Pavlovich v. National City Bank

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 9, 2006
Docket04-4372
StatusUnpublished

This text of Pavlovich v. National City Bank (Pavlovich v. National City Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pavlovich v. National City Bank, (6th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 06a0020n.06 Filed: January 9, 2006

No. 04-4372

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

Lauren M. Pavlovich, ) ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) v. ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE National City Bank, ) NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO ) Defendant-Appellee, ) ) )

BEFORE: MERRITT, MARTIN, and COLE

MERRITT, Circuit Judge. Plaintiff Lauren M. Pavlovich invested a small fortune in Rx

Remedy, Inc. (“Rx Remedy”), a privately-held health care company, with a dubious financial record.

A half-decade and a million-and-a-half dollars in losses later, Ms. Pavlovich now is trying to blame

defendant National City Bank (“the Bank”) for following her investment instructions and those of

her unscrupulous investment advisor, Cashel Management Company (“Cashel”). The District Court

granted summary judgment in favor of the Bank as to all claims and denied Ms. Pavlovich’s motion

for partial summary judgment. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.

I.

In 1992, the Mooney family sold its business, Mooney Chemical. Plaintiff Lauren (Mooney)

Pavlovich received approximately $2.5 million after taxes from selling her share. Her brother, Bob No. 04-4372 Pavlovich v. National City Bank

Mooney, advised Ms. Pavlovich, as well as other family members, to invest the proceeds under the

direction of Cashel, an investment company led by Bob Mooney’s childhood friend Tom Durkin.

That same year, Ms. Pavlovich and Cashel executed an Investment Management Contract (“Cashel

Contract”) giving Cashel “complete discretion with respect to the investments of your funds and the

execution of purchase and/or sale orders through one or more broker-dealers and/or registered

representatives as [Cashel] deems appropriate.”

Since the Cashel Contract precluded Cashel from having custody of her funds, Ms. Pavlovich

simultaneously signed a Custody Agreement with the Bank that generally required the Bank to

follow her written instructions regarding investment of the funds entrusted to the Bank. Also in

1992, a Trading Letter apparently executed by her granted Cashel “sole trading authority” over her

“Fixed Income Account” and directed the Bank “to accept all trades from [Cashel] unless notified

to the contrary . . . .”1

Pursuant to these three documents, in 1995, Cashel began directing the Bank to disburse

some of her funds in Rx Remedy. This privately-held company sold health care information from

its large database, published a magazine, and, starting in 1997, provided personalized consumer

health news on the internet. Ms. Pavlovich’s initial disbursement purchased stock in Rx Remedy.

As the millennium approached, Rx Remedy became increasingly starved for cash. The company’s

1 There is some dispute as to whether Ms. Pavlovich actually signed the Trading Letter. The copy of the letter in the record does not bear her signature, and she does not recall signing it. However, she maintains on appeal that she executed the Trading Letter, and, in any event, the document would have been required in order to have opened the custodial account in the first place. Taking the facts in the light most favorable to Ms. Pavlovich, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c), Ms. Pavlovich executed the Trading Letter.

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net losses compounded each year, and its owners’ equity decreased over seventy-five-fold in five

years to a whopping -$37.8 million by the spring of 1999. Cashel heeded Rx Remedy’s calls for

cash by, between 1998 until well into 2000, investing the money of Ms. Pavlovich and other clients

each month in Rx Remedy promissory notes bearing 12% interest with warrants to buy Rx Remedy

stock.2 As she later testified, Ms. Pavlovich understood that this was a risky strategy; but it

was one with the potential for a big payoff: by the summer of 1999, the company’s management

propagated the prospect of an initial public offering (IPO) to capitalize on the booming demand for

internet IPOs. That same summer Ms. Pavlovich and her husband agreed with Tom Durkin to

increase her investments in Rx Remedy to generate more income.

To prop up Rx Remedy and conceal the true state of Ms. Pavlovich’s investment funds,

Cashel devised a scheme of “rollover transactions” that eventually depleted her account:

Typically, at the beginning of each month, Cashel requested money to be wired from the Account to Rx Remedy’s account; then on the last day of the month, a Cashel representative would hand deliver to NCB a check in the amount of the earlier wire transfer plus “interest” for deposit into the Account. This pattern of transactions would begin again on the first day of the next month. The net effect of these repeated transactions was that even before the funds represented by the checks had been deposited into the Account, those same funds had already been wired back to Rx Remedy.

Pavlovich v. Nat’l City Bank, 342 F. Supp. 2d 718, 721 (N.D. Ohio 2004). The Bank provided Ms.

Pavlovich with monthly statements depicting these transactions. In January of 2000, the Bank

instituted a “five day rule” prohibiting the Bank from approving “any wire transfers from Cashel

2 As discussed below, Ms. Pavlovich strenuously disputes this characterization, claiming instead that the Bank simply transferred money to Rx Remedy without a stated purpose at Cashel’s request.

-3- No. 04-4372 Pavlovich v. National City Bank

which were dependent on funds that had been deposited by check less than five days earlier.” Id.

at 722. That same month, Ms. Pavlovich’s husband called the Bank to complain about these

transactions, but no written correspondence terminated Cashel’s management authority until late

2000. By then, Ms. Pavlovich had lost roughly a million-and-a-half dollars once Rx Remedy filed

for bankruptcy.

On April 12, 2001, Ms. Pavlovich sued the Bank in state court in Ohio, alleging various

claims under state and federal law. The Bank timely removed the case to federal court on the basis

of federal question jurisdiction. She subsequently amended her complaint to assert diversity

jurisdiction. Approximately a year after that amendment, she again amended her complaint to

withdraw those counts presenting federal questions. Ms. Pavlovich now appeals the District Court’s

grant of the Bank’s motion for summary judgment on all claims, and denial of Ms. Pavlovich’s

motion for partial summary judgment on Counts I and III.

II.

A. Jurisdiction

The District Court had diversity jurisdiction over this case pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §

1332(a)(1) because, when the suit was initiated, Ms. Pavlovich was domiciled in Florida and the

Bank was a citizen of Ohio.3 See Grupo Dataflux v. Atlas Global Group, L.P., 541 U.S. 567, 574

(2004) (“To our knowledge, the Court has never approved a deviation from the rule articulated by

3 The District Court improperly cited federal question jurisdiction as the basis of its subject-matter jurisdiction. As noted earlier and discussed below in footnote 5, Ms. Pavlovich amended her complaint to remove all claims arising under federal law.

-4- No. 04-4372 Pavlovich v. National City Bank

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