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Page 231
136 F.2d 231  SMOLOWE et al.
v.
DELENDO CORPORATION et al. No. 191. Circuit Court of Appeals, Second
Circuit. June 8, 1943.
Page 232
COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED
Page 233
Appeal from the District Court of
the United States for the Southern District
of New York.
Representative actions by Philip
Smolowe and M. William Levy, as stockholders
of Delendo Corporation, against it, and I.
J. Seskis and Henry C. Kaplan, its
directors, to recover for the defendant
corporation, under Securities Exchange Act
of 1934, § 16(b), 15 U.S.C.A. § 78p(b),
profits realized by the other defendants
from security trading, wherein the United
States of America was allowed to intervene,
D.C. S.D.N.Y., 36 F.Supp. 790, and
thereafter the actions were consolidated.
From a judgment on behalf of the plaintiffs
and the defendant corporation, D.C.S.D.N.Y.,
46 F.Supp. 758, all the defendants appeal.
Affirmed.
Jack Hart, of New York City
(Arthur J. Sleppin, of New York City, on the
brief, for Smolowe, and Samuel A. Mehlman,
of New York City, on the brief, for Levy),
for plaintiffs-appellees.
Jay Leo Rothschild, of New York
City (Louis Rivkin, of New York City, on the
brief), for defendants-appellants.
Chester T. Lane, Sp. Asst. to
Atty. Gen. (Mathias F. Correa, U. S. Atty.,
and William L. Lynch, Asst. U. S. Atty.,
both of New York City, Francis M. Shea,
Asst. Atty. Gen., Sidney J. Kaplan, Sp.
Asst. to Atty. Gen., and Donald R. Seawell,
of Washington, D. C., and John F. Davis,
Sol., Milton V. Freeman, Asst. Sol., Milton
P. Kroll, and W. Victor Rodin, Securities
and Exchange Commission, all of
Philadelphia, Pa., on the brief), for United
States, intervenor-appellee.
Before SWAN, CHASE, and CLARK,
Circuit Judges.
Page 234
CLARK, Circuit Judge.
The issue on appeal is solely one
of the construction and constitutionality of
§ 16 (b) of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934, 15 U.S.C.A. § 78p(b), rendering
directors, officers, and principal
stockholders liable to their corporation for
profits realized from security tradings
within any six months' period. Plaintiffs,
Smolowe and Levy, stockholders of the
Delendo Corporation, brought separate
actions under this statute on behalf of
themselves and other stockholders for
recovery by the Corporation joined as
defendant against defendants Seskis and
Kaplan, both directors and president and
vice-president respectively of the
Corporation. The United States, upon
notification that the constitutionality of a
federal statute had been called in question,
sought intervention, which was granted, 36
F.Supp. 790; and thereafter the two actions
were consolidated. After trial at which the
facts were stipulated, the district court in
a careful opinion, 46 F.Supp. 758, held the
named defendants liable for the maximum
profit shown by matching their purchases and
sales of corporate stock, some transacted
privately and some upon a national
securities exchange, between December 1,
1939, and May 30, 1940, in conceded good
faith and without any "unfair" use of inside
information.
The named defendants had been
connected with the Corporation (whose name
was Oldetyme Distillers Corporation until
after the transactions here involved) since
1933, and each owned around 12 per cent
(approximately 100,000 shares) of the
800,000 shares of $1 par value stock issued
by the Corporation and listed on the New
York Curb Exchange. The Corporation had
negotiated for a sale of all its assets to
Schenley Distillers Corporation in
1935-1936; but the negotiations were then
terminated because of Delendo's contingent
liability for a tax claim of the United
States against a corporation acquired by it,
then in litigation. This claim, originally
in the amount of $3,600,000, had been
reduced by agreement to $487,265, with the
condition that trial was to be postponed (to
await the trial of other cases) until, but
not later than, December 31, 1939. The
Corporation was, therefore, pressing for
trial when on February 29, 1940, the present
attorney for the defendants submitted to the
Attorney General a formal offer of
settlement of $65,000, which was accepted
April 2 and publicly announced April 5,
1940. Negotiations with Schenley's were
reopened on April 11 and were consummated by
sale on April 30, 1940, for $4,000,000, plus
the assumption of certain of the
Corporation's liabilities. Proceedings for
dissolution of the Corporation were
thereupon initiated and on July 16, 1940, an
initial liquidating dividend of $4.35 was
paid.
During the six months here in
question from December 1, 1939, to May 30,
1940, Seskis purchased 15,504 shares for
$25,150.20 and sold 15,800 shares for
$35,550, while Kaplan purchased 22,900
shares for $48,172 and sold 21,700 shares
for $53,405.16. Seskis purchased 584 shares
on the Curb Exchange and the rest from a
corporation; he made the sale at one time
thereafter to Kaplan at $2.25 per share
15,583 shares in purported satisfaction of a
loan made him by Kaplan in 1936 and 217
shares for cash. Kaplan's purchases, in
addition to the stock received from Seskis,
were made on the Curb Exchange at various
times prior to April 11, 1940; he sold 200
shares on February 15, and the remaining
shares between April 16 and May 14, 1940
(both to private individuals and through
brokers on the Curb). Except as to 1,700
shares, the certificates delivered by each
of them upon selling were not the same
certificates received by them on purchases
during the period. The district court held
the transactions within the statute and by
matching purchases and sales to show the
highest profits held Seskis for $9,733.80
and Kaplan for $9,161.05 to be paid to the
Corporation. Both the named defendants and
the Corporation have appealed.
Section 16(b) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 provides: "For the
purpose of preventing the unfair use of
information which may have been obtained by
such beneficial owner, director, or officer
by reason of his relationship to the issuer,
any profit realized by him from any purchase
and sale, or any sale and purchase, of any
equity security of such issuer (other than
an exempted security) within any period of
less than six months, unless such security
was acquired in good faith in connection
with a debt previously contracted, shall
inure to and be recoverable by the issuer,
irrespective of any intention on the part of
such beneficial owner, director, or officer
in entering into such transaction of holding
the security purchased or of not
repurchasing the security sold for a period
exceeding six months. Suit to recover such
Page 235
profit may be instituted at law or in
equity in any court of competent
jurisdiction by the issuer, or by the owner
of any security of the issuer in the name
and in behalf of the issuer if the issuer
shall fail or refuse to bring such suit
within sixty days after request or shall
fail diligently to prosecute the same
thereafter; but no such suit shall be
brought more than two years after the date
such profit was realized. This subsection
shall not be construed to cover any
transaction where such beneficial owner was
not such both at the time of the purchase
and sale, or the sale and purchase, of the
security involved, or any transaction or
transactions which the Commission by rules
and regulations may exempt as not
comprehended within the purpose of this
subsection."
The controversy as to the
construction of the statute involves both
the matter of substantive liability and the
method of computing "such profit." The first
turns primarily upon the preamble, viz.,
"For the purpose of preventing the unfair
use of information which may have been
obtained by such beneficial owner, director,
or officer by reason of his relationship to
the issuer." Defendants would make it the
controlling grant and limitation of
authority of the entire section, and
liability would result only for profits from
a proved unfair use of inside information.
We cannot agree with this interpretation.
We look first to the background
of the statute. Prior to the passage of the
Securities Exchange Act, speculation by
insiders directors, officers, and
principal stockholders in the securities
of their corporation was a widely condemned
evil.1 While some
economic justification was claimed for this
type of speculation in that it increased the
ability of the market to discount future
events or trends, the insiders' failure to
disclose all pertinent information gave them
an unfair advantage of the general body of
stockholders which was not to be condoned.
Twentieth Century Fund, Inc., The Security
Market, 1935, 297, 298. By the majority
rule, aggrieved stockholders had no right to
recover from the insider in such a
situation. And although some few courts
enforced a fiduciary relationship and the
United States Supreme Court in Strong v.
Repide, 213 U.S. 419, 29 S.Ct. 521, 53 L.Ed.
853, announced a special-circumstances
doctrine whereby recovery would be permitted
if all the circumstances indicated that the
insider had taken an inequitable advantage
of a stockholder, even these remedies were
inadequate because of the heavy burden of
proof imposed upon the stockholders.2
The primary purpose of the
Securities Exchange Act as the declaration
of policy in § 2, 15 U.S.C.A. § 78b, makes
plain was to insure a fair and honest
market, that is, one which would reflect an
evaluation of securities in the light of all
available and pertinent data. Furthermore,
the Congressional hearings indicate that §
16(b), specifically, was designed to protect
the "outside" stockholders against at least
short-swing speculation by insiders with
advance information.3
It is apparent too, from the language of §
16(b) itself, as well as from the
Congressional hearings, that the only remedy
which its framers deemed effective for this
reform was the imposition of a liability
based upon an objective measure of proof.
This is graphically stated in the testimony
of Mr. Corcoran, chief spokesman for the
draftsmen and proponents of the Act, in
Hearings before the Committee on Banking and
Currency on S. 84, 72d Cong., 2d Sess., and
S. 56 and S. 97, 73d Cong., 1st and 2d
Sess., 1934, 6557: "You hold the director,
irrespective of any intention or expectation
to sell the security within six months
after, because it will be absolutely
impossible to prove the existence of such
intention or expectation, and you have to
have this crude rule of thumb, because you
cannot undertake the burden of having to
prove
Page 236
that the director intended, at the time
he bought, to get out on a short swing."4
A subjective standard of proof,
requiring a showing of an actual unfair use
of inside information, would render
senseless the provisions of the legislation
limiting the liability period to six months,
making an intention to profit during that
period immaterial, and exempting
transactions wherein there is a bona fide
acquisition of stock in connection with a
previously contracted debt. It would also
torture the conditional "may" in the
preamble into a conclusive "shall have" or
"has." And its total effect would be to
render the statute little more of an
incentive to insiders to refrain from
profiteering at the expense of the outside
stockholder than are the common-law rules of
liability; it would impose a more stringent
statute of limitation upon the party
aggrieved at the same time that it allowed
the wrongdoer to share in the spoils of
recovery.5
Had Congress intended that only
profits from an actual misuse of inside
information should be recoverable, it would
have been simple enough to say so.
Significantly, however, it makes recoverable
the profit from any purchase and sale, or
sale and purchase, within the period. The
failure to limit the recovery to profits
gained from misuse of information justifies
the conclusion that the preamble was
inserted for other purposes than as a
restriction on the scope of the Act.6
The legislative custom to insert
declarations of purpose as an aid to
constitutionality is well known. Moreover,
the preamble here serves the desirable
purpose of guide to the Commission in the
latter's exercise of its rule-making
authority.
True, early drafts of the statute
were without this preamble.7
But there is no indication, either in the
Congressional hearings or in the debates, of
dissent from the proposed objective standard
of proof. Had the statute as enacted imposed
more stringent penalties than appeared in
these early drafts, there might be more
reason for supposing that the introduction
of a subjective standard was intended. But
the statute as enacted actually omitted
draft provisions rendering long and short
sales by corporate fiduciaries within any
six months' period unlawful and subject to
criminal penalties.8
Furthermore, provisions in these early
drafts declaring unlawful the improper
disclosure of confidential information
regarding securities by directors, officers,
or principal stockholders, and holding that
any profit made by any person to whom such
unlawful disclosure was made should inure to
the corporate issuer, were deleted,
presumably because the burden of proof made
enforcement unfeasible.9
Anomalously the construction of the statute
which defendants would have us adopt would
impose an equally severe burden as to
profits made by the insiders themselves.
The present case would seem to be
of the type which the statute was designed
to include. Here it is conceded that the
defendants did not make unfair use of
information they possessed as officers at
the time of the transactions. When these
began they had no offer from Schenley's. But
they knew they were pressing the tax suit;
and they, of course, knew of the corporate
offer to settle it which re-established the
offer to purchase and led to the favorable
sale. It is naive to suppose that their
knowledge of their own plans as officers did
not give them most valuable inside knowledge
as to what would probably happen to the
stock in which they were dealing. It is
difficult to find this use "unfair" in the
sense of illegal; it is certainly an
advantage and a temptation within the
Page 237
general scope of the legislature's
intended prohibition.
The legislative history of the
statute is perhaps more significant upon a
determination of the method of computing
profits defendants' second line of attack
upon the district court's construction of
the statute. They urge that even if the
statute be not construed to impose liability
only for unfair use of inside information,
in any event profits should be computed
according to the established income tax rule
which first looks to the identification of
the stock certificate, and if that is not
established, then applies the presumption
which is hardly more than a rule of
administrative convenience of "first in,
first out."10
Defendants rely on the deletion from early
drafts of the statute, H.R. 7852, H.R. 8720,
and S. 2693, of a provision that profit
should be calculated irrespective of
certificates received or delivered.11
H.R. 9323, which was finally passed by the
House, failed even to penalize short-swing
speculations, other than to prohibit short
sales. But H. R. 8720 was never discussed by
a House Committee of the Whole, and the
omission of the penalty provision in H.R.
9323 suggests at most only an opinion of the
Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce
which drafted it, and one which concerns
merely the advisability of any penalty, not
the method for its computation.
Actually the Act as passed is a
combination of H.R. 9323 and S. 3420.12
In the process § 16(b) was taken bodily from
S. 3420 and written into H.R. 9323. S. 3420
was introduced into the Senate after
elaborate hearings on S. 2693 were closed.
And its failure to specify a method of
computation may well be thought more of a
sanction of the formula devised in S. 2693
than an expression of hostility towards it.
Such a conclusion may be reached
upon the face of the Act. "Purchase" is
defined in § 3(a) (13), 15 U.S.C.A. § 78c
(a) (13), to include "any contract to buy,"
and "sale," in § 3(a) (14), to include "any
contract to sell." "Equity security" is
defined in § 3(a) (11) as "any stock or
similar security." Section 16(b) then
appears simply as a statement that any
profit from any contract to purchase and any
contract to sell or vice versa any stock
or similar security shall be recoverable by
the corporate issuer.13
There is no express limitation in this
language; its generality permits and points
to the matching of purchases and sales
followed below. The fact that purchases and
sales may be thus coupled, regardless of the
intent of the insider with respect to a
particular purchase or a particular sale and
without limitation to a specific stock
certificate, points to an arbitrary matching
to achieve the showing of a maximum profit.
Thus, where an insider purchases one
certificate and sells another, the purchase
and sale may be connected, even though the
insider contends that he is holding the
purchased security for sale after six
months.
Defendants seek support for their
position from the Senate hearings, where, in
answer to Senator Barkley's comment, "All
these transactions are a matter of record.
It seems to me the simple way would be to
charge him with the actual profit," Mr.
Corcoran responded: "It is the same
provision you have in the income tax law.
Unless you can prove the actual relationship
between certificates, you take the highest
price sold and the lowest price bought."14
This was an incorrect statement of the
income tax law. The rule there is first in,
first out, regardless of price, wherever the
stock actually purchased and sold is not
Page 238
identifiable.15
But this does show the rule the proponents
had in mind, even though its source is
erroneously stated. Analysis will show that
the income tax rules cannot apply without
defeating the law almost completely. Under
the basic rule of identifying the stock
certificate, the large stockholder, who in
most cases is also an officer or director,
could speculate in long sales with impunity
merely by reason of having a reserve of
stock and upon carefully choosing his stock
certificates for delivery upon his sales
from this reserve. Moreover, his profits
from any sale followed by a purchase would
be practically untouchable, for the
principle of identity admits of no gain
without laboring proof of a subjective
intent always a nebulous issue to
effectuate the connected phases of this type
of transaction.16
In consequence the statute would be
substantially emasculated. We cannot ascribe
to it a meaning so inconsistent with its
declared purpose.17
Once the principle of identity is
rejected, its corollary, the first-in,
first-out rule, is left at loose ends. At
best it is a rule of convenience designed
originally to hit marginal trading without
shares in hand and supplementing the
principle of identity.18
Its rationalization is the same as that for
the identification rule, for which it
operates as a presumptive principle; and it
has no other support. If we reject one, we
reject the other and for like reasons. Its
application would render the large
stockholder with a backlog of stock not
immediately devoted to trading immune from
the Act.19
Further, we should note that it does not fit
the broad statutory language; a purchase
followed immediately by a sale, albeit a
transaction within the exact statutory
language, would often be held immune from
the statutory penalty because the purchase
would be deemed by arbitrary rule to have
been made at an earlier date; while a sale
followed by purchase would never even be
within the terms of the rule.20
We must look elsewhere for an answer to our
problem of finding a reasonable and workable
interpretation of the statute in the light
of its admitted purpose.21
Page 239
Another possibility might be the
striking of an average purchase price and an
average sale price during the period, and
using these as bases of computation. What
this rule would do in concrete effect is to
allow as offsets all losses made by such
trading. This in effect the district court
first planned to do, 46 F.Supp. at page 766,
although it did not carry it out fully,
since its table as to Kaplan's sales shows
only an initial loss on the first
transaction showing any loss of $16.98 and
does not take into consideration some 1,634
more shares, the losses upon which were not
computed. But it corrected this in its
supplemental opinion, properly pointing out
that the statute provided for the recovery
of "any" profit realized and obviously
precluded a setting off of losses. Even had
the statutory language been more uncertain,
this rule seems one not to be favored in the
light of the statutory purpose. Compared to
other possible rules, it tends to stimulate
more active trading by reducing the chance
of penalty; thus Kaplan, with his more
involved trading, benefits by the rule,
whereas Seskis, who bought substantially at
one time and sold as a whole, does not. Its
application to a case where trading
continued more than six months might be most
uncertain, depending upon how the beginning
of each six months' period was ascertained.
It is not a clear-cut taking of "any profit"
for the corporation, and we agree with the
district court in rejecting it.
The statute is broadly remedial.
Cf. Wright v. Securities and Exchange
Commission, 2 Cir., 112 F.2d 89. Recovery
runs not to the stockholder, but to the
corporation.22 We
must suppose that the statute was intended
to be thorough-going, to squeeze all
possible profits out of stock transactions,
and thus to establish a standard so high as
to prevent any conflict between the selfish
interest of a fiduciary officer, director,
or stockholder and the faithful performance
of his duty.
Woods v. City Nat. Bank & Trust Co. of
Chicago, 312 U.S. 262, 61 S.Ct. 493, 85 L.
Ed. 820;
In re Mountain States Power Co., 3 Cir., 118
F.2d 405; Otis & Co. v. Insurance Bldg.
Corp., 1 Cir., 110 F.2d 333;
In re Republic Gas Corp., D.C.S.D.N.Y., 35
F.Supp. 300. The only rule whereby all
possible profits can be surely recovered is
that of lowest price in, highest price out
within six months as applied by the
district court. We affirm it here,
defendants having failed to suggest another
more reasonable rule.
Snyder v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
295 U.S. 134, 55 S.Ct. 737, 79 L.Ed. 1351.
A minor point of construction is
the interpretation of the exemption of a
security "acquired in good faith in
connection with a debt previously
contracted." Within the six months' period
here involved, defendant Seskis paid a debt
owing to defendant Kaplan in stock of the
corporation. It is obvious that the stock so
acquired by defendant Kaplan was exempt from
§ 16(b), and the district court properly so
held. But defendant Seskis contends that it
erroneously refused to exempt the stock
which he acquired to discharge the debt. The
language of the exemption, however, does not
naturally cover this situation, and there is
no reason in policy why it should. It would
mean that profits could be washed out by the
simple expedient of borrowing money to be
repaid in stock.
Agreeing, therefore, with the
district court's interpretation of the
statute and ascertainment of the profits, we
turn to the constitutional issues raised by
this appeal. Defendants make three claims
here: denial of due process of law; that the
statute attempts to regulate intrastate
transactions; that it improperly delegates
legislative authority.
First, the statute is interpreted
does not infringe due process guaranties. It
was enacted only upon a considered finding,
supported by ample evidence, of the abuses
of inside speculation. In effect it was but
a new approach to the common-law attitude
which had long recognized the reasonableness
of enforcing a level of conduct upon
fiduciaries "higher than that trodden by the
crowd."
Meinhard v. Salmon, 249 N.Y. 458, 464, 164
N.E. 545, 546, 62 A.L.R. 1. It would not
have been unreasonable here to prohibit all
short-swing speculation by corporate
fiduciaries.
Booth v. People of State of Illinois, 184
U.S. 425, 22 S.Ct. 425, 46 L.Ed. 623;
Otis v. Parker, 187 U.S. 606, 23 S.Ct. 168,
47 L.Ed. 323; Oliver Bros. v. Federal
Trade Commission, 4 Cir., 102 F.2d 763.
Securities and Exchange Commission v.
Chenery Corp.,
318 U.S. 80, 63 S.Ct. 454,
461, 87 L.Ed. ___: "Abuse of corporate
Page 240
position, influence, and access to
information may raise questions so subtle
that the law can deal with them effectively
only by prohibitions not concerned with the
fairness of a particular transaction."
Surely no complaint can be heard of measures
less harsh than criminal prohibition. That
the evil might have been stamped out by
still more lenient measures a possibility,
however, which defendants have failed to
make real by concrete suggestion is
without our concern, for in the imposition
of penalties Congress has a wide discretion.
Electric Bond & Share Co. v. Securities and
Exchange Commission, 303 U.S. 419, 442, 58
S.Ct. 678, 82 L.Ed. 936, 115 A.L.R. 105.
Bona fide transactions, too, may
be caught in the net of the law. But what is
legitimately struck at is the tendency to
evil in other cases. Cf. Woods v. City Nat.
Bank & Trust Co. of Chicago, supra;
Weil v. Neary, 278 U.S. 160, 173, 49 S.Ct.
144, 73 L.Ed. 243. Nor is it a valid
objection to the law that it affects stock
acquired before the Act.23
The case is not unlike Uebersee
Finanz-Korporation Aktien Gesellschaft v.
Rosen, 2 Cir., 83 F.2d 225, certiorari
denied 298 U.S. 679, 56 S.Ct. 946, 80 L.Ed.
1400, where the Gold Reserve Act, 48 Stat.
337, was applied to gold acquired before its
enactment. Here, however, the asserted
liability seems more an incident of the
holding of office than of the ownership of
stock. Defendants continued in office after
the passage of the Act, submitted to its
registration provisions concerning the stock
of their corporation, and, we think, assumed
the liability of § 16(b).
Ferry v. Ramsey, 277 U.S. 88, 48 S.Ct. 443,
72 L.Ed. 796.
That transactions on national
security exchanges have taken on an
interstate character, justifying regulation
under the commerce clause, is now beyond
doubt. See Electric Bond & Share Co. v.
Securities and Exchange Commission, supra,
303 U.S. at page 440, 58 S.Ct. 678, 82 L.Ed.
936, 115 A.L.R. 105; Wright v. Securities
and Exchange Commission, supra, 112 F. 2d at
page 94; Securities and Exchange Commission
v. Torr, D.C.S.D.N.Y., 15 F.Supp. 315, 319,
Patterson, J., reversed on other grounds, 2
Cir., 87 F.2d 446. Defendants contend,
however, that private sales, such as some of
those here transacted, are purely intrastate
activities, immune to Congressional
regulation. But private sales affect stock
quotations on national security exchanges
and thus interstate commerce no less than
the production of an acre of wheat affects
the price and market conditions of wheat
transported between the states,
Wickard v. Filburn, 317 U.S. 111, 63 S.Ct.
82, 87 L.Ed. ___; and no less than the
ownership of securities by a holding company
whose subsidiaries are engaged in interstate
commerce affects the service those companies
render, cf. North American Co. v. Securities
and Exchange Commission, 2 Cir., 133 F.2d
148. See, also,
United States v. Wrightwood Dairy Co., 315
U.S. 110, 62 S.Ct. 523, 86 L.Ed. 726.
The final constitutional
objection is that the statute delegates an
undefined and, therefore, unlawful authority
to the Commission to grant exemptions. The
Commission has promulgated no regulation
injurious to defendants, and we are asked to
make an abstract determination upon the face
of the statute. The request is premature.
United States v. Rock Royal Co-operative,
Inc., 307 U.S. 533, 561, 59 S.Ct. 993, 83
L.Ed. 1446;
Gorieb v. Fox, 274 U.S. 603, 607, 47 S.Ct.
675, 71 L.Ed. 1228, 53 A.L.R. 1210;
Board of Trade of Kansas City, Mo. v.
Milligan, 8 Cir., 90 F. 2d 855, 860,
certiorari denied 302 U.S. 710, 58 S.Ct. 40,
82 L.Ed. 549; Kuhner v. Irving Trust Co., 2
Cir., 85 F.2d 35, 38, affirmed 299 U.S. 445,
57 S.Ct. 298, 81 L.Ed. 340; President of
United States v. Artex Refineries Sales
Corp., D.C.S.D.Tex., 11 F.Supp. 189, 192. In
any event we think the delegation so clearly
lawful that there is no reason to wait for a
future more pointed argument. Guiding the
Commission in the exercise of an actually
limited authority24
is the quite adequate standard illustrated
by two specific statutory exemptions that
its regulations be consistent with the
expressed purpose of the statute. See Wright
v. Securities and Exchange Commission,
supra, 112 F.2d at page 95. The delegation
serves no other than the commendable
functions of relieving the statute from
imposing undue hardship and of giving it
flexibility in administration. Cf. United
States v. Shreveport Grain &
Page 241
Elevator Co., 287 U.S. 77, 53 S.Ct. 42,
77 L.Ed. 175.
The total recovery against
defendants accruing to the corporation is
$18,894.85, plus costs of $38.93. By this,
plaintiffs will be benefited only to the
extent of about $3, since they own but 150
shares of a total of 800,000. Upon their
petition, however, the district court
awarded them $3,000 for counsel fees,
together with their expenses of $78.98,
payable out of the funds accruing to the
corporation.
While it is well settled that in
a stockholder's or creditor's representative
action to recover money belonging to the
class the moving party is entitled to
lawyer's fees from the sum recovered, this
was not strictly an action for money
belonging to either class, but for a penalty
payable to the corporation. Ordinarily the
corporate issuer must bring the action; and
only upon its refusal or delay to do so, as
here, may a security holder act for it in
its name and on its behalf. But this in
effect creates a derivative right of action
in every stockholder, regardless of the fact
that he has no holdings from the class of
security subjected to a short-swing
operation or that he can receive no tangible
benefits, directly or indirectly, from an
action because of his position in the
security hierarchy. And a stockholder who is
successful in maintaining such an action is
entitled to reimbursement for reasonable
attorney's fees on the theory that the
corporation which has received the benefit
of the attorney's services should pay the
reasonable value thereof. Cf. Hutchinson Box
Board & Paper Co. v. Van Horn, 8 Cir., 299
F. 424;
In re Natural Dry Ginger Ale Corp.,
D.C.W.D.N.Y., 9 F.Supp. 1003. That
attorneys' fees in actions for damages for
manipulation of security prices and for
misleading statements are expressly
recoverable from the defendant under 15
U.S.C.A. §§ 78i(e) and 78r(a), respectively,
does not impinge the result we reach in the
absence of statute, for those sections
merely enforce an additional penalty against
the wrongdoer.
While the allowance made here was
quite substantial, we are not disposed to
interfere with the district court's
well-considered determination. Cf. May v.
Midwest Refining Co., 1 Cir., 121 F.2d 431,
certiorari denied 314 U.S. 668, 62 S.Ct.
129, 86 L.Ed. 534. Since in many cases such
as this the possibility of recovering
attorney's fees will provide the sole
stimulus for the enforcement of § 16(b), the
allowance must not be too niggardly. Cf.
Murphy v. North American Light & Power Co.,
D.C. S.D.N.Y., 33 F.Supp. 567.
Affirmed.
Notes:
1. See Hearings before Committee on
Banking and Currency on S. 84, 72d Cong., 2d Sess., and S. 56 and S. 97, 73d Cong., 1st
and 2d Sess., 1934; Tracy and MacChesney,
The Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 32
Mich.L.Rev. 1025, 1032; Comment, 32
Mich.L.Rev. 678.
2. See Yourd, Trading in Securities by
Directors, Officers and Stockholders:
Section 16 of the Securities Exchange Act,
38 Mich.L.Rev. 133, 139; Lake, The Use for
Personal Profit of Knowledge Gained While a
Director, 9 Miss.L.J. 427, 443.
3. See Hearings before Committee on
Interstate and Foreign Commerce on H. R.
7852 and H. R. 8720, 73d Cong., 2d Sess.,
1934, 85; Hearings before Committee on
Banking and Currency on S. 84, 72d Cong., 2d
Sess., and S. 56 and S. 97, 73d Cong., 1st
and 2d Sess., 1934, 6557-6559.
4. Yourd, supra note 2, at 134, n. 2:
"Until legal action or Congressional
investigation brings the facts to light one
cannot always determine who of the insiders
falls into which class. Sometimes those
thought to be most exemplary in conduct turn
out to be the ones who have taken greatest
undue advantage of a trust."
5. Cf. Yourd, supra note 2, at 150, 151.
6. Cf. Otis & Co. v. Insurance Bldg.
Corp., 1 Cir., 110 F.2d 333.
7. H. R. 7852, H. R. 7855, H. R. 8720, H.
R. 9323, S. 2693.
8. H. R. 7852 and S. 2693, which were
identical in all their provisions, and which
were extensively aired at public hearings,
imposed such penalties. H. R. 8720, the only
other bill upon which public hearings were
held, imposed the same civil penalties as
the instant statute. See Yourd, supra note
2, at 151, n. 60.
9. See Hearings before Committee on
Interstate and Foreign Commerce on H. R.
7852 and H. R. 8720, op. cit. supra note 3,
at 135, 136, 137; Hearings before Committee
on Banking and Currency on S. 84, op. cit.
supra note 1, at 6555.
10. See notes 15, 16, 18, below.
11. H. R. 7852 and S. 2693 contained the
provision that "profit shall be calculated
on the sale or sales by such person of such
security made at the highest price or prices
and on the purchase or purchases made by
such person of such security at the lowest
price or prices during the six months'
period, irrespective of the certificates for
such security received or delivered by such
person during such period." H. R. 8720
provided that "the profit shall be the
difference between the aggregate amount for
which such security was purchased and sold
during the six months' period irrespective
of the certificates for such security
received or delivered pursuant to such
purchases and sales." See note 8, supra.
12. 78 Cong. Rec. 9930, 9936, 10248,
10254, 10262.
13. The statute might be read literally
to permit a recovery where stock of one
class is purchased and stock of another
class sold. But the possibility that
Congress intended such a result is beyond
the realm of judicial fantasy. As will be
indicated, however, there is no occasion to
limit further the statutory language to the
purchase and sale of the same certificates
of stock of a particular class.
14. See Hearings before Committee on
Banking and Currency on S. 84, op. cit.
supra note 1, at 6559.
15. U. S. Treas. Reg. 103, Art. 19.22
(a)-8, 1940, 21 CFR, 1940 Supp., 19.22(a)-8,
providing that if corporate shares are sold
from lots purchased at different times or
prices "and the identity of the lots cannot
be determined, the stock sold shall be
charged against the earliest purchases of
such stock."
16. Cf. Arthur S. Kleeman v. Com'r, 35
B.T.A. 17; James Cunningham v. Com'r, 29
B.T.A. 717; Robert W. Bingham v. Com'r, 27
B.T.A. 186.
17.
Helvering v. Hammel, 311 U.S. 504, 510, 61
S.Ct. 368, 85 L.Ed. 303, 131 A.L.R. 1481;
Haggar Co. v. Helvering, 308 U.S. 389, 60
S.Ct. 337, 84 L.Ed. 340.
18. See Snyder v. Commissioner of
Internal Revenue, 3 Cir., 54 F.2d 57, 58,
59; Helvering v. Rankin, 295 U.S. 123, 129, 130,
55 S.Ct. 732, 79 L.Ed. 1343. See, also,
2 Paul and Mertens, Law of Federal Income
Taxation, 1934, § 18.42. It should be noted
that in probably the most famous application
of this principle the rule in Clayton's
Case, 1 Meriv., Ch., 572, in English trust
law it is held to apply only among
different claimants against a trustee and
does not apply in favor of the wrongdoing
trustee himself.
Cunningham v. Brown, 265 U.S. 1-12, 44 S.Ct.
424, 68 L.Ed. 873; Scott on Trusts,
1939, §§ 517, 518; 4 Bogert on Trusts and
Trustees, 1935, §§ 926-928.
19. Thus, it does not reach the
"quasi-short" sale at all; that is, one
which differs from a short sale only in that
the stock sold is delivered from an
investment backlog. A wide avenue for
profits would then be left open, as the
trading of Kaplan in the present case well
illustrates.
20. Defendants suggest, albeit rather
obliquely, an intermediate rule limiting the
application of the principle only to stock
purchased and sold during the chosen six
months' period. On the surface this would
appear to prevent complete emasculation of
the statute, since it assumes to prevent use
of an investment backlog. Actually it makes
a rule of most uncertain incidence; thus
here it would leave the recovery against Seskis untouched, but reduce that against
Kaplan by roughly two-thirds. These
uncertain results would be increased, of
course, if the period during which the
officer actually continued his trading was
greater than six months; consider its chance
application to, say, a fourteen months'
period, which might be divided up into
three, or even four, six-month periods
starting at different times. And once the
general income tax rule is rejected (as we
have seen it must be), there is surely no
basis for developing this original and
uncertain gloss upon it, since it does not
aid the statutory intent or fit the
statutory language.
21.
Securities and Exchange Commission v. United
States Realty & Improvement Co., 310 U.S.
434, 60 S.Ct. 1044, 84 L.Ed. 1293;
Burstein v. United States Lines Co., 2 Cir.,
134 F.2d 89.
22. See Yourd, supra note 2, at 150.
23. There might well be substantial
objection to an application of the statute
to transactions affected in whole or in part
prior to the Act, but the Commission has
specifically exempted such activities by
Rule X-16B-1 of its "General Rules and
Regulations," 17 CFR 240.16b-1.
24. See Seligman, Problems under the
Securities Exchange Act, 21 Va.L.Rev. 1, 22,
n. 22.
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