Lena Gallagher, on behalf of a class, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. Abbott Laboratories and Miles D. White, Defendants-Appellees.
Nos. 01-1473 & 01-1477
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
Argued September 28, 2001--Decided October 17, 2001
Before Posner, Easterbrook, and Kanne, Circuit Judges.
Appeals from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. Nos. 99 C 6869 and 00 C 765--James B. Moran, Judge.
OPINION
Easterbrook, Circuit Judge. Year after year the Food and Drug Administration inspected the Diagnostic Division of Abbott Laboratories, found deficiencies in manufacturing quality control, and issued warnings. The Division made efforts to do better, never to the fda‘s satisfaction, but until 1999 the fda was willing to accept Abbott‘s promises and remedial steps. On March 17, 1999, the fda sent Abbott another letter demanding compliance with all regulatory requirements and threatening severe consequences. This could have been read as more saber rattling--Bloomberg News revealed the letter to the financial world in June, and Abbott‘s stock price did not even quiver--but later developments show that it was more ominous. By September 1999 the fda was insisting on substantial penalties plus changes in Abbott‘s methods of doing business. On September 29, 1999, after the markets had closed, Abbott issued a press release describing the fda‘s position, asserting that Abbott was in “substantial” compliance with federal regulations, and revealing that the parties were engaged in settlement talks. Abbott‘s stock fell more than 6%, from $40 to $37.50, the next business day. On November 2, 1999, Abbott and the fda
Plaintiffs in these class actions under
Much of plaintiffs’ argument reads as if firms have an absolute duty to disclose all information material to stock prices as soon as news comes into their possession. Yet that is not the way the securities laws work. We do not have a system of continuous disclosure. Instead firms are entitled to keep silent (about good news as well as bad news) unless positive law creates a duty to disclose. See, e.g., Basic, Inc. v. Levinson, 485 U.S. 224, 239 n.17 (1988); Dirks v. sec, 463 U.S. 646, 653-54 (1983); Chiarella v. United States, 445 U.S. 222, 227-35 (1980); Stransky v. Cummins Engine Co., 51 F.3d 1329, 1331 (7th Cir. 1995); Backman v. Polaroid Corp., 910 F.2d 10, 16 (1st Cir. 1990) (en banc). Until the Securities Act of 1933 there was no federal regulation of corporate disclosure. The 1933 Act requires firms to reveal information only when they issue securities, and the duty is owed only to persons who buy from the issuer or an underwriter distributing on its behalf; every other transaction is exempt under
Regulations implementing
Many proposals have been made to do things differently--to junk this combination of sale-based disclosure with periodic follow-up and replace it with a system under which issuers rather than securities are registered and disclosure must be continuous. E.g., American Law Institute, Federal Securities Code xxvii-xxviii, sec.602 & commentary (1978); Securities and Exchange Commission, Report of the Advisory Committee on the Capital Formation and Regulatory Process 9-14, 36-38 (1996). Regulation S-K goes some distance in this direction by defining identical items of disclosure for registration of stock and issuers’ subsequent reports, and by authorizing the largest issuers to use their annual 10-K reports as the kernels of registration statements for new securities. But Regulation S-K does not replace periodic with continuous disclosure, and the more ambitious proposals to do this have not been adopted.
The ali‘s proposal, for example, was embraced by the sec, see 1933 Act Release No. 6242 (Sept. 18, 1980); 1933 Act Release No. 6242 (Jan. 31, 1982), but never seriously pursued, and revisions of Regulation S-K satisfied many of the original supporters of the ali‘s proposal. The advisory committee report, prepared by a distinguished group of scholars and practitioners under the leadership of Commissioner Steven M.H. Wallman, did not
Trying to locate some statement that was either false or materially misleading because it did not mention the fda‘s position, plaintiffs pointed in the district court to several reports filed or statements made by Abbott before November 2, 1999. All but two of these have fallen by the wayside on appeal. What remain are Abbott‘s Form 10-K annual report for 1998 filed in March 1999 and an oral statement that Miles White, Abbott‘s ceo, made at the annual shareholders’ meeting the next month.
Plaintiffs rely principally on Item 303(a)(3)(ii) of Regulation S-K, which provides that registration statements and annual 10-K reports must reveal
any known trends or uncertainties that have had or that the registrant reasonably expects will have a material favorable or unfavorable impact on net sales or revenues or income from continuing operations.
The fda‘s letter, and its negotiating demands, are within this description, according to the plaintiff classes. We shall assume that this is so. The 10-K report did state that Abbott is “subject to comprehensive government regulation”
Attempting to surmount this temporal problem, plaintiffs insist that Abbott had a “duty to correct” the 10-K report. Yet a statement may be “corrected” only if it was incorrect when made, and nothing said as of March 9 was incorrect. In order to maintain the difference between periodic-disclosure and continuous-disclosure systems, it is essential to draw a sharp line between duties to correct and duties to update. We drew just this line in Stransky and adhere to it now. If, for example, the 10-K report had said that Abbott‘s net income for 1998 was $500 million, and the actual income was $400 million, Abbott would have had to fix the error. But if the 10-K report had projected a net income of $125 million for the first quarter of 1999, and accountants determined in May that the actual profit was only $100 million, there would have been nothing to correct; a projection is not rendered false when the world turns out otherwise. See Wielgos v. Commonwealth Edison Co., 892 F.2d 509 (7th Cir. 1989). Amending the 10-K report to show the results for 1999 as they came in--or to supply a running narrative of the dispute between Abbott and the fda--would update the report, not correct it to show Abbott‘s actual condition as of March 9.
Updating documents has its place in securities law. A registration statement and prospectus for a new issue of securities must be accurate when it is used to sell stock, and not just when it is filed.
As for White‘s statements at the annual meeting: he said very little that was concrete (as opposed to puffery), and everything concrete was true. White said, for example:
The outcome [of our efforts] has been growth more than five times faster than the diagnostics market. We expect this trend to continue for the foreseeable future, due to the unprecedented state of our new product cycle. By supplementing our internal investment with opportunistic technology acquisitions, Abbott‘s diagnostics pipeline is fuller than ever before.
The statement about past performance was accurate, and the plaintiffs have not given us any reason to doubt that White honestly believed that similar growth would continue, or that White honestly believed “Abbott‘s diagnostics pipeline [to be] fuller than ever before.” Even with the benefit of hindsight these statements cannot be gainsaid. Here is where
Affirmed
