STONERIDGE INVESTMENT PARTNERS, LLC V. SCIENIFIC-ATLANTA, INC.
552 U.S. 148 (2008)
NATURE OF THE CASE: Stoneridge (P) appealed an affirmance of the dismissal of its suit
against Scientific (D) for aiding and abetting liability under section 78j(b).
FACTS: Charter (D) engaged in a variety of fraudulent practices so its quarterly reports
would meet Wall Street expectations. To help with the fraud, D decided to alter its existing
arrangements with Scientific-Atlanta (R) and Motorola (R). D arranged to overpay Rs $20 for
each set top box it purchased until the end of the year, with the understanding that R would
return the overpayment by purchasing advertising from D. D would then record the advertising
purchases as revenue and capitalize its purchase of the set top boxes. This was blatantly in
violation of generally accepted accounting principles. It would produce financial statement
showing it met projected revenue and operating cash flow numbers. Rs agreed to the
arrangement. To fool the auditor, the companies drafted documents to make it appear the
transactions were unrelated and conducted in the ordinary course of business. The agreements
were backdated to them appear that they were negotiated a month before the advertising
agreements. D recorded the advertising payments to inflate revenue and operating cash flow
by approximately $17 million. The inflated number was shown on financial statements filed
with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and reported to the public. Rs had no role
in preparing or disseminating d's financial statements. It is alleged Rs knew or were in
reckless disregard of D's intention to use the transactions to inflate its revenues and knew
the resulting financial statements issued by D would be relied upon by research analysts and
investors. P filed a fraud class action on behalf of purchasers of D stock alleging section
10(b) and Rule 10b-5 violations. The Court granted Rs' motion to dismiss for failure to
state a claim on which relief can be granted. P's allegations did not show that Rs made
misstatements relied upon by the public or that they violated a duty to disclose; and on
this premise it found no violation of 10(b) by respondents. At most Rs had aided and
abetted D and there is no private right of action for aiding and abetting a 10(b)
violation. The court of appeals affirmed and the Supreme Court granted certiorari.
ISSUE:
RULE OF LAW:
HOLDING AND DECISION:
LEGAL ANALYSIS:
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