Relief defendant-appellant Janet Schaberg, sued under the name Janet Walsh, is the former wife of Stephen Walsh, a defendant in actions brought by plaintiffs-appellees the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (the “CFTC”) and the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) (together, the “agencies”) alleging violations of the anti-fraud provisions of the Commodity Exchange Act and the Securities Exchange Act. The agencies claim that, among other violations of securities law between 1996 and 2009, Walsh and his co-defendant Paul Greenwood misappropriated from funds they managed for various investors as much as 554 million dollars. The agencies seek disgorgement of this money. Although the agencies allege no wrongdoing by Schaberg, they seek disgorgement of whatever proceeds from the fraudulent scheme are in her possession.
The district court (George B. Daniels, Judge) entered ex parte restraining orders freezing the bulk of Schaberg’s assets. Subsequently, by decision and order, the district court converted the restraining orders to preliminary injunctions, prohibiting Schaberg from transferring, disposing of or otherwise encumbering essentially any of her assets without the approval of the court.
In these appeals, Schaberg argues that the district court abused its discretion in issuing the injunctions, since, she contends, the frozen property is not subject to disgorgement in the proceedings against her husband. In opposition, the SEC and CFTC not only contest Schaberg’s arguments but also contend that we lack jurisdiction to hear these appeals.
We conclude that we have jurisdiction to hear these appeals. We further conclude, however, that determining whether Schaberg’s assets are properly subject to a freeze by the district court in these proceedings requires us to assess whether Schaberg has a legitimate claim under New York law to the property she acquired in her separation from Stephen Walsh. Since this inquiry addresses unsettled and significant issues of state law, we certify, pursuant to 22 N.Y.C.R.R. § 500.27(a) and 2d Cir. R. 27.2, two questions to the New York Court of Appeals.
BACKGROUND
Janet Schaberg was married to Stephen Walsh from 1982 until 2004. Over this period, Walsh was either a substantial shareholder in or a management partner of a number of business enterprises, including Champion Sportswear, Tánger Malls and the New York Islanders hockey team. As a couple, the Walshes also purchased, and sometimes sold, a number of real estate properties, including condominiums in Florida and New York City, and houses in Port Washington, New York. During the marriage, Schaberg’s only employment was as an unpaid volunteer for a series of charitable organizations.
Between August 2000 and February 2009, more than 18 million dollars was *222 wired from accounts registered to Walsh and Greenwood’s investment firm, WG Trading Investors, to accounts registered in Schaberg’s name. Much of this money was used to pay the Walshes’ bills, including their children’s college tuition and household expenses. The agencies allege that these transfers represented the fraudulent misappropriation of investor funds.
The Walshes separated in 2004 and began divorce proceedings in early 2005. Schaberg and Walsh negotiated the terms of their separation for some time, finally signing a property settlement and separation agreement on November 1, 2006. Under the terms of the agreement, Schaberg conveyed her ownership interest in a jointly held Port Washington house to Walsh, while she received sole ownership of condominiums in New York City and in Florida. The agreement also provided that Schaberg retained, and Walsh waived all claim to, nearly 5 million dollars held in several checking accounts, and that Walsh agreed to pay Schaberg a total of 12.5 million dollars, first in biannual installments of $500,000 through 2016, and then in biannual installments of $250,000 through 2020. In executing the agreement, both parties waived their rights to any distributive award or equitable distribution with respect to property acquired by the other either before or during the marriage.
In February of 2009, the CFTC and SEC each filed multi-count complaints in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, alleging a large-scale fraud by Walsh, his partner Paul Greenwood, and various investment vehicles they controlled. Both complaints sought monetary penalties and other forms of injunctive relief from the named defendants, as well as the disgorgement of ill-gotten gains plus pre-judgment interest from the defendants and the relief defendants alike. The complaints named Schaberg as a relief defendant, along with other entities believed to be in possession of proceeds from the fraud, and sought disgorgement from her of the ill-gotten funds.
At the outset of the action, on February 25, 2009, the agencies moved by orders to show cause for preliminary injunctions and temporary restraining orders freezing the assets of the defendants and relief defendants and appointing a receiver. The district court immediately issued temporary restraining orders appointed a receiver in both actions, and, on March 3, 2009, held oral argument on the motions for preliminary injunctions. On May 22, 2009, the court granted both agencies’ motions for preliminary injunctions freezing the assets of the primary defendants. In the SEC case, the district court converted the temporary restraining order into a preliminary injunction freezing one of Schaberg’s bank accounts as a relief defendant, and ordered her to provide discovery, including deposition testimony, concerning her finances. On May 29, 2009, the district court ordered Schaberg to provide discovery in the CFTC proceedings.
On August 4, 2009, the district court issued a decision and order, granting the CFTC’s motion for a preliminary injunction with respect to Schaberg’s assets. The court found that the agency had met its burden of demonstrating both that it was likely to succeed in ultimately tracing Schaberg’s assets to the proceeds of the fraud and also that Schaberg lacked a legitimate claim to the property. Accordingly, the district court converted the temporary restraining order in the CFTC case into a preliminary injunction, freezing Schaberg’s assets in her bank and brokerage accounts. Although the district court did not place Schaberg’s assets in receivership, Schaberg was prohibited from transferring, disposing of, or otherwise encum *223 bering any of her real property, jewelry or art without prior notice to the agencies and the receiver, and approval of the court.
On August 20, 2009, the district court issued an order detailing the preliminary injunction in the CFTC case, in accordance with the August 4 order. The district court also issued a revised preliminary injunction in the SEC case, conforming the earlier, narrower injunction in the SEC case to the broader terms of the August 4 order. On August 24, 2009, Schaberg petitioned the court for the emergency release of funds to pay her living expenses' and legal fees. The district court referred this petition to the receiver for a recommendation.
Schaberg then appealed to this Court. Since these appeals were filed, some funds have been released to Schaberg and to her creditors by the district court upon the recommendation of the receiver, although Schaberg remains without access to the vast majority of her assets.
DISCUSSION
I. Jurisdiction
Schaberg’s notices of appeal together identify four orders of the district court for which she seeks review: (1) the court’s February 25, 2009, order granting a temporary restraining order in the SEC case; (2) the court’s August 4, 2009, decision and order, converting the temporary restraining order into a preliminary injunction in the CFTC case; (3) the court’s August 20, 2009, preliminary injunction in the CFTC case; and (4) the court’s order referring Schaberg’s application for release of funds to the court-appointed receiver. Schaberg asserts that this Court has jurisdiction to review these interlocutory orders under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1), which applies to “orders of the district courts ... granting, continuing, modifying, refusing or dissolving injunctions.”
The agencies, however, contend that this provision does not extend jurisdiction to review the orders appealed from here. The agencies assert that, despite its plain language, 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1) grants appellate courts jurisdiction only over interlocutory orders that concern “serious” injunctions.
1
They rely on
Carson v. American Brands, Inc.,
We are not persuaded that interlocutory orders indefinitely freezing essentially all the assets of a relief defendant lack “serious consequence” simply because they allow her access to her funds at the court’s discretion. But even accepting this dubious contention arguendo, the agencies’ claim that we lack jurisdiction over these appeals is without merit.
The agencies’ argument rests on fundamental misunderstanding of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Carson,
as well as of a previous decision of this Court. In
*224
Carson,
the Supreme Court considered whether an order of a district court declining to enter a proposed consent decree was an interlocutory order appealable under § 1292(a)(1).
See id.
at 80,
The decision of this Court on which the agencies rely is likewise inapposite. The agencies cite our statement in
HBE Leasing Corp. v. Frank,
We are satisfied, therefore, that we have jurisdiction over the district *225 court’s orders converting its temporary restraining order into a preliminary injunction and its further order elaborating the preliminary injunction. We proceed, therefore, to the substance of Schaberg’s appeals. 3
II. The Preliminary Injunctions
The SBC and CFTC proceed against Schaberg as a relief defendant. A relief defendant is a person who “holds the subject matter of the litigation in a subordinate or possessory capacity as to which there is no dispute.”
SEC v. Colello,
We review a grant of a preliminary injunction freezing assets for abuse of discretion.
Cavanagh I,
Schaberg contends primarily that the district court erred in determining as a matter of law that she lacked a legitimate claim to the frozen funds, and therefore that an injunction was authorized under *226 Cavanagh I. 4 She claims instead that she acquired her assets pursuant to the separation agreement she executed with Walsh in their divorce proceedings, and that by executing this agreement she became a good faith purchaser for value of the assets. Therefore, she asserts, she has a “legitimate claim” and her assets are not subject to disgorgement in the action against her ex-husband.
We agree with Schaberg that if she received her assets only when they were transferred to her pursuant to the separation agreement and if she is a good faith purchaser for value, then her assets are immune from disgorgement. District courts may only require disgorgement of the assets of a relief defendant upon a finding that she lacks a “legitimate claim.”
See Cavanagh I,
Schaberg’s argument that she holds her assets as a good faith purchaser for value proceeds in two steps: first, she argues that the district court erred in focusing its analysis on transfers of investor funds to her checking accounts over the course of her marriage. These transfers, she contends, were not to her, but rather to her and Walsh together, and the money, even after the transfers, was not her individual property, but rather part of the marital estate. Schaberg asserts that this money was transferred to her only by the separation agreement she executed with Walsh. Second, Schaberg contends that because she relinquished valuable claims to the Walsh marital estate in this negotiated and arms-length separation agreement, she holds whatever she derived from the agreement as a good faith purchaser for value. Evaluating Schaberg’s argument involves addressing two substantial questions of New York state law.
A. New York Domestic Relations Law § 236
The first prong of Schaberg’s argument is that the district court erred in concluding that she received money separately while she was married, since this money was jointly held “marital property.” As she notes, New York Domestic Relations Law (“DRL”) § 236 defines “marital property” as “all property acquired by either or both spouses during the marriage and before the execution of a separation agreement or the commencement of a matrimonial action, regardless of the form in which title is held.”
See Musso v. Ostashko,
In opposition, the agencies contend that the monies misdirected from investor accounts to Schaberg’s checking accounts never became marital property, and accordingly could not be transferred from the marital estate to Schaberg by means of the separation agreement. They argue that DRL § 236 implicitly extends the marital estate only to property obtained lawfully. If the proceeds of the fraud never became part of the marital estate, Schaberg could not have acquired them in her separation agreement, and her only claim to ownership would be based on receipt of the funds while she was married. Under Cavanagh I, this receipt of the funds without consideration would be insufficient to defeat the agencies’ disgorgement claim.
We agree with Schaberg that a separation agreement can serve as a conveyance from the marital estate to divorcing individuals within the meaning of New
*228
York Real Property Law § 290(3), which defines “conveyance” to include “every written instrument, by which any estate or interest in real property is created.”
See FDIC v. Malin,
We are unable to determine, however, whether DRL § 236 defines “marital property” to include the proceeds of fraud. On the one hand, the plain language of the statute suggests that “marital property” should include such assets; Section 236(B)(1)(c) defines marital property as “all property acquired by either or both spouses during the marriage and before ... the commencement of a matrimonial action, regardless of the form in which title is held.” No New York authority supports the agencies’ contention that the word “acquired” implicitly includes a requirement of lawfulness. Furthermore, New York courts are clear that the term “marital property” is to be broadly construed,
see Price v. Price,
On the other hand, a lower court decision in New York suggests that the New York Court of Appeals might not extend § 236’s definition of marital property to include any assets misappropriated from investor funds over the course ’ of the Walshes’ marriage. In a divorce proceeding between a couple that jointly operated an unlawful loansharking enterprise, a New York Supreme Court held that the proceeds of an illegal business are not marital property.
LaPaglia v. LaPaglia,
Furthermore, we believe that since New York has no binding authority on this question, the New York Court of Appeals may be swayed by persuasive authority from other states. The Supreme Court of Colorado has held that the marital estate does not include proceeds of fraud.
See In re Marriage of Allen,
Since the New York Court of Appeals has not been presented with a case similar to Allen, we are uncertain how it would *229 address the issue of whether the proceeds of fraud can be considered marital property. Accordingly, we certify this question to that Court: Does “marital property” tuithin the meaning of New York Domestic Relations Law § 236 include the proceeds of fraud?
B. New York Debtor and Creditor Law §§ 278 and 272
Even if Schaberg’s separation agreement served to transfer the marital assets to her individual ownership, our analysis still requires a second step: we must determine whether this transfer made Schaberg a good faith purchaser for value according to the terms of New York Debtor and Creditor Law (“DCL”) § 278. This inquiry also presents a substantial issue of New York state law, and thus we certify a second question to the New York Court of Appeals.
DCL § 278 provides that a creditor whose claim has matured may have a conveyance set aside “against any person,” other than a good faith purchaser for value, defined as “a purchaser for fair consideration without knowledge of the fraud.” Schaberg contends that she meets this definition because the assets were transferred to her without notice of their source, and she paid “fair consideration,” which is defined by DCL § 272 as given when “in exchange for ... property, ... as a fair equivalent therefor, and in good faith, property is conveyed or an antecedent debt is satisfied.” Schaberg argues that she paid “fair consideration” because, in return for the receipt of her property in the agreement, she agreed that she would “never ... seek through court proceedings or otherwise a distributive award or an award of equitable distribution with respect to” any other property acquired by her husband over the course of their marriage. 8
Schaberg relies upon
FDIC v. Malin,
Schaberg is wrong, however, in her assertion that it is impossible to distinguish her relinquishment of claims to future distributions of her marital property from the *230 valuable consideration paid by Phyllis Malm. In Malin, it was the transfer of property from Leonard to Phyllis that the plaintiff sought to rescind as fraudulent, since, it was contended, that transfer was effected so that the house would not be subject to a claim by the FDIC as a creditor. No party in Malin contended that the house itself represented the proceeds of fraud. Rather, in that case, both the property that was transferred and the property to which Phyllis Malin relinquished her future claims was property in which the couple indisputably already had a legitimate interest. By contrast, in her separation from Walsh, Schaberg relinquished future claims to an equitable distribution of marital property that — it is alleged — consisted almost entirely of the proceeds of fraud. Schaberg did not have a legitimate claim to the property while she was married to Walsh, and the issue in contention is whether the transfer to her individually served to create a legitimate interest where none existed before.
We are uncertain whether, under DCL § 272, a spouse pays fair consideration by relinquishing in good faith claims to funds in which she in fact has no legitimate interest: On the one hand, New York law holds that the focus of the good faith inquiry is on the subjective intent of the transferee.
In re Sharp Int’l Corp.,
On the other hand, DCL § 272 requires that in order to attain the status of good faith purchaser for value the transferee must confer to the transferor “a fair equivalent,” a term that implies that the transferee must convey property in which she has a legitimate interest. A New York court has held that a “fair equivalent” is not given when a wife relinquishes a claim to maintenance and child support of only minimal economic value.
Century Ctr., Ltd. v. Davis,
Accordingly, we certify a second question to the New York Court of Appeals: Does a spouse pay “fair consideration’’ according to the terms of New York Debtor and Creditor Law § 272 when she relinquishes in good faith a claim to the proceeds of fraud?
III. Certification
New York law permits us to certify to New York’s highest court “determinative questions of New York law [that] are involved in a case pending before [us] for which no controlling precedent of the Court of Appeals exists.” 22 N.Y.C.R.R.
*231
§ 500.27(a);
see also
2d Cir. R. 27.2(a) (“If state law permits, the court may certify a question of state law to that state’s highest court.”). Nonetheless, we do not certify all novel questions of state law. Rather, “[w]e resort to certification sparingly, mindful that it is our job to predict how the New York Court of Appeals would decide the issues before us.”
Runner v. N.Y. Stock Exch., Inc.,
We conclude that certification is appropriate in these appeals in light of several factors. First, we have recognized that certification is often appropriate if the issue before us is one that the New York Court of Appeals has not had the opportunity to address.
Penguin Grp. (USA) Inc. v. Am. Buddha,
Second, we have held it appropriate to certify questions where the plain language of the statutes involved does not indicate the answer.
Am. Buddha,
Lastly, we have said that certification may be appropriate if the question certified will control the outcome of the case.
Am. Buddha,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated, the court hereby certifies the following questions to the New York Court of Appeals:
(1) Does “marital property” within the meaning of New York Domestic Relations Law § 236 include the proceeds of fraud?
(2) Does a spouse pay “fair consideration” according to the terms of New York Debtor and Creditor Law § 272 when she relinquishes in good *232 faith a claim to the proceeds of fraud?
The Court of Appeals may answer these questions in whatever order it deems best to assist this court in determining whether Janet Schaberg has a legitimate claim to the money she acquired in her separation from Stephen Walsh. Similarly, the Court of Appeals may reformulate these questions as it sees fit, or expand them to address any other issues of New York law pertinent to these appeals.
This panel retains jurisdiction for purposes of resolving these appeals once the New York Court of Appeals has responded to our certification.
It is, therefore, ORDERED that the Clerk of this Court transmit to the Clerk of the New York Court of Appeals this opinion as our certifícate, together with a complete set of briefs, appendices, and the record filed in this case by the parties.
Notes
. In its briefs, the SEC did not challenge jurisdiction over Schaberg’s appeals. At oral argument, however, it joined the CFTC’s jurisdictional argument.
. In any event, to whatever extent Frank can be read as applicable to the present circumstances, it holds at most that the question raised by the agencies regarding the meaning of Carson remained open. We now decide that question, and reject the agencies' reading of Carson.
. We do not, however, possess jurisdiction over the two other orders appealed by Schaberg. The district court's issuance of a temporary restraining order, which is not an injunction, is not appealable in these circumstances.
Romer v. Green Point Sav. Bank,
. Schaberg also argues that the district court erred in concluding that the SEC had met the first prong of the
Cavanagh
test—that she possessed ill-gotten gains — with regards to all of her assets, since, she asserts, some of her assets were purchased with funds that are not alleged to be the proceeds of fraud, and thereby would not be subject to disgorgement. We reserve judgment on this issue, pending the response to our certification by the New York Court of Appeals. If that court concludes that Schaberg has a legitimate claim to all the frozen assets, we need not reach the issue of whether the district court abused its discretion in the scope of its injunction. We note, however, that whether the frozen funds can be traced to the proceeds of the alleged fraudulent scheme is not necessarily dispositive.
See SEC v. Byers,
No. 08 Civ. 7104(DC),
. We find the reasoning in
Janvey
more persuasive than the holding of our unpublished, non-precedential summary order,
SEC v. Andrescu,
. For similar reasons, she contends that the agencies err in asserting that tens of millions of dollars were transferred to her during the pendency of the marriage (and the fraud), and that the only money that ever came to her (as a good faith purchaser or otherwise) was the money that became hers pursuant to the settlement agreement.
. Moreover, there is some authority that under New York law a culpable party to a voidable transaction “acquires title, albeit voidable title, to the property he has received ... [and] may convey good title to a good-faith purchaser.”
SEC v. Levine,
. Although the agencies now claim otherwise, it is essentially undisputed that Schaberg had no notice that the money she received in her divorce was derived from fraud. The district court did not address this issue, since it determined that it could freeze Schaberg’s assets regardless of whether she had notice of their source. However, none of the evidence pointed to by the agencies in their briefs support their assertions that Schaberg knew the true source of her assets.
