DENISE COTE, District Judge.
An Order of November 28 denied defendants' August 17 motion to dismiss the Amended Complaint in this action (the "August 17 Motion") on the ground that the Court's prior Opinions in the FHFA litigation "comprehensively address the arguments in support of dismissal raised by the defendants" in this case (the "November 28 Order"). On December 5, defendants moved for reconsideration of the November 28 Order, arguing that "none of the Court's prior opinions, including opinions issued after Defendants filed their Motion," addressed their argument "that Plaintiff's claims for ten of the certificates at issue are barred because Plaintiff alleges that the [GSEs] purchased those certificates before defendants made the allegedly actionable statements." For the reasons that follow, defendants' December 5 motion for reconsideration is granted; their August 17 motion to dismiss is denied.
This is one of sixteen actions currently before this Court in which the Federal Housing Finance Agency ("FHFA" or "the Agency"), as conservator for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (together, the "Government Sponsored Enterprises" or "GSEs"), alleges misconduct on the part of the nation's largest financial institutions in connection with the offer and sale of certain mortgage-backed securities purchased by the GSEs in the period between 2005 and 2007.
The Court has already issued several Opinions addressing motions to dismiss in other cases brought by the FHFA.
Following this Court's decision of the motion to dismiss in
This case concerns RMBS Certificates allegedly purchased by the GSEs between September 2005 and October 2007. Each of the GSE Certificates pertains to one of 23 securitizations offered for sale pursuant to one of nine shelf-registration statements. The lead defendant is Bank of America Corporation ("BOA"). Several corporate affiliates of BOA and associated individuals are also defendants. BOA affiliates served as lead or co-lead underwriter for each of the 23 securitizations at issue, as depositor for 18 of them, and as sponsor for 17 of those. Each individual defendant signed one or more of the Offering Documents.
The argument upon which the defendants seek reconsideration concerns 10 Certificates issued pursuant to shelf registration statements and base prospectuses filed between December 22, 2004 and December 22, 2005.
This Court has repeatedly emphasized that neither Section 11 nor Section 12(a)(2) "requires allegations of scienter,
Defendants do not dispute that a plaintiff asserting claims under Sections 11 or 12(a)(2) is not required to plead reliance. Rather, relying on Eleventh Circuit precedent, they suggest with regard to Section 11 that the statute creates a presumption that a person acquiring a security has been harmed by her reliance on a defective registration statement. This presumption, they contend, may be overcome where the defendant can show that "reliance is rendered impossible by virtue of a pre-registration commitment" to purchase the securities at issue.
In
Defendants' argument finds no support in the law of this Circuit or in the text of the statute. Section 11 provides that, subject to certain limitations not relevant here,
15 U.S.C. § 77k(a). As the Second Circuit has recognized, this provision "provides the purchasers of registered securities with strict liability protection for material misstatements or omissions in registration statements filed with the SEC."
Defendants' suggestion that Section 11 contains an implicit reliance requirement is unsupported by the statute's text, which authorizes a cause of action for "
Defendants' argument is also undercut by the fact that the text of Section 11 does reference a rebuttable presumption of the type they describe, but it is one that concerns loss causation rather than reliance. As noted, in order to state a claim under Section 11, a plaintiff need not allege that any loss in value of her securities was caused by the defendant's misstatements. Rather, Section 11 "presumes that any diminution in value is attributable to the alleged misrepresentations, and places the burden on defendants to disprove causation."
Defendants' effort to argue that FHFA's Section 11 claims are barred with respect to securities the GSEs agreed to purchase after the filing of a shelf registration statement but just days before the filing of a Final Prospectus is particularly ironic, because such a factual scenario became possible because of recent regulatory reforms designed, in part, to facilitate the offering process for issuers and underwriters. Section 5(b) of the Securities Act prohibits the sale or delivery after sale of any registered security by means of interstate commerce unless accompanied or preceded by a prospectus that meets SEC requirements. 15 U.S.C. § 77e(b). Prior to 2005, SEC rules permitted participants in a securities offering to make written offers only through a prospectus meeting all of the requirements of Section 10(a) of the Securities Act and on file with the SEC. SEC Release No. 75, 85 S.E.C. Docket 2871, 2005 WL 1692642, at *17 (July 19, 2005) ("2005 Release"). This was a fairly onerous requirement, because, in order to satisfy Section 10(a), a prospectus must make detailed disclosures about the securities at issue and, in the case of asset-backed securities, the underlying asset pools.
As explained in the 2005 Release, the reforms were intended to advance the SEC's continuing efforts "toward integrating disclosure and processes under the Securities Act and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934," 2005 Release, 2005 WL 1692642, at *1, with the hope that the added flexibility given to issuers and underwriters in the marketing of their securities would "promote efficient capital formation, without diminishing investor protection."
This liberalized regime is subject to certain important conditions, however. Among those conditions are requirements that the free writing prospectus direct the recipient to the registration statement and base prospectus on file with the SEC, 17 C.F.R. § 230.433, and that a Final Prospectus containing all information required by statute or regulation be filed on SEC Form 424B5 "no later than the second business day following . . . the date of the determination of the offering price" for a particular security. 17 CFR § 230.424(b)(5) ("Rule 424(b)(5)");
Because, under Section 5(b), the lawfulness of a sale of registered securities is contingent on the issuer's filing a Final Prospectus, the 2005 reforms also included the adoption of Rule 430B, which imposes Section 11 liability for all sales in connection with an offering, including those concluded before the filing of a final prospectus. Specifically, the rule provides that information omitted from a base prospectus and filed after closing pursuant to Rule 424(b)(5) "shall be deemed to be part of and included in the registration statement on the earlier of the date such subsequent form of prospectus is first used or the date and time of the first contract of sale of securities in the offering to which such subsequent form of prospectus relates." 17 C.F.R. § 230.430B(f)(1).
The SEC has explained that its purpose in adopting this rule was to provide that "prospectus supplements required to be filed under Rule 424 . . . will,
Defendants' argument that the plaintiff's Section 12(a)(2)claims for the ten pre-committed Certificates are likewise barred differs somewhat from their argument with respect to Section 11. They argue that Section 12(a)(2) imposes a temporal requirement that any communication alleged to contain an untrue statement have occurred before the contract of sale and that, accordingly, the plaintiff cannot assert Section 12(a)(2) claims on the basis of 424B5 Prospectuses filed after the sales of the 10 Certificates.
Section 12(a)(2) imposes liability, subject to certain limitations, on
15 U.S.C. § 77l(a)(2). Defendants contend that "when a party is committed to carrying out a transaction before the prospectus containing the alleged misrepresentations or omissions is filed, the security was not sold `by means of' the prospectus." But a sale procured through the issuance of a free writing prospectus is a sale made "by means of" a prospectus covered by Section 12(a)(2). The sale is made "by means of" the free writing prospectus itself, and when it is filed pursuant to Rule 424(b)(5), by the Final Prospectus embodying the information contained in the free writing prospectus. After all, the lawfulness of the purchase transactions at issue here was contingent on the defendants' supplementing their shelf registration statements and base prospectuses with the information at issue. The final 424B5 Prospectuses were thus an essential "means" through which the defendants offered and sold these securities.
The defendants reject the idea that the statute intends the phrase "by means of" in this purely functional sense. They insist that their temporal interpretation is supported by an SEC rule providing that "for purposes of determining whether a prospectus or oral statement included an untrue statement of a material fact" under Section 12(a)(2), "any information conveyed to the purchaser only after [the] time of sale (including [the] contract of sale) will not be taken into account." 17 C.F.R. § 230.159 ("Rule 159"). But they misread the rule and misunderstand its purpose.
The SEC adopted Rule 159 as part of the 2005 reforms to the securities offering regime discussed above. As noted, among other things, those reforms liberalized the offering process by permitting sellers to solicit buyers using free writing prospectuses that do not constitute a full and final prospectus. But, while free writing prospectuses are exempted from limitations on any particular content and from certain filing requirements, the SEC structured the reforms with an eye toward continued protection of investors. As it explained, Section 12(a)(2) liability was an important component of that investorprotection regime:
2005 Release, 2005 WL 169642, at *45.
While recognizing that free writing prospectuses are "subject to disclosure liability" under Section 12(a)(2), 2005 Release, 2005 WL 1692642, at *62, the Commission also concluded that sellers should not be held responsible under that provision for information conveyed to the buyer for the first time after sale but incorporated retroactively into the registration statement. As the Commission noted, "[t]he date and time that the information is part of the registration statement and the time of effectiveness relate to an investor's rights under Section 11," while Section 12(a)(2) is concerned primarily with false statements in connection with solicitation.
Because, in the wake of the 2005 reforms, conduct creating liability under Section 12(a)(2) need not create liability under Section 11, and vice versa, FHFA might have pled its claims with respect to these 10 Certificates differently. Rather than basing its Section 12(a)(2) claims on the final, 424B5 Prospectuses, the Agency might have based them on any free writing prospectuses that the GSEs received in advance of closing, as it did its fraud claims in a related action.
Nor is there any indication that in promulgating Rule 159 the SEC intended to adjust the established pleading requirements for Section 12(a)(2) by requiring a plaintiff whose claim is based on the contents of a post-closing prospectus supplement to allege that the information at issue
Defendants' December 5 motion for reconsideration is granted. The August 17 motion to dismiss is denied for the reasons stated herein and in the prior Opinions issued in this litigation.
SO ORDERED.