| Page 276 75 F.3d 276
Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 99,012
In re HEALTHCARE COMPARE CORP.
SECURITIES LITIGATION.
Theodore MOSS, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
HEALTHCARE COMPARE CORPORATION, James C.
Smith, and Joseph
E. Whitters, Defendants-Appellants.
No. 95-2072. United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit. Argued Oct. 25, 1995.
Decided Jan. 24, 1996.
Page 278
Michael J. Freed, Ellyn M.
Lansing, Edith F. Canter, Much, Shelist,
Freed, Denenberg & Ament, Chicago, IL, Terry
Rose Saunders, Chicago, IL, Edward A.
Grossmann, Vincent R. Cappucci (argued),
Patricia S. Gillane, Berstein, Litowitz,
Berger & Grossmann, New York City, and
Michael D. Craig, Schiffrin & Craig, Buffalo
Grove, IL, for Plaintiffs-Appellees.
Lowell E. Sachnoff (argued), Gary
S. Caplan, Joel S. Feldman, Christine
Bodewes, Sachnoff & Weaver, Chicago, IL, and
H. Nicholas Berberian and Robert J. Mandel,
Neal, Gerber & Eisenberg, Chicago, IL, for
Defendants-Appellants.
Before CUMMINGS, COFFEY and
RIPPLE, Circuit Judges.
CUMMINGS, Circuit Judge.
In this securities-fraud class
action, plaintiffs, purchasers of HealthCare
Compare Corporation's ("HealthCare") common
stock, claim they were defrauded when a
company press release expressing discomfort
with analysts' high revenue and earnings
estimates caused HealthCare's stock to
decline more than 30 percent in one day.
Plaintiffs claim that HealthCare knew the
analysts' estimates were too high well
before issuing the press release, and before
making earlier public statements of comfort
with the estimates. Plaintiffs' complaint
survived a motion to dismiss in the district
court, but we agreed to hear this
interlocutory appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §
1292(b) and now reverse.
I.
HealthCare is an independent
provider of medical utilization review and
preferred provider organization services.
Medical utilization review is a system of
monitoring the medical necessity and
appropriateness of certain health care
services prescribed for participants in
health care and medical plans. In connection
with preferred provider organizations,
HealthCare is retained by payors of health
care benefits and medical costs to design,
structure, negotiate, and manage a network
of medical providers and arrange for
discounted health care costs with providers
of health services. HealthCare's common
stock is publicly traded on the NASDAQ
market (National Association of Securities
Dealers Automated Quotation System). Its
revenues consist of fees for cost management
services provided under contracts and fixed
monthly charges for each participant in
client-sponsored health care plans,
excluding covered dependents.
The present controversy concerns
three different forward-looking statements
made by HealthCare early in 1993. The
statements form the basis of plaintiffs'
securities fraud claim. The first
statements, made on February 2 and 9, were
public statements of comfort with the range
of analysts' estimates at the time for
fiscal 1993 revenues and earnings, the
earnings estimates ranging from $1.20 to
$1.25 per share. The second statement
consisted of field sales and year-end
revenue estimates in a February 24 internal
memorandum. The memorandum was compiled by
Joseph Whitters, HealthCare's Chief
Financial Officer, and was sent to Chief
Executive Officer James Smith. The third
statement was a March 30 press release
indicating that HealthCare was
"uncomfortable" with earlier analysts'
estimates of year-end revenues and earnings
that exceeded $160 million and $1.10 per
share. The announcement in effect revised
the prior February comfort statements of 40
percent growth down to a projected 30
percent growth rate for the calendar year.
On the next trading day, HealthCare's stock
declined $5 5/8, closing at $12 7/8--a drop
of more than 30 percent. The first complaint
was filed by plaintiffs within 24 hours.
1
Page 279
Plaintiffs assert that the
positive public representations about
HealthCare's business prospects for Fiscal
1993 prior to March 30 were made even though
HealthCare had information demonstrating
that it would not meet the $1.20-$1.25
earnings projections. They assert that
HealthCare knew it would not meet earnings
projections because of lower-than-expected
insurance plan enrollments at year-end 1992.
HealthCare's knowledge of adverse
developments in the business was confirmed,
plaintiffs argue, by the February 24
internal memorandum in which Whitters
reported a revised revenue forecast.
Specifically, the memorandum shows a
reduction in 1993 revenues from $172,456,000
(estimated as of September 28, 1992) to
$154,350,000 as of February 24, 1993. When
HealthCare made its March 30 public
announcement, the revised downward
projection was attributed to a decrease in
enrollments in previously announced
contracts with The Federal Employees Health
Benefit Plan (FEHBP) and other third-party
contracts.
Plaintiffs filed a class action
in district court alleging securities fraud
against HealthCare and its officers,
Whitters and Smith. The class consists of
persons who purchased HealthCare's common
stock from February 2, 1993 through and
including March 30, 1993. Plaintiffs claimed
that they were defrauded when the price of
HealthCare's stock declined after the March
30 press release. Following the entry of a
Pretrial Order consolidating plaintiffs'
individual actions, plaintiffs filed an
Amended Consolidated Complaint. The district
judge, upon defendants' motion, dismissed
the complaint on June 1, 1994 for failure to
meet the particularity requirement of
Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b) and for failure to state a
claim under Securities Exchange Commission
Rule 10b-5. Plaintiffs were given leave to
file an amended complaint, which they did,
for the first time incorporating allegations
based on the February 24 internal
memorandum. On February 13, 1995, the
district court issued an order upholding the
allegations pled in the Second Amended
Complaint, and on March 10 Judge Plunkett
certified the order for interlocutory
appeal. We later granted defendants'
petition for permission to appeal the
interlocutory order of February 13 pursuant
to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b).
II.
Whether the district court
correctly refused to dismiss the complaint
is a question of law that we review de novo.
Motions to dismiss that test the legal
sufficiency of a complaint are granted when
the plaintiff "can prove no set of facts"
entitling it to relief.
Conley v. Gibson, 355 U.S. 41, 45-46, 78
S.Ct. 99, 102, 2 L.Ed.2d 80. In
reviewing a motion to dismiss, all facts
alleged in the complaint and any inferences
reasonably drawn therefrom must be viewed in
the light most favorable to the plaintiff.
Caldwell v. City of Elwood, 959 F.2d 670,
671 (7th Cir.1992).
A.
We first address the
jurisdictional issue raised by the dissent.
Jurisdiction in this Court is premised on 28
U.S.C. § 1292(b), which gives a Court of
Appeals discretionary authority to permit an
appeal of an order not otherwise appealable
if the district judge certifies the
question. Judge Plunkett certified the
question presented in this case for
interlocutory appeal because he found the
applicable legal standard in the Seventh
Circuit was unclear, because the case before
him presented a "close question," and
because a "massive amount of discovery [is]
lurking in this case" and there would be
"meaningful discovery that would just be
down the drain if I'm wrong." (Tr. of March
10, 1995, at 2-3). A motions panel of this
Court, consisting of Chief Judge Posner and
Judges Easterbrook and Manion, granted
defendants' petition for permission to
appeal the interlocutory order pursuant to
Section 1292(b). Judge Ripple now dissents
because he would not have entertained
Section 1292(b) jurisdiction. In effect,
Judge Ripple is dissenting not from this
case, but from the decision of the motions
panel. The dissent thus raises important
issues regarding the prudence of revisiting
the motions panel's decision.
The merits panel is certainly
entitled to reexamine the decision of the
motions panel, decisions that we have
previously noted are "summary in character,
made often on
Page 280 a scanty record, and not entitled to the
weight of a decision made after plenary
submission."
Johnson v. Burken, 930 F.2d 1202, 1205 (7th
Cir.1991). But other factors counsel in
favor of deferring to the motions panel.
Once the motions panel grants the petition,
the litigants are in essence told that this
Court will exercise jurisdiction. As a
result, district court proceedings are
usually stayed and the parties undergo the
time and expense of fully briefing and
arguing their case on appeal. Were this
Court to vacate the motions panel's
decision, not only would the parties have
suffered significant delay in the district
court, but this Court would have wasted
substantial resources in administering and
hearing a full-blown appeal on the merits.
As such, the purpose of Section 1292(b) to
speed litigation and conserve judicial
resources is utterly thwarted.
Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay, 437 U.S. 463,
474-475 & n. 25, 98 S.Ct. 2454, 2460-61,
2461 n. 25, 57 L.Ed.2d 351; see also
Johnson, 930 F.2d at 1206 (agreeing to
decide the merits of the case and speed the
litigation "since it has been briefed and
argued").
In addition, the applicable
procedural rules indicate that a motions
panel deciding a Section 1292(b) question
might be better informed than the merits
panel on the jurisdictional issue, or at
least equally informed. The party seeking
appellate jurisdiction is required to
include in its petition "the facts necessary
to an understanding of the controlling
question of law ... and a statement of the
reasons why a substantial basis exists for a
difference of opinion on the question and
why an immediate appeal may materially
advance the termination of the litigation."
Fed.R.App.P. 5. On the other hand, the
parties are not required to address the
standards of Section 1292(b) in their briefs
to the merits panel, other than by way of a
cursory statement of the jurisdictional
basis. Fed.R.App.P. 28(a)(2), 28(b). Here
the parties did not even brief the Section
1292(b) issue. We are confident that both
the procedural rules and most litigants
contemplate that the merits panel will defer
to the Court's original decision on the
petition for permission to appeal.
None of this is to suggest that
cases do not exist in which reexamination is
both appropriate and important. Johnson is
one such case. In Johnson, the controlling
issue certified by the district court
involved the validity of a service of
process. We agreed to hear the appeal, but a
second and different form of process was
served before the merits panel could make
its determination on the first service. Thus
an intervening event cast doubt on whether
the certified question was "controlling"
within the meaning of Section 1292(b), and
the merits panel properly took a fresh look
at the jurisdictional question. Id. at
1205-1206. Where the merits panel has reason
to believe that the motions panel would
choose to reconsider the petition in light
of intervening circumstances or other
defects in its ability to make a fully
informed jurisdictional determination, it is
appropriate for the merits panel to
reexamine the Section 1292(b) issue. But
where, as here, nothing indicates that this
panel is better equipped to make the 1292(b)
determination than was the motions panel,
honoring the original jurisdictional
decision is the more prudent course.
B.
SEC Rule 10b-5, promulgated under
Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934, prohibits the making of any untrue
statement of material fact or the omission
of a material fact that would render
statements made misleading in connection
with the purchase or sale of any security.
17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5. To state a valid Rule
10b-5 claim, a plaintiff must allege that
the defendant (1) made a misstatement or
omission, (2) of material fact, (3) with
scienter, (4) in connection with the
purchase or sale of securities, (5) upon
which the plaintiff relied, and (6) that
reliance proximately caused plaintiff's
injuries.
Stransky v. Cummins Engine Co.,
51 F.3d 1329
(7th Cir.1995). This case concerns
plaintiffs' alleged failure to meet the
third of these required allegations.
HealthCare frames its argument that
plaintiffs have not adequately pled fraud
under both Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b) and 12(b)(6).
The arguments are inherently intertwined
because pleading fraud with specificity is
both an element of the SEC Rule 10b-5 cause
of
Page 281 action and a pleading requirement of the
Federal Rules.
Rule 9(b) requires that "the
circumstances constituting fraud ... be
stated with particularity." Fed.R.Civ.P.
9(b). With respect to securities fraud
cases, Rule 9(b) requires that the essential
element of scienter be pled with a
sufficient level of factual support: "the
complaint ... must afford a basis for
believing that plaintiffs could prove
scienter."
DiLeo v. Ernst & Young, 901 F.2d 624, 629
(7th Cir.1990), certiorari denied, 498
U.S. 941, 111 S.Ct. 347, 112 L.Ed.2d 312. We
have said that a sufficient level of factual
support may be found where the circumstances
are pled "in detail." Id. at 627. "This
means the who, what, when, where, and how:
the first paragraph of any newspaper story."
Id. In addition, cases involving
forward-looking statements are unique. As we
noted
Arazie v. Mullane, 2 F.3d 1456, 1468 (7th
Cir.1993), "predictions of future
performance are inevitably inaccurate
because things almost never go exactly as
planned," (citing
Wielgos v. Commonwealth Edison Co.,
892 F.2d 509 (7th Cir.1989)). Thus companies
making forward-looking statements are
afforded a safe harbor: plaintiffs must
allege "specific facts which illustrate that
[the company's] predictions lacked a
reasonable basis." Arazie, 2 F.3d at 1468;
Searls v. Glasser, 64 F.3d 1061, 1066 (7th
Cir.1995); Wielgos, 892 F.2d at 513
("Forward-looking statements need not be
correct; it is enough that they have a
reasonable basis.");
Eckstein v. Balcor Film Investors, 8 F.3d
1121, 1132 (7th Cir.1993) ("If those
statements had a reasonable basis when made,
the defendants did not commit fraud."),
certiorari denied, --- U.S. ----, 114 S.Ct.
883, 127 L.Ed.2d 78. Projections which turn
out to be inaccurate are not fraudulent
simply because subsequent events reveal that
a different projection would have been more
reasonable.
Grassi v. Information Resources, Inc., 63
F.3d 596, 599 (7th Cir.1995).
In dismissing plaintiffs' first
complaint, the district court was primarily
concerned that plaintiffs did not explain
when or how HealthCare knew that client
enrollments and new business revenue were
below expected levels, or why HealthCare
should have been able to process the
information prior to March 30, 1993. In
other words, to allege fraud adequately,
plaintiffs needed to show either (1) that
the early February comfort statements lacked
a reasonable basis (presumably because
HealthCare knew the analysts' estimates were
too high), or (2) that a duty arose prior to
the March 30 press release to correct the
early February comfort statements--a duty
the neglect of which amounts to fraud. We
agree with the district court that
plaintiffs must demonstrate either lack of a
reasonable basis or neglect of a duty to
correct amounting to fraud.
To show lack of a reasonable
basis, plaintiffs point to several
paragraphs in their Second Amended
Complaint. They argue that the allegations
establish that HealthCare knew or recklessly
disregarded the fact that the revenue and
earnings projections made public on and
after February 2, 1993, were without any
reasonable basis. The essential allegations
in the complaint are paraphrased as follows:
(1) Due to its fixed contracts with
clients, HealthCare was able to predict with
certainty revenue and earnings levels for
its fiscal year at the beginning of the
calendar year; during the enrollment period
ending January 1, 1993, HealthCare's clients
(including FEHBP) failed to sign up as many
employees as it had anticipated. (Complaint
pp 44, 57, 58).
(2) HealthCare has an advanced database,
giving it the ability to calculate yearly
fees quickly upon being advised of
enrollment levels; HealthCare was able to
process enrollment data and translate it
into certain financial forecasts at least by
February 24, 1993. (Complaint pp 44, 60).
(3) Clients desire locking in fixed
rates, so they typically advise HealthCare
of the number of enrollments soon after the
enrollment cutoff dates, which in most cases
are just prior to the beginning of the
calendar year. (Complaint pp 44, 57).
(4) The February 24, 1993, internal
memorandum confirms that HealthCare knew
analysts' earlier predictions were too high.
(Complaint p 59).
Page 282
Plaintiffs have the burden of
pleading sufficient facts to call the
reasonable basis of HealthCare's early
February comfort statements into question.
Roots Partnership v. Lands' End, Inc., 965
F.2d 1411, 1419 (7th Cir.1992). The
allegations listed above are insufficient.
Plaintiffs' allegation that HealthCare's
enrollments were down for the period ending
January 1, 1993, does not show lack of a
reasonable basis, primarily because it fails
to demonstrate that HealthCare knew on
February 2 and 9--the dates of the comfort
statements--that total revenues for the
year-end would be materially lower than
analysts' projections. Plaintiffs' complaint
even cites an industry portfolio letter that
says HealthCare renews contracts twice a
year--January 1 and July 1. Clearly January
1 enrollment is not the only factor that
figures into HealthCare's revenues. Further,
the allegation that HealthCare has an
advanced database does little to show what
the company knew in early February. Nowhere
does HealthCare allege how the database was
used in 1993, what information was
processed, or any other specifics regarding
use of the database prior to February 2 and
9.
Plaintiffs' inability to plead
lack of a reasonable basis with specificity
is further revealed by their other
allegations. For example, plaintiffs allege
that "defendants knew as early as February
24, 1993 that the Company's clients had
experienced reduced enrollments." (Complaint
p 59). They then allege that the database
enabled them to process enrollment data "at
least by February 24, 1993." (Complaint p
60). In pleading that the earlier comfort
statements were made without a reasonable
basis, it is insufficient to allege what
plaintiffs knew as of February 24. For the
same reason, the allegations regarding the
February 24 internal memorandum (the primary
addition to the Second Amended Complaint)
are also insufficient to show lack of a
reasonable basis for the February 2 and 9
statements. There is nothing in the
complaint to link specifically what
HealthCare knew in the internal memorandum
to what it knew earlier in the month. The
fact that the memorandum came out after the
comfort statements rather than before
suggests that HealthCare had not completed
the internal estimates earlier in February.
We cannot reasonably infer from these
allegations that HealthCare's early February
comfort statements lacked a reasonable
basis.
The second question, then, is
whether the February 24 internal memorandum
or any other fact indicates that HealthCare
had a duty to correct the comfort statements
prior to March 30, 1993. Plaintiffs argue
that HealthCare was required to correct the
early February comfort statements
immediately after generating the February 24
memorandum. Although HealthCare did revise
the statements about five weeks later on
March 30, plaintiffs claim that the
company's failure to correct them earlier is
actionable as securities fraud. Arguing that
it had no duty to correct the statements
earlier, HealthCare relies on Stransky,
supra, where we specifically declined to
adopt a bright-line rule that a duty to
correct exists when a company makes a
forward-looking statement that becomes
untrue because of subsequent events.
Reliance on Stransky is somewhat misplaced.
There we declined to find a duty to correct
based on the rationale that "just as a
statement true when made does not become
fraudulent because things unexpectedly go
wrong, so a statement materially false when
made does not become acceptable because it
happens to come true." 51 F.3d at 1332
(quoting
Pommer v. Medtest Corp., 961 F.2d 620, 623
(7th Cir.1992)). This is not a case
where things unexpectedly went wrong;
rather, plaintiffs allege that the
circumstances which made the comfort
statements false (lower enrollment, etc.)
arose prior to the statements--even if only
realized by HealthCare on February 24.
Thus we decline to hold that
Stransky adopted a bright-line rule that no
duty to correct exists in any case. Rather,
we are persuaded that plaintiffs can only
show that a duty to correct arose by
alleging facts sufficient to demonstrate
that the internal memorandum was certain and
reliable, not merely a tentative estimate.
Otherwise, it was not unreasonable for
HealthCare to wait until March 30 to make a
public announcement. We held
Panter v. Marshall Field & Co., 646 F.2d
271, 291-293 (7th Cir.1981), certiorari
denied, 454 U.S. 1092, 102 S.Ct.
Page 283
658, 70 L.Ed.2d 631, that "firms need not
disclose tentative internal estimates, even
though they conflict with published
estimates, unless the internal estimates are
so certain that they reveal the published
figures as materially misleading." Wielgos,
892 F.2d at 516; see also Searls, 64 F.3d at
1067 (holding that projections were
tentative and were prepared for the benefit
of management). As we further reasoned in
Wielgos,
Issuers need not reveal all projections.
Any firm generates a range of estimates
internally or through consultants....
Because firms may withhold even completed
estimates, they may withhold in-house
estimates that are in the process of
consideration and revision. Any other
position would mean that once the annual
cycle of estimation begins, a firm must
cease selling stock until it has resolved
internal disputes and is ready with a new
projection. Yet because large firms are
eternally in the process of generating and
revising estimates--they may have large
staffs devoted to nothing else--a demand for
revelation or delay would be equivalent to a
bar on the use of projections if the firm
wants to raise new capital.
Id. at 516; see also Grassi, 63
F.3d at 599; Arazie, 2 F.3d at 1468.
Plaintiffs have not met their
burden to show that the internal memorandum
did not merely contain tentative projections
subject to revision. As plaintiffs'
complaint alleges, the February 24
memorandum contained a revised revenue
forecast for Fiscal 1993. Based on the
complaint, the purpose of the memorandum was
to compare internal forecasts made on
September 28, 1992, with February 24, 1993,
forecasts in five major segments of
HealthCare's business. The memorandum showed
a revised forecast of 1993 revenues, down
from $172,456,000 in September 1992 to
$154,350,000 in February 1993, and
attributed the decline to a loss of revenues
from two primary customers. (Complaint p
59). The complaint fails to allege even a
single fact relevant to the certainty or
finality of these figures; nothing in the
complaint belies the possibility that the
figures reported in the memorandum were
subject to revision or verification before
they could be made public. Plaintiffs allege
that "HealthCare routinely prepared on an
annual basis a yearly revenue forecast in
the second month of each fiscal year as it
did in 1993." (Complaint p 59). But the
complaint fails to take the next essential
step of alleging facts showing that the
February 24 memorandum was a final
version--rather than merely a preliminary
draft--of this yearly revenue forecast. We
are unable to find anything in the complaint
from which we could draw even an inference
that the memorandum was final and
appropriate for public revelation.
We are further persuaded that
plaintiffs failed to allege fraud by the
lack of any sufficient allegations regarding
fraudulent intent or motive.
2
Here sufficient allegations regarding
motive, though not necessary to state a
claim for securities fraud, would have
allowed this Court to draw inferences
favorable to plaintiffs regarding the
disparity in projections in the various
statements. The mere temporal proximity of
the conflicting statements is not
sufficient: "[T]emporal proximity between
positive statements stressing a firm's
strengths and announcements of poor economic
performance do not create an inference that
the earlier statements were fraudulent."
Arazie, 2 F.3d at 1467-1468. Thus we have
stressed the importance of pleading motive
in DiLeo, supra, where we concluded that the
complaint failed to show what the company
would gain from fraudulent activity:
[T]he complaint offers no reason to infer
that [the company] possessed the mental
state necessary for a primary violation.
Although Rule 9(b) does not require
"particularity" with respect to the
defendants' mental state, the complaint
still must afford a basis for believing that
plaintiffs could prove scienter.
* * * * * *
People sometimes act
irrationally, but indulging ready inferences
of irrationality would too easily allow the
inference that ordinary business reverses
are fraud. One
Page 284 who believes that another has behaved
irrationally has to make a strong case.
901 F.2d at 629. Plaintiffs'
complaint fails to plead sufficient facts
supporting a motive to make fraudulent
statements. For example, plaintiffs do not
allege insider trading during the class
period, nor do plaintiffs allege that
HealthCare desired to inflate its stock
price due to an impending merger or
acquisition. Only the following allegations
relate to motive:
The defendants [made fraudulent
statements] to (a) perpetuate the appearance
of HealthCare's sustained growth; (b) allow
Smith and Whitters to retain their
positions, compensation and other
substantial perquisites of executive
employment; (c) inflate analysts' projected
estimates of HealthCare's revenues and
earnings per share; and (d) perpetuate the
inflated value of defendants' substantial
personal holdings in Company securities.
(Complaint p 15). The first and
third of these allegations in Paragraph 15
are essentially the same, and neither
relates to underlying motive beyond the
simplistic assertion that "HealthCare said
its company was more valuable than it was so
people would believe HealthCare was more
valuable than it was." The second allegation
in Paragraph 15 also fails to support an
underlying motive, as plaintiffs offer no
facts to support the necessary inference
that the defendant officers were in danger
of losing their positions based on a revised
earnings estimate for the fiscal year. As to
the fourth, plaintiffs are just short of
alleging insider trading; however, nowhere
do plaintiffs allege that defendants sold or
intended to sell stock during the class
period.
3 Thus
plaintiffs have failed to provide this Court
with any additional reason to draw
inferences of fraud from their complaint.
III.
Stating a claim for securities
fraud requires more specific allegations
regarding fraud than plaintiffs' complaint
provides. The February 24 memorandum is
obviously the crux of this case, because it
is the primary allegation intended to show
either that HealthCare made its early
February comfort statements without a
reasonable basis or that HealthCare
fraudulently failed to correct the comfort
statements earlier than March 30, 1993. We
conclude that neither the February 24
memorandum nor any other allegation states a
claim for securities fraud. Plaintiffs have
failed to allege facts showing that the
comfort statements were made without any
reasonable basis and have failed to allege
facts from which this Court could infer that
the February 24 memorandum was anything
other than a tentative internal estimate
subject to revision. Therefore the district
court's order is reversed and remanded for
dismissal of the Second Amended Complaint.
RIPPLE, Circuit Judge,
dissenting.
The requirement that fraud be
pleaded with specificity has many salutary
justifications. It safeguards defendants
from baseless charges of moral turpitude and
makes it more difficult to bring such
allegations solely because of their nuisance
or settlement value. It affords the
defendant sufficient information to permit
an intelligent evaluation of the complaint
and a focused response. See 5 Charles A.
Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice
and Procedure § 1296. In my
Page 285 view, the district court's decision
demonstrates that these concerns are
safeguarded adequately in the present case
and that litigation beyond the pleading
stage is appropriate. Our earlier case law
sets forth, as adequately as they can be
stated, the applicable standards in this
area. Reasonable minds can--and will--differ
on the adequacy of the factual specificity
in an allegation of fraud. The issue is, by
its nature, case specific and neither the
case law of this circuit nor the case law of
the other circuits can make any claim to
being a seamless garment.
In addition to noting my
respectful disagreement on the merits, I
also write to suggest that, as a prudential
matter, this court ought to exercise
significantly more restraint in using the
certification procedure to review fact-bound
issues with respect to the adequacy of a
complaint. I hope that the court's action in
this case does not signal a radical change
in its receptivity to such overtures. Before
embarking on such a course, we ought to
reflect on the significant institutional
costs implicated in such an approach.
Certification is not a vehicle for obtaining
a "second opinion" on every fact-bound issue
that confronts a district court. The Supreme
Court has made it clear that "even if the
district judge certifies the order under §
1292(b), the appellant still 'has the burden
of persuading the court of appeals that
exceptional circumstances justify a
departure from the basic policy of
postponing appellate review until after the
entry of a final judgment.' "
Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay, 437 U.S. 463,
475, 98 S.Ct. 2454, 2461, 57 L.Ed.2d 351
(1978) (quoting
Fisons, Ltd. v. United States, 458 F.2d
1241, 1248 (7th Cir.1972)). This
principle has been confirmed just recently
by the Court of Appeals for the Second
Circuit
In re Prudential Lines, Inc., 59 F.3d 327,
332 (2d Cir.1995).
Absent the most unusual
circumstances,
1a I
do not believe that the certification
procedure of 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) ought to be
employed as a device to allow interlocutory
review of close, fact-bound judgment calls
by district courts concerning the adequacy
of a complaint. Here, the district court had
before it a decision that confronts district
courts every day--the sufficiency of a
complaint's factual allegations. The
district court made a determination that the
allegations were sufficient. Although my
colleagues disagree with that judgment call,
they point to no issue of law, no
significant doctrinal development that
compels departure from the normal course of
adjudication.
The specificity requirement of
Rule 9(b) does not come without its costs.
Wright & Miller § 1296. The requirement
creates significant delays by encouraging a
great deal of motion practice. Id. If, in
addition to this motion practice, we now
invite defendants in fraud cases to litigate
the factual specificity of the complaint not
only in the district court but also in this
court, much of the benefit of Rule 9(b)
certainly will be diluted. Indeed, if we
allow fraud complaints to visit this court
as a matter of course after an unsuccessful
motion to dismiss based on factual
insufficiency, we shall be hard-pressed to
turn away other fact-based denials of a
motion to dismiss the complaint for failure
to state a cause of action. The tactical
weapon of delay will have found another
battlefield. Appellate resources can be put
to better use.
1 It is interesting to note that,
according to defendants' brief, HealthCare's
stock is currently trading for almost three
times the closing price on March 31, 1993.
(Def.Br. 3).
2 Such allegations may be averred
generally. Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b).
3 Plaintiffs also point to Paragraph 40
of the complaint as alleging motive. There
plaintiffs state that throughout November
and December 1992 company insiders sold
stock to the public at prices averaging over
$30 per share, leading the investing public
to believe that the Company would continue
to report record revenue and earnings
growth. (Complaint p 40). In their brief,
plaintiffs state that the subsequent
fraudulent statements were made to distance
HealthCare from and avoid suspicion of
insider trading prior to the class period.
We fail to see how this allegation supports
a motive to defraud investors. First,
plaintiffs do not allege that the
November/December 1992 stock activity was
significantly greater than at other times.
Second, plaintiffs do not allege that
HealthCare knew in November and December of
1992 that the stock value would decline in
1993. Thus without these two additional
allegations, it is not at all clear how the
November/December activity could constitute
insider trading and even less clear why
HealthCare would be motivated to defraud
investors in order to avoid suspicion of
insider trading.
Plaintiffs also point to Paragraph 65 of
the complaint as alleging motive. However,
Paragraph 65 does nothing more than repeat
the allegations contained in Paragraphs 15
and 40.
1a In this respect, the court ought to
weigh the burden on the parties, financial
and otherwise, as well as the overall burden
on judicial resources. Although the district
court noted, in conclusory fashion, that,
absent certification, the parties would
engage in a significant amount of discovery,
it made no finding that the extent of that
discovery would be unusual. |