Miller v. Asensio & Co.

364 F.3d 223, 2004 WL 792365
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedApril 14, 2004
DocketNos. 03-1225, 03-1262
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 364 F.3d 223 (Miller v. Asensio & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Asensio & Co., 364 F.3d 223, 2004 WL 792365 (4th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

Affirmed by published opinion. Judge DIANA GRIBBON MOTZ wrote the opinion, in which Judge GREGORY and Judge DUNCAN joined.

[225]*225OPINION

DIANA GRIBBON MOTZ, Circuit Judge:

This appeal raises a question of first impression — does a finding of liability under Rule 10b-5 in a private securities case require an award of damages. We hold that it does not and reject the other appellate challenges put forward by the parties. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the district court entered on the basis of a jury verdict finding liability, but awarding no damages.

I.

This case grows out of derogatory statements made by employees of Asensio & Company, Inc. (“Asensio”) about Chromat-ics Color Sciences International, Inc. (“CCSI”). Stockholders of CCSI brought this suit, alleging that these statements constitute material misstatements, which Asensio initiated to defraud the market for its benefit, and which caused their CCSI stock to decline in value, resulting in substantial monetary losses to them.

Asensio, an investment bank licensed to broker securities, focuses on identifying “short sale” opportunities, i.e., transactions through which investors sell a stock and then hope to buy it back at a lower price. In addition to making its own investments, Asensio researches companies, makes an assessment as to their viability, and issues recommendations to investors based on its view of a company’s prospects. Asensio maintains that it specializes in identifying companies in which fraud or hype have assertedly inflated the stock’s prospects or price.

In the months leading up to June 1998, Asensio amassed a significant short sell interest in CCSI, which had developed the Colormate III, a medical device to measure the bilirubin level of babies in a noninvasive manner. In 1997, the Food and Drug Administration had granted CCSI permission to commercially market the Colormate III and the Patent & Trademark Office had issued CCSI a patent. By May 1998, CCSI was in the “final stages of contract negotiation” with three major medical device companies to produce, market, and distribute the Color-mate III.

However, from June 8 to June 26, 1998, Asensio posted on its website and attempted to disseminate as widely as possible seven reports recommending that investors sell or take a short position in CCSI. Asensio suggested that CCSI’s stock price was inflated, on two related grounds. First, the Colormate III allegedly had little potential to become a widely used medical device. Second, according to Asensio, questionable private stock sales and other financial maneuverings had artificially inflated CCSI’s stock price.

From June 9 to June 24, 1998, CCSI issued five press releases attempting to rebut the Asensio reports. Even so, after Asensio released its reports, medical device companies ceased contract negotiations with CCSI and the price of CCSI stock dropped. On the last trading day prior to the issuance of Asensio’s first report on June 8, 1998, the closing price for CCSI stock was 10.75; CCSI stock did not again reach that closing price until February 8, 1999, eight months later. Ultimately, CCSI stock rose again to a closing high of 13.75 in May 1999 and CCSI succeeded in signing a distribution agreement with a medical device company in June 1999. However, by November 2001, CCSI’s stock had been de-listed and, at the time of trial, was trading over-the-counter at a price approaching zero.

Beginning in 1996, Plaintiffs Robert Pearce and Joseph Miller purchased significant amounts of CCSI stock on margin, [226]*226i.e., they borrowed money from their brokers to purchase the stock. As the price of CCSI stock declined, Plaintiffs’ brokers issued margin calls requiring that Plaintiffs either provide additional equity or sell portions of their CCSI holdings. Pearce intermittently sold CCSI stock in varying amounts and at various prices from June 11, 1998 to October 1999. Miller similarly sold CCSI stock in varying amounts and at various prices between June 8, 1998 and late June 1998.

Plaintiffs filed this action on June 10, 1999, under Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b) (2000), and Rule 10b-5, 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5 (2003), promulgated pursuant to that statute. They allege that Asensio’s reports contained false and misleading information, and that this information resulted in a decline in the price of CCSI stock and caused them damage when they had to sell CCSI stock at an artificially low price. Plaintiffs specifically identified six statements made by Asensio in two of its reports as false or misleading. These statements minimized the importance and practicality of CCSI’s Colormate III as a method of testing for bilirubin and assert that the market for Colormate III was “extremely limited.”

At trial, Plaintiffs’ expert, Dr. Perry Woodside, testified first as to causation, stating his opinion that Asensio’s misrepresentations caused the decline in the price of CCSI stock. Dr. Woodside then testified to the measure of Plaintiffs’ out-of-pocket damages, which he calculated as the “true value” of CCSI stock (defined as “the value of the stock in the absence of the action and the reports by Asensio”) less the amount Plaintiffs received for the stock on each date on which they sold it from June 8, 1998 to June 10, 1999.1 Dr. Woodside set the true value of CCSI stock by choosing as a starting price the average price of CCSI stock the week or month prior to June 8. He then charted how CCSI stock would have behaved between June 8, 1998 and June 10, 1999 absent Asensio’s misrepresentations, by use of a “benchmark” mutual fund that he believed reacted to market conditions in the same way that CCSI would have but for the misrepresentations. Significantly, in calculating Plaintiffs’ damages, Dr. Woodside determined that no factor- — other than As-ensio’s misrepresentations — negatively impacted the price of CCSI stock on the dates that Plaintiffs sold the stock.

Asensio challenged Dr. Woodside’s testimony on a number of grounds. In particular, Asensio contended that a host of factors, including truthful information contained in its reports, CCSI’s public rebuttals of the reports, and scandals involving major CCSI shareholders, impacted CCSI’s stock price during the relevant period. Although Asensio did not offer expert testimony as to why CCSI stock declined at specific points, Manuel Asensio, the company founder, testified as to the occurrence of certain significant events on those dates. The company further relied on its reports (which contained a good deal of negative information about CCSI apart from the six misstatements identified by Plaintiffs), CCSI’s rebuttal press releases, and various news articles relating negative information about CCSI. As-ensio also cross-examined Dr. Woodside and Plaintiffs about events or information other than the identified misrepresentations that assertedly impacted CCSI’s stock price.

[227]*227At the close of evidence, the district court properly instructed the jury both as to liability and damages. The court then provided the jurors with a special interrogatory that posed two questions.

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Bluebook (online)
364 F.3d 223, 2004 WL 792365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-asensio-co-ca4-2004.