Saoud v. Everest Indemnity Insurance Company

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedJuly 28, 2021
Docket2:19-cv-12389
StatusUnknown

This text of Saoud v. Everest Indemnity Insurance Company (Saoud v. Everest Indemnity Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saoud v. Everest Indemnity Insurance Company, (E.D. Mich. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION WILLIAM SAOUD, PATRICIA BOLAND-SAOUD, and BILL SAOUD FINANCIAL, LLC, Case No. 19-12389 Honorable Laurie J. Michelson Plaintiffs/Counter-Defendants,

v.

EVEREST INDEMNITY INSURANCE COMPANY,

Defendant/Counter-Claimant.

OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART THE PARTIES’ CROSS MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT [21, 22] AND HOLDING THE REMAINDER OF THOSE MOTIONS IN ABEYANCE PENDING SUPPLEMENTAL BRIEFS At the center of this case is whether an insurer is required to pay for losses sustained by the insured. William Saoud runs Bill Saoud Financial, LLC, a company that sells insurance and other financial products. In 2017 and 2018, Saoud offered several of his clients an investment product called the 1 Global “Memorandum of Indebtedness.” 1 Global later went bankrupt, and the company and its CEO were sued by the Securities and Exchange Commission for, among other things, selling unregistered securities. Saoud’s clients who invested in 1 Global sued Saoud alleging, among other things, that he sold them unregistered securities. When Saoud offered the 1 Global memorandum, he had professional liability insurance from Everest Indemnity Insurance Company. So when he was sued by his clients, Saoud asked Everest to defend and indemnify him. But Everest never gave a final response. Eventually, Saoud, Saoud Financial, and Patricia Boland-Saoud (Saoud’s wife and an employee of Saoud Financial) brought this lawsuit seeking a declaration of insurance coverage.

Both the Saouds and Everest seek summary judgment. Summary judgment is usually all about the evidence. Here, though, the record does not contain much evidence. Indeed, as far as the summary-judgment record indicates, no depositions were taken in this case. And there are only two affidavits of record, both of which were prepared for use in a different case. True, the record does contain documentary evidence. But even that evidence is not as robust as it should have been—for instance, neither party has supplied the court with the 1 Global “Memorandum of

Indebtedness” that caused all the trouble. Given the state of the evidentiary record, the Court cannot decide whether the policy Everest issued requires Everest to reimburse the Saouds for their losses arising out of the sale of the 1 Global memorandum. Accordingly, as detailed below, the Court will order the parties to file supplemental briefs and to supplement the record. I.

A. The information in this section is taken from two complaints filed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission against 1 Global Capital, LLC and assisting lawyer Jan Atlas and, as such, the Court does not treat them as facts for purposes of resolving the pending summary-judgment motions. The Court presents the SEC’s allegations because they provide helpful context for the facts of this case. 1 Global was founded in 2013. See Am. Compl., Securities & Exchange Commission v. 1 Global Capital LLC, No. 18-61991 (S.D. Fla. Sept. 26, 2018). Its CEO was Carl Ruderman. Id. at 8. 1 Global promoted itself to small and medium-sized

businesses as an alternative source for short-term loans. Id. at 9. In exchange for a loan from 1 Global, a business would assign a portion of its accounts receivable to 1 Global. Id. at 10. 1 Global obtained the funds it lent to these small and medium-sized businesses from investors. To find these investors, 1 Global used a network of sales agents. Id. at 11. Many of these sales agents received three percent of every new investment brought into 1 Global. Id. at 12. 1 Global provided its sales agents with marketing

materials that indicated to investors that their return on investment would be high, 10 percent or more of their investment amount. Id. at 14. If an investor agreed to provide 1 Global with funding, the investor would sign a “Memorandum of Indebtedness.” Id. at 15. Once 1 Global obtained the investment funds, it would give each investor a small, fractionalized interest in hundreds of loans to the businesses. Id. at 16. According to the SEC, from “February 2014 until July 27, 2018, 1 Global . . .

raised more than $287 million from more than 3,400 investors.” Id. at 1. Unfortunately for these investors, Ruderman used $50 million of investor funds to purchase bad credit card debt. Id. at 19. Another $28 million went to “Ruderman personally as well as several companies in which he or his family members had a direct interest.” Id. “Largely as a result of 1 Global and Ruderman’s misappropriation and improper use of investor funds,” “by June 30, 2018, 1 Global’s financial records showed approximately $50 million in missing investor funds.” Id. In July 2018, 1 Global filed for bankruptcy. Id. at 26. In August 2018, the SEC sued 1 Global, Ruderman, and related entities in the

U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida. Sec. & Exch. Comm’n v. 1 Global Capital LLC, No. 18-61991 (S.D. Fla. filed Aug. 23, 2018). The SEC asserted, among other things, that 1 Global and Ruderman sold securities that had not been registered as required by the Securities Act of 1933. About a year later, the SEC sued Jan Atlas, a securities lawyer that allegedly aided 1 Global and Ruderman in violating federal securities laws. Complaint, Sec. & Exch. Comm’n v. Atlas, No. 19-62303 (S.D. Fla. Sept. 17, 2019) available at (ECF No.

26-3). The SEC alleged that after an attorney told 1 Global that the Memorandum of Indebtedness was likely a security (and thus subject to registration under the Securities Act), Ruderman reached out to Atlas, a securities lawyer. Id. at 4–5. According to the SEC, Atlas drafted a letter opining that the memoranda were not securities, despite being aware of facts strongly indicating that they were. Id. Further, after 1 Global’s then-CFO obtained yet another law firm’s opinion that the

memoranda were securities, Ruderman again reached out to Atlas, and Atlas again drafted a letter opining that the memoranda were not securities. Id. at 5. According to the SEC, 1 Global used Atlas’ letters “to assure its external sales agents, some of whom bought 1 Global’s notes themselves, that the notes were not securities and the agents did not need to have a securities license to offer and sell the notes.” Id. at 6. Further, “[i]t was important to the external sales agents to know that the notes 1 Global offered were not securities and absent the assurance that the notes were not securities they would not have offered 1 Global’s notes to investors.” Id. B.

William Saoud is the sole owner and member of Bill Saoud Financial, LLC. (ECF No. 21, PageID.362.) Saoud Financial sells insurance-related products, such as life insurance and annuities. (Id.) At some point—likely in 2017—Saoud learned of 1 Global’s financial product. Prior to becoming involved with the company, Saoud “was advised that the 1 Global loans . . . were not securities and that [he] did not need to be registered as a securities broker or agent.” (ECF No. 29, PageID.762.) Saoud “was advised by more than one

attorney that 1 Global loans were not securities.” (Id.) In late 2017 and the first half of 2018, Saoud Financial provided some of its clients with information on 1 Global’s Memorandum of Indebtedness. It appears that this included Victoria Berardi, Robin Diller, Judith Grady, and Michael and Deborah Tremblay. (See ECF No. 21, PageID.374, 376, 385, 387, 470, 472, 510, 512, 524.) As for Berardi, Diller, and Grady, they each attended one of Saoud’s educational

seminars “on retirement planning and insurance.” (ECF No. 21, PageID.362.) According to Saoud, after the seminars, he met with Berardi, Diller, and Grady at their request. (Id.) Saoud recalls that each sought “alternatives to insurance products.” (Id.) After they expressed interest, he presented materials about 1 Global’s Memorandum of Indebtedness.

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Saoud v. Everest Indemnity Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saoud-v-everest-indemnity-insurance-company-mied-2021.