Sheldon Gordon v. David Dadante

336 F. App'x 540
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 14, 2009
Docket08-3697
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 336 F. App'x 540 (Sheldon Gordon v. David Dadante) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheldon Gordon v. David Dadante, 336 F. App'x 540 (6th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

CLAY, Circuit Judge.

The “Regalbuto Plaintiffs,” a subset of the plaintiffs in the underlying action, appeal from the district court’s order approving a settlement agreement between Ferris, Baker Watts, Inc. (“Ferris Baker”) and the Receiver. The plaintiffs are former investors in IPOF Fund, a limited partnership which actually was a Ponzi scheme, using funds raised from subsequent investors to pay earlier investors. After discovering the fraudulent nature of IPOF Fund, in November 2005, the plaintiffs filed a complaint in district court against David A. Dadante and numerous brokerage firms, including Ferris Baker, alleging violations of the Securities Exchange Act (“SEA”) of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78, the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”), 18 U.S.C. §§ 1962, 1964, and state securities laws. The Receiver subsequently entered into a settlement agreement with Ferris Baker and, in April 2008, the district court entered an order approving the settlement agreement, from which the Regalbuto Plaintiffs now appeal. For the reasons set forth below, we AFFIRM the district court’s order approving the settlement agreement.

I. BACKGROUND

Beginning in 1999, David A. Dadante solicited investments from individuals in exchange for a limited partnership interest in IPOF Fund. 1 Dadante told prospective investors that IPOF Fund would invest in initial public offerings, as well as stocks of companies included in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, and that their funds would be held in a money market account at Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. (“Goldman Sachs”). To further the scheme, Dadante provided existing investors with purported account statements showing their alleged returns. In reality, however, IPOF Fund was a Ponzi scheme, paying earlier investors their “returns” out of funds raised from subsequent investors.

Dadante used the funds he solicited from investors to purchase large quantities of stock in Innotrac Corporation (“Innot-rac”). To make these purchases, Dadante opened accounts on behalf of IPOF Fund at numerous brokerage firms, including Ferris Baker. Dadante used the brokerage firm accounts to manipulate the price of Innotrac stock, causing IPOF Fund to purchase Innotrac stock at artificially inflated prices. In addition, Dadante borrowed heavily against IPOF Fund’s Ferris Baker account. At the time the investors filed suit, IPOF Fund’s account at Ferris Baker contained 2,999,152 shares of Innot-rac stock and had a margin debt of almost nine million dollars.

On November 21, 2005, Sheldon Gordon filed a complaint in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio against David Dadante; IPOF, L.P.; IPOF Fund; Ferris Baker; Wachovia Securities, LLC; H & R Block Financial Advisors, Inc.; GSGI; IPOF II, L.P.; Pershing, LLC; and several “John Doe” *542 companies and individuals. The four-count complaint claimed numerous violations of the SEA, RICO, Ohio securities laws, and also alleged common law fraud. Gordon’s complaint requested that the court freeze the assets of Dadante and IPOF Fund, appoint a receiver to manage the assets of IPOF Fund, “disgorgement” of “all ill-gotten profits or proceeds,” and $75,000 in damages. (ROA 90-91.)

On November 23, 2005, the district court established an equity receivership over IPOF Fund’s assets. As requested in the complaint, the district court appointed Mark Dottore as Receiver to “collect, preserve, and protect any assets belonging to [IPOF Fund]” in order to “recover ... assets transferred fraudulently or otherwise from [IPOF Fund],” as well as “to investigate the size of the loss and identify the victims” of Dadante’s fraud. (ROA 526) (alterations and omission in original). Following the Receiver’s appointment, in March 2006, Gordon filed an amended complaint, adding IPOF Fund and other investors, including the Regalbuto Plaintiffs, 2 as plaintiffs.

On January 22, 2008, the Receiver filed a motion with the district court seeking approval of a settlement agreement reached with Ferris Baker. The settlement agreement acknowledged that Ferris Baker disputed the Receiver’s assertion that Ferris Baker would be liable for its actions “in connection with the alleged market manipulation of Innotrac stock and for other acts and conduct the Receiver alleges to be unlawful.” (ROA 1026.) The parties also contested the validity of Ferris Baker’s claim against IPOF Fund for payment of the margin debt associated with the account.

Acknowledging these disputes, the settlement agreement provided that Ferris Baker would pay $7.2 million to the Receivership estate in exchange for IPOF Fund’s agreement to release Ferris Baker, its officers, directors, and employees from “claims that were or could have been raised ... related to [the] trading [of In-notrac] stock” through IPOF Fund’s account at Ferris Baker. (ROA 1030). Ferris Baker further agreed that, following approval of the settlement, the Receiver “shall own and have full authority in regard to the disposition of 2,999,152 shares of Innotrac common stock ... free and clear of any margin debt, claim for margin debt, lien, charge, or encumbrance of any kind by [Ferris Baker] relating to [IPOF Fund’s] account.” (ROA 1026.)

The settlement agreement conditioned the execution of the settlement on the district court’s approval, as well as the court’s entry of the parties’ agreed-upon Bar Order, Injunction and Dismissal of Claims (“Bar Order”), which was attached to the settlement agreement. Additionally, the settlement agreement required that IPOF Fund investors sign releases with respect to Ferris Baker’s liability prior to receiving distributions from the proceeds of the settlement.

In support of the motion seeking approval of the settlement, the Receiver submitted a memorandum containing an extensive analysis of the fairness of the settlement agreement. The Receiver first provided a detailed history of Dadante’s trading activity at Ferris Baker:

Dadante actually deposited $5,779,704.66 of IPOF Fund cash.... At Ferris Baker[,] the IPOF Fund, controlled by Da- *543 dante, actually purchased only about 2.4 million of the 2.9 million plus shares currently held. Also, at various times Dadante made cash withdrawals from the Ferris Baker account that totaled several million dollars, which he deposited into IPOF Fund accounts and used to make distributions to individual IPOF Fund investors. The net of all deposits and withdrawals by Dadante at Ferris Baker is that approximately $7.7 million IPOF Fund assets were actually consumed in the account....

(ROA 1004.) With respect to the Innotrac stock Ferris Baker would transfer to the Receivership estate, the Receiver acknowledged that “because of the size of the IPOF Fund share position in Innotrac stock at Ferris Baker, and because the stock is thinly traded, the Innotrac shares held at Ferris Baker could never be sold in any quantity on the open market” at a price near the approximately $3.28 per share trading price as of January 18, 2008.

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Bluebook (online)
336 F. App'x 540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheldon-gordon-v-david-dadante-ca6-2009.