Bear Stearns Complaint Stated a Cause of Action for Indemnification and Should Not Have Been Dismissed
In a full-fledged opinion by Judge Graffeo, the Court of Appeals reversed the Appellate Division and allowed a suit by Bear Stearns against its insurers (which had denied coverage) to go forward. In response to a Security and Exchange Commission (SEC) investigation into late trading and market timing activities, Bear Stearns agreed to pay a 160-million-dollar disgorgement fee. Bear Stearns then sought indemnification from the defendant insurance companies. The complaint, which had been dismissed, alleged that 140 of the 160 million constituted profits that flowed to Bear Stearns’ customers, not funds improperly acquired by Bear Stearns. The Court of Appeals determined that it could not be discerned from the SEC order alone whether or not the funds were deemed improperly acquired by Bear Stearns. Therefore the complaint stated a cause of action:
In the context of these dismissal motions, we must assume Bear Stearns’ allegations to be true unless conclusively refuted by the relevant documentary evidence, in this case, the SEC order. Contrary to the Insurers’ position, the SEC order does not establish that the $160 million disgorgement payment was predicated on moneys that Bear Stearns itself improperly earned as a result of its securities violations. Rather, the SEC order recites that Bear Stearns’ misconduct enabled its “customers to generate hundreds of millions of dollars in profits.” Hence, at this CPLR 3211 stage, the documentary evidence does not decisively repudiate Bear Stearns’ allegation that the SEC disgorgement payment amount was calculated in large measure on the profits of others. JP Morgan Securities, Inc v Vigilant Insurance Company, No 113, CtApp 6-11-13