Recently a Connecticut State Court granted the entirety of a Request to Revise filed by Pastore and Dailey in its defense of a major world-wide insurance company, denying all of the plaintiff’s objections to the motion. The claims involve an incentive stock plan.
Tag: Firm Victory
Commercial Litigation Victory
Pastore & Dailey successfully defended against multiple rounds of dispositive motions seeking the dismissal of a complaint filed in California state court against certain former officers and directors of a publicly traded company, as well as prevailed in motion practice seeking the dismissal of certain of defendants’ counter-claims. The defendants in this action were represented by a prominent national firm, and were alleged to have, among other things, breached their duties owed to the company, and committed corporate waste, during their time as directors and/or officers. Subsequent to prevailing at the dispositive motion stage of the litigation, a favorable settlement was obtained on behalf of the client corporation.
Dispositive Motions Win
Pastore & Dailey recently prevailed on behalf of Plaintiff after oral arguments against Defendant’s dispositive motions seeking the dismissal of a complaint filed in California state court against certain former directors and officers of a publicly-traded company. The defendants in this action were represented by a prominent nation firm, and are alleged to have, among other things, breached their duties owed to the company, and committed corporate waste, during their time as directors and/or officers.
PJR Victory in NYS Supreme Court
Pastore & Dailey recently obtained a preliminary injunction in NYS Supreme Court (New York County) against 2 ex-employees of a financial services firm (including a FINRA member firm), ordering them to abide by non-solicitation clauses (of customers and fellow employees) in their employment agreements. The injunction lasts for one year from the termination date of the employees’ employment.
TRO Victory in NYS Supreme Court
Pastore & Dailey recently obtained a rare temporary restraining order in NYS Supreme Court (New York County) for a financial services employer (including a FINRA member firm) against 4 ex-employees and their new employer to enforce the restrictive covenants (including non-solicitation of employees and customers clauses).
$3MM DECD Approval
Pastore & Dailey’s transactional team successfully concluded a $3 million loan financing transaction on behalf of client NewOak Capital, a specialized financial advisory firm based in New York City that provides consulting, analysis, and technology services to global banks, insurance companies, asset owners, and regulators. The financing was provided by the State of Connecticut Department of Economic and Community Development (DECD) in connection with NewOak’s $13 million relocation project which established its credit services division, NewOak Credit Services, now located in the Matrix Corporate Center in Danbury, Connecticut. Under the terms of the loan, the company plans to create up to 50 jobs during its first year and up to 100 jobs within three years.
Pastore & Dailey Wins Motion to Dismiss for National Financial Services Client
Recently a Memorandum of Decision was issued granting a Motion to Dismiss in an action involving one of Pastore & Dailey’s financial services clients. Below is a summary of the well written decision by Judge Spatt.
The plaintiff alleged claims under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (“FDCPA”) and the New York General Business Law § 349, as well as common law causes of action. On behalf of the defendant, a major national credit provider, we filed a Motion to Dismiss pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, which was granted by the court.
The District Court first addressed whether the defendant qualified as a debt collector under the FDCPA, and found that it did not. The FDCPA prohibits deceptive and misleading practice by “debt collectors” and defines debt collectors as those engaged in “any business the principal purpose of which is the collection of any debts.” Creditors, however, are defined as “any person who offers or extends credit creating a debt or to whim a debt is owed.” The defendant is a creditor under the statute and the FDCPA limits its application to debt collectors.
The distinction between debt collectors and creditors under the FDCPA has one exception however; it is referred to as the “false name” exception. The false name exception is when a creditor attempts to collect its own debt by using “any name other than his own which would indicate that a third person is collecting or attempting to collect such debts.” 15 U.S.C. § 1692a(6). This would mean a creditor could be liable under the FDCPA if they were to use a pseudonym or alias in attempting to collect their debts.
The plaintiff attempted to assert that the defendant’s conduct fell under the false name exception because under the facts proffered by the plaintiff, the defendant allegedly held themselves out to be someone else in communicating with a third party. The court rejected this theory of liability.
The false name standard has been found to be whether “the least sophisticated consumer would have the false impression that a third party was attempted collect the debt.” Maguire v. Citicorp Retail Services, 147 F.3d 232, 236 (2d Cir. 1998). It was apparent that the defendant never utilized a false name in communicating with the consumer plaintiff, and under the Maguire standard, a court must look to the communications with the debtor to determine whether the false name exception applies. Defendant’s communications with the debtor were not misleading or under a false name.
Thus, the Court concluded that Defendant was not a debt collector under the FDCPA, despite the false name exception, and accordingly granted our Motion to Dismiss the FDCPA causes of action.
After granting our Motion on the above grounds, The District Court also considered the additional reasons asserted for why the Plaintiff’s claims failed. Even if our client was considered a debt collector, Plaintiff’s claims under Section 1692e of the FDCPA failed because the communications from Defendant’s offices were nothing more than attempts to learn the correct contact information for Plaintiff’s attorney, rather than any false representations or deceptive attempts to collect a debt. The District Court found our position meritorious as to Plaintiff’s claims under Sections 1692e(9) and(10), stating that even if the defendant were a debt collector, those claims would be dismissed for failure to state a claim. The Court found that “once again the Plaintiff has failed to provide any authority for the theory that a debt collector can be liable for communications made to a party that is not the debtor, even though tangentially related to the collection of the debt.” (Memorandum of Decision, p. 13).
The District Court declined to address any of the state or common law causes of action.
DECD Small Business Express Program Financing Transaction
In April 2013, Pastore & Dailey’s transactional team successfully concluded a combination grant and loan financing transaction on behalf of a New Haven based manufacturer serving the aerospace industry. The transaction was completed in connection with the recently established State of Connecticut Department of Economic and Community Development (DECD) Small Business Express Program which seeks to provide the maximum return on investments to state taxpayers in the form of job creation and capital investment. The DECD funding will play a key role in the expansion and modernization of our client’s manufacturing facility located in New Haven, Connecticut as well as the creation of a number of new full-time jobs in Connecticut.
Connecticut Complex Litigation
On October 16, 2012, the Connecticut Superior Court denied motions to dismiss filed by separate defendants in response to an amended complaint filed by our client, a 1031 Exchange Company. Each defendant (one a large banking institution and the other, a top nationwide law firm) filed motions seeking to have the suit dismissed on, among others, the grounds of forum non conveniens and improper venue. The amended complaint alleged that both the bank and the law firm violated multiple laws by withholding evidence in a prior civil suit filed against our client, who assists with Section 1031 like kind exchanges. As a result of the alleged withholding of key evidence, our client was held liable in Massachusetts state court for a substantial amount of money for improperly trading funds that were to be conservatively invested for its Section 1031 clients. Instead of assisting our client with the conservative investment strategy, the bank in question allegedly encouraged our client to engage in risky trading of the funds. Not only did the bank allegedly encourage the risky trading when it knew it should not have, but, their attorneys, with the bank’s aid, allegedly withheld the evidence needed to exculpate our client. Because the evidence was allegedly withheld and some of it was allegedly destroyed, our client was held liable in Massachusetts state court for the risky trading and a judgment entered against it. The alleged actions of our client led to criminal trials in Massachusetts and ultimately, two convictions, which have subsequently been overturned. Had the bank not allegedly encouraged our client to make such risky trades when the bank was allegedly aware that the invested funds were to be conservatively traded and had the bank and its law firm not allegedly concealed and destroyed evidence, our client would not have been found liable to the 1031 investors for certain damages and no criminal trials would have ensued. Thus, the amended complaint asserted twenty causes of action against the bank and the law firm, which causes of action include indemnification, contribution, unjust enrichment, intentional spoliation of evidence, breach of fiduciary duty and many others.
The case is pending on the Connecticut Superior Court’s Complex Litigation Docket. In his opinion, Judge William Bright, when considering all of the elements needed for a forum non conveniens dismissal, noted that Connecticut would indeed be a proper forum for this action despite the years of litigation that took place in Massachusetts between the parties. Finally, Judge Bright found defendants’ contention that venue is inappropriate unpersuasive. Thus, after a decade of litigation in Massachusetts against the 1031 exchange, the bank and the law firm, our client now has the opportunity to litigate in Connecticut, its home state, and can take discovery of various parties that it has not been able to for the years in question.
Success Systems Inc. v. Tammerica Lynn et al.
In a recent decision, handed down on October 10, 2012, the U.S. District Court of Connecticut denied a motion to vacate a judgment, which judgment was initially entered in our client’s favor in April 2010. The lawsuit was originally filed by our client in the U.S. District Court of Connecticut in 2006. After the defendant failed to appear and after a hearing in damages, the Court finally entered the judgment in 2010. We then successfully registered the judgment in the District of Massachusetts (in an effort to collect on the judgment via seizure or property and assets). Subsequently, the defendant sprang to life and filed motions to vacate the judgments in both the District Court of Connecticut and the District Court of Massachusetts. Because the District of Connecticut was the original court, Massachusetts deferred taking action until the District Court of Connecticut rendered its decision. The District Court of Connecticut ordered discovery and ultimately, a hearing on the merits. After discovery closed and on the eve of the hearing, we filed a motion to compel the production of certain documents and information due to the defendant’s evasiveness throughout the discovery process. The Court ultimately granted the motion to compel in full and awarded all attorneys’ fees in preparing and filing the motion. After the hearing, Judge Donna Martinez denied defendant’s motion to vacate, giving our client yet another victory in the years long legal battle to recover monies rightfully owed to it.