Dr. William WELCH III, Dr. Andrew Guest, and Mrs. Elizabeth
Guest, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
CADRE CAPITAL, R. Laken Mitchell, Esq., John Roberts, Edna
Lou Ballard, Norman Ballard, Financial Centre
Securities, Northwest Mutual, a Savings
Institution, Defendants-Appellees,
Mutual Fire & Marine Inland Insurance Company, Defendant.
No. 263, Docket 90-7419.
United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.
Argued Sept. 26, 1990.
Decided Jan. 22, 1991.
Peter Luria, West Hartford, Conn., for plaintiffs-appellants.
Alexandra Davis, Hartford, Conn. (Kimberly A. Knox, Moller, Horton & Fineberg, and Antoinette L. Ruzzier, Hartford, Conn., on the brief), for defendants-appellees Roberts, Edna Lou Ballard, Norman Ballard, and Financial Centre Securities.
Russell J. Ober, Jr., Pittsburgh, Pa. (Steven Petrikis, Rose Schmidt Hasley & DiSalle, Pittsburgh, Pa., and Robert L. Wyld, Linda L. Yoder, Shipman & Goodwin, Hartford, Conn., on the brief), for defendant-appellee Northwest Sav. Bank.
J. Jeffrey Coughlin, Bridgeport, Conn. (Bai, Pollock & Dunnigan, Bridgeport, Conn., on the brief), for defendant-appellee Cadre Capital.
Before NEWMAN, PIERCE, and ALTIMARI, Circuit Judges.
JON O. NEWMAN, Circuit Judge:
In Ceres Partners v. GEL Associates,
The issue arises on an appeal by William Welch and Andrew and Elizabeth Guest from the April 12, 1990, order of the District Court for the District of Connecticut (Alan H. Nevas, Judge) granting a motion to dismiss their '34 Act claims against a group of eight defendants allegedly responsible for defrauding plaintiffs into buying and maintaining limited partnership shares in an ill-fated oil and gas drilling venture. Welch v. Cadre Capital,
BACKGROUND
The complaint alleges the following facts as grounds for plaintiffs' '34 Act claims. William Welch and Andrew and Elizabeth Guest each purchased limited partnership interests in the Keystone 84-1 Oil and Gas Drilling Program. The Keystone Program, for which defendant Cadre Capital served as managing general partner, involved a venture to drill at least six oil and gas wells. To become limited partners, Welch and the Guests were required to purchase one or more discrete interests in Keystone; the price for each interest was a $5,000 cash payment and execution of a $15,000 promissory note. The Guests purchased six limited partnership interests on May 10, 1984, based on representations made by defendants Edna Lou and Norman Ballard, acting on behalf of defendant Financial Centre Securities. On May 25, 1984, Welch purchased two limited partnership interests on the recommendation of defendant John Roberts, then a registered broker with Financial Centre Securities. In July of 1984, defendant R. Laken Mitchell, counsel for the general partnership, informed Welch and the Guests that their notes had been assigned to defendant Northwest Savings Bank as collateral for loans used to finance drilling operations. Defendant Mutual Fire & Marine Inland Insurance Company guaranteed payment of the assigned notes on behalf of the general partnership.
Welch and the Guests first learned of Keystone's demise in early 1987. Welch heard of Keystone's "financial difficulties" from defendant Roberts in January 1987. The Guests remained unaware until March 1987 when Financial Centre Securities informed them of Keystone's insolvency. Welch and the Guests subsequently brought suit on October 17, 1988, in the District Court for the District of Connecticut. The first two counts of their six-count complaint alleged violations of the mandatory registration provisions of the 1933 Securities Act, Sec. 5(a), (c), 15 U.S.C. Sec. 77e(a), (c), and the anti-fraud provisions of the '33 Act, Secs. 12, 17, 15 U.S.C. Secs. 77l and 77q(a), and section 10(b) of the 1934 Securities and Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 78j(b) and rule 10b-5, 17 C.F.R. Sec. 240.10b-5, promulgated thereunder. In addition to suing for primary violations of the '34 Act, the plaintiffs also alleged that Northwest Savings Bank and Mutual Fire & Marine Inland Insurance Company aided and abetted the commission of securities fraud by the other defendants. The other four counts sought relief for violations of the anti-fraud provision of the Connecticut Uniform Securities Act, Conn.Gen.Stat. Sec. 36-498 (1989), common law fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, and negligent misrepresentation.
By order dated August 17, 1989, Judge Nevas granted defendants' motion to dismiss the '33 Act claims. See Welch v. Cadre Capital,
DISCUSSION
I. Appellate Jurisdiction
Initially, we must determine our appellate jurisdiction, which is called into question by the appellants' failure to notice an appeal from the final judgment dismissing all claims. Prior to oral argument, we invited the parties to consider whether the appeal could be entertained on the basis of the premature notice of appeal from the April 12 order dismissing the federal claims, but leaving the pendent state law claims for dismissal a month later.
On prior occasions we have indicated that a premature notice of appeal from a nonfinal order may ripen into a valid notice of appeal if a final judgment has been entered by the time the appeal is heard and the appellee suffers no prejudice. See Festa v. Local 3, International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers,
II. Retroactivity of Ceres
In Ceres this Circuit replaced the longstanding practice of borrowing the most analogous state statute of limitations for claims founded on section 10(b) of the '34 Act and rule 10b-5 with the limitations periods statutorily prescribed for private causes of action expressly provided by the '34 Act. See 15 U.S.C. Secs. 78i(e) and 78r(c). First adopted by the Third Circuit, see In re Data Access Systems Securities Litigation,
We look to the three-part test set forth in Chevron Oil Co. v. Huson,
An initial issue in applying Chevron is whether the proponent of a prospectiveonly application must satisfy all three of the Chevron factors. Judge Nevas read our decisions in Kremer v. Chemical Construction Corp.,
Examining the first Chevron factor, we conclude that Ceres, which overrules well-established precedent, meets the threshold requirement for nonretroactive application. Adoption of a uniform federal limitations period changes the practice in this Circuit, which was clear at the time the alleged fraud was discovered, of looking to the law of the forum state for an appropriate statute of limitations for 10b-5 claims. In Connecticut, as we have noted, every court to have considered the issue has ruled that this entails combining the two-year limitations period in the Connecticut Uniform Securities Act with the federal equitable tolling doctrine. Though some of the Supreme Court decisions forming the doctrinal foundation for Ceres' rejection of the borrowing approach had already been decided by 1987, around the time plaintiffs discovered the alleged fraud, see Agency Holding Corp. v. Malley-Duff & Associates, Inc., supra; Wilson v. Garcia,
Application of the second Chevron factor--effect of retroactive application upon the rule in question--is more problematical. Though Chevron concerned the retroactivity of a limitations ruling, the issue arose in a context quite different from the one we face here. In Chevron the new limitations standard was the one-year period of state law, rather than the prior, more indeterminate laches standard of admiralty law. The new standard was applicable by virtue of the Supreme Court's decision in Rodrigue v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.,
Obviously, if "the rule in question" is the new limitations period itself, its retroactive application will always further the new rule: A new, shorter period will end a law suit filed beyond the new limits, and a new, longer period will allow a lawsuit otherwise barred. We doubt that the Court in Chevron contemplated such a mechanical inquiry. Some indication that it did not arises from the fact that the text quoted in Chevron to articulate the second factor is from Linkletter v. Walker,
In the pending case, the application of a new and shorter limitations period (one year after discovery of the fraud) cannot affect the conduct of the plaintiffs where the new rule is announced after expiration of that period. As with all statutes of repose, the one-year/three-year limitations period advances the remedial and deterrent purposes of the particular cause of action and preserves the defendant's interest in repose by simultaneously giving notice to potential plaintiffs of the time within which suit must commence and to potential defendants of the time beyond which exposure to liability ceases. Because they serve primarily individual, rather than institutional, interests and do so by giving potential litigants prior notice of their rights, application of a limitations period not yet in existence at the time suit was commenced clearly does not further either of the competing interests. The second Chevron inquiry thus favors a different result in this case than in Kremer,
As to the third Chevron factor, we believe the equities favor the plaintiffs. Taking plaintiffs' allegations as true at this stage of the litigation, defendants' active concealment of fraud, rather than anything attributable to the plaintiffs, caused the initial three-year delay between violation and discovery of the fraud. And unlike the twenty-month delay in Holzsager, the subsequent one-and-a-half-year delay was not the result of procedural maneuvering designed to achieve a tactical advantage. Though, as Judge Nevas pointed out, plaintiffs, in not filing suit promptly after discovery of the fraud, could not be certain that a court would subsequently agree with their assertion as to the interval of equitable tolling, we see no reason in this case to fault them for taking most of the then applicable two-year period after discovery of alleged fraud to determine whether they had grounds for suit. Accordingly, retroactive application of the rule in Ceres would unjustly deny plaintiffs' "right to a day in court." Chevron,
Defendant Northwest Savings Bank presents as an alternative ground for affirming the District Court's dismissal of the 10b-5 aiding and abetting claim plaintiffs' failure to plead with specificity the element of "substantial assistance." See National Union Fire Insurance Co. v. Turtur,
The judgment of the District Court is reversed, and the case is remanded.
Notes
This approach appears to have originated with Yaretsky v. Blum,
Though we are willing to accept appellate jurisdiction despite the prematurity of the notice of appeal, we do not rest decision upon Fed.R.App.P. 4(a)(2), which treats a notice of appeal filed after announcement but before entry of an order as if it had been filed "after such entry and on the day thereof." That provision applies only to an order that is final. See Marsh-McBirney, Inc. v. Montedoro-Whitney Corp.,
Appellees could have moved to dismiss the premature appeal at any time prior to entry of final judgment. In the circumstances of this case, it would be inequitable to permit them to obtain a dismissal of the premature appeal now that the time for filing a notice of appeal from the final judgment has expired
The appellant's failure to raise the issue of retroactivity does not preclude this Court from considering the issue. See Teague v. Lane,
It is worth emphasizing that the first prong of the Chevron test requires only a prior rule on which plaintiffs "may" have relied, and does not create a test of actual reliance
Whether Chevron retains validity for issues of retroactivity outside the context of statutes of limitations has been placed in doubt by American Trucking Associations, Inc. v. Smith, --- U.S. ----,
