OPINION AND ORDER
This class action is brought on behalf of shareholders of Medis Technologies, Ltd. (“Medis” or the “Company”) against: (1) Medis; (2) its Chief Executive Officer (“CEO”) Robert K. Lifton (“Lifton”); and (3) its business development manager/marketing representative Andrew Udis (“Udis”) (collectively, “Defendants”). In its First Amended Class Action Complaint (“Amended Complaint”), Plaintiff, a unit of similarly situated shareholders, alleges that Defendants either knowingly or recklessly misrepresented the true nature of Medis’s initial product sales to the investing public and thereby committed securities fraud in violation of § 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (“Exchange Act”), 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b), and Rule 10b-5 promulgated thereunder, 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5. Plaintiff also alleges that Defendants Lifton and Udis (the “Individual Defendants”) are liable as control persons
I. STANDARD OF REVIEW
On a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, the court “must accept as true all of the factual allegations contained in the complaint,” and construe the complaint in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.
Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly,
II. FACTS ALLEGED IN THE AMENDED COMPLAINT 1
Medis is a development stage company which designs, develops, and markets a liquid fuel cell device called the 24/7 Pow-erPack (“PowerPack”) for the mobile handset and portable consumer electronics markets. 2 (Amended Complaint (“AC”) ¶ 2.) During the four-day period from April 13, 2007 through April 17, 2007 (the “Class Period”), Medis was registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) pursuant to the Exchange Act and was traded on the NASDAQ National Market (“NASDAQ”). (AC ¶ 19.) Lifton served as Chairman and CEO of Medis throughout the Class Period. (AC ¶ 20.) Udis served as the business development manager for Medis and has been described in various Medis SEC filings as a “marketing representative.” 3 (AC ¶ 21.)
A. The Medis Announcements
On Friday, April 13, 2007, Medis issued a press release, and later filed a corresponding 8-K with the SEC, entitled, “MEDIS TECHNOLOGIES BEGINS COMMERCIAL SALES OF ITS FUEL CELL 24/7 POWER PACK” (the “Press Release”). (AC ¶ 34 & Ex. 1.) It states in relevant part:
Friday April 13,10:02 am ET ... MED-IS TECHNOLOGIES LTD. (NASDAQ:MDTL) announced that it has begun commercial sales of its 24/7 fuel cell Power Packs to Microsoft. The first shipment of Microsoft branded 24/7 Power Packs were made today.
“This is an historic moment for our company,” said Robert K. Lifton, Chairmanand CEO of Medis Technologies. “It marks the first commercial sales of our 24/7 Power Pack product and indeed, the first commercial sales in quantities of any consumer fuel cell product. We are pleased to be able to serve Microsoft as our first customer.”
(AC ¶ 34 & Ex. 1.) The Amended Complaint alleges that this announcement regarding the Company’s lead product caused Medis’s stock to rise dramatically from a previous per share closing price of $18.29 to an intraday high of $24.10 on April 13, 2007. (AC ¶36.) Medis stock closed the day up $2.03 per share, or 11%, at $20.32 per share — on nearly 3.5 million shares traded. (AC ¶ 35.) On the previous day, April 12, 2007, only about 175,000 of the Company’s shares traded hands. (AC ¶ 35.)
This sudden surge in the price of Medis stock prompted several market commentators to raise questions about the Company’s announcement. (AC ¶ 36.) For instance, Herb Greenberg of Marketwatch noted in an internet column that the Medis Press Release contained no firm details about the size of the sale, its impact on profits, or Microsoft’s intended use of the PowerPacks. (AC ¶ 36 & Ex. 2.) Another investment research website, Citron Research, asked Medis’s Deputy Chairman/Chief Operating Officer/Treasurer Howard Weingrow about the size of the Microsoft sale and for a contact person at Medis. (AC ¶¶ 38-39 & Ex. 3.) According to Citron Research, Weingrow informed Citron that he did not have the purchase order in front of him and could not respond to such questions, despite this being the Company’s “historic” first sale. (AC ¶ 39 & Ex. 3.) The Citron Research report also noted that the “two people we spoke to in Microsoft’s corporate communications did not know about th[e] press release.” (AC ¶ 39 & Ex. 3.) While Citron Research was “not fully ready to declare this a fraud yet,” it explicitly questioned the veracity of the Press Release. (AC ¶ 39 & Ex. 3.)
Later that same day — and after the aforementioned skeptical analyst comments surfaced — Udis gave an exclusive interview to Dallas Kachan, the publisher and acting editor of the technology trade publication Inside Greentech. (AC ¶ 40 & Ex. 4.) The resulting Inside Greentech online article entitled “Microsoft to Sell Fuel Cells” provided in pertinent part as follows:
While the company wouldn’t specify the quantity of the initial shipment, or of the contract’s total volume, business development manager Andrew Udis told Inside Greentech the ultimate unit commitment was expected to be “in the millions.”
A Microsoft spokesperson would only acknowledge that the company made “a small purchase” from Medis, but Udis confirmed Microsoft intends to offer the devices to the public.
“They’ve branded the product and plan to sell these around the world.”
(AC ¶ 40 & Ex. 4.)
B. Negative Revelations
On Tuesday, April 17, 2007, two articles appeared in the online trade publication
Marketwatch
discussing the details of the sale. The articles quoted unnamed Microsoft spokespersons, who stated that Microsoft had purchased only about $15,000 worth of PowerPacks and had no plans to resell them to the public or to develop the product at all; rather, it planned to distribute the PowerPacks for free at an unspecified upcoming event. (AC ¶¶ 42-43 & Ex. 5, 6.) One of the articles also referenced a report prepared by proxy and research firm Glass Lewis, which quoted a Microsoft spokesman as saying the Medis
The Amended Complaint alleges that these corrective disclosures caused Medis’s stock price to fall. On April 18, 2007, the Company’s stock closed at $17.97 per share, down $1.53 per share on over 1,132,-000 shares traded. (AC ¶ 65.) This downward slide continued, with the share price falling an additional $0.55 per share at the end of trading on April 20, 2007 for a total decline of $2.08 per share over the three-day period starting April 18, 2007. (AC ¶ 65.)
On April 19, 2007, Kachan posted an online addendum to his Inside Greentech article (the “Addendum”), which stated that “a Medis executive, upon seeing our article, called Inside Greentech to suggest the Microsoft order was substantially smaller in size than what the company’s spokesperson had told us.” (Affidavit of Deborah Renner (“Renner Aff’), Ex. C.) 4 It noted specifically that the Medis executive did not address whether the Power-Packs were intended for resale, despite the report in Marketwatch that they were intended as giveaways. (Id.) The Addendum is silent as to whether Microsoft had branded the PowerPacks, nor is there any indication as to when the unnamed Medis representative contacted the website. 5 (Id.)
III. DISCUSSION
Defendants only challenge the sufficiency of Plaintiffs factual allegations with respect to scienter. The Court assumes that Plaintiff has properly pled the other elements of its securities fraud claim and addresses only the question of whether scienter has been adequately pleaded with regard to both Medis under Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 and the Individual Defendants as control persons under Section 20(a).
In order to establish liability for securities fraud under Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5, the plaintiff must prove,
inter alia,
that the defendant acted with scien-ter, defined in the Second Circuit as “intent to deceive, manipulate, or defraud, or reckless conduct.”
ATSI,
In order to determine whether a complaint has adequately pleaded scienter, a court should examine all of the facts alleged collectively or “holistically” (without parsing individual allegations), and take into account any inference concerning scienter — supporting or opposing — which can be drawn from the complaint. See id. at 2509. Once it has considered the complaint in this light, the court should find that scienter has been adequately pleaded only if a “cogent and compelling” inference regarding the requisite state of mind can be drawn. Id. at 2509-10. According to the Supreme Court, the critical inquiry is: “[w]hen the allegations are accepted as true and taken collectively, would a reasonable person deem the inference of scienter at least as strong as any opposing inference?” Id. at 2511. If so, then scien-ter has been adequately pleaded. If not, the case may be dismissed.
The plaintiff may plead a “strong inference” of scienter “by alleging facts (1) showing that the defendants had both motive and opportunity to commit the fraud or (2) constituting strong circumstantial evidence of conscious misbehavior or recklessness.”
ATSI,
Where the plaintiff pleads scienter by conscious misbehavior or recklessness
B. Control Person Liability: Section 20(a)
In order to plead a prima facie case of control person liability under Section 20(a) of the Exchange Act, a plaintiff must allege “(1) a primary violation by the controlled person, (2) control of the primary violator by the defendant, and (3) that the defendant was, in some meaningful sense, a culpable participant in the controlled person’s fraud.”
ATSI,
C. Analysis
Plaintiff asserts that Medis’s statements of April 13, 2007 were materially false and misleading because: (1) Microsoft had no plans to sell Medis’s Power-Packs around the world — let alone to any consumer- — and planned only to distribute them as a free giveaway at an upcoming event; (2) Microsoft in fact purchased only $15,000-worth of PowerPacks; (3) Microsoft did not plan to establish an original equipment manufacturer (“OEM”) relationship or any other type of ongoing arrangement with Medis; and (4) the Pow-erPacks did not carry the Microsoft brand. (AC ¶ 42.) The gravamen of Plaintiffs allegations is that Medis’s statements improperly suggest a promising and potentially lucrative relationship with industry giant Microsoft, whose brand name and reputation would stand behind the quality and reliability of the PowerPacks. (AC ¶¶ 46-48.) A closer look at the allegations, however, reveals that Plaintiff fails to adduce the strong and particularized circumstantial evidence of Defendants’ recklessness necessary to survive a motion to dismiss.
1. The Press Release
Though Plaintiff clearly seeks to recast the Press Release and
Inside Greentech
That leaves only the statements regarding branding. Plaintiff wants the Court to infer that, by stating that the PowerPacks bore the Microsoft brand, Medis conveyed a message of massive commercial resale, and attacks the Press Release on that basis. The Amended Complaint is completely silent, however, as to what, if anything, was actually superimposed on the PowerPacks themselves — i.e., did the Pow-erPacks carry Microsoft’s distinctive foursquare “Windows” logo, or its black, impact, italicized “Microsoft” logo or, in fact, no mark at all? Instead, all we have are the statements of an unnamed, unidentified Microsoft spokesperson quoted in a third-party news source that the “Medis product is ‘not a Microsoft branded product.’ ” (AC ¶ 43.) At oral argument, counsel for Plaintiff appeared to concede the presence of some sort of Microsoft mark by failing to contest Defendants’ counsel’s claim that the PowerPacks bore Microsoft’s name. (See Transcript of Oral Argument dated July 16, 2008 (“Tr.”) at 4, 28-29.) Roget’s International Thesaurus includes “brand” and “logo” in the following list of synonyms: “label,” “tag,” “stamp,” “seal,” “trademark.” Roget’s International Thesaurus 517.13 (Barbara Ann Kipfer, ed., 6th ed.2001). While Plaintiff suggests “a material difference between Microsoft branding and reselling the PowerPacks under [its] brand name and ... giving away the PowerPacks for free at trade shows with [its] logo on them” (Lead PL’s Mem. in Opp’n to Defs.’ Mot. to Dismiss (“Pis.’ Opp’n”) 8), the distinction between “brand” and “logo” is too nuanced to raise a compelling inference of scienter by recklessness. Indeed, Plaintiffs counsel recognized this deficiency at oral argument, noting with regard to the branding comment, “It was sort of like a small kind of misleading kind of close to a gray area.” (Tr. 29.) Where compelling circumstantial evidence is required, isolated gray areas are plainly insufficient.
Moreover, to the extent Plaintiffs scienter allegations regarding the Press Release focus on the Defendants’ nondisclosure of additional details regarding the Microsoft sale, Plaintiff fails to explain why Medis had an obligation to say something more. (AC ¶ 44.) A defendant’s “failure to disclose particular information, by itself, can only constitute recklessness if there was an
obvious
duty to disclose that information.”
In re Geopharma, Inc. Sec. Litis.,
2. Inside Greentech Article
Next, the Court turns to the statements purportedly made by Udis and reported by Inside Greentech. Plaintiff seeks to raise an inference that, once the media began to question the significance of the Press Release, Medis quickly put Udis to the task of disseminating false and/or misleading information in order to quell the analysts and maintain the surge in Medis’s share value. Plaintiff fails to identify, however, a document or report to which Udis had access that contradicted his alleged misrepresentations concerning the PowerPack sale.
Typically, in order to raise an inference of conscious misbehavior or recklessness, the plaintiff must “specifically allege[ ] defendants’ knowledge of facts or access to information contradicting their public statements.”
Novak,
Plaintiff cites
Cosmas v. Hassett,
[T]he amended complaint alleges facts from which one can reasonably infer that sales to [China] were to represent a significant part of Inflight’s business. These facts give rise to a strong inference that the [defendant directors] had knowledge of [China’s] import restrictions, since the restrictions apparently eliminated a potentially significant source of income for the company.
Id. at 13. Thus, a plaintiff need not identify specific reports or data containing contradictory information when the defendant’s misstatements pertain to subject-matter critical to key corporate functions.
In
In re eSpeed, Inc. Sec. Litig.,
It appears beyond dispute that the development and sale of the PowerPack product was critical to the long term viability of Medis. Though the Amended Complaint does not specify what percentage of the Company’s overall spending was allocated specifically to PowerPack product development, it describes Medis as being “primarily in the business of developing” the PowerPack (AC ¶ 2), a point that Defendants do not contest. It appears Medis chose to describe its sale of PowerPacks to Microsoft as “an historic moment” (AC ¶ 34 & Ex. 1) because it signified Medis’s transformation from a “development stage” (AC ¶ 2) to a revenue-generating company. Indeed, in their supporting memorandum, Defendants state that the mere fact of the sale was significant because it marked the first-ever commercial sale of a fuel cell product and posit that the Press Release was “akin to an announcement such as ‘Wright Brothers Fly Plane.’ ” (Defs.’ Mem. 2.) Thus, information about the sale — including the size of the order, the scope of the business relationship with Microsoft, and the branding of the product — is properly attributable to top-level Medis executives.
Yet, it remains unclear whether Udis is the type of top executive to which such information is ascribable. Unlike Lifton, Medis’s Chairman and CEO, Udis does not have an official corporate title; he is described in the Amended Complaint as the Company’s “business development manager.” (AC ¶ 21.) For support, Plaintiff cites only a press release styled as a letter to the Company’s shareholders, attached as an exhibit to a Form 8-K, in which Lifton recounts Medis’s marketing efforts in Asia and identifies Udis as having traveled there in his capacity as “our marketing representative.” Medis Technologies Ltd., Current Report (Form 8-K), Ex. 99.1 (June 1, 2006). This generic description of Udis’s role stands in stark contrast, however, to Lifton’s description in the same paragraph of other Medis executives, “Jacob Weiss, our President and Gennadi Finkelshtain, our CTO.” 7 Id. Other than a third-party representation that Udis and Lifton have been “friends for years” (AC ¶ 21), there is nothing else by which the Court can infer that Udis was a top corporate insider such that unspecified contradictory information concerning PowerPack sales is ascribable to him. Clearly, not everyone who makes statements to the investing public is a senior executive.
In the absence of any specific countervailing information regarding the extent of the Medis-Microsoft sale, the Court has no context by which to gauge the reasonableness of Udis’s statements. Indeed, one might infer that Udis’s optimism was justified by the significance of the sale itself: his friend’s corporation, after years of development and promise, had finally announced the first-ever shipment of a fuel cell product to any commercial customer, let alone Microsoft. Perhaps Medis and
This conclusion is further buttressed by Medis’s actions in the wake of the
Inside Greentech
article’s release. As evidenced by the Addendum to the article posted on April 19, 2007, Medis promptly contacted the author of the article in an attempt to correct the record. (Renner Aff, Ex. C.) Even though, by taking this action, Medis essentially acknowledged that Udis’s statements were inaccurate, it also raised an inference that Medis did not concoct a plan to artificially inflate its share value for any prolonged period of time.
See In re GeoP-harma,
3. Implausibility
Though Plaintiff admittedly seeks to establish scienter by recklessness, the overall implausibility of the purported scheme is still relevant to the present discussion. See id. at 446 n. 83 (“Courts often refuse to infer scienter, even on a recklessness theory, when confronted with illogical allegations.”). Plaintiff posits that, “[b]y issuing a misleading press release and causing a sudden 25% stock price increase, those investors with short positions were squeezed ... and suffered huge losses.” (PL’s Opp’n 23.) This contention lacks any support, however, in either the record or the relevant case law, and appears to defy common sense. It would mean that Defendants consciously disseminated false information to that segment of the investing public with the most to gain by ferreting out any inaccuracies in their statements. Given the underlying significance of the announcement — the first-ever commercial sale of fuel cell technology — they would have known that the short-sellers, as well as analysts and even Microsoft itself, would easily expose the fraud. Once the negative revelations came to light, the overall effect would be to deflate Medis’s share values below even their April 13, 2007 listings, ultimately giving the short-sellers exactly what they always want: a lower price. Of course, that is exactly what actually transpired: Medis shares lost 5% of their value from the date of the Press Release to April 20, 2007. It is even more unrealistic to suggest that Medis would co-opt the biggest announcement in the history of the Company to achieve that goal.
4. Conclusion
Considering
all
of the facts alleged, the lack of any facts to support the contention that Defendants knowingly made false statements, the absence of specific facts showing that Defendants had access to information contradicting their public statements, and the overall implausibility of the suggested scheme, Plaintiffs have not alleged “strong circumstantial evidence of conscious misbehavior or recklessness.”
ATSI,
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Defendants’ motion to dismiss the Amended Complaint is GRANTED. The Clerk of Court is directed to terminate this motion and close this case.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Except where specified, the facts are drawn exclusively from Plaintiff's Amended Complaint and the exhibits attached thereto and are taken as true for the purposes of this motion.
. According to the Company’s website, the PowerPack purports to be the "world's first consumer fuel cell” power system, (¶ 17.)
. According to media reports issued by David Redstone's investment newsletter "Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Investor,” Lifton and Udis have been "friends for years.” (¶ 21.)
. The Addendum appeared beneath the original text first posted on April 13, 2008. Though the Addendum is not quoted in the Amended Complaint or included in the version of the
Inside Greentech
article attached to the Amended Complaint, it was added to the online version of the article on April 19, 2007 — four days before this action commenced on April 23, 2007. Thus, the Addendum was part of the article as it existed when Plaintiff filed this action. Since Plaintiff has incorporated this article by reference, the Court may consider all portions thereof existing at the time of filing, including the Addendum, without converting this action into a motion for summary judgment.
See In re Astrazeneca Sec. Litig.,
. The full text of the Addendum reads:
This week, Microsoft started asserting to the media that it has only ordered a small quantity of Medis’ fuel cells as trade show giveaways.
This flies in the face of what we were told by Medis itself, as quoted above, which, when specifically asked, emphatically maintained that Microsoft was ordering these in large quantities ("millions,” he said) for resale.
As the one who performed the interview with Medis, let me confirm that this is indeed what we were told by the company. Also for the record, a Medis executive, upon seeing our article, called Inside Greentech to suggest the Microsoft order was substantially smaller in size than what the company’s spokesperson had told us. No contrary numbers were given. Nor was any suggestion made that these products weren’t intended for resale.
(Renner Aff, Ex. C.)
. The Amended Complaint can be read to allege motive, but only with respect to Udis: “His compensation was directly tied to the Company's sales. Udis is entitled to 1% of the actual completed sales on his accounts. Thus, Udis was fully aware of the terms of the Microsoft sale when he made his statements to
Greentech."
(AC ¶ 50.) The Court will disregard this allegation in light of: (1) Plaintiff's concession that it is not pursuing its theory of scienter on motive and opportunity (Lead Pis.' Mem. of Law in Opp’n to Defs.’
. The Court reads the 8-K to suggest that Udis, as the marketing representative, had only limited authority to bind the Company in deals with potential customers. It was left to Weiss and Finkelshtain to meet with companies and government officials in Asia to "follow upon” the groundwork set by Udis in his earlier visits there. See Medis, 8-K, Ex. 99.1 (June 1, 2006). If Udis could have spoken for the Company on his own, there would have been little need to send higher-ranking executives to discuss distribution and purchasing.
