Kenneth Carr was a professional basketball player when in 1984 he paid CIGNA Financial Advisors, Inc. (as the affiliated defendants are now known) $450,000 for limited-partner interests in two commercial real estate limited partnerships that CIGNA had created. Carr sued in 1993 under Rule 10b-5 of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the common law of Oregon, charging that the salesman with whom he had dealt had told him that the limited partnerships were safe, conservative investments, whereas the opposite was true — and indeed he lost every penny of his investment when the commercial real estate market collapsed in the late 1980s. Carr acknowledges that the salesman gave him documents that disclosed the riskiness of the investment, but he says that the salesman “knew that I didn’t understand them. He said they were boilerplate kind of stuff, and breezed through them. He just explained them in his own words. He didn’t say they were contrary to what he had told me. What I understood was what he told me.” Carr did not read the documents.
The suit was filed in an Oregon state court, removed to the federal district court in Oregon, then transferred for pretrial proceedings to the Northern District of Illinois by the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation and dismissed by Judge Zagel as barred by the statute of limitations.
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Actually Carr had brought two suits; and this is more than a detail. He was one of thirty plaintiffs who had joined together in a materially identical suit against CIGNA in 1991 (the
Corkery
suit). Judge Zagel dismissed that suit on the same ground, and on the same day, as the present suit. Neither Carr nor any of the other plaintiffs appealed the judgment in
Corkery.
CIGNA argues that the judgment is res judicata in the present suit, so that we can affirm without reaching the merits. It is true that a judgment need not be appealed in order to operate as a bar — need not even have become final, through exhaustion of appellate remedies (though this one had), provided that it was final in the court that rendered it.
Williams v. Commissioner,
Another threshold question is whether Judge Zagel, having dismissed Carr’s federal claim before trial, should have relinquished Carr’s state law claim. The general rule, when the federal claims fall out before trial, is that the judge should relinquish jurisdiction over any supplemental (what used to be called “pendent”) state law claims in order to minimize federal judicial intrusion into matters purely of state law. 28 U.S.C. § 1367(e)(3);
United Mine Workers v. Gibbs,
We are going to skip over the tangled statutes of limitations issues, which are similar to ones we discussed at rather exhausting length recently in
Wolin v. Smith Barney Inc.,
Carr was a fully literate, fully competent adult investing $450,000, which even to an NBA player is not such chicken feed that a busy person could not realistically be expected to take the time to read a lot of fine-print legal mumbo-jumbo. Carr points out that he is not, or at least was not in 1984, a sophisticated investor, knowledgeable about limited partnerships or commercial real estate. He argues that CIGNA’s salesman invited him to repose trust in the salesman’s advice and by doing so created a fiduciary relationship. The general rule, however, is that a broker is not the fiduciary of his customer unless the customer entrusts him with discretion to select the customer’s investments, which Carr did not do.
CFTC v. Heritage Capital Advisory Services, Ltd.,
We do not say that a written disclaimer provides a safe harbor in every fiduciary ease. Not all principals of fiduciaries are competent adults; not all disclaimers are clear; and the relationship may involve such a degree of trust invited by and reasonably reposed in the fiduciary as to dispel any duty of self-protection by the principal. But we are dealing here with a case in which, if there is a fiduciary duty imposed by state law — and probably there is not — it lies at the outer limits of the fiduciary principle, for it is a duty laid on a broker to whom his client has not even delegated the selection of the investments for the client’s account. In so attenuated a fiduciary relation (cf.
In re Woldman,
Picking up on one of the qualifications in the preceding paragraph, Carr points out that CIGNA handed him 427 pages of documents when he bought the shares of the limited partnerships. We agree that it would be unreasonable to expect Carr to pore through 427 pages of legal and accounting mumbo-jumbo looking for nuggets of intelligible warnings. But the subscription agreements for each of the limited partnerships were only eight pages long and rich in lucid warnings, such as: “the Units [the limited-partner interests that he was buying] are speculative investments which involve a high degree of risk of loss by the undersigned of his entire investment in the Partnership.”
Professional athletes, like other wealthy but financially unsophisticated people, may be a common prey of financial predators. See, e.g., Kent Somers, “The Color of Money: Athletes Often Fall Victim to Bad Financial Moves,” Arizona Republic, Aug. 23, 1992, p. D1; Mark Herman, “It’s Not All the Money in the World After All: Athletes Find Financial Complacency Can Lead to Bankruptcy, at Any Salary,” Plain Dealer, Nov. 8, 1994, p. 5D; Clifford Carlsen, “Faust Steps into the Batter’s Box for Financial Troubles of Athletes,” San Francisco Business Times, Aug. 21, 1989, p. 12; Roger Lowenstein, “Many Successful Athletes Suffer Setbacks in Business,” Wall St. J., Jan. 27,1987, p. 37. But their vulnerability does not justify a rule that would have the effect of making financial advisors the guarantors of risky investments.
Affirmed.
