| Page 81 220 F.3d 81 (2nd Cir. 2000)
JOEL ROTHMAN, individually and on
behalf of all others similarly situated;
ISAAC AUGENSTEIN, on behalf of himself and
all other similarly situated; RUEBEN ADVANI,
individually and on behalf of all others
similarly situated; WILLIAM KELLMAN,
individually and on behalf of all other
similarly situated; CATHY ANDERSON, on
behalf of herself and all others similarly
situated; PETER J. PROCE, individually and
on behalf of all others similarly situated;
JERRY HOEHNEN, individually and on behalf of
all others similarly situated; BLAISE RODON,
on behalf of himself and all other similarly
situated; MOSHE MOSBACHER, on behalf of
himself and all others similarly situated,
Consolidated-Plaintiffs-Appellants,
CHANI HERZOG, individually and on
behalf of all others similarly situated,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
ANDREW GREGOR,
Consolidated-Defendant-Appellee,
GT INTERACTIVE SOFTWARE CORPORATION;
RONALD CHAIMOWITZ; JOSEPH J. CAYRE; ARTHUR
ANDERSEN, LLP, Defendants-Appellees.
Docket No. 00-7005 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR
THE SECOND CIRCUIT Argued June 8, 2000
Decided July 11, 2000
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[Copyrighted Material Omitted]
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[Copyrighted Material Omitted]
Page 84
Ira M. Press, New York, N.Y.
(Jeffrey H. Squire, Andrea Bierstein, Kirby,
McInerney & Squire, New York, N.Y.; Lionel
Z. Glancy, Los Angeles, CA, on the brief)
for plaintiffs-appellants.
Michael S. Oberman, New York,
N.Y. (Alan R. Friedman, Andrew J. Maloney,
Kramer Levin Naftalis & Frankel, New York,
N.Y., on the brief), for
defendants-appellees GT Interactive
Software, Ronald Chaimowitz, Joseph Cayre
and Andrew Gregor.
James J. Sabella, New York, N.Y.
(James D. Zirin, Jennifer A. DeMarrais,
Brown & Wood, New York, N.Y., on the brief),
for defendant-appellee Arthur Andersen.
Before: OAKES, NEWMAN, and
STRAUB, Circuit Judges.
JON O. NEWMAN, Circuit Judge.
This appeal concerns a securities
fraud claim against a seller of computer
software for misrepresenting its income by
failing to expense royalty advances after it
became clear that the capitalized value of
these advances was significantly overstated.
Joel Rothman, representing a plaintiff
class, appeals from the December 6, 1999,
judgment of the District Court of the
Southern District of New York (David
Edelstein, Judge), dismissing with prejudice
plaintiffs' claims against
Defendant-Appellees GT Interactive Software
Corp. ("GT") and its officers, and Arthur
Andersen LLP ("Anderson"). We conclude that
the complaint meets the pleading
requirements for a securities fraud action
against GT and its officers. We also
conclude that the District Court properly
dismissed the claim against Andersen for
failure to sufficiently plead scienter. We
therefore affirm in part, reverse in part,
and remand.
Background
The Second Amended Complaint
("Complaint") alleges or incorporates the
following facts. GT, a Delaware corporation
headquartered in New York, publishes and
merchandises interactive entertainment,
educational, and consumer software.
Defendant-Appellee Ronald Chaimowitz is
president, chief executive officer, and a
director of GT. Defendant-Appellee Joseph J.
Cayre is chairman of the board of directors
of GT. Defendant-Appellee Andrew Gregor is
vice-president of finance and chief
financial officer of GT. Defendant-Appellee
Andersen, an international accounting and
consulting firm, has been GT's outside
auditor since some time prior to December
1995. Plaintiff-Appellants represent a class
of persons who purchased GT securities from
December 15, 1995, through December 12, 1997
(the "GT Class Period"), and from February
4, 1996, through December 12, 1997 (the
"Andersen Class Period").
GT commenced its operations in
1993. During the GT Class Period, GT
developed many software titles each year by
contracting with small, independent software
developers and underwriting their
development costs in large part by paying
them the royalty payments they expected to
earn in advance of any sales. For
"front-line" software titles, GT advanced on
average $ 750,000 to $ 1 million in
royalties per title and paid $ 4-5 million
to well-known developers. In its agreements
with some
Page 85
software developers, GT defined the term
"front-line" as a "'computer program so
technically and aesthetically advanced that
it can be marketed and sold to end users in
the price range for new releases in its
class.'" GT claimed to have released five
front-line titles in 1994, twenty-four in
1995, and 67 in 1996. Under generally
accepted accounting principles ("GAAP")
concerning royalty prepayments, all costs
incurred to "'establish technological
feasibility of a computer software product
to be sold, leased or otherwise marketed are
search and development costs,'" and
therefore "should be charged to expenses
when incurred." GT's accounting policy for
royalty advances during the relevant period,
however, provided:
Royalty advances represent the
unamortized elements of prepayments to third
party licensors of software products for the
right to manufacture and/or distribute their
products under various licensing agreements.
Such advances are amortized to cost of goods
sold in accordance with the individual
agreements.
| Date Earnings Announced |
SEC Filing Date |
Royalty Advances |
Capitalized |
Net Income |
| 1996 |
| quarter 1 |
4/30/96 |
5/14/96 |
$ 21,280,000 |
$ 5,100,000 |
| quarter 2 |
8/1/96 |
8/14/96 |
$ 29,577,000 |
$ 2,140,000 |
| quarter 3 |
11/4/96 |
11/14/96 |
$ 57,357,000 |
$ 3,757,000 |
| quarter 4 |
2/10/97 |
3/31/97 |
$ 69,202,000 |
$ 4,393,000 |
| 1997 |
| quarter 1 |
5/5/97 |
5/15/97 |
$ 70,344,000 |
$ 4,554,000 |
| quarter 2 |
8/7/97 |
8/14/97 |
$ 83,591,000 |
$ 4,469,000 |
| quarter 3 |
11/3/97 |
11/14/97 |
$ 87,542,000 |
$ 8,526,000 |
Future realization of royalty
advances is assessed quarterly by management
and charged to expense if it is not likely
that the amounts will be recovered through
sales of the related product.
The Complaint states that until
January 1, 1998, GT accounted for most of
the royalty advances as assets in its
financial disclosure statements, even
though, the Complaint continues, the "great
majority" of software titles for which GT
advanced royalties during the Class Period
"either failed commercially or
underperformed expectations in the
marketplace." This was done, the Complaint
alleges, in order to artificially inflate
GT's reported earnings throughout the Class
Period.
To support this general
allegation, the Complaint states or
incorporates by reference several categories
of information and specific allegations,
including the following.
(a) Financial Statements. The
Complaint sets forth the following summary
of GT's financial statements in its SEC
filings:
GT spent $ 27.8 million on
royalty advances in the first nine months of
1996, and $ 18.3 million in the first nine
months of 1997.
(b) Sales. According to domestic
sales figures for all of GT's software
titles released during the GT Class Period,
as reported by PC Data, a market research
firm, 64 percent of GT's products realized
less than $ 250,000 in sales during the two
year period covering calender years 1996 and
1997. From 1995 through 1996, between 56 and
sixty-seven percent of GT's titles realized
less than $ 100,000 in sales. Most of GT's
sales of a software product are realized
during the first year that the product was
commercially available. The Complaint
provides the names and sales figures for
several front-line titles released
Page 86
between November 1995 and March 1997 that
GT allegedly failed to "write down to net
realizable value on a timely basis."
According to GT's 1996 Form 10K,
GT's annual net sales amounted to $ 234,461
in 1995 and to $ 365,490 in 1996. A
September 13, 1997, report by an analyst at
Oppenheimer & Co. calculated that, because
of GT's operating and sales costs, GT needed
to realize nearly $ 4 in sales to recoup
every $ 1 of the royalties it prepaid.
(c) Stock Transactions. In
December 1995, GT made an initial public
offering ("IPO") of 10 million shares,
including 5.5 million that the company
offered and 4.5 million that the selling
stockholders tendered, at $ 14 per share,
from which it realized $ 71,885,000. GT's
prospectus, dated December 14, 1995,
reported that as of December 6, 1995,
Defendant-Appellee Cayre beneficially owned
16,094,907 shares of GT common stock, and
Defendant-Appellee Chaimowitz beneficially
owned 804,582 shares of GT common stock. In
connection with the IPO, Cayre sold
1,494,720 of those shares at $ 14 per share
for approximately $ 20,000,000. During the
Class Periods, Chaimowitz sold at least
70,000 of his shares for an aggregate value
of $ 1,615,000. In February 1997, Chaimowitz
purchased 6,000 shares of GT stock.
In June and July 1996, GT used
its stock to acquire three companies:
FormGen Corp. for 1,030,000 GT shares,
Wizard Works Group for 2,350,000 GT shares,
and Humongous Entertainment, Inc. for
3,458,000 GT shares. During October 1997, GT
acquired SingleTrac Entertainment Tech for $
5.4 million in cash and 700,000 shares of
stock valued at $ 7.2 million, for a total
value of $ 12.6 million.
(d) Lawsuits. On November 28,
1995, GT entered into an agreement with
Scavenger, Inc. to develop four software
games, and advanced $ 2.5 million in
royalties to Scavenger. In September 1997,
Scavenger filed a breach of contract suit in
New York Supreme Court, claiming that GT had
deliberately withheld further payments in
December 1996 and, as a result, Scavenger
had ceased business operations in January
1997. In what the Appellants refer to as
GT's cross-complaint, GT claimed that
Scavenger had breached the contract in 1996,
and that GT subsequently terminated the
agreement in March 1997, because Scavenger
never delivered two of the games and the two
games it did deliver did not satisfy the
requirements of the agreement.
On December 4, 1997, GT filed
suit against Smith Engineering, a software
developer, for breach of contract. GT
alleged that notwithstanding royalty
advances from GT totaling $ 645,000 over two
and a half years pursuant to an agreement to
develop a PC software game, Smith had failed
to deliver certain "deliverables" pursuant
their agreement, including "an interactive
demonstration, alpha and beta test versions
and a final gold master disk of the Game."
GT also filed suit against
Technology Marketing Partners, filed in the
Southern District of New York under docket
number 97 CIV 6461, in which GT attempted to
collect $ 200,000 in royalty advances from a
software developer which allegedly failed to
perform under its development contract with
GT.
(e) The Possibility of a
Write-Off. On October 5, 1997, GT announced
its proposed acquisition of MicroProse, a
leading developer and publisher of
interactive entertainment software for
personal computers. On November 14, 1997, in
its Form 10-Q filed with the SEC for the
third quarter of 1997, GT stated the
following as to the $ 87.5 million in
royalty advances it had capitalized by that
time:
In light of the acquisition of
SingleTrac in October 1997 and the
anticipated acquisition of MicroPose in
December 1997, the Company is reviewing the
status of these advances to determine the
expected rate of return and whether, in view
of the Company's evolving strategy of
increasing its focus on internally developed
product, certain of these third
Page 87
party products may be abandoned in favor
of internally generated products or for
other reasons. To the extent the Company
determines as a result of this review that
any product will not be supported or
pursued, the Company expects to expense the
applicable advance account in connection
with the acquisition of MicroPose.
Several weeks later, on December
5, 1997, GT and MicroPose terminated the
proposed merger.
Two newspaper articles, each
dated December 9, 1997, reported on the
failed merger. One article, in the San
Francisco Chronicle, cited sources as saying
that MicroPose "backed out" of the merger
because "G.T. had warned in a recent SEC
document that it may have to write off some
of its $ 87.5 million in deferred royalties
. . . as part of its acquisition of
MicroPose," a prospect that elicited "some
worry" among MicroPose shareholders that
"the potential write-off would have reduced
the value of G.T. shares." The other
article, in the Wall Street Journal, cited a
falling GT stock price as a reason for
MicroPose's decision to abort the merger,
and quoted an analyst who "speculated that
another factor was the possibility that GT
might take a write-off of $ 87.5 million in
prepaid royalties to software developers,
which might have pushed the stock down
further and put the merger at greater risk."
On December 12, 1997, BancAmerica
Robertson Stephens issued a report in which,
according to the Complaint, it "downgraded
GT because of, inter alia, possible
accounting improprieties and the possible
need to write off most, if not all, of the $
87.5 million in royalty advances." The
BancAmerica report explained that as GT
shifted "its business model from externally
to internally developed products," GT might
"change its accounting policy and write off
some portion of the $ 87.5 million of
prepaid royalties now on the balance sheet."
The report noted that the "confusion
regarding this issue may put pressure on the
stock until a decision is made and higher
EPS are reported in 2H: 98." The report
added, however, "We believe most of these
advances will be recouped. The prepaid
royalties on the balance sheet are net of
the reserves GTIS takes against products
that are never completed or delivered."
According to the Complaint, as a
result of the foregoing reports, the
investing public learned that GT's reported
earnings were likely to have been
artificially and materially inflated due to
the Defendants' failure to account properly
for, i.e., to expense, tens of millions of
dollars of prepaid royalties. In response to
the foregoing events, at the close of the
Class Periods, GT's stock price fell more
than 17 percent.
(f) Actual Write-Off. On January
7, 1998, the Plaintiffs filed the original
complaint in this action, alleging that GT,
Chaimowitz, Cayre, and Gregor violated
section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange
Act, 15 U.S.C. 78j(b) (1994), and SEC Rule
10b-5, 17 C.F.R. 240.10b-5 (1999). The
Plaintiffs also asserted derivative
liability for Chaimowitz, Cayre, and Gregor
under section 20(a) of the Act, 15 U.S.C.
78t(a).
A month later, on February 17,
1998, in a press release, GT announced that
it had written off, for the fourth quarter
of 1997, $ 73.8 million in royalty advances
for products currently in development or on
sale. The press release explained that
certain market changes "have made it
increasingly difficult to evaluate the
likelihood of individual product acceptance
and success," and stated that it would
henceforth expense royalty advances as
incurred until technological feasibility was
confirmed. The writedown represented more
than 80 percent of GT's previously
capitalized royalty advances, and was more
than ten times GT's average reported
quarterly earnings during the GT Class
Period. The writedown caused GT to report a
loss of $ 25 million for fiscal 1997.
Page 88
The Plaintiffs filed a
Consolidated and Amended Class Action
Complaint on January 7, 1999. The Second
Amended Complaint, filed on February 5,
1999, named Defendant-Appellee Andersen as
an additional defendant and alleged that
Andersen also violated section 10(b) of the
Securities Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. 78j(b),
and SEC Rule 10b-5, 17 C.F.R. 240.10b-5.
Andersen audited GT's financial
statements for the years ended December 31,
1995 and 1996--the first two annual
financial statements issued by GT following
its IPO. Andersen issued opinions on these
financial statements [to the market] in GT's
1995 and 1996 Forms 10-K as well as in GT's
IPO prospectus. For the relevant time
period, Andersen reviewed GT's filings with
the SEC and the minutes of all of GT's Board
of Directors and all committees thereof.
Andersen's opinions stated in pertinent part
that (i) GT's financial
statements "present fairly, in all material
respects, the financial position of GT" and
"the results of [its] operations and their
cash flows" for the years ended December 31,
1994, 1995, and 1996; GT's financial
statements were presented "in conformity
with generally accepted accounting
principles"; and that (ii) Andersen
performed its audits of GT's financial
statements "in accordance with generally
accepted auditing standards [("GAAS")]."
The Complaint alleged that these
representations were materially false
because Andersen knew that the financial
statements did not fairly present GT's
financial position and did not conform to
GAAP because "GT failed to and Andersen
failed to require GT" to expense royalty
advances for technologically unfeasible
products and products whose poor sales made
recoupment of those advances unlikely.
The Complaint further alleged
that Andersen's representations that it
audited GT "in accordance with GAAS were
knowingly or recklessly false or misleading
in that" Andersen had not determined the
technological feasibility of GT's
capitalized royalty advances, or that
Andersen "knew or in the absence of
recklessness should have known that most of
the software products that GT marketed
during the Class Periods achieved levels of
sales that were so low and disappointing as
to make recoupment of royalties advanced for
such products highly unlikely."
The District Court dismissed the
Amended Complaint in its entirety for
failure to state a claim. See Herzog v. GT
Interactive Software Corp., No. 98 Civ.
0085(DNE), 1999 WL 1072500 (S.D.N.Y. Nov.
29, 1999). The District Court dismissed the
claims against GT and its officers for
failing to allege sufficient facts to plead
false or misleading representations,
scienter, and loss causation. See id. at
*6-10. The Court also dismissed the claim
against Andersen because it was "based on
the same underlying factual allegations" as
the claim against the other defendants. Id.
at *11. Alternatively, the court ruled that
the appellants "offer no evidence" to
support Andersen's scienter. Id. Finally,
the Court found Appellants' claim against
Andersen to be time-barred under section
9(e) of the Securities Exchange Act, 15
U.S.C. 78i(e). See id. at *12. Judgment was
entered on December 6, 1999.
Discussion
We review de novo a district
court's dismissal of a complaint under Fed.
R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6).
Stuto v. Fleishman, 164 F.3d 820, 824 (2d
Cir. 1999). For purposes of a motion to
dismiss, we have deemed a complaint to
include any written instrument attached to
it as an exhibit or any statements or
documents incorporated in it by reference,
Cosmas v. Hassett, 886 F.2d 8, 13 (2d Cir.
1989), as well as public disclosure
documents required by law to be, and that
have been, filed with the SEC,
Kramer v. Time Warner, Inc., 937 F.2d 767,
774 (2d Cir. 1991), and documents that
the plaintiffs either possessed or knew
about and upon which they relied in bringing
the suit, see Cortec
Page 89
Industries, Inc. v. Sum Holding L.P., 949
F.2d 42, 47-48 (2d Cir. 1991).
To state a cause of action for
securities fraud under section 10(b), 15
U.S.C. 78j(b), and Rule 10b-5, 17 C.F.R.
240.10b-5(b), "'a plaintiff must plead that
in connection with the purchase or sale of
securities, the defendant, acting with
scienter, made a false material
representation or omitted to disclose
material information and that plaintiff's
reliance on defendant's action caused
[plaintiff] injury.'"
Chill v. General Electric Co.,
101 F.3d 263, 266 (2d Cir. 1996) (alteration in
original).
I. Claims Against GT and Its
Officers
A. Misleading Omission
The Appellants contend that GT
and its officers rendered its reported
earnings and its accounting policy regarding
royalty advances misleading by omitting the
fact that they refused to expense royalty
advances for a particular software title
even after concluding that royalty advances
for that title were unlikely to be recouped
by future sales of the title. The Appellants
argue that GT's failure to expense was so
perverse that the royalty advances for the
most poorly selling titles were the ones
that remained capitalized. "GT only expensed
advances when such amounts could be charged
against sales of the software title. If a
title did not generate sufficient sales, the
royalty advances remained in the asset
column and were not expensed." Brief for
Appellants at 9 (citations omitted).
To survive a motion to dismiss,
Appellants' complaint must "state with
particularity all facts on which" they
formed this belief. 15 U.S.C. 78u-4(b)(1).
Using GT's public financial statements, the
Appellants sufficiently allege facts
supporting the inference that GT did not
expense any prior royalty advances during
the first nine months of 1996 and the first
nine months of 1997. According to GT's Form
10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31,
1996, GT recorded as assets royalty advances
in the amount of $ 29,577,000, as of
December 31, 1995. According to the
Complaint, by the third quarter of 1996, GT
had capitalized $ 57,357,000 in royalty
advances. The Appellants argue that GT did
not expense any prior royalty advances
during the first nine months of 1996; this
is an inference from the fact that the
increase in the total amount of royalty
advances treated as assets by the end of
that period ($ 27,780,000) equaled the
amount GT spent on royalty advances during
that period ($ 27.8 million). If some of the
previously capitalized royalties had been
expensed, the increase in the total of
capitalized royalties should have been
somewhat less than the amount of newly
advanced royalties.
Similarly, according to GT's Form
10-Q for the quarter ending on September 30,
1997, GT had recorded $ 69,202,000 in total
royalty advances as assets as of December
31, 1996, and had recorded $ 87,542,000 in
total royalty advances as assets as of
September 30, 1997. According to the same
Form 10-Q, however, during the first nine
months of 1997, GT spent $ 18.3 million for
royalty advances. The Appellants argue that
GT did not expense any prior royalty
advances during the first nine months of
1997, because the increase in the amount of
total royalty advances treated as assets by
the end of that period ($ 18,340,000)
equaled the amount GT spent on royalty
advances during that period ($ 18.3
million).
However, the Appellants must also
sufficiently allege facts to support their
belief that GT and its officers failed to
expense royalty advances after concluding
that they would be not be recouped through
future sales. The Appellants base this
belief on: (1) poor sales of most of GT's
software titles during the GT Class Period,
in comparison with the amount of royalties
advanced; (2) GT's allegations in lawsuits
seeking to recover royalty advances from
particular software developers for failing
to deliver technologically or commercially
viable products; and (3) GT's $ 73.8 million
Page 90
write-off for the fourth quarter of 1997.
This aspect of the Appellant's claim
essentially combines the misrepresentation
and scienter inquiries. In this respect, if
the Appellants have sufficiently pled facts
to support scienter, they have also met the
pleading requirements for false
representation or omission.
B. Scienter
For a securities fraud claim,
"the complaint shall, with respect to each
act or omission alleged to violate this
chapter, state with particularity facts
giving rise to a strong inference that the
defendant acted with the required state of
mind." 15 U.S.C. 78u-4(b)(2). By enacting
this pleading requirement, Congress "did not
change the basic pleading standard for
scienter in this circuit (except by the
addition of the words 'with
particularity')."
Novak v. Kasaks, 216 F.3d 300, 310, (2d
Cir. 2000). We have held that to plead
scienter in a securities fraud claim, a
complaint may (1) allege facts that
constitute strong circumstantial evidence of
conscious misbehavior or recklessness, or
(2) allege facts to show that defendants had
both motive and opportunity to commit fraud.
Stevelman v. Alias Research, Inc., 174 F.3d
79, 84 (2d Cir. 1999);
Shields v. Citytrust Bancorp., Inc., 25 F.3d
1124, 1128 (2d Cir. 1994). As Novak
explains, what is required when endeavoring
to plead facts supporting a strong inference
of scienter by showing motive and
opportunity is not a bare invocation of
"magic words such as 'motive and
opportunity'" but an allegation of facts
showing the type of particular circumstances
that our case law has recognized will render
motive and opportunity probative of a strong
inference of scienter. Novak, 216 F.3d at
311, 2000 WL 796300, at *10.
(1) Strong Circumstantial
Evidence of Conscious Misbehavior or
Recklessness
To qualify as reckless conduct,
the decision not to expense royalty advances
must have been "highly unreasonable,"
representing "an extreme departure from the
standards of ordinary care . . . to the
extent that the danger was either known to
the defendant or so obvious that the
defendant must have been aware of it."
Rolf v. Blyth, Eastman Dillon & Co., 570
F.2d 38, 47 (2d Cir. 1978) (internal
quotation marks omitted). The Appellants
contend that they pled facts constituting
strong circumstantial evidence of GT's
intentional or reckless failure to expense
royalty advances unlikely to be recouped
through future sales, i.e., (1) poor sales
of most of GT's software titles during the
GT Class Period, (2) pleadings filed in GT's
lawsuits against software developers
indicating that certain software titles were
not commercially viable, and (3) the $ 73.8
million write-off of royalty advances that
GT took for the fourth quarter of 1997.
First, the Appellants argue that
GT acted recklessly by not expensing royalty
advances for poorly selling software titles.
Generally, poor business judgment is not
actionable under section 10(b) and Rule
10b-5.
Santa Fe Industries, Inc. v. Green, 430 U.S.
462, 479, 51 L. Ed. 2d 480, 97 S. Ct. 1292
(1977). The fact that management's
optimism about a prosperous future turned
out to be unwarranted is not circumstantial
evidence of conscious fraudulent behavior or
recklessness: "People in charge of an
enterprise are not required to take a
gloomy, fearful or defeatist view of the
future; subject to what current data
indicates, they can be expected to be
confident about their stewardship and the
prospects of the business that they manage."
Shields, 25 F.3d at 1129.
The Appellants' argument,
however, turns not on GT's overly optimistic
predictions of sales before the fact, but on
its failure to expense royalty advances
after poor sales during the Class Periods
were known. In Novak, we upheld the
sufficiency of a complaint alleging that a
company's refusal to mark down inventory
known to be worthless artificially inflated
the company's reported financial results and
rendered the company's markdown
Page 91
policy misleading "in that the disclosed
policy no longer reflected actual practice."
Novak, 216 F.3d at 311. The facts of the
pending claim are not quite as strong as in
Novak, but present somewhat similar
allegations of a reckless failure to follow
an announced policy of expensing royalty
advances, thereby artificially inflating
financial results.
We assume to be true, as we must
on a motion to dismiss, the allegation that
most of GT's sales of a software product are
realized during the first year of that
product's release, and that GT knew of this
fact. Although the Appellants do not have to
fix the exact date and time that GT and its
officers became aware that recovering
royalty payments through future sales would
be unlikely, they "must supply some factual
basis for the allegation that the defendants
had reached this conclusion at some point
during the time period alleged."
Posner v. Coopers & Lybrand, 92 F.R.D. 765,
769 (S.D.N.Y. 1981) (dismissing for
insufficient pleading a securities fraud
action alleging that between 1972 and 1975
defendants become aware that company's
product was not economically viable), aff'd,
697 F.2d 296 (2d Cir. 1982) (table); see
Ross v. A.H. Robins Co., 607 F.2d 545, 558
(2d Cir. 1979) (Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b)
required plaintiff's pleading to allege
facts concerning when defendants knew about
their product's major safety problems). In
this case, GT and its officers do not
dispute that they assessed quarterly the
probability that they would recoup royalty
advances for a particular software title
through future sales. Therefore, allowing
for awaiting a full year of sales after a
product's release in late 1995, GT's refusal
to expense royalty advances could rise to
the level of recklessness sometime after the
beginning of the first quarter of 1997.
Secondly, the Appellants point to
the pleadings in separate lawsuits filed by
GT against Scavenger, Smith Engineering, and
Technology Marketing Partners. The
Appellants argue that GT failed to expense
royalty advances to these software
developers even though, according to GT's
lawsuit pleadings, these software developers
had failed to perform their obligations
under their development agreements with GT.
The Appellants conclude that GT's pleadings
in these lawsuits indicate that GT did not
consider the software titles at issue to be
commercially viable.
Notably, GT does not dispute that
it failed to expense the royalty advances to
Scavenger, Smith, and Technology Marketing
Partners during the Class Periods. Instead,
GT argues that these facts do not support a
strong inference of fraudulent intent,
because it would not have been appropriate
to expense the royalty advances sought to be
recovered through these lawsuits unless it
became apparent that GT would not be able to
do so. This argument, however, appears to
concede the Appellants' point: GT sued to
recover royalty payments, because it had
concluded that for these software titles it
could not recover its royalty advances
through sales of the related product.
According to GT's accounting policy, that
conclusion required expensing the
unrecoverable royalties (subject perhaps to
a footnote indicating the possibility of a
non-recurring income item in the future if
the lawsuit succeeded in recouping the
advanced royalties). GT advanced
approximately $ 3.4 million in royalties to
Smith, Technology Marketing, and Scavenger
alone.
The Appellants also ask this
Court to take judicial notice of a breach of
contract suit filed in January 1999 in New
York Supreme Court by GT against Midway
Games Inc. and other co-defendants. In its
complaint against Midway, GT alleges that,
starting in 1994, GT advanced $ 35 million
in royalties to the defendant software
developers. Midway and the other defendants,
however, failed to satisfy their contractual
obligations, including failing to deliver
"technically acceptable, 'bug'-free master
game disks" and advertising materials.
The Appellants explain that the
Second Amended Complaint does not refer
Page 92
to the Midway lawsuit because the Midway
complaint was filed after the Appellants had
submitted their proposed second amended
complaint in the instant action in
connection with their January 22, 1999,
application to amend the complaint and name
Andersen as a defendant. The Appellants
submitted a copy of the Midway complaint to
the District Court in their papers in
opposition to the motion to dismiss. GT and
its officers do not dispute the authenticity
of the Midway complaint and further agree
that the Midway complaint was filed on or
after January 22, 1999. Pursuant to Fed. R.
Evid. 201(b), we take judicial notice of the
Midway complaint as a public record. See,
e.g., 5-Star
Management, Inc. v. Rogers, 940 F.Supp.
512, 518 (E.D.N.Y. 1996) (taking
judicial notice of pleadings in other
lawsuits attached to defendants' motion to
dismiss).
GT and its officers argue that
the Midway complaint is not relevant because
it was filed thirteen months after the GT
Class Period ended and eleven months after
GT announced its change in accounting
policy. The allegations in the Midway
complaint, however, refer to the failure of
software developers to meet their
contractual obligations during the Class
Periods. For example, the Midway complaint
alleges that sometime after 1994, the Midway
Group failed to deliver "technically
acceptable master disks for at least thirty
games on a timely basis," causing "material
delays" in GT's "exploitation of the games,"
and resulting in substantial financial
losses. Although the Midway complaint does
not specify when this alleged breach of
contract occurred, it is reasonable to draw
the inference favorable to the Appellants
that some aspect of it occurred during the
GT Class Periods. Together, in the four
lawsuits, GT sought to recover approximately
$ 38.4 million in royalty advances, or
almost 44 percent of the $ 87.5 million in
royalty advances that GT had capitalized by
the third quarter of 1997.
Finally, we deem significant the
amount of the write-off GT eventually did
take for the final quarter of 1997. In its
February 17, 1998, press release, GT stated
that it had written off, in the fourth
quarter of 1997, $ 73.8 million in royalty
advances for products currently in
development or on sale, because the increase
in technological change, competitiveness for
shelf space, and buyer selectivity, coupled
with a shorter product life cycle, had made
it increasingly difficult to evaluate the
likelihood that an individual product would
succeed. GT further stated that it had
decided to change its accounting policy and
"prospectively expense royalty advances in a
manner comparable with internal software
development costs, which are expensed as
incurred, until technological feasibility is
confirmed." The Appellants argue that GT's $
73.8 million write-off supports its claim of
fraudulent intent. They argue that the
magnitude of this write-off renders less
credible the proposition that during the
Class Period, GT believed it likely that it
could recover those royalty advances through
future sales. We agree. The write-off
suggests something remarkable: prior to the
fourth quarter of 1997, GT was unable to
appreciate that the poor performance of its
products after a disappointing first year
sales required substantial expensing of
royalty advances each quarter but suddenly
realized that $ 73.8 million of $ 87.5
million in royalty advances, i.e., over 84
percent of the total royalty advances it had
capitalized by the end of the third quarter
of 1997 needed to be expensed. Taken
together with the allegations of poor sales
and the pleadings in various lawsuits filed
by GT, the Appellants have alleged
sufficient facts to support a strong
inference of recklessness.
(2) Motive and Opportunity.
(a)Acquisitions. The Appellants
also seek to plead facts supporting a strong
inference of scienter by alleging facts to
show motive and opportunity. It is
undisputed that Defendants-Appellees GT,
Chaimowitz, Cayre, and Gregor had the
opportunity to commit fraud. The key
Page 93
question is motive, namely whether the
Appellants adequately alleged "concrete
benefits that could be realized by one or
more of the false statements and wrongful
disclosures alleged." Shields, 25 F.3d at
1130. The motive alleged must be
sufficiently particularized. See, e.g.,
Chill, 101 F.3d at 268 (generalized motive
to justify investment and have it appear
profitable, "one which could be imputed to
any publicly-owned, for-profit endeavor, is
not sufficiently concrete for purposes of
inferring scienter") (footnote omitted);
San Leandro Emergency Medical Group Profit
Sharing Plan v. Philip Morris Cos., 75 F.3d
801, 814 (2d Cir. 1996) (company's
desire to maintain high bond or credit
rating, and thereby maximize marketability
of and minimize interest rate on debt
securities, does not qualify as sufficient
motive for fraud);
Acito v. Imcera Group, Inc., 47 F.3d 47, 54
(2d Cir. 1995) (scienter cannot be
adequately pleaded based only on existence
of executive compensation dependent upon
stock value).
The Appellants argue that GT,
Chaimowitz, Cayre, and Gregor had the
requisite motive because they would
concretely benefit from an artificially
inflated GT stock price, caused by their
alleged material omissions, by using less GT
stock as consideration to acquire four
companies: two in June 1996, another in July
1996, and another in October 1997. This
Court has ruled that, in some circumstances,
the artificial inflation of stock price in
the acquisition context may be sufficient
for securities fraud scienter.
In re Time Warner Inc. Securities
Litigation, 9 F.3d 259, 270 (2d Cir. 1993)
(sufficient pleading of motive that company
allowed prior statements to become
misleading by material nondisclosure of
company's active consideration of rights
offering in order to maintain high stock
price before announcing new rights offering
in order to lessen dilutive effect of that
announcement on stock price);
Sirota v. Solitron Devices, Inc., 673 F.2d
566, 573 & n.2 (2d Cir. 1982)
(sufficient evidence to support jury finding
of defendants' fraudulent intent to
overstate inventory, including, among other
evidence, that company benefitted from
overstated inventory because stock price
followed rising reported earnings, "enabling
[the company] to make numerous acquisitions
after a five-for-one split") (footnote
omitted).
San Leandro does not support the
argument advanced by GT that the desire to
consummate any corporate transaction cannot
ever be a motive for securities fraud. In
San Leandro, we simply ruled that a
company's desire to maintain a high bond or
credit rating, and thereby maximize the
marketability of, and minimize the interest
rate on, debt securities, does not qualify
as a sufficient motive for fraud "because
'if scienter could be pleaded on that basis
alone, virtually every company in the United
States that experiences a downturn in stock
price could be forced to defend securities
fraud actions.'" 75 F.3d at 814 (alteration
in original). Although virtually every
company may have the desire to maintain a
high bond or credit rating, as San Leandro
reasoned, not every company has the desire
to use its stock to acquire another company.
GT's acquisitions that occurred
in 1996, however, cannot support motive to
commit fraud, because in mid-1996, the
allegedly poor selling products had either
not then been introduced or had not been on
sale long enough to reveal the need to
expense advanced royalties. The Complaint
alleges sales data for software released in
late 1995 at the earliest. The Appellants
further alleged that most of GT's sales of a
software product were realized during the
first year it was commercially available.
Therefore, under the Appellants' theory, GT
was entitled to wait at least a year, until
late 1996, to become aware that the sales of
products released in late 1995 would not
recoup the royalty advances for that
product.
Accordingly, only GT's October
1997 acquisition of SingleTrac Entertainment
Tech could support a motive to commit
Page 94
fraud and thereby contribute to a finding
of scienter. At oral argument, counsel for
GT argued that this acquisition alone could
not support a strong inference of fraudulent
intent (based on maintenance of a high share
price) because the acquisition was largely a
cash deal. The Complaint, however, states
that GT acquired SingleTrac for $ 5.4
million in cash and 700,000 shares of stock
valued at $ 7.2 million. Based on this
allegation, it is strongly inferable that GT
and its officers improperly refused to
expense royalty advances in order to
artificially inflate its stock price with an
eye toward using its stock to acquire
SingleTrac. This conduct, in combination
with the other allegations of the Complaint,
reenforces the adequacy of the complaint's
allegation of scienter. Whether sufficient
motive could be shown solely by an
allegation of a high stock price
artificially maintained in the context one
impending acquisition might well depend on
the particular circumstances of the case,
and, in any event, is not the issue before
us.
(b) Insider Sales. The Appellants
also allege that Cayre and Chaimowitz had a
motive to inflate GT's stock price because
they sold many shares of GT stock to their
financial benefit. We have recognized that
"unusual insider trading activity during the
class period may permit an inference of bad
faith and scienter." Acito, 47 F.3d at 54.
In connection with GT's IPO, Cayre sold
1,494,720 shares of the 16,094,07 shares he
beneficially owned at the time for $ 20
million. Chaimowitz beneficially owned
804,582 shares at the time of the IPO, and
allegedly sold at least 70,000 shares during
the Class Periods for $ 1,615,000.
The District Court did not
consider these sales to be unusual, however,
because Cayre sold only approximately 9.3
percent of the stock he beneficially owned
in December 1995, and because Chaimowitz's
sales involved only 9.9 percent of the
shares he owned outright and 7.8 percent of
the total shares and stock options he held
at the time of sale. See Herzog, 1999 WL
1072500, at *8. The District Court also
noted that in February 1997, Chaimowitz
bought 6,000 shares and held those shares
through the end of the Class Period: "Taking
into account Defendant Chaimowitz's vested
options, he held more shares at the end of
the GT Class Period than at the beginning."
Id.
The Appellants argue that the
District Court erred by focusing on the
percentage of stockholdings sold, not on the
considerable dollar amounts received by
Cayre and Chaimowitz for selling their
shares. Insider sales have been found
unusual based on a variety of factors,
including the amount of profit from sales,
In re Oxford Health Plans, Inc. Securities
Litigation, 187 F.R.D. 133, 140 (S.D.N.Y.
1999) ($ 78 million profit from sale of
1.2 million shares during the class period
is "massive by any measure"), and the
portion of stockholdings sold, see
Stevelman, 174 F.3d at 85 (president and CEO
of company sold 40 percent of his stock
holdings in company while making optimistic
statements about company's financial
position), the change in volume of insider
sales,
In re Quintel Entertainment Inc. Securities
Litigation, 72 F.Supp. 2d 283, 296
(S.D.N.Y. 1999) (sales by corporate
insiders represented 156 percent increase
over total insider sales for fourteen months
prior to start of class period), and the
number of insiders selling, see San Leandro,
75 F.3d at 814 (company officer's $ 2
million profit from company stock sales did
not suffice to prove motive, because no
other company executives sold their shares
during the relevant period).
In light of the $ 2 million
profit in San Leandro, which in that case
was not by itself enough to establish the
sales as unusual, Chaimowitz's alleged $ 1.6
million profit is not unusual even if we
look only to the absolute amount of profit,
and certainly not if we consider the fact
that Chaimowitz sold only 9.9 percent of his
GT stock during the class period, see Acito,
47 F.3d at 54 (insufficient facts to support
inference of scienter where only one
corporate
Page 95
insider sold 11 percent of his stock in
the company).
Although Cayre's sales in
December 1995 resulted in a $ 20 million
return, a more significant amount, several
circumstances surrounding his sales weaken
the inference of fraudulent intent. First,
it is undisputed that his sales in
connection with the IPO represented only
about 9.3 percent of the GT stock he
beneficially owned.
In re Oxford, 187 F.R.D. at 140 ("Large
volume trades may be suspicious but where a
corporate insider sells only a small
fraction of his or her shares in the
corporation, the inference of scienter is
weakened. "). Second, as with the 1996
acquisitions, Cayre's 1995 sales do not
support motive, because he was entitled to
wait at least a year, until early 1997, to
become aware that the sales of products
released in late 1995 would not recoup the
royalty advances for those products. See
Acito, 47 F.3d at 54 (sales by outside
director occurring before alleged
misrepresentation or omission "fail to
provide an inference of an intent to deceive
the public").
C. Causation
In a securities fraud action,
"the plaintiff shall have the burden of
proving that the act or omission of the
defendant alleged to violate this chapter
caused the loss for which the plaintiff
seeks to recover damages." 15 U.S.C.
78u-4(b)(4). To establish causation, a
plaintiff must prove "that the economic harm
that it suffered occurred as a result of the
alleged misrepresentations" and that "the
damage suffered was a foreseeable
consequence of the misrepresentation."
Citibank,
N.A. v. K-H Corp., 968 F.2d 1489, 1495 (2d
Cir. 1992) (citation omitted).
The District Court rejected the
sufficiency of the claim of loss causation
because of the absence of a suggestion that
GT's practice of capitalizing royalty
advances caused the drop in GT's stock
price, and because GT fully disclosed its
accounting policy. Neither reason defeats
the claim of loss causation. The Appellants
allege that the stock price fell, not
because the royalty advances were initially
capitalized, but because the market became
aware of an impending writedown attributable
to GT's reckless failure to expense
appropriate portions of the advances, once
it became evident that they would not be
recouped through sales. And, although the
accounting policy was disclosed, the
Appellants' claim is that it was not
followed, with a consequent overstatement of
income and a decline in share price when the
market became aware that a massive writedown
was imminent.
The Appellants focus on the
December 9 newspaper articles on the failed
merger with MicroPose and the December 12
report issued by BancAmerica as the causes
of the drop in GT's stock price. The
Appellees respond that GT had already
announced in its November 1997 Form 10-Q
that it might expense some or all of its $
87.5 million in royalty advances. Although
the precise duration of the GT class period
and the amount of recoverable damages might
ultimately turn on the extent and timing of
the market's awareness of GT's impending
writedown of royalty advances, the Complaint
adequately alleges that awareness of such a
likely writedown was a cause of the decline
in share price. Of course, to show loss
causation, the Appellants will have to show
that but for GT's failure to expense royalty
advances for a title even after concluding
that they would not be recouped through
future sales of that title, GT would never
have had $ 87.5 million in royalty advances
to potentially write off all at once. If the
Appellants can prove this, they can also
prove that GT could reasonably foresee that
its fraudulent failure to expense would lead
to a drop in GT's stock price whenever the
market became aware of the impending
writedown, because GT's quarterly earnings
might well have been quarterly losses had GT
expensed more royalty advances than it did
during the Class Periods.
Page 96
We think the Complaint permits the
required showing to be made.
II. Andersen
A. Time-Bar
The Appellants challenge the
District Court's finding that the claim
against Andersen is time-barred. To be
timely, Andersen's claim under section 10(b)
and Rule 10b-5 must have been "brought
within one year after the discovery of the
facts constituting the violation and within
three years after such violation," 15 U.S.C.
78i(e).
Lampf, Pleva, Lipkind, Prupis & Petigrow v.
Gilbertson, 501 U.S. 350, 364 & n.9, 115
L. Ed. 2d 321, 111 S. Ct. 2773 (1991);
Ceres Partners v. GEL Associates,
918 F.2d 349 (2d Cir. 1990). "The 1-year period,
by its terms, begins after discovery of the
facts constituting the violation, making
[equitable] tolling unnecessary." Lampf, 501
U.S. at 363. Discovery of facts for the
purposes of this statute of limitations
"includes constructive or inquiry notice, as
well as actual notice."
Menowitz v. Brown,
991 F.2d 36, 41-42 (2d
Cir. 1993);
Dodds v. Cigna Securities, Inc.,
12 F.3d 346, 353 (2d Cir. 1993).
"When a plaintiff seeks to add a
new defendant in an existing action, the
date of the filing of the motion to amend
constitutes the date the action was
commenced for statute of limitations
purposes."
Northwestern National Insurance Co. v.
Alberts, 769 F.Supp. 498, 510 (S.D.N.Y.
1991) (citing
Derdiarian v. Futterman Corp., 36 F.R.D.
192, 194 (S.D.N.Y. 1964)). The
Appellants contend that they sought leave to
amend the complaint to add Andersen as a
defendant on January 22, 1999. See Brief for
Appellants at 57.
The District Court, however,
found that by December 12, 1997, the
Appellants were already "on notice . . . of
all the key facts on which they ultimately
based their claim against Defendant Andersen
in the Second Amended Complaint, more than a
year later." Herzog, 1999 WL 1072500, at
*12. Since the Appellants obviously had
actual notice of the facts they alleged in
the Original Complaint, the Court reasoned,
"to the extent that Plaintiffs properly
filed the original complaint against
Defendant GT, Plaintiffs could have, based
on the same information known to them at the
time, brought an action against Defendant
Andersen." Id.
We disagree. Missing from the
Original Complaint are two subsequently pled
allegations important to the Appellants'
claim against GT: (1) the PC Data reports on
GT's sales, and (2) the allegation that most
of GT's sales of a given software product
were realized during the first year of that
product's commercial release. The Appellants
argue that they could not sufficiently plead
Andersen's scienter until they uncovered
these alleged facts in December 1998,
because an auditor has more limited access
to information than a company has, and
because Andersen reviewed GT's finances only
annually, not quarterly. Without these
alleged facts, we would not have found that
the Appellants alleged sufficient facts to
plead GT's scienter, let alone Andersen's
scienter. Therefore, the facts in the
Original Complaint could not have
constituted actual notice of Andersen's
alleged fraud.
However, we must consider whether
the Appellants' claim against Andersen is
time-barred because they had inquiry notice
of Andersen's fraud over a year before they
sought to name Andersen as a defendant. In
Dodds, we explained, "When the circumstances
would suggest to an investor of ordinary
intelligence the probability that she has
been defrauded, a duty of inquiry arises,
and knowledge will be imputed to the
investor who does not make such an inquiry."
12 F.3d at 350. Although the facts alleged
in the Original Complaint did not put the
Appellants on actual notice as to the facts
constituting Andersen's alleged fraud, they
certainly obliged the Appellants to inquire
into Andersen's role in the accounting
improprieties that the Appellants began to
suspect in December 1997.
Page 97
We must further determine,
however, when knowledge of the facts
constituting the violation of section 10(b)
and Rule 10b-5 will be imputed if, after the
duty to inquiry arises, the investor does
indeed inquire. The Appellants argue that
because they actually inquired further after
December 1997, we cannot deem them to have
"discovered" Andersen's fraud until December
1998, when their further investigation
uncovered facts of Andersen's scienter, such
as the PC Data reports on GT's sales. The
Appellants primarily rely on case law from
the Seventh Circuit that inquiry notice does
not exist "unless and until the investor is
able, with the exercise of reasonable
diligence (whether or not reasonably
exercised), to ascertain the information to
file suit,"
Marks v. CDW Computer Centers, Inc., 122
F.3d 363, 368 (7th Cir. 1997).
In a variation on this standard,
the Tenth Circuit has held that inquiry
notice "triggers an investor's duty to
exercise reasonable diligence," but the
limitations period does not begin to run
until "the investor, in the exercise of
reasonable diligence, should have discovered
the facts underlying the alleged fraud."
Sterlin v. Biomune Systems, 154 F.3d 1191,
1201 (10th Cir. 1998);
Howard v. Haddad, 962 F.2d 328, 330 (4th
Cir. 1992) ("The one year discovery
limitations period thus began running either
when [plaintiff] had notice of these facts
or when, exercising reasonable diligence, he
would have discovered them.");
Berry v. Valence Technology, Inc., 175 F.3d
699, 705 (9th Cir. 1999) ("If we were to
adopt inquiry notice, we would agree with
the Tenth Circuit's formulation of the
standard [in Sterlin]."). The Tenth Circuit
reasoned that "the applicable statute of
limitations should not precipitate
groundless or premature suits by requiring
plaintiffs to file suit before they can
discover with the exercise of reasonable
diligence the necessary facts to support
their claims." Sterlin, 154 F.3d at 1202.
Our precedent points in this
direction. In discussing Ceres, our
precursor to Lampf, we stated that Ceres
"announced a uniform limitations period of
the earlier of one year from the date the
fraud was or reasonably should have been
discovered or three years from the date of
the transaction."
Henley v. Slone, 961 F.2d 23, 24 (2d Cir.
1992) (emphasis added). In Dodds, we
explained, "A plaintiff in a federal
securities case will be deemed to have
discovered fraud for the purposes of
triggering the statute of limitations when a
reasonable investor of ordinary intelligence
would have discovered the existence of the
fraud." 12 F.3d at 350 (emphasis added).
In accordance with Sterlin and
our own precedent, we conclude that whether
the Appellants' claim against Andersen is
time-barred turns on when, after obtaining
inquiry notice in December 1997, the
Appellants, in the exercise of reasonable
diligence, should have discovered the facts
underlying the alleged fraud by Andersen.1
Andersen faults the Appellants for taking a
year to obtain the PC Data sales reports,
arguing that the information in those
reports was publicly available. Indeed, the
Appellants alleged in the Complaint that PC
Data publishes "a comprehensive, monthly
report that tracks the sales of video game
hardware and software
Page 98
of top retailers in the United States."
The Appellants counter that the PC Data
report on which they rely contains
information that was customized for them,
costly to obtain, and "not readily
accessible" to the public. Brief for
Appellants at 56 n.27.
Because we are, on a motion to
dismiss, limited to the facts contained in,
or incorporated into, the complaint, we
cannot rule as a matter of law that the
Appellants had constructive notice of the
sales figures in the PC Data Report before
December 1998. See Dodds, 12 F.3d at 352
n.3. For the same reason, we cannot
determine, as a matter of law, the point in
time after December 1997 that the
Appellants, in the exercise of reasonable
diligence, should have discovered the facts
underlying their fraud claim against
Andersen. Therefore, if the claim against
Andersen otherwise survives this motion to
dismiss, we would remand this issue to the
District Court for appropriate fact-finding.
B. Scienter
To state a claim against Andersen
under section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5, the
complaint must "state with particularity
facts giving rise to a strong inference that
the defendant acted with the required state
of mind." 15 U.S.C. 78u-4(b)(2). The
District Court dismissed the claim against
Andersen because the Appellants "offer no
evidence" to support a strong inference of
Andersen's scienter, Herzog, 1999 WL
1072500, at *11. Although the Complaint
alleged that Andersen had violated various
GAAP provisions, those allegations, "without
corresponding fraudulent intent," do not
suffice to state a securities fraud claim."
Chill, 101 F.3d at 270.
The Appellants argue that
Andersen had the requisite scienter because
it willfully or recklessly disregarded GT
product sales data, which allegedly made
clear that GT would not likely recoup its
royalty advances. For "recklessness on the
part of a non-fiduciary accountant" to
satisfy securities fraud scienter, "such
recklessness must be conduct that is 'highly
unreasonable', representing 'an extreme
departure from the standards of ordinary
care.' It must, in fact, approximate an
actual intent to aid in the fraud being
perpetrated by the audited company."
Decker v. Massey-Ferguson, Ltd., 681 F.2d
111, 120-21 (2d Cir. 1982) (citations
omitted);
McLean v. Alexander, 599 F.2d 1190, 1198 (3d
Cir. 1979) (scienter can be established
by a "showing of shoddy accounting practices
amounting at best to a 'pretended audit,' or
of grounds supporting a representation 'so
flimsy as to lead to the conclusion that
there was no genuine belief back of it'")
(footnotes omitted).
We conclude that the PC Data
report on GT's sales does not by itself
indicate that it was unlikely that GT would
recover its royalty advances from future
sales. As to GT, we concluded that such data
did support scienter, but only when coupled
with, among other things, the alleged fact
that most of GT's sales of a product occur
within the first year of the product's
release. The Complaint, however, does not
allege facts from which to reasonably infer
that Andersen knew that most of GT's sales
of a product occur within a year of the
product's release. This knowledge cannot be
reasonably inferred from the allegation that
Andersen had been GT's outside auditor since
some time prior to 1995. The Appellants have
insufficiently pled facts supporting a
strong inference of Andersen's scienter.
Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, we
affirm the judgment to the extent that it
dismissed the claim against Andersen,
reverse the judgment to the extent that it
dismissed the claims against GT and its
officers, and remand for further
proceedings. Mindful of the burdens that
broad discovery sometimes unwarrantedly
impose on Rule 10b-5 defendants, we invite
the District Court to consider limiting the
Appellants' initial discovery to the subject
of GT's product-by-product (a) sales and
Page 99
(b) quarterly expensing of royalty
advances. The result of discovery on this
subject might either justify broader
discovery, if the Appellants' allegations
are borne out, or make the case appropriate
for summary judgment, if they are not.
Notes:
1. This
inquiry should not be confused with
equitable tolling, which does not apply to
section 9(e) of the Exchange Act. "The
1-year period, by its terms, begins after
discovery of the facts constituting the
violation, making [equitable] tolling
unnecessary," Lampf, 501 U.S. at 363.
Moreover, equitable tolling does not apply
to the three year period in section 9(e)
because that provision "serves as a cutoff."
Id. at 363. To be sure, in Dodds we stated,
"Equitable tolling will stay the running of
the statute of limitations only so long as
the plaintiff has exercised reasonable care
and diligence in seeking to learn the facts
which would disclose fraud." 12 F.3d at 350
(internal quotation marks omitted). In that
case, however, we considered not only
section 9(e) of the Exchange Act but also
section 13 of the Securities Act of 1933, 15
U.S.C. 77m, which lacks a cutoff period. See
id. at 349-50 & nn. 1-2.
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