IN RE: GRIFFIN TRADING COMPANY, Debtor. APPEAL OF: LEROY G. INSKEEP.
No. 10-3607
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
ARGUED SEPTEMBER 16, 2011—DECIDED JUNE 25, 2012
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 10 C 1915—Ruben Castillo, Judge.
WOOD, Circuit Judge. Griffin Trading Company, a futures commission merchant, went bankrupt in 1998 after one of its customers, John Ho Park, sustained trading losses of several million dollars and neither Park nor Griffin Trading had enough capital to cover these obligations. This case turns on whether Farrel Griffin and Roger Griffin (whose first names we use for clarity), the
I
On December 21, 1998, Park began trading German bonds out of Griffin Trading’s office in London. Griffin Trading was not a clearing member of EUREX, the relevant exchange for Park’s trades, and so its trades were placed through MeesPierson (a company organized in the Netherlands), which was Griffin Trading’s clearing broker. (At one point it was known as Fortis
As a result of these losses, MeesPierson issued a margin call for 5 million Deutsche Marks (DM) on the morning of December 22, payable the next day. (The euro was not launched until January 1, 1999, but initially it operated only as a virtual currency; it became fully effective on January 1, 2002, when all participating national currencies, including the DM, had to be converted. See http://ec.europa.eu/economy_finance/euro/index_en.htm.) This triggered a series of transactions among Griffin Trading’s bank accounts. First, at 11:19 a.m. in London on December 22, £1.6 million were transferred from Griffin Trading’s account of segregated customer funds at the London Clearing House to its account of customer funds at the Bank of Montreal.
On the morning of the next day, December 23, Griffin Trading moved that money—converted from British pounds to DM—back to the Bank of Montreal. Finally, at 11:52 a.m. on the 23rd, Griffin Trading answered the margin call by wiring 5 million DM from its account of customer funds at the Bank of Montreal to MeesPierson’s account at Commerzbank (a German entity). In all, as a result of Park’s trades made in London on a European bond exchange, £1.6 million (or the equivalent in DM) bounced around among Griffin Trading’s accounts holding customer segregated funds in England, Canada, and France, until the funds were finally transferred to MeesPierson’s account in Germany.
Meanwhile, back in the United States, Farrel learned of Park’s losses between 6:00 and 7:00 a.m. Chicago time (noon to 1:00 p.m. UTC) on December 22. He called his partner, Roger, and both of them quickly realized that this “debacle” (their word) was going to send Griffin Trading into bankruptcy unless they quickly found a solution. Their first step was, as they put it, to take charge of Griffin Trading’s activities. Farrel, with Roger available by phone, contacted Park, had several conversations with the London office, and, notably, called MeesPierson directly. The bankruptcy court determined that both Roger and Farrel at that time discovered that MeesPierson had issued the 5 million DM margin call to cover Park’s initial losses (another
After unsuccessfully attempting to cover the remaining shortfall, Griffin Trading filed for bankruptcy in the Northern District of Illinois on December 30, 1998. The trustee in bankruptcy initiated this adversary action against Roger and Farrel in 2001, and the suit went to trial in 2004. At trial, the bankruptcy court found that Roger’s and Farrel’s failure to “stop the wire transfer paying the margin call constituted gross negligence and constituted a violation of their fiduciary duties to their creditors.” Inskeep v. Griffin (In re Griffin Trading Co.), No. 01A00007 (Bankr. N.D. Ill. Jan. 26, 2005). Farrel and Roger appealed the bankruptcy court’s decision to the District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, arguing that the application of Illinois’s U.C.C., rather than foreign law, was error. The district court found this argument forfeited, but it nevertheless thought the bankruptcy court applied the wrong law—in particular, the wrong section of the U.C.C. See No. 05 C 1834, 2008 WL 192322, at *7 (N.D. Ill. Jan. 23, 2008). On remand, the bankruptcy court reversed its earlier course, holding that the trustee failed to establish, as a matter of Illinois law, that Farrel and Roger actually caused the loss of customer funds. 418 B.R. 714, 718-21 (Bankr. N.D. Ill. 2009). The court further held that the trustee failed to establish damages. Id. at 721. The district court affirmed, 440 B.R. 148, 164 (N.D. Ill. 2010), and the trustee now appeals.
II
Even though this case is over a decade old and has generated at least four judicial decisions, this is the first time that it has reached the court of appeals. Under
A
The bankruptcy court’s first decision concluded that Farrel and Roger were liable for damages because they could have stopped the wire transfer and their failure to do so constituted a breach of their fiduciary duties. It based this finding on the authority that the two would have had under the U.C.C. On appeal to the district court, Farrel and Roger contested that ruling, asserting that the U.C.C. could not provide the operative rule of law for “a series of four transfers between Griffin Trading’s bank in England to MeesPierson’s bank in Germany.” 2008 WL 192322, at *5. The district court rejected that argument. Citing cases that considered appeals from district courts to the court of appeals, the district court chided the defendants for waiting until its first appeal to raise the question of choice of law (especially foreign law) and ruled the argument forfeited. Id. at *5-*6. This
The district court suggested that the defendants’ alleged forfeiture was especially “problematic” because it implicated
Even strictly adhering to
Moreover, even if these references in the complaint were not as clear then as they now seem, the notes to the rule eliminate any remaining question. The notes show that the rule expressly contemplates the possibility that the need to answer questions of foreign law may become “apparent” even as late as trial. Id. Thus, if the reference to the foreign activity and foreign payment in the complaint was not enough to reveal that all relevant activity took place outside the United States, by the time all of the transactions at issue had been ex-
B
Having established that the U.C.C. should not have been used, one might think that we need to choose an alternative among the various legal systems affected by Griffin Trading’s demise. We conclude, however, that this is not necessary. The important point is that the U.C.C., under which a wire transfer can be reversed until the receiving bank accepts a payment order, cannot provide the operative rule of law. See
In any event, it appears to us that Farrel and Roger would not have been able to meet this burden: Every one of the possible applicable laws requires a causal link
The bankruptcy court’s first ruling answered both of these questions in the affirmative. Judge Black discredited the defendants’ contention that they did not know about the 5 million DM margin call. The court found it “very unlikely that the defendants would not have learned of the first margin call from their employees in the London office.” Their assertion was further undermined by evidence showing that Farrel and Roger called MeesPierson directly. The court found it “strange” that the defendants would ask the court to “believe that people in their posi-
The bankruptcy court further determined that both Farrel and Roger “took no action to prevent the transfer” despite having “time to stop it.” This is consistent with the evidence presented at the first trial. Farrel learned of Park’s trades between noon and 1:00 p.m. UTC on December 22. Yet the actual transfer to MeesPierson was not executed until nearly a full day later, just before noon on December 23. As we have already noted, the Griffins have not suggested, and we cannot find, any legal standard under which this would not have provided ample opportunity for them to prevent the transfer of customer funds to MeesPierson. See UNCITRAL Model Law on International Credit Transfers, art. 12(1), 12(2) (1994) (a transferor needs to give a bank only a “reasonable opportunity to act” in order to cancel a wire transfer); Benjamin Geva, The Wireless Wire: Do M-Payments and UNCITRAL Model Law on International Credit Transfers Match?, 27 BANKING & FIN. L. REV. 249, 254-55 (2012) (same). Indeed, the defendants have never argued that under U.K., or German, or Canadian, or Dutch law that they were powerless to take corrective action. To the contrary, they conceded that they “had the ability to contact Griffin Trading Company’s banks and direct them not to go through with the wire transfer.” See 1 Cresswell, P.J., ed., THE ENCYCLOPAEDIA OF
In the final analysis, the bankruptcy court concluded that Farrel and Roger “knew about [the wire transfer] while there was still time to stop it.” Given the evidence that the defendants were in constant contact with the London office and had called MeesPierson themselves, coupled with their admissions at trial that they had the opportunity to cancel the transfer, we cannot say that this determination was clearly erroneous.
III
Having concluded that the defendants’ inaction caused the creditor loss at issue, we turn now to the question of damages. The trustee alleges that the defendants violated
Specifically, § 30.7(a) requires that a futures commission merchant “maintain in a separate account or accounts money, securities and property in an amount at least sufficient to cover or satisfy all of its current obligations to foreign futures.” That section also provides that such segregated funds “may not be commingled with the money, securities or property of such futures commission merchant . . . or used to guarantee the obligations of . . . such futures commission merchant.” That is, merchants that are entrusted with their customers’ money have special obligations, and those merchants are liable for losses arising out of violations of those obligations.
In its second ruling, the bankruptcy court held that the trustee had failed to prove that Farrel and Roger had violated this regulation, and thus that the trustee had not proven any damage to the estate. The court
At the second trial, Farrel testified that Griffin Trading’s London account of segregated customer funds existed to secure customer activity out of its London office; that is, those funds were supposed to “satisfy all of its current obligations to foreign futures.” This means that all of the money in that account was subject to the strictures of
The defendants’ failure to stop the wire transfer to MeesPierson was a breach of their fiduciary duties. That breach caused a loss to Griffin Trading’s customers equivalent to the amount of the entire transfer. The bankruptcy estate of Griffin Trading is thus entitled to proceed against Farrel and Roger for the damages they caused. We REVERSE and REMAND to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
6-25-12
