Chaney v. Dreyfus Service Corp. , 595 F.3d 219 ( 2010 )


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  •      Case: 08-60555   Document: 00511011493   Page: 1   Date Filed: 01/25/2010
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT  United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    January 25, 2010
    No. 08-60555                Charles R. Fulbruge III
    Clerk
    MIKE CHANEY, Commissioner of Insurance for the State of Mississippi, in
    His Official Capacity as Receiver of Franklin Protective Life Ins Company,
    Family Guaranty Life Ins Company and First National Life Ins Company of
    America; LESLIE A NEWMAN, Commissioner of Commerce and Insurance
    for the State of TN, in her official capacity as Receiver of Franklin American
    Life Ins Company; KIM HOLLAND, Insurance Commissioner for the State of
    Oklahoma, in her official capacity as Receiver of Farmers and Ranchers Life
    Insurance Company in Liquidation; JULIE BENAFIELD BOWMAN,
    Insurance Commissioner for the State of Arkansas, in her official capacity as
    Receiver of Old Southwest Life Insurance Company; LINDA BOHRER,
    Acting Director of the Department of Insurance, Financial Institutions and
    Professional Registration for the State of Missouri, in her official capacity as
    Receiver of International Financial Services Life Insurance Company
    Plaintiffs - Appellants
    v.
    DREYFUS SERVICE CORP
    Defendant - Appellee
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Mississippi
    Before JOLLY, DeMOSS, and PRADO, Circuit Judges.
    E. GRADY JOLLY, Circuit Judge:
    Case: 08-60555    Document: 00511011493         Page: 2    Date Filed: 01/25/2010
    No. 08-60555
    I
    Plaintiffs, receivers of seven insurance companies (the “Receivers”), appeal
    the grant of summary judgment in favor of Dreyfus Service Corporation (“DSC”).
    Throughout the 1990s the insurance companies’ assets were looted through a
    complex fraud scheme perpetrated by the now infamous felon, Martin Frankel.
    In the underlying suit, the Receivers sought to impose tort and civil RICO
    liability on DSC, the investment company through which Frankel funneled the
    insurance companies’ funds before moving them to his Swiss bank account. Had
    DSC properly discharged its duties, the plaintiffs argued, it would have
    uncovered Frankel’s scheme and their losses would have been averted. They
    also alleged that by deliberately turning a blind eye to Frankel’s obviously
    suspicious activities DSC effectively joined Frankel’s conspiracy, thus becoming
    liable for treble damages under the civil recovery provisions of the Racketeer
    Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”).
    The district court, after thoroughly reviewing New York and federal law,
    granted summary judgment in favor of DSC on each claim. As to the state tort
    claims, the court concluded that no duty ran to the insurance companies for
    eight of the accounts, and that the Receivers could not demonstrate causation
    for the remaining five. As to the federal RICO claim, the court concluded that
    a reasonable juror could not find that anyone at DSC was deliberately indifferent
    to Frankel’s money laundering activities.
    We agree with the district court except for one aspect: New York law does
    impose on DSC a duty—in this case running only to the named subaccounts—to
    ensure that the transactions it processes on behalf of its customers are
    authorized. We believe the Receivers have raised fact questions sufficient to
    survive summary judgment as to whether this duty was properly discharged by
    DSC’s   reliance    on   the   insurance       companies’    actions   and   Frankel’s
    representations, and whether a breach of this duty caused the insurance
    2
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    companies’ losses. The district court was correct, however, in concluding that
    the Receivers have not stated a viable theory of recovery in tort as to the
    remaining accounts held in the name of LNS. There is no evidence that DSC
    knew or ought to have known that the funds it processed on behalf of LNS were,
    in fact, fiduciary. The district court was also correct in finding the plaintiffs’
    RICO allegations are without merit, as there is no evidence that anyone at DSC
    knew or purposely contrived to avoid knowing that Frankel was engaged in
    money laundering.
    We therefore affirm the judgment of the district court as to the tort claims
    against the LNS accounts and the RICO claims. We vacate the district court’s
    judgment as to the tort claims against the named subaccounts and remand for
    further proceedings.
    II
    From 1989 to 1991, Frankel fraudulently solicited $11 million for
    investment in a venture he called Creative Partners. He quickly dissipated $5
    million of those funds for his personal use. In order replenish the funds so as to
    avoid detection, Frankel began searching for a bank to purchase and loot,
    engaging John Jordan, a Tennessee lawyer, and John Hackney, a Tennessee
    businessman. When that proved unsuccessful, the parties contrived a scheme
    to purchase and loot insurance companies.        They recruited, among others,
    accountant Gary Atnip to assist in the plan.
    Before acquiring his first insurance company, Frankel anonymously
    purchased a registered broker-dealer firm called Liberty National Securities,
    Inc. (“LNS”). Because the SEC had imposed a lifetime ban on Frankel for prior
    fraudulent activities, Frankel enlisted yet another co-conspirator to act as the
    figurehead of LNS and required him to keep the company registered and in good
    standing with the SEC and NASD. With LNS in place, Frankel moved to
    acquire his first insurance company, purchasing Franklin American Corporation
    3
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    (“FAC”), parent company of the Franklin American Life Insurance Company
    (“FAL”).     Frankel then positioned his co-conspirators in key management
    positions.    Hankney was made the president, chief executive officer, and
    chairman of the board of directors of both FAC and FAL; Atnip became both
    companies’ chief financial officer; and Jordan served as both companies’ counsel.
    Each understood the purpose of the purchase was to loot FAL; each was paid
    well for his continuing participation. With the companies’ management in on the
    scheme, all Frankel had to do was have Hackney liquidate the company’s
    existing portfolio, put LNS in charge of investing the company’s liquid assets,
    and transfer the money to his personal account while LNS fabricated monthly
    statements reflecting holdings in U.S. Treasury bonds. Within a year, Frankel
    caused, through the series of transfers discussed below, nearly $25 million of
    FAL’s assets to be liquidated and sent to a Swiss account under his control. All
    the while Frankel’s cohorts led FAL’s employees and customers and state
    insurance regulators to believe that FAL’s assets were being invested in U.S.
    Treasury securities through LNS.
    Frankel, however, did not stop there.      In 1993, Frankel routed the
    proceeds from looting FAL back through FAC, causing FAC to purchase a second
    insurance company: Family Guaranty Life (FGL). Frankel’s co-conspirators
    were again placed in key management positions, LNS began “managing” FGL’s
    assets, and Frankel started liquidating and siphoning off assets into his Swiss
    account. This same pattern was repeated five more times. In 1994 and 1995,
    Frankel had FAC purchase Farmers and Ranchers Life Insurance Company
    (FRL), International Financial Services Life Insurance Company (IFS), and
    Protective Services Life Insurance Company, which was renamed Franklin
    Protective Life Insurance Company (FPL). In 1998, a Frankel-created holding
    company, International Financial Corporation (IFC), purchased First National
    4
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    Life Insurance Company of America (FNL).        In 1999, FAL purchased Old
    Southwest Life Insurance Company (OSL).
    Dreyfus Service Corporation (DSC), a registered broker-dealer and the
    provider of shareholder services for the Dreyfus family of mutual funds, became
    an instrument of the scheme—unknowingly—in 1994 as part of the process by
    which Frankel transferred funds from the insurance companies to his personal
    account in Switzerland. Shortly after purchasing FGL, Frankel, using the alias
    Eric Stevens, opened two accounts with DSC. The first, a retail money market
    account, was opened by Frankel on behalf of LNS, Inc.—an alias for Liberty
    National Securities, Inc.—upon completion of a written application.        This
    allowed Frankel to trade in various Dreyfus mutual funds with LNS, Inc. as the
    registered shareholder. Frankel funded this initial account with $1.1 million
    from FGL’s Tennessee bank accounts. One day later, he redeemed all but $15
    and had the proceeds wired to a New York bank and ultimately to his Swiss
    bank account. This pattern of large purchases from the insurance companies’
    bank accounts and rapid redemptions to Frankel’s personal accounts abroad
    would continue throughout Frankel’s relationship with DSC.
    A few months later, Frankel closed his retail account and opened his
    second account, a “master account,” also in the name of LNS, Inc. but this time
    in DSC’s institutional cash management fund. Through this master account,
    Frankel was permitted to open subsidiary subaccounts in which shares were
    registered either in the name of LNS, Inc. or in a name other than that of the
    master account holder. Between October 1994 and May 1999 Frankel opened
    twelve such subaccounts. Five bore the name of LNS, Inc. Two designated
    “International Financial Corporation” as the registered shareholder, using its
    taxpayer identification number and address. The remaining five were opened
    using the initials, taxpayer identification numbers, and addresses of the
    5
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    insurance companies.1 Shares purchased in these subaccounts were registered
    in the name of the subaccount holder and were subject to wire redemption
    instructions that, although clearly moving the funds abroad, appeared to direct
    final credit back to the subaccount holder.2 Frankel’s trend of large purchases
    and rapid redemptions to offshore accounts via standing wire instructions, begun
    in his retail account, continued in these institutional management accounts.
    Over $480 million was wired from DSC accounts to Frankel’s Swiss bank in this
    way. In order to continue the fraud over such a long period of time, Frankel
    would transfer money back to the insurance companies from the Swiss accounts
    as needed to meet their obligations. Discounting these circular transactions and
    funds otherwise recovered, Frankel stripped the seven insurance companies of
    nearly $200 million.
    To say that DSC’s efforts to identify the origin, legitimacy, or ultimate
    destination of the funds passing through its accounts were minimal is an
    understatement; such efforts were non-existent. As were DSC’s attempts to get
    to know Frankel himself.            The initial paper application required little
    information, none of which was investigated by DSC for accuracy and much of
    which could have been debunked through a cursory investigation. 3                    All of
    Frankel’s subsequent interactions with DSC, including account openings,
    purchases, and wire redemptions, were conducted over the phone. DSC made
    no effort to determine if the subaccounts were subsidiaries of LNS or if LNS was
    1
    “FNL Company of America”; “FNL Company of America Receiving Account”; “FAL
    Company Receiving Account”; “FGL Company Receiving Account”; “OSL Co.”.
    2
    For example, for funds deposited in the FGL subaccount the registered shareholder
    was FGL and the wire redemption instructions were to some other bank “For Final Credit
    reference to FGL”.
    3
    For example, Frankel provided the name LNS, Inc. rather than Liberty National
    Securities, Inc.; the address Frankel provided for LNS, Inc. belonged to a Mail Boxes, Etc.
    store; Frankel represented to DSC that he was a real estate developer instead of the head of
    a securities broker-dealer.
    6
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    No. 08-60555
    a broker-dealer investing on behalf of other entities. At one point in 1997, one
    of DSC’s institutional sales representatives attempted to meet with “Eric
    Stevens,” but Frankel cancelled, citing the good standing of the business
    relationship.     Although the structure and speed of his transactions were
    suggestive of money laundering under the regulations promulgated by the Office
    of the Comptroller of the Currency, DSC did not train its service personnel to
    recognize these red flags and so they went unnoticed.           This conduct was
    consistent with DSC’s position throughout these proceedings that its investment
    accounts are designed to provide maximum flexibility and liquidity with minimal
    interference, and that DSC owes few if any duties of care with respect to the
    processing of deposited funds.
    In 1999, Frankel’s house of cards finally collapsed. Insurance regulators
    realized they were supervising looted insurers and swept into action. Each
    company was placed in liquidation or receivership in its state of domicile with
    each state’s insurance commissioner being named liquidator or receiver. The
    Receivers, as representatives of the insurance companies’ estates, sued over 70
    parties. Their individual claims were ultimately joined into the current action.
    In 2001 each plaintiff added DSC, alleging negligence and a RICO conspiracy
    claim.      Nearly all other defendants have defaulted, settled, or entered
    bankruptcy. After years of discovery, DSC filed a motion for summary judgment
    and the Receivers filed two motions for partial summary judgment.
    The thorough and conscientious district court reasoned that as to the bulk
    of the DSC accounts, DSC did not, under New York law, owe a duty to the
    insurance companies to protect against Frankel’s looting of their assets.
    Furthermore, as to the accounts to which a duty might run—those subaccounts
    bearing the initials of the insurance companies—the Receivers failed to raise a
    genuine issue of material fact as to whether had DSC properly discharged its
    duty the Receivers’ losses would have been averted. The court also rejected the
    7
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    Receivers’ RICO conspiracy charge, finding that no reasonable juror could
    conclude that anyone at DSC was aware of a high likelihood that money
    laundering was taking place.       The district court thus granted summary
    judgment in favor of DSC on all claims made by each Receiver, further denying
    all other pending motions as moot. The Receivers timely appealed, arguing that
    the district court erred both in its application of New York and federal law and
    by improperly resolving questions of fact against the Receivers.
    III
    We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo,
    applying the same standard as the district court. E.g., Golden Bridge Tech., Inc.
    v. Motorola, Inc., 
    547 F.3d 266
    , 270 (5th Cir. 2008). Summary judgment is
    appropriate where the submissions show that there is no genuine issue as to any
    material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of
    law. F ED.R.C IV.P. 56(c); see Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 
    477 U.S. 317
    , 322 (1986).
    “After consulting applicable law in order to ascertain the material factual issues,
    we consider the evidence bearing on the issues, viewing the facts and the
    inferences to be drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to the nonmovant.”
    Olabisiomotosho v. City of Houston, 
    185 F.3d 521
    , 525 (5th Cir. 1999). In so
    doing, we make no credibility determinations or weigh any evidence and we
    disregard all evidence favorable to the moving party that the jury is not required
    to believe. See Reaves Brokerage Co., Inc. v. Sunbelt Fruit & Vegetable Co., Inc.,
    
    336 F.3d 410
    , 412-413 (5th Cir. 2003). However, we are not required to accept
    the nonmovant’s conclusory allegations, speculation, and unsubstantiated
    assertions which are either entirely unsupported, or supported by a mere
    scintilla of evidence. See 
    id. at 413.
                                             A
    The Receivers primarily argue negligence—that DSC’s failure to monitor
    for suspicious activity or verify redemption authority breached duties of care
    8
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    that it owed to the insurance companies, causing their losses. Having already
    determined in its disposition of an earlier motion that New York law applied, the
    district court decided the summary judgment motion on the basis of New York’s
    tort law without objection from either party. On appeal both parties have
    briefed New York law. Even had either party preserved an objection to this
    choice of law, see Kucel v. Walter E. Heller & Co., 
    813 F.2d 67
    , 74 (5th Cir. 1987),
    we believe it was proper to apply New York substantive law under Mississippi’s
    “center of gravity” test.4 See Mitchell v. Craft, 
    211 So. 2d 509
    , 515 (Miss. 1968);
    see also Huss v. Gayden, 
    571 F.3d 442
    , 450 (5th Cir. 2009).
    To determine issues of state law, we look to the final decisions of that
    state’s highest court. See, e.g., Six Flags, Inc. v. Westchester Surplus Lines Ins.
    Co., 
    565 F.3d 948
    , 954 (5th Cir. 2009). “In the absence of such a decision, we
    must make an Erie guess and determine, in our best judgment, how that court
    would resolve the issue if presented with the same case.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks removed). “In making an Erie guess, we defer to intermediate state
    appellate court decisions, unless convinced by other persuasive data that the
    highest court of the state would decide otherwise, and we may consult a variety
    of sources, including the general rule on the issue, decisions from other
    jurisdictions, and general policy concerns.” Travelers Cas. & Sur. Co. of Am. v.
    Ernst & Young LLP, 
    542 F.3d 475
    , 483 (5th Cir. 2008) (internal citations and
    quotation marks removed). “Our task is to attempt to predict state law, not to
    create or modify it.” Herrmann Holdings Ltd. v. Lucent Techs., Inc., 
    302 F.3d 552
    , 558 (5th Cir. 2002) (internal quotation marks removed).
    To establish a claim for negligence under New York law, the Receivers
    must prove: “(1) that [DSC] owed them a duty, or obligation, recognized by law,
    4
    DSC’s relationships with the insurance companies, out of which the claims against
    it arose, were centered at its headquarters in New York. DSC’s negligence, if any, occurred
    there. Although all of the harm was felt outside New York, the harm was scattered, making
    it difficult to say that any one state has a tighter connection with this case than New York.
    9
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    (2) a breach of the duty, (3) a reasonably close causal connection between [DSC’s]
    conduct and the resulting injury and (4) loss or damage resulting from the
    breach.” McCarthy v. Olin Corp., 
    119 F.3d 148
    , 156 (2d Cir. 1997) (internal
    quotation marks omitted). Contrary to the Receivers’ arguments, the existence
    of a duty is a question of law to be decided by the court. See 
    id. (citing Pulka
    v.
    Edelman, 
    358 N.E.2d 1019
    , 1022 (N.Y. 1976)). Because New York imposes
    significantly different duties on financial organizations depending on whether
    the claimant is a customer or a third party, compare Lerner v. Fleet Bank, N.A.,
    
    459 F.3d 273
    , 286 (2d Cir. 2006) (“As a general matter, ‘[b]anks do not owe non-
    customers a duty to protect them from the intentional torts of their customers.’”)
    with de Kwiatkowski v. Bear, Stearns & Co., Inc., 
    306 F.3d 1293
    , 1305 (2d Cir.
    2002) (“No doubt, a duty of reasonable care applies to the broker’s performance
    of its obligations to customers with nondiscretionary accounts.”), we first
    consider whether the insurance companies were “customers” for the purpose of
    any of the accounts.
    1
    Of the thirteen accounts opened at DSC by Frankel, eight bore the name,
    address, and taxpayer identification number of LNS or IFC (the holding
    company created by Frankel for use in purchasing insurance companies)
    (collectively, the “LNS accounts”). The five remaining accounts—all subaccounts
    organized under LNS’s master account—bore the name, address, and taxpayer
    identification number of one of the insurance companies. The district court
    found that the insurance companies were customers as to their named accounts
    but not as to the LNS accounts.        On appeal, the Receivers accept these
    conclusions. DSC, on the other hand, agrees that the insurance companies were
    not customers as to the LNS accounts, but vigorously challenges the district
    court’s conclusion that the insurance companies were customers of the named
    subaccounts.    Because the parties are in agreement that the insurance
    10
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    companies were not customers vis-à-vis the LNS accounts, we need not consider
    the issue. We need only consider whether the district court was correct in
    concluding that the insurance companies were customers as to the named
    subaccounts. We turn to that now.
    The record establishes that the named subaccounts were opened via the
    phone by Frankel pursuant to LNS’s master account agreement with DSC and
    the subaccounts were funded by deposits from the insurance companies’ bank
    accounts. All account activity, prior and subsequent to funding, was directed by
    Frankel, including the provision of outgoing wire instructions. The insurance
    companies never communicated with DSC and, indeed, DSC argues that it was
    unaware that the names on the accounts referred to independent entities. On
    the strength of these facts, DSC argues that at all times LNS was its only
    customer.
    But DSC’s discussion of its relationship with the insurance companies is
    less than forthright.        It is undisputed that the accounts were opened in
    abbreviated versions of the insurance companies’ names using their real
    taxpayer identification numbers and addresses. It is also undisputed that the
    account holders were, in fact, separate and distinct legal entities and that DSC
    contacted them directly via monthly statements, albeit only by mail.5 If nothing
    else, these last two points make this case unlike those cited by DSC, where the
    account title mirrored that of the defrauded corporation but the bank had no
    direct relationship with the corporation or any other reason to know of its
    5
    These statements included a notice alerting the insurance companies that where the
    statement had a dealer code preceded by an asterisk, “your dealer broker or financial
    institution has placed trades on your behalf.” The district court found that this indicated that
    DSC recognized the insurance companies as customers for the purpose of the subaccounts. We
    agree.
    11
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    existence as an independent entity.6 See Promissor, Inc. v. Branch Bank and
    Trust Co., 
    2008 WL 5549451
    (N.D. Ga. 2008).
    We recognize that DSC’s relationship with the insurance companies was
    not that of a typical bank and its customers; in a very real sense they were
    strangers to DSC. This fact complicates any attempt to impose on DSC duties
    the New York courts have utilized to protect banks’ traditional customers with
    whom there is a clear relationship. Certainly there are no cases explicitly
    including subaccount holders such as the insurance companies.                 But neither
    have we been made aware of any case definitively excluding the insurance
    companies from New York’s “customer” jurisprudence. We thus consider as a
    matter of first impression whether New York courts would include such entities
    as customers.
    Under New York law the imposition of a duty is a question of public policy.
    The court determines the parties to whom the duty runs “by balancing factors,
    including the reasonable expectations of parties and society generally, the
    proliferation of claims, the likelihood of unlimited or insurer-like liability,
    disproportionate risk and reparation allocation, and public policies affecting the
    expansion or limitation of new channels of liability.”            In re New York City
    Asbestos Litig., 
    840 N.E.2d 115
    , 119 (N.Y. 2005). Although not explicit, it is
    clearly the fear of imposing on banks endless, unpredictable liability that drives
    New York’s distinction between a bank’s customers and non-customers. See
    Century Bus. Credit Corp. v. N. Fork Bank, 
    668 N.Y.S.2d 18
    , 19 (N.Y. App. Div.
    1998) (stating that requiring a bank to monitor its customers’ accounts for the
    benefit of its customers’ creditors would “unreasonably expand banks’ orbit of
    duty”); Hamilton v. Beretta U.S.A. Corp., 
    750 N.E.2d 1055
    , 1061 (N.Y. 2001)
    6
    DSC argues that the accounts could have just as easily referred to LNS’s wholly
    owned subsidiaries rather than LNS’s customers. But even if the entities were wholly owned
    subsidiaries of LNS it would not have changed their status as independent legal entities for
    the purpose of transacting business with DSC.
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    (explaining that duties must be precisely defined to avoid imposing potentially
    “limitless liability”); Eisenberg v. Wachovia Bank, N.A., 
    301 F.3d 220
    , 226 (4th
    Cir. 2002) (noting that to extend a bank’s duties of care to non-customers would
    “expose banks to unlimited liability for unforeseeable frauds”).
    There is no such risk here. The funds in the accounts were registered to
    the insurance companies. The addresses and taxpayer identification numbers
    utilized in opening the accounts made it abundantly clear that the named
    entities were separate and distinct from LNS. Recognizing this fact, DSC sent
    the insurance companies monthly statements and confirmations of account
    activity. In short, the insurance companies in this case were well enough known
    to DSC that imposing the limited duties of care flowing to customers would
    hardly be crippling; nor would it “unreasonably expand” banks’ “orbit of duty.”
    Century Bus. Credit 
    Corp., 668 N.Y.S.2d at 19
    . We accordingly disagree with
    DSC that the only way an entity can qualify as a “customer,” and thus access the
    protections afforded to that status under New York tort law, is if it opens the
    account itself or has some equivalently direct personal relationship with the
    financial institution. Because the insurance companies were customers as to
    their named subaccounts, they are entitled to the protections afforded to
    customers under New York tort law.
    2
    We have thus concluded that the insurance companies were customers of
    DSC for the purpose of the named subaccounts; as we have noted, it is conceded
    that the insurance companies were not customers of DSC with respect to the
    accounts in the name of LNS. We will now consider DSC’s respective obligations
    to the insurance companies, first as non-customers, then as customers.
    As a general matter, “[b]anks do not owe non-customers a duty to protect
    them from the intentional torts of their customers.” Lerner v. Fleet Bank, N.A.,
    
    459 F.3d 273
    , 286 (2d Cir. 2006) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also
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    Renner v. Chase Manhattan Bank, 
    1999 WL 47239
    , at 13 (S.D.N.Y. 1999)
    (finding it “well settled” that a bank owes no duty to non-customer third-parties
    to prevent its customers from defrauding them). This principle is true even as
    to fiduciary accounts. See Home Sav. of Am., FSB v. Amoros, 
    661 N.Y.S.2d 635
    ,
    637 (N.Y. App. Div. 1997) (“[A] depository bank has no duty to monitor fiduciary
    accounts . . . to safeguard the funds in those accounts from fiduciary
    misappropriation.”).
    Like most, this rule is not without exception. New York courts have
    recognized that a bank may be held liable for its customer’s misappropriation
    where (1) there is a fiduciary relationship between the customer and the non-
    customer, (2) the bank knows or ought to know of the fiduciary relationship, and
    (3) the bank has “actual knowledge or notice that a diversion is to occur or is
    ongoing.” 
    Id. The Receivers
    urge us to apply this theory to their case.
    Whether there was a fiduciary relationship is a question of fact. See
    Penato v. George, 
    383 N.Y.S.2d 900
    , 904-05 (N.Y. App. Div. 1976). Generally, a
    fiduciary relationship exists where “a party reposed confidence in another and
    reasonably relied on the other’s superior expertise or knowledge.” Weiner v.
    Lazard Freres & Co., 
    672 N.Y.S.2d 8
    , 14 (N.Y. App. Div. 1998). Not every
    broker-customer relationship qualifies, but fiduciary duties can arise where the
    broker is empowered with discretion. See Indep. Order of Foresters v. Donald,
    Lufkin & Jenrette, Inc., 
    157 F.3d 933
    , 940 (2d Cir. 1998); Press v. Chem. Inv.
    Servs. Corp., 
    988 F. Supp. 375
    , 386-87 (S.D.N.Y. 1997). LNS’s relationship with
    the insurance companies was, of course, discretionary. They deposited funds in
    the DSC accounts at the direction of LNS expecting LNS to use the funds to
    engage in bond trading on their behalf. Although a few individuals were aware
    of the fraud, most were not. There was more than enough evidence for a jury to
    find that a fiduciary relationship existed between the insurance companies and
    LNS—the broker-dealer with which they entrusted their funds.
    14
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    No. 08-60555
    The parties’ briefs demonstrate substantial disagreement over the proper
    approach to prong two—whether the bank knows or ought to know of the
    fiduciary relationship. DSC argues that under New York law this prong can
    only be met by actual knowledge and that the Receivers’ attempt to extend this
    duty to situations where a bank merely ought to have known of the relationship
    is improper. The Receivers, of course, disagree, as they have presented no
    evidence that any DSC employee had actual, subjective knowledge that the
    accounts were fiduciary.7
    We are inclined to agree with the Receivers. DSC is correct in pointing out
    that in every case cited by the Receivers, the nature of the misappropriated
    funds was not in dispute. See, e.g., 
    Lerner, 459 F.3d at 281
    n.2. Only once has
    a New York court stated that a bank “knew or ought to have known” of the
    fiduciary nature of the funds it accepted, and that was in dictum. See Fid. &
    Deposit Co. of Md. v. Queens County Trust Co., 
    123 N.E. 370
    , 372 (N.Y. 1919)
    (“The conclusion that the facts permit . . . [is] that the defendant knew or ought
    to have known that the funds deposited in the trustee account were trust funds
    . . . .”).   However, neither has DSC pointed to a case expressly requiring
    subjective knowledge that the funds are fiduciary. Recognizing that it is an open
    question, we think the better rule—the one that would be chosen by New York’s
    Court of Appeals—is that a plaintiff need only demonstrate that the bank ought
    to have known given the facts before it.
    7
    The district court seems to have taken an even more restrictive view, finding that
    under New York law a bank’s liability as a participant in fiduciary misappropriation is limited
    to accounts denominated as fiduciary. To the extent that the district court held that even
    actual knowledge that funds deposited were controlled by the account holder as a fiduciary is
    not enough to trigger a bank’s obligations to the non-customer, it was incorrect. See 
    Lerner, 459 F.3d at 281
    n.2 (“[W]hether or not the accounts were titled as IOLA accounts, the banks
    had actual knowledge that they were intended to be trust accounts for client funds.”); Bischoff
    v. Yorkville Bank, 
    112 N.E. 759
    , 760 (N.Y. 1916) (finding that the nature of the funds, rather
    than the status of the account, determines whether an individual holds the funds as a
    fiduciary). The title of the account is not dispositive.
    15
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    No. 08-60555
    By using the language “ought to have known” we mean that, like the third
    prong of New York’s test for finding banks liable for fiduciary misappropriation,
    the defendant must be chargeable with the knowledge by having access to
    “[f]acts sufficient to cause a reasonably prudent person to suspect” that a
    fiduciary relationship underlies the funds and by failing to inquire as to the
    status of the funds. Nw. Mortgage, Inc. v. Dime Sav. Bank of New York, 
    280 A.D.2d 653
    , 654 (N.Y.A.D. 2001). Generally this will not be the case unless the
    facts support the “sole inference” that the funds being deposited are held in a
    fiduciary capacity. See 
    Lerner, 459 F.3d at 287-88
    ; Bischoff v. Yorkville Bank,
    
    112 N.E. 759
    , 761 (N.Y. 1916). We stress that banks are generally not obligated,
    under New York law, to investigate whether funds deposited with them are
    fiduciary in nature. See, e.g., Century Business Credit Corp. v. North Fork 
    Bank, 668 N.Y.S.2d at 19
    .
    That being said, we agree with the district court that knowledge that a
    third party’s funds are being deposited into an account is certainly not enough,
    alone, to show that the bank ought to have known that the funds were fiduciary.
    See Renner v. Chase Manhattan Bank, 
    1999 WL 47239
    (S.D.N.Y. 2003); Tzaras
    v. Evergreen International Spot Trading, 
    2003 WL 470611
    (S.D.N.Y. 2003). That
    leaves the Receivers in the uncomfortable position of arguing that DSC ought to
    have known that the funds were fiduciary from other information it actually
    knew.8 That Frankel provided almost exclusively misinformation makes the
    Receivers’ position even more difficult.
    Undaunted, the Receivers argue that a jury could have found that DSC
    ought to have known that the funds deposited into the LNS accounts were
    fiduciary for the following reasons. First, all of the transfers into the LNS
    8
    Because this is ultimately a fact question for the jury, the question on summary
    judgment is whether there is sufficient evidence for a jury to find for the Receivers on this
    point.
    16
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    No. 08-60555
    accounts came from bank accounts owned by the Insurance Companies or their
    affiliates, as plainly indicated by the transfer documents handled by DSC
    personnel. Second, the master accounts used by Frankel not only anticipated
    use by, but were indeed “targeted” toward, customers who would use the
    accounts in a “fiduciary” capacity. Third, Frankel opened five separate LNS
    subaccounts. Fourth, as soon as Frankel was informed that he could open
    accounts in the name of third parties he began to do so while at the same time
    continuing to push funds through the LNS accounts.
    Notwithstanding these assertions, we are unconvinced that, with respect
    to the LNS accounts, the Receivers have raised a fact question that should be
    sent to the jury.   It is undisputed that DSC’s institutional accounts were
    marketed to fiduciaries and non-fiduciaries alike. It is similarly uncontested
    that the structure utilized by Frankel to invest in DSC’s institutional funds—one
    master account with a number of subaccounts—is equally consistent with
    investment by an individual investor or a broker acting as an intermediary and
    thus handling funds as a fiduciary. That third-party funds are being invested
    under the primary account holder’s name in a fund often used by fiduciaries is
    simply not enough, especially in the light of New York courts’ decisions in
    Renner and Tzaras, for a reasonable jury to conclude that DSC ought to have
    known that LNS controlled the deposited funds as a fiduciary.
    Before moving on, we should also refer to the Receivers’ suggestion that
    the many “red flags” suggestive of money laundering gave rise to an obligation
    on behalf of DSC to investigate Frankel’s account activity; and that in
    discharging this duty DSC would have discovered the fiduciary relationship
    between   LNS      and   the   insurance    companies     as   well   as   Frankel’s
    misappropriation. Some early cases articulating the duty of banks to prevent
    fiduciary misappropriation do use broad language regarding New York’s duty of
    inquiry. See Fid. & Dep. Co. of 
    Md., 123 N.E. at 372-73
    (“If a person has
    17
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    No. 08-60555
    knowledge of such facts as would lead a fair and prudent man, using ordinary
    thoughtfulness and care, to make further accessible inquiries, and he avoids the
    inquiry, he is chargeable with the knowledge which by ordinary diligence he
    would have acquired.”). Later cases, however, make clear that any duty to
    investigate account activity can arise only if the institution knows or ought to
    know of the fiduciary nature of the funds of which it is in possession and there
    is a pattern of suspicious activity in the account. See 
    Lerner, 459 F.3d at 287-88
    ;
    Northwest Mortgage, 
    Inc., 280 A.D.2d at 654
    . The Receivers have cited no cases
    suggesting some broad duty for financial institutions to monitor all their
    accounts for suspicious activity and to investigate that activity upon discovery.
    We will certainly not act to impose such an expansive obligation.
    This conclusion ends our inquiry into DSC’s liability for funds deposited
    in the LNS accounts. Because DSC had no reason to know LNS controlled the
    funds as a fiduciary the insurance companies fall outside the scope of the duties
    owed by DSC with regard to fiduciary accounts.             Because there is no
    independent obligation to investigate suspicious activity in non-fiduciary
    accounts, the nature and pace of Frankel’s transactions could never have put
    DSC under a duty “to make reasonable inquiry and endeavor to prevent a
    diversion.” 
    Lerner, 459 F.3d at 288
    .
    3
    As to the insurance companies’ subaccounts, however, the insurance
    companies were customers of DSC. Although its scope is not well developed,
    New York law does recognize that banks and brokers owe a duty of care to their
    customers. See Dubai Islamic Bank v. Citibank, N.A., 
    126 F. Supp. 2d 659
    , 667-
    68 (S.D.N.Y. 2000) (collecting cases recognizing a duty of care to customers). The
    district court recognized that such a duty might exist, but decided this issue on
    the basis of a failure to demonstrate causation between DSC’s alleged breach of
    its duties and the insurance companies’ losses. Because it is impossible to decide
    18
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    No. 08-60555
    whether the Receivers’ losses would have been averted had DSC fulfilled its
    obligations without precisely identifying those obligations, we start by
    identifying the duties owed by DSC to the insurance companies.
    The insurance companies’ accounts with DSC were nondiscretionary (i.e.,
    all trades required authorization). Because “[a] nondiscretionary customer by
    definition keeps control over the account and has full responsibility for trading
    decisions,” a financial institution’s duties are limited. de 
    Kwiatkowski, 306 F.3d at 1302
    (finding that no general duty of care exists between a broker and the
    holder of a nondiscretionary account). “On a transaction-by-transaction basis,
    the broker owes duties of diligence and competence in executing the client’s trade
    orders, and is obligated to give honest and complete information when
    recommending a purchase or sale.” 
    Id. (emphasis added).
    Complementary to
    this duty to exercise diligence in the execution of trade orders is at least some
    duty to ensure that an individual purporting to trade on the customer’s behalf
    is actually authorized to do so. See Dubai Islamic 
    Bank, 126 F. Supp. 2d at 667
    (declining to dismiss, on a 12(b)(6) motion, claims that honoring unauthorized
    transfers out of a customer’s account without attempting to verify authorization
    constituted negligence). This duty exists apart from any contractual obligations
    entered into by the parties, though it of course may also arise from or be
    satisfied by the parties’ contractual arrangements.         See Indep. Order of
    
    Foresters, 157 F.3d at 940-41
    (“[W]here the terms of a nondiscretionary account
    require the customer’s authorization on all transactions, a broker has a duty to
    obtain the client’s authorization before making” trades).
    Although this obligation would run to any transaction involving the
    subaccounts’ funds, the circumstances of this case make it unnecessary to
    consider an institution’s liability with respect to the management of assets
    within a nondiscretionary account by an unauthorized individual. To the extent
    19
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    No. 08-60555
    that DSC violated a duty that caused the Receivers’ losses, it must arise out of
    the execution of Frankel’s redemption orders to foreign banks.
    Having decided that DSC owed the insurance companies a duty to
    determine if the redemptions from its accounts were actually authorized, we
    must ask whether there is a triable issue of fact as to whether DSC breached
    that duty. We conclude that there is. DSC took no steps to verify that LNS was
    authorized to make such extraordinary redemptions from the insurance
    companies’ accounts;9 it chose, instead, to rely exclusively on representations
    made by Frankel. Clearly, an agent’s representations as to the scope of its
    authority are not determinative, and a third party proceeds on the basis of those
    representations at its own risk. See Metro. Aluminum Mfg. Co. v. Lau, 
    112 N.Y.S. 1059
    , 1061 (N.Y. App. Term 1908) (“[T]hird parties dealing with an
    avowed agent . . . do so at their own risk. They cannot rely upon the agent’s
    assumption of authority, but are to be regarded as dealing with the power before
    them, and must at their peril observe that the act done by the agent is legally
    identical with the act authorized by the power.”).               DSC’s insistence that
    Frankel’s master contract authorized him to order the redemptions processed by
    DSC is similarly unavailing. Once the insurance companies are recognized as
    DSC’s customers, a contract between DSC and LNS can hardly be used to satisfy
    tort duties owed from DSC to the insurance companies.
    A jury reasonably could find that DSC’s duty was discharged by its
    reliance on the insurance companies’ repeated, voluntary transfer of funds into
    DSC accounts the insurance companies knew were established and controlled by
    Frankel.10 See Standard Funding Corp. v. Lewitt, 
    678 N.E.2d 874
    , 877 (N.Y.
    9
    This failure to make contact with the insurance companies is consistent with DSC’s
    insistence that the insurance companies were not customers.
    10
    Reliance on apparent authority is by no means the only method by which a financial
    institution could discharge its duties to its customers. But because DSC took no affirmative
    20
    Case: 08-60555        Document: 00511011493          Page: 21     Date Filed: 01/25/2010
    No. 08-60555
    1997) (“[A]pparent authority [is created by] words or conduct of the principal
    . . . that give rise to the appearance and belief that the agent possesses authority
    to enter into a transaction.”) (emphasis in original, quotation marks omitted).
    Generally, a third party need not seek assurances of actual authority where it
    reasonably relies on the appearance of authority.                  See C.E. Towers Co. v.
    Trinidad & Tobago (BWIA Intern.) Airways Corp., 
    903 F. Supp. 515
    , 523
    (S.D.N.Y. 1995) (“Under New York law, an agent’s authority may be actual or
    apparent.”); Marfia v. T.C. Ziraat Bankasi, N.Y. Branch, 
    100 F.3d 243
    , 251 (2d
    Cir. 1996) (explaining that where there is apparent authority, “the principal is
    estopped to deny that the agent’s act was not authorized”).                     This conduct
    continued despite the insurance companies’ knowledge that the funds were being
    redeemed out of the accounts by LNS. That the redemption instructions on the
    account purported to direct final credit to the insurance companies makes DSC’s
    reliance appear all the more reasonable.11
    But a jury could also reasonably find that DSC’s personnel, in the exercise
    of common judgment without any special training, should have recognized these
    transactions as suspicious and extraordinary, particularly with respect to the
    funds of an insurance company. The jury could go on to conclude that DSC’s
    fiduciary duty to its customer, under the circumstances as a whole, required
    more than turning a blind eye to these extraordinary transactions in reliance on
    the unverified word of Frankel. See Collision Plan Unlimited, Inc. v. Bankers
    Trust Co., 
    472 N.E.2d 28
    , 29 (N.Y. 1984) (finding that a duty to inquire into
    steps to verify Frankel’s authority to order redemptions from the accounts we do not consider
    whether, as a matter of law, those steps satisfied the tort duties owed by DSC to its customers,
    the insurance companies.
    11
    This assumes, of course, that the insurance companies were aware of these wire
    instructions when depositing funds into the accounts, an issue on which the record appears
    to be silent. If they were not aware of the instructions, the existence of the instructions would
    be irrelevant to whether the insurance companies’ actions created apparent authority.
    21
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    No. 08-60555
    actual authority may arise where a third party relies on apparent authority for
    “extraordinary” transactions).
    Whether DSC’s actions, in the light of what it knew or should have known,
    properly discharged its duty to process only authorized transactions, or whether
    in the context of all the circumstances to which we have referred, DSC breached
    its duty in not making some further inquiry, is a question best left for the jury.
    See Di Benedetto v. Pan Am World Serv., Inc., 
    359 F.3d 627
    , 630 (2d Cir. 2004)
    (“[I]n New York, breach is determined by the jury . . . in [all] cases where there
    arises a real question as to a defendant’s negligence . . . .”) (internal quotation
    marks, brackets, and citation omitted).12
    4
    Assuming that DSC did fail in discharging its obligation to verify that the
    transactions were authorized, we turn to the basis upon which the lower court
    dismissed the subaccount claims—causation. The lower court held that there
    was insufficient evidence to support a jury finding that an inquiry of the
    insurance companies would have revealed the scheme and averted the losses.
    Almost certainly, according to the court, any inquiry would have gone to
    Hackney, Atnip, or Jordan, any of whom would have confirmed LNS’s complete
    authority to act on the Insurance Companies’ behalf with respect to the funds in
    the subaccounts. It dismissed the Receivers’ arguments to the contrary as
    “speculation” insufficient to survive summary judgment. See Douglass v. United
    Servs. Auto. Ass’n, 
    79 F.3d 1415
    , 1429 (5th Cir. 1996) (en banc) (“[C]onclusory
    allegations, speculation, and unsubstantiated assertions are inadequate to
    satisfy the nonmovant’s burden.”). For the following reasons, we find ourselves
    in disagreement.
    12
    As is the existence of reasonable reliance itself. Arol Dev. Corp. v. Whitman &
    Ransom, 
    626 N.Y.S.2d 118
    , 120 (N.Y. App. Div. 1995) (“The issue of apparent authority
    presents what is inherently a fact determination.”).
    22
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    No. 08-60555
    There is no doubt that Frankel’s co-conspirators included substantial
    portions of the insurance companies’ upper management. But because not
    everyone was in on the fraud, and because of extensive reporting requirements,
    Frankel’s ability to operate without detection depended less on his “domination”
    of upper management and more on Frankel’s ability to control and manipulate
    the flow of information. It is difficult to say precisely what would have occurred
    had DSC properly discharged its duty.       Almost certainly DSC would have
    discovered that LNS stood for Liberty National Securities and Frankel would
    have been outed as a broker rather than a real estate agent. There is some
    evidence that this alone could have altered the relationship between DSC,
    Frankel, and the insurance companies by triggering an additional set of DSC
    procedures.
    We recognize that DSC has presented counter-evidence that the insurance
    companies were receiving funds from a Swiss account, suggesting that officials
    likely to receive DSC’s inquiry, whether in on the fraud or not, would not have
    considered foreign transactions to be beyond the scope of LNS’s authority. DSC
    has also presented evidence suggesting that any inquiry would have been passed
    up the chain of command to Frankel’s co-conspirators who would have
    authorized the transactions.
    Although undoubtedly a close call, at the summary judgment stage, and
    on the record before us, we cannot assume that efforts by DSC to verify the
    relationship between “Eric Stevens” and the insurance companies would have
    been futile. At this stage in the proceedings it is enough to survive summary
    judgment that the Receivers identified individuals managing the insurance
    companies’ investments who were not involved in the conspiracy and who the
    jury could reasonably believe would have known that redemptions to foreign
    23
    Case: 08-60555       Document: 00511011493         Page: 24     Date Filed: 01/25/2010
    No. 08-60555
    banks were inconsistent with the insurance companies’ relationship with LNS.13
    In this case Judith Lowrey, the insurance companies’ treasurer responsible for
    processing the companies’ financial transactions, testified that, to her
    knowledge, wire redemptions were to the accounts of LNS, a domestic securities
    broker, for investment in U.S. treasury bonds, a domestic security.                      Her
    testimony was consistent with the documentation she received from DSC, as
    DSC’s redemption confirmations provided only the date of the transactions and
    their amount, not the location to which the funds were being transferred or the
    name of the receiving account. A jury would not be unreasonable in believing
    that, upon finding that the funds were heading abroad, she would have cried
    foul.14
    Put otherwise, we cannot hold, on the record before us today, that a jury
    would be unreasonable in concluding that inquiries from an outside source would
    have been directed, not to one of Frankel’s few co-conspirators, but to one of the
    many other individuals unaware of the fraud. A jury might reasonably go on to
    conclude that it is more likely than not that such an individual would have
    alerted DSC that Frankel was a broker, not a real estate developer, that LNS
    was authorized only to invest insurance company funds in government
    securities, and that transferring the funds abroad exceeded this authority, thus
    stopping the diversion of funds to foreign banks.                 Within the bounds of
    reasonable disagreement it is up to the jury to decide the course of events had
    13
    The statements sent to the insurance companies made clear that their funds were
    being wired somewhere, but the understanding of the insurance companies’ employees was
    that the funds were being wired out to LNS for investment in government securities.
    14
    At the very least she would have alerted DSC of LNS’s status as a brokerage firm
    which, as we discussed above, may have been a significant signal leading to further inquiries.
    24
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    No. 08-60555
    DSC properly discharged its duties, including how much, if any, of the insurance
    companies’ losses would have been averted.15
    B
    The Receivers also seek to recover under a RICO conspiracy theory. 18
    U.S.C. § 1962(d).16 In order to demonstrate a RICO conspiracy under § 1962(d),
    15
    Having concluded that the insurance companies have asserted a viable theory of
    recovery under New York tort principles, DSC urges us to hold that the claims are barred by
    New York Uniform Commercial Code § 8-115. In full, N.Y.U.C.C § 8-115 provides that:
    A securities intermediary that has transferred a financial asset pursuant to an effective
    entitlement order, or a broker or other agent or bailee that has dealt with a financial
    asset at the direction of its customer or principal, is not liable to a person having an
    adverse claim to the financial asset, unless the securities intermediary, or broker or
    other agent or bailee:
    (1) took the action after it had been served with an injunction, restraining order, or
    other legal process enjoining it from doing so, issued by a court of competent
    jurisdiction, and had a reasonable opportunity to act on the injunction, restraining
    order, or other legal process; or
    (2) acted in collusion with the wrongdoer in violating the rights of the adverse
    claimant; or
    (3) in the case of a security certificate that has been stolen, acted with notice of the
    adverse claim.
    It is undisputed that DSC was acting as a “securities intermediary” and that none of the
    statute’s three enumerated exceptions applies.
    However, having found that the insurance companies were customers as to these
    accounts, it is clear that they are not “person[s] having an adverse claim” under this provision.
    See Powers v. Am. Express Fin. Advisors, Inc., 
    82 F. Supp. 2d 448
    , 453 (D. Md. 2000) (“One
    cannot view Powers as an ‘adverse claimant’ under [Md. Commercial Law Code] Section 8-115,
    as she is simply one of two entitlement holders . . . .”); 8 Lawrence’s Anderson on the Uniform
    Commercial Code § 8-102:4 [Rev.] at 654 (3d ed. 1994) (“[T]he claim of a customer against his
    or her broker[] is not an adverse claim.”). This section would likely protect DSC as to LNS
    account activities (at least those taking place after this provision was implemented), but it
    cannot be thought to protect DSC against claims by its own customers that DSC failed to
    discharge its duty to ensure that transactions were authorized.
    16
    This provision provides that:
    (d) It shall be unlawful for any person to conspire to violate any of the provisions of
    subsection (a), (b), or (c) of this section.
    25
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    No. 08-60555
    the Receivers must demonstrate “(1) that two or more people agreed to commit
    a substantive RICO offense and (2) that [DSC] knew of and agreed to the overall
    objective of the RICO offense.” United States v. Sharpe, 
    193 F.3d 852
    , 869 (5th
    Cir. 1999). A person cannot be held liable for a RICO conspiracy “merely by
    evidence that he associated with other . . . conspirators or by evidence that
    places the defendant in a climate of activity that reeks of something foul.”
    United States v. Posada-Rios, 
    158 F.3d 832
    , 857 (5th Cir. 1998); see Marlin v.
    Moody Nat. Bank, N.A., 248 F. App’x 534 (5th Cir. 2007). A conspirator must at
    least know of the conspiracy and “adopt the goal of furthering or facilitating the
    criminal endeavor.” Salinas v. United States, 
    522 U.S. 52
    , 65 (1997). There is
    no doubt that Frankel and others committed a substantive RICO offense by
    using LNS to engage in, among other things, multiple predicate acts of money
    laundering.      DSC’s primary argument is that it was simply unaware that
    Frankel’s transactions were designed to launder his ill-gotten gains and thus
    could not have “kn[own] of and agreed to the overall objective of the RICO
    offense.”17 
    Sharpe, 193 F.3d at 869
    .
    Section (c), the section which Frankel was convicted of violating, provides that:
    (c) It shall be unlawful for any person employed by or associated with any enterprise
    engaged in, or the activities of which affect, interstate or foreign commerce, to conduct
    or participate, directly or indirectly, in the conduct of such enterprise’s affairs through
    a pattern of racketeering activity or collection of unlawful debt.
    17
    DSC also argues that the “overall objective” language from Sharpe requires the
    Receivers to prove that DSC agreed to assist Frankel in “defrauding the Insurance Companies
    while concealing [Frankel’s] involvement and misappropriating their assets.” However, we
    believe it would be enough that DSC “knowingly agree[d] to facilitate the [illegal] activities of
    those who [DSC knows] are operating an enterprise.” United States v. Useni, 
    516 F.3d 634
    ,
    646 (7th Cir. 2008). DSC clearly knew that Frankel—to wit Eric Stevens—controlled and was
    acting through the entity LNS, thus DSC could be liable as a conspirator as long as it
    knowingly agreed to facilitate LNS’s illegal conduct. The “overall objective” language from
    Sharpe was designed to expand, not restrict, the class of persons subject to conspiracy liability.
    A defendant need not know exactly what predicate acts the conspiracy intends to perpetrate
    so long as the defendant knows and agrees to facilitate the “overall objective” of the conspiracy.
    26
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    Under the federal money laundering statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1956(a)(1)(B)(i),
    it is unlawful to conduct a financial transaction with knowledge that the
    proceeds involved are the product of unlawful activity and knowing that the
    transaction is designed to conceal or disguise the nature, location, source,
    ownership, or control of the proceeds. See United States v. Giraldi, 
    86 F.3d 1368
    ,
    1372 (5th Cir. 1996). Thus, as the district court explained, to survive summary
    judgment the Receivers must have presented sufficient evidence that DSC knew
    that the money funneled through their accounts was the product of unlawful
    activity, knew that at least one purpose 18 of the transactions it was processing
    on behalf of Frankel was to conceal the ownership of the funds, and agreed to
    assist Frankel in achieving this objective.19
    The Receivers seem to grant that no one at DSC actually knew that money
    laundering was ongoing, arguing instead that the requisite knowledge can be
    established through the doctrine of deliberate ignorance. Deliberate ignorance
    exists where there is “a conscious effort to avoid positive knowledge of a fact
    which is an element of an offense charged . . . so [the defendant] can plead lack
    of positive knowledge in the event he should be caught.” United States v.
    Restrepo-Granda, 
    575 F.2d 524
    , 528 (5th Cir.1978). It exists if (1) “the defendant
    was subjectively aware of a high probability of the existence of the illegal
    conduct” but (2) “purposely contrived to avoid learning of the illegal conduct.”
    United States v. Faulkner, 
    17 F.3d 745
    , 766 (5th Cir. 1994). Neither awareness
    of some probability of illegal conduct nor a showing the defendant should have
    known is enough, and so “[t]he circumstances which will support [a] deliberate
    18
    Not just an effect. See Regalado Cuellar v. United States, 
    128 S. Ct. 1994
    , 2005
    (2008).
    19
    Because agreement can be inferred from circumstantial evidence, including knowing
    participation, the only real issue is DSC’s knowledge. See, e.g., United States v. Brito, 
    136 F.3d 397
    , 409 (5th Cir. 1998) (“[A] conspiracy can be inferred from a combination of close
    relationships or knowing presence and other supporting circumstantial evidence.”).
    27
    Case: 08-60555       Document: 00511011493         Page: 28     Date Filed: 01/25/2010
    No. 08-60555
    indifference instruction are rare.” United States v. Lara-Velasquez, 
    919 F.2d 946
    , 951 (5th Cir. 1990). It requires conscious action in light of known facts
    amounting to a “charade of ignorance.” 
    Id. In short,
    “deliberate ignorance is
    reflected in a . . . defendant’s actions which suggest, in effect, ‘Don’t tell me, I
    don’t want to know.’”        
    Id. Deliberate ignorance
    is the legal equivalent of
    knowledge.
    The record does not establish that any individual at DSC was subjectively
    aware of a high probability that Frankel was engaged in money laundering.
    Both parties agree that while Frankel’s activity would have been suspicious to
    someone trained to recognize the “red flags” associated with money laundering,
    DSC’s client specialists were not so trained.20               Beyond the transactions
    themselves there was precious little information provided from Frankel to the
    client specialists.      The few odd statements made by Frankel to client
    specialists—for example, that he had to engage in complex multi-bank
    transactions in order to “show” money for a real estate deal—were certainly not
    enough to make anyone aware of a high probability that he was engaged in
    money laundering. Moreover, there is no evidence that Frankel had repeated
    dealings with the same specialist.
    The Receivers seek to avoid this conclusion by aggregating DSC’s client
    specialists’ experience with that of DSC’s compliance officers through a
    “collective knowledge” theory. This argument was never raised to the district
    court and we need not consider it now. See Forbush v. J.C.Penney Co., 
    98 F.3d 817
    , 822 (5th Cir.1996) (“[T]he Court will not allow a party to raise an issue for
    the first time on appeal merely because a party believes that he might prevail
    if given the opportunity to try a case again on a different theory.”).
    20
    To the extent that this was a strategy by DSC management to avoid guilty
    knowledge, its effect on the Receivers’ RICO claim is considered next; to the extent that this
    was merely negligent, the Receivers’ remedy would be in tort, not RICO.
    28
    Case: 08-60555       Document: 00511011493          Page: 29      Date Filed: 01/25/2010
    No. 08-60555
    Even if we were to consider it, we note that, as a general rule, where “an
    essentially subjective state of mind is an element of a cause of action” we have
    declined to allow this element to be met by a corporation’s collective knowledge,
    instead requiring that the state of mind “actually exist” in at least one individual
    and not be imputed on the basis of general principles of agency. Southland Sec.
    Corp. v. INSpire Ins. Solutions, Inc., 
    365 F.3d 353
    , 366 (5th Cir. 2004); see also
    United States v. Philip Morris USA Inc., 
    566 F.3d 1095
    , 1122 (D.C. Cir. 2009)
    (distinguishing “collective knowledge” from “collective intent” and questioning
    the latter’s “legal soundness”); Restatement (2nd) Agency § 275, comment b. The
    first prong of our deliberate ignorance doctrine clearly falls within this
    category.21    See 
    Lara-Velasquez, 919 F.2d at 951-52
    (“The term deliberate
    ignorance denotes a conscious effort to avoid positive knowledge. . . . [It thus]
    protects a defendant from being [held liable] for what he should have known.”)
    (first emphasis added). Of course, even if the first prong of our test could be met
    by corporate knowledge, we would still have to find that someone at DSC
    purposely contrived to avoid confirming information that was suspected
    exclusively on a corporate level.          See 
    id. at 952
    (“[A] defendant could not
    purposely avoid learning of illegal conduct unless he were subjectively aware
    that a high probability of illegal conduct exists.”) (emphasis added).
    The Receivers’ more supportable argument is that DSC’s management
    knew that structuring DSC’s policies in the way they did—requiring minimal
    information for account openings; taking no steps to verify this information;
    segregating transactional and compliance personnel; randomly assigning client
    21
    The Receivers argue that such a rule, i.e., that knowledge will not be aggregated
    across individuals in a corporation to meet the subjective awareness prong of our deliberate
    ignorance test, would allow corporations to avoid liability by compartmentalizing information.
    To the extent that this is purposeful, we consider it in the next section; to the extent that it
    is an incidental effect of the corporate structure, we are not concerned, as the basis for RICO
    conspiracy liability is the intentional facilitation of a RICO enterprise, not the incidental
    facilitation thereof.
    29
    Case: 08-60555    Document: 00511011493      Page: 30    Date Filed: 01/25/2010
    No. 08-60555
    specialists; systematically refusing to train client specialists to identify
    suspicious account behavior; all as part of a larger effort to compete on the basis
    of liquidity—created a high probability that its funds would be used for money
    laundering.   Refusing to implement policies capable of identifying money
    laundering under these circumstances constituted “purposeful contrivance”—in
    other words, DSC’s management knew its customers would take advantage of
    its structure to engage in money laundering, knew what steps would likely
    detect it, but declined to take these steps.
    Though not directly on point, cases cited by the Receivers seem to provide
    some support for such a theory. See Ga. Elec. Co. v. Marshall, 
    595 F.2d 309
    , 319
    (5th Cir. 1979) (finding that violation of an OSHA regulation is “willful” when
    a corporation acts with complete indifference to its occurrence by failing to
    educate its employees). Certainly, failing to ask questions in the face of highly
    suspicious activity may be enough, in some situations, to satisfy the purposeful
    contrivance prong of the test. United States v. Nguyen, 
    493 F.3d 613
    , 622 (5th
    Cir. 2007) (“Not asking questions can be considered a purposeful contrivance to
    avoid guilty knowledge.”). Nevertheless, in this case, the record indicates that
    DSC’s actions at worst rose to the level of recklessness. DSC’s policies do not
    amount to a special invitation targeting people like Frankel, such that would
    support a jury finding that DSC’s managers were subjectively aware of a high
    probability that its funds would be used for illegal purposes.
    Because the Receivers have presented no theory by which DSC could be
    properly charged with knowledge of Frankel’s money laundering, summary
    judgment was appropriate on the Receivers’ RICO conspiracy claim.
    IV
    We conclude. As to the LNS accounts and subaccounts the Receivers have
    failed to present evidence that DSC knew or should have known of the fiduciary
    relationship between LNS and the insurance companies. New York law thus
    30
    Case: 08-60555      Document: 00511011493         Page: 31    Date Filed: 01/25/2010
    No. 08-60555
    imposed no duty of care on DSC as to the funds passing through those accounts.
    The district court’s judgment in this respect is affirmed. The Receivers have,
    however, demonstrated that they were DSC’s customers as to five of the
    subaccounts and, consequently, we have considered DSC’s liability in that
    context. New York law imposes a limited duty on DSC to ensure that the
    transactions it processed on their behalf, as its customers, were indeed
    authorized. The Receivers have raised a fact question as to whether, given the
    nature of the transactions at issue, this duty was properly discharged by DSC’s
    reliance on Frankel’s representations and the insurance companies’ deposits into
    these accounts. We further conclude that, on the record before us, a jury could
    find that an inquiry into Frankel’s authorization to redeem funds to foreign bank
    accounts would have prevented some of the insurance companies’ losses. Thus,
    the district court’s judgment in this respect is vacated, and the case is remanded
    for further proceedings on this claim relating to the customer accounts.
    As to the RICO claims, we find the Receivers’ arguments to be without
    merit. RICO conspiracy liability is based on the knowing participation in and
    facilitation of activities in violation of RICO.22 No one at DSC was actually
    aware that Frankel was engaged in money laundering; nor was anyone
    subjectively aware of a high probability that Frankel was engaged in money
    laundering.     Without actual knowledge of Frankel’s illegal activities or a
    demonstration of deliberate ignorance, the Receivers’ RICO claim must fail.
    Accordingly, the district court’s judgment on the RICO claim is affirmed.
    For these reasons, the judgment of the district court dismissing the
    complaint is AFFIRMED in part and VACATED in part, and the case is
    REMANDED for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
    22
    As explained above, unlike negligence claims, RICO liability cannot be made out by
    recourse to what DSC should have known or to that which it would have discovered had DSC
    properly discharged any tort-based duties of care or inquiry.
    31
    Case: 08-60555   Document: 00511011493   Page: 32   Date Filed: 01/25/2010
    No. 08-60555
    AFFIRMED in part; VACATED in part; and REMANDED.
    32
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 08-60555

Citation Numbers: 595 F.3d 219

Judges: DeMOSS, Jolly, Prado

Filed Date: 1/25/2010

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/2/2023

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