Paul, Weiss is widely recognized as having one of the nation’s preeminent securities litigation and regulatory practices. For two decades, our lawyers have guided global corporations and financial institutions through a series of “bet-the-company” securities-related crises, consistently reducing or eliminating their most damaging claims and negotiating favorable resolutions.
Securities Class Action Dismissed Against Imperial Sugar Company
- Client News
- October 27, 2013
Paul, Weiss obtained the dismissal of a federal securities class
action brought against our clients, Imperial Sugar Company and its
former executives. Relying largely on confidential informants, the
plaintiffs had alleged that our clients made material
misrepresentations about the company's use of co-packers and its
purchase of sugar from other refiners, as well as the status of its
main sugar refinery in Port Wentworth, Georgia.
In a thorough 66-page opinion, the Southern District of Texas ruled
that the plaintiffs failed to adequately plead fraud, scienter and
loss causation. The court found that the company disclosed its
activities to shareholders, and that allegations sourced from the
purported confidential informants failed to show that the company's
financial information or public statements were materially
misstated. The court also determined the facts did not give rise to
a strong inference that the company or its management intended to
deceive shareholders. Among other arguments, the court rejected the
notion that the defendants "must have known" some undisclosed or
inadequately disclosed truth about the company's operations due to
their positions as senior executives, and declined to apply a line
of cases holding that collective corporate scienter may be inferred
when the alleged misconduct is egregious. Finally, the court ruled
in our favor on loss causation, holding that the company's
purported corrective disclosures were too attenuated from its prior
statements and that plaintiffs failed to tie an actionable
misrepresentation to any corrective disclosure. The court gave
plaintiffs until October 30 to amend the complaint, should they
wish to do so.
The Paul, Weiss team included litigation partners Daniel
Kramer and Audra Soloway.