Texas Judge: pcOrder Class Reps Uninformed, Lead Counsel Conflicted - 11/2002

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Copyright © 2001
Stanford Law School


2002 News and Press Releases

News News 2002


HEADLINE ARCHIVED:

Texas Judge: pcOrder Class Reps Uninformed, Lead Counsel Conflicted
BY: Unknown


Professional Liability Litigation Reporter, Vol. 12; No. 5; Pg. 10. November 2002

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EXCERPT: A federal judge in Austin, Texas, has refused to certify a class-action securities fraud suit stemming from the initial public stock offering for Internet company pcOrder.com because he found the candidates for class representatives lacked standing and/or competency and the proposed lead counsel suffered from conflicts of interest. He questioned whether the prospective lead counsel were "truly concerned about their clients' interests" since they had kept them in the dark. Krim v. pcOrder.com Inc. et al., No. 00-776 (W.D. Tex. Oct. 24, 2002). Plaintiff Jerry Krim filed one of many shareholder suits against pcOrder.com, its directors, its investment bankers and its parent company, Trilogy Software Inc., alleging violations of Sections 11 and 15 of the Securities Act of 1933 in connection with pcOrder's March 1999 initial public offering and a secondary offering nine months later. Generally, the shareholders charged that they lost tens of millions of dollars because pcOrder falsely claimed to have a viable business plan, the ability to report accurate financial information and freedom from competition from parent Trilogy Software. However, Krim did not seek the job of class representative in the Texas litigation, and most of the plaintiffs who were initially in the lead role withdrew. Several shareholders came forward to take the class representative position, but the court found fault with their standing as shareholders or their competency to carry out the job. He disqualified two applicants because they could not prove that their stock was issued in the IPO or the secondary offering. Although they need not prove that they themselves bought the stock during the IPO, they must show that the stock they own was issued at that time -- not that it was probably issued then, the court held. It said the applicants who did have standing to sue would make unacceptable class representatives because they knew virtually nothing about the claims of the suit and the plaintiffs they would champion. The court blamed that condition in part on the law firms that sought the lead counsel position. He said they had failed to inform their clients about their case or the parallel cases where those attorneys represented plaintiffs making similar claims against pcOrder and its directors. "Furthermore, counsel participated in a full week of settlement negotiations with defendants, who offered to settle all lawsuits against pcOrder.com," the court noted. "Although unsuccessful, the negotiations demonstrate the problematic nature of counsel's multiple representations in negotiations."

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