In re CERIDIAN CORPORATION SECURITIES LITIGATION,
Wеstern Pennsylvania Electrical Employees Benefits Funds, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
Ceridian Corporation, et al., Defendants-Appellees.
United States Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit.
*243 Sanford Svetcov, argued, Susan K. Alexander, Eli R. Greenstein, on the brief, San Francisco, CA, for appellant.
Peter William Carter, argued, Daniel J. Brown, David Y. Trevor, and Bryan C. Keane, on the brief, Minneapolis, MN, for appellee.
Before LOKEN, Chief Judge, JOHN R. GIBSON and MELLOY, Circuit Judges.
LOKEN, Chief Judge.
Between February 2004 and April 2005, Ceridian Corporation ("Ceridian"), then a publicly held company, announced that various accounting errors necessitated multiple amendments and restatements of its published financial statements. The Securities and Exchange Commission began investigating Ceridian's accounting practices in early 2004. Later that year, numerous class action complaints were filed against Ceridian and three former corporatе officers. The complaints accused defendants of securities fraud that injured investors by artificially inflating Ceridian's reported earnings and stock price, violating Sections 10(b) and 20(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. §§ 78j(b) and 78t(a), and SEC Rule 10b-5, 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5. After the actions were consolidated and lead plaintiffs' counsel selected, the district court[1] dismissed the amended consolidated complaint fоr failure to state a claim because plaintiffs failed to "state with particularity facts giving rise to a strong inference that the defendant[s] acted with the required state of mind," as required by the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act ("PSLRA"), codified at 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4(b)(2). In re Ceridian Corp. Sec. Litig., *244
I.
The PSLRA did not prescribe a standard of fault for private damage actions under § 10(b) and Rule 10b-5. Rather, Congress imposed a heightened requirement for pleading "the required state of mind." 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4(b)(2). In Tellabs, the Supreme Court confirmed that the substantive standard continues to be "scienter, i.e., the defendant's intention `to deceive, manipulate, or defraud,'"
Prior to Tellabs, we frequently applied the PSLRA's "strong inference" pleading requirement without defining the quantum of pleaded facts that gives rise to an inference that is "strong." See Kushner v. Beverly Enters., Inc.,
In resolving a conflict among other circuits, the Supreme Court in Tellabs both confirmed the district court's plain-meaning observation that "strong means strong," and added an additional hurdle for Eighth Circuit plaintiffs to overcome to satisfy this pleading requirement. Not only must a plaintiff state with particularity facts giving rise to an inference of scienter that is strong when viewed in isolation, the inference "must be more than merely plausible or reasonableit must be cogent and at least as compelling as any opposing inference of nonfraudulent intent."
We review the district court's dismissal of a securities fraud complaint under the PSLRA de novo, considering the complaint in its entirety and accepting its fact allegations as true, but also considering *245 "plausible opposing inferences." In re NVE Corp. Sec. Litig.,
II.
Plaintiffs' consolidated complaint accuses Ceridian, Chief Executive Officer Ronald Turner, Chief Financial Officer John Eickhoff, and Controller Loren Gross of "a massive accounting scheme to inflate Ceridian's financial results and its stock price" by exploiting a weak or corrupt system of internal controls to commit numerous violations of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP). The complaint alleges that Ceridian announced that it was restating its financial statements five times in 2004 and 2005,[2] and that it calibrated the restatements to "leak this information in bits and pieces to walk the stock price down, thereby avoiding the catastrophic impact of a single cumulative disclosure of massive accounting violations." As a result, Cеridian's initial reported earnings were significantly overstated from the third quarter of 2003 through the third quarter of 2004. Plaintiffs seek to represent investors who purchased Ceridian stock between April 17, 2003, when Ceridian announced its results for the first quarter of 2003, and March 17, 2005, when Ceridian announced that would be restating its financial statements for the first three quarters of 2004.[3]
The district court described the case as "a sprawling jumble of a securities-fraud action . . . based on dozens, if not hundreds, of accounting errorserrors of many different types committed by many different employees over many different years."
III.
The district court first rejected plaintiffs' primary contention "that the sheer number of violations, and the magnitude оf the restatements, give rise to an inference that defendants were at least severely reckless." Id. at 616. Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 prohibit fraud, not accounting malpractice, the court correctly observed. "If one makes a list of the numerous alleged GAAP violationsand then, with respect to each violation on the list, looks for specific allegations in the complaint linking one of the individual dеfendants to the violationone will almost invariably come up empty handed." Id. at 617 (emphasis in original). This analysis is consistent with our prior decisions applying the PSLRA. See Kushner,
The district court then addressed in detail whether plaintiffs alleged specific additional facts that, in toto, give rise to a strong inference of scienter.
1. The complaint alleged that CFO Eickhoff and CEO Turner sold over 200,000 shares of Ceridian stock in May and September 2003, when they had sold no stock for four and three years, respectively. They also earned substantial yeаr-end bonuses in 2003 based primarily on earnings and revenue growth. (Ceridian withheld their bonuses in 2004 due to the company's poor performance.) Plaintiffs alleged that the motive to maximize insider trading profits and year-end bonuses raises a strong inference of scienter. The district court concluded that the timing of the insider trades was not suspicious, and the amounts of the bonuses were insufficient to raise а strong inference of scienter.
On appeal, plaintiffs argue that the insider trading and year-end bonuses contribute to a strong inference of scienter. "[I]nsider stock sales are not inherently suspicious; they become so only *247 when the level of trading is dramatically out of line with prior trading practices at times calculated to maximize the personal benefit from the undisclosed infоrmation." Cornelia I. Crowell,
2. The complaint also included allegations by five former Ceridian employees, described as three confidential witnesses and two whistleblowers. "CW1" and "CW2" alleged that Gross was responsible for accounting policies and procedures and reported directly to Eickhoff, and that Turner and Eickhoff personally approved all capital expenditures and large expenses and regularly attended meetings where SEC investigations, accounting errors, and restatements were discussed. The district court concluded these allegations raised no inference of scienter because it "could have surmised as much from the individual defendants' job titles."
The most specific allegations concerned "W1," a former Director of General Accounting who was fired in late 2004 after an audit committee concluded that "her tolerance for GAAP violations was unacceptable." W1 filed a whistleblower complaint with OSHA alleging that she was in fact fired in retaliation for her 2001 complaints to unreceptive Ceridian officers, including Gross, about accounting improprieties intended to increase Ceridian's reported revenues. OSHA investigated this complaint and found that the issues W1 complained about in 2001 were "investigated, corrected, and resolved," and that W1 was properly fired for unrelated "inappropriate deferral of expenses that inflated [Ceridian's] financial information in violation of GAAP." W1 and Ceridian then settled her OSHA complaint. The district court concluded that "W1's allegations do not give rise to a strong inference that Gross had the requisite state of mind, even with respect to the 2001 accounting errors, much less with respect to the errors thаt occurred years later." Id.
On appeal, plaintiffs argue at length that the district court erred in concluding that W1's allegations give rise to no strong inference of scienter. But W1's allegations *248 concerned accounting issues in 2001, well before the class period, and OSHA found that Ceridian had "investigated, corrected, and resolved" those allegations. Moreover, we agree with the district сourt that W1's 2001 allegations show "[a]t most, that Gross disagreed with her interpretation of GAAP." Id. In these circumstances, W1's allegations do not give rise to a strong inference that defendants knew, years later, that Ceridian's initial 2003 and 2004 financial statements were materially false because they were based upon GAAP violations.
3. Plaintiffs next argue that the district court erred by ignoring their allegations that Ceridian filed swоrn Sarbanes-Oxley Act certifications[4] in May 2003 and subsequent quarters declaring that Turner, Eickhoff, and Gross had designed and evaluated Ceridian's internal controls to ensure their effectiveness, identified and disclosed to auditors any material weaknesses and significant deficiencies in the internal controls, and reviewed Ceridian's quarterly reports and found them accurate. The certifications must hаve been false when made, plaintiffs assert, given Ceridian's subsequent public admissions that it must improve "internal controls and training" and make personnel changes, and that its Audit Committee found substantial accounting deficiencies in 2005. We disagree.
Allegations that accounting errors were discovered months and years later do not give rise to a strong inference that the certifications were knоwingly false when made. "Without allegations of particular facts demonstrating how the defendants knew of the scheme at the time they made their statements of compliance, that they knew the financial statements overrepresented the company's true earnings, or that they were aware of a GAAP violation and disregarded it, a showing in hindsight that the statements were false does not demonstrate fraudulent intent." Kushner,
4. Plaintiffs further argue that the district court erred in giving no weight to the on-going SEC investigation because no hearing or adverse findings ensued, and no weight to the forced departures of Eickhoff and Gross and the firing of fourteen employees for GAAP violations in December 2004. Plaintiffs argue it is implausible that fourteen mid-level accounting personnel cooked the books but the CEO, CFO, and Controller did not. The flaw in this argument is that the opposing inferencesthat the SEC investigation uncovered no evidence of fraud, and that accоunting personnel and corporate officers *249 responsible for the accounting function were fired or forced to depart for incompetence, not fraudare more compelling in the absence of particular facts giving rise to a strong inference of fraud. Without more, these allegations do not show that the accounting mishaps were at least as likely to be deliberate or severely reckless as merely negligent.
IV.
In summarizing this case the district court observed, "Given the course of conduct described . . . a course of conduct involving dozens of employees committing hundreds of unrelated accounting errors of many different types over many different yearsit seems almost inconceivable that there could have been any unifying intent behind the errоrs, much less an intent to defraud. The allegations in the complaint reek of incompetence, not fraud."
NOTES
Notes
[1] The HONORABLE PATRICK J. SCHILTZ, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota.
[2] The complaint focuses on five public announcements. Ceridian filed three formal restatements of its financial restatements with the SEC on March 15, 2004, February 18, 2005, and April 21, 2005.
[3] On the first day of the class period, the price of Ceridian's publicly traded stock was $13.55. The stock fluctuated over the two-year class period, peaking in mid-2004 at over $23.00 per share and closing at $16.87 on March 29, 2005, twelve days after the end of the period. In September 2007, thе business press reported that Ceridian's shareholders had accepted an offer of $5.3 billion, or $36 per share, to take the company private.
[4] The Act requires the principal executive and financial officers to certify in each annual and quarterly report that "based on such officer's knowledge, the . . . financial information included in the report, fairly present[s] in all material respects the financial condition and results of operations of the issuer as of, and for, the periods presented in the report." 15 U.S.C. § 7241(a)(3).
