Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Judge declines to toss McFadden’s lawsuit against Little Rock couple

- LINDA SATTER

A federal judge on Tuesday refused to dismiss former Arkansas Razorback Darren McFadden’s lawsuit against his former financial adviser’s sister and her husband, who live in Little Rock.

In the lawsuit, McFadden alleges that his former adviser, Michael Vick of Little Rock, fraudulent­ly transferre­d real estate to his sister, Jacqueline Vick, and her husband, Cheo Clark, to hide his assets after McFadden, now a Dallas Cowboys running back, sued Michael Vick in 2016 over the management of McFadden’s finances in his younger days. The Michael Vick who was McFadden’s adviser isn’t the former National Football League quarterbac­k of the same name.

Meanwhile, attorneys for Simmons Bank, which earlier this year was added as a defendant in McFadden’s original suit over Vick’s alleged theft of $15 million, have asked another federal judge to dismiss it from the case. McFadden’s attorneys are opposing the request, saying the bank and its acquisitio­n, Metropolit­an National Bank, facilitate­d the theft by failing “to employ reasonable oversight procedures and observe basic standards of care and fidelity to its customers.”

In the case that U.S. District Judge Leon Holmes refused to throw out Tuesday, McFadden contends that on Aug. 15, 2016, just two months after he sued Vick on allegation­s of fraud, conversion and breach of fiduciary duty, Vick transferre­d multifamil­y real property at 1508 and 1512 S. Battery St. to his sister for $289,000 cash and a gift of $211,000 in equity.

McFadden called it “the quintessen­tial example of a fraudulent transfer” and has asked Holmes to prevent Jacqueline Vick and Clark from disposing of it or doing anything to reduce its value.

Attorneys Willard Proctor Jr. and Evelyn Moorehead, both of Little Rock, asked Holmes to dismiss the case, arguing that the allegation­s are too vague and the suit, which was filed in May, fails to state a proper legal claim for relief.

Holmes’ order noted that “although detailed factual allegation­s are not required, the complaint must set forth ‘enough facts to state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face,’” quoting from case law.

“The complaint must contain more than labels, conclusion­s, or a formulaic recitation of the elements of a cause of action,” Holmes said, ruling that lawsuit does indeed contain enough specifics, and cites adequate grounds for relief, to allow it to proceed to the discovery phase.

McFadden wants Holmes to void the transfer on the grounds that it was done with the intent to defraud and violated Arkansas laws, such as one requiring a “reasonably equivalent value” in exchange for property transfers.

In the original case, which now includes Simmons Bank as a defendant alongside Michael Vick and two companies owned or controlled by Vick, attorneys for Simmons filed a motion Aug. 31 to dismiss the bank as a defendant. Simmons bought Metropolit­an National Bank out of bankruptcy in 2013.

Attorney Joseph Price II of the Little Rock law firm Quattlebau­m, Grooms and Tull argued in the motion that in 2010, McFadden made Vick a signatory on McFadden’s account, which “provided Mr. Vick with the authority to engage in the transactio­ns at issue.”

“Mr. McFadden also provided a power of attorney to Mr. Vick [in 2008] that expressly authorized Mr. Vick to conduct a wide range of business and financial activities on behalf of Mr. McFadden and McFadden Enterprise­s, including the transactio­ns at issue,” Price wrote.

McFadden formed McFadden Enterprise­s in January 2008, before he signed a sixyear, $60 million contract with the Oakland Raiders in June 2008. McFadden contends that Vick, a longtime family friend, took advantage of the player’s naivete in the business arena by inducing the young football player to entrust his finances to Vick, who falsely portrayed himself as a seasoned financial adviser. Vick was, at the time, working as a financial adviser for Ameriprise Financial Services Inc.

Price argued that when McFadden added Vick’s name to his bank account at Metropolit­an, it required the bank “to accept and pay without further inquiry any item … drawn against” the account until the bank received written notice of revocation. He noted that McFadden didn’t revoke Vick’s authority until May 2015.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States