Morgan Keegan & Company, Inc. v. William Hamilton Smythe, III

401 S.W.3d 595, 2013 WL 1775690, 2013 Tenn. LEXIS 428
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 25, 2013
DocketW2010-01339-SC-R11-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by78 cases

This text of 401 S.W.3d 595 (Morgan Keegan & Company, Inc. v. William Hamilton Smythe, III) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morgan Keegan & Company, Inc. v. William Hamilton Smythe, III, 401 S.W.3d 595, 2013 WL 1775690, 2013 Tenn. LEXIS 428 (Tenn. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

WILLIAM C. KOCH, JR., J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court,

in which GARY R. WADE, C. J., CORNELIA A. CLARK, and SHARON G. LEE, JJ„ joined. JANICE M. HOLDER, J., not participating.

This case requires us to decide whether Tennessee’s appellate courts possess subject matter jurisdiction to review a trial court’s order that vacates an arbitration award and remands the dispute to a new arbitration panel without expressly declining to confirm the award. An investor pursued a claim against an investment company over losses he incurred due to the failure of some of the company’s bond funds. After a Financial Industry Regulatory Authority arbitration panel ruled in the investor’s favor, the investment company petitioned the Chancery Court for Shelby County to vacate the award based on its belief that two members of the arbitration panel were biased. The trial court, without expressly declining to confirm the award, vacated the award and remanded the case for a second arbitration before a new panel. The investor appealed. The Court of Appeals, on its own motion, dismissed the appeal on the ground that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction. Morgan Keegan & Co. v. Smythe, No. W2010-01339-COA-R3-CV, 2011 WL 5517036, at *8 (Tenn.Ct.App. Nov. 14, 2011). We granted the investor’s application for permission to appeal and now reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals because the trial court’s order is, in fact, an appeal-able order “denying confirmation of an award” under Tenn.Code Ann. § 29-5-319(a)(3) (2012).

I.

The sole issue in this case focuses on the subject matter jurisdiction of the Court of Appeals. Even though we are not concerned with the merits of the underlying substantive dispute between the parties, we provide the following facts in order to frame the jurisdictional discussion.

William Smythe III owned various investment accounts at Morgan Keegan & Company, Inc. (“Morgan Keegan”), including several accounts for which he served as trustee for other members of his family. The documents creating these accounts contained provisions requiring that disputes between Mr. Smythe and Morgan *599 Keegan be resolved using arbitration procedures established by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (“FINRA”). 1

A portion of Mr. Smythe’s portfolio included investments in Morgan Keegan’s “Regions Morgan Keegan” (“RMK”) family of funds. These funds invested in “junk bonds” — below investment grade securities that offered the potential of high rates of return but with a higher degree of risk. According to expert testimony presented during the arbitration proceeding, these funds “collapsed spectacularly in 2007,” thus living up to their name and costing investors billions of dollars. The failure of its RMK funds has generated a substantial amount of litigation for Morgan Keegan. 2

On April 30, 2008, Mr. Smythe initiated a FINRA arbitration proceeding against Morgan Keegan. This procedure was conducted in accordance with FINRA’s Code of Arbitration Procedure for Customer Disputes (“FINRA Code”). 3 A crucial step in the process was the selection of the members of the arbitration panel. 4 For disputes exceeding $100,000, the panel is composed of three members: a “non-pub-lie” arbitrator, a public arbitrator, and a chairperson who is an experienced public arbitrator. 5 Non-public arbitrators are industry insiders with professional experience in securities, commodities, or futures. 6 Public arbitrators are persons who lack recent professional experience in the investments industry and who have no immediate family members in that industry. 7

FINRA supplies each party with a list of ten randomly generated arbitrators for each position on the panel. 8 Each party may strike up to four potential arbitrators from each list, and each party must rank the remaining arbitrators in order of preference. 9 FINRA then combines the ranked arbitrator lists and populates the panel with the highest-ranked available arbitrator from the combined list. 10

In order to assist the parties in their decisions regarding the exclusion of potential arbitrators and in ranking the remaining arbiters, the FINRA Code requires disclosure of biographical information for each potential arbitrator, including potential conflicts of interest and other relevant disclosures. 11 The dispute in this case cen *600 ters on the alleged failure of two arbitrators to disclose potential conflicts of interest under FINRA Code § 12405(a) and to recuse themselves under FINRA Code § 12406 or FINRA’s failure to remove them under FINRA Code § 12407.

After Mr. Smythe filed his arbitration claim against Morgan Keegan, both parties participated in the arbitrator selection procedure. A three-arbitrator panel was assembled on October 2, 2008; however, FINRA replaced the chairperson of the panel on February 19, 2009. On August 10, 2009, the non-public member of the panel supplemented his disclosure report to Mr. Smythe and Morgan Keegan. This information enabled Morgan Keegan to discover that this panel member was a broker for a firm that was also suing Morgan Keegan over the RMK funds and that the firm was being represented by the same lawyer who was representing Mr. Smythe.

In October 2009, Morgan Keegan requested that the non-public arbitrator re-cuse himself and alternatively asked FIN-RA’s director to remove this arbitrator from the panel. By this time, the nonpublic arbitrator had served on two other FINRA arbitration panels involving Morgan Keegan’s RMK funds that had awarded damages against Morgan Keegan. In both of these proceedings, the non-public arbitrator had heard expert testimony to the effect that the RMK funds were fundamentally flawed and unfit for any investor. Thus, by the time Mr. Smythe’s claim was ready to be heard, the non-public arbitrator had already received damaging information about the RMK funds in two previous arbitrations and had ruled against Morgan Keegan in both. Morgan Kee-gan’s requests for recusal and removal of the non-public arbitrator were denied.

Morgan Keegan also objected to the panel’s chairperson. The chairperson had previously chaired an arbitration proceeding involving RMK funds in which the panel made the rare move of imposing punitive damages against Morgan Keegan. This was the only arbitration involving RMK funds that resulted in a punitive damages award. Morgan Keegan’s request for the removal of the chairperson was also denied.

The FINRA arbitration regarding Mr. Smythe’s complaint against Morgan Kee-gan was conducted from November 2 through November 6, 2009.

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Bluebook (online)
401 S.W.3d 595, 2013 WL 1775690, 2013 Tenn. LEXIS 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-keegan-company-inc-v-william-hamilton-smythe-iii-tenn-2013.