ORDER RE MOTIONS TO DISMISS THE COMPLAINT
I. INTRODUCTION & BACKGROUND
This securities action concerns residential mortgage-backed securities (“RMBS”) purchased by Allstate Insurance Company, Allstate Life Insurance Company, Allstate Life Insurance Company of New York, and American Heritage Life Insurance Company (collectively “Allstate” or “Plaintiffs”) in multiple offerings structured and sold by several of the defendants. Allstate Insurance Company and Allstate Life Insurance Company are referred to as the “Illinois Plaintiffs.” The complaint alleges federal and state causes of action against Countrywide Financial Corporation (“CFC” or “Countrywide”), three Countrywide subsidiaries, the SPVs that issued the RMBS Certificates, 1 Bank of America, its subsidiary NB Holdings Corp., and several of Countrywide’s former officers and directors. The various defendants are referred to as the Countrywide Defendants, 2 the Depositor Defendants, 3 the Individual Defendants, 4 and the Bank of America Defendants. 5
This case only recently came before the Court, but it has a complicated and relevant procedural history. Various plaintiffs have been attempting to recover alleged losses on Countrywide RMBS since the end of 2007. In November 2007, David Luther filed a putative class action on behalf of himself and purchasers of several hundred Countrywide-issued RMBS in the California state court. 6 In June of 2008, the Washington State Plumbing and Pipe-fitting Pension Fund Trust filed a similar *1169 action in state court seeking to represent purchasers of several hundred Offerings. 7 Those cases were later consolidated into one case (referred to hereafter as Luther) and amended to assert claims on behalf of yet more Offerings. This despite the fact that the Luther named plaintiffs had purchased Certificates in only a small fraction of the Offerings that they purported to represent. The Luther case was removed to federal court. The Court remanded to state court under the Class Action Fairness Act (“CAFA”), and was affirmed by the Ninth Circuit. The state court then dismissed the case under the Securities Litigation Uniform Standards Act (“SLUSA”). That decision was reversed and remanded on appeal. The suit is presently pending in California state court.
While the
Luther
appeal was pending in state court, the
Luther
plaintiffs filed an identical suit before this Court, captioned
Maine State Retirement System v. Countrywide Financial Corp.,
No. 2:10-CV-0302 MRP (MANx)
(“Maine State
”). In
Maine State,
this Court found the claims as to most of the 427 Offerings to be time-barred under Section ll’s three-year statute of repose. Specifically, the Court held that the doctrine of
American Pipe
tolled the statute of limitations only for those Certificates that the named plaintiffs in the prior putative class actions had standing to sue, i.e., those tranches that the
Luther
named plaintiffs had actually purchased.
Maine State Ret. Sys. v. Countrywide Fin. Corp.,
After the Maine State I ruling, which barred the claims of Allstate from that action, Allstate filed the Complaint in the Southern District of New York. ECF No. 1. In addition to the Securities Act claims asserted in Maine State, Allstate asserted several Exchange Act claims, as well as state law fraud, aiding and abetting, negligent misrepresentation, and successor liability. Id. Defendants moved to transfer the case to this Court. Citing apparent “judge-shopping,” Judge Hellerstein granted the transfer motion, but not before the parties had fully briefed the Defendants’ various motions to dismiss under New York and Second Circuit law. Order Granting Motion to Transfer, ECF No. 116. This Court ordered additional briefing to clarify the choice of law and state law issues, and then permitted a second round of supplemental briefing on choice of law. The issues now have been fully briefed, and the Court heard extensive oral argument on September 21, 2011.
II. CHOICE OF LAW
Before embarking on a substantive analysis, the Court must determine which law to apply to each of Plaintiffs’ claims.
Allstate’s federal claims are governed by federal law. “When reviewing federal claims, a transferee court in [the Ninth Circuit] is bound only by [the Ninth Circuit’s] precedent.”
Newton v. Thomason,
The case was transferred from the Southern District of New York pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a). ECF No. 116. The Court will therefore apply the substantive law, including choice-of-law rules, of New York to Allstate’s state law claims.
Van Dusen v. Barrack,
A. Aiding And Abetting
In their supplemental briefs, Mozilo and Sambol argue that California law, not New York law, applies to the aiding and abetting claims against him. Mozilo Supp. Brief at 4, ECF No. 163; Sambol Supp. Brief at 5, ECF No. 166. When faced with a choice of law question, New York first analyzes whether a true conflict exists.
Cromer Finance Ltd. v. Berger,
When a true conflict does exist, New York employs an “interest analysis” to apply the law of the jurisdiction “having the greatest interest in the litigation.”
Cromer Finance,
The fact that the Illinois Plaintiffs are based in Illinois and represent the vast majority of the RMBS purchases in the case provides a plausible basis to favor Illinois law over that of New York. However, the parties fully briefed the present motions to dismiss before Judge Heller-stein and no party urged the application of Illinois law. Rather, both sides assumed that New York law would apply (with the exception of Delaware’s
de facto
merger law, discussed below) and fully briefed their arguments using New York precedent. Interpreting New York choice of law rules, the Second Circuit has held that, “where the parties have agreed to the application of the forum law, their consent concludes the choice of law inquiry.”
American Fuel Corp. v. Utah Energy Dev. Co., Inc.,
B. Successor Liability
The Bank of America Defendants argue that Delaware, not New York, law governs the successor liability claims against them. The Court applies the same conflict of law principles that are laid out above.
Under New York law, a court considers (i) continuity of ownership; (ii) cessation of ordinary business and dissolution of the acquired corporation as soon as possible; (in) assumption by the successor of the liabilities ordinarily necessary for the uninterrupted continuation of the business of the acquired corporation; and, (iv) continuity of management, personnel, physical location, assets and general business operation.
Fitzgerald v. Fahnestock & Co., Inc.,
The Court next addresses whether Delaware or New York has the greater interest in the application of its law. Choice of law questions must be decided on an issue-by-issue basis.
Cooney,
New York has not explicitly adopted § 302, but its result is a logical extension of the interest analysis required under New York law. Corporations are creatures of the state, and a key purpose of the corporate form is to structure and channel liability. This is part of the reason that corporations pick one state over another to incorporate in, and it follows that the law of the state of incorporation should govern such a core attribute.
U.S. Fid. & Guar. Co. v. Petroleo Brasileiro S.A.-Petrobras,
No. 98 Civ. 3099(THK),
A number of courts have applied § 302 in the closely analogous context of corporate veil-piercing.
See Kalb, Voorhis & Co. v. Am. Fin. Corp.,
*1173 The comments to § 302 match this logic, noting that the internal affairs doctrine provides a corporation with the benefits of certainty, predictability, and uniformity of result. As Bank of America notes, applying Delaware law to de facto merger questions will allow Delaware to provide its corporations with one bright-line rule rather than subjecting them to the vagaries of multiple states’ rules.
The Court takes this opportunity to briefly address several additional points. First, Allstate argues that § 301 of the Restatement applies rather than § 302. Opp. at 124-25. To the extent that the Restatement applies at all, the Bank of America Defendants are correct that it would be § 302, not § 301. Section 301 states that, “[t]he rights and liabilities of a corporation with respect to a third person that arise from a corporate act of a sort that can likewise be done by an individual are determined by the same choice-of-law principles as are applicable to non-corporate parties.” Restatement (Second) Conflict of Laws § 301. Bank of America is not alleged to have committed any primary violation. The “corporate act” which potentially gave rise to its liability was the acquisition of Countrywide via forward triangular merger. And, an individual cannot engage in such a transaction.
This is enough to end the inquiry, but the Court notes that § 301 would not apply even were the Court to assume that the “corporate acts” are those giving rise to primary liability (i.e. Countrywide’s purportedly false and misleading statements). If the “corporate act” is Countrywide’s sale of RMBS and associated statements, then Allstate is not a third party under any standard meaning of the term. A “third person” or “third party” is “[a] person who is not a party to a lawsuit, agreement, or other transaction but who is usually somehow implicated.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1518 (8th ed.1999). Allstate is a sophisticated investor and one of the largest insurance companies in the world. Allstate voluntarily entered into a series of commercial transactions with Countrywide; this makes it a party to the securities purchases, not a third party.
Second, Allstate has cited several cases which it claims support its position that New York’s
de facto
merger law should apply. Opp. at 125-126. Specifically, Allstate relies upon
Chrysler v. Ford Motor Co.,
C. Borrowing Statute
In Court-directed supplemental briefs, Defendants asserted that New York’s borrowing statute requires the application of Illinois’ statute of limitations to the Illinois Plaintiffs’ claims, and therefore dismissal of many of the common law claims. This argument had not been raised in the pretransfer briefing before Judge Hellerstein, and Allstate claims that it is therefore waived. Allstate Opp. to Defs’ New Motions re: Timeliness of Common-Law Claims (“Supp. Opp.”) at 2-3. The parties agree that, if not waived, New York’s borrowing statute applies. They disagree strenuously on the implications of that statute. The sections that follow address whether the argument has been waived and, if not, which Illinois limitations periods apply. The impact of those decisions is addressed in Sections IV.A.4-5.
1. Defendants Have Not Waived Their Borrowing Statute Arguments
Subject to several exceptions not applicable here, the statute of limitations is an affirmative defense which is waived if not raised at the pleadings stage.
John R. Sand & Gravel Co. v. United States,
Allstate is correct that Defendants’ timeliness defense could and should have been raised in their initial motions before Judge Hellerstein. It was not, but Defendants recognized their omission before they were required to file answers. They are therefore entitled to raise the issue in those answers, and to move for a judgment on the pleadings any time thereafter. Fed. R. Civ. Proc. 12(h)(2)(B) (Dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6) may be requested through a Rule 12(c) motion after the pleadings are closed.);
Yumul v. Smart Balance, Inc.,
No. CV 10-00927 MMM (AJWx),
Rule 12(g) is designed to avoid repetitive motion practice, delay, and ambush tactics.
See Yumul,
Defendants’ common law statute of limitations arguments have not been waived. Despite the winding path to this point, both sides have now had a chance to fully brief those issues. Addressing the arguments now will prejudice neither side and will promote the efficient and just resolution of this case.
2. The ISL’s Three-Year Limitations Period Applies to the Illinois Plaintiffs’ Claims
The parties agree that New York law applies to the common law claims. Countrywide Defs’ Response to Supp. Opp. at 6; Supp. Opp. at 4. New York has a borrowing statute, C.P.L.R. § 202, which provides that when a nonresident sues on a cause of action that accrued outside the state, the action must be timely under both New York and the laws of the place where the cause of action accrued.
Id.
A cause of action “accrues where the injury is sustained rather than where the defendant committed the wrongful acts.”
Gordon & Co. v. Ross,
One plaintiff is located in New York, meaning that the borrowing statute is not implicated. Another is located in Florida. Florida has a four-year statute of limitations for fraud, meaning that the Florida Plaintiffs suit is timely under either state’s law. The remaining two plaintiffs, *1176 and the ones who purchased the vast majority of the RMBS in the case, reside in Illinois. The parties agree that an Illinois statute of limitations should apply, though they disagree as to whether it should be the three-year period in the Illinois Securities Law (“ISL”), or the five-year period for fraud. Supp. Opp. at 4-8; Countrywide Defs’ Response to Supp. Opp. at 6-10.
The ISL states that, “[n]o action shall be brought for relief under this Section or upon or because of any of the matters for which relief is granted by this Section after three years from the date of sale....” 815 I.L.C.S. 5/13(D) (“Section 13(D)”).
13
Illinois courts have interpreted the “any of the matters for which relief is granted” language to mean that the three-year period applies to common law fraud claims arising out of the purchase of securities.
Tregenza v. Lehman Bros., Inc.,
The Court need not look past the plain language of the statute to conclude that the “matters for which relief is granted” refers to the conduct giving rise to a suit rather than the procedural question of whether an ISL suit is allowed in a particular case. Section 13(D) provides a three-year limitations period from the date of sale. Consider an Illinois case alleging fraud in the sale of a security, filed four years after the security sale. Section 13(D) would bar such a suit.
See Tregenza,
The more logical reading of Section 13(D), the one that the Tregenza court implicitly endorsed and which the Court adopts here, is the one that holds that Section 13(D)’s three-year statute of limitations applies when the conduct giving rise to the fraud claim is conduct that is also covered by the ISL. Allstate alleges that Countrywide misrepresented the quality of the loans underlying its RMBS. This is conduct that, setting aside the procedural questions regarding where and when the suit was brought, is squarely governed by the ISL. The ISL therefore, and not the five-year period for common law fraud, provides the relevant statute of limitations.
*1177 3. The ISL’s Five-Year Repose Period Applies to the Illinois Plaintiffs’ Claims
The second half of Section 13(D) provides that no suit may be brought more than five years from the date of sale. Defendants claim that this acts as an absolute bar to claims on behalf of any purchases before December 27, 2005. Countrywide Defs’ Supp. Brief at n. 8. Allstate counters that this portion of Section 13(D) is a statute of repose and therefore is not borrowed under C.P.L.R. § 202. Allstate cites
Tanges v. Heidelberg N. Am., Inc.,
h- The ISL’s Limitations and Repose Periods Apply to The Illinois Plaintiffs’ Negligent Misrepresentation Claims
The ISL’s statutes of repose and limitations apply to Allstate’s negligent misrepresentation claims as well as its fraud claims.
See Tregenza,
III. MOTION TO DISMISS STANDARD
A Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss should be granted when, assuming the truth of the plaintiffs allegations, the complaint fails to state a claim for which relief can be granted.
See Epstein v. Washington En
*1178
ergy Co.,
IV. DISCUSSION
Having decided the choice of law issues, the Court turns to the substantive issues raised by the parties. As discussed below, Allstate’s federal claims are time-barred and are DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE. The Illinois Plaintiffs’ state law claims on Certificates that they purchased prior to December 27, 2005 are time-barred and are DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE. The remainder of Allstate’s common law fraud claims are adequately pleaded and may proceed. Allstate’s aiding and abetting claims and negligent misrepresentation claims are inadequately pleaded and are DISMISSED WITHOUT PREJUDICE.
A. Statutes of Limitations and Repose
1. The Section 11 and 12(a)(2) Claims Are Time-Barred.
The topic of
American Pipe
tolling has been considered in other Countrywide cases before the Court. The Court will not belabor the issue, but rather refers the parties to its rulings in the
Maine State
and
Stichting
cases.
Maine State I,
2. The Section 10(b) Claims Are Time-Barred
Allstate filed its complaint on December 27, 2010. ECF No. 1. A § 10(b) claim must be filed within two years of the date Plaintiff either knew, or through the exercise of reasonable diligence should have known, “the facts constituting the violation.”
Merck & Co., Inc. v. Reynolds,
— U.S. -,
Allstate’s first argument, that nothing in the public record as of December 27, 2008 indicated scienter with respect to the particular loan pools that Allstate purchased, is frivolous and contradicted by its pleadings. In the shareholder class action and elsewhere, the Court has held that a sufficient inference of scienter exists to support the allegation that Countrywide knew that it had abandoned its underwriting standards.
In re Countrywide Fin. Corp. Sec. Litig.,
*1180 Nothing in the public record or put before the Court since December 2008 permits Allstate to go beyond the “unified course of abandoning sound underwriting practices” or to tie that course of action to the particular Certificates that it purchased. Allstate’s own Opposition acknowledges that its claim is reliant on bootstrapping representations of the quality of specific loan pools to knowledge that all loan pools were riskier than advertised. Opp. at 12 (“[A]llegations showing systemic problems during the relevant period, by definition, support a finding that these Certificates were misrepresented.”). Allstate is faced here with a Hobson’s choice. If it is correct in its big-picture argument that systemic abandonment is sufficient to state an RMBS § 10(b) claim, then it was on notice of that claim before December 27, 2008. If it is wrong, as it is forced to argue for purposes of this motion, then its claim is insufficient. Allstate proposes to walk a razor-thin line whereby systemic problems were insufficient to state a case in late 2008 but somehow sufficient in 2010. Nothing in the record supports its argument.
Second, the Complaint frequently references a study of 19,000 individual loans which purportedly demonstrates that, at the time they were sold, the RMBS purchased by Allstate were worth substantially less than the amount that Allstate paid for them. ¶ 112; Opp. at 91. Allstate argues that it could not adequately link Defendants’ wrongdoing to the specific offerings that Allstate purchased until this “loan-level” analysis was completed in 2010. Id. This argument confuses the term “fact” with the terms “analysis” or “opinion.” A “fact” is “something that actually exists; an aspect of reality.” Black’s Law Dictionary 628 (8th ed.1999). To analyze, by contrast, is to “separate into parts or basic principles so as to determine the nature of the whole; examine methodically.” American Heritage Dictionary 1248 (2d College Ed.1976). Put another way, analysis is not a fact, it is a process whereby one evaluates, considers, and synthesizes facts to reach a conclusion. The conclusion itself may be a fact (if unassailable and therefore “an aspect of reality”), 20 or it may be an opinion (if the conclusion relies upon a mixture of factual analysis and any element of judgment, experience, mathematical modeling, expectations regarding future performance, or other non-quantifiable factors). 21
For Allstate’s argument to delay the triggering of the statute of limitations, its loan-level analysis would have to have (i) generated new facts which had not been previously known, (ii) been essential to surviving a motion to dismiss, and (iii) not been possible until at least December 27, *1181 2008. The loan-level analysis fails all three requirements. Most of the conclusions from Allstate’s analysis appear to be opinions in that they rely upon complex and unverifiable mathematical models. To the extent that they could be characterized as factual, it would be by recasting them as factual descriptions of the inputs and outputs of an analysis (i.e., “using these five factors as inputs to the AYM valuation model reveals that 8% of loans had an LTV ratio above 100%”). To the extent that any of the loan-level analysis’ results are factual, those facts must be considered summaries of other, previously disclosed facts. Information regarding each of the inputs for any such analysis, for each loan that underlay the RMBS that Allstate purchased, was available in the Prospectus Supplements that Allstate claims to have relied upon. Opp. at 24. Allstate could have analyzed that information whenever it wished; the fact that it declined to do so does not toll the statute of limitations.
The Court finds no difference between a series of underlying facts and a summary of those facts. For all intents and purposes, a summary statistic is available (even if not compiled) on the date that the underlying facts are available. Second, even if these summary statistics could somehow constitute new facts subject to independent discovery, the Court finds that a reasonable investor exercising reasonable diligence would have compiled them prior to December 27, 2008. If, as Allstate claims, these statistics were essential to stating a claim, a reasonable investor could and should have engaged someone to copy and paste the Prospectus Summaries into a spreadsheet and analyze the numbers well before 2008.
Finally, Allstate argued that, unlike Stichting, it pleaded that it incurred actual damages based on ratings downgrades and other events. As such, Allstate argues that it cannot have been aware of its actual damages until at least the date that its RMBS were downgraded. A § 10(b) claim requires the plaintiff to show that a loss occurred when the public became aware of a misrepresentation.
See In re Oracle Corp. Sec. Litig.,
For the reasons discussed above, the Court GRANTS Defendants’ motions to dismiss Count I. Dismissal is WITH PREJUDICE as to ALL DEFENDANTS.
3. The Federal Control Person Claims Are Time-Barred
In addition to its primary liability claims under the Securities Act and the Exchange Act, Allstate has asserted federal control person claims against CFC, CHL, CCM, Mozilo, and Sambol. ¶¶ 399; 457. These claims arise under § 15 of the Securities Act and § 20(a) of the Exchange Act.
Id.
Both §§ 15 and 20(a) are control person liability statutes which require a properly pleaded predicate violation.
Stichting,
Ip. The Statute of Repose Bars Some of the Illinois Plaintiffs’ Fraud and Negligent Misrepresentation Claims
New York’s borrowing statute requires the Court to apply the time limitations specified in the ISL to claims by the Illinois Plaintiffs. See Section II.C.2-8 above. This includes a five-year statute of repose from the date of sale. 815 I.L.C.S. 5/13(D). Allstate filed its complaint on December 27, 2010. The statute of repose therefore prohibits claims for any RMBS that the Illinois Plaintiffs purchased before December 27, 2005. The Court hereby GRANTS Defendants’ motions to dismiss Counts III, IV, and V for all RMBS that the Illinois Plaintiffs purchased before December 27, 2005. Dismissal is WITH PREJUDICE as to ALL DEFENDANTS.
5. The Statute of Limitations Does Not Bar the Remainder of the Illinois Plaintiffs’ Fraud Claims
The ISL includes a three-year statute of limitations which begins to run when the plaintiff had actual knowledge of the violation, or had notice of facts which, in the exercise of reasonable diligence, would lead to actual knowledge of the violation. 815 ILCS 5/13(D). This statute of limitations applies to Allstate’s fraud, aiding and abetting, and negligent misrepresentation claims. The Court recently held, under California’s very lenient inquiry notice standard, that an RMBS plaintiff had notice of potential claims against Countrywide by February 14, 2008.
Stichting,
The Illinois statute appears to be very close to the California inquiry notice standard. Unlike a federal § 10(b) suit, Illinois does not require discovery of the “facts constituting the violation,” but rather notice of facts that would “lead to actual knowledge” when reasonable diligence was applied. 815 ILCS 5/13(D)(2);
Merck & Co., Inc. v. Reynolds,
— U.S. -,
Countrywide took a charge against earnings in July of 2007. That charge was directly related to the quality of the loans Countrywide was underwriting. Numerous complaints alleging abandonment of underwriting standards followed, as did further charges against earnings.
See Stichting,
Second, and more importantly, the Illinois standard requires both (i) actual knowledge of facts that should have triggered an investigation and (ii) that such an investigation would have unearthed actual knowledge of a violation. It is possible, even probable, that Defendants will be able to meet both tests and show that the Illinois Plaintiffs’ claims are time-barred. Nevertheless, both tests require fact-specific inquiries that render this issue more appropriate for summary judgment. The first will require Defendants to establish what Allstate knew and when it knew it. The second inquiry will require Defendants to show that a reasonable investigation would have revealed a violation of New York law. That question is factual and intimately tied up with the (also fact-intensive) question of underlying liability. It is therefore better addressed at the summary judgment stage.
Accordingly, the Court DENIES Defendants’ motions to dismiss Counts III, IV, and V based on the statute of limitations.
B. State Law Fraud Claims
The Court has dismissed Allstate’s federal claims as untimely, and therefore declines to address the merits of any but the state law claims. The Court declines to dismiss the case for lack of subject matter jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c). Allstate has asserted claims for common law fraud, aiding and abetting fraud, and negligent misrepresentation. For purposes of this motion the Court will apply New York law. See Section II.A, above.
Allstate claims that CFC, CHL, CSC, the Depositor Defendants, and the Bank of America Defendants are hable to it for common law fraud. The Bank of America Defendants are addressed separately in Section IV.E. Under New York law, the elements of a fraud claim are: (i) a material misrepresentation of a fact, (ii) knowledge of its falsity, (in) an intent to induce reliance, (iv) justifiable reliance by the plaintiff, and (v) damages.
Eurycleia Partners, LP v. Seward & Kissel, LLP,
The First Department of the New York Supreme Court’s Appellate Division recently held that a very similar complaint adequately pleaded common law fraud against Countrywide.
MBIA Ins. Corp. v. Countrywide Home Loans, Inc.,
1. Material Misrepresentation of a Fact
Allstate has identified eight categories of statements which it claims were both material and false:
• Representations relating to underwriting standards and the prevalence of exceptions;
• Representations relating to loan to value (“LTV”) statistics;
• Representations relating to the percentage of homes which were owner occupied;
• Representations relating to the ratings process and the import of ratings;
• Representations relating to sufficiency of borrower income;
• Representations relating to adverse selection of loans;
• Representations relating to the servic- ' ing of loans;
• Representations relating to the documentation process used;
See
Opp. at 8-38. A statement is material if it would justify a party in taking action on the basis of the statement. 60A N.Y. Jur.2d Fraud and Deceit § 113. The Court quickly dispenses with materiality; statements about any of the above categories would affect the perceived value of RMBS based on the underlying loans. As such, a reasonable investor would be justified in basing a purchase decision on any of the above factors. The Court therefore finds that Allstate has adequately pleaded that the above statements were material.
See also Maine State III,
The question of which Defendants made statements and whether they were action-ably false representations of fact or mere opinions is a much closer one.
Facts or Opinions/Puffery
Defendants argue that various statements relating to appraisal values, appraiser independence, LTV ratios, and ratings are non-actionable opinions. Countrywide Defs’ Mtn. to Dismiss at 34. Under New York law, “[RJepresentations of opinion or predictions of some thing [sic] which it is hoped or expected will occur in the future will not sustain an action for fraud.”
Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A. v. Perla,
New York does not use the term “subjective falsity,” but several rulings make clear that a New York court would apply the analogous principle that misrepresentations regarding (i) a party’s subjective belief in an opinion or (ii) the factual bases of an opinion are actionable.
Rodin Properties-Shore Mall, N.V. v. Ullman,
Allstate has alleged that Countrywide “did not genuinely believe the appraisal values given to the properties” and that Countrywide was pressuring appraisers to inflate their valuations. ¶ 97. And, Allstate has put forth a number of facts to support this allegation. These include, among others, facts which call into question the factual bases for the appraisals and ratings. See Opp. at 21-22 (detailing facts, including, among others, statements from former executives, abandonment of underwriting standards, and incomplete appraisal files). Allstate may be unable to prove subjective falsity, or Countrywide may demonstrate that its disclaimers regarding the source and reliability of appraisals, LTV statistics, and shadow ratings rendered any representations non-false or immaterial. These are mixed questions of law and fact and *1186 therefore best reserved for summary judgment. Allstate has met its pleading burden with respect to falsity and materiality.
Who Made the Representations?
A party may be liable under New York state law if it “makes,” “authorizes,” or “causes” a misrepresentation to be made. 60A N.Y.Jur.2d Fraud and Deceit § 188. The representations that form the basis of Allstate’s Complaint all appeared in the Offering Documents. Those Offering Documents were put out by the Depositor Defendants, CWALT, CWABS, CWHEQ, and CWMBS. There is no doubt that the Depositor Defendants “made” the representations and therefore may be held primarily liable; the Court must evaluate whether the same is true of CFC, CHL, and CSC.
The Supreme Court recently limited the scope of primary liability under the federal securities laws in
Janus Capital Group, Inc. v. First Derivative Traders,
— U.S. -,
The
Janus
decision interpreted one word, “make.” Making a misrepresentation is an unavoidable requirement for primary liability under § 10(b) and Rule lob-5, and so the Court was forced to interpret the term.
Id.;
17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5(b). It did so in a way that gave effect to its prior
Central Bank
and
Stoneridge
decisions, while avoiding duplication of the control person liability that Congress had expressly provided for in § 20(a) of the Exchange Act.
Janus,
2. Scienter
Common law fraud requires the plaintiff to plead facts which support an inference of scienter.
Ford v. Sivilli, 2
A.D.3d 773, 774,
S. Intent to Induce Reliance
The representations that Allstate identifies all appear in the Offering Documents. Offering documents exist for the purpose of registering and selling the securities at issue. Allstate has therefore adequately pleaded that the representations in the Offering Documents were made with the intent to induce reliance.
A Justifiable Reliance
A misrepresentation is only actionable if it (i) induces a party to act, and (ii) the party was justified or reasonable in being so-induced.
Secs. Investor Protection Corp. v. BDO Seidman, L.L.P.,
Allstate has met its burden to plead actual reliance by stating that it “received, reviewed, and relied upon the Offering Materials” and that “but for the misrepresentations and omissions in the Offering Materials, Allstate would not have purchased or acquired the Certificates.” ¶¶ 281; 283. The truth of this allegation is a question of fact better reserved for summary judgment or trial. Whether Allstate has pleaded justifiable reliance is a closer question. This inquiry dovetails with the materiality inquiry discussed above. In the same way that a misrepresentation may be immaterial or non-false if it is accompanied by accurate, more detailed, information, a party is not justified in relying on a misrepresentation when other, more detailed, information should have alerted a reasonable party of the representation’s falsity.
New York follows the general rule that, “one has no right to rely on a mere representation as to value, at least where the parties stand on an equal footing and have equal means of knowledge.” 60A N.Y. Jur.2d Fraud and Deceit § 163. However, it has recognized exceptions based on the steps that a plaintiff takes to avoid deception,
DDJ Mgt., LLC v. Rhone Group, L.L.C.,
The pleadings make clear that Allstate, at the time it acquired the Certificates, had access to a wealth of statistics regarding the underlying loan pools. Those statistics may or may not have been truthful. Allstate alternatively may have taken adequate steps to avoid misdirection and therefore have been justified in ignoring *1188 micro-level data in favor of the more macro-level representations in the Offering Documents. Neither question is readily answered by the pleadings, and so the Court reserves them for summary judgment.
5. Damages
Finally, Allstate must plead that it has suffered damages as a result of Defendants’ misrepresentations.
Eurycleia Partners,
For the reasons discussed above, the Court DENIES Defendants’ motions to dismiss the remaining portions of Count III.
C. Aiding and Abetting Fraud
Allstate alleges that CFC, CCM, Mozilo, Sambol, and the Bank of America Defendants (as Countrywide’s successor) are liable to it for aiding and abetting fraud. The Court addresses the Bank of America Defendants’ liability below; here it focuses on CFC, CCM, Mozilo, and Sambol.
Allstate is required to plead that each of these defendants had actual knowledge of the fraud and substantially participated in it.
Lerner v. Fleet Bank, N.A.,
With respect to actual knowledge, the Complaint states the following:
The Aiding and Abetting Defendants knew that the Certificates being packaged and sold by Countrywide were not backed by high-quality loans and were not underwritten according to Countrywide’s stated underwriting guidelines. The Countrywide Defendants, Mozilo, and Sambol knew that due diligence on the securitizations was not being done and/or was not being done properly.
¶ 415. With respect to substantial assistance, the Complaint states the following:
The Aiding and Abetting Defendants gave substantial assistance to and/or facilitated and encouraged the Depositors, Countrywide Securities, and Countrywide Home Loans in their fraud as set forth in Section VII(A) and elsewhere above. In providing substantial assistance, the Aiding and Abetting Defendants knew that the information being distributed to the public was false and misleading, and that material information was being withheld, but intended to facilitate the wrongful conduct.
¶ 416.
These paragraphs are bare legal assertions. They mirror the legal standard for liability, but they provide no facts, particular or general, which would allow the Court to draw an inference of liability. Other portions of the Complaint come closer with respect to Mozilo and Sambol. See, e.g. ¶ 42 (Mozilo and Sambol led the drastic shift in underwriting standards); ¶ 53 (Mozilo and Sambol authorized the establishment of the Structured Loan Desk); ¶¶ 145-149 (Mozilo emails regarding underwriting standards); ¶ 151 (email to Sambol regarding riskiness of Countrywide-originated mortgages); ¶ 153 (email to Sambol regarding overstatement of income); ¶ 161 (memo to Mozilo stating that “borrower repayment capacity was not adequately addressed”); ¶ 169-70 (email exchange between Sambol and Mozilo regarding whether Countrywide should hold less risky loans for its own account and securitize more risky loans). The Complaint’s “Control Person” section largely mimics these factual allegations. ¶¶ 308-36. These factual allegations, if true, would establish that Mozilo and Sambol had actual knowledge of, and substantial participation in, the underwriting of risky loans. What they would not do, and what is required under Rule 9(b), is establish knowledge of or participation in the alleged fraud.
Allstate cannot recover in fraud against Countrywide merely because Countrywide underwrote risky loans and issued risky RMBS; Allstate must establish that Countrywide lied about the attendant risks. Allstate has identified a number of alleged misrepresentations in the Offering Documents. Those are the only representations in the case. Allstate has not pleaded any facts that would suggest that Mozilo or Sambol substantially participated in making those misrepresentations or that they had actual knowledge of the misrepresentations.
The allegations against CCM and CFC contain slightly different deficiencies. The only allegations relating to CCM in the Complaint are that it “exercised a high level of day-to-day control over its subsidiary, Countrywide Securities,” ¶ 306, and that it was “charged with marketing the loans originated and acquired by [CHL].” ¶ 307. If true, CCM should have been added as a primary violator rather than an aider and abettor. If not true, then an aiding and abetting claim is unsustainable.
The claim against CFC fails because Allstate has alleged that CFC is a primary *1190 violator and it is impossible to aid and abet oneself.
Therefore, the Court GRANTS Defendants’ motions to dismiss the remaining portions of Count IV. Dismissal is WITHOUT PREJUDICE.
D. Negligent Misrepresentation Claims
Allstate claims that the Depositors, CSC, CHL, and CFC are liable to it for negligent misrepresentations in the Offering Documents. ¶ 419. The elements of negligent misrepresentation are “(1) the existence of a special or privity-like relationship imposing a duty on the defendant to impart correct information to the plaintiff; (2) that the information was incorrect; and (3) reasonable reliance on the information.”
J.A.O. Acquisition Corp. v. Stavitsky,
1. Allstate’s Claims Are Not Preempted by the Martin Act
New York authorities are presently split over whether New York’s Martin Act (N.Y. Gen. Bus. Law §§ 352
et seq.)
preempts negligent misrepresentation claims like those in this case. The Martin Act is a New York law which grants the Attorney General broad powers to combat financial fraud.
Id.
“The New York Court of Appeals has held that there is no implied private right of action under the Martin Act, and other New York courts have determined that sustaining a cause of action for breach of fiduciary duty in the context of securities fraud would effectively permit a private action under the Martin Act, which would be inconsistent with the Attorney-General’s exclusive enforcement powers thereunder.”
Castellano v. Young & Rubicam, Inc.,
“In the absence of controlling forum state law, a federal court ... must use its own best judgment in predicting how the state’s highest court would decide the case.”
Takahashi v. Loomis Armored Car Service,
The Court therefore considers whether the Martin Act intended to override other causes of action. “[I]t is a general rule of statutory construction that a clear and specific legislative intent is required to override the common law.”
Hechter v. New York Ins. Co.,
Several recent decisions from the New York intermediate courts of appeals and the Southern District of New York have performed exhaustive research into the legislative history and uncovered no legislative intent to override the common law.
See Assured Guar. (UK),
A 1983 decision of the New York Court of Appeals is instructive. In that case,
Burns Jackson,
New York’s highest court considered the Taylor Law, which proscribed strikes by public employees.
For the reasons discussed above, the Court DENIES Defendants’ motions to dismiss Count V on the basis of Martin Act preemption.
2. Allstate Has Not Adequately Pleaded Privity
“A claim alleging negligent misrepresentation must also be based on some special relationship which implies a close degree of trust between the plaintiff and the defendant.”
WIT Holding Corp. v. Klein,
E. The Bank of America Defendants are not Liable as Countrywide’s Successor
As discussed above, Delaware law applies to Allstate’s successor liability claims against Bank of America. Section II.B,
supra.
This Court previously concluded that identical facts to those pleaded here were insufficient to plead that the Bank of America had engaged in a
de facto
merger under Delaware law.
Maine State II,
Allstate makes two additional allegations in the Complaint. The first is that NB Holdings Corp. is liable as Countrywide’s successor. Allstate has not alleged any facts which would support such a claim. Second, Allstate claims that Bank of America has implicitly or explicitly assumed Countrywide’s liabilities. It cites as evidence statements to the effect that Bank of America had purchased Countrywide’s assets and liabilities, and that it had factored Countrywide’s liabilities into the purchase price. Opp. at 127. Allstate has not identified any express contractual assumption of liabilities, and it directs the Court to nothing that would indicate that Bank of America impliedly assumed Countrywide’s liabilities. The statements cited in the Complaint appear, rather than supporting Allstate’s position, to accurately reflect the structure of the transaction, in which a Bank of America subsidiary purchased CFC. That transaction included all of CFC’s assets and liabilities, and it is *1193 perfectly consistent that the sale price would reflect those liabilities.
The Court GRANTS the Bank of America Defendants’ motion to dismiss all claims against them. Dismissal is WITHOUT PREJUDICE.
V. CONCLUSION
For the reasons discussed above, Counts I, II, VI, VII, and VIII are time-barred. The Court therefore GRANTS Defendants’ motions to dismiss Counts I, II, VI, VII, and VIII as to ALL DEFENDANTS. Dismissal is WITH PREJUDICE. Counts III, IV, and V are partially barred by the statute of repose. The Court therefore GRANTS Defendants’ motions to dismiss Counts III, IV, and V to the extent that they are based on RMBS that the Illinois Plaintiffs purchased prior to December 27, 2005 as to ALL DEFENDANTS. Dismissal is WITH PREJUDICE. Count III is otherwise adequately pleaded. Count IV is inadequately pleaded. The Court therefore GRANTS the motions to dismiss Count IV. Dismissal is WITHOUT PREJUDICE. Count V is inadequately pleaded. The Court therefore GRANTS the motions to dismiss Count V. Dismissal is WITHOUT PREJUDICE. Count IX is inadequately pleaded. The Court therefore GRANTS the Bank of America Defendants’ motion to dismiss Count IX. Dismissal is WITHOUT PREJUDICE. Allstate has leave to submit an amended complaint within 21 days of this order.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. A Certificate is a document that shows ownership of a mortgage backed security issued pursuant to a registration statement and prospectus supplement in a public offering. Each Certificate represents a particular tranche within an offering. Because "Certificate” refers to the document evidencing ownership of a specific tranche, the Court uses the terms "tranche" and "Certificate" somewhat interchangeably. An Offering refers to the process by which the Certificates were sold to Plaintiffs. The Offering Documents refer to the Registration Statements, Prospectuses and Prospectus Supplements, Term Sheets, and other written materials pursuant to which the Certificates were offered.
. The Countrywide Defendants are: Countrywide Financial Corporation ("CFC”), Countrywide Home Loans, Inc. ("CHL”), Countrywide Capital Markets ("CCM”), and Countrywide Securities Corporation ("CSC”).
. The Depositor Defendants are: CWALT, Inc., CWMBS, Inc., CWABS, Inc., and CWHEQ, Inc.
. The Individual Defendants are: Angelo R. Mozilo, Stanford L. Kurland, David A. Spec-tor, Eric P. Sieracki, Ranjit Kripalani, Jennifer S. Sandefur, David A. Sambol, and N. Joshua Adler.
. The Bank of America Defendants are: Bank of America Corp. and NB Holdings Corp.
. Luther v. Countrywide Home Loans Servicing LP, No. BC 380698 (Cal.Super.Ct. Nov. 14, 2007).
. Washington State Plumbing and Pipefitting Pension Fund Trust v. Countrywide Fin. Corp., et al., No. BC 392571 (Cal.Super. Ct. June 12, 2008).
. As discussed in Section II.A, it is plausible that Illinois law should govern those claims. Under the doctrine of implied consent, the Court will apply New York law to the fraud and negligent misrepresentation claims for purposes of this motion, without prejudice to a later assertion of Illinois law. See Section II.A; note 9, infra.
. That the parties have impliedly consented to the application of New York law for purposes of this motion to dismiss does not preclude them from later arguing that some other law applies to any other issue in the case.
General Signal Corp. v. MCI Telecomm. Corp.,
. Allstate argues that veil piercing is fundamentally different from successor liability via
de facto
merger, but it provides no explanation of either how the concepts are different or why they require a different result in this case. Opp. at n. 107. Both concern whether a court should disregard the corporate form and allow a plaintiff to proceed against a related party. Some jurisdictions regard veil-piercing as a contractual issue,
see John T. Callahan & Sons, Inc. v. Dykeman Elec. Co., Inc.,
. The Court also notes that Chrysler, Korzetz, and Lopata all involve torts against third parties, whereas this case involves an alleged tort against a commercial counterparty. Chrysler and several of the cases following it involve mass toxic torts and CERCLA liability. It may well be that a state has a stronger interest in applying its law to disregard the corporate form when the plaintiff is a third party who had no business relationship with the defendant. As that is not the case here, the Court has no need to decide the issue.
. Several Courts of Appeals, though not the Ninth Circuit, have held that a district court must look to state law to determine whether the statutes of limitations and repose are affirmative defenses which must be pleaded under Rule 8(c) or defenses to the substantive elements of a claim (and therefore not waivable).
See, e.g., Roskam Baking Co., Inc. v. Lanham Mach. Co., Inc.,
. Section 13(D)(l)-(2) includes an exception under which the three-year clock does not begin to run until the plaintiff knew or through the exercise of reasonable diligence should have known of the violation. The Court will discuss this exception in Section IV.A.5 below.
. As noted in Section II.A, above, there is reason to think that Illinois, rather than New York, law should apply to the claims by the Illinois Plaintiffs. Given that both sides have consented to New York law for purposes of this motion, the Court will apply New York law.
. In
Tanges,
the Court of Appeals faced the threshold question of whether the plaintiff could invoke the borrowing statute’s "resident exception.”
Tanges,
. As discussed above, the question of where (and whether) the cause of action "accrued” is governed by New York law because of the parties’ implied consent. Therefore, the Illinois statute of repose cannot prevent the "accrual” of an action the way it did in Tanges. If the Court were to apply Illinois substantive law, the statute of repose would simply bar claims on RMBS purchased before December 27, 2005 directly rather than through the application of New York's borrowing statute.
. The parties have not briefed the question of whether Maine State I and Maine State III have collateral estoppel effect here by virtue of Allstate's supposed presence in the Maine State class. The fact that those decisions *1179 were based on standing renders this an immensely difficult question. Because the issues are identical to Maine State I and Maine State III, the Court declines to address the collateral estoppel issue and instead merely adopts its reasoning from the Maine State case.
. The Court’s hesitancy on whether the same claims of systemic abandonment that supported the shareholders class action would be sufficient to support an RMBS § 10(b) suit may seem to be at odds with its holding in
Stichting. See Stichting,
802 F.Supp.2d at
*1180
1134-40,
. This question is related to the issue of whether, for purposes of common law fraud, the voluminous disclosures contained in the Offering Documents render any misstatements non-false, non-material, or not reasonably relied upon. The Court addresses these issues in Sections IV.B.l and IV.B.4 below.
. For example, a conclusion that some percentage of homes in a particular pool of loans are owner-occupied.
. For example, a conclusion that the value of a piece of collateral was overstated.
. The parties cite two federal cases which reached inconsistent results using questionable reasoning. Neither assists in determining how an Illinois court would rule on this question. In
Grumhaus v. Comerica Secs., Inc,
No. 99-cv-1776,
. Defendants object that, because none of the misrepresentations are specifically tied to the loans that Allstate purchased, Allstate has not made any showing of materiality. Countrywide Defs' Mtn. to Dismiss at 30. The Court has already held that statements regarding Countrywide's underwriting standards may be actionably false because those statements concerned the totality of Countrywide’s business.
In re Countrywide Fin. Corp. Sec. Litig.,
. For instance, the Opposition claims that true LTV ratios were calculated using an industry-standard automated valuation model using the same type of data Countrywide's appraisers would have been using, including contemporaneous home sales data and macroeconomic indicators. Opp. at 20. The inputs to this model would have been widely available at the time. Opp. at 24 (“AVM used information available from the time of the transactions.”).
. The "truth on the market” defense can fairly be characterized as a defense to materiality, reliance, or loss causation, or as a separate affirmative defense. However characterized, it requires a fact-intensive inquiry that is better reserved for summary judgment.
. Several Southern District of New York Courts have declined to apply the holding in
Anwar,
finding that they are bound by the rules of stare decisis and the Second Circuit’s ruling in
Castellano. See In re Wachovia Equity Sec. Litig.,
. Allstate makes reference to the fact that it "could not evaluate the loan files” itself and that it was "heavily reliant on Countrywide’s unique and special knowledge regarding the underlying mortgage loans.” ¶ 422. This assertion, aside from being contradicted by the highly detailed Prospectus Supplements, fails to establish how this situation is different from the informational asymmetries inherent in any commercial transaction.
