This case arises out of alleged misstatements and omissions contained in Appellee Dignity Partners, Inc.’s (“Dignity’s”) registration statement filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission for an initial public offering of Dignity common stock. Dignity was in the business of buying the rights to life insurance proceeds from people with AIDS, paying a lump sum up front, and taking over the responsibility for paying the premiums. Shortly after the offering, the fact that AIDS patients were living longer than expected because
Plaintiffs/appellants Hertzberg, Derosa, and Feinman (“Hertzberg”) are investors who purchased Dignity stock on the open market more than 25 days after the initial offering but before the news of the longer life expectancy or large losses became public knowledge. They brought a class action for several violations of the securities laws by Dignity, including violation of Section 11 of the Securitiеs Act of 1933 (“Securities Act”), 15 U.S.C. § 77k (“Section 11”). Hertzberg claims that Dignity knew of the longer life expectancy but failed to disclose it in the registration statement. The district court dismissed the Section 11 causes of action on the ground that, because appellants had not bought their stock in the initial public offering, or within 25 days thereof, they did not have standing to bring the claim. The district court later found that a proposed new class representative, who had bought Dignity stock within 25 days of the initial offering, was barred by the statute of limitations.
We reverse the district court’s holding that the original named plaintiffs lacked standing under Section 11. Because of that holding, we do not reach the statute of limitations issue.
BACKGROUND
On February 14, 1996, Dignity filed a registration statement for an initial public offering of approximately 2.7 million shares of common stock. Hertzberg asserts, on behalf of a class of persons who purchased Dignity stock between February 14, 1996, and July 16, 1996, that the registration statement contained materially false and misleading statements and omitted mаterial facts. He seeks damages under Section 11 as well as under other provisions of the federal securities laws.
Dignity was in the business of making “viatical settlements.” It purchased the rights to the proceeds of life insurance policies from individuals with terminal illnesses, and in exchange, paid lump sums to the individuals and assumed responsibility for pаyment of premiums. The amounts Dignity paid to the individuals were based on their estimated life expectancies, and the profits Dignity received depended on the accuracy of those estimates. Nearly all of the individuals from whom Dignity purchased its rights had AIDS.
By 1995, new drugs and treatments for AIDS became available, and many of the individuals with whom Dignity had contracted began to live longer than expected. Hertzberg alleges that, as a consequence, the value of Dignity’s business was in jeopardy because it could not collect the life insurance proceeds as rapidly as expected, it had to pay premiums for longer periods than expected, and it could no longer estimate with accuracy the life expectancy of the persons with whom it contracted.
Hertzberg alleges that the owners of this privately held company saw the prospect of their entire investment disappearing and decided to liquidate much of their holding by taking the company public. According to Hеrtzberg, the financial statements in Dignity’s registration statement were misleading because they misrepresented the true worth of the business. Hertzberg alleges that shortly before the offering Dignity adopted the accrual method of accounting, under which Dignity counted the potential proceeds from a particular policy as incоme as soon as it purchased the rights, rather than when it actually received the proceeds. Hertzberg further alleges that this new accounting method was misleading because it hid the facts that Dignity was taking longer to collect on those policies and that Dignity could no longer accurately estimate when individuals would die. Finally, Hertzbеrg alleges that Dignity violated Section 11 by failing to disclose its inability to make accurate estimations of life expectancies, the “adverse trends” experienced in 1995, and the fact that its accrual Dignity’s accounting method did not comport with Generally Accepted Accounting Principles.
Dignity moved to dismiss Hertzberg’s Section 11 claims because the named plaintiffs had not purchased their shares “in” the registered offering. The district court, ruling from the bench, held that because the named plaintiffs purchased their stock more than 25 days after the registration statement was filed, they did not have standing to bring an action under Section 11. It therefore dismissed their Section 11 claims.
Nineteen days after the district court’s ruling but more than a year after the action had been commenced, unnamed class member Charles Steinberg, who had filed a state court action against the same defendants on February 13, 1997,
The district court granted Steinberg’s motion to intervene on February 20, 1998, and appellants amended their complaint to include Steinberg as a named plaintiff. Dignity again moved to dismiss, now arguing that the statute of limitations barred the entire class’s Section 11 claims. The district court ruled that the class’s Section 11 claims were time-barred. It concluded that because the original named plaintiffs had not had standing to bring individual Section 11 claims, their suit could not toll the statute of limitations for unnamed members of the class they had sought to represent.
Observing that the scope of Section 11 had not been resolved by this circuit, the district court invited the parties to submit briefs on whether an immеdiate appeal should be taken. The parties agreed that final judgment on the dismissed Section 11 claims should be entered under Rule 54(b), and the district court entered an order on June 29, 1998 expressly finding “no just reason for delay” and directing entry of final judgment on those claims. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and we reverse.
DISCUSSION
We review the district court’s interpretation of Section 11 de novo. See In re Stac Elecs. Sec. Litig.,
The term “any person” is quite broad, and we give words their ordinary meaning. United States v. Alvarez-Sanchez,
The limitation on “any person” is that he or she must have purchased “such security.” Clearly, this limitation only means that the person must have рurchased a security issued under that, rather than some other, registration statement. See Barnes v. Osofsky,
Further, paragraph (e) of Section 11 uses “the amount paid for the security (not exceeding the price at which the security was offered to the public)” as the baseline for mеasuring damages. 15 U.S.C. § 77k(e); see also 15 U.S.C. § 77k(g). Such a provision would be unnecessary if only a person who bought in the actual offering could recover, since, by definition, such a person would have paid “the price at which the security was offered to the public.”
Finally, Dignity believes that its rеading of Section 11 is supported by the Supreme Court’s decision in Gustafson. We believe that Dignity is mistaken. In Gustafson, the Supreme Court interpreted Section 12 of the Security Act, 15 U.S.C. § 771, rather than Section 11, and limited its decision to determining what was a “prospectus” under Section 12.
Dignity relies on the Supreme Court’s statements in Gustafson that Section 12 is
Congress’s decision to use “from him” in Section 12 but not in Section 11 must mean that Congress intended a different meaning in the two sections. See Russello v. United States,
Other circuits that have addressed this issue agree with our reading of the text and havе uniformly allowed for recovery by purchasers in the aftermarket. Versyss Inc. v. Coopers and Lybrand,
Where the meaning of a statute is clear from the text, we need look no further. In re: Kelly, supra,
The House Report accompanying the version of the bill that ultimately became the Securities Act of 1933 provides:
the civil remedies accorded by [Section 11] are given to all purchasers ... regardless of whether they bought their securities at the time of the original offer or at some later date, provided, of course, that the remedy is prosecuted within the period of limitations provided by section 13.
H.R.Rep. No. 73-85, at 22 (emphasis added). By expressly referring to purchasers who bought their securities “at some later date” other than “at the time of the original offer,” the Report makes it clear that purchasers in the aftermarket are intended to have a cause of action under the Section. Similarly, when Congress amended Sectiоn 11 in 1934 to add a requirement of proof of reliance on the registration statement if there had been an intervening earning statement, the House Report stated:
The basis of this provision is that in all likelihood the purchase and price of the security purchased after publication of*1082 such an earning statement will be predicated upon that statement rather than upon the information disclosed upon registration.
H.R. Rep 73-1838 at 41. By referring to purchases after publication of an earning statement, the Report makes clear that purchasers in the aftermarket are within the group of purchasers provided a cause of action by Section 11.
Dignity does not effectively counter this legislative history. Rather, it points to comments made regarding an alternate bill which was never enacted, S. 875. This circuit relies on official committee reports when considering legislative history, not stray comments by individuals or other materials unrelated to the statutory language or the committee reports. In re: Kelly, supra,
Finally, we note that the Securities and Exchange Commission has filed an amicus brief supporting Hertzberg’s reading of Section 11. Generally, we afford deference to the Commission’s interpretation of the federal securities laws as long as that interpretation is “reasonable.” See Alderman v. SEC,
Since Hertzberg had standing to bring an action under Section 11, we need not reach the issue of whether the statute of limitations was tolled for 'Steinberg, the proposed replacement class representative.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Steinberg, et al. v. Dignity Partners, Inc., et al., Civ. No. 98643 (San Francisco Superior Court).
. The district court ruled frоm the bench and did not issue a written decision, so we are not certain where it got the 25-day period. Such a 25-day period was most likely borrowed from the 25-day after-market period of 17 C.F.R. § 230.174. However, this section pertains to false statements in prospectuses (a Section 12 violation), not registration statements (a Section 11 viоlation). We note that defendant does not seriously argue in support of the 25-day period. Rather, it argues that any after-market purchase is excluded from the protection of Section 11, whether made
. If there is a mixture of pre-registration stock and stock sold under the misleading registration statement, a plaintiff must either show that hе purchased his stock in the initial offering or trace his later-purchased stock back to the initial offering. See Shapiro v. UJB Fin. Corp.,
. The statute of limitations requires a suit to be brought either one year from discovery of the misstatements or three years from the date of the registration, whichever is earlier. 15 U.S.C. § 77m.
. Dignity suggests that a purchaser in the initial offering might pay mоre than the offering price if she was the victim of an unscrupulous broker. This reading is strained, to say the least. Among other weaknesses, it makes the unlikely assumption that Congress chose to prevent victims of broker fraud from recovering the additional amount out of which they were cheated.
. Specifically, the Supreme Court held that a private sales agreement executed 20 years after the issuance of the stock was not a prospectus.
