OPINION AND. ORDER
Thеse two actions involve claims that an equity analyst, defendant Paul Johnson, engaged in a scheme with the knowledge of his employer broker-dealer, defendant Robertson Stephens, to commit securities fraud by publishing false statements of opinion about two stock issuers, Redback and Sycamore, in reports distributed by Robertson Stephens. Plaintiffs are investors who purchased the securities of Red-back and Sycamore during the time Johnson and Robertson Stephens were issuing the allegedly false and misleading reports,' and who seek to represent a class of others similarly situated. On February 10, 2004, this Court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss plaintiffs’ class action complaints for securities fraud in these two cases. 1 Plaintiffs have now moved pursuant to Rule 59(e) to amend the February 10 Order to explicitly allow leave to amend the complaints, and to lift the stay of discovery pursuant to the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act (“PSLRA”) to permit additional discovery. In the course of briefing on the motion, the nature of the relief sought by plaintiffs has changed somewhat, but in the end the result must be the same. The motion will be denied.
DISCUSSION
In the February 10 Order, the Court ruled that plaintiffs had failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted under section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b), and Rule 10b-5 promulgated thereunder, because they had failed to allege specific provable statements or actions from which a factfin-der could reasonably infer that the published opinions of the defendants were not truly held.
Podany v. Robertson Stephens, Inc.,
The motion, as initially formulated, was totally without merit. While courts are receptive to motions to replead where the defects that led to dismissal can be cured,
see
Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(a) (“leave [to amend] shall be freely given when justice so requires”);
Foman v. Davis,
Plaintiffs’ request for discovery does not provide such a reason. Except in certain limited circumstances, see, e.g., Fed.R.Civ.P. 27 (allowing depositions before an action is filed where necessary to perpetuate vital testimony), discovery is authorized solely for parties to develop the facts in a lawsuit in which a plaintiff has stated a legally cognizable claim, not in order to permit a plaintiff to find out whether he has such a claim, and still less to salvage a lawsuit that has already beеn dismissed for failure to state a claim. Whatever the norms of discovery in the ordinary lawsuit, such a request is even more plainly without merit in cases covered by the PSLRA. In such cases, Congress has specifically imposed a stay of “all discovery and other proceedings ... during the pendency of any motion to dismiss,” 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4(b)(3)(B), creating a strong presumрtion that no discovery should take place until a court has affirmatively decided that a complaint does state a claim under the securities laws, by denying a motion to dismiss. See also S. Rep. 104-98, at 14 (1995) (“the Committee has determined that discovery should be permitted in securities class actions only after the court has sustained the legal sufficiency of the cоmplaint.”).
WTiile the PSLRA permits a court to lift the stay if it makes a finding that “particularized discovery is necessary to preserve evidence or prevent undue prejudice to [a] party,” the entire purpose of the stay provision is to avoid saddling defendants with the burden of discovery in meritless cases, and to discourage the filing of cases that lack adequate support for their allegations in the mere hope that the traditionally broad civil discovery proceedings will produce facts that could be used to state a valid claim. See id. (describing testimony on the costs and burden of discovery in private securities litigation and decrying the use of discovery for “fishing exрeditions”). To grant a motion for post-dismissal discovery, where a complaint has already been found inadequate and where plaintiffs’ hope of finding facts to salvage the complaint is entirely speculative, would fly in the face of clear congressional intent.
The cases cited by plaintiffs are not to the contrary. (P. Mеm. 6-7.)
In re WorldCom
is simply a case in which the PSLRA stay was lifted to permit limited discovery in a still-pending case, where the complaint had not been dismissed (indeed no motion to dismiss had yet been filed), and where special circumstances not present here warranted lifting the stay to prevent significant harm to plaintiffs.
On reply, however, while not withdrawing their request for discovery, plaintiffs did attach proposed amended complaints, which they contend provide a basis for leave to replead and for allowing discovery to proceed. Having obtained a copy of defendant Johnson’s testimony in a deposition by the Securities and Exchange Commission, 3 plaintiffs now set forth additional facts derived from that testimony, and incorporate those facts into the new proposed amendеd complaints. In a sur-re-ply, which the Court authorized to allow defendants to address the new matters raised in the reply brief, defendants again oppose the filing of amended complaints, arguing inter alia that the proposed amendments would be futile.
Plaintiffs’ eleventh-hour proposal of amended complaints, filed in a reply brief on a motion to amend a judgment of dismissal, is to say the least unconventionally timed. Nevertheless, the predominant issue here must be the merits óf plaintiffs’ proposed amended complaints. Plaintiffs’ previous complaints were dismissed not because they failed to state a viable legal theory, but because they failed to assert specific facts sufficient to meet the standards under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b), the PSLRA, and
Virginia Bankshares, Inc. v. Sandberg,
The proposed amended complaint in
Fi-nazzo,
alleging the issuance of fraudulent opinions regarding the securities of Red-back, is easily disposed of. The essential issue here is whether plaintiffs have alleged facts giving rise to “a strong inference of fraudulent intent,”
Acito v. IMC-ERA Group, Inc.,
Although plaintiffs claim to have discovered “precisely the powerful evidence that was lacking from the original complaint” (P. Rep. 1), in fact almost no additional infоrmation bearing on Johnson’s opinion of Redback is included in the amended Finazzo complaint. Plaintiffs do not allege that Johnson sold his Redback shares while telling the world it should buy, nor that he advised his friends or associates to sell their Redback shares contrary to his public advice. The new facts now alleged — that Johnson placed his Redbaсk stock in a blind trust and used the shares as collateral for a loan — do not demonstrate, or even support a plausible inference, that Johnson did not truly believe the stock was valuable or likely to appreciate.
The proposed
Podany
amended complaint, alleging fraudulent opinions regarding the securities of Sycamore, presents а closer question. That complaint alleges that Johnson did sell a portion of his Sycamore holdings in late November or early December 2000, after issuing a report on November 15, 2000, which reiterated his previous “buy” rating for Sycamore, a rating which was repeated in Johnson’s February 14, 2001, report. Moreover, the alleged transactiоn was not an ordinary sale of securities. According to the complaint, the Sycamore shares were in a blind trust and in order to dispose of the shares Johnson had to violate the terms of the trust and specifically direct the sale. It is arguable that this suggests a greater than normal urgency to sell the shares.
4
At the same time, while Johnson elected to sell
Plaintiffs also make much of a January 2000 e-mail exchange between Johnsоn and another Robertson Stephens analyst, Tim Weingarten. In response to Weingar-ten’s comment that the announcements of another telecom startup company, also covered by Johnson but not the subject of either of these lawsuits, regarding customer “wins” were “a joke,” Johnson replied, “[hjowever, fiction is sometimes morе powerful than reality. Do you believe that Sycamore wins are that much more impressive?” (D. Rep., Ex. A at ¶ 42.) Despite plaintiffs’ best rhetorical efforts, these remarks simply are not evidence that Johnson’s published opinions on Sycamore (or Redback, for that matter) were fraudulent. In the context of the technology and telecom startup companies that Johnson analyzed, many of whom did not have any significant business or financial history, and in the context of a market in which, like all markets, pricing is determined relative to the market price of similar goods, these brief remarks do not give rise to an inference of fraudulent intent. To the contrary, Johnson’s statement reads as an assertion that this startup’s shares (and, by implication, Sycamore’s) had value, in an optimistic market, notwithstanding alleged weaknesses in the business’s acquisition of customers.
Fraud may not be alleged based on a tortured reading that would turn a casual e-mail remark on the importance of perception to a startup’s prospects into some sort of “confession” by Johnson that his published analyst reports on those companies were themselves “fiction.” Although the e-mail may indicate that Johnson did not feel compelled to deflate what appear in hindsight to be wildly unstable and overpriced market valuations in telecom startups, and this may reflect poorly on his desirability as a personal investment advis- or, it simply does not support an inference, much less a strong inference, that his published opinions regarding Sycamore and Redback were not truly held.
See, e.g. In re Merrill Lynch & Co. Research Reports Sec. Litig.,
The Court is mindful that аn inference of fraudulent intent may be based on the totality of the evidence, and that plaintiffs need not establish that each individual fact, taken alone, creates a strong inference of fraud. However, in these cases, although the conduct of Johnson and Robertson Stephens with respect to Redback and Sycamore securities, at least as alleged by plaintiffs, appears to stray far from the standards one might hope would govern the behavior of once-respected investment analysts at financial services institutions, it falls short of the pleading standards for securities fraud. The plaintiffs’ request for permission to file amended complaints in the Finazzo and Podany actions is denied on grounds of futility, and the Court declines to grant permission for plaintiffs to conduct discovery of defendants in these dismissed actions.
For all of the foregoing reasons, the plaintiffs’ motion to amend the order and judgment of dismissal pursuant to Rule 59(e), to lift the stay of discovery under the PSLRA, and for entry of a scheduling order is denied.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. A full discussiоn" of the factual báckground in these cases is contained in "the Court's February 10 Order.
Podany v. Robertson Stephens, Inc.,
. Although plaintiffs cite to
In re FirstEnergy Corp. Sec. Litig.,
03 Civ. 1684 (N.D.Ohio (P.Mem.2, 6)), the then-unpublished order they attach for this cite is from
In re FirstEnergy Shareholder Derivative Litig.,
. The exact manner in which plaintiffs obtained this information remains in dispute. Defendants have alleged an abuse of process (D. Mem. 5 n. 3), based on subpoenas served on the S.E.C. by plaintiffs after these actions had been dismissed. (D.Mem.Ex. C.) Although the subpoenas were plainly improper, plaintiffs do not appear to have received Johnson's deposition transcript as a result of issuing them, since the S.E.C. assured defendants in a letter that it had no intention of responding to the invalid subpoenas. (Field-stein Decl., Ex. B.)
. Defendants suggest in their sur-reply that the urgency was occasioned by a need for liquidity to cover a downpayment of some sort (D.Rep. 4), and that Johnson's custodial account at U.S. Trust was not a "blind trust” (D. Rep. 2 n. 1). However, in evaluating the possible futility of plaintiffs’ proposed amendments, the Court must accept as true all of the well-pleaded allegations in the proposed amended complaints in order to determine if they could survive a motion to dismiss.
