Justices Challenge Arguments in Favor of Shareholders Suing Companies - 3/29/2007

Home

Index of Filings

News and Press Releases

Filings

Decisions

Settlements

Litigation Activity Indices

Top Ten List

Annual/Quarterly Updates

Clearinghouse Research

Articles & Papers

Search

Related Sites

About Us

Local Rules

Sponsors


Register


_______________
Copyright © 2001
Stanford Law School


2007 News and Press Releases

News News 2007


HEADLINE NEWS:

Justices Challenge Arguments in Favor of Shareholders Suing Companies
Marcy Gordon - The Associated Press

Law.com. March 29, 2007

_________________________________________________________________________

EXCERPT: Several Supreme Court justices challenged shareholder groups who were arguing Wednesday against standards that could make it tougher for investors' cases to go forward when they sue companies for fraud. Appeals courts have been split on whether a stricter standard should be applied for initially making a case in such lawsuits. The Bush administration favors the tougher standard, but the investor groups say it would go too far in choking off suits. Several justices suggested not only going along with the stricter standard for starting cases but raising the bar for proving cases later on to the same higher level. The high court is being asked to clarify what legal hurdles investors must clear in a case with far-reaching repercussions for class action lawsuits against public companies. Such suits have brought billions of dollars to shareholders in connection with the 2002 wave of corporate scandals. Comments by several justices during oral arguments indicated the Court may consider going further than the Bush administration and business interests are seeking. A 1995 law intended to curb abusive litigation against companies "just established an entry qualification for [shareholders] getting into court," Justice Antonin Scalia said. In enacting the law, Congress was concerned about the expense of the pre-trial process, he said, "and tried to set a high wall to get to the discovery stage." Asked Harvard law professor Arthur Miller, representing shareholder groups such as public pension funds: "Now what kind of a wall was it? Was it a Dutch dike or the Berlin Wall?" Thirty-two states and territories also came into the case on the side of investor interests -- opposing the Justice Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission and corporations -- arguing that the stricter legal standard prescribed by some federal appeals courts is unwarranted. The arguments unfolded in a spirited exchange between justices and attorneys. While Congress intended with the 1995 law to restrain frivolous suits against companies, Miller urged, "Let's not throw the baby out with the bathwater." If the stricter threshold is applied, he said, "I think we've got a stone rolling downhill" toward dismissal of investor cases. Attorney Carter Phillips, one of those arguing the government's position, said that to be true to the law, courts must require shareholders in those cases to show a "high likelihood" of an intention to deceive on the part of companies or executives. "Congress acted decisively to curb abuse of private securities litigation," Phillips said. The case before the high court is Tellabs Inc. v. Makor Issues & Rights Ltd. Tellabs, a manufacturer of fiber optic equipment, was sued by shareholders over statements made in 2001 by its then-chief executive about its sales that turned out to be false. Shareholders lost millions when the stock price dropped after Tellabs corrected the CEO's statements. Specifically, the case challenges the Supreme Court to resolve a split among federal appeals courts over how stringent a legal standard shareholders must meet in showing an intent to deceive on the part of companies or executives.

Back to News page | Back to Archived News 2007 page | Back to Top