In Re Wilmington Trust Securities Litigation
Filing
670
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER re 484 MOTION to Unseal the Following Document(s): 460 Order Adopting Report and Recommendations, Order on Motion to Compel, Order on Report and Recommendations, 459 REPORT AND RECOMMENDATIONS re 233 MOTION to Compel Production of Documents filed by Automotive Industries Pension Trust Fund, Coral Springs Police Pension Fund, Pompano Beach General Employees Retirement System, St. Petersburg Firefighters Retirement System, Merced County Employees Retirem ent Association, 485 Exhibit to a Document, filed by Automotive Industries Pension Trust Fund, Coral Springs Police Pension Fund, Pompano Beach General Employees Retirement System, St. Petersburg Firefighters Retirement System, Merced County Employees Retirement Association. Signed by Judge Sherry R. Fallon on 6/7/17. (cak)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF DELAWARE
IN RE WILMINGTON TRUST
SECURITIES LITIGATION,
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)
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Master Civ. No. 10-990-SLR-SRF
(Consolidated Securities Class Action)
MEMORANDUM ORDER
I.
INTRODUCTION
Presently before the court in this consolidated class action for securities fraud brought
under Sections lO(b) and 20(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 ("Exchange Act") is the
motion for clarification and to unseal the August 16, 2016 Report and Recommendation, filed by
the Merced County Employees' Retirement Association, the Coral Springs Police Pension Fund,
the St. Petersburg Firefighters' Retirement System, the Pompano Beach General Employees
Retirement System, and the Automotive Industries Pension Trust (collectively, "Lead
Plaintiffs"). (D.I. 484) For the following reasons, Lead Plaintiffs' motion to unseal the August
16, 2016 Report and Recommendation in the redacted form proposed by Lead Plaintiffs is
granted. (D.I. 485) The motion for clarification is denied to the extent that it seeks to expand the
scope of the Report and Recommendation to encompass documents in the possession of third
parties such as Treliant Risk Advisors ("Treliant").
II.
BACKGROUND 1
Lead Plaintiffs are institutional investors who purchased the common stock of
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The factual background included in this decision is limited to facts relevant to the pending
motion. A more detailed description of the facts is set forth in Judge Robinson's Memorandum
Opinion dated March 20, 2014 and this court's August 16, 2016 Report and Recommendation.
(D.I. 184; D.I. 459)
Wilmington Trust Corporation ("WTC") between January 18, 2008 and November 1, 2010 ("the
class period"). (D.I. 149 at iii! 25-30) Lead Plaintiffs claim that WTC's lending practices were
part of a "massive criminal conspiracy that 'fraudulently conceal[ ed] the Bank's true financial
condition' and 'deceive[d] regulators and the public."' (Id. at if 1) In September 2009, the Board
of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (the "Federal Reserve") required WTC to enter into
a Memorandum of Understanding ("MOU"), which identified failings in the Bank's lending, risk
management, and accounting functions and forced the Bank to restructure the way it originated,
monitored, and accounted for its loans. (Id. at iii! 12-13, 152-56)
During the second quarter of 2010, WTC utilized Treliant to serve as a third party
reviewer of its risk rating and loan collateral values as a result of the MOU. (D.I. 149 at iii! 90,
150) Plaintiffs allege that Treliant's updated appraisals preceded WTC's fire sale to M&T Bank
Corp. (Id.) On May 13, 2014, Lead Plaintiffs served a document subpoena on Treliant to obtain
documents in connection with Treliant's evaluation and review of WTC's loan portfolio. (D.I.
484 at 2; D.I. 342 at 18 n.19; 1114/14 Tr. at 29:19-30:2)
Lead Plaintiffs submitted a formal administrative request to the Federal Reserve on June
4, 2014, seeking a waiver of the bank examination privilege to authorize Defendants to disclose
confidential supervisory information ("CSI") to Lead Plaintiffs. (D.I. 484 at if 2 n.2; D.I. 235,
Ex. Lat 1-8) The Federal Reserve denied the administrative request. (D.I. 484 at if 2 n.2)
Following the denial of the request for a waiver, Lead Plaintiffs filed a motion to compel in this
court on August 5, 2014, which sought confidential bank examination documents and an
injunction against future assertions of bank examination privilege. (D.I. 233)
On February 19, 2016, the court issued an order requesting the production of a sampling
of certain categories of documents for in camera review. (D.I. 432) Following the in camera
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review, the court issued a sealed Report and Recommendation on August 16, 2016, granting in
part and denying in part Lead Plaintiffs' motion to compel. (D.I. 459) The court evaluated
various categories of documents, concluding that a number of the documents were factual and
therefore not subject to the bank examination privilege, and the majority of documents that were
subject to the privilege should be produced in accordance with the good cause exception. (Id.)
The court recommended denial of the motion to compel with respect to a limited number of
documents. (Id.) On September 12, 2016, the court adopted the Report and Recommendation
after receiving no objections to its findings. (D.I. 460)
On October 12, 2016, Lead Plaintiffs contacted Treliant to determine whether Treliant
would produce documents in response to the May 13, 2014 subpoena following the adoption of
the August 16, 2016 Report and Recommendation. (D.I. 484 at if 7) Treliant declined to
produce any documents prior to reviewing the sealed Report and Recommendation. (Id.)
Consequently, Lead Plaintiffs asked Defendants, the Federal Reserve, and other regulators if
they would consent to unsealing the August 16, 2016 Report and Recommendation to allow for
its distribution to subpoenaed third parties such as Treliant. (D.I. 484 at if 8) Defendants did not
object, but the Federal Reserve and other regulators refused to consent to unsealing the Report
and Recommendation. (Id.)
On November 1, 2016, Lead Plaintiffs provided proposed redactions to the Report and
Recommendation in an effort to obtain the consent of the Federal Reserve and other regulators to
unseal the Report and Recommendation. (Id.) The Federal Reserve rejected the proposed
redactions, and on November 3, 2016, offered to provide Lead Plaintiffs with its own set of
proposed redactions. (Id. at if 9) To date, the Federal Reserve has not provided its proposed
redactions or consented to the redactions proposed by Lead Plaintiffs. (Id. at if 10) On
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November 29, 2016, Lead Plaintiffs filed the instant motion, seeking to unseal the August 16,
2016 Report and Recommendation and clarify the scope of the ruling to extend to third parties
such as Treliant. (D.I. 484)
III.
DISCUSSION
A.
Motion to Unseal
In support of the pending motion, Lead Plaintiffs contend that the August 16, 2016
Report and Recommendation should be unsealed so that it may be provided to subpoenaed third
parties such as Treliant. (D.I. 484 at if 8) According to Lead Plaintiffs, Defendants do not object
to the request to unseal, and the Federal Reserve and other regulators have provided no reasons
for their objection. (Id.) The Federal Reserve ' s brief in opposition to the motion does not
address Lead Plaintiffs' request to unseal the Report and Recommendation in its opposition to
Lead Plaintiffs' motion. (D.I. 487)
When a responding party fails to defend against an issue which is the subject of a motion,
courts consistently construe the failure to respond as an abandonment of the issue or a
concession that the moving party is correct. See Blakeman v. Freedom Rides, Inc., C.A. No. 12416-LPS-CJB, 2013 WL 3503165, at *13 (D. Del. July 10, 2013) (citing additional cases).
Consequently, Lead Plaintiffs' motion to unseal the August 16, 2016 Report and
Recommendation is granted in the redacted form attached to Lead Plaintiffs' motion at Exhibit
B. (D.I. 485)
B.
Motion for Clarification
Lead Plaintiffs additionally ask the court to clarify that the scope of the August 16, 2016
Report and Recommendation encompasses all documents previously withheld from Lead
Plaintiffs by any person or entity on the grounds of the bank examination privilege, and not just
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those documents withheld by Defendants. (D.I. 484 at 1) According to Lead Plaintiffs, the
Report and Recommendation does not distinguish between parties and non-parties, and instead
focuses on the categories of documents being withheld under the guise of the bank examination
privilege. (Id. at 3) Lead Plaintiffs contend that Treliant has been withholding a significant
volume of documents based on the bank examination privilege, and should be compelled to
produce these documents in accordance with the Report and Recommendation and the May 13,
2014 subpoena. (Id.)
In response, the Federal Reserve alleges that Lead Plaintiffs should not be permitted to
retroactively expand the scope of their motion to compel and the court's Report and
Recommendation to include third parties because the relief requested by Lead Plaintiffs was
limited to the production of withheld documents by Defendants on the basis of the bank
examination privilege. (D.I. 487 at 2) According to the Federal Reserve, Treliant did not
participate in status conferences with the court regarding the privilege issue, had no opportunity
to participate in the briefing or oral argument on Lead Plaintiffs' 2014 motion to compel, and did
not submit documents for in camera review by the court. (Id. at 3-6)
A review of Lead Plaintiffs' motion to compel and the court's August 16, 2016 Report
and Recommendation reveals that the court' s ruling was limited to the reliefrequested by Lead
Plaintiffs, and does not expressly extend to third parties such as Treliant. The title of Lead
Plaintiffs' motion to compel is styled, "Motion by Lead Plaintiffs to Compel Production of
Documents Withheld by Defendants Based On ' The Bank Examination' Privilege." (D.I. 233)
The relief requested in the motion expressly identifies each Defendant from whom the allegedly
privileged documents are sought, but does not refer to documents in the possession of Treliant.
(D.I. 233 ; D.I. 234) Consequently, CSI in the possession of Treliant or any other third party was
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not included in the court's collection of documents for in camera review. (D.I. 432) The court's
Report and Recommendation is limited to addressing the relief requested by Lead Plaintiffs in
the motion to compel, and is therefore silent on the applicability of the ruling to a third party
such as Treliant. (D.I. 459)
Lead Plaintiffs served a subpoena on Treliant on May 13, 2014 in an effort to obtain the
documents which are the subject of the present dispute. (D.I. 212; 5/17/17 Tr. at 17:1-9)
Nevertheless, on June 4, 2014, Lead Plaintiffs served a formal administrative request on the
Federal Reserve which requested that the Federal Reserve "authorize Wilmington Trust and
other Defendants to disclose to Lead Plaintiffs" certain CSI, but did not include Treliant or other
third parties in the administrative request. (D.I. 235 at 1) Thus, Lead Plaintiffs did not exhaust
their administrative remedies with respect to Treliant in accordance with the Federal Reserve's
regulations, which require the filing of an administrative request prior to the disclosure of CSI:
All confidential supervisory information or other information made available
under this section shall remain the property of the Board. No supervised financial
institution, financial institution supervisory agency, person, or any other party to
whom the information is made available, or any other officer, director, employee
or agent thereof, may disclose such information without the prior written
permission of the Board' s General Counsel ....
12 C.F .R. § 261.20(g); see also Alaska Elec. Pension Fund v. Bank ofAm. Corp., 2016 WL
6779901 , at *6 (S.D.N.Y. Nov. 16, 2016) (citing In re Bankers Trust Co., 61 F.3d 465, 467-68
(6th Cir. 1995)); In re JPMorgan Chase Mortgage Modification Litig. , 2012 WL 5947757, at *2
(D. Mass. Nov. 27, 2012) ("Plaintiffs may not move to compel the production of privileged
examination information until they have first contacted the agency that holds the privilege and
followed the agency' s procedures for obtaining information."); In re Countrywide Fin. Corp.
Sec. Litig., 2009 WL 5125089, at *2 (C.D. Cal. Dec. 28, 2009) ("The Court holds that Plaintiffs
must first exhaust all administrative procedures and submit requests to use the documents in this
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litigation to the FRB and OCC, pursuant to the federal regulations. If the FRB and OCC do not
authorize disclosure of the information that is relevant to this litigation, then the parties can seek
the appropriate relief from this Court regarding document production.").
During oral argument on the pending motion, Lead Plaintiffs registered their concern
regarding the practical effects of exhausting their administrative remedies prior to obtaining
relief from the court. Lead Plaintiffs cited the Federal Reserve' s rejection of the June 4, 2014
administrative request on relevance grounds and predicted that the process would be lengthy and,
ultimately, futile. (5/17 /17 Tr. at 22: 1-23 :2) However, the Federal Reserve represented on the
record that an expedited process could be implemented in the present case. (Id. at 24: 12-17) ("I
would submit, Your Honor, that this was very easily solvable by providing an administrative
request and then having Truliant [sic] send us the documents through the log so we can easily
complete that process and we would do so expeditiously.") Consequently, the procedural
inefficiencies caused by adding the extra layer of administrative review in this case would not
likely result in an unduly frustrating process for obtaining the records in issue.
IV.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Lead Plaintiffs' motion for clarification and to unseal the
August 16, 2016 Report and Recommendation is granted-in-part and denied-in-part. (D.I. 484)
Specifically, Lead Plaintiffs' motion to unseal the August 16, 2016 Report and Recommendation
in the redacted form proposed by Lead Plaintiffs at D.I. 485 is granted. Lead Plaintiffs' motion
for clarification is denied to the extent that the motion seeks to expand the scope of the August
16, 2016 Report and Recommendation to encompass documents held by third parties such as
Treliant.
This Memorandum Order is filed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(l)(B), Fed. R. Civ. P.
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72(a), and D. Del. LR 72.1. The parties may serve and file specific written objections within
fourteen (14) days after being served with a copy of this Memorandum Order. Fed. R. Civ. P.
72(a). The objections and responses to the objections are limited to ten (10) pages each. The
failure of a party to object to legal conclusions may result in the loss of the right to de novo
review in the District Court. See Sincavage v. Barnhart, 171 F. App'x 924, 925 n.1 (3d Cir.
2006); Henderson v. Carlson, 812 F.2d 874, 878-79 (3d Cir. 1987).
The parties are directed to the court's Standing Order For Objections Filed Under Fed. R.
Civ. P. 72, dated October 9, 2013, a copy of which is available on the court's website,
http://www.ded.uscourts.gov.
Dated: June
2_,2017
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