Rothman v. Gregor

220 F.3d 81, 2000 WL 959484
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 11, 2000
DocketNo. 00-7005
StatusPublished
Cited by770 cases

This text of 220 F.3d 81 (Rothman v. Gregor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rothman v. Gregor, 220 F.3d 81, 2000 WL 959484 (2d Cir. 2000).

Opinion

JON O. NEWMAN, Circuit Judge.

This appeal concerns a securities fraud claim against a seller of computer software for misrepresenting its income by failing to expense royalty advances after it became clear that the capitalized value of these advances was significantly overstated. Joel Rothman, representing a plaintiff class, appeals from the December 6, 1999, judgment of the District Court of the Southern District of New York (David Edelstein, Judge), dismissing with prejudice plaintiffs’ claims against Defendant Appellees GT Interactive Software Corp. (“GT”) and its officers, and Arthur Andersen LLP (“Anderson”). We conclude that the complaint meets the pleading requirements for a securities fraud action against GT and its officers. We also conclude that the District Court properly dismissed the claim against Andersen for failure to sufficiently plead scienter. We therefore affirm in part, revérse in part, and remand.

Background

The Second Amended Complaint (“Complaint”) alleges or incorporates the following facts. GT, a Delaware corporation headquartered in New York, publishes and merchandises interactive entertainment, educational, and consumer software. Defendant-Appellee Ronald Chaimowitz is president, chief executive officer, and a director of GT. Defendant-Appellee Joseph J. Cayre is chairman of the board of directors of GT. Defendant-Appellee Andrew Gregor is vice-president of finance and chief financial officer of GT. Defendant-Appellee Andersen, an international accounting and consulting firm, has been GT’s outside auditor since some time prior to December 1995. Plaintiff-Appellants represent a class of persons who purchased GT securities from December 15, 1995, through December 12, 1997 (the “GT Class Period”), and from February 4, 1996, through December 12, 1997 (the “Andersen Class Period”).

GT commenced its operations in 1993. During the GT Class Period, GT developed many software titles each year by contracting with small, independent software developers and underwriting their development costs in large part by paying them the royalty payments they expected to earn in advance of any sales. For “front-line” software titles, GT advanced on average $750,000 to $1 million in royalties per title and paid $4-5' million to well-known developers. In its agreements with some [85]*85software developers, GT defined the term “front-line” as a ‘“computer program so technically and aesthetically advanced that it can be marketed and sold to end users in the price range for new releases in its class.’ ” GT claimed to have released five front-line titles in 1994, twenty-four in 1995, and sixty-seven in 1996.

Under generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”) concerning royalty prepayments, all costs incurred to “ ‘establish technological feasibility of a computer software product to be sold, leased or otherwise marketed are search and development costs,’” and therefore “should be charged to expenses when incurred.” GT’s accounting policy for royalty advances during the relevant period, however, provided:

Royalty advances represent the unamor-tized elements of prepayments to third party licensors of software products for the right to manufacture and/or distribute their products under various licensing agreements. Such advances are amortized to cost of goods sold in accordance with the individual agreements. Future realization of royalty advances, is assessed quarterly by management and charged to expense if it is not likely that the amounts will be recovered through sales of the related product.

The' Complaint states that until January 1, 1998, GT accounted for most of the royalty advances as assets in its financial disclosure statements, even though, the Complaint continues, the “great majority” of software titles for which GT advanced royalties during the Class Period “either failed commercially or under-performed expectations in the marketplace.” This was done, the Complaint alleges, in order to artificially inflate GT’s reported earnings throughout the GT Class Period.

To support this general allegation, the Complaint states or incorporates by reference several categories of information and specific allegations, including the following.

(a) Financial Statements. The Complaint sets forth the following summary of GT’s financial statements in its SEC filings:

Date Earnings Announced SEC Filing Date Capitalized Royalty Advances Net Income

quarter 1 4/30/96 5/14/96 $21,280,000 $5,100,000

quarter 2 8/1/96 8/14/96 $29,577,000 $2,140,000

quarter 3 11/4/96 11/14/96 $57,357,000 $3,757,000

quarter 4 2/10/97 3/31/97 $69,202,000 $4,393,000

quarter 1 5/5/97 5/15/97 $70,344,000 $4,554,000

quarter 2 8/7/97 8/14/97 $83,591,000 $4,469,000

quarter 3 11/3/97 11/14/97 $87,542,000 $8,526,000

GT spent $27.8 million on royalty advances in the first nine months of 1996, and $18.3 million in the first nine months of 1997.

(b) Sales. According to domestic sales figures for all of GT’s software titles released during the GT Class Period, as reported by PC Data, a market research firm, 64 percent of GT’s products realized less than $250,000 in sales during the two year period covering calender years 1996 and 1997. From 1995 through 1996, between 56 and 67 percent of GT’s titles realized less than $100,000 in sales. Most of GT’s sales of a software product are realized during the first year that the product was commercially available. The Complaint provides the names and sales figures for several front-line titles released [86]*86between November 1995 and March 1997 that GT allegedly failed to “write down to net realizable value on a timely basis.”

According to GT’s 1996 Form 10K, GT’s annual net sales amounted to $234,461 in 1995 and to $365,490 in 1996. A September 13, 1997, report by an analyst at Oppenheimer & Co. calculated that, because of GT’s operating and sales costs, GT needed to realize nearly $4 in sales to recoup every $1 of the royalties it prepaid.

(c) Stock Transactions. In December 1995, GT made an initial public offering (“IPO”) of 10 million shares, including 5.5 million that the company offered and 4.5 million that the selling stockholders tendered, at $14 per share, from which it realized $71,885,000. GT’s prospectus, dated December 14, 1995, reported that as of December 6, 1995, Defendant-Appellee Cayre beneficially owned 16,094,907 shares of GT common stock, and Defendant-Ap-pellee Chaimowitz beneficially owned 804,-582 shares of GT common stock. In connection with the IPO, Cayre sold 1,494,720 of those shares at $14 per share for approximately $20,000,000. During the Class Periods, Chaimowitz sold at least 70,000 of his shares for an aggregate value of $1,615,000. In February 1997, Chaimowitz purchased 6,000 shares of GT stock.

In June and July 1996, GT used its stock to acquire three companies: FormGen Corp. for 1,030,000 GT shares, Wizard Works Group for 2,350,000 GT shares, and Humongous Entertainment,- Inc. for 3,458,-000 GT shares. During October 1997, GT acquired SingleTrae Entertainment Tech for $5.4 million in cash and 700,000 shares of stock valued at $7.2 million, for a total value of $12.6 million.

(d) Lawsuits. On November 28, 1995, GT entered into an agreement with Scavenger, Inc. to develop four software games, and advanced $2.5 million in royalties to Scavenger.

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220 F.3d 81, 2000 WL 959484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rothman-v-gregor-ca2-2000.