|
Page 46
187 F.2d 46  GRATZ et al.
v.
CLAUGHTON. No. 147. Docket 21660. United States Court of Appeals
Second Circuit. Argued January 5, 1951. Decided February 6, 1951.
Writ of Certiorari Denied April 30,
1951. See 71 S.Ct. 741.
Page 47
COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED
Page 48
Higgins, Brenner & Higgins, New
York City, Joseph T. Higgins, Philip A.
Brenner, New York City, J. Richard Kafes,
Trenton, N. J., Julius Kuschner, New York
City, of counsel, for defendant-appellant,
Edward N. Claughton.
Milton Pollack, New York City,
Milton Pollack, Irving K. Rubin and Richard
F. Wolfson, all of New York City, of
counsel, for appellee, Stella Gratz.
White & Case, New York City,
Orison S. Marden, David Hartfield, Jr. and
Melvin L. Milligan II, all of New York City,
of counsel, for plaintiff-appellee,
Missouri-Kansas-Texas R. Co.
Newell A. Clapp, Acting Asst.
Atty. Gen., Irving H. Saypol, U. S. Atty.
for Southern District of New York, New York
City, Edward H. Hickey, Attorney, Department
of Justice, Donald B. MacGuineas, Attorney,
Department of Justice, Washington, D. C.,
for the United States, intervenor-appellee.
Before L. HAND, Chief Judge, and
SWAN and AUGUSTUS N. HAND, Circuit Judges.
L. HAND, Chief Judge.
This is an appeal by the
defendant, Claughton, from a judgment
against him, entered upon the report of a
master, in an action by a shareholder of the
Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad Company under
§ 16(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934.1 The
railroad was originally named as a defendant
and was later made a co-plaintiff; and the
United States intervened under § 2403 of
Title 28, U.S.C.A., because the defendant
challenged the constitutionality of the
statute. The court first granted a summary
judgment as to all the issues except the
amount of the profits made by the defendant,
which it referred to a master, on whose
report it entered final judgment. The
defendant does not dispute the propriety of
a summary disposition of all the issues
except that referred, but he does dispute
the propriety of the judgment in law. First,
he argues that the venue was wrong because
he was domiciled in Florida, and the summons
was served upon him in that state. Second,
he disputes the rule adopted by the master
in computing his profits. Third, he
challenges the constitutionality of the
statute which imposes the liability, and of
the provisions for venue. We shall take up
the first and third in sequence, reserving
the second for the last.
The argument as to venue is as
follows. Section 27 of the Act2
provides that "Any suit or action to enforce
any liability or duty created by this
chapter * * * may be brought in any such
district or in the district wherein the
defendant is found or is an inhabitant or
transacts business"; and the phrase, "such
district," refers back to the preceding
sentence: "Any criminal proceeding may be
brought in the district wherein any act or
transaction constituting the violation
occurred." The defendant says that § 16(b)
does not declare that an officer, a director
or a "beneficial owner" (one, who, like
Claughton, holds ten per cent of the
company's shares), "violates" the statute by
dealing in its shares. He of course agrees
that such a person must account to the
company for any profits, but he says that
the statute nowhere forbids such dealing,
but merely makes the dealer pro tanto
an agent, or constructive trustee, of the
corporation. From this it follows, he
Page 49
says, that the provision that a civil
suit may be brought in "such district"
that is, in a district where a criminal
prosecution will lie is confined to civil
actions upon a duty, whose breach is also a
crime. He concludes that since dealing in
shares was not made a crime, an action to
recover profits must be brought on "in the
district" wherein the defendant is found, or
is an inhabitant or transacts business.
There is no warrant for such a distribution
of the three places of venue between civil
suits and criminal prosecutions. Section
16(b) was passed "For the purpose of
preventing the unfair use of information
which may have been obtained * * * by reason
of his" the "beneficial owner's"
"relationship to the issuer". The section
does indeed cover trading by those who in
fact have no such information, but that is
true as well of dealings between a trustee
and his beneficiary: "A trustee with power
to sell trust property is under a duty not
to sell to himself either at private sale or
at auction, whether the property has a
market price or not, and whether the trustee
makes a profit thereby." Restatement of
Trusts, § 170(1): Comment b. All such
transactions are breaches of trust, and §
16(b) in effect made "beneficial owners"
fiduciaries as directors and officers were
anyway. To suppose that the dealings
themselves were not forbidden, but were
sanctioned on condition that the "beneficial
owner" accounted for the profits, would as
much falsify the purpose of the statute as
it would the purpose of the equitable
doctrine from which the statute was
borrowed. The section forfeits the profits
because it forbids dealings in the shares.
Nobody is obliged to become a director, an
officer, or a "beneficial owner"; just as
nobody is obliged to become the trustee of a
private trust; but, as soon as he does so,
he accepts whatever are the limitations,
obligations and conditions attached to the
position, and any default in fulfilling them
is as much a "violation" of law as though it
were attended by the sanction of
imprisonment. The defendant's argument that
no "act or transaction constituting the
violation occurred" in the Southern
District, need not detain us. It rests upon
the assumption that the wrong consists in
failing to turn over the profits to the
corporation. In fact it is obtaining the
profits by the wrongful purchase and sale,
or sale and purchase, of shares; and those
acts took place on the floors of the New
York Exchanges where by his orders the
transactions took place.3
The challenge to the
constitutionality of § 16(b) we have
answered twice before.4
For many years a grave omission in our
corporation law had been its indifference to
dealings of directors or other corporate
officers in the shares of their companies.
When they bought shares, they came literally
within the conventional prohibitions of the
law of trusts; yet the decisions were
strangely slack in so deciding. When they
sold shares, it could indeed be argued that
they were not dealing with a beneficiary,
but with one whom his purchase made a
beneficiary. That should not, however, have
obscured the fact that the director or
officer assumed a fiduciary relation to the
buyer by the very sale; for it would be a
sorry distinction to allow him to use the
advantage of his position to induce the
buyer into the position of a beneficiary,
although he was forbidden to do so, once the
buyer had become one. Certainly this is
true, when the buyer knows he is buying of a
director or officer, for he expects to
become the seller's cestui que trust.
If the buyer does not know, he is entitled
to assume that if his seller in fact is
already a director or officer, he will
remain so after the sale. Nor was it
necessary to confine this disability to
directors or other officers of the
corporation. The reason for the doctrine was
that a director or officer may have
information not accessible to a shareholder,
actual or prospective, and that advantage is
not confined to them. We take judicial
notice that an effective control over
Page 50
the affairs of a corporation often does
not require anything approaching a majority
of the shares; and this is particularly true
in the case of those corporations whose
shares are dealt in upon national exchanges.
Nor is it common for the control so obtained
to be in the hands of one individual; more
often a number share it, who are all in a
position to gain a more intimate
acquaintance with the enterprise and its
prospects than the shareholders at large. It
is of course true that the ownership of ten
per cent of the shares does not always put
the owner among those who do control; but
neither Congress, nor any other legislature,
is obliged to limit the means which it
chooses so exactly to its ends that the
correspondence is exact. If only those
persons were liable, who could be proved to
have a bargaining advantage, the execution
of the statute would be so encumbered as to
defeat its whole purpose. We do not mean
that the interest, of which a statute
deprives an individual, may never be so
vital that he must not be given a trial of
his personal guilt; but that is not so when
all that is at stake is a director's,
officer's or "beneficial owner's" privilege
to add to, or subtract from, his holdings
for a period of six months. In such
situations it is well settled that a statute
may provide any means which can reasonably
be thought necessary to deal with the evil,
even though they may cover instances where
it is not present.5
The challenge to the validity of the venue
provision § 27 depends upon the supposed
unfairness of compelling the defendant to
defend an action brought far from his
residence, Florida, upon transactions which
took place in New York. It is an answer that
a man may be prosecuted even for a crime
to say nothing of a civil wrong in any
district where he has brought to pass the
proscribed event, however far that may be
from his home. The most extreme instance of
this is conspiracy,6
but the doctrine is of general application,7
indeed the Constitution itself, III, § 2;
and the Sixth Amendment provides that the
prosecution shall be where the crime is
"committed." As we have already said, this
wrong was "committed" where the sales and
purchases were made.
There remains the question of the
computation of profits, which we dealt with
in Smolowe v. Delendo Corporation, supra,8
Section 16(b) declares that "any profit
realized * * * from any purchase and sale,
or any sale and purchase * * * within any
period of less than six months * * * shall
inure to and be recoverable by the issuer":
the corporation. It is plain that this
presupposes some matching of (1) purchases
against sales, or of (2) sales against
purchases, and that there must therefore be
some principle upon which both the minuend
the sale price and the subtrahend the
purchase price can be determined. At first
blush it might seem that the statute limited
the recovery to profits derived from
transactions in the same shares; as, for
example, that a dealer's profit upon the
sale of any given number of shares was to be
measured by subtracting what he paid for
those shares from what he got upon a sale of
the same certificate. However, as we
observed in Smolowe v. Delendo Corporation,
supra, that would
allow an easy avoidance of the statute; in
order to speculate freely an officer,
director, or "beneficial owner" need only
hold a substantial block of shares for more
than six months. If, for example, on January
1st, he had 10,000 shares which he had
bought before October 1st, he could buy
1,000 shares on February 1st and sell 1,000
shares at a profit on April 1st, making
Page 51
delivery out of certificates from the
10,000 shares purchased before October 1st.
After the two transactions his position
would be what it had been on January 1st
save that in two months he had made a
profitable turn in 1,000 shares exactly
the evil against which the statute is
directed. Moreover, there is an added reason
for this interpretation, if one be needed.
In the case of a sale followed by a purchase
it is impossible to identify any purchase
with any previous sale; one would have to
confine such transactions to the practically
non-existent occasions when the proceeds of
the sale were used to purchase. Thus it
appears, regardless of anything said during
the passage of the bill through Congress and
of the different forms it took, that the Act
does not demand that the same shares
should be sold which were bought. This
accords with the fungible nature of shares
of stock. Indeed, if we translate the
transaction into sales and purchases, or
purchases and sales, of gallons of oil in a
single tank, or of bushels of wheat in a
single bin, it at once appears that the
ascertainment of the particular shares
bought or sold must be wholly irrelevant.
Although for these reasons it
appears that the transactions sales and
purchases, or purchases and sales are not
to be matched by identifying the shares
dealt in, we are no nearer than before to
finding an answer as to how transactions
shall be matched; all that so far appeared,
is that the matching is to be between
contracts of sale and contracts of purchase,
or vice versa. On the other hand it is
manifest that the intent of the fiduciary
cannot be the test; first, because he
generally has no ascertainable intent; and
second, because that would open the door
even more widely to the evil in question.
The statute does not allow the fiduciary to
minimize his profits, any more than to set
off his losses against them. We can
therefore find no principle by which to
select any two transactions which are to be
matched; and, so far as we can see, we are
forced to one of two alternatives: to match
any given sale taken as minuend, against any
given purchase, taken as subtrahend, in such
a way as to reduce profits to their lowest
possible amount, or in such a way as to
increase them to the greatest possible
amount. The master adopted the second
course, following what he supposed to be the
doctrine of Smolowe v. Delendo Corporation,
supra. We think
that he was right for the following reasons.
The question is in substance the
same as when a trustee's account is to be
surcharged, for, as we have said, the
statute makes the fiduciary a constructive
trustee for any profits he may make. It is
true that on the beneficiary in an
accounting rests the burden of proof of a
surcharge,9
although the fiduciary has the burden of
establishing any credits.10
Since the plaintiff was seeking to surcharge
the defendant we will therefore assume that
it rested upon her to show how the
transactions are to be matched; and, that,
if there were nothing more, since she cannot
do so, she must be content to have them
matched in the way that shows the least
profit. Obviously that cannot be the right
answer, for the reasons we have given; and
perhaps the fact that it cannot be, is
reason enough for adopting the alternative.
But there is another ground for reaching the
same result. As we have said, the statute
makes all such dealings unlawful, and makes
the fiduciary accountable to the
corporation. Although it is impossible in
the case at bar to compute the defendant's
profits, except that they must fall between
two limits the minimum and the maximum
the cause of this uncertainty is the number
of transactions within six months: that is,
the number of defendant's derelictions. The
situation falls within the doctrine which
has been law since the days of the "Chimney
Sweeper's Jewel Case,"11
that when damages are at some
unascertainable amount below an upper limit
and when the uncertainty
Page 52
arises from the defendant's wrong, the
upper limit will be taken as the proper
amount.12
This results in looking for six
months both before and after any sale, and
not for three months only, as the defendant
insists. If one is seeking an equation of
purchase and sale, one may take any sale as
the minuend and look back for six months for
a purchase at less price to match against
it. On the other hand, if one is looking for
an equation of sale and purchase, one may
take the same sale and look forward for six
months for any purchase at a lower price.
Although obviously no transaction can figure
in more than one equation, with that
exception we can see no escape from what we
have just said. It is true that this means
that no director, officer, or "beneficial
owner" may safely buy and sell, or sell and
buy, shares of stock in the company except
at intervals of six months. Whether that is
too drastic a means of meeting the evil, we
have not to decide; it is enough that we can
find no other way to administer the statute.
Therefore, not only will we follow Smolowe
v. Delendo Corporation, supra,8
as a precedent; but as res integra
and after independent analysis we reassert
its doctrine. The defendant concedes that,
except for carrying the transactions
backward and forward for six months, instead
of for three, the master followed the rule
laid down in that decision; and the
plaintiff has not appealed, so that she is
not entitled to any more than she has
recovered. On this account we have not
examined the master's computations in detail
and are not to be understood to have passed
upon them. The crushing liabilities which §
16(b) may impose are apparent from this
action in which the judgment was for over
$300,000; it should certainly serve as a
warning, and may prove a deterrent.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes:
1. § 78p (b) Title 15, U.S.C.A.
2. § 78aa of Title 15, U.S.C.A.
3. Scheer v. Rockne Motors Corp., 2 Cir.,
68 F.2d 942; Hunter v. Derby Foods, Inc., 2
Cir., 110 F.2d 970, 133 A.L.R. 255;
Restatement of Conflict of Laws, § 67.
4. Smolowe v. Delendo Corp., 2 Cir., 136
F. 2d 231, 148 A.L.R. 300; Park & Tilford,
Inc. v. Schulte, 2 Cir., 160 F.2d 984.
5.
Bain Peanut Co. of Texas v. Pinson, 282 U.S.
499, 501, 51 S.Ct. 228, 75 L.Ed. 482;
South Carolina Highway Department v.
Barnwell Brothers, 303 U.S. 177, 192, 193,
58 S.Ct. 510, 82 L.Ed. 734;
United States v. Carolene Products Co., 304
U. S. 144, 153, 154, 58 S.Ct. 778, 82 L.Ed.
1234;
North American Company v. Securities &
Exchange Commission, 327 U. S. 686, 710,
711, 66 S.Ct. 785, 90 L.Ed. 945.
6.
Hyde v. United States, 225 U.S. 347, 365, 32
S.Ct. 793, 56 L.Ed. 1114; Easterday v.
McCarthy, 2 Cir., 256 F. 651; Burton v.
Smithers, 4 Cir., 31 F.2d 966; Hudspeth v.
McDonald, 10 Cir., 120 F.2d 962, 966.
7.
In re Palliser, 136 U.S. 257, 266, 267, 10
S.Ct. 1034, 34 L.Ed. 514.
8. 2 Cir., 136 F.2d 231, 148 A.L.R. 300.
9. Ewen v. Peoria & Eastern Ry., D.C., 78
F.Supp. 312, 334.
10. Wootton Land and Fuel Co. v. Ownbey,
8 Cir., 265 F. 91.
11. Armory v. Delamirie, 1722, 1 Strange
505.
12.
Eastman Kodak Co. v. Southern Photo Co., 273
U.S. 359, 379, 47 S.Ct. 400, 71 L.Ed. 684;
Schnell v. The Vallescura, 293 U.S. 296,
307, 55 S.Ct. 194, 79 L.Ed. 373;
Story Parchment Co. v. Paterson Parchment
Paper Co., 282 U.S. 555, 563-565, 51 S.Ct.
248, 75 L.Ed. 544;
Bigelow v. R. K. O. Radio Pictures, Inc.,
327 U.S. 251, 264, 265, 66 S.Ct. 574, 90
L.Ed. 652; Great Southern Gas & Oil Co.
v. Logan Natural Gas & Fuel Co., 6 Cir., 155
F. 114; Package Closure Corp. v. Seal-Right
Co., Inc., 2 Cir., 141 F.2d 972, 979;
President & Directors of Manhattan Co. v.
Kelby, 2 Cir., 147 F.2d 465, 476.
|