Lead Opinion
BOGGS, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which MARTIN, C.J., MERRITT, NELSON, RYAN, NORRIS, SUHRHEINRICH, SILER, DAUGHTREY, MOORE, COLE, and GILMAN, JJ., joined. KENNEDY, J. (pp. 270-274), delivered a separate dissenting opinion, in which BATCHELDER and CLAY, JJ., joined.
OPINION
The plaintiffs in this securities-fraud case are private investors from the State of New York who invested $153,000 in an Ohio company, Medical - Designs, Inc. (“MDI”). The defendants include Richard Barnhart, an attorney who represented MDI in connection with plaintiffs’ investment; Schottenstein, Zox & Dunn, Barnhart’s law firm; and the Todds, the two officers (and the majority owners) of MDI. A divided panel of this court previously affirmed the dismissal of the plaintiffs’ federal— and state-law claims on the grounds that the defendants had no duty to disclose certain facts in connection with plaintiffs’ investment in MDI, and that, in any event, plaintiffs could not reasonably rely on the misrepresentations or omissions made by an attorney representing MDI. See Rubin v. Schottenstein, Zox & Dunn,
I
Because the facts of this case are set out fully in the panel opinion, wé limit ourselves to a brief statement of those facts relevant to our disposition, noting preliminarily that the summary-judgment posture of the case requires us to construe factual disputes in favor of the nori-moving plaintiffs. See Richards v. General Motors Corp.,
Before the New England Journal article appeared, MDI’s principal source of operating capital was a revolving line of credit provided by Star Bank, N.A. When MDI’s sales revenues declined, the Todds (MDI’s principal officers) sought additional sources
At the Todds’ urging, Rubin telephoned Barnhart. Rubin asked Barnhart a number of questions about MDI’s financial soundness as well as its relationship with Star Bank. According to Rubin’s affidavit, Barnhart assured Rubin that “there was no problem with the Star Bank and MDI and that it was his opinion that after [Rubin’s and Cohen’s] investment in MDI that the Star Bank would increase the amount of funding that it was providing to MDI.” Rubin averred that Barn-hart also stated that “the only problem that MDI had with Star Bank was reducing the percentage of receivables- that it was reimbursing MDI under the terms of its financing agreement.” Finally, Barnhart told Rubin that “there was no need to contact Star Bank as part of [Rubin’s and Cohen’s] due diligence.”
In addition to Rubin’s direct contact with the Todds and Barnhart, Rubin had his attorney, Stephen Weiss, investigate MDI and its relationship with Star Bank in connection with the proposed investment. Weiss submitted an affidavit in the district court in which he recounted a telephone interview with Barnhart regarding the proposed investment. According to this affidavit, when Weiss specifically asked Barnhart about MDI’s relationship with Star Bank, Barnhart replied that “MDI was not experiencing any problems with the Star Bank.” Probing further in an apparent effort to understand more fully the Star Bank situation, Weiss asked whether Star Bank would permit Rubin and Cohen to take a security interest in MDI assets. Instead of informing Weiss that MDI was already in default under its financing agreement with Star Bank, or that the granting of a security interest would constitute another incident of default, or— most significantly — that the proposed investment itself would constitute a default, Barn-hart stated that “MDI was doing fine with the Star Bank, but that since MDI had experienced some recent operating losses ... the Star Bank would be reluctant to permit the Plaintiffs to have a secured interest in MDI.” When Weiss asked to contact Star Bank directly, Barnhart told him “not to contact the Star Bankj because everything with the Star Bank was fine, but it just wouldn’t be a good idea to contact them.”
On March 27, 1992, after these various meetings and telephone conversations, Rubin and Cohen purchased $150,000 of MDI debt and $3,300 of MDI stock. Despite all the assurances that “things were fine” with Star Bank, Star Bank froze MDI’s account as soon as the $150,000 from Rubin and Cohen was deposited in the account. As it happened,' the $150,000 loan was a material breach of MDI’s financing agreement with Star Bank. On May 5, 1992, MDI voluntarily filed a bankruptcy petition in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Ohio. As a result of these events, Rubin and Cohen effectively lost their entire investment in MDI.
II
One fundamental question posed by this ease is whether enterprising attorneys may gratuitously tout their clients’ securities unconstrained by the general duty imposed by the securities laws not to make materially misleading statements in connection with the sale of such securities. Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78j, prohibits the use “in connection with the purchase or sale of any security ... [of]
It shall be unlawful for any person, directly or indirectly, by the use of any means or instrumentality of interstate commerce, or of the mails or of any facility of any national securities exchange,
(a) To employ any device, scheme, or artifice to defraud,
(b) 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, or
(c) To engage in any act, practice, or course of business which operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit upon any person,
in connection with the purchase or sale of any security.
17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5.
In determining whether Barnhart and his law firm may be liable for Barnhart’s misrepresentations or omissions, we must resolve two preliminary issues: (1) whether Barn-hart had a duty to disclose MDI’s default status with Star Bank, or to disclose the fact that the proposed investment would constitute an additional incident of default; and (2) whether, if so, Rubin and Cohen had any right to rely on Barnhart’s representations or omissions despite the fact that he was not their attorney.
A
There is nothing special about Barnhart’s status as an attorney that negates his Rule 10b-5 duty to disclose, a duty that ordinarily would devolve under Rule 10b-5 upon a third party under these circumstances. Although under Rule 10b — 5(b) and its predecessor, “only those individuals who had an affirmative obligation to reveal what was allegedly omitted can be held liable as primary participants in the alleged deception[, a] duty to disclose naturally devolve[s] on those who hLave] direct contacts with ‘the other side.’ ” SEC v. Coffey,
The defendants urge that “silence, absent a duty to disclose, does not violate” Rule 10b-5, and that Coffey’s direct-contacts analysis does not alter this rule. True enough. But here we are not confronted with Barn-hart’s silence; on the contrary, Barnhart spoke at length about the proposed investment both with Rubin and with Weiss. The question thus is not whether Barnhart’s silence can give rise to liability, but whether liability may flow from his decision to speak to Rubin and Weiss concerning material details of the proposed investment, without revealing certain additional known facts necessary to make his statements not misleading. This question is answered by the text of Rule 10b-5(b) 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....” 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5(b).
B
Having concluded that Barnhart (and, by extension, his law firm) were under a duty not to misrepresent or omit material facts in connection with the proposed investment, the only remaining issue for us to resolve is whether a trier of fact could find that Rubin and Cohen relied reasonably on Barnhart’s misrepresentations and omissions. We conclude that a trier of fact could reach such a finding.
1
We begin with the plaintiffs’ reliance on Barnhart’s omissions — that is, Barn-hart’s failure to mention that MDI was in default at the time the proposed investment was being negotiated, or that the proposed investment would itself constitute a default. “In the case of omission or nondisclosure of material facts, the element of reliance on the part of the plaintiffs may be presumed.” Molecular Technology Corp. v. Valentine,
Moreover, the defendants have introduced no evidence to rebut the presumption of reasonable reliance that flows from a material omission. All the defendants offer is the unsupported assertion that Rubin and Cohen could have learned the omitted facts by telephoning Star Bank and requesting the details of the bank’s relationship with MDI. It is difficult to imagine that Star Bank would divulge such information on request to an unknown, out-of-state caller. Presumably, divulging such information without the prior consent of MDI could expose Star Bank to an action for trade libel, see Musa v. Gillette Communications of Ohio, Inc.,
2
Rubin and Cohen also seek recovery on a misrepresentation theory. In a nutshell, they aver that Barnhart told them “Star Bank would look with favor” on the
The principal authority relied upon by the defendants on appeal is our decision in Molecular Technology, where we set forth a list of factors helpful in determining whether a purchaser’s reliance on a seller’s misrepresentations -was reasonable. See
Here, as in Molecular Technology, we cannot say that Rubin and Cohen were reckless in believing and relying on Barnhart’s misrepresentations — certainly not at the summary judgment stage, where at best there is a dispute as to whether Rubin and Cohen could have uncovered information (perhaps from Star Bank) that would have revealed Barnhart’s misrepresentations. It is true that in large, sophisticated transactions, securities purchasers frequently conduct due diligence efforts substantially more thorough than those conducted by Rubin and Cohen. We must remember, however, that the transaction at issue in this case was denominated in thousands of dollars, not millions. There is no rule that requires a single, constant level of due diligence in every business transaction regardless of size, and we are unwilling to impose one here. While Rubin’s and Cohen’s behavior might be thought reckless in the context of a multimillion-dollar securities purchase, we believe that the question of recklessness requires a case-by-case, fact-specific inquiry. Here, Rubin asked probing-questions both of the principals and of MDI’s attorney, and he and Cohen engaged an attorney to conduct further inquiries. MDI’s attorney responded to their questions, though Rubin and Cohen did not independently verify the truth of his responses. We cannot say that they were reckless as a matter of law to rely on the word of an attorney, and we therefore decline to dismiss their claims at the summary judgment stage.
We thus are left with the defendants’ least persuasive argument: that attorneys should be treated differently from other defendants in securities-fraud cases. According to the defendants, “lawyers, unlike ... other parties to securities transactions, have an obligation of confidentiality that is at the heart of the duties they owe their clients.” It is perhaps symptomatic of the current debate over the state of legal ethics that the defendants would invoke the attorney’s duty of confidentiality to justify what, if Rubin’s and Weiss’s affidavits are correct, amount to outright lies. Cf. Anthony Kkonman, The Lost Lawyer: Failing Ideals of the Legal Profession (1993) (generally discussing the question of moral character in the contemporary legal profession). In any event, the mere fact that one party generally may not be entitled to rely on the advice of counsel for another party is an insufficient reason to ignore the statutory rule prohibiting “any person” — not excepting lawyers — from making material misrepresentations in connection
That principle, as a reading of the cases cited by the district court reveals, is limited to reliance on the opinions or research of the other party’s attorney on points of law. See Royal American Managers, Inc. v. IRC Holding Corp.,
Ill
The panel opinion in this case affirmed the dismissal of the plaintiffs’ state-law claims on the ground that their reliance on Barnhart’s representations were not reasonable as a matter of law. See Rubin,
IV
The defendants continue to argue that the plaintiffs filed an untimely notice of appeal, and that we therefore are without jurisdiction to entertain this appeal. On this point, we are persuaded by the panel’s reasoning and conclusion that this appeal is properly before us. We therefore reinstate that portion of the panel’s opinion. See Rubin,
V
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is REVERSED and the case is REMANDED to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. We are not the only circuit currently considering the extent of an attorney’s potential liability for omitting material facts in connection with securities transactions. The United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit recently agreed to review en banc a panel decision holding a law firm liable as a principal violator of Rule 1 Ob-5, where one of the firm's lawyers elected to speak to potential investors but did not disclose certain facts material to the investment. See Klein v. Boyd, Nos. 97-1143, 97-1261, slip op.,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Because I believe that Barnhart had no duty to disclose to plaintiffs MDI’s possible defaults with Star Bank and that Rubin and Cohen’s reliance on Barnhart’s statements was reckless, I must respectfully dissent from the majority opinion. The majority opinion examines two theories presented by the plaintiffs to support their claim of securities violations: omissions of material fact and misrepresentations.
The courts, including our own, that have considered claims against attorneys for securities violations in the context of their representation of the issuer of stock have focused, as I believe we should here, on the absence of a fiduciary relationship between the plaintiff and the attorney and the purpose for which the attorney was hired. In particular, the United States Courts of Appeal for the Fourth and Ninth Circuits have made such distinctions. In Schatz v. Rosenberg,
Noting that “(sjilence, absent a duty to disclose, does not violate section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5,” the court framed the issue for its determination as whether “federal securities laws impose upon an attorney a duty of disclosure to third parties who are not the attorney’s clients.” Id. at 490. Recognizing-that a duty to disclose arises only where “ ‘a fiduciary or other similar relation of trust and confidence’ ” exists between parties, the court held that a lawyer or law firm is not liable for failing to disclose information about their client to a third party unless some fiduciary or other confidential relationship exists with the third party. Id. at 490. Because no fiduciary or confidential relationship existed between the law firm and the plaintiffs in Schatz, the court refused to hold the firm liable under Section 10(b). The court carefully distinguished the facts before it from cases where an attorney issues a misleading legal opinion and from cases where an attorney drafts false prospectuses or other securities documents and therefore makes affirmative misrepresentations in connection with the solicitation of securities. Id. at 491-92.
In Roberts v. Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co.,
Our Court’s decision in Molecular Technology v. Valentine,
Some guiding principles can be gleaned from Molecular Technology, Schatz, and Roberts. First, an attorney may be liable for securities fraud where there exists a confidential or fiduciary relationship between the attorney and the third party. Here, as in Molecular Technology, Schatz, and Roberts, there is no confidential or fiduciary relationship. Second, courts are inclined to hold counsel liable where the attorney omits material information directly relevant to the specific purpose for which the attorney was hired. See, e.g., Kline v. First W. Gov’t Secs., Inc.,
I have elaborated on the circumstances triggering an attorney’s duty to disclose because the majority opinion is unclear as to whether it holds that an attorney has a duty to disclose absent a fiduciary relationship or where the attorney omits material information directly relevant to the specific purpose for which the attorney was hired. The opinion first states that “[ujnder the long-established precedent of this circuit, the conversations between Barnhart and the plaintiffs clearly were instances of ‘direct contacts’ sufficient to give rise to a duty to disclose.” At the same time, the majority acknowledges that while “an attorney representing the seller in a securities transaction may not always be under an independent duty to volunteer information about the financial condition of his client,” he does “assume a duty to provide complete (and completely) truthful information with respect to subjects on which he undertakes to speak.” Under either a silence scenario or a material omissions scenario, the majority has imposed upon attorneys involved in securities transactions a duty that is unworkable. While the majority contends that attorneys should not be distinguished from other professionals and individuals, I disagree in light of the unique duty of confidentiality attorneys owe to their clients. What is an attorney to do when he possesses information learned from his client relative to an impending deal? Under the majority rule, if the attorney spoke on any matter not directly related to the purpose for which the attorney was hired, the attorney would have to disclose any other relevant information to the investor in violation of his ethical duty to keep his clients’ matters confidential. I would not adopt such a rule.
One further clarification is needed. While plaintiffs’ complaint alleges only silence or
Turning then to the plaintiffs’ .theory that Barnhart uttered misrepresentations tp the plaintiffs, I disagree with the majority’s conclusion that the plaintiffs’ reliance on Barn-hart’s statements was not reckless. Whether a plaintiff has justifiably relied on a misrepresentation is judged by a recklessness standard in our Circuit. See Molecular Tech. Corp. v. Valentine,
(1) The sophistication of expertise of the plaintiff in financial and securities matters; (2) the existence of longstanding business or personal relationships; (3) access to the relevant information; (4) the existence of- a fiduciary relationship; (5) concealment of the fraud; (6) the opportunity to detect the fraud; (7) whether the plaintiff initiated the stock transaction or sought to expedite the transaction; and (8) the generality or specificity of the misrepresentations. .
Id.
Examining each of the factors, I can arrive only to the conclusion that the plaintiffs’ reliance was reckless. Rubin was not only a sophisticated investor,
I agree with the majority that we cannot know whether Star Bank would have disclosed the default to Rubin; however, had Rubin inquired of the Bank and had it declined to disclose information regarding MDI, he would have at least demonstrated some attempt to exercise due diligence. The majority, in fact, concedes that “... Rubin and Cohen’s behavior might be thought reckless in the context of a multimillion-dollar securities purchase ...” Although it might have been even more reckless to invest several million dollars, the $153,000 investment at issue here is not insignificant. While the majority proposes that “[tjhere is no rule that requires a single, constant level of due diligence in every business transaction regardless of size,” there is similarly no rule that the determination of whether investors have recklessly relied on misrepresentations should rise or fall on the monetary value of the transaction. Yet, the majority has effectively imposed an additional factor, the dollar amount of the transaction, to the eight-factor test established by our Court in Molecular Technology. While I might be persuaded that a court ought to consider whether a purchase of securities was a significant or insignificant investment, I cannot agree to a rule that would judge recklessness by the amount of the transaction.
I would hold that plaintiffs, who were investing in what they knew to be a financially troubled company, acted recklessly in failing to examine audited financial statements, review loan documents, and contact the financial institution with whom the company transacted business, before purchasing securities and infusing capital into the company. Accordingly, I would affirm the judgment of the District Court granting summary judgment to the defendants.
. While for purposes of the posture of this appeal, we must assume that the statements plaintiffs allege as misrepresentations were uttered by Barnhart, the defendants have denied throughout these proceedings that Barnhart spoke with plaintiffs about MDI's relationship with Star
. Specifically, the offering circular failed to disclose that
60,000 shares (representing about 90% of the outstanding shares) of State Die [the predecessor company to SDE] were in escrow; ... that the title to the real property of State Die, which was part of the consideration in the merger with Extra Production, was held by an unrelated leasing company and, thus, not transferable ... and ... that State Die had substantial debts, including one $194,000 bank debt.
Id. at 918.
. Rubin attested in his affidavit that he has "invested several million dollars in various companies."
