Remember the ruling last September in which the 2nd Circuit
Court of Appeals remade the rules for standing in class actions
over mortgage-backed securities? In a case called NECA-IBEW Health & Welfare Fund v. Goldman Sachs, a three-judge appellate
panel expanded the operative judicial thinking, which had
restricted MBS class actions to trusts (or even tranches) the
name plaintiff had invested in. The 2nd Circuit said that the
key question wasn't whether all the investors in the proposed
class bought into the same trust, but whether they had "the same
set of concerns" as the name plaintiff. In the specific context
of MBS litigation, the court said, those concerns involved
underwriting failures by loan originators. So the 2nd Circuit
ruled that name plaintiffs in MBS class actions have standing to
assert claims on behalf of all investors in trusts backed by
loans originated by the same lenders that supplied the mortgages
underlying their notes.
At the time, I wondered how consequential the ruling would
turn out to be, since MBS class action litigation has already
been under way for years and most cases have long since moved
beyond standing considerations. Nevertheless, the ruling has had
reverberations, beginning with a sua sponte decision by U.S.
Senior District Judge Edward Korman of Brooklyn that drastically
expanded a class action against JPMorgan. Earlier this month,
U.S. District Judge Laura Swain of Manhattan granted a motion by
the Public Employees' Retirement System of Mississippi to file
an amended complaint in an MBS class action against Morgan
Stanley in order to establish standing under NECA-IBEW in a
widened number of trusts backed by loans originated by the same
lenders as those already implicated in the case, in one of a
handful of recent decisions favoring MBS plaintiffs.
On Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Paul Crotty of Manhattan
issued the latest ruling to grapple with the 2nd Circuit's
holding. On a motion to reconsider by plaintiffs in an MBS class
action against Credit Suisse, Crotty found that the New Jersey
Carpenters Health Fund has standing to assert claims on behalf
of investors in trusts backed by mortgages originated by New
Century, which was the only mortgage lender disclosed in
offering materials for the trust it invested in. But he rejected
an attempt by the union fund's lawyers at Cohen Milstein Sellers
& Toll to expand the class even wider, finding that allegations
about the mortgage arranger or about originators whose
involvement was not disclosed in offering documents do not
establish "the same set of concerns" invoked by the 2nd Circuit.
Other judges, meanwhile, have disagreed with the 2nd Circuit
entirely or have interpreted the ruling to have a minimal effect
on class standing. In November, U.S. District Judge Mariana
Pfaelzer of Los Angeles went out of her way to discount the
NECA-IBEW decision, in a ruling dismissing as time-barred the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation's MBS claims against
Countrywide. "The decision in NECA-IBEW has thrown the
jurisprudence in this area into disarray," she wrote. Pfaelzer,
who is, of course, not bound by 2nd Circuit precedent, is the
only federal judge who has flat-out rejected the reasoning of
NECA-IBEW, according to Westlaw. But in December, U.S. District
Judge Katherine Forrest of Manhattan took an extremely narrow
view of what the 2nd Circuit meant by "the same set of
concerns." She held that the Policemen's Annuity Fund of Chicago
only had standing to assert claims on behalf of investors in the
same Bank of America MBS trusts it bought into -- exactly the
same result judges in the 2nd Circuit were reaching before the
NECA-IBEW ruling.
The impact of the 2nd Circuit decision is at issue right now
at the U.S. Supreme Court. Goldman Sachs, represented by Gibson,
Dunn & Crutcher and Sullivan & Cromwell, filed a petition for certiorari last October, arguing that the appellate ruling is of
nationwide importance, with the potential to affect billions of
dollars in MBS claims. (Goldman also asserted that the 2nd
Circuit's decision is at odds with the 1st Circuit's 2011
holding in Plumbers Union Local 12 v. Nomura.) Goldman's request
for Supreme Court review has been bolstered by amicus briefs by
a defense lawyers' group and by the Chamber of Commerce and the
Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, both of
which claim that huge sums of money hang on the 2nd Circuit's
ruling.
NECA-IBEW's lawyers at Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd waived
the right to respond to Goldman's cert petition, but after the
case was distributed for conference in December, the court
requested a response. The filing is due on Feb. 4. And
ironically, the best tack for plaintiffs may be to minimize the
significance of the 2nd Circuit's ruling, casting it as a narrow
holding that affects a limited number of class actions already
under way. That strategy would contradict plaintiffs' initial
reactions to the NECA-IBEW opinion, but it could dissuade the
justices from wading into the ebb tide of MBS litigation. I
called counsel of record for the union, Joseph Daley of Robbins
Geller, but through a representative, he declined to comment.
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