Mellon Investor Services., LLC v. Longwood Country Garden Centers, Inc. , 263 F. App'x 277 ( 2008 )


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  •                              UNPUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 07-1140
    MELLON INVESTOR SERVICES, LLC,
    Plaintiff - Appellant,
    versus
    LONGWOOD COUNTRY GARDEN CENTERS, INCORPORATED,
    Defendant - Appellee.
    ------------------------------
    SECURITIES TRANSFER ASSOCIATION, INCORPORATED,
    Amicus Supporting Appellant.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Middle
    District of North Carolina, at Durham. James A. Beaty, Jr., Chief
    District Judge. (1:06-cv-00440-JAB)
    Argued:   December 6, 2007                 Decided:   February 6, 2008
    Before WILLIAMS, Chief Judge, DUNCAN, Circuit Judge, and John
    Preston BAILEY, United States District Judge for the Northern
    District of West Virginia, sitting by designation.
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded by unpublished per
    curiam opinion.
    ARGUED: Charles Gordon Brown, BROWN & BUNCH, Chapel Hill, North
    Carolina, for Appellant. Mark A. Harmon, HODGSON RUSS, L.L.P., New
    York, New York, for Amicus Supporting Appellant.        Sean Eric
    Andrussier, WOMBLE, CARLYLE, SANDRIDGE & RICE, P.L.L.C., Raleigh,
    North Carolina, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Scott D. Zimmerman, BROWN
    & BUNCH, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, for Appellant.      Jack M.
    Strauch, WOMBLE, CARLYLE, SANDRIDGE & RICE, P.L.L.C., Winston-
    Salem, North Carolina, for Appellee.
    Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
    2
    PER CURIAM:
    Mellon Investor Services, LLC (“Mellon”) filed a complaint
    against    Longwood   Country      Garden    Centers,    Inc.     (“Longwood”),
    asserting    a   warranty   claim    under     Article   8   of    the   Uniform
    Commercial Code (“U.C.C.”) (Count I), as well as one count of
    negligent misrepresentation (Count II), one count of equitable
    subrogation (Count III), and two counts of indemnity (Counts IV and
    V).   The district court granted Longwood’s motion to dismiss under
    Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), concluding that the
    warranty created by Article 8 of the U.C.C. did not bear on
    Mellon’s    relationship    with    Longwood    and   that   the    U.C.C.   had
    displaced Mellon’s equitable and common-law tort claims.1
    We affirm in part and reverse in part.             We conclude, as the
    district court did, that Mellon has failed to state a claim under
    Article 8 of the U.C.C.     On the other hand, we hold that the U.C.C.
    does not displace Mellon’s equitable and common-law tort claims.
    Turning to the merits of these claims, we conclude that Mellon has
    stated claims for negligent misrepresentation and indemnity, but
    not for equitable subrogation. Accordingly, we affirm the district
    court’s dismissal of Counts I and III and reverse the court’s
    dismissal of Counts II, IV, and V.
    1
    The district court adopted and affirmed the findings of the
    United States Magistrate Judge. In speaking of the proceedings
    below, we will only refer to the district court.
    3
    I.
    Mellon    is   a   New   Jersey       limited-liability   company      that
    specializes in serving as a stock-transfer agent for publicly
    traded companies. In 2001, Principal Financial Group, Inc. (“PFG”)
    hired Mellon as its stock-transfer agent. In this capacity, Mellon
    registered 48,961 uncertificated shares of PFG stock in the name of
    the    L.A.    Reynolds    Company   Salaried      Employees’    Pension   Trust
    (“Trust”).
    L.A. Reynolds Company created the Trust in 1959, the same year
    that   the    company     established    a    defined-benefit    plan   for    its
    employees.      The Trust terminated in the 1970s after it had paid all
    of its debts and had made all terminating distributions to plan
    participants.      Over the course of many years, and through a series
    of transactions, the Trust’s undistributed assets were converted
    into the 48,961 uncertificated shares of PFG at issue in this
    appeal.       Eventually, these shares came to reside in the Fisher
    River Timber Land & Cattle Company (“Fisher River”), a successor
    corporation to the original L.A. Reynolds Company.               As the shares
    of PFG stock changed hands, however, confusion arose as to their
    ownership.      For instance, the address of the Trust was unknown, as
    evidenced by the fact that dividend checks were mailed to the Trust
    and returned in 2002 and 2003 because the mailing address was
    invalid.
    4
    In April 2004, Michael Franklin Smith, a New York attorney,
    acquired information about the uncertificated PFG stock, including
    the confidential account key necessary to access the shares.2
    Although Mellon’s complaint does not shed light on how Smith
    acquired the account key, Smith describes how he acquired the key
    in an affidavit submitted in this case.   According to Smith, he was
    a personal and professional acquaintance of Mike Ryan, the manager
    of Mellon’s unclaimed property department.   Ryan gave Smith copies
    of numerous confidential Mellon documents relating to unclaimed PFG
    shares held by Mellon in the hopes that Smith would help Mellon
    locate the owners.    Among those confidential documents was a
    “screen shot” image from Mellon’s computer system showing Mellon’s
    internal account information regarding the Trust’s PFG stock,
    including the account key.
    Through his efforts to locate L.A. Reynolds Company, Smith
    came upon Longwood, a North Carolina corporation doing business as
    L.A. Reynolds Company.     Previously, in 1991, Longwood purchased
    substantially all of the assets of L.A. Reynolds Landscaping, Inc.,
    a company formed in 1977 by Fisher River’s sole shareholder Jon
    Reynolds and two other men, and began to operate under the name
    “L.A. Reynolds Company.”     It is at this point that things became
    messy, for Longwood’s “L.A. Reynolds Company” had no relationship
    2
    In this opinion, “Smith” refers to Michael Franklin Smith as
    well as his law offices.
    5
    to the original L.A. Reynolds Company.             Thus, Smith had not
    actually found the true owner of the uncertificated PFG shares.
    Unaware that Fisher River was the successor to the original
    L.A.    Reynolds   Company    (and   hence   the   true        owner   of   the
    uncertificated     PFG   shares),    Smith   offered      to     recover    the
    uncertificated PFG shares for Longwood for a fee equal to one-third
    of the stock value recovered.        Longwood accepted the contingency
    agreement and retained Smith as its lawyer to obtain and liquidate
    the PFG shares.
    In June 2004, Smith contacted Mellon about the uncertificated
    PFG shares.    Instead of communicating with his acquaintance Mike
    Ryan, however, Smith dealt with David Spritzer, who handled stock
    transfers for Mellon. After Smith provided the account key for the
    Trust account, Spritzer confirmed the name of the registered owner
    of the account as “The L.A. Reynolds Company Salaried Employees
    Pension Trust” and asked Smith for proof of his authorization to
    represent the registered owner.          Smith provided a copy of the
    power-of-attorney that Longwood Chairman Gerald Long signed on
    behalf of “L.A. Reynolds Company” (the name under which Longwood
    was doing business).         This convinced Spritzer that Smith was
    authorized to represent the rightful owner of the PFG shares.
    At this point, Longwood, through Smith, sent an instruction to
    Mellon to register a transfer of the uncertificated PFG shares to
    Longwood and to remit the proceeds of the liquidated shares to
    6
    Longwood as well. Relying on Smith’s knowledge of the confidential
    account key and documents verifying his power-of-attorney, Mellon
    registered a transfer of the uncertificated PFG shares and issued
    checks for the proceeds and unredeemed dividends, payable to the
    Trust    in    care   of   Smith.     The    unredeemed    dividends   totaled
    $34,272.70, and the net proceeds from the registration of the
    transferred shares totaled $1,680,117.33.
    Once he received the funds, Smith paid himself the one-third
    contingency fee out of the funds and wrote a check in the amount of
    $1,148,641.32 to “L.A. Reynolds Company.”           He mailed the check to
    Longwood, accompanied by a document describing the source of the
    funds.        Upon receiving this check and accompanying document,
    Longwood became concerned that the funds did not belong to it.
    Longwood thus deposited the funds from the check into an escrow
    account and contacted Jon Reynolds, owner of Fisher River, the
    successor      to   the    original   L.A.   Reynolds     Company,   about   the
    liquidation of the assets.
    Thereafter, Fisher River filed suit against Longwood, Gerald
    Long, Smith, and Mellon for common-law negligence and conversion in
    North Carolina state court.3          Fisher River dismissed Longwood and
    3
    When served with Fisher River’s complaint, Mellon contacted
    PFG to determine if PFG would indemnify Mellon under their
    indemnity agreement, which excluded indemnity for losses resulting
    from Mellon’s own negligence. PFG declined to provide a defense or
    to indemnify Mellon. To preserve its business relationship with
    PFG, Mellon did not pursue any indemnity claims against PFG.
    7
    Gerald Long from the suit after they transferred the escrow account
    to Fisher River in exchange for Fisher River’s promise not to sue
    them in the future, but Fisher River maintained its claims against
    Mellon    and     Smith.4   Mellon   cross-claimed      against   Smith   and
    impleaded Longwood into the suit as a third-party defendant.
    Fisher River later amended its complaint to add a claim against
    Mellon under U.C.C. § 8-404 (2005) for wrongful registration of
    transfer,5 and the state court entered summary judgment in favor of
    Fisher River on that claim.        Mellon paid the judgment in full.6
    After paying the state court judgment in full, Mellon brought
    the present suit against Longwood in the Middle District of North
    Carolina, alleging claims for breach of the originator’s warranty
    under    U.C.C.    §   8-108(e)   (2005),   negligent   misrepresentation,
    equitable subrogation, and indemnity.7         Longwood moved to dismiss
    4
    Despite Jon Reynolds’s personal plea to Smith asking him to
    return his contingency fee, Smith refused, taking the position that
    he had earned his fee.
    5
    Section 8-404(a)(1) of the U.C.C. provides that “an issuer is
    liable for wrongful registration of transfer if the issuer has
    registered a transfer of a security to a person not entitled to it,
    and the transfer was registered . . . pursuant to an ineffective
    endorsement or instruction.” U.C.C. § 8-404(a)(1) (2005).
    6
    The state court judgment required Mellon to pay Fisher River
    $31,008 for proportional dividends due Fisher River and $1,685.94
    in court costs.    The judgment also required Mellon to acquire
    16,320 shares of common PFG stock (at a total cost of $806,014) and
    transfer this replacement stock to Fisher River.
    7
    Section 8-108(e) of the U.C.C. provides that “[a] person who
    originates an instruction for registration of transfer of an
    uncertificated security warrants to the issuer that:      (1) the
    8
    the complaint, and Mellon responded by obtaining an assignment of
    all of PFG’s rights of recovery against Longwood for breach of its
    originator’s   warranty;   thereafter   Mellon    moved   for   summary
    judgment.
    The district court granted Longwood’s motion to dismiss,
    concluding that the originator’s warranty under U.C.C. § 8-108(e)
    did not run to a transfer agent and that the U.C.C. displaced
    Mellon’s equitable and common-law claims.        Mellon noted a timely
    appeal, and we have jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C.A. § 1291
     (2006).
    II.
    On appeal, Mellon argues that the district court erred in
    dismissing its U.C.C. claim and in ruling that the U.C.C. displaced
    its equitable and common-law tort claims.         We review de novo a
    decision dismissing a complaint under Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to
    state a claim.     Glaser v. Enzo Biochem, Inc., 
    464 F.3d 474
    , 476
    (4th Cir. 2006).   We must dismiss a complaint if it does not allege
    “enough facts to state a claim to relief that is plausible on its
    face.”   Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 
    127 S. Ct. 1955
    , 1974 (2007).
    In reviewing the district court’s dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6), we
    must view as true all of Mellon’s well-pleaded allegations, and we
    instruction is effective; and (2) at the time the instruction is
    presented to the issuer the purchaser will be entitled to the
    registration of transfer.” U.C.C. § 8-108(e).
    9
    must draw all reasonable inferences in Mellon’s favor. Glaser, 
    464 F.3d at 476
    .
    A.
    This case requires us to consider the law as it relates to
    the transfer of securities.              Under Delaware law,8 the rights and
    relations of parties to a securities transfer are governed by
    Delaware’s version of Article 8 of the Uniform Commercial Code,
    
    Del. Code Ann. tit. 6, § 8-101
     et seq. (2005) [hereinafter Article
    8].       In   a    direct    holding      system      such   as   Delaware’s,9    the
    registration of a transfer is the point at which ownership rights
    of the prior registered owner end and the ownership rights of the
    new   registered          owner   begin.      Registering      a   transfer   of    an
    uncertificated security initially requires that the issuer of the
    security receive an instruction to register the transfer of the
    security.          
    Del. Code Ann. tit. 6, § 8-102
    (a)(12)   (defining
    8
    In this diversity action, we apply North Carolina’s
    substantive law, including its choice-of-law rules. See Private
    Mortgage Inv. Servs., Inc. v. Hotel & Club Assocs., Inc., 
    296 F.3d 308
    , 312 (4th Cir. 2002). The district court concluded that under
    North Carolina choice-of-law provisions, Delaware law controls the
    U.C.C. claim and New Jersey law controls the common-law tort
    claims. Because neither party contests this determination, we need
    not review it. Casio, Inc. v. S.M. & R. Co., 
    755 F.2d 528
    , 530-31
    (7th Cir. 1985)(“Parties can within broad limits stipulate the
    substantive law to be applied to their dispute, and that is what we
    deem them to have done here by not objecting to the district
    judge’s application of the substantive law of Illinois to their
    dispute.”).
    9
    Because the PFG shares were registered directly with PFG
    rather than a securities intermediary like a brokerage firm, the
    direct holding system rules apply.
    10
    “[i]nstruction” as “a notification communicated to the issuer of an
    uncertificated security which directs that the transfer of the
    security be registered or that the security be redeemed”). For the
    instruction to be effective under the statute, the registered owner
    of   the    uncertificated   security    (or   its    agent)   must    make    the
    instruction.      
    Del. Code Ann. tit. 6, § 8-107
    (a),(b) (explaining
    that “[a]n . . . instruction . . . is effective if . . . made by
    the appropriate person” and defining an “[a]ppropriate person” as
    “the registered owner of an uncertificated security”). Conversely,
    an instruction is ineffective if the originator of the instruction
    is not the security’s registered owner.
    If,    pursuant   to   an   ineffective        instruction      (i.e.,   an
    instruction not from the registered owner), an issuer registers a
    transfer of a security to a person not entitled to the security,
    the issuer is liable to the registered owner of the uncertificated
    security for wrongful registration of transfer.                
    Del. Code Ann. tit. 6, § 8-404
    (a).     Likewise, the transfer agent, the person who
    helped effectuate the transaction, is also liable to the registered
    owner.     
    Del. Code Ann. tit. 6, § 8-407
     (“A person acting as . . .
    transfer agent . . . for an issuer in the registration of a
    transfer of its securities . . . has the same obligation to the
    holder or owner of a[n] . . . uncertificated security with regard
    to the particular functions performed as the issuer has in regard
    to those functions.”).
    11
    To shift any loss arising out of a wrongful registration of
    transfer to the person who actually caused the loss (i.e., the
    originator of the ineffective instruction), Article 8 provides that
    certain warranties are made by the originator of the instruction.
    Specifically,   “[a]   person   who   originates   an    instruction   for
    registration of transfer of an uncertificated security warrants to
    the issuer that: (1) the instruction is effective; and (2) at the
    time the instruction is presented to the issuer the purchaser will
    be entitled to the registration of transfer.”      6 Del. C. § 8-108(e)
    (emphasis added).
    B.
    In this case, Mellon seeks to sue Longwood under Article 8 for
    breach of the originator’s warranty.       To start our analysis, we
    note that the following facts are undisputed:       PFG was the issuer
    of the shares; Mellon was PFG’s transfer agent; the PFG shares were
    an uncertificated security because they were registered only in
    book entry form and no physical certificate existed, see 
    Del. Code Ann. tit. 6, § 8-102
    (a)(18) (defining “[u]ncertificated security”
    as “a security that is not represented by a certificate”); and the
    instruction from Longwood to PFG was ineffective because Longwood
    was not the registered owner of the shares.             The central issue
    presented here -- one that, to our knowledge, no federal or state
    appellate court has addressed -- is whether the word “issuer” in
    U.C.C. § 8-108(e) also includes transfer agents. The answer is no.
    12
    Section 8-108 does not define the term “issuer,” but the Notes
    accompanying § 8-108(e) cross-reference the definition of “issuer”
    in § 8-201.     Section 8-201(c) provides that “[w]ith respect to a
    registration of a transfer, issuer means a person on whose behalf
    transfer books are maintained.” 
    Del. Code Ann. tit. 6, § 8-201
    (c).
    In the registration of transfer at issue, Mellon maintained
    the transfer books on behalf of PFG.                 Thus, under the plain
    language of the Delaware statute, Mellon, as a transfer agent,
    cannot    be   an   “issuer”   for   purposes   of   §   8-108(e).   We   are
    unpersuaded by Mellon’s arguments to the contrary and therefore
    conclude that Mellon has failed to state a claim against Longwood
    for breach of the originator’s warranty under § 8-108(e).10
    III.
    A.
    In an effort to save the remainder of its complaint, Mellon
    alternatively contends that the provisions regarding the transfer
    of securities in Article 8 have not displaced any equitable or
    common-law tort claims it might assert against Longwood.             “Unless
    displaced by the particular provisions of the Uniform Commercial
    Code, the principles of law and equity . . . supplement its
    10
    To the extent that Mellon contends that PFG has “assigned”
    all of its rights to Mellon so that Mellon stands in the place of
    PFG as an issuer under Article 8, we agree with the district court
    that PFG has sustained no liability, i.e., no injury, and thus has
    no claim against Longwood to assign to Mellon.
    13
    provisions.”      
    Del. Code Ann. tit. 6, § 1-103
    (b) (2005).          Our task,
    therefore, is “to determine whether [Article 8 of the UCC] is a
    ‘particular provision’ that displaces the common law.”               Equitable
    Life Assurance Soc’y of the U.S. v. Okey, 
    812 F.2d 906
    , 909 (4th
    Cir. 1987).
    In this case, the district court first concluded that “[t]he
    applicable UCC provisions in Article 8 provide a comprehensive
    remedial scheme regarding the rights and obligations of those
    persons and entities involved in the wrongful registration of
    transfers of securities.”           (J.A. at 485.)           Pursuant to this
    conclusion, the district court held that “even despite the fact
    that [Mellon] as a transfer agent has no recourse under the
    warranty provisions of section 8-108, [Mellon]’s right to common
    law remedies has been displaced by Article 8’s comprehensive
    remedial scheme.”         (J.A. at 485); see also Okey, 812 F.2d at 909
    (indicating that specific provisions may displace common law when
    the U.C.C. “comprehensively covers the field of legal theories
    available”); Yahn & McDonnell, Inc. v. Farmers Bank of Del., 
    708 F.2d 104
    ,   113   (3d    Cir.   1983)    (“[W]here   the   Code   provides   a
    comprehensive remedy for parties to a transaction, a common law
    action is barred.         But a remedy in tort will be recognized where
    the Code’s policy is furthered by placing the risk of loss on the
    party most able to minimize that risk.” (internal quotation marks
    and    citation     omitted));    N.J.     Bank,   N.A.   v.   Bradford   Sec.
    14
    Operations, Inc., 
    690 F.2d 339
    , 346 (3d Cir. 1982)(same in Article
    8 context).
    We disagree with the district court’s conclusion on this
    issue.       Insofar    as    Mellon    has    brought   claims   for    equitable
    subrogation and common-law indemnity, there is a presumption that
    the U.C.C. does not displace claims based in equity.11               Adkinson v.
    Int’l Harvester Co., 
    975 F.2d 208
    , 213 (5th Cir. 1992) (“[W]ith
    regard to equitable principles, the presumption appears to be
    against displacement. . . . Code sections do not occupy the equity
    field. Rather, general equitable principles remain largely intact,
    for   they    are   only     rarely     particularly     displaced.”     (internal
    quotation marks and citations omitted)). Moreover, aside from this
    presumption, there is no “particular provision” in Article 8 that
    displaces Mellon’s equitable claims for subrogation and indemnity.
    Likewise,     there    is    no    provision   in   Article   8   that   displaces
    Mellon’s common-law tort claim for negligent misrepresentation. In
    our view, the remedial scheme in Article 8 cannot be considered
    “comprehensive” when transfer agents are provided with no remedies
    at all under the Code.            We therefore conclude that Article 8 of the
    U.C.C. does not displace Mellon’s equitable and common-law claims.
    11
    Common-law indemnity is “an equitable doctrine that allows
    a court to shift the cost from one tortfeasor to another.” Harley
    Davidson Motor Co. v. Advanced Die Casting, Inc., 
    696 A.2d 666
    , 670
    (N.J. 1997).
    15
    B.
    Because we may affirm a dismissal for any reason in the
    record, Catawba Indian Tribe of S.C. v. City of Rock Hill, 
    501 F.3d 368
    , 372 n.4 (4th Cir. 2007), however, it remains for us to decide
    whether Mellon has stated any claims for relief under New Jersey
    law    based    on     equitable    subrogation,    indemnity,       and   negligent
    misrepresentation.         We will address each claim in turn.
    1.
    First,     we    turn   to    Mellon’s    claim     against    Longwood   for
    equitable subrogation, which permits a person who has discharged
    another’s debt to succeed to the rights and position of the
    satisfied creditor under certain circumstances.                      73 Am. Jur. 2d
    Subrogation § 5 (2001).            Mellon contends that it should be allowed
    to assert the warranty claim against Longwood under a theory of
    equitable subrogation because, in paying Fisher River’s state-court
    judgment, Mellon actually paid the debt of PFG, on whom the U.C.C.
    also    imposes      liability      for   the   wrongful    registration.        Even
    assuming that equity applies, however, Mellon, as a subrogee, would
    stand in the shoes of Fisher River, the subrogor Mellon paid, and
    not the shoes of PFG.          In that posture, Mellon would be equitably
    subrogated to Fisher River’s claims against PFG, but not PFG’s
    potential warranty claim against Longwood. Because Mellon chose to
    sue Longwood rather than PFG, we conclude that Mellon has failed to
    state a claim for equitable subrogation.
    16
    2.
    We next turn to Mellon’s indemnity claims. “[C]ommon law
    indemnification shifts the cost of liability from one who is
    constructively or vicariously liable to the tortfeasor who is
    primarily liable.”      Harley Davidson Motor Co. v. Advance Die
    Casting, Inc., 
    696 A.2d 666
    , 671 (N.J. 1997).              “The right of
    indemnity . . . enures to a person who, without active fault on his
    own part, has been compelled, by reason of some legal obligation,
    to pay damages occasioned by the initial negligence of another, and
    for which he himself is only secondarily liable.” Adler’s Quality
    Bakery, Inc. v. Gaseteria, Inc., 
    159 A.2d 97
    , 110 (N.J. 1960)
    (internal quotation marks omitted) (indemnity claim by aircraft
    owners on whom statute imposed strict liability).         In other words,
    to recover indemnification, a party must not be “personally at
    fault.”   Stephenson v. R.A. Jones & Co., 
    510 A.2d 1161
    , 1164 (N.J.
    1986).    Here, § 8-404 imposed strict liability on Mellon for
    registering   a   transfer   without    an   effective   instruction,   and
    Mellon alleges that if it committed any wrong, the wrong was merely
    “secondary” to Longwood’s negligence. Although a court could later
    conclude after hearing all the evidence that Mellon was in fact
    negligent in giving Smith the confidential account key and thus was
    personally at fault (on this issue, we express no opinion), for the
    17
    purposes of a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, Mellon’s complaint
    has stated claims for indemnity.12
    3.
    Finally, to state a claim for negligent misrepresentation, the
    plaintiff must establish (1) that the defendant negligently made an
    incorrect   statement   of   past   or   existing   fact,   (2)   that   the
    plaintiff justifiably relied on it, and (3) that his reliance
    caused a loss or injury.     Kaufman v. i-Stat Corp., 
    754 A.2d 1188
    ,
    1195 (N.J. 2000).   In its complaint, Mellon asserts that Longwood
    is liable for the negligent misrepresentations of its agent Smith.
    Rather than argue that Mellon has failed to allege any required
    element of negligent misrepresentation, Longwood contends that
    Smith, acting as Longwood’s attorney, was an independent contractor
    and not its agent and that Longwood thus cannot be held liable for
    Smith’s negligent misrepresentations.        Longwood’s argument fails,
    however, because although lawyers are independent contractors, an
    independent contractor may or not be an agent.       JMB Enters. v. Atl.
    12
    Longwood argues that Mellon’s indemnity claim based on
    conversion must fail because, as Mellon argued in state court,
    uncertificated securities are general intangibles that cannot be
    converted.    Longwood further argues that Mellon may not claim
    indemnity for conversion of the proceeds because Mellon had no
    property right in the proceeds to support a conversion claim. Even
    assuming that uncertificated securities may not be converted, we
    find that Mellon has established a cognizable claim for indemnity
    based   on   Longwood’s  conversion   of   the  proceeds   of  the
    uncertificated securities because it is Longwood’s conversion of
    the proceeds, not Mellon’s, that is at issue in the indemnity
    claim.   Mellon needs no possessory interest in the proceeds to
    assert its indemnity claim.
    18
    Employers Ins. Co., 
    550 A.2d 764
    , 767 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div.
    1988).    Whether an agency relationship exists is ordinarily a
    question of fact within the province of the jury.        Antonio v.
    Edwards, 
    74 A.2d 307
    , 308 (N.J. 1950).      Thus, although a court
    could find that Mellon’s negligence limits or bars its recovery,
    for purposes of a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, Mellon has
    stated a claim for negligent misrepresentation.
    IV.
    Based on the foregoing, we find that Mellon has failed to
    state a claim either for breach of the originator’s warranty under
    
    Del. Code Ann. tit. 6, § 8-108
    (e) or for equitable subrogation, and
    we thus affirm the district court’s dismissal of Counts I and III.13
    Because we find that Mellon has indeed stated claims for negligent
    misrepresentation and indemnity, however, we reverse the district
    court’s dismissal of Counts II, IV, and V.        Accordingly, the
    judgment of the district court is
    AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.
    13
    Mellon requested summary judgment only on Count I (Breach of
    Originator’s Warranty) as supplemented by Count III (Equitable
    Subrogation) and by PFG’s assignment to Mellon of its claim against
    Longwood. Because we conclude that the district court correctly
    dismissed Mellon’s U.C.C. claim as well as its claims based on
    equitable subrogation and assignment, we, like the district court,
    conclude that these issues are moot.
    19