants, as opposed to the market crash, caused some of plaintiff's losses. "The empirical evidence shows that Magnetar deals in general, and Auriga in particular, performed worse than other mezzanine CDOs issued during the same period." For example, the expert noted, "Magnetar deals experienced events of default ['EODs'] on average approximately four months faster than other mezzanine CDO bonds issued in 2006 and 2007" and Auriga "failed 175 days earlier than the average mezzanine non-Magnetar deal." The expert further explained, "[a]ll 26 mezzanine Constellation deals experienced an [EOD.] This 100 percent EOD rate contrasts with an EOD rate of 82 percent . . . among non-Magnetar subprime CDOs issued in 2006 and 2007. The difference between these two EOD rates . . . is statistically significant."[FN1]

Plaintiff's expert also criticized the methodology of defendants' expert, who had opined that plaintiff's losses stemmed from market-wide events, not defendants' selection of collateral for Auriga. In particular, plaintiff's expert asserted that the regression analyses conducted by defendants' expert suffered from a number of flaws. He contended that these flaws undermined defendants' comparison of Auriga's RMBS assets with other benchmark RMBS assets, and that this in turn undermined defendants' conclusion that plaintiff's loss stemmed solely from macroeconomic events and not from the alleged fraud. In response, defendants' expert adjusted the variables in his regressions to demonstrate that plaintiff's criticisms are unfounded. On this record, where the parties' experts have engaged with each other's arguments this Court cannot decide on summary judgment which expert provides the correct analysis on the presence, or absence, of loss causation (see generally Beta Holdings, Inc. v Goldsmith, 129 AD3d 521, 522 [1st Dept 2015]).

With regard to lack of justifiable reliance on misrepresentations, the other ground on which the motion court granted summary judgment, plaintiff's fraud claim depends both on an affirmative representation (that Auriga's collateral manager would independently select the collateral) and an omission or concealment (that defendants structured Auriga to facilitate Magnetar's net-short strategy). The court was correct to the extent it held that plaintiff could not establish that it relied on an affirmative misrepresentation by defendants because it is undisputed that plaintiff never communicated directly with defendants about Auriga; rather, defendants communicated with plaintiff's investment advisor, nonparty IKB. Thus, to [*3]the extent plaintiff relies on an affirmative representation, its claim is barred by Securities Inv. Protection Corp. v BDO Seidman (95 NY2d 702, 710-711 [2001] [SIPC]), which held that no fraud action may be maintained against a defendant for misrepresentations made by a defendant to a third party where the third party did not communicate any negative information to the plaintiff.

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Related

Loreley Fin. (Jersey) No. 28, Ltd. v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc.
2021 NY Slip Op 04413 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2021)

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2021 NY Slip Op 04413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loreley-fin-jersey-no-28-ltd-v-merrill-lynch-pierce-fenner-smith-nyappdiv-2021.