Skatteforvaltningen v. Cedar Hill Capital Investments LLC Roth 401(K) Plan
1:19-cv-01922
S.D.N.Y.Aug 26, 2024Background
- Customs and Tax Administration of the Kingdom of Denmark (SKAT) brought multiple actions to recover funds allegedly paid out via a massive fraudulent tax refund scheme targeting Danish dividend withholding.
- SKAT alleged that U.S. pension funds and their associates falsely claimed tax-exempt status and ownership of Danish securities to obtain over $2.1 billion in refunds.
- Defendant Michael Ben-Jacob (former law firm partner) was alleged to have played a central role in structuring entities and schemes, particularly relating to the Schedule A pension plans.
- In April 2018, a tolling agreement was executed (and later extended) regarding potential claims; disputes arose as to its effect on time-bar defenses.
- In June 2021, after discovery of new evidence allegedly indicating deeper involvement, SKAT filed a fresh complaint against Ben-Jacob for conspiracy to defraud and aiding and abetting fraud.
- Ben-Jacob moved for summary judgment, arguing SKAT’s claims were time-barred either by the tolling agreement’s terms or New York’s statute of limitations for fraud, as interpreted under the “discovery rule.”
Issues
| Issue | Plaintiff's Argument | Defendant's Argument | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Does the tolling agreement bar claims against Ben-Jacob? | Agreement only covered claims that would’ve expired during its term | Agreement bars the claims because they were not timely filed after the toll expired | Tolling agreement doesn’t bar claims; at most ambiguous, so factual dispute remains |
| Is the June 2021 Complaint time-barred by New York law? | Claims timely because SKAT could not have reasonably discovered facts before 2021 | SKAT knew or should have known enough of the fraud and Ben-Jacob's involvement by 2019 | Disputed factual issues preclude summary judgment; jury could find SKAT acted reasonably |
| Did SKAT know facts sufficient to infer Ben-Jacob's role? | Much of Ben-Jacob's Schedule A involvement was only revealed post-privilege waiver | Earlier complaints and settlement exclusions reflect SKAT’s prior knowledge | Jury could find SKAT lacked facts to draw reasonable inference pre-2021 |
| Are SKAT’s 2019 pleadings conclusive admissions? | SKAT not bound by prior pleadings, especially as Ben-Jacob denied their claims | SKAT should be bound by its prior broader allegations | Court exercises discretion not to treat them as conclusive |
Key Cases Cited
- Sargiss v. Magarelli, 12 N.Y.3d 527 (NY high court reiterates plaintiff’s burden to show fraud could not have been discovered earlier under two-year discovery rule)
- Cantor Fitzgerald Inc. v. Lutnick, 313 F.3d 704 (statutes of limitations in diversity cases governed by state law)
- Koenig v. Smith, 133 N.E. 669 (NY 1921) (discussing discovery of fraud standard)
- Moll v. Telesector Res. Grp., Inc., 94 F.4th 218 (pleadings and the discretion to treat admissions conclusively or not depending on the context)
