Veritas Independent Partners, LLC v. The Ohio National Life Insurance Company

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedJuly 20, 2021
Docket1:18-cv-00769
StatusUnknown

This text of Veritas Independent Partners, LLC v. The Ohio National Life Insurance Company (Veritas Independent Partners, LLC v. The Ohio National Life Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Veritas Independent Partners, LLC v. The Ohio National Life Insurance Company, (S.D. Ohio 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO WESTERN DIVISION VERITAS INDEPENDENT PARTNERS LLC, et al.,1 Plaintiffs, Case No. 1:18-cv-769 JUDGE DOUGLAS R. COLE v. THE OHIO NATIONAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, et al., Defendants. OPINION AND ORDER This cause comes before the Court on the Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings (Doc. 69) submitted by just one of the Ohio National Defendants2—Ohio National Financial Services, Inc. (“Ohio Financial”). For the reasons below, the Court DENIES Ohio Financial’s Motion. BACKGROUND Ohio National is an insurance company that issues various insurance-related products. Among those products are individual variable annuities, including the kind at issue here—Guaranteed Minimum Income Benefits (“GMIB”) Contracts. As the

1 The Plaintiffs in this action, so far, are Veritas Independent Partners LLC and Avantax Investment Securities, Inc. (collectively, “Veritas”). The Court says they are the Plaintiffs “so far,” because they allege they also are bringing this lawsuit on behalf of similarly situated broker-dealers, though they have not yet sought class certification. 2 The Court refers to the Defendants collectively in this Opinion as “Ohio National.” The Defendants are The Ohio National Life Insurance Company, Ohio National Life Assurance Corporation, Ohio National Equities, Inc., and Ohio National Financial Services, Inc. While there are four Defendants, the Motion (Doc. 69) at issue in this Opinion & Order was filed by just one of these Defendants: Ohio National Financial Services, Inc. (“Ohio Financial”). name suggests, these annuities provide a guaranteed income to the purchaser regardless of the performance of the underlying investment. That may be a good deal for the purchaser, but at some point, Ohio National allegedly concluded that these

annuities weren’t so good (i.e., profitable) for Ohio National. So, according to Veritas, Ohio National devised a scheme to exit as many of these annuities as it could. The scheme allegedly went as follows: Ohio National terminated its selling agreements with broker-dealers—like Veritas—who were responsible for selling the annuities to individual investors. Ohio National then claimed that this termination meant it no longer needed to pay trail commissions on those annuities to the broker- dealers, and Ohio National told the broker dealers as much in letters it sent them.

(Trail commissions are commissions that Ohio National would pay on a periodic basis to the broker-dealer of record based on the value of the annuity while the annuity was in effect. These commissions would compensate the broker-dealers for the ongoing costs associated with servicing the annuities.) According to Veritas, Ohio National’s decision to terminate the selling agreements and to cease paying trail commissions was meant to pressure broker-dealers to encourage their clients to

relinquish their GMIB Contracts, thereby alleviating the ongoing losses these GMIB Contracts allegedly were causing Ohio National. None of this sat well with Veritas. It responded by filing this class-action lawsuit on behalf of itself and similarly situated broker-dealers. In so doing, Veritas became one of the many broker-dealers who have enmeshed Ohio National in federal litigation across the country over its decision to stop paying trail commissions on certain annuities. See, e.g., Ohio Nat’l Life Ins. Co. v. Cetera Advisor Networks, LLC, No. 1:19-cv-47, 2021 WL 2819838 (S.D. Ohio July 7, 2021); Next Fin. Grp. v. Ohio Nat’l Life Ins. Co., No. 4:18-cv-4652, 2019 WL 4739508 (S.D. Tex. Aug. 30, 2019); Commonwealth Equity Servs., LLC v. Ohio Nat’l Life Ins. Co., No. 18-cv-12314-DJC,

2019 WL 1470131 (D. Mass. Apr. 3, 2019). As in some of those other cases, Ohio National in this case has already attempted to persuade the Court that the contract unambiguously relieves Ohio National of any obligation to continue paying trail commissions when the selling agreement is no longer in force. And, as the courts in those other cases held, this Court decided (while the case was assigned to a different judge) that the selling

agreement here does not unambiguously support Ohio National’s position. The Court therefore denied Ohio National’s Motion for Summary Judgment. (See Docs. 13 and 31). The issue now before the Court is different. One (and only one) of the Defendants—Ohio Financial—moves for (partial) judgment on the pleadings with respect to Count III of Veritas’s First Amended Class Action Complaint. That Count asserts a tortious-interference-with-contract claim under Ohio law against Ohio

Financial. Veritas alleges that Ohio Financial “induced or otherwise purposely caused the other Ohio National Defendants to breach their obligations under the Selling Agreement to Plaintiff and the Class.” (Am. Compl., Doc. 37, #4663).

3 Refers to PageID# Ohio Financial is the parent company of the other Ohio National Defendant companies. The latter are thus Ohio Financial’s subsidiaries. That is important because, according to Ohio Financial, binding Sixth Circuit precedent (interpreting

Ohio law) prohibits a claim of tortious interference based on a parent’s alleged interference with a subsidiary’s contract. See Canderm Pharm., Ltd. v. Elder Pharm., Inc., 862 F.2d 597 (6th Cir. 1988). Veritas, for its part, points to an Ohio Court of Appeals decision, Paramount Farms International, L.L.C. v. Ventilex, B.V., 61 N.E.3d 702 (Ohio Ct. App. 2016). According to Veritas, the Paramount Farms decision means that Canderm no longer binds this Court because “Ohio law has measurably changed” in the 30-plus years

since the Sixth Circuit decided Canderm. (Resp. in Opp., Doc. 71, #2186). Sorting out this disagreement is the task before the Court. LEGAL STANDARD When a defendant moves for judgment on the pleadings (as Ohio Financial does here), the court must construe the complaint in the light most favorable to the

plaintiff and accept the well-pleaded factual allegations as true. League of United Latin Am. Citizens v. Bredesen, 500 F.3d 523, 527 (6th Cir. 2007). The court’s task is thus much like reviewing a defendant’s motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). LAW AND ANALYSIS At the center of this dispute is the Sixth Circuit’s decision in Canderm and whether later Ohio case law has displaced it as the law that controls here. Before delving into that issue, however, the Court offers a word of caution.

Both sides treat the relevant portion of Canderm as holding instead of dictum. That may be a mistake. In that part of the decision, the Sixth Circuit was analyzing a district court’s ruling that a tortious inference claim failed because it was based on a parent company’s alleged interference with its subsidiary’s contract, and the parent company (by virtue of being the parent company) was privileged to so interfere. The Sixth Circuit noted its likely agreement with that conclusion, stating, “[i]t

would appear, then, that the trial court was correct in its conclusion that SPI, the parent company of Elder, was, in effect, the same entity as Elder, and, so, was privileged to become involved in the relations between Canderm [the plaintiff] and Elder.” Canderm, 862 F.2d at 601 (emphasis added). But the Sixth Circuit did not ultimately affirm the district court on that ground. It held, more narrowly, that “even if SPI was not privileged to become involved in the relations between Canderm and Elder … there simply [was] no cause of action in Ohio to sanction the actions Canderm

alleges were performed by SPI.” Id. at 601–02 (emphasis added).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bennett v. MIS CORP.
607 F.3d 1076 (Sixth Circuit, 2010)
United States v. Bishop
453 F.3d 30 (First Circuit, 2006)
Dushon Hampton v. United States
191 F.3d 695 (Sixth Circuit, 1999)
Rutherford v. Columbia Gas
575 F.3d 616 (Sixth Circuit, 2009)
Davis v. Venture One Construction, Inc.
568 F.3d 570 (Sixth Circuit, 2009)
PSC Info Group v. Lason, Inc.
681 F. Supp. 2d 577 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 2010)
Big Lots Stores, Inc. v. Luv N' Care, Ltd.
302 F. App'x 423 (Sixth Circuit, 2008)
Tamarin Lindenberg v. Jackson Nat'l Life Ins. Co.
912 F.3d 348 (Sixth Circuit, 2018)
Kenty v. Transamerica Premium Insurance
650 N.E.2d 863 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1995)
Fred Siegel Co., L.P.A. v. Arter & Hadden
707 N.E.2d 853 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1999)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Veritas Independent Partners, LLC v. The Ohio National Life Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/veritas-independent-partners-llc-v-the-ohio-national-life-insurance-ohsd-2021.