Securities & Exchange Commission v. Smith

710 F.3d 87, 2013 WL 1092819, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 5325
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 18, 2013
Docket11-3843-cv (L)
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 710 F.3d 87 (Securities & Exchange Commission v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Securities & Exchange Commission v. Smith, 710 F.3d 87, 2013 WL 1092819, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 5325 (2d Cir. 2013).

Opinion

WINTER, Circuit Judge:

This appeal arises out of a proceeding brought to remedy securities fraud and recover assets — to be distributed to victims — that were the fruits of the fraud. The issues before us relate to enforcement of, and compliance with, an order freezing various assets.

Appellants, the David L. and Lynn A. Smith Irrevocable Trust U/A 8/04/04 (the “Trust”) and various individuals, appeal from Magistrate Judge Homer’s 1 order directing the disposition of the Trust’s assets and sanctioning: (i) Lynn Smith, a defendant in the action, and (ii) non-parties Jill Dunn, attorney for the Trust, and David M. Wojeski, one-time trustee of the Trust. The order against Lynn Smith provided that, in the event of her failure to satisfy the sanctions against her, a receiv *90 er would dispose of a piece of real property owned by the Trust if doing so would maximize the return on that property.

This appeal raises questions concerning our jurisdiction to hear interlocutory appeals of sanctions orders; the propriety of the sanctions imposed; and whether it was error for the magistrate judge to give the receiver authority to dispose of Trust assets without first providing notice and an opportunity for the Trust to be heard.

We dismiss the appeals of Jill Dunn and David Wojeski for lack of jurisdiction, affirm the sanction order as to Lynn Smith, and remand to allow the Trust to contest the court’s order regarding the disposition of Trust property and for the magistrate judge to give additional guidance to the receiver as to disposition of the Trust property.

BACKGROUND

The origins and provisions of the Trust, which was created in August 2004, are central to the issues on appeal. David and Lynn Smith created the Trust with themselves as donors and their adult children as beneficiaries. The Trust was funded by 100,000 shares of stock held in Lynn Smith’s name. The shares were worth approximately $4.5 million. The shares were not given outright to the Trust but were transferred pursuant to an annuity agreement that would pay the Smiths approximately $490,000 per year beginning in 2015 and ending either when both David and Lynn Smith died or when the Trust’s assets were exhausted. As discussed infra, contrary to the district court’s orders, the existence of this annuity was not revealed until late July 2010, and its discovery gave rise to the sanctions imposed.

In April 2010, the SEC filed the present complaint against David Smith and various related individuals and corporations alleging violations of the securities laws. Lynn Smith, his wife, was included in the action as a relief defendant 2 and later as a defendant under New York law who had received a fraudulent conveyance. The SEC also moved to freeze the assets of all of the defendants. In response, the district court issued an order that, inter alia, froze Lynn Smith’s assets and directed her to provide “an accounting [of her] own personal assets, liabilities and general financial condition.”

Lynn Smith’s April 29 statement of accounts and list of assets included no mention of any interest in the Trust or in the annuity that was to be paid to her and David Smith by the Trust. On May 26, she filed an affidavit stating explicitly that she and David Smith “had no interest in or expectation of an interest in the [Trust], It exists solely, exclusively and permanently for the benefit of our children.” Finally, at a hearing concerning the asset freeze on June 10, Lynn Smith stated that she had no ownership interest in the stock that was transferred to the trust and that the funds in the Trust were solely for the benefit of her children.

On July 7, 2010, after considering the blatantly misleading information before it, the court released the freeze on the Trust’s assets, concluding that David Smith had no beneficial ownership in the *91 trust. Shortly after the lifting of the freeze, the Trust made several expenditures. Jill Dunn, the Trust’s attorney, received $101,096 for lawyer’s fees and costs; David Wojeski, then the sole trustee, received $8,098.50 in fees for his work as trustee; and the Trust purchased a vacation home in New York from Lynn Smith for $600,000.

On July 20, Wojeski received a fax containing an e-mail from an individual at Southtowns Financial Group that stated, “[t]he first four pages [attached] are from the annuity contract. The three pages after that are documents that were in the file that I thought might be relevant.” The pages that followed included a “Policy Delivery Receipt” for a “PRIVATE ANNUITY CONTRACT,” which was signed by David Smith; the first page of a private annuity agreement, which identified David and Lynn Smith as annuitants; and a page providing the key terms of the contract. The next day, July 21, Wojeski forwarded the fax to Dunn via e-mail.

On July 22, during a teleconference with the court to discuss the SEC’s intended motion to re-freeze the Trust’s assets, the SEC attorneys informed the court that they were going to offer evidence that the Smiths owed a significant amount in gift taxes for transferring the stock to the Trust and that the Trust also owed a capital gains tax. Dunn argued that no gift tax was owed, but provided no supporting details for that assertion. The SEC attorneys, David Stoelting and Kevin McGrath, then called Dunn to inquire as to why she believed that the Smiths did not owe gift taxes from the transfer to the Trust. Stoelting testified that Dunn told them that no tax was owed because of “a private annuity agreement.” Dunn, on the other hand, asserted that she told the attorneys that the Trust was a “private annuity trust.” 3 After the call, the SEC attorneys contacted the original trustee for more information, who sent a copy of the full annuity agreement to the SEC and Dunn on July 27.

After receiving the agreement, the SEC sought reconsideration of the prior order lifting the freeze on the Trust’s assets in view of the Smiths’ interest in the Trust. The Trust challenged the motion, arguing that reconsideration was inappropriate because the SEC could have discovered the annuity before the original proceeding to freeze the Trust’s assets. In support, the Trust submitted affidavits from both Dunn and Wojeski. Dunn’s affidavit asserted that she did not disclose the agreement to the SEC on the telephone call of July 22. It stated that Dunn “could state with absolute certainty that [she] did not make [the statement that there was a private annuity agreement] because [she] did not know of the existence of the private annuity agreement until [she] received it ... on July 27, 2010, the same day the SEC received it.” It further stated that “[n]either I nor Mr. Wojeski had any documents in our possession relating to the private annuity other than the courtesy copy of the documents I received ... on July 27....” Wojeski’s affidavit stated that he first learned of the existence of the annuity agreement in late July when Dunn informed him that both she and the SEC had received the agreement from the former trustee.

A hearing concerning the motion for reconsideration was scheduled for November 16, 2010.

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710 F.3d 87, 2013 WL 1092819, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 5325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/securities-exchange-commission-v-smith-ca2-2013.