| Page 63 252 F.3d 63 (2nd Cir. 2001)
IN RE: SCHOLASTIC CORPORATION
SECURITIES LITIGATION LAWRENCE B. HOLLIN, INDIVIDUALLY AND
ON BEHALF OF ALL OTHERS SIMILARLY SITUATED,
PLAINTIFF,
RICHARD TRUNCELLITO AND THE CITY OF
PHILADELPHIA, APPELLANTS,
v.
SCHOLASTIC CORPORATION AND RAYMOND MARCHUK,
DEFENDANTS-APPELLEES, RICHARD ROBINSON,
DEFENDANT. Docket No. 00-7517
August Term, 2000 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR
THE SECOND CIRCUIT Argued: November 15, 2000
Decided June 1, 2001 Plaintiffs Richard Truncellito
and the City of Philadelphia appeal from a
judgment of the United States District Court
for the Southern District of New York
(Keenan, J.) entered January 31, 2000, which
pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
12(b)(6) dismissed their second amended
complaint alleging federal securities fraud.
Reversed and remanded.
Page 64
[Copyrighted Material Omitted]
Page 65
[Copyrighted Material Omitted]
Page 66
Jeffrey A. Klafter, New York, New
York (Bernstein Litowitz Berger & Grossmann,
LLP, New York, New York; Stephen A.
Whinston, Douglas M. Risen, Berger &
Montague, P.C., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
of counsel), for Appellants.
Michael J. Chepiga, New York, New
York (Felecia L. Stern, Michael A. Berg,
Simpson Thacher & Bartlett, New York, New
York, of counsel), for Defendants-Appellees.
Before: Cardamone, Calabresi,
Circuit Judges, and HAIGHT*,
District Judge.
Cardamone, Circuit Judge
On this appeal we construe a
complaint in a securities fraud case brought
by stockholders against a book publisher and
one of its officers. It is the book
publisher's practice to count as income the
proceeds of any book it sells to a retailer
or distributor, while at the same time
granting to such buyers a full right of
return. The number of returns is therefore
critical to profitability in the publishing
business because when returns occur the
publisher not only has unsold inventory back
on its hands, but, also, income it has
previously declared never materializes.
Plaintiffs allege that during the
class period defendants knew returns had
increased significantly, and that this
negative corporate development later
precipitated a large loss and a steep plunge
in
Page 67
the company's publicly traded stock. The
company is said to track book returns on a
monthly and weekly basis, and to have daily
information available to it from other
sources as well. But despite such data
establishing an adverse trend, the company
announced publicly that its return rates
were running at normal levels.
Defendants maintain, in effect,
that there are no allegations in the
complaint that would support proofs of
either false statements or a fraudulent
intent. To the contrary, we think plaintiffs
sufficiently allege an unusual business
model which, if proven, ignored alarmingly
high returns that function as an obvious
straw to show which way the wind was blowing
in this book business. They may also be able
to prove that the defendant officer,
represented to stock analysts to be a key
spokesperson, cashed in 80 percent of his
stock while disseminating information that
the company was not experiencing financial
difficulties. For a spokesperson to cash in
his own stock can in appropriate
circumstances be like a ship's captain
exiting into the safety of a lifeboat while
assuring the passengers that all is well. A
jury could find defendants liable for such
behavior if its existence were supported by
sufficient evidence. As such, plaintiffs in
our view have survived the pleading stage of
this securities fraud litigation.
BACKGROUND
Lawrence B. Hollin, individually
and on behalf of all others similarly
situated, began the instant class action
securities fraud suit against defendant
Scholastic Corporation, a book publishing
company, and its officer Richard Robinson in
the United States District Court for the
Southern District of New York (Keenan, J.).
The complaint asserted claims pursuant to §
10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(Exchange Act), 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b) (1994),
Rule 10b-5 promulgated thereunder, 17 C.F.R.
§ 240.10b-5 (2000), and § 20(a) of the
Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78t(a) (1994).1
A consolidated amended complaint was filed
August 13, 1997 and dismissed on December
15, 1998 following a Rule 12(b)(6) motion
brought by defendants,
In re Scholastic Corp. Sec. Litig., No. 99
Civ. 2447, 1998 WL 872422 (S.D.N.Y. Dec.
15, 1998), and the district court granted
plaintiffs leave to amend.
On March 8, 1999 court-appointed
lead plaintiffs Richard Truncellito and the
City of Philadelphia filed a corrected
second consolidated amended class action
complaint. They named Scholastic and Raymond
Marchuk, who serves as Scholastic's vice
president for finance and investor
relations, as defendants. The plaintiff
class includes those persons who purchased
Scholastic common stock during the class
period and who sustained damages allegedly
because defendants made materially false and
misleading statements and concealed adverse
facts regarding their publishing business,
thereby causing plaintiffs to purchase the
stock at artificially inflated prices.
Defendants in response filed
another motion to dismiss under Rule
12(b)(6), arguing that plaintiffs failed to
state a claim and failed to plead fraud with
particularity, as required under Federal
Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b) and the Private
Securities Litigation Reform Act (Securities
Reform Act), Pub. L. No. 104-67, 109 Stat.
737
Page 68
(1995). The district court granted the
motion. See In re Scholastic Corp. Sec.
Litig.(Scholastic Corp.), No. 99 Civ. 2447,
2000 WL 91939 (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 27, 2000).
On appeal, we examine the factual
allegations set out in plaintiffs' second
amended complaint in some detail, assuming
them, as we must, to be true.
Novak v. Kasaks, 216 F.3d 300, 305 (2d
Cir.), cert. denied, 121 S. Ct. 567 (2000).
A. Scholastic's Business and Its
Operations Prior to the Class Period
Plaintiffs' allegations reveal
that Scholastic is a leading publisher and
distributor of children's books, classroom
and professional magazines, and other
educational products, which it sells through
retail distributors, book clubs, book fairs,
classrooms and libraries. In the years
leading up to 1996-1997, Scholastic's
best-selling product was "Goosebumps," a
series of "scary" children's books. Prior to
December 1996, defendants had expanded
Goosebumps distribution to mass
merchandisers and other non-traditional
retailers. This change in strategy was
presented to the public as a significant
positive development.
What the public did not know was
that Scholastic shipped books to retailers
and distributors with a full right of
return. In so doing, Scholastic could, under
generally accepted accounting principles,
record revenues upon shipment to the
retailer so long as an adequate reserve
provision existed for books that might be
returned. In June 1996, Scholastic announced
through a press release that it was adopting
Statement of Accounting Standard 121, which
requires a more frequent evaluation of
inventory and a write-down when appropriate.
Prior to its change in
distribution strategy, Scholastic boasted
one of the lowest book return rates in the
children's book publishing industry. On
September 12, 1996 Merrill Lynch issued a
report on Scholastic's return rates that
incorporated statements made at a meeting
with senior Scholastic officers that
included defendant Marchuk. These officers
represented that the company's return rate
historically ran at 15 to 20 percent, as
compared to 35 percent rates at other book
publishers, Goosebumps books were being
returned at even less than 20 percent, and
while the expansion into the mass retail
market could cause the return rate to rise,
it would rise only "modestly." Scholastic
officials added that "the issue of managing
return exposure is one that gets
considerable management attention." No one
at Scholastic corrected this report when it
appeared.
First quarter results, ending
August 31, 1996, recorded a loss worse than
had been experienced in the same quarter the
previous year. Nevertheless, on September
19, 1996 Merrill Lynch issued another report
derived from statements by company officials
that Scholastic's "return rates remain among
the lowest in the industry at less than 20%,
which might suggest that Goosebumps has been
somewhat underdistributed."
B. What Allegedly Occurred During
the Class Period
The class period in this lawsuit
begins on December 10, 1996, the day
Scholastic issued a press release announcing
a net income for the second quarter of the
1997 fiscal year, which ended November 30,
1996. The income represented a 24 percent
increase over the comparable period for the
prior year. The class period ends on
February 20, 1997, when Scholastic issued
another press release announcing an
Page 69
expected third quarter loss of 70 to 80
cents per share. Prior to this release,
Scholastic had expressed "comfort" with
income estimates of 64 to 73 cents per
share. Scholastic's news of an expected loss
also contrasted with estimates by stock
analysts that Scholastic would realize a net
income of approximately 69 cents per share.
The February 20 press release stated further
that Scholastic would take a $13 million
pre-tax special charge consisting of a
reserve for anticipated additional book
returns. The next day, Scholastic stock fell
40 percent or $24.75 per share. Another $11
million special charge for book returns was
taken in the following quarter. Industry
analysts thereafter questioned the
credibility of Scholastic management with
respect to what officials knew and how long
they had known it before Scholastic made the
third quarter announcement.
What happened between the
December 10, 1996 and February 20, 1997
press releases forms the basis for
plaintiffs' lawsuit. Defendants are alleged
to have disseminated false information,
withheld damaging truthful information and
failed to update prior public statements
that had become materially misleading. In
addition, defendant Marchuk is alleged to
have sold a large percentage of his
Scholastic stock within a week's time
(starting at the end of 1996), and
plaintiffs further claim that Marchuk
influenced Scholastic's decision to
disseminate false and misleading statements
in ways that would cause him to be liable as
a "controlling person" as that term is
defined in § 20(a) of the Exchange Act.
DISCUSSION
The grant of a motion to dismiss
pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
12(b)(6) is reviewed on appeal de novo.
Rothman v. Gregor, 220 F.3d 81, 88 (2d Cir.
2000). Accepting all of the allegations
in the complaint as true and drawing all
reasonable inferences in favor of
plaintiffs,
Press v. Chem. Inv. Servs. Corp., 166 F.3d
529, 534 (2d Cir. 1999), dismissal is
proper "only if it is clear that no relief
could be granted under any set of facts that
could be proved consistent with the
allegations,"
Hishon v. King & Spalding, 467 U.S. 69, 73
(1984). To decide whether plaintiffs
have sufficiently pled facts in support of
their claims, we look to the elements of a
securities fraud and a "controlling-person"
liability claim.
I. Section 10(b) Securities Fraud
Claim
For a plaintiff to state a viable
cause of action for securities fraud under §
10(b), 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b), and Rule 10b-5,
17 C.F.R. § 240.10b- 5(b), the complaint
must allege that in connection with the
purchase or sale of securities, defendant,
acting with scienter, either made a false
material representation or omitted to
disclose material information so that
plaintiff -- acting in reliance either on
defendant's false representation or its
failure to disclose material information --
suffered injury and damages. See Rothman,
220 F.3d at 89. The Exchange Act, as amended
by the Securities Reform Act also requires
that "the complaint shall specify each
statement alleged to have been misleading,
[and] the reason or reasons why the
statement is misleading." 15 U.S.C. §
78u-4(b)(1) (1994 & Supp. V 1999).
Specificity is also required by
the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which
provide that "[i]n all averments of fraud .
. . the circumstances constituting fraud . .
. shall be stated with particularity." Fed.
R. Civ. P. 9(b). The complaint must identify
the statements plaintiff asserts were
fraudulent and why, in plaintiff's view,
they were fraudulent, specifying who
Page 70
made them, and where and when they were
made.
Mills v. Polar Molecular Corp., 12 F.3d
1170, 1175 (2d Cir. 1993).
A. False Material Representation
or Failure to Disclose Material Information
In their complaint, plaintiffs
identify specific statements or sets of
statements believed to be materially false
and misleading. The first is the press
release issued by Scholastic on December 10,
1996, announcing its net income for the
second quarter of the 1996-97 fiscal year.
The second set of statements
arises out of a conference call with
analysts the day after the press release was
issued, in which defendant Marchuk is
alleged to have participated. Merrill Lynch
issued a report on December 12 stating that
defendants emphasized that the "front list"
of newer Goosebumps titles demonstrated
strong growth and that any flattening of
trade revenues was due to older titles.
Although Merrill Lynch also reported
defendants as saying the quarterly retail
sales results were distorted and had
suffered in comparison to the second quarter
for the previous year, Deutsche Morgan
Grenfell reported on December 13, 1996 that
defendants continued to maintain that a 20
percent growth in Goosebumps retail sales
was reasonable. Defendants received copies
of these reports and made no corrections.
Third, plaintiffs point to the
prospectus supplement issued by Scholastic
on December 18, 1996 in connection with its
sale of $125 million in notes, in which the
company reported second quarter results and
stated that "[t]rade sales remained constant
from the prior year's strong second quarter
performance." Profitable second quarter
results were also reported in Scholastic's
Form 10-Q filed on January 14, 1997.
Merrill Lynch issued another
report on January 31, 1997, again based on
discussions with senior Scholastic officials
including Marchuk. These officials said no
surge in book returns had occurred, which
Merrill Lynch considered important since it
viewed higher-than-expected returns as a
significant stock risk after Scholastic
initiated mass market distribution. Merrill
Lynch raised its rating on Scholastic stock
from neutral to accumulate. That
recommendation caused Scholastic's stock to
rise by $1.50 per share.
Following this report, Merrill
Lynch contacted Scholastic in early February
to inquire about return rates. Defendant
maintained that returns were at "normal"
levels, previously represented to be between
15 and 20 percent. Less than three weeks
later, Scholastic issued its February 20
press release announcing expected losses for
the third quarter.
B. Trends Adequately Alleged
Pursuant to 17 C.F.R. § 229.303
(2000), promulgated by the Securities and
Exchange Commission, defendants were
required to disclose on Form 10-Q any known
trends that would have or were reasonably
likely to have a material impact on
revenues. The trial court found the
complaint had inadequately pleaded the
existence of such trends and therefore found
it failed to identify false or misleading
statements. Scholastic Corp., 2000 WL 91939,
at *9-11. We think plaintiffs were held to a
more stringent standard than the law
requires and that the trend in declining
sales and increasing returns is adequately
alleged.
1. Decline in Sales.
The complaint specifically sets
out the distributors through which
Goosebumps books were sold, and alleges
declines in sales as of specific dates, some
in terms of percentage
Page 71
and others in terms of quantity. Such
information covers over two-thirds of
Scholastic's trade business in Goosebumps.
For example, according to the
complaint, Advanced Marketing Services
Incorporated (AMS) represents 15 percent of
Goosebumps sales. It was selling 20,000 sets
of Goosebumps per week in June 1995, but
only 10,000 sets per week in the fall of
1996. It downloads point-of-sale data (POS
data) into its computers on a daily basis
and permits Scholastic to download that same
information.
Ingram Distribution Group, Inc.
which accounts for 50 percent of the
Goosebumps trade, is said to have
experienced a "significant decrease" in
Goosebumps sales in the fall of 1996. Its
orders dropped from 25,000 copies per title
in September 1996 to 12,000 per title in
January and February 1997. According to a
senior manager at Ingram, this decline in a
series was the steepest he had seen in his
15 years of experience in the book business.
Ingram transmitted this information to
Scholastic electronically and also collected
POS data that was available to Scholastic.
Further, trade sales of
Goosebumps books through Aramark
Corporation, a book distributor that sells
to mass retailers Target, Walmart and Kmart,
allegedly dropped 50 percent between
September 1995 and the fall of 1996. Target
tracked Goosebumps sales on a weekly basis
and sent its reports to the sales department
at Scholastic.
The complaint similarly states
that Caldor Corporation sold 6,000 to 7,000
books per week in September 1995, but only
3,000 books per week in September 1996. Its
retail sales dropped further to 1,800 books
per week in January 1997. Scholastic is said
to have known of these trends both because
Caldor's orders for Goosebumps books
decreased, and because Caldor tracked daily
sales figures and made them available to
Scholastic.
Plaintiffs allege that Scholastic
not only had access to POS data, but also
reviewed it. Scholastic "thus knew how a
substantial percentage of its Goosebumps
books were selling in the trade market on at
least a weekly basis, and also, therefore,
the growing number of unsold Goosebumps
books distributors and retailers had in
inventory that were subject to full return."
2. Increase in Returns.
Again, according to plaintiffs,
the information on Goosebumps books returned
each day to Scholastic's warehouse in
Jefferson City, Missouri -- the warehouse
through which the company processes and
fulfills most orders for trade distribution
-- are entered into an "AS400" computer at
the warehouse. That information, in turn, is
transferred each night to Scholastic's
corporate offices. By Christmas 1996, Greg
Wong, a Scholastic employee responsible for
evaluating inventory levels in Scholastic's
New York office, allegedly told the
inventory manager at the Jefferson City
warehouse that the situation for Goosebumps
had taken a turn for the worse and returns
would continue to mount because many titles
were overstocked and overbought.
Plaintiffs further allege
defendant Marchuk monitored internal data.
Along with Leslie Lista, Scholastic's
comptroller, he compiled and distributed a
"Director's Book" each month to all members
of the board. The Director's Book analyzed
trade sales data and provided commentary on
sales trends. Moreover, trade sales figures
were sent to the head of each Scholastic
division on a weekly basis, and the sales
department received weekly trade book sales
reports, title by title, from the company's
Jefferson City warehouse.
Page 72
With respect to outside
information, Toys R Us returned "an
unusually high amount" of Goosebumps books
in December 1996, after advising Scholastic
earlier in the month that their increasingly
scary content was resulting in a
"significant" growth in returns. Returns
from distributor Levy Home Entertainment
"began to rise to unprecedented levels" in
November and December 1996. Its returns in
January 1997 equaled 50 to 70 percent of
October and November 1996 sales. By January
1997 the amount of returned books consigned
to the employee bookstore had grown to such
an extent that little room existed to walk
into the store.
The complaint asserts that
ultimately, returns for January 1997
amounted to about $4 or $5 million, an
increase of 150 percent over January 1996
levels. The complaint also alleges that this
information was known to defendants in early
February, prior to the time when defendants
allegedly assured Merrill Lynch that returns
remained at normal levels.
3. Pleadings Sufficiently
Specific. The district court viewed certain
allegations regarding December 1996 book
returns as "too vague." Scholastic Corp.,
2000 WL 91939, at *11. Yet, a reasonable
inference can be drawn that if Goosebumps
sales through AMS and Aramark declined
throughout the fall of 1996, and sales
through Ingram and Caldor dropped by about
50 percent from September 1996 through
January 1997, then a decline was also
experienced through the month of December
1996.
With respect to sales, the
district court faulted plaintiffs for
employing pre-class period information in
their pleadings, and for not relying instead
on sales data from the relevant period, that
is, from December 1996 -- data that it said
would have shown that declining sales were
made known to defendants. Scholastic Corp.,
2000 WL 91939, at *10. Pre-class data is
relevant in this case, however, to establish
that at the start of the class period,
defendants had a basis for knowing increased
Goosebumps sales were unlikely in the third
quarter due to marked decreased sales
experienced in the second quarter. Just as
our cases have relied on post-class period
data to confirm what a defendant should have
known during the class period, see, e.g.,
Rothman, 220 F.3d at 92; Novak, 216 F.3d at
312-13, so the same logic applies here.
Any information that sheds light
on whether class period statements were
false or materially misleading is relevant.
Even with the heightened pleading standard
under Rule 9(b) and the Securities Reform
Act we do not require the pleading of
detailed evidentiary matter in securities
litigation. See Ross v. A.H. Robins Co., 607
F.2d 545, 557 n.20 (2d Cir. 1979). Moreover,
the district court failed to take into
account the alleged facts that Scholastic
reviewed POS data made available by AMS and
Caldor on a daily basis, by Target on a
weekly basis and by Ingram to learn returns
would be on the rise.
Plaintiffs also include
allegations as to company-generated
statistics.
San Leandro Emergency Medical Group Profit
Sharing Plan v. Philip Morris Companies, 75
F.3d 801, 812 (2d Cir. 1996), we held
that an "unsupported general claim of the
existence of confidential company sales
reports that revealed [a] larger decline in
sales is insufficient to survive a motion to
dismiss." We then cited cases from other
circuits stating that a plaintiff needs to
specify the internal reports, who prepared
them and when, how firm the numbers were or
which company officers reviewed them. Id. at
812-13 (citing
Serabian v. Amoskeag Bank Shares, Inc., 24
F.3d 357, 365 (1st Cir. 1994) (specific
identification of
Page 73
internal report held sufficient),
superseded by statute on other grounds,
Greebel v. FTP Software, Inc.,
194 F.3d 185
(1st Cir. 1999), and
Arazie v. Mullane, 2 F.3d 1456, 1467 (7th
Cir. 1993) (failure to give specific
identification held insufficient)).
Plaintiffs have satisfied this standard by
specifying who prepared internal company
reports, how frequently the reports were
prepared and who reviewed them. We further
observe that the complaint gives additional
indications as to the nature of the reports,
because the allegations are immediately
preceded and followed by figures from
retailers to show sales were declining. In
San Leandro, we noted that plaintiffs had
simply made an unsupported general claim
that confidential company sales reports
existed to contradict public statements. See
75 F.3d at 812. Plaintiffs here instead have
gone beyond the bare pleadings found in San
Leandro, and have met the criteria
identified in Arazie and Serabian.
Moreover, always according to the
amended complaint, Scholastic engaged in
aggressive sales practices during the second
and third quarters of its 1996-97 fiscal
year. This, if proven, would furnish
additional support for the proposition that
company officials were aware of declining
sales and increasing returns. These
aggressive tactics, allegedly, included:
offering excessive discounts beyond the
company's normal practices for the purchase
of additional books; altering its return
policy to delay the return of Goosebumps
books; encouraging distributors to keep
unsold books rather than return them; and
assuring distributors that Scholastic would
extend its billing period for 90 days -- and
sometimes for as long as six months.
Scholastic gave distributors free
advertising dollars, subsidized freight
costs when books were finally returned, and
repackaged Goosebumps books and merchandise
at no cost. In this way, plaintiffs claim,
defendant staved off or delayed disclosure
of the huge amount of book returns to its
inventory and delayed having to set up
adequate reserves for the income it had
reported, but due to huge returns would
never receive.
The $13 million pre-tax special
charge taken by Scholastic in February 1997
lends yet more support to the notion that
defendants had knowledge of increasing
returns. As stated earlier, post-class
period data may be relevant to determining
what a defendant knew or should have known
during the class period. See Rothman, 220
F.3d at 92; Novak, 216 F.3d at 312-13. And
an inference, from the size of the special
charge, that trade business in Goosebumps
books declined throughout the third quarter,
is not unreasonable. Further, since January
1997 returns amounted to about $4 or $5
million, the claim that Scholastic took a
charge almost three times that amount would
support proofs that returns did not pile up
only in that month, but throughout the class
period.
Consequently, we conclude that
plaintiffs pleaded with sufficient
particularity facts necessary to show a
downward trend with respect to Goosebumps'
profitability. The facts alleged are
sufficient to establish a trend even in the
face of the admittedly cyclical nature of
Scholastic's business. Scholastic explained
in the September 1996 press release that its
first quarter loss was not uncommon because
of higher expenses not offset by greater
revenues in the summer months. But, with the
second and third quarters covering months
when revenues should have increased,
plaintiffs have alleged enough to permit
proofs that Scholastic should have been
alerted, by decreased sales and increased
returns, to negative business results in the
relevant time frame.
Page 74
Further throwing doubt on its
retail sales being subject to the cyclical
nature of the school calendar, Scholastic's
CEO said in a press release that Goosebumps
books "continued to sell well in trade" even
during the first quarter. If the books were
selling well during typically slower summer
months, and data began to show the books
were not selling well during Scholastic's
usually busier fall and winter months,
plaintiffs could show defendants knew they
had a problem that would affect the price of
their stock and recklessly failed to
acknowledge it at the time.
We conclude therefore that the
facts alleged are sufficiently detailed to
allow the plaintiffs to present proofs that
the defendants knew, despite the fact that
their business was cyclical, of a material
downward secular trend. It may be that at
summary judgment, or even at trial, the
defendants demonstrate so profoundly
cyclical a business and a strong enough link
between normal cycles and the negative
information available to them, that a
reasonable jury could not find that they
violated the securities laws. But any
speculation to that effect is inappropriate
at the pleadings stage.
C. Scienter
The Securities Reform Act imposes
on plaintiffs the obligation to "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); see also Novak, 216 F.3d at 311
(reaffirming that Second Circuit case law
remains the standard after passage of the
Act). Plaintiffs can plead scienter by (a)
alleging facts demonstrating that defendants
had both the motive and an opportunity to
commit fraud or (b) otherwise alleging facts
to show strong circumstantial evidence of
defendants' conscious misbehavior or
recklessness. See Novak, 216 F.3d at 307.
1. Motive and Opportunity
Motive is the stimulus that
causes a person or entity to act or to fail
to act. Such stimulus ordinarily anticipates
a concrete benefit defendant would realize
by his conduct. Plaintiffs allege that
defendant Marchuk was motivated to withhold
damaging information about Goosebumps sales
and returns so that he could sell his
Scholastic stock at a higher price.
With respect to opportunity,
Marchuk as an officer of Scholastic had
access to insider information and thus had
an opportunity to commit fraudulent acts.
Our focus therefore rests on whether any
motive existed for such conduct.
Plaintiffs' complaint alleges
that Marchuk realized over $1.25 million in
gross proceeds from the sale of his stock in
defendant Scholastic during the class
period. Marchuk sold a total of 19,400
shares -- approximately 80 percent of his
holdings of Scholastic stock -- through
trades on December 31, 1996 and January 2,
3, and 7, 1997. Plaintiffs claim that prior
to these sales, he had not sold a single
share of company stock since April 11, 1995.
The motive and opportunity
element is generally met when corporate
insiders misrepresent material facts to keep
the price of stock high while selling their
own shares at a profit. See Novak, 216 F.3d
at 307- 08. "Unusual" insider sales at the
time of the alleged withholding of negative
corporate news may permit an inference of
bad faith and scienter.
Acito v. Imcera Group, Inc., 47 F.3d 47, 54
(2d Cir. 1995). Factors considered in
determining whether insider trading activity
is unusual include the amount of profit from
the sales, the portion of stockholdings
sold, the change in volume of insider sales,
Page 75
and the number of insiders selling. See
Rothman, 220 F.3d at 94.
In San Leandro, 75 F.3d at
813-14, we said that a sale of stock by only
one company executive netting over $2
million in profit did not give rise to a
strong inference of fraudulent intent. In
Rothman, 220 F.3d at 94, we held that an
alleged $1.6 million profit on stock sales
was not unusual. In Acito, 47 F.3d at 54,
stock sales by one officer that amounted to
less than 11 percent of his holdings also
failed to qualify as "unusual."
But none of these cases
established a per se rule that the sale by
one officer of corporate stock for a
relatively small sum can never amount to
unusual trading. Rather, each case was
decided on its own facts. For example, in
both San Leandro and Acito, multiple
individual defendants were named. We found
in each case that the failure of other
defendants to sell their stock undermined
the plaintiffs' theories that negative
information was withheld to obtain a higher
sell price. See San Leandro, 75 F.3d at 814;
Acito, 47 F.3d at 54. The second amended
complaint in the present case, however,
names only Marchuk as an individual
defendant. Consequently, whether other
Scholastic officials sold their stock prior
to the February 20, 1997 press release is
not only unknown, but, as to Marchuk's
possible liability, is also irrelevant,
since in that regard motive is considered
with respect to Marchuk alone.
As to the amount of the sales,
Rothman and San Leandro make clear that
$1.25 million standing alone may not be
unusual. Yet dollar amount cannot be
considered in isolation. Rather the
percentage of stock holdings sold may be
indicative of unusual trading. To
illustrate, in Rothman, 220 F.3d at 94, a
second defendant sold shares for a $20
million return. Despite this large amount,
we did not consider it evidence of unusual
trading because the percentage of shares
sold in relation to the number held was
small. Id. at 95.
In contrast, Marchuk is alleged
to have sold 80 percent of his holdings
within a matter of days for a not
insignificant profit, after having sold no
Scholastic stock since 1995. Although
defendants contest this information, whether
plaintiffs can prove their allegations is
not to be resolved on a Rule 12(b)(6)
motion. Therefore, in the context of this
appeal, plaintiffs have adequately alleged
motive and opportunity on Marchuk's part for
concealing facts that ultimately caused the
price of Scholastic's stock to drop
precipitously.
Marchuk counters that despite the
sale of his stock, the alleged fraudulent
and misleading statements attributable to
Scholastic have not been properly made
attributable to him. He notes the complaint
pleads that he was involved in disseminating
such statements only "upon information and
belief." The Securities Reform Act provides
that "if an allegation regarding [a]
statement or omission is made on information
and belief, the complaint shall state with
particularity all facts on which that belief
is formed." 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4(b)(1).
Notwithstanding the use of the phrase "all
facts," plaintiffs need not plead with
particularity every single fact upon which
they base their beliefs concerning the false
or misleading nature of defendant's
statements, but instead are required only to
plead with particularity sufficient facts to
justify those beliefs. See Novak, 216 F.3d
at 313-14. Contrary to Marchuk's
contentions, plaintiffs have met this
standard.
The complaint alleges that
Marchuk was vice president for finance and
investor relations, and therefore in a
position both to access confidential
information and to control the extent to
which it was
Page 76
released to the public. Cf. San Leandro,
75 F.3d at 814 n.14 (observing that in
addition to the sale of stock by only one
defendant, "plaintiffs have alleged no facts
suggesting that [this defendant] acting
alone had the opportunity to manipulate [the
company's] plans for his own advantage").
Assuming plaintiffs' allegations to be true,
Marchuk was primarily responsible for
Scholastic's communications with investors
and industry analysts. He was involved in
the drafting, producing, reviewing and/or
disseminating of the false and misleading
statements issued by Scholastic during the
class period. Marchuk had access to internal
corporate documents and reports relating to
trade sales and return data, conversed with
other officers and employees and attended
management and committee meetings. He helped
prepare the Director's Books analyzing data
and commenting on sales trends.
These alleged facts are detailed
enough to justify plaintiffs' belief that
Marchuk was one of the senior officials
involved in conversations with market
analysts such as Merrill Lynch. As such,
Marchuk would also have been in a position
to know Scholastic's sales/return data and
evaluate whether statements disseminated to
the public accurately reflected such
information.
2. Conscious Misbehavior and
Recklessness
Plaintiffs' complaint adequately
pleads scienter in its allegations
concerning conscious misbehavior and
recklessness on the part of Scholastic. To
qualify as reckless conduct, defendants'
conduct must have been "highly unreasonable"
and "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). Where the
complaint alleges that defendants knew facts
or had access to non-public information
contradicting their public statements,
recklessness is adequately pled for
defendants who knew or should have known
they were misrepresenting material facts
with respect to the corporate business.
Novak, 216 F.3d at 308. Plaintiffs claim
defendants knew or were reckless in not
knowing from information provided by
internal monitoring and access to trade
sales data that sales of Goosebumps books
were declining and returns were increasing.
We recognize Scholastic was
required under the law to disclose only
material information. Information is
material if there is "a substantial
likelihood that the disclosure of the
omitted fact would have been viewed by the
reasonable investor as having significantly
altered the total mix of information made
available."
Basic Inc. v. Levinson, 485 U.S. 224, 231-32
(1988). The complaint indicates the
information as to increasing returns was
important because Merrill Lynch boosted its
rating of Scholastic stock in January 1997
based upon representations from the company
that no surge in book returns had occurred.
The sharp criticism from industry analysts
after Scholastic's February 20 press release
further indicates the weight given to
information pertaining to Goosebumps sales
and returns.
As to whether plaintiffs
adequately pled an inference of reckless
intent, we find they did. Our discussion in
Sections IA and B illustrates that the
second amended complaint contains detailed
allegations as to what defendants knew on a
daily, weekly and monthly basis about the
retail trade of Goosebumps books, while at
the same time making public statements that
painted a different picture. Defendants
Page 77
publicly represented that returns were
not increasing and failed to adjust revenues
despite their knowledge of rapidly rising
returns; these actions, if proven, are
consistent with recklessness. See Rothman,
220 F.3d at 90-91.
In this respect, the most
egregious allegations involve Scholastic's
response to inquiries from Merrill Lynch in
early February 1997. At this point, even
disregarding the information ostensibly
received from computer runs, Scholastic knew
the return rate for January 1997 had
increased 150 percent from the year before.
Yet by telling Merrill Lynch that return
rates remained at normal levels of 20
percent, defendants acted in ways that could
be found to be reckless.
Recklessness may also be shown
based on the allegations that defendants
learned from Toys R Us in early December
1996 that the newer Goosebumps books were
too "scary" and hence were being returned.
Defendants allegedly had represented to
industry analysts at the time that more
recent Goosebumps titles were doing well in
the trade. Moreover, the combined total of
$24 million in special charges during the
third and fourth quarters undermines, at the
pleading stage, the argument that defendants
were unaware of the sharp increase in
Goosebumps returns until shortly before
Scholastic's February 20, 1997 press
release. See Rothman, 220 F.3d at 92
(finding that the magnitude of defendant's
post- class period write-off, together with
the allegations of poor sales, constituted
sufficient pleadings as to recklessness).
Finally, defendants' asserted
actions contrary to expressed policy and
prior practice can form the basis for proof
of recklessness. Although Scholastic had
adopted Statement of Accounting Standard
121, several months passed from September to
February before a special pre-tax charge was
taken to account for returns. Despite public
statements that considerable management
attention was given to monitoring returns,
Scholastic issued no warnings or corrections
after seeing first quarter sales suffer in
comparison to the previous year and after
revealing to Merrill Lynch in December that
second quarter sales had suffered in similar
fashion. See Rothman, 220 F.3d at 91
(describing a "reckless failure to follow an
announced policy"); Novak, 216 F.3d at 311
(describing defendants who "knowingly
sanctioned procedures that violated the
Company's own markdown policy").
II. Section 20(a)
"Controlling-Person" Liability Claim
The district court also dismissed
plaintiffs' § 20(a) claim because it
concluded that the primary violation
asserted was not adequately pled. Section 20
provides:
Every person who, directly or
indirectly, controls any person liable under
any provision of this chapter or any rule or
regulation thereunder shall also be liable
jointly and severally with and to the same
extent as such controlled person to any
person to whom such controlled person is
liable, unless the controlling person acted
in good faith and did not directly or
indirectly induce the act or acts
constituting the violation or cause of
action.
15 U.S.C. § 78t(a).
"Controlling-person liability" is
a separate inquiry from that of primary
liability and provides an alternative basis
of culpability.
SEC v. Mgmt. Dynamics, Inc., 515 F.2d 801,
812 (2d Cir. 1975). A plaintiff may
allege a primary § 10(b) violation by a
person controlled by the defendant, and
culpable participation by the defendant in
the perpetration of the fraud.
Page 78
SEC v. First Jersey Sec., Inc.,
101 F.3d 1450, 1472 (2d Cir. 1996).
The district court dismissed
plaintiffs' § 20(a) claim for failure to
plead a primary § 10(b) violation.
Scholastic Corp., 2000 WL 91939, at *14.
Since on appeal defendants offer no basis
for dismissing the secondary liability claim
if we reverse the dismissal of the
securities fraud causes of action, we hereby
reinstate it.
CONCLUSION
Accordingly, for the reasons
stated the judgment appealed from is
reversed, plaintiffs' complaint is
reinstated, and the case is remanded to the
district court for further proceedings not
inconsistent with this opinion.
NOTES:
*. Hon.
Charles S. Haight, Jr., United States
District Court Judge for the Southern
District of New York, sitting by
designation.
1. We
recognize that Congress amended §§ 10 and 20
through legislation passed at the end of
2000. See Consolidated Appropriations - FY
2001, Pub. L. No. 106-554, Appendix G - H.R.
5660, §§ 205(a)(3), 206(g), 303(d), (i) &
(j), 114 Stat. 2763, 2763G-1, 2763G-62,
2763G-68, 2763G-90, 2763G-92 (2000). These
changes have no bearing on the merits of
this appeal.
|