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Page 204
817 F.Supp. 204
Wendy COLBY, Plaintiff,
v.
HOLOGIC, INC., Joel Weinstein, David
Ellenbogen, Jay Stein and Glenn Muir,
Defendants. Civ. A. No. 90-12822-Y. United States District Court, D.
Massachusetts. March 30, 1993.
Page 205
COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED
Page 206
Thomas G. Shapiro, Shapiro, Grace
& Haber, Boston, MA, for plaintiff.
James W. Stoll, M. Frederick
Pritzker, Brown, Rudnick, Freed, & Gesmer,
Boston, MA, for defendants.
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
YOUNG, District Judge.
This case presents the grimly
familiar picture of disappointed investors
crying fraud after fortunes were lost when a
promising corporation stumbled in the winds
of New England's lingering economic winter.
Here, the plaintiff, Wendy Colby
("Colby"), represents a purported class of
persons who purchased stock in the defendant
company, Hologic, Inc. ("Hologic"), between
July 31, 1990, and November 16, 1990 ("the
class period"), shortly before the company's
stock crashed.
Count I of Colby's Amended
Complaint1 ("Am.
Compl.") charges Hologic and four of
Page 207
its executives (collectively, the
"officers"),2 with
misleading statements and omissions and with
"guiding" misleading forecasts by
independent analysts. These statements,
omissions, and indirect forecasts are said
to have misrepresented Hologic's business
prospects, artificially inflated stock
prices, and thereby perpetrated a "fraud
upon the market" in violation of § 10(b) of
the Securities Exchange Act (the Act"), 15
U.S.C. § 78j,3 and
Rule 10b-5, 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5.4
In Count II, Colby charges Hologic officer
Joel Weinstein ("Weinstein") with "insider
trading" in violation of § 10(b), in that on
September 6, 1990, he sold 15,000 shares of
Hologic common stock allegedly at inflated
prices without the required disclosure of
facts pertinent to investment.
Hologic and the officers urge the
Court to dismiss Colby's suit as failing to
state a valid cause of action and as
insufficiently detailed to support
allegations of fraud. See Fed.
R.Civ.P. 9(b) and 12(b)(6). They deny that
the challenged company statements were
misleading, that they had any duty to
disclose additional information about future
prospects, or that they are liable for
forecasts by independent securities
analysts. The "insider trading" claim is
said to be untenable because Weinstein
claims he did not rely upon non-public
information, and in any event Colby's stock
purchase was not contemporaneous with
Weinstein's sale.
I. Factual Background and
Disputed Statements.
A. The Parties and the Undisputed
Factual Background
Hologic, with offices in Waltham,
Massachusetts, has since 1986 been engaged
in the development, manufacture, and sale of
x-ray systems and particularly bone
densitometers used in the diagnosis of
various bone diseases. The company is
registered with the Securities and Exchanges
Commission ("SEC") as a reporting company,
has outstanding more than 3 million shares
of common stock and an average monthly sales
volume of 1.5 million shares.
The plaintiff, Wendy Colby, is a
resident of New Jersey who purchased 500
shares of Hologic common stock on September
17, 1990. The investor class, as defined and
putatively represented by Colby, is
estimated to number in the hundreds. Over 3
million shares were traded during the class
period.
The class period, as defined by
Colby, corresponds to a time of considerable
change and development for Hologic. The
Company's main product in 1987-1990 was
scheduled for replacement in 1990. Hologic's
new sensitometer was expected to be shipped
in
Page 208
the 1991 fiscal year. Coincident with
this change in product lines, Hologic
shifted its marketing posture, initiating
direct sales in the United States while
anticipating expansion of its indirect
European sales in 1989 through agreements
with General Electric CGR S.A. ("General
Electric") in France and Siemens A.G.
("Siemens") in Germany. There were
significant delays, however, both in
completing and shipping the new sensitometer
product and in signing new contracts with
the European distributors.
Hologic stock prices reached a
peak of $22.75 per share during the class
period. After reductions in European sales
and Hologic's November 15, 1990 disclosure
that it would not meet previously projected
earnings, however, the market price of the
common stock dropped $6.25 in a single day,
falling from $15 per share on November 15,
1990, to $8.75 on November 16, 1990, the end
of the class period.
B. Challenged Statements and
Allegations
Colby claims that Hologic and its
officers schemed to inflate Hologic's stock
price by creating the illusion the company
was growing rapidly and would continue to
grow throughout 1990-91. This was allegedly
accomplished, in particular, through four
misleading statements and omissions by
Hologic, its officers, and several
independent analysts who were "guided" by
the defendants.5
The challenged statements are summarized as
follows:
1. Hologic, in a July 31,
1990 press release, reported substantial
earnings for the third quarter of 1990, and
President Ellenbogen stated "while we do not
expect to maintain this rate of growth in
the fourth fiscal quarter due to seasonal
variations in order rates from Europe,
prospects for long-term growth in the bone
densitometry market are bright." Pl.Ex. 3,
at 2.
2. Reuters news service
noted, on July 31, 1990, a fall in value of
Hologic stock after weaker earnings than
"analysts had expected," but quoted a
Needham analyst who said, "the slightly
weaker forecast for the fourth quarter was a
short term problem.... Hologic expects that
the market for bone densitometers will
grow." Pl.Ex. 4, at 1.
3. Adams Harkness and Hill
("Adams"), an independent analyst, observed
on August 1, 1990 that "some believe
[Hologic's] business may be slowing, based
on management's statement that fourth
quarter growth will be affected by
vacation-related variability in orders
coming in from European distributors."
Still, Adams predicted, "we see strong
sales" from Europe, and described Hologic as
"a small company growing very rapidly," and
projected healthy earnings through fiscal
1992. Pl. Ex. 5, at 1.
4. Professional Investor
Report ("PIR") news service, on
September 17, 1990, interviewed Muir of
Hologic who said, "the company hasn't gotten
any indication from [foreign purchasers]
that orders this ground will be
disappointing in any way" and that he is
"not aware of any long term or short term
negative trends that might affect Hologic's
business." Muir was said to be "comfortable
with a wide range of street estimates" of
Hologic earnings, considering it "too early
to strongly project earnings for next year."
Pl.Ex. 6.
Direct misrepresentation is said
to lie in the July press release by Hologic
(no. 1, above) because the company's
forecast as to future sales was not
"reasonably based" on "timely" and
"reliable" information. Am. Compl. at
17-18. Muir's optimistic declarations (no.
4, above) are also described as misleading
because he failed to disclose indications of
a slowing "negative trend." Id. at
22-23.
Page 209
Indirect fraud is imputed to
Hologic because the Needham analyst's
forecast (no. 2, above) was said to be
"premised upon" discussions with Hologic
representatives. The Adams report (no. 3,
above) is likewise charged against Hologic
because the analyst "gave the company an
opportunity to preview the projections" and
Hologic failed to disclose the beginning of
a slowdown in orders. Id. at
20-21.
II. Assessing Securities Fraud
Complaints under Rule 9(b).
Dismissal for failure to state a
claim pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) is
generally inappropriate unless "it appears
beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no
set of facts in support of his claims which
would entitle him to relief."
Conley v. Gibson, 355 U.S. 41, 45-46,
78 S.Ct. 99, 102, 2 L.Ed.2d 80 (1957).
This Court must take all the allegations as
admitted and must liberally construe all
inferences in favor of the pleader.
Scheuer v. Rhodes, 416 U.S. 232, 236,
94 S.Ct. 1683, 1686, 40 L.Ed.2d 90 (1974).6
A plaintiff asserting fraud may not lean too
heavily on a court's hesitance to dismiss,
however, since Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b) requires
that "the circumstances constituting fraud
or mistake shall be stated with
particularity."
The First Circuit has been
especially strict in applying Rule 9(b) to
securities fraud complaints out of concern
that "a plaintiff with a largely groundless
claim will bring a suit and conduct
extensive discovery in hopes of obtaining an
increased settlement, rather than in the
hopes that the process will reveal relevant
evidence."
New England Data Services, Inc. v.
Beecher, 829 F.2d 286, 288 (1st
Cir.1987).
Hayduck v. Lanna, 775 F.2d 441, 443
(1st Cir.1985).
Romani v. Shearson Lehman Hutton,
929 F.2d 875 (1st Cir.1991), this Circuit
demonstrated its readiness to dismiss a
"fraud on the market" complaint which failed
to "meet the Rule 9(b) threshold" because
plaintiffs failed to allege "in some detail
the facts and figures upon which their
claims of misrepresentation were based."
Id. at 880.
The two elements of "fraud on the
market" claims which are subjected to the
closest scrutiny under Rule 9(b) are (1)
whether there was a material misstatement or
omission by the defendant, and (2) whether
there was scienter.
Backman v. Polaroid Corp., 910 F.2d
10, 15-16 (1st Cir.1990);
Holmes v. Bateson, 583 F.2d 542, 551
(1st Cir.1978).7
The foundation for these two elements must
be visible in the complaint which must
specify the "time, place and content of an
alleged false representation."
McGinty v. Beranger Volkswagen, Inc.,
633 F.2d 226, 228 (1st Cir.1980).
A misrepresentation
is "material" to a claim of securities fraud
only if the misstated or omitted fact was
one likely to be viewed by the reasonable
investor as significantly altering the total
mix of available information.
TSC Industries, Inc. v. Northway, 426
U.S. 438, 445, 96 S.Ct. 2126, 2130, 48
L.Ed.2d 757 (1976). A complaint mounted
upon § 10(b) or Rule 10b-5 must offer a
sufficient allegation of "materiality,"
i.e. enough information to ascertain the
significance of the misrepresentation based
upon the indicated probability that the
(described or omitted) event would occur and
the anticipated magnitude of the event upon
the totality of company activity. Basic,
Inc. v. Levinson,
Page 210
485 U.S. 224, 238, 108 S.Ct. 978, 986, 99
L.Ed.2d 194 (1988).
The scienter
requirement of Rule 10b-5 requires
plaintiffs to prove "an intent to deceive,
manipulate, or defraud,"
Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder, 425 U.S.
185, 193, 96 S.Ct. 1375, 1381, 47 L.Ed.2d
668 (1976). A plaintiff need not,
however, describe the circumstances from
which fraudulent intent can be inferred,
Wayne Investment, Inc. v. Gulf Oil Corp.,
739 F.2d 11, 13-14 (1st Cir.1984), and
the First Circuit has upheld complaints
based upon allegations of "recklessness
amounting to indifference."
See Hoffman v. Estabrook & Co., 587
F.2d 509, 516 (1st Cir.1978). Even so,
to survive a motion for dismissal such a
complaint must contain, at a minimum,
"factual allegations that would support a
reasonable inference" that "circumstances
adverse" to the defendant's statements "were
known and deliberately or recklessly
disregarded" at the time the statements were
made. Romani, 929 F.2d at 878. A
plaintiff is not released from this
obligation to plead specific supporting
facts even where "the fraud relates to
matters particularly within the knowledge of
the opposing party." Wayne Investment,
739 F.2d 11, 14.
In stretching her particular
allegations over this general framework,
Colby incurs three additional obligations
under Rule 9(b):
First, since Colby's case is
based on omissions and erroneous forecasts
(rather than direct misstatements), she must
offer factual indications that Hologic's
omissions violated a duty to make further
disclosure, Backman, 910 F.2d 10,
12-13; or that Hologic's forecasts were not
reasonably based or were not made in good
faith.
Kirby v. Cullinet Software, Inc., 721
F.Supp. 1444, 1450 (D.Mass.1989) (Wolf,
J.).
Second, since the analysts'
reports are sought to be imputed to the
defendants as part of their scheme, she must
offer allegations that the reports could be
fairly attributed to Hologic itself and its
officers must be so "entangled" with the
analysts' forecasts such that they assumed a
duty to disclose the analysts' errors.
Elkind v. Liggett & Myers, Inc., 635
F.2d 156, 163 (2nd Cir.1980).
Third, since she would prove a
concerted "scheme" among the defendants, she
must, in order to show scienter,
particularize the role of each in the fraud.
Hurley v. Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp., 719 F.Supp. 27, 31 (D.Mass.1989)
(Tauro, J.).
The lack of allegations of direct
misrepresentations of fact by the defendants
(as opposed to imputed statements and
erroneous predictions of future events)
leaves Colby's complaint vulnerable to
dismissal under Rule 9(b) as discussed
below:
III. Colby's Allegations
against Hologic.
A. Misleading Forecasts?:
Hologic's July 31, 1990, Press Release
(Statement No. 1).
The July 31, 1990 press release
by Hologic and its president included the
following key passages:
[1] declaration 20% earnings
for 3d quarter, fiscal 1990
[2] forecast I"We don't expect
to maintain this rate of growth"
[3] explanation of forecast
I"seasonal variations orders (Europe)"
[4] forecast II"prospects for
long term growth are bright"
[5] explanation of forecast
IIpositive results recent drug studies
Colby does not dispute Hologic's
statement of earnings [1], or the
pessimistic short-term forecast [2] with
explanation [3]. Rather, she claims that the
statement "prospects for long term growth
are bright" [4] was misleading because
Hologic's president had "no reasonable
basis" from which to prepare projections for
the fourth quarter and beyond. In support of
this argument, Colby asserts that there was
an "informational void" within the company
due to the inexperience of the domestic
sales force, the recent execution of the
contracts with European distributors, and
inadequate information and delays in
meetings with European distributors. Am.
Compl. 32-34.
Colby asserts that Hologic's
comment that "long term prospects are
bright" is
Page 211
sufficiently "material" to sustain her
claim. Certainly, predictions "are not
exempt" from the securities laws, Kirby,
721 F.Supp. 1444, 1449, but they are
actionable only if the forecast might affect
a "reasonable investor" in contemplating the
value of a corporation's stock. Holmes,
583 F.2d 542, 552.
Hologic's vague "bright
prospects" comment offers no projections of
earnings or sales statistics, nor even a
temporal reference point. Such empirical
data have been crucial in cases finding
forecasts material, including those cited by
Colby.8 Hologic's
projection is more akin to those found too
nebulous to support a securities fraud
claim. Notably,
Priest v. Zayre Corp., 1987 WL 10741
(D.Mass. May 1, 1987) (Zobel, J.), the
company's statement that it "was poised to
continue its steady growth in the coming
year" was held inadequate, as the court
declared:
Optimistic, vague projections of
future success which prove to be ill founded
are not, without more, sufficiently material
to incur Rule 10B-5 liability. When,
however, such projections are accompanied by
either specific qualifications of projected
results implying certainty (e.g., earnings
shall increase at least 30% next year) or
statements of fact which prove to be
erroneous, then such statements can be the
basis of Rule 10b-5 liability.
Id. at *2. See also
Elkind, 635 F.2d 156, 164 (company's
declaration that "we expect another good
year in 1972" not materially misleading).
A reasonably well informed
investor could not reasonably have
considered Hologic's bare "long term
prospects are bright" comment to be so
significant as to alter the mix of
information bearing on investment. The
"forecast" is not material as matter of law.
The lack of scienter is
also independently fatal to a claim based
upon the July 31st press release. While the
"time, place, and content" of that press
release are provided, this is, standing
alone, insufficient without "supporting
facts" indicating fraud, Wayne, 739
F.2d at 13. Nor may a plaintiff rest upon
"mere allegations of fraud, corruption,
conspiracy ... or referrals to plans or
schemes ... no matter how many times such
accusations are repeated." Hayduk,
775 F.2d at 444. Allegations that a
prediction was fraudulent must offer
"supporting facts" indicating that the
defendant did not act in "good faith" or had
no "reasonable basis" for the forecast. A
"reasonable basis" exists if the defendant
relied upon an historical or contemporary
body of facts and a "reasonable method of
preparation." Kirby, 721 F.Supp. at
1450 (citing
Marx v. Computer Sciences Corp., 507
F.2d 485, 489 (9th Cir. 1974)).
There is good reason for the
courts to discourage complaints based on
allegedly misleading generalized forecasts.
Such forecasts are inherently difficult and
unreliable, though necessary, and are not
likely to be "material" to investors. The
Securities Exchange Commission recognized
this in adopting the "Safe Harbor Rule,"
which provides that projections filed with
the Commission do not violate federal
securities law unless it is shown that they
were made without a "reasonable basis" or
were not made in "good faith."9
Page 212
The "basis" for Hologic's
challenged July 31, 1990 forecast of "bright
future prospects" was explicit in the
statement's reference to (1) encouraging
earnings in three previous quarters of that
fiscal year, and (2) recently published
"osteopathic drug studies." Nowhere has
Colby challenged the accuracy of those
reported earnings or the positive
implications of the cited drug studies for
the future marketing of Hologic's product.
Instead, it is alleged only that the sales
and order data then available to Colby was
"untimely" or "unreliable" or inadequately
processed. Such charges, taken as true for
purposes of dismissal, are essentially
criticisms of Hologic's management, "[o]nly
fraud, [however,] not poor management or
even gross mismanagement is actionable under
the securities laws."
Boyle v. Merrimack Bancorp, Inc., 756
F.Supp. 55, 58 (D.Mass.1991).
Here, based on historical
earnings data and the contemporary facts and
inferences of the drug studies, there was a
"reasonable basis" for the forward looking
statement of July 31st. The allegations of
scienter are thus insufficient to sustain
any claims of misrepresentation based upon
that press release.
B. Misleading Silence?: Muir's
Press Interview on September 17, 1990
(statement No. 4).
Muir, Hologic's controller and
principal spokesperson, was interviewed by
Professional Investor Report on September
17, 1990, and was reported as making the
following challenged statements:
[1] forecast I: Hologic "hasn't
gotten any indication from either GE or
Siemens that orders this go round will be
disappointing in any way."
[2] forecast II: Muir is
"unaware" of "negative trends, either short
or long term, that might be affecting the
Company's business."
[3] declaration I: Muir is
"comfortable with a wide range of street
estimates" for fiscal 1991 earnings.
[4] explanation of declaration I:
"It is very early to more strongly project
earnings for next year ... we'll get a
clearer picture as we move forward."
Colby advances two challenges to
the Muir interview. First, she claims that
forecasts I and II (passages [1] and [2]
above) were "not reasonably based" because
Hologic was already experiencing a slowdown
in orders and was becoming unable to project
future orders. Am.Compl. 39.
Second, Colby attacks Muir's
acceptance of a "wide range" of analysts'
estimates and his unwillingness to forecast
earnings (numbers [3] and [4] above) as
misleading because Muir "should have
disclosed" a "developing negative trend."
Id.
With respect to the challenged
forecasts (passages [1] and [2] above)
the analysis of scienter and materiality
above which led to the conclusion that
Hologic's July 31 press release was not
actionable again applies with the same
conclusion. It is undisputed that Hologic
had not yet met with its European
distributors when Muir stated that he had
"no indication" that their orders would be
"disappointing." Scienter is said to lie in
Colby's claim that "the company was already
experiencing a slowdown in orders;" but the
complaint does not specify any sources of
that information or facts suggestive of a
"slowdown" at the time of Muir's September
17th press interview. See Am.Compl.
37, 39. Instead, the Complaint infers a
slow down existed on September 17th solely
from Hologic's November 15th announcement
that earnings in 1991 would fall due to "a
continued (Colby's emphasis) slowing
of orders from Europe after a very strong
sales year in Europe in 1990." Am.Compl.
42.
These allegations of scienter
without specified sources or supporting
facts are based implicitly upon information
and belief alone, and so must be regarded as
speculative and fatally defective under the
standard of Wayne Investments, 739
F.2d at 13-14. No facts are offered to
indicate that these forecasts were made in
bad faith, and such barren allegations
cannot stand against the standard raised
under Hayduk, 775 F.2d at 444.
Page 213
The materiality of Muir's stated
unawareness of "negative trends" is also
dubious, where Muir makes no reference to
any time line or empirical data indicating
any expectations of sales or earnings.
See Priest, 1987 WL 10741, at *2.
Colby also challenges Muir's
silencefailing to disclose a
"developing negative trend" in light of his
declarations (passages [3] and [4] above)
that he was "comfortable" with a wide range
of analysts' estimates because it was "too
early to strongly project" Hologic's
earnings. Am.Compl. 39. Muir's refusal to
forecast Hologic's earnings for the analysts
can be "misleading" only if he had a duty to
make further disclosure. It is well settled
that "[s]ilence, absent a duty to disclose,
is not misleading under Rule 10b-5."
Chiarella v. United States, 445 U.S.
222, 235, 100 S.Ct. 1108, 1118, 63 L.Ed.2d
348 (1980). Such a duty does not arise
merely because investors may be interested
in withheld information.
Roeder v. Alpha Industries, Inc., 814
F.2d 22, 26 (1st Cir.1987).
Backman
v. Polaroid Corp.,
910 F.2d 10 (1st
Cir.1990) held that a duty to disclose
arises only to correct or update what would
otherwise be a materially misleading prior
statement by the defendant. Backman,
910 F.2d at 16-17. Colby has pointed to no
prior affirmative statements by the
defendants, and (as noted above) her
challenges to their vague prior forecasts
are not actionable.
The facts of Backman, no
less than its general rule, mandate a
rejection of Colby's non-disclosure claim.
Backman led a class of Polaroid stock
purchasers who challenged as misleading the
corporation's advertisements of itself as a
"growth company" and a particular quarterly
report which announced record sales and
earnings and extolled its new product,
Polarvision. That report also mentioned that
Polarvision was sold below cost, but did not
disclose the scale of losses and lagging
sales for that product. Id. at 15-16.
The First Circuit pronounced Backman's
complaint to be "dead on arrival," stressing
that Polaroid was not obliged to disclose
the extent of losses so long as management
did not know at the time of the report that
the product was a "commercial failure."
Id. at 13, 16.
Colby's complaint is weaker than
Backman's. Hologic's prior "bright
prospects" comment is as vague as Polaroid's
"growth company" advertisement, but
Hologic's July 31, 1990 balancing prediction
that "we do not expect to maintain this
[high] rate of growth" is more cautionary
than the overall tenor of Polaroid's
challenged quarterly report. Most
importantly, Colby offers no facts to
suggest that Hologic's orders were already
slowing on September 17 when Muir refused to
project earnings or choose among a "wide
range" of analysts' forecasts. By contrast,
Polaroid knew of mounting Polarvision
losses when it published the quarterly
report which noted increased product costs
but did not quantify the scale of Polaroid's
losses or mention declining production.
Backman, 910 F.2d at 16. If Polaroid
owed no duty of further disclosure because
"what was revealed [was] not so incomplete
as to mislead," id. at 13, 16, then
no such duty can be imputed to Hologic.
In short, the complaint has not
advanced a cognizable securities fraud claim
on the basis of direct statements or
omissions made in the course of either
Hologic's July 31 press release or Muir's
September 17 interview.
C. The Imputation of Analysts'
Statements to Hologic.
Two independent analysts'
forecasts of Hologic earnings are sought to
be imputed by Colby to Hologic and the other
defendants as a basis for Rule 10b-5
liability. The "Needham analyst" in a
Rueters July 31, 1990 news account
stated that Hologic's weaker forecast for
fourth quarter, 1990, was a "short term
problem.... Hologic expects that the market
[for its product] will grow." Pl.Ex. 4, at
1. The "Adams, Harkness and Hill" market
specialists predicted "We see strong sales,"
and described Hologic as "a small company
growing very rapidly." Pl. Ex. 5, at 1.
Neither of these analysts
directly quoted or paraphrased any Hologic
officers, nor did they make reference to
allegedly misleading information provided by
the company. Both reports were presented as
independent opinions and neither referred to
any role of Hologic
Page 214
or its officers in the preparation,
approval, or editing of the articles or data
presented.
Colby argues that the analysts'
views may nevertheless be attributed to
Hologic because the company "guided" the
analysts. It is said to have been Hologic's
policy for its officers to "meet or speak
with securities analysts on a regular basis"
and to give "detailed guidance to these
analysts" with respect to company
performance and prospects. Am.Compl. 26.
The analysts, Colby says, "gave Hologic the
opportunity to review and comment" upon
their reports "prior to issuance." As a
consequence of this "guidance" it is said
that Hologic effectively "adopted" the
analysts' reports and, by its silent
acquiescence, violated its duty to correct
their mistaken forecasts. Id. at
27.
The First Circuit has not yet
determined when independent reports of
analysts or journalists may be imputed to a
Section 10(b) or Rule 10b-5 defendant.
Jurisprudence elsewhere is divided.
More restrictive courts have
flatly "refused to impose an affirmative
duty on a corporation to correct
misstatements about it by third parties."
In re Comm. Oil/Tesoro Petroleum Corp.
Securities Litigation, 467 F.Supp. 227,
240 (W.D.Tex.1979). See e.g.,
Electronic Specialty Co. v. International
Controls Corp.,
409 F.2d 937, 949 (2d Cir. 1969)
(defendant with advance knowledge that
analysts' column was inaccurate, but who was
not the source for the article, had no duty
to correct misstatement). In a similar vein,
imputation has been permitted only to a
defendant who "had complete control" over
the content of the publication. Schwartz
v. Novo Industri, A/S, 658 F.Supp. 795,
799 (S.D.N.Y.1987).
Alternatively, some courts have
allowed attribution of articles by third
parties to corporate defendants if
corporate reports or officials are directly
quoted and are materially misleading
as to "a statement of fact" rather than
"merely opinions."
In re Columbia Securities Litigation,
747 F.Supp. 237, 245 (S.D.N.Y.1990).
Milberg v. Western Pacific RR Co., 51
F.R.D. 280, 282 (S.D.N.Y. 1970) (no
liability unless complaint alleges and
publication indicates that misleading
statements of fact were made by corporate
officials);
Hershfang v. Citicorp, 767 F.Supp.
1251 (S.D.N.Y.1991) (analysts' articles
not actionable despite direct quotation of
corporate officials who offered opinions but
not statements of fact).
The Second Circuit's ruling
Elkind v. Liggett & Myers, Inc.,
635 F.2d 156 (2d Cir.1980) is particularly
illuminating in this context. There,
Liggett's practice of examining and
commenting upon analysts' draft reports
regarding company operations was held not to
oblige the company to correct overly
optimistic forecasts or to disclose the
company's own less sanguine expectations.
Id. at 162-63. Such systematic
involvement was deemed to fall short of "an
implied representation that the information
they have reviewed is true or at least in
accordance with the company's views." Id.
at 163. Nor did the company officers'
declarations that "[we] expect another good
year in 1972" in meetings with analysts
allow disappointed investors to bring claims
based upon those analysts' subsequently
hopeful forecasts. Id. at 164. The
Second Circuit concluded that sophisticated
and experienced analysts are not so easily
led astray, and ruled that dismissal of Rule
10b-5 claims based upon imputed statements
is appropriate unless a defendant
"sufficiently entangled itself
with the analysts' forecasts to render those
predictions attributable to it ... [by
placing] its imprimatur, expressly or
impliedly, on the analysts' projections."
Id. at 163.
Allegations of corporate
"guidance" far more specific and direct than
those offered by Colby against Hologic
failed to withstand a dismissal challenge in
Hershfang. There, the Wall Street
Journal reported repeated meetings and
quoted Citibank officers' optimistic
declarations to securities analysts who then
reported favorably on the bank's prospects
and quoted the officers at length. Fed.
Sec.L.Rep. at 90,381-82. Later, after
dividends crashed, the bank president
acknowledged "We were warned about real
estate two years ago, we were warned again a
year ago, and we pooh-poohed it.... Now I'm
Page 215
damned embarrassed." Id. at
90,382. The plaintiff argued to no avail
that the officers' statements in meetings
with analysts and the officers' later
admission of disregarded warnings of
corporate trouble at these meetings were
sufficient to allege a fraudulent scheme to
promote the analysts' misleading
projections. The court dismissed the claims
and admonished:
The complaint must rise or fall
on allegations about defendants' conduct and
not on wide-eyed citation to the gratuitous
commentary of outsiders.
. . . . .
The complaint as a whole alleges
simply that defendants' optimism about
Citibank prospects turned out wrong. Missing
are any facts or identified circumstances
that would generate an inference of guilty
knowledge.
Id. at 90,383, 90,385.
Colby cannot bell Hologic with
the two analysts' statements offered in her
complaint.10 No
Hologic reports or officials are quoted in
those two articles, nor are any
misstatements of fact by any of the
defendants to the analysts described. There
are only vague claims of misleading company
"guidance" which is entirely unspecified as
to "time, place, or content" of the acts of
the individual defendants in leading the
analysts astray. Such gossamer allegations
cannot bear the weight of the scrutiny
necessary under Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b) as
described above.
IV. Insider Trading.
The essential elements of an
insider trading claim as generally derived
from
Affiliated Ute Citizens v. United States,
406 U.S. 128, 152-53, 92 S.Ct. 1456,
1471-72, 31 L.Ed.2d 741 (1972), include:
(1) trading in securities by corporate
insiders (2) while withholding material
inside information (3) which they have a
duty to disclose to the investor public.
Count II of Colby's complaint charges that
Weinstein violated a duty to refrain from
trading Hologic stock before disclosure of
material adverse facts to which he was privy
as an officer. These "material adverse
facts" are said to have been the artificial
inflation of Hologic stock prices by the
collective concealment and
misrepresentations alleged in the Count I
claim.
Colby's "insider trading" claim
fails for two reasons, each of which is
independently sufficient. First, as noted
above, Colby has not sufficiently alleged
what "materially adverse information" any
defendant possessed during the "class
period" and hence there can be no duty to
avoid trading or to make disclosure to
equalize knowledge of insiders and the
investing public.11
There are no allegations that Weinstein knew
more than other defendants, whose alleged
"materially adverse" knowledge of Hologic's
decline in September is largely inferred
form their November acknowledgement of
"continued" declining sales. That sort of
inferred omission by hindsight admission is
rejected herein as a basis for a duty to
disclose.
Second, Colby's purchase of stock
is not sufficiently "contemporaneous" with
Weinstein's sale to afford her standing for
an insider trading claim. Weinstein sold his
shares on September 6, 1990; Colby purchased
her share eight trading days later on
September 17, 1990. While the First Circuit
has not yet ruled on this issue, this Court
is persuaded by the reasoning advanced by
Page 216
Judge McNaught
Backman v. Polaroid Corp.,
540 F.Supp. 667 (1982). The Backman
ruling adopted the Second Circuit
"contemporaneous trading" standard which
presumes that investors are only affected by
temporally proximate insider trades. Id.
at 669;
Wilson v. Comtech Telecommunications
Corp.,
648 F.2d 88 (2d Cir.1981).12
The investors in Backman purchased
stock two and seven trading days,
respectively, after sales by Polaroid
insiders who possessed material information
on revised corporate earnings. This two day
interval was enough to deny the plaintiffs
standing as "contemporaneous" traders.
Backman, 540 F.Supp. at 671.13
Against the obvious barrier of
Backman and parallel jurisprudence,
Colby calls for more liberal standing rules
following what Colby reads as the general
principle enunciated
Shapiro v. Merrill Lynch, Fenner & Smith,
Inc.,
495 F.2d 228, 238 (2d Cir.1974),
which held that the duty of insiders not to
trade was owed to all who purchased stock
while inside information remained
undisclosed. The open door to liability
seemingly afforded under Shapiro,
however, was most emphatically closed by the
Second Circuit
Wilson v. Comtech Telecommunications
Corp., 648 F.2d 88, 94 (1981) where,
in denying standing to the plaintiff, the
court stressed "[a]ny duty of disclosure is
owed only to those investors trading
contemporaneously with the insider."
There are persuasive policy
considerations which underpin the
"contemporaneous" standing requirements of
evolving federal common law. The unfair
advantage presumably possessed by insiders
dissipates rapidly, in part because their
trading transactions are followed and
reported by securities analysts.14
Fridrich v. Bradford, 542 F.2d 307,
326 (6th Cir.1976), cert. denied,
429 U.S. 1053, 97 S.Ct. 767, 50 L.Ed.2d 769
(1977). Moreover, to extend liability "well
beyond the time of the insider's trading
could make the insider liable to all the
world." Wilson, 648 F.2d at 94. It is
notable that for claims mounted under
Section 20A of the Exchange Act Congress has
explicitly mandated that the insider trading
must occur "contemporaneously." 15 U.S.C. §
78t-1(a). These policy considerations apply
to restrain open ended liability in the case
brought by Colby. In the period between
Weinstein's September 6th sale of stock and
Hologic's November 15th disclosure of the
allegedly "inside" information, over two
million shares of Hologic stock are said to
have changed hands. Def.Reply at 16.
Colby's insider trading claim
must be dismissed, both because it fails
sufficiently to allege Weinstein's duty to
disclose information and because Colby, who
purchased shares eight trading days after
the Weinstein sale, lacks standing herself
to bring this claim and is not a suitable
representative of others who might perhaps
press it.
V. Dismissal of the Complaint.
Since both of Colby's counts fail
under the standards erected in Fed.R.Civ.P.
9(b), this complaint must be dismissed in
its entirety.
The First Circuit has underscored
the appropriateness of dismissal without
leave to amend a complaint where "even at
oral argument, before this court, plaintiff
failed to indicate specifically how he would
amend the complaint so as to comply with
Rule 9(b)."
Page 217
Romani, 929 F.2d at 881.15
In the case at bar, Colby likewise has
failed to outline what facts might be
discovered to support her securities fraud
allegations.
The defendants here ought not be
subjected even to some limited discovery by
Colby in the hope that she may find some
basis for her allegations of fraud. See
Boyle 756 F.Supp. at 59. See
generally Judicial Improvements Act of
1990, title I., Pub.L. No. 101-650, 104
Stat. 5089 (codified at 28 U.S.C. §§ 471-482
[Supp.1992]); Comment to Article II,
Discovery, in the Expense and Delay
Reduction Plan of the United States District
Court, District of Massachusetts, order of
Nov. 18, 1991, 583 N.E.2d cxii, cxxvi
(1992); Council on Competitiveness Working
Group on Civil Justice Reform, Agenda for
Civil Justice Reform in America (Aug. 1991);
Donald R. Frederico, The District of
Massachusetts Civil Justice Expense Delay
Reduction Plan, 2 Litigation Management &
Economics 11, 12-13 (1992). Nearly ten
months elapsed from the filing of this case
to its evolution through two complaints with
accompanying motions and oral arguments. The
amended complaint offers little improvement
over the original in the way of
particularized averments of materiality,
scienter, or duty to disclose. Moreover, it
appears to a certainty that further
discovery could not provide a remedy for
Colby's lack of standing to advance Count II
(insider trading).
While the federal rules of civil
procedure are intended to promote access to
the courts through simplified pleading
requirements, the danger of groundless
"strike suits" which allege fraud in hopes
of a settlement offer from corporate
defendants threatened by expensive discovery
and litigation costs is well recognized.
See New England Data, 829 F.2d at 288.
See generally Baskin, Using Rule
9(b) to Reduce Nuisance Securities
Litigation, 99 Yale L.J. 1503, 1594
(1990). Colby has pled her case with
determined imagination but little factual
substance. Considerations of fairness,
judicial economy, and congressional purpose
in enacting the Securities Laws all point to
a denial of discovery and to dismissal of
this complaint with prejudice.
SO ORDERED.
Notes:
1. The Amended Complaint, filed January
10, 1991, succeeds an earlier Complaint,
filed November 19, 1990. The original
Complaint included a third count charging
Hologic and the officers with fraudulent
misrepresentations in Hologic's Registration
Statement filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission. These
misrepresentations were said to violate
Section 11 of the Securities Act of 1933
("the 1933 Act"). This third count does not
appear in the Amended Complaint.
2. These officers are:
(1) David Ellenbogen, a
co-founder of the Company who has served as
President, Treasurer, and a director since
its organization in 1985;
(2) Jay Stein, a co-founder of
the Company who has served as Senior Vice
President, Technical Director, and a
director since its organization;
(3) Glenn Muir, who has served as
Controller and an officer of Hologic since
October, 1988; and
(4) Joel Weinstein, who has been
Vice President of Marketing since 1987.
3. 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b) specifies:
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 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.
4. Rule 10b-5 provides:
It shall be unlawful for any
person, directly or indirectly, by use of
any means or instrumentality of interstate
commerce, or of use of the mails or of any
facility of any national securities
exchange,
(a) To employ any devices,
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.
5. Colby also cites a fifth statement
made by Hologic in a November 15, 1990 press
release. There, the company announced
disappointing 1989 fourth quarter results,
and acknowledged "uncertainty ... due to a
continued slowing of orders from Europe ...
and some delays in orders from customers
awaiting the availability of the [new
Hologic sensitometer] QDR-2000." Pl. Ex. 7
at 2. Colby cites this fifth statement only
to show that prior challenged statements
about Hologic prospects were misleading.
Colby stresses in particular the reference
in the November 15th press release to
"continued slowing of orders from
Europe." Id. at 24 (emphasis
Colby's).
6. The defendants' motion to dismiss is
not transformed into a motion for summary
judgment under Fed.R.Civ.P. 56 by virtue of
the presence of several exhibits attached to
the Complaint. The exhibits are copies of
the allegedly misleading statements which
are the basis of the claim and, as such, may
be properly considered when ruling on a
motion to dismiss.
Fudge v. Penthouse International, Ltd.,
840 F.2d 1012, 1015 (1st Cir.1988).
7. A plaintiff's "due care" and
"reliance" upon a defendant's
misrepresentation are described
Kirby v. Cullinet Software,
721 F.Supp. 1444 (D.Mass.1989) (Wolf, J.)
and Holmes as additional elements of
a Section 10(b) or Rule 10b-5 action.
However, the "reliance" requirement was set
aside for "fraud on the market" claims
Basic, Inc. v. Levinson, 485 U.S.
224, 246-47, 108 S.Ct. 978, 991, 99 L.Ed.2d
194 (1988). Reliance is now presumed and
plaintiffs are held entitled to rely upon
the "integrity of the market" and
information publicly released by
corporations and their agents or employees.
Closely related to reliance is the "due
care" element of common law fraud which is,
almost by definition, a question of factual
dispute not easily resolved in a motion to
dismiss or by summary judgment.
8. Colby's cited authorities are easily
distinguished on this basis. See e.g.,
Kirby, 721 F.Supp. 1444, 1446 (defendant
company offered "expected growth" and
"operating margin" percentages for the
coming year);
Eisenberg v. Gagnon, 766 F.2d 770,
775 (3d Cir.1985) (offering memoranda
projected IRS policies, amounts of coal
reserves and ability to mine them);
Marx v. Computer Sciences Corp., 507
F.2d 485, 488 (9th Cir.1974) (defendant
officer forecast total revenue and earnings
per share).
9. The "Safe Harbor Rule," 17 C.F.R. §
230.175 (1988), specifies:
(a) A statement within the
coverage of paragraph (b) of this section
... shall be deemed not to be a fraudulent
statement ... unless it is shown that such
statement was made or reaffirmed without a
reasonable basis or was disclosed other than
in good faith.
(b) This rule applies to the
following statements:
(1) A forward looking statement
...
(c) For purposes of this rule,
the term "forward looking statement" shall
mean and shall be limited to:
(1) A statement containing a
projection of revenues, income loss,
earnings (loss) per share, capital
expenditures, dividends, capital structure
or other financial items;
(2) A statement of management's
plans and objectives for future operations:
(3) A statement of future
economic performance contained in
management's discussion and analysis of
financial condition and results of
operations....
10. The authority offered by Colby
suggests no rule more friendly to her cause,
since nearly all the cases sustaining
complaints against dismissal involved
corporate defendants who were quoted
as making misstatements of fact in
articles by journalists or securities
analysts.
See Basic, Inc. v. Levinson, 485 U.S.
224, 227-28, 108 S.Ct. 978, 981, 99 L.Ed.2d
194 (1988) (president quoted in
newspaper as denying fact of merger
negotiations, which were underway);
Peil v. Speiser, 806 F.2d 1154, 1160
(3d Cir.1986) (president quoted as
predicting amount of sales; numerous other
inaccuracies quoted in two publications).
Alfus v. Pyramid Technology Corp.,
764 F.Supp. 598 (N.D.Cal.1991) (two
articles allegedly drawn from information
passed to analysts by company are imputed
and actionable as misleading even though
corporate defendant was not directly
quoted).
11. Judge McNaught,
Backman v. Polaroid Corp., 540
F.Supp. 667, 670 (D.Mass.1982), stressed
that liability for insider trading is
"dependent ... upon whether the defendant is
obligated to disclose the inside
information."
Fridrich v. Bradford, 542 F.2d 307,
326-27 (6th Cir.1976), cert. denied,
429 U.S. 1053, 97 S.Ct. 767, 50 L.Ed.2d 769
(1977).
12. Judge McNaught rejected the Sixth
Circuit causation-in-fact rule, i.e., that
plaintiffs must show the direct effect of
insider trading on their own investment
decisions. See generally Fridrich,
542 F.2d 307.
13.
Accord Alfus v. Pyramid Technology Corp.,
745 F.Supp. 1511, 1521-22 (N.D.Cal.1990)
(citing with approval dismissal of
non-contemporaneous claims by plaintiffs
trading two, four, and seven days after
insiders); Kreindler v. Sambos's
Restaurants, Inc., Fed.Sec.L.Rep. (CCH)
98,312, 1981 WL 1684 (S.D.N.Y.1981)
(purchase seven days after insider's sale
not contemporaneous).
14. Jonathan Macey and Geoffrey Miller
argue in their provocative article, An
analysis of Fraud on the Market Theory,
that the "pro-disclosure tilt of the
securities laws" has been exaggerated. 42
Stan.L.Rev. 1059, 1073 (1990). They also
challenge, through a cost benefit analysis,
the Supreme Court's view
Basic, Inc. v. Levinson, 485 U.S.
224, 108 S.Ct. 978, 99 L.Ed.2d 194 (1988)
that disclosure by insiders protects the
overall efficiency of the market. Id.
at 1074.
15. The claims advanced in the failing
Romani complaint are not unlike those in
the present case. There, losing investors in
a horsebreeding limited partnership charged
defendant managers and brokers with a scheme
to "lure investors" through statements which
extolled the partnership in "glowing terms"
while withholding information pertinent to
the horse industry in general and the
management and financial condition of the
partnership in particular. Id. at
877. The First Circuit dismissed Romani's
complaint for failure to offer "factual
allegations that would support a reasonable
inference" that circumstances adverse to
those generalized predictions "existed at
the time of the [statements] and were known
or deliberately or recklessly disregarded by
the defendants." Id. at 878.
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