Court Opinion

ID: 9928310
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-01-31 16:00:50.973286+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:45:25.135405
License: Public Domain

23-154
Chatham Capital Holdings, Inc. v. Conru

                                     In the
                United States Court of Appeals
                          For the Second Circuit
                                _________________

                               August Term 2023
                            Argued: October 4, 2023
                            Decided: January 31, 2024

                                Docket No. 23-154

 CHATHAM CAPITAL HOLDINGS, INC., CHATHAM CAPITAL MANAGEMENT IV, LLC,

                                                  Plaintiffs-Appellants,

                                          v.

  ANDREW B. CONRU, as Trustee for the Andrew B. Conru Trust, FRIENDFINDER
               NETWORKS, INC., INTERACTIVE NETWORK, INC.,

                                                 Defendants-Appellees,

                             JOHN and JANE DOES 1-5,

                                                        Defendants.
                                _________________

Before:              JACOBS, WESLEY, and ROBINSON, Circuit Judges.
                                _________________

       Plaintiffs-Appellants, two investment firms, hold debt securities issued by
Defendant-Appellant FriendFinder Networks, Inc., and an affiliate. FriendFinder
issued the securities through an exchange offer. Several years after the exchange
offer, FriendFinder’s founder, acting through a trust in his own name, reduced the
securities’ payment terms under the governing Indenture. According to the
Plaintiffs-Appellants, FriendFinder’s founder sought to force them to sell their
stake back to FriendFinder at a discount.

       The Plaintiffs-Appellants sued in state court, bringing common-law
contractual claims related to the Indenture. After the case was removed to federal
court, the Plaintiffs-Appellants sought leave to amend their complaint to add
federal claims, contending primarily that the Trust Indenture Act (“TIA”), 15
U.S.C. §§ 77aaa et seq., protected the Indenture and prevented FriendFinder and
its founder from changing the payment terms without the Plaintiffs-Appellants’
consent. The United States District Court for the Southern District of New York
(Cote, J.) disagreed, dismissed the case, and denied leave to amend to add claims
under the TIA.

       The TIA does not protect this Indenture because the underlying exchange
offer was a private placement under the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. §§ 77a et
seq. The TIA, as relevant here, does not apply to private placements. Absent the
TIA’s protections, a “no-action” clause in the Indenture bars the Plaintiffs-
Appellants’ lawsuit.

      We therefore AFFIRM the district court’s judgment of dismissal.
                            _________________

            STEVEN M. KAYMAN (Stacy L. Ceslowitz, on the brief), Rottenberg
                 Lipman Rich, P.C., New York, NY, for Plaintiffs-Appellants.

            LAWRENCE ROBBINS (Jeffrey R. Wang, Alexandra Elenowitz-Hess, on
                the brief), Friedman Kaplan Seiler Adelman & Robbins LLP,
                New York, NY, for Defendants-Appellees.
                              _________________

                                        2
WESLEY, Circuit Judge:

      This case turns upon the scope of the Trust Indenture Act (“TIA”), one of

our federal securities laws.

      “After rampant abuses in the securities industry led to the 1929 stock market

crash and the Great Depression, Congress enacted a series of laws to ensure that

‘the highest ethical standards prevail in every facet of the securities industry.’”

Kokesh v. SEC, 581 U.S. 455, 457–58 (2017) (quoting SEC v. Cap. Gains Rsch. Bureau,

Inc., 375 U.S. 180, 186–187 (1963)). The initial law was the Securities Act of 1933.

See 15 U.S.C. §§ 77a et seq. The Securities Act imposes registration requirements

for public offerings of a broad array of securities. Id. § 77e. Conversely, the

Securities Act exempts private offerings—specifically, “transactions by an issuer

not involving any public offering”—from registration.           Id. § 77d(a)(2).    This

“Private Placement Exemption” recognizes that sophisticated private investors

generally need fewer protections and can “fend for themselves” in the market.

SEC v. Ralston Purina Co., 346 U.S. 119, 125 (1953). 1

1
  Although the Securities Act and the TIA are codified in Title 15 of the United States
Code, courts and practitioners commonly refer to the original sections of each standalone
securities law. Thus, the Private Placement Exemption, codified at 15 U.S.C. § 77d(a)(2),
is also known as Section 4(a)(2) of the Securities Act.
                                           3
      The TIA joined the securities laws six years later, in 1939. See 15 U.S.C.

§§ 77aaa et seq. As a supplement to the Securities Act, the TIA addresses problems

particular to debt securities (for example, bonds or notes). Because debt securities

provide fixed rates of payment, they are typically governed by a contract—

referred to in the industry as an “indenture”—with a trustee who oversees the

securities. Before the TIA was passed, conflicts of interest between trustees and

issuing companies had harmed investors in debt markets. See id. § 77bbb. The TIA

guards against such conflicts by providing indentures with special protections.

For instance, an indenture will often purport to contain a “no-action” clause which

blocks investors from suing the trustee or the issuing company for breaching the

indenture. If the TIA applies, it invalidates that no-action clause and guarantees

those investors’ right to sue. See id. § 77ppp(b); Marblegate Asset Mgmt., LLC v.

Educ. Mgmt. Fin. Corp., 846 F.3d 1, 7 (2d Cir. 2017) (citing Cruden v. Bank of New

York, 957 F.2d 961, 967–68 (2d Cir. 1992)).

      The TIA, however, does not protect every indenture. Rather, it mirrors the

Securities Act’s general structure and invokes the Private Placement Exemption:

It does not protect private offerings of debt securities. See 15 U.S.C. § 77ddd(b).

The TIA’s scope is limited to indentures which govern securities offered publicly.

                                          4
      Here, pursuant to an Indenture, the Plaintiffs-Appellants (together,

“Chatham”) acquired debt securities issued by FriendFinder Networks, Inc., and

an affiliated company Interactive Network, Inc. (together, “FriendFinder”).

Chatham acquired its securities through an “exchange offer,” by which it

exchanged preexisting FriendFinder notes for the new securities. Several years

later, FriendFinder’s founder gained voting control over the Indenture and

reduced the securities’ payment terms—allegedly, to strong-arm Chatham into

selling its own stake back to FriendFinder at a steep discount. The primary

question is whether the TIA applies, invalidates the Indenture’s no-action clause,

and guarantees Chatham’s right to sue to remedy the devalued securities.

      The TIA does not apply. The underlying exchange offer was a private—

rather than public—offering limited to preexisting FriendFinder investors. The

no-action clause bars Chatham’s lawsuit because Chatham has not met the clause’s

prerequisites to sue, and the TIA does not invalidate the no-action clause. We

therefore affirm the district court’s judgment of dismissal.

                                         5
                                 BACKGROUND

      The Exchange Offer.

      Chatham is a pair of affiliated private investment firms. Some years ago, it

acquired debt notes, issued by FriendFinder, worth millions of dollars. Those

original notes had a fixed maturity date and interest rate.

      The key transaction—the exchange offer—took place several years later. In

essence, FriendFinder sought to convince Chatham and other investors to

restructure their existing investments. Upon accepting the exchange offer, each

investor would swap their original notes for a combination of new debt securities

(with an extended maturity date) and FriendFinder stock. Only investors who

already held notes with FriendFinder were eligible for the exchange offer. The

general public could not participate.

      Investors in the exchange offer fell into two categories under the Securities

Act. The first category comprised domestic investors located “in the United

States” who would complete “a private transaction in reliance upon the exemption

from the registration requirements of the Securities Act provided by Section 4(a)(2)

thereof . . . .” Joint App’x at 250. The second category comprised investors located

“outside the United States” who would complete “offshore transactions in

                                         6
compliance with Regulation S under the Securities Act.” Id. 2 These categories—

domestic and offshore—matter because an investor’s location can implicate

different registration and filing requirements under the securities laws.

      Chatham accepted the exchange offer. It received its new securities through

a domestic transaction. Several other investors received their new securities

through an offshore transaction. Regardless of their locations, though, every

investor had to acknowledge in the offering materials that their new debt securities

were being “privately placed” with them—such that the transaction did “not

involv[e] a public offering.” Id.

      The Indenture.

      Chatham’s debt securities are governed by the Indenture. It contains two

provisions which define a securityholder’s ability to sue.

2
 The Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) has general authority to promulgate
rules and regulations to carry out the provisions of the Securities Act. See 15 U.S.C.
§ 77s(a). Regulation S is one such regulation. As discussed below, Regulation S sets forth
categories of offshore transactions and explains that the SEC will not enforce the
Securities Act’s registration requirements for those transactions. In other words,
Regulation S provides safe harbors from enforcement.
                                            7
         First, the “no-action” clause (Section 5.7) limits a holder’s ability to sue in

court. 3 It notes that holders like Chatham “may not pursue any remedy with

respect to this Indenture or the Securities unless” five conditions are met. Id. at 358

(emphasis added). The first is that the holder must provide written notice to the

Indenture’s trustee that an “Event of Default” is ongoing. 4 The Indenture lists

situations which would constitute an “Event of Default,” including FriendFinder’s

failure to pay principal, premium, or interest on the securities within 10 days of

3   As relevant here, the no-action clause reads:
         SECTION 5.7. Limitation on Suits. Subject to Section 5.8, a Holder may not
         pursue any remedy with respect to this Indenture or the Securities unless:
             (a) such Holder has previously given to the Trustee written notice
                 stating that an Event of Default is continuing;
             (b) Holders of at least 25% in principal amount of the outstanding
                 Securities have requested that the Trustee pursue the remedy;
             (c) such Holders have offered to the Trustee security or indemnity
                 reasonably satisfactory to it against any loss, liability or expense;
             (d) the Trustee has not complied with such request within 60 days after
                 receipt of the request and the offer of security or indemnity; and
             (e) the Required Holders have not given the Trustee a direction that, in
                 the opinion of the Trustee, is inconsistent with such request during
                 such 60-day period. . . .
Joint App’x at 358 (emphasis added).

4
 The Indenture’s trustee is not a party in this case and is not alleged to have participated
in any wrongdoing.
                                               8
their due date. The parties agree that no “Event of Default” has occurred, and that

neither the no-action clause’s first condition nor any of the other four have been

satisfied.

       Second, the “payment carve-out” clause (Section 5.8) makes clear that

holders like Chatham can always “bring suit for the enforcement” of their

“right . . . to receive payment of principal of, premium (if any), or interest on the

Securities” on or after those payments’ due dates. Id. Holders may sue to enforce

this payment right without needing to comply with the conditions in the no-action

clause.

       The Dispute.

       Several years after Chatham completed the exchange offer, another investor

increased its stake to become the Indenture’s “Supermajority Holder.”

A Supermajority Holder is an investor who holds more than 67% of the entire

issuance. Critically, the Supermajority Holder can vote to amend the Indenture

and change the securities’ core payment terms (their interest rate and maturity

date) without consent from Chatham or the other minority holders.

       The Supermajority Holder who emerged was none other than a trust in the

name of FriendFinder’s founder, Andrew Conru (the “Conru Trust”). The Conru

                                         9
Trust had bought up securities from other holders to increase its stake to around

85% of the entire issuance.

      Wielding its newfound Supermajority Holder power, the Conru Trust

allegedly began coordinating with FriendFinder to strong-arm other investors. In

particular, Chatham claims that FriendFinder and its founder devalued the

securities to try and coerce Chatham into selling its own stake at a steep discount.

      The coercion allegedly worked as follows. Soon after the Conru Trust

gained Supermajority Holder control, FriendFinder approached Chatham and

offered to buy back its securities at 70% of their principal amount. Chatham

declined the offer. A few weeks later, the Supermajority Holder voted to amend

the Indenture (the “Amendment”). The Amendment devalued the securities by

reducing their core payment terms; it cut their interest rate in half and extended

their maturity date by a decade. Once the Amendment took effect, FriendFinder

made an even lower offer to buy back Chatham’s securities—this time, for 65% of

their principal amount. Chatham again declined.

      Chatham then filed this action in New York state court against FriendFinder

and the Conru Trust, contending that the Amendment was invalid. Chatham

brought claims for breach of the Indenture and breach of the covenant of good

                                        10
faith and fair dealing. It also sought a declaratory judgment that the Amendment

was unenforceable.

      After removing the case to federal court, FriendFinder and the Conru Trust

moved to dismiss the case, while Chatham moved to amend its complaint to

reframe its contractual claims under the TIA. The district court (Cote, J.) dismissed

the case, reasoning that the Indenture’s no-action clause barred Chatham’s lawsuit

and that amending the complaint would be futile because the TIA did not apply.

Chatham appeals the dismissal.

                                   DISCUSSION 5

      The No-Action Clause Bars this Lawsuit.

      At the outset, Chatham’s lawsuit faces a contractual roadblock:               The

Indenture’s no-action clause. “Such no-action clauses frequently are included in

indentures to limit suits arising from those agreements.” McMahan & Co. v.

5
 Our standard of review is well-established. “We review the grant of a motion to dismiss
de novo, accepting as true all factual claims in the complaint and drawing all reasonable
inferences in the plaintiff’s favor.” Fat Brands Inc. v. Ramjeet, 75 F.4th 118, 125
(2d Cir. 2023). In so doing, we “may consider the facts alleged in the complaint,
documents attached to the complaint as exhibits, and documents incorporated by
reference in the complaint.” DiFolco v. MSNBC Cable L.L.C., 622 F.3d 104, 111
(2d Cir. 2010). We likewise review de novo the district court’s interpretation of the TIA
and its application to an indenture. See Marblegate, 846 F.3d at 6.
                                           11
Wherehouse Ent., Inc., 65 F.3d 1044, 1050 (2d Cir. 1995).           They are “strictly

construed” under New York law, 6 but “have been enforced in a variety of contexts

in both federal and state courts.” Id. (quoting Cruden, 957 F.2d at 968). Here, the

district court properly enforced the no-action clause.

         The no-action clause prevents a holder like Chatham from seeking “any

remedy” regarding the debt securities “unless” it satisfies the five pre-suit

conditions. First, Chatham must provide notice to the Indenture’s trustee that an

“Event of Default” has occurred. Given that there was no “Event of Default,”

Chatham concedes that it did not—and could not—provide proper notice.

Accordingly, Chatham has not satisfied the no-action clause’s conditions and

presently cannot pursue “any remedy.”

         Chatham attempts to flip this condition to its advantage. It argues that the

lawsuit bar is not triggered until an “Event of Default” has occurred. In Chatham’s

view, until a default occurs, there is nothing to notify the Indenture’s trustee about.

The no-action clause would thus allow Chatham, in its view, to sue over disputes

that do not rise to the level of a default.

6
    The parties agree that the Indenture is governed by New York law.
                                              12
      Chatham misreads the no-action clause. The clause’s first part sets the status

quo: Chatham “may not pursue any remedy with respect to this Indenture or the

Securities.” The second part identifies the exception to the status quo: Chatham

cannot sue unless five requirements are met, including notice of an “Event of

Default.” The five subparts are not preconditions before the entire clause takes

effect; they are preconditions (they follow the word “unless”) before Chatham can

sue. See Walnut Place LLC v. Countrywide Home Loans, Inc., 948 N.Y.S.2d 580, 581

(1st Dep’t 2012) (holding that plaintiffs were not “excused from complying with

the ‘Event of Default’ provision because of the alleged impossibility of showing

such an event”); ACE Sec. Corp. v. DB Structured Prod., Inc., 977 N.Y.S.2d 229, 231

(1st Dep’t 2013) (no-action clause precluded claim when basis of claim was not a

“default”), aff’d, 25 N.Y.3d 581 (2015). In other words, the preconditions do not

turn the ability to sue off; they are required to turn that ability on. The no-action

clause applies to this lawsuit by its own terms.

      Nor are we persuaded that Chatham can invoke the payment carve-out

from the no-action clause. The payment carve-out guarantees holders the right to

sue to enforce “payment” of the securities’ principal and interest if those amounts

are not paid by their due dates. Chatham says that its lawsuit seeks to enforce the

                                         13
larger payments it was receiving before the securities were devalued.            But

Chatham does not allege that FriendFinder has failed to pay the principal and

interest at the new (lesser) rates authorized by the Amendment. In fact, the

Indenture defines the non-payment of principal or interest as an “Event of

Default,” which Chatham agrees has not occurred.

      What Chatham really challenges is not missed payments, but the validity of

the Amendment to the Indenture itself. We have explained, however, that claims

which “assert breaches of the Trust Indenture Act and the Indenture[]” are “not”

claims “for non-payment of principal or interest as such” that would fall within

this carve-out. Cruden, 957 F.2d at 968; see also Emmet & Co. v. Cath. Health E., 951

N.Y.S.2d 846, 851 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 2012) (reasoning that construing the payment

carve-out to “allow all claims relating to the value of the bond” would “swallow

the no-action clause”), aff’d, 980 N.Y.S.2d 762 (1st Dep’t 2014). The payment carve-

out does not save Chatham’s lawsuit.

      The TIA Does Not Invalidate the No-Action Clause.

      Because the no-action clause applies on its face, Chatham’s lawsuit is barred

unless the TIA invalidates that no-action clause. We conclude that it does not. The

TIA does not apply; the Indenture’s own provisions govern.

                                         14
      Recall that the TIA does not target private offerings—only public ones.

When offerings fall within the Private Placement Exemption, they are exempt from

the Securities Act’s registration requirements, and are likewise exempt from the

TIA’s protections.

      Here, the offering documents attached to Chatham’s pleadings make clear

that the exchange offer was a completely private offering. And the fact that the

offering was made partially offshore does not affect its private nature.

           i.   The Exchange Offer Falls Within the Private Placement
                Exemption.

      FriendFinder’s exchange offer—to Chatham and to every other offeree—

falls within the Private Placement Exemption, which encompasses any

“transactions by an issuer not involving any public offering.”             15 U.S.C.

§ 77d(a)(2). In general, “a limited distribution to highly sophisticated investors,

rather than a general distribution to the public, is not a public offering.” SEC v.

Platforms Wireless Int’l Corp., 617 F.3d 1072, 1090–91 (9th Cir. 2010). This exchange

offer involved a limited distribution: It was made only to preexisting FriendFinder

investors who held preexisting FriendFinder notes.           Before offerees could

participate, each had to warrant that it was an experienced investor who had

received sufficient financial and other information from FriendFinder to make an
                                         15
informed investment decision. Chatham, for example, styles itself as a private

investment firm “concentrating on investing in lower to middle-market companies

with sustainable cash flow from operations.” Joint App’x at 219. The Private

Placement Exemption is designed for investors, like Chatham, who are able “to

fend for themselves.” Ralston Purina, 346 U.S. at 125.

      Chatham does not dispute any of this for domestic investors like itself, but

speculates that offshore investors, outside of the United States, might have

accepted their securities via a public offering. Yet Chatham concedes that it has

alleged no facts suggesting that any offshore investor actually did so. On the

contrary, the offering documents make clear that the entire exchange offer was

private, regardless of an offeree’s location. Those documents required every

investor—including every offshore investor—to warrant multiple times that their

securities were going to be privately placed with them.

      Because this offering falls under the Private Placement Exemption, the TIA’s

protections do not apply.

          ii.   Regulation S Does Not Displace the Private Placement
                Exemption.

      Finally, Chatham maintains that the TIA can still protect private offerings

which are made (at least partially) offshore, because offshore regulations trigger
                                        16
the TIA even when the Private Placement Exemption does not. We disagree. For

purposes of the TIA, the offering’s private nature is what controls.

      Regulation S governs offshore offerings. See 17 C.F.R. §§ 230.901 et seq.

Under Regulation S, an issuer who makes an offshore offering need not file a

registration statement with the SEC, just as an issuer who makes a private offering

need not do so. Despite their overlapping goals, Regulation S provides safe

harbors from registration requirements as a matter of SEC enforcement policy,

while the Private Placement Exemption waives them as a matter of statute.

      Given this difference, however slight, between safe harbors and statutory

exemptions, it is possible that the TIA could reach some securities offered offshore

under Regulation S. 7 After all, the TIA applies to debt security offerings unless

one of its exemptions applies, and it lists no exemption for offshore offerings. See

15 U.S.C. § 77ddd. Seizing on this silence, Chatham reasons that the TIA must

7
 Put differently, the TIA might reach offshore offerings made under Regulation S when
they are public. The SEC itself has refrained from taking TIA enforcement action against
Regulation S offerings. See SEC, Offshore Offers and Sales, 55 Fed. Reg. 18306, 18320
(May 2, 1990) (“Regulation S Release”). The SEC’s non-enforcement policy might bear
on public offerings, but the Private Placement Exemption already provides the answer
for offshore private offerings.
                                          17
apply to the entire exchange offer—even if the entire offer was private—because

it was made partially offshore under a regulation that could implicate the TIA.

       That argument misses the mark. Whether an offering is public or private

does not depend on whether it occurs inside or outside the United States. The TIA

already provides a complete exemption for private offerings; it need not provide

an additional exemption for offshore offerings under Regulation S. Chatham cites

no authority indicating that Regulation S somehow displaces the plain text of the

TIA and the Private Placement Exemption. 8              Again, the Private Placement

Exemption encompasses “transactions by an issuer not involving any public

offering.” 15 U.S.C. § 77d(a)(2). That language contains no geographic limitation

treating private offerings any differently whether they are domestic or offshore.

8
  Even if the TIA was unclear and we looked to SEC guidance, “our holding is consistent
with the SEC’s position” that the Private Placement Exemption overrides Regulation S.
Ret. Bd. of the Policemen’s Annuity & Ben. Fund v. Bank of N.Y. Mellon, 775 F.3d 154, 169–70
(2d Cir. 2014). In its release accompanying Regulation S, the SEC confirmed that
“[r]eliance on one of the safe harbors does not affect the availability of any exemption
from the Securities Act registration requirements upon which a person may be able to
rely.” Regulation S Release, 55 Fed. Reg. at 18308. Likewise, the SEC reiterated that
Regulation S does not alter the TIA’s baseline rule: The TIA “applies generally” to debt
securities “unless an exemption is available.” Id. at 18320. Here, an exemption is
available for private offerings.
                                            18
      We therefore hold that the Indenture is exempt from the TIA’s protections.

Those protections do not apply to private offerings like the underlying exchange

offer made here. Accordingly, we agree with the district court that the no-action

clause bars Chatham’s lawsuit, and that it would be futile for Chatham to amend

its complaint to add claims under the TIA.

                                CONCLUSION

      We have considered Chatham’s remaining arguments and find them to be

without merit. Accordingly, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.

                                       19