Benedetto v. PaineWebber Group ( 1998 )


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  •                                                                         F I L E D
    United States Court of Appeals
    Tenth Circuit
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    SEP 1 1998
    TENTH CIRCUIT
    PATRICK FISHER
    Clerk
    TIFFANY LYN BENEDETTO,
    Plaintiff - Appellant,
    v.
    PAINEWEBBER GROUP, INC.;
    PAINEWEBBER, INC.; FOURTH                             No. 96-3401
    QUALIFIED PROPERTIES, INC.;                      (D.C. No. 95-CV-2505)
    PAINEWEBBER PROPERTIES, INC.;                      (District of Kansas)
    SECOND QUALIFIED PROPERTIES,
    INC.; SIXTH INCOME PROPERTIES
    FUND, INC.; THIRD QUALIFIED
    PROPERTIES, INC.,
    Defendants - Appellees.
    ORDER AND JUDGMENT         *
    Before PORFILIO , McKAY and LUCERO , Circuit Judges.
    Tiffany Lyn Benedetto sued PaineWebber alleging violations of state tort
    and contract law. She also brought claims under state and federal securities law.
    *
    This order and judgment is not binding precedent, except under the
    doctrines of law of the case, res judicata, and collateral estoppel. This court
    generally disfavors the citation of orders and judgments; nevertheless, an order
    and judgment may be cited under the terms and conditions of 10th Cir. R. 36.3.
    The district court dismissed all her claims at summary judgment as barred by the
    statute of limitations. We affirm in part, and reverse and remand in part.
    I
    As the parties to this matter are familiar with the facts of this case, we
    recite only those portions of the record most directly relevant to the present Order
    and Judgment. When she was four, Tiffany Lyn Benedetto received $28,000 in a
    settlement arising out of a wrongful death action. The money was entrusted by
    Benedetto’s mother and guardian, Deborah Varley, to a branch office of
    PaineWebber. Jeffry Heal, the manager of that office, assured Varley that the
    money would be kept in “safe investments,” an assurance that he allegedly
    repeated over the next several years.
    Benedetto alleges, however, that Heal placed the funds in “unsuitable high-
    risk investments.” I Appellant’s App. at 3. Over a six-year period from 1983 to
    1989, Heal invested the bulk of the funds in five PaineWebber real estate limited
    partnerships: PaineWebber Qualified Plan II (“PWQP II”), PaineWebber
    Qualified Plan III (“PWQP III”), PaineWebber Qualified Plan IV (“PWQP IV”),
    PaineWebber Mortgage Partners V (“PWMP V”), and PaineWebber Income
    Properties VI (“PWIP VI”). Appellant charges that PaineWebber’s
    representations as to these partnerships were “false, misleading, and omissive,”
    
    id. at 9,
    in failing to disclose the high risks associated with these investments, and
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    that, because of high fees and commissions, PaineWebber’s promotion and
    maintenance of these investments constituted self-dealing,    
    id. at 14.
    Moreover,
    she asserts that PaineWebber’s misrepresentations as to these investments were
    on-going. For instance, she claims that in October 1994 PaineWebber reported
    the value of her partnership investments at more than double the prevailing
    secondary market price.   See IV Appellant’s App. at 641. Benedetto states that
    such manipulations prevented her from discovering “by the exercise of reasonable
    diligence” PaineWebber’s misconduct and her resulting injuries.     
    Id. at 654.
    Varley’s guardianship ended in July 1992 when Benedetto turned eighteen.
    In November 1994, a securities class action was filed against PaineWebber in the
    Southern District of New York. The action alleged that PaineWebber was liable
    to investors for its mismanagement of various investments, including the
    partnerships at issue here. Benedetto learned of this action in July 1995. In
    November of that year, she filed an individual action against PaineWebber. That
    action alleged that PaineWebber breached a contract with the National
    Association of Securities Dealers, of which Benedetto was allegedly a
    beneficiary, and violated Kansas securities law. It also charged PaineWebber
    with breach of fiduciary duty, negligence, and fraud. The parties dispute whether
    Benedetto’s initial filings also pleaded a cause of action under federal securities
    law.
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    II
    The district court granted PaineWebber’s motion for partial summary
    judgment in an order dated October 16, 1996. The court accepted PaineWebber’s
    argument that as to PWMP V and PWIP VI, the applicable statutes of limitation
    barred all causes of action. The district court premised this decision on a
    determination that appellant had inquiry notice: first, of defendant’s PWMP V
    misconduct from January 1991, when PaineWebber informed her that the value of
    that investment had dropped significantly in the course of one month; and,
    second, of defendant’s PWIP VI misconduct from February 1991, when
    PaineWebber notified her of a suspension in investment distributions from that
    investment following a significant increase in the partnership’s net loss.
    The district court then ordered Benedetto to submit an amended complaint
    “that should be consistent with the rulings” contained in the order granting partial
    summary judgment.    
    Id. at 587.
    Following submission of an amended complaint,
    the district court indicated that its summary judgment on the PWMP V and PWIP
    VI claims would apply to bar all the remaining claims. Appellee’s Supp. App. at
    50. Endeavoring not to concede the validity of the court’s partial summary
    judgment, Benedetto’s counsel then stipulated that the analysis underlying that
    judgment would—if correct—also dispose of the claims stated in the amended
    complaint. See 
    id. at 50-54.
    The district court then granted leave for Benedetto
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    to file the amended complaint, and ruled summarily that all of Benedetto’s
    additional claims were barred for the reasons stated in the earlier grant of partial
    summary judgment.      See 
    id. at 60-61.
    That order reiterated Benedetto’s
    stipulation that the partial summary judgment analysis also disposed of her
    remaining claims, albeit—in her view—incorrectly.          See 
    id. Benedetto appeals.
    III
    We determine, first, exactly what potential grounds of error are properly
    before us. Benedetto’s amended complaint has little bearing on the present appeal
    because “[w]hen a motion for summary judgment is made and supported as
    provided in this rule, an adverse party may not rest upon the mere allegations or
    denials of the adverse party’s pleading, but the adverse party’s response, by
    affidavits or as otherwise provided in this rule, must set forth specific facts
    showing that there is a genuine issue for trial.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(e);    see also
    Black v. Baker Oil Tools, Inc.    , 
    107 F.3d 1457
    , 1460 (10th Cir. 1997) (party may
    not rely on pleadings to demonstrate issue of material fact). In effect, the only
    grounds that Benedetto raises in opposition to summary judgment on her PWQP
    II-IV claims are those that she earlier asserted when defending her PWMP V and
    PWIP VI claims against partial summary judgment.
    “[A] party seeking summary judgment always bears the initial responsibility
    of informing the district court of the basis for its motion, and identifying those
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    portions of ‘the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions
    on file, together with the affidavits, if any,’ which it believes demonstrate the
    absence of a genuine issue of material fact.”     Celotex Corp. v. Catrett , 
    477 U.S. 317
    , 323 (1986) (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c)). PaineWebber met this burden
    with respect to Benedetto’s PWMP V and PWIP VI claims by filing its motion for
    partial summary judgment. PaineWebber also effectively met this burden with
    respect to Benedetto’s PWQP II-IV claims when, following its grant of partial
    summary judgment, the district court requested appellant to consider stipulating
    that “the analysis which I have already made in the order dated October 16th
    applies equally to the other transactions . . . .” Appellee’s Supp. App. at 51. At
    this point, PaineWebber had apprised the court of its view that no issues of
    material fact existed as to Benedetto’s remaining claims.
    Once PaineWebber had met this burden, it is beyond dispute that appellant
    was on notice that it needed to come forward with its opposition to summary
    judgment as to those claims not disposed of by the partial grant of summary
    judgment. In effect, however, by accepting the stipulation offered by the district
    court, and thus by failing to file any additional arguments supporting the
    existence of issues of material fact, Benedetto offered only her initial opposition
    to summary judgment as grounds for precluding a similar disposition of her
    residual claims.   See 
    id. at 51-54.
    Appellant explicitly agreed there was no need
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    to brief summary judgment on these remaining claims, nor to make an
    “independent analysis” of them, for purposes of appeal. Benedetto apparently
    determined that the grounds of her opposition to partial summary judgment would
    suffice to preserve her remaining claims against summary judgment.       See 
    id. As a
    consequence, the stipulation delimits the grounds of Benedetto’s opposition.
    Thus the only asserted grounds of error properly before us are that the
    district court erred in concluding that Benedetto’s arguments in opposition to
    partial summary judgment—when generalized to cover her claims based on all
    five investment funds—presented no genuine issue of material fact on the claims
    presented in the amended complaint. Although the amended complaint was
    properly filed before the district court, because Benedetto filed it after stipulating
    that no new briefing or analysis was required for claims raised in the amended
    complaint, such claims are defended against summary judgment on the limited
    grounds set forth in Benedetto’s opposition to summary judgment. For instance,
    Benedetto argues in her amended complaint and before this panel that Ohio
    tolling and limitations principles should apply to certain of her state causes of
    action. See, e.g. , IV Appellant’s App. at 660; Appellant’s Br. at 24-26. But her
    opposition to partial summary judgment did not invoke any such arguments;
    instead, it stated explicitly and repeatedly that Kansas law should govern such
    claims. See, e.g. , II Appellant’s App. at 159, 162. We therefore do not consider
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    such arguments on appeal.     1
    The analysis that follows is therefore limited to
    assessing the merits of Benedetto’s arguments made in opposition to partial
    summary judgment, and generalized by her stipulation to apply to all her claims.
    IV
    We confine our review to two contentions Benedetto raises on appeal: first,
    that the district court erred in its inquiry notice determination; second, that the
    district court erred in rejecting her cause of action under federal securities law.     2
    A
    Appellant’s inquiry notice argument is meritorious. The statute of
    limitations on Kansas securities law and common law tort actions runs for three
    and two years, respectively, from the time at which wrongful conduct becomes
    reasonably ascertainable.     See Kan. Stat. Ann. § 60-513(b) (1994);        Kelly v.
    Primeline Advisory, Inc. , 
    889 P.2d 130
    , 134, 137 (Kan. 1995);          Knight v. Myers ,
    1
    Fairly construed, the stipulation does not limit Benedetto to the precise
    language contained in that earlier brief, but rather to the format of its arguments.
    Nonetheless, her argument that Kansas law controls the applicable statute of
    limitations and tolling analyses is not broad enough to encompass a later claim
    that Ohio law governs instead.
    2
    It is true that appellant did not reference her federal claims in opposition
    to partial summary judgment. Under the circumstances, however, that was not her
    burden because PaineWebber’s motion for partial summary judgment did not
    challenge these claims as inadequate—quite possibly because PaineWebber did
    not read the original complaint to state such claims. But given that the district
    court appears to have ruled against the merits of any such claims, and the
    amended complaint does state federal claims, we think they are properly raised
    here.
    -8-
    
    748 P.2d 896
    , 901 (Kan. 1988). The district court appears to have held, first, that
    PaineWebber’s sole misconduct was the initial sale of these various investments
    to Benedetto, and second, that the injuries caused by these acts of misconduct
    were—as a matter of law—reasonably ascertainable as of 1990-91, following the
    company’s disclosures about PWMP V and PWIP VI. By extension, the district
    court held that Benedetto had inquiry notice from this time with respect to her
    remaining investments as well.
    This analysis errs in two respects. First, we cannot agree with the district
    court’s implicit assumption that the initial sale of the investments represents the
    only “fact of injury” for purposes of determining the application of the statute of
    limitations. Accepting,   arguendo , the district court’s characterization that
    “[p]laintiff’s tort claims all hinge upon Heal’s representation that plaintiff’s
    investments were ‘safe,’” IV Appellant’s App. at 580, there is enough evidence in
    the record to indicate that these representations of safety continued past 1989 and
    were relied on to her detriment by the plaintiff and her guardian.   See Varley Aff.,
    II Appellant’s App. at 166 (“Mr. Heal always assured me that Tiffany’s money
    was being kept in safe investments with minimal risk. I relied on these statements
    made by Mr. Heal.”). Moreover, it is far from clear that all Benedetto’s tort and
    securities law claims hinge on representations of safety, other than as a proximate
    cause of her continued investment in PaineWebber’s real estate partnerships. The
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    pleadings and materials opposing summary judgment are replete with charges of
    PaineWebber breaching fiduciary duties, committing negligence, and otherwise
    acting wrongfully, the merits of which do not depend in any way on
    representations to Varley or Benedetto that the investments in question were safe,
    beyond the fact that such representations left appellant open to injury by these
    separate acts of wrongdoing. Even if the events of 1990 and 1991 were sufficient
    to create inquiry notice of some of this additional misconduct, appellant has
    alleged that such misconduct continued beyond this time. We therefore cannot
    agree with the district court that statutes of limitations bar all such claims.
    Inasmuch, therefore, as PaineWebber has failed to meet its initial Rule 56 burden
    of showing a lack of genuine issues of material fact with respect to these claims,
    summary judgment cannot lie.
    Second, Kansas authority indicates that whether Benedetto or her mother
    could have continued to rely on PaineWebber’s representations of safety
    following the PWMP V and PWIP VI disclosures in 1990 and 1991 is properly a
    question for the jury. Benedetto and her mother introduced evidence that they
    were unsophisticated investors,   see II Appellant’s App. at 172, 174, which,
    contrary to the district court’s view, is a factor that the Kansas courts have taken
    into account in determining whether securities misconduct was reasonably
    ascertainable.   See, e.g. , Kelly , 889 P.2d at 138 (where party is “unsophisticated
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    investor,” date of accrual is matter for factfinder even where investment materials
    received explicitly warned of risks of investment).
    Against that background, the record in this case is not sufficiently
    conclusive for the court to have resolved    as a matter of law that PaineWebber’s
    wrongdoing was necessarily ascertainable in 1990 or 1991 by a reasonable party
    in Varley’s position.   Cf. Wolf v. Preferred Risk Life Ins. Co.   , 
    728 F.2d 1304
    ,
    1307 (10th Cir. 1984) (“Questions of when a reasonable person would discover an
    injury and what a reasonable person would have done are generally within the
    province of the jury.”). An unsophisticated investor, told repeatedly by an
    investment manager—acting pursuant to a probate court’s instructions—that her
    investments are “safe,” should not necessarily ascertain injury under the
    circumstances identified as dispositive by the district court.
    Although payments from PWIP VI were suspended in November 1990,
    PaineWebber’s quarterly report for the final fiscal quarter of that year was
    equivocal about the partnership’s prospects: three of the five properties were
    reported to be performing well; one was reported as performing badly because of
    market conditions; and, although a borrower had defaulted on payments on a final
    property, a loan on the latter was reported to be adequately secured by the value
    of the building. With respect to PWMP V, despite the decline in the value of
    Benedetto’s investment, there is no indication that distributions to the partnership
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    ceased. Moreover, the very report showing this decline in value also shows that
    Heal’s investment strategy since May 1979 had grown Benedetto’s investment
    portfolio from $28,000 to $67,847.46 by December 1990, an appreciation of more
    than 142% over less than twelve years, or more than 8% per annum.            See I
    Appellant’s App. at 94;    compare Waite v. Adler , 
    716 P.2d 524
    , 527-28 (Kan.
    1986) (party on constructive notice of misrepresentation of creditworthiness
    following reduction in bank’s floor plan from $235,000 to $75,000);          Friends
    Univ. v. W.R. Grace & Co. , 
    608 P.2d 936
    , 941-42 (Kan. 1980) (party on notice of
    negligence when new roof on new building leaks). For a reasonable person of
    Varley’s sophistication, one month’s poor showing would not            necessarily be
    enough to create inquiry notice of wrongdoing against a background of more than
    a decade’s proven investment results by the same investment manager. “[W]here
    the evidence is in dispute as to when substantial injury . . . becomes reasonably
    ascertainable, the issue is for determination by the trier of fact.”      Hecht v. First
    National Bank & Trust Co. , 
    490 P.2d 649
    , 656 (Kan. 1971).
    B
    Benedetto’s claim under federal securities law is without merit. Arguably,
    it was never properly pled below; the amended complaint avers a violation of the
    “applicable . . . federal securities laws,” IV Appellant’s App. at 658, but makes
    no attempt to delineate which such laws might be applicable.           See Phillips v.
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    Calhoun , 
    956 F.2d 949
    , 953-54 (10th Cir. 1992) (holding that party must support
    its argument with legal authority). However, citing the Supreme Court’s decision
    in Lampf, Pleva, Lipkind, Prupis & Petigrow v. Gilbertson             , 
    501 U.S. 350
    , 364
    (1991), Benedetto’s appellate brief concedes that “claims under the federal
    securities laws must be brought within one year of discovery, and in any event,
    not more than three years after the alleged violation occurred.” Appellant’s Br. at
    28. As Lampf only addresses alleged violations of section 10(b) of the Securities
    Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b) (“Section 10(b)”) and of 17 C.F.R. §
    240.10b-5 (1995) (“Rule 10b-5"), we will construe Benedetto’s pleading under
    the “federal securities laws”—inasmuch as it raises claims at all—to lie under
    these same provisions.
    To be actionable under Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5, the fraud alleged
    must be “integral to the purchase” of the investment in question.           See Flickinger
    v. Harold C. Brown & Co. , 
    947 F.2d 595
    , 598 (2d Cir. 1991). Here, the final
    purchase of the disputed investments was made in 1989. Therefore the district
    court was correct to dismiss the claims as untimely; this action was brought well
    in excess of three years after the last possible date of violation.        See Lampf , 501
    U.S. at 364.
    V
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    The district court’s grant of summary judgment as to appellant’s federal
    securities law and state contract law claims is    AFFIRMED . The district court’s
    grant of summary judgment on appellant’s tort and state securities law claims is
    REVERSED .
    ENTERED FOR THE COURT
    Carlos F. Lucero
    Circuit Judge
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