| Page 673 259 F.Supp. 673  Tora C. BRENNAN, Plaintiff,
v.
MIDWESTERN UNITED LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY,
Defendant. Civ. No. 1716. United States District Court N. D.
Indiana, Fort Wayne Division. September 23, 1966.
Page 674
COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED
Page 675
Charles B. Feibleman, Bamberger &
Feibleman, Indianapolis, Ind., Robert L.
Kaag, Congdon & Kaag, Fort Wayne, Ind., for
plaintiff.
G. R. Redding and John L.
Woolling, Baker & Daniels, Indianapolis,
Ind., Gilmore S. Haynie, Livingston,
Dildine, Haynie & Yoder, Fort Wayne, Ind.,
for defendant.
MEMORANDUM OF DECISION AND ORDER
ESCHBACH, District Judge.
The complaint in this case
alleges a class action for damages against
the defendant corporation for aiding,
abetting, and assisting, by its failure to
report improper activities of a brokerage
firm, the alleged violation by the brokerage
firm of Section 10(b) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78j (b),
and of Rule 10b-5 of the Securities and
Exchange Commission, 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5.
The alleged principal violator, Dobich
Securities Corporation, was engaged in
selling shares of stock in the defendant
corporation, which was acting as its own
transfer agent. However, according to the
complaint, Dobich failed to deliver stock of
the defendant corporation having a value of
two million nine hundred thousand dollars
($2,900,000) before Dobich became bankrupt,
having used the stock purchase money as
working capital for speculation and other
improper purposes and having used fraudulent
misrepresentations in explaining to
purchasers the reason for delays in delivery
of the purchased shares of stock. The
complaint alleges that the defendant knew of
Dobich's activities and permitted the
activities to continue by failing to report
Dobich either to the Indiana Securities
Commission or to the Securities and Exchange
Commission. By thus permitting Dobich's
activities to continue, alleges the
complaint, the defendant knowingly and
purposely encouraged an artificial build-up
in the market for its stock. As a result of
this Dobich-stimulated market, the defendant
was allegedly in a more favorable position
for potential mergers it was then
negotiating, and certain of the defendant's
officers and directors realized substantial
personal profits from the sale of stock in
the defendant corporation.
On January 13, 1966, the
defendant filed motions (1) to dismiss for
failure to state a claim upon which relief
can be granted, (2) to dismiss the claim in
so far as it is a class action, (3) for a
more definite statement, and (4) to strike
certain parts of the complaint. Extensions
of time were granted to both parties for the
preparation of extensive and helpful briefs
on the issues raised by the motions. A
hearing was held on June 9, 1966, on the two
motions to dismiss, and at the close of that
hearing both parties were granted additional
time to file further briefs. After full
consideration, this court concludes that all
four motions must be denied for the reasons
and in the manner hereinafter stated.
I. Motion to Dismiss for
Failure to State a Claim
The motion to dismiss for failure
to state a claim upon which relief can be
granted raises basic, and not yet clearly
answered, questions regarding the extent and
nature of civil liability under Section
10(b) and Rule 10b-5. The defendant's
primary contentions in regard to this motion
are (1) that an aider and
Page 676
abettor is not liable, as such, in a
civil action for damages under Section 10(b)
and Rule 10b-5, (2) that one cannot aid and
abet the commission of a wrong unless he
does so by some affirmative action or by
breaching an affirmative duty to act, and
(3) that the complaint does not sufficiently
allege the plaintiff's reliance upon the
defendant's conduct, or "some semblance of
privity" between the plaintiff and the
defendant, or some relationship between the
plaintiff and the defendant which would show
that the defendant's conduct was a proximate
cause of the plaintiff's alleged damage.
For purposes of the motion to
dismiss, the defendant concedes that the
complaint sufficiently alleges a violation
of Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 by Dobich
Securities Corporation. Nor has the
defendant challenged the proposition that
civil liability for damages arises under the
cited section and rule. Such civil liability
has become well established in the twenty
years since it first appeared in the
landmark case of
Kardon v. National Gypsum Co.,
69 F.Supp. 512 (E.D.Pa.1946). The Kardon
doctrine has been explicitly approved and
adopted in holdings of courts of appeals in
five circuitsFischman
v. Raytheon Mfg. Co.,
188 F.2d 783 (2d Cir.
1951);
Speed v. Transamerica Corp., 235 F.2d 369
(3d Cir. 1956);
Hooper v. Mountain States Securities Corp.,
282 F.2d 195 (5th Cir. 1960);
Fratt v. Robinson, 203 F.2d 627, 37 A.L.R.2d
636 (9th Cir. 1953);
Ellis v. Carter, 291 F.2d 270 (9th Cir.
1961);
Crist v. United Underwriters, Ltd., 343 F.2d
902 (10th Cir. 1965); by dictum of the
courts of appeals in two more circuits Beury
v. Beury, 222 F.2d 464, 465 (4th Cir. 1955);
Brouk v. Managed Funds, Inc., 286 F.2d 901,
906-908, 913 (8th Cir. 1961);
Boone v. Baugh, 308 F.2d 711, 713-714 (8th
Cir. 1962); and applied in the district
courts in still two more circuitsNorthern
Trust Co. v. Essaness Theatres Corp., 103
F.Supp. 954, 964 (N.D.Ill.1952);
Texas Continental Life Ins. Co. v. Bankers
Bond Co., 187 F.Supp. 14, 23 (W.D.Ky.1960)
including the Seventh Circuit where Judge La
Buy, in the Northern Trust Co. case,
stated,
"Without unduly lengthening this
memorandum by consideration of the
defendants' contentions, the court is of the
opinion Section 10(b) authorizes the remedy
here pursued."
The Kardon doctrine was
impliedly approved by the United States
Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit by
its opinion
Kohler v. Kohler Co., 319 F.2d 634, 7
A.L.R.3d 486 (7th Cir. 1963). It appears
that there have been no decisions rejecting
that doctrine. 3 Loss, Securities Regulation
1763-1764 (2d ed. 1961).
Mindful of the fact that the
issue of aider and abettor liability under
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 is here
raised by a motion to dismiss and that the
issue presents important questions in an
expanding area of the law, and having due
regard for the purposes and policies
underlying the Act, it cannot be held
necessarily to exclude persons who do no
more than aid and abet a violation of
Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5.
In fact, the provisions of
Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 were applied to
aiders and abettors even before the first
case recognizing civil liability under that
statute and rule. The first case to deal
with the applicability of Section 10(b) and
Rule 10b-5 to aiders and abettors involved a
suit by the SEC for an injunction against
alleged principal violators and certain
aiders and abettors. The complaint against
the aiders and abettors was upheld on a
motion to dismiss. The district court cited
the criminal provisions making aiders and
abettors responsible as principals and
stated, "No good reason appears why this
same rule should not apply in an injunctive
proceeding to restrain a violation of the
same statute."
SEC v. Timetrust, Inc., 28 F.Supp. 34, 43
(N.D.Calif.1939). The court further
observed that, "There is ample authority to
support the validity of a suit to enjoin
persons who are aiding and abetting the
commission of unlawful acts."
The defendant inaccurately
contends that the above-cited Timetrust
case was
Page 677
reversed on its holding that aiders and
abettors could be enjoined under Section
10(b). That decision was appealed, but the
appeal was dismissed on stipulation. 118
F.2d 718 (9th Cir. 1941). The district court
then heard evidence and enjoined all the
defendants. The granting of the injunctions
against the aiders and abettors was reversed
because "there is no evidence that they
participated in any way" in the unlawful
activity.
Timetrust v. SEC, 142 F.2d 744, 746 (9th
Cir. 1944). The court of appeals gave no
indication that the injunctions would not
have been upheld had there been evidence of
the alleged aiding and abetting.
SEC
v. Scott Taylor & Co., 183 F.Supp. 904
(S.D.N.Y.1959), another suit for an
injunction, the court found that a defendant
actively participated in a violation of an
SEC rule promulgated under Section 10(b).
However, the court added a footnote, by way
of dictum, that "Wholly apart from Landau's
participation in [the illegal distribution],
he aided and abetted the other defendants'
violations * * * and is therefore liable as
a principal."
Fry
v. Schumacker, 83 F.Supp. 476 (E.D.Pa.1947),
the court upheld a complaint on a motion to
dismiss when the complaint alleged a claim
against brokers who had been employed by the
principal violators to write a letter which
was an essential part of a plan to defraud
in violation of Section 10(b) and Rule
10b-5.
The case that is perhaps most
nearly in point is
Pettit v. American Stock Exchange, 217
F.Supp. 21 (S.D.N.Y.1963). This was an
action for damages. The court denied motions
to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon
which relief could be granted and upheld
that part of the complaint which, under
Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5, alleged that
the defendant stock exchange and its
officers aided, abetted, and assisted an
illegal distribution of stock "by failing to
take necessary disciplinary action" against
some of its brokers who it knew or should
have known were engaged in abusive conduct
and practices. The complaint as upheld also
included allegations that other defendants,
including some banks, assisted, aided, and
abetted by allowing the principal violators
to open and maintain dummy accounts and by
helping to conceal the true identity of
traders in the plaintiff's stock. Judge
Palmieri explicitly stated the basis for his
holding:
"Since knowing assistance of or
participation in a fraudulent scheme under
Section 10(b) gives rise to liability equal
to that of the perpetrators themselves, the
facts alleged by the [plaintiff] trustees,
if proven, would permit recovery under
Section 10(b)." Pettit v. American Stock
Exchange, supra, at 28.
The defendant attempts to
distinguish this case upon the basis that
Section 6 of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934 imposes a statutory duty upon stock
exchanges to take certain disciplinary
actions. However, the court did not base its
decision upholding the aiding and abetting
sections of the complaint under Section
10(b) on the duty of the stock exchange
under Section 6. The Section 6 duty was the
basis of a separate count of the complaint
and was considered in a separately labeled
and subsequent section of the court's
memorandum. Whatever effect the Section 6
duty might have on the alleged aiding and
abetting by the stock exchange, which
involved no affirmative action, Section 6
would, of course, have no relevance to the
alleged aiding and abetting of the other
defendants.
The defendant contends that the
legislative history of certain amendments
proposed, but never adopted, during 1956,
1957, and 1959-1960 indicates a
Congressional determination that Section
10(b) does not apply to aiders and abettors,
and does not impose a civil liability in
damages against persons aiding and abetting
a violation of Section 10(b). This
legislative history sheds little, if any,
light on the Congressional understanding of
the applicability of Section 10(b) to aiders
and abettors. The amendments which would
have given the SEC explicit power
Page 678
to enjoin aiders and abettors under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as well as
under several other Acts administered by the
SEC, were part of a package of numerous
amendments proposed by the SEC. This package
of amendments was never fully enacted by
Congress. Some of the amendments, including
the aider and abettor amendments to the 1934
Act, were passed by the Senate in 1960, but
were never acted on by the House of
Representatives. See 1 Loss, Securities
Regulations 205-206, n. 80 (2d ed. 1961).
The legislative history does
indicate that the purpose of the unadopted
aider and abettor amendments was "to
strengthen and clarify the injunctive power"
rather than to add a new element to the
power of the SEC. S.Rep. No. 1757, 86th
Cong., 2d Sess. 8 (1960). The SEC explained
in a memorandum of its General Counsel that
the amendment would "make manifest" the
responsibility of aiders and abettors,
Hearings on S. 1178-1182 Before a
Subcommittee of the Senate Committee on
Banking and Currency, 86th Cong., 1st Sess.,
at 276 (1959). In an official explanation of
the proposed amendments, the SEC stated the
purpose of the aider and abettor amendment
was to "remove the ambiguity" since "there
may exist some doubt as to the Commission's
authority to obtain an injunction, or impose
administrative sanctions, against persons
aiding or abetting violations of the act."
Hearings, id. at 335. The New York Stock
Exchange apparently acceded to this view of
the purpose of the amendment and of the
SEC's injunctive power under the 1934 Act as
it then read. In a statement before the
Senate Subcommittee, the Exchange agreed
that "this would be a reasonable
clarification of the statute" and would
"make it clear that an indirect violation of
the act is unlawful." Hearings, id. at 54.
It should also be remembered that at that
time the Timetrust, Scott Taylor, and
Fry cases had all been decided. If it
was then generally understood that the SEC
had injunctive power against aiders and
abettors under the 1934 Act, as the
legislative hearings on the proposed
amendments indicate, the defendant here
cannot successfully contend that the failure
to pass the clarifying amendment shows a
Congressional intent that the Act has no
applicability to aiders and abettors. The
SEC, in the same amendment package, had
sought explicit statutory authorization for
certain other items then already judicially
recognized. Such requests were not included
in the bill reported out of committee
specifically because the committee
considered such codification unnecessary.
S.Rep. No. 1757, 86th Cong., 2d Sess. 9
(1960). Perhaps Congress did not act on the
reported bills for the same reason.
The defendant seeks to emphasize
the fact that the New York Stock Exchange
opposed the particular form of the SEC's
proposed aider and abettor amendment because
of its fear that adding a provision merely
making it "unlawful" to aid and abet a
violation of the Act would not only clarify
the SEC's injunctive power, but might also
give rise to civil liability in damages on
the part of such an aider and abettor.
Hearings, supra at 54. The SEC's proposed
aider and abettor amendment was to have
modified Section 20(b) of the 1934 Act, and
applied generally to all provisions of that
Act. The Exchange proposed that the
amendment modify only Section 21(e), which
dealt with the SEC's injunctive power.
Hearings, supra at 54. A memorandum of the
SEC's General Counsel indicates that, at
least originally, the SEC intended that its
amendments "would make this aiding and
abetting principle equally applicable to
civil and administrative proceedings."
Hearings, supra at 275. The SEC, however,
apparently felt a stronger interest in
clarifying its injunctive powers than in
clarifying the extent of civil liability of
aiders and abettors, since a memorandum by
the Senate Subcommittee staff states:
"* * * the industry fears that
private litigants, not only the SEC, may
find in this section a vehicle by which to
sue aiders and abettors. For
Page 679
the statute does not say who can sue it
merely says `it shall be unlawful' (to aid
or abet). The courts have extended from the
SEC to private plaintiffs a right of suit
under a comparably general antifraud
provision of the 1934 Securities Exchange
Act (sec. 10(b)).
"Suggestions of industry
agreeable to SEC.Make it clear that no
civil liability is intended."
Hearings, supra at 370 and 288.
It should come as no surprise
that "the industry" wanted to limit the
liability of aiders and abettors, or that
the SEC would be satisfied with a provision
limited to a confirmation of its own powers.
But the intent of the industry or the
acquiescence of the SEC is not necessarily
the intent of Congress. The SEC's proposed
amendment was modified in the Senate
Committee on Banking and Currency as
suggested by the New York Stock Exchange.
The bill, favorably reported out of
committee but never passed by the Congress,
would have amended Section 21(e) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 as follows:
"Whenever it shall appear to the
Commission * * * that any person is aiding,
abetting, counseling, commanding, inducing,
or procuring, or is about to aid, abet,
counsel, command, induce, or procure such a
violation, it may in its discretion bring an
action * * * to enjoin such acts or
practices and to enforce compliance with
this title. * * * The Commission may
transmit such evidence as may be available
concerning such acts or practices to the
Attorney General, who may, in his
discretion, institute the necessary criminal
proceedings under this title."
S. 3770, 86th Cong., 2d Sess., §
20 (1960). This amendment was not enacted by
Congress.
The conclusions drawn by the
defendant from the legislative history of
these amendments rest upon inferences drawn
from Congress' inaction on the proposed
aider and abettor amendments. The
defendant's own line of reasoning could lead
to the conclusion that Congress may have
failed to enact the Senate Committee's bill
because the Committee's modification was a
rejection of civil liability on the part of
aiders and abettors. See, e. g., the stated
reason for the President's veto of
amendments to the Federal Tort Claims Act in
1960. 1 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News, p. 1563
(1960). The more realistic view, however, is
that the inferences from a mere failure to
act are too elusive to provide any reliable
guide to the intention of Congress. As
Justice Frankfurter stated for the
Court in Helvering v. Hallock, 309 U.S. 106,
119-120, 60 S.Ct. 444, 451, 84 L.Ed. 604,
125 A.L.R. 1368 (1940), "To explain the
cause of non-action by Congress when
Congress itself sheds no light is to venture
into speculative unrealities." The courts
have wisely and consistently refused to draw
such speculative inferences from
Congressional non-action. When considering a
legislative history strikingly similar to
that urged upon this court by the defendant
in the instant case, Justice Jackson,
speaking for the Court, stated:
"We draw, therefore, no inference
in favor of either construction of the
Actfrom the Department's request for
legislative clarification, from the
congressional committee's willingness to
consider it, or from Congress' failure to
enact it."
Wong
Yang Sung v. McGrath, 339 U.S. 33, 47-48, 70
S.Ct. 445, 453, 94 L.Ed. 616 (1950). See
also,
FTC v. Dean Foods Co., 384 U.S. 597, 86
S.Ct. 453, 1738, 16 L.Ed.2d 802 (June
13, 1966).
There may be many reasons why
Congress fails to adopt proposed
legislation. Particularly where, as in this
case, an amendment is part of a package of
amendments covering numerous and various
aspects of securities regulation, Congress
may fail to act for reasons entirely
unrelated to many of the individual
provisions included within that package. At
the time these amendments were being
considered, Congress was convened in special
session late in the summer of a
Page 680
Presidential election year and much
proposed legislation fell victim to a lack
of time. It is often difficult to determine
Congressional intent from positive actions
of Congress, but it is usually impossible to
determine such intent from a failure of
Congress to act. To draw any inferences from
the action and nonaction on these proposed
but unadopted amendments by Congress and its
committees would indeed be a "venture into
speculative unrealities."
Aside from this legislative
history, the defendant points out that there
is nothing in the statute indicating a
Congressional intent to impose civil
liability on persons aiding and abetting
violations of Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5.
But, likewise, one can search the statute in
vain for language indicating that a violator
of Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 should be
liable in a civil action for damages. Such
liability was developed by the courts on
general principles of tort law. Judge
Kirkpatrick in the Kardon case,
supra, cited the Restatement, Torts § 286
(1939) in finding civil liability for the
violation of Section 10(b). Such liability
was there rested upon the maxim, Ubi jus,
ibi remediumWhere there is a right, there
is a remedy. This is the rationale upon
which the Kardon doctrine has been
adopted by the courts of appeals. Crist v.
United Underwriters, Ltd., supra, 343 F.2d
at 903-904. Appropriate general principles
of law should continue to guide the
development of federal common law remedies
under Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5.
Such general legal principles
were the basis upon which the court in
Pettit v. American Stock Exchange, supra,
upheld a complaint under Section 10(b)
against aiders and abettors. The court there
stated that "knowing assistance of * * * a
fraudulent scheme under Section 10(b) gives
rise to liability equal to that of the
perpetrators themselves * * *" Pettit,
supra, 217 F.Supp. at 28. The principle has
been formulated in the Restatement of Torts
as follows:
"For harm resulting to a third
person from the tortious conduct of another,
a person is liable if he
* * * * * *
"(b) knows that the other's
conduct constitutes a breach of duty and
gives substantial assistance or
encouragement to the other so to conduct
himself, or
"(c) gives substantial assistance
to the other in accomplishing a tortious
result and his own conduct, separately
considered, constitutes a breach of duty to
the third person."
Restatement, Torts § 876 (1939).
Such principles as stated in the Pettit,
Timetrust, and Scott Taylor
cases, supra, and formulated in the
Restatement of Torts surely best fulfill the
purposes of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934 and are a logical and natural
complement to the Kardon doctrine.
A basic philosophy of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 is
disclosure and is directed toward the
creation and maintenance of a post-issuance
securities market that is free from
fraudulent practices. The investor's
protection is the paramount consideration of
much of the federal securities legislation
and, in particular, of the 1934 Act here
involved. The effect on an investor of an
issuer corporation's failure to disclose
improper activities of a brokerage firm
dealing heavily in the issuer's stock, where
the broker's activities create an
appreciable risk of loss to that investor,
may be just as dangerous and equally as
damaging as a failure by the issuer to
disclose information of its own improper
activities affecting the value of its stock.
The loss to the investor may well be the
same. This is not to say that there is no
distinction between the two types of
situations, but is rather to emphasize that
a statute with a broad and remedial purpose
such as the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
should not easily be rendered impotent to
deal with new and unique situations within
the scope of the evils intended to be
eliminated. In the absence of a clear
legislative expression to the
Page 681
contrary, the statute must be flexibly
applied so as to implement its policies and
purposes. In this regard, it cannot be said
that civil liability for damages, so well
established under the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934, may never under any
circumstances be imposed upon persons who do
no more than aid and abet a violation of
Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5.
The defendant contends, however,
that aiding, abetting, and giving assistance
or encouragement necessarily requires an
affirmative act. Therefore, reasons the
defendant, its own alleged "silence and
inaction," viz., the failure to report
Dobich's activities to the SEC or to the
Indiana Securities Commission, could not
make the defendant liable for damages caused
by Dobich's wrongdoing. Such a contention,
however, oversimplifies both the problem and
the answer. The statute under which this
action is brought imposes a duty upon
persons or corporations who are in a
superior position to know crucial and
material facts not to take advantage of
those who are not in such a position.
Kohler v. Kohler Co., 319 F.2d 634, 637 (7th
Cir. 1963). In the Kohler case,
at page 642, the Court of Appeals for the
Seventh Circuit defined the duty of
"insiders" under Section 10(b) as a general
principle:
"[Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5]
basically call for fair play and abstention
on the part of the corporate insider from
taking unfair advantage of the uninformed
outsider or minority stockholder."
The court also pointed out that
such duties applied not only to "majority
stockholders of corporations and corporate
insiders, but equally to corporations
themselves when acting through their
officers, directors or agents." Kohler,
supra at 638.
It should be noted that the
general principle formulated by the Court of
Appeals is not limited merely to minority
shareholders, and the duty of insiders was
not merely a duty to uninformed outsiders
"with whom they deal." In the instant case,
of course, the defendant corporation did not
seek any advantage directly from the various
purchasers of stock from Dobich Securities
Corporation. Rather, the advantage alleged
to have been desired by the defendant was to
have inured to defendant by virtue of being
able to assert a stronger position in merger
negotiations then allegedly in progress with
other persons and/or corporations. This does
not mean, however, that the purchasers from
Dobich were not taken "unfair advantage" of
within the meaning of the Kohler
case, supra. An insider can breach its duty
of "fair play" to outsiders even though the
advantage desired by the insider is to be
gained from others. It is true that the
facts which are required to be divulged in
the typical insider-outsider stock
transaction concern the facts of the
corporation's condition which may affect the
value of the stock rather than facts about a
broker's improper conduct, as in the instant
case. It is also true that the insider and
outsider deal directly with each other in
the typical case rather than entirely
through an independent brokerage, as in the
instant case. It does not necessarily
follow, however, that the duty under Section
10(b) should be so narrowly confined. The
duty of "fair play and abstention * * * from
taking unfair advantage of the uninformed
outsider" arises under Section 10(b) and
should be construed according to the broad
and general provisions of that section
rather than limited to the specific facts of
one case to which the duty was found
applicable. The Court of Appeals indicated
that the duty should not be so limited when
it cautioned:
"What are the limits of those
duties? We are satisfied that the answer
cannot be confined to an abstract rule but
must be fashioned case by case as particular
facts dictate."
Kohler, supra at 637-638.
Certainly, not everyone who has
knowledge of improper activities in the
field of securities transactions is required
to report such activities. This court does
not purport to find such a duty. Yet, duties
are often found to
Page 682
arise in the face of special
relationships, and there are circumstances
under which a person or a corporation may
give the requisite assistance or
encouragement to a wrongdoer so as to
constitute an aiding and abetting by merely
failing to take action. See Pettit,
supra. The question raised by the motion at
bar is whether the allegations in the
complaint will permit evidence which may
establish such circumstances in the instant
case. This court holds that they do.
The alleged misrepresentations of
Dobich certainly come within the
prohibitions of Section 10(b) and Rule
10b-5. The defendant has conceded this for
purposes of the motion to dismiss. The
plaintiff was no less defrauded by the
misrepresentations of Dobich than she would
have been by misrepresentations as to the
condition of the corporation and the value
of the defendant's stock. The complaint
alleges that the defendant knew of Dobich's
conduct and alleges circumstances under
which it would be possible to conclude that
the defendant was an "insider" in so far as
it was in a superior position to determine
the nature and the propriety of Dobich's
conduct. The complaint further alleges that
the defendant took advantage of the
artificial market for its stock in certain
merger negotiations then taking place and
that certain of the defendant's officers and
directors took advantage of the increased
stock values by selling a large number of
their shares at a substantial profit.
Whether or not the defendant's
alleged "silence and inaction" was
sufficient assistance or encouragement to
constitute an aiding and abetting of
Dobich's alleged violation of the statute
and rule cannot be decided on the pleadings.
These are questions of fact to be determined
at the trial. To rest the definition of
aiding and abetting solely on abstract and
mechanical distinctions between active and
passive assistance or to hold blindly that
silence and inaction cannot constitute
aiding and abetting under any possible set
of circumstances would be to defeat and
hamper the intelligent and responsible
development of the law by subjecting it to a
tyranny of labels. Where recovery may be
possible, the pleadings should be upheld so
that the facts can speak for themselves. In
this regard the Supreme Court has stated:
"In appraising the sufficiency of
the complaint we follow, of course, the
accepted rule that a complaint should not be
dismissed for failure to state a claim
unless it appears beyond doubt that the
plaintiff can prove no set of facts in
support of his claim which would entitle him
to relief."
Conley v. Gibson, 355 U.S. 41, 45-46, 78
S.Ct. 99, 102, 2 L.Ed.2d 80 (1957).
This is not to hold that silence
and inaction under all circumstances, or
even under the circumstances which may be
developed from the evidence in this case,
constitutes aiding and abetting. This is
merely to find a sufficient basis in the
pleadings to permit evidence that may
establish conduct which under the particular
circumstances does constitute aiding and
abetting. The warning by the Court of
Appeals in the Kohler case that the
extent of such duties "cannot be confined to
an abstract rule but must be fashioned case
by case as particular facts dictate" is most
appropriate here. The very fact that this
case arises in a newly developing area of
law cautions that the court should refrain
from abstract and premature legal
determinations fashioned in an evidentiary
vacuum.
The defendant's remaining
contentions in support of its motion to
dismiss for failure to state a claim upon
which relief can be granted are without
merit. The complaint specifically alleges
that the plaintiff relied upon the
misrepresentations of Dobich, whose conduct
the defendant is alleged to have aided and
abetted. Likewise, the complaint
specifically alleges that Dobich's conduct
proximately resulted in the damages to the
plaintiff and other persons similarly
situated. Finally, there is no requirement
of privity between plaintiffs and
defendants, nor of any "semblance of
privity," for recovery in Section 10(b)
Page 683
actions. Miller v. Bargain City, U.S.A.,
Inc., 229 F.Supp. 33 (E.D.Pa.1964);
Cooper v. North Jersey Trust Co., 226
F.Supp. 792 (S.D.N.Y.1963); Pettit v.
American Stock Exchange, supra;
Errion v. Connell, 236 F.2d 447 (9th Cir.
1956); Fishman v. Raytheon Mfg. Co.,
supra;
Texas Continental Life Ins. Co. v. Bankers
Bond Co., 187 F.Supp. 14, 24-25
(W.D.Ky.1960); 3 Loss, Securities
Regulation 1767-1771 (2d ed. 1961).
II. Motion to Dismiss the
Class Action
During the pendency of this
action, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
have been amended. Rule 23, governing class
actions, has been entirely rewritten. In its
order transmitting these amendments to
Congress on February 28, 1966, the Supreme
Court provided that the amendments
"shall take effect on July 1,
1966, and shall govern * * * all further
proceedings in actions then pending, except
to the extent that in the opinion of the
court their application in a particular
action then pending would not be feasible or
would work injustice, in which event the
former procedure applies."
383 U.S. ___ (1966). There is no
reason why application of the new Rule 23
would be unjust or not feasible in this
case, and counsel for both parties have so
indicated in oral argument. Therefore, the
amended Rule 23, effective July 1, 1966,
must govern the determination of the
appropriateness of this case as a class
action.
This case is maintainable as a
class action under Rule 23(b) (3). The
requirements of Subdivision (a) of Rule 23
are all fulfilled. There appear to be more
than five hundred purchasers from Dobich who
allege or may allege claims against the
defendant similar to the claims alleged by
the plaintiff, Tora C. Brennan. There
appears to be no reason why the plaintiff
will not fairly and adequately protect the
interests of these purchasers. The plaintiff
Brennan herself has a substantial interest
in this litigation, is represented by able
counsel, and is close enough to the forum to
assure convenient access during this
litigation. Under Rule 23(c) (2) any member
of the plaintiff's class who is not
satisfied with the adequacy of the plaintiff
Brennan's representation may exclude himself
from this action by appropriate notification
under that subdivision of Rule 23 or may, if
he desires, enter an appearance through his
own counsel. Rule 23(c) (2). The court
itself may assure the protection of the
interests of all alleged members of the
class to whom notice shall be sent by
appropriately describing the members of the
class in its order of final judgment as
provided in Subdivision (c) (3) of Rule 23.
The determination that this
action shall proceed as a class action is
made in light of the present posture of this
litigation. There has thus far been no
pre-trial discovery, and this court has only
the complaint and the papers on the instant
motion to look to for guidance on the
question of the appropriateness of the class
action. If, however, as the case develops,
it becomes apparent that the questions of
fact and/or law are so dissimilar, as
between members of the class represented by
plaintiff, so as to render the class action
unmanageable, the court has the authority
under amended Rule 23(c) (1) and (d) to
alter or amend its order and to either
strike the class allegations from the
complaint, subdivide the class, or make such
other order as may be proper under the
circumstances and as justice requires. That
the court has this authority under the
express language of amended Rule 23(c) (1)
was recently confirmed by Judge Palmieri in
Kronenberg v. Hotel Governor Clinton, D.C.,
41 F.R.D. 42, reported August 23, 1966.
Kronenberg involved a class action by
purchasers of shares of stock alleging
fraudulent misrepresentations. The court
rejected the defendant's contention that the
alleged misrepresentations were too varied
to meet the requirement of amended Rule
23(b) (3) that there be predominating
questions of law or fact common to the
members of the class, and rejected the
defendant's argument
Page 684
that the plaintiffs did not adequately
represent the class, relying in both
instances on the flexibility of the new rule
in permitting the court's class action
determination to be conditional. And the
Advisory Committee's Note accompanying the
new Rule 23 states that under the new rule:
"[A] fraud perpetrated on
numerous persons by the use of similar
misrepresentations may be an appealing
situation for a class action, and it may
remain so despite the need, if liability is
found, for separate determination of the
damages suffered by individuals within the
class."
This court finds that common
questions of law and fact concerning the
claims of this class of plaintiffs
predominate over whatever questions may
variously affect only the individual members
of the class. The primary legal and factual
question in this case is whether the
defendant aided and abetted Dobich's alleged
violation of Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5.
This issue is identical as to all claimants
in the plaintiff's class. Even consideration
of the question whether Dobich violated the
statute and rule and at what time Dobich's
wrongful conduct began, if there was any
violation, involves questions of fact which
are essentially common to all the purchasers
to whom Dobich allegedly failed to make
delivery of the defendant's stock. At this
posture of the litigation, there do not
appear to be "material variations in the
representations made or in the kinds or
degrees of reliance" by the various members
of the class, which the Advisory Committee's
Notes to the new Rule 23 indicate would
mitigate against the maintenance of a class
action in a fraud case.
This does not, of course, relieve
any member of the plaintiff's class from the
necessity of proving all elements essential
to his or her recovery. If it should
subsequently appear that certain issues in
this case are not appropriately determinable
in a class action, the court can modify the
nature of this class action and confine it
to particular issues as contemplated by
amended Rule 23. Elements necessary to
recovery, but not appropriate for common
determination in the class actionsuch as,
but not limited to, the amount of damages to
which each individual member of the class is
entitled if liability is establishedwill be
determined separately and individually in
proceedings, the nature of which can better
be determined at a later date. Under the
flexibility of the new Rule 23, it is not
likely that the administrative difficulties
will outweigh the advantage of handling in
one action the similar claims of hundreds of
purchasers based upon essentially similar or
identical circumstances. To handle the
potential litigation by several hundred
separate trials would raise administrative
difficulties far exceeding those present in
this class action. This court also finds at
this time that a class action, under the
particular pleadings of this case, is
superior to any other available method for
the fair and efficient adjudication of the
claims of the members of the plaintiff's
class.
The court will direct the
plaintiff to prepare a form of notice which
will fulfill the requirements of Subdivision
(c) (2) of Rule 23 and to present such form
to the court for its approval. The plaintiff
will also be directed to furnish the court
the names and addresses of all alleged
members of the plaintiff's class. The form
of notice must inform each member of the
plaintiff's class (1) that the court will
exclude him from the action if he requests
exclusion on or before a specified date, (2)
that the final judgment in this action,
whether or not favorable to the individual
class member, will include all members of
the class who do not request exclusion, and
(3) that anyone so notified and who does not
request exclusion may, if he desires, enter
an appearance in this action through his
counsel.
III. Motion for More Definite
Statement
The nature of the information
sought by the defendant in its motion for a
more definite statement can appropriately
Page 685
be obtained through the discovery
procedures provided for in the Federal Rules
of Civil Procedure. The complaint gives
ample notice of the plaintiff's claim and is
not so vague or ambiguous that the defendant
cannot reasonably be required to frame an
answer. Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(e). Rule 9(b) of the
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, requiring
particularity in pleading the circumstances
constituting an alleged fraud, is satisfied
by the complaint in its present form. The
complaint also makes explicitly clear that
the action is based upon Section 10 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934. The motion
for a more definite statement will be
denied.
IV. Motion to Strike
Paragraph 1 of the defendant's
motion to strike is addressed to all
references in the complaint which refer to
this case as a class action. Since the
defendant's motion to dismiss the class
action is being denied, it would be
inappropriate to strike the plaintiff's
references to the class action.
The allegations of Paragraph 16
of the complaint, "which set out
approximately 18 specifications of instances
when the defendant allegedly received
information from inquiring purchasers which,
it is alleged, gave it notice of Dobich's
violations of Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5,"
are not redundant or immaterial, nor is the
defendant prejudiced in any way by having
such allegations included in the complaint.
The motion to strike the
allegations that the defendant "should
reasonably have known" or "should have
known" in Paragraphs 16(h) and 19 of the
complaint and the request for attorneys fees
will be denied with leave to raise these
issues at the pre-trial conference.
ORDER
The defendant's motion to dismiss
the action for failure to state a claim is
denied.
The defendant's motion to dismiss
the class action is denied. The plaintiff is
directed to prepare a form of notice which
will fulfill the requirements of Subdivision
(c) (2) of Rule 23 as discussed in the
foregoing Memorandum of Decision and to
present such form of notice to the court for
its approval. The plaintiff is also directed
to furnish the court the names and addresses
of all alleged members of the plaintiff's
class.
The defendant's motion for a more
definite statement is denied.
The defendant's motion to strike
certain portions of the complaint referring
to the class action and to strike Paragraph
16 of the complaint is denied. The
defendant's motion to strike the allegations
referring to the defendant's alleged state
of knowledge and to strike the plaintiff's
request for attorneys fees is denied with
leave to raise these issues again at the
pre-trial conference. |