| Page 473 856 F.2d 473
Blue Sky L. Rep. P 72,901, Fed. Sec.
L. Rep. P 94,007 Daniel CAPRI, Stanley Machenberg,
Robert A. Epstein, Ronald
A. King, Paul A. Plotkin, Frederick
Gilchrist, Joseph D.
Waxberg, Victor Wall, Martin Fox, William
Capri, Gerard
Davis, Eve Kotkin, Sanford P. Young, James
L. Cohen, Bruce
Weale, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
Cross-Appellees,
v.
C. Gordon MURPHY, Greenwich Coal Associates,
Greenwich Coal
Company, Liberty Capital Group, Defendants
and
Third-Party Plaintiffs-Appellees, Cross-
Appellants,
v.
GATES ENGINEERING COMPANY, Third-Party
Defendant-Appellee. Nos. 1137, 1248, Dockets 88-7051,
88-7053. United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit. Argued June 2, 1988.
Decided Aug. 31, 1988.
Page 474
James R. Fogarty, Stamford, Conn.
(Andrew P. Nemiroff, Epstein & Fogarty,
Stamford, Conn., of counsel), for Capri, et
al.
Richard L. Albrecht, Bridgeport,
Conn. (Cohen & Wolf, P.C., Bridgeport,
Conn., of counsel), for Murphy, et al.
Page 475
Eugene A. Cooney, Hartford, Conn.
(Cooney, Scully & Dowling, Hartford, Conn.,
of counsel), for Gates Engineering Co.
Before KAUFMAN and MINER, Circuit
Judges, CONNER,
*
District Judge.
MINER, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiffs Daniel Capri, et al.,
and defendants-third-party plaintiffs C.
Gordon Murphy, et al., appeal from a
judgment of the United States District Court
for the District of Connecticut (Dorsey,
J.), imposing liability on defendants for
negligently promoting a coal-mining venture
and dismissing plaintiffs' claims under
federal and Connecticut securities laws as
well as the third-party claim against Gates
Engineering Company ("Gates") for
indemnification. For the reasons that
follow, we affirm the district court on the
negligence claim, reverse the court's
dismissal of plaintiffs' claims under
section 12(2) of the Securities Act of 1933
and Conn.Gen.Stat. Sec. 36-498(a), and
remand with instructions to enter judgment
against defendants Murphy and Greenwich Coal
Company, to make further factual findings
with respect to defendant Liberty Capital
Group, and to amend the determination of
plaintiffs' damages.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiffs invested $522,500 in
cash and notes as limited partners in
Greenwich Coal Associates ("GCA"), a
coalmining venture formed on December 29,
1977. GCA was intended to be a "year-end"
tax shelter, whose purpose was to mine coal
from property owned by Herbert and Effie
Pauley in West Virginia. Plaintiffs,
collectively, represented 45% of the
ownership interest in GCA. Defendant C.
Gordon Murphy, who had extensive experience
in developing and mining coal properties,
was one of two general partners in GCA and
owned 1% of the partnership. Defendant
Greenwich Coal Company, a corporation formed
on or about December 29, 1977, was the other
general partner in GCA, owning 49% of the
partnership. The remaining 5% interest was
owned by two investors who are not
plaintiffs here. For their 50% interest in
GCA, Murphy and Greenwich Coal Company
invested $125,000. Greenwich Coal Company,
in turn, was owned two-thirds by Liberty
Capital Group ("LCG"), a partnership
consisting of Murphy, Robert Reardon and
Marshall Brown, and one-third by Energy
Resources, a corporation whose stock was
owned by Robert Fain and Fain's law partners
and associates. Murphy, Reardon and Brown
all were experienced in owning, structuring
and managing coal properties. Fain, whose
law firm drafted the prospectus and
performed other legal work in connection
with the venture, also was President of
Greenwich Coal Company.
In November 1977, Liberty Capital
Group acquired two sixty-day options to
lease the Pauley property. The GCA general
partners set up the venture so that LCG
would exercise its option to lease the
Pauley property, and the Pauleys would
receive a royalty of 6% of the gross selling
price or an annual minimum royalty of
$24,000. LCG would then sublease the
property to GCA, and LCG would receive a
royalty of $3.00 per ton or an annual
minimum of $480,000. The LCG royalty was
intended to maximize the limited partners'
tax write-offs for 1977.
In early November, Murphy hired
Gates Engineering Company to determine the
economic feasibility of mining the property
and to recommend a plan for mining and
selling the coal. However, Gates never was
told of GCA's obligation to pay royalties, a
necessary factor in determining the economic
feasibility of the venture. Gates produced a
preliminary report ("Gates Report"), dated
December 10, 1977, which concluded that two
coal seams on the Pauley property were
"minable and merchantable." The Gates Report
projected a selling price of $45.00 per ton
for the "No. 2 Gas" seam and $22.50 per ton
for the "Stockton" seam. Gates later revised
the price of the
Page 476
"No. 2 Gas" seam to $33.50 per ton and
informed Murphy of the revision in February
1978. However, neither the original nor the
revised Gates Report reflected any expenses
for washing or selling the coal, which would
have adversely affected profitability.
The original Gates Report also
noted the need to construct a three-mile
road suitable for heavily-loaded trucks in
order to transport the coal; however, Murphy
failed to obtain an estimated cost for the
road construction and to assess the impact
of that cost prior to the closing of the
deal. The parties later discovered that the
road would cost up to $1.5 million, which
would substantially and adversely affect the
feasibility of the project. In addition,
Murphy knew of the recent enactment of the
Surface Mining Act of 1977 prior to the
closing and understood that this legislation
was a "drastic change in the law" which
"revolutionized" coal strip mining in the
United States. Nevertheless, the impact of
this legislation on the project never was
communicated to plaintiffs either personally
or in the prospectus.
In mid-December, Fain's law firm
prepared a draft prospectus. The prospectus
projected profits of between $409,000 and
$691,000 from the "Stockton" seam and
between $6,411,000 and $6,690,000 from the
"No. 2 Gas" seam. Although none of the
plaintiffs knew any specific facts about the
venture other than those stated in the
prospectus, all of the plaintiffs made
commitments, and six plaintiffs paid their
entire subscription costs, before the
prospectus ever was issued. None of the
plaintiffs had experience in the coal
business prior to investing in GCA. Each
plaintiff relied upon the representations of
Murphy, Reardon and Fain, as communicated by
Fain and Daniel Conover, regarding the
venture's potential. Conover was a former
partner in Fain's law firm. Many of these
same representations later were included in
the prospectus. From the beginning,
plaintiffs' primary motivation for investing
in the project was to obtain tax write-offs.
On December 29, 1977, LCG
exercised its option and entered into a
lease with the Pauleys, providing for
payments to the Pauleys commencing on
November 1, 1978. LCG subleased the property
to GCA, with royalty payments to LCG
commencing upon the closing. That day, GCA
paid LCG $480,000, but LCG defaulted on its
obligation to pay the minimum due the
Pauleys. LCG eventually paid the Pauleys a
total of $8,000, resulting in litigation
with the Pauleys and termination of the
lease.
Despite the parties' intentions,
the coal-mining venture never came to
fruition. Defendants had intended to hire an
operator to mine the coal, which would be
sold through Neville Coal Sales Company, a
corporation of which Liberty Capital Group
was a shareholder. Well into 1978, Murphy's
communications to the limited partners
reflected enthusiasm and optimism for the
project. However, GCA never mined any coal,
and the IRS subsequently disallowed the
limited partners' deductions for payments to
GCA, concluding that the project lacked
economic viability at inception. In December
1978, Murphy flagged most of the project's
problems in a letter to plaintiffs, but he
did not inform them of the project's
economic infeasibility until July 1979.
In December 1980, sixteen of the
seventeen limited partners instituted this
action, seeking recovery of their total
principal invested in GCA, plus interest,
punitive damages, costs and attorneys fees.
Plaintiffs' complaint alleged that GCA's
general partners omitted or misrepresented
material facts in promoting the partnership,
in violation of: sections 12(2) and 17(a) of
the Securities Act of 1933 (Count I);
section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Count II);
sections 36-472 and 36-498(a) of the
Connecticut Securities Act (Count III); and
the Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices Act
(Count IV). In addition, plaintiffs claimed
that defendants: were negligent in omitting
or misrepresenting material facts (Count V);
had engaged in fraudulent misrepresentation
(Count VI); and had breached their fiduciary
obligations to plaintiffs (Count VII).
Plaintiffs also brought a derivative suit
against LCG, claiming that LCG entered into
the sublease with GCA solely to
Page 477 obtain the minimum annual royalty from GCA
despite knowledge of the project's economic
infeasibility (Count VIII).
Defendants filed a third-party
complaint against Gates, alleging that Gates
should have foreseen the economic
infeasibility of mining and selling the
coal. Defendants claimed that Gates' failure
constituted tortious conduct and that Gates
should indemnify defendants for damages
awarded to plaintiffs.
After a bench trial, Judge Dorsey
found that plaintiffs had not shown
sufficient proof of defendants' "state of
knowledge and ... intent," Capri v. Murphy,
No. B-80-571, slip op. at 32 (D.Conn. Dec.
10, 1987), to sustain their claims under
Counts I-IV and Count VI. The court also
held that defendants had not breached any
fiduciary duties to plaintiffs, finding that
while Murphy had interests in both LCG and
GCA, the LCG-GCA sublease benefited
plaintiffs by maximizing tax payments to
plaintiffs as limited partners. Judge Dorsey
also dismissed the derivative action against
LCG, finding that the royalty payment to LCG
was not excessive and that LCG had in fact
used the royalty to pay the venture's
start-up expenses.
However, the court held that
defendants were negligent in promoting the
venture. Specifically, the court found that
defendants failed to inform the limited
partners that: 1) the partnership would have
to build, at a substantial cost, a road to
transport the coal from the mine; 2) the
market price for coal projected in the Gates
Report was overly optimistic; and 3) GCA
would have to comply with changes in the law
resulting from the enactment of the Surface
Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977
in order to mine the coal. This information,
if disclosed, would have communicated the
existence of a higher risk that the
venture's projected profits might never be
realized, and, might have altered
plaintiffs' opinion of the project's
feasibility. The court also found that
Murphy should have known this information
and should have realized that the Gates
Report was insufficient in critical
respects. The court held that Murphy should
have acted to ensure that the report's
conclusions were verified before the
prospectus was completed. The court also
determined that Fain and Conover, by
actually promoting the deal, were agents of
the defendants, and their acts were
attributable to the general partners.
On the third-party claim, Judge
Dorsey found that Gates was negligent in its
preparation of the report, but that
defendants were not entitled to
indemnification because they failed to come
within any exceptions to the general rule of
Connecticut law barring contribution among
joint tortfeasors.
The court awarded those
plaintiffs who had paid the entire
subscription cost "up front" the full amount
of their capital contributions. However,
those limited partners who chose to pay a
percentage in cash and the remainder in
one-year notes secured by irrevocable
letters of credit received only the amount
of their capital contributions paid up to
December 1978. The court reasoned that
because the defendants informed the limited
partners in December 1978 of the project's
troubles, payments made thereafter were made
with knowledge of additional risks.
On appeal, plaintiffs claim that
they should not have been required to prove
scienter in order to prevail on the section
12(2) and Sec. 36-498(a) claims, and that
even if scienter were required, the district
court's findings of fact support the
conclusion that scienter was proven.
Plaintiffs also contend that the court erred
in its computation of damages on the
negligence count. Defendants contest the
court's determination that they were
negligent, arguing that: their actions were
not the proximate cause of plaintiffs'
losses; Gates' negligence was the proximate
cause of plaintiffs' harm; and plaintiffs
were contributorily negligent. Defendants
also claim that the court erred in denying
their indemnification claim against Gates.
DISCUSSION
The parties do not contest the
court's factual findings on appeal. In light
of the court's finding that Fain and Conover
were
Page 478 agents whose acts were attributable to GCA's
general partners, we affirm the court's
determination that defendants negligently
promoted the venture. Moreover, in view of
the court's finding that plaintiffs failed
to prove scienter, we affirm the court's
dismissal of plaintiffs' section 10(b) and
Rule 10b-5 claims,
Mayer v. Oil Field Systems Corp.,
803 F.2d 749, 756 (2d Cir.1986), as well as the
common-law fraud claim.
Sections 12(2) and 36-498(a) Claims
However, the court erred in
dismissing plaintiffs' claims under section
12(2) of the Securities Act of 1933, 15
U.S.C. Sec. 77l(2) (1982), and
Conn.Gen.Stat. Sec. 36-498(a) (West 1987 &
Supp.1988). The Supreme Court recently
addressed the meaning of the words "[a]ny
person who ... offers or sells a security"
as used in section 12(1) of the Securities
Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 77l (1) (1982).
Pinter v. Dahl, --- U.S. ----, 108 S.Ct.
2063, 2075-76, 100 L.Ed.2d 658 (1988).
Although the Supreme Court did not "take a
position on" the scope of a "seller" for
purposes of section 12(2), id. --- U.S. at
---- n. 20, 108 S.Ct. at 2076 n. 20, we
previously have held that the language of
sections 12(1) and 12(2) is identical in
meaning,
Schiller v. H. Vaughan Clarke & Co.,
134 F.2d 875 (2d Cir.1943). Accordingly, we
shall consider plaintiffs' section 12(2)
claim in light of Pinter.
In Pinter, the Court held that
section 12(1) "contemplates a buyer-seller
relationship not unlike traditional
contractual privity," --- U.S. at ----, 108
S.Ct. at 2076, but its scope is not
"restricted to those who pass title," id.
Rather, since "solicitation is the stage at
which an investor is most likely to be
injured," id. at 2078, the term "seller"
must include the person "who successfully
solicits the purchase, motivated at least in
part by a desire to serve his own financial
interests or those of the securities owner,"
id. at 2079.
Based on the district court's
factual findings, we have no difficulty in
concluding that Murphy and GCC, as general
partners of GCA, are "sellers" within the
meaning of section 12(2) whose material
misrepresentations and omissions render them
strictly liable to plaintiffs. The court
specifically found that Murphy and GCC
prepared and circulated the prospectus to
plaintiffs, slip op. at 3, and that the
prospectus omitted material facts which
significantly affected the risk undertaken
by the investors, id. at 30. The prospectus
projected coal prices which were not
justified, id., and failed to disclose the
need to construct a road to transport the
coal or the impact of the road's cost on the
venture's feasibility, id. "Thus, the
investors were unjustifiably led to believe
that certain profits were likely when the
more realistic probable prices,
ascertainable from information available at
the time, would have substantially reduced
the expectable profit," id.
Murphy and GCC, nevertheless,
contend that only Fain was in direct
communication with plaintiffs and that he
alone should bear full responsibility for
any misrepresentations or omissions. While
Fain, having promoted the deal and received
compensation for his promotional efforts,
id. at 5, 37, would have been liable as a
"seller" if he were a named defendant,
Fain's status as a "seller" does not
preclude GCC and Murphy from being
"sellers," too. In fact, Judge Dorsey
specifically found that: Fain's promotional
efforts were done "at the behest of Murphy,"
id. at 5; Fain "provided no information to
the investors other than what was supplied
by defendants," id. at 36; and Fain "took no
action in relation to the investors other
than that which was contemplated and
authorized by defendants," id. at 36-37.
Accordingly, Fain's promotional efforts are
directly attributable to GCC and Murphy, and
both are liable to plaintiffs under section
12(2).
As for LCG, plaintiffs alleged
that between November 7 and December 29,
1977, LCG solicited each of the plaintiffs
to invest in the venture, Jt.App. at 17-18
(Complaint, paragraphs 13-14). The district
court indicated that the record contained
extensive correspondence in the name of LCG,
slip op. at 37. While there is no doubt that
LCG played a major role in setting up the
coal-mining venture, that is not sufficient
Page 479 to cast LCG as a "seller," see Pinter, ---
U.S. at ----, 108 S.Ct. at 2080-82. Instead,
plaintiffs must show that LCG actually
solicited their investment in GCA, see id.
--- U.S. at ----, 108 S.Ct. at 2080. Based
on the record before us, we are unable to
determine whether LCG made any such
solicitations. Accordingly, we remand to the
district court for further factual findings
on this issue.
GCC and Murphy also are liable
under Conn.Gen.Stat. Sec. 36-498(a) (West
1987 & Supp.1988). The language of Sec.
36-498(a) is virtually identical to the
language of section 12(2) and, in the
absence of state authority to the contrary,
will be interpreted similarly, cf. Hitchcock
v. deBruyne, 377 F.Supp. 1403, 1405-06
(D.Conn.1974) (Second Circuit's
interpretation of federal statute applies to
Connecticut statute that is the state
"counterpart" of federal law). Accordingly,
our conclusion that Murphy and GCC are
liable under section 12(2) is sufficient to
establish their liability under Sec.
36-498(a), and we remand with instructions
to enter judgment in favor of plaintiffs on
these claims and to determine damages. As to
LCG, we remand for further factual findings
on this issue as well.
Third-Party Claim
As for defendants' third-party
claim against Gates, Connecticut law
generally does not permit contribution or
indemnification among joint tortfeasors.
See, e.g.,
Kaplan v. Merberg Wrecking Corp., 152 Conn.
405, 412, 207 A.2d 732, 736 (1965). One
of the exceptions to that general rule,
however, is
[w]here ... one of the defendants is in
control of the situation and his negligence
alone is the direct and immediate cause of
the injury and the other defendant does not
know of the fault, has no reason to
anticipate it and may reasonably rely upon
the former not to commit a wrong.
Kyrtatas
v. Stop & Shop, Inc., 205 Conn. 694, 697-98,
535 A.2d 357, 358 (1988) (quoting
Preferred Accident Ins. Co. v. Musante,
Berman & Steinberg Co., 133 Conn. 536, 543,
52 A.2d 862 (1947)). In such
circumstances, " 'it is only justice that
the former should bear the burden of damages
due to the injury.' " 205 Conn. at 698, 535
A.2d at 358.
The district court properly
concluded that Gates' negligence alone was
not the direct and immediate cause of
plaintiffs' damages. For example, the Gates
Report noted the need to construct a road in
order to transport the coal from the mine,
see slip op. at 26. Yet, Murphy failed to
obtain a cost estimate for the road
construction and to assess the impact of
that cost on the project's economic
feasibility, see id. at 26-27. In addition,
the court found that Murphy knew of the
Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act
of 1977 prior to closing of the deal and
knew that this legislation was a " 'drastic
change in the law' " which "
'revolutionized' " strip mining in the
United States, see id. at 27 (citing Murphy
deposition at 189-92). Yet, Murphy failed to
disclose this information to plaintiffs, see
id. Most important, it was the general
partners, not Gates, who ultimately
controlled the flow of information to the
investors and who were responsible for
determining what was communicated to them.
Defendants claim that they were entitled to
rely on the Gates Report because it was
Gates' responsibility to determine the
venture's economic feasibility. Nonetheless,
the court indicated that Murphy, who was
experienced in developing and mining coal
properties, see id. at 6-7, should have
known that the Gates Report was insufficient
in critical respects, see id. at 40-41 & n.
5, and should have acted to ensure that the
Report's conclusions were verified before he
relied on them, see id. Indeed, even if we
accepted defendants' assertion that
assessing the project's feasibility was
Gates' responsibility, we note that
defendants failed to inform Gates of such
crucial factors as the option agreement, id.
at 26, and the royalty payments, id. at
23-24, which the court found were necessary
to the determination of the project's
economic feasibility, id. at 23. Thus, the
district court correctly determined that
Gates was not the direct and immediate cause
of plaintiffs' injuries and
Page 480 should not be required to indemnify
defendants.
Damages
Finally, we amend the district
court's award of damages to include recovery
of payments made by plaintiffs after Murphy
informed them in December 1978 of the
project's troubles. Although Judge Dorsey
correctly indicated that plaintiffs had a
duty to mitigate damages, those plaintiffs
who made payments after December 1978
pursuant to promissory notes secured by
irrevocable, unconditional letters of credit
could not mitigate their damages by
withholding payment. Under Connecticut law,
GCA would be entitled to collect on the
irrevocable letters of credit in the event
that plaintiffs defaulted, and plaintiffs
would have been obligated to reimburse their
banks, regardless of plaintiffs' defenses in
a direct action by GCA.
See Armac Industries, Ltd. v. Citytrust, 203
Conn. 394, 398-99, 525 A.2d 77, 79-80 (1987);
New York Life Ins. Co. v. Hartford Nat'l
Bank & Trust Co., 173 Conn. 492, 498-99, 378
A.2d 562, 566 (1977). Plaintiffs could not
mitigate damages by defaulting on their
promissory notes and thus are entitled to
full recovery of their capital
contributions.
CONCLUSION
Based on the foregoing, we affirm
in part, reverse in part and remand with
instructions to enter judgment in favor of
plaintiffs as to defendants Murphy and GCC
on the section 12(2) and Sec. 36-498(a)
claims, to make further factual findings
with respect to defendant LCG, and to amend
the determination of plaintiffs' damages.
* Hon. William C. Conner, Senior United
States District Judge, Southern District of
New York, sitting by designation. |