Articles

Omnicare: Negligence is the New Strict Liability When Pleading Omissions Under the Securities Act

Corporate Law & Accountability Report (BNA)

March 20, 2015

The 1933 Securities Act requires a company, prior to issuing securities via a public offering, to file a registration statement, and ยง 11 of the Act makes statement issuers liable, via a private right of action, if, inter alia, that statement โ€˜โ€˜contain[s] an untrue statement of a material factโ€™โ€™ or โ€˜โ€˜omit[s] to state a material fact . . . necessary to make the statements therein not misleading.โ€™โ€™ 15 U.S.C. ยง 77k(a). Section 11 has no scienter requirement, thus the statute makes no mention of an issuerโ€™s intent to mislead.

On Oct. 4, 2013, after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit denied its motion to dismiss the plaintiffsโ€™ Securities Act claims (12 CARE 675, 6/20/14), Omnicare Inc. filed a petition for certiorari with the Supreme Court, presenting the following question: โ€˜โ€˜For purposes of a Section 11 claim, may a plaintiff plead that a statement of opinion was โ€˜untrueโ€™ merely by alleging that the opinion itself was objectively wrong, as the Sixth Circuit has concluded, or must the plaintiff also allege that the statement was subjectively falseโ€” requiring allegations that the speakerโ€™s actual opinion was different from the one expressedโ€”as the Second, Third, and Ninth Circuits have held?โ€™โ€™ The Supreme Court granted certiorari March 3, 2014 (12 CARE 1451, 11/7/14) and issued a March 24 opinion by Justice Elena Kagan that delineated the circumstances in which liability can attach to a statement of opinion in a registration statement.

Read Omnicare: Negligence is the New Strict Liability When Pleading Omissions Under the Securities Act