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Page 1371
862 F.Supp. 1371
Glen VOSGERICHIAN, on behalf of
himself and all others similarly situated,
v.
COMMODORE INTERNATIONAL, Irving Gould, Medhi
R. Ali, Ronald B. Alexander and Arthur
Andersen & Co. Civ. A. No. 92-4867. United States District Court, E.D.
Pennsylvania. September 21, 1994.
Page 1372
John F. Innelli, Michael J.
Molder, Philadelphia, PA, for plaintiff.
Bennett G. Picker, Ellen Rosen
Rogoff, Philadelphia, PA, Fredric W. Yerman,
Phillip A. Geraci, Andrew J. Melnick, New
York City, for Commodore defendants.
Arthur Makadon, Mark S. Stewart,
Laurie Martin, Philadelphia, PA, for Arthur
Andersen & Co.
MEMORANDUM
DITTER, District Judge.
In this case, plaintiff alleged
that defendants violated sections 10(b) and
20(a) of the
Page 1373
Securities and Exchange Act of 1934, 15
U.S.C. §§ 78j(b), 78t(a) (1981), and
Securities and Exchange Commission Rule
10b-5, 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5 (1988).
Commodore International along with the
individual defendants (together, "the
Commodore defendants") and Arthur Andersen &
Co. ("AA") each filed a motion to dismiss
the complaint for failure to state a claim
pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
12(b)(6). The Commodore defendants submitted
an appendix of exhibits with their motion.
I concluded that because the
Commodore defendants had submitted material
extraneous to the pleadings and because
plaintiff had had "a reasonable opportunity
to present pertinent material" himself,
defendants' motions should be treated as
motions for summary judgment.1
I entered summary judgment in favor of AA
and partial summary judgment in favor of the
Commodore defendants. I did not, however,
give plaintiff prior notice of my intention
to treat the motions to dismiss as motions
for summary judgment, 832 F.Supp. 909.
Plaintiff filed a motion for
reconsideration, arguing that I erred in
converting defendants' motions to dismiss
into motions for summary judgment without
providing plaintiff the requisite notice and
opportunity for discovery. Plaintiff asks
that I vacate my prior order and deny
defendants' motions to dismiss.
FACTS.
Commodore manufactured personal
computers and other high technology
products. Through the 1980s Commodore
prospered, but in 1989, the company's sales
began to fall off and net income decreased
sharply, particularly in Europe. Plaintiff
charges that the Commodore defendants, with
the help of their auditor, Andersen,
intentionally misled shareholders about the
company's financial health. Plaintiff and
the other shareholders who purchased
Commodore stock between July 1, 1990, and
August 19, 1992, were allegedly damaged as a
result of having relied on defendants'
misrepresentations. Plaintiff specifically
alleges the following:
A. THE GAAP VIOLATIONS
1. The Litigation Settlement
The first element of defendants'
alleged course of fraud involved Commodore's
financial reporting practices. In 1991,
Commodore settled a lawsuit with its former
president for $9.2 million. In its FY91
third-quarter financial statement, Commodore
termed this settlement an "extraordinary
item." Because generally accepted accounting
principles ("GAAP") reserve the term
"extraordinary item" for expenses more
unusual than litigation, plaintiff charges
that the Commodore defendants, with
Andersen's acquiescence, knowingly violated
GAAP. Moreover, Andersen, by issuing a
"clean" or unqualified opinion for
Commodore's statement, allegedly violated
generally accepted auditing standards
("GAAS") as well.2
In addition, the Commodore
defendants are charged with fraud due to
their use of the "extraordinary item" in two
different ways. In the third-quarter of
FY91, Commodore reported its net income as
$10.6 million "before extraordinary item,"
making its income seem higher than the $1.4
million it actually was after payment of the
settlement. The next year, however, in
comparing its current income to the prior
year's, Commodore called the FY91
third-quarter income "$1.4 million ... after
extraordinary charge," which, plaintiff
contends, was intended to make the actual
drop in net income from FY91 to FY92 seem
smaller.
2. The Undisclosed Obligation to
Prudential
Second, plaintiff alleges that
Commodore failed to disclose in its
financial statements
Page 1374
an obligation, allegedly incurred in
1987, to buy back warrants for stock it had
conveyed to Prudential Insurance Company in
1987, in connection with a $60 million loan.
Commodore does not dispute that this
obligation was never disclosed; rather, it
maintains it never had such an obligation.
Moreover, Commodore concedes that
in 1989, and 1991, when it did buy back
portions of these warrants, it reported
these re-purchases in its financial
statements as equity transactions. Arthur
Andersen does not dispute that it "advised
or concurred" with Commodore's decision to
do so.
B. CDTV
Plaintiff's second charge in the
Commodore defendants' course of fraudulent
conduct is that these defendants
misrepresented their expectations for CDTV,
a new interactive compact disc television
system for the home. Plaintiff charges that
defendants promised that the product would
do far more than it did.
In Commodore's first CDTV press
release on April 3, 1991, it introduced its
"revolutionary consumer electronics
component." Commodore stated that, "During
the introductory phase, 50 CDTV multimedia
titles will be available, with more than a
hundred planned." (Appendix, CDTV Press
Release). Also in that release, Nolan
Bushnell, general manager of Commodore's
Interactive Consumer Products Division,
stated:
We believe the CDTV player and
interactive multimedia will be to the 1990s
what VCRs and videos were to the 1980s. The
CDTV system will make our education
entertaining and our entertainment
educational. If we can change the world
through information, then this is the
product to do it.
Later that month, Commodore's
chairman, Irving Gould, stated: "Commodore's
range of products is now being enhanced with
the launch of CDTV, an innovative
multi-media product which represents a major
potential opportunity in the consumer
market." (Appendix, FY91 3Q PR and Report.)
At the end of that year, the
company's 1991 annual report announced:
[CDTV] was received with great
enthusiasm by industry analysts and
retailers. The Electronic Industries
Association named it one of the most
innovative consumer electronics products of
1991. Popular Science named CDTV one
of 1990's "Best of What's New" products for
the home.
It continued, "Commodore and
other third party developers introduced more
than 50 CDTV titles with 100 planned to be
available by Christmas 1991," and concluded:
Commodore plans to offer a wide
range of CDTV accessory products in fiscal
1992, including keyboard, genlock, and
storage and networking devices. In addition,
Commodore plans to introduce a new video
card that will substantially enhance the
color capability of CDTV to over 4 million
colors.
Finally, in its 1991 Financial
Review, Commodore stated plainly that: "The
CDTV, the first CD based interactive
multimedia player for consumers, was
launched in the fourth quarter of fiscal
1991 and accounted for only a nominal share
of sales." (Appendix, 1991 Report.)
Commodore does not contest that
CDTV sold slowly. In the spring of 1992,
just after the Christmas season, the company
cut CDTV's suggested retail price by 20
percent.
C. RELIANCE ON THE SHRINKING
EUROPEAN MARKET
The final element of Commodore's
alleged fraud is its failure to disclose the
extent of the European recession's impact on
Commodore's growth in Europe. Commodore
concedes it relied heavily on the European
computer market. It also concedes that the
demand for personal computers in Europe
dropped sharply in 1990 and 1991. Plaintiff
concedes that the recession was widely
recognized and that defendants had no duty
to report on Europe's economy in greater
detail. What was fraudulent, plaintiff
charges, was Commodore's failure to disclose
how this recession had actually affected
growth, reporting instead that declining
revenues were due to "currency fluctuations"
and a "weak global economic environment." In
particular, plaintiff charges that
Commodore's reports
Page 1375
of "continuing sales growth of European
operations" and its "sustained growth ...
despite the significant unfavorable effect
of foreign exchange rates" were false.
Plaintiff claims it is now evident that the
company's high sales volume was due not to
continued growth but to Commodore's
aggressive price cutting strategy.
DISCUSSION.
A. THE CONVERSION OF MOTIONS
TO DISMISS INTO MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
WAS ERRONEOUS.
The Third Circuit has
specifically held that "litigants are
entitled to 10 days notice before a Rule
12(b)(6) motion to dismiss may be converted
into a Rule 56 motion for summary judgment."
Crown Central Petroleum v. Waldman,
634 F.2d 127, 129 (3d Cir.1980). I did
not give plaintiff any notice that I
intended to rule on defendants' motions to
dismiss as motions for summary judgment;
therefore, the conversion was improper.
B. PLAINTIFF'S CLAIMS MUST
NONETHELESS BE DISMISSED.
1. Consideration of the documents
in the appendix was proper in ruling on a
motion to dismiss.
Generally, in ruling on a motion
to dismiss, a court "may not consider any
material other than the pleadings." 2A James
W. Moore et al., Moore's Federal Practice
12.07[2.-5], at 12-89 (2d ed. 1994). If the
court does consider extraneous material,
Rule 12(b) requires that the motion to
dismiss be converted into a motion for
summary judgment and that all parties be
given a "reasonable opportunity to present
all material made pertinent to such a motion
by Rule 56." Fed.R.Civ.Pro. 12(b).
"[M]aterial which is submitted as
part of the complaint, as well as certain
items in the record and the public record,"
however, may be consulted in deciding a
motion to dismiss without treating the
motion as one for summary judgment.
Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp. v. White
Consolidated Industries, 998 F.2d 1192,
1196 (3d Cir.1993); 2A James W. Moore et
al., Moore's Federal Practice 12.07[2.-5]
at 12-90 to 12-91; see also 5A
Charles A. Wright and Arthur R. Miller,
Federal Practice and Procedure § 1357, at
299 (1990) ("In determining whether to grant
a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, the court primarily
considers the allegations in the complaint,
although matters of public record, orders,
items appearing in the record of the case,
and exhibits attached to the complaint, also
may be taken into account.").
The Third Circuit has held that
consideration of "an undisputedly authentic
document that a defendant attaches as an
exhibit to a motion to dismiss" does not
require that the motion to dismiss be
converted into a motion for summary judgment
"if the plaintiff's claims are based on the
document." Pension Benefit, 998 F.2d
at 1196; see also In re Donald Trump
Casino Securities Litigation Taj Mahal
Litigation, 7 F.3d 357, 368 n. 9 (3d
Cir.1993). The reasoning underlying this
rule is obvious:
Were courts to refrain from
considering such documents, complaints that
quoted only selected and misleading portions
of such documents could not be dismissed
under Rule 12(b)(6) even though they would
be doomed to failure. Foreclosing resort to
such documents might lead to complaints
filed solely to extract nuisance
settlements.
Kramer
v. Time Warner Inc., 937 F.2d 767, 774;
Goodwin v. Elkins & Co., 730 F.2d 99,
113 (3d Cir.1984) (Becker, J.,
concurring) (counseling that "where a
document is actually and necessarily relied
upon in the allegations of a complaint, and
its authenticity is conceded, the document
may be considered by the court" on a motion
to dismiss; otherwise, plaintiff's claims
could survive "where the terms of the
document on which the claim is based would
render the complaint insufficient as a
matter of law simply by refusing to attach
the document to the complaint").
Because plaintiff has never
contested the authenticity of the documents
in the appendix,
Page 1376
I conclude that all of the exhibits are
"undisputedly authentic."3
Thus, the issue becomes whether plaintiff's
claims are based on each of the documents.
Plaintiff concedes that I may
properly take into "account the full text
of the statements set forth in the complaint
in determining what message was sent to the
investment community."4
(emphasis added). Plaintiff actually
paraphrased and/or quoted from all but two
of the exhibits that the Commodore
defendants attached.5
These exhibits are necessarily documents on
which plaintiff bases his claims. Thus, each
of these exhibits can properly be considered
in deciding the motions to dismiss.
The only other documents which
were submitted as part of the appendix are
the 1990 annual report and FY93 1Q press
release.6 While
plaintiff does not quote from the FY93 1Q
press release, he does quote the financial
information contained in the report
accompanying the release. Therefore, in an
abundance of caution, I will only consider
the financial data and not the press
release. Likewise, I will not consider the
1990 annual report.
2. Because the judgments in
favor of defendants were based on
plaintiff's failure as a matter of law to
state essential elements of his fraud case,
the claims must now be dismissed.
a. Arthur Andersen & Co.
In granting summary judgment in
favor of AA, I held that no reasonable
investor would have considered either of the
misrepresentations which plaintiff alleged
to be material. First, with respect
to the characterization of the litigation
settlement as an "extraordinary item" in
violation of GAAP, I found that all relevant
information about the settlement had been
disclosed to investors in the same
documents. "Any investor who read the
third-quarter FY91 and FY92 financial
statements closely enough to see the
`extraordinary item' also saw that
payment's rather profound effect on the
company's net income, stated just below."
The financial statements reflected the
"amount, the purpose, and the effect" of the
settlement, none of which plaintiff contends
was inaccurate. Thus, I concluded that no
reasonable investor could have found any
mislabeling of the settlement agreement
to be a material misrepresentation because
it did not "significantly
Page 1377
alter the `total mix' of the information"
available.
See TSC Industries, Inc. v. Northway,
Inc., 426 U.S. 438, 449, 96 S.Ct. 2126,
2123, 48 L.Ed.2d 757 (1976).
Similarly, I found that the
accounting treatment of the re-purchase of
the Prudential warrants was immaterial
because "both transactions were fully
disclosed in the company's financial
statements and in its press releases. Any
reasonable investor knew from reading any of
those documents what warrants Commodore had
issued, when it bought them back, and at
what price.... [N]o reasonable investor
could have considered the accounting
treatment of the purchases significant."
Once again, the "total mix" of information
available to the investing public was not
altered by the accounting treatment of the
warrant repurchase.
Although my conclusions were
couched in "summary judgment" language, I
essentially held that plaintiff failed to
state a claim against AA. After properly
considering the alleged misrepresentations
in the context of a motion to dismiss, I now
conclude they were immaterial as a matter of
law, and therefore, I must dismiss
plaintiff's claims against AA.
b. The Commodore defendants
I granted summary judgment in
favor of the Commodore defendants on the
claims arising from: 1) the characterization
of the litigation settlement; 2) the
representations regarding CDTV; and, 3) the
false portrayal of growth in a shrinking
European market. As with AA, I determined
that no reasonable investor would have found
the misrepresentations relating to the
litigation settlement to be material.
I also concluded that Commodore
defendants' statements about CDTV, which
plaintiff alleged to be materially
misleading, did not support a securities
fraud case as a matter of law. I held that
"[a]ll of Commodore's statements about CDTV
either constitute unactionable `puffing' or
they are not misleading."
Finally, I found that the alleged
misrepresentations and omissions regarding
the European market were non-actionable as
well. Commodore "reported both a large drop
in earnings and a much smaller drop in
sales. Anyone with an elementary mathematics
education could determine that Commodore's
sales price dropped proportionately." I held
that "[w]hen the undisclosed elements of a
company's financial situation are obvious
from that which the company does
disclose, the company cannot be held liable
for a material omission." Because all
pertinent information was available to
investors to determine that the prices of
Commodore's computers was reduced, it cannot
serve as a basis for a securities fraud
claim.
Each of these determinations,
although originally the result of a summary
judgment analysis, remains valid when
considered in the context of a motion to
dismiss. In each instance, plaintiff has
failed to state one of the essential
elements of his claims, whether it be the
materiality element or the actual
misrepresentation or omission, as in the
CDTV claim. Thus, each of these claims must
now be dismissed.7
C. THE EFFECT OF THE
CENTRAL BANK CASE.
During the pendency of this
motion for reconsideration, the United
States Supreme Court held that no cause of
action exists under section 10(b) and rule
10b-5 for aiding and abetting a manipulative
or deceptive act in connection with the
purchase or sale of securities.
Central Bank of Denver v. First
Interstate Bank, ___ U.S. ___, 114 S.Ct.
1439, 128 L.Ed.2d 119 (1994). Therefore,
irrespective of my determination in this
motion for reconsideration which reaffirms
my conclusions from the summary judgment
analysis, plaintiff's claims against any of
the defendants for aiding and abetting
securities law violations must be dismissed.
The claims plaintiff alleged
against the Commodore defendants clearly
asserted primary liability and are thus
unaffected by Central Bank. This
result is less clear with
Page 1378
respect to AA. Plaintiff's "Amended Class
Action Complaint as to Arthur Andersen &
Co." charges that AA violated securities
laws due to its roles in: 1) the Prudential
warrant transaction, and 2) the
characterization of the litigation
settlement as an extraordinary item.
Plaintiff's allegations with
respect to the Prudential warrant
transaction are insufficient to support any
claim other than one for aider and abettor
liability, which has now been abolished.
Plaintiff states that Commodore "consulted
Arthur Andersen" and that "AA advised or
concurred with Commodore's decision to treat
the re-purchases as equity transactions."
(Doc. No. 18, 19.) He also maintains that
"Commodore, with AA's guidance and express
approval, effectively paid Prudential an
additional $9 million in interest without
ever recording any expense." (Id.) He
further states, "AA provided direct and
substantial assistance to Commodore in
misrepresenting the true nature of the
Prudential transactions." (Id. at
23.) Plaintiff has not alleged facts in
connection with the Prudential warrant
transaction sufficient to support a primary
liability claim under section 10(b) or rule
10b-5 against AA. Each and every
misrepresentation alleged was made by
Commodore. Plaintiff's allegations against
AA do not go beyond allegations that AA
assisted Commodore in perpetrating
securities fraud and are thus not
cognizable.
Plaintiff alleges that AA
committed securities fraud by issuing an
unqualified, or "clean," opinion even though
the characterization of the litigation
settlement as an extraordinary item
allegedly violated "generally accepted
accounting principles" (GAAP). (Id.
at 26.) Plaintiff claims the "clean
opinion" was false and misleading itself and
that it "provided substantial assistance to
Commodore in its scheme to inflate the
market price of the company's stock." (Id.
at 27.)
Because plaintiff maintains that
AA made false representations itself, in the
form of the "clean" opinion, rather than
merely assisting Commodore in its scheme to
defraud, the claims based on the litigation
settlement are not affected by Central
Bank. See Central Bank, ___ U.S. at ___,
114 S.Ct. at 1455 ("Any person or entity,
including a lawyer, accountant, or bank, who
employs a manipulative device or makes a
material misstatement (or omission) on which
a purchaser or seller of securities relies
may be liable as a primary violator under
10b-5, assuming all of the requirements for
primary liability under Rule 10b-5 are
met.")
CONCLUSION.
In conclusion, plaintiff's motion
for reconsideration will be granted, and my
order dated August 26, 1993, will be
vacated. Because I find that my
consideration of the appendix material was
proper in the context of a motion to
dismiss, I will instead grant defendants'
motions to dismiss to the same extent I
entered judgment in their favor.
Furthermore, all claims alleging aider and
abettor liability must be dismissed due to
the Supreme Court's ruling in Central
Bank.
Notes:
1. I also determined that the appendix
contained material relevant to AA's motion
to dismiss and converted it as well.
2. GAAS represents auditing standards
approved and adopted by the membership of
the American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants (AICPA), AU § 150.02. Similarly,
GAAP "encompasses the convention, rules, and
procedures necessary to define accepted
accounting practice at a particular time,"
AICPA, AU § 411.02. In essence, GAAS and
GAAP delineate due professional care owed by
accountants to their clients as stated by
the accounting community. See The
Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors of
Corell Steel v. Fishbein & Co., No.
91-4919, 1992 WL 196768, at *5 (E.D.Pa. Aug.
10, 1992).
3. Plaintiff had ample opportunity to
object to the documents on the grounds of
authenticity. At oral argument, Mr. Yerman,
counsel for the Commodore defendants,
specifically pointed out that he had
attached various documents to the motion to
dismiss and requested that I examine them
closely. (See Transcript of Oral
Argument, April 8, 1993, at 6, lines 17-20;
at 14, lines 22-24; at 40, lines 8-9; at 46,
lines 9-10; at 56, lines 23-24; at 57, lines
1-19). At no time did plaintiff raise any
objection to the utilization of the
documents in the appendix in deciding the
motion to dismiss. At one point during the
argument, Mr. Innelli, plaintiff's attorney,
also consulted one of the documents in the
appendix (the "financial statements which
were appended to a press release") in
arguing that the characterization of the
settlement as an extraordinary item had a
material impact on "the information that
[was] disseminated to the marketplace." (See
id. at 59, lines 15-25 to 60 lines 1-7).
4. Plaintiff, however, argues that I may
not use the documents to stand for the truth
of the matter asserted. I agree. In first
granting summary judgment and now in
dismissing plaintiff's claims, the truth or
falsity of the statements made in the
documents is beside the point. Rather, the
documents are consulted for the sole purpose
of putting the alleged misrepresentations in
complete context.
5.
Cite in
Document Amended Complaint
March 14, 1989 PR 49(a)
FY90 4Q and Final PR 21
FY91 1Q PR and Report 22
FY91 2Q PR and Report 24
CDTV PR 25
FY91 3Q PR and Report 26
May 9, 1991 PR 49(b)
FY91 4Q PR and Report 27
1991 Annual Report 28-30, 34
FY92 1Q PR and Report 31
FY92 2Q PR and Report 32
FY92 3Q PR and Report 39
FY92 4Q PR and Report 41-42
1992 Annual Report 58
FASB No. 5 51
6. Also included in the appendix was a
copy of the amended complaint, slip
opinions, and Commodore Stock prices as
printed in the New York Times. It is
obviously appropriate to consult the
complaint and slip opinions. I will take
judicial notice of the stock prices.
Fed.R.Evid. 201(b)(2) & (c).
7. Plaintiff's claim arising from the
alleged obligation to repurchase the
Prudential warrants is unaffected by this
opinion and shall go forward.
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