| Page 290 919 F.2d 290
Howard FINE, Oakhill South
Corporation, Eugene Vanderford,
Dr. Charles Yates, and John V. Yates,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
AMERICAN SOLAR KING CORP., et al.,
Defendants,
Main Hurdman, Defendant-Appellee.
James RANDALL, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Brian D. PARDO, et al., Defendants,
Main Hurdman, Defendant-Appellee.
Nos. 89-1218, 89-1290. United States Court of Appeals,
Fifth Circuit. Dec. 4, 1990.
Page 292
Terrell W. Oxford, Susman,
Godfrey & McGowan, Dallas, Tex., Daniel L.
Berger, Bernstein, Litowitz, Berger &
Grossmann, New York City, for
plaintiffs-appellants in 89-1218.
Stephen Rackow Kaye, James F.
Parver, Steven Altman, John W. Ritchie, New
York City, Marvin S. Sloman, Dallas, Tex.,
for Hurdman.
Roger W. Kirby, Lubna M. Farugi,
Kaufman, Malchman, Kaufmann & Kirby, New
York City, Daniel J. Sheehan, Jr., Sheehan,
Young, Smith & Culp, Terrell W. Oxford,
Susman, Godfrey & McGowan, Dallas, Tex., for
plaintiff-appellant in 89-1290.
Appeals from the United States
District Court for the Western District of
Texas.
Before KING, JOHNSON and
WILLIAMS, Circuit Judges.
Page 293
KING, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiffs-appellants
(Plaintiffs) allege that the accounting firm
of Main Hurdman violated Sec. 10(b) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule
10b-5 promulgated thereunder by issuing a
materially false and misleading qualified
report on American Solar King's (ASK)
financial statement for fiscal year 1982.
The district court found that the Plaintiffs
failed to raise a genuine issue of material
fact on the elements of scienter and
reliance and granted summary judgment in
favor of Main Hurdman. We reverse.
I. BACKGROUND
ASK manufactured collectors for
the solar heating of water, and sold groups
of such collectors, with associated
circulatory equipment and control devices,
through a network of distributors for use in
the residential solar energy market. In
fiscal year 1982, ASK entered the industrial
solar energy market, which involved the sale
of larger arrays of the same kind of solar
collectors to apartment complexes and other
industrial users. Under ASK's industrial
sales program, the user did not actually buy
the system but guaranteed to pay for energy
used, up to a maximum of eighty percent of
prior fuel costs. The system was sold to a
tax-shelter, limited partnership. The first
sale was to S.E.P. No. 1 for use by a
Wisconsin meat packer (Provimi) and had a
sale price of $1,750,000. The partnership
paid for the system with $20,000 cash, a
short-term note for $905,000, and a
long-term, ten-year note at ten percent
interest. ASK entered the transaction the
day prior to the end of its 1982 fiscal
year.
In order to secure the Provimi
sale in fiscal year 1982, ASK's own officers
and directors purchased about thirty-five
percent of S.E.P. No. 1's partnership
interests. As a result of the Provimi sale,
ASK recognized $1,239,000 of revenue and
$964,000 of profits from the Provimi
transaction in its 1982 financial
statements. With this sale, ASK reported a
profit for its fourth quarter and only a
small loss for the year as a whole; without
this sale, they would have reported a highly
unprofitable year.
The Plaintiffs allege that ASK
engaged in a fraudulent scheme to overstate
its financial statements for fiscal year
1982, and that the Plaintiffs purchased
ASK's common stock at artificially inflated
prices as a result. Specifically, the
Plaintiffs allege that ASK's financial
statement for fiscal year 1982 was false and
misleading because it:
(1) Improperly recognized revenue from
the Provimi sale;
(2) Failed to discount a below
market-rate note received in payment for the
Provimi system;
(3) Failed to reserve sufficient funds
for uncollectible accounts; and
(4) Improperly recognized revenue from
sales to Solar Heating, Inc. (Solar
Heating), a company under ASK's control.
Main Hurdman violated Sec. 10(b)
and Rule 10b-5, the Plaintiffs allege, by
issuing a materially false auditor's opinion
on ASK's inflated 1982 financial statements.
They claim that Main Hurdman's opinion was
materially false because:
(1) Main Hurdman incorrectly represented,
subject to qualification, that ASK's 1982
financial statements were prepared in
conformity with Generally Accepted
Accounting Principles (GAAP);
(2) Main Hurdman falsely qualified its
opinion by stating that it was "unable to
determine the adequacy of the provision for
uncollectible accounts," when it knew that
the provision for uncollectible accounts was
inadequate by at least $200,000 to $300,000;
and
(3) Main Hurdman falsely stated that it
conducted its audit in accordance with
Generally Accepted Auditing Standards
(GAAS).
This appeal combines class action
suits by purchasers of ASK's common stock
during 1982 and 1983. The plaintiffs in Fine
v. American Solar King (Fine Plaintiffs),
No. 89-1218, consist of purchasers of ASK's
common stock from October 28, 1982 (the date
on which ASK filed its 1982 Form 10-K
containing the allegedly false financial
statements) through October 27,
Page 294 1983 (the date ASK announced that it was
changing its accounting policies). The
plaintiffs in Randall v. American Solar King
(Randall Plaintiffs), No. 89-1290, purchased
stock from July 8, 1982 to December 29,
1983.
The Fine and Randall Plaintiffs
both allege similar violations against ASK;
ASK's president, Brian Pardo; ASK's former
vice-president for finance, David Redding;
and ASK's former accountants, Main Hurdman.
These defendants, they assert, violated Rule
10b-5, both as primary violators and as
aiders and abetters. The Plaintiffs also
assert pendent state law claims of fraud and
negligent misrepresentation. The Plaintiffs
base their allegations against Main Hurdman
largely on Main Hurdman's qualified report
on ASK's financial statements for fiscal
year 1982. The Randall Plaintiffs also
allege that Main Hurdman aided and abetted
violations committed by ASK with respect to
certain unaudited financial reports and
other announcements issued by ASK in fiscal
year 1983.
In order to prove a violation
under Rule 10b-5, a plaintiff must show:
(1) a misrepresentation or omission or
other fraudulent device; (2) a purchase or
sale of securities in connection with the
fraudulent device; (3) scienter by defendant
in making the misrepresentation or omission;
(4) materiality of the misrepresentation or
omission; (5) justifiable reliance on the
fraudulent device by plaintiff (or due
diligence against it); and (6) damages
resulting from the fraudulent device.
Warren
v. Reserve Fund Inc.,
728 F.2d 741, 744 (5th
Cir.1984). Summary judgment in favor of
Main Hurdman was proper if the Plaintiffs'
summary judgment evidence failed to raise a
genuine issue of material fact on any of
these elements.
The district court concluded that
the Plaintiffs failed to raise a genuine
issue of material fact on the elements of
scienter and reliance and granted summary
judgment in favor of Main Hurdman, dismissed
the pendent state law claims without
prejudice, and administratively closed both
cases because the defendants, other than
Main Hurdman, were in bankruptcy. The
Plaintiffs appeal from the district court's
grants of summary judgment in favor of Main
Hurdman and its orders administratively
closing the cases against the other
defendants. We reverse the district court's
grants of summary judgment and vacate and
remand the district court's orders
administratively closing the cases.
II. MAIN HURDMAN'S LIABILITY AS A PRIMARY
VIOLATOR
A. Scienter
The Plaintiffs allege that Main
Hurdman acted with intent to deceive, or
severe recklessness, when it issued its
qualified auditor's report on ASK's
financial statements for fiscal year 1982.
Main Hurdman, they argue, knew that ASK
improperly recognized revenue from the
Provimi sale and from sales to Solar
Heating, a company that ASK controlled. They
allege that Main Hurdman approved the
accounting for these sales in order to
benefit certain of Main Hurdman's clients
who invested in S.E.P. No. 1 and in order to
keep ASK as a client. The Plaintiffs also
argue that Main Hurdman knew that its
qualification of its report, which stated
that Main Hurdman could not determine the
adequacy of ASK's reserve for uncollectible
accounts, was false because ASK knew that
the reserve was inadequate by at least
$200,000 to $300,000.
The Plaintiffs observe that Main
Hurdman examined the Provimi transaction
both before and during their audit. A Main
Hurdman planning memo stated:
This transaction must be looked at
closely to determine if it was indeed a
sale, if the notes carried by ASK are at
fair values or if any related parties are
involved.... Due to small anticipated net
income per books we need to be concerned
that the client has done anything possible
to record income.
The Plaintiffs argue that,
despite these reservations, Main Hurdman
approved ASK's accounting for the Provimi
sale and that Main Hurdman knew, or should
have
Page 295 known, that ASK's accounting for the Provimi
sale violated GAAP.
The Plaintiffs' expert testified
that revenue may be recognized under GAAP
only when the earnings process is virtually
complete and an exchange has taken place. At
the end of ASK's fiscal year, however, the
Provimi system had not yet been constructed
or shipped to the buyer and ASK retained
material maintenance and warranty
obligations. GAAP also provides that revenue
should not be recognized when the seller
retains material obligations, or if
uncertainties exist with respect to the
sale. Significant uncertainties existed, the
Plaintiffs' expert opined, concerning
whether ASK could install the system by the
end of the year as required by their
contract.
GAAP also provides that the
profit on a sale should not be recognized if
collection of the sale price is not
reasonably assured. The Plaintiffs argue
that Main Hurdman knew that the transaction
required completion of a working system, and
also knew that the solar panels themselves
had not been shipped by ASK to S.E.P. No. 1
or Provimi at year end. Main Hurdman also
was aware, the Plaintiffs assert, that
interest and principal on the ten-year note
was to be paid from payments by Provimi for
the energy actually used and would
negatively amortize if such payments were
inadequate. No evidence existed, the
Plaintiffs argue, that the system would ever
generate energy sufficient to make the
payments on this note. Nor could ASK have
been reasonably assured that the individual
partners would be able to make up any
shortfall on the note after ten or more
years.
Main Hurdman argues that ASK's
recognition of the Provimi sale conformed
with GAAP and that Main Hurdman's conduct
negated any intent to deceive. They observe
that ASK disclosed the facts concerning the
Provimi sale in its 1982 financial
statements. They also note that Main Hurdman
indicated that the sale, as originally
structured, could not be recognized in
fiscal year 1982. ASK restructured the
sale's terms to include full transfer of
title to the solar equipment, and transfer
of risk of loss, delay, and other matters
during the installation process, to the
purchaser by the end of the fiscal year.
Subsequent installation was to be supervised
by ASK as agent for, and at the risk of, the
purchaser. Main Hurdman also presented
evidence that S.E.P. No. 1 paid for an
uninstalled system and that the cost of
installation was not recognized in 1982.
Collection of the notes, Main Hurdman
argues, was reasonably assured because they
were secured by the solar energy equipment,
by the personal worth of S.E.P. No. 1's
general partner, and by the individual
partner's notes, due unconditionally, for
their pro rata share.
The Plaintiffs also allege that
ASK's accounting for the long-term note
violated GAAP. GAAP requires the evaluation
of the reasonableness of the interest rate
on a note that is received as consideration
for the sale of goods. If the note bears an
unreasonably low interest rate, the purchase
price must be deemed to include a portion of
the interest and the actual face amount of
the note must be discounted. The long-term
note carried a ten percent rate of interest
at a time when the prime rate was fifteen
and one-half percent. The Plaintiffs argue
that because S.E.P. No. 1 had no credit
history, and no assets or security, it could
not have obtained even a prime rate loan in
the open market. The Plaintiffs argue that
Main Hurdman knew, therefore, that the
ten-percent rate was below market and was
prima facie unreasonable.
Main Hurdman argues that the
terms of the note were disclosed in ASK's
financial statement and that it determined
that the interest rate was reasonable
because rates had been falling sharply
during the year before the note was executed
and were expected to continue to decline.
The Plaintiffs, on the other hand, observe
that Accounting Principles Board Opinion No.
21 specifically provides that considerations
of subsequent changes to interest rates are
to be ignored and the interest rate must be
evaluated at the time the note is issued.
The Plaintiffs also allege that
ASK inflated its revenue for fiscal year
1982 by entering into improper transactions
with
Page 296 Solar Heating. Solar Heating had been a
large customer of ASK, but could not pay for
goods previously purchased. ASK acquired
irrevocable proxies for all of Solar
Heating's stock, replaced the company's
directors and officers with officers of ASK,
and continued to sell to Solar Heating. The
Plaintiffs assert that a combined financial
statement should have been issued for Solar
Heating and ASK and that the intercompany
sales should have been eliminated from ASK's
financial statements. Even if a combined
statement was not required, the Plaintiffs
argue, a significant reserve should have
been set aside for the possibility that
Solar Heating might never make payment.
Main Hurdman argues that it
determined that the control of Solar Heating
was likely to be temporary and that GAAP
does not require consolidation of financial
statements in such instances. Control by
ASK, they noted, was only until Solar
Heating paid its debt to ASK, although no
fixed date existed for termination of such
control. The Plaintiffs, on the other hand,
argue that ASK had no assurance of when, if
ever, Solar Heating would be able to pay its
debt, and the Plaintiffs observe that the
debt was increasing because of continued
sales to Solar Heating. ASK's control of
Solar Heating, they argue, should have been
considered indefinite rather than temporary.
The Plaintiffs' expert also
opined that Main Hurdman should have
realized that ASK's financial statement
departed from the GAAP of conservatism,
which requires that all possible errors in
financial statements be in the direction of
understatement rather than overstatement of
net income and net assets. He also opined
that Main Hurdman departed from the GAAP
that requires that transactions be recorded
in accordance with economic reality when the
form of the transaction differs from its
substance.
The Plaintiffs argue that Main
Hurdman knew, or should have known, that its
statement that ASK's financial statement was
in accordance with GAAP was false. They also
argue that Main Hurdman knew that its
qualifying statement was false. Main
Hurdman's qualifying paragraph stated:
While management is of the opinion that
the allowance for doubtful trade accounts
and notes receivable is adequate at July 31,
1982, we [Main Hurdman] are unable to
determine the adequacy of the provision for
uncollectible accounts.
The Plaintiffs argue that Main
Hurdman knew that the account was inadequate
and provided this statement because ASK
adamantly refused to adjust the account and
because Main Hurdman did not wish to lose
ASK as a client. Main Hurdman, on the other
hand, argues that they could not reasonably
estimate an adequate reserve.
An audit memorandum by Main
Hurdman's audit manager indicates that he
believed that ASK's reserve for doubtful
accounts should have been increased by at
least $200,000 to $300,000. He stated that
because
the client had a bad year they would not
even consider the possibility of an
adjustment of that size [$200,000 to
$300,000]. Therefore, it was decided after
several discussions with the client that a
qualified opinion would be issued in regard
to the A/R [accounts receivable] issue.
Since we knew that we were going to qualify
as to receivables, all work on W/Ps
[workpapers] listed above was stopped as it
would be very time consuming and was no
longer necessary in light of the qualified
opinion.
The Plaintiffs assert that this
memorandum indicates that Main Hurdman
either knew that the account was inadequate
or purposely avoided determining the
adequacy of that account.
A plaintiff may prove scienter by
showing that the defendant acted with an
intent to deceive, manipulate or defraud, or
by showing that the defendant acted with
severe recklessness.
Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder, 425 U.S. 185,
194 n. 12, 96 S.Ct. 1375, 1381, n. 12,
47 L.Ed.2d 668 (1976);
Shivangi v. Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc., 825
F.2d 885, 889 (5th Cir.1987). We have
defined severe recklessness as
limited to those highly unreasonable
omissions or misrepresentations that involve
Page 297 not merely simple or even inexcusable
negligence, but an extreme departure from
the standards of ordinary care, and that
present a danger of misleading buyers or
sellers which is either known to the
defendant or is so obvious that the
defendant must have been aware of it.
Id. at 889.
The district court concluded that
the Plaintiffs' evidence did not raise a
triable issue on scienter because their
evidence could not reasonably be construed
as indicating that Main Hurdman departed
from the standards of ordinary care.
A reasonable jury, however, could
infer from the Plaintiffs' evidence that
Main Hurdman knew that its statements were
false when it indicated that ASK's financial
statements complied with GAAP, and when it
stated that ASK's financial statements
fairly represented ASK's financial position.
Main Hurdman, as evidenced by their own
audit working papers, formed an opinion that
the provision for uncollectible accounts was
inadequate by at least $200,000 to $300,000.
In fact, Main Hurdman admits that their
"audit team could not accept ASK's position
that the existing reserve was adequate...."
The only uncertainty, it appears, was on the
exact amount by which the account was
inadequate. Main Hurdman, we observe, states
that their engagement partner "believed that
an adequate reserve might be substantially
more than the $200,000--$300,000 range noted
in the work papers by his subordinate." Even
assuming that Main Hurdman's statement that
it was "unable to determine the adequacy of
the provision for uncollectible accounts"
was true, "a conscious purpose to avoid
learning the truthfulness of a statement is
an extreme departure from the standards of
ordinary care."
G.A. Thompson & Co. v. Partridge, 636 F.2d
945, 962 (5th Cir.1981). The Plaintiffs'
evidence, we conclude, creates a triable
issue whether Main Hurdman knew that its
qualification was false, or whether Main
Hurdman consciously avoided learning the
truthfulness of its qualification.
Main Hurdman's qualification also
was misleading, the Plaintiffs' expert
opined, because Main Hurdman failed to
disclose that ASK's financial statements
were materially affected by ASK's improper
revenue recognition from the Provimi and
Solar Heating sales, although Main Hurdman
must have known that the accounting for
these transactions was improper. We note
that this evidence is circumstantial, but we
have recognized that proof of scienter "will
often be inferential" and "circumstantial."
Huddleston v. Herman & MacLean, 640 F.2d
534, 546-47 (5th Cir.1981), reversed in
part on other grounds, 459 U.S. 375, 103
S.Ct. 683, 74 L.Ed.2d 548 (1983).
Main Hurdman argues that the
disagreement between the Plaintiffs' expert
and their accountants indicates at most a
difference of professional judgment
concerning the application of GAAP, and that
such a dispute does not raise a triable
issue concerning scienter.
Godchaux v. Conveying Techniques, Inc., 846
F.2d 306, 315 (5th Cir.1988) ("an
ethical, reasonably diligent accountant may
choose to apply any of a variety of
acceptable accounting procedures when that
accountant prepares a financial
statement."). In Godchaux, we observed that
GAAP tolerates a wide range of acceptable
procedures, and we concluded that in
reviewing an accountant's conduct a district
court may determine only whether an
accountant has chosen a procedure from
within that universe of acceptable
practices. Id. at 315. Our rule in Godchaux
does not assist Main Hurdman, however,
because the Plaintiffs' expert unequivocally
testified that Main Hurdman's accounting of
ASK's 1982 financial statements could not be
included within the universe of acceptable
practices under GAAP, and his testimony
suffices to create a triable issue on that
question.
We agree that the mere
publication of inaccurate accounting
figures, or a failure to follow GAAP,
without more, does not establish scienter.
The party must know that it is publishing
materially false information, or the party
must be severely reckless in publishing such
information.
Page 298 Main Hurdman does not argue that it did not
know that ASK's reserve should have been
increased. Rather, Main Hurdman argues that
such knowledge did not establish scienter
because, in order to establish scienter, it
must have known that the omitted fact
created a "danger of misleading buyers" or
the danger must have been "so obvious that
the [defendant] must have been aware of it."
S.E.C. v. Southwest Coal & Energy Co.,
624 F.2d 1312, 1321 n. 17 (5th Cir.1980).
Main Hurdman confuses the requirements of
knowledge and severe recklessness.
The court in Southwest Coal
considered whether severe recklessness could
be inferred from a party's failure to
disclose material facts, and the court
concluded that knowledge of an omitted fact,
in itself, does not constitute such
recklessness unless the party also knows
that its failure to disclose the fact could
mislead buyers. Id. Nothing in the Southwest
Coal court's opinion, however, indicates
that scienter cannot be satisfied by
demonstrating that a party knows that it is
issuing a materially false statement. The
Plaintiffs in the instant case do not allege
that Main Hurdman was severely reckless by
omitting certain facts. They assert that
Main Hurdman's qualification was itself
materially false and that Main Hurdman
either knew that it was false or was
severely reckless in not determining its
truthfulness.
Even were we to accept Main
Hurdman's argument that the Plaintiffs must
show that Main Hurdman knew the statement
was misleading as well as false, we would
have to conclude that the danger of
misleading the public through a public
accountant's knowing issuance of a false
opinion is obvious. A public accountant
performs an important public function and
must be aware that the public places great
faith in the probity of its opinions.
The Plaintiffs also adduced
evidence of an improper motive that, if
believed, suggests that Main Hurdman
assisted ASK in a scheme to mislead the
public by inflating ASK's revenues. The
Plaintiffs observe, for example, that
several of the investors in S.E.P. No. 1
were Main Hurdman's clients, and the
Plaintiffs suggest that Main Hurdman
approved ASK's accounting of the Provimi
sale to ensure that these clients received
tax advantages from the Provimi sale. The
Plaintiffs also argue that Main Hurdman may
have been motivated, in part, by a desire to
keep ASK as its client. The Plaintiffs'
evidence and speculation as to motive, in
itself, does not suffice to create a triable
issue on scienter. We have noted, however,
that summary judgment should be used
sparingly when motive and intent are
factors.
Whitaker v. Coleman, 115 F.2d 305, 306 (5th
Cir.1940);
Morrison v. Nissan Motor Co., 601 F.2d 139,
141 (4th Cir.1979); see also 6 Moore's
Federal Practice p 56.15(4) at pp. 56-295
(2d ed. 1986) (discussing propriety of
summary judgment when credibility is an
issue).
We agree with Main Hurdman that a
"mere scintilla of evidence in support of
plaintiff's position will be insufficient"
to avoid summary judgment.
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S.
242, 249-50, 106 S.Ct. 2505, 2510-11, 91
L.Ed.2d 202 (1986). We must view the
evidence and draw all inferences, however,
in the light most favorable to the
non-moving party.
United States v. Diebold, Inc., 369 U.S.
654, 82 S.Ct. 993, 8 L.Ed.2d 176 (1962).
A reasonable jury, we conclude, might
believe the Plaintiffs' expert and find that
Main Hurdman knew that it was issuing a
false and misleading report, or that it was
severely reckless in issuing its report.
Anderson, 477 U.S. at 249-50, 106 S.Ct. at
2510-11.
B. Reliance
The district court asserted, and
the parties do not dispute, that the fraud
on the market theory, which creates a
rebuttable presumption of reliance, controls
the issue of reliance in this case. The
district court found that Main Hurdman
rebutted the presumption of reliance,
however, because the deposition testimony,
read as a whole, indicated that the named
Plaintiffs did not rely on Main Hurdman's
report on ASK's 1982 financial statements.
Under the fraud on the market theory,
however,
Page 299 misleading statements defraud purchasers of
stock even if the purchasers do not rely
directly on such misstatements.
Basic Inc. v. Levinson, 485 U.S. 224,
241-42, 108 S.Ct. 978, 988-89, 99 L.Ed.2d
194 (1988). The Supreme Court in Basic
observed:
The fraud on the market theory is based
on the hypothesis that, in an open and
developed securities market, the price of a
company's stock is determined by the
available material information regarding the
company and its business ... Misleading
statements will therefore defraud purchasers
of stock even if the purchasers do not
directly rely on the misstatements....
Id. (emphasis added) (quoting
Peil v. Speiser, 806 F.2d 1154, 1160-61 (3rd
Cir.1986)). The court presumes that the
plaintiff relied not on the defendant's
fraudulent statements directly, but on the
market's reflection of those fraudulent
statements in the value of the stock.
Peil v. Speiser, 806 F.2d 1154 (3rd
Cir.1986).
Main Hurdman could rebut the
presumption of reliance by "any showing that
severs the link between the alleged
misrepresentation and either the price
received (or paid) by the plaintiff, or his
decision to trade at a fair market price."
Basic, 485 U.S. at 248, 108 S.Ct. at 992.
The presumption of reliance can be rebutted
by showing: (1) that the nondisclosures did
not affect the market price, or (2) that the
Plaintiffs would have purchased the stock at
the same price had they known the
information that was not disclosed; or (3)
that the Plaintiffs actually knew the
information that was not disclosed to the
market. Id. at 248-49, 108 S.Ct. at 992-93;
Finkel v. Docutel/Olivetti Corp.,
817 F.2d 356, 365 (5th Cir.1987), cert. denied, 485
U.S. 959, 108 S.Ct. 1220, 99 L.Ed.2d 421
(1988), citing
Peil v. Speiser, 806 F.2d 1154, 1163 (3rd
Cir.1986), and
Blackie v. Barrack, 524 F.2d 891, 906-07
(9th Cir.1975), cert. denied, 429 U.S.
816, 97 S.Ct. 57, 50 L.Ed.2d 75 (1976). Main
Hurdman argues that it rebutted the
presumption of reliance by proving that the
named Plaintiffs did not rely on the market
price of the stock or on Main Hurdman's 1982
report, but rather relied on other specific
information with which Main Hurdman had no
connection.
Under the fraud on the market
theory, however, the Plaintiffs did not need
to show that they actually relied on Main
Hurdman's report rather than on other
materials. Main Hurdman had the burden of
showing that the Plaintiffs knew of the
omitted or misstated facts, or that they
would have traded at the same price had they
known. They offered no such evidence. The
evidence upon which Main Hurdman relies
demonstrates only that the named Plaintiffs
had their own investment strategies and
motives in purchasing ASK's stock. Main
Hurdman did not offer evidence that these
Plaintiffs would have purchased ASK's stock
at the same price had they known, for
example, that ASK's provision for
uncollectible accounts was understated by
several hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Even if the Plaintiffs relied on interim
reports and revenue projections issued after
ASK's 1982 financial statements, as Main
Hurdman suggests, this fact does not negate
their reliance on the market or on ASK's
1982 financial statements.
An investor who buys or sells stock at
the price set by the market does so in
reliance on the integrity of that price.
Because most publicly available information
is reflected in market price, an investor's
reliance on any public material
misrepresentation, therefore, may be
presumed for purposes of a Rule 10b-5
action.
Basic, 485 U.S. at 247, 108 S.Ct.
at 991-92. We conclude, therefore, that Main
Hurdman did not sever the link between the
market price and the investment decision.
Even without the fraud on the
market presumption, the Plaintiffs appear to
have raised a genuine issue of material fact
on the issue of reliance. In their
depositions, each of the named Plaintiffs
testified that they relied, at least to some
extent, on Main Hurdman's opinion. Plaintiff
Fine, for example, testified unequivocally
that Main Hurdman's opinion was a factor in
his decision to purchase thirty-two shares
of ASK stock on February 3, 1983
Page 300 and two-hundred shares of ASK stock on July
28, 1983.
The district court acknowledged
that "[w]hile more than one Plaintiff states
a conclusion that he relied on the report,
the whole of each Plaintiffs' deposition
testimony clearly indicates the contrary."
Perhaps the district court objected to these
Plaintiffs' testimony because they stated
conclusions. A witness' conclusory opinion
on his subjective state of mind, however, is
admissible and perhaps inevitable.
United States v. Dozier, 672 F.2d 531,
542-43 & n. 7 (5th Cir.), cert. denied,
459 U.S. 943, 103 S.Ct. 256, 74 L.Ed.2d 200
(1982). Or perhaps the district court simply
did not agree with these Plaintiffs'
conclusions. In reviewing the record on a
motion for summary judgment, however, we
must draw all inferences most favorable to
the party opposing the motion and all doubt
as to the existence of a genuine issue of
material fact must be resolved in the
nonmovant's favor.
Southern Distributing Co., Inc. v.
Southdown, Inc., 574 F.2d 824 (5th Cir.1978);
United States Steel Corp. v. Darby, 516 F.2d
961 (5th Cir.1975). Even if the fraud on
the market theory did not apply to this
case, therefore, we would have difficulty in
concluding that the Plaintiffs' evidence,
viewed in the light most favorable to the
Plaintiffs, and drawing all inferences most
favorable to them, failed to raise a genuine
issue of material fact on the question of
reliance.
III. MAIN HURDMAN'S LIABILITY AS AN AIDER
AND ABETTOR
The district court in both cases
dismissed the Plaintiffs' claims against
Main Hurdman, both as a primary violator and
as an aider and abettor, based on Main
Hurdman's qualified report on ASK's 1982
financial statements. The Randall
Plaintiffs, however, also claimed that Main
Hurdman aided and abetted violations
committed by ASK through its issuance of
certain unaudited 1983 reports and other
announcements. The district court concluded
that Main Hurdman was not liable as an aider
and abettor based on these 1983 reports
because Main Hurdman was not generally aware
of its improper role in a securities
violation by a primary party and did not
knowingly render substantial assistance in
such a violation.
In order to establish a claim for
aiding and abetting, the plaintiff must
demonstrate: (1) a securities violation by a
primary party; (2) that the aider and
abettor had a general awareness of its role
in the violation; and (3) that the aider and
abettor knowingly rendered substantial
assistance in that violation.
Abell v. Potomac Ins. Co., 858 F.2d 1104,
1126 (5th Cir.1988), cert. denied as to
relevant part sub nom.,
Abell v. Wright Lindsey & Jennings, --- U.S.
----, 109 S.Ct. 3242, 106 L.Ed.2d 589 (1989),
vacated and remanded as to non-relevant part
sub nom.,
Fryar v. Abell, --- U.S. ----, 109 S.Ct.
3236, 106 L.Ed.2d 584 (1989), citing
Bane v. Sigmundr Exploration Corp., 848 F.2d
579, 581 (5th Cir.1988). The Plaintiffs'
evidence on scienter, we conclude, sufficed
to raise a genuine issue of material fact on
whether Main Hurdman was generally aware of
its role in a securities violation by a
primary party. We also conclude that the
Plaintiffs raised a triable issue on whether
Main Hurdman knowingly rendered substantial
assistance in a securities violation by a
primary party. The knowing issuance of a
materially misleading qualified opinion, we
observe, would have substantially assisted
ASK, Pardo, or Redding in committing a
securities violation. We must address
separately, however, the question of whether
the Plaintiffs presented sufficient evidence
of a securities violation by a primary
party.
In order to prove a violation
under Rule 10b-5, a plaintiff must show: (1)
a material misrepresentation or omission;
(2) a purchase or sale of securities; (3)
scienter; (4) justifiable reliance; and (5)
damages.
Warren v. Reserve Fund Inc.,
728 F.2d 741, 744 (5th Cir.1984). The only elements
not controlled by our earlier discussion are
whether ASK, Pardo, or Redding, rather than
Main Hurdman, issued, with scienter, a
material misstatement or omission.
Page 301
The Plaintiffs' expert stated
unequivocally that ASK's recognition of
income from the Provimi sale, and from the
sales to Solar Heating, inflated ASK's
revenue for 1982 and did not comply with
GAAP. Main Hurdman, as well as the
Plaintiffs' expert, acknowledged that ASK's
$47,000 reserve for uncollectible accounts
was insufficient. We find this evidence
sufficient to raise a triable issue on
whether ASK misrepresented material facts in
its 1982 financial reports.
In order to avoid summary
judgment, the Plaintiffs' evidence also must
raise a triable issue on whether ASK, Pardo,
or Redding knew that ASK's 1982 financial
statements were false, or whether ASK,
Pardo, or Redding was severely reckless in
issuing those statements. Main Hurdman, we
note, informed ASK that its provision for
uncollectible accounts was inadequate, and
Main Hurdman qualified its report because
ASK would not alter that provision.
According to Main Hurdman's workpapers, ASK
told Main Hurdman that it would not change
its provision for uncollectible accounts
because it had a bad year and because it was
pursuing collection vigorously.
We conclude that this evidence
created a triable issue on whether ASK knew
that its provision for uncollectible
accounts was inadequate. The Plaintiffs also
presented evidence from which a reasonable
jury could conclude that ASK knew that its
recognition of revenue from the Provimi and
Solar Heating transactions was improper. We
find, therefore, that the Plaintiffs
presented sufficient evidence to avoid
summary judgment on their claims that Main
Hurdman aided and abetted a Rule 10b-5
violation by a primary party. Because we
find that the Plaintiffs raise a genuine
issue of material fact on the question of
aiding and abetting based on Main Hurdman's
qualified report on ASK's 1982 financial
statements, we do not reach the issue of
whether the Plaintiffs' also met their
burden of preventing summary judgment based
on their claims that Main Hurdman aided and
abetted violations in fiscal year 1983.
IV. CLOSING THE CASE AGAINST THE OTHER
DEFENDANTS
The district court dismissed
without prejudice the defendants other than
Main Hurdman so that it could remove the
case from its docket. The district court
noted that these defendants are in
bankruptcy and it specifically provided that
the Plaintiffs could reopen the case against
these defendants should the outcome of their
bankruptcy proceedings warrant it. Because
the district court will not be able to
remove this case from its docket, we vacate
and remand for the district court to
consider whether, in these circumstances, it
remains in the interest of judicial
administration to dismiss the defendants
other than Main Hurdman.
V. CONCLUSION
Based on the foregoing, we
reverse the district court's grant of
summary judgment in favor of Main Hurdman in
actions No. 89-1218 and 89-1290, and we
vacate and remand in both cases for the
district court to consider its decision to
close these cases as to the defendants other
than Main Hurdman. Costs shall be borne by
Main Hurdman.
REVERSED IN PART, VACATED AND
REMANDED IN PART. |