This is а securities fraud ease. Margaret and Anna Koke appeal from a summary judgment dismissing their two-count complaint with prejudice. Count I alleged that Stifel, Nicolaus & Co. and Kingsley 0. Wright, Sr., a vice-president of that brokerage firm, violated § 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78j, Rule 10b-5 promulgated thereunder, and § 17 of the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. § 77q. 1 Count II alleged common-law fraud under pendent jurisdiction. In granting summary judgment, the District Court 2 held that both counts were barred by the two-year statute of limitations provided by the Missouri Uniform Securities Act, Mo.Rev.Stat. § 409.411(e) (1969). The District Court had before it a substantial amount of discovery, including two depositions of Margaret Koke, her affidavit, and several exhibits. We affirm the dismissal of Count I; as to Count II, we vacate the ruling below and remand with instructions to dismiss the complaint without prejudice.
1. FACTS
We first summarize the facts befоre the Court below. Margaret Koke works for a small St. Louis business known as Southside Service Company, a home appliance repair service. She started as a call clerk, became a bookkeeper in 1941, and later assumed the role of manager in addition to the bookkeeping duties. In these capacities, she pays the bills, figures the payroll, sees to it that servicemen dо their jobs, and makes sure that parts are properly ordered.
Southside Service Company was owned by Joseph E. Loisseau until 1969. Margaret invested in Associated Fund in 1954 or 1955 through a friend of Loisseau’s. She also purchased government savings bonds from time to time. She was not an experienced investor, although she had accumulated, mostly through thrift, a rather sizeable estate. Margaret and her mother, Anna Kоke, lived together in St. Louis. Anna had no experience handling money, having relied entirely upon her husband to manage the family finances. When he died in 1955, Margaret took over the management of the household and assumed the responsibility for taking care of her mother. In 1972, Anna went to a nursing home to live and is still there.
The events which led to the filing of this suit occurred after Wright left A.G. Edwards for Stifel and took the Koke accounts with him. They are recounted here from plaintiffs’ point of view, giving them the benefit of all reasonable inferences, as we must when reviewing a summary judgment. One day Wright called Margaret. He told her about a new bond program that he and Stifel were starting for retirees. Wright explained that the investment would be stable, that “he- and Stifel Nicolaus and we would all be in [it] together,” that it would provide a steady income, and that he wanted “to get us out of mutual funds because he wasn’t too sure what was happening there . . . .” Wright further allegedly represented that the program involved no risk — “if anything happened to [the bonds] why the whole country — nothing would be of any value. . . . [M]y E bonds, my war bonds would not be any good, my money in the bank wouldn’t be any good and nothing would be any good.” Wright represented, and Margaret believed, that purchasing the bonds Wright suggested would provide a steady income at no risk. She replied: “Well, King, you know best, I’m leaving it up to you. I don’t have the time to check into anything, it’s up to your judgment.”
Wright began purchasing bonds for the Kokes’ accounts in Nоvember, 1971, and continued to do so until May, 1973. At his suggestion, Margaret’s and Anna’s accounts were merged in 1972. The bonds purchased were not the “no risk” investment they were supposedly represented to be, and on at least five separate occasions — July, August, and October of 1972, and May and August of 1973 — the Kokes through Wright sold bonds at losses. All of the purchases and sales were immediately reported to the Kokes by wаy of confirmation slips and monthly by account statements, but because these writings appeared to Margaret to have been written in “hieroglyphics,” she did not understand them and did not pay much attention to them. Upon their receipt, she simply put them in a drawer. She never knew that she was losing money and that the value of the account was decreasing. On occasion, Wright would send requests for more money, and she would ask him why it was necessary; Wright would assure her that “nothing had happened to my account. I needed to increase my capital to keep interest at the same level.” Wright constantly reassured her that nothing was wrong, and because she trusted him didn’t ask questions about the details. Throughout all of her transactions with Wright and Stifel, Nicolaus, Margaret acted as her mother’s agent; Anna knew nothing about thе bond program and wasn’t interested in it. She trusted Margaret to manage her money for her. Margaret, in turn, trusted Wright, and she told him on several occasions that she was trusting him to watch her interests.
On September 17, 1974, all of the remaining bonds in the Koke account were sold at a loss, and no further purchases or sales were made on their account. At least eight confirmation slips showing the sales at a loss were rеceived by Margaret on September 20,1974, and on September 27,1974, she received a monthly account statement summarizing the sales and losses. As was true with all written confirmations and monthly account statements, Margaret did not understand them and put them in a drawer.
On March 7, 1975, Anna Koke’s federal tax return was prepared, and the losses
On March 6, 1975, the Kokes’ bond account with Stifel, Nicolaus was closed, but Margaret did not know of the closing until much later. In late November or early December, 1976, Margaret read a newspaper аrticle about the trial of the suit by Milton Garnatz against Stifel, Nicolaus & Co., and Wright. See
Garnatz
v.
Stifel, Nicolaus & Co.,
Suit was filed on March 30, 1977. The complaint alleged that the defendants, Kingsley 0. Wright, Sr., and Stifel, Nico-laus & Co. fraudulently represented that bonds were a stable, steady invеstment which would provide a steady income without fluctuation; that the bonds purchased for the plaintiffs would be of high quality and that there was no way they could lose; and that the recommended bonds and security purchases were part of a new plan for retirees, in which Stifel, Nicolaus was itself participating. The plaintiffs claimed that all of these representations were in fact false, and knоwn by the defendants to be false. There was a substantial amount of discovery. Both Margaret Koke and Kings-ley Wright were deposed twice, and the parties answered interrogatories and requests for production. The defendants moved for summary judgment on September 6, 1979. The plaintiffs filed a timely opposition to the motion. Judgment was entered for the defendants on November 20, 1979, and this appeal followеd.
II. COUNT I
We first consider whether the granting of summary judgment on Count I was appropriate. In
Morris
v.
Stifel, Nicolaus & Co.,
The standard is an objective one.
Hupp v. Gray,
The answer is yes. The confirmation slips and monthly account statements which were sent to Margaret were sufficient to require the initiation of an inquiry. While they are not a model of clarity for the novice investor, they provide information sufficiеnt to require a reasonable per
Q Let me also ask you, did you receive monthly account statements every month from Stifel Nicolaus after Mr. Wright moved to Stifel Nicolaus? Did you receive these every month?
A I suppose it was every month. I used to get them — it was every month I used to get them.
Q You said you didn’t understand them, is that correct?
A That’s right.
Q When you first received one, did you testify that you did not understand them?
A I never could figure out what the heck they were doing, no, I never could.
Q What attempts did you make to figure out the monthly account statement?
A I guess, basically, I never did go any furthеr than just looking at them and not understanding them. I never went any further than that.
Q Did you ever ask Mr. Wright about them?
A No.
Q And what they meant?
A No.
Q Did you ever ask anybody at Stifel Nicolaus how you had done on your investments for the year [in preparation for the filing of tax returns]?
A No.
Q Did you have any interest in how your investments were doing from time to time?
A I never really — I just left everything up to him, sir. I never went into any of it, never did.
Q Not even to know whether your bonds had risen or fallen in value?
A No, honestly.
Miss Koke simply did not exerсise the care and diligence reasonable under the circumstances to understand what was happening to her account. Had she examined the confirmation slips and compared them with each other, she would have discovered that bonds were being sold at substantial losses. For example, the sale of a particular bond at a certain price was indicated by a confirmation slip. The purchase of the same bond at a higher price would have been disclosed by an earlier confirmation slip. A comparison of the two slips, and simple arithmetic, would have indicated a loss. The same kind of simple comparison and examination of the monthly account statements would have revealed the same information.
The confirmation slips and account statements reflecting losses were received by Margaret during 1972, 1973, and 1974. Although we need not fix a precise date, it is clear that at some point a reasonable person would have, upon reasonable inquiry, discovered that Wright’s representations were untrue. The District Court fixed that date at no later than March 6, 1975, the date the Kokes’ bond account was closed. We believe that this date gives the Kokes the benefit of every reasonable doubt.
Miss Koke’s tax returns were prepared yearly by an accountant, yet she did not ask him for assistance in understanding her bond account. Again, we turn to her deposition:
Q I’ll give you back Defendants’ Exhibit H, your 1972 tax return that showsunder capital gains and losses, a loss of fifty thousand Glen Aldens. Did you ever read your tax return in 1972 showing that loss?
A I don’t remember.
Q Glen Aldens were some of the bonds you had purchased from Mr. Wright, is that correct?
A I don’t even — I couldn’t even tell you what the names — I mean, if you’d ask me, I couldn’t even tell you for sure.
Q Let me give you back Defendants’ Exhibit A, your first bond statement. Does it show Glen Alden as being one of the bonds you purchased?
A Yes it does.
Q Did you ever read that?
A I never actually tried to figure those out, sir, I never did.
Q Did you ever read that to determine the names of the bonds that had been purchased for you?
A No I didn’t, sir.
Q Did you ever аsk Mr. Wright what bonds had been purchased for you?
A No.
Q Mr. Keller prepared your tax returns, is that correct?
A Yeah.
Q Did he ever discuss the returns with you?
A No he didn’t.
Q Did he read through them with you?
A No he didn’t.
Q What type of information did you give Mr. Keller concerning your bonds to permit him to prepare your tax return?
A Well, I would just send him the little forms that I would get from the savings and loans and the forms that I would get from either A. G. Edwards or Stifel Nicolaus and just put’em in an envelope and send them all in to him.
Q Did you ever ask him how you had done during the year on your investments?
A No, never talked to him.
The District Court was correct in сoncluding that Court I was barred by the statute of limitations, and the dismissal of that Count is affirmed.
III. COUNT II
Count II of the complaint incorporated the allegations of Count I and alleged fraud under the common law of Missouri. The District Court held that the fraud claim was barred by the same statute of limitations that barred Count I, Mo.Rev.Stat. § 409.-411(e) (1969), reasoning that this statute “was made applicable to plaintiffs’ state claim by the decision ... in Morris v. Stifel, Nicolaus & Co., supra.” Thе appellants argue that an action in Missouri for common-law fraud is governed by the five-year period of limitations set out in Mo.Rev. Stat. § 516.120 (1969).
At the outset, we cannot agree that Morris is controlling. We stated in Morris that:
[t]he only issue presented on appeal is whether the district court properly applied the two-year blue sky limitations period contained in section 409.411 to appellants’ federal securities claims, or whether the court should have instead apрlied the five-year period provided in section 516.120 for common law fraud.
Morris v. Stifel, Nicolaus & Co., supra,
We find it unnecessary, however, to resolve the limitations issue, and we express no opinion about whether § 516.120 should have been applied rather than § 409.411(e). We find, instead, in light of
United Mine Workers v. Gibbs,
In
Gibbs,
the Court set out the basic principles which should be applied where federal and state claims are presented together. First, the federal claim must be
M In the case at bar, it is clear that the federal securities claim was substantial. Claims are “insubstantial only if the prior decisions inescapably render the claims frivolous . . .”
Goosby v. Osser,
This case, however, did not proceed in such a fashion. The federal claim was dismissed before trial, and we have upheld that dismissal. The Supreme Court in
Gibbs
said that if the federal claims are dismissed before trial, “the state claims should be dismissed as well.”
United Mine Workers v. Gibbs, supra,
This conclusion does not end the inquiry, however. The question still remains whether, in the circumstances of this case, the state сlaim
ought
to be tried in federal court. In
Kuhn,
we suggested that appropriate factors for consideration are the difficulty of the state claim, the amount of judicial time and energy already invested in it, the amount of additional time and energy necessary for its resolution, and the availability of a state forum.
Ibid.
Having weighed these considerations, we are convinced that the state claim should be dismissed without prejudice. We arе influenced primarily by the desire to avoid the needless, and non-definitive, federal resolution of an important question of state law. The limitations question has not been resolved by the Missouri appellate courts. The only Missouri case squarely in point is the decision of Judge Hoester of the Circuit
We are also influenced by the availability of a state forum in which the Kokes may litigate their claim. At argument, counsel for appellants disсlosed that they some time ago filed in state court a suit against the appellees virtually identical to Count II. Thus, our dismissal will not foreclose the opportunity for litigation in state court.
We do not foresee a significant increase in inconvenience to the parties if the fraud claim is pursued in state court rather than federal. The discovery in the District Court can be used in the state litigation, so the efforts of the parties to gather facts will not have been wasted. And finally, dismissal will allow the appellants to obtain a definitive'ruling on the limitations issue in state court, thereby “procuring for them a surer-footed reading of applicable law.”
United Mine Workers v. Gibbs, supra,
We vacate the ruling of the court below on Count II, and remand with instructions to dismiss that Count without prejudice.
Notes
. The appellants have not pressed in this Court their claim under § 17 of the Securities Act of 1933, and we are treating this claim as abandoned.
. The Hon. James H. Meredith, Senior United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri. The opinion below is reported at
. Each slip confirmed the purchase or sale of bonds and provided the following information: the name of the bond, the number of bonds bought or sold, the price per bond, the date of the purchase or sаle, the gross amount of the transaction in dollars and cents, and the commission. Each slip stated at the bottom in small print: “Please advise us immediately if this confirmation is not in complete accordance with your understanding.” The monthly account statements consisted of a series of six columns which provided information about bond transactions occurring during a given month. The columns were labeled as follows: Date, Bought Received Or Long, Sold Delivered Or Short, Description, Price, Debit, Credit.
