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Jurisdiction & Venue in Lawsuit vs. Ricky Fixer & Futura, Inc. for Investment Fraud, Exams of Civil procedure

A civil procedure exam question regarding a lawsuit filed by rachel black and lorna green, as administrator for the estate of georgia green, against ricky fixer and futura, inc. For investment fraud. The case involves issues of improper removal to federal court, personal jurisdiction, and venue. The exam question also explores the subject matter jurisdiction of federal law claims under the investor protection act (ipa) and state law claims. Recommended for university students studying civil procedure, law, or business law.

Typology: Exams

2012/2013

Uploaded on 02/15/2013

amrusha
amrusha 🇮🇳

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Download Jurisdiction & Venue in Lawsuit vs. Ricky Fixer & Futura, Inc. for Investment Fraud and more Exams Civil procedure in PDF only on Docsity! EXAM#_________________ Stickgold: Civ Pro I, Final, F08 Page 1 of 2 ESSAY QUESTION (60 points, 110 minutes) [It is recommended that you use 20-30 minutes to read and organize your answer; then approximately 45-50 minutes on part (1), and 35-40 minutes on part (2) of this essay.] Rachel Black and Georgia Green were best of friends. A few years ago they began making investment decisions together. Rachel lives in Brooklyn, N.Y. (Eastern District of New York), and until a few months ago, Georgia lived in Montclair, N.J. (District of New Jersey), just across the river from New York City. Then Georgia moved to Rachel’s apartment while she looked for her own place. “I’m so glad to be out of Sopranoland [New Jersey] forever, and feel at home in New York,” she told all her friends. Rachel and Georgia both worked at the law firm of Dewey, Cheatem, & Howe in Manhattan (Southern District of New York). On the recommendation of a friend, they started using a financial consultant, Ricky Fixer, who also has his office in Manhattan, to advise on their investments. He lives in Greenwich, Connecticut (District of Connecticut). Following his advice, they each invested a substantial amount of money in a private real estate investment trust run by Futura, Inc. Fixer, who said it was a “guaranteed” 15% interest a year, pushed it very heavily. He presented them with very impressive written material provided by Futura. Fixer indicated that he had invested in a different Futura real estate trust a year ago, and was doing “great.” Futura, Inc. is a Connecticut corporation (District of Connecticut), with offices in Princeton, New Jersey (District of New Jersey), and in Dallas, Texas (Middle District of Texas). The Chief Executive Officer works in New Jersey, and manages some overseas investment accounts from there. The real estate trust investments were exclusively in Texas real estate ventures, and were managed and supervised in the Dallas office. While approval to start a new real estate venture comes from Princeton, all the actual work, financing and control is set in Dallas. Within a few months of investing, the economy hit the skids. Rachel and Georgia learned that Futura, Inc. was in real trouble with some of the Texas real estate investments, including those invested in by them. One day, Ricky Fixer informed both Rachel and Georgia that their portfolio was sinking fast. They were only worth 20% of their original value. The women had lost hundreds of thousands of dollars. “I’ve lost over $100,000 too,” Ricky whined. Rachel and Georgia’s investments never recovered. Futura’s overseas investments are doing fine, as were some other real estate funds paying much lower returns. Georgia in particular was devastated, having lost her life savings, and a week later died of a heart attack. Her sister, Lorna Green, who lived in Houston, Texas (Eastern District of Texas), was appointed the administrator of her estate. Lorna and Rachel decided to sue Ricky Fixer and Futura, Inc.
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