Grede v. Bank of New York Mellon Corp. (In Re Sentinel Management Group, Inc.) , 809 F.3d 958 ( 2016 )


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  •                                In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________________
    No. 15-1039
    IN RE SENTINEL MANAGEMENT GROUP, INC.,
    Debtor.
    ____________________
    FREDERICK J. GREDE, as Liquidation Trustee of the
    Sentinel Liquidation Trust,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON CORP. and BANK OF
    NEW YORK,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    ____________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
    No. 08 C 2582 — James B. Zagel, Judge.
    ____________________
    ARGUED NOVEMBER 10, 2015— DECIDED JANUARY 8, 2016
    ____________________
    Before POSNER, EASTERBROOK, and ROVNER, Circuit Judges.
    2                                                   No. 15-1039
    POSNER, Circuit Judge. The plaintiff in this case, now in its
    eighth year, is the trustee of a bankrupt firm named Sentinel
    Management Group, Inc. Sentinel was what is called a cash-
    management firm: it invested cash, which had been lent it by
    persons or firms, in liquid low-risk securities. It also traded
    on its own account, using money borrowed from Bank of
    New York Mellon Corp. and Bank of New York (affiliates
    usually referred to jointly as BNYM) to finance the trades.
    BNYM required that its loans be secured by its borrowers, of
    whom Sentinel was one. Not owning enough assets to pro-
    vide the required security, however, Sentinel pledged securi-
    ties that it had bought for its customers with their money
    even though its loans from BNYM were used for trading on
    its own account—improperly. Federal law (7 U.S.C.
    §§ 6d(a)(2), 6d(b)), as well as the contracts between Sentinel
    and its customers, required the securities to be held in segre-
    gated accounts, that is, accounts separated from Sentinel’s
    own assets. Sentinel was forbidden to pledge the assets in
    the segregated accounts to BNYM as security for BNYM’s
    loans to it.
    In August 2007, with the securities markets becoming
    shaky (the following year, the year of the financial crash,
    segments of these markets would be even shakier), Sentinel
    experienced trading losses that prevented it from both main-
    taining its collateral with BNYM and meeting the demands
    of its customers for redemption of the securities that Sentinel
    had bought with their assets. Sentinel used its line of credit
    with BNYM to meet those demands. By June 2007 its loan
    balance with BNYM was $573 million; two months later it
    halted redemptions to its customers and declared bankrupt-
    cy, owing BNYM $312 million. A BNYM executive notified
    Sentinel that because of its inability to repay the bank’s loan
    No. 15-1039                                                  3
    the bank planned to liquidate the collateral that Sentinel had
    pledged to secure the loan. The bankruptcy trustee (Grede,
    the plaintiff in our case) believed that the liquidation would
    deny Sentinel’s customers more than $500 million in re-
    demptions. He refused to classify the bank as a senior se-
    cured creditor with respect to the $312 million that the bank-
    rupt Sentinel owed it. He considered the transfers of cus-
    tomer assets to accounts that Sentinel could (and did) use to
    collateralize its loans from BNYM to be fraudulent transfers,
    unlawful under 
    11 U.S.C. § 548
    (a)(1)(A).
    The bank would have been in the clear had it accepted
    the pledge of the assets “in good faith,” 
    11 U.S.C. § 548
    (c),
    but it would not have been acting in good faith had it had
    what’s called “inquiry notice.” In re Sentinel Management
    Group, Inc., 
    728 F.3d 660
    , 668 n. 2 (7th Cir. 2013). The term
    signifies awareness of suspicious facts that would have led a
    reasonable firm, acting diligently, to investigate further and
    by doing so discover wrongdoing. In re M & L Business Ma-
    chine Co., 
    84 F.3d 1330
    , 1335–38 (10th Cir. 1996); In re Sher-
    man, 
    67 F.3d 1348
    , 1355 (8th Cir. 1995); In re Agricultural Re-
    search & Technology Group, Inc., 
    916 F.2d 528
    , 535–36 (9th Cir.
    1990). The trustee believed that officials of BNYM had been
    aware of suspicious facts that should have led them to inves-
    tigate, and that an investigation would have revealed that
    the bank could not in good faith accept assets of Sentinel’s
    customers as security for the bank’s loans to Sentinel.
    The district judge conducted a seventeen-day bench trial
    that convinced him that Sentinel was in the clear—that it had
    not been shown to have intended to defraud its customers,
    in violation of 
    11 U.S.C. § 548
    (a)(1)(A), when it transferred
    their segregated funds into clearing accounts, where they
    4                                                  No. 15-1039
    became collateral for the bank’s loans to Sentinel. He there-
    fore dismissed the trustee’s claim against the bank. A panel
    of this court reversed, however, holding that Sentinel had
    made fraudulent transfers and instructing the district judge
    to decide on remand whether BNYM had been on inquiry
    notice in its dealings with Sentinel. In re Sentinel Management
    Group, Inc., supra, 728 F.3d at 666–68.
    But on remand the judge neither conducted an eviden-
    tiary hearing nor made additional findings. Instead he is-
    sued what he called a “supplemental opinion” intended
    merely to “clarify” his “prior opinion and findings of fact.”
    He “incorporate[d] by reference [his] earlier opinion on the
    merits and the Seventh Circuit’s opinion” that had reversed
    the earlier decision, without explaining how he could incor-
    porate both an opinion that had been reversed and the opin-
    ion reversing it.
    The supplemental opinion reveals a misunderstanding of
    the concept of inquiry notice. The opinion suggests that the
    bank, as long as it did not believe that Sentinel had pledged
    customers’ assets to secure its loans without the customers’
    permission, was entitled to accept that security for its loans
    without any investigation. That’s incorrect, because inquiry
    notice is not knowledge of fraud or other wrongdoing but
    merely knowledge that would lead a reasonable, law-
    abiding person to inquire further—would make him in other
    words suspicious enough to conduct a diligent search for
    possible dirt. See In re Sentinel Management Group, Inc., supra,
    728 F.3d at 668 n. 2; In re M & L Business Machine Co., Inc.,
    supra, 
    84 F.3d at 1338
    .
    That the bank had information that should have created
    the requisite suspicion is illustrated by a note of Mark Rog-
    No. 15-1039                                                    5
    ers, the bank’s Managing Director of Financial Institutions
    Credit, to other employees of the bank who like him worked
    on the Sentinel account. Rogers was responding to a mes-
    sage, from one of those other employees, that had listed Sen-
    tinel’s collateral. The list puzzled Rogers. He responded:
    “How can they [i.e., Sentinel] have so much collateral? With
    less than $20MM [i.e., 20 million dollars] in capital I have to
    assume most of this collateral is for somebody else’s benefit.
    Do we really have rights on the whole $300MM?” (Actually
    the “$20MM in capital” to which Rogers referred was incor-
    rect; the correct figure was between $2 and $3 million.) The
    “somebody else” is an obvious reference to Sentinel’s cus-
    tomers, owners of the accounts held by Sentinel; it was their
    money that was being used—improperly—to secure the
    bank’s loans to Sentinel. Rogers’ puzzlement was enough,
    given his position in the bank, to place the bank on inquiry
    notice and thus require it to conduct an investigation of
    what Sentinel was using to secure a $300 million debt when
    it had capital of no more than $3 million.
    He received a nonresponsive answer to the question in
    his note: “We have a clearing agreement [with Sentinel]
    which gives us a full lien on the box position outlined be-
    low.” There was no further inquiry.
    The district judge said that “Rogers did not claim he
    knew or believed that all the collateral was for somebody
    else’s benefit.” True, but he was suspicious, and that was
    enough to place him on notice of a possible fraud and so re-
    quire that he or others at the bank investigate. In fact it was
    more than enough. Notice that because of the recipient’s ob-
    tuseness fails to trigger suspicion is nevertheless sufficient to
    create inquiry notice because all that is required to trigger it
    6                                                 No. 15-1039
    is information that would cause a reasonable person to be
    suspicious enough to investigate.
    The district judge acknowledged that the bank had in its
    possession documents that would show, on even a casual
    perusal, that Sentinel lacked authority to pledge all the as-
    sets that it pledged to the bank to secure the bank’s loans to
    it. But he said that the bank wasn’t required to conduct an
    investigation because there were no “grounds to believe that
    [the] bank should have known of the misconduct of its bor-
    rower.” BNYM had Sentinel’s assurances that it “was al-
    lowed to use client[s’] segregated funds as collateral,” and
    on the basis of those assurances the judge concluded that
    “any inquiry BNYM might have made would likely have
    been fruitless, as BNYM believed, even to its own detriment,
    the lies” told by Sentinel’s CEO. But Rogers had a reason to
    disbelieve Sentinel’s assurances, and an investigation would
    have discovered their falsity.
    The district judge noted that Rogers “came closer to an
    affirmative statement when he ‘assumed’ that most of the
    collateral was for somebody else’s benefit, but this too was
    not an assertion of belief or knowledge.” But the assumption
    was at least a suspicion, based on evidence, and it should
    have prompted an investigation.
    The judge went on to say that “assuming arguendo that
    Rogers knew, rather than guessed, that some portion of the
    collateral was posted for the benefit of insiders, he did not
    assume that all of it came from the accounts of Sentinel’s cli-
    ents.” But if some of it did, and Rogers knew it, he knew
    there was fraud. Again the judge missed the point when he
    said that the bank “neither knew nor turned a blind eye to
    the improper actions of Sentinel.” Knowing or turning a
    No. 15-1039                                                      7
    blind eye (refusing to look because of what you fear to see)
    would have made the bank guilty of fraud, but was not re-
    quired to establish inquiry notice. And while the judge may
    have been correct when he said that “mere negligence—or
    ineptitude—is insufficient to establish inequitable conduct,”
    it would suffice for inquiry notice.
    He said there was no evidence that anyone agreed with
    Rogers that there was something fishy about the security for
    the bank’s loan to Sentinel. We don’t believe it. The bank
    had lent approximately $300 million to a company that had
    capital equal to roughly 1/150th of that amount. Yet the com-
    pany had been able to secure the entire loan. Where could
    that security have come from? The obvious place was the
    company’s customer accounts. The bank’s failure to follow
    this obvious lead was a failure to act on inquiry notice.
    Recall that the district judge in the opinion under review
    incorporated his earlier opinion—the one this court had re-
    versed—and by incorporating it adopted the findings in it.
    Those findings actually prove inquiry notice. We quote a few
    passages from the opinion, Grede v. Bank of New York Mellon,
    
    441 B.R. 864
     (N.D. Ill. 2010):
    “[T]he evidence at trial revealed the Bank’s knowledge
    that Sentinel insiders were using at least some of the loan
    proceeds for their own purposes.” 
    Id. at 883
    .
    “BNYM had Sentinel’s audited financial statements … .
    [T]he 2005 financial statements showed customer securities
    ‘segregated and held in trust’ to be approximately $1.14
    billion, but that approximately $156 million of this total
    was pledged as collateral for a $280 million short-term
    bank loan. [Terence] Law [a BNYM client executive] and
    [Joseph] Ciacciarelli [who oversaw BNYM’s relationship
    8                                                       No. 15-1039
    with Sentinel], both of whom reviewed these monthly
    statements [and were recipients of Rogers’ note], admitted
    that securities pledged as collateral could not simultane-
    ously be held in segregation. Moreover … the difference
    between the amount of assets listed as ‘funds segregated
    or in separate accounts …’ and Sentinel’s total assets was
    never more than approximately $15 million. Therefore, in
    order for Sentinel to pledge collateral in excess of that dif-
    ference, it would have to use assets that had been held in
    segregation and then removed from segregation to allow
    them to be pledged.” 
    Id. at 889
     (footnote omitted).
    “Rogers’ [note] is certainly evidence that he had a suspi-
    cion that the securities were not Sentinel’s to pledge and he
    shared this suspicion with Law,” who of course did noth-
    ing. 
    Id. at 890
    .
    “The team [Rogers et al.] knew that same-day liquidity
    was part of Sentinel’s agreement with its customers, which
    also suggests that Sentinel may not have had the right to
    pledge customer assets.” 
    Id.
     (That’s an understatement;
    had Sentinel pledged customer assets to secure its loan
    from the bank, how could it transfer those assets to the
    customers in a day?)
    “It is clear to me that before June 13, 2009, certain BNYM
    employees had suspicions that Sentinel may not have
    rights to the collateral” for the bank’s loan. 
    Id.
     (What more
    need be said?) “Members of the Sentinel team also had ac-
    cess to forms … which, with relatively cursory review, re-
    vealed that Sentinel was violating its segregation [of cus-
    tomer assets] requirements.” 
    Id.
    “I have little doubt that BNYM should have looked further
    into whether Sentinel had the right to pledge the securities.
    BNYM employees were careless in protecting their own in-
    terests.” 
    Id. at 891
    .
    No. 15-1039                                                        9
    “The facts demonstrate that by the middle of June, at least
    one BNYM employee [Rogers] was suspicious, and others
    should have known that Sentinel was violating segregation
    requirements. In light of such notice, it is difficult to see
    how reliance on Sentinel’s representations and warranties
    contained in the clearing agreement is objectively appro-
    priate.” 
    Id. at 892
    .
    Enough! As we said, the district judge found inquiry no-
    tice—over and over again—without realizing it. But in fair-
    ness to the judge, the first panel’s opinion may have been
    unduly deferential in remanding this issue rather than re-
    versing outright. The panel had noted correctly that “
    11 U.S.C. § 548
    (a)(1)(A) allows the avoidance of any transfer of
    an interest in the debtor’s property if the debtor made the
    transfer ‘with actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud’ an-
    other creditor,” and that “Grede claims that the transfers of
    customer assets out of segregation and into the lienable ac-
    counts (which Sentinel used as collateral for its overnight
    loans from Bank of New York) in June and July 2007 consti-
    tuted fraudulent transfers under 
    11 U.S.C. §§ 548
    (a)(1)(A) &
    544(b), and should thus be avoided.” In re Sentinel Manage-
    ment Group, Inc., supra, 728 F.3d at 666–67. But even though
    the panel agreed with Grede that Sentinel had made fraudu-
    lent transfers, it remarked in a footnote that “the district
    court needs to clarify on remand what exactly the Bank
    knew before Sentinel’s collapse. But based on the record cur-
    rently before us, we suspect that the Bank will have a very
    difficult time proving that it was not on inquiry notice of
    Sentinel’s possible insolvency.” Id. at 668 n. 2. The district
    judge had, as we’ve seen, found fact after fact showing that
    the bank had indeed been on inquiry notice. There was no
    need to remand for further findings on that issue.
    10                                                 No. 15-1039
    The second issue, to which we now turn, presented by
    the trustee’s appeal is whether the bank’s conduct was suffi-
    ciently egregious to justify application of the doctrine of eq-
    uitable subordination, which allows a bankruptcy court to
    reduce the priority of a claim in bankruptcy. Id. at 669–72; 
    11 U.S.C. § 510
    (c)(1). Even though the bank’s secured claim
    goes down the drain because it was on inquiry notice of Sen-
    tinel’s fraud, it still has an unsecured claim in bankruptcy—a
    claim for the money it lost when Sentinel failed to repay the
    bank’s loan to it of $312 million. The question is whether its
    claim is to be subordinated to other claims, which would
    normally be subordinate to its claim. The first panel’s opin-
    ion wrestled inconclusively with the question of how serious
    the bank’s misconduct had to be to justify reducing the pri-
    ority of the bank’s bankruptcy claim. It reversed the district
    judge’s rejection of the trustee’s argument for equitable sub-
    ordination and remanded the case for the district judge to
    clarify his factual findings regarding the extent of the bank’s
    knowledge of wrongdoing. On remand the district judge
    adhered to his original position.
    The statute authorizing equitable subordination does not
    indicate what conduct justifies that Draconian remedy, but
    there is general agreement in the case law that the defend-
    ant’s conduct must be not only “inequitable” but seriously
    so (“egregious,” “tantamount to fraud,” and “willful” are
    the most common terms employed) and must harm other
    creditors. See, e.g., Carhart v. Carhart-Halaska Int’l, LLC, 
    788 F.3d 687
    , 692 (7th Cir. 2015); In re Kreisler, 
    546 F.3d 863
    , 866
    (7th Cir. 2008); In re Granite Partners, L.P., 
    210 B.R. 508
    , 515
    (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 1997). Other creditors (that is, creditors oth-
    er than the bank) were harmed by the bank’s accepting the
    accounts of Sentinel’s customers as security for its loan.
    No. 15-1039                                                    11
    Could that acceptance be thought tantamount to fraud, thus
    justifying the remedy of equitable subordination? That
    would require that the bank believed there was a high prob-
    ability of fraud and acted deliberately to avoid confirming
    its suspicion. E.g., Global-Tech Appliances, Inc. v. SEB S.A., 
    131 S. Ct. 2060
    , 2070–71 (2011). But we agree with the district
    judge that the trustee has not satisfied that high standard. To
    suspect potential wrongdoing yet not bother to seek confir-
    mation of one’s suspicion is negligent, and negligence has
    not been thought an adequate basis for imposing equitable
    subordination. See, e.g., In re Franklin Bank Corp., 
    526 B.R. 527
    , 534 (D. Del. 2014). For it is not “purposeful avoidance of
    the truth.” Harte-Hanks Communications, Inc. v. Connaughton,
    
    491 U.S. 657
    , 692 (1989) (emphasis added); see also Bullock v.
    Bankchampaign, N.A., 
    133 S. Ct. 1754
    , 1759–60 (2013); United
    States v. Macias, 
    786 F.3d 1060
    , 1061–64 (7th Cir. 2015). Rog-
    ers had suspicions that he should have followed up, as we
    said earlier. But he may have thought he’d done so when he
    communicated his suspicions to colleagues at the bank, and
    if so then at worst he was negligent.
    The trustee argues that refusing to decree equitable sub-
    ordination “would permit BNYM to lien securities it knew
    Sentinel was improperly pledging from segregation.” The
    key word is “knew,” and BNYM has not been proved to
    have known that Sentinel was securing the bank’s loans with
    customers’ money without their consent. The trustee also
    argues that “a duty of inquiry arises when a bank has notice
    of facts ‘sufficient to cause a reasonably prudent person to
    suspect that trust funds are being misappropriated.’” True,
    but that’s the inquiry-notice argument for forbidding the
    bank to retain its secured creditor status when it should have
    12                                                    No. 15-1039
    investigated Sentinel’s fraudulent use of its customer ac-
    counts to secure the bank’s loan to it; it is not proof of fraud.
    We close by noting briefly two more defenses to losing its
    status as a secured creditor that the bank presses on us. Sec-
    tion 550(b)(1) of the Bankruptcy Code creates a defense
    against the trustee’s recovering property from a firm that re-
    ceived a transfer otherwise avoidable under other sections of
    the Code but that gave value for the transfer in good faith.
    That provision has no application to this case. The transfer
    was the bank’s acquisition of a lien, consisting of the cus-
    tomers’ assets pledged by Sentinel to the bank, in violation
    of section 548. The trustee is not seeking recovery of those
    assets. See In re Burns, 
    322 F.3d 421
    , 427–28 (6th Cir. 2003).
    Section 550(d), the basis of the bank’s second defense,
    limits a trustee in bankruptcy to a single satisfaction of a
    debt owed the bankrupt estate. The district judge thought
    that granting the trustee the requested relief would result in
    “a windfall recovery of the millions loaned to Sentinel by
    BNYM plus the entire collateral that secured these loans,”
    because the trustee would have both the value of the loans
    that remained and the collateral (the customers’ assets that
    Sentinel pledged to the bank). No. The bank is still owed
    Sentinel’s debt to it. It has just lost its security interest. This
    does not give the trustee a double recovery. See In re Sky-
    walkers, Inc., 
    49 F.3d 546
    , 549 (9th Cir. 1995). The bank re-
    mains a creditor in the bankruptcy proceeding, but is an un-
    secured creditor because it was on inquiry notice that the as-
    sets that Sentinel had used to secure the bank’s loans had
    been fraudulently conveyed to the bank.
    No. 15-1039                                               13
    The judgment of the district court is affirmed in part and
    reversed in part, and the case remanded for further proceed-
    ings consistent with this decision.