Select an RSS feed from the list below

  • Top DailyHerald.com headlines
  • Top DailyHerald.com Sports headlines
  • Top DailyHerald.com Business headlines
  • Top DailyHerald.com Life & Entertainment headlines
Go

View the complete list of DailyHerald.com RSS links |

Subscriber Total Access Learn more
loading
Home Delivery Order Customer Service
Article updated: 2/6/2012 11:14 AM

BofA wins dismissal in Allstate Countrywide securities suit

Bank of America Corp. won dismissal from Allstate Corp.'s lawsuit over the insurer's alleged losses from $700 million in mortgage-backed securities purchased from Countrywide Financial Corp.

Bank of America Corp. won dismissal from Allstate Corp.'s lawsuit over the insurer's alleged losses from $700 million in mortgage-backed securities purchased from Countrywide Financial Corp.

 
 1 of 1 
 
text size: AAA
By Bloomberg News

Bank of America Corp. won dismissal from Allstate Corp.'s lawsuit over the insurer's alleged losses from $700 million in mortgage-backed securities purchased from Countrywide Financial Corp.

Bank of America, as a corporate parent, isn't responsible for the liabilities of Countrywide, the mortgage lender it acquired in 2008, U.S. District Judge Mariana Pfaelzer in Los Angeles ruled yesterday. The judge found that the evidence Northbrook-based Allstate provided wasn't sufficient to support its allegations that Bank of America set out to defraud Countrywide's creditors.

Advertisement

Pfaelzer in October had granted Bank of America's request to be dismissed from the case and gave Allstate permission to amend its claims to address the deficiencies she identified. Allstate argued in its revised complaint that Bank of America structured the Countrywide acquisition so as to strip the unit of all its valuable assets and leave a “raided” shell for creditors to sue.

“This is significant for settlement negotiations,” James Kwak, a law professor at the University of Connecticut, said in a phone interview before the ruling was filed. “It gives Bank of America a card to play in negotiations.”


Bank of America merged Countrywide with a subsidiary and subsequently transferred most of the mortgage lender's assets from that unit, Countrywide Financial, to other Bank of America operations and retired the Countrywide brand. Allstate claimed that the asset transfers should be treated as a so-called de facto merger under Delaware law.

Pfaelzer previously said that under Delaware law an asset transfer can't be treated as a de facto merger, which would make Bank of America liable as the successor of Countrywide, unless there was fraud involved. Allstate argued that the consideration Bank of America paid the Countrywide subsidiary for the assets was insufficient and was evidence of fraud.

“We respectfully disagree with the court's opinion,” Maryellen Thielen, a spokeswoman for Allstate, said in an e-mailed statement.

“Even if it is upheld on appeal,” she said, the “decision only affected whether Bank of America, in addition to Countrywide, will have to pay should Allstate's claim reach judgment in its favor.”

Lawrence Grayson, a spokesman for Charlotte, North Carolina-based Bank of America, said in an e-mail that the bank is pleased with the ruling.

This article filed under

MostViewed

Today
Yesterday
Most Commented
Top Jobs

    View all Top Jobs Place a job ad

    DHExtras

       
    • Daily Herald eEdition Get summer on contest until June 10!
    • MORE logo Poll vault for Saturday and Sunday - What would you choose for your last meal?
    • Talk to the Editor: Tuesday On Guard series
    • 2011 school report cards Discuss refer
    • Newspaper archives -- Monday or anyday Fittest Loser

    FacebookActivity

    BusinessDirectory

    Connect with a business or service in your area fast. First select a town, then enter a search term or choose one of the listed popular searches:

    Don't see your town listed? Visit our full directory to begin your search.

    Powered by Local.com