Wall v. Altium Grp., LLC

384 F. Supp. 3d 561
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 30, 2019
DocketCIVIL ACTION NO. 16-1044
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 384 F. Supp. 3d 561 (Wall v. Altium Grp., LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wall v. Altium Grp., LLC, 384 F. Supp. 3d 561 (W.D. Pa. 2019).

Opinion

KEARNEY, District Judge

After we initially found a broker arranging for the purchase of an annuity later found fraudulent should be liable under a breach of contract claim to the investors, our Court of Appeals thought differently and directed judgment in favor of the broker on a breach of contract claim. We did not initially address the investors' alternative unjust enrichment claim as we found the contract claim warranted judgment. Our Court of Appeals directed us to consider whether the investors could recover on an unjust enrichment claim in the first instance. Following discovery and with both parties agreeing the issue is ripe as a matter of law, we today analyze whether the investors can recover their investment in the fraudulent annuity from the broker based on unjust enrichment. Under the governing New Jersey law, there can be no unjust enrichment claim in the existence of a valid contract. Our Court of Appeals found a valid contract but found the broker had not breached the contract and entered judgment for the broker on the contract claim. Consistent with New Jersey law, we today grant the broker's motion for summary judgment on the unjust enrichment claim. As difficult as this decision is for disappointed and possibly defrauded investors, they do not have a claim against the broker for unjust enrichment in the face of a valid contract governing the entirety of their relationship.

I. Background

A. Adduced Facts.1

After discussing investment opportunities with financial advisor Roy L. D'Alessandro, *563Robert and Linda Wall decided to invest in a structured settlement annuity listed by Defendant Altium Group, LLC ("Altium Group").2 Altium Group, "a broker of structured settlement annuities,"3 provides "listings of available streams of payments, including structured settlement payment rights from original payees, to financial advisors and certified financial planners, when the purchase is perfected through a transfer procedure regulated by federal and state statutes and requiring court approval."4 The structured settlement annuity the Walls sought to acquire belonged to Kenneth Stevens, "who received the annuity-issued by the New York Life Insurance Company ('New York Life')-after [he] settled a personal injury matter in a Florida state court action."5

The Walls and Altium Group sign the Master Agreement in 2011.

On November 8, 2011, the Walls and Altium Group signed the Master Structured Settlement Receivable Purchase and Sale Agreement and Non-Circumvention Agreement ("Master Agreement").6 In it, the parties declared their "purpose" and "intent ... to establish the terms and conditions under which [Altium Group] will convey such streams of payment to [the Walls], and [the Walls] will purchase such streams of payment from [Altium Group]."7 The Master Agreement required the Walls tender payment in two phases. First, the Walls agreed to pay Altium Group $5,000 "within 48 hours of [the Walls'] execution of a [subsequent] 'Contract to Purchase Payment Rights.' "8 This initial payment would "be used (1) to secure [the Walls'] interest in the Contract to Purchase Payment Rights, and (2) for preparation of transaction documents and attorney's fees incurred to apply for and obtain court approval of the transaction contemplated by the Contract to Purchase Payment Rights."9 The second and final payment, "representing the Final Purchase Price, less the $5,000.00" original payment, would be tendered to Altium Group "within 48 hours of [the Walls'] receipt of the 'Closing Book.' "10

The parties agreed "[t]he validity, construction, and enforcement of th[e] [Master] Agreement shall be governed by the laws of the State of New Jersey, excluding its conflicts of law provisions."11 The parties *564also agreed to recovery of attorney's fees related to enforcement: "[i]n any action to enforce this Agreement, the prevailing party shall be awarded all arbitration costs or court costs and reasonable attorney's fees incurred."12

Altium obtains and assigns to the Walls the rights to the Kenneth Stevens' structured settlement annuity before a Florida court vacates the transfer order.

The Walls wired $5,000 to Altium Group on November 8, 2011.13 On January 12, 2012, Corona Capital, LLC purchased the rights to Kenneth Stevens' structured settlement annuity under an "Absolute Assignment and UCC Article 9 Security Agreement."14 On January 17, 2012, the Walls and Altium Group signed the Contract to Purchase Payment Rights ("the Addendum"), "an addendum to" the Master Agreement.15 Under the Addendum, "[the Walls] agree[d] to purchase the Kenneth Stevens Transfer and [Altium Group] agree[d] to convey its interest in the Kenneth Stevens Transfer to [the Walls] subject to the Master Agreement."16 Altium Group purchased from Corona Capital the rights to the Kenneth Stevens' structured settlement annuity on January 19, 2012.17 The Structured Settlement Receivable Purchase and Sale Agreement between Altium Group and Corona Capital also describes Altium Group's "assign[ment] [of] its interest in the Receivable Payments to their designated assignee Robert L. Wall and Linda M. Wall."18 The agreement between Altium Group and Corona Capital limits Corona Capital's liability to Altium Group "to cases in which [Corona Capital] has committed a material fraud upon [Altium Group]."19

Corona Capital petitioned in Florida state court for approval of the transfer of the Kenneth Stevens' Annuity in March 2012.20 Florida Circuit Court Judge Michelle Morley approved the transfer on March 27, 2012.21 Judge Morley directed the "[a]ssigned [p]ayments"-"60 guaranteed monthly payments of $3,000 beginning on June 01, 2014 with a 3% annual increase through and including May 01, 2019"-be paid to the Walls at their address in Grove City, Pennsylvania.22 The Walls, in compliance with the Master Agreement, wired $147,851.37 to Altium Group on April 23, 2012.23 Despite the size of the investment, Linda Wall swore she, *565her husband, and Mr. D'Alessandro "never" addressed or discussed the risk of the deal.24

The Walls never received a single payment on the Stevens annuity. In April 2013, Kenneth Stevens, represented by counsel, moved to vacate the March 2012 order approving the annuity transfer. Mr. Stevens argued he "was never made a party to [the] proceeding," "did not sign any of the documents submitted to this Court in support of the petition," and "was not served with a copy of the petition," as a result of "a fraud ... committed upon the Court."25 Judge Morley granted Mr. Stevens's motion on April 15, 2014, vacating the March 2012 order nunc pro tunc.26 Judge Morley directed all payments on the annuity be sent to Mr.

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

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
384 F. Supp. 3d 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wall-v-altium-grp-llc-pawd-2019.