| Page 204 42 F.3d 204
63 USLW 2460, Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P
98,474 HILLSON PARTNERS LIMITED
PARTNERSHIP, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
ADAGE, INCORPORATED; Donald F.U. Goebert;
Robert H.
Cahill; Robert T. Holland; Robert L.
MacDonald;
Philip B. Ryan; Buck Scott; Ralph R.
Whitney, Jr., Defendants-Appellees.
No. 94-1186. United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit. Argued Sept. 29, 1994.
Decided Dec. 13, 1994.
Page 205
ARGUED: Susan B. Bovee,
Finkelstein, Thompson & Loughran,
Washington, DC, for appellant. Joseph O.
Click, Dryer, Ellis, Joseph & Mills,
Washington, DC, for appellees. ON BRIEF:
Burton H. Finkelstein, Lisa E. Boehley,
Finkelstein, Thompson & Loughran,
Washington, DC, for appellant. Michael
Joseph, Richard A. Kirby, Dryer, Ellis,
Joseph & Mills, Washington, DC, for
appellees.
Before MICHAEL and MOTZ, Circuit
Judges, and MICHAEL, United States District
Judge for the Western District of Virginia,
sitting by designation.
Affirmed by published opinion.
Judge MOTZ wrote the opinion, in which
Circuit Judge MICHAEL and District Judge
MICHAEL joined.
OPINION
MOTZ, Circuit Judge:
In this case we are again called
upon to determine whether a company's
statements as to its business prospects
constitute false statements or omissions of
material fact actionable under the
securities laws. Because we conclude that
the statements at issue here
Page 206 neither misstated nor omitted material
facts, we affirm the district court's
dismissal of the complaint.
I.
Adage, Inc. is a publicly traded
Pennsylvania corporation; its stock is
listed on the NASDAQ National Market System.
Through its subsidiaries, including Allister
Access Controls, Inc. and Fort Orange Paper
Company, Adage is involved in the businesses
of specialty manufacturing, including
electronics, steel processing, and recycled
paper manufacturing, and real estate
development and management. The president
and chief executive officer of Adage at all
times relevant to this lawsuit was Robert H.
Cahill. The statements at the heart of this
dispute were made during the period from
April, 1992 through December, 1992 and
concern Adage, Allister, and Fort Orange.
In an April 30, 1992 press
report, Cahill was quoted as telling a group
of security analysts that Adage "expects to
report revenue increases" for its first
quarter, ending March 31, 1992. Cahill was
further quoted as attributing the increases
in first quarter revenues in part to
"improved performance in the Allister
electronic access controls division."
On May 5, 1992, Adage issued its
first quarter report in which it reported
net income from continuing operations for
the first quarter of 1992 of $505,000, a 45%
increase over the first quarter of 1991. It
attributed this increase to decreased
expenses because of restructuring,
"attention to detail in quality at all
levels of operations," and the acquisition
of a new subsidiary, RELM Communications,
that increased working capital by $9.5
million. With regard to the Allister
subsidiary, the report noted that:
Allister Access Controls has reduced
costs and improved its gross margins.
Significant sales gains should be seen as
the year progresses. Additionally, as
Allister's electronic components are
produced by RELM, Adage's financial
situation will improve.
As to Fort Orange, the report
stated:
Fort Orange Paper Company continues its
excellent performance. We expect these
results only to improve with the savings
from the cogeneration plant expected to
begin this summer, the rebuilding of the
forming end of the paper machine which will
increase capacity by 14%, and the increased
efficiency and capacity of the new 8 color
press which will enhance our quality.
In a press release also issued on
May 5, 1992, Cahill was quoted as saying
that he was "pleased to see the current year
get off to the good start we had previously
forecast. This strengthens our conviction
that 1992 will produce excellent results for
Adage." Cahill again attributed positive
first quarter earnings to decreased expenses
and noted that "[i]n addition, the results
reflect improvement at the Allister
electronic access controls subsidiary as
well as net income from RELM."
In a May 19, 1992 press release,
Cahill is quoted as telling shareholders
attending the company's annual meeting that
Adage "is on target toward achieving the
most profitable year in its history and
expects to exceed, by a comfortable margin,
its previous net income record of $1.7
million set in 1990;" this result was
attributed to the acquisition of RELM. The
May 19 press release also stated:
Later this year we are expecting the
cogeneration plant at our Fort Orange Paper
Company subsidiary to begin operating and
yield annual savings on steam costs of $1
million pre-tax. Additional improvements to
the mill scheduled for August will increase
capacity by 14% adding another $1.8 million
in pre-tax profits. On an annualized basis
these two events will generate an additional
$.32 per share to our bottom line.
On August 11, 1992, Adage
released its report for the second quarter,
ending June 30, 1992. The report noted that
"Adage is in the midst of an excellent year.
We are on track to exceed 1990, our record
year for net income." It further stated that
although "this profitability is in the face
of dire economic conditions facing the
housing industry upon which [Allister's]
sales of residential garage door openers are
dependent. With
Page 207 improvement in the housing segment,
Allister's operation should significantly
improve." The quarterly report also stated
that "[t]he rebuilding of the Fort Orange
paper machine, that will result in a 14%
increase in capacity, is on schedule...."
That same day Adage issued a press release
in which it stated that the record second
quarter and first half results kept the
company "on track toward reaching its
previously forecast goal of record full year
profits." Adage reported net income of
$506,000 for the second quarter of 1992, an
enormous increase over the $435,000 net loss
for the second quarter of 1991, bringing its
net income for the first six months of 1992
to $1.01 million, a 617% increase over the
$141,000 net income for the first six months
of 1991.
On November 4, 1992, Adage
announced in a press release that during the
previous week it had dismissed the president
and six high ranking executives of Allister.
Cahill is quoted as explaining:
The termination of these executives will
result in annual savings of approximately
$750,000 for Allister which lost $1.2
million on revenues of $6.7 million for the
six months ended June 30, 1992. Returning
Allister to profitability is an important
priority for Adage at this time. This
reduction in personnel along with other cost
saving measures we have implemented should
significantly improve Allister's
performance.
Eleven days later, on November
13, 1992, Adage released its report for the
third quarter, ending September 30, 1992, in
which it reported a net loss of $153,000,
against $153,000 in net income for the third
quarter of 1991; this loss was despite third
quarter revenues in excess of $24 million, a
31% increase in revenues over the $18
million reported for the same quarter in
1991. The report explained that Adage's
"plan for steady progress in revenues and
earnings this year was briefly interrupted
due to a decision to postpone short term
gains in favor of long term benefits" at
Fort Orange:
Unfortunately the installation [of the
forming section for the paper machine] took
longer than planned and we were not only out
of operation at the paper mill for two weeks
in August but also only running at half
capacity during the month of September.
Without Fort Orange's usual contribution to
profit, we were only marginally profitable
and did not make our plan.
In the third quarter report,
Cahill also attributed Adage's
"disappointing" third-quarter performance to
"continued unsatisfactory performance at the
Allister Access Controls subsidiary." He
noted that Allister "has been
underperforming for more than two years,"
that "nine recently appointed senior and
middle management personnel" had been
removed as of October 30, and that this
"management change will produce annual
savings of $825,000." The report concluded
that "[w]ith Fort Orange back operating at
improved rates ... [and] reduced costs at
Allister we should have an excellent fourth
quarter and see significant improvements
during 1993."
Two weeks before the end of the
fourth quarter, on December 15, 1992, the
Wall Street Journal reported in an article
headlined "Adage Expects Quarter and Year to
Improve Upon 1991 Results":
Adage Inc. expects to have a better
fourth quarter and year in sales and overall
net income than a year ago, said Robert H.
Cahill, president. Calling 1992 a transition
year, Mr. Cahill said 1993 would be "a very
good year" for Adage.
The article further stated that
"[t]he executive is looking for 1992 sales
of about $100 million, and 1993 sales of
about $110 million." On March 5, 1993, Adage
issued its fourth quarter and year end
reports. For the fourth quarter, in fact,
Adage reported net income of $231,000, an
increase of $384,000 over the third quarter
of 1992, but a decrease of $97,000 over that
reported during the fourth quarter of 1991.
For the year, it reported sales of
$97,863,000 as against $75,044,000 in sales
in 1991; and net income of $1,089,000, a 75%
increase over the net income of $622,000 for
1991, but $700,000 less than the net income
for 1990.
On August 9, 1993, Hillson
Partners Limited Partnership filed this
class action against Adage, Cahill, and
other officers of Adage, on behalf of those
who purchased Adage common stock between
April 30, 1992 and March
Page 208
9, 1993. The complaint alleges that the
statements described above concerning Adage
and its subsidiaries were materially false
and misleading, and so violated Sections
10(b) and 20(a) of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 (Exchange Act),
1
15 U.S.C. Secs. 78j(b), 78t(a); Rule 10b-5
promulgated thereunder, 17 C.F.R. Sec.
240.10b-5;
2 and
the Maryland Securities Act; and further
constituted the torts of fraud and negligent
misrepresentation.
The complaint alleges that after
Adage disclosed its 1992 year end results on
Friday, March 5, 1993, the per share
purchase price of its common stock, which
had traded at a high of $6.37 and at an
average of $5.09 during the period of April
30, 1992 through March 8, 1993, dropped to
$4.25 by Tuesday, March 9, 1993. Certain of
Adage's officers and directors, including
Cahill, are alleged to be parties to a
Contingent Share Agreement, which entitled
them to receive up to 2,390,305 shares of
Adage's common stock held in escrow, or
about 46% of the then outstanding shares, if
the stock price was maintained at certain
levels over any ninety day period prior to
August 27, 1993.
3
Approximately 1,833,200 shares of Adage
common stock were publicly traded from April
30, 1992 through March 9, 1993, 89,000 of
which were purchased by Hillson on various
occasions. A total of 5,225,620 shares of
Adage's common stock were outstanding during
the period from April, 1992 through March,
1993.
The district court granted
Adage's motion to dismiss Hillson's
complaint for failure to state a claim upon
which relief can be granted. Specifically,
the district court concluded that Cahill's
statements as to Adage's expected overall
performance in 1992 and as to Allister's
performance were not sufficiently material
to support claims for securities fraud and
that Hillson had failed to allege any
damages resulting from Cahill's statements
as to Fort Orange. After dismissing
Hillson's federal claims, the district court
declined to exercise its jurisdiction over
the pendent state law claims and dismissed
them as well.
II.
To establish liability under Sec.
10(b) and Rule 10b-5, a plaintiff must
prove: (1) the defendant made a false
statement or omission of material fact (2)
with scienter (3) upon which the plaintiff
justifiably relied (4) that proximately
caused the plaintiff's damages.
Cooke v. Manufactured Homes, Inc.,
998 F.2d 1256, 1260-61 (4th Cir.1993).
Malone v. Microdyne Corp., 26 F.3d 471, 476
(4th Cir.1994);
Myers v. Finkle, 950 F.2d 165, 167 (4th
Cir.1991);
Schatz v. Rosenberg,
943 F.2d 485, 489 (4th
Cir.1991), cert. denied sub nom.,
Schatz v. Weinberg & Green, --- U.S. ----,
112 S.Ct. 1475, 117 L.Ed.2d 619 (1992).
The critical concern in the case
at hand is the first of these factors, which
itself has two
Page 209 components: (a) a false statement or
omission of a fact (b) that is material.
Basic Inc. v. Levinson, 485 U.S. 224, 108
S.Ct. 978, 99 L.Ed.2d 194 (1988), the
Supreme Court set forth the starting point
for any analysis of this factor. There the
Court devoted much of its attention to the
"materiality requirement" and held that in
order "to fulfill the materiality
requirement" in the Sec. 10(b) and Rule
10b-5 context "there must be 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." Id. at 231-32, 108 S.Ct. at 983
(quoting
TSC Industries, Inc. v. Northway, Inc., 426
U.S. 438, 449, 96 S.Ct. 2126, 2132, 48
L.Ed.2d 757 (1976)). Thus, materiality
is a "fact-specific inquiry," which "depends
on the significance the reasonable investor
would place on the withheld or
misrepresented information." Id. at 240, 108
S.Ct. at 988 (footnote omitted). With
respect to "contingent or speculative
information or events," materiality " 'will
depend ... upon a balancing of both the
indicated probability that the event will
occur and the anticipated magnitude of the
event in light of the totality of the
company activity.' " Id. at 238, 108 S.Ct.
at 987 (quoting
SEC v. Texas Gulf Sulphur Co., 401 F.2d 833,
849 (2d Cir.1968) (en banc ), cert.
denied sub nom.,
Coates v. SEC, 394 U.S. 976, 89 S.Ct. 1454,
22 L.Ed.2d 756 (1969)).
In the midst of this discussion
of the materiality requirement the Court
also emphasized that in order to meet its
burden under this first factor "a plaintiff
must show that the statements were
misleading as to a material fact," id.
(emphasis in original), and that "[t]o be
actionable, of course, a statement must also
be misleading." Id. at 239 n. 17, 108 S.Ct.
at 987-88 n. 17. Moreover, all averments of
fraud are required by Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b) to
be "stated with particularity." Where
fraudulent projections are alleged, the
plaintiff must therefore identify in the
complaint with specificity some reason why
the discrepancy between a company's
optimistic projections and its subsequently
disappointing results is attributable to
fraud. Borow v. nVIEW Corp., 829 F.Supp.
828, 833 (E.D. Va.1993), aff'd mem., 27 F.3d
562 (1994);
4
DiLeo v. Ernst & Young, 901 F.2d 624, 627-28
(7th Cir.), cert. denied, 498 U.S. 941, 111
S.Ct. 347, 112 L.Ed.2d 312 (1990). Mere
allegations of "fraud by hindsight" will not
satisfy the requirements of Rule 9(b).
Borow, 829 F.Supp. at 833 (citing
Denny v. Barber, 576 F.2d 465, 470 (2d
Cir.1978));
Greenstone v. Cambex Corp., 975 F.2d 22,
25-27 (1st Cir.1992) (and cases cited
therein).
Although for some time there was
a question as to whether statements of
belief or opinions could constitute
statements "with respect to material facts"
for purposes of the securities laws,
Virginia Bankshares, Inc. v. Sandberg, 501
U.S. 1083, 1092-93, 111 S.Ct. 2749, 2758,
115 L.Ed.2d 929 (1991), the Supreme
Court made it clear that they can, at least
for purposes of Sec. 14(a) of the Exchange
Act, provided they are opinions or beliefs
as to current facts. This is so because such
statements rest on "a factual basis that
justifies them as accurate, the absence of
which renders them misleading." Id. at 1093,
111 S.Ct. at 2758. Thus, as to the
statements at issue in Sandberg, "provable
facts either furnish[ed] good reasons" for
the directors' statements in recommending a
merger, or "count[ed] against it." Id. at
1093, 111 S.Ct. at 2758.
Three times in the past sixteen
months we have, in published opinions,
considered whether a company's statements as
to its business prospects are actionable
under the securities laws. We did not reach
the same ultimate conclusion in these cases,
i.e., we did not hold that all of the
statements were, or were not, actionable.
However, contrary to Hillson's suggestion,
we did follow a consistent course in these
cases. In each, we either implicitly or
explicitly recognized that the above four
pronged test was controlling and then
examined the pleadings or evidence,
depending on the procedural posture of the
particular case, to determine if one or more
Page 210 of the above factors were properly pled or
sufficiently proved. That course guides us
now.
First, in Cooke v. Manufactured
Homes, we reversed, in part, a grant of
summary judgment to the defendant company.
In that case, it was undisputed that the
company made a number of conflicting
statements as to its current financial
status. In its annual reports it "disclosed
its declining financial status" but at the
same time it issued press releases "stating
that it was enjoying a degree of financial
prosperity." Cooke, 998 F.2d at 1259. Among
the statements indicating financial
prosperity was the announcement that the
company "was planning to repurchase 400,000
shares of its common stock" because the
shares were an "attractive investment in
light of the Company's strong earnings
prospects for the future" and its report
that it was "involved in negotiations with
an insurance company that would act as a
guarantor on its loans." Id. at 1259, 1261.
Also in support of its claims of financial
prosperity were the company's announcements
that it "was looking for record earnings"
for the year, that sales were "good," and
other soft puffing statements. Id. Hillson
argues that these statements were held
"material enough to withstand a motion to
dismiss." In fact, materiality was not the
basis of our holding or that of the district
court in Cooke.
In granting judgment for the
company on the securities law claims, the
trial court focused solely on the third
factor necessary to such a claim, i.e.,
reliance. Thus, the district court held that
the plaintiffs had not justifiably relied on
the company's statements because "any
alleged misrepresentations or omissions by
[the company] were countered by prolific,
contrary information disseminated to the
market." Id. at 1258. There was no finding
by the district court as to the first
factor, i.e., whether there was a
misstatement or omission of material fact.
Similarly, on appeal, the company
apparently did not assert that the
statements were not misstatements of
material fact. Rather it claimed that the
finding as to no justifiable reliance was
correct and that "summary judgment was
properly granted because the market was
apprised of the financial health of the
corporation at all relevant times." Id. at
1260. After explaining how the fraud on the
market theory, on which the Cooke
stockholders relied, relieves a plaintiff of
proving "direct reliance," we noted:
Appellants assert that the
misrepresentations and/or omissions by [the
company] created a conflicting mix of
information on which the market justifiably
relied and that the reliance of the market
on this mix of information led to an
artificially inflated stock price, thereby
giving rise to a genuine issue of fact.
Accordingly, they contend that summary
judgment was inappropriate. Applying the
summary judgment standard, we conclude that
... there was a sufficient total mix of
information as to whether any
misrepresentations and/or omissions by [the
company] were materially misleading to the
market. Hence, granting summary judgment
against all investors was improper.
Id. at 1261. Thus, our focus in
Cooke, like that of the district court, was
on reliance. Contrary to Hillson's argument,
our holding in Cooke cannot be fairly read
as a determination of the materiality vel
non of any of the challenged statements. We
were not asked to, and did not, examine
whether the challenged statements were
material or misleading.
5
Page 211
A month after the Cooke decision
was issued, we again addressed a claim that
certain company statements constituted
violations of the securities laws.
Raab v. General Physics Corp.,
4 F.3d 286
(4th Cir.1993), however, the district
court, the parties, and this Court focused
not on the third factor (reliance) but on
the first factor: whether the plaintiffs had
alleged that the company had made
misstatements or omissions of material fact.
The district court held that the complaint
should be dismissed because it "failed to
plead the requisite, non-conclusory specific
factual predicate" necessary to allege fraud
and because some of the alleged
misstatements were not material, i.e., were
"no more than puffery."
Raab v. General Physics Corp., No.
S-92-1741, 1993 WL 358450 (D. Md.1993).
On appeal, the parties also
focused on this factor; we, in turn,
affirmed because we agreed with the district
court's conclusion. We held that as to some
claims the stockholders did not plead the
"specific facts required by Fed.R.Civ.P.
9(b) .... to show that the statements were
false." Raab, 4 F.3d at 288, 290. The
remaining claims were based on an asserted
"failure to disclose the adverse impact of
[a] contracting slowdown on first quarter
1992 earnings" and on predictions that
"results during the remainder of 1992 should
be in line with analysts' current
projections" and that "an expected annual
growth rate of 10% to 30% over the next
several years" with resulting "growth and
success" would continue "well into the
future." Id. at 288-91. We held that these
statements and omissions were not material
as a matter of law.
Consistent with the Basic
materiality formulation, we explained that "
'[s]oft,' 'puffing' statements ... generally
lack materiality because the market price of
a share is not inflated by vague statements
predicting growth.... No reasonable investor
would rely on these statements, and they are
certainly not specific enough to perpetrate
a fraud on the market." Id. at 289-90.
Moreover, we noted that predictions of
future growth "not worded as guarantees are
generally not actionable under the federal
securities laws." Id. at 290 (quoting
Krim v. BancTexas Group, Inc., 989 F.2d
1435, 1446 (5th Cir.1993)). We
distinguished expressions of belief or
opinion "concerning current facts," that
"may be material," see Sandberg, 501 U.S. at
1090-97, 111 S.Ct. at 2757-60, 115 L.Ed.2d
929, from opinions as to uncertain future
events, to which the Sandberg analysis does
not "extend[ ] so easily." Raab, 4 F.3d at
290 (emphasis in original).
Most recently, in Malone v.
Microdyne Corp., we examined the claim of
certain stockholders that seven company
statements constituted violations of the
securities laws. The district court entered
judgment as a matter of law for the company
entirely on the basis of the first factor,
"holding that the plaintiffs had presented
no evidence that [the company's] statements
were false or misleading." Malone, 26 F.3d
at 476 (citing
Malone v. Microdyne Corp., 824 F.Supp. 65,
66, 68 (E.D.Va.1993)). After carefully
examining each of the statements, we
concluded that, as to six of them, there was
a sufficient evidentiary basis on which a
jury could find the company had made false
or misleading statements of material fact
with scienter. Id. at 478-79. In each of
these six statements, issued from April to
August of 1992, the company booked and
reported items as sold, never disclosing
that, in fact, it had given distributors the
right to return these items if they could
not sell them and never disclosing "the
actual return of more than forty percent" of
the items reportedly "sold" to distributors.
Id. at 473 (emphasis in original).
In the seventh statement, the
company's president did not make any
comments as to past or present sales.
Rather, he simply stated, in response to a
press inquiry, that he "was comfortable
with" an analyst's earnings estimate that
the company would earn 80 cents per share in
the 1992 fiscal year, which would end in
seven months, and $1.05 per
Page 212 share in the 1993 fiscal year, an increase
from the 76 cents per share that the company
had earned in fiscal year 1991. Id. This
prediction, however, did not become reality.
Relying on the analysis in Raab, we held
that nevertheless it was not actionable as a
matter of law because it was neither a
guarantee nor specific enough to "perpetrate
a fraud on the market." Id. at 479-80. We
explained:
Misstatements or omissions regarding
actual past or present facts are far more
likely to be actionable than statements
regarding projections of future performance.
Generally the latter will be deemed
actionable under Sec. 10(b) and Rule 10b-5
only if they are supported by specific
statements of fact or are worded as
guarantees.
Id. at 479 (emphasis in
original).
With these principles in mind, we
turn to the case at hand.
III.
Adage's April and May press
releases and first quarter report issued on
May 5, 1992 were largely devoted to
descriptions of its first quarter results.
Those results were reported to be excellent,
and Hillson does not allege that this
characterization was in any way false or
misleading. Hillson does take issue with the
statements contained in the press releases
and first quarter report that Allister's
performance should improve ("significant
sales gains should be seen as the year
progresses"), that "1992 will produce
excellent results for Adage," and that Adage
is "on target toward achieving the most
profitable year in its history." All of
these statements are predictions as to
future events; none are statements as to
present facts, let alone guarantees. Thus,
all of the April and May statements clearly
constitute the type of vague predictions of
growth that we held in Raab and Malone not
to be material as a matter of law.
Hillson also challenges the
statement made in Adage's second quarter
report, issued on August 11, and a press
release issued the same day, that Allister's
operations "should significantly improve,"
as painting a fraudulently "rosy picture" in
light of Allister's "underperformance" for
several years. It seems to us, however, that
statements that operations "should improve"
signal not a "rosy picture" but recognition
that operations have not been "rosy" in the
past and the hope ("should") that they will
"improve" in the future. Thus, these
statements were entirely consistent with
Allister's previous underperformance. Like
the district court, we believe that the
statements regarding Allister were "even
more indefinite" than the April and May
statements discussed above regarding Adage's
expected overall performance. Moreover, all
of the projections regarding Allister's
improved performance were expressly
contingent on other market conditions,
including the success of the housing
industry. Therefore, consistent with Raab
and Malone, none of the statements regarding
Allister's performance constituted material
misrepresentations sufficient to support a
claim for federal securities fraud.
Nor did Adage's failure to
disclose in more detail Allister's problems
constitute an omission of material facts.
Those problems had been detailed in Adage's
1992 annual report and on a Form 10K filed
by the company in March, 1992. Both the
annual report and the 10K disclosed Allister
had lost money in each of the three years
preceding 1992, including a net operating
loss in 1991 alone of more than $1.5
million.
6 "The
securities laws require disclosure of
information that is not otherwise in the
public domain," not information that has
already been publicly--indeed,
officially--disclosed by the company.
Sailors v. Northern States Power Co., 4 F.3d
610, 613 (8th Cir.1993) (quoting
Acme Propane, Inc. v. Tenexco, Inc.,
844 F.2d 1317, 1323 (7th Cir.1988))
(emphasis added in Sailors); see also Basic,
485 U.S. at 248-49, 108 S.Ct. at 992-93
(presumption of fraud rebutted when market
has access to accurate information); Raab, 4
F.3d at 289 ("defendant's
Page 213 failure to disclose material information may
be excused where that information has been
made credibly available to the market by
other sources") (quoting
In re Apple Computer Sec. Lit., 886 F.2d
1109, 1115 (9th Cir.1989)). Compare
Malone, 26 F.3d at 478 (company never
disclosed the actual return of products
booked and reported as sold, even though
this handling of "sales" violated Financial
Accounting Standards and Generally Accepted
Accounting Principles).
With regard to Fort Orange,
Hillson challenges the assertions, also
contained in the August 11 statements, that
the rebuilding of the Fort Orange paper
machine was "on schedule," which, according
to Adage's May statements, meant "scheduled
for August." Hillson does not allege that
Adage made any representations as to how
long the rebuilding of the paper machine
would take, or that the rebuilding would be
problem free. Rather, Hillson's only claim
is that there was "no reasonable basis" for
the "on schedule" statements of August 11,
given that, as Adage acknowledged three
months later in its third quarter report:
[W]e started planning three years ago to
install a new forming section during the
1992 annual two week maintenance shut down.
Unfortunately the installation took longer
than planned and we were not only out of
operation at the paper mill for two weeks in
August but also only running at half
capacity during the month of September.
As the district court recognized,
the "on schedule" statements refer to
specific, ongoing projects, not general
financial projections, like most of the
statements in Raab. They are very similar in
substance and timing to one of the Raab
statements. In Raab, the company in March 30
and April 23 press releases stated that
lower first quarter earnings "resulted
primarily from administrative delays" in the
award of certain government contracts, but
that "conditions in the 1st quarter are
temporary and that the results during the
remainder of ... 1992 should be in line with
analysts' current projections." 4 F.3d at
288. The prediction as to the delay in
government contracts, like the "on schedule"
prediction here, failed to materialize.
Although "predictions about earnings for the
latter three quarters of 1992 proved
incorrect," we concluded that "hindsight
does not establish fraud." Id. at 291. That
conclusion is also compelled here.
Just as the stockholders in Raab
did not allege "sufficient nonconclusory
facts" showing that the company did not
believe the "temporary delay" statement was
"accurate at the time" it was made, id. at
290, Hillson did not allege facts showing
that Adage did not believe the "on schedule"
statement was "accurate at the time" it was
made. Indeed, Hillson did not allege any
facts indicating that the installation was
not actually "on schedule" as of August 11,
1992, let alone any facts that would
indicate that on or before August 11 Adage
knew, or had reason to know, that the
installation would actually be delayed.
"[A]n inability to foresee the future does
not constitute fraud."
Eckstein v. Balcor Film Investors, 8 F.3d
1121, 1132 (7th Cir.1993);
Denny v. Barber, 576 F.2d at 470.
Moreover, the "on schedule"
statement was not material. The role of the
materiality requirement is not to "attribute
to investors a childlike simplicity" but
rather to determine whether a " 'reasonable
investor' would have considered the omitted
information significant at the time." Basic,
485 U.S. at 232-34, 108 S.Ct. at 983-85. A
"reasonable investor" knows that a capital
improvement project may run into unforeseen
problems and delays and would not have
considered a statement explaining this to
have been "significant." See Raab, 4 F.3d at
291 (no duty to disclose information of
common knowledge);
Wielgos v. Commonwealth Edison Co., 892 F.2d
509, 515 (7th Cir.1989) (no duty to
disclose Murphy's Law or Peter Principle);
Borow, 829 F.Supp. at 834 (investors
understand development of new product may
run into snags resulting in delay).
7 It is "not a violation
of any securities law to fail to disclose
Page 214 a result that is obvious even to a person
with only an elementary understanding of the
stock market."
Zerman v. Ball, 735 F.2d 15, 21 (2d
Cir.1984) (quoting
Vaughn v. Teledyne, Inc.,
628 F.2d 1214, 1220 (9th Cir.1980)).
8
In its second quarter report
issued on August 11, the company also
reported record second quarter and first six
months results. Hillson does not allege that
the report of these past results was in any
way false or misleading. It does challenge a
statement in the quarterly report that
"Adage is in the midst of an excellent year
.... [w]e are on track to exceed 1990, our
record year for net income," and, in the
press release issued the same day, that
record first-half sales and profits were
"keeping the company on track toward
reaching its previously forecast goal of
record full-year profits." Relying on
Virginia Bankshares v. Sandberg, Hillson
claims that these "on track" statements were
"expressions of belief or opinion as to
current facts," made without any reasonable
basis.
To the extent that they were
expressions of belief as to current facts,
the August "on track" statements clearly had
a reasonable basis. Adage's first half
results were in fact record-breaking,
providing more than a reasonable basis for
the belief that the company was "on track"
for a record-breaking year. To the extent
that the "on target" statements were
addressed to the third and fourth quarters,
they were not expressions of belief as to
current facts, but rather expressions of
belief as to uncertain future performance,
the very sort of statements that we held in
Raab did not lend themselves to the Sandberg
analysis. See Raab, 4 F.3d at 290; see also
Eckstein, 8 F.3d at 1132 ("intentions and
beliefs are 'facts' " for purposes of the
securities laws only when "they are open to
objective verification"). Indeed, in Raab we
discussed why such predictions of future
growth cannot constitute the basis for
claims under the securities laws:
Predictions of future growth ... will
almost always prove to be wrong in
hindsight. If a company predicts twenty-five
percent growth, that is simply the company's
best guess as to how the future will play
out. As a statistical matter, twenty percent
and thirty percent growth are both nearly as
likely as twenty-five. If growth proves less
than predicted, buyers will sue; if growth
proves greater, sellers will sue. Imposing
liability would put companies in a whipsaw,
with a lawsuit almost a certainty. Such
liability would deter companies from
discussing their prospects, and the
securities markets would be deprived of the
information those predictions offer. We
believe that this is contrary to the goal of
full disclosure underlying the securities
laws....
Raab, 4 F.3d at 290.
Hillson seeks to distinguish Raab
because "of the abbreviated time frame in
which the events in the Adage case were
predicted to occur." Thus, it asserts that
Adage had no reasonable basis for making the
"on-track" statements six weeks into the
third quarter, in which the ultimate results
(not reported until November 13, some three
months later) were poor. There is nothing in
Raab (or Malone) that suggests a prediction
of future growth ceases to be a prediction
of future growth simply because it is made
six weeks rather than six months in advance.
Indeed, contrary to Hillson's assertions, as
explained above, the timing of the
"temporary delay" statement found not to be
actionable in Raab is similar (although not
identical) to the timing of the "on track"
statements here: three weeks into the second
quarter, the company in Raab issued a
statement, which ultimately proved to be
inaccurate, that the delay would be
temporary and that results during that
quarter and the remainder of the year
"should be in line with analyst's
projections." Id. at 288 (emphasis added).
It may be that under certain
circumstances, the timing of a prediction
may contribute to its materiality, making it
more likely that a reasonable investor would
rely
Page 215 on it in making investment decisions.
Although there is scant authority on this
point, it seems clear that an inference from
timing alone is not sufficient, without
additional supporting facts and
circumstances, to withstand the strict
requirements of Rule 9(b).
Fox v. Equimark Corp., 782 F.Supp. 295, 300
(W.D.Pa.1991) (although reversal of
fortune came less than three weeks after
release of optimistic annual report,
complaint dismissed because "the mere
implication of fraud made from the timing of
public statements is not enough to meet
9(b)'s particularity requirement for
pleading fraud"); In re Healthco Int'l Inc.
Sec. Lit., 777 F.Supp. 109, 115 (D.
Mass.1991) (complaint dismissed even though
proxy statement issued a week after end of
fourth quarter failed to disclose company's
poor fourth quarter and its impact on
possible merger); Steiner v. Shawmut Nat'l
Corp., 766 F.Supp. 1236, 1246-47
(D.Conn.1991) ("complaint alleges only in a
most sketchy fashion circumstances which
would give rise to an inference of fraud"
where timing of statements is sole basis for
allegation) (quoting Ross v. A.H. Robins,
607 F.2d 545, 558 (2d Cir.1979), cert.
denied, 446 U.S. 946, 100 S.Ct. 2175, 64
L.Ed.2d 802 (1980));
Driscoll v. Landmark Bank for Sav., 758
F.Supp. 48, 52-53 (D.Mass.1991)
("inference one may draw from the timing" of
public statements not sufficient under 9(b)
even though reported loss in earnings
closely followed bank's optimistic
statements);
Salit v. Centerbank, 767 F.Supp. 429, 431
(D.Conn.1990) (where corporation on
November 29 reaffirmed its intention to
maintain its dividend, yet two weeks later
chief executive officer resigned and less
than two months later corporation announced
it would add $40 million to loan loss
reserves in its fourth quarter and would not
pay its fourth quarter dividend, complaint
alleging fraud dismissed because it
contained "no particulars as to the respect
in which ... the statements are fraudulent
and presents no basis for [a] belief that
the defendants were engaging in fraud").
9
Indeed, timing has only been
considered significant in cases in which
there were circumstances other than timing
that may have justified investor reliance,
such as where a company has made specific
dollar predictions or a number of very
positive predictions, and in which there
were allegations of specific evidence, other
than timing, demonstrating that those
predictions had no factual basis. See, e.g.,
Goldman v. Belden,
754 F.2d 1059 (2d
Cir.1985);
Marx v. Computer Sciences Corp.,
507 F.2d 485 (9th Cir.1974). Thus, in both
Goldman and Marx, on which Hillson heavily
relies, there were allegations of specific
evidence, other than timing, that those
predictions had no factual bases, and in
Marx, 507 F.2d at 488, the company projected
$105 million in gross revenues and $1 per
share in net income, whereas in Goldman, 754
F.2d at 1069, the company was alleged to
have made "a series of very positive
predictions as to probable success."
The two "on track" statements
here were neither specific dollar
predictions like those in Marx, nor did they
constitute a "series of very positive
predictions" like those in Goldman. Even
more significantly, Hillson's complaint,
unlike those in Marx and Goldman, alleges no
facts, other than timing, demonstrating that
Adage lacked a reasonable basis for its "on
track" statements. Hillson now argues that
Allister's underperformance, which had been
known to Adage for some time, provides such
facts, thereby casting doubt on the
reliability of the "on track" statements. Of
course, such assertions must be alleged in
the complaint; they cannot simply be raised
in argument. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b).
Moreover, the undisputed facts are that, as
Adage acknowledged in several previous
public filings, Allister had been
underperforming for three years prior
Page 216 to the August, 1992 "on track" statements,
and that even with that underperformance
Adage managed to have two record-breaking
quarters in the first half of 1992. Thus,
there is no reason why, in the minds of
Adage's management in August, 1992,
Allister's historical underperformance
should have cast any doubt on Adage's
ability to continue "on track" for two more
record-breaking quarters in the last half of
1992.
The final two statements
challenged by Hillson were made in November
and December of 1992. In Adage's third
quarter report, issued on November 13, 1992,
Cahill explained in some detail the
company's poor third quarter results,
including the difficulties with Allister and
Fort Orange, and then concluded:
With Fort Orange back operating at
improved rates, Niagara Cold Drawn and RedGo
Properties performing exceptionally well,
Relm showing significant improvements over
1990 and 1991 and reduced costs at Allister,
we should have an excellent fourth quarter
and see significant improvements during
1993.
On December 15, two weeks before
the end of the fourth quarter, the Wall
Street Journal reported that:
Adage Inc. expects to have a better
fourth quarter and year in sales and overall
net income than a year ago, said Robert H.
Cahill, president. Calling 1992 a transition
year, Mr. Cahill said 1993 would be "a very
good year" for Adage.
The article further stated that
"[t]he executive is looking for 1992 sales
of about $100 million and 1993 sales of
about $110 million."
The experienced trial judge held
that these statements were "too vague and
indefinite to be anything more than loose
non-actionable predictions." The statements
are obviously not guarantees. See Malone, 26
F.3d at 479. Nor are they "hard statements
of corporate operations and performance for
the near term," as Hillson argues. Rather,
they are replete with the language of future
prediction ("should have an excellent fourth
quarter" and "expects to have a better
fourth quarter") rather than present fact. A
statement is only material when there is a
substantial likelihood that a reasonable
investor would consider it "significant,"
Basic, 485 U.S. at 240, 108 S.Ct. at 988,
and a "reasonable" investor is not
necessarily a "prudent" or "conservative"
investor. Texas Gulf Sulphur Co., 401 F.2d
at 849. Nevertheless, Hillson claims that
these statements, like the August "on track"
statements, are expressions of opinion as to
current facts that were false and for which
Adage lacked any "reasonable basis." As with
the "on track" statements, Hillson relies
heavily on the timing of the statements. The
timing of the December statement, two weeks
before the end of the fourth quarter and
fiscal year, does give us pause. However,
even if we were to hold timing
alone--without circumstances involving
specific dollar projections or a "series" of
very optimistic projections--is sufficient
to make these otherwise indefinite
statements material (something no court has
yet done), Hillson still must state its
allegations regarding Adage's assertedly
fraudulent misstatements of material fact
with particularity.
On close examination, it is clear
that the November and December statements
are, in large part, totally accurate. The
only portion of the November report that is
purportedly false is: "[w]ith Fort Orange
back operating" and other "improvements over
1990 and 1991 and reduced costs at Allister,
we should have an excellent fourth
quarter...." The allegedly false portion of
the December press account is the statement
that Adage "expects to have a better fourth
quarter and year in sales and overall net
income than a year ago." In fact, during the
fourth quarter of 1992, the company
ultimately reported sales of $25 million, an
increase over 1991 fourth quarter sales of
$18 million and over 1992 third quarter
sales of $24 million, and income of
$231,000, a decrease of $97,000 over that
reported during the fourth quarter of 1991
but an increase of $384,000, or more than
250%, over the 1992 third quarter loss of
$153,000. For the year the company reported
sales of $97 million against $75 million in
sales in 1991, and net income of $1,089,000,
a 75% increase over its 1991 net income of
$622,000. Thus, fourth quarter net income
exceeded that of the third quarter; fourth
quarter sales, annual sales, and annual net
Page 217 income exceeded that of 1991; and 1992 sales
were "about $100 million." Accordingly, with
regard to most indicia, Adage's 1992 fourth
quarter was indeed "excellent," as predicted
in the November statement, and the year was
indisputably "better ... in sales and
overall income than a year ago," as
predicted in the December statement;
furthermore, 1992 sales were "about $100
million," as also predicted in the December
statement.
The November and December
statements are thus inaccurate only to the
extent they predicted 1992 fourth quarter
income would surpass that realized in the
fourth quarter of the previous year. The
November statement does not specify whether
the hoped for "excellent fourth quarter" is
to be evaluated by comparing the fourth
quarter's results to those of the quarter
immediately preceding it or to the fourth
quarter of the previous year. Nor does the
complaint allege that there is any
invariable rule in this regard.
Capri Optics Profit Sharing v. Digital
Equipment Corp.,
950 F.2d 5, 10 (1st
Cir.1991) (stockholder asserts correct
comparison is with immediately preceding
quarter and not with comparable quarter of
previous year). It is similarly unclear
whether "better fourth quarter" in the
December statement means "better" than the
third quarter or "better" than the fourth
quarter of the previous year. Although the
Wall Street Journal column headline, which
does not purport to quote Cahill, states
that "Adage Expects Quarter and Year to
Improve Upon 1991 Results," the article
itself can certainly be read as stating only
that fourth quarter sales "and overall net
income" for the year were expected to be
better than the previous year, which they
were.
10
Even if the November and December
statements are read as predictions that
income in the fourth quarter of 1992 would
surpass that in the fourth quarter of 1991,
they are not actionable because Hillson
fails to allege facts showing that the
company did not believe these predictions
were "accurate at the time [they were
made]." Raab, 4 F.3d at 290. Rather,
Hillson's sole allegation on this point is
that "the Company made material
misrepresentations in the November 13 and
December 15 statements concerning 1992
fourth quarter earnings in the face of
directly contrary information, known only to
it, that 1992 fourth quarter net income and
earnings per share would represent but a
fraction of those levels for the same period
in 1991." The complaint alleges no facts
indicating that Adage or its representatives
knew in advance about its disappointing
fourth quarter results.
In re Healthco, 777 F.Supp. at 115 n. 9
(plaintiffs averred no facts as to how
defendants' accounting system would or
should have made them aware of any concrete
financial figures for the fourth quarter
before February 25, 1991, when Healthco
announced its expected losses for the fourth
quarter). Nor does it allege what other
"directly contrary information" was
available at the time. Thus the complaint
utterly fails to allege facts indicating
Adage lacked a reasonable basis for its
November and December predictions. See
Greenstone, 975 F.2d at 25-26 (dismissing
complaint that alleged negative event should
have been anticipated in an earlier
disclosure because a "general averment" that
from negative event or poor performance one
can infer earlier knowledge of that event or
poor performance "without more, will not
do") (Breyer, J.).
In its memorandum in the district
court and again on appeal, Hillson argues,
as it did with regard to the August "on
track" statements, that the "critical
problems at Allister" provide such facts and
hence constitute such
Page 218
"directly contrary information known only"
to Adage. However, as explained above,
argument is no substitute for allegations in
the complaint and, furthermore, it is
undisputed that (as Adage acknowledged in
public filings in March, 1992) Allister had
been underperforming for years prior to the
November and December statements, losing
almost $1.5 million in 1991, yet Adage's
first two quarters of 1992 were nevertheless
record-breaking. Accordingly, there is no
reason why Allister's "critical problems"
would necessarily have made Adage management
aware, even in November and December, that
the results of the fourth quarter of 1992
would not exceed that of the fourth quarter
of 1991.
Moreover, it is simply not true
that Allister's problems were "known only
to" Adage at the time of the November and
December statements.
11
Although there is no discussion of Allister
in the short Wall Street Journal article
that appeared in December, by that time
Adage itself had publicly disclosed
Allister's problems on at least four
separate occasions in 1992. In addition to
the company's 1991 annual report and Form
10K, filed in March of 1992, Adage detailed
Allister's problems in the November 4 press
release, which focused exclusively on
Allister, and in the November 13 report
itself, which further explained:
Allister has been underperforming
for more than two years. The third quarter
witnessed additional erosion of margins and
we realized that our investment in a higher
level of sales activity was not producing
the planned results. Consequently, on 30
October 1992 I effected a major management
change removing nine recently appointed
senior and middle management personnel and
installed myself as President of the
subsidiary. The management team that is now
at the helm has been with Allister for a
number of years.
Many of you may know that I was
President of Allister from 1980 through
1988. As a result, I am very familiar with
the operation and markets it serves.
The management change will
produce annual savings of $825,000. The task
ahead is to regain the confidence of our
customers, improve margins and continually
reduce costs. I will do my best. Allister's
former facilities in Tennessee have been
sold and we will achieve additional savings
by the elimination of taxes, interest and
depreciation. We also expect a significant
improvement in quality in the products
produced by Relm.
There are two other
considerations that lead us to conclude that
the November and December statements were
not materially misleading. The first is that
they contained cautionary language. In the
November report Adage not only discussed
Allister's problems and the Fort Orange
delays in detail,
12
but in that same report the company also
disclosed its poor third quarter results and
repeatedly mentioned its hope for
"improvement." Similarly, in his brief
December statement Cahill was reportedly
expecting "improvement" and "[c]alling 1992
a transition year" in comparison to 1993,
which would be "a very good year" for Adage.
It is well recognized that statements that
include such cautionary language are usually
"not the stuff of which securities fraud
claims are made."
Romani v. Shearson Lehman Hutton, 929 F.2d
875, 879 (1st Cir.1991) (quoting
Luce v. Edelstein, 802 F.2d 49, 56 (2d
Cir.1986)); see also In re Donald J.
Trump
Page 219 Casino Sec. Lit., 7 F.3d 357, 364 (3d
Cir.1993) (recognizing "well-established
principle that a statement or omission must
be considered in context, so that
accompanying statements may render it
immaterial as a matter of law"). Compare
Goldman, 754 F.2d at 1068 (absence of any
"note of caution" supports conclusion that
statements were actionable).
Finally, materiality depends
"upon an evaluation of the magnitude of the
event, discounted by the improbability of
occurrence," 2 Thomas Lee Hazen, Treatise on
the Law of Securities Regulation Sec. 13-5
at 90-91 (2d ed.1990), and the magnitude of
the event is measured "in light of the
totality of the company activity." Basic,
485 U.S. at 238, 108 S.Ct. at 987. Adage's
1992 fourth quarter net income was $231,000
($97,000 less than the previous fourth
quarter) on revenues of $25 million. Even if
the November and December statements are
read as predictions that the company would
surpass the net income achieved in the
fourth quarter of the previous year, the
difference between the company's predicted
income (approximately 1.4% of revenues, or
$330,000) and its delivered income (only .9%
of revenues, or $231,000) was only .5% of
total revenues. This difference is hardly
material.
IV.
In the alternative, Hillson
contends that Adage had a duty to update or
correct its quarterly reports and press
releases, even if they were accurate when
made, as soon as it became apparent that the
assertions or predictions in them were
inaccurate. "In order for there to be
liability under 10b-5 for omissions or
nondisclosure, however, a duty to speak must
exist."
Walker v. Action Indus., 802 F.2d 703, 706
(4th Cir.1986), cert. denied, 479 U.S.
1065, 107 S.Ct. 952, 93 L.Ed.2d 1000 (1987).
"Silence, absent a duty to disclose, is not
misleading." Basic, 485 U.S. at 238 n. 17,
108 S.Ct. at 987-88 n. 17. Assuming that
there can ever be a "duty to update," there
was no such duty here.
The statements at issue here were
predictions, neither material under the
federal securities laws nor pled with
sufficient particularity to allege a claim
for fraud. There is no duty to update such
statements on the basis of subsequent
events.
In re Time Warner Inc. Sec. Litigation, 9
F.3d 259, 267 (2d Cir.1993) (statements
"lack the sort of definite positive
projections that might require later
correction [and] suggest only the hope of
any company, embarking on [strategic
alliance] talks with multiple partners, that
the talks would go well").
13
Liability under Sec. 10(b) and Rule 10b-5
stems from an omission or misrepresentation
of material fact upon which a reasonable
investor might have relied; where there has
been no such omission or misrepresentation,
there can be no further obligation to update
because, almost by definition, such
disclosure would not significantly alter the
total mix of available information. To
require Adage continually to correct and
modify its projections would inevitably
discourage the types of disclosure the
securities laws seek to encourage. See Raab,
4 F.3d at 290. As we explained in Walker, in
determining whether a corporation need ever
disclose economic projections:
Because of the frequency and volatility
of these projections, the imposition of a
duty to disclose them would have required
virtually constant statements by [the
issuer] in order not to mislead investors.
Under these circumstances, we deem the
projection disclosures urged by [appellant]
to be impractical, if not unreasonable.
Walker, 802 F.2d at 710.
V.
We have carefully considered each
of Hillson's arguments and, after applying
the controlling
Page 220 legal principles, rejected each. At first
blush, those principles may seem, as a
matter of policy, to require too much of a
plaintiff in a securities case. On
reflection, however, we believe that they
strike an entirely appropriate balance.
Plaintiffs who can allege they have been
injured by reliance on fraudulent
misstatements or omissions of material
current facts can state a cause of action.
Those, like Hillson, who can only allege
injury from purported reliance on future
projections that did not prove accurate and
so for this reason assertedly must be
fraudulent, cannot. These are, to be sure,
rigorous requirements that do, and will
continue to, eliminate many claims at a
preliminary stage. This seems justified,
however, because "in this type of litigation
... the mere existence of an unresolved
lawsuit has settlement value to the
plaintiff not only because of the
possibility that he may prevail on the
merits, an entirely legitimate component of
settlement value, but [also] because of the
threat of extensive discovery and disruption
of normal business practices...."
Blue Chip Stamps v. Manor Drug Stores, 421
U.S. 723, 742-43, 95 S.Ct. 1917, 1928-29, 44
L.Ed.2d 539 (1975). As we noted in Raab,
imposing liability on companies for
predictions of future growth, which are
often and inevitably wrong, would lead to
the further proliferation of lawsuits
14 and would be contrary
to the "goal of full disclosure underlying
the securities laws." Raab, 4 F.3d at 290.
Accordingly, we are satisfied that the
result reached here is a correct application
of both the law and appropriate public
policy.
AFFIRMED.
1 Section 10(b) provides:
It shall be unlawful for any person,
directly or indirectly, by the use of any
means or instrumentality of interstate
commerce or of the mails or of any facility
of any national securities exchange--
(b) To use or employ, in connection with
the purchase or sale of any security
registered on a national securities exchange
or any security not so registered, any
manipulative or deceptive device or
contrivance in contravention of such rules
and regulations as the Commission may
prescribe as necessary or appropriate in the
public interest or for the protection of
investors.
15 U.S.C. Sec. 78j.
2 Rule 10b-5 provides:
It shall be unlawful for any person,
directly or indirectly, by the use of any
means or instrumentality of interstate
commerce, or of the mails or of any facility
of any national securities exchange,
(a) To employ any device, scheme, or
artifice to defraud,
(b) To make any untrue statement of a
material fact or to omit to state a material
fact necessary in order to make the
statements made, in the light of the
circumstances under which they were made,
not misleading, or
(c) To engage in any act, practice, or
course of business which operates or would
operate as a fraud or deceit upon any
person, in connection with the purchase or
sale of any security.
17 C.F.R. Sec. 240.10b-5 (1992).
3 Although the existence of the
Contingent Share Agreement is ultimately not
relevant to our decision here, we note that
the per share price of Adage's common stock
never--at anytime--approached the levels
contemplated by the Contingent Share
Agreement ($9 per share for ninety days)
during the purported class period.
4 In an unpublished opinion we affirmed
dismissal "on the reasoning of the district
court." 27 F.3d 562 (4th Cir.1994).
5
Indeed, in Raab v. General Physics Corp., 4
F.3d 286, 289 n. 1 (4th Cir.1993), we
expressly so stated, noting that in Cooke we
"had no reason to address: (i) whether the
complaint satisfied Rule 9(b)'s pleading
requirements; (ii) whether soft puffing
statements are actionable in themselves; or
(iii) whether a company can be liable for
third party opinions and statements."
Examination of the materiality or misleading
nature of the statements was, of course,
unnecessary to our holding in Cooke because,
although an "appellate court has the power
to determine independently whether summary
judgment may be upheld on an alternative
ground where the basis chosen by the
district court is erroneous," it need not do
so.
Ross v. Communications Satellite Corp., 759
F.2d 355, 363 (4th Cir.1985), rev'd sub
nom. on other grounds,
Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins, 490 U.S. 228,
109 S.Ct. 1775, 104 L.Ed.2d 268 (1989);
see also Charbonnages de
France v. Smith, 597 F.2d 406, 416 n. 9
(4th Cir.1979) (appellate court can affirm
grant of summary judgment "at least [on] any
alternative grounds that had been presented
both to the district court and on appeal so
that the nonmoving party has had fair
opportunity to contest them at both
levels");
Paskaly v. Seale, 506 F.2d 1209, 1211 n.
4 (9th Cir.1974) (appellate court can affirm
grant of summary judgment "on any ground
supported by the record, provided the
parties have had the opportunity to discuss
it in their briefs" in the appellate court).
There was no discussion in the appellate
briefs in Cooke of whether the statements
there were material or misleading.
6 Although the losses reported by Adage
in its 1991 annual report and 10K were not
attributed to Allister per se, operating
losses of $1.567 million, $1.051 million,
and $25,000 for 1991, 1990, and 1989,
respectively, were attributed to Adage's
"specialty manufacturing" industry segment,
and Allister was clearly denominated as
Adage's "specialty manufacturing group" in
Adage's reports.
7 Hillson's attempt to distinguish Raab,
Wielgos, and Borow is unpersuasive. Although
a "private construction project" was
involved here, it is common knowledge and
certainly known to reasonable investors that
such projects, like development of new
products, are invariably subject to
unanticipated delays.
8 The district court dismissed Hillson's
complaint as to the "on schedule" statement
for failure to allege any damages suffered
as a result of this statement, because the
price paid for Adage stock actually
increased within 34 days after disclosure of
the delays surrounding the installation of
the Fort Orange paper machine. We do not
base our holding on this fact but do take
note of it, as additional evidence of the
lack of materiality of the "on schedule"
statement.
9 We recognize that in most of these
cases the complaint was dismissed with leave
for the plaintiffs to amend to state their
claims with the required particularity.
These cases are nonetheless relevant because Hillson has never suggested to either the
district court or this Court that it wished
to, or could, amend its complaint to allege
its claims with more specificity. Rather,
Hillson's consistent argument throughout has
been that in its present complaint it has
"sufficiently alleged" a factual basis for
virtually all of its claims. The only
factual allegation that it seeks to add to
the complaint (and it only seeks to amend if
the absence of this fact "is a material
fault in the pleadings") is the allegation
that the Wall Street Journal article was
based on an interview with Cahill; that fact
is, of course, irrelevant to our decision
here.
10 It is not at all clear that "indirect
quotes taken from a newspaper reporter's
notebook" satisfy the strictures of Rule
9(b), Ferber v. Travelers Corp., 785 F.Supp. 1101,
1108 (D.Conn.1991), or that liability
with respect to statements made in a
newspaper article is appropriate when a
defendant lacks control over the article.
See Raab, 4 F.3d at 288;
Elkind v. Liggett & Myers, Inc., 635 F.2d
156, 163 (2d Cir.1980) (no liability
absent allegations that company
"sufficiently entangled itself with the
analysts' forecasts to render those
predictions 'attributable to it' "). Adage
argues that it lacked control over the
contents of the December Wall Street Journal
article and so cannot be held responsible
for its contents. Hillson counters that the
article was derived from an interview with
Cahill, and so Adage should be held
responsible for these statements. We need
not resolve this issue here but do note that
Hillson does not attempt to rely on the
headline of the article, at least implicitly
conceding that Adage had no control over the
headline.
11 For this reason, Hillson's alternative
argument that Adage omitted these allegedly
material facts from its November and
December statements is meritless. See
Sailors, 4 F.3d at 613; Raab, 4 F.3d at 289.
12 In its reply brief, Hillson claims for
the first time that the "protracted delays
at Fort Orange and the combined negative
impact" of those delays, together with
Allister's problems, also constituted
"directly contrary information known only"
to Adage, which would indicate that Adage
lacked a reasonable basis for its November
and December predictions. Since these
arguments were never made below, they are
not properly before us now.
Fowler v. Land Management Groupe, Inc., 978
F.2d 158, 164 (4th Cir.1992); see also
Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b) ("circumstances
constituting fraud or mistake shall be
stated with particularity ... in all
averments of fraud or mistake") (emphasis
added). Moreover, the Fort Orange delays
were described in the November 13 report in
almost as much detail as the problems at
Allister. Thus, like the problems at
Allister, the delays at Fort Orange and the
cumulative impact of both the delays and
Allister's problems were hardly information
"known only" to Adage.
13 Dicta in some cases can be read to
suggest a possible duty to update even
immaterial statements in that those cases do
not expressly limit the asserted duty to
update to statements that are material. See,
e.g., Backman v. Polaroid Corp., 910 F.2d 10,
16-17 (1st Cir.1990);
In re Phillips Petroleum Sec. Lit., 881 F.2d
1236, 1245 (3d Cir.1989). Although
Hillson generally relies on these cases, it
does not claim that a company has a duty to
update immaterial statements. Rather, its
claim is that "a company has an affirmative
duty to publish updated information where
its prior material statement ... has become
materially misleading in light of subsequent
events" (emphasis added). Accordingly, we
need not here reach the question of whether
there can be a duty to update an immaterial
statement.
14 Recently it was reported that in 1989
cash settlements in securities class-action
suits totaled an estimated $529 million; by
1992, settlements had jumped nearly three
fold to $1.55 billion. Bruce Rubenstein,
"Cease and Desist," Corp. Legal Times, Sept.
1, 1994, at 1. |