In Re Seagate Technology II Securities Litigation

843 F. Supp. 1341, 1994 WL 48434
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedMarch 2, 1994
DocketC-89-2493(A)-VRW
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 843 F. Supp. 1341 (In Re Seagate Technology II Securities Litigation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Seagate Technology II Securities Litigation, 843 F. Supp. 1341, 1994 WL 48434 (N.D. Cal. 1994).

Opinion

ORDER

WALKER, District Judge.

The complaints in these consolidated securities fraud cases allege that due to improper conduct by the defendants, the price of Sea-gate common stock was fraudulently inflated for a period of several months. During this time, defendants allegedly made several partially curative disclosures. These partial disclosures caused the trading price of the stock to decline gradually, instead of dropping suddenly as is usually the ease when a one-time full disclosure of fraud is released. As a result, some of those purchasing stock during this period also sold some or all of their shares at prices reflecting these partial disclosures.

As will be developed here, these purchasers have very different stakes in shaping the pertinent evidence from those purchasers who held their stock until after the fraud had been fully revealed. These divergent interests, which stem primarily from the measure of damages currently in use in fraud-on-the-market cases, may be so pervasive that the interests of the class members are not sufficiently aligned to satisfy the prerequisites of FRCP 23 and fundamental due process requirements. Accordingly, this litigation may be precluded from proceeding as a class action.

Apart from these concerns, defendants have established that this litigation can proceed only as to plaintiffs’ allegations that defendants failed to disclose material information they were under a duty to disclose; any claims based on alleged affirmative misstatements by defendants cannot succeed.

I

During 1988, Seagate Technology, Inc. (“Seagate”), the issuer of a single class of NASDAQ-quoted common stock, encountered adverse conditions in its principal line of business, the manufacture of 5/4 inch rigid disk drives for personal computers. Instead of fully disclosing “the truth concerning its financial condition and business prospects,” Second Consol Amended Compl ¶ 53 at 30, plaintiffs allege that, starting with a press release on July 18, 1988, Seagate made a series of “grudging admissions of certain adverse facts — no one of which was fully curative.” Pis Submission re Ending Date of Class Period, June 3, 1991, at 2. Plaintiffs claim that the dissemination of these half-truths continued until October 5, 1988, when Seagate issued a press release announcing a loss for the quarter ended September 30 and the resignation of two sales executives. Second Consol Amended Compl at 33. With each disclosure, the trading price of Seagate common stock ratcheted down, dropping from $22 per share on April 13, 1988, to about $7 per share following Seagate’s October 5 press release. See In re Seagate Technology II Securities Litigation, 802 F.Supp. 271, 272-74 (N.D.Cal.1992).

This litigation followed. Plaintiffs contend that defendants’ fraudulent nondisclosures and their “grudging” partial disclosures distorted, to varying degrees, the price of Sea-gate common over the period from April 13, 1988, to October 5, 1988.

*1345 On August 21, 1991, another judge, to whom this litigation was then assigned, provisionally certified a class action, but established subclasses of the security’s purchasers more or less keyed to the dates of the partial disclosures. The order tersely stated:

Certification for this period is provisional and subclasses shall be certified for the period 1) April 13,1988 to July 19,1988; 2) July 20, 1988 to August 7,1988; 3) August 8,1988 to September 24,1988; 4) September 25, 1988 to October 7, 1988.

Although the litigation has thus far proceeded pursuant to that order, the parties now disagree on the effect of the order for purposes of completing pretrial preparation and trial. 1

The prior judge’s decision provisionally to certify subclasses, rather than a single class, indicates serious misgivings about the suitability of this case for class treatment. In fact, as will be explained, any securities fraud case involving the slow leakage of partially curative disclosures into an active securities market creates the potential for troubling antagonisms among those purchasing the security during the relevant period. Evidently, the prior judge hoped that these conflicts could be avoided by the use of subclasses. Upon further analysis, as explained below, the court concludes that the subclassing contemplated by the prior judge is wholly inadequate to the task of resolving this problem. Instead, detailed factual analysis is necessary to determine the extent and severity of the conflicting interests, so that the court can evaluate whether due process requirements and the prerequisites of FRCP 23 are satisfied. For this purpose, the court concludes that an evidentiary hearing is warranted.

In addition to the class certification dispute, the court has before it defendants’ motion for summary judgment. Defendants base their motion on three arguments. First, defendants mount a so-called “truth on the market” defense, arguing that Seagate’s stock price was not distorted by any misstatements or omissions of defendants. In support of this contention, defendants offer a statistical analysis of the trading price of Seagate common throughout the class period. Second, defendants suggest that they had no affirmative duty to disclose adverse financial information to the public any sooner than they actually did so. Third, defendants claim that they are entitled to summary judgment on the issue of scienter. In response, plaintiffs have brought a cross-motion for partial summary judgment, contending that Sea-gate’s stock price was biased by defendants’ misstatements/omissions as a matter of law.

Before discussing the conclusions the court has reached on these various issues, it is imperative to set in perspective the FRCP 23 prerequisites to class certification, the elements of a Rule 10b-5 claim, and the measure of damages currently used in securities fraud cases; this follows presently. Part II then reviews the impact of the fraud-on-the-market theory on the substantive law of Rule 10b-5. As will be shown, this theory dramatically amplified the importance of certain types of class conflicts, rendering them serious obstacles, under the requirements of FRCP 23, to class certification. Part III details two such disturbing conflicts, the “seller-purchaser” conflict and the “equity” conflict, both of which are present in the case before the court. Part IV demonstrates that these conflicts may be particularly troublesome in cases, such as the instant one, involving partial curative disclosures. Finally, Part V addresses the summary judgment motion of defendants, and the partial summary judgment motion brought by plaintiffs.

A

The prerequisites to class certification are by this time well known. To qualify for class treatment, an action must first meet the requirements of FRCP 23(a):

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Bluebook (online)
843 F. Supp. 1341, 1994 WL 48434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-seagate-technology-ii-securities-litigation-cand-1994.