This case is before us following two preliminary rulings issued in an action to recover damages stemming from the conversion of municipalities’ funds invested in the Iowa Trust. The issues pertain to plaintiffs’ cause of action against counsel for the trust, Davis, Hockenberg, Wine, Brown, Koehn & Shors, P.C. The law firm challenges the court’s refusal to dismiss the action on standing grounds and its certification of the suit as a class action. Finding no error, we affirm and remand for further proceedings.
The Iowa Trust was established in 1990 to permit political subdivisions of the state to pool surplus treasury funds for investment. The treasurer of each municipality served as a member of a supervisory board which annually elected the trustees. The trustees were charged with investment and administrative powers outlined under the indenture of trust.
The Davis law firm was retained by the trustees as special counsel. In that capacity, one of the firm’s attorneys drafted the necessary trust documents including the trust indenture. The indenture provided for an investment advisor, administrator, and custodian of securities, with provisions pertaining to the duties, powers, and liabilities of each position.
In November 1991, the trust investment advisor, Steven Wymer, made improper and illegal trades resulting in the disappearance of over $65 million in treasury securities held by the trust. Wymer also sold securities to the trust at an inflated price of $6.5 million over market. Consequently, the trust lost more than $71 million in assets virtually overnight.
While the Securities Exchange Commission pursued federal charges against Wymer and his California investment firm, the City of Dubuque — a trust participant — brought suit against the trustees, alleging mismanagement and breach of fiduciary duty. The City sought the removal of the trustees, an accounting of all trust funds, and the appointment of a new receiver to marshal and manage the assets until new trustees could be elected. The district court appointed David J. Lyons, then insurance commissioner for the State of Iowa, receiver. The court suspended the duties of the trustees and directed the receiver to “exercise all such powers and duties of the trustees as provided in the indenture of trust ... as well as any other powers and duties of a receiver appointed pursuant to Iowa Code chapter 680.” Thereafter, the receiver pursued actions in Colorado and California in an effort to recover trust funds fraudulently diverted to entities in those states.
The City of Dubuque, along with several intervening plaintiff/participants, later sought leave to amend the petition to name the Davis firm as an additional defendant. The receiver resisted, claiming that by standing in the shoes of the trustees he held exclusive and plenary power to sue for damages caused to the trust by third parties. The court granted plaintiffs’ motion over the receiver’s objection and also joined the receiver as an indispensable party plaintiff.
The amended petition alleged thirteen claims of professional malpractice and breach of contract centering principally on the firm’s simultaneous representation of the trust as well as Denman <& Company/Institutional Trust Management, the trust administrator and custodian. These latter entities were corporations owned and controlled by Wymer. The petition alleged that the firm’s conflicting loyalties to these clients i’esulted in substandard legal advice and the drafting of trust documents that failed to protect the trust participants from inadequate custodial arrangements and the unscrupulous conduct of the investment advisor. The amendment
The Davis firm moved to dismiss the amended petition on the same ground previously asserted by the receiver. The firm also resisted class certification, alleging plaintiffs had not sustained their burden of pleading or proving the elements necessary to establish a class under the rules. After hearing, the district court overruled the motion to dismiss and certified the class. The Davis firm sought interlocutory appeal from the order denying dismissal, which we granted,
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and appealed as a matter of right from the certification order.
See Martin v. Amana Refrig., Inc.,
I. Standing.
The firm’s motion to dismiss for lack of standing placed the burden on plaintiffs to show (1) a specific, personal, and legal interest in the litigation, and (2) injury.
Hawkeye Bankcorp. v. Iowa College Aid Comm’n,
Turning first to the court order, we observe that the powers it grants are, indeed, extensive. As already noted, the court gave the receiver all powers granted the trustees under the indenture of trust. Under the indenture, the trustees were granted “full, exclusive and absolute power, control and authority over the trust property and over the affairs of the trust.” They held complete power “to collect, sue for, receive and receipt for all sums of money or other property due to the trust.” Further, the trustees enjoyed “full and complete power to take all actions, do all matters and things, and execute all instruments as they deem necessary, proper or desirable, in order to carry out, promote or advance the interests and purposes of the trust....”
Nevertheless, trustees may exercise only the power specifically conferred by the trust’s terms or necessary to carry out its purposes.
Van Gorden v. Lunt,
Nor does the receiver’s statutory authority preclude plaintiffs’ suit as a matter of law. Under Iowa Code chapter 680 (1991), and subject to the control of the court,
a receiver has power to bring and defend actions, to take and keep possession of property, to collect debts, to receive the rents and profits of real property, and, generally, to do such acts in respect to the property committed to the receiver as may be authorized by law or ordered by the court.
Iowa Code § 680.4 (emphasis added). This statutory scheme authorizes the receiver to
Moreover, the firm’s claim that plaintiffs can prove no damages in excess of those potentially recoverable by the receiver is clearly a question not properly resolved on a motion to dismiss. While plaintiffs’ petition does not state the precise amount of damages suffered as a result of funds lost or encumbered, such specificity is not required under our liberal pleading rules. Iowa R.Civ.P. 69(a);
Gordon v. Noel,
Nor do we find any merit in the firm’s claim that the court’s ruling violates fundamental trust law principles. In support of its claim of exclusivity, the firm cites the long-standing rule that when a third person commits a tort against a trust, the beneficiaries cannot maintain suit against the tortfeasor so long as the trustee is ready and willing to proceed.
See
Restatement (Second) of Trusts § 282 (1959); 4 Austin W. Scott and William F. Fratcher
Scott on Trusts
§ 282, at 26 (4th ed. 1989). The weakness in the firm’s argument is that a receiver appointed by the court is not a trustee. Restatement (Second) of Trusts § 16B;
Andrew v. Union Sav. Bank & Trust Co.,
Finally, we note that even if the receiver were deemed a successor trustee, the beneficiaries could still maintain a suit upon proof that the trustee improperly refused or neglected to bring an action against the third-party wrongdoers. Restatement (Second) of Trusts § 282(2); see also 4 Scott on Trusts § 294.1, at 99. Accepting the pleaded facts as true for purposes of ruling on the motion to dismiss, the district court properly rejected the firm’s claim that no evidence exists to prove the receiver’s reluctance to bring suit on plaintiffs’ behalf. For all of these reasons, the court’s ruling on the standing issue must be affirmed.
II. Class certification.
The Davis firm mounts two principal challenges to the trial court’s class certification ruling. First it contends that the court’s findings on impracticability of joinder and adequacy of representation under Iowa Rules of Civil Procedure 42.1 and 42.2(b)
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lack
We consider the firm’s contentions mindful of the broad discretion vested in trial courts to assess the weight, if any, to be accorded class certification criteria.
Varner v. Schwan’s Sales Enter., Inc.,
Iowa’s uniform class action rule permits commencement of a class action where common questions of law or fact are shared by persons so numerous that joinder is impracticable.
Vignaroli v. Blue Cross,
The firm’s primary complaint is that plaintiffs offered no evidence to support class certification. It argues the court rested its ruling on unsupported legal conclusions from plaintiffs’ pleadings and oral argument. Because the certification rules require the court to make specific findings in support of the decision, the firm contends the court’s failure to follow the rule constituted an abuse of discretion.
Although these are strong allegations by the firm, they lack vitality when considered in context. As plaintiffs correctly note, the court had supervised the receivership proceedings for nearly eighteen months prior to ruling on class certification. Thus it had a wealth of information before it, including the names of all the trust participants, their losses and recoveries, and an understanding of the nature of the claim against the Davis firm. We have held that as long as the court has before it sufficient information to form a reasonable judgment on the certification issue, it need not inquire further into the facts supporting plaintiffs’ petition.
Martin,
Our-rules require the class to be “so numerous or so constituted” that joinder of all members is “impracticable.” Iowa R.Civ.P. 42.1(1). The district court determined that the potential class was comprised of over eighty members, thus making joinder impractical. Although the firm contends this finding was merely speculative, its argument ignores the fact that the court, in its supervisory position, was uniquely apprised of all governmental entities sustaining Iowa Trust losses. The record reveals regular account-ings filed by the receiver with the court identifying the various : entities’ claims against the trust and their status in distribution proceedings. These reports furnished more than sufficient information for the court to adequately judge the size of the potential class.
The firm also contends the court failed to make an independent finding of impracticability, asserting that numbers
The firm next asserts an insufficient foundation for the court’s finding that the proposed class representatives will fairly and adequately protect the interests of the class. Specifically the firm cites potential conflicts existing among trust participants with respect to individual claims of liability and damages. Given this circumstance, the firm argues, the court abused its discretion on the representation issue.
To determine the adequacy of representation, rule 42.3(b) lists three crucial factors: (1) the attorney for the named parties will sufficiently represent and protect the class interests; (2) the named parties have no conflict of interest in the maintenance of the class action; and (3) the named parties have or can acquire sufficient financial resources to guarantee that the class interests will not be harmed.
Iowa Annual Conference of United Methodist Church v. Bringle,
It is unnecessary for plaintiffs’ individual claims to be “carbon copies” of each other.
Vignaroli,
Moreover, not every disagreement between representatives and other class members will stand in the way of a class action lawsuit. Id. at 746. To defeat certification, the conflict must relate to the specific issues and controversies common to the class. Id. Although the firm points to prior conflicts between trust participants concerning settlement with the trust custodian, nothing in the record suggests a conflict over the malpractice claim.
The firm’s claim that potential for differing damages renders the class uncertifiable is likewise unpersuasive. The fact that a potential class action involves individual damage claims does not preclude certification when liability issues are common to the class. Id. at 745; 1 Newberg § 3.16, at 94.
Finally, the firm contends that the court abused its discretion by failing to make specific factual findings with respect to each of the criteria listed in rule 42.3(a). The listed criteria all relate to the issue of whether certification of the class will promote a fair and efficient adjudication of the controversy. Rule 42.4(b) requires the order certifying or
The ruling before us clearly reflects the court’s consideration of the factors listed in rule 42.3(a). It found that common interests existed among members of the class based on their allegations that the firm negligently drafted trust documents, failed to disclose conflicts of interest, and failed to monitor trust operations. It also determined that a class action was the most appropriate means of adjudicating plaintiffs’ claims in order to avoid future conflicts similar to those currently existing between the receiver and trust participants. Nothing in the rule mandates that the court make written findings regarding
each
factor under rule 42.3(a).
See Stone,
AFFIRMED AND REMANDED FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS.
Notes
. The receiver joins the Davis firm’s interlocutory appeal from the motion to dismiss but, for simplicity’s sake, references to the law firm shall include both appellants.
. Rule 42.1 states:
One or more members of a class may sue or be sued as representative parties on behalf of all in a class if:
(1) the class is so numerous or so constituted that joinder of all members, whether or not otherwise required or permitted, is impracticable; and
(2) there is a question of law or fact common to the class.
Rule 42.2(b) provides:
The court may certify an action as a class action, if it finds that (1) the requirements of R.C.P. 42.1 have been satisfied, (2) a class action should be permitted for the fair and efficient adjudication of the controversy, and (3)the representative parties fairly and adequately will protect the interests of the class.
