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Page 1441
116 F.3d 1441  Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 99,487, 11 Fla.
L. Weekly Fed. C 159 Lawrence ROBBINS, C. Alan Peck,
George Levy, Max Bloom,
Alfred Edwards, Leonard J. Goldfarb, Milton
Stark, Richard
Swire, Andrew Mastrangelo, Irving Metzner,
Charles Carroll,
Thomas Farber, Vincent R. Scala, Betty R.
Ramsey, Sidney
Field, Mitchell State, Abraham Galfunt,
Robert I. Shane, Eva
Shane, John A. Brooks, Marian J. Brooks,
Leander H.
Peterson, Herbert J. Zeiss, Mary Alice
Johnson, Howard
Perlman, Victor L. Mesaros, R. Bruce Simpson
Trust,
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
KOGER PROPERTIES, INC., Ira M. Koger,
Wallace F.E. Kienast,
James B. Holderman, Allen R. Ransom,
Defendants,
Sol. H. Proctor, Sandra Proctor, Claimants,
Deloitte & Touche, Defendant-Appellant,
American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants, Business
and Securities Lawyers, Amicus for
Appellant,
National Association of Securities and
Commercial Law
Attorneys, Amicus. Nos. 95-2882, 95-3069. United States Court of Appeals,
Eleventh Circuit. July 14, 1997.
Page 1443
Robert D. McLean, Peter D.
Keisler, Rex E. Lee, Richard D. Bernstein,
Carter G. Phillips, Sidley & Austin,
Washington, DC, Richard E. Brodsky, Miami,
FL, William L. Durden, Jacksonville, FL, for
defendant-appellant.
Linda A. Klein, Gambree & Stolz,
Emmet J. Bondurant, Bondurant, Mixson &
Elmore, Atlanta, GA, Amicus.
George E. Ridge, Kent, Ridge &
Crawford, Jacksonville, FL, Lawrence P.
Kolker, Daniel W. Krasner, Wolf,
Haldenstein, Adler, Freeman & Herz, Keith M.
Fleischman, Milberg, Weiss, Bershad, Hynes &
Lerach, New York City, Arthur Miller,
Cambridge, MA, for plaintiffs-appellees.
Stanley R. Wolfe, Ruthanne
Gordon, Stuart J. Guber, Berger & Montague,
Philadelphia, PA, for Lawrence Robbins.
Michael R. Young, Willkie, Farr &
Gallagher, New York City, for Amicus.
Tyrie A. Boyer, Boyer, Tanzler &
Boyer, Jacksonville, FL, for Amicus Am.
Institute of CPA.
Appeals from the United States
District Court for the Middle District of
Florida.
Before COX, Circuit Judge, HILL,
Senior Circuit Judge, and VINING
*, Senior District Judge.
COX, Circuit Judge.
I. Introduction
Deloitte and Touche challenges
the district court's denial of its
Fed.R.Civ.P. 50(a) motion for judgment as a
matter of law. The district court held that
plaintiffs offered sufficient proof of loss
causation to support their Rule 10b-5 claim.
We reverse and render judgment in favor of
Deloitte and Touche.
II. Facts
1
Deloitte and Touche ("Deloitte"),
an accounting firm, conducted audits of the
Page 1444 1988, 1989, and 1990 financial statements of
Koger Properties, Inc. ("KPI"), a commercial
real estate construction and management
company listed on the New York Stock
Exchange. KPI included these audited
financial statements in its 1989 and 1990
Annual Reports and in its 1989 and 1990 Form
10-K filings with the Securities and
Exchange Commission ("SEC"). In both the
Annual Reports and the Form 10-K filings,
Deloitte represented that, in its opinion,
the financial statements presented fairly,
in all material respects, the financial
position of KPI in accordance with generally
accepted accounting principles (GAAP).
The information audited by
Deloitte included cash flow figures
calculated by KPI for its fiscal years 1988,
1989, and 1990. KPI calculated its cash flow
by subtracting from its operating revenues
costs related to administration, rental
property maintenance, interest, and income
tax. KPI generated operating revenue both by
leasing properties it developed and by
selling such properties.
In the course of its audits,
Deloitte noted problems with the accounting
methods utilized by KPI to calculate cash
flow. Specifically, Deloitte and KPI
disagreed at times about whether certain
costs should be treated as expenses in a
particular year or should be capitalized.
2
For example, in auditing KPI's
fiscal year 1988 statement, Deloitte
informed KPI that its capitalization of
interest payments was in violation of GAAP.
Deloitte initially insisted that KPI record
the amount of the discovered
overcapitalizations in the fiscal year 1988
financial statement. However, Deloitte
ultimately approved KPI's fiscal year 1988
financial statement without a full
adjustment for the interest
overcapitalization. In addition, throughout
the 1989 and 1990 audits, Deloitte
repeatedly identified discrepancies between
KPI's capitalization of "lease-up" costs and
GAAP. Nevertheless, Deloitte approved the
financial statements as in accordance with
GAAP without requiring a correction.
Plaintiffs' expert identified other
instances of Deloitte improperly approving
KPI's capitalization of indirect property
costs. In the end, all of these
overcapitalizations increased KPI's apparent
cash flow.
KPI derived a significant amount
of its 1989 and 1990 operating revenue from
sales of developed commercial properties to
Koger Equity ("KE"). KPI owned a twenty
percent interest in KE, and Ira Koger served
as chairman and CEO of both KPI and KE.
Plaintiffs offered testimony that reporting
gains from these sales as operating revenue
violated GAAP. In 1991, the SEC required KPI
to restate these gains as financing
activities, not as operating revenue. These
misstated revenues, like the
overcapitalizations, increased KPI's
apparent cash flow in 1989 and 1990.
During the 1990 audit, Michael
Goodbread was a partner at Deloitte with
responsibility for the KPI audit. Goodbread
owned KPI stock during part of the 1990
audit. This ownership was a violation of
generally accepted accounting standards
(GAAS). Goodbread did not work at Deloitte
during the 1989 audit.
KPI consistently paid nearly all
of its cash flow out in the form of
quarterly stockholder dividends. Thus, by
overstating its cash flow, KPI could pay its
shareholders higher dividends. The high
dividends were one of the forces behind
KPI's stock price. Deloitte, however, never
stated that KPI's dividend could continue to
be paid. (R.30 at 99.)
According to KPI's 1990 Form
10-K, although the percentage of revenues
generated from its leasing operations
steadily declined from 1988 through 1990,
KPI's quarterly dividend increased
throughout this period from $.625 to $.70
per share. Thus, the dividend was
increasingly sustained by sales of real
estate and was a non-taxable return of
capital. Concomitantly, the price of KPI
stock steadily declined from 1988 to 1990,
from a
Page 1445 high of $27.38 in the first quarter of 1988
to $21.13 on June 25, 1990. In the face of a
rising dividend, this decrease in stock
price meant that KPI's dividend yield rose
substantially, from around 10% in July 1989
to over 15% in September 1990. Moreover,
this 15% yield was completely non-taxable.
On September 28, 1990, Standard
and Poor's downgraded KPI's credit rating,
stating that "[t]he company's continued
increases in debt and declining equity base
are concerns in light of the deteriorating
real estate environment." (DX247-C.)
With rumors of a dividend cut
swirling, on September 30, 1990, KPI's board
of directors decided to cut KPI's future
quarterly dividend from seventy cents per
share to twenty-five cents per share. The
cut took effect after KPI paid a seventy
cent dividend it had declared on August 7,
1990. As revealed in the minutes of the
board meeting, the board was motivated to
reduce its dividend, a form of cash outflow,
by a perceived decrease in the availability
of future real estate financing. Such
financing was necessary if KPI was to
continue to sell developed properties and
pay the dividend those sales supported.
Moreover, the board expressed concern that
the current dividend was hard to justify
given the recent declines in KPI's stock
price.
The dividend cut was announced
officially in a press release on October 1,
1990. The press release stated that "[t]here
has been no decline in the cash flow of
Koger Properties." (DX 253.) Following this
announcement, KPI's stock price fell to an
average price of $8.20 between October 1 and
October 5, down from an average price of
$18.25 between September 11 and September
17, a difference of $10.05. It was not until
sometime in 1992, according to plaintiffs'
expert, that it was discovered that the
audited financial statements were false.
(R.30 at 48, 83.) Following this discovery,
KPI charged an adjustment of over
$100,000,000 to its balance sheet. (Id.)
III. Procedural History
Lawrence Robbins filed this
action on October 1, 1990, against KPI and
several individual defendants seeking
certification of a plaintiff class under
Fed.R.Civ.P. 23 and damages under section
10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b), and Rule 10b-5
promulgated thereunder, 17 C.F.R. §
240.10b-5. In January 1991, plaintiff filed
an amended complaint adding more named
plaintiffs and including Deloitte as an
additional defendant. In February 1993, the
district court certified a plaintiff class
composed of all purchasers of KPI common
stock from July 5, 1989, through and
including October 1, 1990. KPI and the
individual defendants were later dismissed
at plaintiffs' request, leaving Deloitte as
the sole defendant.
During a nineteen day trial in
February and March of 1995, plaintiffs
presented their claims to a jury. Plaintiffs
claimed that Goodbread's ownership of KPI
stock during the 1990 audit impaired
Deloitte's ability to act as an independent
auditor and that Deloitte, in each of the
audits in question, approved capitalizations
and statements of operating revenue that it
knew were in violation of GAAP. (R.15-352 at
3-5; R.43 at 182-84.) Plaintiffs claimed
that Deloitte misled investors into thinking
that KPI's cash flow was sufficient to
support its dividend. (R.15-352 at 5.) As a
result, members of the plaintiff class
suffered damage when they purchased KPI
stock during the class period because the
price of the stock was "artificially
inflated." (R.15-352 at 6; R.2-41 at 11;
R.43 at 187.)
As proof of the amount of
artificial inflation, plaintiffs offered the
testimony of its damages expert. To
demonstrate damages, this expert assumed
that KPI would have had to cut its dividend
at the beginning of the class period had
KPI's financial statements been corrected to
eliminate the incorrect statements of cash
flow. (R.30 at 49-50.) The expert then
looked to the decline in the price of KPI
stock that occurred after the October 1990
dividend cut--on average $10.05 per
share--as a reasonable indicator of the
amount that KPI stock would have dropped had
the dividend been cut at the beginning of
the class period. (R.30 at 49-57.)
Therefore, according to this expert,
plaintiffs overpaid $10.05 per share for
their KPI stock. (R.30 at 49-50.) Plaintiffs
did not claim that this October 1990
dividend cut
Page 1446 resulted from the discovery of any financial
statement errors. (See generally R.15-352;
R.2-41.) To show that they relied on
Deloitte's misrepresentations, plaintiffs
utilized the fraud on the market theory
which presumes that the plaintiff class
relied on an open, well-developed, and
efficient market in purchasing KPI stock.
At the close of the evidence,
Deloitte moved for judgment as a matter of
law pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 50(a),
contending that plaintiffs had failed to
prove the loss causation element of a Rule
10b-5 claim. The district court denied the
motion.
The jury entered a verdict, by
way of a special interrogatory verdict form,
finding that "Plaintiffs suffered damages as
a proximate result of [Deloitte's] material
misrepresentation and/or omissions."
(R.19-450 at 5.) The jury fixed damages at
$10.05 per share and estimated the total
damages for the class at $81,338,647.
After denying Deloitte's
post-trial motions, the district court
entered its judgment and order directing
final judgment and retained jurisdiction to
supervise the distribution of the award to
the plaintiff class. Deloitte appeals this
judgment (appeal 95-2882). At the same time,
the district court certified its judgment,
the order directing judgment, and the jury
verdict for appeal as involving "a
controlling question of law as to which
there is substantial ground for difference
of opinion." 28 U.S.C § 1292(b). We granted
Deloitte's § 1292(b) petition (appeal
95-3069).
3
IV. Issue on Appeal and Standard of
Review
We must decide whether the
district court properly denied Deloitte's
motion for judgment as a matter of law.
Specifically, we must determine whether
plaintiffs offered sufficient proof of loss
causation to support their Rule 10b-5 fraud
claim.
4 We review
de novo the denial of a motion for judgment
as a matter of law.
Sherrin v. Northwestern Nat. Life Ins. Co.,
2 F.3d 373, 377 (11th Cir.1993). We
therefore utilize the same standard the
district court utilized in deciding whether
to grant the motion. Under this standard,
we consider all the evidence, and the
inferences drawn therefrom, in the light
most favorable to the nonmoving party. If
the facts and inferences point
overwhelmingly in favor of one party, such
that reasonable people could not arrive at a
contrary verdict, then the motion was
properly granted. Conversely, if there is
substantial evidence opposed to the motion
such that reasonable people, in the exercise
of impartial judgment, might reach differing
conclusions, then such a motion was due to
be denied and the case was properly
submitted to the jury.
Carter
v. City of Miami, 870 F.2d 578, 581 (11th
Cir.1989) (footnotes omitted). A mere
scintilla of evidence is not sufficient to
support a jury verdict. See id.
V. Contentions of the Parties
Deloitte contends that the
district court should have granted its
motion for judgment as a matter of law
because plaintiffs did not offer sufficient
proof of loss causation as required under
Rule 10b-5. Deloitte argues that a 10b-5
plaintiff must show that a defendant's
conduct was the actual cause of the decline
in value of the plaintiff's investment and
that plaintiffs here offered no such proof.
Deloitte argues that what might have
happened if KPI's cash flow figures had been
adjusted during the class period is
irrelevant to the issue of loss causation.
Plaintiffs contend that they
offered sufficient proof of loss causation.
Plaintiffs argue that Deloitte's improper
approval of KPI's financial statements
misled investors about the ability of KPI to
maintain its high dividend and thereby
artificially inflated KPI's stock price. As
evidence of this price inflation, plaintiffs
maintain that an adjustment in the stated
amount of cash flow in July 1989, the
beginning of the class period, would have
Page 1447 required KPI to cut or eliminate its
dividend, causing a $10.05 decline in KPI's
stock price like the decline that occurred
in October 1990.
VI. Discussion
To succeed on a Rule 10b-5 fraud
claim, a plaintiff must establish (1) a
false statement or omission of material fact
(2) made with scienter (3) upon which the
plaintiff justifiably relied (4) that
proximately caused the plaintiff's injury.
Bruschi v. Brown,
876 F.2d 1526, 1528 (11th
Cir.1989). To prove the causation
element, a plaintiff must prove both
"transaction causation" and "loss
causation." See id. at 1530. "Transaction
causation, another way of describing
reliance, is established when the
misrepresentations or omissions cause the
plaintiff 'to engage in the transaction in
question.' "
Currie v. Cayman Resources Corp.,
835 F.2d 780, 785 (11th Cir.1988) (quoting
Schlick v. Penn-Dixie Cement Corp., 507 F.2d
374, 380 (2d Cir.1974)). As such,
transaction causation is akin to actual or
"but for" causation. Transaction causation
is not at issue on this appeal.
Loss causation is at issue. To
prove loss causation, a plaintiff must show
"that the untruth was in some reasonably
direct, or proximate, way responsible for
his loss."
Huddleston v. Herman & MacLean, 640 F.2d
534, 549 (5th Cir. Unit A 1981), aff'd
in part, rev'd in part on other grounds, 459
U.S. 375, 103 S.Ct. 683, 74 L.Ed.2d 548
(1983). "If the investment decision is
induced by misstatements or omissions that
are material and that were relied on by the
claimant, but are not the proximate reason
for his pecuniary loss, recovery under the
Rule is not permitted." Id. (citing
Marbury Management, Inc. v. Kohn, 629 F.2d
705, 718 (2d Cir.1980)(Meskill, J.,
dissenting)). In other words, loss causation
describes "the link between the defendant's
misconduct and the plaintiff's economic
loss." Rousseff v. E.F. Hutton Co., Inc.,
843 F.2d 1326, 1329 n. 2 (11th Cir.1988).
Because market responses, such as
stock downturns, are often the result of
many different, complex, and often
unknowable factors, "the plaintiff need not
show that the defendant's act was the sole
and exclusive cause of the injury he has
suffered; 'he need only show that it was
'substantial,' i.e., a significant
contributing cause.' "
5
Bruschi, 876 F.2d at 1531 (quoting
Wilson v. Comtech Telecommunications Corp.,
648 F.2d 88, 92 (2d Cir.1981)). In other
words, plaintiff must show that "the
misrepresentation touches upon the reasons
for the investment's decline in value."
Huddleston, 640 F.2d at 549. This
intermediate approach balances our twin
concerns of compensating investors who have
suffered loss as a result of a fraudulent
misrepresentation, while at the same time
preventing 10b-5 from becoming a system of
investor insurance that reimburses investors
for any decline in the value of their
investments. See id.
Because Rule 10b-5 provides a
remedy for fraud in a wide variety of
securities transactions, the loss causation
requirement must be applied on a
case-by-case basis. In the present case,
plaintiffs may have offered sufficient
evidence for a reasonable jury to conclude
that Deloitte's misrepresentations
artificially inflated the price of KPI
Page 1448 stock during the class period.
6
This showing of price inflation, however,
does not satisfy the loss causation
requirement. Our cases do not hold that
proof that a plaintiff purchased securities
at an artificially inflated price, without
more, satisfies the loss causation
requirement. Some courts have held that
"[i]n a fraud-on-the-market case, plaintiffs
establish loss causation if they have shown
that the price on the date of purchase was
inflated because of the misrepresentation."
Knapp v. Ernst & Whinney, 90 F.3d 1431, 1438
(9th Cir.1996).
In Re Control Data Corp. Securities
Litigation, 933 F.2d 616, 619-20 (8th
Cir.1991) ("This is a 'fraud on the
market' case....To the extent that the
defendant's misrepresentations artificially
altered the price of the stock and defrauded
the market, causation is presumed.") But the
fraud on the market theory, as articulated
by the Supreme Court, is used to support a
rebuttable presumption of reliance, not a
presumption of causation.
Basic v. Levinson, 485 U.S. 224, 241-2, 108
S.Ct. 978, 992, 99 L.Ed.2d 194 (1988)
("Because most publicly available
information is reflected in market price, an
investor's reliance on any public material
misrepresentations, therefore, may by
presumed for purposes of a Rule 10b-5
action."). The theory was used for this
purpose by the plaintiffs in this case.
Because the theory supports a presumption of
reliance, it is more closely related to the
transaction causation requirement. Our cases
have not utilized the theory to alter the
loss causation requirement, and we refuse to
do so here. Our decisions explicitly require
proof of a causal connection between the
misrepresentation and the investment's
subsequent decline in value. See, e.g.,
Huddleston, 640 F.2d at 549; Currie, 835
F.2d at 785; Bruschi, 876 F.2d at 1530-1531.
But see Michael J. Kaufman, Loss Causation:
Exposing a Fraud on Securities Law
Jurisprudence, 24 Ind. L.Rev. 357, 364
(1991) (incorrectly concluding that "[i]n
application, the [Huddleston ] court allows
plaintiffs to recover even when the
misrepresentation does not touch upon the
reasons for the investment's ultimate
decline in value, so long as the
misrepresentation creates a disparity
between the purchase price and the true
value of the securities at the time of the
transaction").
Plaintiffs here offered no
evidence of a connection between Deloitte's
misrepresentations and the decline in price
of KPI stock throughout the class period or
following the October 1990 dividend cut. In
fact, the claims presented to the jury do
not attempt to link Deloitte's
misrepresentations to any decline in the
value of plaintiffs' investment. Instead,
plaintiffs simply claim they paid too much.
But there is no evidence that this price
inflation was removed from the market price
of KPI stock, causing plaintiffs a loss. In
1990, the investing public continued to
believe that KPI's 1988, 1989, and 1990 cash
flow figures were correct and that KPI would
not have to adjust its balance sheet to
cover any past errors. Plaintiffs' expert
testified that if the market had learned of
the overstated cash flow figures while KPI
was operating "the stock would have totally
collapsed"--that is, any price inflation due
to Deloitte's misrepresentations was still
present after October 1990 and, therefore,
the value plaintiffs lost was not caused by
Deloitte's misrepresentations. (R.30-153.)
It was not until 1991 that KPI corrected its
past operating revenue figures and not until
1992 that KPI charged an adjustment for the
previous overcapitalizations.
The minutes of the September 1990
board meeting as well as KPI's financial
situation point to the conclusion that KPI
cut its dividend in October 1990 because it
was concerned that future financing would
not be available to sustain its sales of
properties--not because it discovered that
past accounting errors had overstated its
cash flow. No testimony supporting a
contrary conclusion was offered. Thus, no
evidence supports a conclusion that
Deloitte's misrepresentations
Page 1449 were a substantial cause of the decline in
value of plaintiffs' KPI stock. In short,
plaintiffs have proven "the cause of their
entering into the transaction in which they
lost money but not the cause of the
transaction's turning out to be a losing
one."
Bastian v. Petren Resources Corp., 892 F.2d
680, 684 (7th Cir.1990).
For these reasons, we hold that a
reasonable jury could not conclude that
Deloitte's misrepresentations were "in some
reasonably direct, or proximate, way
responsible for [plaintiffs'] loss."
Huddleston, 640 F.2d at 549.
Bennett v. United States Trust Co. of New
York, 770 F.2d 308, 314 (2d Cir.1985)
(Plaintiffs "fail to establish the necessary
loss causation; there is simply no direct or
proximate relationship between the loss and
the misrepresentation."). Because plaintiffs
failed to support an essential element of
their 10b-5 claim, loss causation, the
district court erred in denying Deloitte's
Fed.R.Civ.P. 50(a) motion for judgment as a
matter of law. The district court's judgment
is REVERSED, and judgment is RENDERED in
favor of defendant.
REVERSED and RENDERED.
* Honorable Robert L. Vining, Jr., Senior
U.S. District Judge for the Northern
District of Georgia, sitting by designation.
1 In reviewing a district court's denial
of a motion for judgment as a matter of law,
we consider all of the evidence "in the
light and with all reasonable inferences
most favorable to the party opposed to the
motion."
Boeing Company v. Shipman, 411 F.2d 365, 374
(5th Cir.1969). Our narrative of the
facts, therefore, is constructed in such a
fashion.
2 Capitalizing a cost involves spreading
the cost over several years (or "amortizing"
the cost), as opposed to treating the cost
as an expense in the year in which it is
incurred. Thus, capitalizing costs paints a
more favorable current financial picture
than expensing costs.
3 Given our jurisdiction under § 1292(b),
we need not decide whether a judgment that
reserves jurisdiction over distribution of
an award to a plaintiff class is an appealable final judgment.
4 Deloitte raises several other issues on
this appeal. Our disposition of the loss
causation issue obviates the need to discuss
these issues.
5 The distinction between the loss
causation requirement and proof of damages
is important. To satisfy the loss causation
element, a plaintiff need not show that a
misrepresentation was the sole reason for
the investment's decline in value.
Ultimately, however, a plaintiff will be
allowed to recover only damages actually
caused by the misrepresentation. 15 U.S.C. §
78bb(a). The proper measure of damages
utilizes the out-of-pocket rule: the
plaintiff can recover "the difference
between the price paid and the 'real' value
of the security, i.e., the fair market value
absent the misrepresentations, at the time
of the initial purchase by the defrauded
buyer." Huddleston, 640 F.2d at 556.
Consequently, as long as the
misrepresentation is one substantial cause
of the investment's decline in value, other
contributing forces will not bar recovery
under the loss causation requirement. But in
determining recoverable damages, these
contributing forces must be isolated and
removed. This is often done, as it was here,
with the help of an expert witness. See,
e.g., Huddleston, 640 F.2d at 553-554. Proof
of damages under the out-of-pocket rule is
not proof of loss causation. Our cases have
repeatedly treated loss causation and
damages as involving discrete inquiries.
See, e.g., Bruschi, 876 F.2d at 1530-1532;
Huddleston, 640 F.2d at 549-556.
6 Plaintiffs made this showing through
expert testimony that had these accounting
errors come to light at the beginning of the
class period, KPI would have been forced to
cut its dividend and the stock price would
have declined. This showing--which
essentially established the value of the
investment absent the misrepresentation--was
the appropriate proof of damages under the
out-of-pocket rule. The attempt to
characterize this testimony as proof of loss
causation is misplaced. See supra note 5. |