Turns out that while some of us were wondering when the lawsuits arising out of the current bank wave would really start to accumulate, the FDIC itself was busy filing lawsuits — they just didn’t tell anybody about it, at least not until now. Specifically, the FDIC filed three more lawsuits in August than had previously come to light. At a minimum, these lawsuits suggest the FDIC has been more active in pursuing its litigation strategy than may have been perceived. The suits also suggest that the FDIC’s declarations about its planned litigation strategy are very much in earnest.

 

The three newly publicized lawsuits, each of which were filed by the FDIC in its capacity as receiver of a failed bank, are as follows:

 

First, on August 8, 2011, the FDIC filed a lawsuit in the Eastern District of Michigan against a single former loan officer at Michigan Heritage Bank, of Farmington Hills, Michigan, which failed on April 24, 2009 (about which refer here). A copy of the complaint in this lawsuit can be found here. The complaint alleges that the individual, whom the complaint alleges had been CEO of a different Michigan bank that failed in 2002, caused the bank to incur losses in excess of $8.2 million. The complaint, which asserts claims of negligence, gross negligence and breach of fiduciary duty, alleges among other things that the lending officer “failed to conduct due diligence and analysis prior to originating and recommending approval of 11 commercial loans that resulted in losses” and “failed to adequately inform [the Bank’s] board of directors and senior management of deficiencies with respect to those loans.”

 

Second, on August 9, 2011, ,the FDIC filed a lawsuit in the District of Kansas against six former officers and directors of the Columbian Bank and Trust Company, of Topeka, Kansas, which failed on August 22, 2009 (about which refer here). The FDIC’s complaint in this lawsuit can be found here. The FDIC seeks to recover losses of at least $52 million the bank allegedly suffered because the defendants allegedly “negligently, grossly negligently, and in breach of their fiduciary duties originated and/or approved poorly underwritten large commercial and commercial real estate loans … and failed to properly supervise the Bank’s lending function.” The FDIC also alleges that the defendants (one of whom owned or controlled the bank’s holding company) “failed to heed the warnings of bank supervisory authorities.”

 

Third, on August 10, 2011, the FDIC filed a lawsuit in the Eastern District of North Carolina against nine former directors and officers of the Cooperative Bank, of Wilmington, North Carolina, which failed on June 19, 2009 (about which refer here). The FDIC’s complaint in this action can be found here. The complaint alleges that defendants “failed to manage the inherent risks associated with their aggressive growth strategy” and “permitted a lax loan approval process.” The complaint further alleges that through out the period 2005 through the bank’s failure, state and federal regulators “repeatedly warned” the bank’s management and board “about the risks associated with its high concentrations in speculative loans and weaknesses in lending functions,” yet the bank’s board “permitted and approved” the bank’s continued lending practices. The FDIC alleges that the defendants’ negligence, gross negligence and reckless conduct “ultimately led to the bank’s failure.”

 

There are a number of interesting things about these three new lawsuits, beyond the fact that they were filed on three successive days in August. For one thing, all three involved banks that failed more than two years before the complaints were filed. The timing of the filings relative to the earlier closures says something about the FDIC’s internal timetable for working up potential lawsuits. Another thing about these lawsuits are that the involve banks in states that have not been particularly hard hit during the current bank failure. By and large the bank failures have involved banks in just a few states, particularly Georgia, Illinois, California and Florida. Hard to know for sure what it signifies, but it is interesting that none of these suits involve banks from those hard hit states.

 

Another interesting thing about these suits is that all three involve relatively small banks. The Michigan Heritage bank lawsuit  involves a single mid-level lending officer and relatively modest losses on a relatively small number of loans. The implication seems to be that the FDIC intends to be very thorough and that there are not going to be cases that are too small to bother with. This is a salvage operation, pure and simple, and the FDIC is going to recover everything it can, no matter how small.

 

In any event, when these three additional lawsuits are taken into account, the total number of lawsuits that the FDIC has filed against former directors and officers of failed banks as part of the current bank failure wave is now up to fourteen, five of which were filed in August, and half of which were filed since June 30, 2011. The fact that these suits were filed in August and are just coming to light now suggests the possibility that there could be other FDIC lawsuits that have been filed but that have not yet surfaced.

 

Whether or not there are other filed but not yet publicized suits out there, it is clear there are many more lawsuits to come. On its website, the FDIC has said that as of September 13, 2011, the agency has approved lawsuits involving suits in connection with 32 failed institutions against 294 individuals with damage claims of at least $7.2 billion. The FDIC’s fourteen lawsuits to date involve only 103 directors and officers. The implication is that there are at least 18 more lawsuits yet to be filed – and that is only taking into account the lawsuits that have been approved as of September 13, 2011. There undoubtedly will be many lawsuits approved in the months ahead, with additional filings to follow after that.

 

Given the two year lag time between failure date and filing date that these three lawsuits described above demonstrate, and given the fact that the pace of bank failures only really accelerated during late 2009 and early 2010, it seems likely that the failed bank filings will not only continue well into at least 2012, but that over the next few months the pace of failed bank lawsuits could really take off. 

 

Indeed, one of the clear implications of the FDIC’s lawsuit filings during August of this year is that the agency’s declared litigation strategy is for real. The FDIC clearly does intend to pursue the active litigation strategy it has laid out on its website. And in light of these latest filings, the FDIC’s litigation approach clearly will not be limited just to the largest banks, but could well involve many smaller failures as well.

 

To be sure, the FDIC’s approach does not necessarily require an actual lawsuit in every case. Early on in connection with many of the bank failures, the FDIC has submitted notices of claim to the failed banks’ former directors and officers and to the failed bank’s D&O insurance carriers. In many cases, the FDIC may attempt to try to negotiate a settlement with the former directors and officers and the D&O carriers, without the actual filing of a civil action.

 

Reliable sources advise me that that is in fact exactly what happened in connection with one large failed bank in Florida. Apparently, the FDIC was able to negotiate a settlement in connection with the failed bank without actually filing a lawsuit against the failed bank’s former directors and officers. To the extent the FDIC pursues this approach in other cases and succeeds in negotiating settlements, there could ultimately be fewer complaints. In view of the fact that this approach would avert the erosion of the D&O insurance limits of liability by the payment of defense expenses, this approach could actually result in improved recoveries.

 

But though there may be cases where actual lawsuit filings are averted, the likelier scenario in many cases is that there will be an FDIC lawsuit. With the revelation of the FDIC’s August lawsuit filings, and the suggestion that the FDIC is now actively pursuing its litigation strategy, it is clear that the game is on. For months to come, one of the predominant stories on the directors and officers’ liability scene will be the FDIC’s pursuit of growing numbers of failed bank lawsuits against the former directors and offices of the failed institutions

.

One final note. The FDIC’s website makes it clear that its litigation strategy is not limited just to suits against former directors and officers. The site says that the agency has “also has authorized 20 fidelity bond, attorney malpractice, and appraiser malpractice lawsuits. In addition, 175 residential malpractice and mortgage fraud lawsuits are pending, consisting of lawsuits filed and inherited.”

 

Active Self-Defense: As discussed in prior posts (refer for example here), the individuals dragged into the failed bank lawsuits will rely on a number of theories in order to try to defend themselves. Former Indy Mac Chairman and CEO Michael Perry is taking a different approach. He has launched a website called “Not Too Big to Fail” (here) on which he is attempting to defend himself against charges the FDIC has asserted against him and other former IndyMac executives.

 

As discussed here, in July 2011, the FDIC filed a lawsuit in the Central District of California against Perry. The FDIC alleges that Perry acted negligently when he allowed IndyMac to generate and purchase $10 billion in loans when the secondary mortgage market was becoming illiquid. When IndyMac was later unable to sell the loans, the bank transferred them to its own investment portfolio, which then caused over $600 million in losses. Perry has also been named as a defendant in other lawsuits arising out of IndyMac’s July 2008 failure.

 

On his website, Perry asserts that “not one of the lawsuits against me has merit.” He says that “I and the management team and directors of IndyMac Bank made prudent and appropriate business decisions based on the facts available to us at the time and always with the primary goal being to keep IndyMac bank safe and sound.”

 

The name of the site is taken from Perry’s complaint that IndyMac did not receive government bailout funds that were made available to other banks. He asserts that this occurred because IndyMac was “not too big to fail.”

 

Though Perry’s website represents a rather impressive display of self-justification, it seems unlikely that his Internet-based public relations campaign will accomplish much. I suppose though for someone in Perry’s position there is some satisfaction involved with telling off the regulators, even if it is unlikely to change the outcome of any of the claims against him. The one thing that is clear is that Perry is both unrepentant and defiant.

 

Well, Maybe Next Year: For those who missed the allusion in the title of this blog post, the reference was to the lyrics of the song “Send in the Clowns,” from Stephen Sondheim’s Broadway musical A Little Night Music. The lyrics include these lines: “Sorry my dear/ But where are the clowns?/Quick, send in the clowns/Don’t Bother, they’re here.”  

 

Although many have sung this tune, it is has perhaps become most closely associated with Judy Collins. There are actually a surprising number of verions on You Tube of Judy Collings singing this song. Here’s an audio only version:

 

https://youtube.com/watch?v=0a2QGDFHTv0

I am pleased to present below a guest post by Mike Hogan, Executive Vice President at U.S. Risk Financial Services. I would like to thank Mike for his willingness to publish his article on this site. I am interested in publishing guest posts from responsible commentators on topics of interest to readers of this blog. Please contact me directly if you are interested in submitting a guest post for consideration.

 

Here is Mike’s guest post:

 

The banking crisis of the 1980’s, resulted in the passage of the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Endorsement Act by Congress, (FIRREA) that significantly increased the penalties for both banks, and individuals and broadened the applicability of Civil Money Penalties. These penalties may be assessed for the violation of any law, regulation, as well as for a violation of any condition imposed in writing by the appropriate Federal banking agency in connection with any written agreement between a depository institution and the agency.

 

Clearly, the banking industry has suffered through some of its most difficult times during the last three years as indicated by the 25 bank failures in 2008, 140 bank failures in 2009 and 157 failures in 2010. This year, thru September 2, 70 banks have failed with the expectation of considerably more before year end.  This year, on June 24, 2011, the FDIC announced  57 enforcement actions against problem banks that included 11 Civil Money Penalties, the majority of which were issued to individuals. 

 

As a result of these failures and the fact that over 800 banks are currently on the FDIC “Problem Bank List”, the agency has initiated a new trend to review directors and officer’s liability policies during their examinations. The intent of this review is to determine if there is a “regulatory exclusion” on the policy and to identify the potential limits of liability that might be available for recovery of losses the FDIC sustains when taking a bank into receivership.  

 

In the last few months the FDIC has also begun to review bank D&O Insurance  policies to determine if a “Civil Money Penalty” endorsement attached to the policy. If they find a Civil Money Penalty endorsement is attached to the policy, the agency is issuing citations to the bank along with a requirement that the endorsement be immediately deleted from the policy.

 

According to this author’s interview of an attorney in the FDIC’s legal division, the governing bank regulation is the Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1828(k)) Part 359.1(1)(2)  – Golden Parachute and Indemnification Payments. This regulation provides that a depository institution may not purchase an insurance policy that would be used “to pay or reimburse an IAP (institution affiliated party a.k.a Directors and Officers) for the cost of any judgment or Civil Money Penalty assessed against such person in an administrative proceeding or civil action commenced by any federal banking agency…”. Section 18(k) of the statute includes the same prohibitions. (See 12 U.S.C. 1828( k) (5)-(6) ). (Both Part 359 and Section 18 prohibit the bank from purchasing an insurance policy that includes Civil Money Penalties insurance coverage. 

 

The FDIC’s position with respect to insurance for Civil Money Penalties is made even more difficult by the period of time such coverage has been made available.  Over the last twenty years, most if not all of the principal insurers that offer directors and officers liability insurance to banks have also provided Civil Money Penalties coverage for bank officers and directors as long as the bank is performing well and have no current regulatory concerns. During this period, banks have been advised to retain photocopies of the Directors and Officers personal checks in the event the bank has to prove that these individuals had paid for the coverage personally. This was based on the assumption that if the bank could prove that the directors and officers paid for the coverage personally, that the FDIC wouldn’t object to the coverage. 

 

Insurance agents and brokers that have placed directors and officers liability insurance that include Civil Money Penalties coverage are potentially exposed to criticism for offering coverage that is contrary to FDIC rules and regulations,  and putting their client bank in a situation where the FDIC  cites the bank for violation of the FDIC regulations.   Equally, agents could be faced with competition from agents and other Insurers who are willing to offer the coverage in spite of these regulations.  Interestingly, many of the bank directors and officers liability insurers are continuing to offer bank management the choice of whether they want to purchase the coverage or not. 

 

These issues would lead most agents to believe that the most appropriate approach is to be proactive by advising their client bank management of the regulation and its intent so the directors and officers can make their own decision on whether to retain the current endorsements on the directors and officers liability policy or to remove it prior to the next FDIC exam. 

 

The FDIC attorney this author consulted further advised that the FDIC has no concerns or interest in policies where the bank is not named as an Insured on the policy. This could lead insurers to consider other options for providing Civil Money Penalties coverage. For example, the coverage could be offered through a stand alone policy where the bank is not named as an Insured. Alternatively, insurers may consider offering the coverage on a Side A Policy naming the Board and officers as Named Insureds or on an Individual D&O policy by endorsement. In either event,   directors and officers will have to pay for the coverage personally, as opposed to the bank purchasing it on their behalf. 

 

My New All-Time Favorite Headline: Our sincerest condolences to the family of the late Percy Foster. We mean no disrespect. But you have to admit, it is pretty hard to beat this headline from the September 14, 2011 issue of Perth Now: "Gordon Ramsay’s Dwarf Porn Double Dies in Badger Den." (here)

The options backdating scandal may now be ancient history, but questions surrounding insurance coverage for the scandal’s consequences apparently continue to live on. In a September 9, 2011 opinion applying Maryland law, Southern District of New York Judge Naomi Reice Buchwald ruled in a coverage action brought by SafeNet’s excess D&O insurer that, among many things, there is no coverage under the policy for SafeNet’s $25 million options backdating-related securities lawsuit settlement.

 

The opinion addresses a number of recurring policy issues, including questions of claim interrelatedness and relation back; imputation of fraudulent misconduct; application of the consent to settlement provision; and imputation of application misrepresentations for purposes of policy rescission.  

 

Beginning in early 2006, SafeNet experienced a series of legal problems. These problems began with the company’s February 2006 announcement that it was restating prior financial statements. On May 18, 2006, the company announced it had received a subpoena from the U.S. Attorney as well as an informal inquiry from the SEC. Shortly thereafter, the company announced that it was forming a special committee to investigate its stock option granting practice. In September 2006 the company announced that the committee concluded that certain prior stock options had been accounting for using incorrect measurement dates and as a result its financial statements for the relevant periods would have to be restated.

 

These developments led to a variety of legal proceedings, including a securities class action lawsuits (about which refer here). There was also an SEC enforcement proceeding and a criminal investigation. The SEC proceeding resulted in the entry of a permanent injunction against the company’s former CFO, Carole Argo. Argo also pled guilty to a single count of securities fraud. The consolidated  securities class action litigation was later settled for $25 million.

 

For the period March 12, 2005 to March 12, 2006, the company carried $15 million of D&O insurance, arranged with a primary $10 million layer, and a $5 million layer of insurance excess of the primary. For the period March 12, 2006 to March 12, 2007, the company also carried $15 million of D&O insurance, arranged in the same way as the prior year.

 

On February 28, 2006, the company sent its primary carrier a copy of the initial financial restatement disclosure. Both the primary carrier and the excess carrier accepted this letter as a notice of circumstances that might give rise to a claim. The company advised the carriers of the various legal matters as they later arose. The carriers took the position that all of the subsequent notices and claims related back to the initial notice of circumstances and therefore the various matters implicated only the 2005-06 policies, regardless of when the later claims may have been made.

 

Later, after Argo entered her guilty plea, the primary carrier advised the company that it was no longer entitled to coverage under its policy. The excess carrier advised the company that due to the guilty plea, “a declination of coverage is in order in certain respects” under the excess policy, and that “rescission of the policy may be appropriate.” The excess carrier asked the company to enter a tolling agreement.

 

SafeNet later settled the securities class action lawsuit and paid the settlement amount. In the later coverage action, the parties stipulated that the company did not notify the excess carrier of the settlement negotiations and did not seek the excess carrier’s consent to settlement. In the later coverage action, the company contended that it spent more than $20 million in defense costs for itself and the directors and officers, including more than $10 million in defense costs for directors and officers other than Argo.

 

The excess carrier filed an action against Safeguard, Argo and the company’s former CEO, Anthony Caputo., seeking a judicial declaration of its coverage obligations and seeking a rescission of the renewal excess insurance policy. The defendants filed a motion to dismiss arguing amount other things that the case could not proceed without the primary carrier as a party and arguing further that the case was premature because the primary policy had not been exhausted. In a December 7, 2010 order (discussed here, scroll down), Judge Buchwald denied the defendants’ motions to dismiss. The parties then filed cross-motions for summary judgment.

 

In her September 9 opinion, Judge Buchwald denied the defendants’ summary judgment motion and granted the excess carriers’ motion in part and denied the excess carrier’s motion in part. Among other things, Judge Buchwald agreed that all of the claims relate back to the 2005-06 policy and that only the 2005-06 policy was implicated; that any loss incurred by Argo was precluded from coverage by the policy’s fraudulent conduct exclusion, but that coverage for the company’s loss was not precluded by that exclusion; that because the company had failed to obtain the excess carrier’s  settlement approval, there was no coverage under the excess policy for the $25 million securities class action settlement; and that to the extent that there is coverage under the renewal excess policy, the excess carrier was entitled to rescind the policy as to Argo and the company based on Argo’s application misrepresentations.

 

In contending that they were entitled to coverage under the 2006-07 renewal excess policy, the defendants had argued that the various option backdating problems were not even discovered until the middle of 2006 and therefore could not relate  back to the February 2006 notification sent to the carriers. In rejecting these arguments, Judge Buchwald found that in the class action lawsuit, the financial irregularities disclosed in February 2006 and the stock options backdating were “part of an interrelated course of conduct.” 

 

With respect to the policy’s relation back language, Judge Buchwald said that “these provisions make clear that the relation back of a claim turns upon the nature of the allegations in a subsequent Claim, not simply on the relationship in fact between an earlier notice of circumstances and a later Claim.” Because of the interrelationship between the two types of conduct and the “broad-relation back language” in the policies, she concluded that the subsequent matters relate back to the original notification and therefore only the 2005-06 policy was implicated.

 

Although she concluded that the fraudulent conduct exclusion precluded coverage for Argo, she concluded that the exclusion did not preclude coverage for the company. Even though policy language imputed “facts” and “knowledge” possessed by Argo to the company for purposes of determining the applicability of the exclusion to the company, the exclusion still does not apply to the company unless there has been an adverse judgment against the company. There was no adverse judgment against the company, and the judgment against Argo cannot be imputed to the company. Accordingly, notwithstanding Argo’s guilty plea and the imputation to the company of the facts and knowledge possessed by her, the exclusion does not operation to preclude coverage for the company.

 

However, the fact that the exclusion did not apply to the company does not mean that the company is entitled to coverage under the policy. Judge Buchwald concluded that the company was not entitled to coverage under the policy for the $25 million settlement because it had failed to get the carrier’s prior consent to settle. She said further that the she “could not conclude that the company was excused” from complying with the consent to settlement provisions. 

 

As for the question of whether or not there was coverage under the policy for the more than $10 million the company incurred defending the directors and officers other than Argo, Judge Buchwald concluded that because there was no record evidence that the company had actually indemnified any particular director and officer and the state of the record is “undeveloped” she could not decide the question of coverage for the defense fees.

 

Finally, although she had concluded that SafeNet’s claims did not implicate the renewal excess policy, Judge Buchwald concluded that to the extent the renewal policy does apply, the excess carrier was entitled to rescission as to Argo and as to the company. She found that because Argo admitted to knowingly and with intent to defraud causing the company to file inaccurate public filing, the carrier was entitled to rescission was to her. Moreover, Argo’s knowledge was imputable to other insureds. And while the policy allows individual insureds to establish lack of actual knowledge, it does not allow the company to establish that it lacked knowledge.

 

Discussion

This case is a veritable textbook of D&O Insurance coverage issues and Judge Buchwald’s opinion contains a number of rulings that could be important in many other cases.

 

Her ruling that the subsequent legal proceedings all relate back to the date of the initial notice, and therefore that only the 2005-06 policy is triggered, is likely to be of particular interest in many of the credit crisis related cases, in connection with many of which the insurance carriers are arguing that all of the various lawsuits filed against a particular company all relate back to a single, earlier policy year. Indeed that is the position that the carriers are taking in connection the Lehman Brothers lawsuits, as discussed in a recent post. The broad reading Judge Buchwald gave to the interrelated claim and relation back language here could prove to be very helpful for the carriers in many of these cases.

 

On the other hand, Judge Buchwald’s interpretation of the fraudulent conduct exclusion, and the limitations on what she was willing to impute to the company, will likely motivate carriers to quickly review  their policy language to see whether the imputation provisions in their fraud exclusion require an adjudication of the fraudulent misconduct even when the fraud has been  imputed. I suspect it came as a surprise here that if there was an adjudication of fraud as to Argo and that fraud was imputed to the company that the company could still retain coverage under the policy if the adjudication itself was not imputed to the company or there was otherwise no adjudication of the company’s fraudulent misconduct. I suspect many carriers are going to want to hold up their fraud exclusion and compare them to the fraud exclusion applicable here to see whether their fraud exclusion might operate as the fraud exclusion did here

 

As an aside, it is probably worth noting that Judge Buchwald was satisfied that a guilty plea represented an “adjudication” sufficient to trigger the exclusion. Perhaps that is a common sense interpretation, but I can certainly imagine the argument that a guilty plea is different from an adjudication, since there was no separate determination by a finder of fact, but merely an admission. Judge Buchwald’s conclusion that the guilty plea was sufficient would seem to undercut the argument that the exclusion could have said that an admission was sufficient to trigger the exclusion, but instead it required an adjudicated determination, which is different from an admission.

 

On the other hand, with respect to the topic of imputation, in her analysis of the rescission issues, Judge Buchwald found that Argo’s knowledge was imputable to the company under the applicable policy language. Thus Argo’s knowledge of application misrepresentations was sufficient to rescind coverage not only for herself but for the company as well. What observers may find most noteworthy about this is not just the imputation to the company but the fact that the application misrepresentations to which the imputation applied were in the form of misstatements in the company’s financial filings. In other words, the very financial misrepresentations that might attract a lawsuit might also wind up removing the company’s insurance coverage – at least where as here a senior corporate official has pled guilty to knowing fraudulent misrepresentation.

 

The final determination of significance in Judge Buchwald’s opinion is her conclusion that the company’s failure to obtain prior consent to settlement precludes coverage under the policy for the settlement. While a number of court have recently reiterated the enforceability of the consent to settlement clause (refer, for example, here), what is noteworthy here is that she found that the failure to obtain consent was not waived even where the carrier has said it has grounds to deny coverage, is contemplating rescission and has asked for a tolling agreement. The company undoubtedly felt like it had been left by the carrier to do the best it could to look after its interests, yet Judge Buchwald had found that the consent requirement had not been waive.

 

Judge Buchwald’s willingness to enforce the consent requirement even in these circumstances is yet another reminder of the critical importance of communicating with the carrier even under these types of strained circumstances. One protective step the company might have been able to take to avoid triggering a consent problem would be to obtain the carrier’s agreement that it would not raise the consent issue as an additional defense to coverage beyond those the carrier had said it believed it had grounds to assert.

 

Ad Nauseum: I was flipping channels earlier this week and I stopped to watch part of a major league soccer game. The field on which the game was being played had a billboard that said “Infinitum.” I idly wondered what product or service  the billboard might be referring to, and then it hit me – the billboard is nothing less than an “ad infinitum.”

 

I am pleased to present below a guest post by Kara Altenbaumer-Price, Esq., the Director of Complex Claims and Consulting for USI and part of its Management & Professional Services Group in Dallas. I would like to thank Kara for her willingness to publish her article on this site. I am interested in publishing guest posts from responsible commentators on topics of interest to readers of this blog. Please contact me directly if you are interested in submitting a guest post for consideration.

 

Here is Kara’s guest post:

 

 

As insureds try to navigate through the new language and products being offered by D&O carriers to address increasing costs and coverage issues associated with government investigations, insureds should consider recent remarks by the SEC’s Director of Enforcement pushing for separate counsel in SEC matters. The SEC’s initiative to encourage cooperation with the agency is likely force more corporate officials to seek separate representation, which in turn will only increase the extent of coverage sought under ever-broadening D&O insurance policies. 

 

 

In 2010, the SEC implemented a number of changes in its Enforcement Manual, a internal SEC document that guides the SEC’s enforcement staff in how—and in some cases whether—investigations proceed forward from informal inquiry to formal investigation to Wells Notice stage. Included in the 2010 revisions to the manual was a program called “Fostering Cooperation” designed to spur confessions by providing leniency—or in some cases, immunity—to individuals who provide valuable evidence to the SEC.

 

 

While voluntary cooperation with the SEC enforcement’s division has long yielded benefits for companies, individuals had not necessarily seen the same level of benefit because the SEC had never set out guidelines for granting so-called “cooperation credit” to individuals.  On the other hand, the “Fostering Cooperation” initiatives appear to also mean harsher outcomes for those who are offered a chance to cooperate but do not accept. The new enforcement policy, released in January 2010, also gives the SEC access to enforcement tools the DOJ has long used—Cooperation Agreements, Non-Prosecution Agreements, and Non-Prosecution Agreements.  Each of these gives incentives for individuals and companies to cooperate with the SEC to lessen their own punishment. 

 

 

        It is likely that more individuals will “confess” to the SEC in order to obtain the benefits of these initiatives.  The inevitable D&O insurance challenge is clear: more defense costs. Cooperation by one individual implies that other individuals will be negatively impacted by that individual’s testimony.  As more individuals cooperate and as others become the “target” of that cooperation, the need for separate counsel rises, causing a rise in defense costs.

 

 

      Although the Enforcement Manual is silent about whether the use of joint defense counsel will be considered in evaluating whether an individual has cooperated, the Manual itself acknowledges that multiple representations are common and that “representing more than one party … does not necessarily present a conflict of interest.” Yet, SEC Director of Enforcement Robert Khuzami recently warned against the common practice of defense counsel representing multiple defendants in one SEC matter. He said in a June speech, “We are taking a closer look at such multiple, seemingly adverse representations. You will likely see an increase in concerns expressed by SEC staff in those situations.”  While this common practice has always been a concern from a traditional conflicts perspective, Khuzami emphasized the cooperation initiatives only heighten the issue. As he warned in his speech, “this increases the likelihood that one counsel cannot serve the interests of multiple clients, given the real benefits that could result from cooperation, such as one client testifying against another client represented by the same counsel.” 

 

 

            There may be a number of scenarios in which multiple representations are not objectionable to the SEC or insureds, such as, in the SEC’s words, “when one lawyer or one firm represents employees who are purely witnesses with no conflicting interests or material risk or legal exposure.” However, there are many other scenarios in which defense counsel represent multiple clients whose interests may ultimately diverge. For example, Khuzami noted a scenario in which one lawyer represented both an employee and a supervisor in a failure to supervise case. 

 

 

            Indeed, not only is there the possibility that one individual may want to testify against another—or that the company may want to offer up an individual in order to gain cooperation credit for itself—there may be a conflict even between two individuals whose interests may otherwise be aligned because the cooperation incentives create a “race to the Commission.” The SEC has stated that the benefits of cooperation will be reserved for those whose assistance is timely. As Khuzami said in a speech when the initiatives were announced, “Latecomers rarely will qualify for cooperation credit, so there is every reason to step forward – before someone else does.” It is not hard to see the conflict created if a single lawyer or firm finds themselves in the position of choosing which client to help to the front of the cooperation line. This could be true even for insured executives whose culpability level may be low but who may want to avoid the dreaded career-ending director and officer bar.

 

 

            Interestingly, SEC staff have indicated that they will raise the conflict issue in scenarios in which they recognize that there are individuals who may benefit from a cooperation agreement. For example, the SEC raised just such an issue in an administrative proceeding against Morgan Keegan & Compay and Morgan Asset Management and two employees when it moved to disqualify counsel. The SEC had argued unsuccessfully that the defendants had “potential defendants involving the conflict of [each] other” but that their shared counsel prevented “any such blame-shifting.”

 

 

            The big insurance question is whether D&O carriers will agree to fund the additional counsel or whether insured companies will get caught in the middle of a push for separate counsel by the SEC (and executives) and the carriers’ push for shared counsel. In the securities context, insureds almost always choose white shoe law firms with corresponding top-of-the-market fees. Sharing defense counsel has long been a method of controlling litigation costs for both companies and carriers. Even with a push for some time by counsel for each executive potentially implicated in an investigation scenario to retain independent counsel, carriers often push back for as few counsel as possible, including offering the incentive of covering the insured entity if the entity shares counsel with individual defendants.

 

 

            In considering the likely increase in defense costs as separate representations becomes even more likely in SEC matters, insureds would be wise to consider the issue when examining the number of new D&O products on the market addressing insurance coverage for SEC investigations.  Companies may also want to consider increased limits as each separate counsel can significantly ratchet up the cost of defense, eating away at limits available for settlement of SEC matters or follow-on civil litigation.

           

A recent negotiated resolution of an FDIC failed bank lawsuit suggests disputes over D&O insurance coverage may represent the real frontline in the failed bank litigation wars. The compromise was reached in the lawsuit the FDIC only recently filed in the District of Arizona involving the failed First National Bank of Nevada. As discussed below, the FDIC and the bank officer defendants have reached a settlement agreement that includes a stipulated judgment, assignment of insurance rights, release of claims against the individual defendants, and a covenant not to execute the judgment against the individual defendants.

 

First National Bank of Nevada failed on July 25, 2008 (as discussed here). First National Bank of Arizona was one of FNB Nevada’s sister banks until the two banks merged less than 30 days prior to FNB Nevada’s failure. As discussed here (scroll down), on August 23, 2011, the FDIC filed an action in the District of Arizona against Gary Dorris, who was CEO and Vice Chairman of the banks’ holding company as well as of both FNB Nevada and FNB Arizona, and Phillip Lamb, who was EVP of the banks’ holding company as well as of both FNB Nevada and FNB Arizona. The FDIC’s complaint alleged mismanagement and gross negligence at FNB Arizona that allegedly left FNB Arizona holding millions of dollars of bad loans.

 

On September 2, 2011, just days after the FDIC filed its complaint against the two individuals, the FDIC and the two defendants filed a joint motion for entry of judgment. A copy of the joint motion for entry of judgment can be found here. Though they had filed an answer denying liability, the defendants nevertheless consented to the entry of judgments “for purposes of compromising disputed claims.” Pursuant to the parties’ settlement agreement, the two individuals each consented to the entry against each of them of separate judgments in the amount of $20 million (plus post-judgment interest).

 

As part of the parties’ settlement agreement, upon the entry of the judgment the defendants will assign to the FDIC all of their rights and claims against the D&O insurer. The FDIC for its part agreed not to take any action to enforce the judgment against the individuals, except with respect to the individuals’ rights under the D&O policy. The joint motion alleged that the bank’s D&O insurer has “denied coverage, refused to defend, to advance defense costs, to indemnify, or to consider settlement of the claims brought against the defendants.”

 

Assuming for the sake of discussion that the court enters the consent judgment in the form the parties have requested, the FDIC’s obvious next move is to file a lawsuit against the bank’s D&O insurer, seeking to recover the amount of the judgments from the D&O insurer. The joint motion does identify the D&O insurer, but it does not specify the face amount of the D&O insurance policy, nor does it specify the basis on which the D&O insurer has denied coverage.

 

The fact that the consent judgment was submitted within days after the initial complaint was filed does seem to suggest that the lawsuit filing was itself part of a coordinated plan anticipating the consent judgments, as a way to shift the FDIC’s focus from the individuals themselves to the D&O insurer, the recovery of whose policy proceeds appears to have been the FDIC’s objective all along.

 

The problem with this approach is that it has not been established that the individuals in fact breached any duties or that they should be or could be held liable on the merits. Of course, the individuals would contend that when the D&O insurer failed to provide them with a defense, they were left on their own to take whatever steps they could to protect themselves from liability and to avert the accumulation of further defense expense. The FDIC, as the individuals’ successor in interest under the policy, now undoubtedly will argue that having disclaimed coverage and having declined to participate in the individuals’ defense, the carrier should not be heard to object to the basis on which the individuals compromised the lawsuit.

 

But merely because the FDIC will succeed to the individuals’ rights under the policy does not establish that there is coverage under the policy or that the D&O insurer has any liability for the amounts of the consent judgment. If it comes to that, the D&O insurer will undoubtedly attack the judgment on many bases. The D&O insurer will also likely maintain its assertion that there is no coverage under the policy for the claims against the individuals as well as for the judgment.

 

Given that this bank closed in mid-2008, which was very early in the current wave of bank failures, it is relatively unlikely that the operative policy had a regulatory exclusion (as those had only just started making their return to the D&O insurance marketplace at or about that time). The likelier possibility is that the coverage denial is based on some policy process issue, such as timely notice, claims made date, or the like.

 

As I previously noted, it could be argued that the D&O insurer, having denied coverage, should not be heard to object to the fact that the individuals have taken steps to protect themselves. However, the problem with these type of consent judgment/covenant not to execute type deals is that this approach can run the risk of slipping into a collusive arrangement, with the insured individual willingly agreeing to a settlement amount that has no relation to the his or her true liability exposure. In my prior life as an insurance company coverage attorney, I saw more than one deal that could only be described as abusive, and I have one particular deal   in mind that qualified as grotesque bad faith (it was so awful no court would touch it and it died a very ignominious death).

 

Whatever the merits or demerits of these types of deals, we undoubtedly will see many more of them before the current round of failed bank litigation finally plays itself out. FNB Nevada failed in the earliest days of this wave of failed banks, and the FDIC is just now getting around to pursuing claims and insurance coverage related to its closure. Many hundreds of banks have failed in the interim and over the coming months and years, the FDIC will be pursuing claims and insurance coverage in connection with many of those subsequent bank failures. In many of these cases, as apparently was the case here, the FDIC’s ultimate objective will be the recovery of D&O insurance proceeds.

 

As a result, there may well be many more occasions where, as here, individuals, in order to extricate from an FDIC lawsuit, similarly agree to a consent judgment and an assignment their rights to their D&O insurance policy in exchange for a covenant not to execute the judgment against them and their assets.

 

The larger message here is that as the FDIC ramps up its claims and lawsuits against the former directors and officers of failed banks, one of the consequences will be a rash of coverage lawsuits involving the failed institutions’ D&O insurance policies. All I can say is that it seems like old times to me. I expect that all across the country there are coverage attorneys getting their files from 20 years ago out of storage. 

 

As I said at the outset, D&O insurance coverage suits may represent the real frontlines of the failed bank litigation wars. (It is no coincidence that the lawsuit filed at the same time as the suit against the FNB Arizona defendants, the one filed against former directors and officers of Silverton bank, described here, apparently also is really a dispute about D&O insurance coverage; indeed in that case, the FDIC took the extraordinary step of naming the D&O insurers as defendants in the liability lawsuit.)

 

 In any event, it is clear that coverage lawsuits involving failed bank D&O policies will be one of predominant features of the D&O insurance scene for the next several years to come.

 

News coverage regarding the bank executives’ settlement with the FDIC can be found here. Special thanks to a loyal reader for sending me a copy of the parties’ joint motion for entry of judgment.

 

Court Rejects Failed Bank Directors and Officers Bid to Dismiss Claims Against Them: Meanwhile, in a case in the Northern District of Illinois involving the former directors and officers of the failed Heritage Community bank, the court has rejected the individual defendants’ motions to have the claims for negligence and breach of fiduciary duty against them dismissed, except to the extend the negligence claims are duplicative of the fiduciary duty claims.

 

As discussed here, in November 2010, the FDIC filed a lawsuit against certain former directors and officers of Heritage. The defendants moved to dismiss the FDIC’s negligence and breach of fiduciary duty allegations, arguing that the alleged misconduct that on which the negligence and breach of fiduciary duty claims are based are protected by the business judgment rule; that the FDIC had failed to sufficiently state claims for gross negligence, negligence or breach of fiduciary duty; and that the negligence and breach of fiduciary duty claims were duplicative.

 

In a September 1, 2011 order (here), Northern District of Illinois Judge Rebecca Pallmeyer denied the defendants’ motions, except that she granted the motions to the extent the negligence claims were duplicative of the fiduciary duty claims. In rejecting the defendants’ attempt to rely on the business judgment rule, she found that because these arguments represented affirmative defenses and held that the “appropriate mechanism for consideration” of the affirmative defenses is “a motion for judgment on the pleadings or for summary judgment.”

 

Judge Pallmeyer also found that the FDIC’s allegations “are sufficient to meet the liberal notice pleading requirements and to set for the duty, breach, causation and damage elements of claims for gross negligence, negligence and breach of fiduciary duty.”

 

For those involved in defending former directors and officers in FDIC litigation (and these individuals’ D&O insurers), Judge Pallmeyer’s ruling may be concerning. One of their principal defenses for individuals caught up in FDIC failed bank litigation will be that under FIRREA, they can only be held liable for gross negligence (refer here for an excellent discussion of these issues). This argument is most compelling with respect to outside directors, as  a judge in the Central District of California recently recognized in dismissing NCUA claims that had been brought against outside directors of the failed WesCorp credit union (as discussed at greater length here). Although Judge Pallmeyer did dismiss the negligence claims to the extent they were duplicative of the fiduciary duty claims, she did not reach the question whether or not under FIRREA the individuals can be held liable only for gross negligence.

 

Special thanks to a loyal reader for forwarding the Heritage bank ruling to me.

 

Annual Law Firm Survey of D&O Insurance Coverage Issues: On September 7, 2011, my good friends at the Troutman Sanders law firm issued their annual survey of coverage decisions involving D&O and professional liability insurance policies, which can be found here. The survey is very comprehensive and has the added virtue of being indexed by topic, which makes the survey a particularly useful resource for those involved with D&O insurance claims to keep at hand.

 

A group of former executives of a Lehman Brothers subsidiary   is seeking to block the bid by senior Lehman executives to use $90 million of the remaining D&O insurance proceeds to settle the cases pending against them. As discussed here, on August 24, 2011, the senior executives filed a motion with the Lehman bankruptcy court seeking access to $90 million in insurance funds to settle the securities suits pending against them. On September 8, 2011, seven executives of Lehman’s Structured Asset Securities Corp. (Sasco) objected to the requested $90 million drawdown, arguing that it would leave the Sasco executives without sufficient insurance funds remaining to settle the claims pending against them. A copy of the Sasco executives’ opposition papers can be found here.

 

The Sasco executives, like the senior Lehman executives who seek the $90 million, are defendants in a number of securities class action lawsuits involving events leading up to Lehman’s collapse. As I detailed in my prior post about the senior Lehman executives request for the $90 million in insurance proceeds, defense expenses and other costs (including an arbitration settlement) have already significantly eroded the $250 million insurance tower. The Sasco executives claim they now have an opportunity to settle the $4 billion claims pending against them for $45 million. They contend that if the senior executives draw down the $90 million they seek, there will be insufficient remaining insurance funds to settle the claims against them.

 

In their opposition papers, the Sasco executives argue that the $90 million drawdown would represent a “disproportionate and inequitable portion” of the remaining funds. They argue that “permitting one class of insureds to use such tactics to divert a disproportionate share of insurance proceeds for their benefit to the exclusion of other classes of insureds is inequitable, contrary to the purpose of the available D&O insurance and would have an adverse economic impact on the Debtors’ estate.”

 

The Sasco executives note that the fight is with respect to Lehman’s 2007-2008 tower of insurance, which originally totaled $250 million. (This tower is described in detail in an earlier post about Lehman’s D&O insurance, here.) The Sasco executives contend that their claim actually implicated the separate $250 million 2008-2009 tower,  as it was during that policy period that the claims were first made against them. However, the carriers in the 2008-2009 D&O insurance tower apparently contend that the claims against the Sasco executives relate back to claims first  made during the 2007-2008 insurance tower’s policy period, and therefore it is the 2007-2008 tower that is implicated with respect to the claims against the Sasco executives. The Sasco executives dispute this position of the insurers, but they note in the motion papers that they cannot establish their entitlement to the proceeds of the 2008-2009 tower without protracted and expensive coverage litigation.

 

It is worth noting that the senior executives request for the $90 million drawdown would not in and of itself deplete the amounts remaining in the $250 million 2007-2008 tower. As discussed in my post about the settlement, it looks as if the drawdown would leave about $50 million remaining, which would seem to be enough to fund the Sasco executives’ proposed $45 million settlement. In their motion papers, however, the Sasco executives assert that the senior Lehman executives “will quickly attempt to settle other claims asserted against them, exhausting the remaining limits under the 2007-08 D&O policy,” contending that the senior executives “seek to appropriate all of the remaining proceeds …for their own benefit, to the exclusion of the Sasco defendants.”

 

The Sasco executives argue that they have “an equal right to insurance protection” as the senior executives and that it “would be inconsistent with the purpose of D&O insurance to permit one class to monopolize the protection.” The Sasco defendants seek to have the bankruptcy court deny the senior executives’ motion for the $90 million drawdown and to enter an order adopting an “allocation scheme” that more equitably divides the remaining proceeds. They note that they are not arguing that the proposed $90 million settlement is “unreasonable,” they simply object to the fact that the senior executives’ requested drawdown would leave them using the remaining proceeds to enter a settlement of the claims against them.

 

This situation represents a classic example of the too-many-insured, too-many-claims, not-enough-insurance problem. These problems come up in all sorts of contexts, although rarely in cases as high profile as this. The most basic problem is that even with $250 million in insurance, there is not nearly enough insurance to defend and settle all of the claims involving insured persons. The question is how the insufficient insurance proceeds should be applied.

 

There are procedural mechanisms available to deal with these types of situations, such as interpleader, where the insurer(s) simply deposit the insurance with the court and the court sorts out the entitlements. The insurers themselves would have to initiate an interpleader action. The Sasco executives are hoping to enlist the bankruptcy court to perform an equivalent allocation on an equitable basis. In their motion papers, they reference an earlier bankruptcy case where the D&O insurance policy proceeds were allocated in a pro rata basis. This type of scheme might well be equitable, but the problem is that given the number of individuals involved and the seriousness of the claims against them, a per capita allocation might leave everyone with insufficient funds to settle any of the claims against them.

 

The one thing that seems likely if the Sasco executives are unable to secure for themselves a portion of the 2007-08 insurance tower to settle the claims pending against them, they will be under pressure to try to establish that they are entitled to proceeds of the 2008-09 tower. Such a bid would involve very significant questions regarding the interrelatedness of the claims made against them with the prior claims on which the carriers are relying to argue that the claim against the Sasco executives do not involve 2008-09 insurance tower, but instead relate back to the 2007-08 tower.

 

It will in any event be interesting to see how the bankruptcy court responds to these competing claims to the proceeds of the D&O insurance coverage. The situation certainly underscores the fundamental tension that arises from the fact that the D&O insurance must provide protection for a significant number of individual directors and officers, and the fact that in the event of a catastrophic claim, the various individuals can find themselves in competition for the D&O insurance policy proceeds. One way to address this problem of course is to buy more insurance. But as the Lehman example shows, there may be limits to how much can be accomplished simply by buying more insurance. If $250 million is not enough insurance, higher limits is not going to solve much for most companies.

 

This may be one of those problems that may not be susceptible to solution, but one possible approach to ameliorate this situation is through program structure. For example, if the outside directors had their own separate tower of insurance, those amounts could be applied toward defending and settling the claims against them while the proceeds of the main policy could be applied toward the settlement of the claims against the officers. Of course, even this arrangement would not have eliminated the possibility of the kinds of problems that have arisen here. It is at least one way to try to address problems due to the fact that so many individuals are entitled to and would want the benefit of the proceeds of the main D&O insurance policy’s protection.

 

A September 10, 2011 Wall Street Journal article about the Sasco executives’ motion can be found here.

 

SEC Seeks to Enforce Subpoena Against Longtop Financial Auditor: The SEC is going on the warpath to try to enforce a subpoena that it served on Longtop Financial’s former auditor, Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu (DTT), which is the Shanghai-based affiliate of the global accounting firm, Deloitte Touche. As discussed here, Longtop is one of the many U.S.-listed Chinese companies to be caught up in accusations of accounting impropriety in recent months. DTT resigned as Longtop’s auditor earlier this year.

 

The allegations surrounding Longtop attracted the attention of the SEC, and at least according to news reports, the company recently received a Wells Notice from the SEC. The SEC also apparently tried to subpoena DTT in connection with its investigation of Longtop. As reported in the SEC’s Sept. 8, 2011 press release (here), DTT failed to produce the requested documents and so the on September 8 the SEC filed a motion with the United States District Court for the District of Columbia requiring DTT to comply with the subpoena. The SEC’s motion papers can be found here.

 

The SEC’s motion papers report that DTT’s U.S. counsel had sent a letter to the SEC asserting that (1) the firm could not be compelled to produce documents created prior to July 21, 2010, the effective date of the Dodd-Frank Act, and (2) that in any event producing any documents could subject the firm to sanctions for violations of Chinese secrecy laws.

 

The SEC contends that DTT’s arguments are “apparently based on a misunderstanding of the legal basis for the subpoena,” arguing further that the subpoena was not dependent on the additional powers given the SEC in the Dodd-Frank Act but rather was based on the SEC’s long standing subpoena power. The SEC argued further DTT’s “vague assertions of possible conflicts with a foreign law provide no justification” for DTT’s “continued non-compliance with the Subpoena.” The SEC argued that DTT’s “speculative” assertion that compliance would subject it to sanctions is “illusory” and furthermore a risk DTT “knowingly accepted by availing itself of the U.S. securities markets.”

 

As detailed in Nate Raymond’s September 8, 2011 Am Law Litigation Daily article about the SEC’s motion to enforce the subpoena (here), this situation represents something of a test case for the SEC, as (according to one commentator quoted in the article) “the SEC for obvious reasons wants to know if it can get to these documents in the future.” Another commentator in a September 10, 2011 Wall Street Journal article (here) said that the SEC’s move to enforce the subpoena represents a “major escalation.” The Journal article also notes that the dispute also “highlights the shortcomings of regulation in China, which is complicated by vague laws, competing regulatory agencies and a tight rein on information.”

 

Whatever the significance of the SEC’s action ultimately may prove to be, it is clear that the SEC has ramped up its activity levels in seeking to take action in connection with the U.S.-listed Chinese companies caught up in the accounting scandals. In addition to the Wells notice recently served on Longtop, the SEC also recently served a Wells notice on the Chairman of another Chinese company, Puda Coal (about which refer here).

 

The other thing about the challenges the SEC is facing in trying to enforce its subpoena is that it shows how difficult it will be for any party to pursue legal action against many of these Chinese companies. If the SEC can’t even enforce a subpoena against an audit firm that is registered with the PCAOB, it obviously is going to be a challenge for private litigants to try to pursue discovery from China-based firms and individuals. Indeed, because many claimants have recognized these limitations, they have tried to focus their actions against the outside professionals (underwriters, auditors, attorneys) that have facilitated the Chinese companies’ entries into the U.S. securities markets. But as the SEC’s struggles to enforce its subpoena show, some of these professionals may also be difficult to pursue.

 

Lawyers’ Relief Act: If you have not had a chance to read Eric Dash’s September 8, 2011 New York Times article “Feasting on Paperwork” (here), I recommend taking a few minutes now to read it. Unbeknownst to the rest of us, the Dodd-Frank Act was actually a stimulus package intended to rescue lawyers from the impact of the economic crisis on their profession. The Act is, in the words of one commentator quoted in the article, “a full employment act” for lawyers and consultants. The article goes on to note that new regulation “has long been one of Washington’s unofficial job creation tools.”

 

I don’t know whether to be appalled at the brazen profit-extracting presumption that the lawyers quoted in the article unapologetically express or to be impressed by their naked opportunism. There is little wonder, as the article states, that lawyers and consultants “are salivating at the prospect of even more business opportunities.” The firms are, as noted by one lawyer quoted in the article, “only getting started.”

 

The overwhelming impression is the main consequence of the Act is the enrichment of a small number of professionals at the expense of the entire economy. And lawyers wonder why they do not enjoy a higher regard in our society. The article reminds me of the old joke about how research scientists are now going to use lawyers rather than rats in their scientific experiments — there aren’t enough rats; there is no danger that the scientists will become emotionally attached to the lawyers; and there are some things that rats just won’t do.

 

The Moral of the Ducks: Even when you are completely blown away by unexpected events, the thing to do is to regroup, quickly get it back together, and march on.

https://youtube.com/watch?v=SEBLt6Kd9EY

According to papers filed on September 6, 2008, the parties to the consolidated MBIA securities action pending in the Southern District of New York have agreed to settle the lawsuit for $68 million. The settlement is subject to court approval. As noted below, the settlement has some interesting features.

 

The parties’ stipulation of settlement can be found here and the plaintiffs’ motion for preliminary approval of the settlement can be found here. Nate Raymond’s September 7, 2011 Am Law Litigation Daily article describing the settlement can be found here.  

 

As discussed here, in January 2008, MBIA joined a group of several other bond insurers there were sued in securities class action relating to their alleged failures to disclosure the exposures they had as a result of insurance guarantees they had extended ion mortgage related securities. The lawsuit against MBIA followed the company’s disclosure of the extent of the guarantees the company had extended on collateralized debt obligations. Among other things, the disclosure revealed the extent to which the company had issued insurance on so-called CDOs-squared.

 

As discussed here (scroll down), in March 2010, the Court granted in part and denied in part the defendants’ motion to dismiss. The dismissal motion grants were without prejudice to the plaintiffs’ filing amended pleadings as to the dismissed portions. In April 2010, the plaintiffs amended their complaint (refer here) and the defendants renewed their motions to dismiss. While the motions were pending, the parties began settlement negotiations.

 

In their motion seeking preliminary approval of the settlement, the plaintiffs, in explanation of the amount of the settlement state that

 

In light of MBIA’s financial condition and likelihood that this Action and other litigation against MBIA would substantially deplete Defendants’ insurance coverage, Lead Plaintiff and Lead Counsel also believed that there was a substantial risk that, even if they were successful in establishing liability at trial (and after appeals from any verdict), Defendants would not have been able to pay an amount significantly larger than the Settlement Amount or even as much as the Settlement Amount.

 

Obviously, this statement clearly implies that that at least some portion of the settlement is to be funded with D&O insurance. However, neither the motion papers nor the settlement stipulation specify what portion of the settlement is to be funded by D&O insurance. There is nothing in the filings to indicate whether the D&O insurers’ settlement contribution will deplete the remaining amount of insurance.

 

Without knowing one way or the other whether D&O insurance is to fund the entire amount of this settlement, it is clear that the fact that the D&O policy limits were rapidly eroding was a factor in this settlement and may even have affected the amount of the settlement.

 

This settlement is only the latest in a series of subprime and credit crisis related litigation in which the fact that the remaining limits were rapidly eroding was a factor in the timing and even the amount of the settlement. Other cases where there seems to have been a factor are the recent settlement involving in the Lehman executives (refer here); the recent  Colonial Bank settlement  (refer here); the D&O portion of the WaMu  settlement (refer here); and the New Century Financial settlement (here).

 

As I discussed at length in my recent post about the Lehman executives’ settlement (here) , the rapid depleting o f the D&O limits puts pressure on the plaintiffs to reach a settlement quickly. If they play hardball and hold out for a better settlement or try to holdout by demanding that individuals contribute to the settlement out of their own assets, the plaintiff’s lawyer may manage only to reduce the ultimate recovery as the D&O insurance limits drain away while negotiations drag on. This feature of many of these cases makes many of the subprime and credit crisis-related cases particularly challenging to try to settle, particularly where the defendant company is insolvent or in poor financial condition. This feature may also result in lower settlement amounts in many cases, at least where there is not solvent of financially stable company to fund additional settlement amounts.

 

I have in any event added the MBIA settlement to my list of subprime and credit crisis securities class action lawsuit settlements, which can be accessed here. As discussed here, the subprime-related securities suit against another of the bond insurers, Ambac, settled for a total of $33 million .

 

Every fall since I first started writing this blog, I have assembled a list of the current hot topics in the world of directors’ and officers’ liability. This year’s list is set out below. As should be obvious, there is a lot going on right now in the world of D&O, with further changes just over the horizon. The year ahead could be very interesting and eventful. Here is what to watch now in the world of D&O:

 

1. How Massive Will the Total Cost of the Subprime and Credit Crisis Litigation Wave Turn Out to Be?: Even though the subprime and credit crisis-related litigation wave is now well into its fifth year, only a small number of the cases have settled. But in recent weeks, a number of cases have settled in quick succession, and these settlements have been very substantial.

 

The recent settlements include the largest so far in subprime and credit crisis-related cases, the $627 million Wachovia bondholders settlement, about which refer here. Other settlements include the following: Washington Mutual, $208.5 million (refer here); Wells Fargo Mortgage Backed Securities, $125 million (refer here); National City, $168 Million (refer here); Colonial Bank, $10.5 million (refer here); and Lehman Brothers executives, $90 million (refer here).

 

With these latest settlements (many of which are subject to court approval), there have now been a total of 29 settlements collectively representing a total of almost $3.4 billion, for an average settlement of $116 million (although that average is obviously skewed upward by the $627 million Wachovia bondholders settlement and the $624 million Countrywide shareholders settlement)

 

As impressive as these cumulative numbers are, there are still many more cases pending. Of course, a certain number of the pending cases will ultimately be dismissed. But many will not, and eventually those remaining cases will be settled. Although it is impossible to conjecture how large  the total tab for all these cases ultimately will be, the implication from the cases that have settled is that the total amount will be massive.

 

The possibilities here may have significant implications for D&O insurers. Of course, not all of these amounts will be covered by D&O insurance. But a significant chunk will be. Indeed, a number of the recent settlements will be funded entirely by D&O insurance, including the WaMu settlement, the Colonial Bank settlement and the Lehman Brothers settlement. Interestingly, the Lehman settlement will come close to exhausting what is left of Lehman’s $250 million insurance tower.

 

In other words, the D&O insurers have had some very big bills to pay and could have some even bigger bills to pay in the months ahead. To the extent the ultimate loss amounts are fully reserved, these funding requirements will not cause a problem. But to the extent the carriers have not adjusted their loss reserves in anticipation of these losses, the cumulative impact of the coming settlements could be disruptive.

 

2. How Extensive Will the FDIC’s Failed Bank Litigation Efforts Become?: Since January 1, 2008, 392 banks have failed, including 70 so far in 2011 (as of September 2, 2011).  Fortunately, though the closures are continuing to mount, it appears that the failures finally may be starting to wind down. Since the current wave of bank closures began, there have been concerns that, just as it did during the S&L crisis in the late 80s and early 90s, the FDIC will again aggressively pursue claims against the directors and officers of the failed banks. At least so far, the FDIC’s litigation activity has been relatively modest. However, the signs are that the FDIC has merely been gearing up, and that substantial numbers of failed bank lawsuits could be just ahead.

 

As of September 2, 2011, there have been a total of eleven FDIC lawsuits against the directors and officers of failed banks. A number of these were filed in quick succession in August, raising the possibility that the apparent backlog of FDIC lawsuit filings may finally be starting to work out. There clearly are more cases to come. The FDIC’s website states that the agency has authorized suits in connection with 30 failed institutions against 266 individuals for D&O liability with damage claims of at least $6.8 billion. The eleven cases the FDIC has filed so far involve only 77 individuals. Even just taking account of the lawsuits that have already been authorized, there are many more suits to come, and undoubtedly even more lawsuits will be authorized.

 

The latest round of failed bank litigation has been very slow to develop. But at this point it seems likely that for the next several years there is going to be a very significant amount of FDIC litigation involving the directors and officers of failed banks. Moreover, the litigation will not be limited just to cases brought by the FDIC. Many of the failed banks were publicly trade or otherwise have broad and diverse ownership, and in many instances the bank failures have been followed by shareholder litigation. These shareholder suits represent competing claims for the D&O insurance policy proceeds. The competing claimants will be vying to secure the dwindling limits, adding a layer of complexity both for the defendants and for the FDIC.

 

3. Will the Failed Bank Litigation Be Accompanied by a Wave of Coverage Litigation?: During the S&L crisis, the FDIC was involved in extensive litigation to try to establish coverage under D&O insurance policies. Many of the leading cases on the Insured vs. Insured exclusion arose out of this litigation (about which refer here), and the Regulatory Exclusion was also extensively litigated (refer here).

 

The signs are that there could be extensive coverage litigation this time around too. Indeed, when the FDIC recently filed a lawsuit against the former directors and officers of the failed Silverton Bank, it included the bank’s D&O insurers as named defendants. As discussed here, the FDIC’s claims against the D&O insurers in the lawsuit involve the insurers’ attempt to deny coverage for the claim under the Regulatory Exclusion.

 

The FDIC may not be the only litigant involved in D&O insurance coverage litigation. As multiple defendants struggle with the problems associated with too many claims and too many insured persons, the various defendants will want to sort out their entitlement to the policy proceeds. For example, as discussed here, a subsidiary of the failed IndyMac Bank, which is a defendant in a number of lawsuits arising out of the bank’s failure, recently attempt to obtain a judicial declaration of coverage in order to sort out who was entitled to what under the bank’s D&O policies. Although the subsidiary’s claims were dismissed for lack of standing, the case does show that a variety of parties may be interested in using litigation as a way to establish their rights to the proceeds of D&O insurance.

 

The coverage litigation will hardly be limited just to D&O insurance. A recent coverage action in Alabama involved the coverage disputes involving a failed bank’s bond (refer here). There are also likely to be coverage disputes involving errors and omissions insurance. And as other outside professionals, such as accountants and lawyers, get dragged into these cases, there will likely be coverage litigation involving their professional liability policies.

 

For those of us who were involved in the failed bank coverage litigation during the S&L crisis, the return of these types of coverage cases has a very familiar feeling.

 

4. Will the Dodd-Frank Whistleblower Provisions Lead to More Claims? And How Will the D&O Insurers Respond?: Among the parts of the Dodd-Frank Act that may have a significant impact on claims is the Act’s whistleblower provisions. The whistleblower provisions include the creation of a new whistleblower bounty pursuant to which individuals who bring violations of securities and commodities laws to the attention of the Securities and Exchange Commission or the Commodities Futures Trading Commission will receive between 10 percent and 30 percent of any recovery in excess of $1 million. The SEC recently promulgated rules implementing these provisions.

 

While it is too early to tell what impact the bounty provisions will ultimately have, most observers expect that the substantial incentives provided by the whistleblower provisions will lead to an increased number of whistleblower reports and that these reports will lead to investigations and enforcement actions. In some instances, the revelations in the whistleblowers’ reports will also lead to follow-on civil litigation, as aggrieved shareholders or others pursue claims for misrepresentation or mismanagement. These follow on claims represent one type of potential increase claims exposure arising from the whistleblower provisions. But the possibility of increased numbers of investigations and enforcement actions present their own sets of issues.

 

One of the perennial issues in D&O coverage litigation is the question of policy coverage for regulatory investigations. Individual directors and officers typically covered (depending on policy wording) for both informal inquiries and requests for information, and civil, criminal, administrative or regulatory investigations commenced by either the issuance of a Target Letter or Wells Notice, or after the service of a subpoena. The company itself rarely has coverage for these types of investigations, except when it was named with an individual directors and officer in a “formal” SEC investigation. There typically is no coverage for the Company for responding to informal inquiries and requests for information from the SEC.

 

Many of these issues were discussed in the Second Circuit’s July 1, 2011 opinion in the MBIA case (about which refer here), which held that, under the specific policy language at issue and under the circumstances presented, MBIA’s D&O insurance policies covered the investigative and special litigation expense the company incurred during a regulatory investigation of its accounting practices.

 

Recently, one D&O insurance carrier introduced a new insurance product intended to provide entity coverage for these costs of investigation, as discussed here.  Due to problems of cost, as well as to the high deductibles and coinsurance that the carrier is requiring, this product is still looking for widespread acceptance. But the product’s introduction shows that the D&O insurance industry is working to try to find insurance solutions to the growing need for solutions addressing the regulatory investigation risk. To the extent the new whistleblower provisions mean increased numbers of investigations, companies will be increasingly interested in finding insurance products that address these risks.

 

5. What Will be the Next “Hot” Litigation Target?: From time to time, a sector or industry will find itself as the target of plaintiff securities class action attorneys. Last summer, for a brief period, the hot sector was the for-profit education section. Since then, the hot target has been U.S.-listed Chinese companies. This year alone, there have been 32 cases filed against U.S-listed Chinese companies (through September 2, 2011).

 

This surge of litigation involving Chinese companies has arisen out of accounting scandals, many of which were first revealed by online analysts, many of whom have short positions in the companies they are attacking. The Chinese companies have attempted to deflect the assertions of accounting improprieties by charging that the online attacks were merely rumors started by those with a financial incentive to drive down the companies’ share price. Fair or not, the online reports seem to be leading directly to shareholder litigation, as in many cases the shareholder plaintiffs are simply quoting the online analysts’ reports in their complaints.

 

For now, the phenomenon shows no sign of letting up, as the lawsuits involving the U.S.-listed Chinese companies have continued to accumulate as the year’s second half has progressed. Indeed, between July 1, 2011 and September 2, 2011, there were a total of 6 of these Chinese companies sued in new securities class action lawsuits in the U.S.

 

The recent litigation outbreak involving the U.S.-listed Chinese companies is a reminder of circumstance-specific events that can drive securities class action lawsuit filings. Many things determine filing levels, many of which cannot be captured or predicted in historical filing data. As a result, it can be misleading to try to generalize from short term trends about future filing levels. Simply put, the numbers vary over time, because, for example, contagion events and industry epidemics happen.

 

6. Will M&A Litigation Continue to Surge?: One of the more interesting phenomena in the world of corporate and securities litigation has been the changing mix of litigation. As recently as just a few years ago, securities class action lawsuits represented a significant percentage of all corporate and securities lawsuits. The insurance information firm Advisen has documented that in more recent years, class action securities litigation has represented an increasingly smaller percentage of all corporate and securities lawsuits. One area that has been growing as a percentage of all corporate and securities litigation has been M&A related litigation.

 

According to Advisen, in 2010, there were 353 lawsuits challenging corporate mergers filed in state and federal courts, which represents a 58% increase over 2009. As of August 27, 2011, 352 M&A related lawsuits had already been filed, putting this year’s filings to far exceed last year’s.

 

As discussed in an August 27, 2011 Wall Street Journal article entitled “Why Merger Lawsuits Don’t Pay” (here), these lawsuits rarely produce substantial damage awards. Often, the most they succeed in accomplishing is a delay in the merger or slightly improved disclosures about the deal’s terms. The reason these lawsuits continue to be filed, and indeed continue to be filed in increasing numbers, is that these cases are good business for the plaintiffs’ firms. These firms can collect fees that range from $400,000 for typical cases to millions of dollars for bigger cases.

 

In the past, these types of cases have not represented a significant claims exposure for D&O insurers. However, now that so many more of them are being filed, and now that individual merger deals are now attracting multiple claims, these cases are becoming a much bigger problem for the D&O insurers, particularly those that are the most active as primary insurers. A basic assumption of the D&O insurance industry is that D&O claims represent a low frequency, high severity threat. But these M&A claims are exactly the opposite – they represent a high frequency, low severity exposure, for which the D&O insurers likely did not price and almost certainly cannot underwrite. And even if the typical case settles for relatively modest amounts, the claims costs including defense fees are now in the aggregate becoming an issue for the D&O insurers.

 

In the current competitive marketplace (about which see more below), the D&O insurers may not be able to do much about this problem, but this might among the first areas to which D&O insures turn if the market does start to firm. Among other things, the D&O insurers might require higher self-insured retentions for these types of claims, on the theory that they really represent a cost of doing business rather than a true third-party liability exposure.

 

7. Will the U.S. Supreme Court Continue Its Inexplicable Willingness to Take Up Securities Cases?: Years from now, when the history of the Roberts Court is finally written, perhaps the historians will be able to explain why during the second half of the first dozen years of the 21st Century, the Court was so eager  to take up securities cases. The Supreme Court is just coming off a term in which the Court heard three different securities cases, and it has already agreed to take up one more case in the term that is about to begin.

 

The case that the Court has already agreed to hear next year is the Credit Suisse Securities case, and it involves statute of limitations issues arising in connection with Section 16(b) claims for short-swing profits. This narrow, technical issue is unlikely to have widespread significance. But what is significant is that yet again this Court has taken up a securities case. There doesn’t seem to be any particular member of the Court that is driving the Court’s interest in securities cases. But for whatever the reason, the Court’s docket increasingly includes these types of cases. Though there is only one case now on the Court’s docket in the upcoming term, the Court can always choose to hear others – which is something the Court seems inclined to do.

 

The current Court does not always rule in the favor of the defendants. For example, this last term, in the Matrixx Initiatives case (refer here), the court rejected the defense argument that plaintiffs must show “statistical significance” in order to establish materiality in a securities lawsuit. In an earlier term, in the Merck case, the court rejected the defendants’ statute of limitations arguments (refer here). But many of the Supreme Court’s recent securities law decisions  have been in the defendants’ favor, and the Court’s rulings in recent terms in such cases as Janus Capital (refer here), Morrison (refer here), and Tellabs (refer here) represent significant defense victories that have or will have a significant impact in many cases on the plaintiffs’ ability to pursue securities claims.

 

The overall cumulative impact of the Court’s interest in taking up securities cases has been favorable to companies and unfavorable to plaintiffs. There is some speculation that the increased difficulty of successfully maintaining a securities class action lawsuit through the motion to dismiss may be one reason for the shift in the mix of corporate and securities litigation away from securities class action lawsuits and toward other types of litigation (like the M&A litigation, discussed above).

 

8. Will the Implementation of the U.K Bribery Act Mean Increased Anti-Bribery Enforcement Activity?: On July 1, 2011, the U.K Bribery Act became effective, as discussed here. The Act has a broad reach, regulating prohibited conduct that takes place within the U.K. or that involves a company or person that carries on business in the U.K., regardless of where the prohibited activity takes place. The Bribery Act is broader than the U.S.’s Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, reaching a broader range of prohibited activities and providing for greater possible liabilities for those at companies involved in these activities, even if not directly involved in the prohibited conduct.

 

From the time the Act received Royal Assent, one of its features that has been the focus of particular concern has been Section 7 of the Act. Section 7 creates a new offense which can be committed by commercial organizations that fail to prevent persons associated with them from committing bribery on their behalf. Commentators have been concerned that this provision seemingly would subject any firm –even non-U.K. companies that have operations in the U.K. – to liability under the Act for violative conduct taking place any where in the world.

 

Because the Act has only just become effective, it is not yet known how aggressively it will be implemented or what its overall impact will be. At a minimum, it seems likely that the Act will lead to an increase in enforcement activity. It is also possible that as has proved to be the case with enforcement actions under the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, follow-on civil litigation will follow in the wake of regulatory enforcement activity.

 

As companies confront these developments, among the issues that are likely to arise are questions concerning coverage for these proceedings under their D&O insurance policies, as discussed in a prior guest post on this blog.  The Act’s fines and penalties are not likely to be covered under typical policies. Whether investigative costs and defense fees will be covered will depend on a large variety of circumstances, including who is the target of the investigation. How serious these problems will turn out to be will depend a lot on the Act’s implementation, a development that will be worth watching.

 

9. What Impact Will the Changing Corporate Governance Requirements Have?: Largely due to the 2010 enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act, we have entered a watershed period of corporate governance reform. Processes now afoot have wrought a transformation in the relations between corporate boards and corporate shareholders. These changes have not only created additional burdens on affected companies but they have also resulted in some cases in a change in the corporate litigation environment as well.

 

Among the changes the Dodd-Frank Act implemented is the requirement for an advisory shareholder vote on executive compensation. As a result of Section 951 of the Dodd Frank Act and the requirements of SEC rules that went into effect January 25, 2011, all but the smallest public companies had to put their executive compensation practices to an advisory shareholder vote this past proxy season. As it turns out, about 40 companies experienced a negative shareholder vote. In some cases the negative “say on pay” vote have been followed by shareholder litigation, by activist investors seeking to reform executive compensation practices, as discussed here.

 

The requirement for a shareholder “say on pay” is only one of many current corporate governance reform under discussion. Other areas include the question of proxy access – that is, the question whether shareholders can have their board candidates listed on the annual proxy form. The D.C. Circuit recently struck down the SEC’s rules requiring proxy access, but the issue is not likely to go away.

 

As discussed at length here, other current corporate governance issues include reforms such as board declassification and majority voting. Other issues that loom ahead as other provisions of Dodd-Frank go into effect include requirements that companies disclose the ratio between total annual compensation of their CEO and the median annual compensation of their employees (rules implanting these provisions are required to be adopted before the end of 2011).

 

Another provision of the Dodd Frank Act requires to SEC to direct the national exchanges to impose new listing standards directing public companies to implement compensation clawback provisions. Under Section 954 of the Dodd Frank Act, companies making accounting restatements of prior financials must recover from any current or former officer all incentive-based compensation paid during the preceding three-year period above what would have been paid without the misstated financials. These provisions are to be implemented by this year-end.

 

These various provisions will affect different companies in different ways. But it is clear that these changes are here to stay and that as a result companies and their management are operating in a challenging environment. Companies that resist these governance developments may face heightened levels of scrutiny, both from shareholders and from the media. Moreover, as corporate governance standards change, boards will be held to standards of conduct reflecting the changed governance norms and expectations. And in an era of growing shareholder empowerment, that reality may translate into increased judicial expectation for boards to address shareholder initiatives.

 

Taken together, these changes in the corporate governance environment mean heightened scrutiny, changing shareholder expectations, and even an increased litigation risk. How extensive these changes ultimately will prove to be remains to be seen as the additional provisions of Dodd Frank are put into effect in the months ahead.

 

10. What Does All of This Mean for the D&O Insurance Marketplace?: Given all of these trends and developments, an outside observer might reasonably expect that the marketplace for D&O insurance would be becoming more restrictive. And certainly with respect to certain categories, such as U.S.-listed Chinese companies and commercial banks, the marketplace for D&O insurance is challenging. However, outside of those very particularized categories, the marketplace for D&O insurance remains generally competitive. Most financially stable companies continue to be able to obtain broad terms and conditions at relatively attractive prices.

 

There is nothing specific to suggest that the generally competitive environment is about to change, at least immediately. But there are a number of considerations that could lead to change. The first is the cumulative impact of the year’s catastrophic losses. The various natural disasters this year, from the earthquakes in New Zealand and Japan to Hurricane (and tropical storm) Irene, have had an impact on the insurance industry’s collective balance sheet. If there were to be another significant event in the four remaining months of the year, the accumulated losses could be enough to force a pricing increase or to cause carriers (or at least some of them) to pull back.

 

Given the catastrophe events that have already occurred this year, carriers are likely to be scrutinizing their books. Many of the developments discussed above will undoubtedly lead the various carriers to take a close look at their D&O portfolios. The mounting losses from the subprime meltdown and the credit crisis; the looming impact of the wave of failed banks; and the difficulties and uncertainties associated with a changing litigation and legal environment are all likely to raise concerns. These concerns inevitably lead to questions about pricing adequacy, risk selection, and scope of coverage.

 

In light of all of these considerations, it would be very rational for the D&O insurance marketplace to enter a more restrictive phase. In some sectors that may already be happening. For example, even relatively healthy commercial banks are seeing increased pricing and reduced limits. Several carriers are pulling back in that space.

 

At the same time, though, the overall marketplace remains competitive. As long as capacity remains ample and competition active, most companies outside of the most troubled sectors apparently will continue to enjoy the benefits of a competitive marketplace for D&O insurance. The question is how long these conditions will continue. Time will tell of course, but if the wind blows or the earth shakes again, among the consequences could be a harder market for insurance generally and for D&O insurance in particular.  

 

Labor Day has come and gone. The kids are back in school. The air is cooler and the nights are longer. There’s a definite autumnal feel in the air. It is time to get back to work. Fortunately, The D&O Diary kept its eye on things over the summer. So if you are feeling the need to get caught up on what happened while you were at the beach, don’t worry, we’ve got you covered. Here is a quick summary of what you missed on The D&O Diary while you were away.

 

Key Insurance Coverage Decisions: There have been several important D&O insurance coverage decisions in the last few months, two of them in the federal circuit courts. Probably the most significant decision of the summer is the Second Circuit’s July 1, 2011 ruling in the MBIA case, in which the Court held that the company’s D&O insurance policies cover the investigative and special litigation committee expense the company incurred during a regulatory investigation of its accounting practices.

 

The Fifth Circuit issued another important coverage ruling on August 5, 2011 when it held that where a policyholder has accepted a compromise payment from a primary carrier of less than the limit of liability of the primary policy, the excess carrier’s payment obligations were not triggered and the excess carriers has  no obligation to pay the policyholders‘ loss.

 

In another interesting coverage decision, the Judge William Q. Hayes of the Southern District of California held in an August 15, 2011 decision (refer here) that the D&O insurance policy at issue covered the attorneys’ fees of non-party employee witnesses.

 

Significant Developments in the Subprime and Credit Crisis-Related Litigation Wave: The subprime litigation wave began over four years ago but only a small number of the cases have been settled. As reflected in my running tally of subprime cases, even now only 29 of the cases have settled. But a number of these settlements were announced just in the past few weeks, and there is a definite sense that the movement of these cases toward settlement is gaining momentum.

 

The recent settlements in subprime and credit crisis-related cases included the largest subprime securities lawsuit settlement so far, the $627 million Wachovia bondholders settlement, about which refer here. Other subprime securities lawsuit settlements this summer included the following: Washington Mutual, $208.5 million (refer here); Wells Fargo Mortgage Backed Securities, $125 million (refer here); National City, $168 Million (refer here); Colonial Bank, $10.5 million (refer here); and Lehman Brothers executives, $90 million (refer here).

 

In other developments in the subprime and credit crisis cases, two appellate courts affirmed the lower courts’ dismissals of a couple of subprime cases. On May 24, 2011, the Eleventh Circuit affirmed the dismissal of the HomeBanc case (refer here), and on August 23, 2011, the Second Circuit affirmed the dismissal of the action that had been brought on behalf of the Regions Financial trust preferred securities holders (refer here).

 

There were also dismissal motion denials in two of the higher profile cases. First, on July 27, 2011, Southern District of New York Judge Lewis Kaplan denied the motion to dismiss in the Lehman Brothers case (about which refer here; as noted above, the Lehman Brothers executives settled the case against them shortly thereafter). And as discussed here, on July 29, 2011, Southern District of New York Judge Kevin Castel granted in part and denied in part the renewed motions to dismiss in the BofA/Merrill Lynch merger case.

 

FDIC Failed Bank Litigation Mounts: The current wave of bank failures is now several years old. Over 390 banks have failed since January 1, 2008. Yet the FDIC has filed lawsuits involving former directors and officers of failed banks in only a very small number of instances. In the past several weeks, however, the FDIC has launched several new lawsuits and there is a definite sense that the lull in FDIC lawsuit filings may be over.

 

Just in the last few weeks, the FDIC has filed lawsuits involving the former CEO of IndyMac bank (about which refer here); former directors and officers of Haven Trust bank (refer here); former directors and officers of Silverton bank (refer here); and First National Bank of Arizona (refer here). The Silverton bank case is particularly interesting because, as I discuss in my blog post about the lawsuit, the defendants that the FDIC named in the lawsuit include the bank’s D&O insurers.

 

With these latest filings, the FDIC has now filed a total of eleven cases involving former directors and officers of failed banks. But the likelihood is that there are more cases to come, perhaps many more. The FDIC’s own website states that the agency has authorized suits in connection with 30 failed institutions against 266 individuals for D&O liability with damage claims of at least $6.8 billion. The lawsuits the FDIC has filed so far involve only eleven failed institutions and 77 individuals. Even just taking account of the lawsuits that have already been authorized, there are many more suits to come, and undoubtedly even more lawsuits will be authorized.

 

Mid-Year Securities Litigation Studies Released: All of the leading statistical services issued their respective studies of securities class action lawsuit filings for the first six months of 2011. My post about the Cornerstone Research study can be found here; the NERA Economic Consulting study, here; and the Advisen study, here. My own analysis of the first half filings can be found here.

 

Supreme Court Issues Key Rulings: It already seems like a long time ago, but at the end of the Supreme Court’s term in June, the Court issued its opinions in several key cases. First, in a June 6, 2011 opinion (about which refer here), the Supreme Court held in the Halliburton case that proof of loss causation is not required at the class action certification stage. On June 13, 2011, the Court held in the Janus Capital case (refer here) that a mutual fund management company cannot be held liable for the alleged misstatements in the prospectuses of the mutual funds that the management company administered.

 

And finally, on June 20, 2011 the Court held in the Wal-Mart Stores v. Dukes case (refer here) that the gender discrimination claimants did not allege a companywide pattern of discriminatory practices and therefore their case could not proceed as a class action. (Earlier in the year, the Supreme Court also issued its opinion in the Matrixx Initiatives case, refer here, in which the Court rejected the “statistical significance” test for securities suit materiality.)

 

Consistent with the inexplicable interest the Court has shown in recent years in taking up securities cases, the Court has already granted a writ of certiorari for yet another securities case to be heard in the upcoming term. As discussed here, the Court has agreed to hear the Credit Suisse Securities case, which involves statute of limitations issues in Section 16(b) short-swing profits cases.

 

Litigation Against U.S.-Listed Chinese Companies Continues to Surge: As I have noted in several posts, most recently here, one of the most distinct securities litigation trends over the last twelve months or so has been the surge in litigation involving U.S.-listed Chinese companies. Signs are that this litigation surge is continuing, as the filings involving these companies have continued to accumulate so far in  the second half of the year, about which refer here. While some have questioned the merits or value of these cases, at least one of these cases recently survived a motion to dismiss, as discussed here.

 

These cases raise a number of important D&O insurance issues for these companies. A July 14, 2011 Client Advisory that I co-authored (about which refer here) examines the critical D&O insurance issues that these companies face and reviews the questions these companies should be asking about their D&O insurance.

 

Keynote Speeches at the Stanford Directors’ College: In June, I attended the Stanford Law School Directors’ college as a member of the event faculty. While there I was able to monitor the keynote speeches, about which I reported in a series of blog posts. The key note speakers included SEC Commissioner Troy Paredes, about whose presentation I wrote here; Delaware Supreme Court Chief Justice Myron Steele, whose speech I wrote about here; and SEC Enforcement Division head Robert Khuzami, about whose presentation I wrote here.

 

Debating Director Liabilities: As part of this blog’s continuing mission to explore the issues surrounding the liabilities of corporate directors and officers, I posted a couple of commentaries this summer discussing  whether and to what extent directors should be held responsible when problems occur at their companies.

 

First, on June 13, 2011, I published a post here examining the question of whether or not directors should be held liable more often. And on August 5, 2011 (here), I reviewed the question of whether or not directors at companies that have failed should be stigmatized for their association with the failed companies. Finally, on a related topic, in an August 15, 2011 post, I took a look here at issues surrounding the potential liabilities of former directors of failed banks.

 

Guest Posts: One of the great privileges of maintaining this site is that from time to time I am honored to be able to publish guest posts from leading commentators and observers. Over the course of this summer, I was fortunate to be able to publish several guest posts, including posts from the following authors and on the following topics: Anjali Das on the U.K. Bribery Act (here); Angelo Savino on the applicability of the Morrison decision to SEC enforcement actions (here); Rick Bortnick and Micha J.M. Knapp on the significance and implications of the Second Circuit’s decision in the MBIA case (here); Anjali Das again, on the issues surrounding the lawsuits against Chinese reverse merger companies (here); and Paul Ferrillo on the question of insurance coverage for investigative costs in light of the revisions of the Dodd-Frank Act (here).

 

Finally, just this past week, I published a post (here) by Mary Gill, Robert Long and Todd Chatham about the issues and concerns surrounding the defense of former directors and officers of failed banks in FDIC litigation.

 

I am very grateful to all of these authors for their willingness to publish their articles on this site. I am interesting in receiving guest post submissions from responsible commentators on topics of interest to readers of this blog. If you are interested in submitting a guest post, please contact me.

 

Coming Attractions: Tomorrow I hope to post my annual fall survey, “What to Watch Now in the World of D&O.” Obviously due to their significance, many of the items referenced above will also appear in tomorrow’s post, albeit discussed in greater depth, and there will be many additional topics as well.

 

ABA TIPS Commemorates 9/11: In recognition of the tenth anniversary of 9/11, the Tort, Trial and Insurance Practice Section (TIPS) of the American Bar Association is sponsoring a series of educational events. Among these events will be a teleconference sponsored by the TIPS Professionals, Officers and Directors Committee scheduled for September 16, 2011 from 12:00 to 1:30 Eastern Time, entitled “9/11 Attacks on the World Trade Center: Duties of Corporate Directors and Officers in the Preparation and Executive of Disaster Avoidance and Recovery,” which will be moderated by my friend Perry Granof. Complete information about this series can be found here. Registration for the September 16 teleconference can be found here

 

It’s a Long, Long While from May to December, But the Days Grow Short When You Reach September: Summer, it was great having you around. We are sorry to see you go. Please come back again next year. We will be thinking about you while you are gone. One thing, though. Next year we can do without the heat wave, hurricanes, earthquakes, tornadoes, and tropical storms, O.K.?

 

It is hard to believe that it is already September. There is something about heading into September and moving past Labor Day that always makes me feel blue. The feeling is captured in the classic soulful “September Song,” sung here by the incomparable Sarah Vaughn, with Teddy Wilson Quartet. Oh, the days dwindle down to a precious few. 

 

In the latest example of the SEC’s use of its compensation clawback authority under Section 304 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, the SEC reached a settlement with the former CFO of Beazer Homes to return more than $1.4 million in bonus compensation he earned during a period when the company was committing accounting fraud. As is contemplated under Section 304, the former CFO, James O’Leary, was obligated to return the bonus compensation even though he was himself not charged with any wrongdoing in connection with the accounting fraud. The SEC’s August 30, 2011 press release about the settlement can be found here.

 

The SEC has previously accused Beazer Homes and its former chief accounting officer, Michael Rand of accounting fraud. In September 2008, Beazer settled its SEC enforcement action. The SEC action against Rand is continuing. Last year, as reported here, Rand was separately indicted on charges including securities fraud and witness tampering. The SEC alleges that during various fiscal years including 2006  Rand and other employees misreported the company’s income by releasing redundant reserves to avoid missing analysts’ estimates.

 

O’Leary served as CFO from 2003 to 2007. However, in the SEC complaint against him, he was not charged with any involvement with or even any awareness of the accounting improprieties. Under Section 304, if any reporting company fails to comply with the financial reporting requirements of the federal securities laws, then the company’s CEO and CFO can be compelled to return bonus compensation or stock sale profits earned during the twelve months following the financial misreporting. Section 304 does not require that the CEO or CFO be personally charged with the misconduct or to have otherwise violated the securities laws.

 

Under the terms of his settlement with the SEC, which is subject to court approval, O’Leary agreed to reimburse Beazer more than $1.4 million in case, including his fiscal 2006 bonus of $1.02 million, plus $131,733 in stock compensation. He also agreed to reimburse the company $274,525 in stock sale profits.

 

O’Leary’s settlement follow the SEC’s similar March 2011 settlement with  Beazer’s CEO Ian McCarthy, who returned several millions of dollars in bonus compensation and stock compensation he had received.

 

These SOX Section 304 clawback actions against Beazer Homes CEO and CFO follow prior Section 304 clawback actions in which the SEC has sought reimbursement of compensation paid to corporate officials they had earned during periods in which their companies had made financial misstatements, as I discussed in an earlier post. As was the case in the actions against Beazer’s CFO and CEO, in the prior actions the officials involved were not alleged to have been involved in or aware of the financial misreporting. At least one court (refer here) has affirmed the SEC’s authority to pursue the compensation clawback under these circumstances, under SOX Section 304.

 

Though statutorily authorized, the implementation of a forfeiture without culpability or fault raises troubling questions, including even basic questions of fairness. On the other hand, it might also fairly be asked whether the CEO or CFO ought to be able to retain benefits accumulated at a time when the investing public was being misled, by financial statements that the CEO and CFO certified, about the company’s financial condition. As an SEC official was quoted as saying in the press release about the SEC’s settlement with O’Leary, “Section 304 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act encourages senior management to take affirmative steps to prevent fraudulent accounting schemes from occurring on their watch.”

 

Regardless of where you come down on the propriety of the compensation clawback without culpability of any kind, the question is about to extend a much broader array of corporate officials. As discussed here and here, under Section 954 of the Dodd-Frank Act, the national securities exchanges are required to promulgate rules requiring reporting companies to adopt and disclose procedures providing for the recovery of any amount of incentive based compensation paid to any current or former executive that exceeds the amount which would have been paid under an accounting restatement in the three years prior to the date on which the company was required to prepare the restatement. The Dodd-Frank provision is quite a bit broader than Sox Section 304, as it extends to all executives and it reaches back three years and to all incentive based compensation.

 

As I have previously noted (here), these provisions allowing for the return of compensation without fault or culpability raise a host of potentially troublesome insurance coverage issues. The marketplace has responded, as many carriers are now willing in at least some cases to add a provision to their policy stating that the policy will cover defense expenses incurred in connection with a SOX 304 action.

 

With the advent of the Dodd-Frank Section 954 requirements, it may be worth asking whether the relatively new Section 304 policy provisions need to be further extended to clarify that the policies will also provide coverage for defense expenses incurred in a Section 954 action or any other compensation clawback provision.

 

Beazer Homes financial misreporting has led to a slew of litigation. As discussed here, Beazer previously settled for $30.5 million the subprime-related securities class action lawsuit that had been filed against the company and certain of its directors and officers. And as discussed here, the company also settled the separate subprime-related shareholders’ derivative suit that had been filed against the company, as nominal defendant, and certain company officials.