Pioneer GP Limited v. Valdez

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 6, 2023
Docket1:22-cv-00373
StatusUnknown

This text of Pioneer GP Limited v. Valdez (Pioneer GP Limited v. Valdez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District 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
Pioneer GP Limited v. Valdez, (S.D.N.Y. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK ------------------------------------- X : 22cv373 (DLC) PIONEER GP LIMITED and CHAMPLAIN : INVESTMENT HOLDINGS LIMITED, : : OPINION AND ORDER Plaintiffs, : : -v- : : DARIA VALDEZ and JASON SWEENEY, : : Defendants. : : ------------------------------------- X

APPEARANCES:

For the plaintiffs: Ropers, Majeski, Kohn & Bentley (NYC) Blaise U. Chow Martin R. West II 750 3rd Avenue., 25th Floor New York, NY 10017

For the defendants: Baker & Hostetler LLP (NYC) Howard E. Cotton Michael S. Gordon 45 Rockefeller Plaza New York, NY 10111

DENISE COTE, District Judge: The plaintiffs, each of whom is a Cayman Islands company, have brought this action against residents of the Bahamas and Ireland, alleging that they mismanaged a Cayman Islands’ investment fund. The plaintiffs bring claims under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”), 18 U.S.C. §§ 1961 et seq., and state law. The defendants have moved to dismiss the first amended complaint (“FAC”) for, among other grounds, failure to state a claim under RICO. Because the RICO claims are time-barred, the motion to dismiss those claims

is granted. The Court declines to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the state law claims. Background The following facts are drawn from the FAC and documents upon which it relies. For the purposes of deciding this motion, the factual allegations in the FAC are accepted as true, and all reasonable inferences are drawn in the plaintiffs’ favor. This litigation arises out of the parties’ connections to Pioneer Recovery Fund L.P. (the “Fund”), a Cayman Islands investment fund. The sole investor in the Fund (the “Investor”), whom the FAC does not identify, committed $10 million to the Fund. Plaintiff Pioneer GP Limited (“Pioneer”)

is the general partner of the Fund, and plaintiff Champlain Investment Holdings Limited (“Champlain”) is a Cayman Islands holding company owned by the Fund. In 2008, Lance Valdez (“Mr. Valdez”), the deceased spouse of defendant Daria Valdez, founded the Fund. At its inception, the Fund was managed by Pioneer Investment Management Ltd. (“Pioneer Investment”). Defendant Jason Sweeney was the Chief Operating Officer and Director of Legal Affairs of Pioneer Investment. Non-party Crescent Advisors, Ltd. (“Crescent”) was the original general partner of the Fund. Mr. Valdez invested the Fund’s assets across various

entities and through numerous complex transactions. Among these investments was an investment of $3.5 million in 10 East 63rd Street, Inc. (“10E63 Inc.”), which owned a property in Manhattan located at 10 E. 63rd Street (the “Property”). The Fund’s investment was valued at about 30% or 40% of the equity in the Property. Defendant Daria Valdez, a resident of the Bahamas, also had an ownership interest in the Property. Sweeney, an Irish resident, was the Chief Executive Officer, President, and Director of 10E63 Inc. Sweeney is also a director or general partner of various entities that also had an ownership interest in 10E63 Inc.

Mr. Valdez died in November 2012, and Sweeney attempted to fill the void left by Mr. Valdez’s passing. In late 2012, Sweeney falsely told the Investor that two advisors had been appointed to the Fund. One of those purported advisors later stated that Sweeney’s representation about his appointment was false. Around this time, the Investor had contributed 90% of the $10 million it had committed to the Fund. In January 2013, Crescent demanded that the Investor contribute the remaining $1 million. Sweeney sent the Investor a summary of the Fund’s investments in the last quarter of 2012 and the first quarter of 2013, which falsely reported that the investments were doing

well and increasing in value. There was, however, no documentation to support those written representations regarding the value of the investments. Sweeney also led the Investor to believe that there were other investors in the Fund, which was not true. Based on these false representations, the Investor contributed the remaining $1 million. In August 2013, Crescent sold to Champlain the Fund’s interests in 10E63 Inc. for $350,000 and the Fund’s interest in a different company, ESO Prop Corp. Ltd. (“ESO”), for $240,000 (“2013 Investment Sales”). These sales were for substantially less than the investments had been valued. The FAC asserts that these sales were fraudulent. The Investor was not informed of

the sales until after the sales had occurred. At the request of the Investor, and after considerable delay, Pioneer was created and replaced Crescent as the general partner of the Fund. Pioneer began investigating the circumstances surrounding the 2013 Investment Sales. In September 2014, Pioneer brought a 28 U.S.C. § 1782 proceeding (“2014 § 1782 Proceeding”) in this Court seeking information about the 2013 Investment Sales for use in anticipated litigation in the Cayman Islands. After obtaining this discovery, and as a result of a settlement, Champlain became an asset of the Fund. In March 2016, entities that owned shares of 10E63 Inc.

sold their shares to Griffen Holdings Services. These shareholders included Subacu Investment Partners LP (“SIP”). Sweeney was the sole director of the general partner of SIP, and negotiated and executed the documents relating to the sale of SIP’s shares in 10E63 Inc. Champlain owned an 80% interest in SIP, but was not advised of the sale orchestrated by Sweeney before the sale occurred. The FAC asserts that it was Valdez who made the decision to sell the Property. In 2017 and 2018, the plaintiffs continued their investigations of the status of the Fund’s investments. On September 20, 2017, Valdez’s lawyer told the plaintiffs that the “New York property in question is located at 10 East 63rd

Street, New York, NY 10065,” but did not advise them that the Property had already been sold. In 2020, the plaintiffs commenced proceedings under 28 U.S.C. § 1782 in this Court against 10E63 Inc. and other related entities. Through these proceedings, the plaintiffs learned in 2021 that the value of Champlain’s investment in 10E63 Inc. was not the value of the Property but rather the value of a company with an “inbuilt” contingent tax liability, which significantly reduced the value of the investment. The shares in 10E63 Inc., therefore, had been sold at a price that took this tax liability into account. The plaintiffs also learned that the Property had net operating losses amounting to $6 million, and that the

Valdez family lived in the Property during this time. Prior to 2023, the plaintiffs had not received any proceeds from the sale of the Property. In January 2023, as a result of liquidation proceedings in the Bahamas, the “liquidators” received $600,000. The plaintiffs commenced this action on January 14, 2022. On December 7, Sweeney moved to dismiss the complaint, and an Order of December 8 set a deadline for the plaintiffs to amend their complaint or oppose Sweeney’s motion to dismiss. The Order stated that it would be unlikely that the plaintiffs would have a further opportunity to amend. The FAC was filed on January 30, 2023. The plaintiffs

bring two claims under RICO: for a violation of RICO and for a conspiracy to violate RICO. See 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c)-(d). The plaintiffs also assert state law claims for misappropriation of funds, fraud, conversion, and breach of fiduciary duty. The defendants moved to dismiss the FAC on March 13.

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