Geoffrey Varga v. U.S. Bank National Association , 764 F.3d 833 ( 2014 )


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  •                  United States Court of Appeals
    For the Eighth Circuit
    ___________________________
    No. 13-2709
    ___________________________
    Geoffrey Varga, in his capacity as Official Liquidator of Palm Beach Offshore,
    Ltd., and Palm Beach Offshore II, Ltd.
    lllllllllllllllllllll Plaintiff - Appellant
    v.
    U.S. Bank National Association
    lllllllllllllllllllll Defendant - Appellee
    ____________
    Appeal from United States District Court
    for the District of Minnesota - Minneapolis
    ____________
    Submitted: June 11, 2014
    Filed: August 21, 2014
    ____________
    Before LOKEN, BEAM, and GRUENDER, Circuit Judges.
    ____________
    GRUENDER, Circuit Judge.
    Geoffrey Varga, in his capacity as the official liquidator of Palm Beach
    Offshore, Ltd. and Palm Beach Offshore II, Ltd. (collectively, “the Palm Beach
    Funds”), sued U.S. Bank National Association (“U.S. Bank”) for aiding and abetting
    a breach of fiduciary duty, willful and wanton negligence, and gross negligence.
    These claims arose from the Palm Beach Funds’ investment through accounts
    maintained at U.S. Bank in what turned out to be a Ponzi scheme. The district court1
    granted U.S. Bank’s motion to dismiss Varga’s amended complaint. Varga appeals,
    and we affirm.
    I.    Background
    In this appeal from the grant of a motion to dismiss, we accept as true the well-
    pleaded allegations in the amended complaint. Loftness Specialized Farm Equip.,
    Inc. v. Twiestmeyer, 
    742 F.3d 845
    , 854 (8th Cir. 2014).
    Tom Petters, through his company Petters Company, Inc. (“Petters Company”),
    claimed to purchase excess consumer merchandise, such as electronics, from vendors.
    Petters Company financed these supposed transactions by selling high-yield
    promissory notes to investors through Petters Capital, Inc. (“Petters Capital”), a
    wholly owned entity of Petters Company. These promissory notes were to be repaid
    once the consumer merchandise had been sold to and paid for by retailers, like Sam’s
    Club and BJ’s Wholesale Club, in transactions that Petters Company was to arrange.
    This investment structure enabled Petters Company to grow into what appeared to be
    a multi-billion dollar operation. But the investment scheme peddled by Petters
    Company was entirely illusory: no vendors ever sold consumer merchandise, and no
    retailers ever purchased it. Instead, Petters Company generated fake purchase orders
    and sales confirmations and kept its scheme afloat by recycling funds that it received
    from new investors to pay off the promissory notes of old investors as they came due.
    The inevitable collapse of Petters’s Ponzi scheme caused investors to suffer
    staggering losses.
    1
    The Honorable Richard H. Kyle, United States District Judge for the District
    of Minnesota.
    -2-
    The Palm Beach Funds, which invested in Petters Company’s promissory notes
    and are now being liquidated, collectively lost over $700 million to Petters’s scheme.
    The Palm Beach Funds’ investment was made through another fund called Palm
    Beach Finance Partners II, LP (“Palm Beach Finance”). Palm Beach Finance
    received the Palm Beach Funds’ investment in Petters Company’s promissory notes
    via an escrow account that was maintained at U.S. Bank and was governed by an
    escrow-account agreement.
    What happened to the Palm Beach Funds’ money once it was transferred out
    of the escrow account forms the heart of this case. The money initially went to a
    collateral account that also was maintained at U.S. Bank. The collateral account was
    governed by a collateral-account agreement to which U.S. Bank, Palm Beach Finance,
    and Petters Capital, among others, were parties. The Palm Beach Funds were not
    parties to the collateral-account agreement. Once the Palm Beach Funds’ investment
    reached the collateral account, Varga alleges that a “direct payment system”
    prescribed that (a) outgoing funds from the collateral account were to be sent directly
    to the vendors that purportedly sold the consumer merchandise to Petters Company
    and (b) incoming funds to the collateral account were to come directly from the
    retailers that purportedly purchased the consumer merchandise from Petters
    Company. This direct payment system, according to Varga, was designed to prevent
    a third party from accessing investor funds and to ensure the legitimacy of the
    merchandise transactions. Because no vendors or retailers were involved in any
    legitimate transactions, the direct payment system was never followed. Instead, the
    collateral account played host to the Ponzi scheme with the outgoing funds being sent
    to Petters Company through sham inventory vendors and the incoming funds (i.e., the
    investors’ recycled funds) coming from Petters Company.
    Varga alleges that Bruce Prevost and David Harrold, in their capacity as
    directors of the Palm Beach Funds, breached their fiduciary duties to the Palm Beach
    Funds. Varga additionally alleges that Palm Beach Capital Management, LLC
    -3-
    (“PBCM”), which managed the Palm Beach Funds, breached its fiduciary duties to
    the Palm Beach Funds. In particular, Varga argues that Prevost, Harrold, and PBCM
    breached their fiduciary duties to the Palm Beach Funds by failing to ensure that the
    direct payment system was utilized while nonetheless continuing to invest in Petters
    Company’s promissory notes and by concealing the noncompliance with the direct
    payment system from the Palm Beach Funds. Varga settled his claims against
    Prevost, Harrold, and PBCM in a separate proceeding.
    This case concerns Varga’s further claim that U.S. Bank’s actions are sufficient
    to charge it with aiding and abetting the breach of fiduciary duty by Harrold, Prevost,
    and PBCM, willful and wanton negligence, and gross negligence. Varga alleges that
    U.S. Bank knew that the direct payment system was not being followed. Varga
    further asserts that U.S. Bank understood that the direct payment system was an
    important procedural safeguard that was designed to protect the Palm Beach Funds’
    investment. U.S. Bank acquired this knowledge, according to Varga, by reviewing
    the collateral-account agreement, the Palm Beach Funds’ marketing and due-diligence
    documents, and the private offering memoranda for the Palm Beach Funds’
    investment in Petters Company’s promissory notes.
    In addition to appreciating the importance of the direct payment system, Varga
    alleges that U.S. Bank participated in concealing from the Palm Beach Funds the fact
    that the direct payment system was not being followed. Varga first alleges that U.S.
    Bank participated in a so-called “re-coding scheme” at the direction of two of the
    “fund managers” for the Palm Beach Funds—identified in Varga’s brief as Prevost
    and Harrold. This alleged scheme, which began no later than December 2006,
    involved U.S. Bank re-coding the account statements for the collateral account to
    indicate that the incoming funds into the collateral account were being received from
    retailers, not Petters Company. However, Varga admits in his amended complaint
    that, from 2002 until the re-coding scheme began in approximately December 2006,
    the collateral account statements correctly listed Petters Company as the source of the
    -4-
    incoming funds. According to Varga, U.S. Bank also told various individuals
    associated with the Palm Beach Funds that the direct payment system was being
    followed. The amended complaint includes only one example of this alleged practice.
    Varga alleges that Jonathan Spring, a third-party marketer for the Palm Beach Funds
    and an investor in Petters Company’s promissory notes, contacted U.S. Bank
    employee Thomas Caruth. Caruth, who was Palm Beach Finance’s “main contact”
    at U.S. Bank, told Spring that “all wires sent out of U.S. Bank go directly to retailers
    and manufacturers” and “wires received come directly from retailers without going
    through intermediaries.”
    On the basis of these allegations, Varga sued U.S. Bank. U.S. Bank moved to
    dismiss the amended complaint for failure to state a claim under Federal Rule of Civil
    Procedure 12(b)(6). The district court granted U.S. Bank’s motion. This appeal
    followed.
    II.   Discussion
    We review de novo the grant of a motion to dismiss, accepting the well-pleaded
    allegations in the complaint as true and drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of
    the plaintiff. 
    Id.
     In addition to the allegations in the amended complaint, we also
    may consider “materials that are necessarily embraced by the pleadings.” Mattes v.
    ABC Plastics, Inc., 
    323 F.3d 695
    , 697 n.4 (8th Cir. 2003). “To survive a motion to
    dismiss, a complaint must contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to ‘state
    a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.’” Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. 662
    , 678
    (2009) (quoting Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 
    550 U.S. 544
    , 570 (2007)). “A claim has
    facial plausibility when the plaintiff pleads factual content that allows the court to
    draw the reasonable inference that the defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged.”
    
    Id.
    -5-
    A.     Aiding and Abetting a Breach of Fiduciary Duty
    Under Minnesota law, aiding and abetting the tortious conduct of another has
    three elements: “(1) the primary tort-feasor must commit a tort that causes an injury
    to the plaintiff; (2) the defendant must know that the primary tort-feasor’s conduct
    constitutes a breach of duty; and (3) the defendant must substantially assist or
    encourage the primary tort-feasor in the achievement of the breach.” Witzman v.
    Lehrman, Lehrman & Flom, 
    601 N.W.2d 179
    , 187 (Minn. 1999). While the parties
    dispute whether Varga alleged a breach of fiduciary duty by Prevost, Harrold, and
    PBCM, we assume for purposes of this appeal that Varga has done so. Varga’s
    aiding-and-abetting claim nonetheless fails because he has not alleged plausibly that
    U.S. Bank knew that Prevost, Harrold, and PBCM’s conduct constituted a breach of
    fiduciary duty or that U.S. Bank substantially assisted that breach of fiduciary duty.
    An aider and abettor’s knowledge that the primary tortfeasor’s conduct
    constitutes a breach of fiduciary duty is a “crucial element” of a claim for aiding and
    abetting. E-Shops Corp. v. U.S. Bank Nat’l Ass’n, 
    678 F.3d 659
    , 663 (8th Cir. 2012)
    (quoting Fed. Deposit Ins. Corp. v. First Interstate Bank of Des Moines, N.A., 
    885 F.2d 423
    , 431 (8th Cir. 1989)) (applying Minnesota law). Knowledge is evaluated
    “in tandem” with the requirement that the aider and abettor substantially assist the
    breach of a fiduciary duty. Witzman, 601 N.W.2d at 188 (quoting In re
    Temporomandibular Joint (TMJ) Implants Prods. Liab. Litig., 
    113 F.3d 1484
    , 1495
    (8th Cir. 1997)). Consequently, “where there is a minimal showing of substantial
    assistance, a greater showing of scienter is required.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Camp v. Dema,
    
    948 F.2d 455
    , 459 (8th Cir. 1991)). Factors that are relevant to whether knowledge
    and the requisite degree of assistance exist include “the relationship between the
    defendant and the primary tortfeasor, the nature of the primary tortfeasor’s activity,
    the nature of the assistance provided by the defendant, and the defendant’s state of
    mind.” 
    Id.
    -6-
    Varga relies on three allegations in the amended complaint to support his
    argument that he plausibly pled that U.S. Bank knew of and substantially assisted a
    breach of fiduciary duty. First, Varga asserts that U.S. Bank’s review of various
    documents that purportedly mandated the direct payment system suffices to establish
    U.S. Bank’s knowledge that Prevost, Harrold, and PBCM were breaching their
    fiduciary duties to the Palm Beach Funds by failing to ensure that the direct payment
    system was utilized while nonetheless continuing to invest in Petters Company’s
    promissory notes. The documents alleged to have been reviewed by U.S. Bank
    include: the collateral-account agreement; the private offering memoranda for the
    Palm Beach Funds’ investment in Petters Company’s promissory notes; and the Palm
    Beach Funds’ marketing and due-diligence documents. However, the collateral-
    account agreement, which established U.S. Bank’s duties in relation to the collateral
    account, does not mandate that U.S. Bank only accept those deposits that come from
    retailers.2 To the contrary, the collateral-account agreement expressly contemplates
    instances in which the direct payment system would not be followed. In particular,
    the collateral-account agreement provides that U.S. Bank “shall . . . [a]pply and credit
    for deposit to the Collateral Account . . . all Collections [defined as “all payments
    owing to [Petters Capital] with respect to sales of inventory”] and other Receipts from
    time to time tendered by or on behalf of [Petters Capital] for deposit therein.” As this
    excerpt makes clear, not only did the collateral-account agreement indicate that
    exceptions to the direct payment system may be made, but it also left U.S. Bank with
    no discretion to refuse the aforementioned deposits that were made “by or on behalf
    of” Petters Capital, a wholly owned entity of Petters Company. In light of this
    contractual provision in the collateral-account agreement, it is implausible to
    conclude that U.S. Bank knew that the failure to adhere to the direct payment system
    2
    As noted above, when deciding a motion to dismiss, we may consider
    materials that necessarily are embraced by the pleadings. See Mattes, 323 F.3d at 697
    n.4. During oral argument, Varga conceded that the collateral-account agreement,
    which was attached to U.S. Bank’s motion to dismiss, is properly before us.
    -7-
    and continued investments in Petters Company’s promissory notes constituted a
    breach of fiduciary duty by Harrold, Prevost, and PBCM. See Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. at 678
    .
    Varga responds by pointing to other language in the collateral-account
    agreement—for example, that Petters Capital “agrees to direct each [retailer] to make
    all payments” to the collateral account. The private offering memorandum quoted in
    the amended complaint contains a similar statement. But an agreement that Petters
    Capital would “direct” the retailers, who were not parties to the collateral-account
    agreement, to make the deposits into the collateral account provides no indication of
    whether the retailers had agreed or would agree to this course of action. Varga also
    relies on the portion of the collateral-account agreement that states that Palm Beach
    Finance “has requested that . . . all collections received from [retailers] and proceeds
    of such inventory and accounts receivable be . . . remitted by wire transfer directly to”
    the collateral account. (emphasis added) However, the use of the word “requested”
    by Palm Beach Finance—the party through which the Palm Beach Funds’ money
    flowed—indicates that no agreement had been reached on whether the direct payment
    system was, in fact, mandatory. See Webster’s Third New International Dictionary
    1929 (2002) (defining “request” as “to ask (as a person or an organization) for
    something”). Moreover, neither of the above-quoted provisions impose any duty on
    U.S. Bank to ensure that the retailers made their deposits directly into the collateral
    account. Consequently, far from mandating the direct payment system, the portions
    of the collateral-account agreement and the private offering memoranda on which
    Varga relies actually indicate that the direct payment system was not mandatory.
    Varga also contends that U.S. Bank acquired knowledge of the breach of
    fiduciary duty from its review of the Palm Beach Funds’ marketing and due-diligence
    materials. Because these documents are not before the court at this procedural
    juncture, Varga asserts that we must accept the truth of his allegation that these
    documents “required” the retailers to make deposits directly into the collateral
    account. Even if these documents did so state, they would be inconsistent with the
    -8-
    collateral-account agreement, the document that specified U.S. Bank’s duties in
    relation to the collateral account. As noted above, by executing the collateral-account
    agreement, Palm Beach Finance and Petters Capital, among others, agreed to allow,
    and in fact required, U.S. Bank to accept incoming funds from a source other than a
    retailer. U.S. Bank is entitled to rely on the specific provisions in its contract in the
    face of alleged statements in ancillary documents, like the marketing and due-
    diligence documents at issue here, to determine what conclusion to draw from the fact
    that the direct payment system was not being followed. Cf. Witzman, 601 N.W.2d at
    188 (providing that “the relationship between the defendant and the primary
    tortfeasor” as well as “the nature of the primary tortfeasor’s activity” are permissible
    considerations when ascertaining defendant’s knowledge of a breach of fiduciary
    duty). Therefore, Varga has not alleged plausibly that U.S. Bank knew from its
    review of the documents described above that Prevost, Harrold, and PBCM’s actions
    constituted a breach of fiduciary duty to the Palm Beach Funds.
    Second, Varga relies on his assertion that, no later than December 2006, U.S.
    Bank began re-coding the account statements for the collateral account to identify
    retailers, not Petters Company, as the source of the funds deposited into the collateral
    account. U.S. Bank, it is alleged, took this step at the direction of Prevost and
    Harrold. From these instructions, Varga contends that U.S. Bank inferred that
    Prevost, Harrold, and PBCM were breaching their fiduciary duties by wrongfully
    concealing the noncompliance with the direct payment system from the Palm Beach
    Funds. We disagree. The context within which the re-coding instructions to U.S.
    Bank were made is key. For approximately the previous four years—that is, from
    2002 until about December 2006—the account statements correctly reported that
    Petters Company, not a retailer, made the deposits into the collateral account.
    Inferring a wrongful scheme to conceal the noncompliance with the direct payment
    system when this fact had been fully disclosed for approximately four years without
    any questions from the recipients of the account statements is simply not plausible.
    See Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. at 678
    . As the district court correctly summarized, under these
    -9-
    circumstances, “it is hard to understand why U.S. Bank should have understood [the
    re-coding] as a breach of fiduciary duty, ‘somehow retroactively conceal[ing]’ the
    source of the payments from the [Palm Beach Funds].” (second alteration in original).
    Varga further contends that U.S. Bank’s act of re-coding the account statements
    amounted to substantial assistance of a breach of fiduciary duty. In order to provide
    substantial assistance, “[t]he defendant must have some degree of knowledge that his
    actions are aiding the primary violator.” Camp, 
    948 F.2d at 460
    ; see Witzman, 601
    N.W.2d at 188 (relying on Camp and explaining that “defendant’s state of
    mind . . . come[s] into play” when determining whether conduct constitutes
    substantial assistance). “[S]ome element of blameworthiness” must be present in the
    defendant’s assistance. Camp, 
    948 F.2d at 460
    . Consequently, conduct that
    inadvertently advances the breach of a fiduciary duty does not amount to substantial
    assistance. 
    Id.
     While U.S. Bank’s re-coding of the account statements might be
    consistent with a recognition that it was helping to mislead the recipients of the
    account statements or otherwise aiding a breach of fiduciary duty, Varga’s allegations
    fail to raise more than a sheer possibility of misconduct. See Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. at 678
    (“The plausibility standard . . . asks for more than a sheer possibility that a defendant
    has acted unlawfully.” (quoting Twombly, 
    550 U.S. at 556
    )); Ritchie v. St. Louis
    Jewish Light, 
    630 F.3d 713
    , 717 (8th Cir. 2011) (“The facts pleaded . . . do not permit
    us to infer more than the mere possibility of misconduct. Thus, [the] complaint
    merely alleged, but did not show, that [plaintiff] is entitled to relief.”).
    Considering the facts as alleged by Varga, the only plausible inference to be
    drawn from U.S. Bank’s re-coding of the account statements is that U.S. Bank simply
    was following a customer’s directions for reporting the ultimate source of the
    incoming funds into the collateral account. When U.S. Bank agreed to re-code the
    account statements, it knew that the recipients of these statements had known for
    approximately four years that Petters Company was the source of the incoming funds
    into the collateral account. Moreover, the collateral-account agreement informed
    -10-
    U.S. Bank of the fact that Petters Capital, a wholly owned entity of Petters Company,
    may be depositing the funds that it received from the retailers into the collateral
    account. The collateral-account agreement also describes the incoming deposits to
    the collateral account as “all payments owing to [Petters Capital] with respect to the
    sales of inventory.” Consequently, in the absence of further allegations about the
    substance of the re-coding instructions to U.S. Bank or any allegation about U.S.
    Bank’s knowledge of how Prevost, Harrold, and PBCM intended to use the account
    statements, U.S. Bank could only plausibly understand that it was assisting its
    customer with reporting the ultimate source (retailers), rather than the intermediate
    source (Petters Company), of the incoming funds into the collateral account.
    Accordingly, Varga has not alleged plausibly that U.S. Bank inferred that it was
    assisting with any sort of concealment or otherwise furthering a breach of fiduciary
    duty by Prevost, Harrold, and PBCM. See Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. at 678
    .
    Finally, Varga relies on his assertion that U.S. Bank employees falsely told
    individuals associated with the Palm Beach Funds that the direct payment system was
    being followed. Although Varga contends that misrepresentations like this occurred
    on multiple occasions, the amended complaint identifies only one specific instance:
    a misrepresentation by U.S. Bank employee Caruth to Spring, a third-party marketer
    for the Palm Beach Funds and an investor in Petters Company’s promissory notes.
    Caruth was Palm Beach Finance’s “main contact” at U.S. Bank. Varga primarily
    argues that Caruth’s misstatement constitutes substantial assistance. However, Varga
    has not alleged that Caruth knew that his statement to Spring was false. Absent such
    an allegation, Varga’s argument for substantial assistance necessarily fails. See
    Camp, 
    948 F.2d at 460
     (explaining that defendant’s conduct must have “some
    element of blameworthiness”); E-Shops Corp., 
    678 F.3d at 664
     (“There are no factual
    allegations that [the bank] knew the information it processed . . . [was] false at the
    time of receipt.”); see also Topchian v. JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., --- F.3d ---,
    
    2014 WL 3703995
    , at *7 (8th Cir. July 28, 2014) (“The facts that [the plaintiff] has
    alleged might be consistent with [a bank executive] having known that his statement
    -11-
    was false, but the alleged facts are equally consistent with a scenario in which [the
    bank executive] fully and reasonably believed that his statement was true.”).
    Moreover, even if we can infer that Caruth knew that his statement was false, there
    are no allegations from which we can infer that Caruth understood or even should
    have understood that his misstatement aided Prevost, Harrold, and PBCM’s breach
    of fiduciary duty to the Palm Beach Funds. See Camp, 
    948 F.2d at 460
     (“The
    defendant must have some degree of knowledge that his actions are aiding the
    primary violator.”).
    Varga’s further assertion that, at unspecified times, unnamed U.S. Bank
    employees made misstatements to unnamed individuals associated with the Palm
    Beach Funds fares no better. Not only does Varga fail to allege that the unnamed
    U.S. Bank employees knew that their statements were false, but the amended
    complaint lacks any indication of whether these employees had access to records
    regarding the collateral account or whether they understood or even should have
    understood that their statements were aiding a breach of fiduciary duty by Prevost,
    Harrold, and PBCM. These allegations are therefore insufficient to state a plausible
    claim. See C.N. v. Willmar Pub. Schs., Indep. Sch. Dist. No. 347, 
    591 F.3d 624
    , 634
    (8th Cir. 2010) (rejecting allegations that misconduct occurred “on unspecified dates
    and under circumstances not described” because “[s]uch vague allegations neither
    provide [defendant] with fair notice of the nature of [plaintiff’s] claims and the
    grounds upon which those claims rest nor plausibly establish [plaintiff’s] entitlement
    to any relief”); Braden v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 
    588 F.3d 585
    , 594 (8th Cir. 2009)
    (“[S]ome factual allegations may be so indeterminate that they require ‘further factual
    enhancement’ in order to state a claim.” (quoting Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. at 678
    )).
    Considering U.S. Bank’s knowledge and assistance in tandem, see Witzman,
    601 N.W.2d at 188, we agree with the district court that Varga has not stated a
    plausible claim. We consequently affirm the grant of U.S. Bank’s motion to dismiss
    Varga’s claim for aiding and abetting a breach of fiduciary duty.
    -12-
    B.     Negligence
    Varga also brought claims against U.S. Bank for willful and wanton negligence
    and for gross negligence. In order to succeed on these claims, Varga must, among
    other things, allege the existence of a duty. See Louis v. Louis, 
    636 N.W.2d 314
    , 318
    (Minn. 2001). Under Minnesota law, whether a duty exists is generally an issue of
    law. See 
    id.
    Varga asserts that U.S. Bank had a duty to provide information to the Palm
    Beach Funds about the flow of funds in and out of the collateral account. Varga
    bases this argument on Klein v. First Edina National Bank, 
    196 N.W.2d 619
     (Minn.
    1972) (per curiam), which held that when a bank transacts business with a customer,
    the bank “has no special duty to counsel the customer and inform him of every
    material fact relating to the transaction . . . unless special circumstances exist.” Id.
    at 623. One such special circumstance is “where the bank knows or has reason to
    know that the customer is placing his trust and confidence in the bank and is relying
    on the bank so to counsel and inform him.” Id.
    Relying on Klein, Varga argues only that special circumstances existed here
    because U.S. Bank knew or had reason to know that the Palm Beach Funds placed
    their trust and confidence in U.S. Bank to counsel and inform them about whether the
    direct payment system was being followed. U.S. Bank knew or had reason to know
    of this reliance, Varga argues, based on the escrow-account agreement and the
    collateral-account agreement as well as U.S. Bank’s role in the Palm Beach Funds’
    investment in Petters Company’s promissory notes. The parties’ contracts are of no
    help to Varga. Neither the escrow-account agreement, which defined U.S. Bank’s
    duties to the Palm Beach Funds, nor the collateral-account agreement, which
    specifically disclaimed U.S. Bank’s duties to third parties like the Palm Beach Funds,
    evidence the special circumstances contemplated by Klein. Moreover, as noted
    -13-
    above, the collateral-account agreement expressly required U.S. Bank to accept
    deposits that did not comply with the direct payment system.
    Nor does the allegation that the Palm Beach Funds referred its investors and
    third-party marketers to U.S. Bank to have their questions about the escrow and
    collateral accounts answered establish the special circumstances contemplated by
    Klein. The relevant contracts establish what can only be described as an ordinary,
    arm’s-length commercial relationship between U.S. Bank and the Palm Beach Funds,
    and “[c]ourts applying Minnesota law have been reluctant to impose a duty to
    disclose material facts in arm’s-length business transactions between commercial
    entities.” Driscoll v. Standard Hardware, Inc., 
    785 N.W.2d 805
    , 813 (Minn. Ct. App.
    2010). Moreover, Varga has not referred us to any Minnesota case law, and we have
    not located any on our own, that imposes a duty on a bank to inform its customer of
    material information under circumstances that are remotely similar to those present
    here. Indeed, the primary case that Varga cites in favor of imposing such a
    duty—Klein—actually undermines his argument. The Klein court found that a bank
    did not have a duty to inform a customer of material information notwithstanding the
    twenty-year relationship between the bank and the customer. 196 N.W.2d at 623; see
    Norwest Bank Hastings v. Clapp, 
    394 N.W.2d 176
    , 179 (Minn. Ct. App. 1986) (“If
    [the Klein plaintiff’s] twenty-year relationship with her banker was insufficient to
    establish reliance, certainly [meeting your banker twice and having one short meeting
    with him] was insufficient.”). We thus affirm the grant of U.S. Bank’s motion to
    dismiss Varga’s negligence claims.
    III.   Conclusion
    For the reasons set forth above, we affirm.
    ______________________________
    -14-