Rogosin v. Steadman

71 F.R.D. 514, 1976 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15246
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 5, 1976
DocketNos. 69 Civ. 2277, 69 Civ. 2660
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 71 F.R.D. 514 (Rogosin v. Steadman) 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
Rogosin v. Steadman, 71 F.R.D. 514, 1976 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15246 (S.D.N.Y. 1976).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

OWEN, District Judge.

In my memorandum and order of December 5, 1974, D.C., 65 F.R.D. 365, I ordered a hearing into certain allegations which arose from the motion of defendants Steadman Security Corporation and Steadman Corporation of America (hereinafter “Steadman”) to strike and/or dismiss the consolidated supplemental complaint as a sham and false for improper verification pursuant to Rule 11 of the Fed.R.Civ.P.

I concluded that a hearing was required under Surowitz v. Hilton Hotels Corp., 383 U.S. 363, 86 S.Ct. 845, 15 L.Ed.2d 807 (1966) to resolve the basic issues of (1) whether the verification of the complaints in this shareholder derivative action should be stricken as sham because of the circumstances surrounding the initiation of the lawsuit; and (2) whether the named plaintiffs, Mrs. Rogosin and Mr. Herman, could adequately represent the class of plaintiff shareholders on behalf of the corporation as required by Rule 23.1 of the Fed.R.Civ.P. I held extensive hearings beginning on February 7, 1975 and continuing from time to time thereafter until March 14, 1975.

The facts which initially prompted me to hold the hearing are set out in my December 5, 1974 memorandum, but may be summarized briefly as follows.

[516]*516As to the Rogosin complaint, four years after Mrs. Rogosin 1 filed her complaint, she testified at her deposition on August 15, 1973 that she had neither authorized nor was she aware that an action had been commenced in her name in May 1969 or even that it had been pending or in existence during the intervening four years.2 Mrs. Rogosin stated that she had not verified any complaint in 1969. Her attorney, Ira J. Sands, had verified it instead, reciting that “. . . the plaintiff resides outside of the County within which my office is located and is presently not within that County.” Mrs. Rogosin had, however, lived within New York City since 1967 and had, according to her testimony, her first meeting with Sands on May 22, 1973, some three months3 before her deposition which was the first time she learned of the existence of her lawsuit — the instant action. Sands responded to these allegations by affidavit, stating that it was Arthur Rogosin, Mrs. Rogosin’s husband, who was the guiding force behind the filing of his wife’s complaint and that he, Sands, verified the complaint believing Mrs. Rogosin to have then resided in Baltimore, and further Sands argued that it was incumbent upon defendants to point out his error, if any, and provide him with the accurate address of his own client.

Kenneth Herman, the other named plaintiff and trustee of a trust for Sheril Kupfer, verified his original complaint in June 1969. He testified at his deposition that he was asked to file this complaint by Paul Kupfer, an attorney and Sheril’s father. He stated that Kupfer brought him the complaint and prior to his verification he skimmed but did not read it and was aware only generally of its contents. He had no independent knowledge of the facts surrounding the complaint and would not have brought the action except for the request of Kupfer. Herman stated he had never met anyone from Rosenthal & Gurkin, the attorneys who filed his action, until four years later and did not meet Ira Sands, his attorney in the consolidated action, until a moment before his deposition in August 1973. Herman asserted that he was satisfied to verify the complaint based on Kupfer’s representations to him. Kupfer asserted that he acted upon information of Alfred Gurkin, an attorney. Gurkin stated that it was he who did the investigating on Kupfer’s behalf.

In view of these prima facie disturbing circumstances I set this matter down for a hearing on two issues: (1) whether either plaintiff was the motivating force in the institution of these actions; and (2) whether there was an adequate investigation performed by the attorneys or any one else on behalf of the plaintiffs before suit was commenced. I further noted that the Court must be assured

“. . . that some person, party, attorney advisor, or otherwise has responsibly investigated the allegations at the behest of the named plaintiff, who then stands behind the merits of the complaint, and that the plaintiff is [not] ... a puppet for others, neither instigating the action, nor having interest in or awareness of its basis.”

Four witnesses testified before me. The first, Lawrence Philips, Mrs. Rogosin’s per[517]*517sonal attorney, although not counsel of record in this action, testified that the Ro-gosin litigation grew out of a social occasion in 1968 at which he mentioned to Arthur Rogosin, plaintiff Rogosin’s husband, that he was involved in some stockholders’ litigation involving mutual funds. Philips testified that husband Rogosin indicated that his wife held some shares in mutual funds and that he, Philips, should look into some of these funds. Philips subsequently passed the request on to Leonard Schreiber, another attorney, and then supplied Mrs. Rogosin with a blank retainer form which she signed and returned to him, the details being later furnished to him by her husband on the phone.

Philips’ testimony revealed that when Mr. Rogosin asked Philips to look into the question of mutual funds, he supplied Philips with a list of some thirteen funds — apparently all the funds in which Mrs. Rogosin owned shares. This would appear to evidence either total distrust of the mutual fund industry on the one hand, or the search for a lawsuit on the other.

Attorney Leonard Schreiber testified next. He recalled receiving a telephone call from Philips in which the list of thirteen funds was relayed. Schreiber stated that because of his practice of “not backstop-. ping” — not getting involved in mutual fund litigation already instituted by others — and because he knew offhand about most of the shareholder suits that were pending, he concluded that the Steadman funds were the only ones as to which litigation was not currently pending, and therefore concentrated his inquiry in this area. Schreiber stated that he contacted the Berdon accounting firm for a report and thereafter telephoned Philips to inform him that all of the funds except the Steadman funds were involved in derivative suits and Philips should therefore obtain a retainer from his client as to suit against the Steadman funds (which Philips nevertheless did in blank, see supra).

Schreiber indicated that he never personally investigated the Steadman funds prior to his conclusion that they were the funds for which Philips should seek a retainer from Rogosin. Schreiber also stated that the accountant’s report4 was passed directly on to Sands —not to Philips or the Rogo-sins,5 and that, based on the accountant’s report and investigation by Sands, Sands— not Schreiber — prepared and filed the complaint. Schreiber testified that he neither had a role in preparing the complaint nor was involved in any subsequent phases of the Rogosin action.

Mrs. Rogosin’s husband, Arthur, next testified that it was he, and not his wife, who instituted the litigation now pending in this Court. Mr. Rogosin’s testimony in substance was that Mrs. Rogosin knew neither about the complaint nor this litigation.' Moreover, it is clear that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
71 F.R.D. 514, 1976 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogosin-v-steadman-nysd-1976.