In Re: BP, P.L.C. Securities

800 F.3d 674, 92 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 1100, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 15938, 2015 WL 5235010
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 8, 2015
Docket14-20420
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 800 F.3d 674 (In Re: BP, P.L.C. Securities) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re: BP, P.L.C. Securities, 800 F.3d 674, 92 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 1100, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 15938, 2015 WL 5235010 (5th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

In this case, our court returns — not for the first time, and likely not for the last— to events related to the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill. The plaintiffs, all holders of BP securities, bring suit against the company and two of its executives, former CEO Anthony Hayward and former Chief Operating Officer Douglas Suttles. 1 They allege that BP made two distinct series of misrepresentations in violation of federal securities law: one series regarding its pre-spill safety procedures, and one regarding the flow rate of the oil after the spill occurred.

The plaintiffs moved to certify two classes; one for the pre-spill misrepresentations, and one for the post-spill misrepresentations. The district court certified the post-spill class, concluding that the plaintiffs had established a model of damages consistent with their liability case and capable of measurement across the class, as required by the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Comcast Corp. v. Behrend. 2 It refused to certify the pre-spill class, holding that the plaintiffs had not satisfied Comcast’s common damages burden.

Both sides petition for review. We affirm.

*678 I.

A.

The events of the 2010 Deepwater Horizon spill are well known to bench and bar and will be only briefly limned here. BP was the co-owner and co-lessee of the Ma-condo exploratory well, which was located in the Gulf of Mexico, about fifty miles from the Louisiana coast. 3 The well was drilled by the Deepwater Horizon offshore drilling vessel. A catastrophic blowout ensued.

... [0]n April 20, 2010, while the Deep-water Horizon was preparing to depart from the site in anticipation of the permanent extraction operation. As part of this preparation, the well had been lined and sealed with cement. Before the Deepwater Horizon departed, this cement failed, resulting in the high-pressure release of gas, oil, and other fluids. The blowout preventer also failed, thus allowing these fluids to burst from the well, flowing up through the riser and onto the deck of the Deepwater Horizon. The oil and gas subsequently caught fire, and the ensuing blaze capsized the Deepwater Horizon, which was still connected to the well via the riser. The strain from the sinking vessel severed the riser, and for nearly three months oil flowed continuously through the broken riser and into the Gulf of Mexico. Authorities eventually installed a cap over what remained of the riser, and oil continued to leak for two days, with the well finally sealed on July 15, 2010. 4

During the eighty-seven days of the spill, some five million barrels of oil (approximately 60,000 barrels per day) spilled into the Gulf.

Before the spill, BP was not silent about its safety plans and procedures. The plaintiffs point to three broad categories of pre-spill statements they argue portrayed BP’s safety policies as being more advanced on paper than they were in practice:

1. Statements touting BP’s progress in implementing the recommendations of the independent commission known as the “Baker Panel” following the 2005 explosion at the Company’s Texas City refinery. The Baker Panel was convened to review and suggest improvements to BP’s safety practices, the efficacy of which was seriously in doubt following a series of high-profile safety mishaps. The Baker Panel released a report in January 2007 (the “Baker Report”), which included a series of specific recommendations intended to improve BP’s safety culture and processes. Plaintiffs claim' that, following the release of the Baker Report, Defendants repeatedly publicized their progress on the Report’s recommendations as a way to assuage the public that BP had turned a corner on safety. In reality, according to Plaintiffs, nothing about BP’s safety programs had changed, and BP remained an accident waiting to happen. Alleged misstatements in this cat-' egory were made in November 2007, February 2008, April 2008, December 2008, and March 2010.
2. Statements describing BP’s Operating Management System (“OMS”) as a system being applied across all of BP’s lines of business, worldwide, in an attempt to standardize safety processes. Statements in this category were allegedly misleading because they omitted *679 that OMS would not govern safety practices at contractor-owned sites, such as the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig. Statements in this category were also allegedly misleading because they represented that OMS had been implemented in the Gulf of Mexico by the time of the Deepwater Horizon explosion, when Plaintiffs claim it had not. Alleged misstatements in this category were made in February 2009, March 2009, April 2009, February 2010, March 2010, and April 2010.
8. Statements from two agency filings — the Initial Exploration Plan (“IEP”) and the Gulf of Mexico Regional Oil Spill Response Plan (“OSRP”) — describing BP’s ability to respond to a catastrophic deepwater oil spill. According to Plaintiffs, these statements were grossly inaccurate, and BP had no contingency plans and no adequate response equipment for a disaster. The documents were filed with the relevant federal agency, the U.S. Department of the Interior’s Minerals Management Service (“MMS”), in March 2009 and June 2009 respectively. Plaintiffs claim' that they were publicly available documents upon filing. They were also scrutinized in the media following the Deep-water Horizon explosion. 5

The alleged misstatements continued, the plaintiffs posit, after the spill occurred; this time, they were about the spill rate:

4. Statements made after the April 20, 2010 Deepwater Horizon explosion regarding the magnitude of the resulting oil spill. According to Plaintiffs, Defendants perpetuated the fiction that the spill was only approximately 5,000 barrels per day, even as internal BP estimates showed that the true number was much higher. Alleged misstatements in this category were made in late April 2010 and May 2010. 6

B.

The plaintiffs, all BP shareholders, brought suit, alleging, inter alia, that BP’s alleged misstatements violated section 10(b) of the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934 (the “Exchange Act”) and SEC Rule 10b-5. 7 After thrice narrowing the case at the motion to dismiss stage, 8 the district court turned to whether a class ought to be certified. At first, it said no, reasoning that while the plaintiffs had satisfied most of the requirements of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23, they “failed to discharge their burden to’ establish that damages in this case can be measured on a class-wide basis consistent with their theories of liability,” 9

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Bluebook (online)
800 F.3d 674, 92 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 1100, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 15938, 2015 WL 5235010, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bp-plc-securities-ca5-2015.