Safron Capital Corp v. Morgan Stanley

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 22, 2024
Docket1:24-cv-07750
StatusUnknown

This text of Safron Capital Corp v. Morgan Stanley (Safron Capital Corp v. Morgan Stanley) 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
Safron Capital Corp v. Morgan Stanley, (S.D.N.Y. 2024).

Opinion

DavisPolk 95.01%" Sattar ar brian.weinstein@davispolk.com New York, NY 10017 davispolk.com

USDC SDNY DOCUMENT ELECTRONICALLY FILED November 21, 2024 DOC □ DATE FILED: 11/22/2024 _ VIA ECF The Honorable Valerie E. Caproni United States District Court Southern District of New York 40 Foley Square, Room 240 New York, NY 10007 Re: Safron Capital Corp. v. Morgan Stanley et al., Case No. 1:24-cv-7750-VEC and Estate of Bernard J. Sherlip v. Morgan Stanley et al., Case No. 1:24-cv-4571-VEC Dear Judge Caproni: We represent Morgan Stanley and Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC (collectively, “Defendants”) in the above-referenced actions and submit this letter jointly with counsel for the Safron and Sherlip plaintiffs. Consolidation Pursuant to the Court’s November 14, 2024 Order (ECF No. 15) in the Safron action, the parties write to indicate their consent to the consolidation of the Safron action with the Sherlip action, which is reflected in the attached Joint Stipulation and Proposed Order. The Joint Stipulation and Proposed Order also requests that Defendants’ deadline to move to dismiss or otherwise respond to the currently operative complaints in Sherlip and Safron be vacated until such time as this Court sets deadlines for the filing of a Consolidated Complaint and for the briefing of any motion to dismiss or other response to the Consolidated Complaint. Schedule for Filing Consolidated Complaint and Defendants’ Response Thereto The Plaintiffs in the Sherlip action and Defendants have reached agreement on a proposed schedule for the appointing of Interim Class Counsel, filing of a Consolidated Complaint, and for Defendants’ response to the Consolidated Complaint. The Plaintiff in the Safron action takes the position that the deadline to file a Consolidated Complaint should run from the date that the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation (“JPML”) rules on a motion filed by counsel for the Safron plaintiff to consolidate the various cash sweep actions filed against various financial institutions in courts around the country into a nationwide MDL in this Court (the “JPML Motion”). The parties’ positions are summarized below. Position of the Sherlip Plaintiffs and Defendants Plaintiffs in the Sherlip action and Defendants respectfully propose the following schedule: e 21 days after the Court orders consolidation: Motions for appointment of Interim Class Counsel due; e 14 days after the prior deadline: Responses to Interim Class Counsel motions due; e 7 days after the prior deadline: Replies on Interim Class Counsel motions due;

Davis Polk Honorable Valerie E. Caproni

e 45 days after the Court issues an Order appointing Interim Class Counsel: Deadline to file Consolidated Complaint; e 45 days after the Consolidated Complaint is filed: Deadline for Defendants’ answer or motion to dismiss; and e If a motion to dismiss is filed: o 45 days after the motion to dismiss is filed: Deadline for Plaintiffs’ opposition to the motion to dismiss; o 30 days after the Opposition to the motion to dismiss is filed: Deadline for Defendants’ reply in support of the motion to dismiss. The Sherlip Plaintiffs and the Defendants in both actions oppose the JPML Motion and do not believe there is any basis for the JPML to grant that motion, which seeks centralization of a number of cash sweep cases filed in different courts. Because each institution’s cash sweep program is governed by different contracts, disclosures, and decision-making processes, and there is currently no contention that any of the institutions coordinated with one another with respect to their cash sweep programs, there are not common issues of fact between the cases filed against different financial institutions that would justify an MDL, nor are there meaningful efficiencies to be gained through an MDL. Instead, the only consolidation required is the type the parties have agreed to in these actions—that is, the consolidation of separate actions filed against the same financial institution. There is no reason for the filing of a Consolidated Complaint in the present actions to be delayed pending the JPML’s decision on the JPML Motion, which has not yet been placed on the JPML calendar and will not even be heard for months. It should also be noted that, in In re Checking Account Overdraft Litig., 626 F. Supp. 2d 1333 (J.P.M.L. 2009), cited by the Safron Plaintiff below, several of the defendant banks consented to transfer to the MDL proceeding. But Morgan Stanley is the third defendant firm to go on record that it will either oppose a cash sweep MDL, or that an industry-wide MDL proceeding here is unlikely to succeed. See Brickman Investments Inc. v. Wells Fargo & Co., No. 24-cv-7751 (S.D.N.Y.), ECF No. 27 at 3 (Wells Fargo defendants agreeing that the “likelinood” of the JPML “consolidating an industry-wide MDL here is low’); Lourenco v. Ameriprise Financial, Inc., No. 24-cv-08825 (C.D. Cal. Nov. 8, 2024), ECF No. 26 (Ameriprise defendants stating that “there are strong grounds on which to oppose the MDL Motion’s suggestion that an industry-wide proceeding would create efficiencies, and Defendants intend to do so.”)." Position of the Safron Plaintiff Plaintiff Safron Capital Corp. believes the appropriate forum to discuss the merits of the pending JPML Motion is before the JPML. However, Safron’s position is that the JPML Motion is likely to be granted. In each related action, the defendant institution is charged with the same practice of paying its customers unreasonably low interest rates through its respective cash sweep program. This fact alone suffices under Section 1407 to warrant MDL centralization. That there are currently 34 cash sweep actions against 12 financial institutions pending in nine different districts does not undermine the case for centralization, it

1 Last night, counsel for the Safron Plaintiff filed a new action, McKinney v. Morgan Stanley et al., No. 1:24- cv-08860. Defendants as well as the Sherlip Plaintiff have not had time to consider and do not yet take a position on whether, as the Safron Plaintiff suggests below, McKinney “should be related and consolidated with the Sherlip Action and the Safron Action.” November 21, 2024

reinforces it. The JPML routinely centralizes cases involving defendants operating within the same industry to promote efficiency, avoid inconsistent rulings, and conserve judicial resources. MDL centralization would provide a range of pretrial techniques, such as the establishment of separate discovery and/or motion tracks, to streamline litigation—an issue that is, again, for the JPML to decide. Nor do the differences between the contracts and/or disclosures make centralization any less likely. As one of many examples, the JPML previously centralized related breach of contract actions against financial institutions arising out of their common practice of maximizing overdraft fees by debiting charges on customer accounts from largest to smallest. In re Checking Account Overdraft Litig., 626 F. Supp. 2d 1333, 1335 (J.P.M.L. 2009). The transferee court accumulated related actions against more than 40 financial institutions, including some of the same ones named as defendants in cash sweep cases, and aptly handled all pretrial proceedings. See generally In re Checking Account Overdraft Litig., No. 1:09-md-2036 (S.D. Fla.). The Sherlip Plaintiffs and the Defendants say that case was different because “several” defendants consented to centralization. But the position of the defendant financial institutions and each additional plaintiff in the related cash sweep actions is not yet known. And the three defendants that have voiced an opinion have, at best, merely stated their intention to oppose.

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Related

In Re Checking Account Overdraft Litigation
626 F. Supp. 2d 1333 (Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation, 2009)

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Bluebook (online)
Safron Capital Corp v. Morgan Stanley, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/safron-capital-corp-v-morgan-stanley-nysd-2024.