Legal Sidebari
UPDATE: When Silence Isn’t Golden:
Omissions Liability under Securities Laws
Updated October 17, 2017
UPDATE: On October 17, the Court granted a joint motion of the parties to remove the case from its
argument calendar in light of the parties’ reported agreement in principle to settle the dispute.
The original post from October 3, 2017, appears below.
In its upcoming term, the Supreme Court is scheduled to hear oral arguments i
n Leidos, Inc. v. Indiana
Public Retirement System, a case involving a circuit split between the Second and Ninth Circuits (which
together see more securities case
s than the rest of the federal circuits combined) on a question concerning
the principal anti-fraud provision of the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934 (the Exchange Act). The
case raises the question of whether violations of a Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) regulation
requiring public companies to disclose “known trends or uncertainties” that a company “reasonably
expects will have a material . . . impact” on revenues are actionable under
Section 10(b) of the Exchange
Act, which prohibits fraudulent misstatements and omissions in connection with the purchase and sale of
securities. This Sidebar discusses the legal issues involved in
Leidos, the circuit split, and the implications
of the Court’s decision for securities law in general.
Section 10(b), Rule 10b-5, and Item 303
The
Leidos case involves the interaction of Section 10(b), SEC Rule 10b-5, which implements Section
10(b), and Item 303 of SEC Regulation S-K, which imposes certain disclosure requirements on public
companies.
Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act makes it unlawful “[t]o use or employ, in connection with the purchase
or sale of any security . . . any manipulative or deceptive device or contrivance” prohibited by rules
adopted by the SEC
. SEC Rule 10b-5, in turn, makes it unlawful to, “in connection with the purchase or
sale of any security,” (1) “employ any device, scheme, or artifice to defraud;” (2) “make any untrue
statement of a material fact or . . . omit to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements
made . . . not misleading;” or (3) “engage in any act, practice, or course of business which operates or
would operate as a fraud or deceit upon any person.” To state a claim under these provisions, a plaintiff
must show that a defendant (1) made a
material misrepresentation or omission (
i.e., that there is a
substantial likelihood that a
reasonable investor would view a misrepresented or omitted fact as
significant); (2) with
scienter (
i.e., that the defendant made the misstatement or omissi
on intentionally or
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recklessly); (3) in connection with the purchase or sale of securities; (4) upon which the plaintiff
relied;
and (5) the misrepresentation or omission
caused the plaintiff
economic loss.
In interpreting the scope of omissions liability under these provisions, the Supreme Court has
held that a
company’s failure to disclose a fact is not “misleading” unless a company has an affirmative “duty to
disclose” that fact. Courts have held that such a “duty to disclose” arises i
n three general types of
circumstances: when (1) a defendant has a fiduciary-type relationship with the plaintiff (
e.g., where a
corporate insider trades securities on the basis of inside information); (2) an omission renders a
company’s affirmative statements misleading; or (3) a statute or regulation obligates a defendant to speak.
While the existence of a “duty to disclose” is fairly well established in th
e first two categories of cases,
the Supreme Court has not squarely addressed the third category of disclosure duties under Rule 10b-5.
Leidos raises the question of whether the disclosure requirements i
n Item 303 of SEC Regulation S-K
impose a “duty to disclose,” such that violations of those requirements are actionable under Rule 10b-5.
Item 303 requires public companies to include in their annual reports management’s discussion and
analysis of their financial condition and results of operations—frequently referred to as the “MD&A.”
Under Item 303, the MD&A section of a company’s annual report must, among other things, “[d]escribe
any known trends or uncertainties . . . that the [company] reasonably expects will have a material ...
unfavorable impact on . . . revenues or income from continuing operations.”
The Leidos
Litigation and the Circuit Split
The
Leidos litigation arises out of what has been described as
“the largest city corruption scandal in
decades”—an elaborate kickback scheme orchestrated by employees of Science Applications
International Corporation (SAIC, later spun off and renamed “Leidos”), the prime contractor for New
York City’s “CityTime” workforce management system. The scheme allegedly resulted i
n hundreds of
millions of dollars in fraudulent charges to the city and ultimately led to a criminal investigation.
A putative class of investors in SAIC common stock sued SAIC for violations of Section 10(b) and Rule
10b-5, based on a number of alleged misstatements and omissions. In particular, the plaintiffs allege that
SAIC accumulated information regarding its employees’ role in the kickback scheme in the months
following the announcement of the criminal investigation. Despite this knowledge, the plaintiffs allege,
among other things, that SAIC omitted discussion of the CityTime scandal from the MD&A section of its
March 2011 annual report, in violation of Item 303’s requirement that companies disclose known trends
or uncertainties reasonably expected to materially impact revenue.
After the district court dismissed the plaintiffs’ claims, the Second Circuit
reversed as to the plaintiffs’
claims based on the alleged omissions from SAIC’s March 2011 annual report. In reversing the district
court, the Second Circuit relied on its decision several months earlier i
n Stratte-McClure v. Morgan
Stanley, which held that Item 303 imposes an “affirmative duty to disclose . . . [that] can serve as the basis
for a securities fraud claim under Section 10(b)” when a plaintiff can also establish the other elements of a
Section 10(b) claim discussed above, including materiality.
The Second Circuit’s conclusion in
Stratte-McClure and
Leidos conflicts with case law from the Third
and Ninth Circuits. I
n Oran v. Stafford, then-Judge Alito wrote for the Third Circuit and concluded that
Item 303 does not create a “duty to disclose” under Section 10(b). Judge Alito reasoned that the general
test for securities fraud materiality (whether there is a
substantial likelihood that a reasonable investor
would view a misrepresented or omitted fact as significant) is considerably more demanding than Item
303’s requirement that management disclose known trends or uncertainties
reasonably expected to
materially impact revenue, citing
SEC guidance indicating the differences between those standards. The
Ninth Circuit relied heavily on
Oran when it came to the same conclusion i
n In re NVIDIA Corp.
Securities Litigation.
Implications of the Court’s Decision
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The
petitioners in
Leidos and certai
n commentators have suggested that a decision affirming the Second
Circuit would represent a “vast” expansion of Section 10(b) liability. Indeed, the petitioner
s argue that the
Second Circuit’s conclusion lacks a limiting principle, and that if private plaintiffs can enforce Item 303
via Section 10(b), there is no reason why they cannot also “enforce the SEC’s entire disclosure regime.”
Accordingly, if the Court affirms the Second Circuit, the extent to which it qualifies its holding will be
critical in assessing the decision’s impact on securities litigation more generally. A decision wholly
adopting the Second Circuit’s reasoning could be read to support Section 10(b) liability for violations of a
wide variety of SEC disclosure rules.
A decision reversing the Second Circuit would also be significant. The respondent
s contend that the
conclusions of the Third and Ninth Circuits “ha[ve] no limiting principle that would restrict [their] impact
on the [SEC’s] enforcement prerogatives to Item 303 cases.” Because the SEC, like private plaintiffs,
must allege breach of a “duty to disclose” to bring a Section 10(b) claim based on an omission, the
respondents a
nd certain amici argue that a decision reversing the Second Circuit could seriously
undermine the SEC’s enforcement capabilities. Whether the Court chooses to distinguish between the
SEC and private litigants could accordingly prove important if the Court reverses the Second Circuit.
The case is scheduled for oral argument on November 6, 2017.
Author Information
Jay B. Sykes
Legislative Attorney
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