United States Securities & Exchange Commission v. Kirch

263 F. Supp. 2d 1144, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10675, 2003 WL 21459647
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJune 20, 2003
Docket02 C7195
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 263 F. Supp. 2d 1144 (United States Securities & Exchange Commission v. Kirch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States Securities & Exchange Commission v. Kirch, 263 F. Supp. 2d 1144, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10675, 2003 WL 21459647 (N.D. Ill. 2003).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

SHADUR, Senior District Judge.

United States Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) has sued Terry Kirch (“Kirch”), charging him with a violation of the “insider trading” prohibitions of the federal securities laws. As counsel for the litigants had told this Court they would do, they have filed cross-motions for summary judgment in compliance with Fed.R.Civ.P. (“Rule”) 56 and this District Court’s LR 56.1 implementing that Rule. Each side has not only submitted memoranda by which each has supported its or his own motion and has responded to the other party’s cross-motion, but has also filed a reply relating to its or his own motion. Those memoranda, together with some other filings by the litigants, have brought the case into a posture ripe for judicial resolution.

When Kirch’s counsel advised during the course of a January 14, 2003 status hearing that a cross-motion under Rule 56 was in the offing, this Court cautioned counsel for the parties that strict adherence to Rule 56 principles sometimes resulted in a court’s perception that one or more potentially outcome-determinative facts was or were in dispute even though the litigants had not thought so, in which event both sides’ hopes of a disposition short of trial would be defeated. In response to this Court’s inquiry whether the parties would be amenable to this Court’s resolution of any such factual issues if that were to develop, Kirch’s counsel immediately responded in the affirmative, and SEC’s counsel have since provided their consent to such treatment.

What follows then in the Facts section of this opinion and in the analysis that follows is in accordance with that joint agreement. For example, where there are some divergences between Kirch’s characterizations of events and those of Jack Noonan (“Noo-nan”) — another member of the Roundtable referred to in the Fads — this Court has credited Noonan’s sworn version as that of an unbiased witness with no self-interest and with no reason to shape the facts to favor one side or the other. 1

Facts

Kirch is now a senior vice president of a publicly-traded company, Trizetto Group, Inc. (“Trizetto”). In the fall of 1999, when the operative events at issue in this litigation took place, 2 he was the President, *1147 owner and founder of a privately-held company, Resource Information Management Systems. At that time he and a handful of others (some ten or so in number) who were also key officers in companies engaged in the computer software business 3 were members of an unincorporated group calling itself the “CEO Roundtable” or “Software Executives Roundtable” (“Roundtable”) that met twice a year for sessions lasting two, three or four days.

Although some part of those meeting days are spent in social or recreational activities, their fundamental purpose (and that of the Roundtable itself) is business-oriented: About six hours each day are spent in members-only meetings (to the exclusion of spouses, other family members and friends). Because the very nature of the meetings — to exchange information and ideas that are or could be of utility to the members in their respective businesses — is such as to call for imparting information of a sensitive and confidential nature, the Roundtable and its members had an express policy and understanding that such matters were indeed to be kept confidential. As Noonan Decl. ¶ 4 states:

It is a definite and fundamental understanding of the Software Executive Roundtable that matters of a confidential or sensitive nature are to be kept confidential. This has always been the definite and fundamental understanding of the Software Executive Roundtable.

To the identical effect, President-CEO of ShowCase Corporation (“ShowCase”) Kenneth Holec (“Holec”) states in Paragraph 3 of his February 21, 2001 sworn declaration, which this Court also credits:

It is a definite policy and fundamental understanding of the software roundtable that matters of a confidential or sensitive nature are to be kept confidential. When I make a presentation before the software roundtable that included confidential information, it is my practice to remind the group of the sensitive and confidential nature of the material I am about to present and the need to keep the information confidential. 4

As just indicated, Holec was another member of the Roundtable during 1999. Here is how he described his critical presentation at the October 1 Roundtable meeting (his Decl. ¶ 9), an account that this Court credits as accurate in all respects:

At around 10:15-11:00 a.m., I gave my presentation to the software roundtable *1148 concerning ShowCase Corporation. I began my presentation by stating that the information I was going to present was confidential and had not yet been publicly announced. My presentation lasted approximately 20-80 minutes and included a discussion of the fact that ShowCase Corporation would not make its earnings projections for the second quarter. I presented this confidential information to the software roundtable as I sought their input as to how to publicly announce this information and how to deal with employee and customer concerns. After my presentation, I believe the software roundtable took another break.

Indeed, Noonan’s account of that presentation (Noonan Decl. ¶ 6) is entirely consistent with Holec’s version, with the addition (also credited by this Court) that Kirch had himself taken part in the discussion of the business issue that was invited by Ho-lec (and was the reason that Holec disclosed the nonpublic information about corporate earnings in the first place).

For his part, Kirch agrees with a portion of the Noonan (and hence the Holec) description, while he does not dispute the balance because of what he says is his insufficient recollection of the event. And as that consistent description makes plain, Holec’s confidentially communicated earnings information bode ill — at the least — for the price of Showcase’s stock in the marketplace when that information became public.

For some time Kirch had been a ShowCase stockholder as the result of market acquisitions (its stock was NASDAQ-traded). Almost immediately after Holec’s completion of his presentation in the late morning of October 1, Kirch called his broker Piper Jaffray (at 11:42 a.m. that same morning) and placed an order to sell 8,500 shares out of his 15,000 share holding. As anticipated, when the confidentially-communicated information was released to the public a few days later (after the market close on October 4), the ShowCase stock price dropped precipitously — from $9.50 to $4 a share in just one trading day. According to the SEC, Kirch’s sale of his stock for nearly $80,000 thus avoided losses of more than $45,000 (Kirch does not question the fact of his avoidance of loss, responding only that he cannot admit the exact amount specified by the SEC because of uncertainty as to which date the agency used to compute the final stock price).

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Bluebook (online)
263 F. Supp. 2d 1144, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10675, 2003 WL 21459647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-securities-exchange-commission-v-kirch-ilnd-2003.