National Credit Union Administration Board v. Basconi et al
Filing
249
Memorandum Opinion and Order: For the reasons set forth herein, plaintiff's motion for partial summary judgment as to defendants' statute of limitations defense (Doc. No. 196 ) is denied and the motion of defendants Ciuni & Panichi, Inc., Lynn A. Basconi, and Charles Ciuni for partial summary judgment on any claim based upon the 2006 and 2007 audits (Doc. No. 205 ) is granted--all claims relating to the 2006 and 2007 audits are time-barred, leaving only claims relating to the 2008 audit. The motion of plaintiff for partial judgment on the pleadings or, in the alternative, for partial summary judgment as to defendants' affirmative defenses (Doc. No. 197 ) is granted in part and denied in part--judgment on the pleadin gs is granted in favor of the National Credit Union Administration Board with respect to the defenses of contributory/comparative negligence, intervening and/or superseding acts, unclean hands, in pari delicto, set-off, failure to comply with federal statutes, and failure to comply with federal regulations. The motion of plaintiff for partial summary judgment concerning defendants' liability as to the 2007 Audit (Doc. No. 198 ) is denied because the 2007 audit is time-barred. The motion of defendant Robert J. Smolko for summary judgment on all claims against him (Doc. No. 206 ) is granted because Robert Smolko had no involvement with the three audits at issue. The only claims remaining for trial are the professional negligence claim, the gross negligence claim, and the breach of contract claim (subject to a four-year statute of limitations) against Ciuni & Panichi, Inc., Lynn A. Basconi, and Charles Ciuni relating to the 2008 audit. Robert J. Smolko is dismissed as a party. In l ight of all the rulings over the course of proceedings in this case, available affirmative defenses include failure to join necessary/indispensible parties (sixth defense), no legally cognizable duty between Ciuni & Panichi and the National Credit Un ion Administration Board (seventh defense), damages caused by persons or entities not controlled by Ciuni & Panichi (twelfth defense), assumption of the risk (thirteenth defense), lack of good faith (sixteenth defense), impracticability/ impossibility/frustration of purpose (seventeenth defense), and failure to mitigate (eighteenth defense). Judge Sara Lioi on 1/11/2019. (P,J)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO
EASTERN DIVISION
NATIONAL CREDIT UNION
ADMINISTRATION BOARD, acting in its
capacity as Liquidating Agent for G.I.C.
Federal Credit Union,
)
)
)
)
)
PLAINTIFF, )
)
vs.
)
)
CIUNI & PANICHI, INC. CERTIFIED
)
PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS, et al.,
)
)
DEFENDANTS. )
)
CASE NO. 5:16-cv-455
JUDGE SARA LIOI
MEMORANDUM OPINION
AND ORDER
Before the Court are the following motions for summary judgment:
1. Motion of plaintiff National Credit Union Administration Board (“the NCUA
Board” or “the Board” or “plaintiff”), as Liquidating Agent for G.I.C. Federal
Credit Union, for partial summary judgment as to defendants’ statute of limitations
defense (Doc. No. 196), with an opposition brief by all defendants (Doc. No. 226),
and plaintiff’s reply (Doc. No. 237);1
2. Motion of the NCUA Board for partial judgment on the pleadings or, in the
alternative, for partial summary judgment as to defendants’ affirmative defenses
(Doc. No. 197), with an opposition brief by all defendants (Doc. No. 231), and
plaintiff’s reply (Doc. No. 238);
3. Motion of the NCUA Board for partial summary judgment concerning defendants’
liability as to the 2007 Audit (Doc. No. 198), with an opposition brief by all
defendants (Doc. No. 230), and plaintiff’s reply (Doc. No. 236);
4. Motion of defendants Ciuni & Panichi, Inc., Lynn A. Basconi, and Charles Ciuni
(“the Ciuni defendants”) for partial summary judgment on any claim based upon
the 2006 and 2007 audits (Doc. No. 205), with an opposition brief by plaintiff (Doc.
No. 227), and a reply by the Ciuni defendants (Doc. No. 239); and,
1
For ease of reference herein, all relevant documents will be referred to by the CM/ECF docket numbers, rather than
the typical bluebook abbreviations.
5. Motion of defendant Robert J. Smolko (“Smolko”) for summary judgment on all
claims against him (Doc. No. 206), with an opposition brief by plaintiff (Doc. No.
228), and a reply by Smolko (Doc. No. 240).
For the reasons set forth herein, the NCUA Board’s motion for partial summary judgment
with respect to the Ciuni defendants’ statute of limitations defense (Doc. No. 196) is denied and
the Ciuni defendants’ motion for partial summary judgment that all claims based on the 2006 and
2007 audits are time-barred (Doc. No. 205) is granted; the NCUA Board’s motion for partial
summary judgment on the pleadings or, in the alternative, for partial summary judgment as to
defendants’ affirmative defenses (Doc. No. 197) is granted in part and denied in part; the NCUA
Board’s motion for partial summary judgment concerning defendants’ liability as the 2007 Audit
(Doc. No. 198) is denied; and Smolko’s motion for summary judgment (Doc. No. 206) is granted.2
I. BACKGROUND
On February 26, 2016, acting in its capacity as Liquidating Agent for G.I.C. Federal Credit
Union (“GIC”), the NCUA Board filed a complaint against the Ciuni defendants,3 seeking to
recover damages relating to a massive, multiyear fraud committed by William Memmer
(“Memmer”)4, a long-time officer and employee of GIC who overstated GIC’s assets by over $9
million resulting in a loss to the National Credit Union Share Insurance Fund (“NCUSIF”) of more
than $8 million. The NCUA Board seeks to hold the Ciuni defendants responsible because they
were GIC’s outside independent auditors and, in that capacity, failed to discover the nonexistence
2
Plaintiff also filed a motion in limine to preclude from evidence the Material Loss Review Report, #OIG-13-13.
(Doc. No. 235.) The motion is fully briefed, but need not be resolved at this time, since the Court found no need to
rely upon the challenged report to resolve any of the dispositive motions.
It is undisputed that Ciuni & Panichi, Inc. (“C&P”) was the accounting firm engaged to perform audits of GIC’s
financials for the relevant years. Defendants Lynn A. Basconi (“Basconi”), Charles Ciuni (“Ciuni”) and Smolko are
accountants who were employed by C&P. Basconi was the accountant actually in charge of performing the GIC audits
and Ciuni was the engagement partner who signed the audit reports. (Doc. No. 205 at 5401.) [All page number
references herein are to the page identification number generated by the Court’s electronic docketing system.]
3
4
It is the Court’s understanding that Memmer is currently incarcerated, having been prosecuted for his fraud.
2
of millions of dollars in GIC assets reported on published financial statements for the years 2006,
2007, and 2008.5 The NCUA Board alleges that, but for the Ciuni defendants’ misfeasance,
Memmer’s fraud would have been discovered years earlier and the loss to GIC would have been
either avoided or significantly reduced.6
II. DISCUSSION
A.
Standard of Review
When a party files a motion for summary judgment, it must be granted “if the movant
shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment
as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). “A party asserting that a fact cannot be or is genuinely
disputed must support the assertion by: (A) citing to particular parts of materials in the record …;
or (B) showing that the materials cited do not establish the absence or presence of a genuine
dispute, or that an adverse party cannot produce admissible evidence to support the fact.” Fed. R.
Civ. P. 56(c)(1).
In reviewing summary judgment motions, this Court must view the evidence in a light most
favorable to the nonmoving party to determine whether a genuine issue of material fact exists.
5
The complaint sets forth five counts: (1) professional negligence; (2) gross negligence; and (3), (4), (5) breach of
contract for audit years 2006, 2007, and 2008. When read as a whole, the complaint clearly encompasses only the
years 2006, 2007, and 2008. (See, e.g., Doc. No. 1 [“Compl.”] ¶¶ 57, 78-80, 85-87.) Notably, although alleging that
“[d]efendants also failed to complete any audit subsequent to 2008, despite being engaged to do so[,]” (Compl. ¶ 88),
there is no breach of contract claim for those subsequent years. Although, herein, the Court will find that the contract
claims are subsumed into the negligence claims (and, therefore, governed by a four-year statute of limitations), had
breach of contract claims been alleged for 2009 and following, those might have stood alone with a six-year statute of
limitations. At this juncture, despite passing references in some of plaintiff’s briefing to years after 2008, none of
those years are at issue in this case.
The Ciuni defendants filed a counterclaim, as amended, which sought to hold the NCUA Board liable for GIC’s
breach of contract. On the NCUA Board’s motion, by order dated March 30, 2017, this Court dismissed the
counterclaims, determining that there was no subject matter jurisdiction because the counterclaims had not been first
presented as administrative claims under the relevant statute. (See Doc. No. 109.) The Ciuni defendants also filed a
third-party complaint attempting to accomplish the same purpose as the counterclaim. The third-party complaint was
dismissed as to all but two third-party defendants by separate order. (See Doc. No. 247.)
6
3
Adickes v. S.H. Kress & Co., 398 U.S. 144, 157, 90 S. Ct. 1598, 26 L. Ed. 2d 142 (1970); White v.
Turfway Park Racing Ass’n, Inc., 909 F.2d 941, 943-44 (6th Cir. 1990), impliedly overruled on
other grounds by Salve Regina Coll. v. Russell, 499 U.S. 225, 111 S. Ct. 1217, 113 L. Ed. 2d 190
(1991). A fact is “material” only if its resolution will affect the outcome of the lawsuit. Anderson
v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248, 106 S. Ct. 2505, 91 L. Ed. 2d 202 (1986). Determination
of whether a factual issue is “genuine” requires consideration of the applicable evidentiary
standards. Thus, in most civil cases the Court must decide “whether reasonable jurors could find
by a preponderance of the evidence that the [nonmoving party] is entitled to a verdict[.]” Id. at
252.
“Once the moving party has presented evidence sufficient to support a motion for summary
judgment, the nonmoving party is not entitled to trial merely on the basis of allegations; significant
probative evidence must be presented to support the complaint.” Goins v. Clorox Co., 926 F.2d
559, 561 (6th Cir. 1991). The party opposing the motion for summary judgment may not rely solely
on the pleadings but must present evidence supporting the claims asserted by the party. Banks v.
Wolfe Cty. Bd. of Educ., 330 F.3d 888, 892 (6th Cir. 2003); see Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S.
317, 322, 106 S. Ct. 2548, 91 L. Ed. 2d 265 (1986) (finding that summary judgment is appropriate
whenever the nonmoving party fails to make a showing sufficient to establish the existence of an
element essential to that party’s case and on which that party will bear the burden of proof at trial).
Moreover, conclusory allegations, speculation, and unsubstantiated assertions are not evidence,
and are not sufficient to defeat a well-supported motion for summary judgment. See Lujan v. Nat’l
Wildlife Fed’n, 497 U.S. 871, 888, 110 S. Ct. 3177, 111 L. Ed. 2d 695 (1990). In other words, to
defeat summary judgment, the party opposing the motion must present affirmative evidence to
support his or her position; a mere “scintilla of evidence” is insufficient. Bell v. Ohio State Univ.,
4
351 F.3d 240, 247 (6th Cir. 2003). Rule 56 further provides that “[t]he court need consider only”
the materials cited in the parties’ briefs. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c)(3); see also Street v. J.C. Bradford
& Co., 886 F.2d 1472, 1479-80 (6th Cir. 1989) (“The trial court no longer has the duty to search
the entire record to establish that it is bereft of a genuine issue of material fact.” (citing Frito-Lay,
Inc. v. Willoughby, 863 F.2d 1029, 1034 (D.C. Cir. 1988))).
Under this standard, the mere existence of some factual dispute will not frustrate an
otherwise proper summary judgment motion. Dunigan v. Noble, 390 F.3d 486, 491 (6th Cir. 2004)
(quotation marks omitted) (citing Anderson, 477 U.S. at 247-48). “Only disputes over facts that
might affect the outcome of the suit under the governing law will properly preclude the entry of
summary judgment. Factual disputes that are irrelevant or unnecessary will not be counted.”
Anderson, 477 U.S. at 248.
B.
Analysis7
1.
Doc. Nos. 196 and 205 - Statute of Limitations
In their motion for partial summary judgment, the Ciuni defendants argue that all claims
based upon the 2006 and 2007 audits are time-barred, and were already time-barred at the time
GIC was placed into liquidation, warranting summary judgment in their favor on those claims.
(Doc. No. 205 at 5397.) They assert that these claims accrued when the audit reports were issued.
They further assert that all of the claims related to these two audit years are governed by the same
four-year statute of limitations because, under Ohio law, the breach of contract claims (which
Some of the dispositive motions seek judgment with respect to various affirmative defenses. Courts “can and do
resolve affirmative defenses at the summary judgment stage.” Speedeon Data, LLC v. Integrated Direct Mktg., LLC,
718 F. App’x 333, 337 (6th Cir. 2017) (citing Louzon v. Ford Motor Co., 718 F.3d 556, 561 (6th Cir. 2013) (“[T]he
question whether a particular affirmative defense is sufficiently supported by testimony to go to the jury may often be
resolved on a motion for summary judgment.” (further citation omitted))).
7
5
ordinarily have a six-year statute of limitations) are subsumed into the professional negligence
claims. (Id. at 5404-05 (citing cases).)
The NCUA Board takes the position in its motion that an accounting malpractice claim
accrues when the negligent act is discovered. (Doc. No. 196 at 1822.) It further argues that there
are several theories under Ohio law (e.g., the delayed damages rule, the termination rule, the
continuing tort doctrine, and general equitable tolling principles) that, under the “unique
circumstances” of this case, would permit the tolling of the statute of limitations for the tort claims
for audit years 2006 and 2007. (Doc. No. 196 at 1822 (citing Antioch Co. Litig. Tr. v. Morgan (In
re Antioch Co.), No. 3:10-CV-156, 2011 WL 3664564 (S.D. Ohio Aug. 12, 2011)).) In opposition
to the Ciuni defendants’ motion, the NCUA Board also argues that the breach of contract claims
are not subsumed into the professional negligence claims because any such Ohio law conflicts
with, and is preempted by, the Extender Statute, 12 U.S.C. § 1787(b)(14). (Doc. No. 227 at 731215.)
There are several issues raised by these competing summary judgment motions. The Court
will address them in this order: (a) whether the breach of contract claims are subsumed into the
professional negligence claims; (b) when the claims accrued; (c) whether the Extender Statute
affects the date of accrual; and (d) whether there is any equitable theory upon which the statute of
limitations should be tolled.
a.
Subsumption of claims
The Ciuni defendants first argue that all the claims in the Board’s complaint are governed
by the four-year statute of limitations for professional negligence, that is, that the breach of contract
claims are subsumed into the professional negligence claims.
In its complaint, the NCUA Board alleges, in relevant part:
6
13.
On December 13, 2012, the NCUA Board placed GIC into
involuntary liquidation due to GIC’s insolvency, and the NCUA Board appointed
itself as its liquidating agent, pursuant to 12 U.S.C. § 1787(a)(1)(A). The liquidation
of GIC was triggered by the discovery that William Memmer (“Memmer”), a longtime officer and employee of GIC, had committed a massive, multi-year fraud
against GIC by overstating GIC’s assets by over $9 million, resulting in a loss to
the National Credit Union Share Insurance Fund (“NCUSIF”) of more than $8
million.
14.
Despite the blatant and substantial overstatements of assets, in each
of the years 2006-2008, [d]efendants published audited financial statements
indicating all asset accounts were fairly and accurately represented. The reality was,
as early as 2006, GIC had insufficient assets to satisfy its liabilities, and was
insolvent. GIC’s insolvency was not discovered until December, 2012, at which
time the net loss borne by the NCUSIF had increased due to the absence of
sufficient assets.
15.
At all relevant times, [d]efendants served as GIC’s outside
independent auditor and as such, were required, at a minimum, to perform their
services in accordance with Generally Accepted Auditing Standards (“GAAS”).
16.
During the entire time that Memmer was carrying out his
unsophisticated, yet increasingly brazen and costly fraud against GIC, [d]efendants
failed to discover that millions of dollars of GIC assets that [d]efendants reported
on their published financial statements for each of the years 2006, 2007 and 2008
did not exist. As demonstrated more fully below, [d]efendants repeatedly, and
erroneously, issued clean opinions stating that the asset accounts listed in GIC’s
financial statements were fairly and accurately stated. Overlooking colossal
misstatements of assets and nonexistent internal controls, [d]efendants continued
to negligently perform auditing services for GIC.
17.
The Liquidating Agent has identified numerous acts and omissions
by [d]efendants in connection with C&P’s audit engagements for fiscal years 2006,
2007 and 2008, each constituting professional negligence, gross negligence and
breach of contract. In the absence of [d]efendants’ misfeasance, Memmer’s
substantial misstatement of assets would have been discovered by early 2007 (when
[d]efendants were required to publish the audited financial statements as of
December 31, 2006), and [p]laintiff’s damages would have been avoided.
***
COUNT 1 - PROFESSIONAL NEGLIGENCE
89.
The Liquidating Agent hereby restates and incorporates by reference
each of the allegations set forth above as if fully rewritten herein.
7
90.
Defendants owed GIC a duty of care, diligence and prudence in
executing their professional obligations as GIC’s independent auditors. Defendants
owed a duty to perform their audits and professional services in accordance with
applicable professional standards.
91.
Defendants breached their duties in numerous ways, including
without limitation, committing the acts of negligence detailed herein. Defendants’
negligent acts violated numerous governing professional standards in many
significant ways, and thus they missed several opportunities to identify substantial
and material misstatements of GIC’s assets.
***
94.
Had [d]efendants complied with applicable professional standards,
they would have detected that Memmer substantially and materially misstated
GIC’s assets in 2006, 2007 and 2008, and GIC would have been deemed insolvent
and immediately liquidated by the NCUA Board.
***
COUNT 2 - GROSS NEGLIGENCE
96.
The Liquidating Agent hereby restates and incorporates by reference
each of the allegations set forth above as if fully rewritten herein.
97.
Defendants’ actions in committing the acts described above
demonstrated a complete absence of care, a conscious disregard and indifference to
the rights of GIC and its members, and an utter disregard for prudence amounting
to gross negligence and recklessness.
***
99.
But for [d]efendants’ grossly negligent and reckless acts and
omissions, GIC would have been liquidated by the NCUA Board at an earlier date
and would have avoided incurring additional losses that were ultimately borne by
the NCUSIF.
100. Defendants’ misconduct constituted such an extreme departure from
professional standards as to constitute gross negligence.
***
8
(Compl. ¶¶ 13-17, 89-91, 94, 96-97, 99-100.) The complaint goes on to assert three counts
characterized as breach of contract claims (one for each audit year: 2006, 2007, and 2008), all
incorporating by reference each of the above-quoted allegations. Each of the three counts alleges
for its respective year that “C&P and GIC executed an engagement letter[.]” (Id. ¶¶ 103, 109, 115.)
The complaint further alleges in each of the three counts as follows:
C&P breached various promises set forth in the [relevant year’s] Contract
by, among other things: (a) failing to exercise professional judgment and to
sufficiently test and confirm GIC’s cash and investment accounts; (b) failing to plan
and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial
statements are free from material misstatement; (c) failing to obtain an
understanding of GIC’s internal controls sufficient to plan an audit; (d) failing to
ensure that financial statements were prepared in accordance with GAAP; and (e)
failing to apply GAAS to audits conducted on GIC’s financial statements.
(Id. ¶¶ 106, 112, 118.)
In Fronczak v. Arthur Andersen, L.L.P., 705 N.E.2d 1283 (Ohio Ct. App. 1997), cited by
the Ciuni defendants, an Ohio court of appeals noted that it was “evident from the face of the
amended complaint that the factual allegations supporting [the] breach-of-contract claim are the
same factual allegations supporting [the] accountant-negligence claims[.]” Id. at 1287.
In such circumstances, courts have routinely held that the breach-of-contract claim
is simply a restatement of the negligence claims and that the four-year statute of
limitations for professional negligence found in R.C. 2305.09(D) applies rather
than the six-year statute of limitations for contracts not in writing found in R.C.
2305.07.
Id. (citing cases).
The NCUA Board argues in opposition that the principle announced in Fronczak and its
cited cases is inapplicable where, as here, there were written contracts. Although the Board is
correct that the cases cited in Fronczak apparently involved only oral contracts, the reasoning
underlying the subsumption of claims was not dependent upon whether the contract was written
9
or oral. Rather, it depended upon the fundamental nature of the claims as alleged, an analysis not
altered by the way the individual claims may have been framed by the plaintiff. See, e.g., Cohen
& Co. v. Breen, No. 100775, 2014 WL 4460363, at *5 (Ohio Ct. App. Sept. 11, 2014) (citing cases
holding that “‘malpractice by any other name still constitutes malpractice,’ whether predicated on
contract or tort[]”); see also Chilton-Clark v. Fishel, No. 16AP-76, 2016 WL 5639615, at *2 (Ohio
Ct. App. Sept. 30, 2016) (affirming summary judgment where the trial court found that the
negligence, breach of contract, and breach of fiduciary duty claims “were essentially a single claim
for ‘professional malpractice’”).
All the claims in the complaint are based on the Ciuni defendants’ allegedly deficient
auditing of GIC. Although there were written contracts, the NCUA Board points to nothing in any
of the contracts that created a separate duty distinct from the Generally Accepted Accounting
Principles (“GAAP”) underlying the professional negligence and gross negligence claims.8
Therefore, under Ohio law, all the claims are subsumed under the professional negligence claims.
The NCUA Board asserts that Ohio law conflicts with the Extender Statute, which
“specifically recognizes a 6-year statute of limitations for contract claims[,]” and, therefore, the
Ohio law is preempted. (Doc. No. 227 at 7312.) But the Extender Statute, as cited by the Board,
refers to the differing length of the statute of limitations for tort and contract claims; it does not
address how individual claims should be framed. Before the statutes of limitations in the Extender
Statute are applied, one must first determine the precise nature of the claims.
The NCUA Board makes passing reference, in a footnote, to defendants owing “a contractual duty to perform
confirmations, a duty that is separate from the duties owed under GAAS and GAAP.” (Doc. No. 227 at 7312, n.8.)
But the Board offers no supporting citation to either the allegations of the complaint or to the actual contracts that
supposedly created that duty. The Court need not search the record to find support for plaintiff’s half-hearted assertion.
8
10
There is no dispute that, under Ohio law, the statute of limitations for accounting
malpractice is four (4) years. (Doc. No. 196 at 1822; Doc. No. 205 at 5404). See Inv’rs REIT One
v. Jacobs, 546 N.E.2d 206, 210 (Ohio 1989) (citing Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.09(D)). Here, the
Ciuni defendants are correct that all the claims are professional negligence claims, although some
purport to be based on contract. Therefore, all the claims are governed by the same four-year statute
of limitations.
b.
Accrual of claims
The Ciuni defendants argue that a claim for accounting malpractice accrues four years from
the date an audit report is issued. (Doc. No. 205 at 5404.) They claim that, as recognized by the
NCUA Board’s expert, Harry J. Potter (“Potter”), the 2006 audit was completed and issued on
March 2, 2007, and presented at the GIC annual meeting on March 4, 2007; the 2007 audit was
completed and issued on February 22, 2008, and presented at the GIC annual meeting on March
2, 2008. (Doc. No. 205 at 5405-06 (citing Doc. No. 204-1 [“Potter Dep.”] at 5262 (73))9.) This
lawsuit was filed on February 26, 2016–well beyond four years after the audit reports were issued
and presented.
In opposition, the NCUA Board argues that use of Potter’s acknowledgement of the dates
of the 2006 and 2007 audits would be “improper” because “he gave [d]efendants the benefit of the
doubt by employing a conservative damages methodology.” (Doc. No. 227 at 7315 (citing Doc.
No. 197-6 [Expert Report of Harry Potter] at 2178.))10 Regardless of the damages methodology
9
Because the deposition has four pages to every one CM/ECF page, the Court cites to both the PageID# and the actual
deposition page number.
In a separate section of its opposition to the Ciuni defendants’ motion, the NCUA Board attacks the defendants’
factual assertion that “some of the [GIC] Board members lacked the requisite education or experience to effectively
serve on the Board.” (Doc. No. 227 at 7317 (quoting Doc. No. 205 at 5400 (alteration in original)).) This argument
has no relevance to the statute of limitations question raised by the cross-motions, and the Court need not address it.
10
11
Potter may have applied, he nonetheless explicitly accepted the March 2, 2007 and February 22,
2008 audit report dates, both during his deposition and for purposes of his damages calculation.
Finally, the NCUA Board asserts that “[d]efendants are also as confused as everyone else
when it comes to determining which of the multiple reports in 2006 and 2007 were the actual final
audit reports.” (Id.) The Board then points to the alternative dates of July 19, 2007 (for the 2006
audit) and July 1, 2008 (for the 2007 audit) as possible dates of accrual. (Id. at 7316.) Even taking
those dates as the correct ones, the claims would still be time-barred.11
c.
Effect of the Extender Statute, 12 U.S.C. § 1787(b)(14)
Although it is not particularly clear from either the NCUA Board’s own motion or its
opposition to the Ciuni defendants’ motion, it appears that the Board is of the view that the
Extender Statute, by itself, is capable of restarting an already-expired statute of limitations in cases
where the Liquidating Agent, upon taking over a failed credit union, discovers an allegedly
negligent act that, for whatever reason, had not been previously (or timely) pursued by the credit
union itself. (Doc. No. 196 at 1822 & n.8.)
The Ciuni defendants properly reject this interpretation of the statute. (Doc. No. 205 at
5407.) In a case construing a virtually identical statute12 that applies to the conservatorship of failed
In its opposition to the Ciuni defendants’ motion, the NCUA Board does not repeat the argument in its own motion
that the claims accrued as of their discovery, not as of the date of the audit reports. But the Board also does not abandon
that argument, which is discussed in the equitable tolling section of this opinion. In opposition to the Ciuni defendants’
motion, the Board merely questions the dates advanced by defendants. But even assigning the later dates suggested
by the Board, the claims are still time-barred.
11
12
Notably, the Extender Statute that governs situations where the FDIC is appointed receiver or conservator of a failed
federally-insured depository institution includes additional language not found in the otherwise almost identical statute
applicable to failed credit unions. This additional language specifically revives “a claim arising from fraud, intentional
misconduct resulting in unjust enrichment, or intentional misconduct resulting in substantial loss to the institution[,]”
12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(14)(C), provided the claim had expired within five years of the FDIC’s appointment. Courts,
however, have declined extension of that very specific language to include negligence actions brought by the receiver.
See, e.g., Fed. Deposit Ins. Corp. v. Coleman, No. 1:14-cv-00310-CWD, 2015 WL 476234, at *5 (D. Idaho Feb. 5,
2015).
12
depository institutions, the Tenth Circuit adopted the position of the Third Circuit and held that
“‘[i]f the state statute of limitations has expired before the government acquires a claim, it is not
revived by transfer to a federal agency.’” Fed. Deposit Ins. Corp. v. Regier Carr & Monroe, 996
F.2d 222, 225 (10th Cir. 1993) (quoting Fed. Deposit Ins. Corp. v. Hinkson, 848 F.2d 432, 434 (3d
Cir. 1988)). The court further noted: “‘Were this not the law, then the FDIC, FSLIC, or RTC could,
by the mere act of taking conservatorship of a bank, revive claims relating to acts done during the
Great Depression.’” Id. (quoting Resolution Tr. Corp. v. Krantz, 757 F. Supp. 915, 920 (N.D. Ill.
1991)); see also Resolution Tr. Corp. v. Artley, 28 F.3d 1099, 1101 (11th Cir. 1994) (stating that
the Extender Statute generally will not “‘revive stale state law claims acquired by the FDIC’”
(quoting Fed. Deposit Ins. Corp. v. Dawson, 4 F.3d 1303, 1307 (5th Cir. 1993))).
There is no principled reason to apply a different interpretation to 12 U.S.C. § 1787(b)(14)
than that applied to materially identical language in 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(14). See Nat’l Credit
Union Bd. v. Goldman, Sachs & Co., No. 13 Civ. 6721(DLC), 2014 WL 297518, at *5 (S.D.N.Y.
Jan. 28, 2014) (citing United States v. Robinson, 702 F.3d 22, 33-34 (2d Cir. 2012) (“[W]here
Congress has used materially identical language, it ‘obviously’ intended the same purpose[.]”)).
Section 1787(b)(14), just like § 1821(d)(14), does not revive claims that were already stale at the
time of liquidation; it merely extends the time within which a liquidating agent may bring a stillviable claim that it acquires from the failed credit union.
d.
Tolling of the Statute of Limitations
In its motion for summary judgment relating to the statute of limitations defense (Doc. No.
196), the NCUA Board argues that the four-year statute should be tolled on one or all of four
equitable theories. Each will be addressed separately.
13
1)
Equitable Tolling
The NCUA Board argues that “Ohio recognizes that the doctrine of equitable tolling may
be used to avoid the inequitable use of the statute of limitations.” (Doc. No. 196 at 1835 (quoting
Wuliger v. Star Bank, No. 3:02 CV 1513, 2008 WL 2323887, at *4 (N.D. Ohio June 4, 2008).)
The Board bears the burden of establishing any entitlement to equitable tolling.
“Equitable tolling is the exception rather than the rule, granted only sparingly.” Osman v.
Grube, Inc., No. 16-CV-802, 2017 WL 2908864, at *8 (N.D. Ohio July 7, 2017) (internal quotation
marks omitted). “[A] litigant is entitled to equitable tolling of a statute of limitations only if the
litigant establishes two elements: ‘(1) that he has been pursuing his rights diligently, and (2) that
some extraordinary circumstance stood in his way and prevented timely filing.’” Menominee
Indian Tribe of Wis. v. United States, -- U.S. --, 136 S. Ct. 750, 755, 193 L. Ed. 2d 652 (2016)
(quoting Holland v. Florida, 560 U.S. 631, 649, 130 S. Ct. 2549, 177 L. Ed. 2d 130 (2010)).
The trial court, in its discretion, may grant equitable tolling on a “case-by-case basis.”
Truitt v. Cty. of Wayne, 148 F.3d 644, 648 (6th Cir. 1998). In Truitt, the Sixth Circuit expressed:
We have identified five factors to consider when determining the appropriateness
of equitably tolling a statute of limitations: 1) lack of notice of the filing
requirement; 2) lack of constructive knowledge of the filing requirement; 3)
diligence in pursuing one’s rights; 4) absence of prejudice to the defendant; and 5)
the plaintiff’s reasonableness is remaining ignorant of the particular legal
requirement.
Id.
The Board claims that the instant case is “factually similar” to Wuliger v. Star Bank, No.
3:02 CV 1513, 2008 WL 2323887, at *4 (N.D. Ohio June 4, 2008), where the court concluded that
equitable tolling was appropriate. In Wuliger, one James Capwill was the escrow agent for Liberte
Capital Group and Alpha Capital Group. The escrowed funds of the two groups’ investors were in
14
the control of Capwill and his wholly-owned companies, VES and CFL, which both maintained
accounts at Star Bank. Capwill converted millions of dollars of the escrowed funds to his personal
use. Id. The receiver (William Wuliger) sued Star Bank asserting various claims based on alleged
acts or omissions of the bank and its employees with respect to administering the relevant accounts.
For example, the receiver alleged that Star Bank and its employees intentionally or negligently
allowed Capwill to use Star Bank to launder money because he was a significant customer of the
bank, aided and abetted him in his conversion of investor funds, and failed to adhere to the
standards of a prudent and reasonable banker. See Wuliger, Doc. No. 1, Complaint ¶ 16.13 On Star
Bank’s motion for judgment on the pleadings, the court in Wuliger concluded that equitable tolling
applied because “[u]ntil there was an appointment of a receiver and access to the relevant bank
accounts, it cannot be said that there was notice of what cause of action existed nor was it capable
of being asserted until the receiver was able to examine those records.” Id.14
Aside from the fact that Wuliger was not an accounting malpractice case, it is factually
distinguishable from the instant case. The only way that Wuliger would be applicable here would
be if the NCUA Board were trying to sue GIC for some sort of misconduct (in the same manner
that Wuliger sued Star Bank for its misconduct). The claims asserted now by the NCUA Board
against the Ciuni defendants initially belonged to GIC, which could have timely asserted them but,
for whatever reason, did not do so. The mere fact that the NCUA Board has succeeded to GIC’s
rights does not provide a basis for tolling the statute of limitations in a manner that would
13
As Wuliger was decided by another branch of this court, the undersigned has direct access to the documents filed
in the case through CM/ECF.
14
The applicability of Wuliger is somewhat questionable for the simple reason that, as correctly noted by the Ciuni
defendants, the Ohio appellate case relied upon by the court in Wuliger to justify use of the doctrine of equitable
tolling was actually a case that applied the doctrine of equitable estoppel. See Livingston v. Diocese of Cleveland, 710
N.E.2d 330 (Ohio Ct. App. 1998) (cited by Wuliger).
15
essentially revive completely stale claims. Further, the Board has not shown that GIC had been
pursuing its rights diligently, but that something outside its control stood in the way. Menominee
Indian Tribe, supra.
There is no basis for applying equitable tolling as a general principle in this case.
2)
Delayed Damages Rule
The Ohio Supreme Court “has long recognized that a ‘[s]tatute of limitations commences
to run so soon as the injurious act complained of is perpetrated, although the actual injury is
subsequent . . . .’” LGR Realty, Inc. v. Frank & London Ins. Agency, 98 N.E.3d 241, 245 (Ohio
2018) (alteration in original) (quoting Kerns v. Schoonmaker, 4 Ohio 331 (1831), syllabus). There
are exceptions to this general rule, including the delayed damages rule, under which, “where the
wrongful conduct complained of is not presently harmful, the cause of action does not accrue until
actual damage occurs.” Velotta v. Leo Petronzio Landscaping, Inc., 433 N.E.2d 147, 150 (Ohio
1982).
The NCUA Board argues that, had the Ciuni defendants not acted negligently in conducting
the audits, Memmer’s fraudulent conduct “would have been discovered by early 2007” and
“damages would have been avoided.” (Compl. ¶ 17, emphases added.) In its motion, the Board
argues that it “did not become aware of the [Ciuni defendants’] malpractice until after GIC was
liquidated in December 2012[.]” (Doc. No. 196 at 1840.) The Board claims, therefore, that the
actual damage did not occur until the time of liquidation, a scenario it characterizes as “delayed
damages.” It claims that it “did not sustain a legal harm until GIC was liquidated on December 13,
2012, and payouts from the NCUSIF began to be made.” (Id.)
But the professional negligence claims brought by the NCUA Board were “inherited” from
GIC and would not exist were it not for the professional relationship between GIC and the Ciuni
16
defendants, as supported by the allegations in Counts 1 and 2 of the complaint. Any negligence
was committed against GIC and was merely succeeded to by the Board. The fact that GIC, for
whatever reason, did not discover the allegedly negligent conduct of the Ciuni defendants does not
alter or toll the statute of limitations for a claim brought by the Board. In fact, the Ohio Supreme
Court has explicitly held that “[t]he discovery rule is not available to claims of professional
negligence brought against accountants.” Inv’rs REIT One, 546 N.E.2d at syllabus ¶ 2a.15 The
NCUA Board’s assertion of the delayed-damages theory “cannot . . . be used to circumvent the
clear holding of [Investors] REIT One by resurrecting the discovery rule in a different analytical
guise.” Chateau Estate Homes, LLC v. Fifth Third Bank, 95 N.E. 3d 693, 698-99 (Ohio Ct. App.
2017) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Flagstar Bank, F.S.B. v. Airline Union’s Mortg.
Co., 947 N.E.2d 672, 678 (Ohio 2011) (“In Investors REIT One, we explicitly rejected the
application of the discovery rule for [professional negligence] causes of actions.”); Grant Thornton
v. Windsor House, Inc., 566 N.E.2d 1220, 1222 (Ohio 1991) (rejecting the delayed-damages rule
implicitly).
Moreover, the Board cannot establish that there were any delayed damages. Assuming the
Ciuni defendants engaged in “wrongful conduct” by negligently conducting audits in 2006, 2007,
The court in Investors REIT One noted that Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.09 “expressly includes its own limited discovery
rule: ‘If the action is for trespassing under ground or injury to mines, or for the wrongful taking of personal property,
the causes thereof shall not accrue until the wrongdoer is discovered; nor, if it is for fraud, until the fraud is
discovered.’” 546 N.E.2d at 211, quoting § 2305.09(D). The court then concluded:
15
The General Assembly’s failure to include general negligence claims under the discovery rule set
out in R.C. 2305.09 argues strongly that it was not the legislature’s intent to apply the discovery rule
to such claims. The legislature’s express inclusion of a discovery rule for certain torts arising under
R.C. 2305.09, including fraud and conversion, implies the exclusion of other torts arising under the
statute, including negligence.
Id. (internal citation omitted). The NCUA Board is not asserting that the Ciuni defendants committed anything other
than negligence; although Memmer committed fraud, there is no allegation that the Ciuni defendants were involved
in that fraud. Therefore, the discovery rule in the statute is inapplicable here.
17
and 2008 that permitted Memmer’s fraud to go undiscovered, the “actual damage” caused by the
Ciuni defendants’ negligence was “presently harmful,” see Velotta, supra, because it allegedly
facilitated the ever-increasing deficits in GIC’s finances that ultimately led to liquidation.
There is no basis for applying the delayed damages rule in this situation.
3)
Continuing Tort
The NCUA Board seeks to apply the continuing tort doctrine because the Ciuni defendants’
negligence “was continuous from 2006 through late 2012.” (Doc. No. 196 at 1840.) The Board
argues that “[t]he doctrine tolls the statute of limitations ‘until the date of the last injury or when
the tortious act ceased.’” (Id., purporting to quote Sta-Rite Indus., LLC v. Franklin Elec. Co., 519
F. App’x 370, 381 (6th Cir. 2013)16.)
Under this doctrine, “[w]here new harm occurs on a continuing basis due to continuing
course of conduct, the statute of limitations begins anew each day of the harm.” Ohio Edison Co.
v. Wilkes, No. 10MA174, 2012 WL 2308127, at *9 (Ohio Ct. App. June 13, 2012). “The concept
of a continuing violation, easily stated in theory, becomes more difficult to apply in a specific
context.” Hayden v. Fifth Third Bank, Inc., No. 3:12-CV-00824-H, 2013 WL 2242760, at *5 (W.D.
Ky. May 21, 2013) (applying Ohio law).
The Ciuni defendants argue that, under Ohio law, the continuing tort doctrine cannot be
applied to the Board’s claims. (Doc. No. 226 at 7255.) They cite Lee Turzillo Contracting Co. v.
Touche Ross & Co., Nos. 51075, 51114, 1986 WL 155040 (Ohio Ct. App. Oct. 9, 1986), where
plaintiff “sought . . . compensatory damages for the alleged negligence of defendant-appellee
16
The quoted language is actually found in Sta-Rite Indus., LLC v. Franklin Elec. Co., No. 1:09CV01790, 2011 WL
4626022, at *7 (N.D. Ohio Sept. 30, 2011) (quoting Rodrigue v. Olin Emps. Credit Union, 406 F.3d 434, 442 (7th
Cir. 2005) and applying Indiana and Seventh Circuit law).
18
Touche Ross [a national accounting firm] in failing to detect employee embezzlement between
1977 and early 1982.” Id. at *1. There, the court held that “a continuous tort approach . . . must
fail [because] . . . [w]hile the embezzlement herein occurred throughout the time period,
defendant’s alleged negligence occurred at annual intervals. The tort was readily separated by
dates, and the damages identifiable by years.” Id. at *8.
The NCUA Board challenges the applicability of Lee Turzillo because it “devoted one
paragraph to the ‘suggestion of a continuous tort approach.’” (Doc. No. 237 at 7581.) The Board
claims that “[the] quoted language was casually used by the court and does not set the standard for
applying the continuous tort doctrine.” (Id.) The Board claims that the “black letter law” is found,
not in an Ohio case, but in the Sixth Circuit case of Hensley v. City of Columbus, 557 F.3d 693,
697 (6th Cir. 2009). Finally, and inexplicably, the Board argues that, in Lee Turzillo, the court
“found that the malpractice claim was ‘regulated by statute’, i.e., R.C. § 2305.09, which does not
apply here.” (Doc. No. 237 at 7581.)
The Ciuni defendants have the correct view. Lee Turzillo could not have been clearer. In
cases of professional negligence involving accountants, such as the instant case, Ohio Rev. Code
§ 2305.09(D) applies a four-year statute of limitations that accrues when the negligent conduct
(each individual audit) occurs, and, given the facts of this case, it is not amenable to a continuing
violation theory (or, for that matter, a discovery theory).
Notwithstanding the Board’s urging that this Court apply the test for a continuous violation
mentioned in Hensley, supra,17 the Sixth Circuit has also observed (in an environmental dispute)
17
In Hensley, property owners brought taking and due process claims against the City of Columbus after their water
wells dried up due to “dewatering” activity on a city sewer project. The district court dismissed the taking claim as
time-barred. Plaintiffs urged the court to apply a “continuous violation” theory, which the court noted was “rooted in
general principles of common law” and “exists if: (1) the defendants engage in continuing wrongful conduct; (2) injury
19
that “‘[c]ourts have been extremely reluctant to apply [the continuing violation] doctrine outside
the context of Title VII.’” Nat’l Parks Conservation Ass’n, v. Tenn. Valley Auth., 480 F.3d 410,
416 (6th Cir. 2007) (quoting LRL Props. v. Portage Metro. Housing Auth., 55 F.3d 1097, 1105 n.3
(6th Cir. 1995)). Although finding no opinion that articulated a principled reason for so limiting
the doctrine, the court nonetheless concluded that there was no continuing violation. In reaching
that conclusion, it stated: “Courts have long distinguished continuing violations, which toll the
applicable statutes of limitations, from repetitive discrete violations, which constitute
independently actionable individual causes of action.” Id. at 417.
In the instant case, the challenged audits were repetitive and discrete, not continuing. The
continuing tort doctrine does not apply.
4)
Equitable Estoppel
The NCUA Board argues, lastly, that equitable estoppel bars the Ciuni defendants from
raising a statute of limitations defense. “Equitable estoppel requires a party prove another party
made a factual representation, that is misleading, that induced actual reliance which is reasonable
and in good faith; and the misrepresentation caused detriment to the relying party.” Alford v. E.
Ohio Gas Co., No. 2013AP030014, 2014 WL 2109320, at *17 (Ohio Ct. App. May 12, 2014).
“The purpose of equitable estoppel is to prevent actual or constructive fraud and to promote the
ends of justice.” Ohio State Bd. of Pharmacy v. Frantz, 555 N.E.2d 630, 633 (Ohio 1990). “[T]he
party claiming the estoppel must have relied on its adversary’s conduct ‘in such a manner as to
change his position for the worse.’” Heckler v. Cmty. Health Servs. of Crawford Cty., Inc., 467
U.S. 51, 59, 104 S. Ct. 2218, 81 L. Ed. 2d 42 (1984). “In order to apply the doctrine to the statute
to the plaintiffs accrues continuously; and (3) had the defendants at any time ceased their wrongful conduct, further
injury would have been avoided.” Hensley, 557 F.3d at 697.
20
of limitations, a party must show that the misrepresentation ‘was calculated to induce a plaintiff to
forgo the right to sue.’” Hoeppner v. Jess Howard Elec. Co., 780 N.E.2d 290, 297 (Ohio Ct. App.
2002) (quoting Welfley v. Vrandenburg, No. 95APE11-1409, 1996 WL 145467, at *3 (Ohio Ct.
App. Mar. 29, 1996)); see also Walburn v. Lockheed Martin Util. Servs., Inc., 443 F. App’x 43,
49 (6th Cir. 2011) (agreeing with the district court) (“Ohio courts have narrowed the kind of
misrepresentation that must be alleged in order to invoke equitable estoppel to preclude a
defendant from asserting a statute-of-limitations defense.”).
As properly pointed out by the Ciuni defendants, the Board has pointed to no statements
calculated to induce GIC (or the Liquidating Agent) to forgo the right to sue in a timely manner.
This renders the doctrine inapplicable. (Doc. No. 226 at 7257.) In reply, the Board merely points
to defendants’ clean audit report confirming that the account balances were “‘fairly stated at
12/31/06’ and supported by a Corp. One confirmation.” (Doc. No. 237 at 7582.) These may have
been misrepresentations, but there is no showing that they were calculated to prevent GIC from
suing for professional negligence.
The NCUA Board has not established a right to equitable estoppel.
e.
Conclusion Regarding Doc. Nos. 196 and 205
For the reasons set forth, the NCUA Board’s motion for partial summary judgment with
respect to the Ciuni defendants’ statute of limitations defense (Doc. No. 196) is denied. The Ciuni
defendants’ motion for partial summary judgment that all claims based on the 2006 and 2007 audits
are time-barred (Doc. No. 205) is granted.
21
2.
Doc. No. 197 - Other Affirmative Defenses18
In this motion for summary judgment, the NCUA Board seeks either partial judgment on
the pleadings or partial summary judgment with respect to eight of the affirmative defenses for
several different reasons,19 each of which is addressed separately below.
a.
Lack of Subject Matter Jurisdiction (Eighth [contributory/comparative
negligence], Eighteenth [failure to mitigate], Nineteenth [set-off], and TwentyThird [unclean hands] Defenses)
The NCUA Board first argues that, because these four affirmative defenses all seek a
determination of rights with respect to the assets of GIC and/or relate to an act or omission of GIC
or the Liquidating Agent, there is no subject matter jurisdiction since the Ciuni defendants failed
to first exhaust their administrative remedies.
The Board relies upon 12 U.S.C. § 1787(b)(13)(D), which provides that no court shall have
jurisdiction over:
(i)
any claim or action for payment from, or any action seeking a determination
of rights with respect to, the assets of any credit union for which the Board
has been appointed liquidating agent, including assets which the Board may
acquire from itself as such liquidating agent; or
The NCUA Board filed three motions for summary judgment, without prior leave and notwithstanding this Court’s
Initial Standing Order (“ISO”) (Doc. No. 3) expressly stating that “[t]he Court typically permits only one summary
judgment motion per party,” and that “[a] party must seek prior leave of Court before filing any additional or
supplemental motions for summary judgment[.]” (Id. at 42.) The Court would have been well within its discretion, in
light of this infraction of the ISO by the plaintiff, to have disregarded all but the first-filed motion. However, since the
ISO also states that leave may be granted to file additional motions “upon a showing of good cause[,]” (id.), and since
it is likely that the Court would have granted leave in this case had it been sought, it will overlook the plaintiff’s
infraction.
That said, the ISO also states “the Court will not consider any material that is submitted [in support of a
motion] by way of incorporation of previously-filed documents. (Id. at 40.) Despite this order, in its second motion
for summary judgment, the NCUA Board purports to incorporate by reference the arguments made in earlier briefs on
other motions. (Doc. No. 197 at 2034, citing Doc. No. 15 and Doc. No. 22.) The Board cites Fed. R. Civ. P. 10(c) as
authority for this incorporation. That Rule permits incorporation by reference of “[a] statement in a pleading[.]”
(emphasis added). “Pleadings” are specifically defined in Fed. R. Civ. P. 7(a), and the list does not include motions
or briefs. Therefore, consistent with the ISO, the Court has not considered any “incorporated” arguments.
18
19
Some of the defenses are challenged on more than one ground. Survival on the basis of one ground does not preclude
judgment on the basis of another ground.
22
(ii)
any claim relating to any act or omission of such credit union or the Board
as liquidating agent.
The NCUA Board now seeks a ruling that these affirmative defenses constitute “claims”
that, like the counterclaims previously dismissed by the Court (see Doc. No. 109), are subject to
the mandatory administrative claims process. (Doc. No. 197 at 2048.) The Board argues that “a
majority of courts, including the Northern District of Ohio, have held that affirmative defenses that
constitute a ‘claim’ are subject to the mandatory administrative claims process.” (Id. at 2049
(citing cases from district courts in Kansas, Maryland, Indiana, Louisiana, Wyoming, and Ohio).)20
The Ciuni defendants argue in opposition that, because the statutory terms “claim” and
“action” are clear and unambiguous, and do not encompass “affirmative defense,” exhaustion of
the administrative process prior to asserting an affirmative defense is not required. (Doc. No. 231
at 7442 (citing Resolution Tr. Corp. v. Conner, 817 F. Supp. 98, 99 (W.D. Okla. 1993)).)
As pointed out by all the courts that have interpreted the relevant statutes and their
counterparts, “[t]he starting point for interpretation of a statute ‘is the language of the statute
itself.’” Kaiser Aluminum & Chem. Corp. v. Bonjorno, 494 U.S. 827, 835, 110 S. Ct. 1570, 108 L.
Ed. 2d 842 (1990) (quoting Consumer Prod. Safety Comm’n v. GTE Sylvania, Inc., 447 U.S. 102,
108, 100 S. Ct. 2051, 64 L. Ed. 2d 766 (1980)). And the reading of a statute is “mandated by the
20
In its motion, the Board repeats twice that Village of Oakwood v. State Bank & Trust Co., 539 F.3d 373, 385-86
(6th Cir. 2008) accepts the “majority position [that] holds that if the administrative process has not been completed,
the court lacks jurisdiction to hear those issues, regardless of whether a claim is couched in terms of a counterclaim
or affirmative defense.” (Doc. No. 197 at 2052.) This Sixth Circuit case discussed the tension between 12 U.S.C. §
1821(d)(6)(A) (the process for reviewing claims against a depository institution) and 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(13(D)(ii)
(the broad prohibition against judicial review of claims relating to acts or omissions of the corporation as receiver).
The case does not address whether defenses should be treated as claims and, therefore, it adds nothing to the analysis
here. The Board also mentions in passing “Zovko, supra,” with no additional identifying information. In National
Credit Union Board v. Zovko, 728 F. App’x 567 (6th Cir. 2018), the Sixth Circuit affirmed a ruling of another branch
of this court striking certain affirmative defenses. But it did so because appellants “fail[ed] to support their argument
with any specificity regarding which affirmative defenses should not have been struck, or why[,]” and, therefore, failed
to show an abuse of discretion by the district court. Id. at 571 (emphasis added). Zovko appears to offer no support for
the Board’s “majority position” argument.
23
grammatical structure of the statute.” United States v. Ron Pair Enters., Inc., 489 U.S. 235, 241,
109 S. Ct. 1026, 103 L. Ed. 2d 290 (1989). But, unfortunately, the cases then focus, not on the
language of “claim” or “action,”—which must be the starting point—but on language in the statute
that modifies those nouns, i.e., “seeking a determination of rights with respect to [] the assets of
any [liquidated] credit union[.]” 12 U.S.C. § 1787(b)(13)(D)(i).
Applying the Board’s interpretation (that the affirmative defenses are “claims”) would have
required clairvoyance—a prediction in advance that GIC would be liquidated and that the NCUA
Board, as Liquidating Agent, would attempt to hold the Ciuni defendants liable for some or all of
the loss to the National Credit Union Share Insurance Fund. It is difficult to fathom the contours
of any such predictive administrative claim.
Further, this Court is persuaded by the Conner court’s interpretation of the exact
counterpart statute that addresses failed banks:
The statute is clear and unambiguous. Therefore, it must be interpreted according
to its plain meaning. The word “claim,” used as a noun as it is in the relevant statute,
ordinarily means a “cause of action.” See Black’s Law Dictionary (5th [e]d. 1979)
at p. 224. The word “action” “in its usual legal sense means a suit brought in a
court” or “a formal complaint within the jurisdiction of a court of law.” Id. at p. 26.
There can be no doubt that Congress employed the terms “claim” and “action” in
their ordinary legal sense inasmuch as Section 1821(d)(13)(D) expressly withdraws
from courts jurisdiction over matters over which they would otherwise have
jurisdiction. Affirmative defenses do not seek payment nor are they “claims” or
“actions,” i.e. causes of action. Nor is an affirmative defense an “action seeking a
determination of rights.” 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(13)(D)(i). An affirmative defense
may be asserted in an action and an affirmative defense may seek or require a
determination of rights but it is not an “action seeking a determination of rights.”
12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(13)(D)(i) (emphasis added). Had Congress intended to remove
from the courts jurisdiction over all actions in which a determination of rights in
receivership assets is sought or merely to remove from courts jurisdiction over
defenses requiring a determination of rights in receivership assets, it would have
been a simple matter to do so. Similarly, had Congress intended to remove from the
jurisdiction of the courts any and all actions, claims or defenses which might
diminish the assets of any depository institution for which the Corporation has been
24
appointed receiver or diminish or defeat any claims of the Corporation in any
capacity, it would been simple to so provide.
Conner, 817 F. Supp. at 100. The same can be said for § 1787(d)(13)(D) dealing with failed credit
unions.
As also properly pointed out by the Ciuni defendants, not one of these four affirmative
defenses seeks actual “payment from” GIC’s assets or a “determination of rights with respect to”
any such assets. These defenses would do no more than decrease damages for which the Ciuni
defendants might be found liable.
The NCUA Board’s assertion of lack of jurisdiction as a basis for judgment with respect to
the defenses of contributory/comparative negligence, failure to mitigate, set-off, and unclean hands
is rejected. To that extent, the motion is denied.
b.
Lack of Jurisdiction as to Post-Liquidation Claims/Defenses (Eighth
[contributory/comparative negligence] and Twenty-Third [unclean hands]
Defenses)
Next the NCUA Board argues that, to the extent the affirmative defenses of contributory
/comparative negligence and unclean hands relate to actions of the Liquidating Agent, they are
“claims” subject to the administrative claims process.
The discussion in subsection a above applies equally and this argument is similarly
rejected. To that extent, the Board’s motion is denied.
c.
Inappropriateness of Imputing Others’ Actions to Liquidating Agent (Eighth
[contributory/comparative negligence], Twenty-Third [unclean hands], and
Twenty-Fourth [in pari delicto] Defenses)
The NCUA Board argues that these three affirmative defenses seek to impute the alleged
wrongful actions of GIC’s officers and/or directors to the Liquidating Agent. (Doc. No. 197 at
2054.) It claims that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law as to these defenses.
25
The Board first claims that, for public policy reasons, the majority of courts that have
considered the issue have held that the conduct of former employees or agents of a failed financial
institution may not be imputed to the receiver or liquidating agent. (Id. (citing cases from Alabama
and Kansas district courts and from the Fourth and Ninth Circuits).) It further argues that
Memmer’s criminal conduct cannot be imputed to the Liquidating Agent because that conduct was
adverse to GIC’s interests and entirely for Memmer’s own purposes. (Id. at 2059-60.)
Most instructive among the cases cited by the Board is Comeau v. Rupp, 810 F. Supp. 1127
(D. Kan. 1992), where the FDIC, as successor-in-interest to a savings and loan association, sued
the association’s majority shareholders and its accountants claiming that their breach of fiduciary
duty caused the association to lose money on loans. The FDIC also claimed that the accountants
had negligently and recklessly certified the association’s financial statements. The defendant
accountants, in turn, claimed that the FDIC could not recover because the association’s owners’
concealment of material facts was imputed to the FDIC as the association’s successor-in-interest,
making the FDIC contributorily negligent and subject to the in pari delicto defense. In rejecting
this argument, the district court noted that the accountants sought to impute conduct to the FDIC
for two reasons: to set up a defense of contributory negligence, and to obtain indemnity from the
FDIC in the event they were found liable. The court observed:
In either case, the relief sought by the [a]ccountants would come into play only
upon plaintiff’s initial showing of some culpable conduct on the part of the
[a]ccountants. But by imputing to FDIC the torts of [the association’s] officers, the
[a]ccountants would shift their liability for plaintiff’s losses to the FDIC. Thus, this
is not a case where a wholly innocent party will be called upon to pay for a loss
caused by another. To the contrary, allowing the FDIC to disavow the wrongful
acts of [the association’s] former officers prevents culpable parties from
transferring liability for their tortious conduct to an entity that is indisputably
without fault in bringing about [the association’s] losses: the public, in the person
of the FDIC.
26
Id. at 1142. The court also noted that the defendant accountants, even without the benefit of
imputation, could still argue that the knowledge and actions of others, although not attributable to
the FDIC, were the legal cause of any losses, which could not have been prevented by more prudent
accounting practices. Id.
Similarly, in Grant Thornton, LLP v. Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., 435 F. App’x 188
(4th Cir. 2011), where accountant defendants raised defenses of contributory/comparative
negligence and in pari delicto, the Fourth Circuit upheld the district court’s ruling barring these
defenses because
[p]ublic policy concerns mandate a finding that the duty of FDIC to collect on assets
of a failed institution runs to the public and not to the former officers and directors
of the failed institution and that it is the public which is the intended beneficiary of
FSLIC, just as it is the public which is the beneficiary of the common law duty
imposed upon officers and directors to manage properly the institutions entrusted
to their [care].
Id. at 200 (internal quotation marks omitted).
The Ciuni defendants offer limited argument in opposition, stating only that the
wrongdoing they seek to impute to the Liquidating Agent is mere negligence within the scope of
the employment of the former officers and directors of GIC, not any independent fraud that,
admittedly, could not be imputed. (Doc. No. 231 at 7444-45.) The Ciuni defendants also argue,
unconvincingly, that at the very least there is a material factual dispute as to whether Memmer
acted “on his own account” or in concert with Grubb (who is a named third-party defendant, but
has never appeared or defended). (Id. at 7445.) This latter argument is easily rejected since,
whether or not Memmer may have acted in concert with another, his actions were quite clearly
adverse to GIC.
27
The Court concludes that the NCUA Board’s position is correct. The actions of the former
officers and directors cannot be imputed to the Board in its role as Liquidating Agent and,
therefore, it is entitled to judgment on the pleadings on the affirmative defenses of
contributory/comparative negligence, unclean hands, and in pari delicto. To that extent, the
Board’s motion is granted. That said, as noted by the court in Rupp, there is “[no] inequity in
withdrawing from the [a]ccountants’ litigation arsenal a defense that would normally be
available[,]” since it “does not lessen plaintiff’s burden to prove that its losses were caused by the
[a]ccountants’ wrongful conduct.” Rupp, 810 F. Supp. at 1142.
d.
Summary Judgment (Eighth [contributory/comparative negligence], Ninth
[intervening and/or superseding acts], Tenth [failure to comply with various
federal statutes], Eleventh [failure to comply with various federal regulations],
Nineteenth [set-off], and Twenty-Third [unclean hands] Defenses)
Finally, the NCUA Board argues that, if it is not entitled to judgment on the pleadings with
respect to the various affirmative defenses, it is entitled to summary judgment with respect to six
of them because they are factually insufficient. (Doc. No. 197 at 2061.) Since the eighth and
twenty-third defenses have already been rejected in the previous section, the Court will address
only the remaining four.
1)
Intervening and/or Superseding Acts (Ninth Defense)
The NCUA Board argues that it is entitled to summary judgment with respect to the ninth
affirmative defense because, although typically the issue of intervening causation is a question of
fact, “in this case, after reviewing the evidence, no reasonable person could conclude that the
actions of any third party breaks the chain of causation.” (Doc. No. 197 at 2065.) It further asserts
that “there can be no question that it is foreseeable that an auditor’s negligence in failing to
discover fraud will allow that fraud to continue.” (Id.)
28
In opposition, the Ciuni defendants claim that “the fraudulent acts of Memmer and/or the
negligent management of G.I.C. by the credit union’s former officers and directors were
intervening causes, thus breaking the chain of causal connection.” (Doc. No. 231 at 7448.) Citing
Smith v. Dayton Builders Supply, Inc., No. 12835, 1991 WL 262684 (Ohio Ct. App. Dec. 11,
1991), they assert that Memmer’s fraud constitutes a superseding cause “unless [the NCUA Board]
. . . was able to prove that, at the time of [its] negligence, [C&P] . . . realized or should have realized
that a lack of internal accounting controls might create a situation which afforded an opportunity
for an employee to [engage in fraud] and that an employee might avail himself of that opportunity.”
(Doc. No. 231 at 7449 (quoting Smith, 1991 WL 262684 at *3).) They argue that, at the very least,
there is a question of fact as to whether they should have been able to foresee Memmer’s fraudulent
(i.e., criminal) behavior. (Id. at 7450.)
As pointed out by the NCUA Board in its reply brief: “The question is not whether [an] act
is criminal. The correct question is whether the act is foreseeable.” (Doc. No. 238 at 7784
(emphasis in original).) Under Ohio law, “an intervening act must be unforeseeable in order to
break the causal connection and therefore relieve a defendant of all liability for its negligence.”
Harris v. St. Vincent Med. Ctr., 205 F.3d 1340 (Table), 2000 WL 178395, at *3 (6th Cir. 2000).
Further, “an intervening act is deemed to be a superseding cause which breaks the chain of
causation only if the intervening act is not brought into operation by the original wrongful act, but
[operates] entirely independent[ly] thereof; it must be such a cause as would have produced the
result, without the co-operation of the original wrong.” Id. (internal quotation marks and citations
omitted).
As the NCUA Board points out, “that an auditor’s negligence in failing to discover fraud
will allow that fraud to continue is foreseeable.” (Doc. No. 238 at 7785 (citing cases).) The NCUA
29
Board’s position is that, although damages would have resulted from Memmer’s fraud, the Ciuni
defendants’ failure to timely discover that fraud when it first began to occur caused any damages
to multiply—a breach of professional duty for which the Ciuni defendants must be held liable, and
which precludes the application of this affirmative defense. In addition, the NCUA Board notes
that, in planning memos prepared in advance of each year’s audit, the Ciuni defendants specifically
identified the lack of several internal accounting controls that might put the credit union at risk by
Memmer and Grubb. (See, e.g., Doc. Nos. 238-3 & 238-4; see also Doc. No. 238-5, Deposition of
Sheila Birch at 7832-37.)
The NCUA Board has the better view and is entitled to summary judgment with respect to
the ninth affirmative defense. To that extent, its motion is granted.
2)
Failure to Comply with Federal Statutes and Federal Regulations
(Tenth and Eleventh Defenses)
The Ciuni defendants assert in the Tenth Affirmative Defense that “[p]laintiff’s [c]omplaint
is barred by [p]laintiff’s failure to comply with 12 U.S.C. §§ 1756, 1757, 1761b, 1761d, 1784a,
1784f, and 1790d.” (Doc. No. 10 [“Answer”] ¶ 129.) In the Eleventh Affirmative Defense they
assert that “[p]laintiff’s [c]omplaint is barred by [p]laintiff’s failure to comply with 12 C.F.R. §
700 et seq.” (Id. ¶ 130.)
The NCUA Board argues that these defenses are overly broad, contending violation by
GIC’s former officers and directors of seven federal laws and approximately 100 federal
regulations, and that, in any event, there is no record evidence to support them. (Doc. No. 197 at
2066-67; Doc. No. 238 at 7794.)
In opposition, the Ciuni defendants assert that “[o]ne need look no further than the
depositions of virtually any Board member and/or Supervisory Committee ‘member’ to uncover
30
that they had no understanding that they owed duties to G.I.C., what those duties might be, and
that their fiduciary duty was of a serious nature.” (Doc. No. 231 at 7452 (citing, without pinpoint
references, “Depositions of Grubb, Paugh, Call, Lumpkin, and Carek”).)
The Court need not devote much time to these defenses, which, indeed, are more than
overly broad. Further, given the Ciuni defendants’ complete failure to point to anything specific
in the record, beyond a general reference to the depositions, these defenses cannot survive. The
Court need not search the record in a manner that defendants themselves declined to do, apparently
in recognition of the utter insupportability of these defenses. See Street v. J.C. Bradford & Co.,
886 F.2d 1472, 1479-80 (6th Cir. 1989) (“The trial court no longer has the duty to search the entire
record to establish that it is bereft of a genuine issue of material fact.”).
The NCUA Board is entitled to summary judgment with respect to the tenth and eleventh
affirmative defenses and, to that extent, its motion is granted. That said, as already noted,
elimination of these two very broad defenses “does not lessen plaintiff’s burden to prove that its
losses were caused by the [a]ccountants’ wrongful conduct.” Rupp, 810 F. Supp. at 1142.
3)
Set-Off (Nineteenth Defense)
The NCUA Board very briefly argues that it is entitled to summary judgment with respect
to the nineteenth affirmative defense because, due to the Ciuni defendants’ failure to pursue the
administrative process for any potential claims, the Liquidating Agent “does not owe anything” to
the Ciuni defendants to serve as a set-off against any potential liability. (Doc. No. 197 at 2066.)
In an equally brief opposition, the Ciuni defendants argue that “with no real analysis on the
issue, [p]laintiff has failed to demonstrate that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law[.]” (Doc.
No. 231 at 7451.) They do not, however, dispute that they are owed nothing by the Liquidating
Agent, nor do they identify any third person from whom they might be entitled to set-off.
31
The NCUA Board has the correct position. It is entitled to summary judgment with respect
to the nineteenth defense of set-off.
e.
Conclusion Regarding Doc. No. 197
For the reasons set forth, Doc. No. 197 is granted in part and denied in part.
3.
Doc. No. 198 - The 2007 Audit
The NCUA Board seeks summary judgment with respect to the Ciuni defendants’ liability
relative to the 2007 financial audit of GIC based upon the absence of any work papers for that
audit. (Doc. No. 198 at 2206). In light of the Court’s ruling that all claims relating to the 2006 and
2007 audits are time-barred, the Board is not entitled to summary judgment.
In addition, even if a reviewing court were to determine that the 2007 audit claim were not
time-barred, as properly pointed out by the Ciuni defendants in their opposition to this motion, the
mere absence of work papers, even if proven to be a deviation from the requisite standard of care,
does not automatically establish the necessary causal link to find the Ciuni defendants liable for
injury to the Board. As a result, even if the claim were not time-barred, the Board would not be
entitled to summary judgment but would be required to prove its case before a fact-finder.
Doc. No. 198 is denied.
4.
Doc. No. 206 - Smolko’s Motion
Defendant Smolko seeks summary judgment for two reasons. Only the second will be
discussed in any detail.
a.
Statute of Limitations
First, Smolko argues that any claim based upon the 2006 and 2007 audits is time-barred.
(Doc. No. 206 at 5469.) In opposition, the NCUA Board simply claims that Smolko is incorrect.
32
(Doc. No. 228 at 7331.) But the Court has already decided otherwise and need not discuss the issue
further.
b.
Liability
Second, Smolko claims he is entitled to summary judgment because the record establishes
that he possesses no liability as he was not involved in any of the audits at issue, namely, the 2006,
2007, and 2008 audits. (Doc. No. 206 at 5470-71.)
In opposition, the NCUA Board declares that there is a genuine issue of material fact since
“Smolko’s Motion does not resolve the issue of liability for damages arising from [d]efendant
Cuini [sic] & Panichi’s conduct of audits in the years 2006, 2007, 2008, and every subsequent year
that [d]efendants performed work and issued clean audit opinions, including audit years 2009 and
2010.” (Doc. No. 228 at 7331.) The NCUA Board declares that Smolko was the supervisor for the
2010 audit, and “[b]ut for the issuance of a final unqualified audit opinion, the continued existence
of GIC beyond the conclusion of the 2010 audit would not have occurred.” (Id. at 7332.) Maybe
so, but that is completely irrelevant since the 2010 audit is not at issue in this case, despite the
Board’s unfounded assertion that “[t]he audits from years 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2010 are at
issue in this case.” (Id. at 7335.) As discussed below, the complaint alleges otherwise, and Board
cannot amend the complaint by cleverly weaving in arguments about years beyond 2008.
Although the complaint alleges that GIC’s insolvency was not discovered until 2012
(Compl. ¶ 14), all the claims are based upon the Ciuni defendants’ alleged failure “to discover that
millions of dollars of GIC assets that [d]efendants reported on their published financial statements
for each of the years 2006, 2007 and 2008 did not exist.” (Id. ¶ 16.) The NCUA Board, as
Liquidating Agent, claims to have “identified numerous acts and omissions by [d]efendants in
connection with C&P’s audit engagements for fiscal years 2006, 2007 and 2008, each constituting
33
professional negligence, gross negligence and breach of contract.” (Id. ¶ 17.) In paragraphs 47
through 70, the NCUA Board sets forth the factual allegations relating to “GIC’s Audits and Audit
Reports,” notably alleging that “the financial statements materially misstated GIC’s financial
condition in each year for which C&P published audited financial statements, namely the
following years relevant to [p]laintiff’s damages brought in this [c]omplaint: December 31, 2006,
December 31, 2007 and December 31, 2008.” (Id. ¶ 57.) In subsequent paragraphs, the Board
outlines all of the Ciuni defendants’ alleged failures with respect to the 2006 audit (id. ¶ 78), the
2007 audit (id. ¶ 79), and the 2008 audit (id. ¶ 80), concluding with the following allegations,
before setting forth the individual counts:
85.
If [d]efendants had properly completed the 2006 Audit, the damages
would have been substantially less.
86.
If [d]efendants had properly completed the 2007 Audit, while
[d]efendants would still have had liability, the damages would have been less.
87.
If [d]efendants had properly completed the 2008 Audit, while
[d]efendants would still have had liability, the damages would have been less.
88.
Defendants also failed to complete any audit subsequent to 2008,
despite being engaged to do so.
The complaint then outlines five counts. Count 1, for professional negligence, alleges that
“[b]ut for [d]efendants’ negligent acts and omissions, [d]efendants would have detected
Memmer’s substantial and material misstatements of GIC’s assets in 2006, 2007 and 2008[,]” and
“GIC would have been deemed insolvent and immediately liquidated by the NCUA Board.” (Id.
¶¶ 93-94.) Count 2, for gross negligence, alleges that “[d]efendants’ actions in committing the acts
described above demonstrated a complete absence of care, a conscious disregard and indifference
to the rights of GIC and its members, and an utter disregard for prudence amounting to gross
negligence and recklessness.” (Id. ¶ 97 (emphasis added).) Although Count 2 contains no time
34
parameters, it clearly references “acts described above,” which include only acts relating to the
2006, 2007, and 2008 audits. Counts 3, 4, and 5 set forth breach of contract claims, one for each
year: 2006, 2007, and 2008.
Notwithstanding the single passing mention in paragraph 88 that “[d]efendants also failed
to complete any audit subsequent to 2008, despite being engaged to do so[,]” there is no claim
relating to any year beyond 2008. Paragraph 88, standing alone in a 119-paragraph complaint,
cannot be broadly read to require a construction of the complaint that would incorporate audit
years beyond 2008.
As admitted by the NCUA Board, “the evidence plainly shows that Mr. Smolko was
involved in the GIC audits beginning in 2010.” (Doc. No. 228 (citing Doc. No. 202-1 [“Smolko
Dep.”] at 17:11-15.) There is no way that Smolko could be found liable for anything relating to
the 2006, 2007, and/or 2008 audits. Smolko is entitled to summary judgment.
Doc. No. 206 is granted.
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth herein: Doc. No. 196 is denied and Doc. No. 205 is granted—all
claims relating to the 2006 and 2007 audits are time-barred, leaving only claims relating to the
2008 audit. Doc. No. 197 is granted in part and denied in part—judgment on the pleadings is
granted in favor of the NCUA Board with respect to the defenses of contributory/comparative
negligence, intervening and/or superseding acts, unclean hands, in pari delicto, set-off, failure to
comply with federal statutes, and failure to comply with federal regulations. Doc. No. 198 is denied
because the 2007 audit is time-barred. Doc. No. 206 is granted because Robert Smolko had no
involvement with the three audits at issue.
35
The only claims remaining for trial are the professional negligence claim, the gross
negligence claim, and the breach of contract claim (subject to a four-year statute of limitations)
against Ciuni & Panichi, Inc., Lynn A. Basconi, and Charles Ciuni relating to the 2008 audit.
Robert J. Smolko is dismissed as a party. In light of all the rulings over the course of proceedings
in this case, available affirmative defenses include failure to join necessary/indispensible parties
(sixth defense), no legally cognizable duty between C&P and the NCUA Board (seventh defense),
damages caused by persons or entities not controlled by C&P (twelfth defense), assumption of the
risk
(thirteenth
defense),
lack
of
good
faith
(sixteenth
defense),
impracticability/
impossibility/frustration of purpose (seventeenth defense), and failure to mitigate (eighteenth
defense).
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Dated: January 11, 2019
HONORABLE SARA LIOI
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
36
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