| Page 666 6 F.3d 666
62 USLW 2226, Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P
97,770,
27 Fed.R.Serv.3d 296 D. NEUBRONNER, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Michael R. MILKEN, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 91-56314. United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit. Argued and Submitted Feb. 2, 1993.
Decided Oct. 4, 1993.
Page 667
Robert H. Bretz, Robert H. Bretz,
P.D., Marina del Rey, CA, for
plaintiff-appellant.
Steven B. Rosenfeld, Paul, Weiss,
Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, New York City,
for defendant-appellee.
Appeal from the United States
District Court for the Central District of
California.
Before: WALLACE, Chief Circuit
Judge, SNEED and HALL, Circuit Judges.
CYNTHIA HOLCOMB HALL, Circuit
Judge:
Dieter Neubronner appeals the
district court's dismissal with prejudice of
his fifth amended complaint against Michael
Milken purporting to state a cause of action
for securities law fraud under section 10(b)
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15
U.S.C. Sec. 78j(b), and Securities and
Exchange Commission Rule 10b-5, 17 C.F.R.
Sec. 240.10b-5. Neubronner alleged that
Milken engaged in "insider" trading and made
material misrepresentations in connection
with the stock of Gibralter Financial
Corporation and its wholly owned subsidiary
Gibralter Savings. Neubronner lost
approximately $7.5
Page 668 million as a result of his investments in
Gibralter securities. We have jurisdiction
over Neubronner's timely appeal pursuant to
28 U.S.C. Sec. 1291.
I. BACKGROUND
Between April 1, 1987, and
November 14, 1988, Dieter Neubronner
purchased a total of 1,235,900 shares of
Gibralter Financial Corporation's ("GFC" or
"Gibralter") common stock, which he then
sold between November 29, 1988, and February
8, 1989, for a loss of approximately $7.5
million. The value of the company's stock
had declined dramatically after GFC
announced on October 30, 1987, approximately
$230 million in losses attributable to its
real estate loans and investment portfolio.
1
In March of 1989, Neubronner
initiated this action, at first naming as
defendant Drexel Burnham Lambert, the firm
which had provided investment banking and
broker/dealer services for Gibralter, and
later adding Michael Milken, head of
Drexel's west coast office. Beginning with
Neubronner's third amended complaint, Milken
has been the only defendant in this action,
as all litigation against Drexel has been
stayed due to its bankruptcy filing.
Before filing his present
complaint, Neubronner failed five times to
survive motions to dismiss. Each time, the
district court advised Neubronner of the
deficiencies in his complaints and directed
him to plead his claims with greater
specificity. For example, in its order
dismissing the second amended complaint, the
district court stated that Neubronner "still
fails to allege with any specificity when
and how defendants learned about the alleged
'inside information,' what the inside
information was, when defendants traded on
it, who traded on it, what Mr. Milken's role
was in the scheme--and, for some of the
allegations ..., when such information was
publicly released." The court instructed
Neubronner to plead specific facts to
support any allegations made on information
and belief. This fatal flaw remained
uncorrected, and the district court repeated
the admonition quoted above in its ultimate
order dismissing the fifth amended
complaint.
In its order dismissing the third
amended complaint, the court gave Neubronner
"leave to file one more amended complaint,"
and warned that if the next complaint was
insufficient, the "action may be dismissed
with prejudice." In dismissing the fourth
amended complaint, the district court gave
Neubronner "leave for a final time to file
an amended complaint which is limited to a
claim of inside trading on the seven
established dates of contemporaneous trading
or which pleads additional instances with
specificity."
2
Finally, in dismissing the fifth amended
complaint, the district court found once
again that Neubronner failed to satisfy the
contemporaneous trading requirement and
failed to plead insider trading with
sufficient particularity under Federal Rule
of Civil Procedure 9(b). The court observed
that the complaint "still alleges that
insider trading took place over a three year
period ... despite this Court's instructions
to plead 'particular days' of
contemporaneous trading." The court further
noted that Neubronner again failed "to plead
the defendant's role in the alleged insider
trading with sufficient particularity under
Rule 9(b)." In addition, the court dismissed
Neubronner's claims concerning alleged
misrepresentations--stated for the first
time in the fifth amended complaint--as
time-barred and for failure to satisfy Rule
9(b).
Page 669
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review de novo a district
court's dismissal of a complaint. Sun
Savings and Loan
Ass'n v. Dierdorff, 825 F.2d 187, 191 (9th
Cir.1987). "A complaint should not be
dismissed for failure to state a cause of
action 'unless it appears beyond doubt that
plaintiff can prove no set of facts in
support of his claim which would entitle him
to relief.' " Id. (citation omitted). We
construe all allegations in the complaint
favorably to the plaintiff. Id.
III. DISCUSSION
A. Contemporaneous Trading Requirement
Neubronner contends that the
district court improperly required him to
plead with specificity all instances in
which he and Milken traded contemporaneously
in Gibralter securities.
3
In his fifth amended complaint, Neubronner
refers by way of example to seven specific
days on which he and Drexel traded
contemporaneously, but he does not limit his
claim of insider trading to those seven
days. Rather, he alleges generally that he
traded contemporaneously with Milken and
Drexel throughout the "time period covered
by this complaint." Neubronner defines that
time period as the three-year span between
January 1, 1986, and December 31, 1988.
Milken argues that
contemporaneous trading is one of the
primary "circumstances constituting fraud"
when a plaintiff asserts an insider trading
claim, and therefore must be pleaded with
particularity under Federal Rule of Civil
Procedure 9(b).
4
He suggests that this is a sensible rule
because otherwise any investor who lost
money could sue any insider who ever traded
in the same security in the hope that
discovery would reveal matching trade dates.
This court has not previously
established a contemporaneous trading
requirement for implied private causes of
action under section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5.
5 However, the
district courts in this circuit have
followed the Second Circuit's interpretation
of the requirement.
Wilson v. Comtech Telecommunications Corp.,
648 F.2d 88 (2d Cir.1981), the Second
Circuit held that any duty of disclosure on
the part of insiders trading in the open
market "is owed only to those investors
trading contemporaneously with the insider;
noncontemporaneous traders do not require
the protection of the 'disclose or abstain'
rule because they do not suffer the
disadvantage of trading with someone who has
superior access to information." Id. at
94-95. In reaching this conclusion, the
court commented that to "extend the period
of liability well beyond the time of the
insider's
Page 670 trading simply because disclosure was never
made could make the insider liable to all
the world." Id. at 94. In Wilson, the court
held that trades approximately one month
apart were not contemporaneous, and that
because the plaintiff did not trade
contemporaneously with the insiders he had
no standing to sue them. Id. at 95. See
alsoShapiro v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner
& Smith, Inc.,
495 F.2d 228, 237 (2d
Cir.1974) (trades within a four day period
were contemporaneous).
In following Wilson, one district
court has noted that the duration of a
"contemporaneous" period is not fixed,
"although the courts have interpreted the
'contemporaneous trading' requirement quite
strictly" and have found the requirement not
met if the plaintiff's trades occurred more
than a few days apart from the defendant's.
Alfus v. Pyramid Technology Corp., 745
F.Supp. 1511, 1522 (N.D.Cal.1990). The
district court in Alfus found that the
plaintiff failed to satisfy the
contemporaneous trading requirement, and
therefore lacked standing to bring a private
insider trading claim, where she alleged a
four and one-half month period of insider
trading. Id. at 1523. See alsoIn
re Genentech, Inc. Securities Litigation,
1989 WL 201577, * 6 (N.D.Cal.1989)
(following Second Circuit, held plaintiff
did not satisfy contemporaneous trading
requirement where complaint alleged only
that plaintiffs purchased Genentech stock on
unidentified days between March 1987 and
September 1988);
In re Verifone Securities Litigation, 784
F.Supp. 1471, 1489 (N.D.Cal.1992)
(trades 14 days and more apart not
contemporaneous). Cf.In
re Worlds of Wonder Securities Litigation,
1990 WL 260675, * 5 (N.D.Cal.1990)
(court cited Second Circuit's Wilson rule
but declined to address contemporaneous
trading issue noting that "the status of the
law is unclear on the issue").
We now adopt the Second Circuit's
approach in Wilson and hold that the scope
of liability for insider trading claims
under section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 is
confined to persons who traded
contemporaneously with the insider. We
further hold that contemporaneous trading is
necessarily a "circumstance constituting
fraud" because an insider can not be liable
to a private party under section 10(b) and
Rule 10b-5 without having traded
contemporaneously; thus, contemporaneous
trading must be pleaded with particularity
under Rule 9(b).
As the Wilson court explained,
the contemporaneous trading rule ensures
that only private parties who have traded
with someone who had an unfair advantage
will be able to maintain insider trading
claims. Neubronner does not propose an
alternative rule, but instead suggests he
should be permitted to allege generally that
contemporaneous trading occurred, and then
amend his complaint following discovery of
any particular instances of contemporaneous
trading. In light of the obvious need to
protect parties from having to defend suits
against plaintiffs who may be merely
guessing that contemporaneous trading
occurred, and in the absence of an
alternative rule for limiting the scope of
liability, the Wilson court's reasoning is
persuasive. We do not determine in this case
the exact contours of "contemporaneous
trading" because under the approach outlined
in Wilson, Neubronner's allegation of a
three-year period of contemporaneous trading
is clearly insufficiently specific to
establish contemporaneity. The delineation
of how far apart in time trades may be
without being too far apart to satisfy the
contemporaneous trading requirement is best
worked out in cases much closer to a
probable borderline than this one.
Neubronner argues that
application of the contemporaneous trading
rule to this case would be unfair and
unrealistic because the district court
refused to allow him to obtain any discovery
from Milken. He contends that it is
impossible for him to plead contemporaneous
trading with specificity without the benefit
of discovery because information regarding
Milken's trading activity is exclusively
within Milken's control. However, the single
case that Neubronner cites to support this
argument,
New England Data Services, Inc. v. Becher,
829 F.2d 286 (1st Cir.1987), is
inapposite. The First Circuit's
determination in New England Data Services
that the district court abused its
discretion in denying the plaintiff's
request for discovery in order to defeat a
motion to dismiss
Page 671 was expressly limited to the facts of that
case. The court decided that where a
plaintiff has sufficiently alleged facts
demonstrating a scheme that necessarily
involves communication, some discovery is
warranted to support allegations of mail and
wire fraud as predicate RICO acts because a
plaintiff can't possibly know of specific
phone calls and letters. Id. at 292. In the
present case, however, Neubronner has not
alleged any facts that necessarily suggest
Milken ever traded at any time in GFC common
stock, much less that raise an inference
that Milken traded contemporaneously with
Neubronner.
We do recognize, however, that
some balance must be achieved between the
need to protect defendants from having to
defend factually baseless litigation and the
need to afford plaintiffs an adequate
opportunity to develop factual bases for
legitimate claims. This court has stated
that one purpose of Rule 9(b)'s requirement
that plaintiffs plead fraud with
particularity is to "prevent[ ] the filing
of a complaint as a pretext for the
discovery of unknown wrongs."
Semegen v. Weidner, 780 F.2d 727, 731 (9th
Cir.1985). But surely we can not expect
a private plaintiff in an insider trading
case to plead with the specificity Rule 9(b)
requires without allowing some limited
opportunity for discovery.
The record reveals that the
district court did not foreclose
Neubronner's opportunity to collect facts
from Milken which would enable him to plead
contemporaneous trading with specificity,
though Neubronner did not make the most of
that opportunity. Neubronner never followed
through on a demand for document production
made in November 1989 nor on a set of
interrogatories propounded to Milken in
August 1990. In particular, he never
requested a ruling on Milken's objections to
the document demand. Later, Milken's motion
for a protective order to forestall a
deposition and document production noticed
for September 1990 as well as the
interrogatory request became moot when the
district court dismissed Neubronner's third
amended complaint.
6
Neubronner again noticed a deposition for
February 20, 1991, the day after a scheduled
hearing on Milken's motion to dismiss the
fourth amended complaint. Milken then
requested a protective order on the ground
that if the motion to dismiss was granted
the deposition issue would be moot, and if
denied, it would be oppressive and
burdensome to require him to appear any time
before his March 4, 1991, surrender to the
Federal Bureau of Prisons due to his
conviction on criminal charges. The district
court on February 19, 1991, granted Milken's
motion for a protective order and stayed his
deposition pending further court order.
Thus, the district court only prevented
Neubronner from deposing Milken until
further order, but never restricted him from
pursuing discovery through other means. The
district court's action was proper under
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(c), which
permits a district court to limit discovery
for good cause.
B. Rule 9(b) Specificity Requirement
Neubronner argues that his
allegations that Milken, in his capacity as
an investment banker for Gibralter, obtained
inside information about the company and
then used that information to trade in
Gibralter securities are sufficient to
apprise Milken of the wrongdoing with which
he is charged and therefore satisfy Rule
9(b). He asserts that his allegations enable
Milken to prepare a meaningful answer
because Milken himself knows the details of
what information he received and how he used
it.
This court has interpreted Rule
9(b) to require that "allegations of fraud
are specific enough to give defendants
notice of the particular misconduct which is
alleged to constitute the fraud charged so
that they can defend against the charge and
not just deny that they have done anything
wrong." Semegen, 780 F.2d at 731. A pleading
"is sufficient
Page 672 under Rule 9(b) if it identifies 'the
circumstances constituting fraud so that the
defendant can prepare an adequate answer
from the allegations.' "
Gottreich v. San Francisco Investment Corp.,
552 F.2d 866, 866 (9th Cir.1977)
(citation omitted); seeDeutsch v. Flannery,
823 F.2d 1361, 1365-66 (9th Cir.1987). The
complaint must specify such facts as the
times, dates, places, benefits received, and
other details of the alleged fraudulent
activity. Semegen, 780 F.2d at 731;
Gottreich, 552 F.2d at 867; seeIn
re Genentech Securities Litigation, 1990 WL
32070, * 4-5 (N.D.Cal.1990).
A reading of Neubronner's fifth
amended complaint reveals that he has not
satisfied Rule 9(b)'s demands. The only
connection that Neubronner draws between
Milken and the wrongful conduct which the
complaint charges is Neubronner's allegation
that Milken supervised and was responsible
for Drexel's Beverly Hills office, and that
he acted as an investment banker for
Gibralter. Neubronner states no specific
factual basis for his allegation that Milken
traded in GFC securities for his own
benefit.
The complaint catalogs in summary
fashion the investment banking services that
Drexel performed for GFC, as well as adverse
information about GFC's financial condition
that apparently eventually became public.
The complaint then asserts that Drexel and
Milken must have known about that
information in advance of its public
release, and therefore must have used it to
trade for their own benefit. Neubronner does
not allege specifically what information
Milken obtained, when and from whom he
obtained it, and how he used it for his own
advantage. It is difficult to imagine how
Milken could respond to the complaint other
than by generally denying that he ever
obtained any material, adverse nonpublic
information about Gibralter which he then
used to trade Gibralter securities for his
own benefit. The complaint offers no
specific facts demonstrating wrongdoing
which Milken could deny or otherwise
controvert.
Neubronner argues that his claim
falls within a recognized exception to Rule
9(b)'s particularized pleading requirement,
because the facts constituting the
circumstances of the alleged fraud are
peculiarly within the defendant's knowledge
or are readily obtainable by him. This court
has held that the general rule that
allegations of fraud based on information
and belief do not satisfy Rule 9(b) may be
relaxed with respect to matters within the
opposing party's knowledge. In such
situations, plaintiffs can not be expected
to have personal knowledge of the relevant
facts.
Wool v. Tandem Computers Inc., 818 F.2d
1433, 1439 (9th Cir.1987);
Moore v. Kayport Package Express, Inc., 885
F.2d 531, 540 (9th Cir.1989);
seeDiVittorio v. Equidyne Extractive
Industries, Inc.,
822 F.2d 1242, 1247-48 (2d
Cir.1987).
However, this exception does not
nullify Rule 9(b); a plaintiff who makes
allegations on information and belief must
state the factual basis for the belief.
Wool, 818 F.2d at 1439; Moore, 885 F.2d at
540; DiVittorio, 822 F.2d at 1247-48;
In re Worlds of Wonder Securities
Litigation,
694 F.Supp. 1427, 1433
(N.D.Cal.1988). Neubronner fails to
satisfy this relaxed version of Rule 9(b).
Indeed, Neubronner essentially admits in his
fifth amended complaint that he has alleged
no more than "suspicious circumstances";
those circumstances--i.e., that Milken was
an investment banker for Gibralter and that
Gibralter eventually sank into financial
trouble--do not constitute a sufficient
factual basis for allegations of insider
trading.
We conclude that the district
court accurately determined that Neubronner
failed to plead Milken's role in the alleged
insider trading with sufficient
particularity under Rule 9(b). Furthermore,
the district court's decision to dismiss the
fifth amended complaint with prejudice was
appropriate in light of Neubronner's
repeated failure to cure the deficiencies in
his pleadings. Courts have dismissed
complaints with prejudice in similar
situations. SeeSemegen, 780 F.2d at 731
(dismissal with prejudice where plaintiffs
failed to plead with the requisite
particularity after "repeated
opportunities"); O'Brien
v. National Property Analysts Partners,
936 F.2d 674, 675-76 (2d Cir.1991) (third
amended complaint dismissed with prejudice).
Page 673
C. Misrepresentation Claims
Neubronner half-heartedly argues
that the district court erred in dismissing
his claims of market manipulation and fraud
on the market based on allegedly false and
misleading statements in a GFC prospectus
dated April 7, 1986 (collectively referred
to as his misrepresentation claims). These
claims not only clearly fail to satisfy Rule
9(b), but they probably even fail to satisfy
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8(a)'s
requirement of a short and plain statement
of a claim showing that the plaintiff is
entitled to relief (though we need not
explore this latter point).
Neubronner's complaint does not
explain how, in purchasing GFC common stock,
he could possibly have relied on the
prospectus, which concerned an offering of
convertible debentures in which he did not
invest, and which was distributed a full
year before he purchased any GFC shares.
Moreover, he does not state the content of
any allegedly false and misleading
statements, nor precisely when and where he
obtained the false information.
SeeGottreich, 552 F.2d at 867 (must allege
time, place and content of
misrepresentations); Semegen, 780 F.2d at
731.
In addition, he provides no
factual basis for his allegation on
information and belief that Milken read and
approved the prospectus, other than his
blanket assertion that Milken was
responsible for all offerings and sales of
securities managed by Drexel's west coast
office. Nor does he otherwise attribute any
false or misleading statements to Milken or
state how Milken benefitted from the
purported misrepresentations. Neubronner
merely asserts that at some point in time he
read the prospectus, and sometime later
relied on it in deciding to purchase GFC
common stock, and that the prospectus did
not include certain negative information
about GFC's financial condition that at some
unidentified time presumably became public.
Neubronner's allegations of
misrepresentation do not satisfy the Rule
9(b) requirement that plaintiffs must plead
the circumstances constituting fraud with
particularity.
We affirm the district court's
dismissal of the misrepresentation claims on
the ground that they failed to satisfy Rule
9(b). Therefore, we need not address the
district court's additional determination
that these claims were time-barred due to
the three and one-half years that elapsed
between the October 30, 1987, public
disclosure of GFC's poor financial health
and Neubronner's first assertion of his
misrepresentation claims in his fifth
amended complaint.
IV. CONCLUSION
We affirm the district court's
dismissal with prejudice of Neubronner's
fifth amended complaint on the grounds that
Neubronner failed to specifically plead
contemporaneous trading, Milken's role in
the alleged wrongful conduct, and the
factual basis of his misrepresentation
claims. Under Rule 9(b), dismissal was
proper in these circumstances.
AFFIRMED.
1 Out of the total number of shares that
Neubronner purchased, he bought more than
one-third (specifically, 487,200 shares) for
$1.8 million after the October 30, 1987,
announcement. That announcement made public
the material adverse information which
Neubronner appears to accuse Milken of using
to his own advantage during the time when
the information was nonpublic. Neubronner
does not explain how he could have been
harmed by trading with insiders after the
negative information about Gibralter's
financial condition was disclosed.
2 In response to a discovery request
early in this litigation, Drexel provided
Neubronner with a listing of all its trades
in GFC common stock through February 2,
1988. Based on this information, Neubronner
established seven dates in May, June and
August 1987 on which he and Drexel traded
contemporaneously. Neubronner's trades on
these dates comprised a small fraction of
his total trades in GFC common stock.
3 The district court apparently accepted
that the seven established dates discussed
above satisfy the contemporaneous trading
requirement even though Neubronner's trades
on those dates were contemporaneous with
trades by Drexel for its own account, rather
than with trades by Milken himself. Possibly
this is because Neubronner claims that
Milken used inside information not only to
trade GFC shares for his own advantage, but
also to direct the trades of Drexel and
unidentified Milken family members and
business associates.
4 Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b)
provides:
In all averments of fraud or mistake, the
circumstances constituting fraud or mistake
shall be stated with particularity. Malice,
intent, knowledge, and other condition of
mind of a person may be averred generally.
(Emphasis added.)
5 In 1988, Congress enacted section 20A
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15
U.S.C. Sec. 78t-1, which expressly provides
for private suits against inside traders who
trade "contemporaneously" with private party
plaintiffs. The provision is applicable to
all actions occurring on or after November
19, 1988. However, the provision expressly
does not preempt existing remedies,
including the availability of implied causes
of action under existing law. Neubronner did
not proceed under Sec. 20A.
Congress did not define the term
"contemporaneous" as used in Sec. 20A, but
instead apparently intended to adopt the
definition "which has developed through the
case law." H.R.Rep. No. 910, 100th Cong., 2d
Sess. 27 (1988), reprinted in 1988
U.S.C.C.A.N. 6043, 6064. As examples of such
case law, the House Report cited three cases
which discuss the contemporaneous trading
requirement in the context of implied
private 10b-5 actions against insiders:
Wilson v. Comtech Telecommunications Corp.,
648 F.2d 88 (2d Cir.1981);
Shapiro v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner &
Smith, Inc.,
495 F.2d 228 (2d Cir.1974);
and O'Connor
& Associates v. Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc.,
559 F.Supp. 800 (S.D.N.Y.1983). H.R.Rep.
No. 910 at 27 n. 22. SeeIn
re Verifone Securities Litigation, 784
F.Supp. 1471, 1488-89 (N.D.Cal.1992).
6 In an affirmation in support of
Milken's motion for a protective order,
Milken's attorney stated that he offered to
make available, immediately after Milken's
sentencing in an unrelated criminal case,
information sufficient to show that neither
Milken nor any entities in which he had an
ownership interest ever traded in GFC common
stock during the period in which Neubronner
traded. Neubronner refused the offer and
instead insisted that discovery proceed
before Milken's sentencing. |