LV Highland Credit Feeder Fund LLC, Charles A. Walsh III, the Ruderman Family Charitable Foundation, the Friedman Family Foundation, the Louis E. Wolfson Foundation, Barbara Roberts, and Abram London v. Highland Credit Strategies Fund, LP

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 2, 2015
Docket05-13-01118-CV
StatusPublished

This text of LV Highland Credit Feeder Fund LLC, Charles A. Walsh III, the Ruderman Family Charitable Foundation, the Friedman Family Foundation, the Louis E. Wolfson Foundation, Barbara Roberts, and Abram London v. Highland Credit Strategies Fund, LP (LV Highland Credit Feeder Fund LLC, Charles A. Walsh III, the Ruderman Family Charitable Foundation, the Friedman Family Foundation, the Louis E. Wolfson Foundation, Barbara Roberts, and Abram London v. Highland Credit Strategies Fund, LP) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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LV Highland Credit Feeder Fund LLC, Charles A. Walsh III, the Ruderman Family Charitable Foundation, the Friedman Family Foundation, the Louis E. Wolfson Foundation, Barbara Roberts, and Abram London v. Highland Credit Strategies Fund, LP, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

AFFIRM; and Opinion Filed August 28, 2015.

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-13-01118-CV

LV HIGHLAND CREDIT FEEDER FUND LLC, CHARLES A. WALSH III, THE RUDERMAN FAMILY CHARITABLE FOUNDATION, THE FRIEDMAN FAMILY FOUNDATION, THE LOUIS E. WOLFSON FOUNDATION, BARBARA ROBERTS, AND ABRAM LONDON, Appellants V. HIGHLAND CREDIT STRATEGIES FUND, LP, HIGHLAND CREDIT STRATEGIES FUND, LTD, HIGHLAND CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LP, HIGHLAND GENERAL PARTNER, LP, JAMES DONDERO, JACK YANG, MARK K. OKADA, AND DONALD J. SALVINO, Appellees

On Appeal from the 134th Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 09-08521

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Lang, Brown, and Whitehill Opinion by Justice Brown Appellants sued appellees for various causes of action arising out of appellants’

investment in two hedge funds. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of appellees.

In this appeal, appellants bring five issues in which they contend the trial court erred in granting

summary judgment. For the following reasons, we affirm the trial court’s order granting

appellees’ motions for summary judgment. BACKGROUND

Appellee Highland Capital Management, LP, based in Dallas, created and managed two

hedge funds – appellee Highland Credit Strategies Fund, LP (the Delaware Fund) and appellee

Highland Credit Strategies Fund, Ltd. (the Bermuda Fund) (collectively “the funds”). 1 The

Delaware Fund was a Delaware limited partnership. The Bermuda Fund was an exempted

mutual fund company incorporated under Bermuda law. Appellee Highland General Partner LP

is an affiliate of Highland Capital Management and the general partner of the Delaware Fund.

The individual appellees, James Dondero, Jack Yang, Mark K. Okada, and Donald J. Salvino,

are Highland Capital Management executives. Both the Delaware Fund and the Bermuda Fund

invested in nonparty Highland Credit Strategies Master Fund, LP, a Bermuda exempted limited

partnership. The Master Fund was structured to allow the Delaware Fund and the Bermuda Fund

to pool their respective investments and share in the profits and losses of the Master Fund on a

pro rata basis.

The seven appellants all invested in either the Delaware Fund or the Bermuda Fund.

Appellant LV Highland Credit Feeder Fund LLC is a Delaware limited liability company with its

principal place of business in Boston, Massachusetts. The investments of multiple clients were

pooled together to form the Feeder Fund. The Feeder Fund had a partnership interest in the

Delaware Fund and invested solely in that fund. The other six appellants, three individuals and

three charitable foundations, invested in the Bermuda Fund. The individual appellants, Charles

A. Walsh, Barbara Roberts, and Abram London, are Massachusetts residents. The charitable

foundations are the Ruderman Family Charitable Foundation, the Friedman Family Foundation,

and the Louis E. Wolfson Foundation, all based either in Massachusetts or New York.

1 This background is taken largely from appellants’ pleadings.

–2– LongVue Advisors, LLC, not a party in this case, provided investment advisory services

and account management services to appellants regarding their investments in the Bermuda Fund

and the Delaware Fund. Appellants have alleged that LongVue acted as their agent in dealing

with appellees regarding the funds. In addition to being an individual investor in the Bermuda

Fund, appellant Walsh is a managing partner of LongVue.

An investor who wanted to withdraw all or part of his investment in one of the funds was

required to give written notice. Withdrawals, or redemptions, were processed on a quarterly

basis, with a lag time of at least ninety days before a redemption request became effective. An

investor wishing to withdraw his investment at the end of a particular quarter was required to

give notice by the end of the preceding quarter.

With the financial crisis in 2007-2008, the Delaware Fund and the Bermuda Fund began

experiencing significant losses. Appellants became concerned that other investors in the funds

would seek to redeem their investments in substantial numbers. They were worried that the

funds’ ability to successfully execute their long-term investment strategies could be negatively

affected if a significant amount of investors withdrew from the funds. They were also concerned

that if the funds were forced to liquidate a significant amount of investments on short notice to

meet redemption demands, those investors who did not redeem would be left holding the funds’

most illiquid investments.

Because of their concerns, in March 2008, LongVue, acting on appellants’ behalf, began

asking appellees for information regarding the number and amount of investor redemptions in

the funds. According to appellants, appellees informed them, on more than one occasion, that

redemption requests were not significant. Appellants now contend that, instead of disclosing the

true number of redemptions, appellees “concealed the truth about the amount of redemptions and

falsely represented that the redemptions were far below their actual level.” Appellants contend

–3– that because of appellees’ false representations, appellants decided not to submit redemption

requests for their investments prior to the end of either the first or second quarter of 2008.

On October 15, 2008, Highland Capital Management sent a letter to investors in the funds

informing them it intended to “wind down the investment portfolio in an orderly fashion.” It

planned to sell off the assets in the portfolio over a projected three-year period and distribute the

sales proceeds to investors on a pro rata basis. The claims of investors and creditors exceeded

the value of the funds’ assets, and disputes arose among investors regarding distribution of those

assets. In response, Highland Capital Management proposed a Joint Plan for Distribution for the

stated purposes of maximizing recovery for redeemers and avoiding the expense and uncertainty

of litigation. That plan favored investors who submitted redemption requests on or before June

30, 2008, and who had not received full payment. These investors were considered Prior

Redeemers. The second class of investors, Compulsory Redeemers, was comprised of investors

who either never sought to redeem their investments or filed requests effective after September

30, 2008.

In July 2009, appellants sued appellees for various claims, including fraud, breach of

fiduciary duty, and violations of Massachusetts’s deceptive trade practices and blue sky laws. 2

Appellants’ fundamental complaint was that, in reliance on appellees’ misrepresentations, they

did not request redemption in time to be considered Prior Redeemers instead of Compulsory

Redeemers, and consequently their share of the funds’ assets was reduced by over $11 million.

Appellants maintained that, had appellees revealed the true amount of redemption requests

received by the funds, appellants would have redeemed all of their investments before June 30,

2 Appellants pleaded other causes of action, including negligent misrepresentation, unjust enrichment, and rescission. They withdrew some of these claims and are not appealing the dismissal of others.

–4– 2008. The Feeder Fund also contended it made additional investments in the Delaware Fund

based on the misrepresentations.

Appellees filed two separate summary judgment motions, a no-evidence motion and a

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LV Highland Credit Feeder Fund LLC, Charles A. Walsh III, the Ruderman Family Charitable Foundation, the Friedman Family Foundation, the Louis E. Wolfson Foundation, Barbara Roberts, and Abram London v. Highland Credit Strategies Fund, LP, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lv-highland-credit-feeder-fund-llc-charles-a-walsh-iii-the-ruderman-texapp-2015.