Justia U.S. 7th Circuit Court of Appeals Opinion Summaries

Articles Posted in Securities Law
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Davis learned that the government was suspending sale of new 30-year bonds.The information was embargoed until 10 AM. He passed the information to traders, who bought futures contracts with an eight-minute head start and reaped profits. The brokerage settled SEC charges. PPP sought to represent a class of traders who held short positions in futures when the brokerage took the long side. The district judge concluded that such a class would be unrelated to trading that occurred during eight minutes of October 31, 2001 and denied certification. Investors, all of whom held short positions during the eight minutes, filed their own suit. The court dismissed because the two-year limitations period (7 U.S.C. 25(c)), had expired, rejecting an argument that claims did not accrue until the SEC filed its complaint. Meanwhile PPP's proposal for a reduced class was rejected. PPP accepted an offer of judgment under Fed. R. Civ. P. 68. The court rejected PPP's proposal to continue the suit. The investor suit plaintiff sought to intervene as class representative. The district court denied that motion. The Seventh Circuit affirmed. With respect to the limitations period, the court noted when the investors were aware of their harm. There cannot be a class action without a viable representative and there was no such representative involved in the appeal.

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The borrowers, former high-level employees, participated in the companyâs shared investment program by purchasing company stock. The entire purchase price was funded by personal loans from banks. The company guaranteed the loans, received loan proceeds directly from the banks, and held the shares. Some participants made a profit, but in 2001 the company filed for bankruptcy. After settling with the lenders, the bankruptcy trustee filed actions against the borrowers. The district court ruled in favor of the trustee. The Seventh Circuit vacated and remanded. The borrowers may have enough evidence to satisfy the "in the business of supplying information" element of a negligent misrepresentation defense. The borrowers may raise margin Regulations G and U as an affirmative excuse-of-nonperformance defense; it is not clear whether the borrowers, the banks, the company, or the plan violated those regulations. Summary judgment on the Securities and Exchange Act Section 10(b) and Section 17(a) illegality defenses was also in error.

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The Commodity Futures Trading Commission sued operators of commodity trading pools for fraud and related violations of the Commodity Exchange Act. Following earlier proceedings in the Seventh Circuit, the district court entered judgment against remaining defendants. Defendantâs assets of $104 million, 39% of the amount owed the investors in the pools, were placed in the control of a receiver. The district court approved the receiverâs proposed allocation of the assets among the investors, which excluded a claim filed by an Andorran bank as untimely and rejected a valuation claim by GAMAG. The Seventh Circuit affirmed. The district court acted within its discretion in disallowing the bankâs claim, based on the bankâs neglect in pursuing its claim and the difficulty in recalculating the shares of the investors. GAMAGâs claim to be a creditor, rather than a shareholder, was properly rejected; its funds were commingled with and managed with the funds of the other investors and there was no difference in the level of risk.

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Purchasers of common stock brought a class action alleging violations of federal securities laws; the case settled for $190,000,000. The same underlying facts resulted in an action by employees and former employees under ERISA; the company's 401(k) profit-sharing plan claimed a share of the settlement. The district court rejected the claim and the Seventh Circuit affirmed. Although individual plan participants did not purchase publicly-traded stock, the plan itself did so and is not excluded from the class definition of persons who purchased publicly traded common stock. The definition does, however, exclude any âaffiliateâ of the company and the plan is an affiliate. Plan administrators are either directors of the company or appointed by directors.

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The company was established in 1998 to develop systems for high-speed Internet connections for home computers. After a decision to not respond to an acquisition offer, the company was in financial trouble by 2000 and took an $11 million loan for 90 days and a second loan for $9 million, on which it defaulted. The company exchanged its assets for stock in an amount that would have satisfied creditors and preferred stockholders. The stock, the company's only asset in bankruptcy, fell to a value less than the claims of creditors. Common shareholders brought suit. The district court entered summary judgment for the defendants. The Seventh Circuit reversed and remanded, stating that the company's failure was not likely solely the result of the "burst of the dot-com bubble." Even if the directors were excused from liability for failure to exercise due care, as permitted by Delaware law, there was evidence of disloyalty, which was not excused. Evidence of disloyalty switched the burden of proving "entire fairness" with respect to the loans on the directors. There was enough evidence of causation and that certain preferred stockholders (venture capital groups) aided and abetted the directors to submit the question to a jury.