| Page 1078 70 F.3d 1078
Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 98,946, 33
Fed.R.Serv.3d 658,
95 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 8802,
95 Daily Journal D.A.R. 15,422 Max FECHT, On behalf of himself and
all others similarly
situated; Errol Marcus; Norman Cooper;
Hamilton
J. Sah, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
The PRICE COMPANY; Robert W. Price; Dennis
R. Zook;
Theodore Wallace, et al.,
Defendants-Appellees. No. 93-55541. United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit. Argued and Submitted Oct. 4, 1994.
Submission Withdrawn Oct. 20, 1994.
Resubmitted Jan. 3, 1995.
Decided Nov. 20, 1995.
Page 1079
William S. Lerach, Eric A.
Isaacson & Dennis Stewart, Milberg, Weiss,
Bershad, Hynes & Lerach, San Diego,
California, for plaintiffs-appellants.
Gerald L. McMahon, James P.
Delphey, Seltzer, Caplan, Wilkins & McMahon,
San Diego, California, for
defendants-appellees.
Appeal from the United States
District Court for the Southern District of
California.
Before: D.W. NELSON, NORRIS, and
BOGGS,
* Circuit
Judges.
WILLIAM A. NORRIS, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiffs appeal the district
court's dismissal of their securities fraud
action on the grounds that it failed to meet
the requirements of Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6)
and 9(b). We review the district court's
dismissal de novo,
Wool v. Tandem Computers Inc., 818 F.2d
1433, 1439-40 (9th Cir.1987), and
reverse and remand to the district court.
Page 1080
I
Over the course of two days in
early April, 1992, the price of the stock of
The Price Company ("Company") fell from $45
per share to $32 per share. The decline
occurred immediately after the Company
announced a drop in its net income for the
first quarter of 1992, the first
year-to-year earnings decline in the
Company's history. On the day following the
announcement, plaintiffs filed this class
action seeking damages for violations of
Secs. 10(b) and 20(a) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 ("Exchange Act"), Rule
10b-5 promulgated by the Securities and
Exchange Commission ("SEC"), and various
California laws prohibiting fraud.
In their second amended complaint
("Complaint"), plaintiffs allege that prior
to the April 2 announcement, the Company and
three of its top-ranking officers
intentionally misrepresented the financial
condition of the Company, in particular its
expansion program's prospects for enhancing
the Company's earnings. The Complaint cites
various public statements--either prepared
by the Company itself (Shareholder Reports,
Form 10-Qs, Form 10-K, newspaper interviews)
or prepared by securities analysts with the
approval and guidance of the Company--and
alleges that these statements created the
impression that the Company was successfully
expanding its retail warehouse operations
when, in fact, the Company's expansion
program was failing. Complaint, pp 27-56,
59. The Complaint asserts that these
statements were thus "false and misleading
and operated to inflate the market price of
Price Company's publicly traded securities."
Complaint p 25. The Complaint also alleges
that the Company's SEC reports were "false
and misleading because of their omission of
the material adverse information" known to
the defendants regarding the expansion
program. Complaint p 26. The district court
concluded that the allegations of 10b-5
violations and of fraud were insufficient
and dismissed the Complaint pursuant to
Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) and 9(b) without leave
to amend.
II
The district court held that the
Complaint failed to plead adequately the
first element of a 10b-5 cause of
action--that the defendant made materially
misleading statements or omissions,
Basic Inc. v. Levinson, 485 U.S. 224,
231-32, 108 S.Ct. 978, 983-84, 99 L.Ed.2d
194 (1988). After examining the full
texts of the source documents cited in the
Complaint,
1 the
district court concluded as a matter of law
that (1) the public statements were not
misleading because they included cautionary
or guarded language, and (2) the defendants'
failure to disclose the losses sustained by
the warehouses opened in the expansion
program was not a material omission because
it is the profitability of the Company as a
whole, not any one particular aspect of the
Company's operations, that is significant.
We disagree that the question whether an
omission is material or a statement is
misleading can be determined in this case as
a matter of law.
Whether an omission is "material"
is a determination that "requires delicate
assessments of the inferences a 'reasonable
shareholder' would draw from a given set of
facts and the significance of those
inferences to him, and these assessments are
peculiarly ones for the trier of fact."
TSC Indus., Inc. v. Northway, Inc., 426 U.S.
438, 450, 96 S.Ct.
Page 1081
2126, 2133, 48 L.Ed.2d 757 (1976);
United States v. Gaudin, --- U.S. ----,
----, 115 S.Ct. 2310, 2314, 132 L.Ed.2d 444
(1995) (materiality is an
"application-of-legal-standard-to-fact sort
of question ... [that] has typically been
resolved by juries");
Kaplan v. Rose, 49 F.3d 1363, 1375 (9th
Cir.1994) ("materiality" is a
"fact-specific issue[ ] which should
ordinarily be left to the trier of fact"),
cert. denied, --- U.S. ----, 116 S.Ct. 58,
133 L.Ed.2d 21 (1995). Similarly, whether a
public statement is misleading, or whether
adverse facts were adequately disclosed is a
mixed question to be decided by the trier of
fact.
Durning v. First Boston Corp., 815 F.2d
1265, 1268 (9th Cir.) (quoting TSC
Indus., 426 U.S. at 450, 96 S.Ct. at 2133,
and stating that "[l]ike materiality,
adequacy of disclosure is normally a jury
question"), cert. denied, 484 U.S. 944, 108
S.Ct. 330, 98 L.Ed.2d 358 (1987). Therefore,
only if the adequacy of the disclosure or
the materiality of the statement is "so
obvious that reasonable minds [could] not
differ" are these issues "appropriately
resolved as a matter of law." Durning, 815
F.2d at 1268; accord TSC Indus., 426 U.S. at
450, 96 S.Ct. at 2133.
The cautionary statements cited
by the district court, when considered
against the backdrop of the allegations set
forth in Paragraph 59 of the Complaint
("Price Company's Undisclosed Adverse
Information")
2--allegations
which at this stage we must accept as true,
Durning, 815 F.2d at 1267,--do not "so
obviously" render the challenged public
documents not misleading as to permit the
adequacy of the disclosure to be determined
as a matter of law.
For example, in one Report to
Shareholders, the Company states that it
"anticipates a continuation of its
accelerated expansion schedule...."
Complaint p 27. This statement, even in the
context of the Company's acknowledgment that
it "feel[s] a little more optimistic about
our near-term future than [it] did at the
end of the last quarter," which the district
court relied on as an admission that the
Company had not been too happy with the
earlier sales, could reasonably be
interpreted as conveying a level of
confidence in the continued viability of the
expansion program not borne out by the
adverse facts allegedly known to the
defendants. In another Report to
Shareholders, the Company predicted an
"overall improvement in the sales trend due
[in part] to the large number (24) of new
Price Clubs." Complaint p 32. This statement
could also reasonably be considered
misleading when, as alleged by plaintiffs,
most of the new stores were actually losing
money. The follow-up statement relied on by
the district court that "[e]arnings may not
increase at as high a rate as sales because
of the ... operating costs associated with
opening new Price Clubs," not only does not
cure, but arguably contributes to the
alleged misconception that the new stores
were increasing the Company's profitability
because it assumes an increase in earnings
and focuses only on the rate of that
increase. Thus, as these examples
illustrate, the mix of information contained
in the public documents issued by the
Company does not clearly preclude
"reasonable minds" from differing on the
question of whether they included misleading
statements.
Defendants attempt to support the
district court's resolution of the
"misleading" question as a matter of law by
relying on the "bespeaks caution" doctrine.
We have recognized that the "bespeaks
caution" doctrine "provides a mechanism by
which a court can rule as a matter of law
... that defendants' forward-looking
representations contained enough cautionary
language or risk disclosure to protect the
defendant against claims of securities
fraud."
In re Worlds of Wonder Sec. Litig., 35 F.3d
1407, 1413 (9th Cir.1994) (citation
omitted), cert. denied, --- U.S. ---- &
----, 116 S.Ct. 185 & 277, 133 L.Ed.2d 123
Page 1082
& 197 (1995). However, we have also
recognized that the "bespeaks caution"
doctrine reflects nothing more than "the
unremarkable proposition that statements
must be analyzed in context." Id. at 1414
(quoting
Rubinstein v. Collins, 20 F.3d 160, 167 (5th
Cir.1994)). In other words, the doctrine
is merely a new name for a venerable precept
that does not alter the standard for
deciding questions as a matter of law.
The "bespeaks caution" doctrine
is thus wholly consistent with our analysis
that whether a statement in a public
document is misleading may be determined as
a matter of law only when reasonable minds
could not disagree as to whether the mix of
information in the document is misleading.
Inclusion of some cautionary language is not
enough to support a determination as a
matter of law that defendants' statements
were not misleading.
Virginia Bankshares, Inc. v. Sandberg, 501
U.S. 1083, 1097, 111 S.Ct. 2749, 2760, 115
L.Ed.2d 929 (1991) ("a misleading
statement will not always lose its deceptive
edge simply by joinder with others that are
true...."). A motion to dismiss for failure
to state a claim will succeed only when the
documents containing defendants' challenged
statements include "enough cautionary
language or risk disclosure," Worlds of
Wonder, 35 F.3d at 1413 (citation omitted)
(emphasis added), that "reasonable minds"
could not disagree that the challenged
statements were not misleading. The
defendants' statements here do not meet this
requirement, and invocation of the "bespeaks
caution" doctrine cannot save the
defendants' 12(b)(6) motion.
In sum, the Complaint sets forth
public statements and omissions that
reasonable jurors could find to be
materially misleading. Neither Rule 12(b)(6)
nor the "bespeaks caution" doctrine requires
more. Therefore, the complaint alleges all
the elements of a 10b-5 cause of action and,
accordingly, the district court erred in
dismissing the Complaint for failure to
state a claim upon which relief could be
granted.
III
We now turn to the second issue
raised by the appeal: Does the complaint
allege fraud with sufficient particularity
to withstand a challenge pursuant to
Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b)?
3
"In a securities fraud action, a
pleading is sufficient under Rule 9(b) if it
identifies the circumstances of the alleged
fraud so that the defendant can prepare an
adequate answer."
Kaplan v. Rose, 49 F.3d at 1370. This
notice requirement is satisfied by
allegations of the "time, place and nature
of the alleged fraudulent activities."
Walling v. Beverly Enters., 476 F.2d 393,
397 (9th Cir.1973). When a fraudulent
statement is alleged, the "plaintiff must
set forth what is false or misleading about
[the] statement, and why it is false."
In re GlenFed, Inc. Sec. Litig., 42 F.3d
1541, 1548 (9th Cir.1994) (en banc).
4 In other words,
the plaintiff must "set forth, as part of
the circumstances constituting fraud, an
explanation as to why the disputed statement
was untrue or misleading when made." Id. at
1549 (emphasis in original). Thus GlenFed
requires a plaintiff to plead evidentiary
facts and the court to consider what
inferences these facts will support--despite
the pitfalls and inefficiencies of such an
analysis at the pleading stage, id. at 1556
(Norris, J., concurring)--and whether they
are sufficient to satisfy the specificity
requirement of Rule 9(b) as interpreted by
GlenFed.
The GlenFed standard is most
easily satisfied when there is direct
evidence of fraud, i.e., "[inconsistent]
facts that had existed all along and were
later revealed." Id. at 1549. In these
cases, a plaintiff may simply set forth
these facts (along with allegations of
Page 1083 time, place, and scienter) and satisfy Rule
9(b). Id. at 1548. Thus, a complaint
alleging that the plaintiff bought a house
from the defendant, that the defendant
assured the plaintiff that the house was in
perfect shape, and that the house was in
fact built on landfill, would satisfy rule
9(b). Id.
A plaintiff may also satisfy Rule
9(b) with allegations of circumstantial
evidence if the circumstantial evidence
alleged explains how and why the statement
was misleading when made. See id. at 1549.
Thus, when there is an intervening event
which might account for the conflict between
the alleged misrepresentation and the
current state of facts, for instance a
general decline in the stock market or an
event internal to the company such as a
revaluation of assets, a plaintiff may
satisfy Rule 9(b) by alleging inconsistent
contemporaneous statements indicating that
the defendant knew all along that the
earlier statement was false, or by showing
that the conflict does not result merely
from the earlier statement's being based on
a different but equally permissible business
judgment. Id. at 1548-49.
We believe that sufficient
evidentiary facts are pleaded to explain why
the Company's statements were false when
made and, thus, to satisfy the requirements
of Rule 9(b) as interpreted by GlenFed. The
Complaint alleges that the positive
statements about the expansion program were
false when made because, in truth, the new
stores were losing money and the program
overall was doing so poorly that it would
have to be curtailed or abandoned. Complaint
pp 5, 59(a)-(d). Thus plaintiffs allege
facts that reveal that the statements failed
to reflect the Company's true condition at
the time the statements were made. A
plaintiff may "draw on contemporaneous
statements or conditions" to demonstrate why
statements were false when made. Id. at
1549;
In re Wells Fargo Sec. Litig.,
12 F.3d 922, 930 (9th Cir.1993) ("[s]tatements of ...
opinions, or beliefs ... are actionable
under Sec. 10(b), if ... there is [no]
reasonable basis for that belief....")
(citation omitted), cert. denied, --- U.S.
----, 115 S.Ct. 295, 130 L.Ed.2d 209 (1994).
More particularly, plaintiffs cite specific
problems with the expansion program:
unsatisfactory initial sales volumes at the
new stores
5 and
losses at specifically identified stores.
6 For purposes of
Rule 9(b), allegations of specific problems
undermining a defendant's optimistic claims
suffice to explain how the claims are false.
See GlenFed, 42 F.3d at 1551 ("[P]laintiffs
have pointed to specific problems which they
allege undermined defendants' optimistic
claims: aged appraisals which concealed risk
of loss; inaccuracies in the commercial real
estate portfolio data base; inadequate
controls on single-borrower loans. Thus this
case ... is distinguishable from those cases
... in which plaintiffs stated simply that
defendants' public statements were false,
without explaining how they were false.")
(emphasis in original); Wells Fargo, 12 F.3d
at 926-27 (Rule 9(b) satisfied by
allegations that bank understated its
non-performing assets and reserves because
it failed to account for defaults and
doubtful collectibility of specifically
identified problem loans).
In addition, the Complaint pleads
facts that show that the decision to
terminate the expansion program was made
very shortly after the optimistic statements
were made, i.e., the decision to terminate
the program was announced on April 2, 1992,
even though the Company was issuing positive
statements about the program on January
14-16, 1992. Complaint pp 53-56. This
shortness of time is circumstantial evidence
that the optimistic statements were false
when made. We give this circumstantial
evidence more weight in
Page 1084 view of the absence of any indication of an
intervening catastrophic event. See GlenFed,
42 F.3d at 1549 (when no catastrophic event
intervened between the time of the
complained-of statements and the revelation
of the truth, the particularity required by
Rule 9(b) may be supplied by pointing to
later inconsistent statements or
conditions).
The weight of these averments
also increases when they are read in
conjunction with the Complaint's allegations
that the optimistic statements permitted the
successful offering of 73,000 shares of The
Price REIT, which raised some $71 million
for the Company. Complaint pp 36-42.
Moreover, the Complaint alleges that two
high-ranking company managers were making
insider sales at inflated prices of Company
stock during the period in which the
optimistic statements were being issued.
Complaint pp 13(b)-(c), 17, 68. The
Complaint alleges that the Company's Chief
Operating Officer for the West Coast and
Chief Operating Officer for the Company's
East Coast operations--two top executives
involved in the expansion program--sold
respectively 12,000 and 18,000 shares of
Company stock for a total of $1.6 million
during the period in which the allegedly
false statements were being made. The
Complaint pleads evidence that these sales
represented significant retrenchments of the
Company executives' own positions in the
Company's stock: The sales by the COO for
the West Coast involved all of the Company
stock he had acquired by option during the
period in which the optimistic statements
were being made; the sales by the COO for
the East Coast halved his total holdings in
the Company. These sales are circumstantial
evidence that the defendants knew or had
reason to know that the financial condition
of the Company was deteriorating well before
they disclosed the problems with the
expansion program. See GlenFed, 42 F.3d at
1550 (allegations of contemporaneous
statements indicating difficulties facing
sale of real estate subsidiary explain why
public statements that company expected no
loss from such a sale were false when made,
thus satisfying Rule 9(b)); Wells Fargo, 12
F.3d at 930 ("statements of ... opinions, or
beliefs ... are actionable under Sec. 10(b),
if ... the statement is [not] genuinely
believed, [or] ... the speaker is ... aware
of any undisclosed facts tending to
seriously undermine the accuracy of the
statement") (citation omitted).
These allegations satisfy
GlenFed's requirement that the plaintiffs
"set forth what is false or misleading about
[the] statement[s], and why it is false."
Id. at 1548. The Complaint thus states the
circumstances constituting the alleged fraud
with the particularity Rule 9(b) requires.
We therefore hold that the district court
erred when it dismissed the Complaint for
failure to comply with Rule 9(b).
REVERSED and REMANDED to the
district court for further proceedings
consistent with this opinion.
* Honorable Danny J. Boggs, United States
Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit,
sitting by designation.
1 Defendants attached to their motion to
dismiss the full text of the Company's
corporate disclosure documents and the
securities analysts' reports quoted in the
Complaint. Plaintiffs argue that because the
district court considered the full text of
these documents--many portions of which were
not pleaded in the Complaint--defendants'
motion to dismiss should have been converted
into a motion for summary judgment,
affording plaintiffs the opportunity to
present additional evidentiary materials.
This argument is foreclosed by
Branch v. Tunnell,
14 F.3d 449 (9th
Cir.), cert. denied, --- U.S. ----, 114 S.Ct.
2704, 129 L.Ed.2d 832 (1994), in which we
stated:
As it makes sense and comports with
existing practice, we hold that documents
whose contents are alleged in a complaint
and whose authenticity no party questions,
but which are not physically attached to the
pleading, may be considered in ruling on a
Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss. Such
consideration does "not convert the motion
to dismiss into a motion for summary
judgment."
Id. at 454 (quoting
Romani v. Shearson Lehman Hutton, 929 F.2d
875, 879 n. 3 (1st Cir.1991)).
2 As alleged in Paragraph 59 of the
Complaint, the following material
information was known, but withheld, by the
defendants: the Company was experiencing
consistent losses in almost all of its new
stores; initial sales volumes in the new
stores were well below the levels usually
experienced upon new store openings and well
below the levels necessary to achieve
profitable operations; the East Coast and
Canadian stores were performing worse than
expected; the expansion program was being
implemented too rapidly and without adequate
feasibility studies; the expansion program
was adversely affecting the Company's
profitability; and no reasonable basis
existed for the bullish forecasts concerning
the expansion program.
3 "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." Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b).
4 With respect to scienter, the
plaintiffs need "simply ... say[ ] that
scienter existed" to satisfy the
requirements of Rule 9(b). GlenFed, 42 F.3d
at 1547. Although the district court found
that the Complaint's allegations of scienter
were insufficient, the allegations,
Complaint pp 25, 61 ("defendants knew the
impression created by this conduct and these
statements ... was false and misleading
..."; "Price Company was ... aware that the
securities analysts' reports were based on
information publicly disseminated by Price
Company ... and that these reports were
false and misleading ..."), clearly meet the
GlenFed standard.
5 Paragraph 59(a) of the Complaint
alleges: "That initial sales volumes of
Price Company's stores newly opened during
[the] Class Period were below levels usually
experienced upon new store openings and
levels necessary for the stores to achieve
profitable operations...."
6 Paragraph 59(c) of the Complaint
alleges: "That recent store openings in
Maple Shade, New Jersey, Denver, Colorado,
Vancouver, British Columbia, New Britain,
Connecticut and Seekonk, Massachusetts were
proceeding poorly and most of these units
were losing money." Paragraph 59(f) of the
Complaint alleges: "That, at least for the
near term, Price Company faced a major
threat of eroding profits and declining
margins because of the size of the losses
being suffered at Price Company's newly
opened stores, especially in Denver,
Colorado and Vancouver, B.C." Paragraph
59(k) of the Complaint alleges: "That Price
Company's new stores in Denver, Colorado and
Vancouver, B.C. were performing very poorly
and suffering significant losses that were
adversely affecting Price Company's overall
results." |