Platsis v. EF Hutton & Co. Inc.

642 F. Supp. 1277, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21894
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Michigan
DecidedAugust 4, 1986
DocketG83-784 CA(5)
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 642 F. Supp. 1277 (Platsis v. EF Hutton & Co. Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Platsis v. EF Hutton & Co. Inc., 642 F. Supp. 1277, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21894 (W.D. Mich. 1986).

Opinion

OPINION

HILLMAN, Chief Judge.

BACKGROUND

The plaintiff in this action, George Plat-sis, age 47, is an educated and intelligent man, having graduated from the University of Michigan Law School. Prior to entering law school, he completed three years of medical school, finishing in the top third of his class. Plaintiff taught physiology to medical students prior to entering law school.

Upon graduation from law school, he was employed at the Federal Trade Commission where, for approximately a year and a half he participated in trial preparation and document production.

Upon leaving the Federal Trade Commission in October, 1969, plaintiff was trial attorney for the Michigan Department of Attorney General, Consumer Protection Division; from January, 1971, until May, 1975, he was a trial attorney for the Department of Transportation, specializing in condemnation and highway negligence defense work.

Plaintiff began solo practice in Michigan in 1975, as a trial attorney specializing in plaintiffs’ personal injury, medical malpractice and highway negligence defense and condemnation as a Special Assistant Attorney General. Plaintiff is married to a science and mathematics teacher and has two teenage daughters. He and his family live in Okemos, Michigan.

Prior to 1981, plaintiff had only a small amount of investment experience. He testified to having taken a course in securities law at the Michigan Law School. His investment experience was limited to purchase of mutual funds and apparently a small number of shares in Ford Motor Company securities.

Defendant Hutton is a major brokerage house, licensed by the Securities and Exchange Commission and acts as a sales agent or broker to investors.

Plaintiff’s relationship with Hutton commenced in late 1980, when he anticipated the receipt in 1981, of a substantial contingent fee in the amount of approximately $500,000. Although the record is not totally clear concerning his earned income from his law practice, aside from the contingent fee, plaintiff testified that his income before 1981, averaged “about $50,000”.

Upon receipt of the lump sum contingent fee, plaintiff sought tax shelter investment advice from Hutton’s Lansing, Michigan office. Specifically, plaintiff was interested in investments that would help reduce his tax burden. Plaintiff testified that he thought it was “unfair” that he should be taxed at a high income rate in one year for income received from work performed over a period of at least six years on one case.

*1285 Plaintiff established several accounts with Hutton over the course of time, the initial one consisting of a $500,000 deposit on October 23, 1980. On January 30, 1981, plaintiff transferred almost this entire sum to his personal Hutton account.

At the Hutton office in Lansing, plaintiff was introduced to Joseph Potvin as “an expert in tax shelter investments”. Mr. Potvin currently an assistant vice-president of Hutton, was then an account executive with considerable training and experience in the area of tax shelter investments. Mr. Potvin, a 1972 graduate of Michigan State University, was then and is now the tax shelter coordinator for the Lansing office. As tax shelter coordinator, Mr. Potvin received extensive training in the tax shelter investments area and was charged with the responsibility of training account executives in the Lansing office. Mr. Potvin had, earlier in his career, worked for Merrill Lynch. Mr. Potvin is a member of the New York Stock Exchange, The American Stock Exchange and the National Association of Security Dealers of America.

Upon their meeting, or shortly thereafter, plaintiff related to Mr. Potvin his financial situation including his current professional corporation income of $500,-000. Plaintiff emphasized to Mr. Potvin his desire to mitigate the tax burden he would incur due to the receipt of the contingency fee in one lump sum. Early on in their relationship, Mr. Potvin recommended to plaintiff that he enroll in Hutton’s Personal Financial Management (PFM) program. The PFM program involves a comprehensive analysis of a customer’s financial and estate situation including investment goals. Plaintiff declined to enroll in the PFM program viewing the $5,000 fee as prohibitive and stating that he thought he could do much of the work himself. Mr. Potvin also recommended that plaintiff seek the advice of a certified public accountant and specifically suggested a Lansing C.P.A. named James Briley, to assist in preparing plaintiff’s tax returns. Again, plaintiff declined. It was his belief that he had always prepared his own taxes and again was apparently reluctant to pay anyone else for tax advice.

Prior to contacting Hutton, plaintiff, on his own, had done some oil and gas lease investigation. There was testimony that plaintiff had investigated at least two oil and gas offerings related to developmental wells. Plaintiff decided not to invest in these programs for they lacked the “diversity” that exploratory programs offered. However, plaintiff remained interested in oil and gas and sought to pursue exploratory offerings through Hutton. At one of their early meetings, plaintiff specifically requested information from Mr. Potvin regarding oil and gas investments handled by Hutton. Prior to plaintiff’s first investment in an oil and gas program, Mr. Potvin discussed with plaintiff the relative advantages and disadvantages of alternate investments. In particular, plaintiff and Mr. Potvin discussed and compared oil and gas, municipal bonds and real estate limited partnership investments. Plaintiff was provided with a copy of a Hutton brochure entitled, “Understanding Tax Shelters”, which describes the tax advantages and risks associated with various tax shelter investments, including cattle, equipment leasing, real estate and oil and gas.

Upon analysis, plaintiff concluded that neither municipal bonds or real estate limited partnership investments suited his particular need for immediate high tax loss write-offs such as those available through investments in oil and gas. Accordingly, plaintiff chose to invest in oil and gas to the relative exclusion of alternate investments with the exception of two real estate tax shelters which are not involved in this action.

Plaintiff purchased interests in the following oil and gas shelter limited partnerships (“Litigated investments”) on the dates indicated for the following initial amounts:

Investment Program Date of Purchase Investment Amount
Forest 81A 15 Dec 1980 $10,000
Hilliard 81 11 Feb 1981 10,000
Indian Wells 1981-1 2 Feb 1981 150,000
Can Am 81-1 11 Mar 1981 10,000
*1286 Investment Program Date of Purchase Investment Amount
Woods 11 Mar 1981 10,000
Apache 81 — I 31 Mar 1981 5,000
Sanchez-O’Brien 81-1 9 Jun 1981 10,000
Forest 81-B 9 Jun 1981 10,000
Kenai 81-2 18 Jun 1981 10,000
Woods 81-11 26 Jun 1981 10,000

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Bluebook (online)
642 F. Supp. 1277, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21894, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/platsis-v-ef-hutton-co-inc-miwd-1986.