Strategic Income Fund, L.L.C., Hennessy Cadillac, Inc. v. Spear, Leeds & Kellogg Corporation, First Options of Chicago, Inc.
This text of 305 F.3d 1293 (Strategic Income Fund, L.L.C., Hennessy Cadillac, Inc. v. Spear, Leeds & Kellogg Corporation, First Options of Chicago, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
I.
This case arises out of the relationship between Strategic Income Fund (“SIF”), a Georgia limited liability company 1 formed *1294 for the purpose of trading in options primarily through the Chicago Board Options Exchange (the “CBOE”); SIF’s individual members (the “Members”); E. Thomas Jung, the manager of SIF and the general partner of ETJ Partners (“ETJ”), a purported broker-dealer and market maker at the CBOE; 2 and LIT Clearing Services, Inc. (“LIT”), a firm that provided clearing services for broker-dealers and market makers at the CBOE, including ETJ. 3
Between September 1994 and September 1998, SIF bought and sold options traded on the CBOE through ETJ, who acted as SIF’s broker. 4 Jung, acting in his respective roles within SIF and ETJ, handled these transactions on behalf of both entities. All of these trades were cleared by LIT. From time to time, as these transactions were taking place, SIF’s members pledged securities to LIT as collateral for SIF’s purchases through ETJ. While Jung was trading for SIF through ETJ, he was also buying and selling options for other individuals — also through LIT and apparently relying upon the collateral pledged by SIF’s Members. By September 1998, ETJ had become indebted to LIT for a sum in excess of $22 million. When ETJ failed to pay this debt, LIT sold the pledged securities (valued at more than $21 million) to satisfy it.
In an effort to recoup their loses, SIF and its Members brought this law suit against LIT seeking damages under federal and state law. (These plaintiffs did not sue Jung and ETJ because Jung and ETJ have commenced bankruptcy proceedings in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Illinois, and the automatic stay provided by 11 U.S.C. § 362 is in place.) The district court dismissed the plaintiffs’ federal securities law claims, as alleged in Count IV of their second amended complaint, and declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the plaintiffs’ state law claims. SIF and its Members thereafter moved the court for reconsideration, to alter judgment, and for leave to file a third amended complaint. The court denied their motions, and the plaintiffs now appeal. They contend that Count IV of their second amended complaint states a case under Sections 10(b) 5 and 20 6 of the Exchange Act of 1934 and *1295 Rule 10b-5. 7 In the alternative, the plaintiffs contend that Count IV of their proposed third amended complaint states such a claim. We disagree, and therefore affirm.
II.
The district court’s orders of December 29, 1999, and May 8, 2000, explain why Count IV, as framed in both the second and third amended complaints, fails to state a claim for relief under federal securities law. We find no fault in the court’s reasoning or application of the law to the facts as pled. 8 We perceive no need to summarize the court’s analysis of the plaintiffs’ Count IV claims here. We think it necessary, however, to say a few words about the plaintiffs’ pleadings.
The second and third amended complaints are quintessential “shotgun” pleadings. 9 The typical shotgun complaint contains several counts, each one incorporating by reference the allegations of its predecessors, leading to a situation where most of the counts (i.e., all but the first) contain irrelevant factual allegations and legal conclusions. Consequently, in ruling on the sufficiency of a claim, the trial court must sift out the irrelevancies, a task that can be quite onerous. 10 In this case, the *1296 proposed third amended complaint contains 127 paragraphs (six more than the second amended complaint) and nine counts, with each count incorporating by reference every paragraph that precedes it. 11 Instead of requiring the plaintiffs to replead, the court attempted — and admirably so — to ascertain exactly which facts formed the basis of the plaintiffs’ federal law claims.
We have read Count IV — including all that it incorporates by reference— several times; yet, we must confess that we are at a loss to explain what allegedly transpired between and among SIF, its Members, Jung, ETJ, and LIT with respect to the securities the Members pledged as collateral. 12 One reason is the omission of several material facts in Count IV; another is that the drafter of the pleading chose to write several critical paragraphs in the passive, rather than the active, voice leading to unnecessary confusion and obfuscation. Take, for example, paragraph 30, which is identical in both amended complaints. It reads as follows:
In connection with SIF’s investment trading through Jung and ETJ, the members of SIF were required to pledge certain assets, including publicly traded securities (the “Pledged Securities”), as collateral for SIF’s trading accounts with LIT. The Pledged Securities were owned by certain of the individual members of SIF and had been pledged to SIF as security for those members’ individual investments in SIF.
Here, the pleader refers to “SIF’s trading accounts” with LIT as though their existence was fact. Nowhere else in the pleading, however, does the pleader allege that SIF had opened such accounts with LIT. Rather, Count IV states that ETJ was the party with the aecount(s) at LIT. The second sentence of the paragraph states, again as fact, that the “[Pledged Securities] had been pledged to SIF as security for the[ ] members’ individual investments in SIF.” This statement leads to more questions than answers. One must ask, why would the members pledge securities to SIF? Was SIF advancing funds on their behalf? Presumably— though the pleader does not tell us- — SIF paid ETJ cash (or its equivalent) for the options it asked ETJ to purchase for its account, since the law would not permit *1297 ETJ to finance SIF’s purchases. Material facts that detail the exact nature of the relationship between the individual plaintiffs, SIF, ETJ, and LIT are conspicuously absent.
The passive voice leads to still more questions: Who “required” the members of SIF “to pledge certain assets ...
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305 F.3d 1293, 53 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 1466, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 19955, 2002 WL 31103631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strategic-income-fund-llc-hennessy-cadillac-inc-v-spear-leeds-ca1-2002.