American Power, LLC v. Harris et al
Filing
43
REPORT AND RECOMMENDATIONS Accordingly, the Dektrix Defendants and the Fontaine Defendants Motions to Dismiss Count VIII lacks merit. IT IS THEREFORE RECOMMENDED THAT: 1. The Dektrix Defendants Motion to Dismiss (Doc. # 20 ) be GRANTED in part and t hat Count II against Defendant Larson be dismissed, and Counts III, IV and Count VII be dismissed; and DENIED in remaining part; and 2. The Fontaine Defendants Motion to Dismiss (Doc. # 16 ) be DENIED. Objections to R&R due by 8/16/2018 Signed by Magistrate Judge Sharon L. Ovington on 8/2/18. (kma)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO
WESTERN DIVISION AT DAYTON
AMERICAN POWER, LLC,
Plaintiff,
vs.
DOUGLAS O. HARRIS, et al.,
Defendants.
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:
:
:
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:
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Case No. 3:17-cv-00347
District Judge Walter H. Rice
Magistrate Judge Sharon L. Ovington
REPORT AND RECOMMENDATIONS 1
I.
Introduction
Plaintiff American Power, LLC is a trucking-logistics company headquartered in
Dayton, Ohio. According to the Complaint, Plaintiff invested in and loaned $450,000 to
Defendant Dektrix LLC, a transportation-servicing company headquartered in Utah. The
Complaint charges that the investment and loan were fraudulently obtained and ultimately
worthless. “Plaintiff is left with nothing it invested.” (Doc. #1, ¶ 72).
Plaintiff seeks to impose liability upon Dektrix and various other business entities
and individuals for purported violations of federal securities laws and state common law.
Two groups of Defendants—(1) the Dektrix Defendants, and (2) the Fontaine Defendants—
seek to avoid liability by attacking Plaintiff’s Complaint under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) for
failing to state a claim upon which relief could be granted and, as to Plaintiff’s fraud claims,
1
Attached is a NOTICE to the parties regarding objections to this Report and Recommendations.
for failing to meet the pleading requirements of Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b) and the Private
Litigation Securities Reform Act. (Doc. #s 16, 20). The Complaint must therefore be
studied.
II.
Factual Background
Accepting as true the well-pleaded factual content in Plaintiff’s Complaint and
construing it in the light most favorable to Plaintiff, see Ohio Pub. Employees Retirement
Sys. v. Fed. Home Loan Mortgage Corp., 830 F.3d 376, 382 (6th Cir. 2016), reveals a
narrative of deception, misplaced trust, and financial washout.
Dektrix LLC formed in January 2015. Its purpose was to commercialize a
“‘revolutionary intermodal flat-deck shipping solution…’” 2 Id. (Doc. #1, ¶11) (footnote
added). This flat-deck shipping solution was manufactured by Defendant Fontaine
Engineered Products, Inc. (d/b/a Fontaine Intermodal). It was known as Fontaine Evolution
Intermodal Flat Decks. Photos of the Fontaine Flat Deck appear in a company document
attached as an Exhibit to the Complaint, id. at 47-48, and in Fontaine’s Flat Deck Owner’s
Guide (Doc. #39, Exh. B). Soon after Dektrix was formed, it began renting and using
Fontaine Flat Decks.
In June 2016, Dektrix reached out to Plaintiff and others with an investment
opportunity related to Dektrix’s use of “new type of trailer design produced and
manufactured by Defendant Fontaine[,]” referring to the Fontaine Flat Deck. (Doc. #1,
2
In the shipping industry, the term “intermodal” refers to something, like a container, that can be carried on
ships, railroad cars, or a trailer being pulled by semi-trucks on a highway. “Using an ‘intermodal’ container
saves significant time and costs associated with having to secure and re-secure loads with every change of
mode of transportation.” Id. at 9.
2
¶25). The opportunity looked attractive in part because Dektrix held an exclusive
opportunity to use the Fontaine Flat Decks. Similar communications from Dektrix
followed: In July 2016, the Dektrix Defendants—there are seven of them 3—told Plaintiff
(through an email) that Dektrix “was a well-established company that had earned an
exclusive opportunity to use Fontaine Evolution Intermodal Flat Decks to ship loads.” Id. at
¶27. They also explained to Plaintiff that Dektrix had a successful (albeit brief) history and
a promising future:
Operating History – Dektrix is not a start-up company. Dektrix was first
organized in December of 2014. It has moved freight every month since April
of 2015. It has two yards, 17 FTE employees [full-time employees] (both w-2
and 1099 contractors). It has moved over 814 loads of freight and it has billed
more than $2.5M in sales. Dektrix has obtained all of its operating authorities
as well as broker authorities. It is authorized to operate on all class 1 railways
in North America…. It has a fleet of 73 decks and nine 2016 Freightliner
tandem axel day cabs which it leases from Penske…. Dektrix has executed
multiple carrier agreements and has current contracts and relationships with the
logistics executives at various companies. Based on Dektrix[’s] performance
the executives at Marmon Highway Technologies and Fontaine Intermodal have
granted Dektrix a 3 year exclusive opportunity. They will not produce or sell
any decks or similar intermodal products to any other individual or entity for
three years. These are the accomplishments of a company which has worked
very hard and is now posed for rapid growth.
Id. (citation omitted).
In July and August 2016, the Dektrix Defendants met with Plaintiff and continued to
solicit its investment. They informed Plaintiff about Dektrix’s operating history, value, and
client opportunities. They also showed Plaintiff a letter that Defendant Marmon’s President
Kelly Dier wrote making it clear, according to the Complaint, “that Fontaine, Marmon, and
Dektrix were working together to secure investment money from Plaintiff.” Id. at ¶29. The
3
The Dektrix Defendants are Douglas O. Harris, Murray J. Crane, Michael T. Morley, Scott Larson, Dektrix
LLC, Dektrix Transportation Services LLC, and Dektrix Intermodal LLC.
3
Complaint quotes the letter at some length, including information about Dektrix’s right to
exclusive use of the Fontaine Flat Decks:
We [Marmon] agree to grant Dektrix two years of exclusivity from the date
Dektrix purchases all of the 73 [Fontaine] Intermodal Flat Decks, which are
currently being rented to Dektrix and we further agree to grant an additional
third year of exclusivity to Dektrix in exchange for purchasing the 43 decks
which Fontaine currently holds in inventory in the form of new components,
ready to assemble….
Id.
An eventful meeting occurred on August 5, 2016 during which two Dektrix
Defendants, Douglas O. Harris and Murray J. Crane, gave a presentation to Plaintiff and
other potential investors. Harris is the general manager of Dektrix; Crane is a MemberManager of Dektrix (and the patent holder of technology used in the Fontaine Flat Decks).
Harris told prospective investors, “Dektrix would register UCC statement on the Fontaine
Intermodal flat decks that Dektrix would purchase from Fontaine with the investor money.
The decks would be registered for the benefit of the investors ‘so that they control the
assets, they own the assets.’” Id. at ¶32.
Defendant Berkley Buchanan, then-President of Fontaine, also participated in the
August 5, 2016 meeting, telling Plaintiff and the others, “We stand behind them,’ meaning
Fontaine stood behind Dektrix.” Id. at 31. Defendant Buchanan also said, ‘We [Fontaine]
believe in this project strongly enough that we have provided them [Dektrix] an offer of
exclusivity on the product.’” Id. (Plaintiff’s brackets). He also “touted Fontaine’s
relationship with BNSF Railway through Berkshire Hathaway…,” and “described the
millions of dollars in development spent by Fontaine.” Id.
Things began to coalesce the next day, August 6, 2016. Dektrix provided Plaintiff
4
with several documents, including (1) a Private Placement Memorandum “titled
Confidential Offering Memorandum $6,000,000.00 Consisting of up to 400,000
Membership Units of Dektrix, LLC, Minimum Purchase $50,000….”; (2) a Subscription
Agreement; and (3) Dektrix’s Operating Agreement. Id. at ¶34 (citation omitted).
Plaintiff concluded, based on the Private Placement Memo, that Fontaine Flat Decks
“were integral and necessary to Dektrix’s business model.” Id. at ¶35. The Private
Placement Memo explained, “‘The company’s revenue is tied to securing shipping contracts
which utilize the Dektrix Intermodal flat-deck solution….’” Id.
Plaintiff and its owners—Adil Baguirov and Islom Shakhbandarov—decided to
review the information that was publicly available about Fontaine and its Flat Decks
“particularly with respect to their compatibility with rail transportation.” Id. at ¶37. Indeed,
“[t]ransportation by railroad was the key to functionality of the Fontaine Evolution Flat
Decks being used by Dektrix.” Id. at ¶36. Baguirov and Shakhbandarov conducted “an
easy search of the internet” and found Fontaine press releases in 2014, introducing its Flat
Deck. Id. at ¶37. The press releases described the Fontaine Flat Deck as “‘Certified by the
Association of American Railroads, Fontaine’s Evolution Intermodal Flat Deck includes
multiple patented features related to the deck floor and load securement system.’” Id.
(footnote and citation omitted). Several industry publications (copies are attached to the
Complaint) quoted these assertions. “Plaintiff relied on Fontaine’s statements that its
Evolution Intermodal Flat Decks had been AAR certified when it decided to invest in
Dektrix.” Id. at ¶43.
The Association of American Railroads (AAR), according to the Complaint, is an
5
industry trade group primarily representing major freight railroads in North America. It is
dedicated to maintaining railroad safety and operating standards. It publishes a Manual of
Safety Standards and Recommended Practices “that includes all regularly adopted
specifications, standards, and recommended practices ….” Id. at ¶39. AAR “maintains a
rigorous certification program for equipment and components in conjunction with railroads,
including rail cars and decks. The process for obtaining AAR approval is time consuming
and expensive.” Id. at ¶41. During 2013-2014, Defendant Crane was a member of AAR’s
Intermodal Operations Committee.
“In a video that was on its [Fontaine’s] website in August 2016 and continuing
through the date of [Plaintiff’s] Complaint, Fontaine described the Evolution Intermodal
Flat Deck to be ‘stronger’ and ‘safer’ than any other deck ‘to withstand the punishing
conditions associated with rail and highway transportation.’ It’s virtually indestructible yet
simple and inexpensive to repair if it’s ever damaged.’” Id. at ¶44.
“On numerous occasions, the Dektrix Defendants represented to prospective
investors including Plaintiff that it had contractual shipping relationships and/or agreements
with a number of carriers, including, among others, Atkore Steel, Allied Tube Conduit,
Logan Aluminum, Inc., and Constellium.” Id. at ¶47.
“[N]one of the Defendants ever disclosed before Plaintiff invested its money that the
Fontaine Evolution Intermodal Flat Decks had never, in fact, been approved by the AAR.
None of the Defendants had disclosed that the decks had significant engineering problems
and were not safe to use on the highway or railroads.” Id. at ¶50.
In December 2016, Plaintiff (through Baguirov and Shakhbandarov) invested in
6
Dektrix by purchasing “preferred membership units.” Id. at ¶52. A Membership Purchase
Agreement stated that Plaintiff (including Baguirov and Shakhbandarov) “shall pay
$350,000 US to Dektrix LLC…, for which [the Dektrix Defendants] will immediately
convey 70,000 preferred membership units to [Plaintiff and the two other investors]….” Id.
(quoting MPA, attached to the Complaint as Exh. E). The Membership Purchase
Agreement also granted Plaintiff a second lien on the first 73 Fontaine Flat Decks and,
according to Plaintiff, “demonstrates the parties’ intent that the $350,000 was to be used
toward the purchase of the first 73 intermodal flat decks from Fontaine.” Id. at ¶54 (quoting
Exh. E). Shortly after the Membership Purchase Agreement was executed, Plaintiff wired
$350,000 to the Dektrix Defendants. Id. at ¶52.
Things soon began to disintegrate. A month later, on January 25, 2017, the Dektrix
Defendants advised Marmon and Fontaine (the Fontaine Defendants—there are five of
them 4), “after inspection of the decks, ‘about 50% of the fleet have sheared bolts on both the
front and rear hub [brake] assemblies.’” Id. at ¶55.
Five days later, “the … Fontaine Defendants wrote to the Dektrix Defendants and
terminated the existing lease.” Id. at ¶57. The letter was sent to Dektrix’s General Manager
Harris. It provided two reasons for the decision to terminate the existing lease: Dektrix’s
continued failure (1) to pay rent as required by the lease agreement between Dektrix and
Fontaine, and (2) “‘maintain the decks in good and efficient operating order, in accordance
with the manufacturers recommendations, all laws and DOT Regulations and in the same
condition or appearance when accepted by [Dektrix]’….” (Doc. #1, Exh. F, PageID #174)
4
The Fontaine Defendants are Kelly Dier, Henry Prochazka, Berkley Buchanan, Marmon Highway
Technologies LLC, and Fontaine Engineered Products, Inc.
7
(quoting § 10 of their Dektrix-Fontaine lease agreement).
Yet, all was apparently not lost. A week later, on February 7, 2017, the Dektrix
Defendants represented to Plaintiff that the lease termination would be short-term, that any
issue with sheared bolts was repairable and could be resolved. The Dektrix Defendants did
not at any time indicate to Plaintiff that the Marmon and Fontaine Defendants “were seeking
not only to call back and seek return of all decks, but were actively seeking to physically
destroy such decks on the basis that they were unfit, defective, and otherwise unsafe….” Id.
at ¶58.
The Dektrix Defendants attempted to improve the situation—or so it looked—by
offering to buy (from the Marmon and Fontaine Defendants) 73 Fontaine Flat Decks for $1
million ($13,699 apiece). But the Dektrix Defendants needed help with these pricey
purchases. They therefore turned to Plaintiff and obtained a $100,000 bridge loan to be
used by Dektrix for the purchase of the Fontaine Flat Decks. Dektrix General Manager
Harris reported to Plaintiff that Defendants Fontaine and Defendant Henry Prochazka 5 “had
agreed to accept Plaintiff’s money as a ‘refundable deposit should things not culminate as
we had hoped for.’” Id. at ¶60. “Dektrix wired $50,000 of Plaintiff’s money to Fontaine on
March 1, 2017.” Id.
On April 6, 2017, the Dektrix Defendants clued in Plaintiff—for the first time—
about the fact that the AAR had never certified Fontaine Flat Decks. The import of this
becomes clear in light of the Complaint’s allegation that Murray J. Crane (remember, he is a
Member-Manager of Dektrix) had learned two years earlier—on May 20, 2015—about the
5
Prochazka is Group President of Fontaine Commercial Trailer, Inc., an affiliate of Defendant Fontaine and a
subsidiary of Defendant Marmon. (Doc. #1, PageID #8).
8
lack of AAR certification. Crane learned this from an email sent to him on May 20, 2015 by
Michael Lesniak with the AAR. Id. at ¶62.
Plaintiff alleges, “the Dektrix Defendants later admitted that they reported defects in
the [Fontaine Flat] decks in 2015 to Buck Buchanan of Fontaine. Defendants Buchanan and
Fontaine had the decks crudely repaired at that time. Neither the 2015 defects nor the
repairs were ever reported to Plaintiff before its investment in and loan to Dektrix.” Id. at
¶63.
On May 22, 2017, further twists in the parties’ relationship developed: The Dektrix
Defendants informed Plaintiff of their intent to file for bankruptcy relief. They also
informed Plaintiff about their position that their use of Plaintiff’s investment money,
including the bridge loan, was not limited to “asset,” meaning Fontaine-Flat-Deck,
purchases. Id. at ¶64. Indeed, Dektrix “misused, misallocated, and never used Plaintiff’s
investment money in a reasonable, sound, prudent and/or agreed upon manner, rather, such
money, including but not limited to the bridge loan, was never used to purchase assets by
way of Fontaine [Flat Decks]. Rather, such investment money was used to repay the bridge
loan (approximately $7,000) and otherwise enrich themselves in the form of salaries
($42,000 going directly to Defendants Crane and Larson 6).” Id. at ¶65 (footnote added).
Two days later, Dektrix told Plaintiff for the first time that Fontaine (through
Defendant Prochazka) had written a letter to a Dektrix creditor warning, in part, that the
Fontaine Flat Decks “are not fit for use and are not safe for use….” Id. at ¶66 (quoting Exh.
G).
6
Defendant Scott Larson is the “Comptroller, employee, and/or agent” of Defendant Dektrix. (Doc. #1,
PageID #7).
9
By June 2016, Dektrix “had fallen into financial difficulties, and the Fontaine [Flat
Decks] that it was leasing had been seized by a creditor ….” Id. at ¶69.
In July 2017, Dektrix’s General Manager Harris told Plaintiff that Fontaine had not
returned its $50,000, as Prochazka had personally assured. Id. at ¶70. Plaintiff alleges,
“Fontaine would not make Dektrix whole for the harm caused by the defective Intermodal
decks. Instead, Fontaine and Dektrix used Plaintiff’s money to further their own
interests….” Id.
In August 21, 2017, Dektrix’s General Manager Harris wrote an email, blaming the
“fraud” on various Fontaine Defendants. The Complaint quotes the email at length, and
given its eye-popping allegations, it is worth repeating:
“Here is the fraud–Kelly Dier, John Craig, Hank Prochazka, Buck Buchanan,
Jess Drommond and others made loud and published claims to reputable
reporters and trade journals that the Evolution deck was in fact AAR certified.
This certification is not something handed out easily but requires heavy
investment in time, money and extensive testing. The benefit of AAR
certification is that the user of the deck would be assured its operation would be
safe. Shortly after putting the decks in service we had pins shearing in the
upright support arms. Those pins were critical to supporting the 60,000 lbs. of
another container stacked on top of our deck. When we verbally drew this
problem to Fontaine’s attention, they asked us to keep it quiet and assured us
they would immediately fix the problem. They also told us that they had not
experienced this problem with any of their other Evolution decks in use with
Boyd Brothers or Prime (not true). The repairs were made in a shoddy way and
did not reflect a design improvement. In fact, the solution they proposed was
to weld the pins in place, which only exacerbated the problem. Now we had
more of the pins shearing. We limped along for several months with Fontaine
trying different weights of pins, washers and welds. The problem was never
adequately resolved. 7 It wasn’t until we were gearing up to service the new
Constellium contract 8 in January that we went to Chicago and to California to
7
The Dektrix Defendants assert that the pin-shearing problem was fixed (Doc. #39, PageID #466), but at this
stage of the case it must be accepted as true that the problem was never adequately resolved, as Harris’s
email, and consequently, the Complaint alleges.
8
Dektrix allegedly represented to prospective investors on many occasions that it had contractual shipping
arrangements with Constellium and other carriers. (Doc. #1, ¶47).
10
inspect our fleet. To our surprise many of the main bolts holding the upright
arms in place appeared to be missing. In fact, more than 40% of the hub
assemblies seemed to have missing bolts. Fontaine provided us a power point
presentation demonstrating how we should replace the bolts, apply a lock-tight
solution and the problem would be solved. As we tried to implement their plan
we discovered the bolts were not missing. They hadn’t merely shaken their way
out of the socket or been sheared clean. They were in fact exploded within the
assembly. The amount of pressure on those bolts must have been inordinate.
Not knowing when a pin might explode we realized the entire fleet was unfit to
service the Constellium contract.”
“We put all of our findings in an email to Buck Buchanan, expecting a robust
partnering type response assuring us they would fix this and get it done right
away. To our surprise there was no such support, only a phone [sic] from Hank
Prochazka, (Buck’s boss) who said he wanted to give me a heads up that
Fontaine would be calling back all of the decks because we had now made the
safety issue a discoverable issue (this statement is also verifiable).”
Id. at ¶71 (footnotes added).
Since August 2017, and despite Plaintiff’s significant investment in Dektrix, “the
Dektrix Defendants have not conducted any substantive shipping and/or transportation
activities, including generating any revenue for the company and/or its Members….” Id. at
¶72.
It is interesting to note that the name Dektrix, a portmanteau blending decks with
tricks, winks toward flat-deck innovation and cleverness as well as flat-deck tricks.
Regardless of whether this was intended, Plaintiff advances federal-securities violations
against the Dektrix Defendants and the Fontaine Defendants, including:
• Count I—The Dektrix and Fontaine Defendants violated Section 10(b) of
the Securities Exchange Act and the Securities and Exchanges
Commission’s Rule 10b-5.
• Count II—The individual Defendants violated Section 20(a) of the
Exchange Act.
11
• Count III—The Dektrix Defendants violated Section 12(a)(2) of the
Securities Act.
• Count IV—The Dektrix Defendants violated Section 15 of the Securities
Act.
The Complaint further advances state-law claims of fraud, breach of contract, breach
of fiduciary duty, and unjust enrichment.
III.
Pleading Requirements
Notice pleading is alive in the United States Courts; the “hypertechnical code
pleading regime of a prior era...,” Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 678 (2009), is not. See
CNH America LLC v. Int’l Union, 645 F.3d 785, 794 (6th Cir. 2011) (concluding the
Complaint’s allegations “suffice to meet the modest notice-pleading requirements of Civil
Rule 8(a).” (citations omitted)). The foundational principal of notice pleading is that a
complaint must contain a “short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is
entitled to relief, in order to ‘give the defendant fair notice of what the claim is and the
grounds upon which it rests....” Bell Atlantic v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 555 (2007)
(quoting, in part, Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(a)(2); other citation omitted).
To endure an attack under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), a complaint must plead a
plausible claim for relief. Iqbal, 556 U.S. at 678. A plausible claim exists if the complaint
contains “‘sufficient factual matter’ to render the legal claim plausible, i.e., more than
merely possible.” Iqbal, 556 U.S. at 678. Sufficient factual matter is present “when the
plaintiff pleads factual content that allows the court to draw the reasonable inference that the
defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged.” Iqbal, 556 U.S. at 678 (citing Twombly, 550
U.S. at 556). “Where a complaint pleads facts that are merely consistent with a defendant’s
12
liability, it stops short of the line between possibility and plausibility of entitlement to
relief.” Id. (citation and internal quotations omitted). Labels and conclusions are not
enough; “a formulaic recitation of the elements of a cause…,’ id., is not enough; and
“‘naked assertions’ devoid of ‘further factual enhancement…,’” are not enough, id.
(citations and brackets omitted).
A complaint charging federal or state fraud triggers additional pleading mandates set
by Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b). Frank v. Dana Corp., 547 F.3d 564, 570 (6th Cir. 2008); see
Glimcher Co., LLC v. Deavers, 2:09cv797, 2010 WL 1610709, at *4 (S.D. Ohio 2010)
(Frost, D.J.). “[The] complaint must ‘(1) specify the statements that the plaintiff contends
were fraudulent, (2) identify the speaker, (3) state where and when the statements were
made, and (4) explain why the statements were fraudulent.’ At a minimum, [the complaint]
must allege the time, place and contents of the misrepresentations upon which they relied.
Frank, 547 F.3d at 570 (quoting, in part, Gupta v. Terra Nitrogen Corp., 10 F. Supp.2d 879,
883 (N.D. Ohio 1998)). And a securities-fraud complaint must work even harder. “As a
check against abusive litigation by private parties…,” Tellabs, Inc. v. Makor Issues &
Rights, Ltd., 551 U.S. 308, 313 (2007), the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995
(PSLRA), 15 U.S.C. § 78u–4, imposes stringent pleading requirements:
To satisfy this heavier, statutorily created burden, plaintiffs must identify each
misleading or false statement and explain how it is misleading. 15 U.S.C. §
78u–4(b)(1)(B). In addition, plaintiffs must “state with particularity facts
giving rise to a strong inference that the defendant[s] acted with the required
state of mind.” § 78u–4(b)(2)(A). These requirements are not easily satisfied.
In re Omnicare, Inc. Securities Litigation, 769 F.3d 455, 461 (6th Cir. 2014). Although the
PSLRA, in general, places an “elephant-sized boulder…,” id., in the path of pleading
13
securities fraud, “‘[w]hen considering a motion to dismiss, [courts] must tread lightly …
engaging carefully with the facts of a given case and considering them in their full
context.’” Ohio Pub. Employees Retirement Sys., 830 F.3d at 388 (quoting Omnicare, 769
F.3d at 473).
IV.
Discussion: Count I
A.
Plaintiff’s Count I and § 10(b)
Plaintiff claims in Count I that the Dektrix Defendants and the Fontaine Defendants,
and each of them, violated § 10(b) 9 by deceiving and misleading Plaintiff into investing in
Dektrix (in December 2016) and providing a bridge loan to Dektrix (in 2017). Plaintiff
alleges, in part, “The purpose of the scheme was to enrich Defendants’ companies and
themselves through the use of material false statements or omissions intended to secure
investment from Plaintiff….” (Doc. #1, PageID #24).
Section 10(b) bans the “use or employ, in connection with the purchase or sale of any
security ... [of] any manipulative or deceptive device or contrivance in contravention of such
rules and regulations as the [SEC] may prescribe as necessary or appropriate in the public
interest or for the protection of investors.” Ohio Pub. Employees Retirement Sys., 830 F.3d
at 383 (quoting 15 U.S.C. §78j(b)).
A prima facie violation of § 10(b) consists of:
(1) a material misrepresentation or omission by the defendant;
(2) scienter;
(3) a connection between the misrepresentation or omission and the purchase or
sale of a security;
9
References herein to Plaintiff’s § 10(b) claim encompass Plaintiff’s co-extensive Rule 10b-5 claim. See
Omnicare, 769 F.3d at 469, n.1.
14
(4) reliance upon the misrepresentation or omission;
(5) economic loss; and
(6) loss causation.
Id., 830 F.3d at 383-84 (citation and internal punctuation omitted).
B.
The Dektrix Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss
The Dektrix Defendants fault the Complaint for failing to allege that they made any
material misrepresentations or omissions. The Complaint, they say, pins the false
representation—i.e., that the Flat Decks were AAR certified—on the Fontaine Defendants
and does not accuse the Dektrix Defendants of making any such false representation. The
Dektrix Defendants also argue that Plaintiff’s Complaint fails under Fed. R. Civ. P. 9 and
the PSLRA because (1) it does not plead with particularity who made what statements or
omissions and when they made them; (2) Dektrix had no duty to correct the unknown
previous AAR-approval misrepresentation made by Fontaine in its 2014 press release; and,
(3) AAR approval was not, in fact, material to the transactions between Plaintiff and the
Dektrix Defendants. And, the Dektrix Defendants assail Plaintiff’s § 10(b) claim on the
ground that it fails to allege a material omission by them about any mechanical condition or
safety issue posed by the Fontaine Flat Decks, about the Dektrix Defendant’s use of
Plaintiff’s investment money, or about the financial condition of Dektrix’s business.
Plaintiff’s § 10(b) claim must, as noted above, derive from a material
misrepresentation or omission. Ohio Pub. Employees Retirement Sys., 830 F.3d at 383.
“Successfully pleading an actionable material misrepresentation or omission requires a
plaintiff to allege facts demonstrating two things: (1) that a defendant made a statement or
15
omission that was false or misleading; and (2) that this statement or omission concerned a
material fact. General allegations of these two components, however, are not enough.
Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b) and the PSLRA, a plaintiff’s complaint must
also ‘allege the time, place, and content of the alleged misrepresentation [or omission] on
which he or she relied [and] the fraudulent scheme....’” Omnicare, 769 F.3d at 470 (citation
omitted).
An affirmative statement constitutes a misrepresentation when it is misleading or
false. Id. Misrepresentations containing either hard or soft information are actionable. Id.
Plaintiff argues that in the Private Placement Memo, the Dektrix Defendants made a
materially false statement by implying that the Fontaine Flat Deck had obtained AAR
certification. In support of this, Plaintiff relies on the following paragraph:
Other trailer manufacturers could produce a competitive deck product
[meaning, competitive with the Fontaine Flat Deck] but it may take up to three
years from the time they make the decision to get into the market to design
around the Fontaine patents, test the equipment and go through several
production models before the competitive deck would be ready for AAR
approval to operate on Class 1 railways.
(Doc. #1, PageID #74). Reading this in Plaintiff’s favor reinforces the significance of AAR
approval for intermodal flat decks and the need for a Dektrix competitor to obtain AAR
approval to operate on Class 1 railways. This, in turn, invites the reasonable inferences that
Dektrix has a significant head start on potential competitors and a strong competitive
advantage over their foes in the marketplace because the AAR had already certified the
Fontaine Flat Deck. The Complaint further alleges that the Dektrix Defendants made this
material misrepresentation on or around August 6, 2016 when they provided Plaintiff with a
copy of the Private Placement Memo. (Doc. #1, ¶33). Although the Dektrix Defendants
16
claim to have lacked knowledge in 2015 about Fontaine’s false-AAR-certification
statement, the Complaint alleges that Crane “had actual knowledge of the lack of
certification from a May 20, 2015 email, sent to him by Michael Lesniak with the AAR.”
Id. at ¶62. Yet, according to the Complaint, Defendant Crane never disclosed the lack of
AAR certification to Plaintiff until April 2017. Id.
If, on the other hand, the Private Placement Memorandum is construed differently—
i.e., as not saying that the Fontaine Flat Deck’s were AAR certified—Plaintiff contends that
the Complaint alleges a material misrepresentation by omission. The asserted omission:
The Dektrix Defendant’s did not tell Plaintiff that the Fontaine Flat Decks were not AAR
certified until April 2017.
“In lieu of targeting a defendant’s misleading or false statements, a plaintiff may
focus on a defendant’s omission—its failure to disclose information when it had a duty to do
so. A duty to affirmatively disclose ‘may arise when there is insider trading, a statute
requiring disclosure, or, as relevant in this case, an inaccurate, incomplete[,] or misleading
prior disclosure.” Id. at 471 (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). “[I]t bears
emphasis that § 10(b) and Rule 10b–5(b) do not create an affirmative duty to disclose any
and all material information. Disclosure is required under these provisions only when
necessary ‘to make ... statements made, in the light of the circumstances under which they
were made, not misleading.’” Matrixx Initiatives, Inc. v. Siracusano, 563 U.S. 27, 44, 131
S.Ct. 1309, 1321 (2011).
The Complaint states that the Dektrix Defendants waited until April 2017 to inform
Plaintiff for the first time that the AAR had never certified that the Fontaine Flat Deck.
17
Again, Dektrix, through Crane, knew in May 2015 that the Fontaine Flat Deck was not AAR
certified. Accepting this as true means he knew that the Fontaine Flat Deck was not AAR
certified throughout the time the Dektrix Defendants solicited Plaintiff’s investment (from
June to December 2016) and its bridge loan (from and after late January 2017).
The fact, moreover, that the Fontaine Flat Deck was not AAR certified was material
because a reasonable potential investor in Plaintiff’s position would have considered it
important, if not central, to its decisions to invest in and loan money to Dektrix. See
Omnicare, 769 F.3d at 472 (“a ‘fact is material if there is a substantial likelihood that a
reasonable shareholder would consider it important in deciding how to vote.’” (citation
omitted)). This is seen in how highly AAR certification was regarded in the industry and in
the high cost and rigor needed to obtain AAR certification. The Complaint explains that the
AAR represents primarily the major freight railroads of North American. (Doc. #1, ¶38).
The AAR describes itself as “‘the standard setting organization for North American
railroads. On its website, the AAR explains that ‘[it] establishes safety, security, and
operating standards for seamless and safe operations across America’s 140,000 mile freight
rail network.’” Id. at ¶39 (citation and footnote omitted)). The AAR also regularly adopts
safety specifications, standards, and practices in its Manual of Standards and Recommended
Practices. Id. The Complaint also details the eight-step process for obtaining AAR
approval. “Suppliers work hard and spend significant amounts of time and money to
achieve AAR approval because of its benefits, and they promote their products by stating
that they are AAR certified,” according to the Complaint. Id. at ¶43. This information,
combined with Defendant Crane’s comments touting the AAR during the August 2016
18
meeting, create a substantial likelihood that a reasonable potential investor in Plaintiff’s
position would have found AAR non-certification important, if not central, when deciding
whether or not to invest in Dektrix during and after August 2016. See Zaluski v. United
American Healthcare Corp., 527 F.3d 564, 571 (6th 2008) (citation and internal quotation
marks omitted) (A fact is material when “there is a ‘substantial likelihood that the disclosure
of [it] would have been viewed by the reasonable investor as having significantly altered the
total mix of information made available.’”) (citations omitted).
The Dektrix Defendants contend that they did not have an affirmative duty to
disclose the Fontaine Flat Deck’s lack of AAR certification. This is not so. The Dektrix
Defendants had an affirmative duty to disclose this historical fact because once Crane sang
the praise of AAR certification during the August 5, 2016 meeting, he was required to be
qualify his praise by disclosing to Plaintiff the fact that the AAR had not certified the
Fontaine Flat Deck. City of Monroe Employees Retirement Sys. v. Bridgestone Corp., 399
F.3d 651, 673 (6th Cir. 2005) (“We … hold that once Firestone elected to make statements
such as the statement regarding the ‘objective data,’ it was required to qualify that
representation with known information undermining (or seemingly undermining) the
claim.”); see also Mayer v. Mylod, 988 F.2d 635, 639 (6th Cir. 1993) (“corporate officers
are not required to speak, but once they do, they must be truthful if their comments are
material to investors’ decisionmaking.”). During the August 5, 2016 meeting, Crane was
asked a question about the AAR, and he responded with a somewhat glowing description:
“they’re the largest governing body in the world, so even the steam trains from Europe …
come over and are tested here under their guidance in Pueblo, Colorado.” Id. at ¶40. Yet,
19
while Crane praised the AAR in this manner, neither he nor Harris told Plaintiff that the
Fontaine Flat Deck was not AAR certified during the meeting or at any time it sought
Plaintiff’s investment or loan. Id. at ¶s 40. Additionally, by talking up the AAR in August
2016, it can be reasonably inferred that Crane was attempting to build Plaintiff’s faith in the
Fontaine Flat Deck and, hence, in Dektrix’s ability to lead the way in the intermodal
transportation industry. By failing to disclose the lack of AAR certification, Crane and the
Dektrix Defendants provided incomplete and misleading information to Plaintiff. Indeed,
no clarification that the Fontaine Flat Decks were not AAR certified came during the August
5, 2016 meeting or in the four months that followed before Plaintiff’s December decision to
invest or through the time Plaintiff extended bridge loan to Dektrix. Without this
clarification, Crane, Harris, and the Dektrix Defendants provided incomplete and misleading
material information to Plaintiff that they had an affirmative duty to correct and clarify. See
Omnicare, 769 F.3d at 471 (“A duty to affirmatively disclose may arise when there is…, an
inaccurate, incomplete[,] or misleading prior disclosure.”).
Plaintiff asserts in its Memorandum in Opposition that during the meeting on August
5, 2016, “The subjects of AAR certification and the quality and safety of the [Fontaine]
Evolution Flat Decks were significant points of discussion.” (Doc. #36, PageID #404). The
Complaint does not explicitly state this, although it reasonably suggests it in part by its
recitation of Crane’s response to an AAR question. The Complaint’s allegations, moreover,
show that Dektrix’s potential for ongoing financial success depended on the quality and
efficacy of the Fontaine Flat Deck. 10 This is seen in the Private Placement Memo. The
10
This is readily seen now in the fact that the simple shearing of bolts gutted the Fontaine Flat Deck’s
usefulness (at least to Dektrix) and doomed Dektrix’s attempt to revolutionize intermodal shipping.
20
Complaint alleges, “The Fontaine … Flat Decks were integral and necessary to Dektrix’s
business model. As stated in the [Private Placement Memo], ‘The company’s revenue is
tied to securing shipping contracts which utilize the Dektrix Intermodal flat-deck solution
….’” (Doc. #1, ¶15). Considering the integral and necessary role the Fontaine Flat Deck
held in Dektrix’s potential for ongoing financial success, combined with Crane’s praise of
the AAR during the August 5, 2016 meeting, the Dektrix Defendants held an affirmative
duty to disclose to Plaintiff that the Fontaine Flat Deck had not been AAR certified.
Dektrix maintains that the Fontaine Flat Deck’s lack of AAR certification was not a
material fact because “AAR approval is not required to operate on the railroads and was not
material to Plaintiff’s investment decision.” (Doc. #20, PageID #241). Yet, even if AAR
approval was not necessary for railroad operations, the fact the Fontaine Flat Decks lacked
AAR certification was material because, again, Crane’s investment pitch on August 5, 2016
touted the AAR, because the quality and efficacy of the Fontaine Flat Deck was integral to
weighing the risks of investing in Dektrix against its potential for ongoing success, because
the Private Placement Memo used AAR certification as a means of misleading potential
investors into thinking Dektrix held a strong competitive advantage. Given these
circumstances, “there is a substantial likelihood that the disclosure of [the lack of AAR
certification] would have been viewed by the reasonable investor as having significantly
altered the total mix of information made available.” Zaluski, 527 F.3d at 571.
Plaintiff also contends that Dektrix had an affirmative duty to disclose safety and
security issues with the Fontaine Flat Decks in 2015. This is correct. The Complaint
alleges that in 2015, Dektrix reported defects in the Fontaine Flat Decks—namely, pin
21
shearing—to Buck Buchanan of Fontaine and that the Flat Decks were “crudely repaired at
that time.” (Doc. #1, ¶s 63, 71). In his August 2017 email, Defendant Harris wrote, “The
repairs were made in a shoddy way and did not reflect a design improvement.” Id. at ¶71.
He noted that the proposed solution “only exacerbated the problem. Now we had more of
the pins shearing…. The problem was never adequately resolved….” Id. The Complaint
further asserts, “Neither the 2015 defects nor the repairs were ever disclosed to Plaintiff
before its investment in and loan to Dektrix.” Id. at 63.
Accepting these facts as true, they identify crucial intelligence about the Fontaine
Flat Deck that a reasonable investor would have viewed as significantly altering the mix of
information it received about the safety and quality of the Fontaine Flat Deck. Not only
would such information be pertinent to whether Dektrix could fulfill its shipping contracts,
it potentially exposed Dektrix to liability for personal or property damage caused by
shearing bolts. Both events were possible, thus exposing Dektrix to much greater financial
risk than Plaintiff knew about. Consequently, Dektrix had an affirmative duty to inform
Plaintiff about the “never adequately resolved” (Doc. #1, ¶71) pin-shearing problem before
Plaintiff invested in and loaned money to Dektrix.
The Dektrix Defendants contend that the Complaint improperly conflates the terms
“pins” and “bolts” and therefore confuses the distinct issues of pin problems in 2015 versus
bolt problems in 2017. (Doc. #39, PageID #466-67). It does not. The Complaint refers to
“defects” that the Dektrix Defendants reported to Fontaine in 2015. Id. at ¶63. The
Complaint also quotes Harris’s email in which he described the pin-shearing problem
consistent with the allegation of “defects” in the Fontaine Flat Decks that Dektrix reported
22
to Fontaine in 2015. Harris also states in his email that later, Dektrix found problems with
missing main bolts holding the upright arm in place and a further problem with missing
“main bolts in holding the assemblies….” Id. at 71. The Complaint, therefore, does not
improperly conflate “pins” with “bolts” but alleges facts applicable to problems with pin
shearing in 2015 and later problems with missing and sheared bolts.
The Dektrix Defendants also argue that Plaintiff’s allegations of “faulty-repair work”
and “persistent, ongoing mechanical problem” related to pins is belied by allegations in the
Complaint, and that, as a result, Dektrix had no duty to disclose the past, resolved pin issue.
(Doc. #39, PageID #467) (internal citations omitted). Defendants, however, overlook the
allegations in the Complaint that confirm these problems. Harris’s email, quoted in the
Complaint, asserts that Fontaine’s repairs were shoddy, Fontaine’s suggested solution
(welding the bolts in place) only exacerbated the problem, and the pin-shearing issue in the
upright support arms was never adequately resolved.
Plaintiff argues that the Dektrix Defendants’ material omissions also include their
failure to disclose that the investment funds they acquired would be used for purposes (such
as paying salaries) other than purchasing Fontaine Flat Decks. Plaintiff further maintains
that the Dektrix Defendants misrepresented Dektrix as having 73 functioning Fontaine Flat
Decks (the bolt-shearing problem meant less than 73 Decks were operable), its possession of
several active broker-carrier contracts, and its great financial condition. See Doc. #1, ¶s 2832, 45, 54, 58, 60, 65, 69, 70-71. These misrepresentations were material because their
addition to the information the Dektrix Defendants provided to Plaintiff painted an
inaccurate and incomplete portrait of Dektrix’s ability to perform its obligations under
23
current and future shipping contracts and its ability to profit from the strong competitive
advantages it professed to have in the intermodal-shipping market.
The Dektrix Defendants argue that the Complaint improperly fails to comply with the
particularity requirements of Rule 9(b) and the PSLRA by engaging in improper group
pleading.
“The genesis of the group pleading doctrine is the decision of the Ninth Circuit
in Wool v. Tandem Computers Inc., 818 F.2d 1433 (9th Cir.1987), wherein the court
explained that doctrine:
In cases of corporate fraud where the false or misleading information is
conveyed in prospectuses, registration statements, annual reports, press
releases, or other ‘group-published information,’ it is reasonable to presume that
these are the collective actions of the officers. Under such circumstances, a
plaintiff fulfills the particularity requirement of Rule 9(b) by pleading the
misrepresentations with particularity and where possible the roles of the
individual defendants in the misrepresentations. Id. at 1440.
In re Huffy Corp. Securities Litigation, 577 F. Supp.2d 968, 984 (S.D. Ohio 2008) (Rice,
D.J.).
As seen above, Plaintiff’s Complaint ties individuals together under the business
entity with whom each is connected. A group of Dektrix Defendants is therefore identified
in the Complaint. The Complaint, however, is not relying on the Dektrix Defendants group
representations in the manner contemplated by the group pleading doctrine. Instead, the
Complaint sufficiently pleads omissions of material facts by the individual Dektrix
Defendants, including their failure to correct and clarify the lack of AAR certification and
their decision to follow Fontaine’s request keep quiet about the bolt-shearing problem. As
to the latter problem, Defendant Harris acknowledged in his email that the Fontaine
24
Defendants had previously asked Dektrix to withhold information about the 2015 boltshearing problem (“they asked us to keep it quiet”) and neither Harris nor any other Dektrix
Defendant informed Plaintiff about this problem before it invested in and loaned money to
Dektrix. Further, three Dektrix individual Defendants (Crane, Harris, and Morley) signed
the Membership Purchase Agreement. And a significant part of Plaintiff’s bridge loan,
$42,000, allegedly went directly to Crane and Larson, rather than for the purchase of the
Fontaine Flat Decks. Given these facts, and in light of their ownership interests in Dektrix,
the Complaint satisfies the particularity requirements of Rule 9 and the PSLRA and is not
subject to dismissal under the group pleading doctrine.
***
The Dektrix Defendants contend that the Complaint does not allege facts showing
they had the requisite scienter regarding Dektrix’s lack of AAR certification, the Fontaine
Flat Deck’s condition or safety, and Dektrix’s failure to purchase Flat Decks with Plaintiff’s
investment money.
The PSLRA requires plaintiffs to plead scienter by stating “with particularity facts
giving rise to a strong inference that the defendant acted with the required state of mind.” 15
U.S.C. § 78u–4(b)(2). The required state of mind exists when a defendant embraces an
“‘intent to deceive, manipulate or defraud.’” In re Comshare Inc. Securities Litigation, 183
F.3d 542, 548 (6th Cir. 1999) (citation omitted). Section “10(b) aims to proscribe ‘knowing
or intentional misconduct.’” Id. (citation omitted). “[P]laintiffs may [also] plead scienter in
§ 10(b) … cases by alleging facts giving rise to a strong inference of recklessness, but not
by alleging facts merely establishing that a defendant had the motive and opportunity to
25
commit securities fraud.” Id. at 549. “Recklessness sufficient to satisfy 10b–5 is ‘a mental
state apart from negligence and akin to conscious disregard.’ It is ‘highly unreasonable
conduct which is an extreme departure from the standards of ordinary care. While the
danger need not be known, it must at least be so obvious that any reasonable man would
have known of it.’” Louisiana School Employees’ Retirement Sys. v. Ernst & Young, LLP,
622 F.3d 471, 478 (6th Cir. 2010) (citation omitted).
To determine whether a defendant acted with this required state of mind, the Court
“‘must consider the complaint in its entirety’ and decide ‘whether all of the facts alleged,
taken collectively, give rise to a strong inference of scienter, not whether any individual
allegation, scrutinized in isolation, meets that standard.’” Omnicare, 769 F.3d at 473
(quoting Tellabs, Inc. v. Makor Issues & Rights, Ltd., 551 U.S. 308, 322-23, 127 S.Ct. 2499
(2007)); see Ricker v. Zoo Entertainment, Inc., No. 1:11cv490, 2012 WL 3070717, at *4
(S.D. Ohio 2012) (Spiegel, D.J.) (“In the securities fraud context, the Court considers
scienter pleadings holistically….”). If the “plaintiff’s allegations create a ‘powerful or
cogent’ inference of scienter, a court must compare this inference with other competing
possibilities, allowing the complaint to go forward ‘only if a reasonable person would deem
the inference of scienter cogent and at least as compelling as any opposing inference one
could draw from the facts alleged.’” Omnicare, 769 F.3d at 473 (quoting Tellabs, 551 U.S
at 324, 127 S.Ct. 2499; other citation omitted).
The Complaint’s factual allegations create a strong and cogent inference that the
Dektrix Defendants intentionally and knowingly, or at least recklessly, misled and deceived
Plaintiff into investing in Dektrix. This strong inference arises from the required
26
comparative analysis. Matrixx, 563 U.S. at 48, 131 S.Ct. at 1324; see Frank, 646 F.3d at
959.
The material omissions at issue—especially the non-AAR certification and the not
fixed bolt-shearing problems—painted a far rosier portrait of Dektrix than its actual ability
to utilize Fontaine Flat Decks to revolutionize the shipping industry (using its words). It is,
moreover, accurate to observe from Plaintiff’s allegations that telling Plaintiff and
reasonable potential investors about the bolt-shearing problem would have soured a
reasonable investor’s interest in Dektrix. The story of the Dektrix Defendants’ intentional
or reckless conduct is significantly bolstered by Harris’s email, which (again) explains that
when Dektrix told Fontaine about this problem, Fontaine asked Dektrix “to keep it quiet….”
Id. Dektrix intentionally or recklessly honored Fontaine’s request to keep the bolt-shearing
problem quiet by not telling Plaintiff about it throughout the summer and fall of 2016 and
into early 2017, when Dektrix was attempting to secure Plaintiff’s investment and bridge
loan. Dektrix’s silence on the pin-shearing problem was imperative to achieve Dektrix’s
goals of obtaining Plaintiff’s investment and maintaining a solid ongoing business
relationship with Fontaine. Dektrix’s financial success and growth depended upon
Fontaine’s willingness to manufacture its Flat Decks and exclusively supply Dektrix with its
Flat Decks. Fontaine, moreover, was the only manufacturer and supplier of an intermodal
flat deck (i.e., the Fontaine Flat Deck), and the quality, safety, and efficacy of the Fontaine
Flat Deck depended upon Fontaine’s willingness and ability to fix the pin-shearing problem,
as it had assured Dektrix it would.
The Dektrix Defendants also intentionally or recklessly misled Plaintiff by failing to
27
forewarn it about Dektrix’s poor financial health in the fall of 2016. Its poor financial
health did not come to light until the January 30, 2017 letter Defendant Prochazka sent to
Harris. Prochazka’s letter documents that Dektrix had not been paying its rent on the 73
Fontaine Decks in its possession and, as a result, Fontaine was terminating their lease
agreement with Dektrix. (Doc. #1, Exh. F, PageID #174). The letter’s reference to
Dektrix’s “continued failure … to pay rent,” id., does not mean that Dektrix had failed to
pay rent only in January 2017; it instead reveals that Dektrix had not been paying rent for
the Fontaine Flat Decks during at least December and likely previous months in the fall of
2016. Further, the fact that Dektrix was losing its ability to use the Fontaine Flat Decks in
late January 2017—only a month after it had secured Plaintiff’s investment—shows that
Dektrix was in poor financial health during the fall of 2016, when it sought Plaintiff’s
investment. Additionally, Dektrix held a strong motivation not to tell Plaintiff about this
because Dektrix’s poor financial health presented a serious impediment to obtaining
Plaintiff’s, or a reasonable investor’s, investment or bridge loan.
The Dektrix Defendants contend that there is no allegation in the Complaint
supporting an inference that Dektrix believed the AAR decks still were not certified during
the course of Plaintiff’s investments (December 2016 through February 2017). (Doc. #39,
PageID #461). This contention lacks merit. The Complaint alleges that Dektrix disclosed
to Plaintiff in April 2017 that the Fontaine Flat Decks “had never been certified by the
AAR.” (Doc. #1, ¶62). Assuming that the Decks had never been certified by the AAR
before April 2017 and given that Crane knew about the lack of AAR certification in May
2015, Plaintiff is entitled to the reasonable inference that Dektrix, through Crane,
28
believed—or better yet knew—the Fontaine Flat Decks were not certified throughout the
time they solicited Plaintiff’s investment and bridge loan.
The Dektrix Defendants further argue that, as to Plaintiff’s loan or investment in
2017, the Complaint fails to show their scienter regarding any omission that the Fontaine
Flat Decks had sheared pins or bolts, were unfit or unsafe to use, or were sought to be
physically destroyed. The Dektrix Defendants argue that the Complaint conclusively
establishes that they believed the sheared bolts were repairable. The Complaint, in the
Dektrix Defendants’ view, supports this because Fontaine proclaimed its Deck was
“inexpensive to repair if it’s ever damaged.” (Doc. #1, ¶44). The Dektrix Defendants,
however, mistakenly construe the Complaint in their, rather than Plaintiff’s, favor. The
Complaint alleges:
On … February 2017, the Dektrix Defendants represented to Plaintiff that the
termination of the existing lease with the … Fontaine Defendants was shortterm, and that any issue regarding “sheared bolts” was “repairable”
(Doc. #1, ¶58). These allegations do not establish that the Dektrix Defendants actually
believed the Decks were repairable. Instead, these allegations merely indicate that the
Dektrix Defendants told Plaintiff that they (the Dektrix Defendants) believed the sheared
bolts were repairable. In light of all the facts alleged in the Complaint, beginning with those
concerning the Dektrix’s material omissions in 2016, it is reasonably inferable that Dektrix
was continuing to mislead Plaintiff by minimizing the bolt-shearing problem while lauding
its own faith in the Fontaine Flat Decks. This reasonable inference is warranted at this stage
of the case and aligns with Plaintiff’s allegations about the Dektrix Defendant’s
misrepresentations and misuse of the bridge loan Plaintiff provided them in 2017. The
29
Dektrix Defendants, for example, allegedly never used the bridge loan to purchase Fontaine
Flat Decks but instead used some of this money to enrich Dektrix Defendants Crane and
Larson in the form of salaries. And they continued to intentionally or recklessly mislead
Plaintiff by saying that “they had active broker-carrier contracts in place, including but not
limited to Constellium.” Id. at ¶64. This representation did not tell the full truth because
the Dektrix Defendants “knew their entire fleet was unfit to service the Constellium
contract.” Id. at ¶71. The fact, moreover, that the Dektrix Defendants knew this at the time
they were soliciting Plaintiff’s 2017 bridge loan can be inferred from many alleged facts that
fit together like puzzle pieces, including, (1) their knowledge of the 2015 pin-shearing
problem, and the missing-and-shearing-bolt problems they discovered in 2017; (2) their
knowledge of their financial problems in late 2016 continuing into 2017; (3) their doubtless
desire to remain in Fontaine’s good graces during early 2017 by remaining silent about the
2015 bolt-shearing problem; (4) the termination of their Lease Agreement along with their
access to Fontaine Flat Decks in late January 2017; and (5) their representation to Plaintiff
in February 2017 that the termination of the lease was a short-term problem, even though
Dektrix was attempting to solve it with an offer to buy 73 Fontaine Flat Decks for
$1,000,000–which it, by itself, could not afford. In addition, the Dektrix Defendants
overlook or ignore assertions in the Complaint that they “at no time provided Plaintiff with
any indication that … [the] Fontaine Defendants were seeking not only to call back and seek
return of all decks, but were actively seeking to physically destroy such decks on the basis
that they were unfit, defective, and otherwise unsafe ….” (Doc. #1, ¶58). Viewed
holistically, see Omnicare, 769 F.3d at 473, all of these allegations add up to a strong
30
inference that the Dektrix Defendants were intentionally or recklessly continuing to mislead
Plaintiff into loaning or investing in Dektrix in early 2017.
Lastly, the strong inference that the Dektrix Defendants acted intentionally or
recklessly is compelling or at least as compelling as any contrary explanation one could
draw from the Complaint. Perhaps the starkest example is that the Complaint provides no
factual basis for inferring that there was a compelling contrary explanation for the Dektrix
Defendants failure to tell Plaintiff during the Fall 2016 to early 2017 about the 2015 pinshearing problem, particularly when their silence was at Fontaine’s request. Although the
Dektrix Defendants allege that the problem was fixed, this is simply an allegation contrary
to the Complaint, rather than a competing inference that can be drawn from it. Indeed, once
Plaintiff’s version of the fraud described in the Complaint is credited, “only … a reasonable
person would deem the inference of [the Dektrix Defendants’] scienter cogent and at least as
compelling as any opposing inference that can be drawn from the facts alleged.” Matrixx,
563 U.S. at 48, 131 S.Ct. at 1324.
Accordingly, the Dektrix Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss Plaintiff § 10(b) claim lacks
merit.
C.
The Fontaine Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss
The Fontaine Defendants argue that the Complaint fails to allege a material
misrepresentation or omission by them. They point to Plaintiff’s allegation about Fontaine’s
2014 press release concerning AAR certification and other statements Fontaine allegedly
made, including that the Flat Deck was “virtually maintenance free”; “stronger” and “safer”
than any other deck; and able to “withstand the punishing conditions associated with rail and
31
highway transportation.” (Doc. #16, PageID #s 201-02). The Fontaine Defendants contend
that they had no duty to provide Plaintiff with corrected information about the Flat Decks
because the statements were not made in connection with a securities transaction.
Section 10(b) applies to forbidden acts or omissions done “in connection with the
purchase or sale of any security …” Tellabs, 551 U.S. at 318, 127 S.Ct. at 2507 (quoting 15
U.S.C. §78j(b)). 11 A forbidden act or omission “is not made ‘in connection with’ such a
‘purchase or sale of a covered security’ unless it is material to a decision by one or more
individuals (other than the fraudster) to buy or to sell a ‘covered security.’” Chadbourne &
Parke LLP v. Troice, 571 U.S. 377, __, 134 S.Ct. 1058, 1066 (2014). “The ‘connection’
must ‘matter’—under the facts of Chadbourne, this meant that the misrepresentation
‘ma[de] a significant difference to someone’s decision to purchase or to sell a covered
security[.]’” United States SEC v. Crowe, 216 F.Supp.3d 852, 864 (S.D. Ohio 2016)
(Marbley, D.J.).
The Complaint alleges that Fontaine issued the press release in 2014 claiming AAR
certification. The press release was quoted by industry publications. Fontaine also placed a
video on its website in August 2016, continuing through October 2017 (the date Plaintiff
filed its Complaint), advancing additional claims, for instance, that the Fontaine Flat Deck
was stronger and safer than any other flat deck. See Doc. #1, ¶s 37, 44. The Complaint
sufficiently alleges that these misrepresentations by the Fontaine Defendants were material
because they made a significant difference in Plaintiff’s decision to invest in Dektrix. This
11
In fraud cases brought by private plaintiffs, § 10(b)-5 liability does not reach those who aid and abet a
violation. Central Bank of Denver, N.A. v. First Interstate Bank of Denver, N.A., 511 U.S. 164, 177, 114
S.Ct. 1439, 1448 (1994).
32
emerges from the allegation that the Fontaine Flat Decks “were so integral to the investment
opportunity that was being presented to Plaintiff and [its owners] Baguirov and
Shakhbandarov, they decided to review the information that was publicly available about
[the Fontaine Flat Deck] ….” Id. at ¶37. Additionally, because the 2014 press release and
the video continued to be publicly available when Plaintiff was deciding whether or not to
invest in Dektrix, these communications coincided with Plaintiff’s investment decision.
And, the August 2016 presentation to Plaintiff by Defendants Crane, Harris, and Buchanan
(Fontaine’s president at the time) omitted the fact that Fontaine had not corrected the false
claim to AAR certification in the 2014 press release. Taken together, and viewed in
Plaintiff’s favor, these facts show that Fontaine’s misrepresentations in the press release and
video made a significant difference to Plaintiff’s decision to invest in Dektrix and, as a
result, were made in connections with the sale of a security. See Crowe, 216 F.Supp.3d at
864.
The Fontaine Defendants argue that they did not have an affirmative duty to disclose
the lack of AAR certification because they were not aware that Plaintiff had seen the 2014
press release. (Doc. #16, PageID #202). Yet their lack of awareness does not help them at
this point in the case because, according to the Complaint, they actively assisted Dektrix in
its fraudulent sale of securities starting in early August 2016. They did so by telling
Plaintiff in early August 2016 that they fully supported Dektrix and were extending a twoyear exclusivity deal to provide only Dektrix with Fontaine Flat Decks. Defendant Dier
communicated Marmon’s support for Dektrix in his letter of August 4, 2016. Crane and
Harris showed this letter to investors, including Plaintiff, during presentations in July and
33
August 2016. While all this was happening, Fontaine’s misrepresentation in the 2014 press
release remained available for investors like Plaintiff to find on the internet. As a result,
once the Fontaine Defendants began to assist Dektrix in its sale of securities, they had a duty
to correct their previous misrepresentation that the Fontaine Flat Decks were AAR certified.
See Bridgestone Corp., 399 F.3d at 673; see also Mayer v. Mylod, 988 F.2d 635, 639 (6th
Cir. 1993) (“corporate officers are not required to speak, but once they do, they must be
truthful if their comments are material to investors’ decisionmaking.”). Under the
Complaint’s version of the events, the Fontaine Defendants were not free to stick their heads
in the sand in the hope that Plaintiff did not find its press release with its false and
misleading statement regarding the Fontaine Flat Deck’s AAR certification.
The Fontaine Defendants contend that additional statements in the Complaint
provided “soft information” such as the statements in another press release and in video—
i.e., the Fontaine Flat Deck is “virtually maintenance free”; “stronger” and “safer” than any
other deck; and, “able to withstand the punishing conditions associated with rail and
highway transportation.” Soft statements like these, the Fontaine Defendants maintain, are
not actionable misrepresentations unless a plaintiff pleads facts showing the statements were
made with knowledge of their falsity.
Soft information, including “certain kinds of rosy affirmation,” are immaterial as a
matter of law. Bridgestone, 399 F.3d at 669. This includes, “loosely optimistic statements
that are so vague, [and] so lacking in specificity, ... that no reasonable investor could find
them important to the total mix of information available.” Id. (citations and internal
punctuation omitted). “The failure to disclose soft information is actionable only if it is ...
34
virtually as certain as hard facts.” Id. (citation and internal punctuation and brackets
omitted).
Assuming Fontaine’s video or website announced soft information about its Flat
Deck (it is stronger, safer, virtually maintenance free, etc.), Plaintiff’s Complaint
sufficiently alleges that the Fontaine Defendants’ new contrary information was virtually as
certain as hard facts. “The context of statements is often telling.” Id. at 672. Here, the
context of the alleged statements was their connection to the Fontaine Flat Deck and to the
Dektrix Defendants’ and the Fontaine Defendants’ attempts to convince investors, including
Plaintiff, to invest in Dektrix. At that time, in and after August 2016, the Fontaine
Defendants possessed actual knowledge of the pin-shearing problem and, hence, actual
knowledge that the Fontaine Flat Deck was not, in fact, virtually maintenance free or
stronger or safer than any other intermodal flat deck. Defendant Harris’s email explains, as
noted previously, “Shortly after putting the decks in service we had pins shearing in the
upright support arms. Those pins were critical to supporting the 60,000 lbs. of another
container stacked on top of our deck. When we verbally drew this problem to Fontaine’s
attention, they asked us to keep it quiet and assured us they would immediately fix the
problem.” (Doc. #1, ¶71). The email goes on to say that the repairs were shoddy and only
exacerbated the pin-shearing problem and it was never adequately resolved. This
information “is virtually as certain as hard facts and contradicts [Fontaine’s] prior
statement[s].” Omnicare, 769 F.3d at 471 (citations omitted). The information is, in other
words, “so concrete” that the Fontaine Defendants must have actually known it rendered
false Fontaine’s previous representations in the 2014 press release and its video. Id. And,
35
given the integral and necessary role the Fontaine Flat Deck held in potential investors’
decision-making process, a reasonable investor could have found the Fontaine Defendants’
statements “important to the total mix of information available.” Bridgestone Corp., 399
F.3dat 669 (citations omitted).
Accordingly, the Complaint identifies with particularly, and in compliance with the
PLSRA, sufficient material misrepresentations in support of Plaintiff’s § 10(b)-5 claim
against the Fontaine Defendants.
* * *
The Fontaine Defendants argue that the Complaint fails to raise a strong inference of
scienter because it makes only conclusory allegations about Fontaine’s alleged intent,
motivation, and actions. They assert that the Complaint attributes Dektrix’s knowledge to
Fontaine without factual support and vaguely alleges that Fontaine assisted Dektrix in
securing Plaintiff’s investment.
The Fontaine Defendants’ Memorandum in Support of their Motion to Dismiss does
not advance a reasoned analysis supported by case law concerning their lack-of-scienter
assertion. See Doc. #16, PageID #203. Instead, they did so in their Reply. This is improper
because it deprives Plaintiff of an opportunity to address arguments raised for the first time
in the Fontaine Defendants’ Reply and because it snuffs out the competition of arguments
essential to judicial decision-making. See Patel v. Lynch, 830 F.3d 353, 357 (6th Cir. 2016).
Additionally, the Complaint advances sufficiently specific factual allegations concerning the
Fontaine Defendants’ involvement, along with the Dektrix Defendants, in the scheme to
intentionally deceive Plaintiff into investing in Dektrix. The Fontaine Defendants did so by
36
failing to correct its 2014 press release about AAR certification and its misrepresentations in
a later press release and video. Perhaps most significantly, the Fontaine Defendants
allegedly asked Dektrix to keep the bolt-shearing problem quiet and the Fontaine
Defendants’ alleged failure to adequately address the bolt-shearing problem. And, the
Fontaine Defendants kept the unfixed bolt-shearing problem quiet during the potentialinvestor meetings in July and August 2016 and thereafter. Doing so, they not only failed to
tell Plaintiff essential information about the Fontaine Flat Deck, they also left in place their
prior misrepresentations that the Fontaine Flat Deck was “virtually maintenance free”;
“stronger” and “safer” than any other deck; and, “able to withstand the punishing conditions
associated with rail and highway transportation.”
Indeed, once Plaintiff’s version of the fraud described in the Complaint is credited,
“only … a reasonable person would deem the inference of [the Fontaine Defendants’]
scienter cogent and at least as compelling as any opposing inference that can be drawn from
the facts alleged.” Matrixx, 563 U.S. at 48, 131 S.Ct. at 1324.
** *
The Fontaine Defendants contend that the Complaint fails to sufficiently plead
reasonable reliance. The Complaint, they say, does not demonstrate that Plaintiff
reasonably relied on the statements in (1) the 2014 press release, (2) Buchanan’s support for
Dektrix on August 5, 2016, (3) Marmon president Dier’s letter, or (4) Fontaine’s
promotional materials. They assert that the Complaint does not allege they provided the
2014 press release to Plaintiff. Plaintiff instead relied solely on third-party articles on the
internet containing a statement regarding AAR certification that was more than two-and-a-
37
half years old.
“Reliance by the plaintiff upon the defendant’s deceptive acts is an essential element
of the § 10(b) private cause of action. It ensures that, for liability to arise, the ‘requisite
causal connection between a defendant’s misrepresentation and a plaintiff’s injury’ exists as
a predicate for liability.” Stoneridge Inv. Partners, LLC v. Scientific-Atlanta, 552 U.S. 148,
159, 128 S.Ct. 761, 769 (2008) (quoting Basic Inc. v. Levinson, 485 U.S. 224, 243, 108
S.Ct. 978 (1988) (other citation omitted). “[R]eliance is tied to causation, leading to the
inquiry whether [the defendants’] acts were immediate or remote to the injury.” Id., 552
U.S. at 160, 128 S.Ct. 761; see In re National Century Financial Enterprises, Inc., 846
F.Supp.2d 828, 877 (S.D. Ohio 2012) (Graham, D.J.).
A rebuttable presumption of reliance arises here due to the Fontaine Defendants’
omissions—again, their failure to correct the misrepresentations in Fontaine’s 2014 press
release and its video. See Stoneridge, 552 U.S. at 159, 128 S.Ct. at 769 (“a rebuttable
presumption arises … if there is an omission of a material fact by one with a duty to disclose
….”); Molecular Technology Corp. v. Valentine, 925 F.2d 910, 918 (6th Cir. 1991) (“In the
case of omission or nondisclosure of material facts, the element of reliance on the part of the
plaintiffs may be presumed.”). Once Buchanan spoke to potential investors, including
Plaintiff, a duty arose that required the Fontaine Defendants to correct Fontaine’s previous
material misrepresentations in the press release and videos.
In contrast to the Fontaine Defendants’ view, the Complaint does more than allege
that Plaintiff merely relied on third-party internet articles. The Complaint alleges that
Fontaine itself issued the press release about AAR certification in 2014. (Doc. #1, ¶37).
38
The Complaint combines this allegation with its Exhibit C, which contains copies of 8
separate third-party articles (industry publications) each advancing the exact same incorrect
statement about AAR certification of the Fontaine Flat Deck. Id. (citing Exh. C). And,
Plaintiff relied on Fontaine’s video, available in 2016 on Fontaine’s website, in which
Fontaine made knowingly false statements by describing the Fontaine Flat Deck as stronger
and safer than any other flat deck, and virtually indestructible yet simple and inexpensive to
repair if it’s ever damaged. Id. at ¶44. Fontaine advanced these claims despite knowing
about the unfixed bolt-shearing problem. The Complaint, therefore, does far more than
basing Fontaine’s purported liability on third-party statements.
The Fontaine Defendants also argue that the Complaint fails to indicate Plaintiff was
reasonably justified in relying on Fontaine’s 2014 press release and related articles. They
emphasize that Plaintiff did not ask Fontaine if its Flat Deck was AAR certified. Yet, it was
reasonable for Plaintiff, knowing what it knew, not to have asked Fontaine about its press
release and AAR-certification statement. A reasonable investor in Plaintiff’s position could
have concluded that no further inquiry about AAR certification was needed beyond
Fontaine’s affirmative statement in the 2014 press release, beyond the fact that industry
publications reported the Fontaine Flat Deck’s AAR certification, and beyond Fontaine’s
assertions in its video that bragged about the strength and efficacy of the Fontaine Flat
Deck. In addition, viewing the Complaint in the light most favorable to Plaintiff, Fontaine
was the driving force behind the tactic (through 2016) to keep the truth quiet about the
Fontaine Flat Deck’s bolt-shearing problem. And, Fontaine’s present assertion that it would
have told the truth about AAR certification, if Plaintiff had only asked about it, constitutes
39
an allegation beyond the Complaint and not accepted as true at this stage of the case.
The Fontaine Defendants also point out that information about the lack of AAR
certification was publicly available and easily obtainable on the AAR’s website, which
Plaintiff did not bother to visit. This again, however, extends the present pleading inquiry
about Plaintiff’s justifiable reliance beyond the Complaint and into territory where
Defendants rely on unproven allegations inappropriate to resolve at the pleading stage,
particularly when Plaintiff challenges these allegations in its Memorandum in Opposition.
(Doc. #26, PageID #313 and n.4); cf. Baker v. BP America, Inc., 768 F.Supp. 208, 214
(N.D. Ohio 1991) (“Whether Krantz should have advised Hawk to evaluate Cimcast and the
Venture more closely, or whether he should have discovered the alleged
‘misrepresentations’ himself as Hawk’s attorney, are relevant issues which can be explored
only through Krantz’s testimony.”).
Accordingly, the Complaint pleads with particularity, and in satisfaction of the
PSLRA, that Plaintiff justifiably relied on the Fontaine Defendants’ material
misrepresentations.
* * *
The remaining two elements of Plaintiff’s § 10(b) claim against the Fontaine
Defendants are economic loss and loss causation, i.e., a causal connection between the
material misrepresentation and the loss. See Dura Pharmaceuticals, Inc. v. Broudo, 544
U.S. 336, 342, 125 S.Ct. 1627, 1631 (2005). The Complaint pleads with particularity that
Plaintiff suffered the loss of its entire $450,000 investment in Dektrix (including its bridge
loan).
40
The Fontaine Defendants argue that the Complaint fails to identify any material
misrepresentation by them that actually caused Plaintiff’s loss. They emphasize, “to touch
upon a loss is not to cause a loss, as 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4(b)(4) requires.” Dura, 544 U.S. at
343, 125 S.Ct. at 1632 (italics in original). According to the Fontaine Defendants, the
Complaint also makes clear that Dektrix failed to use Plaintiff’s investment money as
Dektrix and Fontaine had originally agreed.
The Complaint sufficiently alleges a causal connection between the Fontaine
Defendants’ material misrepresentations and omissions and Plaintiff’s lost investment. This
causal connection exists through the following allegations: Fontaine’s Flat Decks were
integral and necessary to the success of Plaintiff’s investment in Dektrix; Fontaine
misrepresented the quality and efficacy of its Flat Deck through its 2014 press release and
later video; and, Buchanan—and through him the Fontaine Defendants—strongly supported
Dektrix during the August 6, 2016 meeting with Plaintiff and other potential investors even
though he knew about the Flat Deck’s bolt-shearing problem and that it had not been
adequately repaired. Buchanan’s faith in Dektrix, as he explained during the meeting, was
bolstered by Fontaine’s willingness to provide Flat Decks exclusively to Dektrix for two
years. Yet, Fontaine never informed Plaintiff before the date it decided to invest in Dektrix
that Dektrix had stopped paying Fontaine the rent due on the Flat Decks as required by
contract between Dektrix and Fontaine. Viewing the Complaint in Plaintiff’s favor,
Fontaine remained silent about this and failed to correct its previous misrepresentations
because it wanted to secure Plaintiff’s investment in Dektrix—its exclusive customer.
Without Plaintiff’s investment, Dektrix would have certainly failed sooner, leaving Fontaine
41
without a valuable customer to utilize its Flat Deck.
Accordingly, the Complaint pleads with particularity the loss and loss causation
elements of Plaintiff’s §10b-(5) claim against the Fontaine Defendants. And, for all the
above reasons, Plaintiff’s Count I is not subject to dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6) and the
PSLRA.
V. Discussion: Count II
Plaintiff claims in Count II that the § 10(b) liability attaches to each individual
Defendant under § 20 of the Securities Exchange Act because each acted as a “controlling
person” of Dektrix due, in part, to their high-level position with Dektrix, Fontaine, and
Marmon.
“Section 20(a) of the Securities Exchange Act provides that ‘[e]very person who ...
controls any person liable under any provision of this chapter or of any rule or regulation
thereunder shall also be liable jointly and severally with and to the same extent as such
controlled person.” Doshi v. General Cable Corp., 823 F.3d 1032, 1045 (6th Cir. 2016)
(quoting, in part, 15 U.S.C. § 78t(a)). “The term ‘control’ in this context is defined … as
‘the possession, direct or indirect, of the power to direct or cause the direction of the
management and policies of a person, whether through the ownership of voting securities,
by contract, or otherwise.’” Bridgestone, 399 F.3d at 666 (quoting, in part, 17 C.F.R. §
230.405). “‘Allegations of control are not averments of fraud and therefore need not be
pleaded with particularity. They need satisfy only the less stringent requirements of Fed. R.
Civ. P. 8.’” In re National Century Financial Enterprises, Inc., 504 F.Supp.2d 287, 300
(S.D. Ohio 2007) (Graham, D.J.) (citations omitted).
42
Both the Dektrix and Fontaine Defendants’ focus on the maxim that “control person
liability is derivative….” D.E.&J. Ltd. Partnership v. Conaway, 133 F. App’x 994, 1001
(6th Cir. 2005). Consequently, if a complaint fails to sufficiently plead a primary violation
of § 10(b), claims of control-person liability under § 20 are subject to dismissal. Doshi, 823
F.3d at 1045. The Dektrix Defendants’ and Fontaine Defendants’ reliance on derivative
liability is misplaced because Plaintiff’s Complaint sufficiently pleads primary violations of
§ 10(b). Consequently, dismissal for lack of a primary violation is unwarranted. See Frank,
646 F.3d at 962-63.
The Complaint, moreover, adequately pleads control-person liability. The Complaint
identifies Defendant Dier as president of Marmon Highway Technologies, LLC; Defendant
Prochazka as group president for Fontaine Commercial Trailer, Inc., an affiliate of Fontaine
and a subsidiary of Defendant Marmon; and Defendant Buchanan as president of Fontaine.
In their respective positions, each of these individual Defendants were top officers or
directors with “‘the possession, direct or indirect, of … power to direct or cause …,”
Conaway, 133 F. App’x at 1001, either Fontaine’s or Marmon’s material misrepresentations
or omissions. Through the exercise of the authority each high-level position provided these
individual Defendants, each could have revealed the truth about the Fontaine Flat Deck, but
each chose to hide the truth through their omissions. Defendants Kier, Prochazka, and
Buchanan also materially misrepresented the Fontaine Flat Deck’s capabilities by
“‘ma[king] loud and published claims to reputable reporters and trade journals that the
Evolution [Fontaine Flat] deck was in fact AAR certified.’” (Doc. #1, ¶71) (quoting
Harris’s August 2017 email). The Complaint further alleges that “‘they,’” meaning Dier,
43
Prochazka, and Buchanan (and others), “‘asked us [Dektrix] to keep it [the pin-shearing
problem] quiet ….’” Id. And, Prochazka allegedly participated in the fraud by “leading
Plaintiff to believe that its investment would be a refundable deposit on the purchase of the
Fontaine Flat Decks when instead, Fontaine used Plaintiff’s money for its own benefit and
without providing any non-defective, safe decks.” Id. at ¶5. These allegations suffice to
raise plausible control-person liability claims against Defendants Dier, Prochazka, and
Buchanan. Cf. In re MicroStrategy, Inc. Securities Litigation, 115 F.Supp.2d 620, 661 (E.D.
Va. 2000) (“The question of whether someone qualifies as a controlling person under
Section 20(a)…, is ‘a complex factual question.’ SEC v. Coffey, 493 F.2d 1304, 1318 (6th
Cir. 1974). As such, it is ‘not ordinarily subject to resolution on a motion to dismiss,’ and
dismissal is appropriate only when ‘a plaintiff does not plead any facts from which it can
reasonably be inferred the defendant was a control person.’”).
Turning to whether the individual Dektrix Defendants are control persons, Plaintiff
alleges that Harris, Crane, and Morley are member-managers of Dektrix LLC and Dektrix
Transportation Services LLC. Dektrix’s Private Placement Memo identifies all three as
members of Dektrix’s Board of Managers, which “has the exclusive management and
control of all aspects of the business of the Company [Dektrix LLC].” (Doc. #1, PageID #s
50, 84). This specific allegation supports the Complaint’s further statement that “[u]pon
information and belief, Dektrix LLC, Dektrix Transportation Services LLC, Dektrix
Intermodal LLC, along with manager members Harris, Crane, Morley, and Larson…, all
managed, worked and otherwise operated as a single corporate entity.” Id. at ¶18. Adding
this information together, and considering Dektrix’s small size and singular purpose, the
44
Complaint says enough to support the conclusion that each individual Dektrix Defendant
Crane, Harris, Morley possessed the power to direct or cause, see Conaway, 133 F. App’x at
1001, Dektrix’s communications with Plaintiff from July 2016 through December 2016,
including its material omissions about AAR certification and the pin-shearing problem.
This satisfies Rule 8(a)(2)’s notice requirement and raises plausible control-person liability
claims against each of them.
The Complaint identifies Defendant Larson as “the Comptroller, employee, and/or
agent of Dektrix and Dektrix Trans[portation LLC].” Id. at ¶17. The Complaint explains
that $42,000 of Plaintiff’s bridge loan to Dektrix went directly to Crane and Larson. Id. at
¶65. And, the Complaint declares, “[u]pon information and belief, Larson holds a corporate
interest in Dektrix.” Id. at ¶17. Taken together, these allegations fall short of demonstrating
that Larson held any authority to direct or cause Dektrix’s communications with Plaintiff in
2016 and 2017. Assuming he accepted some of the fraudulently obtained $42,000, the
Complaint states that this was paid to him as a salary without alleging misconduct by him.
Id. at ¶65. Further, neither this nor the Complaint’s other allegations indicate that Larson
had the authority to control or direct Dektrix’s communications with Plaintiff. The
Complaint therefore fails to raise a plausible claim of control-person liability against
Defendant Larson.
Lastly, the Dektrix Defendants correctly note that the term “the Company” is
undefined in the Complaint, particularly as it is used in Count II. They contend that this
failure to adequately plead the identity of the entities over whom Count II is asserted is fatal
to Count II. (Doc. #20, PageID #261, n.18). Plaintiff’s slapdash reference to “the
45
Company” in Count II is certainly unhelpful. But it is not fatal to Plaintiff’s control-person
liability claim because the Complaint must be construed in the light most favorable to
Plaintiff. Ohio Pub. Employees Retirement Sys., 830 F.3d at 382. Doing so exposes the
individual Dektrix Defendants (except Larson) to control-person liability, as discussed
above.
Accordingly, Count II is not subject to Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal except as to
Defendant Larson.
VI.
Discussion: Plaintiff’s Counts III-VIII
Plaintiff voluntarily dismisses Counts III and IV of the Complaint. (Doc. #36,
PageID #423).
Plaintiff asserts in Count V that Defendants, collectively and individually, committed
common law fraud against it.
Both the Dektrix Defendants and the Fontaine Defendants contend that the
Complaint fails to plead fraud with particularity and fails to state a claim upon which relief
can be granted based on all of the reasons they advanced in support of their Motions to
Dismiss Plaintiff’s § 10(b) claim. They further assert that Plaintiff’s common-law fraud
claim is based on mere conclusory allegations. And the Fontaine Defendants contend that
Plaintiff’s fraud claim fails because the Complaint does not identify, even in a conclusory
manner, a duty they owed to Plaintiff or any special relationship sufficient to give rise to a
duty to disclose.
Because Plaintiff’s Rule 10(b) claim survives PSLRA review, Plaintiff’s commonlaw fraud claim survives for the same reasons. Cf. Glimcher, 2:09cv797, 2010 WL
46
1610709, at *4 (S.D. Ohio 2010) (Frost, D.J.) (“PSLRA imposes heightened pleading
requirements [above Rule 9(b)’s particularity requirements] in actions brought pursuant to
Section 10(b) and Rule 10b–5.”).
***
Count VI of the Complaint states, “The Dektrix Defendants entered into a contractual
relationship with Plaintiff for trucking transportation work and investments. The Dektrix
Defendants in conjunction with such agreements, made various representations,
advertisements, and other characterizations concerning such services, which ha[ve] been set
forth extensively herein, including but not limited to fair dealing, disclosure, transparency,
and/or the promise to use investment money for the purchase of Evolution Intermodal Flat
Decks from Fontaine.” (Doc. #1, ¶s 110-111). The Complaint alleges that the Dektrix
Defendants materially breached their contractual duties “as set forth in the Agreements,
including but not limited to failure to use the money as required by the contracts, failure to
provide security interests in the [Fontaine] Flat Decks as required by the contracts, and
spending the money for their own benefit instead of the benefit of Dektrix or its members
and investors.” Id. at ¶113.
The Dektrix Defendants contend that Count VI fails to satisfy Rule 8(a)’s
requirements because (1) it does not allege the existence of a contract; (2) Plaintiff breached
the Membership Purchase Agreement and the Assignment of Beneficial Use of Assets—the
bridge loan—by failing to invest the full $650,000 as required by the Membership Purchase
Agreement; (3) Dektrix did not breach the terms of the Membership Purchase Agreement or
bridge loan, and (4) Plaintiff proximately caused its own alleged harm by failing “to come
47
up with more than $100,000 of the $650,000 it agreed to invest, and by [failing] to assign
Decks as it agreed to.” (Doc. #20, PageID #269).
“Under Ohio law, the elements of a breach of contract claim ‘include the existence of
a contract, performance by the plaintiff, breach by the defendant, and damage or loss to the
plaintiff.’” Wheat v. Chase Bank, 3:11cv309, 2014 WL 457588 at *24 (S.D. Ohio 2014)
(Rice, D.J.). (citation omitted).
The Complaint identifies the Membership Purchase Agreement as the contract at
issue. See Doc. #1, ¶52-54 and Exh. E. The Complaint quotes the Membership Purchase
Agreement’s imposition of the parties’ duties as follow:
Buyer [Plaintiffs12] shall pay $350,000 US to Dektrix LLC by wire transfer no
later than Monday December 5, 2016 for which Seller [the Dektrix Defendants]
will immediately convey 70,000 preferred membership units to Buyer and shall
enter said transaction in the organizational records and shall provide Buyer an
authorized signed copy of the same.
(Doc. #1, ¶52 (quoting Exh. E) (Plaintiff’s brackets; footnote added)). 13 Neither this
paragraph nor any provision of the Membership Purchase Agreement contains the phrase,
“Seller shall purchase 73 Fontaine Flat Decks,” or the like. So, Plaintiff refers to the
Agreement’s “Security Interest” provision, which grants it a second lien on certain Fontaine
Flat Decks as follows:
Seller [Dektrix] hereby grants Buyer [Plaintiff] the right to a second lien
position, which may be evidenced by the Buyer filing a UCC-1 on any of the
first 73 intermodal flat-racks the Seller purchases [and] it is expressly
understood by both parties that a 1st lien position will most like be held by the
12
The Membership Purchase Agreement identifies “Buyer” as “Islom Shakhbandarov and Adil Baguirov…,
collectively.” The Complaint states that these two owners of Plaintiff have “assigned any rights they may
have in the present claims to Plaintiff….” (Doc. #1, ¶10).
13
Plaintiff wired $350,000 to Dektrix on December 5, 2016. Accepting this is true, there is no present issue
regarding Plaintiff’s performance of this contractual duty. See id. at ¶52.
48
individual or entity extending credit for the acquisition of those intermodal flatracks and that any security interest herein afforded to the Buyer shall be
subordinate to those of the 1st lien holder, without cost to Dektrix, LLC.
Id. at ¶54 (quoting Exh. E at PageID #170). The next sentence in the Complaint proposes
Plaintiff’s interpretation: “This paragraph demonstrates the parties’ intent that the $350,000
was to be used toward the purchase of the first 73 intermodal flat decks from Fontaine.” Id.
at ¶54.
Plaintiff’s interpretation of the Security Interest provision rests on a conclusion of
law. “Construction of a written contract [under Ohio law]…, is a question of law for the
court….” Arlington Video Productions, Inc. v. Fifth Third Bancorp, 569 F. App’x 379, 386
(6th Cir. 2014) (citations omitted). Given this, Plaintiff’s interpretation of the Security
Interest provision need not be credited at the pleading stage of the case. See Handy-Clay v.
City of Memphis, Tenn., 695 F.3d 531, 539 (6th Cir. 2012); see MoonScoop SAS v.
American Greetings Corp., 489 F. App’x 95, 100 (6th Cir. 2012).
Judicial interpretation of a contract “give[s] effect to the intent of the parties in
making the contract. The parties’ intent is presumed to lie in the language they used in their
agreement.” Id. (citations omitted). Courts “must read the contract as a whole
and give effect to every part of it, if possible.” Id. (citation omitted).
In order to give effect to the Security Interest provision in the Membership Purchase
Agreement, it must be seen as showing the parties’ intent that Dektrix would purchase the
73 Flat Decks it was leasing from Fontaine. Otherwise, without this purchase and resulting
ownership of the Flat Decks, Dektrix did not own the 73 Flat Decks and, axiomatically, it
could not grant Plaintiff a security interest in something it did not own. This interpretation
49
of the Security Interest provision is in line with its central role in the Membership Purchase
Agreement when it is read in its entirety. The duties created by the Agreement—Plaintiff’s
payment of $350,000 in exchange for Preferred Membership Units in Dektrix—
accomplished Dektrix’s goal of obtaining Plaintiff’s investment and Plaintiff’s desire to
invest in Dektrix. The Security Interest provision, moreover, must be construed in line with
the parties’ duties, and doing so, it has significance only if it had value to the parties. The
value to Dektrix? If it was contractually bound to purchase 73 Flat Decks, it was much
more likely to convince Plaintiff to invest in Dektrix. The value to Plaintiff? It would not
have a valuable Security Interest unless this provision required Dektrix to purchase the 73
Flat Decks. This interpretation of the Security Interest provision also gives effect to the
parties’ intent to provide Plaintiff with more in hand to protect its investment than only its
potentially valueless Preferred Membership Units. Such reassurance was needed given the
high cost of Plaintiff’s investment versus the risky nature of investing in a young company
whose continued success hinged chiefly upon the efficacy of a single product—the Fontaine
Flat Deck.
Despite the above analysis, interpretation of the Security Interest provision must
consider the fact that it does not, as previously noted, say something like, “Seller shall
purchase 73 Fontaine Flat Decks.” Considering the absence of such words from the
Membership Purchase Agreement reveals ambiguity in the Security Interest Provision
because it is susceptible to two conflicting yet reasonable interpretations: one requiring
Dektrix to purchase 73 Flat Decks; the other giving Dektrix an option to purchase them.
United Tel. Co. of Ohio v. Williams Excavating, Inc., 125 Ohio App.3d 135, 153 (1997)
50
(“the contract language is susceptible of two conflicting but reasonable interpretations and is
therefore ambiguous.”); see also Aerel, S.R.L. v. PCC Airfoils, L.L.C., 448 F.3d 899, 904
(6th Cir. 2006) (citing Williams Excavating and State v. Porterfield, 106 Ohio St.3d 5, 829
N.E.2d 609, 692-93 (2005)). Such ambiguity must be resolved against the drafter, another
problem for Dektrix because it appears to have drafted the contract. Yet, the neither the
Complaint nor the contract identifies the drafter.
Plaintiff also claims that Dektrix breached the parties’ second contract concerning the
bridge loan, “wherein Plaintiff agreed to pay $100,000 as a loan to be repaid by Dektrix
Defendants in monthly amounts of $2,400. The terms and conditions of the bridge loan
contemplate Dektrix Defendants using the entirety of the funds as a down payment for
[Fontaine Flat] Decks.” (Doc. #36, PageID #428). Because Plaintiff’s breach-of-contract
claim, based on the Membership Purchase Agreement, survives the Dektrix Defendants’
present attacks, it would be superfluous to presently address whether a second contract
existed and, if so, whether Defendants breached it.
The Dektrix Defendants contend that it was Plaintiff who breached the Membership
Purchase Agreement by failing to cough up $650,000 by January 15, 2017. This allegation
is confirmed in addendum B to the Membership Purchase Agreement. Plaintiff essentially
acknowledged in addendum B that it had “not fulfilled its commitment to...” invest
$650,000 on Dektrix by January 15, 2017. (Doc. #36, Exh. A).
Plaintiff argues that its failure to pay did not constitute a breach because the
Membership Purchase Agreement gave them an option to invest in Dektrix. But, this
mischaracterizes as an option Plaintiff’s mandatory duty in the Membership Purchase
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Agreement “to pay Dektrix LLC no later than January 15, 2017 the amount of $650,000 US
for which [Dektrix] will convey 70,000 preferred membership units to [Plaintiff].” (Doc.
#1, Exh. E). Other language provided Plaintiff with various options to purchase additional
Common Membership Units, but Plaintiff had a mandatory duty to invest $650,000 in
Dektrix. See id.
Despite this problem for Plaintiff, the Dektrix Defendants have not shown dismissal
of Plaintiff’s breach-of-contract claim is warranted. Although they seek to vitiate their own
purported breach of the Membership Purchase Agreement (its alleged failure to purchase 73
Flat Decks), they run into Addendum B in which they agreed to modify the terms of
Membership Purchase Agreement that Plaintiff had not satisfied. They also agreed that the
new terms (increasing Plaintiff’s investment to $850,000 and extending deadlines)
superseded the previous pertinent, related terms. This means that issues remain. Did the
Dektrix Defendants, by agreeing to modify the Membership Purchase Agreement with
“superseding terms,” id., effectively waive their right to enforce the previous terms? Do any
other events, before or after January 31, 2017, relieve the Dektrix Defendants from breachof-contract liability, as a matter of law? By focusing on Plaintiff’s original breach without
addressing these issues, the Dektrix Defendants fail to show that dismissal of Plaintiff’s
breach-of-contract claim is presently warranted.
Accordingly, the Dektrix Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss Count VI lacks merit.
* * *
Plaintiff claims in Count VII of its Complaint that the Dektrix Defendants breached
the fiduciary duty they owed to Plaintiff and its owners (Baguirov and Shakhbandarov) by
52
their conduct including their misrepresentations and circumstances. The Complaint presents
a non-exhaustive list of 14 alleged acts and circumstances. (Doc. #1, ¶s 116(a)-(n)).
“In Ohio a breach of fiduciary duty claim has three elements: (1) the existence of a
duty arising from a fiduciary relationship, (2) a failure to observe such duty, and (3) an
injury proximately resulting therefrom. When a breach of fiduciary duty claim rests on
averments of fraud, the allegations of fraudulent conduct must satisfy Rule 9(b).” Glimcher,
2:09cv797, 2010 WL 1610709, at *8 (internal citations omitted).
“A fiduciary is ‘a person having a duty, created by his undertaking, to act primarily
for the benefit of another in matters connected with his undertaking.’ Haluka v. Baker, 66
Ohio App. 308, 312, 34 N.E.2d 68 (9th Dist.1941). ‘A fiduciary relationship is one in which
special confidence and trust is reposed in the integrity and fidelity of another and there is a
resulting position of superiority or influence, acquired by virtue of this special trust. In re
Termination of Emp., 40 Ohio St.2d 107, 115, 321 N.E.2d 603 (1974).” M.S. by Slyman v.
Toth, 97 N.E.3d 1206, 1216, 2017-Ohio-7791, ¶ 28 (Ohio App. 9 Dist., 2017).
Plaintiff’s allegations, accepted as true and construed in its favor, fail to show that it
had a fiduciary relationship with the Dektrix Defendants. Instead, the Complaint describes
business transactions where the parties dealt with each other at arm’s length. No fiduciary
relationship exists in this situation. Id. (citing RPM, Inc. v. Oatey Co., 9th Dist. Medina
Nos. 3282-M, 2005-Ohio-1280, 2005 WL 663057, ¶ 19). Additionally, although a
“fiduciary duty may arise out of a contract or an informal relationship…, id., the contracts
described in the Complaint and attached to it reveal only the imposition of mutual
contractual duties without placing the Dektrix Defendants in the role of fiduciary. Indeed,
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the Dektrix Defendants are not, under the terms of the contract or as the Complaint tells it,
fiduciaries because it had no duty to act primarily for the benefit of Plaintiff. See id. (and
cases cited therein).
Accordingly, Count VII of Plaintiff’s Complaint fails to state a claim upon which
relief could be granted.
***
Plaintiff’s Count VIII—unjust enrichment—alleges that Defendants secured
Plaintiff’s investment and bridge loan to Dektrix, then used the money for “in their
fraudulent business activities and self-dealing, deriving substantial revenues and benefits
….” (Doc. #1, ¶120).
The Dektrix Defendants correctly point out that, under Ohio law, a party cannot
prevail on a claim of unjust enrichment if there is an express contract between the parties.
Wuliger v. Manufacturers Life Ins. Co., 567 F.3d 787, 799 (6th Cir. 2009). The Dektrix
Defendants are also right that Plaintiff’s Complaint asserts a breach-of-contract claim in
Count VI. Yet, Plaintiff maintains that Fed. R. Civ. P. 8 permits it to plead alternative
claims wins the day. See Miami Valley Mobile Health Services, Inc. v. ExamOne
Worldwide, Inc., 852 F.Supp.2d 925, 939 (S.D. Ohio 2012) (Rice, D.J.) (and cases cited
therein).
To avoid this outcome, the Dektrix Defendants criticize Plaintiff’s unjust-enrichment
claim because it asserts (in their view), “Defendants were unjustly enriched by the alleged
‘misuse of Plaintiff’s investment, contrary to the parties’ contractual agreements.’” (Doc.
#20, PageID #272 (quoting, in part, Doc. #1, ¶8)). This, however, inaccurately recasts
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Plaintiff’s unjust-enrichment claim as resting on an alleged breach of contract. Count VIII
fails to refer to any express written contract. See Doc. #1, PageID #36. The Dektrix
Defendants also take the language they quote out of context. The sentence in which the
quoted language appears in the Complaint’s general description of the “Nature Of The
Action.” Id. at PageID #s 4-5. Reading the entire sentence the Dektrix Defendants’ borrow
from divulges a general description of Plaintiff’s claims, rather than the presence of an
unjust-enrichment claim based on the breach of an express contract. See id. at ¶8 (“Such
action also primarily involves the Dektrix Defendants’ breaches of fiduciary duties and
trust, mismanagement, and misuse of Plaintiff’s investment, contrary to the parties’
contractual agreements.” (underline added)).
Moving next to the Fontaine Defendants, they argue that Plaintiff’s unjustenrichment claim fails because Plaintiff did not confer a benefit on them, they were not
enriched at Plaintiff’s expense, and they are not responsible for Plaintiff’s alleged loss.
They reason, “Plaintiff’s Complaint does not include any plausible allegations to the
contrary.” (Doc. #33, PageID #360).
Plaintiff contends that the Fontaine Defendants “retained a benefit from Plaintiff’s
investment by the creation of sales for Fontaine Flat Decks. The [Fontaine] Defendants
benefitted their companies and in their jobs from the increased market for intermodal
shipping containers, and it was unjust of them to receive this benefit at the cost to Plaintiff’s
investment.” (Doc. #26, PageID #319). The Complaint, however does not raise facts
concerning these alleged market-related benefits and provides no factual support for a
reasonable inference that the Fontaine Defendants received such benefits.
55
Yet, the Complaint succeeds in alleging that Fontaine received a benefit from
Plaintiff’s bridge loan to Dektrix. It states, “Defendant Harris reported to Plaintiff that
Defendants Prochazka and Fontaine had agreed to accept Plaintiff’s money as a ‘refundable
deposit should things not go as we had hoped.’ Dektrix wired $50,000 of Plaintiff’s money
to Fontaine on March 1, 2017.” (Doc. #1, ¶60). This was a significant financial benefit to
Fontaine.
The Complaint further alleges that when Redlands, a Dektrix creditor, seized the Flat
Decks that Fontaine had been leasing to Dektrix, Fontaine used $22,800 of Plaintiff’s
$50,000 bridge loan to repay Dektrix’s debt to Redlands. This, in turn, benefited the
Fontaine Defendants because it caused Redlands to release the Flat Decks to Fontaine. Id.
at ¶s 69-70.
Accordingly, the Dektrix Defendants’ and the Fontaine Defendants’ Motions to
Dismiss Count VIII lacks merit.
IT IS THEREFORE RECOMMENDED THAT:
1.
The Dektrix Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss (Doc. #20) be GRANTED in part
and that Count II against Defendant Larson be dismissed, and Counts III, IV
and Count VII be dismissed; and DENIED in remaining part; and
2.
The Fontaine Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss (Doc. #16) be DENIED.
August 2, 2018
s/Sharon L. Ovington
Sharon L. Ovington
United States Magistrate Judge
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NOTICE REGARDING OBJECTIONS
Pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 72(b), any party may serve and file specific, written
objections to the proposed findings and recommendations within FOURTEEN days after
being served with this Report and Recommendations. Such objections shall specify the
portions of the Report objected to and shall be accompanied by a memorandum of law in
support of the objections. If the Report and Recommendation is based in whole or in part
upon matters occurring of record at an oral hearing, the objecting party shall promptly
arrange for the transcription of the record, or such portions of it as all parties may agree
upon or the Magistrate Judge deems sufficient, unless the assigned District Judge otherwise
directs. A party may respond to another party’s objections within FOURTEEN days after
being served with a copy thereof.
Failure to make objections in accordance with this procedure may forfeit rights on
appeal. See Thomas v. Arn, 474 U.S. 140 (1985); United States v. Walters, 638 F.2d 947,
949-50 (6th Cir. 1981).
57
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