In re Massey Energy Co. Securities Litigation

883 F. Supp. 2d 597, 2012 WL 3156765, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 42563
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. West Virginia
DecidedMarch 28, 2012
DocketCivil Action No. 5:10-cv-00689
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 883 F. Supp. 2d 597 (In re Massey Energy Co. Securities Litigation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. West Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Massey Energy Co. Securities Litigation, 883 F. Supp. 2d 597, 2012 WL 3156765, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 42563 (S.D.W. Va. 2012).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

IRENE C. BERGER, District Judge.

Lead Plaintiff, Commonwealth of Massachusetts Pension Reserves Investment Trust (“Massachusetts PRIT”) and Plaintiff David Wagner, on behalf of the putative class, allege that the price of Massey Energy Company (“Massey”) stock was artificially inflated, between February 1, 2008, and July 27, 2010, because Massey and several of its senior executives and directors misled the market about its safety and compliance record and its disregard for safety regulatory compliance. The Defendants move for dismissal of Plaintiffs’ Consolidated Amended Class Action Complaint for Violations of the Federal Securities Laws (“CAC”). (Don L. Blankenship, Baxter F. Phillips, Jr., Eric B. Tolbert and Christopher Adkins’ Motion to Dismiss Plaintiffs’ Consolidated Amended Class Action Complaint (“Officer Defs.’s Mot. to Dismiss”) (Document 94); Joint Motion of Massey Energy Company and the Outside Director Defendants to Dismiss the Consolidated Amended Class Action Complaint (“Joint Mot. to Dismiss”) (Document 96)). The Joint Motion to Dismiss is supported by the Declaration of Julie A. North and various exhibits regarding “screenshots” of webpages from the United States Mine Safety and Health Administration’s (“MSHA”) website. Plaintiffs move to strike these exhibits. (Plaintiffs’ Motion to Strike Exhibits B-H to the Declaration of Julie A. North in Support of Defendants’ Motions to Dismiss (“Mot. to Strike”) (Document 100)).

After careful review of the motions and appropriate submissions relative thereto and for the reasons that follow, the Court grants the Plaintiffs’ motion to strike and denies the Defendants’ motions to dismiss.

I.

This civil action, filed on April 29, 2010, arises out of the alleged securities fraud committed by Massey and several of its officers and directors. Massey, a Delaware Corporation with its headquarters in Richmond, Virginia, is the fourth largest coal producer in the United States and the largest coal producer in the regions of West Virginia, Kentucky and Virginia. [602]*602Massey produces, processes and sells bituminous coal. On January 31, 2010, through its operating subsidiary A.T. Massey, Massey operated fifty-six (56) mines (forty-two (42) underground mines and fourteen (14) surface mines) and twenty-three (23) processing and shipping centers. The company is a publicly owned corporation traded on the New York Stock Exchange. The following officers and directors were named as Defendants: Don Blankenship, Former Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive Officer (“CEO”), President, Executive Committee Chair, who also held executive leadership roles in A.T. Massey Coal;2 Baxter F. Phillips, Jr., CEO of Massey, member of the Safety, Environmental and Public Policy Committee (“SEPPC”) of Massey’s Board of Directors; Eric B. Tolbert, Chief Financial Officer and Vice President of Massey; J. Christopher Adkins, Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, overseeing all mining and processing operations reporting directly to Defendant Blankenship; Dan R. Moore, Massey Director since 2002, Chairman of the Audit Committee, and member of all of the Board of Directors’ committees, including the SEPPC; E. Gordon Gee, Massey Director from 2000 until July 1, 2009, member of the SEPPC and various Board of Directors’ committees; Richard M. Gabrys, Massey Director since May 22, 2007, member of the SEPPC and the Governance and Nominating Committee during the Class Period; James B. Crawford, Massey Director since 2005, member of various Board of Directors’ committees, including the SEPPC, served as Chairman of the SEPPC from July 2009 through the end of the Class Period; Robert H. Foglesong, Massey Director since February 21, 2006, member of the SEPPC and various Board of Directors’ committees; Stanley C. Suboleski, Massey Director since May, 2008, member of the SEPPC and various Board of Directors’ committees, provided mining engineering consultative services to Massey from August 2006 through the end of the class period; Lady Barbara Thomas Judge, Massey director between February 19, 2008, until she resigned on April 19, 2010, member of the SEPPC and the Governance and Nominating Committee.3 Lead Plaintiff, Massachusetts PRIT, a pooled investment fund with more than $41 billion in total assets under management, including assets managed for the benefit of the Massachusetts State Teachers’ and Employees’ Retirement Systems and participating county, authority, district and municipal retirement systems, and David Wagner purchased Massey common stock on the open market between February 1, 2008, and July 27, 2010. Plaintiffs filed this suit as a class action under Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 23(a) and (b)(3), to represent a class of those who purchased common stock from Massey during the class period and who were damaged as a result.4 The Court has reviewed [603]*603the entirety of the one hundred seventy (170) page CAC, but -will only briefly detail the facts giving rise to this litigation, viewing them as true, as the Court must in its consideration of the pending Rule 12(b)(6) motions to dismiss.

On January 19, 2006, a fire claimed the lives of two miners at Alma No. 1 mine in West Virginia. At the time, Alma No. 1 mine was operated by Massey subsidiary Aracoma Coal Company. As a result, investigations were conducted by MSHA and the FBI.5 Plaintiffs aver that the miners died of “carbon monoxide poisoning because monitors were improperly installed and a permanent ventilation control was removed from an emergency escape passage.” (CAC, ¶ 73.) Following criminal and civil litigation, which included a derivative shareholder action, Massey pled guilty to ten criminal charges and entered into a $4.2 million settlement ($2.5 million in criminal penalties and $1.7 million in civil penalties). The settlement required, among other things, “changes to the corporation’s] governance policies and procedures relating to director oversight and conduct regarding environmental compliance and mine worker safety”; the SEPPC’s development of “goals for implementing enhancements to the Company-wide process utilized to monitor, count and report mine safety incidents and complaints (a “mine safety incident” is a lost-time injury suffered in connection with the Company’s mining activities) and near misses with high potential for injury”; reports by the SEPPC to the Board of Directors “regarding the Company’s compliance with all applicable mine safety laws and regulations!,]” including “(a) the number of mine safety incidents overall and by [604]*604type (b) findings by third-party auditors, and (c) an analysis of any causal factors contributing to safety incidents”; enhancements to the safety and environmental procedures and reporting, including shareholder reporting; and annual shareholder reporting from the Board in its Corporate Social Responsibility reporting “environmental and worker safety compliance.” (CAC, ¶¶ 9, 18, 78-79, 317, 321; see also CAC, Ex. D.)

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883 F. Supp. 2d 597, 2012 WL 3156765, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 42563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-massey-energy-co-securities-litigation-wvsd-2012.