OPINION AND ORDER (1) DENYING DEFENDANTS REDDY ICE HOLDINGS, INC, WILLIAM P. BRICK AND STEVEN J. JANTJ-SEKS MOTIONS TO DISMISS (DKT NO. 78); (2) DENYING DEFENDANT JIMMY C. WEAVER’S MOTION TO DISMISS (DKT. NO. hi); (3) GRANTING DEFENDANT RAYMOND D. BOOTH’S MOTION TO DISMISS (DKT. NO. 39); AND (I) GRANTING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO SUPPLEMENT (DKT. NO. 82)
This matter is before the Court on Defendants Reddy Ice Holdings, Inc. (“Reddy Ice”), William P. Brick (“Brick”) and Steven J. Janusek’s (“Janusek”) Motion to Dismiss (Dkt. No. 43 redacted at Dkt. No. 78), Defendant Jimmy C. Weaver’s (‘Weaver”) Motion to Dismiss (Dkt. No. 41) and Defendant Raymond D. Booth’s (“Booth”) Motion to Dismiss (Dkt. No. 39). Plaintiffs have filed responses. (Dkt. Nos. 48, 47 and 46.) Defendants have filed replies. (Dkt. Nos. 58, 59 and 57.) The Court held a hearing on October 22, 2010. For the reasons that follow, the Court DENIES Defendants Reddy Ice, Brick, Janusek and Weaver’s motions to dismiss and GRANTS Defendant Booth’s motion to dismiss. The Court further GRANTS Defendants Reddy Ice, Brick and Janusek’s Motion for Leave to Supplement Pending Motion to Dismiss, (Dkt. No. 82), based upon the parties’ briefs and without necessity for oral argument. See E.D. Mich. L.R. 7.1(f).
I. BACKGROUND
A. The Packaged Ice Litigation
On June 5, 2008, the United States Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation (“MDL”) assigned to this Court a number of related civil antitrust actions against the three dominant players in the Packaged Ice Industry, Reddy Ice Holdings and its wholly owned subsidiary Reddy Ice Corporation (“Reddy Ice”), Arctic Glacier Income Fund and its wholly owned subsidiary Arctic Glacier, Inc. (“Arctic Glacier”) and the Home City Ice Company (“Home City”). Those cases are now consolidated in In re Packaged Ice Antitrust Litig., No. 08-MD-01952 (E.D.Mich.2008). On July 1, 2010, this Court denied the Defendants’ motion to dismiss the Direct Purchaser’s Consolidated Amended Class Action Complaint in the antitrust litigation. (In re Packaged Ice Antitrust Litig., Dkt. No. 260.)
The instant securities fraud class action,
Chamberlain v. Reddy Ice Holdings, Inc.,
Case No. 08-13451, originally filed on August 8, 2008 and reassigned pursuant to E.D. Mich. L.R. 83.11 to this Court on August 14 2008, is a tag-a-long case to the multidistrict antitrust litigation. On July 17, 2009, this Court consolidated
Chamberlain
with two related securities cases,
Coffey v. Reddy Ice Holdings, Inc., et
al.,
On November 2, 2009, Plaintiffs filed a Consolidated Class Action Complaint (“CCAC”) alleging violations of § 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b) and of Rule 10b-5 promulgated thereunder, 17 C.F.R. § 240 (Count I) and of § 20(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78t(a) (Count II). The CCAC alleges that Defendants knowingly and recklessly omitted material information regarding allegedly unlawful market allocation agreements in the Packaged Ice Industry among Reddy Ice, Arctic Glacier and Home City. The CCAC alleges that these omissions and failures to disclose material information resulted in significant financial losses to Plaintiffs, purchasers of Reddy Ice securities between August 10, 2005 and September 15, 2008, after the truth behind these omissions became known to the market and Reddy Ice stock suffered a precipitous decline in market value.
Defendants Reddy Ice, William P. Brick (“Brick”), Steven J. Janusek (“Janusek”), Jimmy C. Weaver (“Weaver”) and Raymond D. Booth (“Booth”), now move to dismiss the CCAC pursuant to Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) and 9(b) and the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4 et seq. (“PSLRA”). Reddy Ice, Brick and Janusek filed their motion to dismiss (Dkt. No. 78) and Defendants Weaver and Booth filed separate motions to dismiss (Dkt. Nos. 41 and 39 respectively), joining in the motion of Reddy Ice, Brick and Janusek and arguing separately as to the Plaintiffs’ failure to plead scienter specifically as to them. Plaintiffs filed separate responses to each motion. (Dkt. Nos. 48, 47, 46) and Defendants filed replies (Dkt. Nos. 58, 59 and 57.) The Court will address all three motions jointly in the instant opinion and order. 1
B. The Allegations of the CCAC
1. Summary of the allegations.
Plaintiffs are purchasers of Reddy Ice’s publicly-traded securities between August 10, 2005 and September 15, 2008. The CCAC alleges that Reddy Ice is the “nation’s largest packaged ice manufacturer” with “locations in 31 states and the District of Columbia” selling packaged ice in 7-50 pound bags to “supermarkets, convenience stores and retail outlets.” (CCAC ¶¶ 1, 2, 34.) According to the CCAC, in August 2005, Reddy Ice conducted an initial public offering (“IPO”) of its stock, issuing 11.7 million shares at $18.50 per share, raising over $190 million and paying to its controlling shareholders, which included Weaver, Janusek and Booth, $56.5 million in proceeds. In a follow-on secondary offering nine months later (“the Secondary Offering”), Reddy Ice sold an additional 4.59 million shares of common stock to investors at $21.55 per share, generating an
The CCAC alleges that following the IPO and Secondary Offering, Reddy Ice grew and touted an “aggressive business plan,” loyal customer base “generated through quality, service and price,” a “large geographic footprint” that gave Reddy Ice “a competitive advantage in its primary markets.” Reddy Ice simultaneously expressed its “strict adherence” to a company code of ethics which expressly prohibited violating the antitrust laws and “was signed by the Company’s executive officers.” (CCAC ¶ 4.) Reddy Ice reported revenues in 2005, 2006 and 2007 of $317 million, $346 million and $339 million, respectively. (CCAC ¶40.) The CCAC alleges that while making these representations regarding it business operations and competitive position in the packaged ice market, Reddy Ice and the other Defendants knowingly and recklessly omitted and failed to disclose the fact that it was a party to unlawful and deceptive agreements with its major competitors, Arctic Glacier and Home City, to allocate customers and markets in violation of the U.S. antitrust laws. The CCAC alleges that because of these illegal agreements, Reddy Ice was able to raise, fix and maintain the price of packaged ice. (CCAC ¶ 42.) The CCAC alleges that these unlawful agreements gave Reddy Ice, and the other packaged ice participants in the market allocation agreement, control over price competition in the nationwide market for packaged ice, resulting in an artificial increase in Reddy Ice’s business and revenues, driving the Company’s stock price “as high as $31.18 per share during the class period.” (CCAC ¶¶ 5-7, 42.)
The CCAC alleges that on March 5, 2008, just a few months after news that Reddy Ice had abandoned a potential merger with a hedge fund drove Reddy Ice stock down to $22.34 per share, the FBI executed a search warrant and raided Reddy Ice’s Dallas, Texas headquarters. The following day, on March 6, 2008, Reddy Ice issued a press release announcing that “federal officials executed a search warrant at the Company’s office in Dallas on March 5, 2008” and that the “Company [was] cooperating with the authorities.” On March 7, 2008, Reddy Ice issued a follow-up press release disclosing that “[t]he execution of the search warrant was directed by the Antitrust Division of the United States Department of Justice (the “DOJ”) in connection with an investigation of the packaged ice industry.” (CCAC ¶¶ 6-10, 61, 126-128.) Following this news, on March 7, 2008, according the CCAC, Reddy Ice’s stock price declined, on unusually heavy trading volume, “from approximately $23.57 per share to $15.38, for a one-day market capitalization loss of $180 million.” (CCAC ¶ 11.) The CCAC alleges that Reddy Ice disclosed in its Annual Report for fiscal 2007 that Reddy Ice had received grand jury subpoenas seeking information in connection with the DOJ’s packaged ice industry investigation. (CCAC ¶ 61.) According to the CCAC, Reddy Ice denied knowledge of any unlawful behavior, stating in March, 2008 that “Senior Management is not aware that the Company has engaged in anticompetitive behavior, or other activities, which would violate that antitrust laws.” (CCAC ¶ 129.)
The CCAC alleges that Reddy Ice continued to deny any improprieties despite news and other disclosures discussing the allegedly unlawful conduct, including an August 7, 2008
Wall Street Journal
article that described an interview with Martin McNulty, a former vice president of sales with Arctic Glacier, who alleged that he had provided prosecutors with evidence of
On September 15, 2008, Reddy ice announced that it had suspended its Executive Vice President of Sales and Marketing, Ben D. Key, on a finding that Mr. Key had “violated Company policies in connection with the antitrust violations under investigation by the DOJ.” (CCAC ¶ 14, 64, 126-127, 129, 151.) As a member of Reddy Ice’s management team, Key attended meetings of the International Packaged Ice Association (“IPIA”) and the Western Ice Association (“WIA”) and held positions as an officer of both associations. (CCAC ¶ 64.) Also on September 15, 2008, according to the CCAC, “Reddy Ice announced that it was suspending its dividend because of ‘weaker than expected operating results and costs related to the ongoing antitrust investigations and related litigation.” (CCAC ¶ 19.) That day, following news of “Key’s implication in the criminal activities under investigation by the DOJ and the related adverse impact on Reddy Ice’s financial condition, the Company’s shares fell an additional $1.09 per share” to close at $6.75 per share and falling the next day, September 16, 2008, a further 34.8 percent to close at $4.40 per share, again on extremely heavy trading volume. According to the CCAC, “Reddy Ice’s shares have not recovered and currently trade in the $4.00 range.” (CCAC ¶ 19,152.)
The CCAC alleges that the Defendants failed to disclose material information, specifically that Reddy Ice:
(1)had engaged, and continued to engage in illicit business practices with its competitors in the packaged ice industry and had unlawfully joined with its competitors in the packaged ice industry in colluding and agreeing to allocate territories and customers in the United States’ packaged ice market:
(2) had agreed with its competitors in the industry to fix, raise, maintain and stabilize prices for packaged ice in the United States market and that Reddy Ice’s revenue and earnings had been artificially increased through the use of such illicit business practices, and as a result, the Company’s financial statements were false and misleading at all relevant times;
(3) had engaged in illicit business practices that exposed the Company to risks of criminal and civil liability and penalties that threatened its existence and continuing business practices;
(4) had falsely certified that it had adequate internal and financial controls and operated under and ensured strict compliance with a code of ethics that expressly prohibited agreements that violated the U.S. antitrust laws; and
(5) had repeatedly issued statements about the Company’s competitive position, financial well-being and future business prospects that were lacking in any reasonable basis when made.
(CCAC ¶ 20.) Plaintiffs claim that the revelation of this wrongful conduct caused a direct and precipitous decline in the market value of Reddy Ice stock and a concomitant significant financial loss to Plaintiffs and all class members.
2. Evidence of the allegedly illegal scheme.
The CCAC alleges that the conspiracy to allocate markets, territories and customers and to fix prices was described by a former Arctic Glacier employee, Martin McNulty, in McNulty’s complaint in a re
The CCAC alleges the following with respect to several confidential witnesses (CWs) whom Plaintiffs claim corroborate the McNulty allegations and offer further proof of Plaintiffs’ claims of an illegal market allocation agreement:
Confidential Witness Number One
CW1 is a former Reddy Ice employee who held the position of National Purchasing and Contracts Manager for Reddy Ice from mid-1997 to late-2004. CW1 became aware during his tenure with Reddy Ice, through discussions held in his presence and in the presence of other employees at Reddy Ice’s Dallas headquarters, that “Reddy Ice agreed not to compete against Arctic Glacier in California, and that Arctic Glacier in exchange for the right to service California without competition from Reddy Ice, agreed to “stay out” of Arizona, a market serviced by Reddy Ice.” (CCAC ¶ 46.)
Confidential Witness Number Two
CW2 is a former Reddy Ice employee who held the positions of internal auditor, area controller and utilities specialist from January 2006 through March 2008. Through his positions in the financial sector of Reddy Ice, CW2 was privy to highly
According to CW2, he was informed by an area controller with first hand knowledge that Reddy Ice would manipulate prices, lower them dramatically to drive out a particular competitor until the smaller company went out of business. (CCAC ¶ 58.) Specifically, CW2 knew of a plan to drive a competitor in Arizona out business by dramatically reducing its prices in the area served by the competitor but that this plan was never realized due to the raid on Reddy Ice’s headquarters in March 2008. (CCAC ¶ 60.)
Confidential Witness Number Three
CW3 is a former Reddy Ice internal audit manager employed at Reddy Ice’s Dallas headquarters from June 2005 through July 2008. CW3 was responsible for overseeing internal audits and Sarbanes-Oxley testing and for reporting confidential information to the audit committee. CW3 states that he has knowledge of the purchase of the Reddy Ice California manufacturing operations by a consortium of California companies through his audit responsibilities. According to CW3, Reddy Ice and the consortium of companies entered into a covenant not to compete whereby Reddy Ice agreed to purchase from the consortium a manufacturing plant in Arizona. According to CW3 he was told by other Reddy Ice employees that Defendants Janusek and Brick, and Reddy Ice’s Vice President of compliance, Nancy Green, along with Ben Key, attended a meeting in 2006 to discuss Arctic Glacier’s purchase of the California consortium that had previously purchased the majority of Reddy Ice’s California manufacturing operations. (CCAC ¶¶ 54-56.)
Conñdential Witness Number Four
CW4 is a former Reddy Ice plant manager for one of Reddy Ice’s large manufacturing facilities in Arizona from mid-2007 through late-2008. According to CW4, he was told by other Reddy Ice employees that Reddy Ice and Arctic Glacier had “management meetings” during which a deal was struck whereby Arctic Glacier agreed to leave California while Reddy Ice agreed to stay out of Arizona.
3. Government investigations of Reddy Ice and criminal guilty pleas by Arctic Glacier and Home City.
The CCAC further alleges that, following the March 5, 2008 execution of a
On June 18, 2008, the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio unsealed a guilty plea that had been entered into on October 30, 2007 by Home City in which Home City, through its president and CEO Thomas Sedler, pled guilty to participating in a conspiracy to suppress and eliminate competition by agreeing “with other packaged ice manufacturers to allocate customers and territories” in Southeastern Michigan. (CCAC ¶ 62.) On or about October 13, 2009, Arctic Glacier and three of its top executives pled guilty to the same charges, admitting that during the period March 1, 2005 (January 1, 2001 in the case of Arctic Glacier) to July 17, 2007 these defendants knowingly violated the antitrust laws by participating in a conspiracy to suppress and eliminate competition by agreeing with other packaged ice manufacturers to allocate customers in Michigan. According to the CCAC, Home City’s guilty plea and the ongoing investigations into Reddy Ice and Arctic Glacier “spawned over ninety civil antitrust laws suits against Reddy ice and its competitors alleging that these companies conspired with one another to allocate territory and fix or stabilize the price of packaged ice sold in the United States and Canada.” (CCAC ¶ 63.)
4. The allegedly materially false and misleading statements issued by Reddy Ice during the class period.
The CCAC alleges that Reddy Ice made numerous false and misleading statements during the class period (August 10, 2005 to September 15, 2008) in various public SEC filings as well as in press releases and annual reports, which caused Reddy Ice shares to trade at inflated prices. Plaintiffs claim that Reddy Ice deceived the investing public by stating in multiple public disclosures that its financial success was due to lawful competition, when in fact Reddy Ice’s success was the result of the above-described anticompetitive behavior and by expressly disavowing in those public disclosures participation in any customer or market allocation agreements with its competitors. The allegedly misleading statements include:
• SEC Prospectus filed on August 10, 2005 in connection with the IPO claiming that Reddy Ice was the largest manufacturer of packaged ice in the United States, claiming competitive strengths including a unique multi-state presence, a leading market position in the Sun Belt and other markets, and a strong incentivized management team. The Prospectus identified business strategies including enhancing revenue growth from existing customers, selectively pursuing acquisitions and continuing efficiency improvements. The Prospectus identified a highly competitive market as one of the main business challenges faced by Reddy Ice. (CCAC ¶¶ 66-70.)
• November 1, 2005 earnings release claiming increased revenues for the third quarter of 2005 over the third quarter results in 2004 and increased net income, decreased net loss pershare and aggressive acquisitions for the quarter. (CCAC ¶ 73-74.)
• Form 10-Q filed with the SEC on November 4, 2005, signed by Janusek and Brick, indicating that Reddy Ice faced many competitors in the packaged ice industry and competed primarily on price, service and quality. Brick and Janusek certified the veracity of the Form 10-Q pursuant to the requirements of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (“Sarbanes Oxley”), indicating their responsibility for establishing and maintaining the company’s disclosure controls and indicating that all of the information in the Form 10-Q “fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the Company.” (CCAC ¶ 75-76.)
• 2005 Form 10-K indicating Reddy Ice’s competitive pricing and market position as the sole supplier of packaged ice to the top twenty retail ice customers. The 2005 Form 10-K indicating a highly competitive market and strong customer relationships to whom Reddy Ice was the sole supplier. (CCAC ¶ 81-83.)
• On March 16, 2006, Reddy Ice disclosed that it complied with the Company’s Code of Business Conduct and Ethics (the “Ethics Code”), which Brick states in the forward that he has personally taken the time to study “carefully” and which is required to be signed by all Reddy Ice employees. The Ethics Code expressly acknowledges that “[s]ome of the most serious antitrust offenses occur between competitors, such as agreements to fix prices or divide customers, territories or markets. Accordingly, it is important to avoid discussions.” The Ethics Code further recognizes that unlawful agreements need not be written and that “any agreements with possible antitrust implications should be made only with the prior approval of legal counsel.” (CCAC ¶ 86-87.)
• February 23, 2006 press release indicating increased revenues for the fourth quarter of 2005, indicating that “typical market forces” led to the financial results.
• May 5, 2006 Registration Statement and Prospectus filed with the SEC in connection with Reddy Ice’s Secondary Offering, largely repeating the same disclosures regarding business, prospects, strategy and risks as provided in the IPO Prospectus. (CCAC ¶¶ 92-95.)
According to the allegations of the CCAC, for the next eight quarters, Reddy Ice made similar public disclosure statements, indicating increasing revenues in a “highly competitive” environment, repeatedly acknowledging the company’s compliance with its Ethics Code and specifically addressing its obligation to comply with antitrust laws, and containing substantially similar Sarbanes-Oxley required certifications and 10-Ks signed by Defendants Brick, Janusek and Weaver. (CCAC ¶¶ 89-91, 97-99, 102-103, 106-109, 111-114,115-117,118-120,122-125.)
5. Revelations of the DOJ investigation and related corporate internal investigations, guilty pleas by competitors and news of claims of a nationwide conspiracy in the packaged ice industry affect the price of Reddy Ice stock.
The CCAC further alleges that on March 14, 2008, Reddy Ice filed its Form 10-K for Year Ended 2007 with the SEC. While disclosing the March 5, 2008 search warrant execution on its headquarters by the DOJ, Reddy Ice did not disclose its alleged agreements with Arctic Glacier and
On April 30, 2008, Reddy Ice filed with the SEC an earnings release for its quarter ended March 31, 2008, indicating decreased revenues and stating that competition in the packaged ice industry was “challenging” in light of the DOJ’s ongoing investigation. According to the CCAC, in an earnings conference call with analysts on April 30, 2008, Defendant Brick refused to answer questions about the DOJ investigation and reiterated that the competitive environment was not “radically different,” and stated that the recent operating results were driven by weather and competition from free standing vending machines. (CCAC ¶¶ 135-137.) The CCAC alleges that because of these continued false assurances and failures to disclose the underlying anticompetitive conduct, Reddy Ice shares, although falling in price per share to $13.24, continued to trade at inflated prices. (CCAC ¶ 139.) Reddy Ice’s May 5, 2009 Form 10-Q continued to attribute decreased revenues to weather and reiterated the company’s compliance with all Sarbanes-Oxley requirements. Reddy Ice indicated that it had incurred $1.2 million in expenses defending itself against shareholder lawsuits as well as the DOJ investigation. Reddy Ice did not disclose an active role in the alleged market allocation agreements with Arctic Glacier and Home City and stated it was unable to predict the outcome of the investigations on Reddy Ice. (CCAC ¶ 140-141.)
According to the CCAC, on June 19, 2008, the
Dallas Business Journal
published an article disclosing the Home City guilty plea, which had been filed late in 2007 but only unsealed in June, 2008, to conspiring with competitors in Southeastern Michigan to allocate customers and territories in the packaged ice industry. On August 7, 2008, the
Wall Street Journal
published an article disclosing in detail McNulty’s claims that Arctic Glacier, Reddy Ice and Home City were engaged in a nationwide conspiracy to allocate customers and disclosing McNulty’s cooperation with the FBI in investigating the packaged ice industry. The article also disclosed the Home City guilty plea and the raid on Reddy Ice’s headquarters in March, 2008. (CCAC ¶¶ 143-144.) Also on August 7, 2008 Reddy Ice filed its earnings release for the period ending June 30, 2008, indicating a decrease in revenues due to “new pricing pressures” and “current economic trends” and disclosing an “exponential increase” in the costs, $4.6 million, associated with the DOJ investigation. (CCAC ¶ ¶ 145.) On this news, Reddy Ice shares fell and closed on August 7, 2008 at $10.99 per share, on unusually heavy trading volume. (CCAC ¶ 146.) On August 8, 2008, Reddy Ice filed its Form 10-Q, for the second quarter, repeating the financial results of the Form 10-K filing and attributing decreased revenue to “economic trends
On September 15, 2008, Reddy Ice disclosed that it was suspending Ben D. Key for likely violation of company policies and Key’s association with matters under investigation by the DOJ. See infra discussion at p. 718, n. 9. On this news, Reddy Ice’s stock closed at $4.40 per share on September 16, 2008 and continued to fall the next day to $3.43 per share — a fraction of the $18.50 IPO price. (CCAC ¶¶ 151— 152.) In its quarterly report for the third quarter ended September 30, 2008, Reddy Ice disclosed that as a result of the decline in its stock price, the total stockholder’s equity exceeded its market capitalization and that the Company’s goodwill was impaired. (CCAC ¶ 153.)
The CCAC alleges that during the class period, Reddy Ice’s misrepresentation and omissions, which failed to disclose that the company was recognizing significant amount of revenue from the market allocation agreements with its major competitors, resulted in an inflated share price, causing Reddy Ice stock to trade at levels up to and above $31 per share. The CCAC alleges that as a direct result of the disclosures discussed above, specifically those that occurred on March 6, August 7 and September 17, 2008, Reddy Ice’s stock price suffered material, statistically significant declines which removed the inflation from Reddy Ice’s stock causing a real economic loss of at least $13.47 per share to investors who purchased during the class period. (CCAC ¶¶ 159-164.) The CCAC alleges that magnitude and timing of this decline negates any inference that the loss suffered by the class members was due to market conditions, macroeconomic or industry factors. According to the CCAC, on March 7, 2008 when Reddy Ice stock suffered a 34% decline the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down by only 1.2% and the S & P 500 was down less than 1%. On August 7, 2008, when Reddy Ice stock suffered an 18% decline, those indices were down by less than 2% each. On September 15 and 16, 2008, when Reddy Ice stock suffered declines of 14% and 35% respectively, those indices were down 4-5% and 1.3-1.8% on those respective dates. (CCAC ¶ 165.)
6. The individual Defendants’ personal gain from the alleged market allocation agreements and their knowledge of the agreements to divide up territories.
The CCAC alleges that “at the beginning of the class period, on or about August 10, 2005, the Defendants took advantage of the artificially-inflated price of the Company’s securities in connection with Reddy Ice’s IPO.” (CCAC ¶ 168.) According to the CCAC, Defendants Janusek, Weaver and Booth collectively sold 2,448,-151 shares at a price of $18.50 per share for gross proceeds of over $45 million. In connection with the Secondary Offering, these Defendants sold an additional collective 129,170 shares for gross proceeds of over $2.78 million. (CCAC ¶¶ 168-169.) In addition to these sales of stock, the individual Defendants sold stock periodically up through and including June 1, 2007, for additional collective gross proceeds of over $2.53 million. (CCAC ¶ 170.)
In addition to gross proceeds received for their sales of stock, the individual De
The CCAC alleges that the individual Defendants, “by virtue of their receipt and possession of information reflecting the true facts regarding Reddy Ice’s competitive practices and pricing, and their control over the Company’s materially misleading misstatements and their executive positions with the Company, which made them privy to confidential proprietary information concerning the Company’s illegal agreements, knowingly and recklessly participated in the fraudulent scheme.... ” (CCAC ¶ 177.)
The CCAC alleges that Defendants Brick, Weaver and Janusek signed Reddy Ice’s Form 10-K for fiscal 2006 and 2007 in which Reddy Ice expressly disavowed anticompetitive behavior and touted the company’s ability to dominate the industry through legitimate, lawful competition. The CCAC alleges that each of the Defendants was involved in the day-to-day operations of Reddy Ice and caused the dissemination of the materially misleading statements. Specifically, based on CW testimony, Brick negotiated the deal with Arctic Glacier, and Janusek and Weaver had actual knowledge of the deal. (CCAC ¶¶ 180-181.) Brick publicly declared that he read and understood the Ethics Code that disavows anticompetitive behavior and Weaver, Janusek and Booth also were required to sign statements acknowledging this precept. (CCAC ¶ 182.) Brick and Janusek both signed Sarbanes-Oxley certifications attesting to the fairness of the financial information in the various SEC filings described in the CCAC. (CCAC ¶ 183.)
The CCAC alleges that at all relevant times, the market for Reddy Ice securities was efficient and the market for Reddy Ice securities promptly digested all available information which was publicly available and in fact entered the marketplace. (CCAC ¶¶ 186-187.) Finally, the CCAC alleges that none of the statements described in the CCAC can properly be characterized as forward-looking statements. To the extent there were any such statements, the CCAC alleges, there were no meaningful cautionary statements which accompanied them. The CCAC alleges that the safe-harbor rules, therefore, do not apply. (CCAC ¶ 188.)
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) provides for the dismissal of a case where the complaint fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. When reviewing a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), a court must “construe the complaint in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, accept its allegations as true, and draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the plaintiff.”
Directv, Inc. v. Treesh,
In
Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly,
To survive a motion to dismiss, a complaint must contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to “state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.” [Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly,550 U.S. 544 , 556, 570,127 S.Ct. 1955 ,167 L.Ed.2d 929 (2007) ]. A claim has facial plausibility when the plaintiff pleads factual content that allows the court to draw the reasonable inference that the defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged. Id. at 556,127 S.Ct. 1955 . The plausibility standard is not akin to a “probability requirement,” but it asks for more than a sheer possibility that a defendant has acted unlawfully. Ibid. Where a complaint pleads facts that are “merely consistent with” a defendant’s liability, it “stops short of the line between possibility and plausibility of ‘entitlement to relief.’ ” Id., at 557,127 S.Ct. 1955 (brackets omitted).
Id.
at 1948-50. A plaintiffs factual allegations, while “assumed to be true, must do more than create speculation or suspicion of a legally cognizable cause of action; they must show
entitlement
to relief.”
LULAC v. Bredesen,
In addition to the allegations and exhibits of the complaint, a court may consider “public records, items appearing in the record of the case and exhibits attached to defendant’s motion to dismiss so long as they are referred to in the [cjomplaint and are central to the claims contained therein.”
Bassett v. NCAA,
A court may also take judicial notice at the pleading stage of certain public documents, including filings in other courts of record and publicly filed disclosure documents.
See Bovee v. Coopers & Lybrand C.P.A.,
III. ANALYSIS
A. Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5: Prohibited Conduct and Pleading Requirements
1. Conduct prohibited by section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5.
Under Rule 10b-5, codified at 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5, promulgated by the Securities Exchange Commission (“SEC”) under authority granted by Section 10(b) of the Securities Act of 1934, codified at 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b), it is unlawful “to make any untrue statement of a material fact or to omit to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements made, in the light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading.” 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5. “Underlying the adoption of extensive disclosure requirements [of the 1934 Act] was a legislative philosophy: ‘There cannot be honest markets without honest publicity. Manipulation and dishonest practices of the market place thrive upon mystery and secrecy.’ H.R.Rep. No. 1383, 73d Cong., 2d Sess., 11 (1934).”
Basic Inc. v. Levinson,
To state a claim under Section 10(b) or Rule 10b-5, a plaintiff must allege: (1) a misrepresentation or omission; (2) of a material fact that the defendant had a duty to disclose; (3) made with scienter; (4) justifiably relied on by plaintiffs; and (5) proximately causing them injury.
City of Monroe Employees Retirement Sys. v. Bridgestone Corp.,
“Misrepresented or omitted facts are material only if a reasonable investor would have viewed the misrepresentation or omission as ‘having significantly altered the total mix of information made available.’ ”
In re Sofamor Danek Group, Inc.,
“Under Rule 10b-5, ‘[w]hen an allegation of fraud is based upon nondisclosure, there can be no fraud absent a duty to
The question thus is not whether a [defendant’s] silence can give rise to liability, but whether liability may flow from his decision to speak ... concerning material details ..., without revealing certain additional known facts necessary to make his statements not misleading. This question is answered by the text of [SEC] Rule 10b5 itself: it is unlawful for any person to “omit to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements made, in the light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading .... ”
Id.
(quoting
Rubin v. Schottenstein, Zox & Dunn,
At the same time, an obligation to disclose is not imposed simply because information is material or “because it suggests that the corporation or its employees engaged in uncharged illegal conduct.”
In re FBR,
2. The heightened pleading requirements in a securities fraud case.
The essence of a § 10(b) claim sounds in fraud so the pleading standards of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b) apply.
Indiana State Dist. Council of Laborers and Hod Carriers Pension and Welfare Fund. v. Omnicare, Inc.,
In addition to the strictures of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b), the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act (“PSLRA”) imposes additional pleading requirements in a securities fraud case:
Under the PSLRA’s heightened pleading requirements, any private securities complaint alleging that the defendant made a false or misleading statement must: (1) ... specify each statement alleged to have been misleading, the reason or reasons why the statement is misleading, and, if an allegation regarding the statement or omission is made on information and belief, the complaint shall state with particularity all facts on which that belief is formed [and] (2) ... state with particularity facts giving rise to a strong inference that the defendant acted with the required state of mind.
Frank,
“[F]aced with a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss a § 10(b) action, courts must, as with any motion to dismiss for failure to plead a claim on which relief can be granted, accept all factual allegations in the complaint as true.”
Tellabs,
Defendants move to dismiss the CCAC arguing: (1) that Plaintiffs have failed to adequately allege any actionable misrepresentations by Defendants because they have not shown that Defendants were aware that the underlying conduct was illegal or that Defendants had a duty to disclose the legal risks of their conduct; (2) that the CCAC fails to adequately allege facts sufficient to create a strong inference of scienter, arguing that there is no evidence that Defendants knew their conduct to be illegal at the time of the allegedly false and misleading public disclosures; (3) that the CCAC has failed to adequately plead loss causation, i.e. that the Defendants false and misleading statements, rather than the mere disclosure of the investigations into the industry standing alone, cause the Plaintiffs’ financial loss; and (4) that the individual Defen
B. Misrepresentations or Omissions of Material Fact
The essence of Plaintiffs’ claim is that Reddy Ice represented to the market throughout the class period that Reddy Ice’s performance was attributable to its ability to effectively compete in the packaged ice industry on price, quality and service when in fact Reddy Ice had entered into illegal market allocation agreements with its major competitors, Arctic Glacier and Home City, which ensured that Reddy Ice was “impervious to the normal effects of competition within the packaged ice industry.” (Pis. Resp. 7.) 4 Plaintiffs allege that the true source of Reddy Ice’s successes in the market were these unlawful market allocation agreements, which Reddy Ice failed to disclose to the market, which stifled competition and allowed for Reddy Ice stock to trade at artificially high prices. When the truth of these illegal agreements was ultimately disclosed, the CCAC alleges, Reddy Ice stock suffered a precipitous decline, and Plaintiffs and the class members suffered significant financial losses.
1. Plaintiffs have sufficiently pled the existence of an illegal market allocation agreement and have sufficiently pled that Defendants (except Booth) made materially false and misleading statements.
Defendants rely on
In re Mirant Corp Sec. Litig.,
No. 02-cv-1467,
As evidence of the underlying allegedly unlawful conduct, Plaintiffs rely in part on the allegations made in Mr. McNulty’s whistleblower litigation that he learned, through a conversation with Mr. Corbin, Arctic Glacier’s Vice President of Sales, that Arctic Glacier, Reddy Ice and Home City had agreed among themselves to allocate markets for the sales of packaged ice in the United States. Specifically, Mr. McNulty, who agreed to cooperate with the FBI in their ongoing investigation of the packaged ice industry, states in his whistleblower complaint that Mr. Corbin informed him that Arctic Glacier’s agreement not to enter the South and Southwest (where Reddy Ice was dominant) enabled Reddy Ice to get their prices up there and Reddy Ice’s agreement to stay out of the Midwest and Canada enabled Arctic Glacier to do the same in those territories. (CCAC ¶¶ 44^15.)
Plaintiffs allege that these allegations are further supported by the testimony of several confidential witnesses who are former employees of Reddy Ice. Defendants argue that these confidential witness statements are non-probative hearsay, relying on the Sixth Circuit’s decision in
Omnicare,
where the court rejected allegations based on the testimony of a confidential witness, concluding that the witnesses’ testimony should be “steeply discounted” where the witness was identified only by the title of his position, without further foundation supporting a reasonable belief in the witness’ basis of knowledge.
However, where the allegations of a complaint give sufficient detail about a confidential witness’ position in the company such that the Court can discern the probable basis of a witness’ belief, such “anonymous sources are not altogether irrelevant.”
Ley v. Visteon Corp.,
In deciding whether a complaint adequately sets forth the foundation or basis of a confidential witnesses’ knowledge, courts should consider “ ‘the position(s) held, the proximity to the offending conduct and the relevant time frame.’ ”
Id.
(quoting
Mizzaro v. Home Depot, Inc.,
Examining those allegations of the CCAC which are based upon confidential witness testimony, the Court finds that some hold a greater of indicia of reliability than others. The Court concludes, however, that collectively and viewed in light of facts alleged through other sources, the statements are sufficient to support the allegations of falsity in the instant case. Confidential witness number one (CW 1) is identified by his position as “National Purchasing and Contracts Manager for Reddy Ice from mid-1997 through late-2004.” (CCAC ¶ 46.) The CCAC further alleges that CW1 was based out of the Reddy Ice headquarters in Dallas, Texas and “became aware of the unlawful market allocation agreement between Reddy Ice and Arctic Glacier.” CW 1 stated that it was discussed in his presence and in the presence of other Reddy Ice employees that “Reddy Ice had agreed to not compete against Arctic Glacier in California, and that Arctic Glacier in exchange had ... agreed to ‘stay out’ of Arizona.” (CCAC
CW2, on the other hand, is described as having held three positions with Reddy Ice during the class period, each of which gave him access to “highly-sensitive financial information related to the Company’s financial performance and business practices.” (CCAC ¶ 47.) CW2 traveled regularly to the Company’s plants to perform internal audits and learned of the alleged market allocation agreement from discussions with employees at the corporate office and at the plants and was also “personally told of the unlawful agreement by Defendant Weaver.” (CCAC ¶ 48.) CW2 learned of the details of the alleged market allocation agreement from “several Reddy Ice employees” and also heard the plan discussed at an annual plant managers meeting in a presentation by Defendant Weaver in the presence several management attendees, including Defendant Janusek. (CCAC ¶¶ 49-51.) CW2 describes the details of the alleged agreement and also is alleged to have gained “first-hand knowledge that defendants Weaver and Janusek” knew that the market allocation agreement included Home City. (CCAC ¶ 52.) The Court finds that the foundation for CW2’s knowledge of the allegations attributed to him is sufficiently pled.
CW3 is a former Reddy Ice Internal Audit Manager who was employed prior to and during the class period, from June 2005 to July 2008, and was responsible for overseeing Reddy Ice internal audits and Sarbanes-Oxley certification, and “for reporting highly-sensitive information about the Company’s financial performance to Reddy Ice’s audit committee.” (CCAC ¶ 54.) The CCAC alleges that CW3 gained knowledge of Reddy Ice’s decision to “pull out of the California packaged ice market” and move into Arizona through his audit responsibilities. (CCAC ¶ 55.) According to CW3, Defendants Janusek and Brick, along with Nancy Green, Reddy lee’s Vice President of Compliance and Ben Key, the suspended Reddy Ice Vice President of Sales and Marketing, attended a meeting with Arctic Glacier in 2006. CW3 was told “by other Reddy Ice employees” that the purpose of the meeting was “to discuss Arctic Glacier’s purchase of the consortium that previously purchased the majority of Reddy Ice’s California manufacturing operations.” While the Court finds that the CCAC alleges sufficient foundation for CW3’s knowledge that Reddy Ice allegedly pulled out of California and agreed to purchase a manufacturing plant in Arizona, and that the above-mentioned individuals attended a meeting together in 2006, the basis for CW3’s knowledge of the alleged purpose of that meeting cannot be discerned from the allegations of the CCAC. Thus, the Court discounts the allegations of the CCAC that are based upon this aspect of CW3’s testimony.
CW4 is a former plant manager for one of Reddy Ice’s large manufacturing facilities in Arizona who was employed during
Viewing the totality of the allegations of the CCAC based on the testimony of CW2 and CW3, along with the corroborating allegations in the McNulty complaint, and considering this Court’s prior determination that a plausible antitrust claim had been stated against Reddy Ice, Arctic Glacier and Home City in the related multidistrict antitrust litigation, the ongoing DOJ investigations, the Reddy Ice internal investigations and suspension of Ben Key for activities violating company policy and related to the DOJ investigation, the Court finds that the CCAC adequately pleads the underlying illegality of the alleged market allocation agreements. Defendants rely heavily on
In re Mirant
but the Court finds that case, where plaintiffs’ complaint provided “no legal basis to support the premise that Mirant violated state of federal law,” distinguishable.
The CCAC further alleges that, despite the existence of the purported illegal market allocation agreements, Reddy Ice made multiple misrepresentations in its public filings, and in other communications to the investing public, that Reddy Ice’s success in the market was solely attributable to its superior ability to compete on price and quality and other legitimate competitive factors. See supra discussion at pp. 693-95. The CCAC further alleges that Reddy Ice also repeatedly stated in its public filings and communications that it understood the illegal nature of such market allocation agreements and that at all times Reddy Ice operated in compliance with all antitrust laws that prohibit such behavior. See id. The Court concludes that the CCAC sufficiently pleads that Defendants (except Booth) made materially false and misleading statements.
2. Defendants (except Booth) had a duty to disclose to the market the allegedly unlawful market allocation agreements.
The two significant limitations on the general obligation of disclosure are that the misrepresentation or omission be material and that the defendant have a duty to disclose the material fact if it is omitted.
City of Monroe,
“Before liability for non-disclosure can attach, the defendant must have violated an affirmative duty of disclosure.”
In re Sofamor,
Generally, “there is no duty to disclose ‘soft information’ such as a matter of opinion, predictions, or a belief as to the legality of the company’s own actions.”
Kushner v. Beverly Enterprises, Inc.,
Defendants argue that they were not obligated to disclose any opinions they may have possessed regarding the potential illegality of any alleged market allocation agreement. (Defs.’ Mot. 8.) Defendants rely principally on the Sixth Circuit’s statement in dicta in
Omnicare
that “pre
Thus, when choosing to speak on a subject, the obligation to do so fully and truthfully requires disclosure of unlawful conduct which otherwise might not be subject to disclosure where plaintiffs sufficiently allege that defendants possessed knowledge of the illegality of their behavior.
See In re UnumProvident Corp. Securities Litig.,
While materiality alone does not obligate a corporation to accuse itself of wrongdoing, a duty to disclose uncharged illegal conduct will arise “when disclosure is necessary to prevent another statement from misleading the public.”
Menkes v. Stolt-Nielsen S.A.,
No. 03-cv-409,
Thus, where corporate officers choose to speak they are obligated to disclose the truth and to make any additional disclosures necessary to avoid making both present and prior statements misleading.
In re Par Pharm.,
The CCAC adequately pleads that Defendants knew, as evidenced by their Ethics Code, that market allocation agreements were of the most pernicious sort of antitrust violations and adequately alleges that, notwithstanding this knowledge, they entered into such market division agreements with their major competitors for the express prohibited anti-competitive purpose of driving up prices. This satisfies the pleading requirement that a complaint adequately allege that the defendants knew that their statements were untruthful. The CCAC also adequately alleges that Defendants made express representations to the contrary in multiple public filings, specifically and repeatedly stating that their market share and earnings were the result of their ability to compete on price, service and quality in a “highly competitive” packaged ice industry. Thus, the CCAC alleges a direct nexus between the allegedly illegal conduct and the Defendants’ allegedly materially false and misleading statements. Omnicare, Helwig and Zaluski require nothing more.
The facts as alleged in the CCAC fit squarely within the parameters of adequacy discussed by the courts in
In re Par Pharm., In re St. Paul Travelers
and
Menkes.
The Sixth Circuit reiterated in
City of Monroe
the legislative philosophy underlying adoption of the disclosure requirements of the 1934 Act: “ ‘There cannot be honest markets without honest publicity’ because ‘[m]anipulation and dishonest practices of the market place thrive upon mystery and secrecy.’ ”
C. Scienter
The PSLRA requires that, in addition to adequately alleging a false and misleading statement or omission, a securities fraud claim must “state with particularity facts giving rise to a strong inference that the defendant acted with the required state of mind.” 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4(b)(2). “Scienter,” the “required state of mind,” is defined as “a mental state embracing intent to deceive, manipulate or defraud.”
Tellabs,
Allegations that a defendant engaged in “deliberately illegal behavior” can give rise to a strong inference of scienter.
Novak v. Kasaks,
Additionally, even were the Court to conclude that the CCAC insufficiently pleads that the Defendants had actual knowledge of their illegal behavior, the CCAC adequately pleads a strong inference of scienter based upon a finding of recklessness. The Sixth Circuit has defined recklessness as “highly unreasonable conduct which is an extreme departure from the standards of ordinary care.”
Helwig,
“ ‘Insider trading at a suspicious time or in an unusual amount’ comprises one of the ‘fixed constellations of facts that courts have found probative of securities fraud.’ ”
The CCAC alleges that the individual Defendants’ compensation packages also support an inference of scienter. “[T]he magnitude of a defendant’s compensation package, together with other factors, may provide a heightened showing of motive to commit fraud.”
In re Cardinal Health,
Plaintiffs argue that an inference of scienter is further supported by the divergence between Defendants’ internal conduct (increasing revenues and growth by engaging in anticompetitive behavior by dividing up the market for packaged ice) and their external statements (attributing increased revenues and growth to competition based on price, quality and service in a “highly competitive” packaged ice industry and professing to comply with the antitrust laws and particularly to not agree with competitors to allocate customers or markets). “Securities fraud claims typically have sufficed to state a claim based on recklessness when they have specifically alleged defendants’ knowledge or access to information contradicting their public statements.”
Menkes,
In determining the existence of scienter, the Sixth Circuit “employs a totality of the circumstances analysis whereby the facts argued collectively must give rise to a strong inference of at least recklessness.”
PR Diamonds,
Specifically, the CCAC alleges that Brick and Janusek knew that Reddy Ice had agreed with competitors to divide up territories and to “stay out of each other’s way” in the market for packaged ice. The CCAC alleges, based on the sufficiently pled testimony of CW2, that Brick approached the CEO of Arctic Glacier to “divvy up” the California and Arizona markets along with certain Midwest states in which Reddy Ice operated. (CCAC ¶¶ 49-52.) The CCAC also alleges, based on the testimony of CW2, that Brick “brokered the straw-man agreement” through which Reddy Ice agreed to allocate territories with Arctic Glacier after the California purchase. (CCAC ¶ 53, 181.) With re
The Court views these allegations together with the following general allegations of the CCAC, to conclude that the CCAC adequately alleges scienter on the part of Brick and Janusek, which is attributable to Reddy Ice: (1) the additional allegations of the CCAC regarding the DOJ investigations of Reddy Ice and the packaged ice industry,
8
(2) Arctic Glacier and Home City guilty pleas to illegal market allocation in Southeastern Michigan, the same competitors with whom Reddy
The Court concludes that the CCAC contains sufficiently particularized factual allegations to support a strong inference that Defendants Brick and Janusek “knew or were seriously reckless in not knowing that the Company was operating under the terms of widespread illegal antitrust agreements and knowingly and recklessly failed to disclose the agreements or related risks to investors during the Class Period.” (CCAC ¶ 179.) The Court further concludes that a reasonable investor would consider this inference at least as plausible as the only opposing inference offered by Defendants, i.e. that Reddy lee was engaged in lawful competition pursuant to an expired covenant not to compete in a discrete area of California. Even if this Court were to credit Defendants’ non-culpable inference with equal plausibility,
Tel-labs
instructs that Plaintiffs win that draw and the CCAC should still move forward.
Frank,
D. Loss Causation
“In a securities action, the plaintiff bears the burden of proving loss causation, 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4(b)(4), as well as pleading it.”
Omnicare,
Plaintiffs in
Dura
alleged that they relied on misrepresentations about expected FDA approval of an asthmatic spray device when purchasing Dura stock.
Plaintiffs in the CCAC do not just allege purchase price inflation and the CCAC gives Defendants adequate notice that Plaintiffs claim that the decline in Reddy Ice stock was causally related to Reddy Ice’s alleged material misrepresentations regarding competition in the packaged ice industry and compliance with the antitrust laws. Here the CCAC alleges what was missing in
Dura.
Plaintiffs allege in the CCAC not only that the price of Reddy Ice stock was artificially inflated by the misrepresentations but explains in detail the corresponding stock price decreases directly related to each additional announcement, each disclosure further exposing Reddy Ice’s connection to the alleged market allocation agreements and causing a further correction to the inflated stock price. Defendants urge the Court to read
Dura
as requiring an admission by the Defendants of illegal wrongdoing, and a revelation that their prior statements were actually false, before loss causation can be pled. The Court declines, as several courts have, to read
Dura
so narrowly.
See Brumbaugh v. Wave Sys. Corp.,
Defendants rely principally on
Rudolph v. UTStarcom,
In
Omnicare,
on which Defendants also rely on the issue of loss causation, the Sixth Circuit touched upon the issue of loss causation with respect to two different allegations. Citing
Dura,
the court began with the premise that an allegation of price inflation, standing alone, is insufficient and held that plaintiff must show that an economic loss occurred after the truth behind an omission became known to the market.
In the instant case, the CCAC specifically relies on three disclosure statements to support the allegation of loss causation. The CCAC alleges that as a direct result of the disclosures on March 6, 2008, August 7, 2008 and September 15, 2008, Reddy Ice shares suffered material statistically significant losses, as these disclosures caused the prior artificial inflation of the share price, which had been based on Reddy Ice’s material misrepresentations regarding competition and compliance with the antitrust laws, to drop out of the price. (CCAC ¶¶ 159-165.) Plaintiffs allege that on March 6, 2008, when the DO J investigation of Reddy Ice was announced, Reddy Ice shares were trading at $23.11 (notably not the class high of $31 per share (CCAC ¶ 160)) and fell the next day, on unusually heavy trading volume, to $15.38, a decline of $7.73 per share. (CCAC ¶ 128, 161.) On August 7, 2008, after publication of McNulty’s story in the Wall Street Journal exposing a nationwide market allocation agreement among Reddy Ice, Arctic Glacier and Home City, Reddy Ice shares fell to $10.99 per share, a drop of $2.40 per share from the prior day, again on unusually heavy trading volume. (CCAC ¶ 146, 162.) On September 16, 2008, the day after Reddy Ice announced the suspension of Ben Key for “likely violating” company policy and being associated with matters under investigation by the antitrust division of
Defendants argue that by qualifying what is likely the most direct disclosure, i.e. the press release announcing Mr. Key’s suspension for likely violating company policy, with the caveat that the matter is still under investigation and no conclusions have been reached regarding illegal conduct, the company somehow insulated this announcement from being considered as a corrective disclosure. However, as the court noted in
Freeland, supra,
“to require proof of a complete, corrective disclosure would allow wrongdoers to immunize themselves with a protracted series of partial disclosures.”
E. Sufficiency of the Allegations as to Defendants Weaver and Booth.
Defendant Weaver was at various times the Chief Operating Officer, the Chief Executive Officer and the President of Reddy Ice. Weaver signed and authorized registration statements, the prospectus issued
Defendant Booth presents a closer case. None of the confidential witnesses mentions Defendant Booth’s knowledge of the alleged market allocation agreement. The Court cannot infer Booth’s fraudulent intent merely from his position in the company.
Konkol,
F. Section 20(a): Control Person Liability
Plaintiffs also charge that the individual Defendants violated § 20(a) of the Exchange Act. Section 20(a) imposes derivative liability on defendants who “control” primary violators of securities laws.
See
15 U.S.C. § 78t(a). A necessary element of a control person claim under § 20(a) is a primary violation of the securities laws. “Section 20(a) thus establishes two requirements for a finding of control person liability. First, the ‘controlled person’ must have committed an underlying violation of the securities laws or the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder. Second, the ‘controlling person’ defendant in a Section 20(a) claim must have directly or indirectly controlled the person liable for the securities law violation.”
PR Diamonds,
In their motion to dismiss, Brick and Janusek have not challenged the sufficiency of the § 20(a) claim except to the extent that this claim depends on the existence of an underlying violation of § 10(b). Because the Court denies Brick and Janusek’s motion to dismiss the § 10(b) claim, and these Defendants offer no other argument in support of their motion to dismiss the § 20(a) claim, that claim remains viable against Defendants Brick and Janusek. Defendant Weaver does not address the
Plaintiffs argue that regardless of whether Defendant Booth is liable for a violation of § 10(b), he is still liable as a control person under § 20(a). Other than stating in their brief that the issue of whether a defendant is a controlling person under § 20(a) is generally a question of fact, Plaintiffs offer no argument in support of their contention that Defendant Booth “controlled” a primary violator. The Court, therefore, dismisses the § 20(a) claim against Defendant Booth.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Court DENIES Defendants Reddy Ice, Janusek and Brick’s motion to dismiss (Dkt. Nos. 43, 78), DENIES Defendant Weaver’s motion to dismiss (Dkt. No. 41) and GRANTS Defendant Booth’s motion to dismiss (Dkt. No. 39). The Court further GRANTS Defendants Reddy Ice, Janusek and Brick’s motion to supplement their pending motion to dismiss. (Dkt. No. 82.)
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The Court predominantly refers to the motion to dismiss filed by Reddy Ice, Brick and Janusek, which will be cited as "Defs.’ Mot.” The Court reviews only the redacted version, (Dkt. No. 78), which was submitted pursuant to this Court's April 28, 2010 Order (Dkt. No. 76). When the Court is referring specifically to either of the motions filed by the individual Defendants Weaver and Booth, the Court will indicate "Weaver Mot.” or "Booth Mot.”
. As this Court did in its recent Opinion and Order Denying Direct Purchaser Defendants' Motion to Dismiss in the related antitrust multidistrict litigation,
In re Packaged Ice Antitrust Litig.,
.
Helwig
was overruled on a different point by
Tellabs, Inc. v. Makor Issues and Rights, Ltd.,
. Defendants claim that "the cornerstone of Plaintiffs' claims appears to be the 'written covenant not to compete' that Reddy entered into with Mountain Water Ice in 2001.” (Defs.’ Mot. 2.) Plaintiffs respond that this self-serving characterization of Plaintiffs' claims is completely without merit, that the CCAC "is not predicated on any 2001 sales transaction,” which contained a covenant not to compete between Arctic Glacier and Reddy Ice's predecessor, was limited to a specific area in California and "expired years before the FBI raided Reddy Ice's headquarters and Ben Key was terminated.” (Pis.' Resp. 8 n. 7; 14-15 n. 13.) In fact, this Court has already ruled that the 2001 agreement was not specifically referenced in Plaintiffs' CCAC and is not properly before the Court on this motion to dismiss on the pleadings.
(See
Opinion and Order Affirming The Magistrate Judge’s February 18, 2010 Order Granting Plaintiffs' Motion To Strike (Dkt. No. 76)). Plaintiffs state that the "foundation of the Complaint [are]the undisclosed illegal market allocation agreements between and among Reddy Ice, Arctic Glacier and Home City that [were] ongoing throughout the Class Period.” (Pis.’ Resp. 8 n. 7.) Indeed the CCAC claims the existence of agreements which go beyond any alleged 2001 transaction with an attendant covenant not to compete. The alleged agreements referred to in the CCAC, based on the first-hand knowledge of McNulty and the corroborating testimony of confidential witnesses as well as the related government investigations and guilty pleas of Reddy Ice’s alleged co-conspirators, are nationwide in scope and involve agreements to allocate entire states and regions for the express purpose of "driving up prices,” which are alleged to have been ongoing throughout the class period. At this pleading stage, the Court does not inquire whether these allegations are true but simply whether they are supported by sufficient factual content and whether, if true, they suffice to state a claim. The issues presented by Defendants' preferred narrow reading of the CCAC are not properly resolved on a 12(b)(6) motion.
City of Monroe,
. Defendants allege, in an argument that this Court previously declined to consider because it presented matters outside the pleadings, that Reddy Ice disclosed the "covenant not to compete” in multiple public filings and argue that therefore any misrepresentations about this fact, which was already known to the investing public, are not actionable.
See City of Monroe,
. The Court also infers scienter from Brick and Janusek’s Sarbanes-Oxley (“SOX”) certifications, which state in part that, based on their knowledge, the Form 10-Q report does not contain any material misrepresentations or omit any material fact otherwise necessary to make the other disclosures not misleading. (CCAC ¶ 76.) An inference of scienter from these certifications is appropriate where, as here, "the complaint asserts facts indicating that, at the time of certification, defendants knew or consciously avoided any meaningful exposure to the information that was rendering their SOX certification erroneous.”
In re Intelligroup,
. The Court acknowledges that generally a company’s “code of ethics,” which is "essentially mandatory” under SEC regulations, is thought to be “inherently aspirational” and unable, standing alone, to support an inference of scienter.
Andropolis
v.
Red Robin Gourmet Burgers, Inc.,
. The existence of such investigations is not sufficient, standing alone, to support a strong inference of scienter but is not irrelevant to the analysis.
Konkol,
On a related note, the Court will grant Defendants Reddy Ice, Brick and Janusek's motion to supplement their motion to dismiss and considers the statement, contained in Reddy Ice’s Form 8-K filed with the SEC on October 29, 2010 and November 1, 2010, that Reddy Ice has issued a press release announcing that its counsel has been notified by the Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice that the DOJ will take no action against Reddy or its employees in connection with the DOJ's criminal investigation of the packaged ice industry. (Dkt. No. 82.) The Court declines, as discussed above, to attach undue significance to any decision of the government to circumscribe its criminal investigation. The Court also notes the lesser standard of proof required in this civil matter.
. Defendants argue that this press release does not imply that Mr. Key is associated with matters under investigation by the DOJ. The press release discusses Mr. Key's suspension for likely violating company policy and being associated with matters under investigation and in the next sentence discusses the DOJ investigation. Defendants put too fine an interpretation on this press release which is fairly understood to say that Mr. Key has likely violated company policy and is associated with matters under investigation by the antitrust division of the DOJ. The press release does not mention any other matters that "under investigation” and the Court finds that Plaintiffs’ interpretation of this press release is not a "mischaracterization.” (Defs.’ Mot. Ex. L.)
