A decade ago Balcor Film Investors (BFI) sold $48 million of securities to the public through an offering registered under the Securities Act of 1933. Litigation commenced in 1988 and 1989 became snagged by a change of rules defining the period of limitations. AVhen last the case was here, we held that the suit by the Eckstein class is problematic on the merits, while the suit by the Majeski clriss may or may not be timely. We remanded for further proceedings to address these subjects.
I
The Majeski action was filed in Wisconsin three years to the day after the registration statement became effective, posing serious problems under the one-and-three year period of limitations and repose established by
Short v. Belleville Shoe Manufacturing Co.,
When a cause of action has arisen in another state, or in a foreign country, and by the laws thereof an action thereon cannot there be maintained against a person by reason of the lapse of time, an action thereon shall not be maintained against him in this state.
CCP § 361. The Majeski suit is doomed if California courts would borrow the federal law that, according to
Short
and § 27A(a), applies to securities suits filed in Wisconsin. But, they insist, a California court — and therefore a federal court applying California’s choice-of-law rules under
Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Electric Manufacturing Co.,
The linchpin of this argument is the contention that “the laws thereof’ in § 361 points exclusively to state or foreign law. The introductory phrase refers to actions that have “arisen in another state, or in a foreign country”, so the antecedent of “laws thereof’ must be state and foreign law, the argument runs. This is not, however, what § 361 says. The initial reference is to the place where the claim arose, not to the legislature or judicial system of that place. The Majeski class claim arose within the State of Wisconsin (so the class concedes). Wisconsin is both a state and a part of the United States; to say that a claim arose “in” a state is to say that it arose in the United States. Then § 361 calls on us to determine what law was in force in Wisconsin. That is a question answered long ago.
The laws of the United States are laws in the several States, and just as much binding on the citizens and courts thereof as the State laws are. The United States is not a foreign sovereignty as regards the several States, but is a concurrent, and, within its jurisdiction, paramount sovereignty. Every citizen of a State is a subject of two distinct sovereignties, having concurrent jurisdiction in the State, — concurrent as to place and persons, though distinct as to subject-matter_ The disposition to regard the laws of the United States as emanating from a foreign jurisdiction is founded on erroneous views of the nature and relations of the State and Federal governments.
Claflin v. Houseman,
We have approached the interpretation of § 361 as a matter of first principles because the courts of California have never considered whether to distinguish between state and federal periods of limitations under that statute. They have never had any reason to do so, because federal periods of limitations normally are uniform across the nation, and when the law is uniform it makes no sense to think of “borrowing” one state’s federal period to apply to a federal suit filed in another state. Section 27A(a) created a temporary geographic non-uniformity by requiring courts to apply the law in force in each jurisdiction on June 19, 1991, the day before
Lampf, Pleva, Lipkind, Prupis & Petigrow v. Gilbertson,
This is not the first time a federal court has had to divine the answer to a question of state law that state coruts themselves have not addressed and are unlikely ever to address.
Marrese v. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons,
Cope v. Anderson,
The place where the events giving rise to a cause of action occur is said to be “important only insofar as the laws of that place" are controlling.” Under this argument, the cause of action here could not have “arisen” in any state since the statutory obligation of shareholders was not imposed or controlled by state law. Hence, the argument runs, the Ohio law did not contemplate borrowing any state statute of limitations in a case where liability is governed by federal law. And no federal statute of limitations could be borrowed in this case for none existed.
Cope is not a perfect parallel; the principal argument there was that a state borrowing statute should not be used when the substance of the claim depends on federal law; here the Majeski class wants to avoid borrowing the federal period of limitations that Short established for claims in Wisconsin. But in the end the principle is the same: federal law is part of the law “in” a state, and when a claim arises in that state, a borrowing rule picks up federal law just as much as it selects state law of the state. Any other understanding would create serious problems under the Supremacy Clause. Suppose Wisconsin had a period of limitations that had been preempted by a federal statute or deemed unconstitutional as discriminatory against interstate commerce. Would California really attempt to apply Wisconsin’s state law, without regard to the principles of federal law that affect the outcome? We doubt it. The district court therefore was right to think that a court in California would have used the California borrowing statute to apply the one-and-three year period.
The prospectus for the securities revealed that BFI would reinvest the money in films to be made by or through New World Entertainment, a producer of low-budget pictures. The prospectus stated that New World (and hence persons who invested through BFI) would receive profits from the movies’ sale on videotape. The Majeski plaintiffs say that they relied on the anticipation of these after-market revenues when investing. The prospectus omitted the potentially significant fact that only 22.5% of the home video receipts would flow to BFI. This omission of a material fact necessary to make the statements in the prospectus non-misleading was fraud, plaintiffs contend. Yet the gory details about the 22.5% cut were in view throughout 1985 — they were in the registration statement filed with the Securities Exchange Commission. The registration statement is a public document, well known to all of the underwriters and dealers plus many of the brokers, and accessible to anyone else who wants it. The prospectus informed investors that details of the home video arrangement could be obtained from BFI; an obvious alternative was to look them up in the registration statement, which included a copy of the contract. Every investor therefore had constructive notice of the 22.5% figure on the date the securities were issued. (“Constructive notice” here is the usual shorthand, meaning “no actual knowledge, but the ability to acquire knowledge by reasonably diligent inquiry.”)
Relying on
Corwin v. Marney, Orton Investments,
The other information that the plaintiffs say was concealed is that by late 1985 New World and its distributor Worldvision had soured on each other. Worldvision thought New World’s films of poor quality (seven of New World’s recent films had bombed in the theaters) and too rife with sex and violence to be shown on TV. Litigation broke out, and the distribution agreement eventually was canceled. Plaintiffs believe that information about the theatrical flops, the simmering dispute, and the litigation should have been in the prospectus. But the lawsuit, which laid bare the reasons for Worldvi-sioris disquiet, was reported in the press in December 1985. In February 1986 BFI put details, including the fact that Worldvision had stopped paying New World, in its quarterly report on Form 8-K, filed with the SEC and sent to all of its investors. Again this report afforded constructive notice — and, to those who read it, actual knowledge. Settlement of the suit was announced in the
Wall Street Journal
on January 7, 1987. In the first half of 1987 BFI told the investors that New World’s films were doing poorly and that they were apt to suffer losses. Still plaintiffs sat on their hands, doing nothing until receiving notice in 1988 that the probability of loss had become a certainty. As we observed in the first appeal, the notice in 1988 is unrelated to fraud; many businesses suffer losses without fraud of any kind.
This understanding also shows why the district court properly rejected plaintiffs’ contention that BFI is equitably estopped to plead the statute of limitations. During 1986 and 1987 BFI made upbeat statements about the venture’s prospects. In saying that these delayed the time for suit, the Majeski class makes the same mistake that lies behind its argument that it could not have discovered any fraud until told that loss was certain. Whether a given investment makes or loses money is by and large unrelated to the question whether the prospectus was actionable. Despite errors and omissions, things often turn out well; at the same time, the most scrupulous disclosures do not ensure business success. The securities laws ask whether the disclosures were proper at the time; they use an ex ante perspective, and how things turn out ex post does not matter to liability (although they may affect damages). See
Pommer v. Medtest Corp.,
After the remand from this court in 1993, plaintiffs sought leave to amend their complaint to add a claim under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), which has a four-year statute of limitations. See
Agency Holding Corp. v. Malley-Duff & Associates, Inc.,
II
The district judge certified Robert and Sylvia Eckstein as representatives of this subclass:
all persons who purchased defendant Bal-eor Film Investors limited partnership interests without relying on any of the public offering materials.
Our answer two years ago was that “reliance” is a synthetic term. It refers not to the investor’s state of mind but to the effect produced by a material misstatement or omission. Reliance is the confluence of materiality and causation. The fraud on the market doctrine is the best example; a material misstatement affects the security’s price, which injures investors who did not know of the misstatement. See
Basic, Inc. v. Levinson,
To prevail the Eckstein plaintiffs must prove that, had the prospectus been free from fraud, BFI would not have satisfied the minimum-sale requirement of $35 million. Because this is a suit under § 10(b) of the ’34 Act rather than §§ 11 or 12(2) of the ’33 Act, the Eckstein plaintiffs must establish this eounterfactual proposition about the decisionmaking of thousands of investors using only statements or omissions amounting to fraud; other errors and omissions that might have supported liability under §§ 11 or 12(2) do not support an inference of causation that can replace direct reliance in a case under § 10(b). The difference between errors and fraud, andthe fact that BFI attracted $48 million, substantially exceeding the $85 million cutoff, present the Eckstein plaintiffs with a daunting task.
The Ecksteins needed to show that additional disclosures would have knocked out more than $13 million in sales. They might have gone about their task by finding out who actually bought the securities (professionals who knew about the movie industry? amateurs? people seeking tax shelters?) and asking how these people would have responded to new information. Professional investors, and those who knew about the movie business, doubtless were aware of the critical facts; if they bought in substantial quantities it would not be sensible to infer that more disclosures would have cut $13 million from the subscription. But if most buyers were amateurs who read the prospectus (an important assumption, for obvious reasons), and there were good alternative investments available at the time, then additional disclosures might have curtailed sales by enough to fall below the $35 million floor. Yet the Ecksteins did not introduce such information. We know essentially nothing about who bought the securities, what they knew when they acted, what other options were open to them, and how many of the buyers read the prospectus. This state of ignorance leads to defeat for the class.
All that the Eckstein class has to offer in response is the presumption that investors rely on material omissions. See
Affiliated Ute Citizens v. United States,
The district court dismissed state-law claims asserted under the supplemental jurisdiction. Both classes remain at liberty to refile in state court, if they believe that claims based on state law can avoid the problems they have encountered under the federal securities acts. They have no federal remedy, however, so the judgments are
AFFIRMED.
