| Page 1121 8 F.3d 1121
62 USLW 2144, Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P
97,712,
27 Fed.R.Serv.3d 422 Robert ECKSTEIN, et al.,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
BALCOR FILM INVESTORS, et al.,
Defendants-Appellees. Nos. 92-1851, 92-2510. United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit. Argued Feb. 25, 1993.
Decided Aug. 20, 1993.
Page 1122
Robert S. Schachter, Robin F.
Zwerling (argued), Zwerling, Schachter &
Zwerling, Jules Brody, Mellisa R. Emert,
Stull, Stull & Brody, New York City, Michael
S. Glassman, Clemens, Glassman & Clemens,
Los Angeles, CA, for Robert and Sylvia
Eckstein in No. 92-1851.
Mary Ellen Hennessy, Amy E.
Smith, Katten, Muchin & Zavis, Chicago, IL,
Dennis M. Perluss, Pauline Levy, Hufstedler,
Kaus & Ettinger, Los Angeles, CA, John A.
Lawrence, Richman, Lawrence, Mann, Greene,
Arbiter & Chizever, Beverly Hills, CA, for
Balcor Film Investors in No. 92-1851.
Steven L. Bashwiner (argued),
Mary Ellen Hennessy, Amy E. Smith, Katten,
Muchin & Zavis, Chicago, IL, Dennis M.
Perluss, Pauline Levy, Hufstedler, Kaus &
Ettinger, Los Angeles, CA, John A. Lawrence,
Richman, Lawrence, Mann, Greene, Arbiter &
Chizever, Beverly Hills, CA, for Balcor
Entertainment Co., Balcor Co., Balcor
Securities, Jerry M. Reinsdorf, Robert A.
Judelson, James E. Finley, Gregory Junkin,
Barry Jackson, Joseph A. Kruszynski and New
World Entertainment Ltd. in No. 92-1851.
W. Stuart Parsons, Quarles &
Brady, Milwaukee, WI, Steven L. Bashwiner,
Mary Ellen Hennessy, Amy E. Smith, Katten,
Muchin & Zavis, Chicago, IL, Dennis M.
Perluss, Pauline Levy, Hufstedler, Kaus &
Ettinger, Los Angeles, CA, John A. Lawrence,
Richman, Lawrence, Mann, Greene, Arbiter &
Chizever, Beverly Hills, CA, for Lawrence
Kuppin, Robert Rehme in No. 92-1851.
Page 1123
Colleen A. Scherkenbach, W.
Stuart Parsons, Quarles & Brady, Milwaukee,
WI, Steven L. Bashwiner (argued), Mary Ellen
Hennessy, Amy E. Smith, Katten, Muchin &
Zavis, Chicago, IL, Dennis M. Perluss,
Pauline Levy, Hufstedler, Kaus & Ettinger,
Los Angeles, CA, John A. Lawrence, Richman,
Lawrence, Mann, Greene, Arbiter & Chizever,
Beverly Hills, CA, for Harry Sloan in No.
92-1851.
David B. Kahn, Mark E. King,
Chicago, IL, for Plaintiff Class amicus
curiae.
George P. Kersten (argued), E.
Campion Kersten, Bruce J. Landgraf, Kersten
& McKinnon, Milwaukee, WI, Jerry H.
Friedland, Maria Lazar, Galanis & Friedland,
K. Scott Wagner, Hale & Lein, Milwaukee, WI,
for Ralph Majeski, Joseph Yach, Janice
Waisman, Larry R. Peterson, Thomas Weil, Lee
Aldridge, Randy Karpinsky, Kenneth Kulas,
Robb S. Elliott and Raymond Harding in No.
92-2510.
Steven L. Bashwiner (argued),
Mary Ellen Hennessy, Amy E. Smith, Katten,
Muchin & Zavis, Chicago, IL, for Balcor
Entertainment Co., Balcor Co.,
Balcor/American Exp. Inc., Balcor Securities
in No. 92-2510.
Terry E. Mitchell, Mitchell,
Baxter & Zieger, Milwaukee, WI, H. Nicholas
Berberian, Jerry M. Santangelo, Robert J.
Mandel, Neal, Gerber & Eisenberg, Chicago,
IL, for Shearson Lehman Hutton, Inc. in No.
92-2510.
Before CUMMINGS, COFFEY, and
EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judges.
EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge.
By late 1984 New World
Entertainment, Ltd. (New World) had
experienced some success making and
distributing low-budget movies. New World
approached Balcor Entertainment Company,
Ltd. (BEC), a subsidiary of Shearson
Lehman/American Express, Inc., to solicit
working capital. New World wanted to expand;
BEC wanted some of the profits to be made in
movies. There were the makings of a deal:
BEC would obtain financing for New World's
films in exchange for part of the films'
profits. Because BEC didn't want to accept
the risk of being the sole source of
capital, it recruited outside investors.
Balcor Film Investors (BFI) is a limited
partnership formed to raise money for eight
to twelve low budget movies that New World
would produce and distribute.
Early in 1985 BFI registered
partnership interests under the Securities
Act of 1933 and commenced public
solicitation. Subscriptions received were to
be held in escrow until $50 million had been
secured. Failing to raise this amount by the
deadline, BFI reduced the minimum to $35
million, offered to refund the investors'
money, and began soliciting anew. By the end
of 1985 $48 million was on deposit, and BFI
closed the offering. During the first two
years BFI supplied the tax benefits for
which the investors had hoped. But New
World's films flopped. In 1988 BFI told its
limited partners that they were likely to
lose some of their capital. Investors then
filed class action suits against Shearson
(now known as Shearson Lehman Hutton, Inc.),
BFI, BEC, the other Balcor entities that had
put together the offering, and their
officers and directors (collectively
Balcor). There are two groups of plaintiffs:
a class of investors who read the prospectus
(the Majeski plaintiffs) and a class of
those who did not (the Eckstein plaintiffs).
The Majeski plaintiffs assert a standard
fraud theory: they purchased the limited
partnership interests in reliance on the
misrepresentations in the prospectus and its
omissions of material facts. The Eckstein
plaintiffs, whose defining characteristic is
failure to read the prospectus, contend that
but for the misrepresentations and omissions
the offering would not have been successful.
This group, in other words, asserts
causation in lieu of reliance.
Although errors and omissions in
the offering documents usually lead to
liability under §§ 11 and 12(2) of the '33
Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 77k, l (2), the plaintiffs
feared that their suits would be untimely
under § 13 of that Act, the statute of
limitations applicable to actions under §§
11 and 12. So they invoked § 10(b) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. §
78j(b), and the SEC's Rule 10b-5, 17 C.F.R.
§ 240.10b-5. This avenue is available even
though the investors complain about an
initial public offering rather than a
transaction in the aftermarket. See
Page 1124 Herman & MacLean v. Huddleston, 459 U.S.
375, 103 S.Ct. 683, 74 L.Ed.2d 548 (1983).
Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 require the
investors to show fraud, not just material
errors and omissions. In exchange they get a
longer statute of limitations--or so they
thought.
The Majeski plaintiffs filed in
October 1988 and the Eckstein plaintiffs in
February 1989. When they began the
litigation, courts throughout the nation
derived from state law the periods of
limitations in § 10(b) cases. On July 30,
1990, this court overruled opinions that had
looked to state law and announced that § 13
of the '33 Act supplies the statute of
limitations.
Short v. Belleville Shoe Manufacturing Co.,
908 F.2d 1385 (7th Cir.1990). On June
20, 1991, the Supreme Court agreed with
Short that the federal securities laws are
the source of the period of limitations, but
the Court selected § 9(e) of the '34 Act, 15
U.S.C. § 78i(e), as the most appropriate
rule.
Lampf, Pleva, Lipkind, Prupis & Petigrow v.
Gilbertson, --- U.S. ----, ---- n. 9,
111 S.Ct. 2773, 2782 n. 9, 115 L.Ed.2d 321
(1991). Both § 13 of the '33 Act and § 9(e)
of the '34 Act give an investor one year
from discovering the facts constituting the
violation, but no more than three years from
the violation, to begin suit. The advantage
of using § 10(b) disappeared.
Congress responded to Lampf by
enacting stopgap legislation. A new § 27A of
the '34 Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78aa-1(a), provides
that "[t]he limitation period for any
private civil action implied under section
[10(b) of the '34 Act] that was commenced on
or before June 19, 1991, shall be the
limitation period provided by the laws
applicable in the jurisdiction, including
principles of retroactivity, as such laws
existed on June 19, 1991." Plaintiffs
believe that this law saves their suits. The
district court disagreed, dismissing both as
untimely. 786 F.Supp. 1458 (E.D.Wis.1992).
Although § 27A avoided Lampf, the district
court held, it did not disturb Short, which
was the law in the seventh circuit on June
19, 1991. And Short, the district court
held, is fully retroactive. It concluded
that Short governs the Eckstein plaintiffs,
who filed in California, as well as the
Majeski plaintiffs, who filed in Wisconsin.
The Panel on Multidistrict Litigation had
transferred the Eckstein case to Wisconsin
under 28 U.S.C. § 1407 for consolidated
pretrial proceedings, and the district court
then completed the transfer by invoking 28
U.S.C. § 1404(a) to make the transfer
permanent. After the transfer the whole case
was in Wisconsin, which the district court
believed is "the jurisdiction" to which §
27A refers. Both groups of plaintiffs have
appealed.
I
Whether the Eckstein plaintiffs
have appealed correctly is another matter.
The Majeski plaintiffs may have destroyed
the Eckstein plaintiffs' notice of appeal,
leaving us without appellate jurisdiction to
review the appeal of the Eckstein class. At
the heart of the matter is the question: was
the Eckstein case fully consolidated with
the Majeski case? If the cases were fully
consolidated the Eckstein appellants have
problems.
Here is what happened. On March
11, 1992, the district court entered
judgments dismissing both actions. The
Majeski plaintiffs filed a timely motion
under Fed.R.Civ.P. 59. Shortly thereafter,
the Eckstein plaintiffs filed a notice of
appeal. The district court denied the Rule
59 motion, and the Majeski plaintiffs filed
a timely notice of appeal. Then the Eckstein
plaintiffs filed what they called a
"Supplemental Notice of Appeal". The clerk
of this court treated that document as
another notice of appeal and assigned it a
new number. It did not last long: the
Eckstein plaintiffs failed to pay the
docketing fee, and as a notice of appeal
this paper was at all events untimely,
coming 34 days after the district court
denied the Rule 59 motion--four more than
Fed.R.App.P. 4(a)(1) permits. Thus our
jurisdiction over the Eckstein plaintiffs'
case depends on their notice of appeal filed
before the district court acted on the
Majeski plaintiffs' Rule 59 motion.
If the district court fully
consolidated the cases, the Ecksteins have
no valid notice of appeal and we have no
appellate jurisdiction. Rule 4(a)(4)
specifies the "time for appeal for all
parties" when "any party" files a timely
Rule 59 motion. See Polara v. Trans World
Page 1125 Airlines, Inc., 284 F.2d 34 (2d Cir.1960);
Continental Casualty Co. v. United States,
167 F.2d 107 (9th Cir.1948). If
consolidation produced a single "case," then
the Eckstein plaintiffs' first notice of
appeal had "no effect" because it was filed
before disposition of the Majeski
plaintiffs' Rule 59 motion. Fed.R.App.P.
4(a)(4).
Did the district court
consolidate the cases? Yes and no. As often
happens, the district court did not clearly
explain the extent to which the actions were
consolidated.
Ivanov-McPhee v. Washington National
Insurance Co., 719 F.2d 927 (7th Cir.1983).
The district court ordered "the Eckstein and
Majeski actions ... consolidated for the
remainder of the pretrial proceedings and
trial" and certified each set of plaintiffs
as a subclass of a single class of all
investors in BFI. A month later the court
added: "the actions are not consolidated for
'all purposes' nor are they merged into a
single cause of action" (emphasis in
original). What can this mean when the court
had certified a single class spanning both
sets of plaintiffs? Because neither case
contained the entire class, if the cases
were not fully consolidated, there could not
have been subclasses. In Ivanov-McPhee, 719
F.2d at 930, we held that cases were fully
consolidated because they could have been
brought as a single unit and there was no
purpose in the cases retaining separate
identities. Sandwiches, Inc. v. Wendy's
International, Inc., 822 F.2d 707, 710 (7th
Cir.1987), adds that courts should keep in
mind the relation between consolidation and
appeal. Preserving formally separation may
multiply the number of appeals, which should
not occur when there is only one nucleus of
facts. In order for plaintiffs to make up a
single class their claims must have a great
deal in common. Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(b)(3). We
should not have to review twice claims
common enough to be classed together. By all
lights, the Majeski and Eckstein cases
should have been consolidated for all
purposes.
Nonetheless, the district court
entered two judgments, just as if the suits
were separate. Different plaintiffs appealed
from each judgment. Appellate jurisdiction
follows the judgment, providing the
certainty that is essential when a misstep
may forfeit a valuable right. Separate
judgments are independently appealable, and
no one need appeal until the formal judgment
under Fed.R.Civ.P. 58 has been entered.
United States v. Indrelunas, 411 U.S. 216,
220-22, 93 S.Ct. 1562, 1564-65, 36 L.Ed.2d
202 (1973). Sometimes a party may appeal
from a final decision not embodied in a
judgment,
Bankers Trust Co. v. Mallis, 435 U.S. 381,
98 S.Ct. 1117, 55 L.Ed.2d 357 (1978),
but it is always entitled to wait for (and
rely on) the separate Rule 58 judgment.
Shalala v. Schaefer, --- U.S. ----, ----,
113 S.Ct. 2625, 2632, 125 L.Ed.2d 239 (1993);
Mallis, 435 U.S. at 386, 98 S.Ct. at 1120;
In re Kilgus, 811 F.2d 1112, 1117 (7th
Cir.1987). Anything else baits a trap
for unwary litigants--for wary ones, too,
the kind who pay particular attention to
judgments. The Eckstein plaintiffs therefore
were entitled to rely on the fact that the
district judge issued two judgments. They
appealed in a timely manner from theirs, and
the Majeski plaintiffs' motion did not
affect that appeal.
II
BFI used a single prospectus for
the two offerings of its partnership
interests. When BFI re-offered these
interests in the fall of 1985 it furnished
investors with a supplement describing
recent events. The plaintiffs' claims center
on this supplement, which they say left out
information about business reverses New
World suffered in 1985. New World was making
low-budget films that had limited attendance
at the box office and reaped most of their
profits from television and from the sale
and rental of video cassettes for home
viewing. A firm called Worldvision had
agreed to distribute New World's films
outside the theaters. According to
plaintiffs, the supplement to the prospectus
fraudulently omitted the fact that
Worldvision and New World had had a falling
out--that Worldvision, dissatisfied with the
quality of the films, was attempting to
withdraw as distributor and had filed a suit
against New World. Plaintiffs also contend
that the offering materials concealed the
fact that New World was to keep the lion's
share of the profits from VCR distribution.
Page 1126
These adverse events occurred
before the investors sent in their money
between October 11, 1985, and December 31,
1985. But, plaintiffs insist, they were
unaware that New World had encountered
troubles until BFI told them in mid-1988
that they probably would not get all of
their money back. The Majeski plaintiffs
filed suit in the Eastern District of
Wisconsin in October 1988, while the
Eckstein plaintiffs filed suit in the
Central District of California in February
1989. Because different issues determine the
applicable limitations period for each group
of plaintiffs, we discuss them separately.
A
The Eckstein plaintiffs' case
moved from California to Wisconsin under 28
U.S.C. § 1404(a). Section 27A instructs us
to use the "laws applicable in the
jurisdiction" on June 19, 1991. The district
in which the court that decides the case
sits must be "the jurisdiction" for purposes
of § 27A. But what is the law of that
jurisdiction? Short identifies the statute
of limitations in force within the seventh
circuit on June 19, 1991. Choice-of-law
rules are part of any jurisdiction's whole
law, however, a principle important in
diversity cases.
Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Electric Manufacturing
Co., 313 U.S. 487, 61 S.Ct. 1020, 85 L.Ed.
1477 (1941). Usually we do not think of
federal courts as having choice-of-law rules
for cases decided under federal law, which
is supposed to be uniform. Yet there is one
distinctively federal choice-of-law problem.
What happens when a federal court transfers
the case to another under § 1404(a)?
Van Dusen v. Barrack, 376 U.S. 612, 84 S.Ct.
805, 11 L.Ed.2d 945 (1964), and
Ferens v. John Deere Co., 494 U.S. 516, 110
S.Ct. 1274, 108 L.Ed.2d 443 (1990), hold
that such a transfer leaves the law
unaffected; the original forum's rules
(including the choice-of-law rules of the
state in which that court sits) are
unaffected by the movement.
Are different circuits like
different states for the purposes of Van
Dusen and Ferens? Usually not.
In re Korean Air Lines Disaster, 829 F.2d
1171 (D.C.Cir.1987) (Ruth B. Ginsburg,
J.), affirmed on other grounds under the
name
Chan v. Korean Air Lines, Ltd., 490 U.S.
122, 109 S.Ct. 1676, 104 L.Ed.2d 113 (1989).
A single federal law implies a national
interpretation. Although courts of appeals
cannot achieve this on their own, the norm
is that each court of appeals considers the
question independently and reaches its own
decision, without regard to the geographic
location of the events giving rise to the
litigation. This meant to the judges in
Korean Air Lines that a transfer under §
1404(a) leaves each court to work out the
problem for itself rather than to guess how
the circuit comprising the original district
court would reason. Congress might require
one federal court to apply another's
interpretation of federal law, but § 1404(a)
does not itself do so. Id. at 1178 (D.H.
Ginsburg, J., concurring). See also Richard
L. Marcus, Conflicts Among Circuits and
Transfers Within the Federal Judicial
System, 93 Yale L.J. 677, 702 (1984).
We agree with Korean Air Lines
that a transferee court normally should use
its own best judgment about the meaning of
federal law when evaluating a federal claim,
but § 27A instructs us to act differently.
Section 27A recognizes that different
circuits had taken different approaches to
the appropriate statute of limitations in
suits under § 10(b), and it codifies this
fractured nature of federal law for cases
filed before June 20, 1991. Congress
requires us to apply federal law as courts
understood it at a point in the past rather
than to make an independent judgment about
what that law actually is. And the law in
use on June 19, 1991, was not nationally
uniform. By then three circuits had adopted
§ 13 of the '33 Act for suits under § 10(b).
One applied this rule retroactively, another
prospectively (in the main), and this
circuit had not ruled on retroactivity. In
all other circuits the courts derived the
period of limitations from state law--with
different circuits looking to different
kinds of state laws.
Pommer v. Medtest Corp., 961 F.2d 620,
627-28 (7th Cir.1992);
Norris v. Wirtz,
818 F.2d 1329, 1331-33 (7th
Cir.1987).
Recently the second circuit
concluded that because "federal law (unlike
state law) is supposed to be unitary", a
transferee court should apply the law of its
circuit and ignore
Page 1127 the law of the transferor court when
determining "the jurisdiction" under § 27A.
Menowitz v. Brown,
991 F.2d 36, 40 (2d
Cir.1993). Menowitz held that Van Dusen
and Ferens apply only in diversity cases. We
believe that this conclusion disregards both
the language of § 27A (whose reference to
"the jurisdiction" implies a non-uniform
federal law) and the holdings of Van Dusen
and Ferens, which construed § 1404(a) rather
than any principle of state law. Although
both of those cases arose under the
diversity jurisdiction, their references to
Erie
R.R. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64, 58 S.Ct. 817,
82 L.Ed. 1188 (1938), do not imply a
ruling limited to state law. Erie is itself
part of national law, interpreting the Rules
of Decision Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1652. Van Dusen
and Ferens accordingly apply whenever
different federal courts properly use
different rules. Erie is not unique in
requiring federal courts to apply disparate
norms. Consider 42 U.S.C. § 1988, which
leads federal courts to use state law as the
basis of a federal period of limitations.
Wilson v. Garcia, 471 U.S. 261, 105 S.Ct.
1938, 85 L.Ed.2d 254 (1985);
Owens v. Okure, 488 U.S. 235, 109 S.Ct. 573,
102 L.Ed.2d 594 (1989). Or consider the
law of federal contracts, which is largely
borrowed from state law.
United States v. Kimbell Foods, Inc., 440
U.S. 715, 99 S.Ct. 1448, 59 L.Ed.2d 711
(1979);
United States v. Einum, 992 F.2d 761 (7th
Cir.1993). When the law of the United
States is geographically non-uniform, a
transferee court should use the rule of the
transferor forum in order to implement the
central conclusion of Van Dusen and Ferens:
that a transfer under § 1404(a) accomplishes
"but a change of courtrooms". Van Dusen, 376
U.S. at 639, 84 S.Ct. at 821. Section 27A
presents such a situation. Accordingly we
respectfully disagree with Menowitz.
So we must examine how a judge in
the Central District of California would
have viewed the limitations question on June
19, 1991. At the time, courts within the
ninth circuit used the most analogous
statute of limitations under the law of the
state in which the district court sat.
Stitt v. Williams, 919 F.2d 516, 522 (9th
Cir.1990). California's three year
statute of limitations for fraud,
Cal.Civ.Proc.Code § 338, was the appropriate
one to use in securities fraud cases. Ibid.
The period under that statute "commences
when the plaintiff discovered or could have
discovered the fraud with the exercise of
reasonable diligence".
SEC v. Seaboard Corp., 677 F.2d 1301, 1309
(9th Cir.1982).
Miller v. Bechtel Corp., 33 Cal.3d 868, 875,
191 Cal.Rptr. 619, 623, 663 P.2d 177, 181
(1983);
Mosesian v. Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co.,
727 F.2d 873, 877 (9th Cir.1984).
The district court concluded that
the Eckstein plaintiffs' claim would be
barred by that rule as well as the federal
rule adopted in Short. It concluded that the
time for bringing suit started to run when
the investors purchased their limited
partnership interests because the dire
warnings of risk in the prospectus should
have put the investors on notice of fraud.
786 F.Supp. at 1466. This logic is flawed. A
warning about risk does not give notice of
fraud. Every prospectus is filled with
advice about the perils of the business,
because every business faces its own set of
risks. Giving general advice about the
industry does not relieve an issuer of the
need to be truthful about itself. Warnings
of the kind that appeared in BFI's
prospectus put investors on notice that
there is a chance things may not go as hoped
in the future; they do not put investors on
notice that statements made in the
prospectus are untrue at the time, or that
important facts have been left out of the
prospectus. Plaintiffs allege, for example,
that New World and Worldvision had come to
blows, and that this gravely affected the
opportunity for profitable investment. A
prospectus stating a risk that such a thing
could happen is a far cry from one stating
that this had happened. The former does not
put an investor on notice of the latter.
Plaintiffs' argument that they
"could [not] have discovered the fraud with
the exercise of reasonable diligence" until
Balcor told them in 1988 they probably would
lose money is equally flawed. Discovering
Page 1128 that one has lost money is not the same as
discovering that one has been defrauded.
Most losses occur without fraud of any kind.
DiLeo v. Ernst & Young, 901 F.2d 624, 627-28
(7th Cir.1990). And victims of fraud
usually discover the problem long before the
wrongdoer stands up and confesses.
Plaintiffs' position amounts to an assertion
that the time to sue does not start until
the extent of the injury becomes clear. But
the question under California law is when
the investors discovered (or should have
discovered) the deceit, not when the full
consequences of that deceit are felt. An
investor can be defrauded before any loss is
realized. Discovery of the fraud means the
discovery of the misrepresentation.
Howard v. Haddad, 962 F.2d 328, 330 (4th
Cir.1992); Volk v. D.A. Davidson & Co.,
816 F.2d 1406, 1412-13 (9th Cir.1987).
Investors must bring their claims as soon as
they become aware of misrepresentations or
omissions, instead of waiting "while
avoidable damages accrue." Volk, 816 F.2d at
1412.
It is conceivable, we suppose,
that until receiving the advice in mid-1988
reasonable investors would not have
bestirred themselves to find out about New
World. (The Eckstein plaintiffs, after all,
invested in BFI without reading the
prospectus; apparently they do not think
information very useful.) Many reasonable
investors--the kind who read the
prospectus?--would have pricked up their
ears sooner. The fact that Worldvision filed
suit against New World in the fall of 1985
to rescind its contract may have been
sufficient to trigger an investigation. The
suit itself was a piece of information
missing from the prospectus; from one angle
its omission was the fraud, yet the fact of
the suit was public knowledge in 1985. If
that should have triggered an investigation,
then California's statute of limitations
expired before the Eckstein plaintiffs filed
their suit in February 1989. That plaintiffs
may have been ignorant of Worldvision's suit
should not matter, because they, not the
defendants, bear the burden of their own
ignorance.
United States v. Kubrick, 444 U.S. 111, 124,
100 S.Ct. 352, 360, 62 L.Ed.2d 259 (1979);
Norris, 818 F.2d at 1335-36. It may be
possible to decide what reasonable investors
knew, or should have known, without
submitting the question to a jury, but the
subject is one for the district court to
address in the first instance.
B
Unlike the Eckstein plaintiffs,
the Majeski plaintiffs have clearly
satisfied the relevant state statute of
limitations. Wisconsin gives investors three
years from the sale, Wis.Stat. § 551.59, and
the Majeski plaintiffs filed before the end
of 1988, at a time when we would have used
that law as the period of limitations.
Cahill v. Ernst & Ernst, 625 F.2d 151 (7th
Cir.1980). But § 13 of the '33 Act gives
investors only one year from the time the
fraud was or should have been discovered,
and the considerations we discussed
immediately above imply that the Majeski
plaintiffs would have a hard time satisfying
that requirement. The district court held
that § 13 applies to the Majeski plaintiffs
because they filed suit within the seventh
circuit after Short had been decided, and
that the suit is untimely under § 13.
The district court concluded that
Short is fully retroactive. Under current
law, it would be.
James B. Beam Distilling Co. v. Georgia, ---
U.S. ----, 111 S.Ct. 2439, 115 L.Ed.2d 481
(1991), holds that decisions are
retroactive if the court applies the new
rule to the parties.
Harper v. Virginia Department of Taxation,
--- U.S. ----, 113 S.Ct. 2510, 125 L.Ed.2d
74 (1993). Short applied its new rule to
the litigants in that case. But § 27A tells
us to use the law, including principles of
retroactivity, in force on June 19, 1991,
and Beam, like Lampf, was decided on June
20, 1991. We concluded
McCool v. Strata Oil Co., 972 F.2d 1452,
1458-59 (7th Cir.1992), that Beam
changed the law of retroactivity, which
means that on June 19, 1991,
Chevron Oil Co. v. Huson, 404 U.S. 97, 92
S.Ct. 349, 30 L.Ed.2d 296 (1971), still
controlled the approach to that subject.
McCool holds that § 27A requires us to
employ Chevron's approach. To apply Chevron
courts must balance several factors. After a
consideration of these factors McCool
concluded that Short does not apply
retroactively when the plaintiff relied on
the pre-Short limitations period. 972 F.2d
at 1459.
Page 1129
The dispositive question under
McCool thus is: if the plaintiffs had known
that Short would apply to their claim, could
and would they have filed within the period
of limitations? The Majeski plaintiffs say
that they filed suit within two months of
discovering the fraud, so it is hard to see
how any delay can be chalked up to reliance
on the availability of Wisconsin's law. But
the belief that state law would provide
three years may have influenced the
investors in other ways. Perhaps it offered
assurance that they need not investigate
expeditiously. Perhaps the Majeski
plaintiffs relied by filing in Wisconsin
when they could have chosen California.
Although Balcor insists that filing in one
forum as opposed to another is not a
legitimate form of reliance, we disagree.
McCool held that the plaintiffs had relied
on the former status of the law by
dismissing a suit they had filed in state
court. 972 F.2d at 1459. We do not believe
that relying by foregoing the opportunity to
pursue a claim in a state forum should
differ from foregoing the opportunity to
pursue a claim in another federal forum.
Ultimately, the determination
whether the plaintiffs did rely is for the
district court. Chevron creates a balancing
approach, and the court of first instance
does the balancing with deferential
appellate review. Indeed if material factual
questions about reliance are controverted
the matter cannot be decided on summary
judgment at all. Berning v. A.G. Edwards &
Sons, Inc.,
990 F.2d 272, 276-77 (7th
Cir.1993).
III
Despite our disagreement with the
district court's reason for dismissing the
suits, a remand does not necessarily follow.
We may affirm its judgment on any properly
preserved ground that the record supports.
Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co. v.
Ludwig, 426 U.S. 479, 96 S.Ct. 2158, 48
L.Ed.2d 784 (1976). A timely but
non-meritorious suit should be cut off at
the first opportunity. We therefore inquire
whether the plaintiffs have a good claim
under the securities laws.
A
Because they never read the
prospectus, the Eckstein plaintiffs
encounter difficulty in establishing that
they relied to their detriment on the
seller's statements, a component of a claim
under § 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 according to
the canonical formulation.
List v. Fashion Park, Inc.,
340 F.2d 457 (2d
Cir.1965). Although courts often refer
to "reliance" as an element of the claim
under § 10(b), we have held that reliance is
a means by which the plaintiff may establish
that material misstatements or omissions
caused him injury, rather than an
indispensable element.
Flamm v. Eberstadt, 814 F.2d 1169, 1173 (7th
Cir.1987).
Rowe v. Maremont Corp., 850 F.2d 1226, 1233
(7th Cir.1988). The Supreme Court's
adoption of the fraud-on-the-market doctrine
Basic, Inc. v. Levinson, 485 U.S. 224, 108
S.Ct. 978, 99 L.Ed.2d 194 (1988), shows
that reliance is not essential; although
Basic continued to use that word, it allowed
an alternative method of establishing
causation--an effect on the market price--to
support recovery by investors who never read
the supposedly deceitful statement. Id. at
243-47, 108 S.Ct. at 989-92.
Affiliated Ute Citizens v. United States, 406 U.S. 128, 152-54, 92 S.Ct. 1456,
1471-72, 31 L.Ed.2d 741 (1972).
When "the market"--that is, the
outcome of trading by persons who are
well-informed about what the issuer is doing
and saying--translates a lie or omission
from voice to price, it is easy to see how
injury can befall a person who is unaware of
the deceit. The price in an open and
developed market usually reflects all
available information, because the price is
an outcome of competition among
knowledgeable investors. See generally
Sanford J. Grossman, The Informational Role
of Prices (1989); James H. Lorie, Peter Dodd
& Mary Hamilton Kimpton, The Stock Market:
Theories and Evidence (2d ed. 1985).
Competition among savvy investors leads to a
price that impounds all available
information, even knowledge that is
difficult to articulate. We call a market
"efficient" because the price reflects a
consensus about the value of the security
being traded--not necessarily because the
price captures the true value of the firm's
assets but because the price is the
Page 1130 best available device to assess the
significance of additional bits of
information. Investors who trade at the
market price are affected, for good or ill,
by the information underlying that price.
Not all stocks are eagerly
followed by astute investors with the
capital to turn their views into movements
in price. The more thinly traded the stock,
the less well the price reflects the latest
pieces of information. "Efficiency" is not
an all-or-nothing phenomenon. See Comment,
Sufficient Efficiency: Fraud on the Market
in the Initial Public Offering Context, 58
U.Chi.L.Rev. 1393 (1991). Prices of even
poorly followed stocks change in response to
news, including statements by the issuers,
and these changes may be better indicators
of causation than litigants' self-serving
statements about what they read and relied
on and about what they would have paid (or
whether they would have bought at all) had
the issuer said something different. Even an
"inefficient" market price is objective and
contemporaneous with events, not plagued by
lapses of memory or the cognitive dissonance
that influences what witnesses may remember
years later. Still, at some point the market
process peters out and the litigation
process offers superior information about
causation. The Eckstein plaintiffs may have
reached that point.
BFI issued its interests as part
of an initial public offering at a fixed
price, $1,000 per unit (with a minimum of
three units per investor). No trading market
valued these interests; only the investors
could do so. No trading market developed
afterward, so we cannot combine the Capital
Asset Pricing Model with the tables in the
Wall Street Journal to see what effect
Worldvision's suit, or the other information
that slowly came to light about New World,
had on price. It would be revealing if news
about Worldvision's withdrawal as New
World's distributor caused the price to fall
by 20% (using the CAPM to hold the market
constant). It would be equally revealing if
the news had no effect on price, which would
imply either that other distributors were
readily available (so that information about
Worldvision was not material) or that
investors had fully taken this fact into
account back in 1985 (so the statute of
limitations would bar these suits). Alas, no
such luck, because there are no such prices.
This does not mean that the Eckstein
plaintiffs cannot show causation, but they
must carry the greater burden of proving the
causal links that an efficient secondary
market establishes automatically.
The Eckstein plaintiffs try to do
so via a theory we could call
"fraud-created-the-market." BFI's offering
was conditioned on its ability to raise at
least $35 million. A minimum sales
requirement may serve two functions: it
ensures that the venture has sufficient
capital to function, and it provides a form
of vicarious protection to ignorant
investors who assume that the condition will
be met only if a significant number of
informed buyers think the project a good
investment. Plaintiffs allege that, if BFI
had made complete and truthful statements,
it would not have been able to sell
interests to investors who did read the
prospectus. Without those investors, BFI
would not have been able to sell the minimum
amount, and thus would have returned the
plaintiffs' tendered funds. Thus, say the
Eckstein plaintiffs, the misstatements and
omissions in the prospectus caused their
losses.
The fifth circuit adopted a
variant of this approach by a vote of 12 to
10
Shores v. Sklar, 647 F.2d 462 (1981) (in
banc). Shores held that an investor may
maintain an action under § 10(b) by
establishing that the fraud permitted the
securities to exist in the market--that but
for the fraud the securities would have been
"unmarketable"--and that the investor relied
on their existence. The tenth and eleventh
circuits follow modified versions of the
Shores approach, while the sixth circuit has
repudiated that case outright.
T.J. Raney & Sons, Inc. v. Ft. Cobb Oklahoma
Irrigation Fuel Authority,
717 F.2d 1330
(10th Cir.1983), and Ross v. Bank South,
N.A.,
885 F.2d 723 (11th Cir.1989) (in
banc), with
Freeman v. Laventhol & Horwath,
915 F.2d 193
(6th Cir.1990). We agree with the sixth
circuit. The existence of a security does
not depend on, or warrant, the adequacy of
disclosure. Many a security is on the market
even though the issuer or some third party
made incomplete disclosures. Federal
securities law does not include
Page 1131
"merit regulation."
The Business Roundtable v. SEC,
905 F.2d 406
(D.C.Cir.1990); § 23 of the '33 Act, 15
U.S.C. § 77w. Full disclosure of adverse
information may lower the price, but it does
not exclude the security from the market.
Securities of bankrupt corporations trade
freely; some markets specialize in penny
stocks. Thus the linchpin of Shores--that
disclosing bad information keeps securities
off the market, entitling investors to rely
on the presence of the securities just as
they would rely on statements in a
prospectus--is simply false.
Without the aid of Shores, the
Eckstein plaintiffs have rough sledding
ahead. They cannot use the incomplete or
rosy nature of Balcor's pamphlets, which
they may have read, as the actionable
"fraud"; sales literature need not repeat
the full disclosures and risk analysis in
the prospectus. (We discuss this more fully
below.) To prevail the Eckstein plaintiffs
must prove that, had the prospectus been
free from fraud, BFI would not have
satisfied the minimum-sale requirement of
$35 million. Because this is a suit under §
10(b) of the '34 Act rather than §§ 11 or
12(2) of the '33 Act, the Eckstein
plaintiffs must establish this
counterfactual proposition about the
decision-making of thousands of investors
using only statements or omissions amounting
to fraud; other errors and omissions that
might have supported liability under §§ 11
or 12(2) do not support an inference of
causation that can replace direct reliance
in a case under § 10(b). The difference
between errors and fraud, and the fact that
BFI attracted $48 million, substantially
exceeding the $35 million cutoff, present
the Eckstein plaintiffs with a daunting
task. Still, the record in its current state
does not doom their case, so we must remand
their case to the district court for further
proceedings.
B
The Majeski plaintiffs, who read
the prospectus, may establish causation in
the traditional way, by proof of their
reliance on any misstatements and omissions.
These plaintiffs advance a second
theory--that because Balcor circulated
upbeat brochures and other supplemental
literature that was much easier to
understand than the dense prospectus, the
defendants should have put the stern
warnings about risk in these documents as
well. Why, one of these brochures even
offered tables of possible rates of return
under different assumptions, and the worst
case still showed BFI able to repay the
original investments (although without
interest or other profits). Because these
easy-to-digest brochures dominated the
investors' perception of the risks,
plaintiffs insist, Balcor was obligated to
make additional disclosures of risk in the
supplemental literature. To simplify the
conduct of this litigation on remand, we now
hold that such a theory cannot support a
claim under § 10(b)--which, recall, depends
on proof of fraud, and not just errors or
omissions.
Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder, 425 U.S. 185,
96 S.Ct. 1375, 47 L.Ed.2d 668 (1976);
Aaron v. SEC, 446 U.S. 680, 100 S.Ct. 1945,
64 L.Ed.2d 611 (1980).
The '33 Act permits issuers,
underwriters, and dealers to engage in "free
writing" once the registration statement
becomes effective, and to furnish
promotional literature to investors provided
that literature is accompanied or preceded
by a prospectus. Section 2(10)(a) of the '33
Act, 15 U.S.C. § 77b(10)(a); Louis Loss,
Fundamentals of Securities Regulation 119
(1983). Only the registration statement need
be self-contained. A prospectus is a subset
of the information contained in the
registration statement, and the sales
brochures are a subset of the information in
the prospectus (plus the customary effort to
sell the securities). If the sales
literature had to contain all the warnings
that appear in the prospectus, the privilege
of distributing supplemental sales
literature would be all but meaningless.
Federal law establishes a regime in which
the prospectus contains the comprehensive
description of the securities. Other
literature can be brief precisely because an
inquiring investor has the prospectus to
turn to. Federal law also establishes a rule
for resolving conflicts: in the event
statements in sales brochures and the
prospectus do not agree, the prospectus
wins. See Brown v. E.F. Hutton Group, Inc.,
991 F.2d 1020, 1033 (2d Cir.1993). "If the
investor already possesses information
sufficient to call [a] representation
Page 1132 into question, he cannot claim later that he
relied on or was deceived by the lie."
Teamsters Local 282
Pension Trust Fund v. Angelos, 762 F.2d 522,
530 (7th Cir.1985). See also, e.g.,
Atari Corp. v. Ernst & Whinney,
981 F.2d 1025, 1030-31 (9th Cir.1992);
Zobrist v. Coal-X, Inc., 708 F.2d 1511,
1518-19 (10th Cir.1983). The Majeski
plaintiffs do not contend that the risk
disclosures in the prospectus were buried or
indigestible; to the contrary, they were
prominent and blunt.
Virginia Bankshares, Inc. v. Sandberg, ---
U.S. ----, ---- - ----, 111 S.Ct. 2749,
2760-61, 115 L.Ed.2d 929 (1991);
Associated Randall Bank v. Griffin, Kubik,
Stephens & Thompson, Inc.,
3 F.3d 208 (7th
Cir.1993);
Acme Propane, Inc. v. Tenexco, Inc.,
844 F.2d 1317, 1322, 1325 (7th Cir.1988).
Failure to disclose important things in
supplemental literature is not fraud when
those things appear in the prospectus.
One final observation. Many of
the claims in this case arise out of
predictions that did not come to pass. For
example, the Majeski plaintiffs allege that
Balcor stated that presales of movies would
generate revenues equal to half of the
movies' production costs, and that this
statement is false. Yet the statement is
nothing but a prediction about how much
revenue New World expected to generate from
preselling movies. Only statements or
omissions of fact can be fraudulent.
Although intentions and beliefs are "facts"
for this purpose when they are open to
objective verification, Sandberg, --- U.S.
at ----, ----, 111 S.Ct. at 2760, 2765, an
inability to foresee the future does not
constitute fraud, because "[t]he securities
laws approach matters from an ex ante
perspective". Pommer, 961 F.2d at 623. See
DiLeo, 901 F.2d at 627-28. If those
statements had a reasonable basis when made,
the defendants did not commit fraud.
Wielgos v. Commonwealth Edison Co.,
892 F.2d 509, 513 (7th Cir.1989).
The judgments are vacated, and
the cases are remanded for further
proceedings consistent with this opinion. As
the district court dismissed the plaintiffs'
claims under state law only because it had
dismissed all of their claims under federal
law, the state-law claims must be
reinstated.
. Because this opinion creates a conflict
among the circuits, it was circulated before
release to all judges in active service.
Circuit Rule 40(f). None favored a hearing
in banc. |