Morgan Keegan Co., Inc. v. Cunningham

918 So. 2d 897, 2005 Ala. LEXIS 66, 2005 WL 1189584
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 20, 2005
Docket1031431
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 918 So. 2d 897 (Morgan Keegan Co., Inc. v. Cunningham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morgan Keegan Co., Inc. v. Cunningham, 918 So. 2d 897, 2005 Ala. LEXIS 66, 2005 WL 1189584 (Ala. 2005).

Opinions

WOODALL, Justice.

Morgan Keegan & Company, Inc., and Regions Financial Corporation (hereinafter referred to collectively as “Regions”), and Jay Higgenbotham, an investment officer of Regions, appeal from a judgment entered on a jury verdict, awarding $10,000 compensatory damages and $50,000 punitive damages in an action by Patricia Cunningham and her son, Judge Preston Cunningham III (“Preston”), against Regions and Higgenbotham for improperly withholding federal income taxes on their investment account. Regions explains the relationship between the corporate entities as follows:

“Regions Investment Company, Inc., merged with Morgan Keegan & Company, Inc., in April of 2001. Morgan Kee-gan & Company, Inc., was the surviving entity. Prior to the merger, Regions Financial Corporation was the parent company of Regions Investment Company, Inc. Upon the merger, Regions Financial Corporation became the parent company of the surviving entity, Morgan Keegan & Company, Inc.”

Regions’ brief, at 4 n. 1. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.

[899]*899The facts underlying this dispute began with a discussion between Patricia Cunningham and Higgenbotham in the summer of 2000 regarding investment opportunities provided by Regions. Later, on September 5, 2000, Patricia Cunningham purchased 2,655.337 shares in a mutual fund managed by Regions, namely, a “Regions Aggressive Growth Fund — B” (“the growth fund”), for $50,000.1 This purchase resulted in the opening of a joint account in the names of Patricia and Preston. The Cunninghams’ decision to open the joint account was communicated to Regions by telephone. Consequently, the Cunning-hams did not sign any documents in connection with opening the account.

Procedures for the opening of accounts such as the Cunninghams’ were set out in a manual entitled “Regions Investment Company, Inc., Compliance with Supervisory Procedures” (“the manual”). In particular, the manual stated, “Prior to the entry of an initial order, the registered representative must obtain a completely executed New Account [Application] Form, duly signed.” (Emphasis added.) The “New Account Application Form” (“the new account form”) contained a section that stated, in pertinent part:

“Certification. — Under penalties of perjury, I certify that
“1. The number shown on this form is my correct taxpayer identification number (or I am waiting for a number to be issued to me).
“2. I am not subject to backup withholding, and
“3. .A copy of Form W-9 Instructions has been provided.
“Certification instructions. — You must cross out item (2) above if you have been notified by IRS that you are currently subject to backup withholding because of underreporting interest or dividends on your tax return.”

(Emphasis added.)

Backup withholding tax has been explained as follows:

“[Backup withholding is] [t]ax withheld from investment income, such as interest and dividends, to ensure that tax is collected on the income. Banks and other organizations are required to report to the IRS all interest and dividend payments you received, along with your Social Security number or other taxpayer identification number. If you don’t give them correct reporting information for you, they are required to withhold SI percent of your investment income. The IRS may also require the bank or other organization to withhold tax if it determines you have underreported your investment income. If backup withholding is taken out of your earnings, it will show up as ‘Federal income tax withheld’ on the Form 1099-INT or Form 1099-DIV that the bank sends you each January.”

(On the date this opinion was released this information could be found at Definitions of Tax Terms: B-C, at www.bankrate.com /wsjr/itax/edit/ definitions/ definitions_tax-es2.asp (on file in the office of the clerk of the Supreme Court)(emphasis added).) The Cunninghams never completed or executed a new account form.

By December. 2000, the value of the Cunninghams’ investment had decreased to approximately $47,000. However, at that time, Higgenbotham learned that the growth fund was going to declare a 22 per cent taxable gain for the year 2000. The gain was based on the performance of the growth fund in the first three quarters of [900]*9002000, that is, before the Cunninghams had purchased their shares of the growth fund. Consequently, the Cunninghams were about to incur a taxable capital gain of approximately $10,000, even though the value of their shares had declined.

In December 2000, Higgenbotham informed the Cunninghams, and 10 to 20 other customers similarly situated, of their impending tax liability and advised them to transfer their investment temporarily from the growth fund to a “Regions treasury money market fund” (“the money market fund”). The Cunninghams accepted Higgenbotham’s advice, and, on December 15, 2000, sold the 2,655.337 shares of the growth fund in order to transfer $46,627.72 from the growth fund to the money market fund. However, because Regions did not have an executed new account form on record as a basis for avoiding backup withholding, that transaction triggered a computer-generated 31 percent backup-withholding payment of $14,454.59, which Regions sent to the Internal Revenue Service (“the IRS”).

Regions sent the Cunninghams a transaction confirmation showing the sale of 1,832.183 shares of the growth fund and a transfer of the sales proceeds of $32,173.13 to the money market fund. The remaining 823.154 shares of the growth fund were sold, and the proceeds of $14,454.59 were used to pay the backup withholding (hereinafter referred to as “the first withholding”).

Inexplicably, the first withholding was followed five days later by a redundant second backup-withholding payment of $9,973.67 (calculated as follows: $46,-627.72 — $14,454.59 = $32,173.13 x 31%) (“the second withholding”). It is undisputed that Regions received no compensation or gain from either withholding. After the first withholding and the second withholding, approximately $22,000 remained in the Cunninghams’ account.

Regions sent a four-page account statement to the Cunninghams for the year 2000 (“the year-end summary”). That statement purported to represent the “total portfolio” value as the sum of the “market value/market price” of three categories: (1) $32,220.32 in a “Regions treasury money market fund”; (2) $11,532.39 in a “Regions aggressive growth fund”; and (3) $32,173.13 in a second “Regions treasury money market fund”; for a “total portfolio” value of $75,925.84. It is undisputed that the statement was “misleading” and that the “true market value” of the portfolio was approximately $22,000. However, in the “Transactions/Activity Detail” section, the year-end summary revealed that only $32,173.13 had been removed from the growth fund and placed in the money market fund.2

The year-end summary also listed the second withholding as “Regions Aggressive Growth Fund 31% Withholding Non-Certified T[axpayer] Identification] N[umber],” in the amount of a $9,973.67 charge. The second withholding appeared on the year-end summary as a negative cash transaction. Moreover, it showed the net of the transactions for the year.

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Bluebook (online)
918 So. 2d 897, 2005 Ala. LEXIS 66, 2005 WL 1189584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-keegan-co-inc-v-cunningham-ala-2005.