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Page 974
898 F.Supp. 974
In re MTC ELECTRONIC TECHNOLOGIES
SHAREHOLDERS LITIGATION. No. 93-CV-876 (JG). United States District Court, E.D.
New York. September 7, 1995.
Page 975
COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED
Page 976
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Page 977
Patricia M. Hynes, Sanford
Dumain, Milberg, Weiss, Bershad, Hynes &
Lerach, Jeffrey H. Squire, Kaufman,
Malchman, Kirby & Squire, New York City, for
plaintiffs.
Bruce S. Kaplan, Friedman &
Kaplan, New York City, for Peter Jensen,
Robert Farr, David Wong, Goodwin Wang,
Thomas Lenagh, Edilberto Pozon.
Edward Westfield, Stults &
Balber, New York City, for H.J. Meyers & Co.
Ronald D. Reynolds, Hill Wynne
Troop & Meisinger, Los Angeles, California,
for H.J. Meyers & Co.
Thomas I. Sheridan, III, Haythe &
Curley, New York City, for MTC Electronic
Technologies Co., Ltd.
James M. Ringer, Rogers & Wells,
New York City, for Diawa Securities America,
Inc.
Gregory A. Markel, Orrick,
Herrington & Sutcliffe, New York City, for
BDO Dunwoody Ward Mallette.
Richard C. Raymond, Braunschweig,
Rachlis, Fishman & Raymond, P.C., New York
City, for Alan Leung.
Jonathan D. Warner, Warner &
Joselson, New York City, for Miko Leung and
Sit Wa Leung.
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
GLEESON, District Judge.
The plaintiffs are purchasers of
defendant MTC Electronic Technologies Co.,
Ltd. ("MTC") stock. They have brought this
putative class action1
against MTC, several of its officers and
directors, its accountant and its
underwriters, alleging violations of the
federal securities laws. Two of the
individual defendants are also charged with
violating the Racketeer Influenced and
Corrupt Organizations Act ("RICO").
In a hearing on April 15, 1994,
the Hon. Reena Raggi denied defendants'
motions to dismiss the complaint. Shortly
thereafter, the Supreme Court decided
Central Bank
N.A. v. First Interstate Bank,
___ U.S. ___, 114 S.Ct. 1439, 128 L.Ed.2d
119 (1994), eliminating aider and
abettor liability under Section 10(b) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934. In light of
the holding of Central Bank, Judge
Raggi allowed the plaintiffs to amend their
complaint. After the plaintiffs' amended
their complaint, the defendants filed
another round of motions to dismiss. The
case was subsequently reassigned to this
Court. On April 10, 1995, the Court issued
an order stating that the defendants'
renewed motions to dismiss were granted in
part and denied in part and that this
opinion, which sets forth the reasons for
those rulings, would follow.
Background
MTC is a Canadian corporation
engaged in the importation, primarily into
Canada and the United States, of consumer
electronics. At the heart of this case is a
series of representations by the defendants
regarding purported joint venture agreements
between MTC and various entities in the
People's Republic of China. MTC claimed that
these agreements would allow it to provide
cellular telephone service and equipment to
hundreds of millions of customers in China.
In press statements and in filings with the
Securities Exchange Commission ("SEC"), MTC
asserted, among other things, that (1) the
agreements gave MTC the exclusive right to
provide cellular phone and paging services
to 300 million people in China; (2) MTC
would own and operate the cellular telephone
networks to be created by the joint
ventures; (3) MTC had developed the only
pagers on the market capable of displaying
Chinese characters; and (4) the agreements
were final and legally binding contracts.
The plaintiffs contend that these
statements were false, and that MTC had no
binding agreements in China and no
reasonable expectation of ever receiving
revenues from such projects. They further
contend that these false statements were
made in order to artificially inflate the
value of MTC stock in anticipation of a
large stock and debt offering in late 1992.
During the period in which these
representations were made, the
Page 978
price of MTC stock skyrocketed from $5.00
per share to $30.00 per share.
It is further alleged that during
this rise in the price of MTC stock, the
Chief Executive Officer and President of
MTC, Miko Leung, and his brother Sit Wa
Leung, who was President of an MTC
subsidiary and member of MTC's Board of
Directors, illegally converted thousands of
shares of MTC stock, realizing personal
profits in the millions of dollars. Peter
Jensen, a Director of MTC and a member of
the Board of Directors' Audit Committee,
also allegedly took advantage of the high
price of MTC stock by exercising stock
options, and netting a profit of $173,992.
Finally, the complaint alleges
that when the truth about the "agreements"
in China was brought to light, MTC's stock
price tumbled, thereby injuring the named
plaintiffs and the class members they hope
to represent.
The plaintiffs have brought this
action against MTC, Miko Leung, Sit Wa
Leung, Peter Jensen, Alan Leung (the son of
Sit Wa Leung and the Manager of MTC's
Marketing Department), Robert Farr (Vice
President of Marketing), Goodwin Wang (Vice
President of Mobile Communications), David
Wong (Executive Controller and Chief
Financial Officer), Edilberto Pozon (Member
of MTC's Board of Directors and the Board's
Audit Committee), and Thomas Lenagh (Member
of the Board of Directors since 1992 and a
former member of the Audit Committee). In
addition, the Plaintiffs have named as
defendants Diawa Securities America, Inc.
("Diawa"), MTC's underwriter for its 1992
stock offering, H.J. Meyers & Co. ("H.J.
Meyers"), the underwriter of MTC's 1991
stock offering, and BDO Dunwoody Ward
Mallette ("Dunwoody"), a Canadian public
accounting firm.
The complaint contains three
counts. Count One accuses all of the
defendants of violating Section 10(b) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 ("the
Exchange Act") (15 U.S.C. § 78j), and Rule
10b-5 (17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5), promulgated
thereunder by the SEC. All of the defendants
are alleged to be primary violators of the
statute and the rule and to have conspired
to violate those provisions. Count Two is
brought against all of the individual
defendants (Miko Leung, Sit Wa Leung, Alan
Leung, Robert Farr, Goodwin Wang, David
Wong, Edilberto Pozon, Peter Jensen and
Thomas Lenagh), and alleges that they
violated Section 20(a) of the Exchange Act
in their capacity as "controlling persons"
at MTC. Finally, Count Three alleges that
Miko Leung and Sit Wa Leung violated the
RICO statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c), by
participating in the conduct of the affairs
of MTC through a pattern of racketeering
activity involving mail fraud, wire fraud,
securities fraud and the transportation of
stolen securities.
With the exception of Diawa, all
of the defendants have brought motions to
dismiss. In all, seven motions have been
made. Pozon and Jensen move to dismiss the
complaint in its entirety for failure to
plead fraud with particularity. Farr and
Wang move to dismiss Count One for failure
to state a claim of primary liability
against them. MTC, Farr, Jensen, Wang,
Lenagh, Pozon, and Wong (referred to herein
collectively as the "MTC Defendants") move
to dismiss Count One for failure to state a
claim to the extent that it alleges a
conspiracy to violate Section 10(b) and Rule
10b-5. Miko Leung and Sit Wa Leung move to
dismiss the RICO count for failure to state
a claim. Alan Leung moves to dismiss Counts
One and Two for failure to plead fraud with
particularity. H.J. Meyers moves to dismiss
for failure to state a claim of primary
liability against it or, in the alternative,
to strike certain portions of the complaint.
Finally, Dunwoody moves to dismiss for
failure to state a claim of primary
liability and for failure to plead fraud
with particularity.
In passing on these motions to
dismiss, I have a limited task. The
allegations in the complaint must be
accepted as true, and must be construed
favorably to the plaintiffs. Further, the
motions can be granted only if it appears
beyond doubt that the plaintiffs can prove
no set of facts entitling them to relief.
Scheuer v. Rhodes, 416 U.S. 232, 236,
94 S.Ct. 1683, 1686, 40 L.Ed.2d 90 (1974);
Conley v. Gibson, 355 U.S. 41, 45-46,
78 S.Ct. 99, 101-102, 2 L.Ed.2d 80 (1957).
Page 979
It of course remains to be
determined what the plaintiffs will actually
be able to prove, but under the standard
applicable here, I must accept their
allegations that there was a massive fraud
perpetrated by the defendants. Although
allegations of such conduct are not unusual,
some of the fraudulent conduct in this case
has been admitted by MTC. For example, in
March 1994, independent auditors and MTC's
Board of Directors revealed that 1,110,000
shares of MTC stock that were supposed to
have been issued in 1992 to engineers
employed at the purported Chinese joint
ventures were actually obtained by fraud and
converted by Miko Leung or his brother Sit
Wa Leung. The Leungs were subsequently fired
and have been sued by MTC for their
fraudulent conduct. Thus, MTC has admitted
to massive fraud by its most senior
management.
Further, MTC's Form 20-F Annual
Report For Fiscal Year Ended January 31,
1994, reveals that the purported sales of
60,000 fax machines during 1991, 1992 and
1993 in fact did not occur. The company has
told its shareholders that it believes that
payments received for these fabricated
"sales" came from companies controlled by
former management. In addition, the company
reported that a $1.25 million management
fee, purportedly paid in connection with the
fax machine "sales" and recorded as income
in fiscal year 1992, was never paid to MTC.
These and other revelations have required
MTC to materially restate its financial
statements for fiscal years 1991, 1992 and
1993.
Discussion
A. The Claimed Failure to
Plead Fraud With Particularity (Pozon and
Jensen)
Defendants Edilberto Pozon and
Peter Jensen move to dismiss the complaint
for failure to meet the pleading
requirements of Rule 9(b) of the Federal
Rules of Civil Procedure. In allegations
involving fraud, Rule 9(b) requires that
"the circumstances constituting fraud or
mistake shall be stated with particularity.
Malice, intent, knowledge, and other
conditions of mind of a person may be
averred generally." Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b).
Rule 9(b) is a departure from the
normal pleading requirements of the Federal
Rules. In most cases, the rules merely
require the plaintiff to plead a "short and
plain statement" setting forth the
allegations and grounds for relief.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(a). The Second Circuit has
held that the requirements of Rule 9(b) and
Rule 8(a) "must be read together."
Ouaknine v. MacFarlane, 897 F.2d 75,
79 (2d. Cir.1990).2
At a minimum, a complaint claiming fraud
"must allege the time, place, speaker, and
sometimes even the content of the alleged
misrepresentation." Id. As for
scienter, a complaint alleging fraud must at
least set out facts "giving rise to a
`strong inference' of fraudulent intent."
Id. (citations omitted);
IUE AFL-CIO Pension Fund v. Herrmann,
9 F.3d 1049, 1057 (2d Cir.1993). In
Section 10(b) cases, the Second Circuit has
established two methods of properly pleading
scienter:
[t]he requisite "strong
inference" of fraud may be established
either (a) by alleging facts to show that
defendants had both motive and opportunity
to commit fraud, or (b) by alleging facts
that constitute strong circumstantial
evidence of conscious misbehavior or
recklessness.
Shields
v. Citytrust Bancorp, Inc., 25 F.3d
1124, 1128 (2d Cir.1994).
However, the Second Circuit has
carved out an exception to this rule for
"insiders and affiliates." If the defendants
are insiders, then "`no specific connection
between fraudulent representations ... and
particular defendants is necessary.'"
DiVittorio v. Equidyne Extractive Indus.,
822 F.2d 1242, 1247 (2d Cir.1987)
(quoting
Luce v. Edelstein, 802 F.2d 49, 54-55
(2d Cir. 1986)).
The defendants, hoping to avoid
the consequences of the "group pleading"
permitted by DiVittorio and Luce,
argue that
Page 980
they are "outsiders," and that
allegations that they were members of the
audit committee and signed the prospectuses
are insufficient. I find these arguments
unconvincing,3 and
conclude that the allegations against Pozon
and Jensen are sufficiently particularized
to warrant the denial of the motion.
Pozon and Jensen are alleged to
have signed prospectuses containing
materially false and misleading information.
Moreover, Pozon and Jensen together
constituted the Audit Committeea committee
charged with the responsibility of
overseeing the work of defendant BDO
Dunwoody. As noted above, the plaintiffs'
allegationswhich I must regard as
truereveal fraud, theft of securities and
the fabrication of financial information by
senior management at MTC. In short, the
complaint alleges massive accounting fraud
during the class period. Considering that
Pozon and Jensen were charged with
overseeing the conduct of MTC's accountants.
I would conclude that the complaint
satisfies the requirements of Rule 9(b),
even if the allegations against them were
limited to their status at MTC and their
signing of fraudulent prospectuses.
See Kimmel v. Labenski, 1988 WL 19229,
*4 (S.D.N.Y. Feb. 10, 1988) (holding that
the signatories of a SEC 10-K forms are
"insiders");
Greenfield v. Professional Care, Inc.,
677 F.Supp. 110, 114-15 (E.D.N.Y.1987)
(board members who serve on the audit
committee should be treated as corporate
insiders). The motions of defendants Pozon
and Jensen are therefore denied.4
B. The Claimed Failure To
Plead A Primary Violation Of Section 10(b)
(Farr and Wang)
Defendants Robert Farr and
Goodwin Wang move to dismiss Count One for
failure to plead a primary violation against
them under Section 10(b) of the Act.5
The allegations against Farr and Wang are
limited to their status as officers: Farr is
a long-term insider at MTC, and Wang has
been Executive Vice President for Marketing
at MTC since 1988 and the company's Vice
President for Mobile Communications since
May of 1992.
Seizing upon Central Bank,
Farr and Wang argue that, since no false
statements are specifically attributed to
them, they are not alleged to have committed
a primary violation of Section 10(b).
However, their argument fails because they
have, in fact, been charged as primary
violators.
Even assuming arguendo
that a corporate insider must be personally
responsible for a particular misstatement or
manipulative device in order to be primarily
liablea proposition I do not acceptthere
is no reason to conclude that such
responsibility must be specifically alleged
in the complaint. Indeed, the rationale for
the relaxed pleading requirements
Page 981
under Rule 9(b) suggests otherwise.
As discussed above, under the
Luce line of cases, "no specific
connection between fraudulent
representations ... and particular
defendants is necessary where ... defendants
are insiders or affiliates participating in
the offer of the securities in question."
Luce, 802 F.2d at 55. Because Farr and
Wang are insiders, the "group pleading" in
the complaint is sufficient to survive a
motion to dismiss.
The underlying purpose of
allowing "group pleading" against insiders
is that "a plaintiff may not be able to
plead the precise role of each defendant
when a group defendants has acted in concert
... Under those circumstances, it is
appropriate to plead the actions of the
group and leave the development of
individual liability questions until some
discovery has been undertaken, rather than
to dismiss the plaintiff because he does not
have what may be concealed information."
In re AnnTaylor Stores Securities Litig.,
807 F.Supp. 990 (S.D.N.Y.1992) (quoting
Jackson v. First Fed Sav. F.A.,
709 F.Supp. 863, 878 (E.D.Ark.1988)). As Judge
Raggi noted when she initially declined to
dismiss the allegations against Farr and
Wang:
their positions within the
company and the fraud alleged does give rise
to questions about what they knew and
whether they would have had to have known
that the company was repeatedly putting out
false statements. I simply do not know at
this point what their control over the
documents was, what their role in preparing
any of them was.
To the extent that the plaintiffs
do not know either, I cannot say at this
point that dismissal is the appropriate
action.
Transcript of Proceedings dated
April 15, 1994, at 113-14.
In short, I conclude that the
complaint properly alleges a primary
violation of Section 10(b) against Farr and
Wang and that the inability to specify
liability among such insiders on an
individualized basis is neither surprising
nor unreasonable at this stage. I therefore
reaffirm Judge Raggi's denial of their
motion to dismiss.
C. The Motion To Dismiss the
Conspiracy Allegations (MTC Defendants)
The MTC Defendants move to
dismiss paragraph 169 of the complaint to
the extent that it alleges a conspiracy to
violate the securities laws. They argue that
the reasoning of Central Bank
requires the conclusion that conspiracy
liability is unavailable in private claims
under Section 10(b). I agree.
Every court that has decided this
issue after Central Bank has adopted
the position advanced by the MTC defendants.
For instance,
In re Ross Systems Securities Litigation,
1994 WL 583114 (N.D.Cal. July 21, 1994),
the court concluded "that the Central
Bank rationale that prohibits implied
aiding and abetting liability is applicable
to implied conspiratorial liability and
leads to the inevitable conclusion that
conspiratorial liability for § 10(b) does
not survive Central Bank." Id. at *4.
The court noted that, like "aiding and
abetting," "conspiracy" does not appear
anywhere in the text of Rule 10(b). In
addition, a claim of conspiracy does not
require the conspirator to have actually
committed a manipulative or deceptive act,
and thus constitutes the type of "secondary"
liability condemned by Central Bank.
Finally, the Ross court noted that
because the tort law elements of aiding and
abetting and conspiracy are identicalboth
require a completed tort6
and knowledge of the tort every case in
which a party could allege aiding and
abetting could also support a claim of
conspiracy. "It is beyond logic," the court
concluded, "to maintain that although
Central Bank prohibits aiding and
abetting liability it permits plaintiffs to
maintain the same cause of action by
labelling it as a conspiracy." Id.; see
also In re Faleck & Margolies, Ltd.,
1995 WL 33631 *12 (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 30, 1995);
In re Syntex Corp. Securities Litigation,
855 F.Supp. 1086, 1098 (N.D.Cal.1994).
Page 982
In sum, every reason cited by the
Supreme Court, in rejecting the implied
right of action for aiding and abetting also
applies to actions alleging conspiracies.
Accordingly, the MTC defendants' motion to
strike the conspiracy allegations in
paragraph 169 of the complaint is granted.
D. The Challenge To The RICO
Count (Miko Leung and Sit Wa Leung)
Miko Leung and Sit Wa Leung move
to dismiss Count Three of the complaint,
which alleges that they violated 18 U.S.C. §
1962(c), a provision in the RICO statute.
Specifically, the Leungs are charged with
conducting the affairs of MTC through a
pattern of racketeering activity that
included, among other racketeering acts,
multiple violations of the federal
securities laws. With respect to these
latter racketeering acts, the plaintiffs'
claim that the requisite element of reliance
on the alleged misrepresentations is
presumptively established by the plaintiffs'
reliance on the integrity of the market, a
theory endorsed by the Supreme Court
Basic, Inc., v. Levinson, 485 U.S.
224, 108 S.Ct. 978, 99 L.Ed.2d 194 (1988),
and generally referred to as the "fraud on
the market" theory.
The Leungs contend that, to the
extent a RICO cause of action is based on
such racketeering acts, it fails to satisfy
the standing requirement of 18 U.S.C. §
1964(c), which confers a private civil
action to any person "injured in his
business or property by reason of a
violation of Section 1962." The argument is
based on
Holmes v. Securities Investor Protection
Corp., 503 U.S. 258, 112 S.Ct. 1311, 117
L.Ed.2d 532 (1990).
Holmes involved the
Securities Investor Protection Corporation
("SIPC"), a private nonprofit corporation
established pursuant to a federal statute to
provide financial protection to the
customers of failed broker-dealers who are
members of SIPC. SIPC had advanced nearly
$13 million to the customers of two such
broker-dealers, and brought a RICO claim
against Holmes and others on the theory that
their fraudulent activity had prevented the
broker-dealers from satisfying their
obligations to their customers, thus
triggering SIPC's statutory duty to
reimburse those customers. 503 U.S. at
260-64, 112 S.Ct. at 1314-15.
In rejecting SIPC's RICO claim,
the Court focused on the distinction between
injuries actually caused by RICO violations
and those "proximately" caused them. As with
any determination of proximate cause, this
latter category is the result of a legal
policy determination. As the Court in
Holmes put it:
Here we use "proximate cause" to
label generically the judicial tools used to
limit a person's responsibility for the
consequences of that person's own acts. At
bottom, the notion of proximate cause
reflects "ideas of what justice demands, or
of what is administratively possible and
convenient."
Id. at 268, 112 S.Ct. at
1318 (quoting W. Keeton, D. Dobbs, R.
Keeton, & D. Owen, Prosser and Keeton on Law
of Torts § 41. p. 264 (5th ed. 1984)). The
Holmes Court concluded that in the
civil RICO context, justice demands that a
plaintiff demonstrate a direct relationship
between the injury asserted and the RICO
violation. Thus, a plaintiff whose alleged
injury flows merely "from the misfortunes
visited upon a third person by the
defendant's acts" is too remote from those
acts to recover. Id.
The Leungs assert that this
requirement that RICO plaintiffs must be
injured directly prohibits RICO claims in
which the pattern of racketeering activity
consists of securities violations that
allege a "fraud on the market." This
argument fails because it improperly equates
indirect reliance with indirect injury. The
fact that the plaintiffs may establish their
reliance on the alleged fraudulent
misstatements by reference to the integrity
of the securities markets does not place
them at a "different level[ ] of injury from
the violative acts." Holmes, 503 U.S.
at 269, 112 S.Ct. at 1318. Those markets
exist for investors, and statements
regarding a issuers' intentions or
performance are meant to influence investor
behavior. There is thus nothing "derivative"
about the injury shareholders suffer through
fraudulent representations made in order to
manipulate those markets. See
Standardbred Owners
985 F.2d 102, 104 (2d Cir.1993)'>Ass'n v.
Roosevelt Raceway,
985 F.2d 102, 104 (2d Cir.1993) (Holmes
precludes claims of injury
Page 983
that are "derivative of injury" to
another). Nor do the Leungs' advance any
policy reasons which would justify not
holding them responsible for the injuries
their fraudulent behavior caused MTC
shareholders.
The Leungs' assertion that
Caviness v. Derand Resources Corp.,
983 F.2d 1295 (4th Cir.1993), supports
their argument is mistaken. Caviness
did not address the fraud on the market
means of establishing reliance. It did not
even address Section 10(b). Rather,
Caviness addressed the question of
whether alleged violations of Section 12(2)
of the Securities Act of 1933which requires
neither reliance nor damagecould constitute
racketeering acts in a RICO count. It
concluded that allegations that go no
further than establishing a cause of action
under Section 12(a) fail to state a RICO
claim. 983 F.2d at 1304.
The Second Circuit has held that,
when racketeering acts are grounded in
fraud, the proximate cause requirement means
that "in addition to showing that but for
the defendant's misrepresentations the
transaction would not have come about, the
[plaintiff] must also show that the
misstatements were the reason the
transaction turned out to be a losing one."
First Nationwide Bank v. Gelt Funding
Corp., 27 F.3d 763, 769 (2d Cir. 1994).
The plaintiffs have satisfied this
requirement. They were shareholders in MTC
who purchased their stock because of the
defendants' alleged misrepresentations.
Indeed, the purpose of the alleged fraud was
to artificially inflate the price of MTC
stock by inducing such investments. Not only
was the injury to the plaintiffs "reasonably
foreseeable," but it was necessary to the
success of the Leung's alleged scheme.
Finally, the Leungs contend that
the rejection of their argument will mean
that "every securities fraud case states a
RICO claim." Leung Reply Memorandum at 1.
However, the issue here is not, as the
Leungs contend, whether securities fraud
allegations that depend on a "fraud on the
market" theory will automatically state a
claim under RICO. Rather, the issue here is
whether, when such securities claims
constitute the alleged predicate acts of
racketeering, a plaintiff who proves them
and the other elements of a cause of action
under Section 1962(c) is injured "by
reason of" the RICO violation. I conclude
that the answer is yes. Moreover, that
answer does not convert every security fraud
case into a potential RICO case because the
other elements of the RICO cause of action,
particularly the pattern requirement, may
not be satisfied in many securities fraud
cases. At any rate, even if the Leungs were
correct, the argument that a broad
construction of the RICO statute produces a
large number of cases has never been warmly
received, even when those cases (unlike
securities actions) would not otherwise be
in federal court. See, e.g., Sedima,
S.P.R.L. v. Imrex,
473 U.S. 479, 499-501, 105 S.Ct. 3275,
3286-87, 3292-93, 87 L.Ed.2d 346 (1985)
(if the extraordinary breadth of the RICO
private action is a defect, it is for
Congress, not the courts, to remedy); id.
at 504, 105 S.Ct. at 3294 (Marshall, J.,
dissenting) (absent judicially-imposed
restrictions, the RICO civil action
"federalizes important areas of civil
litigation that until now were solely within
the domain of the States").
Because the securities fraud
allegations in this case qualify as
racketeering acts for the RICO claim
notwithstanding the plaintiffs' use of the
fraud on the market theory, the motion to
dismiss the claim is denied.7
E. The Claimed Failure To
Plead Fraud With Particularity (Alan Leung)
Like defendants Jensen and Pozon,
Alan Leung moves to dismiss Count One of the
complaint for failure to plead his role as a
primary violator with sufficient
particularity. Alan Leung further argues
that Count Two fails to allege sufficiently
his status as a "control person" under
Section 20(a).
Page 984
The complaint alleges that Alan
Leung, the son of Sit Wa Leung, was MTC's
Manager of Marketing from 1986 through the
class period. Alan Leung marketed MTC's
electronic products in the United States and
was listed in numerous press releases as the
contact person at MTC. Significantly, the
company apparently believed that he was
involved in the fraudulent conversion of
millions of dollars' worth of MTC stock, as
it named him as a defendant in a Hong Kong
action to prevent the dissipation of the
Leungs' assets, and suspended him from the
company.8
These allegations are clearly
sufficient to withstand a motion to dismiss.
As Director of Marketing, as the son and
nephew of the two most powerful officers of
MTC, and as someone who clearly had at least
peripheral involvement in the Chinese joint
venture agreements, the plaintiffs have
sufficiently pleaded Alan Leung's status as
an "insider" to satisfy Rule 9(b)'s group
pleading requirements.
Alan Leung's second argument is
that the plaintiffs have failed to properly
allege that he is a "control person" under
Section 20(a). Section 20(a) of the Act
provides that:
Every person who, directly or
indirectly, controls any person liable under
any provision of this chapter or of any rule
or regulation thereunder shall also be
liable jointly and severally with and to the
same extent as such controlled person to any
person to whom such controlled person is
liable, unless the controlling person acted
in good faith and did not directly or
indirectly induce the act or acts
constituting the violation or cause of
action.
15 U.S.C. § 78t(a) (1995).
In order to establish Alan
Leung's controlling status, the plaintiffs
have alleged that "[b]ecause of his family
relationship with Miko and Sit Wa Leung
within the corporate environment of MTC,
Alan Leung is also liable as a control
person." Plfs.Op. to Leungs' Mem. at 23.
Plaintiffs also allege the Alan Leung served
as Director of Marketing through the class
period and that he "was listed in numerous
press releases from MTC, distributed in the
U.S. as the contact person at MTC." Id.
Although these allegations are insufficient
to establish Alan Leung's knowledge or
participation in the alleged fraud at MTC, I
agree with Judge Sand's statement in Food
& Allied Serv. Trades
841 F.Supp. 1386, 1390 (S.D.N.Y.1994)'>Dep't
v. Millfeld Trading Co.,
841 F.Supp. 1386, 1390 (S.D.N.Y.1994)
that:
a requirement that plaintiffs
allege more than control status confuses
what is required to establish control
liability at trial or summary judgment and
what is required to make out a prima facie
case of control liability at the pleading
stage. Requiring plaintiffs to allege more
than control status in their complaint would
erroneously import into the pleading stage
the Second Circuit's standard of proof at
trial ... Thus, knowledge and culpability
are not elements of a prima facie case;
instead, their absence constitutes an
affirmative defense.
841 F.Supp. at 1390. Plaintiffs
have clearly alleged that Alan Leung had
controlling status both because of his
familial relationships with the two
co-founders of MTC and because of his
position as Director of Marketing. Alan
Leung's motion to dismiss is therefore
denied.
F. The Motion of H.J. Meyers.
H.J. Meyers moves to dismiss the
complaint for failing to allege that it is a
primary violator of the securities laws. The
plaintiffs have alleged that H.J. Meyers has
primary liability arising out of two events:
(1) it was the underwriter for MTC's
November 1991 public offering, and as such
participated in drafting and circulating the
false and misleading registration statement
and prospectus for that offering; and (2) on
May 29, 1992, it issued to the investment
community a Research Report on MTC setting
forth in detail allegedly fraudulent
information regarding the supposed joint
ventures in China. The plaintiffs also
assert that H.J. Meyers is liable for
failing to correct materially false and
misleading statements which it knew to be
false at the time they were issued.
Page 985
1. The Central Bank Decision.
The arguments advanced by H.J.
Meyers, as well as those of BDO Dunwoody,
place in clear relief the question created
by Central Bank's elimination of
aiding and abetting liability under Section
10(b): where is the line between secondary
and primary liability?
To step back for a moment, it
bears noting that even before Central
Bank, there was not a clear answer to
one of the critical questions pertaining to
H.J. Meyers' motionwhether an underwriter
can be held primarily liable for false
statements in the issuer's prospectus. The
cases that have addressed the issue
generally produced mixed results.
In re VMS Securities Litigation, 752
F.Supp. 1373, 1394 & n. 18
(N.D.Ill.1990) (underwriters charged with
participating in preparing materially false
and misleading prospectuses could only be
charged with aiding and abetting liability),
with
Cooper v. Hwang,
1987 WL 16949, at *4, 1987 U.S.Dist.
LEXIS 14258 at *14 (N.D.Cal. April 20, 1987)
(underwriters may be primarily liable for
helping to draft prospectus). This
uncertainty was neither surprising nor
significant before Central Bank,
however, because the distinction between
primary and secondary liability was largely
academic.
Central Bank has elevated
this distinction to critical importance by
eliminating secondary liability under
Section 10(b). More precisely, the Court in
Central Bank held, contrary to the
established law in every federal circuit,
that Congress had never imposed such
liability.
The Central Bank of Denver was
the indenture trustee for $26 million in
bonds issued in 1986 and 1988 by a public
building authority. The bonds were secured
by landowner assessment liens that,
according to bond covenants, had to be worth
at least 160% of the bonds' outstanding
principal and interest. The covenants
further required the developer of the
property to provide to Central Bank an
annual report containing evidence that the
160% test was met. ___ U.S. at ___, 114
S.Ct. at 1443.
In January 1988, the developer
provided such assurances to Central Bank
with respect to the security for the bonds
to be issued in June 1988. However, Central
Bank then became aware from two sourcesthe
senior underwriter of the 1986 bonds and its
own in-house appraiserthat a decline in
property values suggested that the
developer's assurances were suspect. Central
Bank nevertheless agreed with the developer
to postpone an independent review of its
appraisal until after the bonds were issued.
The bonds were issued in June 1988, the
housing authority promptly defaulted on
them, and certain purchasers sued Central
Bank under Section 10(b) as an aider and
abettor of a fraud perpetrated by the
authority, the 1988 underwriter and the
developer. Id. at ___, 114 S.Ct. at
1443.
The Supreme Court held that "§
10(b) ... prohibits only the making of a
material misstatement (or omission) or the
commission of a manipulative act.... The
proscription does not include giving aid to
a person who commits a manipulative or
deceptive act." Id. at ___, 114 S.Ct.
at 1448 (citations omitted). Accordingly, it
concluded that summary judgment had been
properly granted to Central Bank by the
district court. Id. at ___, 114 S.Ct.
at 1455.
Although it made clear that
giving aid to a person who commits a
securities fraud violation is not within the
statute, the Court added:
Because the text of § 10(b) does
not prohibit aiding and abetting, we hold
that a private plaintiff may not maintain an
aiding and abetting suit under § 10(b). The
absence of § 10(b) aiding and abetting
liability does not mean that secondary
actors in the securities markets are always
free from liability under the securities
Acts. 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.
In any complex securities fraud, moreover,
there are likely to be multiple violators;
in this case, for example, respondents named
four defendants as primary violators.
Page 986
Id. at ___, 114 S.Ct. at
1455 (emphasis in original; citations
omitted).
Central Bank thus made the
distinction between primary and secondary
liability extremely important.
Unfortunately, the lower court decisions
that attempt to define and apply that
distinction have reached inconsistent
results. Some courts have held that a third
party's review and approval of documents
containing fraudulent statements is not
actionable under Section 10(b) because one
must make the material misstatement
or omission in order to be a primary
violator. See, e.g.,
In re Kendall Square Research Corporation
Securities Litigation,
868 F.Supp. 26, 28 (D.Mass.1994)
(accountant's "review and approval" of
financial statements and prospectuses
insufficient);
Vosgerichian v. Commodore International,
862 F.Supp. 1371, 1378 (E.D.Pa.1994)
(allegations that accountant "advised" and
"guid[ed]" client in making allegedly
fraudulent misrepresentations insufficient).
Other cases have held that third
parties may be primarily liable for
statements made by others in which the
defendant had significant participation.
See, e.g.,
In re Software Toolworks,
50 F.3d 615, 628 n. 3 (9th Cir. 1994)
(accountant may be primarily liable based on
its "significant role in drafting and
editing" a letter sent by the issuer to the
SEC);
Adam v. Silicon Valley Bancshares,
884 F.Supp. 1398, 1400 (N.D.Cal.1995)
(accountant may be held primarily liable
based on financial statements, press
statements and reports of issuer);
In re U.S.A Classic Securities
Litigation, 1995 WL 363841 at *5
(S.D.N.Y. June 19, 1995) (allegation that
underwriter participated in issuance of
prospectus and thereby employed a deceptive
device is sufficient);
In re ZZZZ Best Securities Litigation,
864 F.Supp. 960, 970 (C.D.Cal. 1994) (an
accounting firm that was "intricately
involved" in the creation of false documents
and their "resulting deception" is a primary
violator of Section 10(b));
Cashman v. Coopers & Lybrand, 877
F.Supp. 425, 432-34 (N.D.Ill.1995)
(primary liability was alleged where
"accountant was charged with playing a
central role in the drafting and formation
of the alleged misstatements" which were
incorporated into the prospectus);
Employers Insurance of Wausau v. Musick,
Peeler & Garrett,
871 F.Supp. 381, 389-90 (S.D.Cal.1994) (attorneys and
accountants may be primarily liable for
assisting in the preparation of false
statements of the issuer).
At first blush, these cases seem
to suggest two distinct approaches. On the
one hand, some courts have adopted a bright
line rule: if the defendant did not actually
make the alleged misleading statement, it
cannot be primarily liable no matter how
much assistance the defendant may have
rendered to those who did. On the other
hand, some courts have adopted a rule that
focuses on the degree of help rendered,
holding that a defendant may be found
primarily liable for statements of others in
which the defendant substantially
participated. Upon closer scrutiny, however,
these different approaches start to blur.
Some of the courts that seem to have adopted
the bright line rule have nevertheless
suggested that if the third party's
assistance includes the preparation of a
draft of the offending statement,
primary liability can attach even if the
final version is not a statement actually
made by the defendant.
In re Kendall Square, 868 F.Supp. at
28 (citing
In re Software Toolworks, 38 F.3d
1078, 1090 n. 3 (9th Cir.1994)). Indeed,
even when such drafting assistance has been
rejected as a basis of primary liability,
some courts have declined to grant
dismissals in order to ensure that possible
violators are not "hastily dismissed."
Walco Investments, Inc. v. Thenen,
881 F.Supp. 1576, 1582 (S.D.Fla.1995)
("[t]he Court does not refute the cases
cited by [the parties] for the proposition
that lawyers who merely assist in drafting
offering documents do not commit securities
violations because of any misstatements or
omissions in the offering document. However,
further factual development on what the law
firms knew and when they knew it is
necessary.") Another decision suggests that
even though an underwriter cannot be held
primarily liable for false statements it did
not actually make, such liability could be
based on the dissemination of false
statements made by others.
In re College Bound Consolidated
Litigation, 1994 WL 172408, at *4-5,
1994 U.S.Dist. LEXIS 5756 *14 (S.D.N.Y. May
4, 1994).
Page 987
In short, Central Bank has
generated a fair amount of confusion in the
lower courts both in identifying the line
between primary and secondary liability and
in determining whether that distinction
should be implemented on a motion to dismiss
or on a motion for summary judgment. After
considering these approaches, I conclude
that if Central Bank is to have any
real meaning, a defendant must actually make
a false or misleading statement in order to
be held liable under Section 10(b). Anything
short of such conduct is merely aiding and
abetting, and no matter how substantial that
aid may be, it is not enough to trigger
liability under Section 10(b).
2. The Claim Based On The 1991
Prospectus
Plaintiffs have alleged that H.J.
Meyers participated in drafting and
circulating the prospectus for MTC's
November 1991 public offering. There is no
allegation that H.J. Meyers made any of the
allegedly fraudulent representations in that
prospectus. Indeed, there is no allegation
that it did anything that is not done by
lead underwriters with respect to all such
public offerings. Again, I conclude that
this is precisely the sort of role in an
alleged 10(b) violation that, according to
Central Bank, is no longer
actionable. Accordingly, to the extent that
Count One seeks to impose liability on H.J.
Meyers based on its role in preparing and
disseminating the November 1991 prospectus,
it is hereby dismissed.
H.J. Meyers' motion to strike
those allegations, however, is denied. As
set forth below, the complaint does allege a
primary violation of Section 10(b) against
H.J. Meyers, and the factual allegations
relating to the 1991 prospectus may properly
be proved in support of that claim.
3. The Claim Based On The
Research Report
The plaintiffs also seek to hold
H.J. Meyers liable for its dissemination of
a research report about MTC on May 29, 1992,
three months before the beginning of the
class period. The allegedly fraudulent
statements in the report (which relate to
the purported joint ventures in China and
the revenues those joint ventures were
expected to generate) are statements by H.J.
Meyers itself, and thus may support an
allegation of primary liability.
H.J. Meyers challenges the
plaintiffs' claim that the misleading report
was a cause in the rise in MTC stock during
the class period. Under normal
circumstances, plaintiffs in securities
cases do not have to make precise
allegations of causation in order to plead a
primary violation under Section 10(b).
In re Crazy Eddie Securities Litigation,
817 F.Supp. 306, 312 (E.D.N.Y.1993).
However, H.J. Meyers points out that shortly
after the release of its research report,
the price of MTC's stock declined for
several months. Because plaintiff's fraud on
the market theory is premised on an
efficient market, Basic, 485 U.S. at
246, 108 S.Ct. at 991, H.J. Meyers argues
that its research report could not, as a
matter of law, have caused the "spike" in
MTC's stock price during the class period.
The plaintiffs vigorously dispute this
assertion, arguing that the research report
contributed to the "totality of the
circumstances" which caused the market price
of MTC stock to rise.
This dispute strikes me as
particularly unsuited for resolution on a
motion to dismiss. What role, if any, H.J.
Meyers' research report played in the rise
of MTC's stock price is an issue of fact.
Accordingly, the motion to dismiss this
claim is denied.
4. H.J. Meyers' Failure To
Correct False Statements.
Finally, H.J. Meyers argues that
it cannot be held liable for failing to
correct the allegedly false and misleading
statements contained in MTC's prospectus and
H.J. Meyer's research report. Since H.J.
Meyers cannot be held liable as a primary
violator for statements contained in MTC's
1991 prospectus, logic dictates that it
cannot be held liable for failing to correct
those statements.
The plaintiffs also claim,
however, that H.J. Meyers had a duty to
correct the statements it knew to be false
in its 1991
Page 988
research report.9
As a general matter, courts have held that
underwriters do not have a duty to correct
statements made by an issuer in a prospectus
which the underwriter learns to be false and
misleading after the underwriter's
involvement with the issuing company has
ceased.
In re Chaus Securities Litigation,
1990 WL 188921, at *13, 1990 U.S.Dist.
LEXIS 15810 at *35, Fed.Sec.L.Rep. (CCH)
95, 646 (S.D.N.Y. Nov. 20, 1990); Hudson
v. Capital Management Int'l, Inc., 565
F.Supp. 615, 623 (N.D.Cal.1983). However, an
issuer has a duty to correct its own
statements which become materially false or
misleading.
IIT v. Cornfeld, 619 F.2d 909, 927
(2d Cir.1980);
In re Phillips Petroleum Sec. Litigation,
881 F.2d 1236 (3d Cir.1989);
Roeder v. Alpha Industries, Inc., 814
F.2d 22, 26-27 (1st Cir. 1987). Courts
have also held that professionals such as
accountants may have a duty to correct their
own statements which later become false or
misleading.
Rudolph v. Arthur Andersen & Co.,
800 F.2d 1040 (11th Cir.1986);
Sharp v. Coopers & Lybrand, 83 F.R.D.
343, 345 (E.D.Pa.1979).
Here, H.J. Meyers had
underwritten an MTC public offering, held
warrants of MTC stock, issued a research
report praising the company and was quoted
in a Business Week article lauding
MTC during the class period. Under these
circumstances, H.J. Meyers may be held
liable as a primary violator for failing to
correct its own statements which became
materially false and misleading.
G. The Motion of BDO Dunwoody.
Dunwoody moves to dismiss the
complaint on the ground that it does not
properly allege that Dunwoody is a primary
violator of Section 10(b). Specifically,
Dunwoody asserts that the plaintiffs have
not alleged facts sufficient to establish
either its scienter or the existence of any
material misstatements by Dunwoody.
Dunwoody's claim that the
plaintiffs have not alleged that it made any
materially false and misleading statements
is incorrect. In fact, the complaint alleges
that Dunwoody issued unqualified audit
opinions on MTC's 1991 and 1992 financial
statements and consented to the inclusion of
these opinions in MTC's 1992 10-K statement,
a registration statement and six
prospectuses filed during the class period.
It is further alleged that Dunwoody
materially misstated MTC's results of
operations and net income, outstanding
shares and options and the nature and extent
of its business, and that Dunwoody
materially misrepresented that it had
performed its audit in accordance with
generally accepted auditing standards. These
allegations are sufficient to state a claim
against Dunwoody as a primary violator.
See Vosgerichian, 862 F.Supp. 1371, 1378
(E.D.Pa. 1994) (dismissing claims against
accountant based on misrepresentations made
by client, but holding that accountant's
unqualified opinion could be the basis of
primary liability);
In re Kendall Square, 868 F.Supp. at
28-29 (same).
Dunwoody's second argument is
that, in light of Central Bank, the
plaintiffs have failed to properly plead
scienter. As noted above, in order to
properly allege scienter under Section
10(b), a plaintiff must allege facts that
either show that the defendant had motive
and opportunity to commit fraud or
constitute strong circumstantial evidence
that the defendant acted knowingly or
recklessly.
Shields v. Citytrust Bancorp, Inc.,
25 F.3d 1124, 1128-30 (2d. Cir.1994).
Dunwoody argues, however, that
Central Bank's strict textual reading of
Section 10(b) compels the conclusion that
the scienter element can no longer be
established by a showing of mere
recklessness. This is particularly true,
Dunwoody adds, with respect to secondary
actors, such as accountants. Dunwoody
contends that "the clear message of
Central Bank was to narrow the liability
against such secondary actors, not expand it
through concepts like `recklessness' which
are not even in the statute." Dunwoody Mem.
at 19-20.
It is true that Central Bank
signals a general unwillingness to interpret
Section
Page 989
10(b) expansively. However, Central
Bank did not address the scienter
requirement, and the Second Circuitin a
decision postdating Central Bankhas
reaffirmed recklessness as a means of
establishing scienter.
Shields v. Citytrust Bancorp, Inc.,
25 F.3d 1124, 1128-29 (2d Cir.1994).
The plaintiffs have alleged both
a motive and an opportunity for Dunwoody to
commit fraud, as well as circumstantial
evidence which points to recklessness on the
part of Dunwoody. First, the plaintiffs
allege that Dunwoody's conduct must have
been intentional or willfully blind because
of Dunwoody's (a) apparent failure to detect
the massive stock embezzlement scheme of the
Leungs despite its audit of MTC's stock
option program; (b) statement indicating
that MTC had exclusive contracts with the
Chinese government, and (c) repeated
correction of its auditing statements
covering the class period.
Second, the plaintiffs allege
that Dunwoody had a motive to turn a blind
eye to the fraud going on around it: aiding
the firm in raising capital for its Chinese
joint venture and the promise of future
profits. There is disagreement over whether
motive may be established by a
professional's alleged desire for future
fees.
Compare Bernstein v. Crazy Eddie, 702
F.Supp. 962, 977 (E.D.N.Y.1988) (finding
that accountant "gained from its alleged
role in the preparation of the misleading
statements the continued patronage and
goodwill of its client"), with
Friedman v. Arizona World Nurseries, Ltd.,
730 F.Supp. 521, 532 (S.D.N.Y.1990)
(motive may not be established merely from
alleging that the firm was compensated for
its professional services).
However, considering that the
plaintiffs have alleged fraud of such an
enormous scope and degree at MTC, I need not
address the sufficiency of the allegations
of motive. Instead, I find that the
allegations of fraud, if proven, are alone
sufficient to permit the jury to infer that
Dunwoody was at least willfully blind to the
fraud. As the court stated
In re Leslie Fay Companies, Inc., 835
F.Supp. 167 (S.D.N.Y.1993), "when tidal
waves of accounting fraud are alleged, it
may be determined that the accountant's
failure to discover his client's fraud
raises an inference of scienter on the face
of the pleading." Id. Accordingly,
Dunwoody's motion to dismiss is denied.
Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, and
in accordance with this Court's ruling of
April 10, 1995:
(a) the motion by Edilberto Pozon
and Peter Jensen to dismiss the complaint
for failure to plead fraud with
particularity is DENIED;
(b) the motion by Robert Farr and
Goodwin Wang to dismiss Count One for
failure to state a claim against them is
DENIED;
(c) the motion by MTC, Robert
Farr, Peter Jensen, Goodwin Wang, Thomas
Lenagh, Edilberto Pozon and David Wong to
dismiss Count One for failure to state a
claim is GRANTED to the extent that it
alleges a conspiracy to violate Section
10(b) of the Securities Act of 1933;
(d) the motion by Miko Leung and
Sit Wa Leung to dismiss Count Three for
failure to state a claim is DENIED;
(e) the motion by Alan Leung to
dismiss the complaint for failure to plead
fraud with particularity is DENIED;
(f) the motion by H.J. Meyers to
dismiss Count One of the complaint for
failure to state a claim is GRANTED only to
the extent that Count One is based on H.J.
Meyers' preparation or drafting of MTC's
November 1991 prospectus. In all other
respects, H.J. Meyers' motion to dismiss is
DENIED; and
(g) the motion by BDO Dunwoody to
dismiss the complaint for failure to state a
claim and for failure to plead fraud with
particularity is DENIED.
So Ordered.
Notes:
1. A class has not yet been certified.
Plaintiffs seek to represent all persons who
purchased MTC stock between September 3,
1992 and February 22, 1993.
2. The particularity requirement serves
three purposes: (1) it affords the
defendants fair notice of the facts upon
which the claim is based; (2) it safeguards
the defendants' reputation and goodwill from
unfounded charges; and (3) it discourages
"strike suits."
IUE AFL-CIO Pension Fund v. Herrmann,
9 F.3d 1049, 1057 (2d Cir.1993).
3. Judge Raggi reached the same
conclusion in April 1994, when she denied an
identical motion by the same defendants.
Pozon and Jensen admit that this motion is
not affected by Central Bank and is
in fact simply a motion for reconsideration.
In explaining their failure to timely file
such a motion, they assert that Judge Raggi
"expressed [her] preference for [addressing
the argument to the Supplemental Complaint]
when counsel stated their intention to seek
reargument of the rulings in light of
Central Bank." MTC Defendants'
Memorandum at 4 n. 2. However, the
transcript to which they cite reveals that
counsel for BDO Dunwoody, not Pozon and
Jensen, suggested that procedure, and did so
only with respect to the arguments affected
by Central Bank. Transcript of April
21, 1994 at 88-90. In addressing the merits
of the motion, I have given these defendants
the benefit of whatever slight doubt that
may have existed as to the scope of Judge
Raggi's ruling.
4. Moreover, even assuming that the
defendants were "outsiders" for the purposes
of Rule 9(b), the plaintiffs have pleaded
their case with enough specificity to
survive a motion to dismiss. First, the
plaintiffs allege that Jensen exercised his
stock options in the middle of the class
period, selling 8,333 shares of MTC stock,
which he had purchased at $5.38 per share,
at $26.25 per share, thus netting him
$173,993 in profit. Am. & Sup.Compl.
29(f). This allegation raises a "strong
inference" of fraudulent intent and
establishes a motive for the fraud.
Similarly, the complaint alleges that Pozon
was a substantial investor in MTC, helping
the company to acquire a $10 million line of
credit through another "entity" with which
he was "affiliated." Plfs' Ind. Defs. Op.
Mem. at 9 (citing Exhibit "C" to Affidavit
of Richard Skaff, submitted in support of
Dunwoody's motion to dismiss at 61).
5. These defendants have not moved to
dismiss Count Two, which charges them with
"control person" liability under Section
20(a).
6. The court noted the distinction
between criminal conspiracy and civil
conspiracy: "[t]he crime of conspiracy may
be inchoate, but there is no corollary
inchoate tort of conspiracy. In civil cases
conspiracy is a theory of liability
available only when a completed tort
exists." Id.
7. As for the other alleged racketeering
acts, which relate to the defendants'
fraudulent conversion of MTC stock, the
plaintiffs may well have suffered only the
sort of derivative injury which, under
Holmes, may not sustain a RICO claim.
The plaintiffs contend otherwise, alleging
that all of the illegal conduct was part of
an overall scheme to inflate the price of
MTC stock. At this juncture, those
allegations are deemed to be true, and the
plaintiffs will be given an opportunity to
prove them.
8. MTC now states that Alan Leung has
been dismissed from that action.
9. H.J. Meyers argues that the complaint
does not allege a failure to correct its own
materially false and misleading statements.
I disagree, and conclude that 168 of the
complaint includes such an allegation.
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