MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
This securities fraud action was dismissed without prejudice after the Supreme Court issued its decision in
Lampf, Pieva, Lipkind, Prupis & Petigrow v. Gilbertson,
While Plaintiffs appeal of the denial was pending, the Supreme Court invalidated the law on which the motion was based to the extent it ordered courts to reopen final judgments of the judiciary.
Plant v. Spendthrift Farm, Inc.,
— U.S. —,
Before me is the third motion by defendant Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc. (“Dean Witter”) to dismiss the Amended Complaint in *1414 this action. Dean Witter asserts Plaintiffs claims are time-barred under Lampf and Plant. Alternatively, Dean Witter asserts Rosenthal’s claims should be dismissed (1) for failure to allege reliance under the fraud-in-the-market theory; (2) for failure to allege fraud with the requisite particularity required by Rule 9(b), Fed.R.Civ.P; and (3) because § 10(b) claims based on allegedly fraudulent statements regarding future prospects are not actionable under the “bespeaks caution” doctrine.
I agree Rosenthal’s claims are untimely and find they were never subject to reinstatement. I therefore grant the motion.
I. BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY.
In 1986, Dean Witter underwrote an issue of special district bonds by Castle Pines North Metropolitan District (the “District”). The District was created for the purpose of providing the constructing and installing of water, sanitary sewer and street improvements on 1,603 acres of land located in Douglas County, Colorado. The land was being developed by defendant Castle Pines Land Company (“Castle Pines”).
Howard Rosenthal, a Pennsylvania resident, purchased $25,000 of these bonds in the initial offering on July 17, 1986 from his Dean Witter broker in Philadelphia. The bonds defaulted, and on November 14, 1990, the District filed for bankruptcy.
Rosenthal initiated this securities lawsuit on behalf of himself and others similarly' situated on April 11,1991, naming Dean Witter and others as defendants. He amended his Complaint on July 3, 1991. Rosenthal alleged the “Official Statement” pursuant to which the bonds were issued contained material misstatements and omissions regarding the risks of the investment and future prospects for completing the Castle Pines development. Relying on a “fraud-created-the-market” theory of reliance, Rosenthal alleged Defendants wrongfully induced him to purchase the bonds by publishing false and misleading statements in the Official Statement. Specifically, Rosenthal asserted claims for violation of Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 of the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b); for violation of Colorado’s statutory analogs to § 10(b) and Rule 10b-5, Colo.Rev.Stat. §§ 11-51-123, 125; and for common law fraud.
On July 16, 1991, Rosenthal filed a nearly identical action in Colorado state court. That case, Civil Action No., 92-CV-429, Div. 2 in Douglas County District Court, is pending.
The procedural meanderings that followed bear illumination, if only as a means of explaining why, more than five years after suit was filed and ten years after the subject bonds were purchased, there is still no scheduling order in effect in this ease.
The proceedings form a montage of the changing landscape in federal securities litigation and the difficulties, facing courts attempting to manage securities case.
See generally Olcott v. Delaware Flood Co.,
On July 21, 1991, the Supreme Court issued its decision in
Lampf.
The decision articulated a one-year/three year statute of limitations for all future and then-pending § 10(b) actions: such actions would have to be brought within one year after the discovery of the alleged fraud, but in no event more than three years after the violation giving rise to the.claim.
Lampf,
*1415 The Supreme Court denied the petition for rehearing in Lampf on September 21, 1991. Rosenthal moved for dismissal, and on September 23, 1991, Judge Finesilver dismissed Rosenthal’s § 10(b) claim and related state law claims without prejudice. The parties were ordered to pay their own costs.
On December 19, 1991, Congress enacted legislation requiring the application of pre Lampf state law statutes оf limitations to § 10(b) actions pending at the time Lampf was decided, and ordering courts to reinstate actions that had been dismissed under Lampf See Section 27A(a) & (b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (§ 476 of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Improvement Act of 1991 (codified at 15 U.S.C. § 78aa-l (1994))). Pursuant to § 27A(b), Rosenthal filed a motion on February 7, 1992 to reinstate his claims. Rosenthal also moved to stay the action, however, expressing his “inten[t] to proceed with the State Court Action which is far advanced as to substantial motions and discovery from the present action for which a Motion for Reinstatement has only just been filed.” Mot. to Stay (filed Feb. 7,1992), ¶ 6.
On February 10, 1992, before Judge Fine-silver had ruled on either motion, the state court issued a substantive ruling dismissing Rosenthal’s securities claims for failure adequately to allege reliance. Judge Finesilver granted Rosenthal’s Motion to Withdraw Motion for Stay the following day.
In its opposition to Rosenthal’s Motion for Reinstatement, Dean Witter argued § 27A violated separation of powers principles and was unconstitutiоnal. Judge Finesilver agreed and denied Rosenthal’s motion, finding that in enacting § 27A, Congress acted as a ‘“super-appellate court’” and usurped powers reserved for the courts.
See
Order (dated June 15, 1992) at 8-9. Rosenthal appealed. Based on its then-recent ruling in
Anixter v. Home-Stake Prod. Co.,
On remand Dean Witter again moved to dismiss, urging preclusive effect be given the state court’s dismissal of Rosenthal’s claims on 12(b)(6) and 9(b) grounds. Judge Finesilver granted Dean Witter’s motion, and Rosenthal аgain appealed. The Tenth Circuit abated this second appeal pending the outcome of Rosenthal’s appeal of the state court decision to the Colorado Supreme Court.
While the state and federal appeals were pending, the United States Supreme Court decided
Plant v. Spendthrift Farm, Inc.,
— U.S. ——,
II. DISCUSSION.
A. Statute of Limitations.
The question to be determined is the effect of Plant on an action that was voluntarily dismissed, rather than reduced to final judgment, under Lampf. Rosenthal argues Plaut has no effect on his claims because reinstatement would not operate to reopen a final judgment: His claims were dismissed upon his own motion, rather than after a judgment on the merits, and were without, rather than with prejudice. Dean Witter denies the distinction is material, arguing the dismissal created “precisely the type of ‘finality 1 that cannot be disturbed under the mandate of Plant.” Reply Br. at 4.
Both the Tenth and Fifth Cirсuits have addressed the issue of finality set forth in
Plant.
In
Anixter V,
the Tenth Circuit looked to the appealability versus nonappealability of the case at the time § 27A was enacted to determine whether or not the case was “final” for the purposes of
Plant.
In
TGX
Corp.
v. Simmons,
Invoking Anixter V, Dean Witter argues Rosenthal’s failure to appeal Judge Finesilver’s September 23, 1991 order rendered it “final” before § 27A was enacted on December 19, 1991. Rosenthal counters that his “time for appeal had not yet begun to run” as of December 19,1991, because Judge Finesilver’s order had never been reduced to judgment under Fed.R.Civ.P. 58. Both arguments are silly to the extent they posit that an order granting a motion for voluntary dismissal would ever be appealed by the movant. Equally irrelevant is Rosenthal’s contention that a dismissal “without prejudice” based on plaintiffs motion, rather than an adjudication on the merits as in TGX, is not a “final judgment” for purposes of Anixter V. The Johnston finality test applied in Anixter V is simply inapposite in the case of a dismissal under Rule 41(a)(2).
The salient issue is the practical effect of a dismissal “without prejudice” on the applicability of § 27A under
Plant.
After
Plant,
the only actions subject to reinstatement under § 27A(b) are those that had not yet “made [their] way through the courts!’ at the time it was enacted. Anixter,
A voluntary dismissal without prejudice leaves the situation as if the action never had been filed.
Brown v. Hartshorne Public School Dist. No. 1,
I conclude Rosenthal’s claims were never subject to § 27A and, therefore, are time-barred under Lampf. Mindful of this case’s long history and in an effort to avoid even further delay, I will go on, in the alternative, to consider Dean Witter’s other arguments in support of its motion to dismiss.
B. The Adequacy of Rosenthal’s Factual Allegations—Reliance.
Dean Witter argues Rosenthal’s Amended Complaint should be dismissed for failure to allege reliance under the fraud-created-the-market theory and for failure to plead fraud with particularity as required under Rule 9(b), Fed.R.Civ.P. I agree. Thus, even if Rosenthal’s claims were subject to reinstatement under § 27A, they would be subject to dismissal under Rule 12(b).
Reliance is the element of a § 10(b) claim that provides the causal connection between the аlleged misconduct and the plaintiffs injury.
Basic Inc. v. Levinson,
In the present case, Rosenthal does not claim to have relied directly on the Official Statement (or even to have read it) in purchasing the Bonds. Instead, he claims he is entitled to a presumption of relianсe under the “fraud-created-the-market” doctrine.
The Fifth Circuit recognized the fraud-created-the-market doctrine in
Shores v. Sklar,
‘(1) the defendants knowingly conspired to bring, securities onto the market which were not entitled to be marketed, intending to defraud, purchasers; (2) [plaintiff] reasonably relied on the Bonds’ availability on the market as an indication of their apparent genuineness, and (3) as a result of the scheme to defraud [plaintiff] suffered a loss.’
The “fraud-created-the-market” doctrine, which permits a plaintiff to maintain an action under § 10(b) by proving that the defendant’s fraud allowed securities to come into and exist in the market that otherwise would have been unmarketable, is to be distinguished from the “fraud-on-the-market” doctrine, which recognizes that in an open and developed market, the price of a security reflects the appropriate synthesis of all relevant information regarding a security, including material misrepresentations.
Basic,
In
Raney,
the Tenth Circuit explained the rationale for the “fraud-created-the-market” doctrine as being that purchasers should be permitted, given federal and state regulation of new securities, to assume new securities “were lawfully issued.”
*1418 Rosenthal does not allege the Bonds were unlawfully issued; rather, he asserts the Bonds were “unworthy” of trading in a regulated securities market. See Pl.’s Reply at 11. According to Rosenthal, the misrepresentations and omissions in the Official Statement were “so egregious” that no investor would have purchased the Bonds had they known how “little, if any,” chance the development had “of supporting the payments necessary to retire the 1986 Bonds.” Am. Compl. ¶ 14. Specifically, Rosеnthal contends: (1) Defendants knew the overall growth and revenue projections in the Official Statement were either incorrect or lacked any reasonable basis (Am.Compl. ¶ 60(a)); (2) Defendants failed to disclose either a substantial downturn in the economy before the Bonds were issued (id. ¶ 60(b)) or that Castle Pines had been experiencing financial problems that led to the issuance of the Bonds as a secret means of replenishing its lines of credit (¶ 60(c)); (3) Defendants failed to disclose that the mill levy rate would generate insufficient revenue to retire the Bonds (¶ 60(d)); and (4) Defendants failed to disclose substantial problems with fee collections and that related projections were therefore intentionally inflated or lacked any reasonable basis. Id. ¶ 60(g).
Dean Witter asserts these allegations are insufficient, as a matter of law, to support an inference of presumptive reliance under the “fraud-created-the-market” doctrine. I agree.
Judge Sam of the United States District Court for the District оf Utah addressed the sufficiency of “fraud-created-the-market” allegations in a decision recently affirmed by the Tenth Circuit.
See Arena Land & Inv. Co., Inc. v. Petty,
The fraud-created-the-market theory, Judge Sam explained,
‘is a circular theory based on faith in the market itself. The theory presumes the securities market is legitimate, and that buyers rely on its legitimacy. As a result, the theory recognizes that the market inevitably confers legitimacy on all of its products; in effect, the market certifies that each traded security has some value. Because of this certification, buyers may presume any tradеd security in the market must be worth at least something, or else it would not be there.’
The theory, Judge Sam concluded, appears to be based on “ ‘some illegality in the process оf issuing the securities.’ ”
Id.
(quoting
Kelley v. Mid-America Racing Stables, Inc.,
Rosenthal’s allegations in the instant ease fall far short of establishing that fraud “created” the market for the 1986 Bonds. Rosenthal does not claim the Bonds “could not have been marketed at any price”; to the contrary, he concеdes they “had some economic worth.” Reply Br. at 11. I conclude Rosenthal has failed to allege reliance under any cognizable theory of relief.
In doing so, I emphasize the fact that both the “fraud-created-the-market” and “fraud-on-the-market” doctrines are exceptions to the general rule that plaintiffs must demonstrate actual reliance to prevail on a claim for securities fraud. As exceptions, they are to be construed narrowly. Accordingly, the circumstances under which the Tenth Circuit recognized the doctrine of “fraud-created-the-market” in T.J. Raney should be the high *1419 water mark for its application. The doctrine should not be extended, as Rosenthal wishes, to the point that reliance is presumed simply because bonds issued during an economic upswing are later defaulted upon. The purpose of the securities laws is to maintain a credible market, not to create one that is risk-free, which would amount to no market at all. Moreover, the purpose of securities litigation is to supрort and protect the established credible market, not to create or nurture a separate industry of its own.
Finally, I note other circuits have declined to apply the “fraud-created-the-market” doctrine on the facts of cases that have reached them.
See Ockerman v. May Zima & Co.,
III. CONCLUSION.
The federal securities fraud claims brought by Plaintiff Howard Rosenthal against Dean Witter and the other named Defendants fail as a matter of law. As an initial matter, the claims are time-barred under
Lamp/, Pleva, Lipkind, Prupis & Petigrow v. Gilbertson,
Even if Rosenthal’s federal claims were not time-barred, they are subject to dismissal under Rule 12(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure for failure to allege reliance under any cognizable theory of relief. Accordingly, I decline to address Defendants’ arguments under the “bespeaks caution” doctrine or Rule 9(b). The pending motion for class certificátion is mooted.
Based on the foregoing, Plaintiffs claims under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 are DISMISSED. No federal claims remain' to provide a basis for exercising supplemental jurisdiction over Rosenthal’s state law claims. Accordingly, Dean Witters’ Motion to Dismiss Plaintiffs Amended Complaint in its entirety is GRANTED. The action is DISMISSED and all remaining pending motions denied as MOOT.
ORDER ON MOTION TO RECONSIDER
Plaintiff Howard Rosenthal moves for reconsideration of my September 25, 1996 Memorandum Opinion and Order dismissing his complaint in this securities fraud action. I reaffirm my order.
Rosenthal urges two grounds for reconsideration: (1) that the dismissal of his complaint wаs “manifestly unjust”; and (2) that this court misapprehended the fraud-created-the-market doctrine as applied in this circuit in
T.J. Raney & Sons, Inc. v. Fort Cobb Oklahoma Irrigation Fuel Auth.,
A. Manifest Injustice.
With respect to the first argument, Rosenthal contends it is manifestly unjust to “punish” him for voluntarily dismissing his claim, rather than maintaining an invalid one, after the petition for rehearing of
Lampf, Pleva, Lipkind, Prupis & Petigrow v. Gilbertson,
As an initial matter, both Smith and Gutierrez involved pro se plaintiffs. Rosenthal has been represented throughout these proceedings. Further, neither Smith nor Gutierrez supports a finding of manifest injustice in this case.
In
Smith,
the court expressly declined to carve out an equitable exception for the
pro se
plaintiff, recognizing statutes of limitations
*1420
are jurisdictional in nature and must be enforced.
Finally, Rosenthal is not left without a forum for his claims. His state court action remains pending before the state District Court in Douglas County; he is losing but one of two bites of the same apple. 1 Under these circumstances, I agree Rosenthal’s request for equitable relief is neither pеrsuasive nor compelling.
B Fraud-Created-the-Market.
A motion for reconsideration is proper when the court has “made a mistake not of reasoning but of apprehension ... [or] if there has been a significant change or development in the law or facts since submission.”
EEOC v. Foothills Title Guar. Co.,
Rosenthal argues I misapprehеnded and “directly contradicted]” the law in this circuit when. I concluded, in dicta 2 that he could not invoke the fraud-created-the-market doctrine presumption of reliance. By alleging Defendants “knowingly conspired to bring securities into the market which were not entitled to be marketed,” Rosenthal maintains he satisfied the pleading requirements set forth in Raney. I disagree.
As set forth in my Memorandum Opinion and Order, the rationale underlying the fraud-created-the-market doctrine in
Raney
is that investors are entitled to assume “new securities ‘were lawfully issued.’ ” Maj. op. at 1417 (citing
Raney,
*1421 As clarified above, I stand by my interpretation of Raney and reject the contention that it is inconsistent with the post-Raney decisions of other courts in this circuit. Accordingly,
The Motion to Reconsider is DENIED, and the Memorandum Opinion and Order issued on September 25, 1996 is REAFFIRMED.
Notes
. This was the third in a series of five opinions issued by the Tenth Circuit in the
Anixter
securities litigation.
In Anixter I,
. In a departure from the trend in the federal courts, the Colorado Supreme Court found conclusoiy allegations that defendants' fraud "caused plaintiff's harm" sufficient to state a cause of action under the Colorado analog.
See, e.g., Basic Inc. v. Levinson,
. Section 27A(b) provides that any private civil action under § 10(b) "that was commenced on or before June 19, 1991 ... [and] which was dismissed as time barred subsequent to June 19, 1991 ... shall be reinstated on motion by the plaintiff not later than 60 days after December 19, 1991.” 15 U.S.C. § 78aa-1 (1988 ed., Supp. V).
. In its Response to Rosenthal's Motion for Reconsideration, Dean Witter notes that on October 1, 1996, the state court granted Rosenthal's Motion for Class Certification.
. As set forth in my Memorandum Opinion and Order, I considered the fraud-created-the-market doctrine and Rosenthal's ability to show reliance in dicta to avoid any further delay in the resolution of this case. Mindful that an appeal to the Tenth Circuit on the statute of limitations issue was likely, I elected to consider the reliance issue to expedite matters were the Court of Appeals to reverse.
. Again, the "fraud-created-the-market" doctrine, which permits a plaintiff to maintain an action under § 10(b) by proving that the defendant's fraud allowed securities to come into and exist in the market that otherwise would have been unmarketable, is to be distinguished from the “fraud-on-the-market” doctrine, which recognizes that in an open and developed market, the price of a security reflects the appropriate synthesis of all relevant information regarding a security, including .material misrepresentations.
Basic Inc. v. Levinson,
