A big private placements win for broker-dealer J.P. Turner

A judge in Georgia decided this week that J.P. Turner & Co. was not required to perform due diligence on stock from now-bankrupt Provident Royalties. A big deal? It is if the ruling boosts other B-Ds being sued for Reg D offerings that went south.
APR 27, 2011
In what can only be viewed as a surprise outcome, an independent broker-dealer has won a rare legal victory in the ongoing scrum over private placements that has forced several broker-dealers to shut down. In federal court in Atlanta on Tuesday, a judge dismissed a class action against J.P. Turner & Co LLC, one broker-dealer among dozens that sold Provident Royalties LLC, an outfit which packaged oil and gas deals and was charged with fraud in 2009 by the Securities and Exchange Commission. While some broker-dealers recently have defeated individual arbitration claims stemming from failed private placements, J.P. Turner is the only broker-dealer to have a putative class action against it dismissed, said Terry Weiss, an attorney for the firm. Significantly, U.S. District Court Judge Julie E. Carnes of the Northern District of Georgia agreed with J.P. Turner that no facts or legal authority had been cited to support the investors' allegation that the B-D owed a duty to confirm the accuracy of Provident's statements in the private placement memoranda, Mr. Weiss said. According to the court order, Ms. Carnes did not find “any Georgia authority that imposes a duty on a broker to conduct due diligence concerning the investment materials it provides to clients." The decision could have a positive impact on broker-dealers facing other complaints stemming from investor losses in Provident Royalties, said Mr. Weiss, a partner with Greenberg Traurig LLP. “This is the first time [in the Provident class action litigation] where the judge actually decided the issue that a brokerage firm, which was not an underwriter of the securities — did not owe the kinds of duties and due-diligence obligations that were alleged in the complaint,” Mr. Weiss said. “I don't believe the courts in other cases got to that question,” he said. “I think this is a significant win.” Other investor lawsuits against broker-dealers over Provident Royalties and another failed series of private placement, Medical Capital Holdings Inc., are winding their way through federal courts in Texas and California. Regulators, including several states, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc., also have investigated or sued broker-dealers that sold the products. Many broker-dealers that sold the products – including QA3 Financial Corp., GunnAllen Financial Inc. and Okoboji Financial Services Inc. — have gone out of business or moved to settle class actions because of the crushing legal costs of investor lawsuits. In total, Provident Royalties raised $485 million from investors before collapsing in early 2009. It filed for bankruptcy protection a few weeks before the SEC charged it with fraud. It now is in receivership. J.P. Turner sold the preferred stock of Provident from September 2006 to January 2009, according to the lawsuit. (Click here for a list of 50 indie B-Ds that sold Provident, as well as the commissions earned.) The suit was filed against J.P. Turner in September 2009. Investors Ron Brown and Vivian Garcia alleged that the firm was “guilty of failing to disclose a multitude of material facts, which J.P. Turner was, or should have been aware of,” according to the complaint. The material facts that they alleged included: ˆ Provident allegedly commingled investor funds. ˆ Money raised from the offerings allegedly was not invested as stated in private placement memoranda. ˆ Money from clients who invested in later Provident offerings were being used to pay dividends and returns of capital to other investors, a classic sign of a Ponzi scheme, the complaint said.

Latest News

SEC to lose Hester Peirce, deepening a commissioner crisis
SEC to lose Hester Peirce, deepening a commissioner crisis

The "Crypto Mom" departure would leave the SEC commission with just two members and no Democratic commissioners on the panel.

Florida B-D, RIA owner pitches bold long-term plan to sell to advisors
Florida B-D, RIA owner pitches bold long-term plan to sell to advisors

IFP Securities’ owner, Bill Hamm, has a long-term plan for the firm and its 279 financial advisors.

Fintech bytes: Vanilla, Wealth.com forge new estate planning partnerships
Fintech bytes: Vanilla, Wealth.com forge new estate planning partnerships

Meanwhile, a Osaic and Envestnet ink a new adaptive wealthtech partnership to better support the firm's 10,000-plus advisors, and RIA-focused VastAdvisor unveils native integrations with leading CRMs.

Fiduciary failure: Ex-advisor who sold practice fined after clients lost millions
Fiduciary failure: Ex-advisor who sold practice fined after clients lost millions

A former Alabama investment advisor and ex-Kestra rep has been permanently barred and penalized after clients he promised to protect got caught in a $2.6 million fraud.

Why the evolution of ETFs is changing the due diligence equation
Why the evolution of ETFs is changing the due diligence equation

As more active strategies get packaged into the ETF wrapper, advisors and investors have to look beyond expense ratios as the benchmark for value.

SPONSORED Are hedge funds the missing ingredient?

Wellington explores how multi strategy hedge funds may enhance diversification

SPONSORED Beyond wealth management: Why the future of advice is becoming more human

As technical expertise becomes increasingly commoditized, advisors who can integrate strategy, relationships, and specialized expertise into a cohesive client experience will define the next era of wealth management