CLS Blue Sky Blog

Paul Weiss Discusses Increased Burden of Pleading Corporate Scienter

On May 27, the Second Circuit issued a ruling that significantly heightens the already heavy burden plaintiffs face in pleading corporate scienter.  The Second Circuit affirmed dismissal of a putative securities class action against Kimberly-Clark Corporation and Avanos Medical, Inc. based on alleged misrepresentations by those companies’ senior executives. The decision upheld the district court’s ruling that plaintiff’s proposed amended complaint failed to raise a strong inference of corporate scienter. The Second Circuit ruled that a plaintiff cannot establish corporate scienter merely by relying on the statements of employees who never communicated their knowledge to specific senior executives who (i) made the challenged statements, or (ii) whose knowledge could fairly be imputed to the corporation. The Second Circuit also found that, although the challenged statements allegedly concerned the companies’ “key product,” this was not an “exceedingly rare instance” in which the information was “so dramatic that collective corporate scienter may be inferred.” The decision will be particularly useful to companies and executives defending a securities fraud complaint with allegations attributed to low- or mid-level “former employees” or “confidential witnesses.”

Background

The Jackson Decision

Second, according to plaintiff, the surgical gown “was of such core importance” to the Corporate Defendants that their senior executives must have known of the alleged falsity of the representations at issue.[6] The Second Circuit rejected that argument. Plaintiff’s “naked assertion” that the gown was a “key product” was “plainly insufficient” to raise a strong inference of corporate scienter.[7] And the Corporate Defendants’ statements concerning the surgical gown’s compliance with industry safety standards were not sufficiently “dramatic” to make this an “exceedingly rare instance” in which collective corporate scienter could be inferred.[8] The decision left open the question of what type of statement might meet such an exacting standard.

Implications of the Jackson Decision

The Second Circuit also expressed deep skepticism that senior corporate officers should be expected (or presumed) to know major developments affecting a company’s core business—the so-called “core operations theory.” While the Court recognized there may be an “exceedingly rare case” in which a challenged statement is “so dramatic” that scienter can be inferred on such a theory, a simple allegation that the alleged fraud concerned a company’s “key product” is insufficient. Securities fraud defendants now have additional ammunition to attack this often-pleaded theory at the motion to dismiss stage.

ENDNOTES

[1]       Jackson v. Abernathy, et al., No. 19-cv-1300, slip op. at 4 (2d Cir. May 27, 2020).

[2]       Id. at 6.

[3]       Id. at 9.

[4]       Id. at 11.

[5]       Id. at 12.

[6]       Id.

[7]       Id.

[8]       Id. at 10.

This post comes to us from Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP. It is based on the firm’s memorandum, “Second Circuit Significantly Increases the Burden of Pleading Corporate Scienter,” dated June 2, 2020, and available here.

Exit mobile version