- Posted November 21, 2013
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Supreme Court to decide if company can try to block suit
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Supreme Court decided last Friday to hear an appeal from Halliburton Co. that could make it more difficult for shareholders to sue companies for engaging in fraud to prop up stock prices.
The high court agreed to hear the corporation's attempt to stop legal action from shareholders who bought stock between June 1999 and December 2001.
Their lawsuit argues that Halliburton deliberately understated the company's liability in asbestos litigation, inflated how much money its construction and engineering units would bring in and overstated the benefits of a merger with Dresser Industries. When Halliburton made corrective disclosures, it made the stock price drop and caused investors to lose money, the lawsuit said.
This is the second time this case has been to the Supreme Court.
The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans originally refused to let the lawsuit go forward as a class-action. But the Supreme Court said in 2011 that ruling was incorrect, and the lawsuit was certified as a class-action suit by the lower courts.
Now Halliburton lawyers want the Supreme Court to throw out its 1988 decision in Basic v. Levinson, which the shareholders' lawyers call "the cornerstone for modern private securities litigation." That decision says shareholders do not have to prove they relied on a company's misrepresentation in order to obtain class certification, meaning that judges can assume that misrepresentations by corporations were taken into account by shareholders when they bought the stock.
Halliburton lawyers say that should be overruled or modified to say that plaintiffs have to prove that the alleged misrepresentations distorted the stock's market price. A decision upholding that theory would make it harder for shareholders to band together in class action lawsuits to sue corporations in securities lawsuits.
Four justices, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Anthony Kennedy and Antonin Scalia, have said they were willing to reconsider the Basic decision.
The court will hear the case next year.
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The case is Halliburton v. Erica P. John Fund Inc., 13-317.
Published: Thu, Nov 21, 2013
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