OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff Marc S. Kirschner, in his capacity as Trustee of the Refco Private Actions Trust (“Trustee” or “Private Actions Trustee”), originally filed this action in New York State Supreme Court on behalf of Refco’s foreign-exchange customers (the “FX customers”), asserting claims under New York state law against certain Refco insiders, professionals, and advisors for,
inter alia,
breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, and conversion. (Compl. ¶¶ 210-38.) Certain defendants subsequently removed the action to this Court on the ground that the case is “related to” Refco’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy, 28 U.S.C. § 1334(b).
See Kirschner v. Bennett,
No. 07 Civ. 8165,
BACKGROUND 2
I. The Refco Fraud
Prior to its collapse in the fall of 2005, Refco 3 presented itself to the public as a leading independent provider of execution and clearing services for exchange-traded derivatives and a major provider of brokerage services in the fixed income and foreign exchange (“FX”) markets. (Compl. ¶ 4. 4 ) Beginning in the late 1990s, *529 Refco’s controlling officer-shareholders— Phillip R. Bennett, Robert C. Trosten, and Santo C. Maggio (collectively, the “insiders”) 5 — with the aid of certain professionals and financial advisors, orchestrated a complex fraudulent scheme to artificially enhance Refco’s performance and conceal Refco’s true financial condition, so that these insiders, through the company’s August 2004 leveraged buy-out (“LBO”) and August 2005 initial public offering (“IPO”), could cash out their interests in Refco on lucrative terms. (Compl. ¶¶2-3, 10-12, 26.) That scheme, which has been thoroughly discussed in this Court’s prior opinions, 6 involved both concealment of Refco’s uncollectible debt and the misappropriation of customer assets.
The concealment of Refco’s uncollectible debt involved a two-part process. First, hundreds of millions of dollars in uncollectible trading losses and other operating expenses were converted into apparently legitimate receivables owed to Refco by RGHI, a related-party holding company, or “alter-ego” owned by Bennett and another Refco principal, Tone Grant. (Compl. ¶¶ 40-41, 47-48.) Although RGHI would never be in a position to repay this debt because RGHI’s primary asset was its ownership of Refco stock — the value of which hinged on the insiders’ ability to conceal the very losses they were shifting off of Refco’s books to RGHI — the transfers had the intended effect of fraudulently increasing Refco’s reported profits and concealing Refco’s outstanding debt, the revelation of which would have devastated customer confidence and severely damaged Refco’s business. (Compl. ¶¶ 45-47.) This facade was further improved by various fictitious transfers between Refco and RGHI, including those in which Refco charged RGHI as much as 35 percent interest on the sham receivables — interest that Refco never, in fact, collected. (Compl. ¶¶ 57-59.)
Next, the insiders disappeared the receivables parked at RGHI through a series of so-called round-trip loans. This additional maneuver was necessary because the disclosure of large “related-party” receivables would have raised red flags among investors and regulators. (Compl. ¶ 50.) These “loans,” which straddled the end of each fiscal year starting in 1998 *530 and, after the LBO, at the end of several fiscal quarters as well, all worked in essentially the same way. (Compl. ¶¶ 49-55.) Several days before Refco closed its books for each financial period, a Refco entity— usually RCM — would lend hundreds of millions of dollars to a third-party customer who then, through the customer’s account at Refco, simultaneously lent the same amount to RGHI. (Compl. ¶ 52.) The loan agreements between the third party and the “lending” entity — which were done on a book basis (the principal never changed hands) — were meticulously structured so that they were essentially risk-free to the third-party customers: the customers’ loans to RGHI were guaranteed by Refco and the customers profited for their participation in the “loans” through interest earned on their loans to RGHI, which by design exceeded the interest they were charged by RCM. 7 (Compl. ¶ 53.) RGHI, in turn, used the loans from the customers to pay down the money it owed to Refco for its uncollectible receivables. (Compl. ¶ 49.)
The net effect of these transactions was that at the close of each reporting period, Refco’s books would show apparently legitimate loans to third-party customers, and the RGHI receivables would be gone. (Id.) Then, just days after the financial period closed, the transactions were unwound — the “loans” were repaid, and the uncollectible receivables from RGHI were returned to Refco’s books. (Compl. ¶ 53.) Through these transactions, Refco lent money to itself, through third parties, to conceal its trading losses, its true operating expenses, and the fictitious nature of hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue. (Compl. ¶ 55.)
In addition to concealing Refeo’s debt, the insiders routinely misappropriated customer assets held at RCM in order to prop up other Refco entities with cash infusions. (Compl. ¶¶ 30-35, 61-62.) Some of these assets belonged to the FX customers, who maintained accounts at RCM for the sole purpose of engaging in FX trading pursuant to their instructions. 8 (Compl. ¶¶ 9, 20-25, 28.) The insiders, however, directed that all but a de minimis portion of the assets held in the FX customers’ accounts be diverted from RCM to Refco Capital LLC (“RCC”), another Refco subsidiary, under the guise of “loans” to “customers.” (Compl. ¶¶ 18, 68.) RCC, in turn, functioned as a disbursing agent and distributed the looted assets wherever they were needed in the Refco organization, without compensation, security, collateral, or appropriate documentation. (Compl. ¶¶ 19, 34, 66, 69-70.) These receiving Refco entities were not, of course, “customers” in any traditional sense — they were intercompany, related parties — nor could they repay these “loans.” (Compl. ¶¶ 32, 61, 67-70.) Nevertheless, Refco’s overall financial health depended on the steady influx of illicit RCM assets (Compl. ¶¶ 32, 64-65), so the insiders kept careful track of these transactions and distributed among themselves daily “cash flow” statements that calculated the amount of customer assets available for diversion to other Refco enti *531 ties. (Compl. ¶ 67.) The size of these uncollateralized intercompany transfers-like the size of Refco’s concealed debt— was substantial; the transfers involved hundreds of millions of dollars and dwarfed Refco’s total capital. (Compl. ¶¶ 62, 64,137-40.)
At the time of the LBO, Refco affiliates owed RCM approximately two billion dollars. (Compl. ¶ 35, 62.) By falsely presenting RCM to the public as a robust entity, the insiders enabled RCM to attract a substantial volume of business from the FX customers and made the enormous quantities of cash associated with their business available to the Refco organization for improper diversion. (Compl. ¶¶ 32, 38, 64-65.)
II. The LBO and IPO
The illusion of a thriving company also allowed Refco insiders, with the aid of the Professional Defendants, to position Refco for, and ultimately to carry out, what appeared to be a legitimate “buy-out” of the insiders’ interests for far more than those interests were worth. (Compl. ¶ 71.) In 2004, Thomas H. Lee Partners (“THL”), a private equity firm, purchased — by buying out the insider-owned RGHI — a controlling interest in Refco as part of a leveraged buy-out transaction (“LBO”). (Id.) Although the uncollaterized “loans” from RCM totaled almost two billion dollars — a fact that would have been obvious to the Professional Defendants helping the insiders to execute the transaction — Refco acquired an additional $1.4 billion of bank and bond debt through the LBO, which Refco could not possibly repay. (Compl. ¶¶ 71, 73-75.) That additional debt was especially problematic because, contrary to an Offering Circular that represented that the bond debt was “effectively junior to all existing and future liabilities,” the debt, in fact, became senior to the debt owed to RCM. (Compl. ¶ 74.) The Offering Circular fiction, however, had the intended result of lulling RCM’s customers into believing that RCM’s obligations to its customers would be satisfied before its obligations to the LBO creditors. (Id.)
Less than a year later, with Refco still concealing its grim financial condition and having filed a fictitious S-4 with the SEC, Refco insiders and THL led Refco through an initial public offering of its stock. (Compl. ¶¶ 83-86.) Some of the IPO proceeds were used to retire part of RGL’s LBO debt, but no proceeds were used to repay the amounts owed to RCM. (Compl. ¶ 83.) Weeks after the IPO, the RGHI receivables were revealed and RCM customers, including the FX customers, instructed RCM to return their deposits. (Compl. ¶ 5.) Refco responded by imposing a moratorium on all withdrawals from RCM customer accounts. (Compl. ¶ 65.) Days later, Refco and its subsidiaries and affiliates declared bankruptcy. (Compl. ¶¶ 88-89.)
III. Refco Private Actions Trust
On December 15, 2006, approximately fourteen months after Refco filed for bankruptcy, the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York confirmed the Modified Joint Chapter 11 Plan of Refco Inc. and Certain of its Direct and Indirect Subsidiaries (the “Plan”). (See Kirschner Decl. ¶ 6; id. Ex. A.) The Plan provided for the establishment of a Private Actions Trust (“PAT”), which was formed to prosecute “non-estate” claims — i.e., claims owned by Refco creditors or shareholders that were “independent” of those held by the Refco Debtors. 9 (Id. ¶¶ 12, 14.) On December 26, 2006, the PAT became effective and plain *532 tiff Marc Kirschner was appointed as the Private Actions Trustee. (Kirschner Decl. ¶¶ 10-11, 14.)
IV. The Movants
There are four separate motions to dismiss pending. This section briefly identifies the movant behind each of the motions.
A. Grant Thornton
Grant Thornton LLP served as outside auditor to Refco and issued clean and unqualified audit opinions on the company’s financial statements for the fiscal years 2003, 2004, and 2005. (Compl. ¶¶ 14, 136-37.) Grant Thornton also audited Refco subsidiaries, including RCM, on a “standalone” basis (Compl. ¶ 129), and FX customers periodically received Grant Thornton’s statements for RCM (Compl. ¶ 14). Given its multiple roles, Grant Thornton was “on both sides of the fence,” giving it a complete picture of how Refco, and the Refco fraud, functioned. (Compl. ¶ 130.)
B. Mayer Brown LLP and Mayer Brown International LLP
Mayer Brown, which the Trustee claims is a “combination” of two limited liability partnerships — Mayer Brown LLP and Mayer Brown International LLP 10 — served as Refco’s principal outside counsel from 1994 until October 2005. (Compl. ¶¶ 13, 92.) Mayer Brown provided a broad range of legal services to Refco, including drafting customer agreements, providing Refco with tax and corporate governance advice including advice on the repatriation *533 of RCM, participating in discussions related to the LBO and IPO, and drafting the documents for the so-called “round-trip” loans, which concealed the RGHI receivables. (Compl. ¶¶ 92, 94, 96, 99.) Through these and similar activities, Mayer Brown actively participated in carrying out Refco’s fraudulent misstatement of its financial position.
C. Ernst & Young
From 1991 through at least 2005, Ernst & Young (“EY”) provided tax-related services to various Refco entities, including RGHI. (Compl. ¶ 15.) During that time, EY prepared tax returns and provided tax consulting and advice with respect to numerous Refco transactions, including corporate restructurings among the various Refco entities, proposed sales and acquisitions by Refco, and potential third-party investments involving Refco. (Compl. ¶ 180.) As a result of this involvement, EY was aware both that the RGHI receivables were not bona fide debts but a sham designed to improve RGL’s financials (Compl. ¶¶ 187-93), and that Refco “clean[ed] up” its balance sheets at the end of the fiscal year through the use of round-trip loans (Compl. ¶¶ 194-96). Despite apprehending the scope of the fraud, EY continued the Refco engagement. (Compl. ¶¶ 197-209.)
DISCUSSION
Under New York law, the elements of aiding and abetting a breach of fiduciary duty, aiding and abetting a conversion, and aiding and abetting a fraud are substantially similar. The claims require the existence of a primary violation, actual knowledge of the violation on the part of the aider and abettor, and substantial assistance. 11 The Professional Defendants allege that the Trustee’s claims for aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty, conversion, and fraud all fail both because the Trustee has failed to state a claim for relief under any of the underlying causes of action, and because the Professional Defendants had no actual knowledge of, nor did they substantially assist, the underlying violation. All of the Trustee’s claims will be dismissed for failure to state an underlying violation, and for failure to allege facts sufficient to demonstrate that the Professional Defendants aided and abetted such violations. 12
*534 I. Standard of Review
A defendant must meet a stringent standard in order to obtain dismissal for failure to state a claim. “The issue is not whether a plaintiff will ultimately prevail but whether the claimant is entitled to offer evidence to support the claims.”
Scheuer v. Rhodes,
Nonetheless, “[t]o survive a motion to dismiss a complaint must contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to ‘state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.’ ”
Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
556 U.S. -, -,
First, although “a court must accept as true all of the allegations contained in a complaint,” that “tenet” “is inapplicable to legal conclusions” and “[t]hreadbare recitals of the elements of a cause of action, supported by mere conclusory statements, do not suffice.” “Second, only a complaint that states a plausible claim for relief survives a motion to dismiss” and “[determining whether a complaint states a plausible claim for relief will ... be a context-specific task that requires the reviewing court to draw on its judicial experience and common sense.”
Harris v. Mills,
Averments of fraud, however, must be “stated with particularity.” Fed. R.Civ.P. 9(b). Where the fraud is based on alleged misrepresentations, the complaint must “specify the statements it claims were false or misleading, give particulars as to the respect in which plaintiff contends the statements were fraudulent, state when and where the statements were made, and identify those responsible for the statements.”
Suez Equity Investors, L.P. v. Toronto-Dominion Bank,
II. Breach of Fiduciary Duty
A fiduciary duty arises “when one [person] is under a duty to act for or to give advice for the benefit of another upon matters
within the scope of the relation.” Flickinger v. Harold C. Brown & Co.,
These are the hallmarks of a non-discretionary account.
See de Kwiatkowski v. Bear, Stearns & Co.,
narrowly defined duties that begin and end with each transaction. We are aware of no authority for the view that, in the ordinary case, a broker may be held to an open-ended duty of reasonable care, to a nondiscretionary client, that would encompass anything more than limited transaction-by-transaction duties.
Id.
at 1306;
see also In re Refco Capital Markets, Ltd. Brokerage Customer Sec. Litig. (“RCM II”),
The fact that RCM, under the so-called “Margin Annex” (Rand Decl. Ex. 1 at 24), could “loan, pledge, hypothecate
or otherwise use or dispose of
[all of a customer’s] cash, securities, and other property free from any claim or right, until settlement in full of all [outstanding margin loans],”
id.
(emphasis added), does not make a customer’s account “discretionary” so as to give rise to a fiduciary duty. As the “use or dispose” language suggests, any action RCM took pursuant to assets treated as margin under the agreement was in ROM’s own interest, and not undertaken for the benefit of the customer.
14
Accordingly, a fiduciary duty does not arise upon ROM’s use of a customer’s margin because the broker’s use is not a situation in which the broker “act[s] for or ... give[s] advice for the benefit of another within the scope of the relation.”
Levitin v. PaineWebber, Inc.,
*536
But the Trustee does not allege that the customers’ injury emerged either from ROM’s execution of any customer-directed transactions or by ROM’s use of customer assets outside the Margin Annex umbrella.
16
Indeed, the Trustee, consistent with the broad allegations of his complaint, specifically asserts that his claims do not “rise or fall” on any such distinctions. (PI. Opp. at 20.) Rather, he contends that RCM owed the FX customers a fiduciary duty, notwithstanding either the terms of the FX Agreement or at precisely what point assets were siphoned from the FX customers’ accounts, because
any
use of customer assets by the broker “must be consistent with a fiduciary duty to avoid waste and theft.”
(Id.)
This argument, even if it were not in tension with this Court’s decision in
RCM
II,
17
is unpersuasive, because the Trustee’s theory of “waste,” as pleaded, is overbroad — it contemplates that the broker’s use of the customers’ assets is contrary to what customers reasonably expected, without pleading
any
facts that identify whether the source of that expectation is “within the scope of the relation.”
Flickinger,
This deficiency distinguishes the circumstances here from those in
United States v. Szur,
In sum, the “no-waste” obligations the Trustee seeks to impose on RCM do not arise from affairs entrusted to the broker as a fiduciary. The complaint simply “does not allege facts indicating that [ROM’s] actions were designed to instill a special relationship.”
See Bauer v. Mellon Mortgage Co.,
III. Fraud
“Under New York law, ‘[t]o state a cause of action for fraud, a plaintiff must allege a representation of material fact, the falsity of the representation, knowledge by the party making the representation that it was false when made, justifiable reliance by the plaintiff and resulting injury.’ ”
Lerner v. Fleet Bank,
N.A.,
The Court has already rejected, in a discussion of some length and on substantially similar allegations, the arguments put forward by the Trustee. In
In re Capital Markets,
the securities customers of RCM relied on nearly identical customer agreements and account statements in support of their claim that RCM engaged in deceptive conduct under federal securities laws. The Court, after allowing the customers to replead, found that the customers had “fail[ed] to establish that RCM actually used [their] securities in a manner that violated the parties’ understanding under the [agreement],”
RCM II,
The Trustee’s argument, which is based on a complaint that pre-dates both
RCM I
and
RCM II,
renews the basic contours of this now-rejected approach.
20
The crux of the Trustee’s claim with respect to the FX Agreement is that the Margin Annex limited what RCM could do with the collateral customers had posted. The provision with which the Trustee takes issue provides that RCM only had “the right to loan, pledge, hypothecate or otherwise dispose of such cash, securities and other property free from any claim or right, until settlement in full of all Transactions entered into pursuant to the [FX] Agreement.” (Rand Decl. Ex. 1 at 24.)
21
The Trustee looks to this language, however, not to allege that RCM, in fact, hypothecated customers’ assets at times other than those permitted by the Agreement — indeed the Trustee appears to concede that some use by RCM under the circumstances was perfectly acceptable,
see RCM II,
This “uncollectibility” argument is unavailing for at least two reasons. First, the provision quoted by the Trustee does not, in any way, restrict RCM’s use of the customers’ assets. At the least, as in
In re Capital Markets,
there is no “requirement to which RCM claimed it would adhere that [would] prohibit[] brokerages from using customer assets for loans to affiliated companies.”
RCM I,
*539
Second, even if the Trustee’s suggestion that the “until settlement in full” language should modify, or impose a limit on, the phrase,
“any
claim or right,” that would not explain the provision that explicitly allows RCM to “hypothecate or otherwise
dispose of’
a customer’s assets. As this Court explained in
RCM II,
In any event, the Trustee’s allegations that the loans that RCM made to its affiliates with the proceeds of the misappropriated customer assets were “uncollectible” are woefully underpleaded. The reason for this underwhelming showing is not readily discernible. Allegations that the receiving entities “lacked the intent and/or financial wherewithal to repay ... on demand or otherwise” (Compl. ¶ 32), or that RCM was “insolvent or in the zone of insolvency at all relevant times” (Compl. ¶ 28(g)), are plainly inadequate because they lack any corroborating detail concerning the receiving entities’ financial status and/or alleged inability to pay. Such allegations, if they are not critical to “nudg[ing] [the customers’] claims across the line from conceivable to plausible,”
Twombly,
As to the account statements provided to the FX customers, the Trustee alleges that the statements contained material misrepresentations because they showed “customer orders being fulfilled and ... being fulfilled in a way that reflected eus
*540
tomer ownership.” (Compl. ¶ 28(m).) But the Trustee provides no explanation
of
what he means by “ownership,” nor details how RCM recorded the debits and credits in the account statements at issue, or why the account statements might fairly be characterized as deceptive or misleading. Such supporting allegations, however, are crucial because, as explained above, the Margin Annex, like the customer agreement at issue in
In re Capital Markets,
allowed RCM to satisfy its contractual obligations to the FX Customers merely by purchasing “like amounts of similar cash [or] securities” on the open market and conveying
those
assets to customers, presumably after the customer’s assets had been “disposed of.”
See also RCM II,
Although it is clear that wrongdoing occurred at RCM, as this Court has recently explained, “[t]heft not accomplished by deception ... is not fraud absent a fiduciary duty.”
RCM I,
IV. Conversion
According to New York law, “[c]onversion is the unauthorized assumption and exercise of the right of ownership over goods belonging to another to the exclusion of the owner’s rights.”
Thyroff v. Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co.,
Although an action of conversion does not lie to enforce a mere obligation to pay money,
see Ehrlich v. Howe,
As a threshold matter, the Professional Defendants argue that the FX customers’ funds cannot be the subject of a conversion claim either because the funds are not “specifically identifiable,” or for the same reasons that no conversion claim could lie against a bank.
See, e.g., Fundacion Museo de Arte Contemporaneo de Caracas-Sofia v. CBI-TDB Union Bancaire Privée,
On the face of the pleadings, the Trustee alleges that each FX customer deposited funds into his account “for [the] specific, limited purposes” of conducting securities, FX, and other transactions pursuant to his instructions (Compl. ¶¶ 5, 9, 20, 22, 28, 38, 40, 55-56, 73, 226-27), but that insiders instead “improperly siphoned [assets] from [their] accounts ... and then converted [the assets] for use by other Refco entities” (Compl. ¶ 33) without repayment (Compl. ¶ 65). These allegations appear to state that the property subject to conversion is a specific identifiable thing: FX customers transferred
a specific sum ... to be credited to a specific account and, by doing so, created an obligation on [RCM’s] part either to treat the transfer in the specified manner or return the funds. [RCM] did neither. Instead, it [“lent”] the transfer [for a purpose] for which it was never intended, ultimately using the transferred funds to [perpetuate Refco’s fraudulent scheme].
Mfrs. Hanover Trust Co.,
The Professional Defendants nevertheless attempt to refute that a claim for conversion lies, contending that the funds deposited by the FX customers were not sufficiently identifiable because the Trustee’s complaint refers to “unsegregated customer assets” at RCM (Compl. ¶ 76(d)). This argument and isolated allegation, without more, does not summarily defeat the Trustee’s claim at the pleading stage.
23
*542
Funds may be “specifically identifiable” despite the fact that they are not alleged to be held in a segregated account.
See LoPresti v. Terwilliger,
This conclusion endures even if the Court were to find probative the Professional Defendants’ argument that the funds at issue here are analogous to funds held in a bank’s general accounts. First, there is only “some authority” for the idea that deposits made with banks are analogous to those made with brokerages — not settled precedent.
Newbro v. Freed,
Finally, it should be noted that many of the cases in which courts have found that funds deposited in general bank accounts are insufficiently identifiable to support a claim for conversion involve claims for conversion where a breach of contract claim would.have been more appropriate.
Newbro,
The Trustee’s allegations are, nevertheless insufficient because they fail to make any factual allegations as to how RCM “exercised an unauthorized dominion over the [FX Customers’ funds], to the alteration of its condition or to the exclusion of the plaintiffs rights.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). Allegations that the funds were “upstreamed, sidestreamed, and downstreamed to other Ref-co entities” (Compl. ¶ 34), which might be satisfactory to describe a conversion in other circumstances, are decisively underwhelming here because the Margin Annex
of the FX Agreement itself specifically authorizes RCM to “loan, pledge, hypothecate or otherwise dispose of such cash, securities and other property
free from any claim or right,
until settlement in full of all Transactions entered into pursuant to the [FX] Agreement.” (Rand Decl. Ex. 1 at 24.) It readily follows that no conversion could occur at the time of the “streaming” unless it took place
outside of
the terms established by the Margin Annex. But the Trustee has not made a single factual allegation as to when or even how the funds were “siphoned” from the customer accounts, instead resting on the assertion that the funds were, at unspecified times and in unspecified amounts, “removed [and transferred] in undocumented, uncollateralized, unsecured, transactions to other Refco entities that lacked the intent and/or the financial wherewithal to repay.” (Compl. ¶ 5.) The issue is not, however, the depravity of the use, but whether the use “exercised unauthorized dominion” over the FX customers’ funds. As the Court has already noted in discussing the Trustee’s other claims, because the FX Agreement explicitly allowed RCM to satisfy its contractual obligations by purchasing “like amounts of similar cash [or] securities” on the open market and conveying those assets to customers,
see RCM II,
V. Aiding and Abetting
Even if the Court were to find that the Trustee’s pleading as to the underlying claims were sufficient, however, the Trustee’s claims for aiding and abetting would nevertheless be dismissed because he has not sufficiently pleaded either that the defendants had actual knowledge of, or that they substantially assisted in, the conduct giving rise to the underlying claims.
The knowledge requirement of an aiding and abetting claim is satisfied by alleging actual knowledge of the underlying harm.
See Kolbeck v. LIT Am., Inc.,
The bulk of the Trustee’s allegations, however, are nowhere near sufficient to meet this standard.
26
Consistent with the Trustee’s position that there was one “cohesive scheme by the [i]nsiders to maximize the appearance of financial stability at Refco so that they could sell the compa
*545
ny and cash out” (PL Opp. at 56), the bulk of the Trustee’s allegations equate a defendant’s knowledge of or participation in the so-called “receivables scheme” that involved the round-trip loans, with a defendant’s knowledge of or participation in the so-called RCM “customer scheme” that siphoned the FX customers’ assets. But the one cannot be equivalent to the other where, as in
In re Capital Markets,
the “only apparent connection” between the schemes is that both “were designed to hide financial problems at Refco and its affiliates from the public and from investors,”
RCM I,
Similarly, while the complaint alleges that the Professional Defendants provided services that rendered concrete assistance to the Refco insiders in making and concealing the round-trip loans, and obscuring the company’s true financial condition (Compl. ¶¶ 93-111, 119-127, 136-164, 167-176, 180-202), the Trustee alleges no conduct on the part of the Professional Defendants that in any way assisted in the alleged unauthorized diversion of FX Customers’ assets that underlies the tort claims asserted here. Even if, as the Trustee alleges, the Professional Defendants helped effectuate the round-trip loans that transformed Refco’s uncollectible losses into receivables owed to Refco by third-parties — a claim vigorously disputed by all of the defendants — such aid is not tantamount to the defendants’ knowing about, or doing anything to facilitate, the looting of customer accounts.
The Trustee’s attempt to patch over this deficiency by arguing that, given the defendants’ knowledge of the receivables scheme and, in particular, the knowledge that the receivables parked at RGHI were uncollectible, the defendants must also have known that the Refco entities to which RCM lent the funds lacked the wherewithal to repay, is unpersuasive. Like the other arguments made by the Trustee and now thrice rejected, allegations regarding the impropriety or uncollectibility of the intercompany “loans,” let alone allegations concerning the defendants’ knowledge of the uncollectibility of other receivables parked at RGHI, are no substitute for factual allegations sufficient to demonstrate that the defendants had actual knowledge that the insiders breached a fiduciary duty to the FX customers, or that RCM made affirmative misrepresentations to the FX customers, or otherwise “exercised an unauthorized dominion over” the FX Customers’ funds,
Moses,
Accordingly, assuming arguendo that diverting funds from FX customers’ accounts involved fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, or conversion, the Trustee must make allegations that these defendants had actual knowledge of and substantially assisted in this putative scheme.
VI. Leave to Replead
Rule 15(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides that leave to replead should be “freely given when justice so requires.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(a). Leave to replead may be denied if repleading would be futile,
Acito v. IMCERA Group, Inc.,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Professional Defendants’ motions to dismiss the Trustee’s complaint as to them is granted. The Trustee is granted leave to replead and is directed to advise the Court by September 25, 2009, as to whether he intends to file an amended complaint. If so, the parties are directed to meet and confer regarding a schedule for the filing of an amended complaint and subsequent motions to dismiss, and submit a stipulated schedule, or competing proposed schedules, to the Court by October 9, 2009. If the Trustee intends to replead, the Trustee and Mayer Brown International LLP are also directed to meet and confer regarding a schedule for discovery and motion practice related to whether Mayer Brown is a single entity that constitutes a “legal partnership” or “combination” under New York law. Such a schedule should be submitted to the Court no later than October 9, 2009.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The remaining defendants Phillip R. Bennett ("Bennett”) and Santo Maggio ("Maggio”) answered the Trustee's Complaint, and by stipulation the Trustee has agreed to stay this action against defendant Robert C. Trosten ("Trosten”), pending Mr. Trosten's sentencing hearing.
. The factual allegations concerning the fraud at Refco are substantially similar to those alleged by the Trustee in his alternative capacity as Trustee for the Refco Litigation Trust. The Court's discussion of these facts is thus substantially similar to that of
Kirschner v. Grant Thornton,
No. 07 Civ. 11604,
. All references to the complaint are to the complaint originally filed in New York State Supreme Court.
(See
Juman Decl. Ex. A.) All factual allegations in the complaint are as
*529
sumed to be true for purposes of this motion.
See Merritt v. Shuttle, Inc.,
. These "insiders” held the top management positions at RGL, RCM and Refco Inc. (Compl. ¶¶ 10-12.) Beginning in September 1998, Bennett was President, CEO, and Chairman of RGL and served as a director and officer of RCM. (Compl. ¶ 10.) Maggio was the Executive Vice President of RGL, and President and a director of RCM. (Compl. ¶11.) In that capacity, he "ran the brokerage operations of Refco Securities, LLC ("RSL”) and RCM, and directly participated in, and orchestrated and supervised, the theft of [FX customer] assets.” (Id.) Trosten was a member of Refco's corporate finance team from 1997 to 2001 and RGL’s chief financial officer from 2001 through October 2004. (Compl. ¶ 12) All three men since have been convicted of, or pleaded guilty to, criminal charges involving their conduct at Refco.
.
See In re Refco, Inc. Sec. Litig.,
. Although the third parties purportedly earned interest from RGHI, it was RCM that paid the difference in interest. (Compl. ¶ 53.) In effect, RCM paid the interest on a loan extended by a third-party customer to a purportedly separate entity, RGHI. (Id.) This payment was the only occasion on which funds actually changed hands in these "round-trip” transactions. (Id.)
. In December 2001, Refco shut down RCM’s Bermuda operations and "repatriated” RCM to the United States. (Compl. ¶¶ 18, 112— 117.) Although this move should have made RCM a regulated broker-dealer, instead RCM became a ghost — it was run entirely by Refco Securities, LLC ("RSL”), another Refco subsidiary, and continued to function as if it were completely unregulated. (Compl. ¶¶ 113, 117.)
. Under the Plan, "Non-Estate Refco Claims” are defined as:
non-estate causes of action arising from any matter involving any Refco Entity including, without limitation, causes of action against: (i) all current and former officers, directors or employees of the Refco Entities; (ii) all persons or entities that conduct *532 ed transactions with the Refco Entities; and (iii) all persons or entities that provided services to the Refco Entities, including, without limitation, all attorneys, accountants, financial advisors and parties providing services to the Refco Entities in connection with the public issuance of debt or equity.
(Kirschner Decl. Ex. A ¶ 1.126.) As this Court explained in In re Refco Inc. Sec. Litig.:
The Plan [also] provided for the establishment of a Litigation Trust and the appointment of a Litigation Trustee to pursue such "claims, rights of action, suits, or proceedings, whether in law or in equity, whether known or unknown, that any [Refco] Debt- or or RCM may hold against any Person." Pursuant to the Plan, all "Contributed Claims," defined as "any and all Litigation Claims of the Debtors, RCM or their estates,” would be irrevocably transferred to the Litigation Trust on the effective date of the Plan. In exchange, "the Litigation Trust Beneficiaries,” who are the holders of allowed general unsecured claims against the Refco Debtors, would receive "Litigation Trust Interests,” which would be allocated on the basis of the beneficiaries’ allowed claims under the confirmed Plan.
. The Trustee argues that Mayer Brown LLP and Mayer Brown International LLP held themselves out as a single entity that constitutes a "legal partnership” or “combination" under New York law. (PL Opp. at 70.) Because the Trustee makes no allegations that Mayer Brown International LLP, if found by the Court to be a separate entity, engaged in any wrongdoing, the Court treats Mayer Brown as a single entity for the purposes of this motion. As to whether there is a sufficient basis to conclude that the two Mayer Brown entities are a de facto partnership, the Trustee has alleged enough to be entitled to conduct focused discovery on this issue. Accordingly, Mayer Brown International LLP’s motion to dismiss is denied, without prejudice to a motion for summary judgment after the Trustee conducts discovery on the issue of the precise relationship between Mayer Brown LLP and Mayer Brown International LLP. In all other respects, Mayer Brown International's motion to dismiss is considered in tandem with that of Mayer Brown LLP.
.
See, e.g., Design Strategy, Inc. v. Davis,
. The Professional Defendants also argue that plaintiff's claims are preempted by the Securities Litigation Uniform Standards Act of 1998 ("SLUSA”), 15 U.S.C. § 77p(b)(l), and that the Trustee's claims on behalf of the FX customers should be dismissed because the customers' claims are derivative of those brought by RCM and therefore only RCM's bankruptcy estate may pursue them. Although the Court need not reach these arguments because the Trustee has failed to state a claim on other grounds, neither has merit. The FX customers are pursuing slate-law claims against third-parties for the injury they suffered when Refco insiders stole from their FX accounts. This is a simple claim, for which the FX customers clearly have standing and which does not plausibly "coincide" with the purchase or sale of a covered security.
See
15 U.S.C. § 77p(b);
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc. v. Dabit,
. The Trustee argues that Judge Drain in the bankruptcy proceedings found that RCM owed a fiduciary duty to RCM customers in the course of ruling that the customers "entrusted” their assets to RCM. The Court has previously rejected the argument that Judge Drain's discussion found a fiduciary duty.
See RCM II,
. When an FX customer is actively trading, the margin deposited with RCM under the Margin Annex functions as security for the broker against swings in the value of currencies. (Compl. ¶ 23.) When an FX customer is not engaged in trading, the relevant cash belongs entirely to the customer and remains in the customer’s account for use in future FX transactions. (Compl. ¶ 24.)
.The Trustee's argument that these cases are inapposite because "the duty rejected in Bissell and Levitin is a different duty than the one at issue here” (Pi. Opp. at 21-22), is without merit. If a broker does not owe a fiduciary duty to a customer when he uses a customer’s assets, then the broker does not *536 owe a fiduciary duty to the customer whether he uses the assets wisely or uses them poorly. It is an implausible interpretation of well-settled precedent to argue that only brokers who make bad decisions with a customer’s assets owe a fiduciary duty.
. Nor does he allege that RCM owed the FX customers a duty based on "transformative ‘special circumstances,’ ” such as the "customers’ incapacity or simplicity.”
de Kwiatkowski,
. In that action — brought by similarly-situated RCM customer-plaintiffs with non-discretionaiy accounts — the Court found RCM owed no fiduciary duty because "the allegations in the complaints [were] insufficient to establish that RCM used plaintiffs' securities when they did not have outstanding margin loans ... [and] to the extent that RCM used plaintiffs’ assets when plaintiffs had outstanding margin loans, such conduct created only a creditor-debtor relationship,
not a fiduciary one." RCM II,
. Accordingly, even if there were merit to the Trustee's argument that a "when using, don't waste” duty turns on the "intensely factual question” of whether the use was wasteful, this argument does not prevent the Court from determining the preliminary question of whether a fiduciary duty exists.
. The Trustee alleges that RCM “was insolvent or in the zone of insolvency at all relevant times” (Compl. ¶ 28(g)), but presents no argument that this insolvency establishes a fiduciary relationship. In any event, as the Professional Defendants point out, the complaint fails to allege facts in support of the allegation and thus such an approach would not survive a motion to dismiss.
. Unlike the securities customers in In re Capital Markets, see RCM II, 586 F.Supp.2d 172, 181 n. 12, who abandoned the argument that ‘'uncollectibility is ... [an] element of the pleaded fraud” upon repleading, the Trustee argues that the purported loans that RCM made to its affiliates with the proceeds of the misappropriated securities were uncollectible, or ''in great danger” of being uncollectible. (PL Opp. at 48; Compl. ¶ 70.)
. There are other allegations in the Complaint, including that the Offering Circular that was distributed as part of the 2004 LBO represented, falsely, that the LBO debt would be junior to other subsidiary liabilities (Compl. ¶¶ 73-74), but the complaint does not allege who created and disseminated the document, or any facts that would connect the document to the FX customers.
. Nearly the entirety of the Court's discussion in
RCM I
is relevant here.
See
The complaint uses strong, unqualified language ("the Refco affiliates ... lacked the financial ability and intention to repay”) that seems to suggest that no Refco affiliate intended to repay any of the RCM loans.... The complaint never alleges that all Refco affiliates were rendered insolvent by the round-robin fraud; nor does it allege any basis for the broad, unqualified contention that the Refco affiliates were unable to pay the RCM loans. If plaintiffs really mean that all of the RCM loans were uncollectible, they have failed to support their claim with sufficient supporting allegations; if, on the other hand, they mean that some of the loans at issue were uncollectible, their failure to specify which loans makes it impossible for defendants or the Court to tell which transactions are alleged to be fraudulent.
Id.
. Contraiy to the Professional Defendants' argument, the Trustee’s claim for conversion is not subject to the heightened pleading requirements of Rule 9(b), Fed.R.Civ.P., because the Trustee's claim for conversion does not ''rest[] on an allegation of fraudulent taking.”
Daly
v.
Castro Llanes,
. New York law distinguishes claims that the defendant wrongfully detained — in contrast to having wrongfully taken — the property in question. For claims of wrongful detention, "a conversion does not occur until the owner
*544
makes a demand for the return of the [lawfully obtained] property and the person in possession of the property refuses to return it.”
In re King,
. Although the Trustee does not dispute this point, this Court has, in the past, expressed sóme doubt as to whether “substantial assistance” can be equated with proximate cause on the ground that a person can "make a meaningful contribution to a fraudulent scheme without being understood to have legally ‘caused’ the scheme or its results.”
See Winnick,
. The Trustee’s claims of aiding and abetting fraud are also subject to Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b).
See Wight v. BankAmerica Corp.,
. That leave to replead is granted does not indicate that repleading is encouraged, or suggest that an amended complaint is likely to state a cause of action. It merely reflects that the Court, necessarily ignorant of the facts that plaintiff might be able to allege, cannot conclude that repleading is necessarily futile.
