U.S. Century Bank Stock Conversion Lawsuit
U.S. Century Bank Stock Conversion Lawsuit
U.S. Century Bank Stock Conversion Lawsuit
Plaintiffs,
v.
CLASS ACTION
LUIS DE LA AGUILERA, AIDA LEVITAN,
BERNARDO B. FERNANDEZ, JR., KIRK
WYCOFF, HOWARD FEINGLASS, and WAYNE
K. GOLDSTEIN,
Defendants.
_______________________________________/
Plaintiffs Joel Benes, John McClure, and Daniel Valdes, individually and on behalf of the
class defined herein, file this Class Action Complaint against Defendants Luis de la Aguilera, Aida
Levitan, Bernardo B. Fernandez, Jr., Kirk Wycoff, Howard Feinglass, and Wayne K. Goldstein,
INTRODUCTION
1. Corporate directors owe fiduciary duties and obligations to the corporation and its
shareholders. They must ensure, among other things, that the corporation acts within its lawful
authority. They cannot cause a corporation to act ultra vires—i.e., to act “‘beyond the scope of
power allowed or granted by a corporate charter or by law.’” Liberty Counsel v. Fla. Bar Bd. of
2. The directors of U.S. Century Bank (the “Bank”) breached their fiduciary duties,
failed in their responsibilities, and caused the Bank to act ultra vires, in order to enrich themselves
and the private equity funds they represented that held the Bank’s preferred stock.
3. Defendants are all current or former members of the Bank’s Board of Directors (the
“Board”). At least three members were appointed to the Board by virtue of their high-level
positions with private equity funds that held a significant share of the Bank’s common and
preferred stock.
4. In 2021, Defendants breached their fiduciary duties when they devised, approved,
and implemented an ultra vires transaction to exchange the Bank’s preferred stock for common
stock. That “Exchange Transaction,” effectuated in July 2021, overwhelmingly favored seven
private equity funds, including the directors’ private equity funds, that held the Bank’s preferred
stock.
5. Plaintiffs are holders of voting common stock in the Bank. They are “Legacy
Shareholders” who founded the Bank twenty years ago as a minority-owned community bank
focused on helping the Hispanic community in Miami-Dade County. The ultra vires Exchange
Transaction dramatically and illegally shifted the economic and voting power in the Bank from
fact that the Bank’s governing Articles of Incorporation expressly prohibited the conversion of
7. Had they wished to carry out the Exchange Transaction lawfully, the Board should
have drafted a proposed amendment to the Articles of Incorporation and submitted that proposal
to the common shareholders for a vote. See Fla. Stat. § 607.1004(1)(b). Defendants knowingly and
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intentionally did not do so. Absent a properly approved amendment, the Exchange Transaction
8. Plaintiffs’ challenge to the ultra vires Exchange Transaction arises under Fla. Stat.
9. To guide the Court through the facts set forth below, Plaintiffs attach a timeline of
PARTIES
Plaintiffs
10. Plaintiff Joel Benes is a citizen of the State of Florida residing in Miami-Dade
County, Florida. Mr. Benes currently holds 6,500 shares in USCB Financial Holdings, Inc., a bank
holding company trading on NASDAQ that wholly owns U.S. Century Bank.
11. Plaintiff John McClure is a citizen of the State of Florida residing in Miami-Dade
County, Florida. Mr. McClure currently holds 1,200 shares in USCB Financial Holdings, Inc.
12. Plaintiff Daniel Valdes is a citizen of the State of Florida residing in Miami-Dade
County, Florida. Mr. Valdes currently holds 12,000 shares in USCB Financial Holdings, Inc.
Defendants
President, CEO, and a member of the Board of Directors of the Bank at all relevant times.
Defendant de la Aguilera was appointed Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Bank on June
28, 2023.
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2. Defendant Aida Levitan is a citizen of the State of Florida and served as a member
of the Board of Directors of the Bank at all relevant times. Defendant Levitan served as Chairman
of the Board of Directors of the Bank from May 2017 to June 2023.
3. Defendant Kirk Wycoff is a citizen of the State of Florida and served as a member
of the Board of Directors of the Bank at all relevant times. Defendant Wycoff is the managing
partner of Patriot Financial Partners II, LP (“Patriot”), which held Class A voting common stock,
Class B non-voting common stock, and both Class C and Class D preferred stock.
4. Defendant Howard Feinglass is a citizen of the State of New York and served as a
member of the Board of Directors of the Bank at all relevant times. Defendant Feinglass is the
managing member of Priam Capital Associates, LLC (“Priam”), which held Class A voting
common stock, Class B non-voting common stock, and both Class C and Class D preferred stock.
5. Defendant Wayne K. Goldstein is a citizen of the State of New York and served as
a member of the Board of Directors of the Bank at all relevant times. Defendant Goldstein is a
founding partner of Endicott Opportunity Partners IV, LP (“Endicott”), which held Class A voting
common stock, Class B non-voting common stock, and both Class C and Class D preferred stock.
6. Defendant Bernardo B. Fernandez, Jr., is a citizen of the State of Florida and served
7. This Court has original jurisdiction over this class action pursuant to the Class
Action Fairness Act and 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d), because members of the proposed Class are citizens
of states different from at least one Defendant, there are more than 100 members in the proposed
Class, and the total amount in controversy in this action exceeds $5,000,000 exclusive of interest
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and costs. This Court has supplemental jurisdiction over Plaintiffs’ state law claims under 28
U.S.C. § 1367.
8. Defendants de la Aguilera, Levitan, Wycoff, and Fernandez are citizens of the State
9. Defendants are subject to the jurisdiction of this Court pursuant to Fla. Stat.
§ 48.193, because, at all relevant times, they: (a) committed tortious acts within the State of
Florida; (b) operated, conducted, engaged in, or carried on a business or business venture in the
State of Florida; and (c) engaged in substantial and not isolated activity within the State of Florida.
ii. Defendants caused injury to the Bank’s Legacy Shareholders residing in the
a Florida court.
10. Venue is proper in this forum pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1391 because one or more of
the named Plaintiffs resides in this judicial district and it is the place where the ultra vires corporate
11. All conditions precedent to the institution and maintenance of this action have been
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GENERAL ALLEGATIONS
12. U.S. Century Bank is a Florida community bank founded in 2002. When the Bank
opened, it focused its business on the South Florida community, with an emphasis on the Hispanic
community. At the time of the Exchange Transaction, the Bank offered a wide range of deposit
and loan products especially catering to the needs of local business owners, entrepreneurs, and
households.
13. When the Bank was founded, it had only one class of voting common stock, and
14. In 2006, the shareholders of the Bank voted to increase the number of authorized
B. In the Midst of the Great Recession, the U.S. Department of the Treasury
Invests More Than $50 Million in the Bank in Exchange for Shares of Newly
Created Preferred Stock
15. The Great Recession of 2007 to 2009 and beyond had a negative impact on the
16. Despite the negative impact of the Great Recession, the United States Department
of the Treasury viewed the Bank as one that could survive with an influx of capital.
17. In 2009, the Department of the Treasury invested $50.2 million in the Bank as part
18. In May of 2009, to facilitate an agreement with the Department of the Treasury, the
Bank amended its Articles of Incorporation to authorize one million shares of preferred stock to
be issued in one or more classes by the Board through appropriate resolutions. This amendment
was filed with the State of Florida on July 7, 2009 and is attached as Exhibit B.
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19. As part of the Department of the Treasury’s TARP investment in the Bank, the
Bank adopted two amendments to its Articles of Incorporation, effective August 6, 2009. Each
amendment created a new series of preferred stock, together the “TARP Preferred” stock. The first
amendment issued 50,236 shares of “Fixed Rate Non-Cumulative Perpetual Preferred Stock,
Series A,” and the second amendment issued 2,515 shares of “Fixed Rate Non-Cumulative
Perpetual Preferred Stock, Series B.” The two amendments to the Bank’s articles are attached as
20. Section 6 of the incorporated Standard Provisions of each set of amendments states:
“Holders of Designated Preferred Stock shares shall have no right to exchange or convert such
21. By 2015, the Bank improved its performance well enough to attract outside
22. To allow for this infusion of new capital, the Department of the Treasury and the
Legacy Shareholders approved a series of “Recapitalization Transactions” that set the terms,
conditions, and limitations for the new investments and the new investors.
23. The Bank’s status as a minority-controlled community bank was a significant factor
for the state and federal regulators who approved the Recapitalization Transactions.
large part because the Legacy Shareholders would end up holding approximately 38% of the
Bank’s common equity and over 50% of the voting common stock, allowing the Bank to maintain
its status as an independent minority-controlled community bank. See ¶ 50, infra. The Legacy
Shareholders also favored the fact that, should there be a sale of the Bank after the Recapitalization
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Transactions, the Legacy Shareholders would receive a pro rata portion of the proceeds of any
sale after the Preferred Stockholders received the initial $114 million. See ¶ 49, infra.
25. On or about March 17, 2015, the Department of the Treasury entered into a
securities purchase agreement with, inter alia, seven private equity funds for the sale of the TARP
Preferred stock. The “TARP Preferred Purchase Agreement” is attached as Exhibit E. The seven
“Private Equity Funds” are: (1) Patriot, (2) Priam, and (3) Endicott—represented by Defendants
Wycoff, Feinglass, and Goldstein, respectively—and (4) Greenhill Capital Partners, III, L.P.,
(5) The Claar Family Spray Trust, (6) Great Hollow International, L.P., and (7) TFO Financial
26. The TARP Preferred Purchase Agreement was premised on the fact that the Private
Equity Funds would invest $52.675 million in new capital in the Bank and would pay the
Department of the Treasury $12.325 million for the TARP Preferred stock, for a total of $65
million.
27. Patriot and Priam were designated “Large Purchasers.” Endicott, Greenhill, Claar,
Great Hollow, and TFO were designated “Other Purchasers.” See Exhibit E, at p. 3 & Schedule I.
Goldstein, respectively—agreed to a series of restrictions on the degree of control that they would
exercise over the Bank in order to not be deemed “bank holding companies” under federal law,
and to avoid the need to obtain approvals for acquisition of “control” under both federal and Florida
law. Essentially, Priam, Patriot, and Endicott committed to being passive investors.
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29. On March 12, 2015, the Legacy Shareholders approved the Recapitalization
Transactions by amending the Bank’s Articles of Incorporation and superseding all previous
Articles of Incorporation and Amendments, thus establishing the terms and conditions for the stock
to be issued to the new investors. The 2015 “Amended Articles” of Incorporation are attached as
Exhibit F.
30. The Amended Articles created two classes of common stock: Class A voting
common stock (50 million shares) and Class B non-voting common stock (8 million shares).
31. The Amended Articles created five classes of preferred stock: The first two
effectively merged into Class C Designated (52,748 shares). See Exhibit F, art. III.B.2.(a), at
p. 12. The other two classes of preferred stock were Class D Companion (12,309,480 shares) and
respectively—each invested $16,653,199.26 in the Bank ($33.3 million of the $65 million total
investment, see ¶¶ 37-40, supra), and in exchange received the following stock:
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and TFO also invested in the Bank, and in exchange, each received the following stock:
34. A small group of Legacy Shareholders also purchased the remaining available
35. In addition to the holdings described above, Patriot and Priam both were afforded
the right to appoint one member of the Bank’s Board. Patriot appointed Defendant Wycoff. Priam
appointed Defendant Feinglass. The Bank later added Defendant Goldstein from Endicott as a
liquidation preferences for the Class C and Class D preferred stock to enable the new investors to
protect their investments in the event of a liquidation, dissolution, or winding up of the Bank.
37. The Private Equity Funds received a $114 million liquidation preference for their
approximately $65 million investment in the Bank and the purchase of TARP Preferred stock—
i.e., in the event of a sale of the Bank, the Preferred Stockholders would receive the first $114
million with the remaining proceeds, if any, divided on a pro rata basis among common
shareholders.
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approximately 38% of the Bank’s common equity and over 50% of the voting common stock.
39. The Amended Articles also created certain redemption rights in the Bank for the
Class C and Class D preferred stock. The Class C and Class D preferred stockholders, however,
40. The Amended Articles expressly state that Class C shareholders have no right to
convert Class C shares into any other securities of the Bank. See Exhibit F, art. III.B.(e)(v), at
p. 29.
41. The Amended Articles further expressly state that the Class C and Class D
shareholders “shall not have any rights, preferences, privileges or voting powers or relative,
other than as set forth herein or in the Articles of Incorporation or as provided by applicable law.”
42. The Amended Articles do not authorize the directors to exchange or convert
43. Specifically, in Article III, Section B, the Amended Articles authorize the directors
to create new classes of stock and to create certain rights, including conversion rights, for the new
classes, but do not authorize the directors to engage in transactions to exchange or convert the
44. In early 2018, the Bank’s Board—which included directors representing three of
stock. Patriot, Priam, Endicott, and the other Private Equity Funds sought to maximize their
investment in the Bank by exchanging their Class C and Class D preferred stock to voting common
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stock at the liquidation preference value. Such an exchange would increase the percentage of
45. At the time, the Private Equity Funds collectively owned 94.6% of Class C
preferred stock, 92.7% of Class D preferred stock, and 45.1% of Class A voting common stock.
Patriot and Priam owned 100% of the Class B non-voting common stock.
46. By converting their Class C and Class D preferred stock to voting common stock,
the Board could arrange a sale of the Bank that was more profitable for the Private Equity Funds.
47. Generally, private equity firms raise funds and manage these monies to yield
favorable returns for their shareholder clients, often with an investment horizon of between four
and seven years. The ultimate goal of the Private Equity Funds here was no different—to sell their
stock in the Bank for the maximum amount they could arrange, and as fast as possible.
48. The Board’s 2018 attempt to engage in a conversion never occurred. In November
2018, a number of Legacy Shareholders filed a direct action in Florida state court. See Rasco v.
Levitan, No. 2018-038212-CA-01 (Fla. 11th Cir. Ct.). In November 2018, and again in April 2019,
the Florida court issued orders temporarily enjoining the proposed exchange transaction. The
Florida court dismissed the case and dissolved the injunction in May 2020. The state court’s
November 2018, April 2019, and May 2020 orders are attached hereto as Exhibits G, H, and I,
respectively.
F. The Board Tries Again and, this Time, Completes the Ultra Vires Transaction
Concurrent with the Bank’s July 2021 Initial Public Offering
49. Undeterred, the Board attempted another exchange transaction. Motivated by self-
interest and with the goal to benefit the Private Equity Funds at the expense of the Legacy
Shareholders, Defendants on the Board approved the Exchange Transaction. The transaction
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occurred concurrently with the Bank’s July 2021 initial public offering (“IPO”) of Class A
common stock.
50. On May 28, 2021, the Bank’s president, Defendant Luis de la Aguilera, distributed
to all of the Bank’s preferred shareholders the “Letter of Transmittal,” attached hereto as
52. The Offer to Exchange further states: “If your Preferred Stock is submitted and
accepted for exchange by [the Bank], you will receive the applicable amount of Class A common
stock . . . in accordance with the Exchange Rates, but you will forgo all rights and benefits
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associated with ownership of such Preferred Stock that are not provided to holders of Class A
53. The Offer to Exchange provides that any untendered preferred stock will be
“redeemed by [the Bank]” “for cash, at the stated liquidation preference.” Exhibit K, at p. 16
(emphasis deleted).
54. The Offer to Exchange stated its purpose and effect: “Management of the Bank and
the Board believe that the exchange of the Preferred Stock for Class A common stock pursuant to
the Exchange Offers will benefit the Bank by creating a more simplified capital structure that will
facilitate [the Bank’s] IPO, allowing [the Bank] to harmonize [its] capital structure consistent with
other similarly sized community banks that are publicly traded. Effecting the Exchange Offers in
connection with the [Bank’s] IPO also allows [the Bank] to independently establish the Exchange
Rates for the Exchange Offers based on the market price at which [the Bank’s] shares of Class A
55. The Offer to Exchange stated that “[p]articipants in the Exchange Offers will
experience immediate and substantial dilution in the book value of their investment in Class A
56. The Offer to Exchange further states that “[t]he exercise of outstanding options and
the issuance of additional securities by [the Bank] could result in further dilution” of Class A
57. The Offer to Exchange “reserved” “6,121,052 million Class A voting common
shares . . . for future issuance for the potential conversion of [the Bank’s] outstanding Class B
common stock and exercise of stock options that have been granted by [the Bank].” Exhibit K, at
p. 15. At the time of the Exchange Transaction, the two largest Private Equity Firms, Patriot and
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Priam, owned all 6,121,052 shares of Class B non-voting common stock. See ¶¶ 44, 57, supra; see
also Exhibit K, at p. 19 (noting that “[a] significant percentage of [the Bank’s] Class A common
stock, Class B common stock, and outstanding Preferred Stock” was held by Patriot and Priam).
58. At the time of the Exchange Transaction, the Legacy Shareholders had almost 9.5
million Class A voting common shares. Thus, the Exchange Transaction, which also resulted in
Patriot and Priam’s Class B shares being converted to Class A voting common shares, resulted in
the dilution of over two-thirds of the value of the Legacy Shareholders’ common stock and voting
power.
59. In addition, the Offer to Exchange disclosed an agreement between the Board and
Patriot and Priam that gave each of the latter two the right to designate one Board member and
60. Despite their fiduciary obligations to all shareholders, Defendants approved the
ultra vires Exchange Transaction, which placed the interests of the Private Equity Funds above
61. The Amended Articles do not permit the conversion or exchange of Class C and
Class D preferred stock absent common shareholder approval. The Exchange Transaction was
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Exhibit F, at p. 11.
63. The only reference to conversion or exchange of Class C preferred stock appears in
Stock shares shall have no right to exchange or convert such shares into any other securities of
64. Moreover, the provisions governing the rights of Class C and Class D preferred
Other Rights. The shares of [Designated or Companion] Preferred Stock shall not
have any rights, preferences, privileges or voting powers or relative participating,
optional or other special rights, or qualifications, limitations or restrictions thereof,
other than as set forth herein or as provided by applicable law.
65. The Bank’s governing documents did not authorize Defendants to approve a
conversion or exchange of preferred stock to common stock without amending the Articles of
Incorporation and submitting the proposed amendment to a vote of the common shareholders.
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Articles; constitutes an ultra vires act; was a breach of fiduciary duties owed to Plaintiffs and the
other Legacy Shareholders; and violated Fla. Stat. § 607.1004(1)(b), which required the Exchange
67. Defendants, all current or former directors of the Bank, approved or caused to be
approved the Exchange Transaction even though the Amended Articles did not authorize directors
a breach of their fiduciary duties to the Bank’s Legacy Shareholders, because the Exchange
Transaction favored the Private Equity Funds preferred stockholders over the Legacy Shareholders
and diluted the value of the Legacy Shareholders’ common stock holdings through ultra vires acts.
69. The Exchange Transaction directly conflicts with the Amended Articles’ design to
protect the Legacy Shareholders from overreaching by the Private Equity Funds.
H. The Bank’s Board Continues to Take Actions Designed to Favor the Private
Equity Funds at the Expense of the Legacy Shareholders
70. Defendants continue to favor the Private Equity Funds that held the preferred
71. Most recently, on April 17, 2023, the directors instructed USCB Financial
Holdings, Inc. (“USCB”) to issue a proxy statement related to USCB’s annual meeting held on
May 22, 2023, which is attached hereto as Exhibit L. The proxy statement includes a
USCB’s Articles of Incorporation that will change the conversion factor of USCB’s Class B non-
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72. There are no Class B non-voting stocks outstanding. This is because the alleged
rationale for the illegal Exchange Transaction described above was to make the Bank’s shares
more marketable for the public markets by having only one class of shares.
73. That tune has now changed because it is clear that the Private Equity Funds the
Defendants’ favor are not in compliance with “regulatory requirements applicable to such
shareholders under state and federal banking rules and regulations, [and] may need or desire to
exchange shares of Class A Common Stock for shares of Class B Common Stock.” Exhibit L,
at p. 32.
74. Consequently, Defendants recommended that the shareholders vote to allow those
preferred Private Equity Funds to divest their voting shares, allowing them to come into regulatory
compliance, without any penalty or consequence, all while changing the entire capital structure of
the Bank in spite of Defendants’ previous position that the preferred capital structure (to the public
75. At the Bank’s May 22, 2023 annual meeting, the shareholders adopted the proposed
amendment to the USCB Articles of Incorporation. The amendment was filed with the State of
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76. Plaintiffs bring this class action and seek to certify and maintain it as a class action
The Class
77. Plaintiffs define and will seek certification of the following Class:
All record holders of voting common stock in U.S. Century Bank prior to March
14, 2015 who were also holders of Class A voting common stock in U.S. Century
Bank when U.S. Century Bank authorized an exchange of Class C and Class D
preferred stock to Class A voting common stock in June/July 2021.
78. Excluded from the Class are Defendants, their employees, officers, directors, legal
representatives, heirs, successors, and wholly or partly owned subsidiaries or affiliated companies;
Plaintiffs’ counsel and their employees; and the judicial officers and their immediate family
79. Plaintiffs reserve the right to modify, expand, or amend the definition of the
proposed Class following class certification discovery and before the Court determines whether
Plaintiffs can prove the elements of their claims on a class-wide basis using the same evidence as
would be used to prove those elements in individual actions alleging the same claims.
Numerosity
81. This action satisfies the numerosity requirement of Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(a)(1). There
are over 300 shareholders in the proposed Class. Accordingly, the size of the Class makes joinder
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Commonality
82. This action satisfies the commonality requirement of Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(a)(2).
Plaintiffs’ claims raise questions of law and fact common to the Class. The common questions of
law and fact include, but are not limited to, the following:
devising and approving the Exchange Transaction despite the fact that the
to the Bank, Plaintiffs, and the Bank’s Legacy Shareholders by causing the
Bank to act ultra vires, favoring the holders of preferred stock over the
to the Bank, Plaintiffs, and the Bank’s Legacy Shareholders by failing to act
stockholders as a whole.
Typicality
83. This action satisfies the typicality requirement of Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(a)(3). The
claims asserted by Plaintiffs are typical of the claims of the Class. Plaintiffs have suffered harm
that stems from the same course of conduct. That conduct gives rise to the Class’s claims, which
are based on the same legal theories and interests and depend on resolution of the same defenses
to liability.
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Adequacy of Representation
84. This action satisfies the adequacy of representation requirement of Fed. R. Civ. P.
23(a)(4). Plaintiffs will fairly and adequately represent the interests of the Class, and they do not
have any conflict with the interests of the other members of the Class that would preclude them
from serving as representatives. Plaintiffs have the same interests as members of the Class and will
fairly and adequately look out for and protect the interests of absent Class members.
85. Proposed class counsel are sufficiently experienced in complex litigation and class
actions and have the qualifications and abilities necessary to adequately represent the interests of
the Class.
Predominance
86. This action is appropriate for class treatment pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(b)(3).
As set forth in paragraph 94, supra, there are questions of law and fact common to Plaintiffs’
claims and the claims of each member of the Class. Those common questions of law and fact
predominate over any questions of law or fact affecting only individual members of the Class.
87. The Class will present common proof as to Defendants’ liability, including, but not
limited to, Defendants’ approval and implementation of the ultra vires Exchange Transaction and
Superiority
88. A class action is superior to other available methods for the fair and efficient
adjudication of this controversy. Class certification in this matter would aid in case management
and the efficient use of limited resources. A class action would achieve substantial economies of
time, effort, and expense, and would assure uniformity of decisions as to persons similarly situated
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Issue Certification
89. This action is appropriate for issue certification pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P.
whether Defendants approved the ultra vires Exchange Transaction and breached their fiduciary
duties to the Bank, the Legacy Shareholders, and the common stockholders.
COUNT I
90. Plaintiffs re-allege and incorporate by reference paragraphs 1 to 101, as if fully set
forth herein.
91. Defendants caused the Bank to engage in ultra vires conduct by devising and
approving the Exchange Transaction despite the fact that the governing Articles of Incorporation
expressly prohibited conversion of Class C and Class D preferred stock to common stock.
92. The Bank’s Amended Articles expressly prohibited the exchange or conversion of
Class C shares into any other securities of the Bank (such as common stock) and expressly denied
to Class C and Class D preferred stockholders any rights, privileges, or preferences other than
those set forth in the Amended Articles (such as exchanging Class D preferred stock for common
stock). See Exhibit F, arts. III.B.2.(e)(v), III.B.2.(e)(xi), III.B.2.(f)(xii), at pp. 29, 33, 43.
93. On or about May 28, 2021, Defendants approved, or caused to be approved, the
Bank’s decision to offer Class C and Class D preferred shareholders the opportunity to convert
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94. Article III.B.2.(e)(v) of the Amended Articles expressly prohibited the conversion
Exhibit F, at p. 29.
95. Article III.B.2.(e)(xi) of the Amended Articles restricted the rights of Class C
preferred stock to those rights expressly provided in the Bank’s Amended Articles or bylaws:
Other Rights. The shares of Designated Preferred Stock [Class C] shall not have
any rights, preferences, privileges or voting powers or relative participating,
optional or other special rights, or qualifications, limitations or restrictions thereof,
other than as set forth herein or as provided by applicable law.
Exhibit F, at p. 33
96. Article III.B.2.(f)(xii) of the Amended Articles restricted the rights of Class D
preferred stock to those rights expressly provided in the Amended Articles or by law:
Other Rights. The shares of Companion Preferred Stock [Class D] shall not have
any rights, preferences, privileges or voting powers or relative participating,
optional or other special rights, or qualifications, limitations or restrictions thereof,
other than as set forth herein or as provided by applicable law.
Exhibit F, at p. 43.
97. To carry out a conversion of Class C and Class D preferred stock to common stock,
the Board was required to submit a proposed amendment to the Amended Articles and submit that
proposal to the common shareholders for a vote. See Fla. Stat. § 607.1004(1)(b). Defendants did
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COUNT II
98. Plaintiffs re-allege and incorporate by reference paragraphs 1 to 101, as if fully set
forth herein.
99. As the Bank’s Board members, each Defendant owes fiduciary duties to the Bank,
Plaintiffs, and all of the Bank’s common stockholders. These duties include, without limitation,
100. Defendants’ fiduciary duties require them to act in the best interests of all of the
stockholders, and not in favor of the interests of preferred stockholders over those of the Legacy
Shareholders.
101. Further, by virtue of the fiduciary duties they owe the common stockholders,
Defendants are required to (a) adhere to the Amended Articles and not approve ultra vires
transactions; (b) act in the best interests of common stockholders; and (c) avoid acting in their own
102. The conduct, acts, and omissions described herein demonstrate that Defendants
committed breaches of the fiduciary duties they owed to the Bank, Plaintiffs, and the common
stockholders by causing the Bank to act ultra vires, favoring the holders of preferred stock over
the holders of voting common stock, and failing to act in the best interest of the common
103. As a result of the Defendants’ actions detailed above, Plaintiffs have suffered
economic losses through the dilution of the value of their common stock. Because of the approval
and implementation of the Bank’s ultra vires actions and Defendants’ breaches of their fiduciary
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duties, Plaintiffs and the common stockholders have been directly, specially, and proximately
injured.
WHEREFORE, Joel Benes, John McClure, and Daniel Valdes, individually and on behalf
of the Class, demand judgment against Defendants Luis de la Aguilera, Aida Levitan, Bernardo B.
Fernandez, Jr., Kirk Wycoff, Howard Feinglass, and Wayne K. Goldstein for remedies including,
a. Declare this action to be a proper class action pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(a) and
d. Award Plaintiffs and Class Members their reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs, as
allowed by law;
f. Award Plaintiffs and Class Members any further and different relief as this case
may require or as determined by this Court to be just, equitable, and proper under
the circumstances.
Pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 38(b), Plaintiffs hereby demand a jury trial on all issues so
triable.
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Case 1:23-cv-22488-XXXX Document 1 Entered on FLSD Docket 07/05/2023 Page 26 of 26
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