Matthew Thomas v. UBS AG , 706 F.3d 846 ( 2013 )


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  •                               In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    No. 12-2724
    M ATTHEW T HOMAS et al., on their own behalf
    and that of all others similarly situated,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    UBS AG,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
    No. 11 C 4798—John W. Darrah, Judge.
    A RGUED D ECEMBER 7, 2012—D ECIDED F EBRUARY 7, 2013
    Before P OSNER, W OOD , and W ILLIAMS, Circuit Judges.
    P OSNER, Circuit Judge. The three appellants are the
    named plaintiffs in a class action suit that seeks damages
    from UBS, Switzerland’s largest bank, which specializes
    in managing the assets of wealthy persons from all over
    the world. Federal jurisdiction is based on the alienage
    branch of the diversity jurisdiction.
    2                                                No. 12-2724
    The parties have not made clear the source or sources of
    the law applicable to the case. The plaintiffs advance
    a variety of common law claims without indicating the
    state or nation whose law gives rise to them. They
    mainly cite law from states in which the three plaintiffs
    reside (Arizona, California, and New York), but they
    also cite Illinois cases (without explaining why). When
    the parties to a diversity case do not mention what
    state’s law applies, the court applies the law of the state
    in which the court is located. Santa’s Best Craft, LLC v.
    St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 
    611 F.3d 339
    , 345 (7th Cir.
    2010). But these parties, by citing cases both from
    Illinois (which is that state) and from the three states
    in which a plaintiff resides, imply that the law of
    all four states applies. This is quadruply strange: The
    parties don’t suggest that all the class members reside
    in those three or four states or that all the allegedly wrong-
    ful acts occurred in those states. They don’t indicate
    whether there are relevant differences among the laws
    of the four states. They don’t explain why the law of the
    state of a plaintiff’s or unnamed class member’s residence
    should control under applicable conflict of laws principles
    rather than, for example, the law of Switzerland, which
    is UBS’s domicile and also the place in which UBS com-
    mitted the complained of acts or omissions. And they
    don’t discuss the possibility that federal common law
    may apply instead of state law because, as we’ll see,
    the plaintiffs rely in part on a contract with the federal
    government.
    The problem of choice of law created by a nationwide
    class action governed by laws of different states or other
    No. 12-2724                                               3
    jurisdictions is usually solved by the district court’s
    certifying a different subclass for class members in each
    jurisdiction whose law differs in some relevant respect
    from that of the other jurisdictions in which members
    of the class reside or the allegedly unlawful acts were
    committed. The parties have not proposed that solution
    and anyway the case was dismissed on the merits
    before any class or subclasses were certified.
    We’re not at liberty to decide a diversity case on the
    basis of the “general common law.” In re Rhone-Poulenc
    Rorer Inc., 
    51 F.3d 1293
    , 1300-01 (7th Cir. 1995); Central
    Soya Co. v. Epstein Fisheries, Inc., 
    676 F.2d 939
    , 941 (7th
    Cir. 1982). The term denoted the common law
    principles created by federal judges for use in diversity
    cases—principles that might differ from the law that the
    various state courts would have applied to the same
    cases if litigated in state rather than federal courts.
    In the Erie case the Supreme Court held that to decide
    diversity cases on the basis of common law created by
    federal judges was an unconstitutional usurpation of state
    authority. “There is no federal general common law.
    Congress has no power to declare substantive rules of
    common law applicable in a state.” Erie R.R. v. Tompkins,
    
    304 U.S. 64
    , 78 (1938). But parties still are allowed to
    specify (within reason, see Lloyd v. Loeffler, 
    694 F.2d 489
    ,
    495 (7th Cir. 1982)) what law shall govern a lawsuit
    between them, and the specification can be implicit.
    Many common law principles are the same, or
    materially the same, in many or even all U.S. states, and
    when a case turns on such a principle the parties will
    4                                               No. 12-2724
    often cite decisions articulating and applying it without
    worrying about which state the decisions come from, as
    in our recent case of Adams v. Raintree Vacation Exchange,
    LLC, 
    702 F.3d 436
    , 438 (7th Cir. 2012); to the same effect
    see Phillips v. Audio Active Ltd., 
    494 F.3d 378
    , 386 (2d
    Cir. 2007). In Adams the parties had implicitly agreed
    that “American law” would govern the interpretation of a
    forum selection clause in a contract that had been made
    in Mexico, but they did not specify a state’s law to
    govern the issue—just American rather than Mexican
    law. This case is similar. And since there is no indication
    that the common law principles invoked by the parties
    vary across the states that might have jurisdiction of
    claims in the complaint or that federal law might govern
    instead of state law or Swiss law instead of American
    law, we’ll not worry further about choice of law.
    The district judge dismissed the suit on the merits
    without, as we said, first considering whether to certify
    a class. Normally the issue of certification should be
    resolved first, Thomas v. City of Peoria, 
    580 F.3d 633
    , 635
    (7th Cir. 2009); Bertrand ex rel. Bertrand v. Maram, 
    495 F.3d 452
    , 454-56 (7th Cir. 2007), because if a class is
    certified this sets the stage for a settlement and if certif-
    ication is denied the suit is likely to be abandoned, as
    the stakes of the named plaintiffs usually are too small
    to justify the expense of suit, though that may not be
    true in this case. But deciding whether to certify a class
    can take a long time. Rule 23(c)(1)(A) requires that the
    decision be made at “an early practicable time,” but
    early is often not practicable. So when as in this case the
    No. 12-2724                                             5
    suit can quickly be shown to be groundless, it may make
    sense for the district court to skip certification and
    proceed directly to the merits. Cowen v. Bank United of
    Texas, FSB, 
    70 F.3d 937
    , 941-42 (7th Cir. 1995).
    UBS opposed certification even though a defendant
    with a winning case has much to gain from it—the judg-
    ment for the defendant will be res judicata in any suit
    by a class member who had not opted out of the class,
    provided “that the named plaintiff at all times ade-
    quately represent the interests of the absent class mem-
    bers.” Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Shutts, 
    472 U.S. 797
    , 812
    (1985); see also Hansberry v. Lee, 
    311 U.S. 32
    , 45 (1940).
    But even a defendant with a winning case may not
    have much to gain, if an opt out can be expected to
    file another class action against the defendant. That
    possibility to one side, a very risk-averse defendant
    will oppose certification even in a weak case lest it
    lose the case (against the odds) and, because the case
    was litigated as a class action, be ordered to pay
    very heavy damages.
    The plaintiffs, and the other members of the class—who
    number in the thousands—are American citizens who
    had bank accounts in UBS in 2008 when the UBS tax-
    evasion scandal (of which more shortly) broke. The ac-
    counts of the three plaintiffs were large—$500,000 to
    $2 million each. The plaintiffs had not disclosed the
    existence of the accounts on their federal income
    tax returns, as they were required to do by Form 1040,
    Schedule B, which on line 7a asked (the current version
    is materially the same): “At any time during [2002-2008]
    6                                               No. 12-2724
    did you have an interest in or signature or other authority
    over a financial account in a foreign country, such as
    a bank account, securities account, or other financial
    account?” They also did not disclose the income they
    earned in those accounts. Neither did they pay federal
    income tax on that income, though it was taxable. Eventu-
    ally they ‘fessed up and paid the taxes they owed plus
    interest on those taxes and a 20 percent penalty. They
    did this pursuant to an IRS amnesty program, adopted
    in the wake of the scandal, called the “Offshore
    Voluntary Disclosure Program.” Internal Revenue
    Service, 2009 Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Program,
    www.irs.gov/uac/2009-Offshore-Voluntary-Disclosure-
    Program, and Disclosure: Questions and Answers,
    www.irs.gov/uac/Voluntary-Disclosure:-Questions-and-
    Answers (both visited Jan. 31, 2013). The suit seeks to
    recover from UBS the penalties, interest, and other costs
    that the plaintiffs and the other members of the class
    incurred from their scrape with the IRS, plus the profits
    (in the hundreds of millions of dollars) they claim UBS
    made from the class as a result of the fraud and other
    wrongful acts that they allege UBS committed by
    inducing them to maintain their accounts with it.
    The plaintiffs are tax cheats, and it is very odd, to say
    the least, for tax cheats to seek to recover their penalties
    (let alone interest, which might simply compensate the
    IRS for the time value of money rightfully belonging to
    it rather than to the taxpayers) from the source, in this
    case UBS, of the income concealed from the IRS. One
    might have expected the plaintiffs to try to show that
    No. 12-2724                                                  7
    they had forgotten they had accounts with UBS (though
    that would be preposterous, for these were significant
    investments for each of the plaintiffs). Or that UBS had
    told them that income earned in those accounts was
    somehow tax exempt and moreover that the accounts
    themselves were somehow not foreign bank accounts
    within the meaning of the tax code and so the plaintiffs
    didn’t have to acknowledge having accounts with UBS.
    They don’t make any of these feeble arguments. They do
    argue, as we’ll see, that UBS was obligated to give
    them accurate tax advice and failed to do so, but not
    that it gave them inaccurate, as distinct from no, advice.
    There are grounds for avoiding penalties for admitted
    violations of federal tax law, see, e.g., 
    26 U.S.C. § 6664
    (c),
    (d); 31 U.S.C § 5321(5)(B)(ii), such as reliance on
    plausible advice from a reputable-seeming lawyer or
    accountant. United States v. Boyle, 
    469 U.S. 241
    , 250-52
    (1985); Mulcahy, Pauritsch, Salvador & Co., Ltd. v. Commis-
    sioner, 
    680 F.3d 867
    , 872 (7th Cir. 2012); Kim v. Commissioner,
    
    679 F.3d 623
    , 626-27 (7th Cir. 2012); 14A Mertens Law of
    Federal Income Taxation § 55:89 (2012). But the plaintiffs do
    not invoke any of those grounds or argue that they asked
    UBS to advise them on U.S. tax law or that the bank
    volunteered such advice.
    What’s true is that in 2009 UBS admitted having
    helped tens of thousands of its clients to evade U.S.
    income taxes, and paid a $780 million fine. (That was the
    scandal we referred to; it is separate from the LIBOR
    scandal in which UBS has been involved recently.)
    Maybe this help included tax advice, but our plaintiffs
    8                                               No. 12-2724
    do not argue that they (or other members of the class)
    received tax advice from UBS. They argue rather that
    the bank should have prevented them from violating
    the law. This is like suing one’s parents to recover tax
    penalties one has paid, on the ground that the parents
    had failed to bring one up to be an honest person who
    would not evade taxes and so would not subject himself
    to penalties.
    There is in general no common law duty to prevent
    another person from violating the law. At worst, UBS, as
    we’re about to see, violated an agreement with the IRS
    designed to prevent the kind of evasion that the
    plaintiffs engaged in. That might conceivably make UBS
    an aider or abettor of the plaintiffs’s tax evasion and so
    make this case a distant relative to Everet v. Williams
    (Ex. 1725), better known as The Highwayman’s Case and
    eventually reported under that name in 9 L.Q. Rev. 197
    (1893). A highwayman had sued his partner in crime for
    an accounting of the illegal profits of their criminal
    activity. The court refused to adjudicate the case, and
    both parties were hanged. Minus the hanging and with
    certain exceptions (such as contribution and indemnity)
    irrelevant to this case, the principle enunciated in
    The Highwayman’s Case applies to accomplices in civil
    wrongdoing, as noted in our recent decision in
    Schlueter v. Latek, 
    683 F.3d 350
    , 355-56 (7th Cir. 2012). In
    The Highwayman’s Case one accomplice was seeking a
    bigger share of the profit from the crime from the other
    one; here one accomplice is seeking a smaller share of
    the costs of the crime from the other one. The principle
    is the same; the law leaves the quarreling accomplices
    where it finds them.
    No. 12-2724                                                                                9
    In 2001 UBS had signed a contract with the Internal
    Revenue Service in which it agreed to participate in
    the IRS’s Qualified Intermediary Program, 
    26 U.S.C. § 1441
    ; 
    26 C.F.R. § 1.1441-1
    (e)(5), a program designed to
    encourage foreign banks to help the IRS collect income
    tax on income earned by American taxpayers abroad.
    Among other things the program required participating
    banks to report to the IRS tax information about
    depositors who were U.S. taxpayers and to withhold “U.S.-
    source income,” such as income on securities of
    American companies, and pay it over to the IRS. Two of
    the three named plaintiffs claim that the bank told them
    not to hold U.S. securities in their accounts. Had they
    obeyed the instructions they would not have earned
    any US-source income, but the bank would still have
    had to report to the IRS tax information about them
    if it knew or should have known that they were U.S. tax-
    payers. See Internal Revenue Service, Qualified Intermediary
    Frequently Asked Questions, www.irs.gov/Businesses/
    I n t e r n a t i o n a l - B u s i n e s s e s / Q u a li f i e d - In t e r m e d i a r y -
    Frequently-Asked-Questions#2 (visited Jan. 31, 2013). The
    third plaintiff has not disclosed what was in his account.
    Supposing the bank failed to comply with the
    reporting requirements in its agreement with the IRS
    with respect to any of the plaintiffs (or unnamed class
    members)—so what? The plaintiffs argue that they are
    third-party beneficiaries of the agreement and so entitled
    to enforce it and thus to obtain damages for the breach
    by UBS, assuming there was a breach. Their theory is
    that had UBS complied with its reporting requirements
    they would have known they had to pay taxes on earnings
    10                                                 No. 12-2724
    in their accounts at the bank—known because the
    program required the bank to inform depositors what it
    was reporting to the IRS about their earnings on their
    deposits. The Supreme Court held recently that a gov-
    ernment contract that involves no negotiable terms
    but merely brings the other party to the contract under
    a statute (or, we can assume, a regulation) does not
    confer third-party beneficiary status on anyone. Astra
    USA, Inc. v. Santa Clara County, 
    131 S.Ct. 1342
    , 1348 (2011).
    But there are negotiable terms in Qualified Inter-
    mediary agreements, so maybe (we needn’t decide) the
    plaintiffs could be third-party beneficiaries: could be,
    but aren’t.
    A third-party beneficiary is someone whom the con-
    tracting parties wanted to have the right to enforce
    the contract. Vidimos, Inc. v. Laser Lab Ltd., 
    99 F.3d 217
    , 219-
    20 (7th Cir. 1996); Sioux Honey Ass’n v. Hartford Fire Ins.
    Co., 
    672 F.3d 1041
    , 1056-59 (Fed. Cir. 2012); Hess v. Ford
    Motor Co., 
    41 P.3d 46
    , 51 (Cal. 2002); Fourth Ocean Putnam
    Corp. v. Interstate Wrecking Co., 
    485 N.E.2d 208
    , 211-13 (N.Y.
    1985). It’s unlikely that the IRS would want the tax
    cheats that the contract was intended to deter, by
    requiring foreign banks to report their income to it, to be
    able to shift the burden of the penalties that the IRS
    imposes on tax cheats to the foreign banks. True, that
    would increase the banks’ incentives to comply with
    the contract. But offsetting this effect would be the reduc-
    tion in the taxpayers’ incentive to honor their tax obliga-
    tions if they could shift the cost of cheating on their
    taxes to the foreign banks.
    No. 12-2724                                             11
    And what would UBS, the other party to the contract,
    gain from being made potentially liable to its depositors
    for failing to prevent them from evading taxes? Less
    than nothing. It’s not surprising that there’s no evidence
    or even suggestion of an intention by the parties to the
    Qualified Intermediary agreement to make the tax-
    payers third-party beneficiaries of it.
    The plaintiffs have a second breach of contract claim:
    that they “entered into implied, oral and/or written
    contracts with UBS to provide [the plaintiffs] with profes-
    sionally competent tax advice” and that the contracts
    contained “unreasonable and oppressive terms” and “are
    unenforceable and void due to lack of mutuality.” Even
    before Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly, 
    550 U.S. 544
     (2007),
    and Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. 662
     (2009), such an allega-
    tion would have failed to state a claim because it
    doesn’t provide the minimum information that the de-
    fendant would need in order to be able to answer
    the complaint. Higgs v. Carver, 
    286 F.3d 437
    , 439 (7th Cir.
    2002); Ryan v. Mary Immaculate Queen Center, 
    188 F.3d 857
    , 859-60 (7th Cir. 1999). The complaint does not tell
    the defendant what communications formed the basis
    of any of the supposed implied contracts and what their
    terms were.
    The plaintiffs also charge fraud: that the bank inveigled
    them into continuing to invest with it (they had opened
    their accounts before the bank joined the Qualified Inter-
    mediary Program) by concealing its agreement with the
    IRS and the obligation entailed by the agreement to
    report tax information about the plaintiffs to the IRS.
    12                                              No. 12-2724
    This is a private-entrapment argument: by letting the
    plaintiffs think that keeping their money in foreign ac-
    counts would enable them to evade federal tax law suc-
    cessfully, UBS caused the plaintiffs to commit tax fraud.
    That is another frivolous theory of liability. For if it
    were adopted, not only would everyone have a legally
    enforceable duty to prevent crimes and other wrongs
    when he could; a failure to perform the duty would
    give the criminal or other wrongdoer a right of action
    against the failed protector.
    The plaintiffs further argue that UBS touted the secrecy
    of their accounts, consistent with the Swiss tradition of
    secret bank accounts. The plaintiffs inferred that the
    bank would conceal their accounts not only from com-
    petitors, relatives, ex-spouses, private creditors, and
    journalists, but also from the Internal Revenue Service,
    thus enabling them to get away with not paying any
    federal income tax they might owe on the earnings in
    the accounts. But such a scheme would of course be
    illegal, bringing us back to The Highwayman’s Case.
    The plaintiffs also argue that UBS had a fiduciary
    obligation to them—the kind of duty that arises from
    a gross disparity in knowledge between the provider
    and the recipient of a service (a lawyer and a client, for
    example, or a physician and a patient) and requires that
    the provider treat the recipient as well as he would
    want himself treated. E.g., Burdett v. Miller, 
    957 F.2d 1375
    ,
    1381-82 (7th Cir. 1992); In re Daisy Systems Corp., 
    97 F.3d 1171
    , 1177-79 (9th Cir. 1996). But a bank is not a
    fiduciary of its depositors. It is merely a creditor. Bennice
    No. 12-2724                                               13
    v. Lakeshore Savings & Loan Ass’n, 
    677 N.Y.S.2d 842
    , 843
    (App. Div. 1998); Copesky v. Superior Court, 
    229 Cal. App. 3d 678
    , 689-94 (1991). It has no duty to treat them like
    children or illiterates, and thus remind them that they
    have to pay taxes on the income on their deposits. It has
    no duty to read aloud to them line 7a on Schedule B
    of Form 1040.
    The plaintiffs further claim that UBS was unjustly
    enriched at their expense. But the claim again lacks
    the minimum specification that UBS would need to
    prepare an answer. No doubt the bank “enriched” itself
    by charging compensatory fees for its services to the
    plaintiffs, but where was the “injustice”? No injustices are
    alleged other than those alleged elsewhere in the com-
    plaint, which we’ve already discussed, making the unjust
    enrichment claim redundant. We explained in ConFold
    Pacific, Inc. v. Polaris Industries, Inc., 
    433 F.3d 952
    , 957
    (7th Cir. 2006), that the legal term “unjust enrichment”
    “has two referents, a remedial and a substantive. The
    remedial [referent] is to a situation in which a tort
    plaintiff asks not for the damages he has sustained but
    instead for the profit that the defendant obtained from
    the wrongful act.” That has no relevance to this case, for
    the plaintiffs haven’t gotten to first base in showing
    that UBS committed a tort against them.
    “In its substantive sense, unjust enrichment or restitu-
    tion refers primarily to situations in which either the
    defendant has received something that of rights belongs
    to the plaintiff (for example, he received it by mistake—or
    he stole it), or the plaintiff had rendered a service to
    14                                             No. 12-2724
    the defendant in circumstances in which one would
    reasonably expect to be paid (and the defendant refused
    to pay) though for a good reason there was no contract.”
    
    Id. at 957-58
    . Neither of these examples relates to this
    case. See also Corsello v. Verizon New York, Inc., 
    967 N.E.2d 1177
    , 1185 (N.Y. 2012); Murdock-Bryant Construc-
    tion, Inc. v. Pearson, 
    703 P.2d 1197
    , 1201-02 (Ariz. 1985).
    We needn’t discuss the plaintiffs’ remaining claims—of
    negligence and malpractice—as they are frivolous
    squared. This lawsuit, including the appeal, is a travesty.
    We are surprised that UBS hasn’t asked for the imposi-
    tion of sanctions on the plaintiffs and class counsel.
    A FFIRMED.
    2-7-13
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 12-2724

Citation Numbers: 706 F.3d 846

Judges: Posner, Williams, Wood

Filed Date: 2/7/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/6/2023

Authorities (27)

Murdock-Bryant Construction, Inc. v. Pearson , 146 Ariz. 48 ( 1985 )

Phillips v. Audio Active Ltd. , 494 F.3d 378 ( 2007 )

Confold Pacific, Inc. v. Polaris Industries, Inc. , 433 F.3d 952 ( 2006 )

Timothy T. Ryan, Jr. And Garrett Wainwright v. Mary ... , 188 F.3d 857 ( 1999 )

Santa's Best Craft, LLC v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance , 611 F.3d 339 ( 2010 )

James Carl Higgs v. William E. Carver and James M. Wolfe , 286 F.3d 437 ( 2002 )

Mulcahy, Pauritsch, Salvador & Co. v. Commissioner , 680 F.3d 867 ( 2012 )

Central Soya Company, Inc. v. Epstein Fisheries, Inc. , 676 F.2d 939 ( 1982 )

Vidimos, Inc. v. Laser Lab Ltd., and Wysong Laser Co., Inc.,... , 99 F.3d 217 ( 1996 )

Kenneth G. Lloyd v. Irma Loeffler and Alvin F. Loeffler , 694 F.2d 489 ( 1982 )

Bertrand Ex Rel. Bertrand v. Maram , 495 F.3d 452 ( 2007 )

In the Matter of Rhone-Poulenc Rorer Incorporated , 51 F.3d 1293 ( 1995 )

Thomas v. City of Peoria , 580 F.3d 633 ( 2009 )

Kim v. Commissioner , 679 F.3d 623 ( 2012 )

Bennice v. Lakeshore Savings & Loan Ass'n , 677 N.Y.S.2d 842 ( 1998 )

Hess v. Ford Motor Co. , 117 Cal. Rptr. 2d 220 ( 2002 )

linwood-cowen-and-jean-cowen-on-behalf-of-themselves-and-all-others , 70 F.3d 937 ( 1995 )

Patricia Burdett v. Robert S. Miller , 957 F.2d 1375 ( 1992 )

Sioux Honey Ass'n v. Hartford Fire Insurance , 672 F.3d 1041 ( 2012 )

96-cal-daily-op-serv-7123-96-daily-journal-dar-11695-in-re-daisy , 97 F.3d 1171 ( 1996 )

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