| Page 1078 38 F.3d 1078
Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 98,426
In re SOFTWARE TOOLWORKS INC.
Securities Litigation.
Richard B. DANNENBERG, On Behalf of Himself
and all others
Similarly Situated, Plaintiff,
and
Mindy Blitz, Eugene Costiglio, Kenneth H.
Ross, Homer
Fleisher, Steven G. Cooperman, Nathaniel
Orme, Ervin H.
Fishman, Frederick Wertheimer, Barbara
Wertheimer, William
J. Bing, Arlene S. Bing, trustees of William
J. Bing and
Arlene S. Bing, Living Trust, Anthony D.
Shapiro, William
Dulude, H.N. Brown, Jr., David E. Lockrow,
Karl E. Bauman,
Lucille C. Bauman, and Jack Schnitzer,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
PAINEWEBBER INC., Montgomery Securities and
Deloitte &
Touche, Defendants-Appellees. No. 94-16150. United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit. Submitted Aug. 23, 1994.
*
Decided Oct. 19, 1994.
Page 1081
Leonard B. Simon and Alan
Schulman, Milberg Weiss Bershad Spechthrie &
Lerach, San Diego, CA, Sherrie R. Savett,
Berger & Montague, Philadelphia, PA, Ronald
Litowitz, Bernstein Litowitz Berger &
Grossmann, New York City, for
plaintiffs-appellants.
Leslie G. Landau, McCutchen,
Doyle, Brown & Enersen, San Francisco, CA,
for defendant-appellee Deloitte & Touche.
Boris Feldman, Wilson, Sonsini,
Goodrich & Rosati, Palo Alto, CA, for
defendants-appellees Montgomery Securities
and PaineWebber.
William F. Alderman, Orrick,
Herington & Sutcliffe, San Francisco, CA,
for amicus curiae.
Appeal from the United States
District Court for the Northern District of
California.
Before: LAY,
**
HALL, and THOMPSON, Circuit Judges.
CYNTHIA HOLCOMB HALL, Circuit
Judge:
In this case, we again consider
the securities-fraud claims raised by
disappointed investors in Software
Toolworks, Inc., who appeal the district
court's summary judgment in favor of
auditors Deloitte & Touche and
Page 1082 underwriters Montgomery Securities and
PaineWebber, Inc. We affirm in part, reverse
in part, and remand.
I.
In July 1990, Software Toolworks,
Inc., a producer of software for personal
computers and Nintendo game systems,
conducted a secondary public offering of
common stock at $18.50 a share, raising more
than $71 million. After the offering, the
market price of Toolworks' shares declined
steadily until, on October 11, 1990, the
stock was trading at $5.40 a share. At that
time, Toolworks issued a press release
announcing substantial losses and the share
price dropped another fifty-six percent to
$2.375.
The next day, several investors
("the plaintiffs") filed a class action
alleging that Toolworks, auditor Deloitte &
Touche ("Deloitte"), and underwriters
Montgomery Securities and PaineWebber, Inc.
("the Underwriters") had issued a false and
misleading prospectus and registration
statement in violation of sections 11 and
12(2) of the Securities Act of 1933 ("the
1933 Act") and had knowingly defrauded and
assisted in defrauding investors in
violation of section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 ("the
1934 Act"). Specifically, the plaintiffs
claimed that the defendants had (1)
falsified audited financial statements for
fiscal 1990 by reporting as revenue sales to
original equipment manufacturers ("OEMs")
with whom Toolworks had no binding
agreements, (2) fabricated large consignment
sales in order for Toolworks to meet
financial projections for the first quarter
of fiscal 1991 ("the June quarter"), and (3)
lied to the Securities Exchange Commission
("SEC") in response to inquiries made before
the registration statement became effective.
Toolworks and its officers
quickly settled with the plaintiffs for
$26.5 million. After the completion of
discovery, the district court granted
summary judgment in favor of the
Underwriters on all claims and in favor of
Deloitte on all claims other than one cause
of action under section 11.
In re Software Toolworks, Inc. Sec. Litig.,
789 F.Supp. 1489 (N.D.Cal.1992)
[Toolworks I ]. The district court held that
(1) the Underwriters had established a "due
diligence" defense under sections 11 and
12(2) as a matter of law, id. at 1494-98,
(2) Deloitte had made no material
misrepresentations or omissions, other than
the OEM revenue statements, on which
liability under sections 11 and 12(2) could
attach, id. at 1510-11, and (3) the
plaintiffs had failed to establish that any
defendant acted with scienter, a necessary
element of liability under section 10(b),
id. at 1498-1510.
The plaintiffs dropped their
remaining section 11 claim (regarding OEM
revenue) against Deloitte and filed a timely
appeal. We dismissed for lack of
jurisdiction because the plaintiffs had
failed to obtain Rule 54(b) certification to
appeal the district court's nonfinal order.
Dannenberg v. Software Toolworks, Inc., 16
F.3d 1073 (9th Cir.1994) [Toolworks II
]. The district court subsequently entered a
Rule 54(b) order and the merits of the
plaintiffs' appeal is now properly before
us.
"We conduct de novo review of the
district court's grant of summary judgment.
In so doing, we are mindful that, although
materiality and scienter are both
fact-specific issues which should ordinarily
be left to the trier of fact, summary
judgment may be granted in appropriate
cases. Summary judgment may be defeated in a
securities fraud derivative suit only by
showing a genuine issue of fact with regard
to a particular statement by the company [or
its professionals]...." Miller v. Pezzani
(In re Worlds of Wonder Sec. Litig.), 35
F.3d 1407, 1412 (9th Cir.1994), (citations
and quotations omitted) [WOW II ].
II.
We first address the plaintiffs'
claims against the Underwriters under
sections 11 and 12(2) of the 1933 Act.
1 Section 11
imposes liability "[i]n case any part of [a]
registration statement ... contain[s] an
untrue statement of a material fact or
omit[s] to state a
Page 1083 material fact required to be stated therein
or necessary to make the statements therein
not misleading." 15 U.S.C. Sec. 77k(a).
Similarly, section 12(2) imposes liability
for using a prospectus "which includes an
untrue statement of a material fact or omits
to state a material fact necessary in order
to make the statements, in light of the
circumstances under which they were made,
not misleading." Id. Sec. 77l(2).
Liability under sections 11 and
12(2) properly may fall on the underwriters
of a public offering. See id. Secs.
77k(a)(5), 77l (2). Underwriters, however,
may absolve themselves from liability by
establishing a "due diligence" defense.
Under section 11, underwriters must prove
that they "had, after reasonable
investigation, reasonable ground to believe
and did believe ... that the statements
therein were true and that there was no
omission to state a material fact required
to be stated therein or necessary to make
the statements therein not misleading." Id.
Sec. 77k(b)(3). Similarly, under section
12(2), underwriters must show that they "did
not know, and in the exercise of reasonable
care, could not have known, of [the] untruth
or omission." Id. Sec. 77l (2).
Because section 11's "reasonable
investigation" standard is similar, if not
identical, to section 12(2)'s "reasonable
care" standard,
Sanders v. John Nuveen & Co.,
619 F.2d 1222, 1228 (7th Cir.1980), cert. denied, 450
U.S. 1005, 101 S.Ct. 1719, 68 L.Ed.2d 210
(1981), the analysis of each on summary
judgment is the same, see Weinberger v.
Jackson, [1990-91] Fed.Sec.L.Rep. (CCH) p
95,693 at 98,255, 1990 WL 260676
(N.D.Cal.1990). In determining whether an
underwriter meets the due diligence test
under either provision, "the standard of
reasonableness shall be that required of a
prudent man in the management of his own
property." 15 U.S.C. Sec. 77k(c); see 17
C.F.R. Sec. 230.176 (factors affecting the
reasonableness of an investigation under
section 11). Thus, due diligence is, "[i]n
effect, ... a negligence standard."
Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder, 425 U.S. 185,
208, 96 S.Ct. 1375, 1388, 47 L.Ed.2d 668
(1976).
The district court held that the
Underwriters had established due diligence
as a matter of law and, accordingly, issued
summary judgment against the plaintiffs on
the section 11 and 12(2) claims. On appeal,
the plaintiffs contend that due diligence is
so fact-intensive that summary judgment is
inappropriate even where underlying
historical facts are undisputed. The
plaintiffs further contend that, in any
event, the district court erred by ignoring
disputed issues of material fact in this
case. We hold that, in appropriate cases,
summary judgment may resolve due diligence
issues but that, in this case, the district
court erred by granting summary judgment in
favor of the Underwriters on several claims.
A.
The plaintiffs first argue that
"due diligence ... [and] the reasonableness
of the defendants' investigation ... is a
question for the jury, even on undisputed
facts." We agree, of course, that summary
judgment is generally an inappropriate way
to decide questions of reasonableness
because "the jury's unique competence in
applying the 'reasonable man' standard is
thought ordinarily to preclude summary
judgment."
TSC Indus. v. Northway, Inc., 426 U.S. 438,
450 n. 12, 96 S.Ct. 2126, 2133 n. 12, 48
L.Ed.2d 757 (1975). We have, however,
squarely rejected the contention that
"reasonableness is always a question of fact
which precludes summary judgment."
West v. State Farm Fire & Casualty Co., 868
F.2d 348, 350 (9th Cir.1989) (emphasis
added). Rather, reasonableness "becomes a
question of law and loses its triable
character if the undisputed facts leave no
room for a reasonable difference of
opinion." Id. Accordingly, "reasonableness
[is] appropriate for determination on [a]
motion for summary judgment when only one
conclusion about the conduct's
reasonableness is possible." Id. at 351. See
TSC Indus., 426 U.S. at 450, 96 S.Ct. at
2132-33 (summary judgment proper where
"reasonable minds cannot differ") (internal
quotation omitted).
Courts therefore may resolve
questions of due diligence in those cases
where no rational jury could conclude that
the defendant had not acted reasonably.
Several courts have, in fact, done just
that. See Weinberger,
Page 1084 p 95,693 at 98,255 (summary judgment in
favor of underwriters); In re Avant-Garde
Computing, Inc. Sec. Litig., No. 85-4149
(AET), 1989 WL 103625 at * 7-* 9 (D.N.J.
Sept. 5, 1989) (summary judgment in favor of
outside director);
Laven v. Flanagan, 695 F.Supp. 800, 811-12
(D.N.J.1988) (summary judgment in favor
of outside directors); cf. Bamco 15 v.
Buchanan Residential Real Estate Ltd.
Partnership, [1986-87] Fed.Sec.L.Rep. (CCH)
p 93,062 at 95,285-86, 1986 WL 15333
(S.D.N.Y.1986) (summary judgment in favor of
plaintiff where defendant produced no
evidence of due diligence).
The district court, therefore,
properly held that "the adequacy of due
diligence may be decided on summary judgment
when the underlying historical facts are
undisputed." Toolworks I, 789 F.Supp. at
1496.
B.
The plaintiffs next assert that,
even if summary judgment may resolve due
diligence issues in some cases, the district
court erred in this case because three
"hotly disputed" issues of material fact
preclude summary judgment on the question of
the Underwriters' due diligence. We consider
each in turn.
1.
The plaintiffs first argue that
the Underwriters failed to investigate
properly Toolworks' Nintendo business.
Specifically, the plaintiffs assert that the
Underwriters should have discovered that, in
contravention of statements in the
prospectus, Toolworks had lowered prices on
its Nintendo games and had "sold"
significant inventory on a consignment
basis, giving buyers an unqualified right to
return unsold merchandise. See WOW II, 35
F.3d at 1418 ("a company that substantially
overstates its revenues by reporting
consignment transactions as sales makes
false or misleading statements of material
fact") (quotations omitted).
The district court disagreed,
noting that the Underwriters had obtained
written representations from Toolworks and
Deloitte that the prospectus was accurate,
had confirmed with Toolworks' customers that
the company did not accept returns of
non-defective cartridges, and had surveyed
retailers to ensure that the company had not
lowered its prices. Toolworks I, 789 F.Supp.
at 1497. Thus, the court concluded that the
Underwriters had, as a matter of law,
"performed a thorough and reasonable
investigation of Toolworks' Nintendo
business." Id. For the following reasons, we
agree.
a.
The plaintiffs argue that the
prospectus was false and misleading because
it stated that Toolworks' "Nintendo software
products have not been subject to price
reductions," when, in fact, Toolworks had
begun a price-cutting promotion days before
the offering. The plaintiffs, however,
presented no direct evidence that the
Underwriters knew of this promotion. Indeed,
the record illustrates that Toolworks'
management consistently assured the
Underwriters that the company would not
reduce prices. [See ER 279:31; ER 280:12;
USER 281/Buoy 288; USER 281/Sherry 267]. The
plaintiffs nevertheless assert that summary
judgment was inappropriate because a jury
might infer that the Underwriters knew about
the price cuts because Toolworks' management
discussed the promotion while on a private
plane with the Underwriters. All personnel
who were on the plane, however, testified
that no conversations regarding price
cutting reached the Underwriters. As such,
any inference that the Underwriters knew
about the sales would not be based in fact
and would be unreasonable. See Weinberger, p
95,693 at 98,255. The district court
properly granted summary judgment in favor
of the Underwriters on this issue.
b.
The plaintiffs also claim that
the prospectus was false and misleading
because it stated that Toolworks "does not
currently provide any product return rights
to its retail Nintendo customers," when, in
fact, the company had booked several
consignment sales prior to the offering.
Again, however, the plaintiffs offered no
direct evidence that the Underwriters knew
about the sales, which represented a
significant departure from prior Toolworks'
policy. In fact, the record
Page 1085 illustrates that the Underwriters made a
substantial effort to ascertain Toolworks'
return policy, both before and after the
consignment sales occurred. The plaintiffs
nevertheless assert that circumstantial
evidence permits an inference that the
Underwriters knowingly "watered down" the
prospectus' risk-disclosure statement about
merchandise returns and ignored a memorandum
from one Toolworks customer ("Walmart")
describing an unlimited right-of-return.
This argument, however, misconstrues the
full record.
In the process of drafting the
prospectus, the Underwriters did change the
risk-disclosure statement. An original draft
stated that, "[i]n light of increased
competition among the [Nintendo]
entertainment titles on the market, it may
be necessary for [Toolworks] to modify its
return policy." [ER 289/322:22]. The final
version stated only that "[t]here can be no
assurance that [Toolworks] will not be
subject to product returns in the future."
[ER 289/15:8]. This change, however, is not
sufficient to permit a reasonable inference
that the Underwriters knew or should have
known that Toolworks actually had changed
its return policy. In fact, the Underwriters
changed the disclosure statement in direct
response to assertions by Toolworks'
management that the company would never
offer return rights and that the prospectus
as originally written could prompt customers
to seek such concessions in the future. [ER
317/Cartmell:136].
Moreover, although the
Underwriters did receive a memorandum from
Walmart describing an unqualified right to
return non-defective merchandise, [ER
289/11], the record illustrates that Walmart
never actually had such rights. Upon
receiving the Walmart memorandum, the
Underwriters called the retailer and
confirmed that the statement regarding
returns was erroneous (it should have said
that Walmart had an unqualified right to
return defective merchandise). [See ER
317/Sherry:252; USER 334/Zuckerman:89].
Thus, in light of this correction, the fact
that the actual contract between Toolworks
and Walmart provided only for the return of
defective items, and the fact that Walmart
never returned any undamaged products, an
inference that the Underwriters attempted to
conceal Toolworks' return policy would be
unreasonable. The district court properly
granted summary judgment in favor of the
Underwriters on this issue.
2.
The plaintiffs next assert that a
material issue of fact exists regarding
whether the Underwriters diligently
investigated, or needed to investigate,
Toolworks' recognition of OEM revenue on its
financial statements. The plaintiffs claim
that the Underwriters "blindly rel[ied]" on
Deloitte in spite of numerous "red flags"
indicating that the OEM entries were
incorrect and that, as a result, the
district court erred in granting summary
judgment.
An underwriter need not conduct
due diligence into the "expertised" parts of
a prospectus, such as certified financial
statements. Rather, the underwriter need
only show that it "had no reasonable ground
to believe, and did not believe ... that the
statements therein were untrue or that there
was an omission to state a material fact
required to be stated therein or necessary
to make the statements therein not
misleading." 15 U.S.C. Sec. 77k(b)(3)(C);
see WOW II, 35 F.3d at 1421. The issue on
appeal, therefore, is whether the
Underwriters' reliance on the expertised
financial statements was reasonable as a
matter of law.
a.
As the first "red flag," the
plaintiffs point to Toolworks' "backdated"
contract with Hyosung, a Korean
manufacturer. During the fourth quarter of
fiscal 1990, Toolworks recognized $1.7
million in revenue from an OEM contract with
Hyosung. In due diligence, the Underwriters
discovered a memorandum from Hyosung to
Toolworks stating that Hyosung had
"backdated" the agreement to permit
Toolworks to recognize revenue in fiscal
1990. [ER 283:11]. The plaintiffs claim
that, after discovering this memorandum, the
Underwriters could no longer rely on
Deloitte because the accountants had
approved revenue recognition for the
transaction.
Page 1086
If the Underwriters had done
nothing more, the plaintiffs' contention
might be correct. The plaintiffs, however,
ignore the significant steps taken by the
Underwriters after discovery of the Hyosung
memorandum to ensure the accuracy of
Deloitte's revenue recognition. The
Underwriters first confronted Deloitte,
which explained that it was proper for
Toolworks to book revenue in fiscal 1990
because the company had contracted with
Hyosung in March, even though the firms did
not document the agreement until April. [ER
283:12-13]. The Underwriters then insisted
that Deloitte reconfirm, in writing, the
Hyosung agreement and Toolworks' other OEM
contracts. [ER 283:12-13]. Finally, the
Underwriters contacted other accounting
firms to verify Deloitte's OEM revenue
accounting methods. [ER 278:13].
Thus, with regard to the Hyosung
agreement, the Underwriters did not "blindly
rely" on Deloitte. The district court
correctly held that, as a matter of law, the
Underwriters' "investigation of the OEM
business was reasonable." Toolworks I, 789
F.Supp. at 1498.
b.
The plaintiffs next assert that
the Underwriters could not reasonably rely
on Deloitte's financial statements because
Toolworks' counsel, Riordan & McKinzie,
refused to issue an opinion letter stating
that the OEM agreements were binding
contracts. This contention has no merit
because, contrary to the plaintiffs'
assertions, Toolworks had never requested
the law firm to render such an opinion. [ER
317/Sylvester:36-42]. The plaintiffs attempt
to infer wrongdoing in such circumstances is
patently unreasonable. The district court
correctly granted summary judgment in favor
of the Underwriters on this issue.
c.
Finally, the plaintiffs assert
that, by reading the agreements, the
Underwriters should have realized that
Toolworks had improperly recognized revenue.
Specifically, the plaintiffs claim that
several of the contracts were contingent and
that it was facially apparent that Toolworks
might not receive any revenue under them. As
the Underwriters explain, this contention
misconstrues the nature of a due diligence
investigation:
[The Underwriters] reviewed the
contracts to verify that there was a written
agreement for each OEM contract mentioned in
the Prospectus--not to analyze the propriety
of revenue recognition, which was the
responsibility of [Deloitte]. Given the
complexity surrounding software licensing
revenue recognition, it is absurd to suggest
that, in perusing Toolworks' contracts, [the
Underwriters] should have concluded that
[Deloitte] w[as] wrong, particularly when
the OEM's provided written confirmation.
We recently confirmed precisely
this point in a case involving analogous
facts: "[T]he defendants relied on
Deloitte's accounting decisions (to
recognize revenue) about the sales. Those
expert decisions, which underlie the
plaintiffs' attack on the financial
statements, represent precisely the type of
'certified' information on which section 11
permits non-experts to rely." WOW II, 35
F.3d at 1421;
In re Worlds of Wonder Sec. Litig., 814
F.Supp. 850, 864-65 (N.D.Cal.1993) ("It
is absurd in these circumstances for
Plaintiffs to suggest that the other
defendants, who are not accountants,
possibly could have known of any mistakes by
Deloitte. Therefore, even if there are
errors in the financial statements, no
defendant except Deloitte can be liable
under Section 11 on that basis.") [WOW I ],
aff'd in relevant part by WOW II, 35 F.3d at
1421.
Thus, because the Underwriters'
reliance on Deloitte was reasonable under
the circumstances, the district court
correctly granted summary judgment on this
issue. See Toolworks I, 789 F.Supp. at 1498
("Given the complexity of the accounting
issues, the Underwriters were entitled to
rely on Deloitte's expertise.").
3.
The plaintiffs next attack the
Underwriters' due diligence efforts for the
period after Toolworks filed a preliminary
prospectus and
Page 1087 before the effective date of the offering.
2 During this
time, several significant events transpired.
First, Barron's published a negative article
about Toolworks that questioned the
company's "aggressive accounting." [ER
289/22]. Second, in response to the Barron's
article, the SEC initiated a review of
Toolworks' prospectus. [ER 341/Weeks:32-33].
Third, Toolworks sent two letters responding
to the SEC. And, fourth, Toolworks booked
several consignment sales that made the
company appear to have a prosperous quarter,
thereby ensuring success of the offering.
The district court held that the
Underwriters satisfied their due diligence
obligations during this period primarily by
relying on Toolworks' representations to the
SEC. Id. at 1497-98. For the following
reasons, we conclude that disputed issues of
material fact exist regarding the
Underwriters' efforts and, accordingly, we
reverse and remand for a trial on the
merits.
a.
The plaintiffs first contend that
the Underwriters should have done more to
investigate the Barron's allegations of
slumping sales and improper accounting. The
Underwriters established, however, that they
contacted a representative of Nintendo and
several large retailers to confirm the
strength of the market in response to the
Barron's article. Moreover, as explained
above, the Underwriters' reliance on
Deloitte's accounting decisions was
reasonable as a matter of law. Summary
judgment was appropriate on this issue.
b.
Next, the plaintiffs raise the
issue of Toolworks' July 4, 1990 letter to
the SEC, which described the company's June
quarter performance. [ER 316/2006]. In the
letter, Toolworks represented that, although
preliminary financial data was not
available, Toolworks anticipated revenue for
the quarter between $21 and $22 million. The
plaintiffs claim that Toolworks deliberately
falsified these estimates and that the
Underwriters knew of this deceit.
The Underwriters claim that they
were not involved in drafting the July 4 SEC
letter and that, as a result, they have no
responsibility for its contents. The
plaintiffs presented evidence, however, that
the letter was a joint effort of all
professionals working on the offering,
including the Underwriters. In fact, a
Riordan & McKinzie partner specifically
testified that, "[w]hen the letter finally
went to the SEC, all parties had been
involved in the process of creating it.
There had been conference calls discussing
it and comments and changes made by a lot of
different members of the working group." [ER
317/Weeks:40-41]. Others similarly testified
that the Underwriters were actively involved
in discussions of how to respond to the
SEC's inquiries regarding the June quarter.
[See ER 317/Barker:23-24; ER
317/Sylvester:18-19].
The Underwriters argue that, even
if they participated in initial discussions
about the letter, they never knew that
Toolworks' financial data actually was
available and that, as a result, they could
not have known that the letter (and the
prospectus) were misleading. Given the
Underwriters participation in drafting both
documents, however, we think this is an
unresolved issue of material fact. A
reasonable factfinder could infer that, as
members of the drafting group, the
Underwriters had access to all information
that was available and deliberately chose to
conceal the truth. We therefore hold that
summary judgment was inappropriate on this
issue.
c.
After suffering lagging sales in
the first two months of the June quarter,
Toolworks booked several large consignment
sales in late June, the quarter's final
month, thereby enabling the company to meet
its earning projections. [ER
289/300:MB10048-49; ER 289/33; ER 289/502;
ER 289/505].
Page 1088 Toolworks later had to reverse more than $7
million of these sales in its final
financial statements for the quarter. [ER
322:20-26]. The plaintiffs presented
evidence that the Underwriters knew that
Toolworks had performed poorly in April,
that Toolworks had no orders for the month
as of June 8, that the June quarter is
traditionally the slowest of the year for
Nintendo sales, and that the late June sales
accounted for more revenue than the
cumulative total of Toolworks' Nintendo
sales for the prior two and a half months.
For its due diligence investigation of these
sales, however, the Underwriters did little
more than rely on Toolworks' assurances that
the transactions were legitimate. A
reasonable inference from this evidence is
that Toolworks fabricated the June sales to
ensure that the offering would proceed and
that the Underwriters knew, or should have
known, of this fraud. As a result, we
conclude that summary judgment regarding the
Underwriters' diligence on this issue was
also inappropriate.
Feit v. Leasco Data Processing Equip. Corp.,
332 F.Supp. 544, 582 (E.D.N.Y.1971)
("Tacit reliance on management is
unacceptable; the underwriters must play
devil's advocate.").
C.
Thus, we hold that the district
court properly granted summary judgment in
favor of the Underwriters on the section 11
and 12(2) issues regarding their due
diligence investigation into Toolworks'
Nintendo sales practices and description of
OEM revenue. The district court erred,
however, by granting summary judgment on the
section 11 and 12(2) claims regarding the
July 4 SEC letter and Toolworks' June
quarter results. We remand for a trial on
the merits of those claims.
III.
We next consider the plaintiffs'
claims against the Underwriters and Deloitte
under section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 of the
1934 Act, which provide liability for
deceptive conduct in connection with the
sale of securities. 15 U.S.C. Sec. 78j(b);
17 C.F.R. Sec. 240.10b-5. To establish
liability under section 10(b), the
plaintiffs must show that the defendants
acted with scienter, "a mental state
embracing intent to deceive, manipulate, or
defraud." Hochfelder, 425 U.S. at 194 n. 12,
96 S.Ct. at 1381 n. 12. The plaintiffs may
establish scienter by proving either actual
knowledge or recklessness. E.g.,
Hollinger v. Titan Capital Corp., 914 F.2d
1564, 1568-69 (9th Cir.1990) (en banc),
cert. denied, 499 U.S. 976, 111 S.Ct. 1621,
113 L.Ed.2d 719 (1991). In this context,
"recklessness" is conduct "involving not
merely simple, or even inexcusable
negligence, but an extreme departure from
the standards of ordinary care, and which
presents a danger of misleading buyers or
sellers that is either known to the
defendant or is so obvious that the actor
must have been aware of it." Id. at 1569
(internal quotation omitted).
The district court granted
summary judgment in favor of the
Underwriters and Deloitte, holding that the
defendants had not acted with scienter as a
matter of law. Toolworks I, 789 F.Supp. at
1498-1510. Summary judgment on the scienter
issue is appropriate only if "there is no
rational basis in the record for concluding
that any of the challenged statements was
made with the requisite scienter." Schneider
v. Vennard (In re Apple Computer Sec.
Litig.), 886 F.2d 1109, 1117 (9th Cir.1989),
cert. denied, 496 U.S. 943, 110 S.Ct. 3229,
110 L.Ed.2d 676 (1990). We conclude that
disputed issues of material fact exist and,
as a result, we reverse and remand several
of the claims under section 10(b).
A.
The plaintiffs raise the same
issues against the Underwriters under
section 10(b) as under sections 11 and
12(2). Because we conclude that the
Underwriters acted with due diligence in
investigating Toolworks' Nintendo business
and OEM revenues, we also hold that the
Underwriters did not act with scienter
regarding those claims. Therefore, the only
section 10(b) issue involving the
Underwriters is whether disputed issues of
material fact exist regarding the July 4 SEC
letter or the June quarter financial
statements. We hold that they do.
Page 1089
The plaintiffs presented no
evidence of the Underwriters' actual
knowledge or fraudulent intent on these
issues. As noted above, however, the
evidence permits a reasonable inference that
"the Underwriters had access to all
information that was available and
deliberately chose to conceal the truth"
about figures in the July 4 SEC letter,
supra pages 1087-88, and that "the
Underwriters knew, or should have known, of
th[e] [alleged] fraud" in the June quarter
statements, supra pages 1087-88. This
evidence is sufficient to defeat summary
judgment on the scienter issue. We therefore
remand for trial on these section 10(b)
claims.
B.
Regarding Deloitte, the
plaintiffs allege that the accountants
violated section 10(b) by improperly
computing the financial statements included
in Toolworks' prospectus, by assisting
Toolworks in drafting misleading letters to
the SEC, and by enabling Toolworks to issue
false financial statements for the June
quarter. We consider each contention in
turn.
1.
Toolworks included in the
prospectus financial statements for fiscal
1990, which had been certified by Deloitte.
The plaintiffs allege that Deloitte violated
section 10(b) by improperly describing
Toolworks' OEM revenues and by failing to
discover Toolworks' price reductions and
return policies. We disagree.
a.
In the district court, Deloitte
conceded that the plaintiffs had raised a
genuine issue of material fact as to whether
the prospectus properly accounted for the
OEM revenues. Toolworks I, 789 F.Supp. at
1504. Deloitte, however, contends that the
plaintiffs presented no evidence that would
support an inference of scienter with regard
to this issue. The plaintiffs presented no
direct evidence that Deloitte knew or
recklessly disregarded errors in the
financial statements. The plaintiffs did,
however, produce circumstantial evidence
with which they seek to infer that Deloitte
acted with scienter. For example, the
plaintiffs established that the OEM
agreements were poorly documented, informal,
and conditional [ER 297/Kumaria:439], that
the OEM licensing transactions were risky
[ER 296/851], that Toolworks' management was
under "extraordinary pressure" for favorable
earnings [ER 297/956], and that Deloitte
obtained only oral confirmations of some
agreements [ER 271:9] and deviated from
their audit plan in reviewing the contracts
[ER 295:27-28].
The district court found this
evidence insufficient to support an
inference of scienter. The court noted that
Deloitte had reviewed the OEM documentation,
obtained oral and written confirmation of
the agreements from Toolworks' management,
confirmed in writing most of the OEM
agreements with outside vendors, obtained
and reviewed Toolworks' licensing
agreements, and reviewed the progress of
Toolworks' collections on the OEM
agreements. Id. at 1505. The court concluded
that "[t]hese procedures provided Deloitte
with ample support for the audit conclusions
it reached.... Plaintiffs' contention ...
that Deloitte should have performed further
inquiries and investigations, arguing with
the benefit of hindsight, does not establish
that the [ ] audit was reckless." Id. We
agree.
"[T]he proof of scienter in fraud
cases is often a matter of inference from
circumstantial evidence."
Herman & MacLean v. Huddleston, 459 U.S.
375, 390 n. 30, 103 S.Ct. 683, 692 n.
30, 74 L.Ed.2d 548 (1982). However, "[t]he
mere publication of inaccurate accounting
figures, or a failure to follow GAAP,
without more, does not establish scienter."
WOW II, 35 F.3d at 1426 (quotations
omitted); see, e.g.,
The Limited, Inc. v. McCrory Corp., 645
F.Supp. 1038, 1045 (S.D.N.Y.1986)
(errors in a client's financial statements
do not give rise to an inference of fraud on
the part of the auditor). Rather,
"[s]cienter requires more than a
misapplication of accounting principles. The
plaintiff must prove that the accounting
practices were so deficient that the audit
amounted to no audit at all, or an egregious
refusal to see the obvious, or to
investigate the doubtful, or that the
accounting judgments
Page 1090 which were made were such that no reasonable
accountant would have made the same
decisions if confronted with the same
facts." WOW II, 35 F.3d at 1426 (quotations
omitted).
In this case, the plaintiffs have
not satisfied this standard. At most, the
evidence establishes that Deloitte was
negligent in auditing Toolworks, not that
Deloitte recklessly or knowingly falsified
the financial statements. The plaintiffs'
expert, Albert Rossi, does not help their
case. Although Rossi testified that Deloitte
"knew that the OEM agreements did not meet
Toolworks' or GAAP's requirements for
revenue recognition," [ER 295:33-34], he
provided no factual basis for these
allegations of knowledge by Deloitte. As a
result, his testimony merely "consists of
self-righteous statements that, because
Deloitte did not audit [Toolworks] as he
would have done, Deloitte must have acted
fraudulently. Such evidence is not
sufficient." Id. at 1426; see WOW I, 814
F.Supp. at 871 n. 15 ("this is not the first
time that a district court has awarded
summary judgment to an auditor on the
scienter issue in the face of a declaration
by Rossi").
We therefore affirm the district
court's summary judgment on the OEM revenue
issue.
b.
The plaintiffs also claim that
Deloitte should have included in the 1990
financial statements a description of
Toolworks' return and price protection
policies. Deloitte correctly notes, however,
that Toolworks did not grant return rights
or price guarantees until fiscal 1991, after
the 1990 audit was complete. The plaintiffs
presented no evidence that Deloitte knew, or
should have known, that Toolworks would
change its policies. In fact, Toolworks
acquired the Nintendo business only at the
very end of fiscal 1990. [ER 296/15:F-9].
The failure of Deloitte to include
statements about Toolworks'
not-yet-implemented return and pricing
policies does not give rise to a reasonable
inference of scienter. See Laven, 695
F.Supp. at 812 ("summary judgment can be
granted if plaintiff fails to present
credible evidence of scienter "). The
district court's summary judgment in favor
of Deloitte on this issue was therefore
appropriate.
2.
The plaintiffs next contend that
Deloitte violated section 10(b) by
participating in drafting the two letters
that Toolworks sent to the SEC.
3 As noted above, the
plaintiffs allege that the letters falsely
stated that Toolworks did not have
preliminary financial data available for the
June quarter and misleadingly described the
nature of Toolworks' OEM contracts.
a.
On July 3, 1990, the SEC told
Toolworks that it should disclose
"preliminary results" for the June quarter
in the prospectus. [ER 316/35]. In its July
4 response, Toolworks stated that
"[p]reliminary financial data is not now
available," but that the company
"anticipated" revenues for the quarter to
range between $21 and $22 million. [ER
316/2006]. Toolworks, however, had
acknowledged to the professionals
participating in the offering that some
financial data for the quarter actually was
available. [ER 317/Weeks:77-82]. The
plaintiffs allege that, as a result, the
statement to the SEC was a deliberate
falsehood and that Deloitte violated
Page 1091 section 10(b) by suggesting in the July 4
SEC letter that preliminary data was not
available and by acquiescing to financial
projections which they knew, or should have
known, to be false. We agree for the same
reasons that we have reversed the summary
judgment in favor of the Underwriters on
this issue. Specifically, we conclude that
"[a] reasonable factfinder could infer that,
as members of the drafting group, [Deloitte]
had access to all information that was
available and deliberately chose to conceal
the truth" about Toolworks' poor June
quarter performance, supra pages 1087-88.
Summary judgment was inappropriate on this
issue.
b.
In its July 1 letter to the SEC,
Toolworks attached a "model" OEM agreement
for the SEC to review. [ER 296/234]. The
plaintiffs claim that the letter was false
and misleading because the model agreement
differed from the agreements that Toolworks
actually used. We agree.
The model OEM agreement stated
that "in no event shall the OEM be relieved
from any minimum payment obligations." [ER
296/234]. None of Toolworks' actual OEM
contracts, however, contained such language.
Deloitte therefore should have been aware
that the model agreement was false and
misleading, and inclusion of the model
agreement with the July 1 SEC letter gives
rise to a reasonable inference that Deloitte
knew or recklessly disregarded this
falsehood. Deloitte claims that it did not
draft, or even see, the model agreement and
cannot therefore be liable for it. Deloitte,
however, ignores the fact that the
misleading language of the model agreement
was actually quoted in the body of the July
1 SEC letter itself, which Deloitte
admittedly saw. [ER 296/234:6]. We hold that
summary judgment was therefore inappropriate
as to this issue.
3.
Finally, the plaintiffs allege
that Deloitte violated section 10(b) by
enabling Toolworks to issue preliminary
financial statements for the June quarter.
See Toolworks I, 789 F.Supp. at 1506-07. The
plaintiffs admit, however, that "[a]s to
the[se] quarterly financial statements, the
Complaint [only] charged Deloitte with
aiding and abetting" Toolworks' primary
violation of section 10(b). As a result,
under Central Bank the plaintiffs' claims
are no longer viable. Central Bank, --- U.S.
at ----, 114 S.Ct. at 1455 ("a private
plaintiff may not maintain an aiding and
abetting suit under Sec. 10(b)"). We
therefore affirm the district court's
summary judgment in favor of Deloitte on
this issue.
C.
In summary, we conclude that,
although the district court properly granted
summary judgment in favor of the
Underwriters and Deloitte on most of the
section 10(b) claims, summary judgment was
inappropriate on the issues regarding the
SEC letters and Toolworks' June quarter
results. We remand those claims.
IV.
The district court properly
granted summary judgment in favor of the
Underwriters on the section 11 and 12(2)
claims regarding Toolworks' Nintendo sales
and OEM accounting. The court erred,
however, by ignoring disputed issues of
material fact regarding the Underwriters'
due diligence investigation of Toolworks'
financial performance in the June quarter
and the description of that performance in
the July 4 SEC letter. Summary judgment was
inappropriate on those issues.
Furthermore, the district court
properly granted summary judgment in favor
of the Underwriters on all the section 10(b)
claims other than those arising from the
July 4 SEC letter and the June quarter
statements. The court also properly granted
summary judgment in favor of Deloitte on the
section 10(b) claims regarding recognition
of OEM revenues in the audited financial
statements appended to the prospectus. The
district court erred, however, in granting
summary judgment in favor of Deloitte on the
section 10(b) claims regarding the SEC
letters and Toolworks' unaudited financial
statements for the June quarter.
Page 1092
We therefore affirm in part,
reverse in part, and remand for further
proceedings consistent with this opinion.
AFFIRMED in part. REVERSED in
part. REMANDED.
* This panel unanimously agrees that this
case is appropriate for submission without
oral argument. Fed.R.App.P. 34(a); 9th Cir.R.
34-4.
** The Honorable Donald P. Lay, Senior
Circuit Judge for the Eighth Circuit,
sitting by designation.
1 The plaintiffs do not appeal the
district court's partial summary judgment in
favor of Deloitte on the section 11 and
12(2) claims.
2 The Underwriters' contention that the
events of this period are inapplicable to
sections 11 and 12(2) liability is clearly
incorrect. Both statutory provisions require
disclosure of information needed in order to
make a prospectus truthful and not
misleading. As the Underwriters' own experts
testified, poor first quarter earnings prior
to the effective date of the offering would
definitely constitute material information
and would have to be disclosed.
3 The district court analyzed this issue
in terms whether Deloitte was liable for
"aiding and abetting" Toolworks' primary
violation of section 10(b). See Toolworks I,
789 F.Supp. at 1507-09. After the district
court issued its opinion, however, the
Supreme Court concluded that aiding and
abetting liability does not exist under
section 10(b).
Central Bank v. First Interstate Bank, ---
U.S. ----, 114 S.Ct. 1439, 128 L.Ed.2d 119
(1994).
Despite Central Bank, we nevertheless
consider this issue because the plaintiffs'
complaint clearly alleges that Deloitte is
primarily liable under section 10(b) for the
SEC letters. In fact, the July 1 SEC letter
stated that it "was prepared after extensive
review and discussions with ... Deloitte"
and actually referred the SEC to two
Deloitte partners for further information.
[ER 296:234]. Similarly, the plaintiffs
presented evidence that Deloitte played a
significant role in drafting and editing the
July 4 SEC letter. [ER 317/Weeks:40-41].
This evidence is sufficient to sustain a
primary cause of action under section 10(b)
and, as a result, Central Bank does not
absolve Deloitte on these issues. |