Medtest Corporation has a single asset: the intellectual property in a self-administered cervico-vaginal cytology testing process. Patrick Manning devised the process and together with Donald West, a lawyer, formed Medtest in December 1981 to obtain a patent and undertake development to make the process commercially attractive. Manning held 31% of the stock, West 26%, and the remainder was scattered among friends and relatives. In 1982 Manning sold some of his stock in Medtest to Robert and Anna Lisa Pommer: 250 shares in September for $25,000, and later another 2,750 shares for $175,000. The Pommers thus acquired 3% of Medtest’s outstanding stock, which is valuable only to the extent the firm pays dividends, goes public, or is acquired by a third party.
None of these things has happened, and the Pommers believe that they are the victims of fraud. A jury agreed in this action under § 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b), and the SEC’s Rule 10b-5, 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5. It awarded the Pommers more than $300,000 in damages, representing the purchase price of the stock plus interest. A magistrate judge, presiding by consent under 28 U.S.C. § 636(c), set aside the verdict and entered judgment for the defendants. She concluded that none of the representations made to the Pommers was materially false.
I
Given the verdict, we must take all of the evidence in the light most favorable to the Pommers. A jury could have concluded that West told the Pommers, while they were negotiating to buy the stock, that Medtest had a U.S. patent on the process and that a sale of Medtest to Abbott Laboratories, at a price between $50 million and $100 million, was imminent (“almost a finished deal”). A 3% interest in Medtest would have been worth between $1.5 million and $3 million had such a sale been consummated. In fact Medtest did not have a patent at the time. Counsel informed West in December 1981 that the process was patentable; the firm filed an application on September 30, 1982, and the patent issued on August 14,1984. Medtest was not in the last stage of negotiation with Abbott Laboratories; it raised the subject with Abbott, and Abbott’s employees mentioned a price in the $50 to $100 million range, but no details had been discussed, no hands had been shaken — and on October 28, 1982, Abbott sent Medtest a letter stating that it was not interested in *623 acquiring Medtest. Since then Medtest has been developing the process on its own.
The magistrate judge concluded that the representations about the existence of a patent were not material — and therefore did not support relief under the securities laws — because counsel had told West that the process was patentable, and Medtest obtained a patent in due course. The judge continued: “It is true that Pommer testified that he would not have purchased his shares had he known the patent had not actually issued, but he never explained this self-serving conclusion or suggested any reason why it would make a difference to him.” As for the sale to Abbott, the judge wrote: “Pommer’s own testimony demonstrated that he knew that the time of sale and its terms were indefinite. [A]ny person of Mr. Pommer’s intelligence and sophistication [knows that nothing under negotiation is] absolutely certain.... Negotiations involving a price range of between 50 and 100 million dollars indisputably indicate that a lot remains to be negotiated and decided.”
Considerations of this kind show that a verdict in defendants’ favor could not be disturbed. They do not, however, show that no reasonable juror could think the statements material. A statement is material when there is “a substantial likelihood that the disclosure of the omitted fact would have been viewed by the reasonable investor as having significantly altered the ‘total mix’ of information made available.”
TSC Industries, Inc. v. Northway,
Inc.,
So too with the negotiations to-sell Med-test to Abbott Laboratories. Until the last minute a deal may collapse, but some deals are more likely to close than others. Probabilities determine the value of stock. At a 90% chance of a buyout for $50 million, the Pommers’ stock was worth $1.35 million; at a 10% chance it was worth $150,000. A-jury could determine that West conveyed to the Pommers a substantially higher probability than the facts supported — that although West represented that the parties were just about to sign on the dotted line, actually there had been no more than superficial discussions, and Abbott had no serious interest in acquiring Medtest. There is “a substantial likelihood” that the Pommers (and any other “reasonable investor”) would have viewed the truth about the negotiations with Abbott as “significantly altering] the ‘total mix’ of informa-; tion made available.”
Defendants insist that until the parties agree on the price and structure of a transaction, the issuer may say what it pleases. For this proposition they cite
Flamm v. Eberstadt,
One could recast the magistrate judge’s conclusion about the sale to Abbott as a finding that the Pommers knew enough of the truth that West’s lies did not significantly affect their appreciation of the situation. An issuer that utters a mixture of truth and falsehood may have furnished the information necessary for an accurate appreciation of the securities’ value — especially when the truth is written and the lie is oral.
Teamsters Local 282 Pension Trust Fund v. Angelos,
The Pommers must have been aware that a deal with Abbott was not just around the corner. A substantial range of price implied that hard negotiations lay ahead. West told them that Medtest needed to secure foreign patents, and that with these in hand it would be an attractive acquisition candidate. As the magistrate judge remarked, foreign patents cannot be obtained in a flash. The Pommers waited more than a year before beefing; would they have sat quietly so long if they really thought they had been promised a bonanza in a few weeks? The price of the securities also implies that a sale was a long shot: Why would Manning sell 3% of Medtest to the Pommers for $200,000 if the stock soon would be worth $1.5 million and up? Even if Manning desperately needed to raise capital, better terms must have been available. Robert Pommer said at one point that he viewed the investment in Medtest as his chance to hit the Lotto — yet he persuaded the jury that the defendants sold him a sure thing.
Whether these things would be enough to neutralize the representations about Abbott we need not say. The falsehood about the patent remains. More, we have emphasized that an issuer needs to disclose the truth clearly before a lie becomes immaterial.
Acme Propane, Inc. v. Tenexco, Inc.,
II
Although defendants are not entitled to judgment notwithstanding the verdict, they sought a new trial in the alternative. The magistrate judge accepted their principal argument but did not formally grant the motion, deeming the subject moot. The Pommers ask us to disapprove the judge’s conclusion, and thus avert any possibility of a new trial. Whether to grant a new trial is a question for the trial judge in the first instance, with deferential appellate review. E.g.,
EEOC v. Century Broadcasting Corp.,
The Pommers put before the jury Abbott’s letter of October 28, 1982, disclaiming interest in Medtest. They contended that defendants’ failure to show them this letter, while they were still paying for the stock, is an independent securities fraud. Defendants contended that the use of the letter should be restricted. The magistrate judge told the lawyers to argue their versions to the jury but after trial wrote that she should have kept the letter out of evidence, because the Pommers agreed to buy the stock before Abbott sent the letter. In contending that the judge’s second thoughts are wrong, the Pommers again have an uphill contest, for our review of evidentiary matters is deferential. See
Taylor v. National R.R. Passenger Corp.,
The truth (or falsity) of defendants’ statements, and their materiality, must be assessed at the time the statements are made, and not in the light of hindsight. We made exactly this point about the patent issued in 1984. The letter arrived after the Pommers agreed to purchase the stock. It was on this ground that the magistrate judge concluded that she should have restrained the Pommers’ use of the document. Nonetheless, the Pommers contend, the judge was right the first time, because, if they had known that Abbott had broken off negotiations, they would have stopped paying.
If the Pommers were saying that they did not sign a contract to purchase the stock until after October 28, 1982, they would have a point. The statute of frauds is enforced rigorously in securities cases. UCC § 8-319;
Kagan v. Edison Brothers Stores, Inc.,
*626
According to the Pommers,
Goodman v. Epstein,
To say that withholding the letter from the Pommers is not an independent fraud is not (necessarily) to say that the letter is inadmissible. Although the parties stipulated that Medtest and Abbott conducted some negotiations, the letter may support an inference that these never became serious. Such an inference would assist the Pommers in demonstrating that the defendants acted with intent to defraud. Whether the letter may be used with appropriate cautions to the jury is a subject for the trial judge in the first instance.
Ill
Several other issues may come up on remand, and we comment briefly on them to speed this litigation along.
1. Manning sold the stock, yet Medtest and West are the defendants. West may be liable for his own misstatements, if made “in connection with” Manning’s sale of stock. In addition to the “connection” language of both statute and rule, see Blue Chip Stamps. Whether West knew that Manning was dealing with the Pommers is an important issue that the trier of fact should resolve.
2. If West was ignorant of Manning’s dealings or stood to gain nothing from them, then his own statements to the Pom-mers look more like boasting over the coffee table (they were social friends). Scien-ter, another element of liability under § 10(b) and Rule 1 Ob-6, would be hard to establish. See
Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder,
3. Vicarious liability remains a possibility. But the chain — Manning’s statements attributed to Medtest, and then back to West — is weak at both links. Section 20(a) of the ’34 Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78t(a), extends liability to “[e]very person who ... controls any person liable under any provision of this chapter ... unless the controlling person acted in good faith and did not directly or indirectly induce the act or acts constituting the violation or cause of action.” Manning and West both exercise control over Medtest and so might be liable, if Medtest is liable.
But what makes Medtest liable? Section 20(a) does not establish the liability of controlled entities. It takes common law vicarious liability to reach Medtest, and such liability would depend on a finding that Manning or West acted as Medtest’s agents, and within the scope of their authority. Manning sold for his own account, not for Medtest’s. Investors, acting as investors, are not agents of the corporation. The Pommers do not contend that Manning bought the stock with a “view to a distribution” and so was Medtest’s underwriter. *627 Under § 2(11) of the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. § 77b(ll), a control person is an “issuer” for the purpose of defining an underwriter, but that does not help — it would make the Pommers the underwriters! At all events, the Pommers have not argued that Medtest should have registered the issue of stock, perhaps because under § 13 of the ’33 Act, 15 U.S.C. § 77m; they sued too late. The magistrate judge thought it sufficient that “West and Manning had apparent authority to act on behalf of Medtest and to sell stock”, but she did not mention the fact that Manning was not selling “on behalf of” Medtest. He sold his- own shares, a fact conspicuously disclosed to the Pommers. The subject bears a fresh look on remand.
So does the imputation of any of Manning’s wrongs to West via § 20(a). West is a control person, all right, but if he “did not directly or indirectly induce the act or acts constituting the violation or cause of action” he is not liable under that section.
Schlifke v. Seafirst Corp.,
4. This suit is problematic under the federal statute of limitations that now governs actions under § 10(b) and Rule 10b-5. See
Lampf, Pleva, Lipkind, Prupis & Petigrow v. Gilbertson,
- U.S. -,
The same day it decided
Lampf Pleva,
the Court issued
James B. Beam Distilling Co. v. Georgia,
- U.S. -,
Perhaps, however, the new § 27A prevents all consideration of
Beam.
If so, then the question is whether
Beam
altered the law. For if
Beam
restates established law, then the jig was up in this circuit when, in July 1990,
Short
applied the federal period to the parties in that case.
Beam
is an outgrowth of
American Trucking Associations, Inc. v. Smith,
The parties filed their briefs several months before Congress enacted § 27A. We have had no guidance on its meaning from other circuits. So far as we can tell, the legislation poses an interesting issue only for this one. As of June 19, 1991, three courts of appeals had applied a federal limitations period to litigation under § 10(b). The others will continue to apply periods derived from state law to suits filed on or before June 19, 1991. The second circuit had adopted a federal period of limitations but before June 19 had held that the new rule was not retroactive; it will therefore join the other circuits in applying state law. The third circuit had adopted a federal rule and applied it retroactively; § 27A thus compels the third circuit to continue using a federal rule. Only in this court was the retroactivity of the federal rule an open question on June 19; only we will have to decide whether Beam applies or changes the law. If we can expect no help from our judicial colleagues, it is all the more vital that we receive aid from the parties. Counsel have not addressed the subject in this court, and we invite them to do so on remand — and, of course, in this court should the subject return here.
5. The jury awarded as damages the full price of the stock, plus interest. This is a rescissionary measure, and although §§ 11 and 12 of the ’33 Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 77k,
l,
use such a starting point, those sections also allow the defendant to reduce the award by demonstrating that the misstatement did not cause the decline in value. Damages under § 10(b), by contrast, usually are the difference between the price of the stock and its value on the date of the transaction if the full truth were known. E.g.,
Goldberg v. Household Bank, f.s.b.,
A rescissionary measure of damages implies that the Medtest stock was worthless in late 1982. Yet the corporation is still in business, apparently close to putting its process on the market (or selling it to a larger firm). Although a patent application is worth (materially) less than a patent, it is worth something, and some patent applications are worth a great deal. Apparently neither the Pommers nor defendants attempted to enlighten the jury about the value of Medtest’s stock in 1982. They might believe it prudent to do so if there is' a second trial.
Reversed and Remanded.
