Mishkin v. Siclari (In Re Adler, Coleman Clearing Corp.)

277 B.R. 520, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 453, 2002 WL 971698
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 27, 2002
Docket17-35049
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 277 B.R. 520 (Mishkin v. Siclari (In Re Adler, Coleman Clearing Corp.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy 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
Mishkin v. Siclari (In Re Adler, Coleman Clearing Corp.), 277 B.R. 520, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 453, 2002 WL 971698 (N.Y. 2002).

Opinion

DECISION ON OBJECTION TO TRUSTEE’S DETERMINATION DENYING CUSTOMER CLAIM AND IN ADVERSARY PROCEEDING SEEKING EQUITABLE SUBORDINATION

ROBERT E. GERBER, Bankruptcy Judge.

In this case under SIPA 1 for the liquidation of securities broker Adler, Coleman Clearing Corp. (“Adler”), the Court consolidated for trial the objection of Anthony Siclari (“Mr. Siclari”) to the determination of Edwin B. Mishkin, Adler’s eourt-ap-pointed trustee (the “Trustee”), denying Mr. Siclari’s claim, and the related adversary proceeding commenced by the Trustee against Mr. Siclari seeking equitable subordination of Mr. Siclari’s claim. Mr. Siclari, a former accountholder at Hanover & Company (“Hanover”), 2 one of the introducing brokers for which Adler served as a clearing firm, was alleged by the Trustee to be the single greatest beneficiary of the illegal activity at Hanover (and elsewhere) that ultimately led to the failure of both firms. 3

After trial (and considering, among other things, witness credibility), the Court has determined that Mr. Siclari was indeed the beneficiary of the fraud and other illegal conduct to substantially the extent alleged by the Trustee, and, also, that Mr. Siclari was a knowing beneficiary. For that reason, and the reasons that follow, the Court determines that (1) Mr. Siclari is not entitled to the benefits of SIPA with respect to his claim, and that (2) Mr. Si- *524 clari’s claim should be equitably subordinated (a) to other customer claims, and (b) to the claims of claimants with general unsecured claims against the Adler estate.

However, for reasons discussed more fully below, the Court does not agree with the Trustee that because Mr. Siclari was used by Hanover personnel as a “nominee” for Hanover in Hanover’s transactions for its own account (and even though Mr. Si-clari knowingly permitted himself to be used as such), Trustee setoff defenses that would be applicable to Hanover apply also to Mr. Siclari.

For those reasons, Mr. Siclari’s objection’s to the Trustee’s determination are upheld to the extent, but only the extent, of the foregoing, and the Trustee’s request for equitable subordination is granted. This decision sets forth the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law 4 with respect to these determinations.

Introduction

Along with over 15,000 other account-holders of Adler, 5 Mr. Siclari filed a “customer” claim in Adler’s liquidation with respect to the assets — cash and securities — held by Adler on his behalf in his customer account. 6 The Trustee denied Mr. Siclari’s claim on the grounds that the account assets for which the claim sought recovery were the fruit of securities law violations, and that those assets were effectively Hanover assets, and not Mr. Si-clari’s, because Mr. Siclari’s account was used as a nominee account for Hanover’s benefit. Mr. Siclari timely objected to that determination, entitling him to a hearing on the matter. 7

Thereafter, the Trustee also commenced an adversary proceeding, seeking a judgment equitably subordinating Mr. Siclari’s claim to the claims of other Adler creditors.

■ With the support of SIPC, which is allied with the Trustee in connection with this matter, the Trustee has asserted that Mr. Siclari’s account was the beneficiary of violations of securities laws perpetrated by Hanover officials — most significantly, Robert Catoggio (“Catoggio”), the trader for Mr. Siclari’s account and Mr. Siclari’s friend since boyhood, who pleaded guilty to securities fraud. As such, the Trustee has argued, Mr. Siclari’s claim should be denied because SIPA protects only innocent customers and innocent customer accounts, and does not permit claimants to receive assets that are tainted by fraudulent conduct. For many of the same reasons, the Trustee also seeks equitable subordination, arguing that it would be inequitable, under these circumstances, for Mr. Siclari to share pari passu with innocent Adler customers in the fund of cus *525 tomer property, or, indeed, with creditors with general unsecured claims. The Trustee also argues that by reason of the means by which Mr. Siclari allowed his account to be used — allegedly permitting it to be used for the benefit of Hanover— Mr. Siclari was in fact and law Hanover’s nominee, and that his claim should be wholly disallowed (and not just subordinated), because the claim should be deemed in law to be asserted by Hanover, as against whom the Trustee has a setoff many times exceeding the amount of Mr. Siclari’s claim.

As the factual predicate for his contentions, the Trustee alleges that Mr. Siclari profited from Hanover fraudulent activity, and then engaged in transactions to take those gains out of his Hanover account, both for his own benefit and to pass them on to Hanover personnel or Hanover itself. First, as alleged by the Trustee, Mr. Si-clari made enormous profits in transactions arranged for him by Hanover:

(1) in initial public offerings (“IPOs”) where Hanover was the primary market maker, and where the prices of the stocks that were the subject of those IPOs skyrocketed immediately after the stocks were offered to the public, as a consequence of the manipulation of the stock prices by Hanover personnel; and
(2) by making loans to (a) Hanover and (b) securities issuers for whom Hanover arranged the loans — in each case resulting in extraordinary gains.

Second, as alleged by the Trustee, those profits were channeled to:

(1) Hanover personnel (as a consequence of the transfer of account proceeds to Mr. Siclari’s bank account, followed by numerous withdrawals by Mr. Siclari of cash in amounts less than $10,000, structured to avoid reporting requirements under federal law); and
(2) Hanover itself (as a result of intentional losses on day-trades where Hanover was the counterparty).

Third, as alleged by the Trustee, Mr. Si-clari engaged in wash sale transactions to boost Hanover’s net capital (which was monitored by the SEC and NASD) 8 at the time Hanover had to report it, only to undo those transactions (at the very same price) immediately thereafter.

Mr. Siclari has denied any wrongful conduct on his part, though he does not contest that there was fraudulent and illegal activity on the part of others at Hanover. In that connection, Mr. Siclari argues, among other things, that:

(a) “every single detail in his account was authorized or instigated by him”; 9

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
277 B.R. 520, 2002 Bankr. LEXIS 453, 2002 WL 971698, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mishkin-v-siclari-in-re-adler-coleman-clearing-corp-nysb-2002.