Rounds v. Securities Invstr ( 2001 )


Menu:
  •                             IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    No. 00-51160
    (Summary Calendar)
    NORMAN P. ROUNDS,                                                                        Plaintiff-Counter Defendant-
    Appellant,
    versus
    SECURITIES INVESTOR                                                                      Defendant-Counter Cl aimant-
    PROTECTION CORPORATION,                                                                  Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Texas
    (No. EP-99-CA-115-H)
    October 15, 2001
    Before DAVIS, BENAVIDES, and STEWART, Circuit Judges.
    CARL E. STEWART, Circuit Judge:*
    Appellant Norman P. Rounds (“Rounds”) appeals from the district court’s entry of a
    declaratory judgment in favor of appellee, Securities Investor Protection Corporation (“SIPC”). For
    the following reasons, we affirm.
    * Pursuant to 5th CIR. R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not be published and is not precedent except
    under the limited circumstances set forth in 5th CIR. R. 47.5.4.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    In 1993, approximately twenty investors filed suit in El Paso, Texas (the “El Paso Plaintiffs”)
    against Ted McCormick (“McCormick”) claiming that they were defrauded in a Ponzi scheme. The
    investors also sued Consolidated Investment Services (“CIS”), the brokerage firm that licensed
    McCormick; Rounds, the principal of the brokerage firm; the Cavalier Group, Inc. (“Cavalier”), a
    related firm; Debra L. Werges (“Werges”), a CIS broker; and Kelly J. Coberly (“Coberly”), another
    CIS broker. A judgment for $8,728,248.31 was entered against Rounds, CIS, and Cavalier, jointly
    and severally (the “Judgment”).
    Subsequently, upon complaints of SIPC, a liquidation proceeding was commenced for CIS
    under the provisions of the Securities Investment Protection Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78aaa, et seq. (1997)
    (“SIPA”). Stephen E. Snyder was appoi nted as the trustee (the “Trustee”). Most of the El Paso
    Plaintiffs filed claims in the liquidation proceeding. SIPC made advances to the Trustee pursuant to
    SIPA, and the Trustee paid the El Paso Plaintiffs the allowed amount of their claims. In return, the
    El Paso Plaintiffs signed a Release and Assignment Agreement assigning SIPC a portion of the
    Judgment equal to the advances. As a result, SIPC owns $908,638.41 of the Judgment.
    On August 25, 1995, Rounds filed a legal malpractice suit against Mart in M. Berliner
    (“Berliner”) and R. Wayne Pritchard (“Pritchard”), the attorneys who represented him in the litigation
    with the El Paso Plaintiffs. Werges and Coberly intervened and asserted their own malpractice
    claims. The Trustee also asserted claims on behalf of the estate of CIS.
    On May 2, 1997, the El Paso Plaintiffs entered into two Standstill Agreements (the “Standstill
    Agreements”), one with Rounds, and the other with Werges and Coberly. Pursuant to the Standstill
    Agreements, Rounds, Werges, and Coberly agreed to pay the El Paso Plaintiffs one-half of any
    2
    recovery obtained from the malpractice litigation. In return, the El Paso Plaintiffs agreed to refrain
    from enforcing the Judgment for a period of time.
    On July 28, 1998, SIPC, the El Paso Plaintiffs, the Trustee, Werges, and Coberly entered into
    a settlement with Berliner and his firm (the “Berliner Settlement Agreement”). The Berliner
    Settlement Agreement provided that funds would be distributed as follows: (1) $150,000 to Werges,
    (2) $150,000 to Coberly, (3) $100,000 to SIPC, (4) $200,000 to the El Paso Plaintiffs, and (5)
    $1,000,000 to the Trustee. The $100,000 paid to SIPC was credited as a payment on SIPC’s portion
    of the Judgment; however, SIPC waived its right to the $200,000 received by the El Paso Plaintiffs,
    and to any recovery received by the El Paso Plaintiffs resulting from any settlement of the Pritchard
    malpractice litigation.
    In conjunction with the Berliner Settlement Agreement, the Trustee and the El Paso Plaintiffs
    entered into a Consent, Partial Assignment, Sharing, and Release Agreement (“Consent, Partial
    Assignment, Sharing, and Release Agreement”), which incorporated the Berliner Settlement
    Agreement, and bound the El Paso Plaintiffs to assign 50% of their remaining share of the Judgment
    to the Trustee. The El Paso Plaintiffs entered into this agreement so that they may receive the
    $200,000 promised to them under the Berliner Settlement Agreement.
    On November 12, 1998, Rounds, the Trustee, SIPC, Werges, and Coberly entered into a
    settlement with Pritchard (the “Pritchard Settlement Agreement”). The Pritchard Settlement
    Agreement provided that payments would be made as follows: (1) $150,000 to Rounds, (2)
    $186,666.66 to the Trustee, and (3) $373,333.34 to Werges and Coberly. Pursuant to the Standstill
    Agreements, Rounds paid $75,000, and Werges and Coberly paid $186,666.67 to the El Paso
    Plaintiffs. There was no provision for a payment to SIPC.
    3
    On January 4, 1999, Rounds entered into an Assignment Agreement (“January Assignment
    Agreement”) with the El Paso Plaintiffs. Pursuant to this agreement, Rounds paid the El Paso
    Plaintiffs $312,500, which were proceeds from Rounds’s settlement with Berliner. In return, the El
    Paso Plaintiffs transferred their remaining interest in the Judgment to Rounds. Rounds agreed that
    the $312,500 was not a payment or recovery on the Judgment or a credit on the Judgment.
    Rounds filed the instant action in the district court of El Paso County, Texas seeking
    declaratory relief. Rounds sought a declaration that (1) SIPC was not entitled to interest on its
    portion of the Judgment, and (2) the various payments made to the El Paso Plaintiffs should be
    credited towards SIPC’s portion of the Judgment. The case was thereafter removed to the Western
    District of Texas by SIPC, and SIPC filed a counterclaim seeking a declaration that its portion of the
    judgment remained unsatisfied. The district court entered declaratory relief in favor of SIPC.
    DISCUSSION
    Rounds argues that SIPC is not entitled to interest on its portion of the Judgment. In support
    of his argument, Rounds points to the following language in the Release and Assignment Agreement:
    “[the individual El Paso Plaintiff] hereby assigns and transfers to SIPC all rights, including any and
    all causes of action, judgments and actions to enforce such judgments . . . to the extent, and only to
    the extent of the Payments.” Release and Assignment Agreement ¶ 2. “Payment” is defined as the
    sum paid by SIPC to the El Paso Plaintiffs. 
    Id. ¶ 1.
    Rounds therefore concludes that SIPC’s
    assignment does not include interest as it is limited by the amount paid by the Trustee to the
    individual El Paso Plaintiff. We disagree.
    The purpose of post-judgment interest is to compensate the prevailing party for any delay in
    payment. Kaiser Aluminum & Chem. Corp. v. Bonjorno, 
    494 U.S. 827
    , 835-36 (1990). As the
    4
    district court correctly noted, a judgment assignee receives as part of an assignment “all the beneficial
    interest of the assignor in the judgment and all its incidents.” Casray Oil Corp. v. Royal Indem. Co.,
    
    165 S.W.2d 244
    , 248 (Tex. Civ. App. 1942). Since interest is an incident of the Judgment, SIPC is
    entitled to interest on its portion of the Judgment.
    Rounds next argues that the payments to the El Paso Plaintiffs (“Payments”) should be
    credited against the amount due to SIPC. The Payments that Rounds contends should be credited
    include: (1) the $200,000 paid to the El Paso Plaintiffs pursuant to the Berliner Settlement and
    Consent, Partial Assignment, Sharing, and Release Agreements, (2) the $75,000 paid by Rounds to
    the El Paso Plaintiffs pursuant to the Standstill and Pritchard Settlement Agreements, (3) the
    $186,666.66 paid by Werges and Coberly to the El Paso Plaintiffs pursuant to the Standstill and
    Pritchard Settlement Agreements, (4) the $312,500 paid by Rounds to the El Paso Plaintiffs under
    the January Assignment Agreement, (5) the $100,000 payment received by SIPC under the Berliner
    Settlement Agreement,2 and (6) the $18,000 paid to SIPC in conjunction with a separate settlement
    with Ms. Gloude. SIPC agrees that payments (5) and (6) are to be credited to its porti on of the
    Judgment. As such, they are not in contention.
    At the heart of this dispute is the language in the Release and Assignment Agreement, which
    provides that “any recovery, of any type or nature whatsoever, whether in the form of a settlement,
    judgment, execution, garnishment or otherwise, by or for the benefit of [the individual El Paso
    Plaintiff] . . . shall [be] paid and/or delivered to SIPC, immediately.” Release and Assignment
    Agreement ¶ 2. Since Rounds is not in privity of contract with the parties to the Release and
    2
    The district court mistakenly refers to this payment as being made to the Trustee. However, it is clear that this payment was
    made to SIPC. The Trustee received a separate payment of $1,000,000 under the Berliner Settlement Agreement.
    5
    Assignment Agreement, he cannot enforce SIPC’s right to obtain the Payments. Norris v. Housing
    Auth. of Galveston, 
    980 F. Supp. 885
    , 892 (S.D. Tex. 1997) (“In Texas, it is an elementary rule of
    law that privity of contract is an essential element of recovery in an action based on a contractual
    theory.”). However, Rounds attempts to circumvent this result by arguing that the Release and
    Assignment Agreement created a trust relationship between the El Paso Plaintiffs and SIPC. As such,
    he argues that the Payments were held in trust for SIPC by the El Paso Plaintiffs. We are not
    persuaded.
    A trust is created “only if the settlor properly manifests an intention to create a trust.”
    RESTATEMENT (SECOND)       OF   TRUSTS § 23 (1959). However, where there is merely a hope or
    expectation of receiving property in the future, a trust does not arise. 
    Id. § 86.
    Therefore, the
    Release and Assignment Agreement did not create a trust, for it involves the expectation of receiving
    property in the future.
    Moreover, there was no intent to create a trust when the Payments were received. With
    regard to the $186,666 and $75,000 paid to the El Paso Plaintiffs as a result of the settlement of the
    Pritchard malpractice claims, no trust could be formed because SIPC waived any right to that money.
    Berliner Settlement Agreement ¶ 9. In addition, the $312,500 paid to the El Paso Plaintiffs pursuant
    to the January Assignment Agreement could not be held in trust for SIPC because the El Paso
    Plaintiffs and Rounds agreed that the payment was not made on the Judgment. January Assignment
    Agreement ¶ 13(r),(s). In sum, no trust arose when the Payments were made because, at each time,
    it was agreed that the money was not a payment on the Judgment or that SIPC waived its rights to
    the money.
    6
    Rounds also contends that a letter from Eric Johnson (“Johnson”) to Carl Green, counsel to
    the El Paso Plaintiffs, contains a manifestation of an intent to create a trust. Rounds maintains that
    Johnson was counsel to SIPC, and the district court agreed. However, it appears that Johnson was
    the Trustee’s counsel. Regardless of whether Johnson was counsel to SIPC or the Trustee, this letter
    does not demonstrate an intention by the El Paso Plaintiffs to create a trust. Johnson cannot
    unilaterally create a trust for the benefit of SIPC. The El Paso Plaintiffs would need to exhibit the
    intent to create a trust because they are the only individuals that could be the settlors of any purported
    trust.
    Rounds relies heavily on In re Penn Central Transp. Co., 
    486 F.2d 519
    (3d Cir. 1973) to
    support his position that a trust relationship was created between SIPC and the El Paso Plaintiffs.
    
    Id. at 524
    (finding that when the language of the parties fails to indicate an intention to create a trust,
    intent may be ascertained by other objective manifestations). This case does not alter our analysis.
    In re Penn Central Transp. Co. merely stands for the proposition that a trust can be found based on
    the parties actions. 
    Id. In the
    instant suit, the actions of SIPC and the El Paso Plaintiffs negate the
    implication of a trust relationship for the reasons previously discussed.
    Further, the El Paso Plaintiffs and SIPC modified the rights established under the Release and
    Assignment Agreement when they signed the Berliner Settlement Agreement. Since Rounds was
    neither a third party beneficiary nor a party to the Release and Assignment Agreement, he cannot
    prevent the parties from exercising their right to modify that contract. Morgan v. Stover, 
    511 S.W.2d 362
    , 364 (Tex. Civ. App. 1974).
    Rounds next argues that when SIPC waived its right to collect payments arising out of the
    malpractice litigation against Berliner and Pritchard under the Berliner Settlement Agreement, this
    7
    extinguished a proportionate share of the Judgment. This argument fails as well. A waiver as to the
    El Paso Plaintiffs would not automatically eliminate Rounds’s obligation as a judgment debtor.
    Accordingly, SIPC’s waiver does not reduce its share of the Judgment.
    Rounds also attempts to rely on Rich v. Smith. 
    481 S.W.2d 162
    , 163 (Tex. Civ. App. 1972)
    (holding that a judgment may be extinguished when it is assigned to a co-judgm ent debtor). This
    reliance is misplaced because in Rich there was only one judgment creditor. As such, the court
    concluded that the assignment extinguished the judgment since the “antagonistic rights of creditor
    and debtor merge[d] in one and the same person.” 
    Id. In the
    instant action, both the El Paso
    Plaintiffs and SIPC were judgment creditors. After the El Paso Plaintiffs assigned their interest in the
    Judgment, SIPC remained an interested creditor. Therefore, the rights of creditor and debtor did not
    fully merge.
    Lastly, Rounds asserts that 15 U.S.C. § 78fff-3(a) (1997) supports his position. Section 78fff-
    3(5) provides that “[t]o the extent moneys are advanced by SIPC to the trustee to pay or otherwise
    satisfy the claims of customers . . . SIPC shall be subrogated to the claims of such customers.” 
    Id. Rounds urges
    this Court to apply this statute in a manner that absolves Rounds of his obligation to
    pay the Judgment. This defies the intended purpose of Section 78fff-3, which is to protect the SIPC.
    Consequently, this Court rejects this argument as well.
    CONCLUSION
    Accordingly, we AFFIRM the district court’s finding that the Payments should not be credited
    towards SIPC’s portion of the Judgment and that SIPC is entitled to interest on the same, and we
    DENY Rounds’s motion for declaratory relief.
    8