Wilson v. Edison Int'l, Inc.
This text of 315 F. Supp. 3d 1177 (Wilson v. Edison Int'l, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, C.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
I. Introduction
Cassandra Wilson ("Plaintiff") brought this putative class action on behalf of herself and similarly situated employees of Edison International, Inc. ("Edison"). The putative class consists of those Edison employees who, through their participation in the Edison 401(k) Savings Plan (the "Plan"), invested in the Edison International Stock Fund from March 27, 2014 through June 24, 2015 (the "Class Period"). Second Amended Complaint ("SAC"), Dkt. 81. Plaintiff claims that Theodore Craver ("Defendant Craver") and Robert Boada ("Defendant Boada") (collectively, "Defendants") each of whom had certain alleged responsibilities with respect to the administration of the Plan, breached their respective duties of prudence imposed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act ("ERISA"),
After a motion to dismiss the initial Complaint was granted (Dkt. 52), Plaintiff filed a First Amended Complaint ("FAC"). Dkt. 53. Defendants filed a motion to dismiss the FAC. Dkt. 61. After the Court granted the motion to dismiss the FAC, with leave to amend (Dkt. 80), Plaintiff filed the SAC. Dkt. 81. Defendants thereafter filed a Motion to Dismiss the SAC ("Motion"). Dkt. 88. Plaintiff filed an opposition to the Motion (Dkt. 93), and Defendants replied (Dkt. 94).
On October 23, 2017, a hearing was held on the Motion and it was taken under submission. Dkt. 96. For the reasons stated in this Order, the Motion is GRANTED .
II. Factual Background
A. The Edison 401(k) Plan and the Edison International Stock Fund
Edison is the parent company of Southern California Edison Company ("SCE"), which supplies electricity to customers in Southern California. SAC ¶ 52. SCE is regulated by the California Public Utilities Commission ("CPUC") and by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission ("FERC").
Certain employees of Edison, SCE and other Edison subsidiaries are eligible to participate in the Plan.
*1179Request for Judicial Notice ("RJN"), Dkt. 88-3 (Ex. 1 at 49). Those employees who elect to participate in the Plan may direct that a percentage of their earnings be invested in one or more funds offered by the Plan.
During the Class Period, the Edison International Stock Fund (the "Stock Fund") was among the investment options available to Plan participants.
B. The CPUC Proceedings and the November 2014 Settlement
In 2013, SCE retired the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station ("SONGS"). SAC ¶ 55. As part of this process, SCE participated in several rate setting proceedings before the CPUC. Their purpose was to determine how costs associated with the closing of the SONGS would be allocated between SCE and California ratepayers.
In November 2014, the CPUC approved a settlement agreement among SCE and the advocacy groups (the "SONGS Settlement"), finding that it was "in the public interest."
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I. Introduction
Cassandra Wilson ("Plaintiff") brought this putative class action on behalf of herself and similarly situated employees of Edison International, Inc. ("Edison"). The putative class consists of those Edison employees who, through their participation in the Edison 401(k) Savings Plan (the "Plan"), invested in the Edison International Stock Fund from March 27, 2014 through June 24, 2015 (the "Class Period"). Second Amended Complaint ("SAC"), Dkt. 81. Plaintiff claims that Theodore Craver ("Defendant Craver") and Robert Boada ("Defendant Boada") (collectively, "Defendants") each of whom had certain alleged responsibilities with respect to the administration of the Plan, breached their respective duties of prudence imposed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act ("ERISA"),
After a motion to dismiss the initial Complaint was granted (Dkt. 52), Plaintiff filed a First Amended Complaint ("FAC"). Dkt. 53. Defendants filed a motion to dismiss the FAC. Dkt. 61. After the Court granted the motion to dismiss the FAC, with leave to amend (Dkt. 80), Plaintiff filed the SAC. Dkt. 81. Defendants thereafter filed a Motion to Dismiss the SAC ("Motion"). Dkt. 88. Plaintiff filed an opposition to the Motion (Dkt. 93), and Defendants replied (Dkt. 94).
On October 23, 2017, a hearing was held on the Motion and it was taken under submission. Dkt. 96. For the reasons stated in this Order, the Motion is GRANTED .
II. Factual Background
A. The Edison 401(k) Plan and the Edison International Stock Fund
Edison is the parent company of Southern California Edison Company ("SCE"), which supplies electricity to customers in Southern California. SAC ¶ 52. SCE is regulated by the California Public Utilities Commission ("CPUC") and by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission ("FERC").
Certain employees of Edison, SCE and other Edison subsidiaries are eligible to participate in the Plan.
*1179Request for Judicial Notice ("RJN"), Dkt. 88-3 (Ex. 1 at 49). Those employees who elect to participate in the Plan may direct that a percentage of their earnings be invested in one or more funds offered by the Plan.
During the Class Period, the Edison International Stock Fund (the "Stock Fund") was among the investment options available to Plan participants.
B. The CPUC Proceedings and the November 2014 Settlement
In 2013, SCE retired the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station ("SONGS"). SAC ¶ 55. As part of this process, SCE participated in several rate setting proceedings before the CPUC. Their purpose was to determine how costs associated with the closing of the SONGS would be allocated between SCE and California ratepayers.
In November 2014, the CPUC approved a settlement agreement among SCE and the advocacy groups (the "SONGS Settlement"), finding that it was "in the public interest."
(c) "Ex parte communication" means a written communication (including a communication by letter or electronic medium) or oral communication (including a communication by telephone or in person) that:
(1) concerns any substantive issue in a formal proceeding,
(2) takes place between an interested person and a decisionmaker, and
(3) does not occur in a public hearing, workshop, or other public forum noticed by ruling or order in the proceeding, or on the record of the proceeding. Communications regarding the schedule, location, or format for hearings, filing dates, identity of parties, and other such nonsubstantive information are procedural inquiries, not ex parte communications.
RJN, Dkt. 88-6 (Ex. 4 at 7).
Rule 8.4 provides that in a ratesetting proceeding an "interested person," which is a term used in Rule 8.1, must report any ex parte communication within three working days of when it occurred.
C. Disclosure of Certain Communications
1. Email to Edison Personnel
In September 2014, approximately two months before the CPUC approved the SONGS Settlement, the Chief Ethics and Compliance Officer of Edison sent an email to Edison personnel. SAC ¶ 71. It stated: "While we are well aware of the CPUC's ex parte communications rules, this situation makes clear that awareness of the rules is not enough."
2. The Warsaw Meeting
In February 2015, approximately three months after the CPUC approved the SONGS Settlement, SCE provided written notice to the CPUC about a previously unreported ex parte communication between Stephen Pickett ("Pickett"), the former Executive Vice President of SCE, and Michael Peevey ("Peevey"), the former President of the CPUC.
Before the February 2015 notice of the ex parte communication, the following had occurred: (i) Peevey had resigned from the CPUC, effective December 2014; (ii) the California Attorney General had seized handwritten notes from the Warsaw Meeting during a January 2015 search of Peevey's residence; and (iii) Edison had implemented its first policy regarding ex parte communications.
Approximately two weeks after the February 2015 disclosure to the CPUC, Edison filed a Form 10-K with the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC").
On February 9, 2015, SCE filed in the OII proceeding a Late-Filed Notice of Ex Parte Communication regarding a meeting in March 2013 between an SCE senior executive and the president of the CPUC, both of whom have since retired from their respective positions. In response, the Alliance for Nuclear Responsibility, one of the intervenors in the OII, filed an application requesting that the CPUC institute an investigation into whether sanctions should be imposed on SCE in connection with the ex parte communication. The application requests that the CPUC order SCE to produce all ex parte communications between SCE and the CPUC or its staff since January 31, 2012 and all internal SCE unprivileged communications that discuss such ex parte communications.
3. Other Meetings
In April 2015, ALJ Darling and ALJ Dudney ordered SCE to provide additional information about its disclosure of the ex parte communication that occurred at the Warsaw Meeting.
On April 29, 2015, SCE responded to the ruling.
After the April 2013 briefing, Pickett sent an email to the senior executives that included a document titled "Elements of a SONGS Deal."
The April 29, 2015 Filing also disclosed that, during June 2013, Defendant Craver sent an email that referred to "two improper substantive ex parte contacts with Peevey to Edison directors Jagjeet Bindra, Richard Schlosberg, Peter Taylor, and Brett White."
Peevey stated he was pleased with the SONGS settlement. President Peevey stated that I probably knew he had talked to Mr. Pickett in Poland. President Peevey waved a set of handwritten notes, but did not give me the notes to read ... President Peevey told me that the settlement was missing a provision to address the greenhouse gas impacts of the SONGS retirement, and he asked SCE to make a voluntary contribution to the University of California ("UC"), specifically UCLA, for greenhouse gas research. President Peevey stated the contribution should total $25 million over five years, with $4 million a year coming from SCE and $1 million a year coming from SDG & E.
Litzinger's declaration also disclosed several other communications between Edison and the CPUC related to the *1182Greenhouse Gas Initiative. These occurred during the SONGS negotiations as to the Proceeding.
D. The CPUC's Response to the Disclosures
In June 2016, TURN filed an application with the CPUC. SAC ¶ 92. It charged SCE with "fraud by concealment" and urged the CPUC to set aside the SONGS Settlement.
In August 2015, ALJ Darling issued a ruling on the TURN application (the "ALJ Ruling").
In December 2015, the CPUC modified in part and affirmed in part the ALJ Ruling (the "CPUC Ruling"). RJN, Dkt. 88-8 (Ex. 6). It found that SCE had failed to file required notices as to eight of the ten ex parte communications.
Both the ALJ Ruling and the CPUC Ruling acknowledged that the CPUC rules about ex parte communications can be difficult to apply. ALJ Darling wrote that "[w]hether reporting is required is often a fact-specific inquiry" and noted that the CPUC "has acknowledged there may be instances where it might be difficult for parties to discern between a [non-reportable] procedural 'inquiry' that merely seeks information and a [reportable] procedural request ... that is substantive in nature." RJN, Dkt. 88-7 (Ex. 5 at 27, 38). The CPUC Ruling also stated that "one-way communications" are not reportable because they are not "between" an interested person and a decisionmaker, although whether a communication is "one-way" depends upon the nature of a party's response and whether it crosses into a "substantive" communication. RJN, Dkt. 88-8 (Ex. 6 at 13). The CPUC Ruling concluded that "SCE's argument that it could hardly be expected to know whether [certain] communications fit the definition of ex parte communications prior to the [ALJ Ruling] is not entirely without weight."Id. at 52.
*1183E. Effect on Edison's Stock Prices
In March 2014, which is the beginning of the Class Period, Edison stock was trading at about $49 per share. SAC ¶ 100. The Complaint alleges that, as a result of SCE's "materially false and misleading statements and omissions," Edison's stock price rose to almost $65 per share, and was trading at "artificially inflated prices."
The SAC also alleges that other disclosures about the conduct described above caused a decline in the price of Edison stock:
On February 9, 2015, after Edison's first disclosure of its ex parte communications, its stock price fell to $62.78 per share from over $66.33 per share, then continued to correct as the truth emerged over the next few months.
On April 29, 2015, on news of Edison's additional ex parte communications, shares of Edison fell from $61.13 per share to $60.08.
On May 4, 2015, on news of the additional ex parte communications, shares of Edison declined $2.87 per share over two days of trading, or roughly 3.75%, to close at $59.60 on May 6, 2015.
On June 24, 2015, on news of TURN's application charging SCO with "fraud by concealment," shares of Edison declined $1.56 per share or over 2.70%, to close at $56.07 on June 24, 2015.
F. Advocacy Group Petitions and Shareholder Litigation
In April 2015, ANR petitioned the CPUC to modify its approval of the SONGS Settlement. SAC ¶ 81. ANR asserted that SCE's failure to file a timely notice of the ex parte communications during the Warsaw Meeting undermined the basis for the CPUC's decision. Id ¶ 82. Other consumer groups made similar requests.
In July 2015, a putative securities class action was brought against Edison and certain of its senior officers, including Defendant Craver, in the Southern District of California (the "Securities Action"). Eng v. Edison Int'l, No. 3-15-CV-1478-BEN-KSC (S.D. Cal.) (Benitez, J.). The Complaint in Eng alleges that Defendants violated Sections 10(b) and 20(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934,
III. Analysis
A. General Legal Standards: Motion to Dismiss
Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(a) provides that a "pleading that states a claim for relief *1184must contain ... a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief ...." The complaint must state facts sufficient to show that a claim for relief is plausible on its face. Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly ,
Pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), a party may move to dismiss for failure to state a claim. It is appropriate to grant such a motion only where the complaint lacks a cognizable legal theory or sufficient facts to support one. Mendiondo v. Centinela Hosp. Med. Ctr. ,
B. Judicial Notice
Defendant has requested judicial notice of 10 documents. RJN, Dkt. 89. Plaintiff has not opposed this request. Fed. R. Evid. 201(b) permits judicial notice of any fact "not subject to reasonable dispute because it: (1) is generally known within the trial court's territorial jurisdiction; or (2) can be accurately and readily determined from sources whose accuracy cannot be questioned." A similar request for judicial notice of seven of these exhibits was granted in the prior orders on the motions to dismiss the Complaint and the FAC ("Prior Orders"). Dkts. 52, 80. For the reasons stated in the Prior Orders, judicial notice of these same exhibits is appropriate. Exhibit 8 is the transcript of the hearing in this action. Exhibit 9 is an analyst report quoted in the SAC and is similar to analyst reports of which judicial notice was taken previously. Exhibit 10 is a modified version of the share price data of which judicial notice was taken previously. For these reasons, judicial notice of these exhibits is appropriate, and the request for judicial notice is GRANTED . See, e.g. , Engine Mfrs. Ass'n v. S. Coast Air Quality Mgmt. Dist. ,
C. Application
1. The Statutory Standards for Claims Brought Under ERISA
Section 404(a)(1)(A) of ERISA requires a fiduciary to "discharge his duties with respect to a plan solely in the interest of the participants and beneficiaries and [ ] for the exclusive purpose of: providing benefits to participants and their beneficiaries;
*1185and defraying reasonable expenses of administering the plan."
2. Interpretation of the Statutory Standards When Maintaining Investment in Stock of Employer
The Supreme Court has established pleading standards for ERISA claims brought against an ESOP fiduciary. It crafted these rules in two cases in which plaintiffs, who were employees, alleged that fiduciaries, who were also employees of the same employer, breached their obligations under ERISA by imprudently managing investments in the stock of that employer. See Fifth Third Bancorp v. Dudenhoeffer , --- U.S. ----,
Fifth Third set forth the following pleading standard:
To state a claim for breach of the duty of prudence on the basis of inside information, a plaintiff must plausibly allege an alternative action that the defendant could have taken that would have been consistent with the securities laws and that a prudent fiduciary in the same circumstances would not have viewed as more likely to harm the fund than to help it.
The Court explained that this standard was to be applied in light of several considerations. First , "the duty of prudence ... does not require a fiduciary to break the law" by "divesting [a] fund's holdings of the employer's stock on the basis of inside information."
Fifth Third also held that a motion to dismiss a complaint by applying this standard is an "important mechanism for weeding out meritless claims."
Amgen presented similar issues. There, the plaintiffs alleged that Amgen fiduciaries *1186breached their duties of prudence by allowing defined contribution plans to purchase and hold their employer's stock. The predicate of the claim was that the fiduciaries allegedly knew that the price of the stock was artificially inflated due to improper, off-label drug marketing and sales efforts. Among other things, it was alleged that Amgen had engaged in extensive marketing, encouraging both "on- and off- label uses" of certain of its drugs.
The Ninth Circuit determined that it was plausible that the Amgen fiduciaries "knew or should have known that the Amgen Common Stock Fund was purchasing stock at an artificially inflated price due to material misrepresentations and omissions by company officers."
The Supreme Court reversed. It determined that the Ninth Circuit erred by failing to assess whether the complaint plausibly alleged that a prudent fiduciary in the same position as defendants "could not have concluded" that the alternative action-removing the Amgen common stock fund from the list of investment options of the relevant plan-"would do more harm than good." Amgen ,
Three other Circuit Court decisions addressed Fifth Third 's"more harm than good" standard in detail. In Whitley v. BP, P.L.C. , the Fifth Circuit held that allegations in the complaint did not satisfy the standard of Fifth Third because "the stockholders do not specifically allege, for each proposed alternative, that a prudent fiduciary could not have concluded that the alternative would do more harm than good, nor do they offer facts that would support such an allegation."
Cliffs's fiduciaries could have concluded that divulging inside information about the Bloom Lake Mine would have collapsed Cliffs's stock price, hurting participants already invested in the ESOP. And closing the fund without explanation might be even worse: "It signals that something may be deeply wrong inside a company but doesn't provide the market with information to gauge the stock's true value." Amgen ,788 F.3d at 925-26 (Kozinski, J., dissenting from denial of reh'g en banc).
3. Whether the SAC is Sufficient
a) The FAC and Prior Order
The FAC alleged that Edison operated in an "efficient market," Defendants were familiar with the efficient-markets theory and Edison's stock price was artificially inflated by the alleged fraud. FAC, Dkt. 53 ¶¶ 105-06. It alleged that once Defendants became aware of the alleged fraud, they knew or should have known that "eventually, the stock price would be corrected, because no fraud can last forever" and "the longer Edison's fraud persisted ... the worse the correction of its stock price would be." Id. ¶¶ 106-07. It alleged that there were two alternative actions Defendants could have taken consistent with the federal securities laws that a prudent fiduciary in the same circumstances could not have viewed as ones that were more likely to harm than help the fund.
In the first alternative, Defendant Boada could have made corrective disclosures to the public, or have caused such disclosures by providing the necessary information to the executives at Edison with the authority to do so. Such disclosures would have allowed market forces to cause the price of Edison stock to decline to its true value. In describing this alternative, the FAC alleges that Defendant Boada "could have sought to tell the public the truth." Id. ¶ 25. As to the second alternative, the FAC alleged that Defendants could have prevented new investments in the Stock Fund by discontinuing both the purchase and sale of the stock until the value of the Stock Fund was no longer inflated, i.e. , after the market became aware of the actual, lower value of Edison stock. Id. ¶ 29.
In sum, the FAC alleged that Defendants could not reasonably have concluded that taking action would have done more harm than good. The basis for this allegation was that disclosure of the fraud would have resulted in the price of the stock falling to its true value. Plaintiffs contend that this could not be considered a harm to those who were already participants in the *1188Stock Fund because it was inevitable that the stock price would fall once the fraud was disclosed.
As noted in the Prior Order, the allegations in the FAC did not satisfy the ERISA pleading standard. The allegations regarding the efficient-markets theory and Defendants' alleged knowledge of it did not meet the pleading standard of Fifth Third or account for the possibility of harm to other Plan members. The FAC also failed to account for the risk that the market might overact to the proposed public disclosure. This would have resulted in an undue decline in the price of the stock. Dkt. 80.
The prior Order stated that more specific factual allegations would be required to meet the standard of Fifth Third :
[T]he factual allegations in the FAC about the efficient-markets theory are not specifically tailored to this action. Fifth Third ,134 S.Ct. at 2473 . They are framed in a manner that could apply to any similar ERISA claim.... To satisfy the Fifth Third standard, Plaintiff must allege specific facts related to the underlying conduct at issue here. The allegations must demonstrate why a prudent fiduciary under the circumstances presented in this action could not have concluded that disclosing fraud or freezing stock purchases would do more harm than good.
Dkt. 80 at 15.
b) The Allegations in the SAC
Plaintiff contends that the new allegations in the SAC satisfy the Fifth Third standards and cure what were deemed to have been deficiencies in the FAC. The new allegations in the SAC as to whether the Defendants could have concluded that disclosing the alleged fraud or freezing stock purchases would do more harm than good to the Stock Fund are as follows:
On March 27, 2014, Edison announced the SONGS Settlement. Defendant Boada knew or should have known at that time about the Company's undisclosed ex parte communications with the CPUC. The public did not know about these communications or the risk they posed to the Settlement, so Edison's stock price began to trade at a higher value as a result. Defendant Boada, recognizing this disparity between what he knew as a senior corporate insider and what the public knew, should have understood that this disparity would result in the artificial inflation of Edison's stock price. Boada, after all, was a highly sophisticated, experienced executive with decades of experience in corporate finance, and the premise that false perception by the public regarding a publicly-traded company causes the company's stock to inflate artificially is a rather basic one.
Boada could have approached Craver and possibly others and entreated them to disclose the undisclosed ex parte communications to correct the public's misapprehension of Edison's value. As of March 31, 2014, Edison's adjusted stock price close was $52.18, not even a full three dollars higher than it had been on March 27, the first day of the Class Period. In other words, very little artificial inflation of Edison's stock had yet taken place. Very few Plan participants had yet had the opportunity to purchase Stock Fund shares at artificially high prices. Corrective disclosure at this time, under basic efficient-market theory, would only have reduced Edison's stock price back to its pre-inflation level-about $49 a share-and the damage to Plan participant purchasers would have almost been completely avoided.
Boada would have had no reason at that time to fear an overcorrection of Edison's stock price, particularly because *1189the fraud had only been extant for a very short period of time. If anything, the public would have been more likely to view the misrepresentation as a forgivable error than as part of a reputation-harming fraud perpetrated on investors.
Boada also could have chosen to do nothing at that time (in fact, that is exactly what he did). As time passed, however, he would have noticed that Edison's stock price was rising higher and higher while its improper ex parte communications remained undisclosed. As of June 19, 2014, the adjusted closing price of Edison's stock was $53.31; on August 29, 2014, it was $54.85; on November 20, 2014, it had climbed to $58.10; in December 2014, it passed $60 a share, peaking in the mid-60s in January and early February 2015. During this time, the public believed the SONGS Settlement was secure and that Edison's problems in connection with it were in the rearview mirror getting smaller and smaller.
But the higher Edison's stock price climbed without any of the truth about the Company's ex parte communications emerging, the more concerned Boada should have been. After all, the higher the stock price was, the further it would have to fall when the truth came out. Whereas on March 31, 2014, corrective disclosure would have resulted in, at worst, a $3 price correction, on January 30, 2015, the same corrective disclosure would have resulted in a potential $15 price correction because Edison's stock was trading at $64.00.
Defendant Boada was not required to see the future, but as a prudent fiduciary, he should have been able to pay attention to the recent past. And, seeing that Edison's stock was continually rising over the first 10 months of the Class Period, he should have recognized that a sooner disclosure at a lower stock price would result in a softer correction, and therefore less harm to Plan participants, than would a later disclosure at a higher stock price.
Starting February 9, 2015, the truth about Edison's misconduct began to emerge, albeit in dribs and drabs instead of all at once. Each of these mini-revelations resulted in a partial correction of Edison's stock price. Boada should have recognized, as a prudent fiduciary, that allowing the stock to be corrected in piecemeal fashion was worse for Plan participants than a single, fulsome correction earlier on would have been, because the more prolonged the fraud was, the greater the damage to Edison's reputation for trustworthiness, and thus the harsher a correction that occurred.
Other factors should have compelled Boada to support earlier disclosure as well. Price is not the only way of measuring the risk of a publicly-traded stock. As an experienced financial executive, not to mention a CFA, Boada should have understood that there are relevant proxies one can look at if one wants to understand the underlying volatility and risk of a stock that one is supposed to be monitoring.
For example, the implied volatility of Edison options is a good indicator of how the market viewed the overall risk of Edison. The greater the implied volatility as reflected in the performance and trading of Edison options, the more risky the market could be said to have viewed Edison.
Throughout the Class Period, the implied volatility of Edison options steadily increased. At the beginning of the Class Period, it hovered around 16; through the fall of 2014, it rose modestly to 17 or 18. Then the implied volatility began to climb higher, hitting (and surpassing) 20 in October 2014. After the truth about *1190Edison's ex parte communications began to emerge in February 2015, the implied volatility for Edison shot above 20 and stayed there, hitting 20.85 on February 9, 2015, rising above 21 in March and April 2015, and hitting a peak of 24.44 on May 7, 2015, and remaining above 20 for the remainder of the Class Period.
Defendant Boada should have understood the significance of this steady increase in implied volatility-the greater the increase, the more volatile and risky Edison common stock was, and thus the more likely a stock-price correction would be harsher.
Had the overall trend in Edison's implied volatility during the Class Period been in the opposite direction, defendant Boada might have been able to make a reasonable argument that holding off corrective disclosure was the better option-the one likely to cause less harm to Plan participants-because the harshness of the stock-price correction was likely softening. But the trend of increasing implied volatility was a clear signal to Boada that acting sooner to correct Edison's fraud was likely to cause less harm than acting later would.
Similarly, Edison's bonds decreased in price over the course of the Class Period, beginning at a price of around 106 and decreasing to about 104 by the end of the Class Period. The Corporate Bond Index, which rose, and comparable maturity Treasury Note remained relatively constant, and thus did not experience similar declines during that period, meaning that Edison's decline was not part of some industry-wide or other larger general economic trend; it was specific to Edison.
Edison's declining bond price was another indicator of growing underlying corporate risk at Edison. This trend, combined with the trend of increasing implied volatility, was a clear indication to any prudent fiduciary that any stock-price correction that Edison experienced was going to be more severe as the bond price dropped and the implied volatility rose. These factors should also have caused defendant Boada to seek to make an earlier corrective disclosure in order to cause Plan participants the least amount of harm.
Defendant Boada, as an experienced executive with a deep background in finance, should also have understood that, the longer Edison's fraud went on, the more damage would be done to the Company's reputation when the truth emerged. Here, that is exactly what happened-for a good six months after the truth about Edison's misconduct had fully emerged in late June 2015, Edison's stock price remained flat (or declined even further). Analysts at the time suggested that this stock price drop was an "overcorrection," that it was disproportionate to the loss in company value that should have been reflected in Edison's stock price. For example, on June 25, 2015, the day after the end of the Class Period, an analyst report issued by SunTrust Robinson Humphrey stated, "We believe EIX's 3% stock decline yesterday (in response to the consumer group, TURN's, decision to support a petition to reopen the SONGS settlement) is an overreaction." The same report noted that "EIX is currently trading at a 2% discount to the peer group (based on our 2017 estimates)."
A June 25, 2015 analyst report from UBS, responding to the stock drop, stated that a "positive view" of Edison was still appropriate. The stock drop was "about public perception" of Edison and the SONGS Settlement, and not about the fundamental value of the Company. A July 1, 2015 report from RBC Capital Markets was similarly bullish on Edison, calling the Company "one of the best *1191ways to play the 'grid of the future' story."
That Edison was still largely viewed as a solid company with a bright future, but whose stock price nevertheless declined or remained flat for at least six months after the revelation of its fraud, is strong evidence that the hit Edison took in the stock market was largely about damage to its credibility and reputation. Had defendant Boada tried to effectuate corrective disclosure at an earlier date, some, or perhaps all, of that reputational damage could have been mitigated or avoided altogether.
No prudent fiduciary, armed with all of the above information-all of which was knowable by defendants at the time-could possibly have concluded that Plan participants would be better served by a delayed disclosure and a prolonged fraud. Earlier corrective disclosure based on these specific facts would not-could not-have done "more harm than good" to the Plan or its participants.
SAC ¶¶ 118-135.
These arguments apply with equal force to the secondary option of closing the Stock Fund to new investments until the artificial inflation ended. Given the increasing implied volatility and decreasing bond prices, as well as the reputational damage that a longer fraud would cause, a cessation of trading at an earlier time, even if it necessitated some public disclosure about the fact of the cessation, could not reasonably be believed to be likely to cause "more harm than good" to Plan participants. The rising inflation of Edison's stock price, coupled with the increasing risk as reflected in options and bond trading, should have made it clear that earlier action was better than no action; any stock-price drop that might have resulted from the temporary closing of the Stock Fund would be less than the stock-price drop that ultimately occurred after an unnecessarily prolonged and reputation-damaging fraud.
SAC ¶ 139.
Plaintiff contends that these allegations are specific as to the claim that Defendants knew or should have known of certain facts that would have led a prudent fiduciary in the same position to conclude that "earlier disclosure of Edison's fraud would do less harm than later disclosure." Dkt. 93 at 9. Plaintiff adds that the SAC plausibly alleges two alternatives that were available to Defendants. It is alleged that each would have been consistent with the securities laws, and that a prudent fiduciary in the same circumstances would not have viewed either as more likely to harm the fund than to help it. First , Boada could have brought the alleged fraud to the attention of Edison executives who had reporting responsibilities under the federal laws or could have made the corrective disclosure himself if Edison executives failed to do so in response to his notification. SAC ¶¶ 27, 28, 50, 119. Second , Boada could have closed the Stock Fund to new investments until the stock price returned to a level no longer a product of the artificial inflation. Id. ¶¶ 36, 139.
Plaintiff cites certain of the new allegations in the SAC in support of her position that these options satisfy the Fifth Third pleading standard. They are as follows: (i) if Boada had disclosed the alleged fraud near the beginning of the Class Period, nearly all of the harm could have been avoided because little artificial inflation in Edison's stock price had occurred at that time, and there would have been no further inflation, SAC ¶¶ 119-20; (ii) as long as the fraud continued, Edison's stock price would continue to rise and "the further it would have to fall" when the fraud was disclosed and the stock price corrected, id. ¶¶ 121-22; (iii) if Boada had corrected the fraud through a one-time, comprehensive *1192disclosure instead of piecemeal disclosures, it would have mitigated the harm to plan members, id. ¶ 124; (iv) because the implied volatility of Edison's stock increased over the Class Period, Boada should have been aware of that fact and that a later, corrective disclosure would cause greater harm, id. ¶¶ 126-27, 129; (v) the decrease in Edison's bond prices over the Class Period, when coupled with the increased volatility in Edison's stock, would have led a prudent fiduciary to conclude that the longer he or she waited to make a corrective disclosure, the more harm such a disclosure would cause, id. ¶¶ 130-31, and (vi) Boada should have recognized that market overreaction to corrective disclosures tends to become more likely the longer the fraud is prolonged. Id. ¶¶ 132-34.
As noted in the Prior Order, the analytical framework established in Fifth Third recognized that the decrease in value of a stock-even if a result of an improperly inflated price-was a harm that a prudent fiduciary could properly weigh in making an investment decision. Fifth Third ,
The SAC fails to allege that a prudent fiduciary could not have concluded that deferring a disclosure until after the completion of investigations into the nature of the alleged fraud or the degree to which the alleged fraud affected the stock price would cause more harm than good. See Price v. Strianese , No. 17-CV-652 (VEC),
The SAC includes several, context-specific allegations regarding the volatility of the price of Edison's stock and bonds. The SAC alleges, for example, that "[t]hroughout the Class Period, the implied volatility of Edison options steadily increased" from "around 16" at the beginning of the Class Period, to 17 or 18 "through the fall of 2014" and hit 20 in October 2014. SAC ¶ 127. The SAC also alleges that Edison's bonds "decreased in price over the course of the Class Period, beginning at a price of around 106 and decreasing to about 104 by *1193the end of the Class Period." Id. ¶ 130. However, the SAC makes only conclusory allegations that Defendants could not have concluded that immediate disclosure would have caused more harm than good even if Defendants were aware of or should have been aware of these alleged facts. See id. ¶ 131 ("Edison's declining bond price .... combined with the trend of increasing implied volatility, was a clear indication to any prudent fiduciary that any stock-price correction that Edison experienced was going to be more severe as the bond price dropped and the implied volatility rose.").
The conclusory allegations in the SAC about the inevitable harm caused by an undisclosed fraud are also insufficient to satisfy the Fifth Third standard. See Amgen ,
Further, the allegations in the SAC regarding inevitable harm do not withstand the "context-sensitive scrutiny" under Fifth Third . They are framed in a manner that could apply to any similar ERISA claim.
Nor does the SAC present any context-specific allegations that could plausibly support another necessary finding. Thus, it fails to allege that a reasonably prudent fiduciary would not decide that, if the Stock Fund were closed to new investments until the artificial inflation ended, it would more likely cause harm than good to the fund. See Saumer ,
The Fifth Third standard is difficult to meet. See Jander v. Int'l Bus. Mach. Corp. ("Jander I "),
that only an extremely narrow category of ESOP fiduciary duty claims based on failure to disclose nonpublic information may survive is not particularly troubling. An ESOP fiduciary duty claim based on the failure to disclose adverse information targets ... generally the same conduct as a securities claim for material misstatements, but "ERISA and the securities laws ultimately have differing objectives pursued under entirely separate statutory schemes[ ] such that alleged securities law violations do not necessarily trigger a valid ERISA claim."
Id. at *8 (quoting Jander I ,
* * *
For the foregoing reasons, the SAC fails to state a claim against Defendant Boada. As Plaintiff concedes, "if [her] claim against Defendant Boada is dismissed, then her claim against Defendant Craver should be dismissed as well." Dkt. 93 at 23. Therefore, the Motion is GRANTED as to Defendant Boada and Defendant Craver.
4. Whether Leave to Amend Should Be Granted
Defendants argue that the dismissal should be with prejudice because Plaintiff has had two opportunities to cure the deficiencies in the pleadings. Salameh v. Tarsadia Hotel ,
*1195IV. Conclusion
For the reasons stated in this Order, the Motion is GRANTED , without prejudice. Any amended complaint shall be filed no later than June 19, 2018, with a response to the amended complaint to be filed by July 3, 2018.
IT IS SO ORDERED .
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
315 F. Supp. 3d 1177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-edison-intl-inc-cacd-2018.