Securities Arbitration Clinic Takes Experiential Learning to New York’s Highest Court

February 09, 2012



With its December 2011 decision in Assured Guaranty (UK) Ltd. v. J.P. Morgan Investment Management, Inc., New York’s Court of Appeals resolved a major unsettled issue in the State’s securities law—whether the Martin Act, New York’s "blue sky" statute, preempts private common-law tort claims stemming from securities transactions. Assured Guaranty involved negligence and breach of fiduciary duty claims asserted against an investment manager for investing funds in mortgage-backed securities. The trial court dismissed the claims as preempted by the Martin Act. The Appellate Division, First Department, reversed. In its unanimous opinion, the Court of Appeals held that, as a general rule, the Martin Act does not preclude a private litigant from asserting a nonfraud common-law cause of action.

Lisa Catalano, Associate Professor of Clinical Education and Director of the Law School’s Securities Arbitration Clinic, spoke to Law School Communications Director Lori Herz about Catalano's work in the Assured Guaranty case and how she and the Clinic’s Supervising Attorney, Christine Lazaro, wove it into the curriculum.
 

LH: How did you get involved in this case?

LC: I co-authored an amicus curiae brief submitted to the Court of Appeals by the Public Investors Arbitration Bar Association’s amicus brief committee, which I chair. PIABA is a national, non-profit, voluntary, public bar association with a membership of over 450 attorneys who devote a significant portion of their practices to representing public investors in disputes against brokerage firms, brokers and financial advisors. PIABA’s members are involved in promoting the interests of public investors in securities and commodities arbitration. The mission of PIABA is to promote the interests of public investors and endeavor to make securities and commodities arbitration as just and fair as systematically possible by creating a level playing field for the public investor.

LH: What is the significance of this no-preemption ruling? 

LC: Had the Court of Appeals reached a contrary ruling, the defense bar might have argued that investors should be left only with federal securities fraud, common law fraud and breach of contract claims. Fraud claims are difficult to pursue because investors must prove intent to defraud and loss resulting from the fraudulent conduct. Also, a contrary ruling would have left a mammoth loophole for brokers because investors could be denied recovery relating to claims such as garden variety gross negligence, negligent misrepresentation and breach of fiduciary duty. In instances where the Attorney General’s office did not pursue individuals guilty of this kind of misconduct, they would potentially get away with it unscathed. The Assured Guaranty decision will not only affect investors in New York, but nationwide as well because many brokerage firms include a New York choice of law provision in their pre-dispute arbitration agreements with investors.     

LH: How and when did you bring Assured Guaranty to your students in the Law School’s Securities Arbitration Clinic?

LC: I had been following this case since it went up on appeal in Spring 2011 and I discussed the case in class as it progressed. I then arranged a trip to Albany once oral argument was scheduled. The response from the students was very enthusiastic. One student in the class, Ross Kartez ’12, wrote a paper on the issue.      

LH: Why was it a good fit for the students as clinic participants and lawyers-in-training?

LC: My colleague Christine Lazaro made this great observation: Law students spend a considerable amount of time reading appellate decisions as part of their legal education. Clinics give students the opportunity to work on cases from their first stages, before they are even close to becoming a text book case. This experience connected the work students do in the Securities Arbitration Clinic with the cases they read about in their text books. It demonstrated how the types of cases they are working on may become a case that future students read about.  

LH: You added an experiential learning component by taking your students to hear oral argument on the case in the Court of Appeals. What was the students’ reaction and how do you think the Court experience enhanced their understanding of the matter and the legal advocacy involved? 

LC: One lesson that we repeatedly impart on our students is the value of preparation. One of my goals was to put our motto of “preparation, preparation, preparation” into a real world context. I also wanted the students to witness first-hand the power of effective (and, perhaps, not so effective) advocacy skills in the context of a case with issues that overlap with their own cases in the Clinic. Another goal was to expose the students to the appellate process and how a case may ultimately culminate. Based on their very positive reactions during and after the visit to the Court of Appeals, I believe all of these goals were accomplished. They had an amazing experience.