This сlass action suit is brought by plaintiffs on behalf of all individuals who purchased securities of the. AES Corporation (“AES”) between June 25,1991, and June 23, 1992, pursuant to two public offerings. The First Amended Class ■ Action Complaint (“Complaint”) alleges violations of Sections 11 and 12(2) of the Securities Act of 1933; Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5 promulgated thereunder; and common law fraud against AES, a number of its officers and directors (the “AES defendants”), and the investment banking firms which underwrote the public offerings (the “underwriter defendants”). 1 The action is currently before the Court on defendants’ motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), Fed.R.Civ.P.
BACKGROUND
AES is a corporation which constructs and operates cogeneration power facilities. 2 Compl. ¶ 13. The dispute in this case centers around two securities offerings. AES made public offerings of $4,770,000 of common stock (“the equity offering”), and $50,-000,000 of 6.5% convertible debentures due in 2002 (“the debt offering”), pursuant to registration statements and prospectuses filed with the Securities and Exchange Cоmmission (“SEC”) on June 25, 1991, and March 12,1992, respectively. Compl. ¶ 1. Plaintiffs allege that the prospectuses contain false and misleading statements that give rise to claims for federal securities violations and common law fraud.
The complaint cites passages' from each prospectus, along with statements in AES’s annual report and public statements from
The Cedar Bay Facility
The Cedar Bay Facility in Jacksonville, Florida, was an AES project designed to sell electricity to a Florida utility and steam to the neighboring paper mill run by Seminole Kraft Corporation (“SKC”). Compl. ¶ 68. In order to construct and operate this facility, AES and SKC made a joint application to the Florida. Department of Environmental Regulation (“FDER”) to obtain a “Site Certification” which was granted on February 17, 1991, by the Governor and his cabinet sitting as the Florida Public Power Siting Board (“FPPSB”). Compl. ¶30>). On June 30, 1991, Sant and Bakke, in a letter to the AES shareholders, stated that financing had been obtained for the facility and construction had begun and was proceeding well, and in subsequent letters AES represented that the project was either on or ahead of schedule. Compl. ¶¶ 53-54. Plaintiffs claim that these statements and those in both prospectuses were false or misleading because AES failed to disclose that the Site Certification was fraudulently obtained.
In both the public relations campaign surrоunding the Site. Certification process and the Site Certification application itself, AES depicted the Cedar Bay Facility as a project which would improve the air quality in the Jacksonville area by shutting down SKC’s existing boilers .and replacing them with those employing more environmentally sound technology. Compl. ¶¶ 68-70. AES submitted its Site Certification application in November of 1988 which is quoted in the complaint as follows:
Eight existing boilers at the mill will be shut down; three oil-fired and two bark-fired power boilers and three Kraft recovery boilers. The new CFB boilers will replace the power boilers process steam generation and the old Kraft recovery boilers will be replaced with a modern low-odor unit.
By shutting down old equipment at the paper mill, utilization of modern technology and installation of stacks consistent with good engineering practices, the project will result in numerous benefits to the environment.
Compl. ¶ 69(a). However, on September 6, 1990, AES and SKC entered into a steam purchase agreement in which they agreed, subject to state approval, to maintain SKC’s old boilers if the repowering would not conflict with the Site Certification. Compl. ¶¶ 3(b), 71; Strauber Aff., Ex. E ¶ I.(N). The Site Certification ultimately issued by the FPPSB on February 17, 1991, included a
This certification and any individual air permits issued subsequent to the final order of the Board certifying the power plant site under 403.509, F.S., shall require, that the following Seminole Kraft Corporation sources be permanently shut down and made incapable of operation, and shall turn in their operation permits to the Division of Air Resources Management’s Bureau of Air Regulation, upon completion of the initial compliance tests on the AESCB boilers: the No. 1 PB (power boiler), the No. 2 PB, the No. 3 PB, the No. 1 BB (bark boiler) and the No. 2 BB. BESD shall be specifically informed in writing within thirty days after each individual shut down of the above referenced equipment. This requirement shall оperate as a joint and individual requirement to assure common control for purpose of ensuring that all commitments relied on are in fact fulfilled.
Compl. ¶ 72.
In late 1991, a question arose as to whether AES actually intended to shut down the SKC boilers, and local Jacksonville officials petitioned the state to re-open the Cedar Bay Facility’s Site Certification process, claiming that AES misled the FPPSB. Compl. ¶¶ 79-80. Florida State Attorney General, Robert A. Butterworth, responded to the local pressure in early January 1992, by directing FDER Secretary Browner to determine whether AES or SKC had taken actions in violation of the Site Certification. Compl. ¶¶ 82-83. On January 16, 1992, Secretary Browner determined that the operation of the boilers would be a violation of the Site Certification, but that there was no evidence to support revoking the Certification. Compl. ¶84.
However, on March 3, 1992, Secretary Browner reported to Florida Governor Law-ton Chiles that AES “may” have made material misstatements during the Site Certification process. Compl. ¶ 85. On March 6, 1992, the Governor directed Attorney General Butterworth to appoint Special Counsel, Denis Dean, to investigate. Compl. ¶86. AES is alleged to have intentionally withheld its agreement' to sell steam to SKC from Dean’s investigation because the letter was not produced pursuant to Dean’s March 30, 1992 general request for documents and was only produced upon specific request on May 1, 1992. Compl. ¶¶ 88-89. On May 4, 1992, Butterworth wrote to .the Governor, explaining that the undisclosed letter of intent indicated that the FDER and FPPSB had been grossly misled by AES’s Site Certification application, and he recommended that they commence proceedings to suspend the Certification. Compl. ¶ 90. 4 As a result, on May 5, 1992, financing of the Cedar Bay Facility was withdrawn, and AES was forced to sell the project. Compl. ¶ 92.
The Shady Point Facility
The AES facility in Shady Point, Oklahoma sold electricity to Oklahoma Gas and Electric Company beginning in January of 1991, and it was therefore subject to state and federal environmental regulations. These regulations required the plant to monitor and control its wastewater discharge into Oklahoma waterways, and they also imposed record-keeping requirements upon the company. , Compl. ¶¶ 94-97. In June of Í992, AES disclosed to the federal and state agencies and to the general public that, from the time the Shady Point Facility had begun operations, employees had been intentionally falsifying wastewater discharge reports so that it would appear that the plant was in compliance with the relevant regulations when, in fact, it was not. Compl. ¶ 98. As a result plaintiffs allege that AES common stock fell from $28.75 to $16.50 per share and the debentures fell from $960 to $720 each. Compl. ¶ 99.
The Bucksporb Facility
AES had plans to construct a 180-mega-watt co-generation facility in Bucksport,
The equity and the debt prospectuses disclosed the generalized risks faced by co-generation projects while in the planning phase, and disclosed many of the specific risks faces by the Bucksport Facility. In addition, the prospectus revealed that the only power- supply contracts that AES had made with regal'd to the Bucksport Facility were with utilities outside the State of Maine. Compl. ¶¶ 63, 65. Nonetheless, plaintiffs claim the prospectuses failed to disclose all the impediments to the project’s development.
DISCUSSION
On a motion to dismiss we accept all allegations in the complaint as true, and dismiss only if, after drawing all inferences in plaintiffs’ favor, it is clear that they are not entitled to relief.
Cosmas v. Hassett,
As a threshold matter, we must determine which documents are properly before the Court pursuant to this motion to dismiss. As a general rule, a motion to dismiss addresses only the validity of plaintiffs’ allegations as they appear- on the face of the complaint.
Anderson v. Coughlin,
I. The Alleged False and Misleading Statements
Defendants argue that the complaint fails to state any false or misleading statements,of material fact to support the securities violations. Plaintiffs point to misstatements by AES which assert its commitment to “shared values” of “integrity,” “fairness” and “social responsibility”, extol AES’s environmental record and expertise, and claim that AES’s financial condition was “very positive”, having grown in late. 1991 and 1992.
Defendants argue that these were general statements of opinion and belief which cannot, support claims alleging securities violations absent an allegation that defendants did not honestly hold the beliefs at the time 'the statements were made.
See Virginia Bankshares, Inc. v. Sandberg,
— U.S. —--,
These arguments reveal that the real issue in dispute is whether the complaint sets out material misrepresentations or omissions pertaining to the three facilities at issue. If such statements are alleged, they render the general statements discussed above false or misleading, and serve as a basis for the securities claims. We address the claims as to each facility in turn to determine whether material misrepresentations or omissions are alleged.
A. The Cedar Bay Facility
The gravamen of plaintiffs’ claim as to the Cedar Bay Facility is that AES fraudulently obtained the Site Certification for this project from the State of Florida, and by failing to disclose this fraud in either the debt or the equity prospectus, AES perpetrated a fraud upon its investors. We find these allegations to be meritless. The letter of agreement, which plaintiffs and the State of Florida put forth to support their allegation that. AES never intended to comply with the provisions of the Site.Certification, actually reveals a painstaking attempt by AES
On September 6, 1990, SKC and AES entered into an agreement in which the former agreed to purchase steam from the latter. The agreement reveals SKC’s intent to seek recertification of its existing boilers. AES argues that although the Site Certification requires that the operation permits for the old SKC boilers be turned in to the FDER, and that the-boilers be “permanently shut down”, this does not preclude refitting the old boilers with new pollution control devices and petitioning the State of Florida to issue a new permit for the operation of the boilers. 7 Although AES advocates this interpretation of the Cedar Bay Site Certification, AES and SKC drafted their agreement so that it would conform to any interpretation the State of Florida might give to the Site Certification. The agreement- requires SKC to operate its boilers in- a manner consistent with the Site Certification or to shut them down; 8 if the State of Florida precluded SKC from restarting its boilers, the contract gave SKC the option to terminate the steam purchase agreement. 9
It is clear from the State of Florida’s behavior that it construed the conditions of the Site Certification as prohibiting the renovation and recertification of SKC’s boilers. Given this construction, the agreement would prohibit SKC from operating the boilers. Further, the agreement reveals SKC’s intention to seek a letter from the FDER stating that the operation of its existing boilers would not violate the Site Certification. The State of Florida could have prevented the use of these boilers by simply refusing to issue such a letter and thus making public its rejection of AES’s interpretation of the Site Certification. Finally, the State of Florida could have prevented the use of these boilers by simply'refusing to recertify them. 10 Consequently, AES could not have predicted, and need not have disclosed, that the State of Florida would institute a fraud investigation based on the existence of this letter of agreement which, although it contemplated refir-ing SKC’s existing boilers, was drafted to allow for the eventuality that the State of Florida would prohibit such action.
Nonetheless, Florida state officials, at the behest of local Jacksonville politicians, did seize upon this steam purchase agreement and used it to challenge AES’s Site Certification for the Cedar Bay.project. This challenge аlone was sufficient to destroy the financing for the facility and force AES to abandon the project. We find that the risk of such local political opposition was fully and conspicuously disclosed by AES. The equity and the debt prospectuses both contain the following paragraphs:
Development Uncertainties. AES develops large and complex projects, the completion of any of which is subject to substantial risks. There can be no assurance that AES will- be able to ... overcome local opposition, obtain the necessary site agreements, ■... ■ environmental and other permits and financing commitments necessary for the successful development of such projects. -These risks may resultin the Company abandoning projects. At the time of abandonment, the Company would expense all capitalized development costs incurred in connection therewith. Some of the significant risks encountered in the development of projects are as follows:
—Risks of Local Opposition. AES triеs to select a location for a proposed facility where local government and community groups are receptive to the construction and operation of such a plant. The Company works with community groups to improve relations, but local opposition frequently occurs based on, among other things, environmental concerns, particularly when a plant is proposed to be sited in more densely populated regions. Significant community opposition increases the risks of obtaining local permits, which can result in delays in the project’s development or increased development costs and may even cause the Company to abandon a proposed site for a project.
Strauber-Aff. Ex. A at 9-10, Ex. B at 9-10.
Furthermore, once the Florida State investigation progressed to a point where it threatened Cedar Bay’s Site Certification, as well as financing for the project, the increased risk to the project was disclosed. Nine days after Florida’s Governor announced Special Counsel Dean’s investigation, AES filed its debt prospectus which disclosed both the investigation and its possible ramifications for the Cedar Bay project as follows:
Possible Revocation of AES Cedar Bay Site Certification. At the request of the Secretary of the Florida Department of Environmental Regulation (“DER”), the Governor of Florida and his cabinet authorized the Florida Attorney General’s office to investigate allegations that Seminole Kraft Corporation (“Seminole Kraft”), in its joint application with AES Cedar Bay to the DER for site certification of the AES Cedar Bay facility, misled the Florida Power Plant Siting Board and the DER by failing to disclose that Seminole Kraft, contrary to its original plans to permanently shut down five boilers used by Seminole Kraft to produce energy and steam for its paper mill, intended to refurbish and seek re-permitting of three of these boilers. If the Attorney General were to determine that the allegations had merit, an administrative complaint wоuld likely be issued seeking revocation or suspension of the site certification. The Siting Board could seek to suspend construction activities during the pendency of administrative proceedings after a preliminary hearing, or without any hearing in emergency circumstances. If a revocation or suspension order were issued, construction of the facility would have to cease.
There can be no assurance that the project lenders to AES Cedar Bay will continue to fund construction of the facility during the course of the Attorney General’s investigation or any subsequent proceedings. Furthermore, the commencement of such proceedings, if not dismissed within 60 days, would constitute an event of default under AES Cedar Bay’s project loan documents, and would entitle the lenders, to cease funding construction of the facility or accelerate the project loans and foreclose against the facility. If it became probable that the project lenders would accelerate the project loans and foreclose against the facility, AES would likely be required to write off its equity investment in the project (currently $8 million). In addition, AES would become liable on and would record a loss for a $1 million guaranty to the utility under the project’s power sales contract if certain construction milestones were not met.
After consultation with counsel, the Company believes that the DER and the Siting Board, in the documents they have provided and the public statements they have made, have not fully explained their position and,' although the Company is unable to ascertain the precise factual basis for the allegations of misrepresentation, it believes that no material misrepresentations were made in the site certification application or proceedings. Notwithstanding the foregoing, if the siting certification for the AES Cedar Bay facility were revoked or suspended, the Company does nоt believe that any such revocation or suspension would be likely to have a material adverse effect on the consolidated financial condition, of AES and its subsidiaries.
Strauber Aff. Ex. B at 11-12.
Even in the face of these substantial disclosures, plaintiffs contend that each prospectus was false or misleading because it failed to disclose that AES was guilty of fraudulently obtaining the Site Certification from the State of Florida. However, as dis- ' cussed above, the letter of agreement which both plaintiffs and the State of Florida claim reveals AES’s intent not to comply with the conditions of the Site Certification, in fact requires that the conditions of Site Certification be met.
See Crystal v. Foy,
B. The Shady Point Facility
Plaintiffs claim as to the Shady Point Facility is that the intentional falsification of wastewater discharge reports at the plant, which began in January of 1991 and was not disclosed until June of 1992, 11 rendered the statements in the prospectuses as to AES’s environmental achievements false and misleading. 12 Defendants admit that the reports were intentionally altered by AES employees but nonetheless contend that plaintiffs fail to allege any material misrepresentations or omissions pertaining to the Shady Point Facility in- support of their claims under section 11, sеction 12(2) and Rule 10b-5.
Defendants contend that every statement in each prospectus pertaining to either AES’s commitment to ethical and environmental values, or its environmental achievements, are statements of opinion or belief. They point to
Virginia Bankshares,
- U.S. at -,
While the prospectuses do cоntain statements of opinion and belief which extol AES’s environmental commitment, the complaint also quotes statements of fact from the prospectuses as to AES’s environmental record:
The company has been a leader in environmental matters associated with independent power production.The AES facilities have established high standards of operation. During 1990 and the first quarter of 1991, on average, these facilities have recorded emissions at levels considerably below those allowable under environmental permits, and have had a safety record better than the average for the electricity generating industry.
AES monitors applicable environmental standards and evaluates the selection of technologies to ensure that the applicable standards will be met.
Compl. ¶¶ 46, 48; Debt Prospectus at 5, 26, 47; Equity Prospectus at 5, 26, 51. To extend the holding in
Virginia Bankshares
beyond statements of opinion and belief and apply it to these statements of fact would be tantamount to reading a scienter requirement into sections 11 and 12(2) which is contrary to the text of these statutes. The gist of the complaint is that these statements in the prospectuses are rendered false or misleading by the failure to disclose the degree to which AES’s environmental record had been obtained by falsifying wastewater reports at the Shady Point Facility. '
See In Re Pharmaceutical, Inc. Sec. Litig.,
Defendants make an additional argument that the Rule 10b-5 claim should be dismissed because plaintiffs have not alleged facts which, if proven, would support a finding that AES made these misreрresentations with scienter.
13
Athough scienter need not be pled with particularity under Rule 9(b), Fed.R.Civ.P., the complaint must state facts which give rise to a “strong inference” of fraudulent intent.
Wexner v. First Manhattan Co.,
C. The Bucksport Facility
Plaintiffs claim that representations in the prospectuses as to the Bucksport Fa
AES Harriman Cove, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of AES, is developing a 180-megawatt coal-fired bo-genefation facility in Bucksport, Maine. Dispatchable power sales contracts have been entered into between AES Riverside, Inc., another development -subsidiary of AES, and Boston Edison Company, Inc. (“Boston Edison”) and New England Power Company (“NEPCO”) pursuant to,which each such utility has agreed to purchase 45% of the electricity produced by the project.... NEPCO has stated that the Bucksport project does not meet the requirements of the power sales contract because the facility originally was to have been developed at a different location. ■ If NEPCO were to terminate the power sales contract on this basis, AES would be liable under a letter of credit reimbursement agreement in the amount of $80,000 and would continue to develop this site while seeking a new utility customer. Discussions are underway with other utilities for the purchase-of the remaining 10% of electrical output. Significant community interest in the environmental permitting process has been encountered in this project (both in opposition and in support). The project’s initial application to the Bucksport Planning Board for a shoreland zoning permit was denied, and an amended application has been refiled. No material permits have yet been obtained. In the event the plant does not commence commercial operations by January 1,1993, ÁES would be liable to NEPCO under the power sales contract for-up to $800,000. If commercial operations at the plant do not commence by August 16, 1995, AES would also be liable to Boston Edison for up to $1 million under the terms of its power sales contract. AES supports its current potential obligations to NEPCO and Boston Edison with letters of credit which aggregated $1.2 million as of May 31, 1991. 15
Compl. ¶ 63.
Plaintiffs contend that these statements were misleading because AES failed to disclose that it had originally promoted the project to the Bucksport community and the EPA as necessary to meet Maine’s power needs, and that subsequently two Maine utility companies saw no present or future need for electricity; from the facility. Plaintiffs claim that this fact was material to AES investors because Maine’s future need for power was a substantial factor to be considered by the EPA in determining whether to approve the project. Defendants contest the materiality of this omission given their disclosure that no permits had yet been obtained for the facility.
The Court may only rule on the materiality of an omission when reasonable minds could not differ on the importance of the information to the reasonable investor,
TSC Indus., Inc. v. Northway, Inc.,
Plaintiffs next contend that the statements in the prospectuses as to the contracts with NEPCO and Boston Edison, quoted above, were false and misleading. The complaint
Defendants argue that the NEPOOL findings were not material because they were preliminary. Defendants fail to cite any authority that supports the conclusion that preliminary findings of a permitting agency are as a matter of law immaterial; as stated above, we must leave to the jury all materiality questions on which reasonable minds might differ. Defendants also argue that they were not required to peer into the future to predict the profitability of a plant which had not yet been, and might never be, constructed. However, given the significant disclosures as to the sales contracts with NEPCO and Boston Edison, if the costs of delivering power to these customers were prohibitively high, it might be found that AES had the obligation to disclose this fact to its investors.
■ Along with the allegations discussed above, which the plaintiffs make as to the representations in both prospectuses, the complaint alleges that additional statements in the debt prospectus as to the Bucksport Facility were false or misleading. The complaint quotes the debt prospectus as follows:
The project’s initial application to the Bucksport Planning Board for a shoreland zoning permit was denied; however, a permit was granted following submittal of a new application in 1991. ■ On February 11, 1992, the Bucksport Zoning Board of Appeals overturned the decision granting the shoreland zoning permit. AES intends to file an action challenging this decision in the Maine Superior Court. Other material permits have yet to be obtained. In the event AES does not begin delivering electricity under this contract by January 1, 1993, AES would be liable to NEPCO under the power sales contract--for up to $800,000. If commercial operations do not commence by August 16, 1995, AES would also be liable to Boston Edison for up to $1 million under the terms of its power sales contract. AES supports its current potential obligations to NEPCO and Boston Edison with letters of credit which aggregated $1.5 million as of December 3Í, 1991.
Compl. ¶ 65. Plaintiffs allegе that these statements were false or misleading because AES failed to disclose that the company and the EPA had halted all efforts towards obtaining EPA approval of the facility, and that AES had refused to fund a study which was necessary before Maine utilities could agree to transmit the electricity generated by the Bucksport Facility out of the state. Compl. ¶ 66.
Defendants again argue that their significant disclosures as to the problems being experienced by the proposed Bucksport Facility should insulate them from liability with regard to the omissions alleged.
Luce,
In sum, we find that the complaint alleges omissions of material fact at the Shady Point and Bucksport Facilities which, if proven, can support plaintiffs’ claim that the prospectuses contained false and misleading statements of material fact.
II. The Section 11 and 12(2) Claims
Defendants additionally argue that the claims rooted in the Securities Act of 1933 should be dismissed because plaintiffs fail to set out a sufficient connection between their securities purchases and the offering documents at issue. 17 The complaint alleges that plaintiffs either acquired their AES securities in AES’s public offerings or that their purchases were “traceable” to the public offerings. Compl. ¶¶ 109, 114. Defendants argue that since section 11 and 12(2) claims cannot arise from trades in the secondary market, this latter allegation fails to establish any claim under the Securities Act of 1933. We are unpersuaded by defendants’ argument and therefore, deny their motion.
To state a claim under section 11, plaintiffs must allege that their stock was issued pursuant to a defective public offering, and under section 12(2), they must claim that their stock was issued pursuant to a false or misleading prospectus.
Ackerman v. Clinical Data, Inc.,
Defendants cite numerous cases where courts refused to extend section 12(2) to cover aftermarket trading and claim that the reasoning in these cases is equally applicable to claims under sections 11 and 12(2).
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons defendants’ motion is granted only as to plaintiffs’ claims relating to the Cedar Bay Facility; the remainder of defendants’ motion is denied.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Only the sections 11 and 12(2) claims are asserted against the underwriter defendants.
. Co-generation is the production of energy by a private company both for its own use and for sale to public utilities.
. The letter discussing AES's performance in 1991 was incorporated into AES’s 1991 annual report. Compl. ¶ 51.
. Defendants have supplied the Court with But-tcrworth's May 4, 1992, letter which was actually written to State Comptroller Lewis, in which the Attorney General states that the FDER knew that AES and SKC were considering the option of continuing the use of the SKC boilers but the state was not privy to the actual steam purchase agreement. Strauber Aff., Ex. E. However, we will not consider this letter pursuant to this motion to dismiss.
. Plaintiffs do not oppose defendants’ additional argument that the section 11 claims should be dismissed against Robert F. Hemphill because he is not alleged to be either an AES director or a signatory to the registration statement. Thus, the section 11 claim is dismissed against this defendant.
See Somerville v. Major Exploration, Inc.,
. We may also take judicial notice of the prospectuses because they have been publicly filed with the SEC.
See Kramer v. Time Warner, Inc.,
. Defendants have provided the Court with two EPA memoranda suggesting that power sources that have been "permanently shut down" may be recertified and operated. AES Br. in Sup. at tab 2.
. Paragraph I.(N) of the letter agreement states "[SKC] shall operate or shut down its boilers consistent with the AES-CB Conditions for Site Certification.” Strauber Aff., Ex. E.
. The termination provision of the contract reads as follows:
A. ... There will be no early termination provisions, except:
— if [SKC] is unable to obtain from the Flor-idá DER (and the Jacksonville BESD, if necessary,) a letter(s) providing reasonable assur-anee to [SKC] that the language in the AES-CB Conditions of Site Certification paragraph II.D does not preclude [SKC] from restarting and operating these units under a PSD permit. This condition may be waived at [SKC’s] sole discretion in the event an alternate proposal is -made by AES-CB to [SKC] which provides [SKC] with economics at least as favorable as operating its existing boilers.
Strauber Aff., Ex. E-HI.(A).
.Indeed the complaint admits that the agreement to refire the SKC boilers was subject to State approval. Compl. ¶ 3(b).
. Defendants argue that statements in its June 23, 1992, press release indicate that AES’s management hád no knowledge of the intentionally falsified reports prior to their disclosure. Defendants conclude that we should therefore dismiss the claims as to the Shady Point Facility. To grant defendants’ argument we would not only have to consider these press releases, hut also assume the truth of the matters asserted therein, which we may not do pursuant to this motion to dismiss.
. The complaint also objects to AES’s Form 10-Q and 10-K filings in 1991 and the 1991 annual report. Compl. ¶ 100.
. Defendants only contend that the complaint does not sufficiently allege scienter against AES, and they do not contest whether the facts sufficient to support scienter as to each individual defendant are alleged.
. Defendants cite
Ross v. A.H. Robins Co.,
. A similar statement appears in the debt prospectus. Compl.’ ¶ 65.
. Defendants also assert that the only federal permit required to operate the facility was a National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System permit ("NPDES permit”), and that the "need” for power within a state need not be shown to obtain such a permit. However, at this stage in the litigation we cannot determine the validity of this argument. If defendants can show that need for power within the State of Maine was indeed irrelevant to obtaining all the permits required to operate the plant, they may to do so via a motion for summary judgment.
. Defendants also argue that section 11 and section 12(2) are aimed only at false statements in the offering documents and therefore, misstatements which are not connected to the offering documents can not support these claims against them. Underwriter Def’s Br. in Sup. at 5. Plaintiffs concede this point and agree that their section 11 and 12(2) claims are based solely on the alleged false and misleading statements and omissions in the offering documents. Pi's Br. in Opp. to Underwriter Defs at 18-19.
. Among the cases that defendants cite in support of this prоposition are
McCowan v. Dean Witter Reynolds Inc.,
. In addition, defendants cite
McCowan,
; Defendants' argument in their initial motion papers focus solely on the cases interpreting the meaning of the phrase "by means of a prospectus or oral communication" in section 12(2). Defendants raise a new argument in their reply papers. They point out that section 12(2) only applies to "[a]ny person who ... offers or sells a security" and only allows “the person purchasing such security from him” to recover. Defendants contend that those plaintiffs who can merely trace their shares to the public- offering can not state a section 12(2) claim against the underwriters because section 12(2) only creates liability against a buyer's immediate seller. Underwriter Def's Br. in Reply at 7-9. We do not reach this question because defendants have raised it in such a way as to deny plaintiffs an opportunity to respond.
