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March 21, 2010 2:31 PM

Toyota Stock Owners Sue Over Price Drop

(AP)  Toyota shareholders incensed over a sudden drop in the Japanese automaker's stock price are heading to court with lawsuits claiming company executives deliberately misled investors and the public about the depth of accelerator problems in millions of its vehicles.

At least three proposed class-action lawsuits filed by Toyota investors say the company gave false initial assurances that the sudden acceleration problem was a simple matter of floor mats trapping gas pedals, helping prop up the stock price.

The shareholder cases are part of an avalanche of potentially costly lawsuits against Toyota over the acceleration issue, including those filed by crash victims and their families and those brought by Toyota owners contending their vehicles are worth far less because of the recalls.

The investor lawsuits say Toyota spread misleading information through press releases, conference calls with stock analysts and TV interviews to assure stockholders and the public that the accelerator problem was easily fixed or might be the driver's fault.

Instead, the lawsuits contend, top Toyota executives have known for nearly a decade that faulty electronic throttle controls caused vehicles to sometimes careen wildly out of control but covered it up to protect the company's reputation for safety - and its stock price. The company has not issued any recalls involving flaws in the electronic throttles and has repeatedly denied they are the problem.

Shares rose from just over $75 on Oct. 5, the day of the floor mat recall, to above $90 on Jan. 21, when Toyota announced another recall - over gas pedals it says can stick in certain conditions.

After that, the stock price fell, dropping 16 percent as of early March. Shares have since rebounded somewhat, closing Thursday at $79.34, but some investors say the recovery did not prevent them from losing potentially millions of dollars as the stock was dropping.

Since the sticky pedal recall in late January, Toyota's total market capitalization has fallen 13 percent to $135.87 billion.

More on Toyota's Troubles:

Toyota: Prius in NY Crash Yielding Data
Toyota Recall Spending Ranges in Billions
Toyota: Data Refutes Runaway Prius Story
NHTSA: We Can't Explain Runaway Prius
Doubts Persist on Runaway Prius Story
Calif. Prius Driver's Story Stirs Skeptics
Calif. Prosecutor Sues Toyota Over Defects
Prius Driver in NY Crash Was Dealer-Bound
Prius Panic Drives Fear, Real and Imagined

Toyota declined comment because the cases are pending in court. The company has repeatedly denied its electronic throttle controls are to blame for sudden acceleration.

In the lawsuits, the shareholders are asking a judge to certify a "class" of plaintiffs that would represent all Toyota shareholders in the U.S. who held company stock on specific dates. If Toyota is found liable, damages could easily run into the hundreds of millions or even billions of dollars.

The shareholder lawsuits are pending in federal court in California, the location of Toyota's North American headquarters.

In one of the lawsuits, Toyota stockholder Harry Stackhouse of Richboro, Pennsylvania, contends the company "misled investors by failing to disclose that there was a major design defect in Toyota's acceleration system, which could cause unintended acceleration."

"This drop removed the inflation from Toyota's securities prices, causing real economic loss to investors who had purchased securities," said Stackhouse, who said he bought 40 shares in late 2009 just as the accelerator problems became more widely known.

Stackhouse and the others filing suit - shareholders from Ohio and Tennessee- did not return several telephone calls seeking comment. All three investors filed sworn statements that they did not buy the shares as an excuse to sue the company.

To win damages, the investors must be able to prove Toyota made misleading statements about an issue that would have a "material" effect on its bottom line, said James Cox, a Duke University law professor who specializes in corporate and securities law. And they must show Toyota had a duty to disclose the truthful information.

"They clearly win on the materiality issue. This is going to be a matter that hits Toyota square in the eye," Cox said. "But the mere fact that you didn't disclose it isn't necessarily fault. It's whether you have a duty."

John Coffee, a law professor at Columbia University, said there has to be strong evidence of fraud.

"Stupidity or gross negligence is not enough, and a defense by Toyota that they were surprised about the extent of the problem can be anticipated," Coffee said.

In one of the best-known recent auto product liability cases, Ford prevailed over investors who claimed the company made misleading statements about the safety of the popular Explorer sport utility vehicle prior to a massive tire recall prompted by a series of rollover crashes. A federal judge ruled in December 2001 that although some of the company statements amounted to "corporate puffery," Ford could not accurately foresee the impact of the recall when the statements were made.

"Companies are under no duty to disclose predictions that are not substantially certain to hold," wrote U.S. District Judge Arthur Tarnow of Detroit, whose ruling was upheld on appeal.

But some shareholder lawsuits claiming corporate wrongdoing have produced huge payouts to investors:

- In 2008, financial institutions were forced to cough up $7 billion for about 1.5 million shareholders of collapsed energy giant Enron Corp., following claims the banks and accounting firms took part in the fraud that kept Enron's stock prices artificially high.

- Former Worldcom directors, major investment banks and auditing firm Arthur Andersen paid more than $6 billion to investors in the wake of a huge fraud that sent the former telecommunications company's boss, Bernard Ebbers, to jail for 25 years.

Despite those successes for investors, Cox said Toyota would probably fight any settlement because investor class-action cases are notoriously difficult to win. In part, that's because Congress in 1995 made it more difficult for investors to dig into a company's documents to find damning evidence in the early stages of a case.

"They have to allege enough facts that management was acting purposely with reckless disregard," Cox said. "The courts give management an awful lot of discretion in disclosing a problem."

The automaker is also being sued by hundreds of Toyota owners seeking compensation for the lost value of their cars and trucks in proposed class-action lawsuits likely to top $3 billion in possible damages. The company also faces a series of wrongful death and injury lawsuits from crashes linked to accelerator problems.

A hearing is scheduled next week in San Diego on whether to consolidate the dozens of Toyota owners' class-action lawsuits before a single judge. The investors' cases are separate from that proceeding.

© 2010 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 15 Comments
by tsigili March 22, 2010 1:13 PM EDT
Awwww, crying in their beer, are they? Maybe they should do their homework better, before investing, next time.
Reply to this comment
by magnumdr March 22, 2010 8:13 AM EDT
Wow, what are these people going to do when toyota closes their doors because so many people are sueing toyota for wrongful deaths by the company.
Reply to this comment
by DocD--2008 March 21, 2010 5:53 PM EDT
I want to start a class action suit against lawyers starting class action suits, anyone want to join?
Reply to this comment
by pollroller1 March 21, 2010 8:33 PM EDT
Count me in.
by book_of_wally March 22, 2010 8:24 AM EDT
If it wasnt for class action lawsuit, they would sell you cars that would fall apart as soon as it left the lot.
by pete_in_az March 21, 2010 4:26 PM EDT
This is ridiculous. Spot on to the comment about the lawyers.
Reply to this comment
by gwjackie March 21, 2010 3:56 PM EDT
Ithnk i want to sue Wall Street for any money lost in the last two years
Reply to this comment
by curse914 March 21, 2010 4:58 PM EDT
Since shareholders are the only true "citizens," good luck with that.
by gwjackie March 21, 2010 3:55 PM EDT
Ithnk i want to sue Wall Street for any money lost in the last two years
Reply to this comment
by timdgrim March 21, 2010 3:43 PM EDT
I'm going to sue the casino I went to last week because it says on the big sign out front 'An Experience of Winning' and yet I did not.
Crazy statement is it not? Then these stockholders have to realize
Wall Street is a gamble, just like a casino. You want to make quick bucks, then deal with the possibility of loss instead of whining about it.
Reply to this comment
by lilbear925 March 21, 2010 3:21 PM EDT
These investors knew perfectly well their investments were not protected. They will now proceed to bankrupt Toyota just because their greed will demand too much money for the company to afford to pay. Stock investments are a crapshoot in the best of conditions. It's greedy people who destroyed our rconomy. Let's see how Japan fares against the same sort of monkey business.
Reply to this comment
by kmrunner122 March 21, 2010 3:03 PM EDT
If the lawyers take their usual %40 cut can you imagine how much they stand to make? If I were a lawyer I'd sue the shareholders and lawyers to make them put me on the legal team! lol
Reply to this comment
by KeithDrippingSprings March 21, 2010 2:48 PM EDT
Why aren't they suing the Insurance companies, Hedge funds, Goldman Saks, and the banks for this economic disaster? Why aren't they suing them for 17.5 million people unemployed?

These people are scum, bottom feeders, the stock holders and the lawyers. When you think about it they are sjuing because they weren't able to bail on their stock position before other people bailed. Well, no matter the circumstances some win and some lose. No one has sent me my thousands of dollars I lost on GM. I say Fu@k em!
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