In Re Medicis Pharmaceutical Corp. Securities Litigation

689 F. Supp. 2d 1192, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 114605, 2009 WL 4755406
CourtDistrict Court, D. Arizona
DecidedDecember 2, 2009
DocketLead Case CV-08-1821-PHX-GMS, CV-08-1870-PHX-GMS, CV-08-1964-PHX-GMS
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 689 F. Supp. 2d 1192 (In Re Medicis Pharmaceutical Corp. Securities Litigation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Medicis Pharmaceutical Corp. Securities Litigation, 689 F. Supp. 2d 1192, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 114605, 2009 WL 4755406 (D. Ariz. 2009).

Opinion

ORDER

G. MURRAY SNOW, District Judge.

Pending before the Court are Defendant Ernst & Young’s Motion to Dismiss (Dkt. # 56) and the Medicis Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss (Dkt. # 58) Plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint (Dkt. # 53). For the following reasons, the Court grants both Motions. 1

*1199 BACKGROUND

Medicis Corporation (“Medicis” or the “Company”) is a publicly-traded pharmaceutical company that develops perishable products for the treatment of dermatological and aesthetic conditions. (Dkt. # 53 at ¶ 17.) On September 24, 2008, Medicis announced that the Company and its independent auditor, Ernst & Young LLP (“Ernst & Young”), failed to comply with Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (“GAAP”) in preparing several years of financial statements. Due to the violation, Medicis announced that its financial statements from 2003 through the second quarter of 2008 would need to be restated. On news of the anticipated restatement and violation of GAAP, the price of Medicis common stock dropped $ 2.34 per share, or 13%. 2 The decline represented a loss of approximately $125 million in shareholder equity. (Dkt. # 53 at ¶ 10.)

When Medicis later filed its restated financials with the SEC on November 10, 2008, the Company asserted that its previous financial statements were based on an incorrect interpretation of accounting principles related to Medicis’s product return reserves. (See Dkt. # 59 at Ex. A ¶ 6; 59, Ex. B.) Specifically, Medicis admitted that it improperly accounted for exchanges of expired or about to expire pharmaceutical products by failing to comply with Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 48 (“SFAS 48”). SFAS 48 provides that revenue may be recognized on product sales when a right of return exists, but only if certain conditions are met. (See Dkt. # 59, Ex. A at ¶ 6.) Pursuant to these conditions, Medicis was required to estimate the amount of likely returns and then exclude the value of those returns from revenue recognized on the sale of its pharmaceutical products. (See id.) These conditions also required that Medicis maintain a reserve account for estimated future returns based on the gross sales price of returned products. (See id.) But, rather than book its reserves based on the gross sales price of exchanged products, as required under SFAS 48, Medicis’s reserve account was based on the replacement cost for fresh product. (See Dkt. # 53 at ¶ 89.)

This improper accounting methodology was uncovered in 2008, when the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (the “PCAOB”) 3 inspected Ernst & Young’s audit of the Company’s 2007 financial statements. (See Dkt. # 59, Ex. B). Based on PCAOB’s inspection and advice from Ernst & Young, Medicis then modified its accounting methodology and began booking reserves for exchanged pharmaceuticals based on the full sales price of those pharmaceuticals. (Dkt. # 59, Ex. B at 2.) At the same time, Medicis restated its 2003-2008 financial statements using the correct methodology. (See id.)

The restated financial data from 2003-2008, which reflect the revised reserve calculations, indicates that the accounting violation had a significant effect on the timing of Medicis’s revenue recognition. In 2003, for instance, Medicis overstated revenues by $ 37.2 million (or 17.7%), and in 2006, *1200 revenues were understated by $ 44 million (or 11%). 0See Dkt. # 59, Ex. B at 3.) Yet, while these numbers present large differences from year to year, the overall impact of the accounting error on net revenue was relatively small. The following table reflects the impact of the revised reserve calculations on Medicis’s financial statements from 2003-2008:

Fiscal year Fiscal year Fiscal year Fiscal year Fiscal year Fiscal year Net Revenue Ended Ended Ended Ended Ended Ended

(in millions) 12/31/07 12/31/06 12/31/06 06/30/05 06/30/04 06/30/03

As Reported_$ 464.7 $ 349.2 $ 164.0 $ 376.9 $ 303.7 $ 247.5

Adjustment_- 7.3_+ 44.0_+ 1.3_- 11.2_+ 11.5_- 37.2

As Restated_$ 457.4_$ 393.2_$ 165.3_$ 866.7_$ 315.2_$ 210.3

As these numbers demonstrate, Medicis overstated revenues during three of the restated fiscal periods and understated revenues in three other periods. In the aggregate, Defendants’ accounting error resulted in an understatement of net revenues of approximately $1.1 million over the entire six-year period. Before the restatement, net revenue for the five-year period totaled $1,906 billion; after the restatement, the net revenue total was $ 1.907 billion. This difference represents less than 0.058 % of Medicis’s net revenues over the five-year period. Thus, Defendants’ accounting error principally had an impact on the timing of revenue recognition. Plaintiffs allege no facts in the Amended Complaint suggesting how Defendants would benefit from the manipulation of the period in which revenue was recognized.

Defendants explain their violation of SFAS 48 as a misinterpretation of a “technical” accounting provision. (Dkt. # 53 at ¶ 89.) Defendants assert that Medicis did not establish reserves based on the full sales price of estimated exchanges because Defendants mistakenly believed that these exchanges qualified for an exception to the general provisions of SFAS 48. This exception is found in Footnote 3 to SFAS 48. Footnote 3 provides, “Exchanges by ultimate customers of one item for another of the same kind, quality, and price (for example, one color or size for another) are not considered returns for purposes of this Statement.” 4 (Dkt. # 59, Ex. A at ¶ 6.) Defendants assert that they understood Footnote 3 to allow Medicis to use the replacement cost of expired or nearly-expired pharmaceuticals, rather than the gross sales price, in calculating the Company’s reserves. After the PCAOB inspection, Medicis concluded that, “although the exchanged product was similar, it was not of the same quality, strictly due to dating” because the Company was “replacing nearly-expired or expired product with newer, fresher product.” (Dkt. # 59, Ex. B at 2.)

Plaintiffs, on the other hand, allege that Defendants’ “purported misinterpretation” of SFAS 48 is “a post hoc rationalization.” (Dkt. # 67 at 7.) Since Medicis develops and distributes perishable pharmaceuticals, the Company’s products have a limited shelf life. (Dkt. # 53 at ¶¶ 24-26.) Plaintiffs, therefore, assert that Defendants’ mistaken belief that these products were the “same kind, quantity, and price” is absurd. (See Dkt. # 59, Ex. A at 10 n. 3.) Plaintiffs further allege that the mistake was unreasonable and obvious since Defendants’ accounting explanation is contradicted by both authoritative accounting literature on SFAS 48 and common sense.

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Bluebook (online)
689 F. Supp. 2d 1192, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 114605, 2009 WL 4755406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-medicis-pharmaceutical-corp-securities-litigation-azd-2009.