| Page 1056 31 F.3d 1056
Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 98,392, 1994-2
Trade Cases P 70,714 Robert Bruce ORKIN, Petitioner,
v.
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION,
Respondent. No. 93-4415. United States Court of Appeals,
Eleventh Circuit. Sept. 13, 1994.
Page 1058
William Nortman, Nortman & Bloom,
P.A., Mark Richard Dern, Miami, FL, for
petitioner.
Securities & Exchange Com'n,
Office of the Gen. Counsel, Jacob H.
Stillman, Leslie E. Smith, Christopher Paik,
Eric Summergrad, Securities & Exchange
Com'n, Washington, DC, for respondent.
Petition for Review of an Order
of the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Before HATCHETT and EDMONDSON,
Circuit Judges, and MELTON
*,
Senior District Judge.
MELTON, Senior District Judge:
Petitioner, Robert Bruce Orkin
("Orkin"), seeks review of an order of the
Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC")
affirming disciplinary sanctions imposed by
the National Association of Securities
Dealers, Inc. ("NASD").
1
The NASD sanctioned Orkin for violations of
Article III, Sections 1 and 4 of the NASD's
Rules of Fair Practice ("Rules").
Specifically, the NASD and the SEC found
that Orkin breached the NASD's 5% markup
policy by charging retail customers
excessive prices in sales of Ortech
Industries, Inc. ("Ortech") stock occurring
from October 20, to December 10, 1987.
Orkin asserts as grounds for
review that: 1) the SEC's determination that
the retail markups were excessive was not
supported by substantial evidence; 2) the
SEC improperly affirmed the NASD's finding
of markup violations when it determined that
the prevailing market price of Ortech stock
was different from that noted in Schedule A
to the NASD complaint and adopted by NASD
conduct committees; 3) the SEC erred in
holding him liable for the markup violations
because he did not have final authority to
set retail prices; 4) the SEC erred in
determining that the NASD's markup policy is
not unconstitutionally vague, illegal, or
unfair, especially as applied to the facts
of this case; and 5) the sanctions imposed
against him are too severe. For the reasons
set forth below, we find substantial
evidence to support the SEC's findings of
fact and we concur in its legal conclusions.
Accordingly, we deny Orkin's petition for
review, affirm the order of the SEC, and
lift the stay.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL
HISTORY
A. FACTS
Orkin was President of Ortech
between November 1986, and August 1987. In
May
Page 1059 1987, he entered into a written employment
agreement with Tri-Bradley Investments, Inc.
("Tri-Bradley"), an NASD member with its
home office in Denver, Colorado. Orkin was
registered as an NASD general securities
principal. He agreed to act as a retail
salesman and branch manager for a
Tri-Bradley branch office in Margate,
Florida. Orkin was to pay all operating
expenses for the Margate branch office. In
exchange, he was entitled to commissions of
80% of the difference between the retail
price and the base or "strike" price of
securities sold.
Orkin's written employment
agreement required him to conduct business
under the "full and complete supervision" of
the home office. He was required to submit
all customer orders to the home office for
approval and execution. In accordance with
the terms of Orkin's employment agreement,
Mary Frances Mernah, a Tri-Bradley officer
and trader, and Paul Hurtado, Jr., another
officer and Mernah's supervisor, reviewed
and accepted Orkin's retail orders and
executed the trades at the Denver home
office.
In June 1987, while Orkin was
still President of Ortech, Brownstone-Smith
Securities Corp. ("Brownstone") was the sole
underwriter for an initial public offering
of Ortech common stock. Two types of
warrants, which could be exercised to
purchase common stock during a designated
period of time at a specified price, were
also offered for sale. The market for Ortech
stock and warrants was not active or "thin."
Brownstone was involved in the vast majority
of inter-dealer as well as retail trades in
Ortech securities.
2
In October 1987, after leaving
Ortech, Orkin negotiated with Brownstone to
acquire Ortech warrants for Tri-Bradley.
Tri-Bradley made three purchases of Ortech
warrants between October 20, and December
10, 1987. Tri-Bradley was the sole purchaser
of Ortech warrants during that period.
Between October 20, and December
10, 1987, Orkin solicited retail customers
for Ortech common stock. Upon receiving a
customer order, he would relay the
customer's price to Mernah. Mernah then
contacted market makers
3
in Ortech stock who were listed on the "pink
sheets"
4 to
obtain oral price quotations. There were no
published quotations for Ortech stock during
this period, although several firms listed
themselves as market makers on the pink
sheets. Pursuant to Tri-Bradley's policy, if
the customer's price was within 5% of the
lowest market maker quotation, Mernah
accepted the order and executed the trade
upon Hurtado's approval. Tri-Bradley was not
a market maker in Ortech securities.
To obtain Ortech stock to fill
Orkin's retail orders, Tri-Bradley exercised
its Ortech warrants. Tri-Bradley's purchase
and exercise cost of Ortech warrants was
$.0175 per share of common stock. It charged
Orkin's customers between $.035 and $.06 per
share of Ortech stock, with only three sales
occurring at $.035 and the vast majority of
sales occurring at $.06.
In January 1989, the NASD filed a
complaint against Hurtado, Mernah, and Orkin
charging that they effected for Tri-Bradley
and permitted Tri-Bradley to effect
"over-the-counter sales of corporate
securities to public customers, which
transactions are described on Exhibit A
[Schedule A] ... at prices which were not
fair, taking into consideration all relevant
circumstances."
5
Such unfair pricing violates the NASD 5%
markup policy, an interpretation of Article
III, Sections 1 and 4 of its Rules.
Page 1060
Schedule A identifies 208 retail
sales of Ortech stock from October 20,
through December 10, 1987, executed at
prices of $.035 to $.06 at a cost of $.0175
to Tri-Bradley, resulting in markups of 100%
to 243%.
6 These
sales were solicited by Orkin and approved
and executed by Mernah and Hurtado on behalf
of Tri-Bradley. The markups were calculated
using Tri-Bradley's cost to purchase and
exercise the Ortech warrants as the best
indicator of the prevailing market price for
Ortech stock. Schedule A also lists eight
inter-dealer trades of Ortech stock during
that period: seven purchases by Brownstone
at $.0175 to $.03 per share and a single
sale by Brownstone at $.06.
B. THE NASD PROCEEDINGS
After conducting an evidentiary
hearing, the NASD District Business Conduct
Committee ("DBCC") found that the sales
identified on Schedule A were made in
violation of the NASD's 5% markup policy.
Because Tri-Bradley was not a market maker
in Ortech securities, the DBCC used
Tri-Bradley's cost of $.0175 to purchase and
exercise Ortech warrants as the best
evidence of the prevailing market price of
Ortech stock. The resulting markups of 100%
to 243% for the retail sales identified on
Schedule A greatly exceed the 5% markup
generally permitted under the NASD's policy
and generated approximately $186,000 profit
for Tri-Bradley.
The DBCC also concluded that
despite language in his employment agreement
requiring approval and execution of sales by
Tri-Bradley's home office, Orkin played a
predominant role in setting the retail price
for Ortech stock. The DBCC thus found that
Orkin violated Article III, Sections 1 and 4
of the NASD Rules. It imposed the following
sanctions: censure, $50,000 fine, costs, and
suspension from all NASD activity for thirty
(30) days.
The NASD National Business
Conduct Committee ("NBCC") upheld the DBCC's
utilization of Tri-Bradley's cost in
calculating the markups, but found that
Orkin's participation in setting the retail
price was limited. Nevertheless, the NBCC
found that his participation was sufficient
to hold him responsible for the excessive
markups because he had been involved in
Tri-Bradley's purchase of Ortech warrants,
as well as in the sales of Ortech stock to
public customers. The NBCC upheld the DBCC's
sanctions of censure and costs. However, it
reduced Orkin's fine to $15,000, and imposed
a 90 day suspension from NASD principal
activities.
C. THE SEC PROCEEDINGS
The SEC conducted a de novo
review of the record and found that: 1) the
markups on 201 sales of Ortech stock listed
on Schedule A were excessive; 2) Orkin was
liable for the markup violations; 3) the
markup policy was not an illegal restraint
of trade or otherwise illegal,
unconstitutional, or unfair; and 4) the
sanctions imposed against Orkin were
appropriate. The SEC found that the record
evidence established a higher prevailing
market price for Ortech stock than that
found by the NASD. The SEC used the price
paid by Brownstone for Ortech stock it
purchased from other dealers as the best
evidence of the prevailing market price
because Brownstone dominated and controlled
the Ortech market during the relevant
period. The prevailing market price as
determined by the SEC resulted in smaller,
but still excessive, markups for the sales
listed on Schedule A.
In concluding that Tri-Bradley
sold Ortech stock to retail customers at
prices that greatly exceeded the prevailing
market price, the SEC began with the
long-standing premise that a firm's markups
on a security must be reasonably related to
its prevailing market price. See, e.g., In
re Alstead, Dempsey & Co., Inc., Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 20,825 (April 5,
1984), 30 S.E.C. Docket 208, 1984 WL 50800,
* 1 (S.E.C.). The general rule is that when
a dealer is not a market maker with respect
to a security, absent countervailing
evidence, the best evidence of the
prevailing market price is the dealer's
contemporaneous cost in acquiring the
security. E.g., Id.
Page 1061
The NASD set the prevailing
market price for Ortech stock at
Tri-Bradley's cost of purchasing and
exercising its warrants because it
determined that Orkin failed to present
countervailing evidence sufficient to
establish a different prevailing market
price and to prevent application of the
general rule. The SEC, however, determined
that countervailing evidence on the record
supported a higher prevailing market price.
In addition to Tri-Bradley's
retail sales, Schedule A identifies eight
inter-dealer trades in Ortech stock, all
involving Brownstone: seven purchases and
one sale. In the seven sales, Brownstone
paid no more than $.03 per share for Ortech
stock.
7 Prices
paid by a dominating and controlling market
maker constitute evidence of prevailing
market price. In re Meyer Blinder,
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 31,095
(August 26, 1992), 52 S.E.C. Docket 1435,
1992 WL 216702, * 2 (S.E.C.). The SEC thus
concluded that the prevailing market price
for Ortech stock was at most $.03 per share
in the uncompetitive, thinly traded market.
Accordingly, using a prevailing market price
of $.03, the SEC computed retail markups
ranging from 16.67% to 100% in 201 trades
listed on Schedule A.
8
These markups still clearly exceed the 5%
markup generally permitted under the NASD
Rules.
The SEC held Orkin liable for the
excessive markups because he played a
significant role in pricing and was "at
least grossly negligent in aiding
Tri-Bradley in effecting retail sales of
Ortech at excessive prices" because he had
reason to believe that Ortech stock prices
had not risen to the level charged his
customers.
9 The
SEC found that Orkin breached his fiduciary
duty to ensure that his customers were
charged a fair price.
The SEC cited a number of facts
indicating that Orkin knew or should have
known the retail prices were excessive.
Orkin was a NASD registered general
securities principal and a Tri-Bradley
branch manager who was familiar with the 5%
markup policy and had to have an
understanding of securities pricing. He had
assisted Tri-Bradley in obtaining the Ortech
warrants and therefore knew the cost
Tri-Bradley would incur to fill his retail
orders. Because he was involved in Ortech's
initial public offering, Orkin also was in a
position to know that Ortech stock was not
actively traded and that Brownstone
dominated and controlled the market.
Moreover, Orkin suggested the prices his
customers should offer.
The SEC opined that these facts,
along with the fact that Orkin was entitled
to a commission calculated on the basis of
the retail price, rendered him more than a
mere salesman or order taker with respect to
the Ortech stock sales. The SEC thus refused
to permit Orkin to abdicate his
responsibility to his customers by hiding
behind a formalistic employment agreement
that gave the final authority to approve the
price and execute the trade to the home
office and deemed him responsible for the
excessive markups.
The SEC dismissed Orkin's
challenge to the NASD's markup policy as
illegal, unconstitutionally
Page 1062 vague, and unfair, pointing out that no SEC
or court decision has so found. On the
contrary, the SEC and federal court
decisions have rejected such challenges. The
SEC relied on its decision in In re Meyer
Blinder, Securities Exchange Act Release No.
31,095 (August 26, 1992), 52 S.E.C. Docket
1435, 1992 WL 216702, * 3, * 6-* 8 (S.E.C.),
finding that the NASD markup policy does not
violate the purpose of the amended Exchange
Act nor the requirement that NASD Rules be
approved by the SEC, and is not an illegal
restraint of trade or unconstitutionally
vague. See also, e.g.,
Handley Inv. Co. v. SEC, 354 F.2d 64, 66
(10th Cir.1965) ("The statement of the
5% Policy establishes sufficient guidelines
[to withstand a due process challenge].");
Ross Sec., Inc., 40 S.E.C. 1064 (1962),
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 3,628
(March 28, 1962); 1962 WL 3628, * 2
(S.E.C.)). In addition, the SEC noted that
the markup policy does not conflict with
antitrust laws; rather, a repeal of the
federal antitrust laws has been inferred
where necessary to promote the purposes of
the securities laws. See, e.g.,
United States v. NASD, 422 U.S. 694, 729-30,
734, 95 S.Ct. 2427, 2447-48, 2450, 45
L.Ed.2d 486 (1975).
Orkin also attempted to convince
the SEC that because of the unique factual
situation presented, the markup policy did
not give sufficient notice that the markups
at issue would be considered excessive,
precluding fair application of the markup
policy to his case. Orkin claimed that no
reported cases discuss application of the
markup policy where a dealer exercises
warrants in order to fill retail orders or
where evidence of another dealer's
domination and control provides the basis
for calculating the prevailing market price.
The SEC found, however, that the NASD
proceedings were conducted fairly and that
the markup policy was fairly applied on the
facts of the case.
The SEC specifically concluded
that the evidence of Brownstone's domination
and control of the Ortech market was
properly considered as a factor in
evaluating the fairness of Tri-Bradley's
retail prices. With respect to a firm that
is not a market maker in a security, the
NASD markup policy creates a presumption
that a dealer's contemporaneous cost is the
best evidence of the prevailing market
price, in the absence of countervailing
evidence. Tri-Bradley's cost was its
purchase and exercise price of Ortech
warrants. Before the NASD, Orkin asserted
that the unpublished phone quotations
obtained by Mernah were countervailing
evidence of Ortech stock's prevailing market
price. He also pointed to the single
inter-dealer sale by Brownstone listed on
Schedule A, as well as to the three other
inter-dealer trades outside the relevant
period, to support the reliability of the
oral quotations.
The SEC observed that the NASD
countered Orkin's position by asserting that
the oral quotations were unreliable because
the Ortech market was not active and
independent; it was dominated and controlled
by Brownstone during the period. The
inter-dealer trades listed on Schedule A,
all involving Brownstone, evidence its
domination and control. Brownstone's
domination and control was asserted by an
NASD investigator at the DBCC hearing. Orkin
had ample opportunity to rebut that evidence
before the NASD and SEC. The SEC considered
Brownstone's domination and control a factor
necessarily and appropriately taken into
consideration in establishing the prevailing
market price for Ortech stock under SEC
precedent. As a result, the SEC concluded
that the NASD erred to the extent that it
ignored such evidence and relied solely on
Tri-Bradley's cost to establish the
prevailing market price.
The SEC further opined that the
sanctions assessed against Orkin by the NBCC
were not excessive, even when compared with
those imposed against Mernah. The SEC noted
that the sanctions against Mernah were
imposed in the context of settlement and
that merely because Orkin's sanctions were
more severe does not render them excessive.
Butz v. Glover Livestock Commission Co., 411
U.S. 182, 185-87, 93 S.Ct. 1455, 1457-59, 36
L.Ed.2d 142 (1973) (sanctions imposed
within the authority of an administrative
agency are not rendered invalid because they
are more severe than those imposed in
similar cases).
Moreover, the SEC found that
Orkin's conduct merited the sanctions
imposed. The
Page 1063 SEC observed that Orkin was in possession of
all the key information, perhaps more
information than Mernah, to determine
whether Tri-Bradley's pricing was fair and
that he participated in the pricing with
respect to the Ortech stock sales. The SEC
affirmed the NBCC sanctions of censure,
$15,000 fine, costs, and 90 day suspension
based upon Orkin's serious disregard for the
NASD's pricing policy. Orkin then filed this
petition for review.
II. ANALYSIS
The SEC's factual findings must
be affirmed if supported by substantial
evidence. 15 U.S.C. Sec. 78y(a)(4) (1988).
This Court conducts a de novo review of the
SEC's legal conclusions.
A. MARKUP VIOLATIONS
Orkin poses a two-pronged
challenge to the SEC's finding of markup
violations on the facts of this case. He
first asserts that the evidence was
insufficient to support the SEC's finding of
excessive markups. His second challenge is
that when the SEC rejected the prevailing
market price utilized by the NASD, as
reflected on Schedule A, it should have
determined that the violations as charged
were not supported. According to Orkin, by
calculating the prevailing market price
differently, the SEC in effect required him
to defend against a new charge.
The NASD adopted its 5% markup
policy as an interpretation of Article III,
Sections 1 and 4 of the
NASD Rules. Handley Inv. Co. v. SEC, 354
F.2d 64, 65 (10th Cir.1965). Section 1
requires NASD members to observe "high
standards of commercial honor and just and
equitable principals of trade." Section 4
requires that prices charged retail
customers be "fair, taking into
consideration all relevant
circumstances...." Five percent is merely a
guideline; larger markups may be justified
in some situations, while in other
situations, lesser markups may be excessive.
Id.
The SEC reviewed its markup
policy in, In re Alstead, Dempsey & Co.,
Inc., Securities Exchange Act Release No.
20,825 (April 5, 1984), 30 S.E.C. Docket.
208, 1984 WL 50800, * 1 (S.E.C.), noting
that "[a]s early as 1939, this Commission
[the SEC] held that a dealer violates
antifraud provisions when he charges retail
customers prices that are not reasonably
related to the prevailing market price at
the time the customers make their
purchases."
10
Under the NASD's policy, a markup of no more
than 5% above the prevailing market price
generally is considered fair. The SEC has
consistently held that a markup of more than
10% in the sale of equity securities is
unfair or fraudulent. See, e.g., In re LSCO
Sec., Inc., Securities Exchange Act Release
No. 28,994 (March 21, 1991) 48 S.E.C. Docket
681, 1991 WL 296502, * 2 (S.E.C.). The key
issue in markup cases thus is determining
the prevailing market price for the security
at issue.
The prevailing market price is
the price at which dealers trade with one
another. See, e.g., Alstead, Dempsey, 30
S.E.C. Docket 208, 1984 WL 50800 at * 1. The
general rule is that in the absence of
countervailing evidence, the best evidence
of prevailing market price is the dealer's
contemporaneous cost, unless a dealer is
simultaneously making a market in a
security. See, e.g.,
F.B. Horner & Associates v. SEC, 994 F.2d
61, 63 (2d Cir.1993);
Barnett v. United States, 319 F.2d 340, 344
(8th Cir.1963); LSCO Sec., 48 S.E.C.
Docket 681, 1991 WL 296502 at * 1; Alstead,
Dempsey, 30 S.E.C. Docket 208, 1984 WL 50800
at * 2. The general rule reflects the fact
that prices a dealer has actually paid for a
security in transactions occurring at the
same time as retail sales are normally a
highly reliable indicator of the prevailing
market price. Alstead, Dempsey, 30 S.E.C.
Docket 208, 1984 WL 50800 at * 1.
Where a market maker is involved,
markups may be computed using the price
charged by the firm or other market makers
in actual sales to other dealers. See, e.g.,
LSCO Sec., 48 S.E.C. Docket 681, 1991 WL
296502 at * 3; Alstead, Dempsey, 30
Page 1064 S.E.C. Docket 208, 1984 WL 50800 at * 2.
However, the nature of the inter-dealer
market must be reviewed to determine if it
can serve as a reliable basis to set the
prevailing market price. Alstead, Dempsey,
30 S.E.C. Docket 208, 1984 WL 50800 at * 2.
For example, if a dealer dominates and
controls the inter-dealer market for a
security, the best evidence of prevailing
market price is the price that the
dominating and controlling dealer is willing
to pay other dealers. E.g. In re Meyer
Blinder, Securities Exchange Act Release No.
31,095 (August 26, 1992), 52 S.E.C. Docket
1145, 1992 WL 216702, * 2 (S.E.C.). Where an
integrated
11
dealer, dominates the market to the extent
that there is no independent, competitive
market, it controls wholesale prices absent
evidence to the contrary. Id.at * 3. Thus,
the price a dominating and controlling
dealer pays for a security is the best
evidence of the inter-dealer market and
therefore the prevailing market price. Id.
at * 4.
A dealer charged with markup
violations may prevent application of these
general rules by presenting countervailing
evidence that another measure is better
evidence of prevailing market price.
Nevertheless, the use of quotations to
establish the prevailing market price, as
urged by Orkin in this case, is widely
recognized as problematic. See, e.g., LSCO
Sec., 48 S.E.C. Docket 681, 1991 WL 296502
at * 3; Alstead, Dempsey, 30 S.E.C. Docket
208, 1984 WL 50800 at * 2. As an initial
matter, quotations merely propose a
transaction, they do not represent an actual
sale. Id. Quotations for obscure securities
with limited inter-dealer trading activity
have particularly little value as evidence
of the current market. Id. Conversely,
published quotations are reliable indicators
of prevailing market price only if there is
an active, viable market for the stock. Id.
We must concur with the SEC's
application of its precedent on the facts of
this case. The fact that Brownstone
dominated and controlled the Ortech market
is a relevant circumstance in determining
whether the retail prices Tri-Bradley
charged were fair, even though Tri-Bradley
was not a market maker in Ortech stock.
Throughout the NASD and SEC proceedings,
Orkin himself argued the unfairness of
ignoring prices paid by other dealers, and
of strictly using Tri-Bradley's
contemporaneous cost as the best evidence of
prevailing market price. Orkin attempted to
present countervailing evidence justifying
the use of the unpublished quotations
obtained by Mernah from Ortech market makers
as evidence of the prevailing market price.
He maintained that the quotations Mernah
obtained were validated by a single
inter-dealer sale of Ortech stock by
Brownstone shown on Schedule A and three
inter-dealer sales after the relevant
period. Orkin cannot have it both ways.
Applying well-established
precedent, the SEC found that the
unpublished quotations and the single sale
by Brownstone during the relevant period
were not indicative of the prevailing market
price for Ortech stock. There is no question
that quotations are unreliable for assessing
the prevailing market price in a thinly
traded, obscure market. The single sale by
Brownstone does not evidence the reliability
of the quotations in this case because
Brownstone dominated and controlled the
Ortech market; it could charge any price it
wanted for Ortech stock due to the
purchasing dealer's lack of bargaining
power.
When a dealer dominates the
market to the extent that it controls
wholesale prices, the only reliable basis
for determining prevailing market price is
the price the dominating dealer is willing
to pay other dealers. See, e.g., Alstead,
Dempsey, 30 S.E.C. Docket 208, 1984 WL 50800
at * 3. The record amply demonstrates that
the market for Ortech stock was
non-competitive and thinly traded in that
Brownstone was involved in all inter-dealer
trades during the relevant period and the
vast majority of all trades in Ortech stock.
As a result, prices paid by other dealers
are not reflective of the prevailing market
price. We conclude that sufficient evidence
supports the SEC's finding that 201 sales of
Ortech stock listed on Schedule A were
executed in violation of the NASD's 5%
markup policy because the prevailing price
for Ortech stock was no higher than $.03 per
Page 1065 share: the highest price paid by Brownstone
during the relevant period.
The SEC's determination did not
amount to a new charge against Orkin.
Discerning the prevailing market price and
computing the resulting markup for any
retail stock sale must be done on a case by
case basis. Accordingly, the nature of the
violations charged in the NASD complaint
placed Orkin on notice that all relevant
circumstances would be considered. The SEC
based its finding of markup violations on
evidence in the record since the initial
hearing before the DBCC. This Court cannot
ascribe as error the SEC's consideration of
sales by a dominating and controlling dealer
during the relevant period. We find that the
SEC appropriately and fairly applied its
precedent to the facts before it in
concluding that the markups charged in 201
sales of Ortech stock listed on Schedule A
were unfair.
B. ORKIN'S LIABILITY FOR MARKUP
VIOLATIONS
Orkin has maintained throughout
these proceedings that he had no
responsibility or authority to set the
retail price for Ortech stock because his
employment agreement with Tri-Bradley
permitted him to conduct securities business
only under the complete supervision of the
Denver home office. He claims that his
employment agreement rendered him a mere
order taker for the home office, which
retained sole authority to set retail prices
and execute trades. He asserts that as a
result, he appropriately relied on his
superiors, Mernah and Hurtado, to comply
with the NASD pricing rules.
The Fifth Circuit Court of
Appeals recently rejected the argument that
stock brokers or salesmen are exempt from
responsibility for fair pricing under
Sections 1 and 4 of the
NASD Rules. Amato v. SEC, 18 F.3d 1281
(5th Cir.) cert. denied, --- U.S. ----, 115
S.Ct. 316, --- L.Ed.2d ---- (1994). We adopt
the Fifth Circuit's reasoning in Amato. As
an initial matter, anyone associated with a
NASD member firm has the same duties and
obligations as the firm under the Rules. Id.
at 1284.
The Amato court concurred with
the SEC's finding that the salesman was
liable for charging excessive markups
because he was intimately involved in the
pricing of securities within the parameters
set by his firm's trading department. Id. at
1283. Moreover, because the salesman
purchased stock from customers which he then
resold to other customers, he was in a
position to know the firm's cost, unlike
many stock brokers. Id. This knowledge,
similar to that possessed by Orkin in this
case, was the key to the salesman's
liability. Furthermore, a salesman cannot
absolve himself of responsibility for
compliance with the NASD Rules simply by
relying on the directives of his superiors.
In re Dan King Brainard, 47 S.E.C. 991,
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 20,408
(November 22, 1983), 29 S.E.C. Docket 268,
1983 WL 35834, * 4 (S.E.C.).
The SEC's finding that Orkin was
liable for markup violations because he knew
or should have known that the retail prices
were excessive is amply supported by the
record. Orkin's knowledge concerning the
Ortech market and Tri-Bradley's cost to
acquire Ortech stock put him in a position
to know that the prices Tri-Bradley charged
his customers were excessive. He also should
have known that because the Ortech market
was obscure and thinly traded that
quotations were an unreliable basis upon
which to calculate markups.
12
In addition, Orkin solicited the orders and
participated in the pricing of Ortech stock
by suggesting prices his customers should
offer.
13 He also
stood
Page 1066 to benefit from the sales in the form of
commissions based on the retail price.
Because of his knowledge and involvement,
Orkin abrogated his fiduciary responsibility
to his customers by standing by while they
were charged exorbitant prices. The SEC did
not err in holding Orkin liable for
excessive markups.
C. LEGALITY OF THE MARKUP POLICY
Orkin asserts that the markup
policy 1) is illegal under federal
anti-trust laws in that it results in price
fixing and unduly restrains trade; 2) has
never been approved in accordance with the
Administrative Procedures Act; 3) is based
on an antiquated survey of dealer pricing
practices and its enforcement is arbitrary
and capricious; and 4) as administered, is
so difficult to comply with that it is
rendered unconstitutional.
In Meyer Blinder, 52 S.E.C.
Docket 1145, 1992 WL 21607, * 3, * 6-* 8,
the SEC considered the arguments that the
NASD markup policy violates the Exchange
Act, the antitrust laws, and the
Administrative Procedures Act as well as the
assertions that the policy is
unconstitutionally vague, arbitrary, and
capricious. For the reasons set forth in
that opinion as well as those cited by the
SEC in its opinion
14,
we concur with the SEC's conclusion that the
NASD's markup policy is not illegal, unfair,
or unconstitutional as applied to the facts
of this case or otherwise.
We are similarly unpersuaded by
Orkin's argument that the markup policy is
unfair because no reported cases involve
similar facts. Specifically, Orkin notes
that no published decision addresses markups
where a dealer exercises warrants to fill
retail orders or where the market of a
security is dominated and controlled by a
party not charged in the complaint. As a
result, Orkin argues that he did not have
adequate notice of the rules he was required
to abide by as an NASD member.
While we have been unable to
locate a decision involving the precise
factual situation before us, none of the SEC
cases that Orkin has cited or that we have
reviewed preclude the SEC's findings.
15 The markup policy is
clear, well-established, and capable of
being fairly applied to the facts of this
case. Orkin had sufficient notice that the
NASD Rules prohibited his conduct in this
case. By its definition, the markup policy
must be applied case-by-case and all
relevant circumstances must be considered in
determining the prevailing market price for
a security and whether a fair retail price
has been charged. For the reasons set forth
above, we cannot find that the SEC unfairly
or improperly concluded that Orkin was
responsible for excessive markups in 201
retail sales of Ortech stock. These
arguments by Orkin do not warrant reversal
of the SEC's order.
D. SEVERITY OF SANCTIONS
Finally, Orkin claims that the
sanctions imposed against him were too
severe. He compares the sanctions assessed
against him with those imposed on Mernah,
who he asserts had greater responsibility
for setting retail prices at Tri-Bradley.
We may overturn the SEC's
decision to impose a particular sanction
only upon finding a gross abuse of
discretion. See, e.g. Amato, 18 F.3d at
1284. Although the SEC found that fewer
transactions violated the markup policy than
the NASD, the sanctions imposed were not
related to the excessiveness of the markups
or to the number of transactions. The SEC
found that Orkin's blatant disregard for the
NASD markup policy was the overriding
consideration in penalizing him. We agree.
Page 1067
The fact that Mernah settled with
the NASD justifies the slightly lesser
sanctions imposed upon her. The SEC has
stated that it will reward settlement in
determining sanctions and the Court finds no
abuse of discretion in such practice. See
Amato, 18 F.3d at 1284. We cannot conclude
that the SEC's decision to affirm the
sanctions imposed by the NASD was a gross
abuse of discretion.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons,
Orkin's petition for review is DENIED, the
SEC's order is AFFIRMED, and the stay is
lifted.
*Honorable Howell W. Melton, Senior U.S.
District Judge for the Middle District of
Florida, sitting by designation.
1The NASD is a self regulating
organization. It commenced disciplinary
action against Orkin by filing a complaint
on January 27, 1989. The NASD's District
Business Conduct Committee ("DBCC") then
conducted an evidentiary hearing on the
complaint on October 11, 1990, and issued an
opinion on January 24, 1991. Orkin sought
review by NASD's National Business Conduct
Committee ("NBCC"). The NBCC reviewed the
proceedings before the DBCC, conducted its
own hearing on June 6, 1991, and issued an
opinion on September 30, 1991. Orkin
appealed the NBCC's decision to the SEC. The
SEC made de novo determinations of fact and
law. This court now reviews the SEC's
Opinion and Order dated March 23, 1993.
Shultz v. SEC, 614 F.2d 561, 568 (7th
Cir.1980).
2An NASD investigator testified at the
DBCC hearing that he estimated that
Brownstone was involved in 98% of all Ortech
trades.
3A market maker includes any dealer who,
with respect to a security, buys from and
sells to other dealers.
4"Pink sheets" are the NASD's published
inter-dealer quotation system. Pink sheets
also list market makers for a given
security.
5The complaint was the fruit of an NASD
investigation of Brownstone. The charge
against Hurtado, along with a second charge,
were withdrawn when he died before the DBCC
hearing was held. Tri-Bradley, also named in
the complaint, and Mernah submitted offers
of settlement which were accepted by the
NBCC. Tri-Bradley was censored, fined
$118,000, and expelled from NASD membership.
Mernah was fined $10,000 and suspended from
acting in a NASD principal capacity for 90
days.
6The opinions of the NASD and SEC refer
to a high markup of 248 %. As reflected on
Schedule A, the correct figure is 243 %
7The SEC gave Orkin the benefit of the
doubt by setting the prevailing market price
at $.03 because in fact, of the seven
purchases by Brownstone, only the last was
made at $.03 per share. The remaining
purchases were made at $.0175 to $.0275 per
share.
8The SEC again gave Orkin the benefit of
the doubt as to seven of the 208 trades
listed on Schedule A. In support of his
position that the unpublished quotations
obtained by Mernah were the best evidence of
Ortech's prevailing market price, Orkin
pointed to three inter-dealer trades not
involving Brownstone that occurred after the
relevant time period: on December 16 and 17,
1987, at $.07 and on January 26, 1988, at
$.05. While noting that Brownstone's
domination and control affected all
inter-dealer trades rendering them
unreliable for establishing the prevailing
market price and that these trades occurred
after the relevant time period, the SEC used
the two $.07 trades to set the prevailing
market price for Ortech stock five business
days before they occurred. See, e.g.,
In re Nicholas A. Codispoti, 48 S.E.C. 842,
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 24,946
(September 29, 1987), 39 S.E.C. Docket 312,
1987 WL 112824, * 2 (S.E.C.). As a result,
the markups on seven sales by Tri-Bradley
were considered not excessive.
9Orkin raises the argument in his brief
that the SEC erred in finding that he "aided
and abetted" Tri-Bradley's markup
violations. In the context of its opinion,
the SEC's use of the word "aided" does not
connote a finding of such liability. We do
not address this argument further as the SEC
determined that Orkin was liable as a
principal with regard to the markup
violations.
10"[A] dealer may not exploit the
ignorance of his customer to extract
unreasonable profits resulting from a price
which bears no reasonable relation to the
prevailing price." Duker & Duker, 6 S.E.C.
386, 388-89 (1939).
11An integrated dealer is a market maker
who also sells the security in the retail
market.
12Using quotations unsubstantiated by a
dealer's own sales to calculate markups
displays at a minimum reckless indifference
to the duty owed to customers. In re Adams
Sec., Inc., Securities Exchange Act Release
No. 34,028 (May 9, 1994); 56 S.E.C. Docket
----, 1994 WL 186827, * 3 (S.E.C.).
13At the DBCC hearing, Orkin testified
that he based the prices he suggested to
customers on conversations with brokers on
the street. At the NBCC hearing, Orkin
claimed that each day Mernah supplied him
with quotations for various stocks and that
the Ortech prices he suggested were based on
information she supplied. In either case,
Orkin is still responsible for the markup
violations. Orkin should have known that
quotations were an unreliable indicator of
the prevailing market price for Ortech,
especially when they were 100% to 243% above
the cost Tri-Bradley would incur to obtain
stock to fill his orders.
14 In re Robert Bruce Orkin, Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 32,035, 53 S.E.C.
Docket 1963 (May 23, 1993); 1993 WL 89023, *
4 (S.E.C.).
15 The cases cited by Orkin are
inapposite. For example, unlike the SEC
panel in In re Kevin B. Waide, Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 30,561 (April 7,
1992), 51 S.E.C. Docket ___, 1992 WL 90342 (S.E.C.),
the SEC panel in this case did not announce
a new rule to govern future markup cases
involving a particular factual situation. |