OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff Highland Capital Management, L.P. (“Highland”) brings this action to recover in contract from the defendants, Leonard Schneider, Leslie Schneider, Scott. Schneider, and Susan Schneider (collectively, “the Schneiders”) for their refusal to seb certain promissory notes, valued at $69 mblion, to Highland and third-party defendant and counterclaimant, RBC Capital Markets Corporation, formerly known as RBC Dominion Securities Corporation (“RBC”). Now on remand from the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, both the Schneiders and Highland have submitted supplemental memoranda of law regarding whether this Court should grant summary judgment to dismiss two of Highland’s three remaining causes of action. Additionally before the Court are motions for summary judgment filed by RBC and the Schneiders to dismiss all third-party claims and counterclaims, respectively. For the reasons set forth below, the Schneiders’ motion for summary judgment is GRANTED as to Counts One and Two of Highland’s Complaint. Further, RBC’s summary judgment motion to dismiss the Schneiders’ third-party complaint is GRANTED and the Schneiders’ summary judgment motion to dismiss RBC’s third-party counterclaims is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART.
Background
I. Facts
The underlying facts of this dispute have been laid out in great detab by this Court,
see Highland Capital Mgmt., L.P. v. Schneider,
No. 02-8098,
On April 15, 1998, the Schneiders sold them businesses, Jeri-Jo Knitwear, Inc. and Jamie Scott, Inc. (“Jeri-Jo”), to the McNaughton Apparel Group, Inc., formerly known as Norton McNaughton, Inc. (“McNaughton”). McNaughton paid $55 million, assumed $10.9 mbbon in Jeri-Jo debt, and promised to pay an earn-out payment based upon Jeri-Jo’s profits through June 30, 2000. After this period, McNaughton owed the Schneiders approximately $190 million in earn-out profits. Because of McNaughton’s poor financial condition at the time these payments came due, it could not pay the Schneiders in
In late 2000, the Schneiders engaged Glen Rauch, a broker-dealer acting through his company, Glen Rauch Securities, Inc. (“Rauch”), to price the notes. On January 8, 2001, Rauch entered into an agreement with RBC whereby RBC would act as an exclusive broker for the purpose of marketing the notes to third parties (the “Letter Agreement”). 1 RBC’s role was that of a “riskless principal,” whereby it would purchase the notes from the Schneiders (through Rauch) and then “flip” the notes by selling them to a third-party purchaser at a premium. RBC found an end-purchaser for the notes, Highland, and RBC and Rauch began to negotiate the price. Highland and RBC allege that on March 14, 2001, Rauch orally agreed on behalf of the Schneiders to sell $45.4 million in notes 2 for 51 cents on the dollar to RBC, who in turn would flip the notes to Highland for 52.5 cents on the dollar. Highland and RBC contend that, despite this agreement, the Schneiders ultimately refused to settle the trade with Highland after learning from their attorneys at Jenkens & Gilchrist Parker Chapin L.L.P. (“JGPC”) that McNaughton would be acquired by another company and the notes most likely would be paid in full. 3
II. Procedural History
Highland initiated this action in Texas State Court on October 18, 2001 against both the Schneiders and RBC. Highland and RBC eventually came to an agreement whereby Highland would amend the complaint and drop RBC as a defendant. Consequently, the case was removed to the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas based upon diversity of citizenship, 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a), and was soon thereafter transferred to this Court. In its third-amended complaint (“Complaint”), the operative pleading here, Highland asserts seven claims for relief: (1) the Schneiders’ breach of the oral contract to sell the notes to Highland; (2) the Schneiders’ breach of the binding preliminary agreement to sell the notes to Highland; (3) the Schneiders’ tortious interference with contractual relations between Highland and RBC; (4) the Schneiders’ tortious interference with pro
At the close of discovery, the Schneiders moved for summary judgment and judgment on the pleadings to dismiss all of Highland’s claims. Counts One through Six of Highland’s complaint were dismissed on the merits and Count Seven was dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
4
Critical to the Court’s analysis of Highland’s contract claims (Counts One, Two, and Seven of the Complaint) was whether the promissory notes at issue were considered securities as defined by the New York Uniform Commercial Code § 8-102(a)(15). This Court determined that the promissory notes were not securities, impacting the remainder of decision in two ways. First, Highland’s contract claims were analyzed purely under common law principles of agency.
Highland Capital Mgmt.,
Highland appealed, and on August 15, 2006, the Second Circuit certified the following question to the New York Court of Appeals:
Based on this record, do the eight promissory notes issued by McNaughton Apparel Group, Inc., to the Schneiders fall within the definition of a ‘security’ as contemplated by Section 8-102(a)(15) of the New York Uniform Commercial Code?
Applying common law principles of agency, the District Court concluded that there was no privity of contract between Highland and the Schneiders. By remanding for reconsideration, the Court is not dictating a different outcome, as the District Court might conclude that, notwithstanding Article 8 of the N.Y. U.C.C., the same common law principles yield the same result The N.Y. U.C.C. does not completely supplant the common law.... The extent to which the analysis differs under the N.Y. U.C.C. is for the District Court to decide in the first instance.
Highland Capital Mgmt., L.P. v. Schneider,
Discussion
I. Counts One and Two of Highland’s Complaint
The issue presented on remand is relatively narrow. Having already determined under common law principles of agency “that there is no evidence supporting plaintiffs theory that RBC acted as an agent with the authority to bind the Schneiders to a contract with Highland,”
id.,
Highland argues that Article 8 should be interpreted liberally and flexibly in order to facilitate uniformity with the customs and usage of the securities industry. See N.Y. U.C.C. § 1-102. Because the securities industry treats “riskless principal” transactions as agency trades, Highland asks the Court to do the same and conclude that there is contractual privity between Highland and the Schneiders. Despite now making this request under the guise of Article 8, Highland’s argument is no different than it was in its first opposition to summary judgment. Indeed, Highland is once again unable to point to any securities regulations that vest a “riskless principal” with authority to bind the seller in its first transaction to a contract with the buyer in its second transaction. As such, the Court relies on the analysis in its initial summary judgment opinion:
Nor is plaintiffs argument that a ‘risk-less principal’ is equal to an agent tenable. In support of this argument, plaintiff cites law review and other trade journal articles which analogize the risk-less principal relationship to that of an agent as the riskless principal also ‘assumes no market risk’ in the transaction between the seller, here the Schneiders, and the secondary buyer, here Highland. An analogy is not a legal equivalent, however, and RBC’s ability to hold Highland to an assumed firm bid to buy had Highland reneged does not create a contract between Highland and the Schneiders.
Highland Capital Mgmt.,
The procedural nature of Part 3 demonstrates that Article 8 does not displace the substantive common law principles originally relied upon by this Court. If Highland’s request — to follow the framework of the N.Y. U.C.C. instead of the common law — was accepted, this Court would be left with no guidance with respect to whether RBC had the authority to bind the Schneiders to a contract with Highland. Accordingly, RBC’s authority must be analyzed under common law, yielding the same result as in the Court’s first opinion; because RBC could not act on behalf of the Schneiders, no privity of contract could exist between the Schneiders and Highland. Counts One and Two of Highland’s Complaint are therefore dismissed.
II. The Schneiders’ Third-Party Complaint
On October 29, 2004, the Schneiders filed a third-party complaint against RBC,
As a threshold matter, the Schneiders’ first, second, and third claims against RBC must be dismissed as moot. The first claim — premised on a finding that RBC was the Schneiders’ agent — cannot stand because this Court has reaffirmed its finding that, as a matter of law, RBC was not an agent to the Schneiders. Additionally, the second and third claims are premised on a finding that the Schneiders entered into binding agreement or binding preliminary agreement with Highland. Because this Court has once again found that there is no privity between the Schneiders and Highland, the Schneiders cannot recover from RBC for causing the Schneiders “to be bound to an agreement to sell some or all of their Notes without RBC’s having obtained the Schneiders’ consent to or approval of any such transaction....” (Defs.’ Ans. & Third Am. Compl. ¶ 114.)
The viability of the Schneiders’ remaining third-party claim for negligence depends upon whether indemnification or contribution from RBC is possible.
a. Implied Indemnification
Under New York law, indemnity arises out of a contract, either expressly or impliedly, in order “to prevent a result which is regarded as unjust or unsatisfactory.”
Rosado v. Proctor & Schwartz, Inc.,
“The burden of establishing an implied [in fact] agreement to indemnify is a heavy one, especially in business relationships where parties are free to negotiate for express indemnification clauses.”
City
Fatal to the Schneiders’ implied-in-law indemnification claim is that the underlying claim by Highland sounds in contract, and not tort. Highland seeks to hold the Schneiders, not RBC, liable for breach of a third-party beneficiary contract. If Highland is successful, no matter what duties RBC may have owed to the Schneiders, 11 the jury will have necessarily found that the Schneiders were at fault. As this Court has noted in the past:
In a case of implied indemnity, ... ‘where the party seeking indemnification is himself at least partially at fault, indemnity will not be implied.’ Because the underlying action sounds in contract, not in tort, there is no possible set of facts on which it can be true that [third-party plaintiff] was not at least partially responsible for harm, for it was [third-party plaintiff] that allegedly breached the contract, not [third-party defendant]. There can therefore be no cause of action in indemnity.
Knight v. H.E. Yerkes & Assocs., Inc.,
b. Contribution
Under New York’s contribution statute, “two or more persons who are subject to liability for damages for the same personal injury, injury to property or wrongful death, may claim contribution among them whether or not an action has been brought or a judgment has been rendered against the person from whom contribution is sought.” N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 1401;
see Morse/Diesel, Inc. v. Trinity Industries, Inc.,
The Schneiders attempt to remove themselves from the purview of the “economic loss” rule by claiming that it does not apply where, as here, “an independent legal duty such as a professional duty is imposed incident to the contractual relationship.” (Defs.’ Opp. to RBC at 9 (citing
Hydro Investors, Inc. v. Trafalgar Power, Inc.,
III. RBC’s Counterclaims
Despite the dismissal of the Schneiders’ third-party complaint, this Court will exercise supplemental jurisdiction over RBC’s counterclaims pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1367(a).
See Viacom Int'l, Inc. v. Kearney,
a. Counts One and Two
RBC’s first two claims against the Schneiders are premised upon the same underlying fact, namely that the Schneiders, through their agent, Rauch, entered into an agreement to sell the promissory notes to RBC. In assessing these claims, the Court is guided by certain findings in its original opinion that were unaffected by the Second Circuit’s opinion. First, this Court considered whether Rauch had the authority to bind the Schneiders to a contract to sell their notes. After listing the requirements for apparent authority under New York law, it was determined that a genuine issue of material fact exists as to whether the Schneiders’ actions compelled RBC to believe that Rauch had the authority to bind the Schneiders.
Highland Capital Mgmt.,
b. Counts Three and Four
RBC next claims that the Schneiders are liable for fraud because on March 14, 2001, Rauch misrepresented to RBC that the Schneiders intended to sell the notes, and “at the time they were made those representations were false.” (RBC’s An
To state a claim for fraud, RBC must demonstrate: (1) a material false misrepresentation; (2) that: the misrepresentation was made for the purpose of inducing reliance by RBC; (3) reasonable reliance by RBC; and (4) injury to RBC.
See Wynn v. AC Rochester,
RBC’s fourth cause of action— fraudulent concealment — requires: (1) an omission of material fact; (2) intent to defraud; (3) a duty to disclose; (4) reasonable reliance upon the omission; and (5) damages suffered as a result of the reliance.
See Waksman v. Cohen,
No. 00 Civ. 9005,
c. Counts Five and Six
In its final two claims, RBC alleges that the Schneiders breached the Letter Agreement and the related covenant of good faith and fair dealing. The Letter Agreement set out that any transaction remained in the sole discretion of the Schneiders and RBC, “including without limitation with respect to price.” While RBC points to the principle that, “[e]ven when a contract confers decision-making power on a single party, the resulting discretion is nevertheless subject to an obligation that it be exercised in good faith,’ ” (RBC’s Opp. at 49-50 (citing
Travellers Int’l, A.G. v. Trans World Airlines, Inc.,
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the Schneid-ers’ motion for summary judgment is GRANTED as to Counts One and Two of Highland’s Complaint. Further, RBC’s motion for summary judgment to dismiss the Schneiders’ third-party complaint is GRANTED and the Schneiders’ motion for summary judgment to dismiss RBC’s third-party counterclaims is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART. Accordingly, a jury will decide: (1) if the Schneiders breached their duty to negotiate with RBC; (2) if the Schneiders breached an oral contract to sell the promissory notes to RBC; and (3) whether Highland was an intended third-party beneficiary of the contract between the Schneiders and RBC.
SO ORDERED,
Notes
. The Letter Agreement states, in part, that “the consummation of any transaction remains in the sole discretion and satisfaction of the holders and [RBC], including without limitation with respect to price.”
. This amount represents seven out of eight of the notes. Fidelity Management and Research Company (“Fidelity”), an unrelated company, was to purchase the remaining note. RBC has received an assignment of Fidelity’s potential claims. (RBC’s 56.1 ¶ 115.)
.Indeed, the notes were paid out in full on June 19, 2001. The Schneiders received the entire $69 million plus interest, instead of the $35.2 million they would have received from the purported deal with Highland and Fidelity-
. The Court dismissed the four claims sounding in tort law-Counts Three through Six of the Complaint-because no genuine issue of material fact existed under New York law for tortious interference with contract or tortious interference with prospective business relationship.
See Highland Capital Mgmt.,
. With Highland’s Complaint fully dismissed, this Court refused to exercise supplemental jurisdiction, 28 U.S.C. § 1367(a), over the Schneiders’ third-parly complaint and over RBC’s counterclaims.
Highland Capital Mgmt.,
. As to Count Seven, third-party beneficiary breach of contract, the Second Circuit reversed this Court’s jurisdictional dismissal because the statute of frauds was deemed inapplicable. Because this Court originally found that a genuine issue of material fact exists as to whether Highland was an intended third-party beneficiary of the purported contract between the Schneiders and RBC,
Highland Capital Mgmt.,
. Highland infers some significance in the Second Circuit’s remand of this judgment for reconsideration when it simply could have affirmed summary judgment had it believed the result under Article 8 to be the same. This Court need not speculate on the intentions of the Second Circuit because its instructions were extremely clear: “By remanding for reconsideration, the Court is not dictating a different outcome ... The extent to which the analysis differs under the N.Y. U.C.C. is
for the District Court to decide in the first instance.” Highland Capital Mgmt.,
. Part 1 provides general definitions; Parts 2 and 4 relate to issuers and the registration of securities; Part 5, as described in Footnote 9, is inapplicable to the Schneiders' securities.
. “The customer can be a direct holder only if the security certificate, or other financial asset, is registered in the name cf, payable to the order of, or specially indorsed to the customer, and has not been indorsed by the
. Assuming, arguendo, that RBC had indorsed the Schneiders’ notes and the issue before the Court was whether RBC had the authority to do so, § 8-107 dictates that the Court would analyze the situation under the common law of agency. See N.Y. U.C.C. § 8-107(b)(2) (providing that an indorsement is effective if "it is made by a person who has power under the law of agency to transfer the security or financial asset on behalf of the appropriate person”). Thus, in this context, Article 8 buttresses, rather than displaces, the common law of agency.
. The Schneiders state that RBC owed them "duties of care, duties of good faith and loyalty, duties to act solely in the interests of the Schneiders, duties to provide complete information, and duties to follow instructions, and that if the Court ultimately determines that the Schneiders, without their knowledge, approval, or consent, were bound to any agreement, then it was due to RBC's breach of these duties.” (Defs.’ Opp. to RBC at 6-7.) The only remaining claim by Highland is that the Schneiders breached their third-party beneficiary contract with RBC; all claims premised upon a direct contract between the Schneiders and Highland were dismissed. Thus, a jury could either find, as between the Schneiders and RBC, that there was no contract or that there was a contract. If the latter is found, "the 'duty' here was to perform on the transaction involving the Notes— something only the Schneiders could do. The Schneiders have cited no case where an alleged implied indemnitor was held liable to perform a contract that only the alleged in-demnitee could perform.” (RBC’s Reply at 4.)
. In an attempt to show that no contract was formed, the Schneiders could still put forth evidence of RBC’s:
(i) failing to use due care in its communications with customers, with the Schneiders, and with the public; (ii) failing to adequately supervise its salespeople, including but not limited to Kenneth Ambrecht and JamesWood; (iii) failing to keep the Schneiders informed with respect to RBC’s efforts to perform under the Letter Agreement and the results thereof; (iv) making false statements and by omitting to disclose material facts to Highland and others; (v) failing to make reasonable efforts to determine whether or not any of the Schneiders was prepared to sell any of his or her Notes at a substantial discount, and (vi) failing to make reasonable efforts to determine whether or not any of the Schneiders had agreed to sell any of his or her Notes.
(Defs.’ Ans. & Third Am. Compl. ¶ 126.) These allegations, supported by evidence, might persuade a jury that no contract was formed. They are not, however, grounds for indemnification from RBC if a jury finds that the Schneiders failed to perform on their contract.
. Assuming,
arguendo,
that RBC did breach some professional duty to the Schneiders, the Schneiders would not be able to seek contribution. " 'The critical requirement ... is that the breach of duty by the contributing party must have had a part in causing or augmenting the injury for which contribution is sought.’ ”
Black & Veatch,
. RBC asserts two other bases for fraud, both of which fail for reasons in addition to their failure to allege injury. First, RBC claims that the Schneiders are liable for fraud because they represented to RBC that they sought to sell their notes yet "claim[ed] in statements made in the discovery of this action [ ] that they never intended to enter into a transaction with RBC.” (RBC’s Answer & Counterclaims ¶ 149.) RBC's support for this claim appears to be that the Schneiders have repeatedly stated that they wanted to "price” the notes. (RBC's 56.1 V 114.) The Schneid-ers' desire to price their notes, however, does not negate their intent to sell those notes. In any event, this fact cannot lead to liability for fraud because RBC admits that "the evidence is clear that the Schneiders fully intended to sell Notes.” (Id.) Thus, RBC cannot make out the first element of a fraud claim, namely that the Schneiders misrepresented a material fact. Second, RBC claims that the Schneid-ers had inside information from McNaughton that payment on the notes would be minimal, leading the Schneiders "to want to dump” their notes. (RBC's Opp. at 41.) Assuming this to be true, and assuming that RBC relied on this misrepresentation, RBC still cannot show a causal link between their reliance and the resulting harm. Perhaps this claim would be viable if a trade between RBC and the Schneiders was consummated, and if after that trade RBC had discovered that payment on the notes would be minimal. In this case, however, the Schneiders kept their notes. Consequently, RBC had no injury related to the alleged fraudulent representations of the value of those notes.
