Obasi Investment Ltd v. Tibet Pharmaceuticals Inc
Obasi Investment Ltd v. Tibet Pharmaceuticals Inc
Opinion of the Court
This case comes to the Court as a certified interlocutory appeal. The sole question presented is whether, under Section 11 of the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. § 77k, a nonvoting board observer affiliated with an issuer's placement agent is a "person who, with his consent, is named in the registration statement as being or about to become a director[ ] [or] person performing similar functions ...." Id. § 77k(a)(3).
We think not. As required by the text of § 77k(a)(3), our inquiry begins and ends with the registration statement's description of the Defendants. We hold as a matter of law that the Defendants' functions are not "similar" to those that board directors perform, so we will reverse the District Court's order and direct the entry of summary judgment for the Defendants.
I
Tibet Pharmaceuticals, Inc. is a holding company. Through an array of parent-subsidiary relationships and contractual rights, Tibet "effectively control[led]" Yunnan Shangri-La Tibetan Pharmaceutical Group Limited (Yunnan), an operating company that manufactured and sold traditional Tibetan medicines.
Dartell v. Tibet Pharm., Inc.
,
Hayden Zou was an early investor in Tibet and the sole director of China Tibetan Pharmaceuticals Limited, a wholly owned subsidiary of Tibet. Tibet's ability to control Yunnan flowed through China Tibetan. In late 2009, Zou told L. McCarthy Downs, III, a managing director at the investment bank Anderson & Strudwick, Inc. (A&S), about Tibet. The two discussed the prospect of a Tibet IPO, and A&S later agreed to serve as Tibet's placement agent. Zou and Downs then worked together to bring Tibet public. Tibet's IPO registration statement became effective in late 2010.
Zou and Downs were neither signatories to the registration statement nor named in it as directors of Tibet. Instead, they were listed as nonvoting board observers chosen by A&S. Though Zou and Downs would have no formal powers or duties, the registration statement explained "they may nevertheless significantly influence the outcome of matters submitted to the Board of Directors for approval." App. 178.
As it turned out, the registration statement
Just before Tibet filed its amended final prospectus, the Chinese government froze all of Yunnan's assets. Tibet did not disclose that either. The IPO closed soon thereafter, and Tibet and its underwriters offered 3 million shares to the public at $ 5.50 per share. But Yunnan still hadn't paid what it owed, so the Agricultural Bank of China auctioned off the company's assets. This prompted the NASDAQ to halt trading in Tibet's stock, and its price plummeted.
Plaintiffs sued Zou, Downs, Tibet, A&S, the IPO's auditor, and several other Defendants on behalf of a class of stock purchasers. As relevant to this certified interlocutory appeal, Plaintiffs alleged Zou and Downs violated Section 11 of the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. § 77k(a).
II
Section 11 imposes near-strict liability for untruths and omissions made in a registration statement.
See
In re Suprema Specialties, Inc. Sec. Litig.
,
Because § 11 is such strong medicine, and to meet its purpose of enforcing accurate registration statement disclosure, it applies only to limited and enumerated categories of defendants.
See
Herman & MacLean
,
The District Court, finding there were material issues of fact about whether Zou and Downs had been named as people
"performing similar functions to a director,"
Dartell
,
We will have an ongoing relationship with our Placement Agent that may impact our shareholders' ability to impact decisions related to our operations.
In connection with this offering, we have agreed to allow our Placement Agent to designate two non-voting observers to our Board of Directors until the earlier of the date that: (i) the investors that purchase shares in this offering beneficially own less than five percent (5%) of our outstanding shares; or (ii) the trading price per share is at least [$ 24 per share] for any consecutive 15 trading day period. Although our Placement Agent's observers will not be able to vote, they may nevertheless significantly influence the outcome of matters submitted to the Board of Directors for approval.
App. 178; see App. 230.
After acknowledging that Zou and Downs would not be able to vote, the District Court observed "they may nevertheless significantly influence the outcome of matters submitted to the Board of Directors for approval."
Dartell
,
Zou and Downs moved for certification of that order under
Can Defendants be potentially liable under Section 11 of the Securities Act of 1933, each as a "person performing similar functions" to a director, in light of Defendants' role as board observers who could (but did not necessarily have to) significantly influence the outcome of matters submitted to the board of directors for approval?
Order at 2, No. 2-14-cv-03620 (D.N.J. Feb. 21, 2018), ECF No. 313. We granted Zou and Downs's timely Petition for Permission to Appeal and now reverse.
III
The Securities Act does not define "director," so we turn to dictionary definitions from the time Congress enacted the statute.
See
New Prime Inc. v. Oliveira
, --- U.S. ----,
Because § 77k(a)(3) also lists "partner[s]" (in context, another business organization title) and because § 77k(a) lists other statutory defendants by technical titles ("underwriters" for example), it seems clear enough Congress meant "director" in the second, specialized sense.
See
Yates v. United States
,
Beyond the text of the Securities Act, the Exchange Act definition of director-which uses the phrase "director of a corporation"-reinforces our conclusion.
See
15 U.S.C. § 78c(a)(7) ("The term 'director' means any director of a corporation or any person performing similar functions with respect to any organization, whether incorporated or unincorporated."). So does Securities Act Regulation C, which defines "director" the same way.
What functions, then, typify directorship? "The whole of the directors collectively form the board of directors."
Directors
, Black's Law Dictionary 581 (3d ed. 1933). Acting as a board, directors are the corporation's agents. 2 Fletcher Cyc. Corp. § 507 (Sept. 2018 update) ; 4 Fletcher Cyc. Corp. § 2261 (1918). The board manages the corporation's affairs by: (1) selecting senior officers; (2) controlling executive
compensation; (3) delegating administrative authority to officers; (4) making high level corporate policy; (5) deciding financing and capital allocation; and (6) supervising the "welfare of the whole enterprise." 2 Fletcher Cyc. Corp. § 505 (Sept. 2018 update) ;
see
4 Fletcher Cyc. Corp. §§ 1729, 1961, 1966 (1918) ;
Blasband v. Rales
,
A commonsense example explains why this is so. We might describe a "sedan" as similar to a "truck"-both are vehicles, after all. But an ordinary English speaker would not say a sedan is similar to a "light-duty pickup truck." The use of a narrowing term of art that distinguishes one class of trucks from others connotes a likeness of specific functions-beyond basics like personal transportation. So too the question here is not whether Zou and Downs are "similar" to "directors" in some abstract sense. The question is rather whether they possess at least some of the core powers and responsibilities that define corporate directorship under the law of corporations.
IV
Having defined our terms, we turn to consider what sources are relevant to deciding whether a person is a proper § 77k(a)(3) defendant, and who ought to make that decision. As to the first question, the District Court held only the registration statement itself is relevant. We agree. It follows from that holding that whether one is a proper defendant under § 77k(a)(3) is a question of law for the court, not a question of fact for the jury.
A
What evidence is relevant to our inquiry? Section 77k(a)(3) asks whether a defendant is "with his consent, [ ] named in the registration statement as being or about to become ... [a] person performing similar functions" to a director. (Emphasis added). The phrase "named in the registration statement as" compels reference to the description provided there. And § 77k(a)(3)'s text, structure, surrounding provisions, and requirement of consent to be named all tell us that the inquiry stops there.
For starters, it would be odd as a matter of logic to consider defendants' real-world actions to determine whether they were "named" in a specified document as "about" to perform certain functions. To "name" a person as "about" to do something is to make a prediction. And § 77k(a)(3) asks only whether the issuer made that prediction in its registration statement. Whether the prediction was well-supported when it was made and whether it came true are irrelevant.
Section 77k(a)(3)'s syntax leads to the same conclusion. To hold extrinsic evidence relevant would substitute an "and" for the "as"-so that once a court finds a person "named" in the registration statement, it then determines whether in fact the person's role is, or will be, director-like. But the statute doesn't say "named in the registration statement and ... about to become ... [a] person performing similar functions." Read slightly differently, Plaintiffs' preferred interpretation would excise the phrase "named in the registration statement as" altogether and rewrite § 77k(a)(3) to say "every person who, with his consent, is or is about to become a director [or] person performing similar functions." That language too would ask whether Zou and Downs were in fact about to become quasi-directors. And it would make sense then to consider extrinsic evidence. But § 77k(a)(3) doesn't say that either.
Our reading is also supported by § 77k(a)'s provision for expert liability, which uses language much like § 77k(a)(3) :
Every accountant, engineer, or appraiser, or any person whose profession gives authority to a statement made by him, who has with his consent been named as having prepared or certified any part of the registration statement, or as having prepared or certified any report or valuation which is used in connection with the registration statement, with respect to the statement in such registration statement, report, or valuation, which purports to have been prepared or certified by him ....
15 U.S.C. § 77k(a)(4) (emphases added). By making the "statement" the subject of the phrase "purports to have been prepared or certified," § 77k(a)(4) limits the inquiry into whether an expert is "named as having prepared or certified" the statement to the face of the document in which it's made.
See
Herman & MacLean
,
Of course, there was no reason to include the "purports to have been prepared or certified" language in § 77k(a)(3). That's because liability under § 77k(a)(3) is not limited to particular statements within the registration statement. But § 77k(a)(4) confirms the commonsense construction that the phrase "named ... as" asks only about the words of the document doing the naming. And § 77k(a)'s other subsections likewise suggest the phrase "named ... as" has this meaning.
Furthermore, it's clear Congress knew how to extend liability to a broader class of defendants when it wanted to-because it did. Unlike § 77k(a)(3) and (4), two of § 77k(a)'s enumerated categories are phrased without reference to how a person is named in the registration statement.
See
15 U.S.C. § 77k(a)(2) (liability for "every person
who was a director
of (or person performing similar functions) or partner in the issuer at the time of the filing of the part of the registration statement with respect to which his liability is asserted" (emphasis added));
Finally, the requirement of consent to be named, see § 77k(a)(3), confirms that our inquiry stops at the text of the registration statement. It is hard to see how this consent could be informed if a person's status (and potential liability) were speculative and mutable based on facts and events beyond the text of the registration statement. See 5 Arnold S. Jacobs, Disclosure & Remedies Under the Sec. Laws § 3:17 (Dec. 2018 update) ("Questions regarding the interpretation" of the phrase "performing similar functions" "rarely should arise because the person would not give consent unless he thought he was within the ambit of one of the terms").
B
Having decided that the registration statement controls who is subject to § 77k(a)(3) liability, it follows that courts, not juries, must determine the scope of that provision and whether the terms of a registration statement bring a defendant within it. "The construction of written instruments is one of those things that judges often do and are likely to do better than jurors unburdened by training in exegesis."
Markman v. Westview Instruments, Inc.
,
Even if the inquiry included subsidiary questions of fact, "[u]niformity would ... be ill served,"
Markman
,
V
As we have explained, the function of a board of directors is to direct and manage the company's affairs. Individual directors do this by formal voting. And because each director bears part of the ultimate responsibility for the company's fate, each owes duties of care and loyalty and may be voted out for mismanagement (or for no reason at all). Zou and Downs's roles, as described in the registration statement, are not "of a like nature or kind," Similar , Oxford English Dictionary 59 (1st ed. 1933).
Three features differentiate Zou and Downs from directors. First, and most fundamentally, Zou and Downs cannot vote for board action. Second, they are aligned with the placement agent, A&S, not Tibet. And third, their tenures are set to end automatically, with no opportunity to vote them out. Without the ability to manage the company's affairs, Zou and Downs lack directors' most basic power. As agents of Tibet's placement agent, their loyalties aren't with Tibet's shareholders-and loyalty to shareholders is as vital to directorship as the power to manage. And unlike Tibet's directors, their tenure is not subject to shareholder vote. Add to that the registration statement's express provision for directors' fiduciary duties, with no similar provision for Zou and Downs.
Consider a hypothetical investment analyst for a research firm. Like Zou and Downs, he owes no duties to the issuer and is affiliated with a different entity. He might also enjoy special access to the issuer's board and management.
Cf.
Regulation FD,
Our conclusion is also supported by Securities Act § 6(a) and the consent requirement of § 77k(a)(3). And it fits both the scant caselaw interpreting § 77k(a)(3) and the only case in which our Court has interpreted parallel language.
First, Securities Act § 6(a), 15 U.S.C. § 77f(a), which lists who must sign
Second, § 77k(a)(3) imposes liability only on a person named in the registration statement as a director or similar "with his consent." Consent can't be inferred merely by the appearance of one's name in the registration statement. By regulation, the registration statement must include express, written consent, filed as an exhibit.
See
And third, our conclusion tracks the only cases to interpret the phrase "performing similar functions" in § 77k(a)(3), as well as our Court's lone interpretation of the same phrase in a different context. The two district courts to consider the phrase suggested it requires something like formal powers.
See
Mersay v. First Republic Corp. of Am.
,
And the only case in which our Court interpreted the phrase (in a different context) is likewise consistent with the conclusion that "performing similar functions" entails a similarity of formal powers and duties. In
First Liberty Investment Group v. Nicholsberg
,
The contractor was thus closely affiliated with the broker-dealer, and operated very much like a branch manager would-with formal powers, rights, and duties to match.
See
Plaintiffs' two main arguments to the contrary are unpersuasive. First, they contend the registration statement contains a "clear grant of limitless power to Appellants to 'significantly' influence the 'outcomes'
of the highest-level corporate decision-making ...." Obasi Br. 12. Far from it. That Zou and Downs, as nonvoting observers, "may" influence board decisions is not a grant of power at all. That's so even if their influence turns out to be "significant." And it's so notwithstanding the observations of "an experienced investor" about the real-world social dynamics of boardrooms. Obasi Br. 25-28. Simply put, the face of the registration statement confers no actual power upon Zou or Downs.
The Sixth Circuit made a similar point in
Bennett v. Durham
,
Finally, Plaintiffs insist the Securities Act is a remedial statute that we should construe broadly. That may be so,
see
Affiliated Ute Citizens of Utah v. United States
,
Plaintiffs also overstate the concern that a broad construction is necessary to hold wrongdoers accountable. Section 11 is but one part of an overlapping web of civil liability provisions. Recall that Plaintiffs allege "Zou and Downs orchestrated the fraudulent sale of $ 16.5 million of worthless Tibet stock." Obasi Br. 10. Exchange Act § 10(b), 15 U.S.C. § 78j, and Rule 10b-5,
For these reasons, "we will not presume with [Plaintiffs] that any result consistent with their account of the statute's overarching goal must be the law but will presume more modestly instead 'that the legislature says what it means and means what it says.' "
Henson v. Santander Consumer USA
Inc.
, --- U.S. ----,
* * *
Because Zou and Downs were not "named in the registration statement as being or about to become [ ] director[s] [or] person[s] performing similar functions," we will reverse the District Court's denial of summary judgment and direct the entry of judgment for Zou and Downs.
The District Court had jurisdiction under
We note the District Court used the term "prospectus," not "registration statement" for the central document in this case. That was accurate, but for our purposes there is no difference between the two. That's because Tibet's amended final prospectus, filed post-effectiveness under Rule 424, is considered part of its registration statement.
See
Regulation C,
Unless they bought their securities more than 12 months after the registration statement became effective, 15 U.S.C. § 77k(a).
The District Court granted Zou and Downs's motions for summary judgment "with respect to their liability pursuant to [§ 77k(a)(2) ]," Order at 1, No. 2-14-cv-03620 (D.N.J. May 10, 2017), ECF No. 269, and the parties have litigated this interlocutory appeal solely under § 77k(a)(3). We follow the parties' lead in addressing only § 77k(a)(3), and express no opinion on the correctness of the District Court's summary judgment for Zou and Downs under § 77k(a)(2).
An amendment to the Securities Act suggests later Congresses agreed. The Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 amended § 77k(f) to make "outside directors" proportionately (rather than jointly and severally) liable.
See
Pub. L. No. 104-67, § 201(b),
Plaintiffs point to two Exchange Act SEC interpretive releases they say suggest a broader definition.
See
Obasi Br. 23-25 (discussing Ownership Reports & Trading by Officers, Directors & Principal Sec. Holders, Exchange Act Release No. 17991,
First, the releases interpret the meaning of "officers and directors" "for Section 16 purposes." Release No. 17991,
Section 16's divergent goals manifest in reasoning that would make little sense in the § 11 context. Release No. 17991 explains, for instance, that the terms "[o]fficers, directors, and ten percent holders .... also include[ ] an officer or director who has terminated officer or director status but continues to be subject to reporting under Section 16."
Second, and as we explain infra in Part IV, the § 77k(a)(3) inquiry is limited to the face of the registration statement. That limitation is based on language in § 77k(a)(3) ("named in the registration statement as") that does not appear in § 16. See § 16(a)(1), 15 U.S.C. § 78p(a)(1) ("Every person who is directly or indirectly the beneficial owner of more than 10 percent of any class of any equity security ... or who is a director or an officer of the issuer of such security, shall file the statements required by this subsection with the Commission." (emphasis added)). Section 16, unlike § 77k(a)(3), invites an inquiry into the actual circumstances of a purported director.
Once we accept that distinction, our holding accords with the release provisions Plaintiffs cite. The releases attempt to cover people with policymaking power and access to inside information, while excluding figureheads-without formalistic reliance on titles. Likewise, our interpretation of § 77k(a)(3) includes only persons who, on the face of the registration statement, exercise formal power similar to directors. If the registration statement here described Zou and Downs as having that kind of power, their "observer" title would not absolve them.
As we explain infra in Part V, Securities Act § 6(a), 15 U.S.C. § 77f(a) (which prescribes who must sign the registration statement) provides additional support for our conclusion that "similar" requires a likeness of formal powers.
It cannot be that § 77k(a)(3)'s extra language adds merely a requirement that the registration statement disclose the defendant's identity. The Securities Act already requires registration statements to include "the names and addresses of the directors or persons performing similar functions." Securities Act Schedule A, 15 U.S.C. § 77aa(4).
It's conceivable that a registration statement's description of a defendant might include ambiguous terms. A judge might then look to evidence of technical meaning (or to other extrinsic sources). While this would be factfinding reviewable only for clear error,
see
Teva Pharm. USA, Inc. v. Sandoz, Inc.
,
And thus become liable for misstatements under § 77k(a)(1).
Dissenting Opinion
The District Court certified the following question for interlocutory appeal:
Can Defendants be potentially liable under Section 11 of the Securities Act of 1933, each as a "person performing similar functions" to a director, in light of Defendants' role as board observers who could (but did not necessarily have to) significantly influence the outcome of matters submitted to the board of directors for approval?
(2/21/18 Order at 2.) Because I agree with the District Court that this question must be answered in the affirmative, I respectfully dissent.
I do not really take issue with the basic definitions of "director" and "similar" offered by the majority, although I do reject its application of these concepts. "[I]n a more specialized sense related to business organizations, ['director'] could mean '[a] member of a board appointed to direct or manage the affairs of a commercial corporation or company.' [
Director
, Oxford English Dictionary 392 (1st ed. 1933) ];
see
Directors
, Black's Law Dictionary 581 (3d ed. 1933) (defining 'director' as a 'person[ ] appointed or elected according to law, authorized to manage and direct the affairs of a corporation or company')." (Majority Opinion at 184.) The District Court likewise "defines 'director' as [inter alia] '[a] person appointed or elected to sit on a board that manages the affairs of a corporation or other organization by electing and exercising control over its officers.' "
Dartell v. Tibet Pharms., Inc.
, Civil Action No. 14-3620,
Even if Section 11(a)(3) of the Securities Act thereby requires more than some slight similarity, the majority fails to recognize the expansive scope of this "similar"
language. Congress chose to use this word instead of the terms "identical" or the "same"-or even "essentially identical" or "essentially the same." We should honor Congress's choice of such language, which the majority acknowledges could encompass varying degrees of likeness. According to the majority, "[t]he question is rather whether they possess at least some of the core powers and responsibilities that define corporate directorship under the law of corporations." (
Id.
at 186 (footnote omitted).) However, the statutory language plainly requires that the individual merely perform functions "similar" to, i.e., " 'of a like nature or kind' " as (
id.
at 186 (quoting
Similar
, Oxford English Dictionary 59 (1st ed. 1933))), the functions of a director. The majority's approach actually resembles the formulation set forth by the British Companies Act of 1929, which defines "director" as including "any person occupying the position of director by whatever name called." (JA818 (comparing statutory language).) Although the Securities Act was modeled on the British Companies Act,
see, e.g.
,
Gustafson v. Alloyd Co.
,
More broadly, the Court should not overlook the purposes of the 1933 Securities Act as well as Section 11 in particular. The "basic purpose" of this legislation was "to provide greater protection to purchasers of registered securities."
Herman & MacLean v. Huddleston
,
Accordingly, a person may be named as performing similar functions to a director even if he or she does not possess the directors' "formal power to direct and manage a corporation, and the responsibilities and duties that accompany those powers" (
id.
at 185 (footnote omitted)). On the contrary, he or she is a person named in the registration statement as being or about to become a person performing similar functions if, pursuant to this statement, he or she possesses powers or abilities that are of a like nature or kind as the power to direct or manage the affairs of the corporation. As the District Court aptly explained, "a defendant may be held liable if he had the ability to exercise similar control and management as a director when the registration statement at issue was filed or was named as about to assume such a role in the registration statement, even if the corporation at issue also had a board of directors or persons about to be named directors."
Dartell
,
"[T]he registration statement explained 'they [Zou and Downs] may nevertheless significantly influence the outcome of matters submitted to the Board of Directors for approval.' " ( Id. at 181-82 (quoting JA178).) Specifically, the " Management " section of the statement (JA226) included a subsection addressing the " Relationship with our Placement Agent" :
In connection with this offering, we have agreed to allow our Placement Agent to designate two non-voting observers to our Board of Directors until the earlier of the date that:
• The investors that purchase shares in this offering beneficially own less than 5% of our outstanding shares; or
• The trading price per share is at least $ 24 per share for any consecutive 15 trading day period.
It is anticipated that Mr. Downs, our Placement Agent's Senior Vice President, and Mr. Hayden Zou will serve as the Placement Agent's observers to our Board of Directors.
Although our placement agent's observers will not be able to vote, they may nevertheless influence the outcome of matters submitted to the Board of Directors for approval. We have agreed to reimburse the observers for their expenses for attending our Board meetings, subject to a maximum reimbursement of $ 6,000 per meeting and $ 12,000 annually, which amount is not more than the reimbursement payable to our directors. The observer will be required to certify that such travel expenses are not reimbursed by any other party. We will also pay observers the same amount as our independent directors receive.
(JA230.) A similar subsection was included as part of the "RISK FACTORS " discussion (JA152):
We will have an ongoing relationship with our Placement Agent that may impact our shareholders' ability to impact decisions related to our operations.
In connection with this offering, we have agreed to allow our Placement Agent to designate two non-voting observers to our Board of Directors until the earlier of the date that:
(i) the investors that purchase shares in this offering beneficially own less than five percent (5%) of our outstanding shares; or
(ii) the trading price per share is at least four (4) times the offering price for any consecutive 15 trading day period.
Although our Placement Agent's observers will not be able to vote, they may nevertheless significantly influence the outcome of matters submitted to the Board of Directors for approval. We have agreed to reimburse the observers for their expenses for attending our Board meetings, subject to a maximum reimbursement of $ 6,000 per meeting and $ 12,000 annually, which amount is not more than the reimbursement payable to our directors. The observer will be required to certify that such travel expenses are not reimbursed by any other party. We will also pay observers the same amount as our independent directors receive. As of the date of this prospectus, Mr. L. McCarthy Downs III and Mr. Hayden Zou are serving as our Placement Agent's observers to our Board of Directors. See "Management - Board of Directors Observer."
(JA178.)
According to the majority, there are three features differentiating Defendants from directors: (1) "First, and most fundamentally, Zou and Downs cannot vote for board action" while individual directors direct and manage company affairs by means of formal voting (Majority Opinion at 189); (2) they are aligned with the placement agent as opposed to Tibet and its shareholders; and (3) their tenures are set to end automatically without any opportunity for the shareholders to vote them out. There are some obvious differences between observers as described by the registration statement and directors (after all, even the registration statement acknowledged Defendants' inability to vote), and I agree with the District Court that "simply being named a board observer did not open Downs or Zou up to Section 11 liability because the title does not indicate that such a position necessarily performs similar functions to a director,"
Dartell
,
Given the plain language of the registration statement, Defendants are clearly named as possessing powers or abilities that are of a like nature or kind as the directors' power to direct or manage the affairs of the corporation:
The prospectus does not define any of the words used to describe the Board Observers' role. As a result, the Court turns to dictionary definitions. First, the statement indicates that Board Observers would have the ability to influence the Tibet Board. "Influence" is defined as "the power or capacity of causing an effect in indirect or intangible ways." Influence , [Merriam-Webster Dictionary] (2016). Next, the description provides that this influence would be significant. "Significant" means "of a noticeably or measurably large amount." Significant , [Merriam-Webster Dictionary] (2016). Thus, the language "significantly influence" indicates that the two Board Observers could play a critical role in board decisions.
Id.
at *10. In fact, the registration statement "does not place a limit on whom or what they may influence,"
id.
, and Defendants' thereby may "significantly" influence the outcome of all matters submitted to the Board-which, according to the statement, "makes all relevant [Tibet] decisions" (JA229). In turn, "our Placement Agent's observers" were appointed "[i]n connection with this offering" (JA178, JA230), indicating that Defendants' capacity for significant influence is linked to the public offering itself.
See, e.g.
,
Herman & MacLean
,
According to the majority, "[t]hat Zou and Downs, as nonvoting observers, 'may' influence board decisions is not a grant of power at all." (Majority Opinion at 191.) It compares Defendants to a hypothetical investment analyst for a research firm, who might (or might not) have special access to the issuer's board of directors and management, power to influence the board based on the analyst's reputation and influence in the industry, and whose "influence-his power to persuade-might even 'impact [the issuer's] shareholders' ability to impact decisions related to [its] operations' " (
id.
at 189 (quoting JA178)). However, we do not-and should not-decide whether this imaginary analyst is named as being or about to become a director or a person performing similar functions. In any event, there is no indication that the analyst resembles "our Placement Agent observers" (JA230) and is entitled to similar compensation as the directors. The majority continues to insist that Section 11(a)(3) "includes only persons who, on the face of the registration statement, exercise formal power similar to directors" (Majority Opinion at 186 n.6)-even though someone need not have any "formal powers" to perform similar functions under Section 11(a)(3). In fact, influence is itself a form of power, defined as "
the power or capacity
of causing an effect in indirect or intangible ways."
Influence
, Merriam-Webster Dictionary (2016) (emphasis added). Under the plain language of the registration statement, such "significant" power over the outcome of matters submitted to the Board of Directors for approval is of a like nature or kind to the formal powers that directors possess to direct and manage the company's affairs. In fact, Defendants may have more real power than the nominal members of the Board of Directors. The majority recognizes that directors act as a board and that it is the board of directors that manages the corporation's affairs. In short, an individual director or group of directors may vote and lose on matters submitted to the Board for approval and thereby fail to influence the outcome of such matters while Defendants "may nevertheless significantly influence the outcome of [the] matter[ ]" (JA178). In such circumstances, the statutory language and purpose plainly mandate holding such individuals liable under Section 11(a)(3).
For the foregoing reasons, I would affirm the District Court's denial of summary judgment.
I agree with the majority that, in considering a claim under Section 11(a)(3), we must look to what is actually stated in the registration statement (as opposed to the defendant's real-world actions). I, however, do not agree that "whether one is a proper defendant under § 77k(a)(3) is a question of law for the court, not a question of fact for the jury." (Majority Opinion at 186.) While judges often do construe written instruments, there are some clear exceptions. For example, if a contract is susceptible to multiple reasonable interpretations, the contract is ambiguous, and the jury is tasked with resolving that ambiguity.
See, e.g.
,
Baldwin v. Univ. of Pittsburgh Med. Ctr.
,
I also am not persuaded by the other arguments raised by the majority opinion, including the case law it cites. In
First Liberty Investment Group v. Nicholsberg
,
Defendants also assert that Section 11(a)(3), at least as interpreted by the District Court and Plaintiffs, would be unconstitutionally vague as applied to them. Given my analysis of this statutory provision, I do not agree that it " 'fails to give a person of ordinary intelligence fair notice that his contemplated conduct is forbidden by the statute.' "
Papachristou v. City of Jacksonville
,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- OBASI INVESTMENT LTD; Jingli Shao; Robin Joachim Dartell; Lixin Wu; Jason Helton ; Sean Carithers, Individually and on Behalf of All Others Similarly Situated v. TIBET PHARMACEUTICALS, INC ; Hong Yu; Taylor Z. Guo; Sabrina Ren; Wenbo Chen; Youhang Pen; Solomon Chen; Anderson & Strudwick Inc; Sterne Agee Group Inc; Hayden Zou; L. McCarthy Downs, III; Acquavella Chiarelli Shuster Berkower & Co., L.L.P., Hayden Zou; L. McCarthy Downs, III, Appellants
- Cited By
- 11 cases
- Status
- Published