HARRIS TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK, as Executor of the Estate of
Mary Ellis, Plaintiff-Appellant-Cross-Appellee,
v.
James ELLIS, et al., Defendants-Appellees-Cross-Appellants.
Nos. 85-2963, 85-3059.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Argued Sept. 3, 1986.
Decided Jan. 27, 1987.
Thomas A. Doyle, Baker & McKenzie, Chicago, Ill., for plaintiff-appellant-cross-appellee.
Brian J. Redding, Chadwell & Kayser, Ltd., Michael L. Brody, Schiff, Hardin & Waite, Joseph E. Coughlin, Lord, Bissell & Brook, Chicago, Ill., for defendants-appellees-cross-appellants.
Before CUDAHY, EASTERBROOK and RIPPLE, Circuit Judges.
EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge.
When Oscar Ellis died in 1968, his will apportioned his estate between a marital trust for the benefit of his wife Mary and a residuary trust for the benefit of Mary and his two children. The estate's principal assets were four farms and stock in three closely held corporations. Oscar had founded one of these, Molinе Consumers Co., in 1917, and working control had passed to his son James by the time of Oscar's death. James was also a member of the board of First National Bank of Moline, which served as the executor of the will and trustee of both trusts. Oscar's will gave James, as "adviser" to the trustee, power to veto the trustee's sale of any stock and to vote the shares held by both trusts. It gave Mary the power to obtain from the trustee "such amounts from the principal of the trust as she from time to time may request in writing" and afforded her a power of appointment over the trust's assets on her death. Until then, however, the trustee had discretion (subject to James's veto and Mary's right to withdraw principal) to make all investment decisions.
A dispute with the Internal Revenue Service about the valuation of the closely held corporations was settled by valuing the stock of Moline Consumers at $325 per share. Nonetheless, in parceling the stock betwеen the marital and the residuary trusts to achieve the appropriate funding of each, the executor valued the stock at $271 per share. The probate court in Illinois approved the apportionment and closed the estate in June 1981.
Shortly after the trusts had been funded, the trustee proposed to sell the marital trust's stock of Moline Consumers to that firm, for $271 cash per share. The total exceeded $880,000. The presence of James Ellis on the trustee's board created a conflict of interest, so the trustee filed a petition asking for a decree authorizing the sale. The petition also asked for the appointment of a guardian ad litem for Mary Ellis, then 85 years old and in a nursing home. The court appointed a guardian, who demanded "strict proof" of the trustee's contention that the sale would be advantageous to the trust.
The court later held an evidentiary hearing, in which the guardiаn participated. An officer of the trustee testified that the sale was advantageous because the estate should hold cash (to provide for Mary) rather than illiquid stock that paid low dividends (about 1% of the estimated value). The trustee's application to approve the sale was backed up by a report prepared by Duff & Phelps, Inc. Moline Consumers makes and sells ready mix concrete and other construction aggregates. The Duff & Phelps report compared Moline Consumers' income, profits, and assets with those of three publicly traded firms in the same line of business. Duff & Phelps concluded that the Moline Consumers stock, if traded, would sell for $417 per share--a multiple of 4.4 times its average yearly earnings for the last five years, and only 28% of the firm's "book value", which the report disclosed. Duff & Phelps then applied a discount of 35% to reach $271. The report stated that the discount reflected the illiquidity of the stock and the fact that the estate held a minority bloc. After listening to the evidence, the court entered an order finding, among other things, "that the sale of said stock to Moline Consumers Company is advantageous to the trust".
The bank, as executor, discovered in 1983 an error in the computations that had produced the division between the marital and residuary trusts. The marital trust had been underfunded by about $224,000. The executor proposed to move 423 shаres of Moline Consumers stock from the residuary trust to the marital trust, again at a valuation of $271 per share, to satisfy $114,633 of the shortfall. (The lower the valuation, the more stock the marital trust would get, because the shortfall had been computed in dollars.) A new petition was filed in the estate case, and a new guardian ad litem was appointed. The court approved the transfer at $271 per share. The trustee proposed a new sale to Moline Consumers at $271. Before this could be approved Mary died, and Harris Trust & Savings Bank became the executor of her estate. Harris Trust opposed the sale at $271, claiming that the value of Moline Consumers was closer to $1,400 per share (book value) and that the apportionments and sales had been fraudulent. Despite these protests the court found that the second sale at $271 was appropriate, and it also found that there had been nо fraud in any earlier proceeding. The Appellate Court of Illinois, in an unpublished opinion, affirmed the order approving the sale but vacated the findings concerning fraud, concluding that these were gratuitous. In re Estate of Mary Ellis,
Meanwhile Harris Trust filed this suit under Sec. 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 78j(b), and Rule 10b-5, 17 C.F.R. Sec. 240.10b-5, and the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), 18 U.S.C. Secs. 1961-68. James Ellis, Moline Consumers, Duff & Phelps, and the First National Bank of Moline arе the defendants. Harris Trust maintained that James had used his position to acquire the stock in 1981 and 1984 at an insufficient price and that the disclosures made in connection with the judicial proceedings had been inadequate and fraudulent. Because some of the documents had been mailed, Harris Trust insisted, there must have been at least two instances of mail fraud, producing a "pattern" of racketeering under RICO and authorizing treble damages.
* The district court dismissed thе securities claim for failure to allege fraud "in connection with" the purchase or sale of a security and the RICO claim largely because of failure to plead with particularity under Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b).
Each side in this case claims the benefit of one decision and tries to distinguish the other. Harris Trust says that the case is like Norris because Mary Ellis made an investment decision every day (in deciding not to withdraw the principal of the trust) and was consulted in the judicial proсeedings about the sale of the stock. Defendants say the case is like O'Brien because Mary lacked veto power over any sale and could not necessarily withdraw the Moline Consumers stock (as opposed to principal of a fixed value). They maintain that the grievance concerns the price, which is not actionable under the securities laws, rather than the disclosure, which is. Harris Bank replies that only disclosure is at issue, that the defendants did not disclose that the marital trust's share, combined with shares in James Ellis's control, were a majority and should have been valued as a majority, and did not disclose that book value was the best method of valuation. We could resolve this dispute only by going back to first principles, as the panel in O'Brien did. But we need not resolve the dispute; the findings of the state court make it clear that the plaintiff could not establish damages, so the merits of the dispute beсome irrelevant. The effect of the state judgments was presented to the district court (which did not reach the matter) and to us by a cross-appeal. We affirm the district court's judgment on this basis.
The first question is whether the securities laws authorize us to disregard findings by state courts, to which the answer is no. We have been reminded, see Marrese v. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons,
That some facts may have been withheld from the state court is not a federal reason to disregard the state's decision. We held in Metlyn Realty Corp. v. Esmark, Inc.,
A number of courts, including ours, have indicated that the federal securities laws require disclosure of enough information to put an investor on notice that he ought to pursue state remedies. E.g., Wright v. Heizer Corp.,
II
There are two questions of state law. The first is whether the state court decided or otherwise foreclosed an issue that is essential to the federal securities action. The second is whether, if preclusion ordinarily would prevent Harris Trust from prevailing on its federal claims, the allegations of fraud in the conduct of the state litigation require a different result. Both of these questions are difficult. We take them up in order.
In September 1981, after hearing testimony and reviewing the Duff & Phelps report, a state court concluded that the sale at $271 per share was "advantageous" to the marital trust. This was a genuine evidentiary hearing, sparked by the guardian ad litem's demand for "strict proof".1 The judge inquired of the trustee's officer what the Duff & Phelps report meant; the guardian ad litem had the opportunity to put in contrary evidence but chose not to. The parties had both opportunity and motive to contest the price. It mаy be that the state hearing was perfunctory, but the judge offered all concerned an opportunity to offer such evidence as they chose. The proceeding in September 1981 therefore met the standards of full and fair adjudication.2 See Kunzelman v. Thompson,
When one party introduces evidence on a dispositive issue of fact, and an adverse party with opportunity and motive to contest the presentation chooses not to, the ensuing finding is entitled to the same respect as one litigated to the hilt. See E.Z. Loader Boat Trailers, Inc. v. Cox Trailers, Inc.,
The finding that the $271 price was "advantageous" to the trust was an essential ingredient of an order approving the salе. In Illinois a finding essential to a judgment precludes further litigation on the same question of fact. Kemling v. County Mutual Ins. Co.,
This brings us to the second issue, concerning the effect of the claim of fraud. Harris Trust tries to avoid the preclusive effect of the finding by arguing that the defendants committed fraud on the court. Fraud is a reason to set aside a judgment. The argument proceeds: fraud vitiates the judgment; the state court would set aside its own judgment if asked; therefore the judgment is not binding within the state system; therefore under Sеc. 1738 a federal court owes no respect to the judgment. The problem with the argument is that under Illinois law only the rendering court may set aside a judgment based on fraud, at least so long as the fraud did not either vitiate the jurisdiction of the rendering court, e.g., Vulcan Materials Co. v. Bee Construction,
A claim of inadеquate disclosure does not authorize a collateral attack on the judgment. A federal court bound by Sec. 1738 must honor this rule, just as any court of Illinois will. If Harris Trust tried to litigate a question of fraud in any state court other than the rendering court, it would be turned aside on grounds of issue preclusion. It therefore meets the same fate here. So long as the judgment of September 1981 finding the price of $271 to be "advantageous" stands, it binds Harris Trust. Turner v. Alton Banking & Trust Co.,
Harris Trust relies heavily on Northern Trust Co. v. Essaness Theatres Corp.,
III
To say that the state court's judgment establishes that the $271 price is "advantageous" to the trust is not necessarily to say that there was no fraud. Just as, under Santa Fe, an unfair price does not violate the securities laws when there has been full disclosure, so perhaps a fair price does not cure a lack of full disclosure. Plaine v. McCabe,
Sometimes remedies under the securities laws are based on defendants' gain rather than plaintiffs' loss, or plaintiff may have an election, see Affiliated Ute Citizens v. United States,
The finding that $271 was "advantageous" to the estate, howevеr, means that the plaintiff cannot show that a higher price was available. Under the law of trusts, $271 was a favorable price or it could not properly have been approved. Harris Trust does not argue to us that, if the finding has preclusive effect, there is anything left to litigate. With damages out of the picture, and in the absence of a request for rescission, there is no point in deciding the merits. Mary's estate is not entitled to relief.
The same finding disposes of the RICO suit. That statute allows treble damages, but treble nothing is still nothing. Because relief is unavailable, we need not decide whether the complaint pleaded fraud with "particularity" under Rule 9(b) or established the necessary "pattern" of criminal offenses.
AFFIRMED
RIPPLE, Circuit Judge, concurring.
The court holds today that the appellant is precluded from asserting claims under the Securities Exchange Act and RICO because a previous valid judgment in the Illinois courts found that the selling price of the stock was "advantageous" to the estate. This finding, which we must respect under the mandate of 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1738, precludes recovery under either statute and obviates the need to deal with the merits of either federal cause of action. On that understanding, I join the judgment and opinion of the court.
Notes
It is unlike the "routine[ ]" approval given in Norris,
We disregard the proceedings in 1984 because they are a wash. The marital trust had been underfunded by $224,000. The transfer of 423 shares of stock to the trust at $271, and its resale at the same price, satisfied $114,633 of the shortfall. (Other assets made up the balance.) Had the trustee valued the stock at $1,400 per share, the marital trust would have received 81.88 shares and, on selling these, the same amount of cash. The valuation in 1984 therefore did not injure the marital trust no matter what the price should have been
