Gallier et al v. Woodbury Financial Services, Inc et al
Filing
137
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER entered: The plaintiffs motion for judgment is denied. (Docket Entry No. 110). Woodbury's motion for judgment as a matter of law is granted. (Docket Entry No. 115). No later than September 29,2016, the parties must confer and submit a proposed final judgment consistent with this Memorandum and Order. (Signed by Judge Lee H Rosenthal) Parties notified.(leddins, 4)
United States District Court
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS
HOUSTON DIVISION
Southern District of Texas
ENTERED
September 13, 2016
David J. Bradley, Clerk
VERNON GALLIER, et al.,
Plaintiffs,
VS.
WOODBURY FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.,
Defendant.
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CIVIL ACTION NO. H-14-888
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON POSTTRIAL MOTIONS
The parties tried this case to a jury in June 2016. The jury returned a verdict in the plaintiffs’
favor, awarding them damages for their financial adviser’s misrepresentations about the annuities
they purchased through his employer, Woodbury Financial Services, Inc. The jury found that the
adviser, David Mierendorf, was acting within the scope of his authority from Woodbury when he
made the misrepresentations; that limitations did not bar the claims; and that Woodbury was liable
for violations of the Texas Insurance Code and for fraudulent and negligent misrepresentations. The
jury awarded damages for fraud and negligence based on alternative benefit-of-the-bargain and outof-pocket damage measures, as well as damages for Woodbury’s knowing violations of the Texas
Insurance Code, TEX. INS. CODE § 541.152(b). (Docket Entry No. 108).
“[U]nder Texas law, a plaintiff who pleads alternative theories of recovery may elect []
remedies after the verdict.” Fisher v. Miocene Oil & Gas Ltd., 335 F. App’x 483, 486 n.4 (5th Cir.
2009) (citing State v. Fiesta Mart, Inc., 233 S.W.3d 50, 56 n.4 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.]
2007, pet. denied)). The plaintiffs moved to enter judgment and elected benefit-of-the-bargain
damages. (Docket Entry No. 110). They also sought pre- and postjudgment interest, attorney’s fees,
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costs, and conditional appellate fees.
Woodbury responded by moving for judgment notwithstanding the verdict under Federal
Rule of Civil Procedure 50(b), arguing that limitations barred the plaintiffs’ claims and that the
plaintiffs had failed to prove recoverable damages. Woodbury also argued that the plaintiffs are not
entitled to attorney’s fees, interest, or costs. The plaintiffs replied, and the court heard oral
argument. (Docket Entry Nos. 115, 117, 119).
At oral argument, the court ordered the parties to submit supplemental briefs addressing the
limitations issue. While the original briefs focused on the Fifth Circuit’s recent unpublished
decision in Rowten v. Wall St. Brokerage, L.L.C., 646 F. App’x 379 (5th Cir. 2016) (per curiam),
the supplemental briefs canvassed state- and federal-court cases applying similar limitations
standards to similar allegations against the kind of “rogue” broker the jury found Mierendorf to
be—a finding Woodbury does not dispute.
The limitations issue has been in this case from the outset. Because the outcome is close and
fact-intensive, the court rejected—or, more precisely, deferred deciding—Woodbury’s limitations
arguments at the motion-to-dismiss, summary-judgment, and judgment-as-a-matter-of-law stages.
Instead, the court found factual allegations and evidence that required a fully developed and wellpresented record to resolve. (Docket Entry Nos. 32, 55, 112). The good lawyers on both sides have
presented the factual record and legal analysis the court hoped for. The four plaintiffs testified
extensively about their annuity purchases and their pre- and post-purchase communications with
Mierendorf and Woodbury.
The case law, while heavily dependent on the facts of each case, presents a consistent theme.
A party arguing that limitations did not accrue until long after the purchase, or invoking fraudulent
concealment or the discovery rule as a basis to toll limitations, must act reasonably. A plaintiff acts
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unreasonably as a matter of law by relying on a broker’s oral representations that clearly conflict
with the brokerage house’s written risk disclosures or financial-performance information. Applying
this rule, case after case holds that a plaintiff cannot reasonably rely on a broker’s oral promise that
her investment is “risk-free” or “guaranteed” in the face of documents, including subscription
agreements and account statements, describing risks of loss or showing financial performance
inconsistent with that promise. If the reliance is unreasonable, courts hold that, as a matter of law,
the plaintiff was on notice of her claims before limitations ran, and her claims are barred.
The case law presents a continuum of factual variations. At one end, the contradictions
between the statements and information in the brokerage house’s documents and the “rogue”
broker’s oral promises are so stark as to make the limitations bar clear. At the other end, the
documents are sufficiently unclear or ambiguous as to make the dispute over when a plaintiff was
on notice of her claims, and therefore subject to the limitations bar, an issue the finder of fact needs
to decide.
Based on the record; the motions, responses, and supplemental briefs; the applicable law;
and counsels’ arguments, the court must deny the plaintiffs’ motion for judgment, (Docket Entry No.
110), and grant Woodbury’s motion for judgment as a matter of law, (Docket Entry No. 115). No
later than September 29, 2016, the parties must submit a proposed final judgment consistent with
this Memorandum and Order.
The reasons for this ruling are set out below.
I.
The Legal Standard Under Rule 50(b)
“A motion for judgment as a matter of law . . . in an action tried by jury is a challenge to the
legal sufficiency of the evidence supporting the jury’s verdict.” Orozco v. Plackis, 757 F.3d 445,
448 (5th Cir. 2014) (quoting SMI Owen Steel Co. v. Marsh USA, Inc., 520 F.3d 432, 437 (5th Cir.
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2008) (per curiam)) (internal quotation marks omitted). Under Rule 50(b) of the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure, “[a] motion for judgment as a matter of law should be granted if there is no legally
sufficient evidentiary basis for a reasonable jury to find for a party.” Id. (internal quotation marks
omitted). In conducting this review, the district court “accord[s] great deference to the jury’s
verdict.” Baltazor v. Holmes, 162 F.3d 368, 373 (5th Cir. 1998). The court “view[s] the entire
record in the light most favorable to the non-movant, drawing all factual inferences in favor of the
non-moving party, and ‘leaving credibility determinations, the weighing of evidence, and the
drawing of legitimate inferences from the facts to the jury.’” Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co. v. Pendleton
Detectives of Miss., Inc., 182 F.3d 376, 378 (5th Cir. 1999) (quoting Conkling v. Turner, 18 F.3d
1285, 1300 (5th Cir. 1994)). A court may grant a motion for judgment as a matter of law “[o]nly
when the facts and reasonable inferences are such that a reasonable juror could not reach a contrary
verdict . . . .” Baltazor, 162 F.3d at 373.
A district court may review a party’s postverdict motion for judgment as a matter of law
under Rule 50(b) only if the party first moved for a directed verdict under Rule 50(a) at the
conclusion of the evidence. See Allied Bank-West v. Stein, 996 F.2d 111, 114–15 (5th Cir. 1993);
see also United States ex rel. Wallace v. Flintco Inc., 143 F.3d 955, 960 (5th Cir. 1998). A Rule
50(a) motion is a prerequisite to the district court’s review of a postverdict motion under Rule 50(b)
and is “virtually jurisdictional.” Stein, 996 F.2d at 114–15 (quoting Perricone v. Kan. City S. Ry.
Co., 704 F.2d 1376, 1380 (5th Cir. 1983)). The parties do not dispute that Woodbury moved for
judgment as a matter of law under Rule 50(a) based on limitations and damages. (Docket Entry No.
112).
II.
Analysis
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A.
Background
Texas law governs the limitations issues. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 16.004(a)(4)
(fraud—four years); id. § 16.003(a) (negligence and negligent misrepresentation—two years); TEX.
INS. CODE § 541.162 (Texas Insurance Code—two years). The parties agree that: (1) the claims
with a two-year statute of limitations are time-barred if they accrued before June 8, 2011; and (2)
the claims with a four-year statute of limitations are time-barred if they accrued before June 8, 2009.
Woodbury’s motion for summary judgment argued that limitations began to run when the
plaintiffs purchased the annuities and received documents describing the risks, because that was
when the alleged losses occurred. (Docket Entry No. 41 at p. 25). In the alternative, Woodbury
argued that limitations began to run in 2008, when the plaintiffs received Woodbury account
statements showing significant actual investment losses that were inconsistent with Mierendorf’s
oral promises that they could withdraw a guaranteed 7% annually without diminishing the principal
value. (Id. at p. 30).
The plaintiffs responded that the losses did not occur on the annuity-purchase dates and that
they reasonably relied on Mierendorf’s promises before and after they bought the annuities. (Docket
Entry No. 46 at p. 17). The plaintiffs argue that limitations did not accrue until 2012, when they first
learned that Mierendorf had left Woodbury under bizarre circumstances and that the investments,
while still containing sufficient value to provide the promised 7% return for some period, would not
provide the promised lifetime guarantee of a 7% return and fully preserved principal.
Woodbury argues that the written risk disclosures the plaintiffs received before they made
the investments in 2003 and the account statements showing significant principal-value losses in
2008 put them on notice that Mierendorf’s statements were false or unreliable. The plaintiffs
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emphasize that they had no meaningful investment experience and trusted Mierendorf to give them
accurate information and answer all their questions about the annuities. The plaintiffs argue that the
risk disclosures in the purchase documents were neither so clear nor inconsistent with Mierendorf’s
promises as to put them on inquiry notice of their claims. Acknowledging that the account
statements they received in 2007 and 2008 showed significant losses that Mierendorf had told them
could not and would not occur, the plaintiffs emphasize that they acted reasonably in seeking and
relying on his explanations. Those explanations reassured the plaintiffs that the annuities were
guaranteed to rebound and to deliver the 7% return with the principal intact. In short, they argue
that Mierendorf lulled them by assuaging their fears, causing them to disregard the account
statements showing significant actual losses in principal value.
The plaintiffs argued that even after 2008, they were reasonable in continuing to rely on
Mierendorf’s oral assurances and representations. They argue that they did not know, and could not
reasonably have known, of Mierendorf’s fraud until 2012. That was when they learned that
Mierendorf had left Woodbury and after a different financial adviser, Carri Tacker, reviewed their
accounts and told them the truth about the annuities’ present and future risks and value.
In response to Woodbury’s repeated efforts to end this case on limitations, the court analyzed
the limitations period separately for each claim, including the statutory claims under the Texas
Insurance Code and the common-law fraud, misrepresentation, contract breach, and negligence
claims. For both the statutory and common-law claims, the limitations period begins to run when
a plaintiff is on inquiry notice, or through reasonable diligence should be on inquiry notice, of the
alleged wrongdoing. The court analyzed the contract breach and negligence claims under the
general rule that “a cause of action accrues when a wrongful act causes some legal injury, even if
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the fact of injury is not discovered until later, and even if all resulting damages have not yet
occurred.” TGI Ins. Co v. Aon Re, Inc., 521 F.3d 351, 355 (5th Cir. 2008) (quoting S.V. v. R.V., 933
S.W.2d 1, 4 (Tex. 1996)) (internal quotation marks omitted).
The plaintiffs invoked two common-law exceptions to the general rule: fraudulent
concealment and the discovery rule. The court held that the fraudulent-concealment exception did
not apply but that the discovery rule could. The limitations period for the statutory claims is subject
to the discovery rule by the explicit instruction of the Texas legislature. TEX. INS. CODE §
541.162(a); Glenn v. L. Ray Calhoun & Co., 83 F. Supp. 3d 733, 746-47 (W.D. Tex. 2015). Under
Texas law, if an injury is both inherently undiscoverable and objectively verifiable, the statute of
limitations does not run “from the date of the [defendant’s] wrongful act or omission, but from the
date the nature of the discovery was or should have been discovered by the plaintiff.” Weaver v.
Witt, 561 S.W.2d 792, 793–94 (Tex. 1977); see also HECI Expl. Co. v. Neel, 982 S.W.2d 881, 886
(Tex. 1998). Applying the discovery rule is a “legal question . . . decided on a categorical rather
than case-specific basis; the focus is on whether a type of injury rather than a particular injury was
discoverable.” Via Net v. TIG Ins. Co, 211 S.W.3d 310, 314 (Tex. 2006).
The court relied on cases applying Texas law to hold that tortious injuries allegedly caused
by misrepresentations about investments are often objectively verifiable but inherently
undiscoverable within the limitations period. See In re Jackson Nat’l Life Ins. Co. Premium Litig.,
107 F. Supp. 2d 841, 854 (W.D. Mich. 2000); Hanley v. First Inv’rs Corp., 793 F. Supp. 719, 723
(E.D. Tex. 1992); Murphy v. Campbell, 964 S.W.2d 265, 270–71 (Tex. 1997); Hendricks v.
Thornton, 973 S.W.2d 348, 365–66 (Tex. App.—Beaumont 1998, pet. denied), superseded by
statute on other grounds, 1999 TEX. SESS. LAW SERV. CH. 950. The court analyzed the application
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of the discovery rule in the reported cases and concluded that “[t]he case law recognizes the
common-sense intuition that those not skilled in finance rely heavily on experts to inform their
decisions. When that advice is negligent or otherwise tortious, the ability to identify an injury within
the limitations period, even with efforts to gain information, is severely diminished.” (Docket Entry
No. 55 at p. 21).
Because the discovery rule could apply to the type of injury alleged, see Via Net, 211 S.W.3d
at 314, the limitations standard for the contract-breach and negligence claims was the same as the
standard for the Texas Insurance Code and fraud claims. The claims accrued when the plaintiffs
knew, or in the exercise of reasonable diligence should have known, of the wrongful act that caused
their legal injury. The court found factual allegations sufficient to raise, and factual disputes
material to deciding, when the plaintiffs were on inquiry notice of Mierendorf’s and Woodbury’s
alleged wrongdoing.1 Importantly, the court did not rule pretrial that, as a matter of law, there was,
or was not, sufficient evidence to support a finding that limitations did not begin to run until 2012.
The case proceeded to trial. Jury Question Number 5 asked: “By what date should the
Plaintiffs, in the exercise of reasonable diligence, have discovered Mr. Mierendorf’s misconduct?”
(Docket Entry No. 108 at p. 7). For each plaintiff, the jury chose among three answers: on or before
June 8, 2009; on or before June 8, 2011; or after June 8, 2011. The jury found that each plaintiff
should have discovered, in the exercise of reasonable diligence, the alleged wrongdoing after June
8, 2011. (Docket Entry No. 108 at p. 7). Woodbury now argues for judgment notwithstanding the
verdict based on limitations, citing Rowten v. Wall St. Brokerage, L.L.C., 646 F. App’x 379 (5th Cir.
1
The court granted Woodbury summary judgment on the contract-breach claims for reasons
independent from limitations. (Docket Entry No. 55 at p. 23–24).
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2016) (per curiam), and the cases gathered in its supplemental brief.
B.
When Did the Causes of Action Accrue?
An inquiry-notice standard governs the accrual dates. Determining when a plaintiff was on
inquiry notice of fraud is a “fact-intensive inquiry . . . typically appropriate for consideration by a
jury.” See Margolies v. Deason, 464 F.3d 547, 553 (5th Cir. 2006). “‘Unless the evidence is such
that reasonable minds may not differ as to its effect, the question as to whether a party has exercised
diligence in discovering fraud is for the jury.’” Id. (quoting Ruebeck v. Hunt, 176 S.W.2d 738, 740
(Tex. 1944)) (internal quotation marks omitted).
A plaintiff is on inquiry notice “when a reasonable investor of ordinary intelligence would
have discovered the information and recognized it as a storm warning.” Sudo Props., Inc. v.
Terrebonne Parish Consol. Gov’t, 503 F.3d 371, 376 (5th Cir. 2007) (quoting DeBenedictis v.
Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc., 492 F.3d 209, 216 (3d Cir. 2007)) (internal quotation marks omitted).
“Investors are not free to ignore ‘storm warnings’ which would alert a reasonable investor to the
possibility of fraudulent statements or omissions . . . .” Jensen v. Snellings, 841 F.2d 600, 607 (5th
Cir. 1988). If, after discovering ‘storm warning’ facts that suggest possible wrongdoing, “a
reasonable person would inquire further, a plaintiff must proceed with a reasonable and diligent
investigation of the facts the plaintiff has learned and is charged with the knowledge of all facts such
an investigation would have disclosed.” Rowten, 646 Fed. App’x at 382 (quoting Topalian v.
Ehrman, 954 F.2d 1125, 1133 (5th Cir. 1992)) (internal quotation marks omitted). This is an
affirmative duty: a plaintiff “cannot close his eyes and simply wait for facts supporting such a claim
to come to his attention.” Martinez Tapia v. Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A., 149 F.3d 404, 409 (5th
Cir. 1998). “[A]n objective standard [applies] to determine what an investor would have known
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through the exercise of reasonable diligence.” Rowten, 646 Fed. App’x at 384.2 The inquiry focuses
on the total mix of information in a plaintiff’s possession: its combined weight is the criterion, even
if individual pieces of information within the mix might not independently suffice. See Jensen, 841
F.3d at 607–08.
Woodbury argues that limitations bars the plaintiffs’ claims as a matter of law because the
claims accrued when they signed the annuity contracts. Ms. Harrison purchased in 2003; Ms.
Temple purchased in 2005; Mr. Gallier purchased in 2004; and Ms. Gallier in 2007. In the
alternative, Woodbury argues that the claims accrued in 2008, when the plaintiffs received account
statements showing investment performance inconsistent with Mierendorf’s oral promises. The
plaintiffs argue that the annuity contracts and related disclosures did not contradict Mierendorf’s
representations so clearly as to trigger a duty to investigate at the time they purchased the annuities.
They argue that they satisfied any duty to investigate that arose in 2008 by asking Mierendorf about
the account losses and relying on his responses. They argue that these responses lulled them into
2
In their briefs and at oral argument, the plaintiffs emphasized that they are unsophisticated and
inexperienced investors. Rowten and other Fifth Circuit cases make clear, however, that inquiry notice is an
objective standard. 646 Fed. App’x at 384; Jensen, 841 F.2d at 608. The jury instructions in this case were
consistent, referring to what the plaintiffs should have known “in the exercise of reasonable diligence.”
(Docket Entry No. 108 at p. 7 (emphasis added)).
The inquiry-notice standard asks a different question than whether to apply the discovery rule.
Whether to apply the discovery rule turns on the categorical nature of the injury alleged, an objective issue.
The question involves subjective considerations to the extent that a layperson is unlikely to discover
fraudulent professional advice when she receives it. See Murphy, 964 S.W.2d at 270–71. Although the court
relied on the case law to apply the discovery rule, applying that rule ultimately triggers the ‘objectively
reasonable’ inquiry-notice standard. Altai, 918 S.W.2d at 455; DeWolf v. Kohler, 452 S.W.3d 373, 391 (Tex.
App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2014, reh’g overruled) (the discovery rule “delay[s] accrual of the claim only
during the time it would take for a reasonably diligent plaintiff to investigate and discover the cause of the
injury.”); see also Merck & Co. v. Reynolds, 559 U.S. 633, 646 (2010) (“[T]reatise writers now describe the
discovery rule as allowing a claim to accrue when the litigant first knows or with due diligence should know
facts that will form the basis for an action.” (quotation marks omitted)).
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continuing to believe that their investments remained “safe” and risk-free.
The court concludes that the plaintiffs were on inquiry notice as a matter of law before June
8, 2009, and that they were not reasonable in relying on Mierendorf’s 2008 explanations. The
plaintiffs then had multiple pieces of information that, taken together, would necessarily alert a
reasonable investor of the possibility of Mierendorf’s fraud, and required them to do more than ask
him about the losses.
1.
The plaintiffs were on inquiry notice when they received account
statements showing significant investment losses; their communications
with Mierendorf did not discharge their duty to perform a diligent
investigation.
The total mix of information available to the plaintiffs throughout 2008 and into the first half
of 2009–well before the June 8, 2009 limitations cutoff–would have put a reasonable investor on
inquiry notice as a matter of law. First, the trial evidence included the quarterly account statements
Hartford sent to each plaintiff. (Docket Entry No. 129, Ex. 6–9). The account statements showed
that the amount discussed under the first benefit rider of the annuity documents declined each
quarter after the plaintiffs purchased the annuities. (Docket Entry No. 129 at p. 26). Second, the
plaintiffs had access to their annuity contracts and written disclosures. These documents contained
numerous disclosures inconsistent with Mierendorf’s oral representations.
The account statements are sufficient, without more, to support judgment as a matter of law
that the plaintiffs were on inquiry notice when they received those statements. Receiving
information demonstrating that a purportedly risk-free or guaranteed investment is suffering
substantial losses triggers a duty to investigate. See Jensen, 841 F.2d at 607; Koke v. Stifel, Nicolaus
& Co., 620 F.2d 1340, 1342-44 (8th Cir. 1980) (the plaintiff was on notice when she received
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account statements reflecting losses on purportedly risk-free investments); In re Merrill Lynch Ltd.
P’ships Litig., 7 F. Supp. 2d 256, 272–73 (S.D.N.Y. 1997) (same). The rule is not strictly limited
to documents showing lost account value. Courts generally hold that receiving information
reflecting investment performance broadly inconsistent with the counterparty’s representations about
the character of the investment triggers inquiry notice. See Mathews v. Kidder, Peabody & Co., 260
F.3d 239, 253–54 (3d Cir. 2001) (the plaintiff was on notice that investments had been
misrepresented after receiving financial updates showing “large swings in [investment] distributions
and net asset values . . . inconsistent with low-risk, conservative investments”); Cooperativa de
Ahorro y Credito Aguada v. Kidder, Peabody & Co., 129 F.3d 222, 224 (1st Cir. 1997) (same).
Here, the account statements clearly showed that the plaintiffs’ investments lost substantial
sums beginning in late 2007 and continuing into 2008. (Docket Entry No. 129, Exs. 6–9). These
declines in value were clearly inconsistent with Mierendorf’s oral promises. Mierendorf promised
a guaranteed, risk-free investment; the account statements showed a risky financial product.
Mierendorf promised that the plaintiffs had bought “insurance” that would preserve their principal
investment to pass on to their children and grandchildren, and that the annuities would experience
annual growth despite the plaintiffs’ withdrawals. The account statements showed that the benefit
rider had shrunk each quarter and continued to suffer declining balances. The plaintiffs recognized
as much: each testified that they knew that their accounts had lost money and that the losses greatly
concerned them. Each acknowledged that the losses were inconsistent with Mierendorf’s promises
of guaranteed investments that were risk-free and would perpetually grow.
But the court need not rely solely on the plaintiffs’ receipt of the account statements. The
plaintiffs also had the written disclosures provided when they opened their annuity accounts.
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Woodbury argues that these disclosures were independently sufficient to trigger inquiry notice,
because “[i]t is undisputed that the prospectuses and annuity applications contained risk disclosures
and warnings that, had plaintiffs read them, revealed that Mierendorf’s purported guarantees were
not in effect.” (Docket Entry No. 115 at p. 13). As explained in more detail below, the riskdisclosure documents were not sufficient in and of themselves to put the plaintiffs on inquiry notice
as a matter of law at the time of purchase. But the documents are part of the total mix of information
available to the plaintiffs as of 2008.
The risk-disclosure documents contain numerous statements inconsistent with Mierendorf’s
representations. The annuity contracts states that the payouts are variable and will fluctuate with
the performance of underlying investments. (Docket Entry 129, Exh. 4 at p. 1). The contracts note
that investment results are not guaranteed. (Id. at pp. 14-15). These warnings echo the disclaimer
on the annuity applications: “may lose value.” (Docket Entry 129, Exh. 1 at p. 55). These
statements are inconsistent with Mierendorf’s promise of a guaranteed and risk-free investment.
The plaintiffs respond that the documents also contain statements plausibly consistent with
Mierendorf’s representations and therefore cannot put them on inquiry notice. As explained later,
the court agrees that the documents are not so consistently inconsistent with Mierendorf’s
representations that they were independently sufficient to put the plaintiffs on notice at the time of
purchase. But that does not change the fact that the documents contain numerous statements at odds
with Mierendorf’s promises. The documents are part of the total mix of information available to the
plaintiffs as of 2008. The contract language warning of investment risks, together with the actual
materialization of those risks as disclosed over and over in the account statements, would have
caused a reasonable investor receiving the account statements to “proceed with a reasonable and
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diligent investigation.” See Jensen, 841 F.3d at 607–08 (assessing warning signs “in their totality”).
Because that investigation would have revealed that the annuities were not performing as Mierendorf
had promised, and because the plaintiffs are “charged with the knowledge of all facts such an
investigation would have disclosed,” the plaintiffs were on inquiry notice, as a matter of law, before
June 8, 2009. See id.
Indeed, the plaintiffs testified that the losses caused them to carry out some investigation:
they contacted and met with Mierendorf. The plaintiffs testified that at these meetings—which took
place either over the phone or in person—Mierendorf reassured them that their investments were
safe, that they had insurance, and that the market and their annuity values would rebound and grow.
(Docket Entry No. 123 at p. 136–38; Docket Entry No. 127 at p. 9–12, 114–117, 218–19). The
plaintiffs testified that they trusted and relied on Mierendorf despite the written account statements
they received. (Id.). The plaintiffs argue that asking Mierendorf discharged their duty to
investigate–that it was reasonable for them to stop investigating after Mierendorf assured them that
all was well. Not so.
The account statements the plaintiffs received before June 8, 2009 were so glaringly
inconsistent with Mierendorf’s representations of a risk-free investment that they “would [have]
alert[ed] a reasonable investor to the possibility” of fraud, making continued reliance on his
reassurances unreasonable. See Jensen, 841 F.2d at 607; see also Koke, 602 F.2d at 1342, 1344 (a
broker’s continuing reassurances that an investment was doing well did not excuse the duty of
inquiry when the plaintiff had account statements reflecting significant losses). That is especially
true given that Mierendorf’s story shifted when the plaintiffs confronted him. Investments that were
once “risk-free” and “guaranteed” to never lose value were now “insured” and “safe” because the
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market would rebound. If the annuities had performed as he had promised, the principal would not
have lost value and the “insurance” the plaintiffs thought they had purchased would have protected
the annuities from market fluctuations. This is precisely the sort of shifting and inconsistent
representation that, far from ‘lulling’ a reasonable investor, should have “dyed the flag raised” by
the conflict between Mierendorf’s promises and the plummeting account values “an even brighter
shade of red.” Topalian, 954 F.2d at 1134; see also Jensen, 841 F.2d at 607, 6099 (a counterparty’s
representation that an investment remained profitable when the plaintiffs knew it was losing money
was a factor increasing, rather than decreasing, the duty to investigate).
Nor does the record show that Mierendorf or Woodbury prevented the plaintiffs from asking
more questions about their losses. Further investigation would have been easy. A call to a different
Woodbury or Hartford representative would have quickly detected, and revealed more details about,
Mierendorf’s fraud. See, e.g., Coleman & Co. Sec., Inc. v. Giaquinto Family Trust, 236 F. Supp.
2d 288, 308 (S.D.N.Y. 2002) (the plaintiffs “could have discovered the facts underlying the gist of
their complaint with virtually any diligence whatsoever, from consulting any source other than [the
allegedly “rogue” financial advisor] for basic investment information.”).3
Among the plaintiffs’ strongest cases is Sudo, which held that, even though the plaintiff
discovered that a defendant’s financial projections were “grossly incorrect,” that evidence was “not
sufficient to create notice inquiry as a matter of law.” 503 F.3d at 377 (citing Breen v. Centex Corp.,
695 F.2d 907, 912 (5th Cir. 1983)). Sudo is distinguishable. The facts of the case make the basis
3
Compare with, e.g., SEC v. Seaboard Corp., 677 F.2d 1301, 1309–10 (9th Cir. 1982) (plaintiff
questioned defendant about facts in his exclusive possession, which the defendant intentionally
misrepresented). The court also rejected the plaintiffs’ fraudulent-concealment argument on summary
judgment. (Docket Entry No. 55 at p. 17).
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for distinguishing it clear.
The plaintiff in Sudo purchased a one-third share of an indoor-football team that leased a
civic center owned and operated by Terrebonne Parish. The center’s director projected a $182,000
annual profit and told the plaintiff that the team was “doing great” financially. Id. at 373-74.
Shortly after purchasing an interest in the team, the plaintiff learned that costs were higher than
projected. The team lost $400,000 in its first year. Id. at 374. Two years later, the plaintiff
discovered an audio recording revealing that the director had “misled him into investing into the
team because [the Parish] desperately needed a tenant at the civic center.” Id. at 375.
The Fifth Circuit held that limitations did not begin to run when the plaintiff received written
statements showing that the director’s profit projections were “grossly incorrect.” Id. at 377. The
court reasoned that “[t]here was considerable truth” to the director’s statement that the team was
“doing great” financially and that the plaintiff had “received mixed information about the accuracy
of [the] projections.” Id. at 376. And even though the plaintiff “knew for certain” that the
projections “were wrong by a wide margin[,] [h]e had no information that would lead him to suspect
that [the director] had deliberately misstated the projections or saddled him with a failing business
for some ulterior purpose.” Id. at 377. He “could have easily interpreted the disjunction between
[the defendants’] projections and reality to be the fault of [the defendants’] poor judgment,” rather
than fraud, making it reasonable to infer that “he had simply ‘made a bad business decision.’” Id.
Unlike the plaintiff in Sudo, the plaintiffs here received quarterly written statements that
clearly contradicted Mierendorf’s promises. There is no evidence supporting the verdict that, after
June 2009, the plaintiffs were reasonable in continuing to rely on those promises as “considerably
true.” The quarterly account statements clearly showed that Mierendorf was wrong, time and again,
16
not only about specific financial “projections” but also about “guarantees” that went to the heart of
the investment products he sold. The nature of Mierendorf’s promises, and the extent to which they
deviated from the written account statements the plaintiffs received, would have alerted a reasonable
investor to at least the possibility of fraud, triggering the duty to inquire further and conduct a
reasonable investigation. Topalian, 954 F.2d at 1134 (warning signs need only “trigger[] a reason
to exercise reasonable diligence”). In short, the statements so “conflict[ed] [with] statements in the
written [quarterly updates]” that they should have “served as an obvious indictment of
[Mierendorf’s] integrity.” See Sudo, 503 F.3d at 377 (citing McGill v. Goff, 17 F.3d 729, 733 (5th
Cir. 1994)). In the face of this weighty evidence of fraud, the plaintiffs’ continued reliance on
Mierendorf’s representations was unreasonable as a matter of law.4
Although the court need not fix a precise date, the evidence shows that, as a matter of law,
the plaintiffs should have discovered the facts giving rise to their claims well before June 8, 2009.
The quarterly account statements, together with the annuity contracts and with Mierendorf’s
inconsistent explanations, would have alerted a reasonable investor to his fraud. Though the
plaintiffs remained in contact with Mierendorf after they purchased the annuities, at some point
before June 2009, a reasonably diligent plaintiff in their position would have questioned his rosy
reassurances, which were themselves inconsistent with earlier representations he had made. The
court must conclude, as a matter of law, that the plaintiffs’ claims are time-barred.
4
At trial, the plaintiffs presented expert testimony that lay investors regularly and reasonably rely
on financial advisers to explain complex financial products. That testimony does not alter the outcome. The
cases dictate that, as a legal rule, a reasonable investor could not continue to rely on Mierendorf after
receiving information flatly contradicting his reassurances. Investors may reasonably rely on their financial
advisers in many circumstances, but it is unreasonable to do so in the face of unambiguous evidence of the
adviser’s fraudulent misrepresentations. Expert testimony to the contrary cannot override that principle of
law.
17
2.
The court does not hold that the written disclosure documents given to
each plaintiff at the time of purchase were independently sufficient to
put plaintiffs on inquiry notice.
Woodbury also argues that limitations began to run even earlier, when the plaintiffs
purchased the annuities, because “[i]t is undisputed that the prospectuses and annuity applications
contained risk disclosures and warnings that, had plaintiffs read them, revealed that Mierendorf’s
purported guarantees were not in effect.” (Docket Entry No. 115 at p. 13). As the court noted
above, statements in the disclosure documents are in the total mix of information giving rise to the
plaintiffs’ duty to inquire and investigate.
But those documents were not so totally and
uncontroversially inconsistent with Mierendorf’s representations as to support judgment as a matter
of law that the plaintiffs were on notice as of receipt.
Woodbury relies primarily on Rowten. In that case, the plaintiff, Charlie Rowten, invested
her retirement savings in a REIT. She alleged that two stockbrokers orally promised that the REIT
was a “‘guaranteed’ investment that would earn a minimum 7 percent annual return without loss of,
or risk to, principal.” Rowten, 646 Fed. App’x at 380. She signed a subscription agreement
referring to the REIT’s prospectus. The prospectus stated that the REIT “involv[ed] a high degree
of risk” and that investors should purchase shares only if they could “afford a complete loss.” The
prospectus included 29 pages of risk factors. Id.
Two years after she signed the subscription agreement, Rowten received an account
statement showing that she had lost more than half of her principal investment. She conducted
internet research and then contacted a REIT representative. The representative told her “that [the]
investment was not ‘guaranteed.’” Id.
18
Rowten and her husband5 sued the brokers and their firm under Texas law, asserting six
causes of action. Each had a four-year statute of limitations that began to run “when a purchaser of
securities knew—or in the exercise of reasonable diligence, should have known—of the alleged
wrongdoing.” Id. at 382 (quoting Topalian, 954 F.2d at 1133). The Rowtens sued more than four
years after signing the subscription agreement, but less than four years after receiving the account
statement showing investment losses. Id. at 380.
The defendants moved for summary judgment, arguing that “the Subscription Agreement
created constructive or inquiry notice of the Prospectus’s contents which contradict the alleged
representations that the REIT was a guaranteed investment.” Id. at 380-81. The district court denied
summary judgment, the case proceeded to trial, and the defendants again raised limitations in
support of a Rule 50(b) motion, which the district court also denied. The Fifth Circuit reversed.
The appellate court held that the limitations period began to run when Rowten signed the
subscription agreement, which referred to the Prospectus. The court reasoned that “a ‘simple
reading’ of the Prospectus before or at the time she made her investment ‘would have alerted [her]
that the written terms of her investment varied from the alleged assertions and promises of’ the
Defendants.” Id. at 384 (quoting Martinez Tapia, 149 F.3d at 411). The court rejected Rowten’s
argument that she and her husband were “unsophisticated, inexperienced investors” because “an
objective standard [applied] to determine what an investor would have known through the exercise
of reasonable diligence.” Id. The court also rejected the argument that the Rowtens had never
“obtained or read the prospectus before investing in the REIT,” because “there [were] no allegations
5
Although Charlie Rowten made the investment, her husband was joined as a plaintiff because she
used community funds. Rowten, 646 Fed. App’x at 380 n.1.
19
and no evidence that the Defendants concealed the existence of the Prospectus from them.” Id.
Rather, the brokers “told the Rowtens that a Prospectus existed, but that they had run out of copies,”
and “the Subscription Agreement’s repeated references to the Prospectus advised [the Rowtens] of
its existence and of its critical importance to understanding [the] investment.” Id.
The parties do not dispute that this case and Rowten involve similar facts and procedural
postures. As in Rowten, the limitations issue in this case went to the jury, which found that the
plaintiffs’ claims were not time-barred. As in Rowten, the defendant here moved for judgment as
a matter of law on limitations, arguing that the written documents the plaintiffs signed contradicted
the broker’s oral representations. And as in Rowten, the plaintiffs here alleged that the broker
promised a “‘guaranteed’ investment that would earn a minimum 7 percent annual return without
loss of, or risk to, principal.” See id. at 380.
But Rowten is also different in critical ways. The inconsistencies between the written
investment documents and the brokers’ oral promises in Rowten were so “glaring[ly]” inconsistent
that the court could determine, as a matter of law, that a “simple reading” would have put a
reasonable person on inquiry notice of the alleged fraud. See id. at 380, 384 & n.26 (quoting
Bodenhamer v. Shearson Lehman Hutton, Inc., No. 92-2392, 1993 WL 277033, at *3 (5th Cir.
July 14, 1993) (unpublished)). The written annuity contract documents here, by contrast, contained
inconsistent statements and statements plausibly consistent with Mierendorf’s promises. The
annuity contract’s statement that “values provided by this contract . . . are variable and are not
guaranteed” contradicted Mierendorf’s assurances that the annuities would not lose money on the
principal investment, would provide consistent monthly income for life, and would perpetually
grow. (Docket Entry No. 41, Ex. 6 at p. 1). But the documents also stated that a different set of
20
warnings about market volatility did “not apply to income guaranteed under [] The Hartford’s
Principal First Rider.” (Docket Entry No. 130 at p. 2). The benefit rider, in turn, stated that the
annuity would provide “a guaranteed income benefit . . . if periodic surrenders do not exceed an
amount equal to 7 percent of premium payments.” This was consistent with the plaintiffs’ testimony
that Mierendorf “guaranteed” the security of their principal investments, that the annuities provided
“insurance” protecting them from losses, and that they could make annual 7 percent withdrawals that
would not diminish the principal value. (Docket Entry No. 41, Ex. 7 at p. 1).
These plausibly–not clearly–consistent statements in the benefit rider distinguish this case
from cases in which a written agreement so directly and clearly contradicted the broker’s oral
representations that the agreement was independently sufficient to put the plaintiff on inquiry notice.
See, e.g., Mauskar v. Hardgrove, No. 02-cv-756, 2003 WL 21403464, at *4 (Tex. App.—Houston
[14th Dist.] June 19, 2003, no pet.) (the plaintiff “could have discovered his injury by reading the
policies,” which did not support the insurance agent’s oral promises); see also Martinez Tapia, 149
F.3d at 409–10; McGill, 17 F.3d at 733 (“The terms of the agreement are so contrary to [the
plaintiffs’] alleged understanding of the deal that upon review of the document, [the plaintiffs]
would have been put on notice of [the] alleged fraud.”). A reasonable jury could conclude that
although there were discrepancies between Mierendorf’s oral promises and the annuity-contract
warnings, the benefit rider was consistent and therefore would not have alerted a reasonable investor
to the possibility of fraud. The court cannot conclude, as a matter of law, that the plaintiffs were on
inquiry notice when they signed their annuity contracts.
The plaintiffs argue that annuities are insurance products under the Texas Insurance Code,
not securities. (Docket Entry No. 117 at p. 12). Citing Colonial Savings Ass’n v. Taylor, 544
21
S.W.2d 116 (Tex. 1976), the plaintiffs argue that they were not required to read their policies and
therefore cannot be charged as a matter of law with knowledge of their contents. To the extent that
plaintiffs rely on Taylor for a general proposition that they cannot be charged as a matter of law with
inquiry notice at any point in the course of their dealings with Mierendorf and Woodbury, their
argument is unpersuasive. The plaintiffs have not cited—and the court has not found—a case
holding that limitations under the Texas Insurance Code is categorically different from the similarly
worded limitations provisions under the Texas and federal securities laws. Compare TEX. INS. CODE
§ 541.162(a)(2) (limitations begins to run on “the date the person discovered or, by the exercise of
reasonable diligence, should have discovered that the unfair method of competition or unfair or
deceptive act or practice occurred”), with 28 U.S.C. § 1658(b)(1) (limitations begins to run “after
the discovery of the facts constituting the violation”), and TEX. REV. CIV. STAT. art. 581 § 33(H)(2)
(limitations begins to run “after discovery of the untruth or omission, or after discovery should have
been made by the exercise of reasonable diligence”). To the contrary: the Fifth Circuit has treated
cases addressing inquiry notice and the discovery rule under Texas law and federal securities law
as interchangeable explorations of the same concept. E.g., Rowten, 464 Fed. App’x at 382 & n.11.
To the extent that the plaintiffs rely on Taylor solely for the proposition that they were
entitled to a jury finding on whether they acted reasonably in failing to read and understand the
disclosure documents upon initial receipt, their argument does not affect the analysis or outcome.
Taylor states an exception to the general rule that a plaintiff is charged with knowledge of the
contents of an insurance policy upon receipt. See 544 S.W.2d at 119. Under Taylor, when a
plaintiff puts forward evidence showing that she did not read or did not understand an insurance
policy when she received it, the reasonableness of that failure is a jury question; if the jury finds that
22
the failure was reasonable, the presumption that the plaintiff knew the contents of the policy gives
way. Id. (citing Fireman’s Fund Indemnity Co. v. Boyle General Tire Co., 392 S.W.2d 352, 355
(Tex.1965)). Taylor is not a limitations case. It deals with the substantive law of negligence,
affecting when a plaintiff can and cannot reasonably rely on a defendant’s actions. But the narrow
question of when a plaintiff has a right to a jury finding on the reasonableness of her failure to read
an insurance policy seems applicable in the discovery rule context, and the Fifth Circuit has
suggested as much. See Harbor Ins. Co. v. Urban Const. Co., 990 F.2d 195, 201 (5th Cir. 1993)
(citing Boyle).
The current validity of the Boyle/Taylor rule is unclear. More recent Texas intermediate
appellate cases often state an unqualified rule that a plaintiff is charged with knowledge of the
contents of an insurance policy upon receipt if she does not object to its terms. E.g., Sabine Towing
& Transp. Co. v. Holliday Ins. Agency, Inc., 54 S.W.3d 57, 62-63 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2001, pet.
denied); Ruiz v. Gov’t Emps. Ins. Co., 4 S.W.3d 838, 841 (Tex. App.—El Paso 1999, no pet.);
Amarco Petroleum, Inc. v. Tex. Pac. Indem. Co., 889 S.W.2d 695, 699 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th
Dist.] 1994, writ denied). The Texas Supreme Court has extensively revised the state’s discoveryrule jurisprudence since Taylor was decided. See, e.g., S.V., 933 S.W.2d at 3-8; Altai, 918 S.W.2d
at 455-58. But neither Altai nor S.V. purported to overrule Taylor. The intermediate-court opinions
stating an unqualified-notice rule upon receipt of an insurance policy do not cite Texas Supreme
Court authority overruling Taylor. Since a state’s supreme court rulings are the primary guide for
a federal court making a state-law Erie guess, see, e.g., Hux v. S. Methodist Univ., 819 F.3d 776, 780
(5th Cir. 2016), Taylor is still good law.
Taylor stands for a narrow proposition that it is not unreasonable as a matter of law to fail
23
to read an insurance policy upon receipt. This case does not turn on that question. Instead, this case
turns on whether the 2008 account statements put the plaintiffs on inquiry notice of the fraud
considering the total mix of information available to them. This court does not hold that the
plaintiffs were unreasonable as a matter of law in failing to read and understand the disclosure
documents on receipt. Instead, this court has held that ignoring the glaring warning signs provided
by the plummeting account values and Mierendorf’s shifting, evasive, and internally inconsistent
explanations made continued reliance on Mierendorf unreasonable. That is particularly true in light
of the plaintiffs’ failure at that point to examine the policy documents to see whether they contained
risk information consistent with Mierendorf’s reassurances or to take that risk information into
account. Taylor is easily distinguishable. This court has not ruled that plaintiffs were on inquiry
notice at the time they purchased the annuities.
The court declines Woodbury’s invitation to hold that limitations ran from the time the
annuities were purchased. But because limitations did run well before June 2009, the plaintiffs’
claims are nonetheless barred.
III.
Conclusion and Order
The plaintiffs’ motion for judgment is denied. (Docket Entry No. 110). Woodbury’s motion
for judgment as a matter of law is granted. (Docket Entry No. 115). No later than September 29,
2016, the parties must confer and submit a proposed final judgment consistent with this
Memorandum and Order.
SIGNED on September 13, 2016, at Houston, Texas.
______________________________________
Lee H. Rosenthal
24
United States District Judge
25
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