Overseas Investment Group v. Wall Street Electronica, Inc. and Herzog, Heine, Geduld, Inc.

181 So. 3d 1288, 2016 Fla. App. LEXIS 215, 2016 WL 64477
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJanuary 6, 2016
Docket4D13-4310
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 181 So. 3d 1288 (Overseas Investment Group v. Wall Street Electronica, Inc. and Herzog, Heine, Geduld, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Overseas Investment Group v. Wall Street Electronica, Inc. and Herzog, Heine, Geduld, Inc., 181 So. 3d 1288, 2016 Fla. App. LEXIS 215, 2016 WL 64477 (Fla. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

WARNER, J.'

Plaintiff, Overseas Investment Group, appeals from a final summary judgment entered in favor of the defendant, Herzog, Heine, Geduld, Inc., a brokerage firm, in connection with Herzog’s liquidation of Overseas’s margin account. The trial court found that Herzog was not liable to Overseas for breach of contract and breach of fiduciary duty because by contract Her-zog had sole discretion to liquidate the subject account for its own protection. We’ reverse because material issues of fact remain.

Defendant Wall Street Electrónica was a securities broker-dealer. Wall Street Electrónica hired Herzog to perform “back office” functions, such as clearing and settling securities transactions it had executed. Overseas, a customer of Wall Street Electrónica, opened a brokerage margin account with Wall Street. Overseas was using a strategy called “selling puts naked,” which involved selling stock options it did not own. It required the extension of credit by Herzog, referred to as a “margin.”

' As part of opening the brokerage account, Overseas’s president, Dr. Samuel Elia, signed a Customer Agreement with Herzog. Section 10 of the agreement provided:

The Customer clearly understands that, notwithstanding a general policy of giving customers notice of a margin deficiency, Herzog is not obligated to request additional margin from the Customer in the event the Customer’s Account falls below minimum maintenance requirements. More importantly, there may be circumstances where Herzog will liquidate securities and/or other property in the Account without notice to the Customer to ensure that minimum maintenance requirements are satisfied.
... Herzog shall have the, right in accordance with its general policies regarding margin maintenance requirements to require additional collateral or the liquidations of any securities and other property whenever in Herzog’s discretion it considers it necessary for its protection including in the event of, but not limited to: the failure of the Customer to promptly meet any call for additional collateral.... In any such event, Herzog is authorized to sell any and all securities and other property in any Account of the Customer ... without demand for margin or additional margin, other notice of sale or purchase, or other notice or advertisement each of which is expressly waived by the Customer.

(Emphasis' added).- Additionally, section 11 of the agreement provided: “The Customer agrees 'to maintain in all accounts with Herzog such positions and margins as required by all applicable statutes, rules, regulations, procedures and- custom, or as Herzog deems necessary or advisable. The Customer agrees to-promptly satisfy all margin and maintenance calls.” (Emphasis added). Dr. Elia, having executed the Customer Agreement, knew that Overseas would be required to maintain a certain level of *1290 margin with Herzog. If the Overseas account fell below the margin requirement, the company could request .additional cash from Overseas or it could sell sufficient securities itself to raise the cash necessary to meet the margin requirement.

The stock market declined on April 10, 2000, and Herzog sent Overseas two margin maintenance calls requesting additional funds. Overseas asserts that it met those margin calls and was in compliance as of Friday, April 14, 20Q0. On Saturday, April 15, Dr. Elia received a phone call that Overseas should expect another margin call. According to Dr. Elia, he advised Herzog that he was in full compliance, but to avoid confusion Overseas would increase its cash position by April 22. However, Overseas contends that on Monday, April 17, the market increased, and Overseas believed no additional funds would be needed. Herzog nevertheless began liquidating the Overseas accounts soon after the market opened on April 17 to satisfy the margin call. Specifically, Herzog liquidated Overseas’s $1,000,000 security portfolio. This liquidation is the basis for the lawsuit.

Overseas filed suit for breach of contract, fraudulent inducement, and negligence against Herzog and Wall Street Electrónica. 1 It alleged that Herzog had failed to notify it of the impending liquidation in a timely fashion. It also alleged that it had met the minimum margin requirements, even though those requirements were not set forth in the agreement. Overseas alleged that its Wall Street Elec-trónica advisors, as well as the Herzog website, had provided the means of determining those requirements. Thus, Overseas alleged that Herzog breached the Customer Agreement by liquidating the account.

Herzog moved for summary judgment, contending that there was a dramatic downturn in the market in April 2000, and Overseas’s account’s equity went into a deficit. To protect itself, Herzog liquidated the account to satisfy unmet margin calls. Herzog claimed that the Customer Agreement authorized it to liquidate the account at any time, with or without notice.

Dr. Elia filed an affidavit in opposition, in which he explained Overseas’s strategy with respect to options. He asserted that the Customer Agreement allowed Herzog to liquidate the account if it fell below “minimum maintenance requirements,” but failed to describe what those requirements were or how they were calculated. Although the agreement required Overseas to maintain margins as required by “all applicable statutes, rules, regulations, procedures and custom, or as Herzog deems necessary or advisable[,]” it never identified the rules or statutes, or what Herzog would deem necessary or advisable. Further, Dr. Elia asserted that the agreement merely required margin calls to be satisfied “promptly,” without giving a time period.

After receiving several margin calls in 1999, Dr. Elia stated that he contacted Herzog to determine how it calculated margin requirements. The manager of Herzog’s margin department described how the minimum maintenance requirement was calculated and explained Her-zog’s liquidation requirements. Dr. Elia asserted that he had relied upon the manager’s explanation, based upon which he calculated that the Overseas account always met the minimum maintenance requirements. And although the market went down on the Friday before Herzog liquidated the account, Dr. Elia attested *1291 that it went up on Monday morning, putting Overseas above the margin' amount required. Nonetheless, Herzog started liquidating the account soon after the market opened. Dr. Elia provided calculations of the maintenance requirements for the account, showing that it always had a net equity and Herzog was never in danger of losing any money.

In . response, Herzog filed an affidavit disputing Dr. Elia’s calculations. The trial court granted summary judgment for Her-zog and entered a final judgment, which Overseas now appeals.

The standard of appellate review applicable to a grant of summary judgment is de novo. Volusia Cnty. v. Aberdeen at Ormond Beach, L.P., 760 So.2d 126, 130 (Fla.2000). Summary judgment is proper only if there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Id.

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181 So. 3d 1288, 2016 Fla. App. LEXIS 215, 2016 WL 64477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/overseas-investment-group-v-wall-street-electronica-inc-and-herzog-fladistctapp-2016.