*449 Opinion
I.
INTRODUCTION
In Fеbruary 2003, Robert Reese Bains III and a group of former Peregrine Systems, Inc. (Peregrine), shareholders (collectively plaintiffs) filed this action against former Peregrine directors John J. Moores, Charles E. Noell in, and Christopher A. Cole (collectively defendants), as well as several former Peregrine employees, Peregrine’s former outside accounting firm, and two of Peregrine’s former business partners. 1 In their complaint, plaintiffs alleged that they had been induced to hold Peregrine stock from May 1997 through 2002 by Peregrine’s false, fraudulent and misleading financial reports. 2 Plaintiffs alleged that Peregrine engaged in various fraudulent accounting practices that led to the improper recognition of revenue in Peregrine’s financial statements, for the purpose of increasing Peregrine’s stock price. Plaintiffs further alleged that in May 2002, after the initial public disclosure of the improper practices, Peregrine’s stock price fell dramatically, causing plaintiffs to suffer damages. Plaintiffs averred that in February 2003, Peregrine issued restated financial statements for fiscal years 2000 and 2001, and for the first three quarters of 2002, and that the financial statements reduced by $509 million previously reported revenue in the amount of $1.34 billion. Of the $509 million, $259 million was deducted for nonsubstantiated transactions. Plaintiffs’ complaint contained various fraud and fraud-related causes of action.
Defendants filed motions for summary judgment in which they contended that plaintiffs could not prevail on any of their fraud or fraud-related causes of action because there was no evidence from which a reasonable trier of fact could conclude that defendants participated in, or knew about, any of the fraudulent accounting practices. 3 Plaintiffs filed a motion to stay the proceedings on the ground that they needed to obtain additional discovery from witnesses who had previously invoked their Fifth Amendment rights and refused to provide substantive testimony in this case. The trial court denied plaintiffs’ motion for a stay, and granted defendants’ motiоns for summary judgment.
*450 On appeal, plaintiffs claim that the trial court erred in granting judgment for defendants as a matter of law on the fraud and fraud-related causes of action. Specifically, plaintiffs claim that the trial court erred in concluding that plaintiffs failed to identify evidence from which a jury could find that defendants knew that Peregrine’s financial reports contained false information. Plaintiffs also contend that there are triable issues of material fact with respect to whether defendants are liable on these causes of action pursuant to the “group published information” doctrine. 4 Plaintiffs further claim that the trial court erred in sustaining Noell’s and Moores’s demurrers 5 to plaintiffs’ claim that they were liable for various California statutory securities law violations pursuant to Corporations Code section 25504. 6 Finally, plaintiffs contend that the trial court erred in denying their motion to stay the proceedings. We reject all of plaintiffs’ claims and affirm the judgment.
II.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In February 2003, plaintiffs filed their original complaint in this action. In November 2004, the trial court sustained Noell’s and Moores’s demurrers to plaintiffs’ section 25504 claim.
In December 2005, plaintiffs filed a fourth amended complaint premised on the allegations of financial accounting fraud summarized in part I., ante. Among other causes of action, plaintiffs’ claims included market manipulation (§§ 25400, subd. (d), 25500) (First Cause of Action), control person liability (§ 25504) (Fourth Cause of Action), 7 fraud and deceit by active concealment (Fifth Cause of Action), fraud and deceit based on omissions *451 and misrepresentations (Sixth Cause of Action), negligent misrepresentations (Seventh Cause of Action), aiding and abetting fraud and deceit (Ninth Cause of Action), aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty (Tenth Cause of Action), and common law conspiracy (Twelfth Cause of Action).
In March 2006, Cole filed a motion for summary judgment. In his motion, Cole argued that the court should grant summary adjudication as to plaintiffs’ fraud and fraud-related causes of action because he had not been a participant in the use of improper revenue-recognition practices at Peregrine, and was not aware of such practices until the board of directors conducted an internal investigation that led to the discovery of the practices in April through May 2002. Cole further argued that any statements he made, on which plaintiffs may have relied, were based on credible assurances Cole had received from Peregrine management and auditors that the matters stated were true. Finally, Cole maintained that he could not be held liable pursuant to the group published information doctrine.
In June 2007, Noell and Moores filed a joint motion for summary judgment. Noell and Moores argued that plaintiffs’ fraud and fraud-related causes of action failed because plaintiffs could not demonstrate either that Noell or Moores knew of the financial statement fraud at Peregrine, or that they had reason to believe that Peregrine’s financial statements contained false information.
In August 2007, plaintiffs filed a combined opposition to defendants’ motions for summary judgment. Plaintiffs also filed a motion to stay the proceedings and a request to continue the summary judgment hearing on the ground that they had been unable to obtain necessary discovery due to related pending or threatened criminal proceedings. In September 2007, after hearing oral argument, the trial court denied plaintiffs’ motion to stay the proceedings and their request to continue the summary judgment proceedings.
In December 2007, after hearing oral argument, the trial court entered an order granting defendants’ motions for summary judgment. In its order, the court reviewed the material allegations in the fourth amended complaint, and noted that plaintiffs alleged that “defendants engaged in a fraudulent financial scheme ... to inflate Peregrine’s stock price.” The court continued, summarizing plaintiffs’ claims as follows: “Plaintiffs contend that the heart of the fraud was the recording of hundreds of millions of dollars of revenue despite non-binding arrangements with customers, in violation of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (‘GAAP’) and Peregrine’s revenue recognition policy. *452 Moores . . . Noell . . . and Cole directed deceptive practices to artificially inflate Peregrine’s revenue resulting in increased stock value in order to sell their own stock at overstated prices. (FAC [Fourth Amended Complaint] H 15). Beginning in 1999, defendants[ 8 ] engaged in improper revenue recognition, especially in connection with software sales to resellers known as ‘channel partners’ and directed the employees and agents to engage in deceptive sales and accounting practices to create the illusion of growth, including secretly adding material sale contingencies and side agreements to what on their face appeared to be binding contacts. (FAC ffl 16, 18.)”
In reviewing the evidence presented on these issues, the trial court concluded, “[Moores, Noell, and Cole] have met their burden of proof to show they had no actual knowledge of the financial fraud committed by the employees and officers of Peregrine. Plaintiffs have failed to raise a material fact that defendants, as outside directors, should be held liable for fraud.” (Original formatting omitted.) Specifically, the trial court observed that plaintiffs’ fraud and fraud-related causes of action required proof that defendants had made statements that they knew to be false, or that defendants had made statements with reckless disregard for their truth or falsity. The court observed that defendants had presented direct evidence that they did not know about the fraud committed by Peregrine employees at the time they signed various financial statements. Defendants also presented evidence that they had relied on the recommendations of Peregrine’s in-house counsel, outside counsel, and outside accounting firm, in signing these statements. With respect to plaintiffs’ evidence, the court concluded, “Plaintiffs have not raised a triable issue of fact that defendants intended to defraud or that they, as outside directors, had knowledge of the fraud [sufficient] to raise a duty to disclose the true facts to plaintiffs.” 9
The trial court subsequently entered judgment in favor of defendants. Plaintiffs timely appeal from the judgment. 10
*453 in.
DISCUSSION
A. The trial court did not err in concluding that plaintiffs failed to identify evidence from which a jury could find that defendants knew about the fraud at Peregrine
Plaintiffs claim that the trial court erred in concluding that there was no evidence from which a reasonable fact finder could find that defendants knew about the fraud committed at Peregrine. We disagree.
1. The scope of plaintiffs’ claim on appeal
Plaintiffs’ claim pertaining to defendants’ knowledge of ongoing fraud at Peregrine is captioned, “THE TRIAL COURT ERRED AS A MATTER OF LAW IN DETERMINING WHAT CONSTITUTES EVIDENCE OF KNOWLEDGE.” Plaintiffs’ opening brief makes clear that this claim is intended to encompass, at a minimum, the fraud causes of action that plaintiffs allege in their fourth amended complaint, namely fraud and deceit by active concealment (Fifth Cause of Action) and fraud and deceit based on omissions and misrepresentations (Sixth Cause of Action). However, plaintiffs’ opening brief is not clear as to whether this claim is also directed at their causes of action for market manipulation (§ 25400, subd. (d) (First Cause of Action), aiding and abetting fraud and deceit (Ninth Cause of Action), aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty (Tenth Cause of Action), and common law conspiracy (Twelfth Cause of Action).
Cole contends that plaintiffs have forfeited all appellate contentions with respect to the First, Ninth, Tenth, and Twelfth Causes of Action by failing to address these claims in their opening brief. Noell and Moores similarly contend that plaintiffs have forfeited any claims pertaining to the Ninth, Tenth, and Twelfth Cause of Action. Plaintiffs maintain in their reply brief that a “ruling by this Court that Plaintiffs put forth sufficient evidence to *454 raise an issue of fact on scienter,[ 11 ] would cause reversal of the First, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh,[ 12 ] Ninth, Tenth, and Twelfth causes of action.”
We conclude below (see pt. III.A.3., post) that plaintiffs have failed to identify evidence that raises a genuine issue of fact regarding defendants’ knowledge of the fraud at Peregrine. Plaintiffs thus are not entitled to reversal of the trial court’s grant of judgment as a matter of law on any fraud or fraud-related cаuse of action. Accordingly, we need not consider whether plaintiffs have forfeited their appellate claims as to the First, Ninth, Tenth, and Twelfth Causes of Action.
In a separate claim in their opening brief, plaintiffs contend that the trial court erred in granting judgment as a matter of law in favor of defendants on plaintiffs’ negligent misrepresentation claim (Seventh Cause of Action). Plaintiffs note, “ ‘The elements of negligent misrepresentation are similar to intentional fraud except for the requirement of scienter; in a claim for negligent misrepresentation, the plaintiff need not allege that the defendant made an intentionally false statement, but simply one as to which he or she lacked any reasonable ground for believing the statement to be true.’ [Citations.]” (Quoting
Charnay v. Cobert
(2006)
Plaintiffs provide no analysis in their brief as to how the evidence in the record demonstrates the existence of a triable issue of fact on the question whether defendants made false statements without having any reasonable ground for believing the statements to be true. In light of our rejection of plaintiffs’ contention with regard to the scienter element of their fraud and other fraud-related causes of action (see pt. III.A.3.,, post), and plaintiffs’ failure to provide any distinct analysis regarding the intent element of their negligent misrepresentation claim, we reject plaintiffs’ claim that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of defendants on this claim.
2. Standard of review
A
moving party is entitled to summary judgment when the party establishes that it is entitled to the entry of judgment as a matter of law. (Code Civ.
*455
Proc., § 437c, subd. (c).) A defendant may make this showing by establishing that the plaintiff cannot establish one or more elements of all of his causes of action, or that the defendant has a complete defense to each cause of action.
(Towns
v.
Davidson
(2007)
In reviewing a trial court’s ruling on a motion for summary judgment, the reviewing court makes “ ‘an independent assessment of the correctness of the trial court’s ruling, applying the same legal standard as the trial court in determining whether there are any genuine issues of material fact or whether the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. [Citations.]’ ”
(Trop v. Sony Pictures Entertainment, Inc.
(2005)
“On review of a summary judgment, the appellant has the burden of showing error, even if he did not bear the burden in the trial court. [Citation.] . . . ‘[D]e novo review does not obligate us to cull the record for the benefit of the appellant in order to attempt to uncover the requisite triable issues. As with an appeal from any judgment, it is the appellant’s responsibility to affirmatively demonstrate error and, therefore, to point out the triable issues the appellant claims are present by citation to the record and any supporting authority. In other words, review is limited to issues which have been adequately raised and briefed.’ [Citation.]”
(Claudio
v.
Regents of University of California
(2005)
3. None of the evidence to which plaintiffs refer in the argument portion of their opening brief on appeal raises a genuine issue of material fact as to defendants’ knowledge of the fraud at Peregrine
“To avoid summary adjudication of [their] fraud claim, [plaintiffs were] required to produce evidence of (1) a misrepresentation, (2)
knowledge of falsity (or ‘scienter’),
(3) intent to defraud, i.e., to induce reliance; (4) justifiable reliance, and (5) resulting damage. [Citation.]”
(Unterberger, supra,
In the argument portion of their opening brief, plaintiffs identify four categories of evidence that they contend demonstrate a triable issue of fact with respect to defendants’ knowledge of the fraud at Peregrine: (1) defendants’ sales of Peregrine stock; (2) inconsistencies between information presented to Peregrine’s board and Peregrine’s public disclosures; (3) evidence *456 of purported red flags identified by plaintiffs’ expert; and (4) Moores’s receipt of an e-mail from a Peregrine employee concerning “channel stuffing.” 13
We address each category of evidence, and plaintiffs’ arguments pertaining to such evidence, below. 14
a. Defendants’ sales of Peregrine stock
Plaintiffs contend that defendants’ sales of Peregrine stock raise a genuine issue of material fact as to defendants’ knowledge of the fraud at Peregrine.
(i) Case law
In
Zucco Partners, LLC v. Digimarc Corp.
(9th Cir. 2009)
In concluding that the district court had not erred in dismissing the plaintiffs’ complaint for failing to plead facts sufficient to support an inference of scienter, the
Zueco Partners
court stated: “As the district court correctly noted, the [complaint] 'fail[s] to provide any information on the trading history of [two of the company’s officers] for purposes of comparison to the stock sales at issue.’ [Citation.] For individual defendants’ stock sales
*457
to raise an inference of scienter, plaintiffs must provide a ‘meaningful trading history’ for purposes of comparison to the stock sales within the class period. [Citation.] Even if the defendant’s trading history is simply not available, for reasons beyond a plaintiff’s control, the plaintiff is not excused from pleading the relevant history.
See [In re Vantive Corp. Securities Litigation
(9th Cir. 2002)
While the
Zueco
court concluded that one could not reasonably infer scienter from the defendants’ stock sales in that case, plaintiffs in this case note that in
Kaplan
v.
Rose
(9th Cir. 1994)
Plaintiffs also cite
Provenz v. Miller
(9th Cir. 1996)
(ii) Application
(a) For purposes of this decision, we assume that suspicious stock sales may raise an inference of scienter under California law
Plaintiffs have not cited, and we are not aware of, any California authority in which a court has concluded that suspicious stock sales by members of a corporation’s board of directors may constitute circumstantial evidence of the directors’ scienter for purposes of establishing a fraud or fraud-related cause of action under California law. Nevertheless, we will assume that for purposes of proving fraud under California law, “ ‘[u]nusual trading or trading at suspicious times or in suspicious amounts by corporate insiders . . . [is] probative of scienter’ ”
(In re Daou Systems, Inc., supra,
(b) Plaintiffs contend in their opening brief that defendants’ February 2000 stock sales were suspicious
A plaintiff who seeks to prove scienter through evidence of suspicious insider trading must specifically identify those stock sales that the plaintiff contends are suspicious. In their opening brief, plaintiffs appear to contend *459 that defendants’ sales of Peregrine stock in February 2000 were suspicious. For example, plaintiffs state, “Within days of meeting with the CEO and the auditor who instructed that Peregrine change its ways of recognizing revenue [in January 2000], Moores, Noell, and Cole sold an unprecedented amount of stock, in excess of $200 million. [Citatiоn.] These facts show suspicious insider trading sufficient to create an inference of scienter.” Plaintiffs similarly contend, “[Defendants sold off large sums of stock nine months into continuous bad reports,” and maintain that defendants received the first such report in April 1999. 16 Plaintiffs’ contention in their opening brief, that “The discovery referee also found the inside[r] trades occurring in February 2000 were suspicious,” lends further support to our conclusion that plaintiffs’ argument is directed at defendants’ February 2000 stock sales. 17 (Italics added.) We therefore consider the evidence that plaintiffs cite in their brief in support of their contention that defendants’ February 2000 stock sales were suspicious. 18
(c) Plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate that defendants’ stock sales in February 2000 were sufficiently suspicious to raise a genuine issue of material fact as to defendants’ scienter
Plaintiffs include three bar graphs in their opening brief, one pertaining to each defendant, and contend that these graphs demonstrate that defendants’ sales of Peregrine stock were suspicious. With respect to Moores, the y-axis of the graph is labeled “No. of Shares Sold” and contains numbers ranging *460 from 500,000 through 7 million, in increments of 500,000. The x-axis shows the time period August 1997 through February 2001. Bars representing the number of shares sold each month during this time period appear on the graph. Between the bars are the following statements: “April 1999— Peregrine CFO tells Defendants the Company will MISS market expectations,” “July 1999—Board votes to sell Receivables,” “October 1999—CEO tells the Board there are problems with revenue,” “January 2000—CEO and Auditors tell the Board that there are concerns and recommend a change in revenue recognition.” 19 Plaintiffs constructed this graph using data obtained from forms entitled “Statement of Changes in Beneficial Ownership” that Moores filed with the SEC. 20
The graph pertaining to Moores shows that he sold approximately 200,000 shares in October 1997. 21 In 1998, in five different months, Moores sold a total of approximately 2.5 million shares. In 1999, Moores sold approximately 1.25 million shares in February, 2.5 million shares in May, and 2,225,000 shares in July. Moores sold approximately 6.5 million shares in February 2000, and approximately 3.5 million shares in February 2001. 22
Applying the factors described in
Zueco Partners
to this data, we observe the following: The graph pertaining to Moores’s sales of stock indicates that Moores sold approximately 18,675,000 shares from October 1997 through February 2001. Approximately 35 percent of these sales were made in
*461
February 2000, the allegedly suspicious period. Accordingly, while plaintiffs provide no information in the graph that would allow us to determine the percentage of Moores’s total holdings that these sales represented,
23
the percentage necessarily must have been lower than 35 percent. This percentage is lower than the percentage that the Ninth Circuit has held is ordinarily sufficient to support an inference of scienter. (See
Metzler Inv. GMBH v. Corinthian Colleges, Inc.
(9th Cir. 2008)
With regard to the timing of Moores’s stock sales, plaintiffs alleged in the operative complaint that the fraudulent misrepresentations began in July 1999 and continued until March 2002. Unlike the stock sales in the cases on which plaintiffs principally rely,
Kaplan, supra,
Plaintiffs note that in January 2000, Peregrine’s CEO told the board of directors the following: “Our channel business is now a cause for concern. . . . We have not been as successful, and in some cases unsuccessful, in getting the sell-through thаt would remove the inventory of software from the channels. Rather than a 3 to 6 month latency, the inventory is moving in closer to 9 months .... The net of this is that we are now at a level of channel inventory that makes our auditors uncomfortable. Therefore, we are going to change the way we compensate the channel sales force to place emphasis on sell-through and up-front payment. We . . . will start to treat portions of contracts as unbooked for purposes of revenue recognition until either payment or sell-through has occurred. This will take us two to three quarters to work through.”
*462 Plaintiffs also note that in January 2000, Peregrine’s outside auditor, Richard Bigelow, 25 expressed concerns to the board’s audit committee regarding the company’s accounting practices pertaining to channel sales. 26 In his deposition, Bigelow testified:
“Q: Okay. Going back to my question . . . did your report to the audit committee—would it have told them or intimated to them in some way that the channel inventory situation had led you to believe that the financial statements were misstated?
“[Bigelow]: My [communication] to the audit committee was that we had a buildup in channel inventory that caused me enough concern that, one, I thought the company need[ed] to reassess its accounting for channel sales; and, two, that when you have a buildup like that, there was a risk that the company would start granting some sort of concessions, which would violate the provisions of [American Institute of Certified Public Accountants Statement of Position 97-2, ‘Software Revenue Recognition’] 97-2 and bring the whole question of previous revenue recognition to the forefront.”
The fact that an auditor and Peregrine’s CEO expressed concerns to defendants about the appropriateness of continuing to use the existing accounting method to account for channel sales does not constitute evidence that defendants knew about the fraud at Peregrine, nor is it the type of highly sensitive nonpublic information that would be likely to have a material effect on a company’s share price, as discussed in the case law that plaintiffs cite. 27 We therefore conclude that the timing of Moores’s stock sales in February 2000 does not support the conclusion that the sales were suspicious. 28
Although February 2000 represents the single largest volume month of shares sold by Moores, we cannot conclude that the quantity of shares that Moores sold in that month was “ ‘ “dramatically out of line with prior trading
*463
practices.” ’ ”
(Zucco Partners, supra,
With respect to Noell, plaintiffs include a bar graph entitled, “NoelF s Suspicious Trades.” The y-axis of the graph is labeled “No. of Shares Sold” and contains numbers ranging from zero through 100,000 in increments of 10,000. The x-axis shows various months between February 1998 and December 2002. Bars representing the number of sales per month during this time period appear on the graph. Plaintiffs constructed this graph using data obtained from forms entitled “Statement of Changes in Beneficial Ownership,” that Noell filed with the SEC. 30
The graph shows that Noell sold approximately 30,000 shares in October 1998, approximately 50,000 shares in February 1999, and approximately 25.000 shares in May 1999. In February 2000, Noell sold approximately 90.000 shares and in February 2001 he sold another 80,000 shares. In December 2002, Noell sold approximately 40,000 shares. Noell sold a total of approximately 315,000 shares in the time period from October 1998 through December 2002. Approximately 29 percent of the sales occurred in February 2000. Noell thus sold a smaller percentage of his total holdings (as defined in fn. 23,
ante)
in the allegedly suspicious period than the Ninth Circuit has held may ordinarily support an inference of scienter. (See
Metzler Inv. GMBH
v.
Corinthian Colleges, Inc., supra,
The fact that Noell sold approximately 40,000 shares in December 2002,
after
the fraud was publicly disclosed, further weakens any inference of scienter on his part. (See
In re Worlds of Wonder Securities Litigation
(9th Cir. 1994)
With respect to Cole, plaintiffs include a bar graph entitled, “Cole’s Suspicious Trades.” The y-axis of the graph is labeled “No. of Shares Sold” and contains numbers ranging from zero through 600,000 in increments of 100,000. The x-axis includes various months between February 1999 and February 2002. Bars representing the number of sales sold each month during this time period appear on the graph. Plaintiffs constructed this graph using information that Cole provided in a declaration. 31
The graph shows that Cole sold approximately 175,000 shares in February 1999, approximately 50,000 shares in July 1999, and another 50,000 shares in August 1999. In February 2000, Cole sold approximately 275,000 shares. In both February and November 2001, he sold 75,000 shares, and in February 2002, Cole sold approximately 500,000 shares. Cole thus sold approximately 1.2 million shares in the time period from February 1999 through February 2002. Approximately 23 percent of the sales occurred in February 2000.
As with the other defendants, Cole sold a smaller percentage of his total holdings (as defined in fn. 23, ante) in the allegedly suspicious period than the Ninth Circuit has held may ordinarily support an inference of scienter. (See
Metzler Inv. GMBH
v.
Corinthian Colleges, Inc., supra,
The analysis provided with respect to the other defendants as to the lack of probative value of the timing of their sales of stock applies equally to Cole. In addition, we cannot say that Cole’s sale of 275,000 shares in February
*465
2000 was unusual, since he also sold a large quantity of stock in February 1999 (175,000 shares) and an even larger quantity in February 2002 (500,000 shares). (Compare with
No. 84 Employer-Teamster v. America West Holding, supra,
320 F.3d at pp. 939-940.) Finally, as noted with respect to the other defendants, because plaintiffs have included no information in their opening brief as to the price of the shares over time, they have not demonstrated that Cole’s stock sales were “ ‘ “calculated to maximize the personal benefit from undisclosed inside information.” ’ ”
(Zucco Partners, supra,
In sum, we conclude that plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate that defendants’ stock sales in February 2000 were sufficiently suspicious to raise a genuine issue of material fact as to their scienter.
b. Plaintiffs did not present evidence of inconsistencies between information presented to the board and Peregrine’s public disclosures sufficient to create a genuine issue of material fact as to defendants’ scienter
Plaintiffs claim that the existence of inconsistencies between information presented to the board and Peregrine’s public disclosures creates a genuine issue of material fact as to defendants’ scienter.
(i) Plaintiffs’ claim
Plaintiffs cite two types of evidence in support of this claim. First, plaintiffs cite evidence that the board learned of potential concerns regarding Peregrine’s accounting systems in the summer of 2001. Specifically, plaintiffs note that at a deposition, William Savoy, a member of Peregrine’s board of directors and a member of the board’s audit committee, testified as follows: “[T]he basic point of the meeting was Arthur Andersen [Peregrine’s outside accounting firm] cоmmunicating their reconsideration of their opinion with regard to [a Peregrine transaction with] Critical Path, in particular, which gave rise to general concerns regarding Arthur Andersen’s opinions of our revenue recognition policy and adherence to our policies previously.” 32 Plaintiffs also note that a second member of the board and audit committee, Thomas Watrous, testified in his deposition that at a board meeting in July 2001, during a discussion regarding concerns over Peregrine’s accounting systems, Watrous informed the board that he had had a conversation with Matt Gless, Peregrine’s chief financial officer, in April or May of that year. Watrous stated, “I asked [Gless] whether, on a scale of 1 to 10, what were the *466 systems and procedures and polices like, just in terms of adequacy, et cetera. He said it would be, on a scale of 1 to 10, a 4 or 5.” Plaintiffs claim that none of this information was disclosed to the public.
In support of their contention that there were inconsistencies between information provided to the board and Peregrine’s public disclosures, plaintiffs also note that their expert witness, certified public accountant Paul Regan, provided a declaration in which he stated that Peregrine’s earnings releases and SEC filings were inconsistent with materials and information that had been presented to the board, and that Peregrine’s “pattern of meeting earnings expectations was inconsistent with its peer groups.”
(ii) None of the evidence that plaintiffs cite creates a genuine issue of material fact as to defendants’ scienter
With respect to the auditor’s and CEO’s concerns regarding Peregrine’s accounting procedures, plaintiffs do not identify any statements made by defendants that were inconsistent with these concerns. Rather, plaintiffs merely state in their brief that Peregrine continued to report record revenues for the subsequent quarter. Expressions of concern among members of a firm regarding the firm’s accounting procedures are not inconsistent with repоrts of record revenue. (See
Ronconi v. Larkin, supra,
Plaintiffs do not articulate the manner by which Peregrine’s earnings releases and financial statements were purportedly inconsistent with information that had been provided to the board. Instead, plaintiffs improperly attempt to incorporate by reference their expert’s testimony on this score.
33
(See
Placer County Local Agency Formation Com.
v.
Nevada County Local Agency Formation Com.
(2006)
Accordingly, we conclude that neither type of evidence that plaintiffs cite as representing an inconsistency between information presented to the board and Peregrine’s public disclosures creates a genuine issue of material fact as to defendants’ scienter.
c. The trial court’s conclusion that еvidence of various purported red flags did not create a genuine issue of material fact as to defendants’ scienter was not error
Plaintiffs contend that four purported red flags identified by Regan in his declaration demonstrate that a genuine issue of material fact exists with respect to defendants’ knowledge of the fraud at Peregrine. Specifically, Regan testified that defendants were aware of “channel stuffing risks,” and that the issue was discussed at many board meetings. Regan also noted that in September 1999, Peregrine’s senior management informed the board that they intended to leave the company, and also informed the board that Peregrine was having “the toughest quarter we have experienced.” Plaintiffs assert that, according to Regan, the existence of Peregrine’s “constant cash crunch” while the company continued to meet or beat earnings expectations constituted a “red flag that something was wrong.” Finally, plaintiffs contend that, according to Regan, the fact that outside auditors were able to quickly identify the fraud at Peregrine constituted a red flag.
The first three items of evidence to which Regan refers in his declaration demonstrate that the board was made aware of business challenges associated with Peregrine’s distribution channels, top management’s employment status, and financial liquidity. However, none of the evidence cited constitutes a red
*468
flag as to the “fraudulent contracts,” acquisitions of companies for the purpose of “hid[ing] . . . fraudulent . . . revenue,” and “swap transaction^],” which, according to plaintiffs, constitute the means by which Peregrine “engaged in a long term financial fraud.” Thus, while Regan identifies in his declaration evidence of potentially problematic business issues of which the board was informed, none of the evidence cited constitutes a red flag that should have alerted defendants that Peregrine employees were engaged in the types of activities that ultimately led to the necessity to restate Peregrine’s financial statements. (Cf.
Ronconi v. Larkin, supra,
While Regan’s declaration may support the conclusion that defendants were negligent in their oversight of the company, the declaration does not create a genuine issue of material fact as to defendants’ knowledge of the fraud at Peregrine. With respect to problems of excessive channel inventory, Regan opined that the audit committee should have appreciated that “there was a significant degree of risk that the channel partners, like Peregrine itself, would have been unable to identify adequate end-users for resale purposes, which ultimately put the Company at risk of either having recognized revenue inappropriately or incurring losses for failure to collect the resultant receivables.” With respect to Peregrine’s continual problems with financial liquidity, Regan opined, “In my opinion, the Board, and the Audit Committee in particular, should have conducted [an] inquiry with management to understand why the Company was unable to demonstrate operating cash-flow.” With respect to the possibility that Peregrine’s top management might choose to leave Peregrine as a result of the accumulating fraud at Peregrine, Regan states, “[I]t is . . . possible that . . . members of Peregrine’s Board understood this motivation.”
We agree with the trial court’s conclusion in its summary judgment order that, while “Regan’s 54 page report documents his conclusions of all of the problems with Peregrine and what should have been done as responsible directors,” his declaration does not demonstrate a genuine issue of material fact as to defendants’ scienter because Regan does “not conclude that the outside directors were fraudulent [szc] or knew of the significant problems.” Accordingly, we conclude that the trial court did not err in determining that plaintiffs’ evidence of various alleged red flags does not create a genuine issue of material fact as to defendants’ scienter.
*469 d. Moores’s receipt of an e-mail from a Peregrine employee expressing concerns about channel stuffing did not create a genuine issue of material fact as to whether defendants knew about the fraud at Peregrine 35
Plaintiffs note that on October 3, 2001, Moores received an e-mail from a Peregrine employee in Australia in which the employee raised concerns about certain Peregrine contracts, including the following: “Come on, what are Peregrine selling here, Amway? Vapourware? Where’s the commercial substance to these so called contracts . . . Peregrine [has] booked the revenue. What will this do to Peregrine’s partner’s credibility? Or Stock Value . . . [T]his is a blatant example of what can be termed ‘channel stuffing’ in their crudest form .... This type of contract should immediately cease and ‘real’ revenue be recognized, i.e., where [the] PRODUCT is actually DELIVERED and payment is probable.”
Plaintiffs contend that this e-mail “lays out that which the public learned in May 2002, but which Peregrine insiders were aware of much earlier.” We disagree.
The e-mail indicates that a single Peregrine employee made an allegation in October 2001 that certain Australian Peregrine contracts lacked commercial substance. Plaintiffs do not cite any evidence indicating that Moores should have viewed the e-mail as coming from a credible source. Further, plaintiffs fail to present any argument in their brief as to how the e-mail should have alerted Moores to the entirety of the fraud at Peregrine. In short, the e-mail is far too insubstantial a foundation on which to base a finding that defendants knew about the extensive fraud at Peregrine. In light of our conclusion, we need nоt consider defendants’ contention that the e-mail does not support plaintiffs’ fraud claims because Moores forwarded the e-mail to Peregrine’s CEO, who assured Moores that the claims would be investigated, notwithstanding that the claims were neither significant nor credible. 36
e. Conclusion
Whether considered individually or cumulatively, none of the evidence that plaintiffs identify in their brief raises a genuine issue of material *470 fact as to defendants’ knowledge of the fraud at Peregrine. Accordingly, we conclude that plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate that the trial court erred in granting judgment as a matter of law in favor of defendants on plaintiffs’ fraud and fraud-related claims, on this ground.
B. The group published information doctrine does not apply in the context of a motion for summary judgment
Plaintiffs contend that the trial court erred in granting judgment as a matter of law in defendants’ favor on plaintiffs’ fraud and fraud-related causes of action on the ground that plaintiffs failed to raise triable issues of material fact with respect to whether defendants are liable on these causes of action pursuant to the group published information doctrine. As noted previously (see fn. 4, ante), the doctrine, where applicable, allows a party to attribute collective statements made by a company to individual members of the company’s board of directors. 37 While the trial court’s summary judgment order suggests that the court concluded that plaintiffs had failed to make a sufficient evidentiary showing to rely on this doctrine in opposing defendants’ motions for summary judgment, we conclude that the group published information doctrine, or group pleading doctrine, as its alternative name suggests, is a pleading device that has no application in the summary judgment context. 38
1. Standard of review
The de novo standard of review outlined in part III.A.L,
ante,
applies to plaintiffs’ claim that the trial court erred in failing to apply the group published information doctrine in ruling on defendants’ summary judgment motion. Further, “ ‘If summary judgment was properly granted on any ground, we must affirm regardless of whether the court’s reasoning was correct.’ [Citation.]”
(County of Solano v. Handlery
(2007)
2. Factual and procedural background
In his motion for summary judgment, Cole argued that he could not be held liable pursuant to the group published information doctrine because he had no role in the company beyond that of an outside director. Moores and Noell did not discuss the doctrine in their motion for summary judgment.
In their opposition to defendants’ motion for summary judgment, plaintiffs argued that the record contained evidence that would support a finding that defendants were liable for market manipulation under section 25400, subdivision (d), pursuant to the group published information doctrine. Specifically, plaintiffs contended that they had established that defendants could be held liable pursuant to this doctrine because plaintiffs had presented sufficient evidence to raise a triable issue of material fact as to whether defendants had a “special relationship” with Peregrine.
(Kamen, supra,
*472 In his reply memorandum, Cole argued that plaintiffs had failed to present sufficient evidence to hold Cole liable pursuant to the group published information doctrine as the doctrine is described by the court in Kamen. Specifically, Cole claimed that plaintiffs’ evidence did not support a credible inference that Cole “participated in the day-to-day activities of Peregrine, or had the ability to control any activities of the other defendants or Peregrine.” In their reply memorandum, Noell and Moores claimed that they were entitled to summary judgment on plaintiffs’ fraud and market manipulation claims because plaintiffs had not presented sufficient evidence that Noell and Moores knew that the public financial statements on which plaintiffs based their claims were false. Noell and Moores did not directly discuss the group published information doctrine in their reply memorandum.
In its order granting summary judgment, the trial court considered the potential applicability of the group pleading doctrine to plaintiffs’ fraud, market manipulation, and negligent misrepresentation clаims, and concluded, “[T]he totality of the evidence is that defendants had a special relationship; however, plaintiffs have not shown how this special relationship, under the facts presented, shows access to fraudulent misrepresentations . . . .” Accordingly, the trial court concluded that plaintiffs “failed to raise a triable issue of material fact that the group pleading doctrine should be invoked . . . .”
On appeal, defendants claim that the group pleading doctrine is merely a pleading device that, where applicable, permits a plaintiff to satisfy the requirements of pleading fraud with particularity, and that the doctrine does not excuse a plaintiff from producing evidence of fraud in opposing a motion for summary judgment. In their reply brief, plaintiffs contend that a court may apply the group pleading doctrine on summary judgment to attribute to individual members of the corporation’s board of directors false statements contained in collectively published corporate documents.
3. Case law
In
Kamen, supra,
*473
In considering whether the plaintiffs had adequately alleged such a cause of action against the defendants, the
Kamen
court considered the potential application of the group pleading doctrine.
(Kamen, supra,
94 Cal.App.4th at pp. 207-208.) In describing the doctrine, the
Kamen
court observed, “[I]n
Stack v. Lobo
(N.D.Cal. 1995)
In a footnote omitted from the above quotation, the
Kamen
court further explained, “ ‘The Ninth Circuit has developed the group published information doctrine which it has described as follows: “In cases of corporate fraud where false and misleading information is conveyed in prospectuses, registration statements, annual reports, press releases or other ‘group-published information,’ it is reasonable to presume that these are the collective actions of the officers. Under such circumstances, a plaintiff fulfills the particularity requirement of [rule 9(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (28 U.S.C.)] by pleading the misrepresentations with particularity and where possible the roles of the individual defendants in the misrepresentations.” [Citation.] Subsequent decisions have extended the doctrine to cover not only officers but directors as well. [Citation.] “The rationale for group pleading is that facts about fraud flowing from the internal operation of a corporation are peculiarly, and often exclusively, within the control of the corporate insiders who manage the parts of the corporation involved in the fraud.” ’
(In re Interactive Network, Inc. Securities Litigation
(N.D.Cal. 1996)
The
Kamen
court concluded that the trial court in that case had properly sustained defendants’ demurrer, reasoning, “In the present case, plaintiffs failed to allege that [the defendants] either participated in the day-to-day management of [the corporation] or had a special relationship with the company.”
(Kamen, supra,
As suggested by the federal cases that the
Kamen
court quoted, the group pleading doctrine had its genesis in the pleading requirements pertaining to fraud that are contained in the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. (See
Wool v. Tandem Computers Inc.
(9th Cir. 1987)
The doctrine is far from universally accepted, particularly in the wake of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4 et seq. (PSLRA), in which Congress enacted heightened pleading requirements for securities class action lawsuits. (See
Winer Family Trust v. Queen, supra,
503 F.3d at pp. 335-336; see also
Tellabs, Inc. v. Makor Issues & Rights, Ltd.
(2007)
4. Application
There are no reported California cases in which a court has applied the group pleading doctrine in the context of a motion for summary judgment. In Kamen—the only California published case to discuss the group pleading doctrine—the court applied the doctrine to determine the adequacy of the plaintiff’s pleadings.
40
(Kamen, supra,
The rationale for the doctrine that the
Kamen
court suggests, i.e., the difficulty of obtaining information regarding the perpetrators of corporate fraud, clearly applies in the pleading context. (See
In re Interactive Network,
*475
Inc. Securities Litigation, supra,
Plaintiffs correctly note that at least one federal district court, in an unpublished decision, relied on the group published information doctrine in denying a motion for summary judgment brought by the chairman of a board of directors. (See
Golden
v.
Terre Linda Corp.
(N.D.Ill., July 26, 1996, No. 95 C 0657)
However, neither the
Golden
court nor the court in
In re Silicon Graphics
provided any analysis of the propriety of applying the group published information doctrine in the context of a summary judgment motion. Further, the case on which the
Golden
court relied,
Blake v. Dierdorff
(9th Cir. 1988)
*476
Neither
Golden
nor
In re Silicon Graphics
constitutes binding precedent оn the issue whether the group pleading doctrine applies in the summary adjudication of California state law claims. (See
Johnson v. American Standard, Inc.
(2008)
We conclude that the group pleading doctrine does not apply in determining whether a party has presented sufficient evidence of its claims to avoid summary judgment under California law. We therefore further conclude that the trial court properly determined that the group pleading doctrine did not apply to create a disputed issue of material fact in this case.
C. The trial court did not err in sustaining Noell’s and Moores’s demurrers to plaintiffs’ section 25504 claim in plaintiffs’ second amended complaint
Plaintiffs claim that the trial court erred in sustaining Noell’s and Moores’s demurrers to plaintiffs’ section 25504 claim. We conclude that plaintiffs have failed to provide an adequate record to permit appellate review of this claim. 41
1. Factual and procedural background
Plaintiffs filed a first amended complaint against defendants in which plaintiffs alleged, among other causes of action, that defendants were liable pursuant to section 25504. 42 Section 25504 establishes civil liability for every *477 person who “directly or indirectly controls a person liable under Section 25501 or 25503 . . . .” Section 25501, in turn, establishes liability for persons who violate section 25401, which generally prohibits making untrue statements in the purchase or sale of securities. 43
Defendants each filed separate demurrers to plaintiffs’ first amended complaint. 44 On July 8, 2004, the trial court entered an order granting defendant Cole’s demurrer with leave to amend, on the ground that the allegations of the first amended complaint were conclusory. In the same order, the court stated, “The demurrers to the fourth cause of action against the Peregrine defendants [including Moores and Noell] are overruled for violation of [section] 25504 (control person liability for Peregrine’s violations of [§] 25401). Plaintiffs have alleged sufficient facts to show that these defendants had control of day-to-day activities of Peregrine.”
On October 28, 2004, the trial court entered a tentative order granting defendants Moores’s and Noell’s motions for reconsideration. Neither the motions nor the opposition to the motions is in the record on appeal. In its tentative order, the court further stated, “The demurrers of defendants [Moores] and [Noell] to the fourth cause of action [for a violation of § 25504] are sustained, with leave to amend, only if plaintiffs can establish they purchased their stock directly from defendants.” The court noted that it had inadvertently overlooked the privity requirement for a section 25504 cause of action in its July 8, 2004 order.
On November 15, 2004, the court stated that it had considered the motions to reconsider, the opposition to the motions, and Moores’s and Noell’s demurrers to the second amended complaint. 45 The appellate record does not contain the briefing on the motions for reconsideration, the second amended complaint, or Moores’s or Noell’s demurrers thereto. In the November 15 order, the court also confirmed its tentative ruling sustaining the demurrers with leave to amend.
In December 2005, plaintiffs filed a fourth amended complaint. This complaint alleged a cause of action against Cole for a violation of section 25504. The complaint stated, “THE PEREGRINE DEFENDANTS were each *478 control persons of PEREGRINE and each other as defined by Corporations Code [section] 25504 and caused PEREGRINE to commit violations of Corporations Code [section] 25400 and [section] 25402, and are therefore jointly and severally liable with PEREGRINE.” The claim also stated, “This cause of Action is Only Pleaded Against . . . Cole, Based on this Court’s Order of November 15, 2004. Plaintiffs Reserve All Rights for Appeal."
On February 15, 2006, the trial court entered a dismissal, without prejudice, of the fourth cause of action alleging a violation of section 25504 against Cole, pursuant to a stipulation of the parties. The stipulation and order essentially provide that in the event of a reversal of the November 14, 2004 order 46 sustaining the demurrers of Moores and Noell to plaintiffs’ section 25504 claim, the order of dismissal of the section 25504 cause of action against Cole would be vacated.
2. Standard of review
“In evaluating a trial court’s order sustaining a demurrer, we review the complaint de novo to determine whether it contains sufficient facts to state a cause of action. [Citation.]”
(Peterson v. Cellco Partnership
(2008)
3. Application
Plaintiffs seek reversal of the trial court’s November 15, 2004 order sustaining Noell’s and Moores’s demurrers to plaintiffs’ second amended complaint.
47
However, plaintiffs have failed to include in the record either the operative complaint or the demurrers, thus making it impossible for this court to review the complaint de novo to determine whether it states a cause of action. On that basis alone, we must reject plaintiffs’ claim. (See
Ballard v. Uribe, supra,
*479 Plaintiffs assert in their brief, consistent with the plain language of section 25504, that “To establish control person liability under [section] 25504, plaintiffs must plead that defendants were in control of a person liable under [sections] 25501, 25503.” 48 (Italics added.) However, the only complaint that is in the record—the fourth amended complaint—doеs not allege that any defendant was in control of a person liable pursuant to section 25501 or 25503 49 Rather, plaintiffs allege in the fourth amended complaint that Cole is liable for a violation of section 25504 based on Peregrine’s alleged violations of sections 25400 and 25402. Plaintiffs provide no argument or authority to the effect that a plaintiff may establish control person liability pursuant to section 25504 for a company’s violations of sections 25400 or 25402. Thus, even assuming that plaintiffs’ second amended complaint contained allegations as to all defendants identical to those contained in the fourth amended complaint as to Cole, plaintiffs still have failed to demonstrate that they have, or could have, stated a section 25504 claim.
Finally, even assuming that plaintiffs had provided an adequate record of their claims, and assuming further that plaintiffs had alleged that one or more of the defendants were liable pursuant to section 25504 for Peregrine’s violations of section
25501,
plaintiffs concede that “privity is required between the buyer and seller under [section] 25501. . . .”
(In re ZZZZ Best Securities Litigation
(C.D.Cal., July 23, 1990, No. CV 87-3574 RSWL)
D. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in refusing to stay the proceedings
Plaintiffs claim that thе trial court erred in denying their motion to stay the case. We review the trial court’s denial of plaintiffs’ motion for a stay under the abuse of discretion standard of review. (See
Avant! Corp. v. Superior Court
(2000)
1. Factual and procedural background
On or about September 4, 2007, plaintiffs filed a memorandum of points and authorities in support of a request to stay all proceedings in the case. 51 In their motion for a stay, plaintiffs requested that the court stay all proceedings in the case for a period of one year, or “until the primary witnesses who are unavailable due to the parallel criminal action are available.” In their motion, plaintiffs noted that they had concurrently filed an affidavit seeking to continue the hearing on defendants’ motions for summary judgment in order to allow plaintiffs to obtain additional evidence pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 437c, subdivision (h). 52
The gist of both the motion to stay the proceedings and the affidavit to continue the summary judgment hearing was that plaintiffs had been unable to gather important evidence from 28 witnesses, such as “key [Peregrine] employees and outside auditors. . . .” Plaintiffs noted that they had been unable to gather this evidence because these witnesses were exercising their privilege against self-incrimination and had refused to provide “any substantive testimony,” in view of pending or potential criminal proceedings concerning the witnesses’ knowledge of and/or participation in the fraud at Peregrine. Plaintiffs claimed that it would be unfair to force them to trial *481 without the unavailable witnesses’ evidence, and that it would be “patently unfair” to dismiss their case for having failed to bring the case to trial within five years pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 583.310. 53
Defendants filed a joint opposition to plaintiffs’ motion to stay the proceedings. 54 In their opposition, defendants contended that plaintiffs had identified nothing in the voluminous discovеry already undertaken that demonstrated that defendants had been aware of the ongoing fraud, nor had plaintiffs identified anything that suggested that they could uncover such evidence if witnesses who were asserting their Fifth Amendment rights were to provide testimony in the case. Defendants asserted that they had a strong interest in concluding the litigation, and claimed that they would be prejudiced if the court were to enter an “indefinite stay.” Defendants noted that they had already produced documents and had been deposed, and that plaintiffs’ request for a stay was premised on nothing more than the “hope that material allegations not otherwise supported by a large and rich record will find support if and when witnesses with non-unique perspectives cease to assert their privilege against self-incrimination.”
The trial court held a hearing on plaintiffs’ motion to stay the proceedings and their motion to continue the hearing on defendants’ motions for summary judgment. After hearing argument from all counsel, the court confirmed its tentative ruling denying both motions. 55
In denying the motion for a stay, the trial court noted that the case had been pending since February 2003, and that the court had granted previous requests by plaintiffs to continue the summary judgment proceedings. The court also noted that it had stayed the case for “multiple-year periods of time at the request of various parties . . . .” The trial court remarked that in delaying the proceedings on previous occasions, the court had acted with the hope that the parallel criminal proceedings would be “somewhere close to resolution,” and added that “the criminal proceeding is still ongoing and when it will be completed is, I think, at best, speculative.” The court further noted that some witnesses might not be available to provide substantive testimony in this case for as long as 10 years, given the applicable statutes of limitations on various potential criminal charges.
The court stated:
*482 “I believe that we have reached the point in this case where the balance has swung in favor of moving forward with the litigation. The factors in [Pacers, Inc. v. Superior Court (1984)162 Cal.App.3d 686 , 689 [208 Cal.Rptr. 743 ]] in terms of prejudice to those who may have to choose whether to exercise a Fifth Amendment privilege at the risk of financial penalty in the civil case has been a factor that’s caused me to continue this case in the past, but counter-balancing that is the concern and right of those charged with significant wrongdoing, including fraud and punitive damages allegations to have a day in court.
“All the cases recognize the court’s discretion under these circumstances, and also the cases note, particularly, the [Fuller v. Superior Court (2001)87 Cal.App.4th 299 [104 Cal.Rptr.2d 525 ]] case, the factors that are also at play in terms of the Delay Reduction Act [Gov. Code, § 68600 et seq.] and moving cases forward.
“The fact [is] that over time there’s loss of memory, and thus, evidence, witnesses become unavailable either personally and/or by way of loss of memory and other evidence becomes more difficult to obtain or is lost. Under the entirety of the circumstances of this case, it does not appear to me that granting a stay for an additional year would get us anywhere meaningful [sic] in this case. I think we’d be where we are now after me having granted numerous stays in the past where the criminal process will be ongoing.”
In denying plaintiffs’ request to continue the summary judgment proceedings, the trial court ruled that plaintiffs had failed to establish the nature of the evidence that they contended was unavailable. The court also stated that plaintiffs had failed to demonstrate that there was a reasonable likelihood that such evidence actually existed, noting that voluminous discovery had already been undertaken, unimpeded by the criminal proceedings. The court further noted that “a great deal of information” had been generated regarding all of the “key periods” in the case, and that plaintiffs had still failed to demonstrate with “any specificity as to exactly who and what would be disclosed,” if the court were to continue the hearing on defendants’ motion for summary judgment. 56
2. The law governing the issuanсe of stays of civil proceedings in light of pending related criminal proceedings
In
Pacers, Inc. v. Superior Court, supra,
In
Avant!, supra,
With regard to the corporation’s interests, the
Avant!
court noted that the corporation itself did not have any Fifth Amendment interests to protect. The court stated that the employees’ interests in staying the proceedings were not to be “reviewed on Fifth Amendment grounds, but on abuse of discretion grounds, even where the employees are the defendants and the requests for admission and interrogatory are directed to those employees.”
(Avant!, supra,
With regard to the interest of the party opposing the stay, the
Avant!
court stated, “[Tjhere is hardly a question of the interest of [the party opposing the stay] in proceeding expeditiously with this litigation or any particular aspect of it,” and observed that granting a stay would “ ‘would increase the danger of prejudice resulting from the loss of evidence, including the inability of witnesses to recall specific facts, or the possible death of a party.’ [Citation.]”
(Avant!, supra,
Pacers, Fuller,
and
Avant!
each involved a defendant or defendants who were facing potential criminal prosecution and sought to stay pending parallel civil litigation. The parties have not cited, and we are not aware of, any California authority that involves a plaintiff’s motion to stay litigation against a defendant in order to allow the plaintiff to attempt to obtain evidence from witnesses (or other defendants) who have invoked their privilege against self-incrimination. Plaintiffs in this case cite
County of Orange v. Superior Court
(2000)
In issuing a writ of mandate to prevent disclosure of the file, the
County of Orange
court noted that “[T]he contents of police investigative files sought in civil discovery must remain confidential so long as the need for confidentiality outweighs the benefits of disclosure in any particular case.”
(County of Orange, supra,
The
County of Orange
court also commented that rather than immediately providing the parents with the contents of the file, the trial court should have stayed discovery or, if necessary, stayed the action, in order to allow the county the opportunity to investigate the murder: “The appropriate remedy in this case is for the trial court to stay discovery of investigative information in the civil action in order to allow the sheriff’s department the necessary time to investigate.
(Pacers, [supra,]
162 Cal.App.3d [at p. 690] . . . .) And, should that become necessary, the trial court should stay the entire action in the interest of justice to avoid a potential statutory dismissal. [Citation.] We are cognizant of the [parents’] concern that the County not be allowed to ‘immunize [itself from] any lawsuit by the [parents] forever simply by keeping the case open.’ Our order is intended to preserve the confidentiality of the investigative file for some reasonable period of time, but not forever.”
(County of Orange, supra,
The County of Orange court reasoned that after a reasonable period of time, “the balance will have swung in favor of giving the [parents] limited access to that information in the file which may help develop their case against the County. In other words, with the passage of time, changing circumstances will inevitably reverse the balance of competing interests under [Evidence Code] section 1040, subdivision (b)(2).” (County of Orange, supra, 79 Cal.App.4th at pp. 768-769, italics omitted.)
3. Application
In their opening brief on appeal, plaintiffs argue in a conclusory fashion that the trial court “failed to fashion any remedy to meet the needs of the plaintiffs,” by allowing defendants to “force plaintiffs to trial without the evidence from any of the key auditors or management who attended the board meetings.”
58
However, plaintiffs provide no argument regarding specific evidence that they contend was unavailable to them (failing to provide in their opening brief even the names of witnesses whose testimony
*486
they were unable to obtain), and do not address the likelihood that the related criminal proceedings would be resolved within a reasonable period of time so as to allow plaintiffs to obtain such evidence. Plaintiffs also do not discuss the alleged inadequacy of the other discovery they obtained in the case.
59
Plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate that evidence favorable to their position even exists. (See
Birge ex rel. Mickens v. Dollar General Corp.
(W.D.Tenn., Dec. 14, 2005, No. 04-2531 BP)
Plaintiffs also fail to address the reasons the trial court gave for denying the motion to stay (see pt. III.D.1.,
ante),
and thus fail to demonstrate that the trial court abused its discretion. In addition, applying the
Avant!, supra,
There is no California authority that even remotely suggests that the trial court abused its discretion under the circumstances of this case. The case on which plaintiffs rely most heavily,
County of Orange, supra,
We conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying plaintiffs’ motion to stay the proceedings.
*487 IV.
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
McConnell, P. J., and Huffman, J., concurred.
Appellants’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied July 8, 2009, S172585.
Notes
Only plaintiffs, Moores, Noell, and Cole are parties to this appeal.
We base our introduction on the only complaint that is in the record—plaintiffs’ fourth amended complaint.
Cole filed a motion for summary judgment. Thereafter, Noell and Moores filed a joint motion for summary judgment.
As we explain in detail in part IRB.,
post,
the group published information doctrine is a pleading doctrine that, where applicable, allows a party to attribute statements made in a company’s public documents, such as annual reports and press releases, to individual members of the company’s board of directors. (See
Kamen v. Lindly
(2001)
Although the demurrers are not in the record on appeal, the trial court’s November 2004 order sustaining the demurrers is in the record.
Unless otherwise specified, all subsequent statutory references are to the Corporations Code. Section 25504 provides for a form of vicarious liability for violations of certain California statutory securities law provisions for those who “directly or indirectly control[] a person” liable for such violations.
Plaintiffs did not allege this cause of action against Moores and Noell in light of the trial court’s November 2004 order sustaining their demurrers to this claim. As discussed in detail in part IRC., post, the court subsequently dismissed plaintiffs’ section 25504 claim against Cole without prejudice, pursuant to a stipulation between plaintiffs and Cole whereby plaintiffs preserved their right to reinstate their claim against Cole in the event that this court reverses the trial court’s November 2004 order.
The trial court’s use of the term “defendants” included the Peregrine employees who are not parties to this appeal.
We discuss in part III.A.3., post, each of the types of evidence that plaintiffs contend, in their opening brief on appeal, supports reversal of the trial court’s grant of summary judgment.
While this appeal was pending, defendants filed a motion to strike plaintiffs’ reply appendix on the ground that the documents contained therein were not in the summary judgment record that was before the trial court. Defendants also requested that this court strike from plaintiffs’ reply brief any references to these documents. Plaintiffs filed an opposition to the motion to strike and requested that this court take judicial notice of the documents. Defendants opposed this request. In their opposition to the motion to strike, plaintiffs claimed that the documents address “new issues and defenses raised by [defendants] in their [briefs on appeal].” The documents pertain to a federal proceeding that arose out of the accounting irregularities at Peregrine, a United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filing concerning *453 one of the companies that Peregrine acquired for the alleged purpose of hiding the improper accounting practices, some draft minutes from a meeting of the Peregrine board of directors, and an excerpt from Moores’s deposition.
We conclude that neither the documents in plaintiffs’ reply appendix nor the issues to which they purportedly respond are material to our disposition of this case. Accordingly, we deny plaintiffs’ request for judicial notice and deny as moot defendants’ motion to strike.
In describing the elements of common law fraud, California courts have used the term “scienter” to refer to a defendant’s knowledge of the falsity of a statement. (See
Unterberger
v.
Red Bull North America, Inc.
(2008)
As we explain below, plaintiffs clearly, albeit inadequately, raise a separate appellate claim regarding their cause of action for negligent misrepresentation (Seventh Cause of Action).
The term “channel stuffing” refers generally to the practice of “ ‘ “oversupplyfing] . . . distributors in one quarter to artificially inflate sales, which will then drop in the next quarter as the distributors no longer make orders, while they deplete their excess supply.” ’ ”
(In re Connetics Corp. Securities Litigation
(N.D.Cal. 2008)
Plaintiffs’ brief on appeal focuses exclusively on the knowledge of falsity element of their fraud and fraud-related causes of action, on the ground that a failure of proof as to this element was the sole basis for the trial court’s summary judgment order with respect to plaintiffs’ First, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Ninth, Tenth, and Twelfth Causes of Action.
Plaintiffs do not contend that California law should differ from federal law on this issue. In their opening brief, plaintiffs acknowledge that “[t]he relevant factors to consider in determining if the trades are suspicious are: 1) the amount and percentage of shares sold by insiders; 2) the timing of sales; and 3) whether the sales were consistent with the insider’s prior trading history.”
Plaintiffs further contend that “in four consecutive board meetings starting in April 1999, Moorеs, Noell, and Cole were told in writing by management and by Peregrine’s auditors that Peregrine was engaged in channel stuffing activities,” and that “[i]n the nine months leading up to this massive stock sell-off, Moores, Noell, and Cole were repeatedly told of Peregrine’s serious financial troubles and difficulties generating revenue.” (Italics added.)
It appears that the discovery referee in fact made no such finding. In the discovery order to which plaintiffs refer in their brief, the referee considered various federal cases in determining whether evidence of Cole’s use of the proceeds of his sale of Peregrine’s stock was relevant to plaintiffs’ claims. On the page of the record that plaintiffs cite in their brief, the discovery referee states, “Based upon the cases discussed in the previous section, it would seem that suspicious insider trading is circumstantial evidence of knowledge. . . .” We do not read this statement as constituting a finding that Cole’s stock sales were in fact suspicious. Further, even assuming that the discovery referee had made such a finding, it would have no relevance to this appeal, in light of the applicable de novo standard of review. (See pt. m.A.2., ante.)
In their reply brief, plaintiffs appear to contend that
all
of defendants’ stock sales in the period February 1999 through February 2000 were suspicious. We need not consider this argument, since plaintiffs raise it for the first time in reply without having made any showing of good cause for failing to raise the argument in their opening brief. (See
Shade Foods, Inc. v. Innovative Products Sales & Marketing, Inc.
(2000)
These statements appear on each of the three bar graphs. The statements summarize nonpublic information that plaintiffs contend led defendants to sell stock in February 2000. We need not describe in detail the evidence on which plaintiffs base these summaries, in light of our conclusion that plaintiffs have failed to identify evidence from which this court can conclude that defendants’ February 2000 stock sales were sufficiently suspicious to give rise to a triable issue of fact as to defendants’ scienter. However, we do discuss in the text of this opinion the evidence on which plaintiffs rely to support their assertions regarding information that defendants gained in January 2000, in light of the temporal proximity to the February 2000 sales.
Plaintiffs fail to cite to any SEC forms in the record evidencing Moores’s sales of Peregrine stocks in the year 1998. However, the graph in plaintiffs’ brief suggests that Moores sold at least 2.5 million shares of Peregrine stock in 1998. We assume for purposes of this opinion that plaintiffs’ graph is correct.
We emphasize that these are approximations gleaned from the graphs presented in plaintiffs’ briefs on appeal.
In their brief, plaintiffs also cite to exhibit No. 3080, entitled “Moores Group—Sale of Peregrine Stock.” This exhibit summarizes in tabular form on a yearly basis (1) the total number of Peregrine shares sold by Moores and his wife, as well as various affiliated entities or trusts, from 1999 through 2002; (2) the total amount of proceeds from those sales; (3) the cost of the shares; and (4) the gain or loss from the sales. Plaintiffs make no argument with respect to the evidence presented in this exhibit in their opening brief.
By “total holdings” we mean the total number of shares that a defendant held over the entire time period represented in plaintiffs’ graphs.
Plaintiffs raise no argument in their opening brief concerning the particular dates on which defendants sold stock. Plaintiffs summarize defendants’ sales on a monthly basis.
Although not indicated on the page of the record that plaintiffs cite, we assume for purposes of this opinion that plaintiffs presented evidence demonstrating that Bigelow made these statements to the audit committee in January 2000, as plaintiffs contend in their brief.
Cole contends that the evidence is irrelevant as to him because he “was not a member of the Audit Committee and never heard Bigelow’s remarks.” In light of our conclusion that one cannot reasonably infer knowledge of fraud at Peregrine from either Bigelow’s January 2000 statements and/or from defendants’ sales of stock in February 2000, we need not consider Cоle’s contention.
Immediately after making this comment during his deposition, Bigelow acknowledged that his accounting firm continued to issue a “clean opinion” on Peregrine’s financial statements notwithstanding these concerns.
The fact that the fraud at Peregrine continued for approximately two years after February 2000 further weakens any potential inference that one might draw from the timing of the February 2000 stock sales.
The record on appeal contains evidence related to this issue, but plaintiffs made no argument regarding the relevance of this evidence in their opening brief. “It is not [this court’s] place to construct theories or arguments to undermine the judgment and defeat the presumption of correctness.”
(Benach v. County of Los Angeles
(2007)
As with Moores, plaintiffs fail to cite to any SEC forms in the record evidencing Noell’s sales of Peregrine stocks in the year 1998. However, the graph in plaintiffs’ brief, which we assume to be accurate, suggests that Noell sold approximately 30,000 shares of Peregrine stock in February 1998.
Although Cole does not indicate in his declaration the number of shares sold, he refers to the operative complaint, in which plaintiffs allege such information. We assume for purposes of this opinion that plaintiffs’ graph is accurate.
Elsewhere in their brief, plaintiffs note that Peregrine’s transaction with Critical Path was later determined to have had no actual economic value.
Plaintiffs’ entire argument on this point in their opening brief consists of the following: “Plaintiffs submitted expert testimony about other inconsistencies in Peregrine’s public disclosures. [Citation.] Specifically the expert testimony points out that 1) Peregrine’s earnings statements were inconsistent with the Reviews and Outlooks [citation]; 2) Peregrine’s SEC Filings were inconsistent with the Reviews and Outlooks (written reports to the board from the CEO) [citation]; and 3) Peregrine’s pattern of meeting earnings expectations was inconsistent with its peer groups [citation].”
One could not reasonably draw an inference of scienter from the fact that Peregrine appeared to be performing better than most of its competitors.
Plaintiffs do not contend in their brief that Cole or Noell received the e-mail.
Plaintiffs acknowledge in their brief that Moores forwarded the e-mail to the CEO, stating, “I can’t figure out why the hell he is complaining. . . .” Plaintiffs also state in their brief that a Peregrine employee named Carleen Scott sent Moores an e-mail in which she stated, “I believe there are some circumstances in this situation that you may want to be aware of.” However, plaintiffs do not provide any further description of Scott’s e-mail or its significance. Accordingly, we conclude that plaintiffs have failed to explain how evidence of Scott’s e-mail demonstrates that a reasonable fact finder could find that defendants knew about the fraud at Peregrine.
It is unclear from plaintiffs’ opening brief which causes of action they contend must be reinstated on the basis of the group published information doctrine. In their reply brief, plaintiffs contend that the group published information doctrine applies to their negligent misrepresentation (Seventh Cause of Action) and market manipulation (§§ 25400, subd. (d), 25500) (First Cause of Action) claims. However, we assume for purposes of this opinion plaintiffs intend that this claim apply to all of their fraud or fraud-related causes of action (Fifth, Sixth, Ninth, Tenth, & Twelfth Causes of Action).
The group pleading doctrine is “alternatively referred to as the ‘group published’ doctrine . . . .”
(In re Intelligroup Securities Litigation
(D.N.J. 2007)
Code of Civil Procedure section 437c, subdivision (m)(2) provides: “Before a reviewing court affirms an order granting summary judgment or summary adjudication on a ground not relied upon by the trial court, the reviewing court shall afford the parties an opportunity to present their views on the issue by submitting supplemental briefs. The supplemental briefing may include an argument that additional evidence relating to that ground exists, but that the party has not had an adequate opportunity to present the evidence or to conduct discovery on the issue. The court may reverse or remand based upon the supplemental briefing tо allow the parties to present additional evidence or to conduct discovery on the issue. If the court fails to allow supplemental briefing, a rehearing shall be ordered upon timely petition of any party.”
Whether our holding in this case regarding the group pleading doctrine constitutes an alternative
ground
for affirming the summary judgment, or merely different
reasoning
is debatable. (Cf.
People
v.
Alice
(2007)
Although
Kamen
involved only a market manipulation cause of action
(Kamen, supra,
Based on the limited record that we do have regarding this issue, the claim appears to have no merit.
The record on appeal does not contain the first amended complaint.
Section 25503, which does not appear to have any relevance to this case, establishes liability for persons who violate other sections of the Corporations Code, and specifies the damages that a plaintiff may recover for such violations.
Those demurrers also are not contained in the record. Cole apparently also joined in Moores’s demurrer.
In its November 15 order, the trial court referred to a single “Motion to Reconsider.” However, in its tentative order, the court indicated that Moores and Noell had each filed a motion for reconsideration.
The parties were referring to the court’s November 15, 2004 order.
On November 15, 2004, the trial court granted Noell’s and Moores’s motions for reconsideration of its July 8, 2004 order in which it overruled Noell’s and Moores’s demurrers to the first amended complaint. In addition, the court sustained, with leave to amend, Noell’s and Moores’s demurrers to plaintiffs’ second amended complaint. As noted previously, none of these demurrers or complaints are in the record.
As noted previously, section 25504 establishes liability for a person who “directly or indirectly controls a person liable under Section 25501 or 25503 . . . .”
We omit any further discussion of section 25503, since there is nothing in plaintiffs’ brief that suggests that plaintiffs ever sought to predicate their section 25504 claim on liability established under section 25503. Based on the trial court’s July 8, 2004 order, it appears that plaintiffs may have predicated their section 25504 claim in their first amended complaint on alleged liability under 25501 for an alleged violation of section 25401.
Plaintiffs do not contest Noell and Moores’s assertion in their appellate brief that plaintiffs “purchased their stock on the open market, not directly from [defendants] or Peregrine.”
The file-stamped copy of the memorandum is not in the record. Further, no motion to stay is contained in the record. We refer to the memorandum in support of the motion to stay as the motion to stay.
Code of Civil Procedure section 437c, subdivision (h) provides: “If it appears from the affidavits submitted in opposition to a motion for summary judgment or summary adjudication or both that facts essential to justify opposition may exist but cannot, for reasons stated, then be presentеd, the court shall deny the motion, or order a continuance to permit affidavits to be obtained or discovery to be had or may make any other order as may be just. The application to continue the motion to obtain necessary discovery may also be made by ex parte motion at any time on or before the date the opposition response to the motion is due.”
In their motion to stay, plaintiffs noted that the five-year deadline was approximately one year away and that granting their motion would toll the running of the five-year period.
Noell and Moores also filed a joint opposition, and Cole filed a separate opposition, to plaintiffs’ affidavit in support of their request to continue the summary judgment proceedings.
The record on appeal does not contain the court’s tentative ruling.
Plaintiffs have not raised any claim on appeal regarding the trial court’s denial of their motion to continue the summary judgment proceeding. Plaintiffs challenge only the trial court’s denial of their motion to stay the proceedings.
In
Avant!,
the defendant sought the stay and the plaintiff opposed the defendant’s request.
(Avant!, supra,
The trial court’s ruling did not have the effect of forcing plaintiffs to trial, given that the court subsequently granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment. Further, plaintiffs have not appealed the trial court’s denial of their request to continue the summary judgment proceedings.
Plaintiffs’ opening brief on appeal was 13,938 words in length, just shy of the 14,000-word limitation that ordinarily applies in civil appeals. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.204(c)(1).) However, such word limitations do not relieve a party of the requirement to adequately brief any argument that the party raises on appeal. Further, a party may file an application seeking permission to file a longer brief upon a showing of good cause. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.204(c)(5).) Plaintiffs filed no such application in this case.
