MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON PLAINTIFFS’ MOTION FOR LEAVE TO FILE A SECOND CONSOLIDATED AND AMENDED CLASS ACTION COMPLAINT
Before me is a motion by the lead plaintiffs in this securities fraud class action for leave to amend the First Consolidated and Amended Class Action Complaint (the “complaint”). On March 28, 2003, I issued a memorandum and order dismissing most of the claims asserted in the complaint as pleaded with insufficient specificity according to the requirements of Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b) and the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. In re Stone & Webster, Inc. Securities Litigation,
In support of their claim that they should be permitted to amend the complaint, the plaintiffs cite the “liberal policy in this Circuit of permitting amendment!)]”
“The decision whether to allow motion for leave [to amend pleadings] falls within the district court’s discretion.” Sheehan v. City of Gloucester,
The fact that the plaintiffs chose to oppose the motions to dismiss on the grounds that their complaint was, in their view, sufficiently pleaded, rather than pro
For the reasons discussed above, the motion of the plaintiffs for leave to file a Second Consolidated and Amended Class Action Complaint is DENIED. PwC has filed a motion for the entry of a partial final judgment under Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(b). The other defendants have filed a joint motion for summary judgment as to the one claim remaining against them. I will shortly issue rulings with respect to those motions.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. This statement by the plaintiffs is not accompanied by citations to First Circuit case law. I direct the plaintiffs' attention to the First Circuit's statement that “[i]f leave to amend is con--templated, we require an express judicial statement to that effеct[.]" Mirpuri v. ACT Mfg., Inc.,
. By letter dated April 8, 2003, the plaintiffs’ counsel urged the prompt convening of a scheduling conference, noting that the passage of time between the filing оf this case and the disposition of the motions to dismiss made it "imperative” that the plaintiffs commence discovery. Letter from Jay W. Eisenhofer to the court of Aрril 8, 2003 (Dkt. No. 120). Notwithstanding what then appeared to be the understandable impatience manifested in the letter, it was not until the day of the conference, May 28, 2003, that thе plaintiffs filed a motion for leave to amend the complaint.
. The law firm representing some of the plaintiffs in Capstead also represents plaintiffs, and is a member of the plaintiffs’ Executive Committee, in this case.
