SEC v. Sharp Capital Inc

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 15, 2003
Docket01-11108
StatusPublished

This text of SEC v. Sharp Capital Inc (SEC v. Sharp Capital Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
SEC v. Sharp Capital Inc, (5th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

REVISED JANUARY 15, 2003

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS For the Fifth Circuit

___________________________

No. 01-10314 Consolidated with No. 01-11108 ___________________________

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION, Plaintiff,

VERSUS

SHARP CAPITAL, INC., a Texas Corporation, ET AL., Defendants;

RALPH S. JANVEY, on behalf of Sharp Capital, Inc., Special Master, Appellee,

ROBERT FERNANDEZ, and Fifty-Three Other Similarly Situated Investor Clients, Movant-Appellant.

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas, Dallas Division

January 8, 2003

Before DAVIS, JONES and SMITH, Circuit Judges.

W. EUGENE DAVIS, Circuit Judge:

Appellants, Robert Fernandez and fifty-three other investors (the Fernandez Group) in Sharp Capital, Inc., appeal the district court’s judgments approving settlements between Sharp and third

parties which settlements included permanent injunctions barring the Fernandez Group from pursuing

their claims against those third parties in state court. For reasons that follow, we are satisfied that

the district court did not abuse its discretion in using a summary judgment type proceeding to

determine that the Fernandez Group had no direct claims against appellees or in entering an injunction

barring the Fernandez Group from pursuing those claims, which belonged solely to Sharp. Therefore,

we affirm.

I.

In November 1998, the Securities and Exchange Commission sued Sharp Capital, Inc.,

Mauricio A. Gutierrez (Sharp’s principal) and Emerging Markets Capital Advisors, Ltd. (EMCA)

invoking the district court’s equity powers and seeking t o enjoin alleged violations of the federal

securities laws. The court entered a preliminary injunction prohibiting anyone from interfering with

Sharp’s assets, signed an order taking jurisdiction of all of Sharp and EMCA assets for the benefit

of defrauded investors and appointing Robert Janvey, Special Master, to gather and distribute those

assets. This appeal relates to orders of the Special Master (approved by the district court) enjoining

individual investors from suing to recoup their individual losses from entities with whom Sharp had

business dealings.

The SEC charged Sharp and others with defrauding numerous investors. Sharp was an

investment advisory company registered with the SEC. It entered into investment advisory

agreements with over 130 Mexican nationals who invested approximately $82 million. The

Fernandez plaintiffs / appellants are 54 of Sharp’s investors who invested approximately $23 million.

Sharp promised to place the investors’ funds in safe, conservative investments such as Eurobonds,

2 Euro CDS and money market funds. Instead it used the investors’ money to make highly leveraged

purchases of investments in volatile emerging markets such as Russia and Latin America. Sharp also

pooled the funds in EMCA, a Bahamian corporation, and used them to make substandard loans to

entities affiliated with Grupo Protexa, a group of Mexican companies, and others. By the time the

SEC stepped in, Sharp had lost about 94% of the investors’ money.

The Investment Advisory and Custody Agreement that each investor signed with Sharp

required Sharp to deposit the funds in NationsBank (n/k/a Bank of America) (the Bank) in an account

owned by Sharp. Sharp was permitted to pool the funds in one account as long as all funds came

from Sharp’s investors. The Investment Agreement gave Sharp exclusive authority to manage and

make investment decisions regarding the funds. Sharp did open a custodial account at the Bank

without investment advice which required the Bank to follow Sharp’s directions for use of the funds.

Following his appointment, the Special Master began the process of settling claims of Sharp

for the benefit of the investors. In June 1999, the Special Master began negotiations with Grupo

Protexa who had borrowed substantial sums from Sharp and whose loans were in default.

In October 1999, the Fernandez plaintiffs filed suit in state district court against Grupo

Protexa, the Bank and other defendants who had done business wit h Sharp or acted as Sharp’s

agents, but who were not parties to the SEC action. The suit raised various state law causes of action

including fraud, negligent misrepresentation, violation of the Texas DTPA, negligence, conversion,

breach of trust, breach of fiduciary duty, misapplication of fiduciary property, violation of the Texas

Securities Act and constructive trust/unjust enrichment. The Bank responded to the Fernandez

lawsuit by filing an action for contribution and contractual indemnity against Sharp, asserting a right

to recover over from Sharp any damages the Fernandez Group might recover from the Bank in the

3 state court action. The Bank’s suit was consolidated into the main SEC suit.

In April 2000, the Special Master applied to the district court in the SEC action for approval

of a settlement it had negotiated with Grupo Protexa. The Special Master concluded that the

Fernandez Group’s claims against Grupo Protexa were derivative of Sharp’s claims and requested

that the settlement include a release of the Fernandez Group’s claims against Grupo Protexa and an

injunction to prohibit them from further pursuing those claims in the state court suit. At the request

of the Special Master, the district court ordered a summary proceeding to evaluate the settlement and

give the Fernandez claimants the opportunity to demonstrate that they had direct claims against

Grupo Protexa.

In his application for approval of the Grupo Prot exa settlement, the Special Master also

requested authority to investigate Sharp’s claims against the Bank, which the district court granted.

In its investigation the Special Master focused on whether the Fernandez plaintiffs had any direct

claims against the Bank or were asserting claims derivative of Sharp’s claims controlled by the Special

Master. The Special Master sent questionnaires to all Sharp investors asking them to identify all

Bank employees with whom they had contact and to disclose any facts that would support a direct

claim against the Bank. The Fernandez plaintiffs refused to answer. The Special Master also

reviewed discovery in the state court suit. The Special Master concluded that the Fernandez Group

had no direct claims against the Bank and were asserting derivative claims of Sharp that were under

his control.

The Special Master negotiated a settlement with the Bank which included Sharp’s claims

against the Bank and the Bank’s contribution and indemnity action against Sharp. The Special Master

then asked the district court to approve the settlement. Again the settlement called for release of all

4 of Sharp’s claims, a release of the Bank’s contribution claims and an injunction to prevent the

Fernandez Group from pursuing their claims against the Bank in the state court suit. The district

court ordered a summary proceeding to allow the Fernandez Group the opportunity to present

evidence of direct claims against the Bank.

The Fernandez Group filed Responses to the Special Master’s Applications for approval of

the settlements with Grupo Protexa and the Bank. Their submissions included their original and

amended petitions from the state court case, declarations from individual Fernandez plaintiffs and the

Sharp brochure, fund receipt confirmations and portfolio analysis statements.

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