EDITH H. JONES, Chief Judge:
Rio Grande Royalty Company, Inc., contends that defendants Energy Transfer Partners, L.P., Energy Transfer Company, ETC Marketing, Ltd., and Houston Pipeline Company committed common law fraud by truthfully reporting natural gas transactions that, because of the defendants' alleged monopolization of the Houston spot market, served to lower prices artificially on long-term contracts. As a result of the alleged misrepresentations, the defendants and other gas buyers were able to purchase natural gas at below-market prices, to the detriment of Rio
The district court found that the plaintiff's complaint failed to state a claim under FED.R.CIV.P. 12(b)(6), and we therefore assume the truth of all facts properly pled within it.
The parties are participants in the natural gas market, buying and selling contracts for the delivery of gas. These contracts are typically of two kinds: those in which the price is fixed in the contract and those in which the price is determined by reference to a published price index. The price index at issue here, for deliveries to the Houston Ship Channel (HSC), is published monthly by trade publications such as Platts Inside FERC's Gas Market Report and is based on fixed-price transactions made during a "bidweek," usually the last five business days of the preceding month. Buyers and sellers voluntarily report volume and price data to Platts, which then calculates the index price.
The plaintiffs allege that the defendants—energy traders and operators of interstate pipelines and other infrastructure—monopolized trading in the market through HSC, a principal U.S. natural gas gateway, from December 2003 through December 2005. During this period, the defendants exploited their market position by making bidweek sales at artificially low prices—in other words, dumping. This, in turn, suppressed the HSC index, to the benefit of the defendants, which were net buyers of natural gas, and to the detriment of the plaintiff and other sellers bound by index-linked contracts.
Rio Grande filed suit in 2008, seeking to certify a class of all natural gas sellers, other than the defendants, who sold gas at prices determined by reference to the manipulated HSC index.
The plaintiff's amended complaint sought to remedy its Sherman Act monopolization claim and asserted an additional claim of common law fraud. The defendants, it alleged, "knowingly, intentionally and recklessly misrepresented and omitted material facts by, inter alia, reporting trade data ... to Platts that: (i) intentionally
The district court denied the plaintiff's motion to amend its complaint for futility, finding that the amended complaint still failed to state a claim under Rule 12(b)(6). Truthful reporting of sales data, it held, did not constitute a misrepresentation, and the plaintiffs had failed to plead facts showing the defendants' intent to induce reliance by failing to disclose any market manipulation.
The plaintiff timely appealed, challenging only the dismissal of its common law fraud claim.
A district court's denial of a motion for leave to amend a pleading is subject to review for abuse of discretion. Word of Faith World Outreach Ctr. Church, Inc. v. Sawyer, 90 F.3d 118, 124 (5th Cir.1996). The trial court acts within its discretion in denying leave to amend where the proposed amendment would be futile because it could not survive a motion to dismiss. Briggs v. Mississippi, 331 F.3d 499, 508 (5th Cir.2003).
On appeal, Rio Grande reasserts that its allegations state a claim for fraud by misrepresentation or omission. Specifically, it argues that the truthful reporting of transactions tainted by market manipulation may amount to fraudulent misrepresentation and that failure to disclose this misrepresentation may amount to a fraudulent omission of material fact.
To state a claim of fraud by misrepresentation under Texas law, a plaintiff must sufficiently allege (1) a misrepresentation that (2) the speaker knew to be false or made recklessly (3) with the intention to induce the plaintiff's reliance, followed by (4) actual and justifiable reliance (5) causing injury. Ernst & Young, L.L.P. v. Pac. Mut. Life Ins. Co., 51 S.W.3d 573, 577 (Tex.2001).
Alternatively, a plaintiff may, in limited circumstances, claim fraud by omission: "[S]ilence may be equivalent to a false representation only when the particular circumstances impose a duty on the party to speak and he deliberately remains silent." Bradford v. Vento, 48 S.W.3d 749, 755 (Tex.2001). "Generally, no duty of disclosure arises without evidence of a confidential or fiduciary relationship," Ins. Co. of N. Am. v. Morris, 981 S.W.2d 667, 674 (Tex.1998), but the plaintiff here alleges no such relationship. Outside of such a relationship, a duty to disclose may arise, among other circumstances, "when one makes a partial disclosure and conveys a false impression." Brown & Brown of Tex., Inc. v. Omni Metals, Inc., 317 S.W.3d 361, 384, 2010 WL 1240580, at *16 (Tex.App.—Houston 2010).
Therefore, to prevail under either theory—affirmative misrepresentation or omission—the plaintiff must allege some defect in the defendants' voluntary reports to Platts. To that end, it claims that these sales reports were misstatements because the sales did not represent "the true market price of natural gas sold at HSC." This, in turn, gave rise to a false impression, which the defendants were obliged to correct.
Both theories depend on the conjecture that a sample of market transactions, compiled
We do not discount the possibility that price reports may be tainted by fraud. A report could plainly misstate the terms of a transaction. It could fabricate a transaction out of whole cloth or be the result of "wash trades"—offsetting transactions calculated to manipulate prices— that are, in substance, equally fictitious. But the plaintiff alleges none of these. Rather, as the amended complaint recounts, the defendants engaged in real transactions of real economic substance and reported the details of those transactions accurately. That these transactions may have been carried out at artificially low prices does not render the reporting of those prices a misstatement.
For the same reason, the defendants were not obliged to disclose that their price reports did not represent "the true market forces of supply and demand." If the Platts index is "representative of transactions," and if the defendants' transactions were properly reported, then there could be no false impression—at no point did the index cease being "representative of transactions"—and hence no duty to disclose.
The plaintiff has failed to allege either a material misstatement or actionable omission on the part of the defendants and so has failed to state a claim for fraud. For reason of futility, the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying the plaintiff leave to amend its complaint.
The district court's dismissal of the appellant's claims is AFFIRMED.