ORDER
Plаintiffs class, as holders of various securities of Iridium World Communications, Ltd. (IWCL), sued Defendant Motorola, Inc. (Motorola), the lone-remaining defendant, for securities fraud under Sections 10(b) and 20 of the Securities Act of 1934 and Section 15 of the Securities Act of 1933, as well as SEC Rule 10b-5. The following motions are before the Court: (1) Plaintiffs’ Renewed Motion for Partial Summary Judgment under the Doctrine of Collateral Estoppel [Doc. # 203]; (2) Motorola’s Motion for Summary Judgment on All Claims [Doc. #204]; (3) Motorola’s Motion for Summary Judgment on Claims Directed Against Motorola [Doc. # 205]; (4) Plaintiff Richard Mandelbaum’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on Section 15 Claim [Doc. # 207]; and (5) Motorola’s Motion to Exclude the Damages Testimony of Anthony Saunders [Doc. #206]. The Court grants, in part, and denies, in part, Motorola’s Motion for Summary Judgment on All Claims. The Court denies the remaining motions.
I. Facts
Approximately twenty years ago, Motorola began developing a global wireless communications system called “Iridium” that would connect low-orbiting satellites, earthbound relay stations, and customer handsets, allowing customers to make and receive phone calls anywhere in the world, all with the convenience of one phone number and one bill. The system was designed for customers who needed to make
The Iridium system as designed had four principal components: (1) the space segment that included 66 low-earth-orbit satellites and related control facilities; (2) ground stations or “gateways” that linked the satellites to terrestrial communications systems; (3) phones, pagers and SIM cards that provided mobile access to the satellite system and terrestrial cellular systems; and (4) the land-based wireless roaming infrastructure that facilitated roaming among the land-based cellular systems and the Iridium system. The gateways were twelve earth stations which provided the call-processing services by connecting calls made through the Iridium system to and from local land lines through an international switching center. Many of Iridium’s gateway owners-separate companies controlling gateways in specific geographic regions-were strategic investors in IWCL.
Dr. Edward F. Staiano was Vice-Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Iridium LLC and Iridium Operating, as well as CEO of IWCL, from before September 8, 1998, until April 22, 1999. Prior to his position at Iridium, he was employed at Motorola for 23 years, where he was part of senior management, holding a position he described as one “of the three operating vice presidents of the corporation” reporting directly to the CEO. Roy T. Grant was Chief Financial Officer and a vice president of Iridium LLC and IWCL until March 29,1999.
There were contracts between Motorola and Iridium, wherein Motorola assumed responsibility for designing, building and launching the satellite communications system and developing the handset technology. As a result, Motorola was a contract creditor of Iridium. Beginning in 1996, Motorola agreed to guarantee the unsecured portion of Iridium’s credit facility up to $750 million. In late 1997, Motorola agreed to allow its guarantee exposure to increase to more than $1 billion. As part of its terms, however, it gained the right to appoint a sixth director on the Iridium LLC board once the guaranteed borrowing by Iridium exceeded $750 million. By March 1999, Motorola designated six of the 29 directors as a result of this agreement. As part of the guaranty’s terms, Iridium could not take certain actions without Motorola’s consent, including acquisitions and recapitalizations, additional borrowing, and payment of dividends except as expressly authorized. Motorola contends that these terms in connection with guarantees were common, but Plaintiffs assert there is no precedent in which a guarantor receives the right to appoint an additional director.
On November 1, 1998, Iridium launched “full” commercial service, over a month after its originally scheduled September launch. Iridium delayed the commercial
(a) by March 31, 1999, it would have at least 27,000 Iridium World Satellite Service subscribers and at least 52,-000 total subscribers;
(b) by ten business days after March 31, 1999, it would have cumulative cash revenues of at least $4 million and cumulative accrued revenues of at least $30 million;
(c) by June 30, 1999, it would have at least 88,000 Iridium World Satellite Service subscribers and at least 213,-000 total subscribers;
(d) by July 15, 1999, it would have cumulative cash revenues of at least $50 million and cumulative accrued revenues of at least $150 million;
(e) by September 30,1999, it would have at least 173,000 Iridium World Satellite Service subscribers and at least 454,000 total subscribers; and
(f) by October 14, 1999, it would have cumulative cash revenues of at least $220 million and cumulative accrued revenues of at least $470 million.
Between September 8, 1998 and May 13, 1999 (the class period), Iridium and Motorola made a number of statements regarding the status of the Iridium service and technology, as well as their expectations about the market and the number of customers they would attract. These statements include press releases issued by Iridium and Motorola; an SEC registration statement filed on October 13, 1998, by IWCL, made in connection with a planned secondary offering (an amended registration statement was filed November 13); a January 21,1999, prospectus by IWCL; as well as statements reported by various third-party publishers, such as newspapers and analysts. Many of these statements related to whether Iridium would be able tо satisfy the bank covenants regarding minimum number of subscribers and revenues. Iridium and Motorola’s statements were often positive, suggesting that they expected to meet the bank covenants, although many of the statements carried cautionary language indicating that these were based on certain assumptions. Plaintiffs contend that internal records and memoranda reveal that at the time these statements were made, both Iridium and Motorola knew that it would actually be almost impossible for Iridium to meet the required covenants. Motorola disputes this and responds that, in any event, the cautionary language, or “forward-looking statements,” make their knowledge of whether Iridium would meet the bank covenants irrelevant.
On February 19, 1999, analysts and news sources started reporting that Iridium would not be able to satisfy the bank covenants and that Iridium would not project where it would be at the end of the quarter. On March 1,1999, Iridium issued a press release stating that “with current projections showing that initial delays with Iridium’s global service roll-out will likely cause the company to fall short of the first quarter target numbers, we do expect that we will be working with our banks to modify these milestones going forward.” On March 29, 1999, Iridium issued another press release stating that it had “received a 60-day waiver from its lenders” of “the financial covenants relating to customers and revenues” and that Iridium had “noti
Plaintiffs maintain that Iridium and Motorola knew well before February 19, 1999, that the Iridium system did not function up to commercial expectations and that Iridium was not going to meet the customer and revenue requirements established by the bank covenants. Plaintiffs present evidence that Alpha testing did not involve performance in real world user environments. Beta testing began even before the Alpha trials ended and was shortened from seven weeks to five. While in public, Iridium and Motorola continued to claim that call connection rates and call quality were improving, and that dropped call rates were falling, Plaintiffs contend that those tests were conducted in a “rigorously controlled” environment, while other data showed that the system performed dramatically poorer under “real world” condition tests.
For example, Motorola claims that call setup success rates rose from just over 40% as of September 25,1998, to 80% as of October 23, 1998; KPI (“key performance indicator”) testing showed that call establishment rose from 10% on September 16, 1998, to 72% as of October 27, 1998; and dropped call rates declined from 50% to 28% in that same timeframe. Motorola’s testing at its Chandler, Arizona, plant showed even better improvements: 90% call establishment and only 15% dropped calls on October 27, 1998. Results for the first week of commercial operations (November 1-7, 1998) showed an average call establishment rate of 85%, a dropped call rate of 13% and a good voice quality rate of 89%. From January 15 to 18, 1999, the average call establishment rate was 94%, the dropped call rate was 5% and the good voice quality rate was 91%. Motorola contends that even though its service was improving throughout this time, it tempered this optimism with forward-looking statements.
Plaintiffs dispute these tests, citing much evidence that the system did not perform that well in reality, including testimony that KPI tests reflect “controlled circumstances which typically don’t obtain in the real world.” They cite the fact that the KPI tests made just before and after commercial activation used phones mounted on racks at the gateway locations, and that their antennas were disconnected, instead hooked up to cable connected to a mast located on rooftops. Further, Plaintiffs cite evidence that on October 27,1998, Alpha testers established only 54% of their calls. An internal report stated that “[pjerformance in the hands of trial coordinators gave call success rate less than 70%, drop rates above 35% until Dec. '98.” Additionally, a monthly review in April 1999 showed actual call date records from subscribers indicating only an 83% establishment rate and 20% drop rate. Voice quality was also questionable, depending highly on the user’s location and sometimes being described as “slurred, drunken-sounding.” Anecdotal testimony also reveals customers, including the wife of an Iridium executive and NATO personnel, had extensive trouble with the system in real world conditions. Plaintiffs cite a number of internal documents and testimony that call establishment rates were lower than the reported ideal condition numbers reported by Motorola and Iridium.
The parties also dispute whether Iridium and Motorola accurately stated the
Plaintiffs respond that by November 29, 1998, only 6,200 commercial handsets had been shipped by Motorola; that by December 7, 1998, 14,381 commercial units were manufactured and 11,158 were shipped; and that in early December, production levels reached approximately 1,000 units per day. Plaintiffs cite testimony, though, that the production level did not “stay at that level for very long because we were producing beyond what we had orders for fairly quickly after we achieved that level.” Plaintiffs also refer to a December 17, 1998, internal memorandum circulated among Motorola executives that stated: “Production levels have reached 1.000 per day, 23,000 units have shipped, 11.000 are still with Brightpoint, and 12,-000 units have gone on to the gateways, or service providers. There is suspicion that only 1,000 are in actual service.” An internal Motorola memo datеd June 29, 1999, stated that “prior to January 1, 1999, we had delivered 29,000 portable phones.”
Finally, both sides dispute the number of Iridium subscribers and revenue projections. On October 22, 1998, it was reported to Iridium’s board of directors that there were 10,000 reservations and that Iridium had over 97,000 qualified leads (defined as potential subscribers “who thoroughly understand the product and price and request a follow-up call”). Iridium’s “Target Plan” projections for subscribers and revenue for the first quarter of 1999 were 151,000 satellite subscribers, $56 million in cumulative accrued revenue and $9 million in cumulative cash revenue. The gateway forecasts for the first quarter were 54,000 satellite subscribers, $4 million in cumulative cash revenue and $23 million in cumulative accrued revenue. Iridium managers and directors, however, believed that the gateway forecasts were inconsistent with Iridium’s own forecasts and did not take into account important programs designed to help Iridium meet its Target Plan. Motorola maintains that Iridium and Motorola management believed that Iridium would meet its first quarter 1999 bank covenants.
Plaintiffs argue that, in reality, Iridium was not attracting the number of customers necessary to meet its obligations under the bank covenants. For example, by January 14, 1999, Motorola estimated there were between 4,000 and 8,000 actual subscribers. An internal memo dated January 22, 1999, states there were 3,393 paying subscribers by January 20, 1999. Another memo dated February 16, 1999, distributed among Motorola executives, stated there were 6,272 subscribers as of February 15, 1999. On March 2, 1999, Staiano, in a presentation to the Iridium board of directors, explained that as of February 26, 1999, there were only 6,400 subscribers, and admitted that cumulative revenue was falling short of the March 31, 1999, targets and covenants.
Iridium ultimately failed to meet its covenants. Internal memos show that by the summer of 1999, Iridium admitted that
II. Discussion
A. Summary Judgment Standard
A moving party is entitled to summary judgment “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). A party who moves for summary judgment bears the burden of showing that there is no genuine issue of material fact.
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
When considering a motion for summary judgment, a court must scrutinize the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, drawing “all reasonable inferences in favor of the nonmoving party.”
Id.
But, to establish a genuine issue of fact sufficient to warrant trial, the non-moving party “must do more than simply show that there is some metaphysical doubt as to the material facts.”
Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co., Ltd. v. Zenith Radio Corp.,
B. Plaintiffs’ Partial Summary Judgment Based on Collateral Es-toppel
For the third time, Plaintiffs request that Motorola be precluded from challenging certain facts based on collateral estop-pel. The facts Plaintiffs wish to preclude Motorola from relitigating were found in
Chase Manhattan Bank v. Motorola, Inc.,
1. “The projections of the Iridium Gateway companies showed clearly that Iridium inevitably would be in Default under the Credit Agreement.” Id. at 390, ¶ 33(a).
2. “Iridium had no basis as of the date it issued the Certificate to believe that it would achieve Cumulative Adjusted Accrued Revenues by February 28, 1999 of $25 million, or that it would be able to satisfy the Financial Covenants as of March 31,1999.” Id., ¶ 31.
3. “Although Iridium proposed a ‘Gateway Rev-Up Project’ to boost sales and the Gateways’ projections, Iridium knew that actual revenue and subscriber results as of February 10, 1999 were far below the targets provided by the Credit Agreement and that the Rev-Up Project could not make up for the deficiency in time.” Id., ¶ 33(b).
4. “When Iridium issued its Certificate on February 11, 1999, it had only 17days before it was required to achieve, as of February 28, 1999[ ], Cumulative Adjusted Revenues of $25 million. As previously discussed, Iridium knew, at the time of its Certifícate, that it could not achieve those revenues. Similarly, at the time it issued the Certificate, Iridium knew that it could not achieve the March 31, 1999 Financial Covenants.” Id. at 392-93, ¶ 40 (citations to record omitted).
5. “[A]t the time it issued the Certificate [on February 11, 1999], Iridium knew that it had not maintained, and could not maintain, the Iridium System consistent with the Financial Projections set for March 31, 1999.” Id. at 393, ¶ 41.
6. “Iridium failed to generate sufficient revenue to satisfy either the Financial Targets set fоr February 28, 1999[] or the Financial Covenants set for March 31,1999.” Id., ¶ 43.
7. “Iridium launched its commercial service on November 1, 1998, before all components of the system had been proved and before it was ready for full commercial launch.” Id. at 386, ¶ 6.
8. “The lack of roaming partners rendered the land-based roaming infrastructure of the Iridium System ineffectual.” Id. at 391, ¶ 36(b).
9. “[As of February 10, 1999,] Iridium had not yet entered into ‘Roaming Partner’ agreements with cellular network operators in 18 of the 27 key markets that accounted for 80% of Iridium’s business plan, and the existing roaming partners largely had not launched Iridium service and were not ready to serve Iridium customers on their local networks.” Id. at 392, ¶ 38 (citations to record omitted).
10. “Equipment problems continued. In particular, [Kyocera] handsets, one of the two handsets for use with the Iridium system, continued to be unavailable due to quality problems that the company could not solve. Without handsets in adequate number, the provisions of the Credit Agreement could not be satisfied.” Id. at 390, ¶ 33(c) (citations to record omitted).
11. “Distribution problems continued. In particular, Iridium’s distribution channels were not adequate to supply Motorola handsets to projected subscribers at a sufficient rate.” Id., ¶ 33(d).
12. “Iridium could not distribute enough Iridium handsets by March 31, 1999 to the projected number of voice subscribers.” Id. at 391, ¶ 36(a).
13. “Iridium was unable to supply enough handsets to achieve 355,400 voice subscribers by March 31, 1999, the number of voice subscribers provided by the Financial Projections. To access the Iridium System, subscribers needed handsets capable of sending and receiving signals from the Iridium satellite constellation. These handsets were to be manufactured by either the Kyocera Corporation (“Kyocera”) or Motorola. As of February 10, Kyocеra was unable to manufacture handsets of satisfactory quality, and Motorola had manufactured and shipped at most 38,000 handsets, far less than needed by March 31. Motorola’s production capacity for Iridium handsets was between 26,000 and 30,000 per month or between 750 and 1,000 per day, and in the 50 days between February 10 and March 31, 1999, Motorola could not have manufactured and shipped enough handsets to satisfy the projected subscribers. Iridium therefore had no reasonable basis to certify on February 10 that the Iridium System was being maintained in a manner consistent with achieving the Financial Projections.” Id. at 391-92, ¶ 37 (citations to record omitted).
14. “Kyocera handsets were qualitatively deficient and therefore were not available and it was unknown when they would be available; Motorola could not manufacture enough cellular cassettes in time.” Id. at 392, ¶ 39.
Motorola makes several objections: (1) the issues are not the same because
Chase
was a breach of contract case, while the current case involves securities fraud; (2) the
Chase
findings were either not litigated or not necessary to that court’s ultimate ruling; (3) preclusion would be unfair to Motorola because those issues would not dispositively resolve any of the matters the jury in this case must address, and would only confuse the jury; (4) another court, in
In re Iridium Operating LLC,
Under offensive collateral estop-pel, “a defendant is precluded from relit-igating identical issues that the defendant litigated and lost against another plaintiff.”
Jack Faucett Assocs., Inc. v. Am. Tel. & Tel. Co.,
Motorola contends that “every single one” of the facts involve “Financial Projections” or “Financial Targets” that were much higher than the bank covenant requirements. The Court recognizes that many of the facts found by the Chase court not only included Financial Projections and Financial Targets (which are not at issue in this case), but also references the financial covenants. However, the Court agrees that separating the findings to exclude the projections and targets would likely confuse the jurors, especially if they do not know what those projections and targets were. And introducing evidence about the targets and projections, which are not at issue here, would likely only create more, not less, confusion. Thus, there is a certain degree of unfairness in estopping Motorola on these issues.
Further, the bankruptcy court’s findings in
In re Iridium Operating LLC
also present a question of fairness.
See Parklane Hosiery,
The questions of solvency and capital adequacy necessary have entailed a comprehensive review of the engineering origins of the Iridium project, the physics of radio frequency and fading, the technical characteristics and limitations of the Iridium system, what was known concerning these characteristics and limitations, the nature and extent of the reasonableness of Iridium’s business plan, and the significance to the valuation question of various capital markets transactions that took place during the relative period.
Id. at 292. Thus, the Indium court necessarily reviewed many of the same facts in Chase, as well as this case, and ultimately came to a different conclusion, finding for Motorola. See, e.g., id. at 299 (“Mr. Mondale indicated that he might have elected to pursue a modified marketing strategy if he knew in advance precisely how the system would function once activated, but such an acknowledgment does not mean that the marketing strategy adopted by Iridium was anything but reasonable.”). Because of this, the Court believes it would be unfair to estop Motorola based on one case, while another, later case made more favorable findings.
Finally, it is somewhat unfair, at this late stage of the litigation, to spring collateral estoppel on Motorola. The Chase decision is from 2002, and the Court has twice refused to preclude Motorola from relitigating those issues. Motorola conducted its discovery and prepared its summary judgment motions based on the understanding that it was not collaterally estopped. Thus, the Court, in its discretion, denies Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment based on the collateral estoppel doctrine.
C. Motorola’s Summary Judgment on All Claims
1. Fonuard Looking Statements.
Motorola contends that even if the statements in various press releases and in the January 21, 1999, prospectus were false at the time they were made, they were “forward-looking statements” and accompanied by appropriate disclaimers, rendering any knowingly false statements immaterial. This argument is based on 15 U.S.C. § 78u-5(c)(1)(A)(i), the PSLRA safe harbor, which reads, in part:
[I]n any private action arising under this chapter that is based on an untrue statement of a material fact or omission of a material fact necessary to make the statement not misleading, a person referred to in subsection (a) of this section shall not be liable with respect to any forward looking statement, whether written or oral, if and to the extent that the forward-looking statement is identified as a forward-looking statement, and is accompanied by meaningful cautionary statements identifying important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statement.
Under Motorola’s interpretation of the safe harbor, the statute’s use of the disjunctive “or” between subsections (A)(i), (A)(ii) and (B)(i) means that “actual knowledge” of a statement’s falsity is immaterial as long as that statement is identified as “forward looking.”
Motorola raised this same argument in its motion to dismiss, which the Court denied in its August 31, 2004, Order [Doc. • # 95]. The Court noted:
Such vaguely pessimistic generalities, however, do not shield the defendants from liability for specific statements which were blatantly false. No degree of cautionary language will innoculate statements that defendants knew were simply not true when made, see Milman v. Box Hill Systems Corp.,72 F.Supp.2d 220 , 231 (S.D.N.Y.1999), and “not everymixture with the true will neutralize the deceptive,” Virginia Bankshares v. Sandberg, 501 U.S. 1083 , 1097,111 S.Ct. 2749 ,115 L.Ed.2d 929 (1991). In this case, the plaintiffs’ allegations would amount to very strong proof that the defendants knew their statements were false and misleading. The statement that the company believed it would meet subscriber and revenue goals, for instance, was contradicted by internal memoranda indicating the goals were outrageous and unattainable. Furthermore, many of the statements which defendants represent as contingent but unanticipated future adversities are not so because they had already come to pass. For example, the Prospectuses speak of contingent risks, stating that delays could occur, resulting in lost revenue and inability to repay debt if “significant errors in the design and implementation of the Iridium system are discovered during commercial operations [or] significant improvements in service quality are needed ... to generate the demand Iridium expects.” At the time these statements were made, the design errors had become realities, apparent to all insiders.
Slip Op. at 12. Motorola argues that the cases relied on by the Court involved the “bespeaks caution” doctrine and not the statutory safe harbor; however, not only has Motorola also raised that doctrine as a defense, it is clear from the Court’s language that its analysis was aimed directly at the safe harbor, as well as the court-created bespeaks caution doctrine.
Despite the Court’s earlier ruling, Motorola, in rearguing this point, suggests since thаt ruling, a majority of circuits have held that “intent” does not play a role in the analysis under Section 78u-5(c)(1)(A)(i). It is true that some courts, including another court in this district, have noted that “courts have held that once the first clause of the [safe harbor] provision is satisfied, ‘the defendants’ state of mind is not relevant.’ ”
In re XM Satellite Radio Holdings Sec. Litig.,
For their part, Plaintiffs request that the Court, having already ruled on the issue in its motion to dismiss order, should apply the law of the case doctrine. “Interlocutory orders are not subject to the law of the case doctrine and may always be reconsidered prior to a final judgment.”
Langevine v. Dist. of Columbia,
At least one commentator has suggested that a proper interpretation of the safe harbor provision should satisfy three criteria: “(1) each provision should protect some set of forward-looking statements that the other two provisions does not (in other words, none of the three provisions should be rendered superfluous by the other two); (2) the provisions should provide acceptable guidance to managers; and (3) the interpretations ought to be reasonable constructions of the statutory language.” Hugh C. Beck, The Substantive Limits of Liability for Inaccurate Predictions, 44 Am. Bus. L.J. 161, 199 (2007). The Court agrees that this approach is both reasonable and incorporates proper statutory in
Satisfying in part of the first criterion, the [In re Donald J. Trump Casino Securities Litigation,7 F.3d 357 (3d Cir.1993) 1 ]-based framework would give the “meaningful cautionary statements” provision significance in relation to the “actual knowledge” provision because even a projection management actually knew was baseless would be protected so long as it was accompanied by disclosures tailored to the subject matter of the projection. The guidance implicit in these interpretations, however, fails to meet the second criterion; whenever the interests of managers favored publishing misleading disclosures, they could print baseless projections without fear of liability so long as they could create content for accompanying statements tied into the subject matter of the projection. For the same reason, this materiality-driven framework also fails the third criterion; a reasonable interpretation of “meaningful cautionary statements” would not include statements that disclose risks tailored to a forward-looking statement yet fail to disclose contingencies management knows are more likely to cause a departure from projected results.
Id. at 200.
Motorola’s argument focuses on the materiality of the statements. Instead, the focus should include whether cautionary statement is meaningful. “Under this interpretation, to demonstrate that a prediction falls outside the protection of the meaningful cautionary statements safe harbor provision a plaintiff must show that a reasonable investor would have drawn important incorrect inferences from the рublication of the prediction despite disclosures in the accompanying statements.” Beck, supra, at 200. Thus, “[i]f evidence adduced by a plaintiff demonstrates management’s belief that a prediction was misleading but fails to show that a reasonable investor would have drawn an important incorrect inference from the prediction’s publication, the first safe harbor provision, under this interpretation, would immunize the statement even though the third would not.” Id. at 203. This also avoids the “incentive to lie” approach of the Trump-based interpretation:
[I]n most cases where evidence adduced [including indirect evidence of scienter] demonstrates management’s “actual knowledge” that a prediction was false, the same evidence will also demonstrate that statements accompanying the prediction were not “meaningful” because they failed to prevent important incorrect inferences a reasonable investor would have drawn about the probability of a departure of actual results from the predicted outcome. Accordingly, as managers perpetrating a fraud through the use of baseless predictions leave a trail of “actual knowledge” evidence theywill generally be unable to avoid creating evidence of the “meaninglessness” of the statements accompanying the predictions at the same time.
Id. at 204. Moreover, this interpretation is consistent with the Supreme Court’s decision in Virginia Bankshares, which this Court cited for support in its August 31, 2004, Order. See Beck, supra, at 202-OS.
In the present case, Plaintiffs have offered evidence that Iridium and Motorola knew their statements to be false or misleading at the time thеy were made, or, at the very least, would allow a trier of fact to infer such. Further, as the
In re Iridium
court explained, “[T]he markets, especially after commercial launch, were reasonably well informed as to Iridium’s operating characteristics and constraints, yet still managed to be terribly wrong about the company’s actual prospects.”
For these same reasons, the Court declines to grant Motorola summary judgment under the bespeaks caution doctrine.
See Kowal v. MCI Commc’ns Corp.,
2. Third-Party Publications.
Next, Motorola argues that it cannot be held liable for statements made by third parties in newspaper and magazine articles. Specifically, Motorola states it is not liable for quotes or paraphrased statements made by either it or Iridium, citing for support
Raab v. General Physics Corp., 4
F.3d 286 (4th Cir.1993). The Second Circuit has held that “(w)hile a company may choose to correct a misstatement in the press not attributable to it, ... we find nothing in the securities legislation requiring it to do so.”
Elkind v. Liggett & Myers, Inc.,
Plaintiffs argue that
Raab
establishes a “minority” “control” test and instead argue for the Second Circuit’s “majority” “entanglement” test as explained in
Elkind.
The Court doubts there is much of a difference as
Raab
cites
Elkind
for support.
See Raab, 4
F.3d at 289. “Generally, securities issuers are not liable for statements or forecasts disseminated by securities analysis or third parties unless they have ‘sufficiently entangled [themselves] with the an
In order to attribute third-party statements to the defendants, the investors must demonstrate that the statements were adopted by defendants or attributable to the defendants in some way, such as when officials of a company “have, by their activity, made an implied representation that the information they have reviewed is true or at least in accordance with the company’s views.” The investors could also allege that the defendants used the analysts as a conduit, making false and misleading statements to securities analysts with the intent that the analysts communicate those statements to the market.
Id.
(citing
Elkind,
Motorola argues that it cannot be held liable if it did not actually “control” the third parties because its quotes may be taken out of context or inaccurately interpreted.
See In re Newbridge Networks Sec. Litig.,
S. Puffery
Motorola contends that its and Iridium’s statements are inactionable puf-fery. “[I]t is well-established under the ‘puffery’ doctrine that ‘generalized statements of optimism that are not capable of objective verification’ are not actionable ‘because reasonable investors do not rely on them in making investment decisions.’ ”
XM Satellite,
Here, Motorola argues that many of its statements are optimistic, and thus immaterial.
See In re Advanta Corp. Sec. Litig.,
In
Manavazian v. Atec Group, Inc.,
In the present case, there are issues of material fact regarding whether Iridium and Motorola knew their business
As to the question of materiality, it is a close call whether a reasonable investor would consider Motorola and Iridium’s statements important in determining whether to buy or sell stock or whether the statements significantly altered the total mix of information available. It is very possible that statements regarding call quality, market demand, and ability to call and receive “virtually anywhere on the planet” might be important to a reasonable investor, especially considering the stated purpose of the Iridium service. Materiality is generally a question of fact for the jury to decide.
See Oxford Asset Mgmt., Ltd. v. Jaharis,
I. Truth-on-the-Market Doctrine.
Additionally, Motorola asserts the “truth on the market” doctrine, which is a corollary to Plaintiffs’ “fraud on the market” claim. “Under this corollary, a misrepresentation is immaterial if the information is already known to the market because the misrepresentation cannot then defraud the market.”
Ganino,
Motorola alleges that even if its statements were misleading, corrective information was already on the market or entered the market after the alleged
Despite these citations to the record, the Court does not believe, in the end, Motorola has met its “onerous burden.” Whether the purported corrective information was conveyed to the public with a degree of intensity and credibility sufficient to effectively counterbalance any misleading information created by the alleged misstatements is a fact-intensive inquiry.
See Biogen,
5. Loss Causation.
Loss causation is the proximate causal link between the alleged misconduct (material misrepresentation) and Plaintiffs’ economic harm.
See ATSI Comm’cs, Inc. v. Shaar Fund, Ltd.,
In its discussion on loss causation, Motorola again tries to inject its truth on the market defense, which the Court has decided is a jury question. In fact, most of Motorola’s loss causation argument rests on establishing that the disclosures revealed information already known to the market, and thus could not have negatively affected the market. The Court holds that this remains a factual determination to be decided by the jury, and that, as a result, Motorola cannot prevail on summary judgment.
See EP Medsystems, Inc. v. EchoCath, Inc.,
Motorola also argues that summary judgment should be granted against class members who purchased shares before December 23, 1998, because the bank covenants did not exist until then, meaning the first alleged misstatements did not occur until that date. Plaintiffs respond that their claim is based on Iridium and Motorola’s “previously rosy statements.” Thus, according to Plaintiffs, it does not matter that the loan covenants did not exist until December 23, 1998, because Iridium and Motorola’s “misleadingly positive financial and operational statements cleаrly did.” “[A] complaint’s inclusion of statements made before the class period does not require dismissal when they are ‘relevant in determining whether defendants had a duty to make a correct disclosure during the Class Period.”
Lapin,
For much the same reasons stated in Lapin, the Court finds that Iridium and Motorola’s statements made before December 23, 1998, are relevant in determining whether defendants had a duty to disclose after that date. Much of this case centers on the strength of Iridium, and Plaintiffs have properly alleged that insiders knew even before commercial launch that the company was shaky. Information about the loan covenants, while important, is not the only information involved here; the greater issue is whether Iridium and Motorola were covering up the poor performance and future prospects of Iridium. The Court, therefore, denies Motorola’s request to grant summary judgment against class members who purchased shares prior to December 23,1998.
6. Iridium Bonds.
Finally, Motorola contends that “courts have recognized that bond damages are not susceptible to class recovery.” Unfortunately, Motorola provides no support for this argument. Plaintiffs respond that the bondholder class members should be allowed to adjudicate the liability elements on a class-wide basis, while the damages for individual bondholders “as to which plaintiffs do not offer a class-wide estimate, can be established based on the individual purchases and sales of the bondholders, available in a claims process following adjudication of liability.”
Plaintiffs only cite one case in support,
In re Nassau County Strip Search Cases,
D. Motorola and Plaintiffs’ Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment on Motorola’s Control-Person Liability
Plaintiffs allege that Motorola is liable as a control person for Iridium’s actions under Section 15 of the 1933 Act and Section 20(a) of the Exchange Act. Motorola moves for summary judgment on both the Section 15 and the Section 20(a) claims; Plaintiff Richard Mandelbaum moves for summary judgment on only the Section 15 claim. Establishing control person liability requires Plaintiffs to show, as part of their prima facie case, both an underlying violation of the securities laws by the controlled person (Iridium), and Motorola’s control over the controlled person.
See In re Baan Co. Sec. Litig.,
1. Culpable Participation under § 20(a).
The term “culpable participation” is not easily defined.
See
Daniel P. Wax-man & Eva L. Jerome,
‘Culpable Participation’
—How’s
that Again?,
N.Y.L.J., Dec. 6, 2004, at S6 (“Although the Second Circuit has referred to culpable participation in five of the six § 29(a) cases it has reviewed since Lanza, it has never defined the requirement.”). Several district courts have held, however, that “culpable participation” is met where the defendants knew or should have known that the controlled person was engaged in fraud.
See In re Comverse Tech., Inc. Sec. Litig.,
Motorola relies primarily on two cases for the proposition that under the “culpable participation” element, Plaintiffs must show that Motorola had some degree of actual control over the contents of the statement:
Winkler v. NRD Mining, Ltd.,
In any event, Plaintiffs and Motorola disagree over who has the burden of establishing culpable participation. “[District courts within the Second Circuit have divided over whether section 20(a) requires an allegation of ‘culpable participation’ as an element of a section 20(a) violation, or whether section 20(a) created a burden-shifting framework where plaintiffs must
Judge Sweet has observed that “[despite the circuit court’s apparent holding in First Jersey that both controlling person status and a person’s culpable participation are part of the prima facie case, the court went on to state that ‘there can be no question that [the defendant] was a controlling person.... Hence, in order to escape controlling-person liability, [he] had the burden [to establish good faith].’ ” Dietrich v. Bauer,126 F.Supp.2d 759 , 766 n. 4 (S.D.N.Y.2001) (quoting First Jersey,101 F.3d at 1473 ). This shift in the burden of proof “seem[s] to elide the culpable participation element” of the prima facie case. Id. at 764. If “good faith and lack of participation are affirmative defense, ... requiring them as part of the plaintiffs prima facie case ... confuses the parties’ responsibilities.” G.A. Thompson & Co. v. Partridge,636 F.2d 945 , 959 (5th Cir.1981); accord Metge v. Baehler,577 F.Supp. 810 , 816 (S.D.Iowa 1984) (“culpability and good faith are two sides of the same issue”), aff'd in pertinent part,762 F.2d 621 (8th Cir.1985). In other words, requiring the plaintiff to plead culpability, at the same time requiring the defendant to prove good faith at trial, engenders an awkward allocation of pleading and proof whereby both parties bear burdens on the same issue.
Id. The court noted that it could not ignore First Jersey, concluding: “Nothing precludes such a burden-shifting scheme, and however unusual it may be to require the plaintiff to plead an element that, at trial, the defendant bears the burden to disprove, reading First Jersey this way reconciles the apparent inconsistency.” Id. at 416. 5
Obviously this Court is not bound by Second Circuit precedent; however, the D.C. Circuit has not directly ruled on the issue and this Court has relied heavily on Second Circuit (including district court) cases precisely because of their familiarity and extensive experience with securities litigation. As a result, the Court believes
Livent
provides the correct analysis. The Court already held in its August 31, 2004, Order that Plaintiffs’ properly pled their prima facie case for control.
See
slip op. at 15-17. Motorola bears the burden of proving good faith (or disproving culpability) at trial.
See Livent,
2. Control Under § 15 and § 20(a).
Under the second element of Plaintiffs’ prima facie case, “[c]ontrol over a primary violator may be established by showing that the defendant possessed ‘the power to direct or cause the direction of the management and policies of a person, whether through the ownership of voting securities, by contract, or otherwise.’ ”
First Jersey,
Motorola does not seriously dispute that it had influence over Iridium, only that it did not have the amount of influence necessary to constitute “enforceable” power.
See In re Motel 6 Sec. Litig.,
In support, Motorola cites several cases to support its argument that the ability to appoint a minority of directors does not establish control person liability. First, the Court notes that three
6
of Motorola’s cited cases involve motions to dismiss; this Court has already denied Motorola’s motion to dismiss based on control. Thus, to the extent Motorola is attempting to reliti-gate issues already decided by the Court, its motion is denied. Another case cited by Motorola,
Illinois Clean Energy Community Foundation v. Filan,
No. 03-7596,
In addition, Motorola argues that Plaintiffs have failed to establish Motorola controlled Iridium in four other respects: (1) Motorola controlled the board not only through its own directors, but also because it controlled the gateways who also appointed some directors; (2) former Motorola executives were also Iridium officers; (3) Motorola had various contracts with Iridium; (4) Motorola was Iridium’s largest shareholder and provided financial support through guarantees and financing. Motorola has alleged facts which might support its claim that it did not control Iridium. For example, it argues that it did not have sufficient ownership interest in the gateways, and thus could not control those board seats. It also argues the directors operated independent, and provides some testimony to this effect. Moreover, Motorola claims the contract’s terms did not give it a right to direct or control Iridium.
To the contrary, though, there remain genuine issues of material fact in the record regarding whether Motorola controlled Iridium. Plaintiffs have shown that Motorola had the power to appoint and direct a substantial minority of the board of directors — in fact, had the power to appoint more directors than any other individual entity. Additionally, Plaintiffs have produced evidence that Motorola’s directors almost always voted as a block, providing them significant influence, even without a majority. Iridium’s January 25,1999, Prospectus admitted that “Motorola could in certain situations exercise significant influ
Thus, having reviewed the record, the Court concludes that there remain genuine issues of material fact. In reaching this decision, the Court considers “the total effect of the various indicia of control in combination” and finds on the whole— having viewed the evidence in the light most favorable to Plaintiffs and making all reasonable inferences in favor of Plaintiffs — that Motorola has not shown that no reasonable jury could find Motorola controlled Iridium.
See In re Leslie Fay Cos., Inc. Sec. Litig.,
3. Motorola’s Press Releases.
Motorola moves for summary judgment on Plaintiffs’ claims that it made material misrepresentations in several press releases. Its motion is based on four arguments: (1) the alleged statements were accurate when made; (2) the statements were puffing; (3) the statements were immaterial given the total mix of information in the market place during the time of the press release; and (4) Plaintiffs cannot prove loss causation. As discussed above in the section on third-party statements, there remain genuine issues of material facts regarding the statements made by Motorola in its press releases.
Motorola has presented some evidence that it might have believed its statements were true when it made them, especially in regards to the September 8, 1998, press release. However, Plaintiffs have also presented evidence that Iridium and Motorola knew there were issues with the system before that time, causing the launch to not only be delayed but testing to be cut short. “[0]ptimistic statements may be actionable upon a showing that the defendants did not genuinely or reasonably believe the positive opinions they touted (i.e. the opinion was without a basis in fact or the speakers were aware of facts undermining the positive statements), or that
Further, the Court declines to grant summary judgment to Motorola on the issues of puffery, total mix of information (truth on the market), and loss causation for the reasons discussed above in the section on Motorola’s Motion for Summary Judgment on All Claims.
E. Motorola’s Motion to Exclude the Damages Testimony of Anthony Saunders
Motorola concurrently filed a motion to exclude the testimony of Anthony Saunders (“Saunders”), Plaintiffs’ expert witness. Plaintiffs have the burden of establishing, by a preponderance of the proof, the admissibility of Saunders’s testimony.
Meister v. Med. Eng’g Corp.,
Plaintiffs offer Saunders’s testimony to establish loss causation, specifically the drop in shareholders’ stock value as a result of Iridium’s alleged fraud coming to light. Motorola complains that Plaintiffs told Saunders to assume their fraud allegations were true, and to assume the disclosures corrected prior misrepresentations. It also complains that Saunders “reviewed very little of the factual record in preparing his analysis.” Finally, Motorola contends Saunders did not “do a comprehensive review of the other information available to the market before the event dates to confirm that the information he assumes impacted stock prices was new, material and unexpected.”
Dr. Saunders is Chair of the Department of Finance at the Leonard N. Stern School of Business at New York University. Saunders’s academic qualifications include 30 years of research experience studying “financial economics, financial institutions and international finance and banking.” He also serves annually on the nominating committee for the Nobel Prize in Economics. As part of his expert testimony, Saunders conducted an event study analyzing abnormal returns on the price of a security. He then analyzed other indicators of efficient markets, reaching the conclusion that the market for Iridium stock was semi-strong form efficient. Plaintiffs argue that Saunders’s findings about market efficiency were necessary to establish
Having reviewed both parties’ briefs, it is clear that most of Motorola’s complaints go to the factual basis of Saunders’s opinions. “[I]t is not proper for the Court to exclude expert testimony ‘merely because the factual bases for an expert’s opinion are weak.’ ”
Boyar v. Korean Air Lines Co.,
Additionally, Motorola asserts that Saunders improperly assumed that statements on four disclosure dates corrected earlier misstatements. This, however, demonstrates that Motorola’s argument is misplaced: whether those disclosures corrected earlier misstatements by Iridium and Motorola is an issue of fact for the jury to decide. Should the jury determine that the disclosures did not correct earlier misstatements (either by deciding there were no misstatements or by agreeing with Motorola’s truth on the market defense), Saunders’s testimony regarding loss causation and damages will be unnecessary. Should the jury determine, though, that the disclosures did correct earlier fraudulent misstatements, then it obviously does not matter that Saunders assumed those facts
Finally, a great deal of Motorolа’s motion to exclude argues that Saunders did not consider the other information already known to the market. Again, this is a factual basis that goes to weight, not admissibility. Further, this is simply another attempt by Motorola to argue its truth on the market defense. However, as already explained above, that is a legal affirmative defense which Motorola has the burden of proving at trial; Plaintiffs and their expert have no duty to disprove the truth on the market defense.
Therefore, the Court holds that Saunders’s testimony is admissible and will assist the trier of fact in determining loss causation and damages. “The Court’s role is not to determine whether [the expert’s] testimony is correct, but rather whether it falls ‘outside the range where experts might reasonably differ, and where the jury must decide among the conflicting views of different experts, even though the evidence is “shaky.” ’ ”
Concord Camera Corp. v. Fuji Photo Film Co.,
No.,
III. Conclusion
Accordingly, it is hereby
ORDERED that Plaintiffs Renewed Motion for Partial Summary Judgment under the Doctrine of Collateral Estoppel [Doc. #203] is DENIED; it is further
ORDERED that Motorola’s Motion for Summary Judgment on All Claims [Doc. # 204] is GRANTED, in part, and DENIED, in part. It is further
ORDERED that Motorola’s Motion for Summary Judgment on Claims Directed Against Motorola [Doc. # 205] is DENIED. It is further
ORDERED that Plaintiff Richard Man-delbaum’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on Section 15 Claim [Doc. # 207] is DENIED. It is further
ORDERED that Motorola’s Motion to Exclude the Damages Testimony of Anthony Saunders [Doc. #206] is DENIED.
Notes
. The
Trump
case, decided in 1993 prior the PSLRA's 1995 enactment, involves the bespeaks caution doctrine. However, it is undeniable that that doctrine and the PSLRA's sаfe harbor are intertwined. In
Trump,
the Third Circuit held that in order to survive a motion to dismiss under the bespeaks caution doctrine, the complaint must allege that the defendants made a
material
misrepresentation.
See
. In its reply, Motorola argues for the first time that if entanglement does apply, then Plaintiffs have not shown the required proof. "Plaintiffs’ brief is devoid of any of the required specifics about who supplied information to the third parties, how it was supplied, or any interactions between defendant and the third parties.” Motorola's Rep. Br. All Claims at 11. First, at the summary judgment stage, it is Motorola, not Plaintiffs, that bear the burden of showing there is no genuine issues of material fact; Plaintiffs, in their response, were not required to provide evidence as to how they would prevail on the entanglement test, only that the entanglement test was the proper law to follow instead of Motorola's proposed control test.
Second, in its reply brief, Motorola is actually arguing for the first time that Plaintiffs have failed to plead the fraud with particularity. Thus, the Court will not consider it.
See Medina v. Dist. of Columbia,
Third, Motorola moved for dismissal back on July 16, 2002. In its August 31, 2004, the Court held, “Contrary to the arguments in defendants’ motion to dismiss, the complaint identifies by date, place, and speaker several specific statements alleged to be false or misleading, and thus satisfies the first requirement of the PSLRA and the first three prongs of the Rule 9(b) test.” Slip op. at 8. The Court also held that the circumstantial evidence gave rise to a strong inference of scien-ter, satisfying the fourth prong of Rule 9(b). See id. Throughout the Order, it is clear that defendants had raised the question of whether the complaint was pled with particularity, which the Court appropriately ruled on.
Finally, many alleged third-party statements directly quote Iridium or Motorola officers. To that extent, many of particularities cited by Motorola are directly addressed or easily inferred.
. Manavazian involved a motion to dismiss, which means the court had to accept plaintiffs’ allegations as true.
. Motorola has also challenged Plaintiff's expert, Anthony Saunders. For reasons stated infra, the Court denies Motorola’s motion to exclude. As a result, Motorola’s request for summary judgment on Plaintiffs' Counts IV and V is denied.
. The Court notes Motorola cites Livent in support of its argument that Plaintiffs must plead, and therefore prove, culpable participation. See Motorola's Reply on Claims Against Motorola, at 9. As the quoted paragraph above explains, while the Livent court agreed plaintiffs must plead culpable participation, it also recognized that defendants have the burden of disproving culpable participation (or proving good faith) at proof stage.
. In re Alstom
SA
Sec. Litig.,
