STANLEY R. CHESLER, District Judge.
Lead Plaintiffs bring this motion for leave to file a Sixth Amended Class Action Complaint ("Sixth Amended Complaint"). The amendments they propose fall into two categories: (1) allegations relating to a November 1, 2004 Wall Street Journal article and the effect of the information contained therein had on the value of Merck stock and (2) allegations regarding alleged misstatements about a high-risk group's participation in the VIGOR study and its effects on the study's results. Defendants Merck & Co., Inc. and Alise Reicin (collectively, "Defendants" or "Merck") have opposed the motion. The Court has considered the papers filed by the parties and, for the reasons that follow, will grant the motion in part and deny it in part.
In its August 8, 2011 Opinion addressing Defendants' motion to dismiss the Corrected Consolidated Fifth Amended Class Action Complaint ("Fifth Amended Complaint"), the Court found that the November 1, 2004 Wall Street Journal article did not constitute a corrective disclosure and dismissed Plaintiffs' Rule 10b-5 claim to the extent it was based on that article's contribution to a drop in value of Merck shares for lack of loss causation. In particular, the Court held that the allegations relating to the November 1, 2004 article failed to state the essential element of loss causation because on September 30, 2004, upon Merck's withdrawal of Vioxx from the market because of an increased risk of confirmed cardiovascular events associated with Vioxx use, the fraud on which this lawsuit is based was revealed to the public. The Court reasoned that the false valuation of Merck stock based on the subject misrepresentations and omissions about Vioxx was removed by the September 30, 2004 disclosure, which made clear that Vioxx was no longer a commercially viable product.
In the instant motion, Plaintiffs seek to re-introduce the November 1, 2004 Wall Street Journal article as a curative disclosure, arguing that it was not until the revelation of information contained in that article that the market became fully aware of the extent of Vioxx-related liability exposure faced by Merck. As the August 8, 2011 Opinion summarized, the November 1, 2004 Wall Street Journal piece described previously undisclosed internal Merck documents which demonstrated that Merck was aware of Vioxx's link to a greater incidence of adverse cardiovascular events. According to Plaintiffs, Merck's misrepresentations and omissions not only overstated the commercial viability of Vioxx but also understated the liabilities associated with Vioxx's safety problems, and the latter aspect of the fraud's effect on the overvaluation of Merck stock could not be internalized by the market until the November 1, 2004 article reported various facts concerning Merck's suppression of critical information. Plaintiffs allege that "[t]he November 1, 2004 Wall Street Journal article significantly increased the market's view of Merck's VIOXX-related litigation exposure, including potential punitive damage awards." (Sixth Am. Compl., ¶ 313.
Plaintiffs indicate that, unlike the previous pleading found insufficient by the Court to state loss causation, the proposed Sixth Amended Complaint alleges additional facts that support the causal link between the subject securities fraud and the November 1, 2004 drop in Merck's stock price. The proposed amended pleading alleges that on September 30, 2004 and in the days shortly following Vioxx's withdrawal, analysts "recognized the significant VIOXX liability exposure that Merck faced," (
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The other category of proposed amendments concerns allegations that Defendants falsely stated that the inclusion of a high-risk subgroup of patients in the VIGOR trial supported Merck's claims that the results of the trial were attributable to naproxen's purported cardioprotective effect (as opposed to Vioxx's propensity to increase the risk of a negative cardiovascular event, or prothrombotic effect). In particular, Plaintiffs seek to add factual allegations that Defendants deceived investors regarding the safety profile of Vioxx by explaining that four percent of the participants in the VIGOR trial should have been receiving prophylactic aspirin therapy to prevent heart attacks and strokes and insinuating that these were the VIOXX-taking participants who suffered the majority of the heart attacks. (For simplicity, the Court will refer to this alleged misrepresentation as the "4% Statement.") According to the proposed Sixth Amended Complaint, Merck misled investors with an analysis suggesting that the VIGOR results (which indicated a higher incidence of heart attack in patients taking Vioxx than those taking naproxen) were driven by the high-risk subgroup of patients who should have been screened out in accordance with the study's protocol. (
Rule 15(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure governs motions for leave to amend a complaint. While Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 15(a) directs that leave to amend a complaint should be freely given, the Supreme Court has held that leave to amend should be denied based, among other reasons, for undue delay, bad faith, undue prejudice, and futility of the proposed amendment.
To state a claim that survives a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, a complaint must contain "enough facts to state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face."
Merck argues that it would be futile to expand the § 10(b) claim to include the market's reaction to the November 1, 2004 Wall Street Journal article because it lacks the required correlation to the alleged fraud, that is, a disclosure which could plausibly establish a causal connection between the fraud and the November 1, 2004 stock price drop. To reiterate from the Court's previous opinion in this case, a § 10(b) claim includes a loss causation element. 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4(b)(4);
The November 1, 2004 Wall Street Journal article did not, however, disclose any previously unknown information that revealed the falsity of Merck's statements and omissions regarding the cardiovascular safety profile of Vioxx. That alleged fraud — which forms the basis of the § 10(b) securities fraud claim pled in this action — was exposed at the time that Vioxx was withdrawn from the market by Merck based on concerns with its possible propensity to increase the risk of heart attack or stroke. In contrast, the information reported in the November 1, 2004 Wall Street Journal, which included internal Merck communications indicating awareness of Vioxx's possible cardiovascular risks long before the market withdrawal, prompted analysts to make revised estimates of the damages that may flow from Vioxx-related lawsuits. As the Court held in its August 8, 2011 Opinion, the facts regarding Merck's awareness of Vioxx's safety issues relate to Merck's state of mind in making the alleged misrepresentations and omissions, but that disclosure did not correct or reveal a previously unknown deception. Now, Plaintiffs argue that the corrective disclosure of the November 1, 2004 Wall Street Journal article consists of the revelation that, in light of the deliberate and intentional nature of Merck's deception regarding Vioxx's safety profile, Merck's liability exposure was much greater than previously thought, according to third-party financial and market analysis of the information regarding Merck's knowledge. Such analysis of facts probative of Merck's scienter may be "bad news," which in turn appears to have precipitated a 9.7% drop in the price of Merck stock, but it is not congruent with the fraud alleged in this case and therefore fails to support loss causation.
In spite of Plaintiffs' arguments that due to the November 1, 2004 Wall Street Journal article, the market finally became fully aware of the losses the company could face as a result of Vioxx litigation and reacted accordingly, the Court concludes that Plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate that the information publicized in that article concerned the very facts Plaintiffs allege were misrepresented and/or omitted by Merck. They have not pled a causal connection between the November 1, 2004 drop in stock price and the fraud at issue. As the loss causation element of the § 10(b) claim fails to meet the plausibility standard of Rule 8(a), amendment of the claim to include the allegations relating to the November 1, 2004 Wall Street Journal article and its effect on the price of Merck stock would be futile. Leave to file an amended complaint to add these allegations will be denied.
The 4% Statement appeared in two publications. According to the proposed Sixth Amended Complaint, it was first made in a Merck press release dated May 24, 2000 and then repeated, in essence, in a November 23, 2000 article in the New England Journal of Medicine concerning the VIGOR study. Merck argues that as to both publications of the 4% Statement, leave to amend must be denied because the statement was not false or misleading and thus fails to support a § 10(b) claim. It points out that the proposed Sixth Amended Complaint does not quote the actual text of May 24, 2000 press release, in which the 4% Statement, as characterized by Plaintiffs, first appeared. That press release stated, in relevant part, as follows:
(DeMasi Decl., Ex. 17 at 2.)
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The Court is not persuaded by either of Merck's futility arguments as to the allegations regarding the 4% Statement.
First, as Plaintiffs argue without conceding, even if the 4% Statement made in the press release was partially or technically accurate, the proposed Sixth Amended Complaint alleges that in making this assertion about the aspirin-indicated subgroup, Merck omitted to state that the risk of adverse cardiovascular event observed in the subgroup was not statistically different from the risk in the remainder of the VIGOR population. Securities law requires that once a defendant speaks about a particular subject, it must not omit material information required to convey accurate and complete information to investors on that subject.
Second, regarding what it means to make a statement in the securities fraud context, the Supreme Court held in
In short, the Court concludes that amendment of the Complaint to add allegations concerning the 4% Statement satisfies the standard of Rule 15. As alleged, the 4% Statement, read in context, bolsters the naproxen hypothesis (Merck's explanation of the VIGOR results as attributable to the cardioprotective qualities of naproxen as opposed to the prothrombotic effect of Vioxx) and thus relates to the core of Plaintiffs' § 10(b) claim. Fort the reasons stated, the Court finds that Plaintiffs have sufficiently alleged that the 4% Statement is actionable under § 10(b) and Rule 10b-5.
The Court will deny the motion for leave to amend insofar as it concerns expanding the § 10(b) claim to include the Novembe 1, 2004 Wall street Juornal article and contemporaneous drop in Merck stock price, as such an amendment would be futile for lack of loss causation to support the claim. It will permit Plaintiffs to file a Sixth Amended Complaint which adds allegations concerning the 4% Statement, as discussed above.
The Sixth Amended Complaint, moreover, must conform to all prior rulings in this case identifying which alleged misstatements and/or omissions the Court has held do not give rise to a claim under Rule 10b-5. While the binding effect of the Court's orders dismissing certain statements as inactionable may seem obvious, the Court must make this point explicit in light of Merck's indication that the proposed Sixth Amended Complaint contains allegations which reassert statements that the Court addressed in its August 29, 2012 Opinion on Merck's motion for judgment on the pleadings pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(c) and that it held insufficient to state a claim. The August 29, 2012 Opinion expressly listed paragraphs, per the numbering of the Fifth Amended Complaint, which failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. The Sixth Amended Complaint may not revive claims by repeating portions of previously dismissed factual allegations that Plaintiffs believe continue to remain viable.
An appropriate order will be filed.