A Missed Deadline Lets AXA Equitable Escape Allegations of Nationwide Consumer Fraud
The Non-Financial Ledger: What a Procedural Technicality Actually Costs
Here is what happened to Joel Malek and every other person he was trying to represent in this lawsuit. They bought life insurance. They trusted that a licensed agent and a major insurance company were giving them honest information about their options. Then, according to the complaint, the company ran a scheme: it used marketing materials designed to make their existing, perfectly adequate policies look inferior, while concealing the real costs and risks of switching. The people who got pushed into new policies paid more money. They got less value. They took on more risk. They did not know any of this was happening because the comparison documents were built to obscure it.
That is the allegation at the heart of this case. “Twisting” is the insurance industry’s own word for it. Regulators have rules against it. AXA Equitable and its agent Leonard Feigenbaum were accused, in a federal court filing, of coordinating a nationwide version of this practice.
The case never got to trial. It never got to discovery. It never got to a single deposition where an executive sat down and had to answer questions under oath. It was dismissed before any of that. Then, when Malek’s lawyer tried to appeal, the clock had already run out.
The clock ran out because of a rule that a federal judge put in her courtroom handbook. The rule said: as a courtesy to the court, please wait until a motion is fully briefed before filing it. The lawyer followed that instruction. He served the motion on AXA Equitable’s attorneys on April 14, 2023, sixteen days after the dismissal order. He did not file it with the court until May 5, 2023, thirty-seven days after the dismissal, because he was waiting for all the responses to come in, as the judge’s rule suggested. Twenty-eight days was the legal deadline for filing. He missed it by nine days.
There is a detail in this case that should make your stomach turn. The same judge whose courtroom rule contributed to this situation had, in writing, warned lawyers that the Court of Appeals would not accept the argument that following her local rules excused a missed federal deadline. That warning was buried inside the same rule that told lawyers to wait. A lawyer reading carefully could find the escape hatch: the rule also said that if you believed waiting would “deprive the party of a substantive right,” you were allowed to file on time. Malek’s lawyer apparently did not treat the deadline as a substantive right until it was too late.
This is what the legal system looks like for ordinary people, even when they have a lawyer. The merits of the fraud claim, the question of whether AXA Equitable actually deceived a nationwide class of insurance customers, will never be examined by any court. Not because the evidence was weak. Not because the case was without merit. Because of a nine-day filing gap.
AXA Equitable is one of the largest life insurance companies in the United States. It had Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher and Flom, one of the most powerful corporate law firms in the world, representing it. The firm filed the motion to dismiss the appeal on July 14, 2023, almost immediately after Malek filed his notice. They knew exactly what they had. The procedural trap closed, and the case was over.
The people who were allegedly tricked into inferior insurance policies never got their day in court. They remain, for now, the unnamed members of a class that will never convene.
Legal Receipts: What the Court Documents Actually Say
The following quotes are taken verbatim from the Second Circuit’s September 11, 2024 opinion in Malek v. Feigenbaum, No. 23-992. Every word below is directly from the court’s own record.
“Malek filed the complaint in the action below, alleging that Defendants engineered and implemented a ‘deceptive marketing conspiracy’ to trick him and a nationwide class of other Equitable life insurance consumers into replacing their existing life insurance policies with Equitable’s more expensive, less valuable, and riskier policies.” Second Circuit Opinion, Background Section, p. 4
- This is the court summarizing Malek’s central allegation. The words “more expensive, less valuable, and riskier” are drawn directly from the complaint. No court ever ruled these allegations were false; they were never tested.
- The phrase “nationwide class” confirms the scope of the alleged scheme. This was not one bad sales interaction. Malek argued that AXA Equitable and its agent built a systematic, coordinated program to push customers into worse products.
“The complaint alleges that Defendants accomplished this scheme — to which Malek refers as ‘twisting’ — through marketing materials that ‘deceptively “compare” the existing insurance with the replacement insurance and offer incomplete disclosure of the benefits of maintaining existing insurance.'” Second Circuit Opinion, Background Section, p. 4–5
- “Twisting” is a recognized term in insurance regulation, referring to the practice of inducing policyholders to lapse, forfeit, or surrender their existing coverage by using misrepresentation or incomplete comparison.
- The allegation of “incomplete disclosure” is specific: the complaint accused AXA Equitable of structuring its marketing comparisons to hide the value of what customers already had, making an inferior new product look superior.
“Malek filed the motion for reconsideration once it became fully briefed after consulting Judge Gujarati’s Individual Practice Rule III.B, which ‘requests’ ‘[a]s a courtesy to the Court’ ‘that the parties refrain from filing motion papers until the motion has been fully briefed, unless doing so might cause a party to miss an applicable deadline.'” Second Circuit Opinion, Background Section, p. 6
- This confirms that Malek’s attorney was explicitly following the sitting judge’s written courtroom instructions when the deadline was missed. The bundling rule told lawyers to hold their filing until briefs were complete.
- The escape clause in the rule (“unless doing so might cause a party to miss an applicable deadline”) was available to Malek but was apparently not used. The court noted that Malek never sought leave from the district court to file the motion early to preserve the deadline.
“This so-called ‘bundling’ rule also ‘remind[s]’ parties that ‘the Court of Appeals will not accept an argument that compliance with district court motion rules should excuse noncompliance with the time limits set forth in Fed. R. App. 4.'” Second Circuit Opinion, Background Section, p. 6 (quoting Judge Gujarati’s Individual Practice Rule)
- The judge’s own rule contained a printed warning that following it could cost a litigant the right to appeal. The rule simultaneously told lawyers to wait and warned them that waiting could destroy their case.
- The Second Circuit found this warning dispositive: because the individual rule explicitly flagged the risk, Malek cannot claim he was misled by the rule’s existence.
“The local rules do not supersede the requirements of the federal rules. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 83(a)(1) (‘A local rule must be consistent with . . . federal statutes and rules.’). Moreover, the district court’s individual rules explicitly warned that this Court would not accept such an argument to excuse an untimely notice of appeal.” Second Circuit Opinion, Section II, p. 21
- This is the court’s final word on Malek’s primary defense. His argument that he followed the applicable local rules is dismissed on two independent grounds: first, local rules cannot override federal procedural requirements; second, he was warned in writing that this argument would not work.
- For ordinary litigants, this passage illustrates the asymmetry of the legal system: a corporate defendant’s procedural team will catch a missed deadline and file a motion to dismiss the appeal within weeks. A plaintiff’s team following a judge’s courtesy rules can unknowingly surrender the entire case.
Societal Impact Mapping: Who Gets Hurt When Insurance Giants Play the System
Public Health
Life insurance is a financial safety net for families facing the worst moments of their lives. When that net is allegedly manipulated for corporate profit, the damage is invisible until someone dies.
- The complaint alleges customers were pushed into “riskier” policies. For policyholders managing chronic illness, aging parents, or dependent children, a policy that underperforms at the moment of a claim is a financial catastrophe that lands directly on surviving family members.
- The stress of financial insecurity is itself a documented public health harm. Families who believe they are adequately insured and later discover their coverage is inadequate face acute financial trauma on top of the grief of losing a loved one.
- Older policyholders, who are disproportionately targeted by insurance replacement schemes, face the compounded risk of being re-underwritten at an older age when they switch policies, potentially being denied coverage or paying substantially higher premiums for equivalent protection.
- Because the class-action was dismissed before discovery, the full scope of harm across the alleged nationwide class remains unknown. There is no official count of how many people were affected or what their policy losses totaled.
Economic Inequality
The alleged “twisting” scheme targeted ordinary American families who trusted a licensed professional. The legal system that was supposed to hold AXA accountable served instead as a shield.
- The premium gap between an existing policy and a replacement policy may appear modest on a monthly basis, but over the life of a policy, even a modest increase compounds into thousands or tens of thousands of dollars extracted from working families, according to the theory of harm in the complaint.
- AXA Equitable could afford Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher and Flom, one of the most expensive law firms on earth. Malek was represented by a small New York firm. The procedural trap that ended this case was caught and weaponized by a legal team with the resources to monitor filing timestamps and move within days.
- Class-action lawsuits are specifically designed to address harm that is spread thinly across many individuals, where each person’s individual loss would not justify hiring a lawyer. Dismissing the class on procedural grounds before any merits review means that no individual class member has a practical path to any form of accountability or restitution.
- The RICO allegations, if proven, would have entitled class members to treble damages under federal law, meaning three times actual losses. That potential remedy is now gone entirely.
- The combination of an expired statute of limitations on the New York state claims and the procedural death of the federal appeal means this case cannot be re-filed in any meaningful form. AXA Equitable has a full, permanent shield against these specific allegations.
The “Cost of a Life” Metric
There is no settlement figure in this case because the case never reached one. These numbers come from what was at stake.
What Now? Accountability Routes That Are Still Open
This case is over, but the underlying conduct it alleged does not disappear because a court procedurally could not hear it.
The People Who Walked
- AXA Equitable Life Insurance Company, defendant-appellee. Represented by Jay B. Kasner, Kurt Wm. Hemr, Alisha Q. Nanda, and Sam Auld of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher and Flom LLP.
- Leonard Feigenbaum, defendant-appellee. Named in the complaint as an individual participant in the alleged conspiracy. Represented by Daniel Scott Furst, Marc J. Ross, and A.R. John Hitchings of Sichenzia Ross Ference Carmel LLP.
- DOES 1 through 1000: unnamed co-defendants identified in the complaint who were never required to publicly identify themselves because the case was dismissed before discovery.
Watchlist: Regulators Who Have Jurisdiction Over Insurance Replacement Fraud
- New York State Department of Financial Services (NYDFS): The primary regulator for AXA Equitable’s New York operations. Has authority to investigate deceptive insurance marketing practices, including twisting. Can impose fines, require restitution, and revoke licenses.
- State Insurance Commissioners (all 50 states): Life insurance is primarily regulated at the state level. Every state where AXA Equitable sold policies has a commissioner with the power to investigate replacement policy schemes and seek consumer restitution.
- Federal Trade Commission (FTC): Has jurisdiction over deceptive trade practices in commerce and the authority to investigate and act on consumer protection violations in the insurance marketing space.
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB): While its jurisdiction over life insurance is limited, the CFPB accepts consumer complaints about financial products and can refer matters to state regulators.
- Department of Justice (DOJ): RICO violations, if substantiated, are federal crimes as well as civil claims. The DOJ retains the authority to pursue criminal RICO prosecutions even where civil class actions have failed.
- National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC): The NAIC coordinates state-level regulation and maintains model regulations on replacement of life insurance. Consumer complaints filed with the NAIC create a record across state lines.
What You Can Do Right Now
- Pull your own policy records. If an AXA Equitable agent encouraged you to replace an existing life insurance policy within the last several years, request a full copy of every comparison document and disclosure you were given. Incomplete or misleading comparisons are the core of the alleged scheme.
- File a complaint with your state insurance department. State regulators can investigate individual complaints and aggregate them into pattern-of-conduct cases. A single complaint is a data point; hundreds of complaints become a regulatory investigation.
- Connect with consumer protection legal clinics. Law school consumer protection clinics and nonprofit legal aid organizations can review whether you have viable individual state-law claims that have not yet expired. State statutes of limitations differ from the federal deadlines that killed this case.
- Share this story. AXA Equitable’s legal victory here was procedural, not substantive. The company never had to answer the fraud allegations in public. Public awareness is the one accountability mechanism that no court can dismiss on a technicality.
- Support procedural justice reform. This case died because of a nine-day gap created in part by a judge’s own courtroom rules. Advocate for clearer, simpler, more accessible federal appellate deadlines so that ordinary people, not just those who can afford Skadden attorneys, can navigate the system.
The source document for this investigation is attached below.
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