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Page 180
375 U.S. 180
84 S.Ct. 275 11 L.Ed.2d 237 SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION,
Petitioner,
v.
CAPITAL GAINS RESEARCH BUREAU, INC., et
al.
No. 42.
Argued Oct. 21, 1963.
Decided Dec. 9, 1963.
Page 181
David Ferber, Washington, D.C.,
for petitioner.
Leo C. Fennelly, New York City,
for respondents.
Mr. Justice GOLDBERG delivered
the opinion of the Court.
We are called upon in this case
to decide whether under the Investment
Advisers Act of 19401 the
Securities and Exchange Commission may
obtain an injunction compelling a registered
investment adviser to disclose to his
clients a practice of purchasing shares of a
security for his own account shortly before
recommending that security for long-term
investment and then immediately selling the
shares at a profit upon the rise in the
market price following the recommendation.
The answer to this question turns on whether
the practiceknown in the trade as
'scalping''operates as a fraud or deceit
upon any client or prospective client'
within the meaning of the Act.2
We hold that it does and that the Commission
may 'enforce compliance' with the Act by
obtaining an
Page 182
injunction requiring the adviser to make
full disclosure of the practice to his
clients.3
The Commission brought this
action against respondents in the United
States District Court for the Southern
District of New York. At the hearing on the
application for a preliminary injunction,
the following facts were established.
Respondents publish two investment advisory
services, one of which'a Capital Gains Re-
Page 183
port'is the subject of this proceeding.
The Report is mailed monthly to
approximately 5,000 subscribers who each pay
an annual subscription price of $18. It
carries the following description:
'An Investment Service devoted
exclusively to (1) The protection of
investment capital. (2) The realization of a
steady and attrative income therefrom. (3)
The accumulation of CAPITAL GAINS thru the
timely purchase of corporate equities that
are proved to be undervalued.'
Between March 15, 1960, and
November 7, 1960, respondents, on six
different occasions, purchased shares of a
particular security shortly before
recommending it in the Report for long-term
investment. On each occasion, there was an
increase in the market price and the volume
of trading of the recommended security
within a few days after the distribution of
the Report. Immediately thereafter,
respondents sold their shares of these
securities at a profit.4 They did
not disclose any aspect of these
transactions to their clients or prospective
clients.
On the basis of the above
facts, the Commission requested a
preliminary injunction as necessary to
effectuate the purposes of the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940. The injunction would
have required respondents, in any future
Report, to disclose the material facts
concerning, inter alia, any purchase of
recommended securities 'within a very short
period prior to the distribution of a
recommendation * * *,' and '(t)he intent to
sell and the sale of said securities * * *
within a very short period after
distribution of said recommendation * * *.'5
Page 184
The District Court denied the
request for a preliminary injunction,
holding that the words 'fraud' and 'deceit'
are used in the Investment Advisers Act of
1940 'in their technical sense' and that the
Commission had failed to show an intent to
injure clients or an actual loss of money to
clients. D.C., 191 F.Supp. 897. The Court of
Appeals for the Second Circuit, sitting en
banc, by a 5-to-4 vote accepted the District
Court's limited construction of 'fraud' and
'deceit' and affirmed the denial
Page 185
of injunctive relief.6 2 Cir.,
306 F.2d 606. The majority concluded that no
violation of the Act could be found absent
proof that 'any misstatements or false
figures were contained in any of the
bulletins'; or that 'the investment advice
was unsound'; or that 'defendants were being
bribed or paid to tout a stock contrary to
their own beliefs'; or that 'these bulletins
were a scheme to get rid of worthless
stock'; or that the recommendations were
made 'for the purpose of endeavoring
artificially to raise the market so that
(respondents) might unload (their) holdings
at a profit.' Id., 306 F.2d at 608609. The
four dissenting judges pointed out that
'(t)he common-law doctrines of fraud and
deceit grew up in a business climate very
different from that involved in the sale of
securities,' and urged a broad remedial
construction of the statute which would
encompass respondents' conduct. Id., 306
F.2d at 614. We granted certiorari to
consider the question of statutory
construction because of its importance to
the investing public and the financial
community. 371 U.S. 967, 83 S.Ct. 550, 9
L.Ed.2d 538.
The decision in this case turns
on whether Congress, in empowering the
courts to enjoin any practice which operates
'as a fraud or deceit upon any client or
prospective client,' intended to require the
Commission to establish fraud and deceit 'in
their technical sense,' including
Page 186
intent to injure and actual injury to
clients, or whether Congress intended a
broad remedial construction of the Act which
would encompass nondisclosure of material
facts. For resolution of this issue we
consider the history and purpose of the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940.
I.
The Investment Advisers Act of
1940 was the last in a series of Acts
designed to eliminate certain abuses in the
securities industry, abuses which were found
to have contributed to the stock market
crash of 1929 and the depression of the
1930's.7 It was preceded by the
Securities Act of 1933,8 the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934,9
the Public Utility Holding Company Act of
1935,10 the Trust Indenture Act
of 1939,11 and the Investment
Company Act of 1940.12 A
fundamental purpose, common to these
statutes, was to substitute a philosophy of
full disclosure for the philosophy of caveat
emptor and thus to achieve a high standard
of business ethics in the securities
industry.13 As we recently said
in a related context, 'It requires but
little appreciation * * * of what happened
in this country during the 1920's and 1930's
to realize how essential it is that the
highest ethical standards prevail'
Page 187
in every facet of the securities
industry.
Silver v. New York Stock Exchange, 373 U.S.
341, 366, 83 S.Ct. 1246, 1262, 10 L.Ed.2d
389.
The Public Utility Holding
Company Act of 1935 'authorized and
directed' the Securities and Exchange
Commission 'to make a study of the functions
and activities of investment trusts and
investment companies * * *.'14
Pursuant to this mandate, the Commission
made an exhaustive study and report which
included consideration of investment counsel
and investment advisory services.
15
This aspect of the study and report
culminated in the Investment Advisers Act of
1940.
The report reflects the
attitudeshared by investment advisers and
the Commissionthat investment advisers
could not 'completely perform their basic
functionfurnishing to clients on a personal
basis competent, unbiased, and continuous
advice regarding the sound management of
their investmentsunless all conflicts of
interest between the investment counsel and
the client were removed.'16 The
report stressed that affiliations by invest-
Page 188
ment advisers with investment bankers or
corporations might be 'an impediment to a
disinterested, objective, or critical
attitude toward an investment by clients * *
*.'17
This concern was not limited to
deliberate or conscious impediments to
objectivity. Both the advisers and the
Commission were well aware that whenever
advice to a client might result in financial
benefit to the adviserother than the fee
for his advice 'that advice to a client
might in some way be tinged with that
pecuniary interest (whether consciously or)
subconsciously motivated * * *.'18
The report quoted one leading investment
adviser who said that he 'would put the
emphasis * * * on subconscious' motivation
in such situations.19 It quoted a
member of the Commission staff who suggested
that a significant part of the problem was
not the existence of a 'deliberate intent'
to obtain a financial advantage, but rather
the existence 'subconsciously (of) a
prejudice' in favor of one's own financial
interests.
20 The report
incorporated the Code of Ethics and
Standards of Practice of one of the leading
investment counsel associations, which
contained the following canon:
'(An investment adviser) should
continuously occupy an impartial and
disinterested position, as free as humanly
possible from the subtle influence of
prejudice, conscious or nconscious; he
should scrupulously avoid any affiliation,
or any act, which subjects his position to
challenge in this respect.'21
(Emphasis added.)
Other canons appended to the
report announced the following guiding
principles: that compensation for investment
advice 'should consist exclusively of direct
Page 189
charges to clients for services
rendered';22 that the adviser
should devote his time 'exclusively to the
performance' of his advisory function;23
that he should not 'share in profits' of his
clients;24 and that he should not
'directly or indirectly engage in any
activity which may jeopardize (his) ability
to render unbiased investment advice.'25
These canons were adopted 'to the end that
the quality of services to be rendered by
investment counselors may measure up to the
high standards which the public has a right
to expect and to demand.'26
One activity specifically
mentioned and condemned by investment
advisers who testified before the Commission
was 'trading by investment counselors for
their own account in securities in which
their clients were interested * * *.'27
This study and
reportauthorized and directed by statute28
culminated in the preparation and
introduction by Senator Wagner of the bill
which, with some changes, became the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940.29
In its 'declaration of policy' the original
bill stated that
'Upon the basis of facts
disclosed by the record and report of the
Securities and Exchange Commission * * * it
is hereby declared that the national public
interest and the interest of investors are
adversely affected* * * (4) when the
business of investment advisers is so
conducted as to defraud or mislead
investors, or to enable such advisers to
relieve themselves of their fiduciary
obligations to their clients.
Page 190
'It is hereby
declared that the policy and purposes of
this title, in accordance with which the
provisions of this title shall be
interpreted, are to mitigate and, so far as
is presently practicable to eliminate the
abuses enumerated in this section.' S. 3580,
76th Cong., 3d Sess., § 202.
Hearings were then held before
Committees of both Houses of Congress.30
In describing their profession, leading
investment advisers emphasized their
relationship of 'trust and confidence' with
their clients31 and the
importance of 'strict limitation of (their
right) to buy and sell securities in the
normal way if there is any chance at all
that to do so might seem to operate against
the interests of clients and the public.'32
The president of the Investment Counsel
Association of America, the leading
investment counsel association, testified
that the
'two fundamental principles
upon which the pioneers in this new
profession undertook to meet the growing
need for unbiased investment information and
guidance were, first, that they would limit
their efforts and activities to the study of
investment problems from the investor's
standpoint, not engaging in any other
activity, such as security selling or
brokerage, which might directly or
indirectly bias their investment judgment;
and, second, that their remuneration for
this work would consist solely of definite,
professional fees fully disclosed in
advance.'33
Page 191
Although certain changes were
made in the bill following the hearings,34
there is nothing to indicate an intent to
alter the fundamental purposes of the
legislation. The broad proscription against
'any * * * practice * * * which operates * *
* as a fraud or deceit upon any client or
prospective client' remained in the bill
from beginning to end. And the Committee
Reports indicate a desire to preserve 'the
personalized character of the services of
investment advisers,'35 and to
eliminate conflicts of interest between the
investment adviser and the clients36
as safeguards both to 'unsophisticated
investors' and to 'bona fide investment
counsel.'37 The Investment
Advisers Act of 1940 thus reflects a
congressional recognition 'of the delicate
fiduciary nature of an investment advisory
relationship,'38 as well as a
congressional intent to eliminate, or at
least to expose, all conflicts of interest
which might incline as investment adviser
Page 192
consciously or unconsciouslyto render
advice which was not disinterested. It would
defeat the manifest purpose of the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 for us to
hold, therefore, that Congress, in
empowering the courts to enjoin any practice
which operates 'as a fraud or deceit,'
intended to require proof of intent to
injure and actual injury to clients.
This conclusion moreover, is
not in derogation of the common law of
fraud, as the District Court and the
majority of the Court of Appeals suggested.
To the contrary, it finds support in the
process by which the courts have adapted the
common law of fraud to the commercial
transactions of our society. It is true that
at common law intent and injury have been
deemed essential elements in a damage suit
between parties to an arm's-length
transaction.39 But this it not
such an action.40 This is a
Page 193
suit for a preliminary injunction in
which the relief sought is, as the
dissenting judges below characterized it,
the 'mild prophylactic,' 306 F.2d, at 613,
of requiring a fiduciary to disclose to his
clients, not all his security holdings, but
only his dealings in recommended securities
just before and after the issuance of his
recommendations.
The content of common-law fraud
has not remained static as the courts below
seem to have assumed. It has varied, for
example, with the nature of the relief
sought, the relationship between the
parties, and the merchandise in issue. It is
not necessary in a suit for equitable or
prophylactic relief to establish all the
elements required in a suit for monetary
damages.
'Law had come to regard fraud *
* * as primarily a tort, and hedged about
with stringent requirements, the chief of
which was a strong moral, or rather immoral
element, while equity regarded it, as it had
all along regarded it, as a conveniently
comprehensive word for the expression of a
lapse from the high standard of
conscientiousness that it exacted from any
party occupying a certain contractual or
fiduciary relation towards another party.'41
'Fraud has a broader meaning in
equity (than at law) and intention to
defraud or to misrepresent is not a
necessary element.'42
Page 194
'Fraud, indeed, in
the sense of a court of equity properly
includes all acts, omissions and
concealments which involve a breach of legal
or equitable duty, trust, or confidence,
justly reposed, and are injurious to
another, or by which an undue and
unconscientious advantage is taken of
another.'43
Nor is it necessary in a suit
against a fiduciary, which Congress
recognized the investment adviser to be, to
establish all the elements required in a
suit against a party to an arm's-length
transaction. Courts have imposed on a
fiduciary an affirmative duty of 'utmost
good faith, and full and fair disclosure of
all material facts,'44 as well as
an affirmative obligation 'to employ
reasonable care to avoid misleading'45
his clients. There has also been a growing
recognition by common-law courts that the
doctrines of fraud and deceit which
developed around transactions involving land
and other tangible items of wealth are
ill-suited to the sale of such intangibles
as advice and securities, and that,
accordingly, the doctrines must be adapted
to the merchandise in issue.46
The 1909 New York case of
Ridgely v. Keene, 134 App.Div. 647, 119
N.Y.S. 451, illustrates this continuing
development. An investment adviser who, like
respondents, published an investment
advisory service, agreed, for compensation,
to influence his clients to buy shares in a
certain security. He did not disclose the
agreement to his client but sought 'to
excuse his conduct by assertin that * * * he
honestly
Page 195
believed, that his subscribers would
profit by his advice * * *.' The court,
holding that 'his belief in the soundness of
his advice is wholly immaterial,' declared
the act in question 'a palpable fraud.'
We cannot assume that Congress,
in enacting legislation to prevent
fraudulent practices by investment advisers,
was unaware of these developments in the
common law of fraud. Thus, even if we were
to agree with the courts below that Congress
had intended, in effect, to codify the
common law of fraud in the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940, it would be logical to
conclude that Congress codified the common
law 'remedially' as the courts had adapted
it to the prevention of fraudulent
securities transactions by fiduciaries, not
'technically' as it has traditionally been
applied in damage suits between parties to
arm's-length transactions involving land and
ordinary chattels.
The foregoing analysis of the
judicial treatment of common-law fraud
reinforces our conclusion that Congress, in
empowering the courts to enjoin any practice
which operates 'as a fraud or deceit' upon a
client, did not intend to require proof of
intent to injure and actual injury to the
client. Congress intended the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940 to be construed like
other securities legislation 'enacted for
the purpose of avoiding frauds,'47
not technically and restrictively, but
flexibly to effectuate its remedial
purposes.
II.
We turn now to a consideration
of whether the specific conduct here in
issue was the type which Congress intended
to reach in the Investment Advisers Act of
1940.
Page 196
It is arguableindeed it was argued by
'some investment counsel representatives'
who testified before the Commissionthat any
'trading by investment counselors for their
own account in securities in which their
clients were interested * * *'48
creates a potential conflict of interest
which must be eliminated. We need not go
that far in this case, since here the
Commission seeks only disclosure of a
conflict of interests with significantly
greater potential for abuse than in the
situation described above. An adviser who,
like respondents, secretly trades on the
market effect of his own recommendation may
be motivatedconsciously or unconsciouslyto
recommend a given security not because of
its potential for long-run price increase
(which would profit the client), but because
of its potential for short-run price
increase in response to anticipated activity
from the recommendation (which would profit
the adviser).49 An investor
seeking the advice of a registered
investment adviser must, if the legislative
purpose is to be served, be permitted to
evaluate such overlapping motivations,
through appropriate disclosure, in deciding
whether an adviser is serving 'two masters'
or only one, 'especially * * * if one of the
masters happens to be economic
self-interest.'
United States v. Mississippi Valley
Generating Co., 364 U.S. 520, 549, 81 S.Ct.
294, 308, 309, 5 L.Ed.2d 268.50
Accord-
Page 197
ingly, we hold that the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940 empowers the courts,
upon a showing such as that made here, to
require an adviser to make full and frank
disclosure of his practice of trading on the
effect of his recommendations.
III.
Respondents offer three basic
arguments against this conclusion. They
argue first that Congress could have made,
but did not make, failure to disclose
material facts unlawful in the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940, as it did in the
Securities Act of 1933,51 and
that absent specific language, it should not
be assumed that Congress intended to include
failure to disclose in its general
proscription of any practice which operates
as a fraud or deceit. But considering the
history and chronology of the statutes, this
omission does not seem significant. The
Securities
Page 198
Act of 1933 was the first experiment in
federal regulation of the securities
industry. It was understandable, therefore,
for Congress, in declaring certain practices
unlawful, to include both a general
proscription against fraudulent and
deceptive practices and, out of an abundance
of caution, a specific proscription against
nondisclosure. It soon became clear,
however, that the courts, aware of the
previously outlined developments in the
common law of fraud, were merging the
proscription against nondisclosure into the
general proscription against fraud, treating
the former, in effect, as one variety of the
latter. For example, in Securities &
Exchange
Comm'n v. Torr, 15 F.Supp. 315
(D.C.S.D.N.Y.1936), rev'd on other
grounds, 2 Cir., 87 F.2d 446, Judge
Patterson held that suppression of
information material to an evaluation of the
disinterestedness of investment advice
'operated as a deceit on purchasers,' 15
F.Supp., at 317. Later cases also treated
nondisclosure as one variety of fraud or
deceit.52 In light of this, and
in light of the evident purpose of the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 to
substitute a philosophy of disclosure for
the philosophy of caveat emptor, we cannot
assume that the omission in the 1940 Act of
a specific proscription against
nondisclosure was intended to limit the
application of the antifraud and antideceit
provisions of the Act so as to render the
Commission impotent to enjoin suppression of
material facts. The more reasonable
assumption, considering what had transpired
between 1933 and 1940, is that Congress, in
enacting the Investment Advisers Act of 1940
and proscribing
Page 199
any practice which operates 'as a fraud
or deceit,' deemed a specific proscription
against nondisclosure surplusage.
Respondents also argue that the
1960 amendment53 to the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 justifies a
narrow interpretation of the original
enactment. The amendment made two
significant changes which are relevant here.
'Manipulative' practices were added to the
list of those specifically proscribed. There
is nothing to suggest, however, that with
respect to a requirement of disclosure,
'manipulative' is any broader than
fraudulent or deceptive.54 Nor is
there any indication that by adding the new
proscription Congress intended to narrow the
scope of the original proscription. The new
amendment also authorizes the Commission 'by
rules and regulations (to) define, and
prescribe means reasonably designed to
prevent, such acts, practices, and courses
of business as are fraudulent, deceptive, or
manipulative.' The legislative history
offers no indication, however, that Congress
intended such rules to substitute for the
'general and flexible' antifraud provisions
which have long been considered necessary to
control 'the versatile inventions of
fraud-doers.'55 Moreover, the
intent of Congress must be culled from the
events surrounding the passage of
Page 200
the 1940 legislation. '(O)pinions
attributed to a Congress twenty years after
the event cannot be considered evidence of
the intent of the Congress of 1940.'
Securities & Exchange
Comm'n v. Capital Gains Research Bureau,
Inc., 306 F.2d 606, 615 (dissenting
opinion).
United States v. Philadelphia Nat. Bank, 374
U.S. 321, 348349, 83 S.Ct. 1715,
17331734, 10 L.Ed.2d 915.
Respondents argue, finally,
that their advice was 'honest' in the sense
that they believed it was sound and did not
offer it for the purpose of furthering
personal pecuniary objectives. This, of
course, is but another way of putting the
rejected argument that the elements of
technical common-law fraudparticularly
intent must be established before an
injunction requiring disclosure may be
ordered. It is the practice itself, however,
with its potential for abuse, which
'operates as a fraud or deceit' within the
meaning of the Act when relevant information
is suppressed. The Investment Advisers Act
of 1940 was 'directed not only at dischonor,
but also at conduct that tempts dishonor.'
United States v. Mississippi Valley
Generating Co., 364 U.S. 520, 549, 81 S.Ct.
294, 308, 309, 5 L.Ed.2d 268. Failure to
disclose material facts must be deemed fraud
or deceit within its intended meaning, for,
as the experience of the 1920's and 1930's
amply reveals, the darkness and ignorance of
commercial secrecy are the conditions upon
which predatory practices best thrive. To
impose upon the Securities and Exchange
Commission the burden of showing deliberate
dishonesty a a condition precedent to
protecting investors through the prophylaxis
of disclosure would effectively nullify the
protective purposes of the statute. Reading
the Act in light of its background we find
no such requirement commanded. Neither the
Commission nor the courts should be required
'to separate the mental urges,'
Peterson v. Greenville, 373 U.S. 244, 248,
83 S.Ct. 1119, 1121, 10 L.Ed.2d 323, of
an investment adviser, for '(t)he motives of
man are too com-
Page 201
plex * * * to separate * * *.'
Mosser v. Darrow, 341 U.S. 267, 271, 71
S.Ct. 680, 682, 95 L.Ed. 927. The
statute, in recognition of the adviser's
fiduciary relationship to his clients,
requires that his advice be disinterested.
To insure this it empowers the courts to
require disclosure of material facts. It
misconceives the purpose of the statute to
confine its application to 'dishonest' as
opposed to 'honest' motives. As Dean Shulman
said in discussing the nature of securities
transactions, what is required is 'a picture
not simply of the show window, but of the
entire store * * * not simply truth in the
statements volunteered, but disclosure.'56
The high standards of business morality
exacted by our laws regulating the
securities industry do not permit an
investment adviser to trade on the market
effect of his own recommendations without
fully and fairly revealing his personal
interests in these recommendations to his
clients.
Experience has shown that
disclosure in such situations, while not
onerous to the adviser, is needed to
preserve the climate of fair dealing which
is so essential to maintain public
confidence in the securities industry and to
preserve the economic health of the country.
The judgment of the Court of
Appeals is reversed and the case is remanded
to the District Court for proceedings
consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
Mr. Justice DOUGLAS took no
part in the consideration or decision of
this case.
Page 202
APPENDIX TO
OPINION OF THE COURT.
On none occasion respondents sold
short some shares of a security immediately
before stating in their Report that the
security was overpriced. After the
publication of the Report, respondents
covered their short sales.
Respondents' transactions are
summarized by the Commission as follows:
Stock Purchased Purchase Recommended
Sold Sale Profit
price price
Continental 47 3/4 -
Insurance Co. 3/15/60 47 7/8
3/18/60 3/29/60 50 1/8 $1,125.00
United Fruit 5/13, 16, 21 1/4 - 6/6,
7, 23 5/8 10,725.00
Co. 19, 20/60, 22 1/8 5/27/60 9,
10, 60 - 24 1/2
Creole Petroleum
Corp 7/5, 25 1/4 - 7/15/60 7/20,
21, 27 1/8 1,762.50
14/60 28 3/4 22/60 - 29
Hart, Schaffner & Marx 8/8/60 23
8/12/60 8/18, 24 7/8 837.00
22/60 - 25 1/4
Union Pacific 10/28, 25 3/8 - 11/1/60
11/7/60 27 1,757.00
31/60 25 5/8
Frank G. Shattuck Co 10/11/60 16.83
(2.53 10/14/60 10/25/60 19 1/2 - 695.17
(purchased call cost, (exercised 20
1/8
calls) plus 14.30 calls and
option price) sold)
Chock Full O'Nuts 10/14/60 68 3/4 -
69 10/14/60 10/24/60 62 - 2,772.33
(sold short). (sale price).
(disparaged).
(covered 62 1/2
short sale)(purchase
price)
Although some of the above figures
relating to profits are disput ed,
respondents do not substantially contest the
remaining figures.
Page 203
Mr. Justice HARLAN,
dissenting.
I would affirm the judgment
below substantially for the reasons given by
Judge Moore in his opinion for the majority
of the Court of Appeals sitting en banc, 2
Cir., 306 F.2d 606, and in his earlier
opinion for the panel. 2 Cir., 300 F.2d 745.
A few additional observations are in order.
Contrary to the majority, I do
not read the Court of Appeals' en banc
opinion as holding that either § 206(1) of
the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, 54
Stat. 847 (prohibiting the employment of
'any device, scheme, or artifice to defraud
any client or prospective client'), or §
206(2), 54 Stat. 847 (prohibiting the
engaging 'in any transaction, practice, or
course of business which operates as a fraud
or deceit upon any client or prospective
client'), is confined by traditional common
law concepts of fraud and deceit. That court
recognized that 'federal securities laws are
to be construed broadly to effectuate their
remedial purpose.' 306 F.2d, at 608. It did
not hold or intimate that proof of 'intent
to injure and actual injury to clients'
(ante, p. 186) was necessary to make out a
case under these sections of the statute.
Rather it explicitly observed: 'Nor can
there be any serious dispute that a
relationship of trust and confidence should
exist between the advisor and the advised,'
ibid., thus recognizing that no such proof
was required. In effect the Court of Appeals
simply held that the terms of the statute
require, at least, some proof that an
investment adviser's recommendations are not
disinterested.
I think it clear that what was
shown here would not make out a case of
fraud or breach of fiduciary relationship
under the most expansive concepts of common
law or equitable principles. The
nondisclosed facts indicate no more than
that the respondents personally profited
Page 204
from the foreseeable reaction to sound
and impartial investment advice.1a
The cases cited by the Court
(ante, p. 198) are wide of the mark as even
a skeletonized statement of them will show.
In Securities & Exchange
Comm'n v. Torr, 15 F.Supp. 315, reversed
on other grounds, 87 F.2d 446, defendants
were in effect bribed to recommend a certain
stock. Although it was not apparent that
they lied in making their recommendations,
it was plain that they were motivated to
make them by the promise of reward. In the
case before us, there is no vestige of proof
that the reason for the recommendations was
anything other than a belief in the
soundness of the investment advice given.
Charles Hughes & Co. v.
Securities & Exchange Comm'n, 139 F.2d 434,
involved sales of stock by customers' men to
those ignorant of the market value of the
stocks at 16% to 41% above the
over-the-counter price. Defendant's
employees must have known that the customers
would have refused to buy had they been
aware of the actual market price.
The defendant in Norris &
Hirshberg, Inc., v. Securities & Exchange
Comm'n, 85 U.S.App.D.C. 268, 177 F.2d 228,
dealt in unlisted securities. Most of its
customers believed that the firm was acting
only on their behalf and that its income was
derived from commissions; in fact the firm
bought from and sold to its customers, and
received its income from mark-ups and
mark-downs. The nondisclosure of this basic
relationship did not, the court stated,
Page 205
'necessarily establish that petitioner
violated the antifraud provisions of the
Securities and Securities Exchange Acts.'
Id., at 271, 177 F.2d at 231. Defendant's
trading practices, however, were found to
establish such a violation; an example of
these was the buying of shares of stock from
one customer and the selling to another at a
substantially higher price on the same day.
The opinion explicitly distinguishes between
what is necessary to prove common law fraud
and the grounds under securities legislation
sufficient for revo ation of a broker-dealer
registration. Id., at 273, 177 F.2d, at 233.
Arleen Hughes v. Securities &
Exchange Comm'n, 85 U.S.App.D.C. 56, 174
F.2d 969, concerned the revocation of the
license of a broker-dealer who also gave
investment advice but failed to disclose to
customers both the best price at which the
securities could be bought in the open
market and the price which she had paid for
them. Since the court expressly relied on
language in statutes and regulations making
unlawful 'any omission to state a material
fact,' id., at 63, 174 F.2d, at 976, this
case hardly stands for the proposition that
the result would have been the same had such
provisions been absent.
Speed
v. Transamerica Corp., 235 F.2d 369, the
controlling stockholder of a corporation
made a public offer to buy stock, concealing
from the other shareholders information
known to it as an insider which indicated
the real value of the stock to be
considerably greater than the price set by
the public offer. Had shareholders been
aware of the concealment, they would
undoubtedly have refused to sell; as a
consequence of selling they suffered
ascertainable damages.
In Archer v. Securities &
Exchange Comm'n, 133 F.2d 795, defendant
copartners of a company dealing in unlisted
securities concealed the name of Claude
Westfall, who was found to be in control of
the business. Westfall was thereby enabled
to defraud the customers of the
Page 206
brokerage firm of Harris, Upham & Co.,
for which he worked as a trader. Securities
of the customers of the latter firm were
bought by defendants' company at under the
market level, and defendants' company sold
securities to the clients of Harris, Upham &
Co. at prices above the market.
In all of these cases but
Arleen Hughes, which turned on explicit
provisions against nondisclosure, the
concealment involved clearly reflected
dischonest dealing that was vital to the
consummation of the relevant transactions.
No such factors are revealed by the record
in the present case. It is apparent that the
Court is able to achieve the result reached
today only by construing these provisions of
the Investment Advisers Act as it might a
pure conflict of interest statute,
United States v. Mississippi Valley
Generating Co., 364 U.S. 520, something
which this particular legislation does not
purport to be.
I can find nothing in the terms
of the statute or in its legislative history
which lends support to the absolute rule of
disclosure now established by the Court.
Apart from the other factors dealt with in
the two opinions of the Court of Appeals, it
seems to me especially significant that
Congress in enacting the Investment Advisers
Act did not include the express disclosure
provision found in § 17(a)(2) of the
Securities Act of 1933, 48 Stat. 84,2a
even though it did carry over to the
Advisers Act the comparable fraud and deceit
provisions of the Securities Act.3a
Page 207
To attribute the presence of a disclosure
provision in the earlier statute to an
'abundance of caution' (ante, 198) and its
omission in the later statute to a
congressional belief that its inclusion
would be 'surplusage' (ante, 199) is for me
a singularly unconvincing explanation of
this controlling difference between the two
statutes.4a
However salutary may be thought
the disclosure rule now fashioned by the
Court, I can find no authority for it either
in the statute or in any regulation duly
promulgated thereunder by the S.E.C. Only
two Terms ago we refused to extend certain
provisions of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934 to encompass 'policy' considerations at
least as cogent as those urged here by the
S.E.C. Blau v. Lehman, 368 U.S. 403, 82
S.Ct. 451, 7 L.Ed.2d 403. The Court
should have exercised the same wise judicial
restraint in this case. This is particularly
so at this interlocutory stage of the
litigation. It is conceivable that at the
trial the S.E.C. would have been able to
make out a case under the statute construed
according to its terms.
I respectfully dissent.
1 54 Stat. 847, as amended,
15 U.S.C. § 80b1 et seq.
2 54 Stat. 852, as amended,
15 U.S.C. (Supp. IV) § 80b6, provides in
relevant part that:
'It shall be unlawful for any investment
adviser, by use of the mails or any means or
instrumentality of interstate commerce,
directly or indirectly
'(1) to employ any device, scheme, or
artifice to defraud any client or
prospective client;
'(2) to engage in any transaction,
practice, or course of business which
operates as a fraud or deceit upon any
client or prospective client;
'(3) acting as principal for his own
account, knowingly to sell any security to
or purchase any security from a client, or
acting as broker for a person other than
such client, knowingly to effect any sale or
purchase of any security for the account of
such client, without disclosing to such
client in writing before the completion of
such transaction the capacity in which he is
acting and obtaining the consent of the
client to such transaction. The prohibitions
of this paragraph shall not apply to any
transaction with a customer of a broker or
dealer if such broker or dealer is not
acting as an investment adviser in relation
to such transaction. * * *'
3 54 Stat. 853, as amended,
15 U.S.C. (Supp. IV) § 80b9, provides in
relevant part that:
'(e) Whenever it shall appear to the
Commission that any person has engaged, is
engaged, or is about to engage in any act or
practice constituting a violation of any
provision of this subchapter, or of any
rule, regulation, or order hereunder, or
that any person has aided, abetted,
counseled, commanded, induced, or procured,
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 in the proper district court
of the United States, or the proper United
States court of any Territory or other place
subject to the jurisdiction of the United
States, to enjoin such acts or practices and
to enforce compliance with this subchapter
or any rule, regulation, or order hereunder.
Upon a showing that such person has engaged,
is engaged, or is about to engage in any
such act or practice, or in aiding,
abetting, counseling, c mmanding, inducing,
or procuring any such act or practice, a
permanent or temporary injunction or decree
or restraining order shall be granted
without bond.'
4 See Appendix, infra, p.
202.
5 The requested injunction
reads in full as follows:
'WHEREFORE the plaintiff demands a
temporary restraining order, preliminary
injunction and final injunction:
'1. Enjoining the defendants Capital
Gains Research Bureau, Inc. and Harry P.
Schwarzmann, their agents, servants,
employees, at-
torneys and assigns, and each of them,
while the said Capital Gains Research
Bureau, Inc. is an investment advisor,
directly and indirectly, by the use of the
mails or any means or instrumentalities of
interstate commerce from:
'(a) Employing any device, scheme or
artifice to defraud any client or
prospective client by failing to disclose
the material facts concerning
'(1) The purchase by defendant, Capital
Gains Research Bureau, Inc., of securities
within a very short period prior to the
distribution of a recommendation by said
defendant to its clients and prospective
clients for purchase of said securities;
'(2) The intent to sell and the sale of
said securities by said defendant so
recommended to be purchased within a very
short period after distribution of said
recommendation to its clients and
prospective clients;
'(3) Effecting of short sales by said
defendant within a very short period prior
to the distribution of a recommendation by
said defendant to its clients and
prospective clients to dispose of said
securities;
'(4) The intent of said defendant to
purchase and the purchase of said securities
to cover its short sales;
'(5) The purchase by said defendant for
its own account of puts and calls for
securities within a very short period prior
to the distribution of a recommendation to
its clients and prospective clients
forpurchase or disposition of said
securities.
'(b) Engaging in any transaction,
practice and course of business which
operates as a fraud or deceit upon any
client or prospective client by failing to
disclose the material facts concerning the
matters set forth in demand 1(a) hereof.'
6 The case was originally
heard before a panel of the Court of
Appeals, which, with one judge dissenting,
affirmed the District Court. 300 F.2d 745.
Rehearing en banc was then ordered.
The Court of Appeals purported to
recognize that 'federal securities laws are
to be construed broadly to effectuate their
remedial purpose.' 306 F.2d 606, 608. But by
affirming the District Court's 'technical'
construction of the Investment Advisers Act
of 1940 and by requiring proof of
'misstatements,' unsound advice, bribery, or
intent to unload 'worthless stock,' the
court read the statute, in effect, as
confined by traditional common-law concepts
of fraud and deceit.
7 See generally Douglas and
Bates, The Fe eral Securities Act of 1933,
43 Yale L.J. 171 (1933); Loomis, The
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940, 28
Geo.Wash.L.Rev. 214 (1959); Shulman, Civil
Liability and the Securities Act, 43 Yale
L.J. 227 (1933). Cf. Galbraith, The Great
Crash (1955).
8 48 Stat. 74, as amended, 15
U.S.C. § 77a et seq.
9 48 Stat. 881, as amended,
15 U.S.C. § 78a et seq.
10 49 Stat. 838, as amended,
15 U.S.C. § 79 et seq.
11 53 Stat. 1149, as amended,
15 U.S.C. § 77aaa et seq.
12 54 Stat. 789, as amended,
15 U.S.C. § 80a1 et seq.
13 See H.R.Rep. No. 85, 73d
Cong., 1st Sess. 2, quoted
Wilko v. Swan, 346 U.S. 427, 430, 74 S.Ct.
182, 184, 98 L.Ed. 168.
14 49 Stat. 837, 15 U.S.C. §
79z4.
15 While the study
concentrated on investment advisory services
which provide personalized counseling to
investors, see Investment Trusts and
Investment Companies, Report of the
Securities and Exchange Commission, Pursuant
to Section 30 of the Public Utility Holding
Company Act of 1935, on Investment Counsel,
Investment Management, Investment
Supervisory, and Investment Advisory
Services, H.R. Doc. No. 477, 76th Cong., 2d
Sess. 1 (thereinafter cited as SEC Report)
the Senate Committee on Banking and Currency
did receive communications from publishers
of investment advisory services, see, e.g.,
Hearings on S. 3580 before Subcommittee of
the Senate Committee on Banking and
Currency, 76th Cong., 3d Sess., pt. 3
(Exhibits), 1063, and the Act specifically
covers 'any person who, for compensation,
engages in the business of advising others,
either directly or through publications or
writings * * *.' 54 Stat. 847, 15 U.S.C. §
80b2.
16 SEC Report, at 28.
17 Id., at 29.
18 Id., at 24.
19 Ibid.
20 Ibid.
21 Id., at 6667.
22 Id., at 66.
23 Id., at 65.
24 Id., at 67.
25 Id., at 29.
26 Id., at 66.
27 Id., at 2930. (Emphasis
added.)
28 See text accompanying note
14, supra.
29 S. 3580, 76th Cong., 3d
Sess.
30 Hearings on S. 3580 before
Subcommittee of the Senate Committee on
Banking and Currency, 76th Cong., 3d Sess.
(hereinafter cited as Senate Hearings).
Hearings on H.R. 10065 before Subcommittee
of the House Committee on Interstate and
Foreign Commerce, 76th Cong., 3d Sess.
(hereinafter cited as House Hearings).
31 Senate Hearings, at 719.
32 Id., at 716.
33 Id., at 724.
34 The bill as enacted did
not contain a section attributing specific
abuses to the investment adviser profession.
This section was eliminated apparently at
the urging of the investment advisers who,
while not denying that abuses she occurred,
attributed them to certain fringe elements
in the profession. They feared that a public
and general indictment of all investment
advisers by Congress would do irreparable
harm to their fledgling profession. See,
e.g., Senate Hearings, at 715716. It cannot
be inferred, therefore, that the section was
eliminated because Congress had concluded
that the abuses had not occurred, or because
Congress did not desire to prevent their
repetition in the future. The more logical
inference, considering the legislative
background of the Act, is that the section
was omitted to avoid condemning an entire
profession (which depends for its success on
continued public confidence) for the acts of
a few.
35 H.R.Rep. No. 2639, 76th
Cong., 3d Sess. 28 (hereinafter cited as
House Report). See also S.Rep. No. 1775,
76th Cong., 3d Sess. 22 (hereinafter cited
as Senate Report).
36 See Senate Report, at 22.
37 Id., at 21.
38 2 Loss, Securities
Regulation (2d ed. 1961), 1412.
39 See cases cited in 37
C.J.S. Fraud § 2 (1943), p. 210.
Even in a damage suit between parties to
an arm's-length transaction, the intent
which must be established need not be an
intent to cause injury to the client, as the
courts below seem to have assumed. 'It is to
be noted that it is not necessary that the
person making the misrepresentations intend
to cause loss to the other or gain a profit
for himself; it is only necessary that he
intend action in reliance on the truth of
his misrepresentations.' 1 Harper and James,
The Law of Torts (1956), 531. '(T)he fact
that the defendant was disinterested, that
he had the best of motives, and that he
thought he was doing the plaintiff a
kindness, will not absolve him from
liability, so long as he did in fact intend
to mislead.' Prosser, Law of Torts (1955),
538. See 3 Restatement, Torts (1938), § 531,
Comment b, illustration 3. It is clear that
respondents' failure to disclose the
practice here in issue was purposeful, and
that they intended that action be taken in
reliance on the claimed disinterestedness of
the service and its exclusive concern for
the clients' interests.
40 Neither is this a criminal
proceeding for 'willfully' violating the
Act, 54 Stat. 857, as amended, 15 U.S.C. §
80b17, nor a proceeding to revoke or
suspend a registration 'in the public
interest,' 54 Stat. 850, as amended, 15
U.S.C. § 80b3. Other considerations may be
relevant in such proceedings. Compare
Federal Communications
Comm'n v. American Broadcasting Co., 347
U.S. 284, 74 S.Ct. 593, 98 L.Ed. 699.
41 Hanbury, Modern Equity
(8th ed. 1962), 643. See Letter of Lord
Hardwicke to Lord Kames, dated June 30,
1759, printed in Parkes, History of the
Court of Chancery (1828), 508, quoted in
Snell, Principles of Equity (25th ed. 1960),
496:
'Fraud is infinite, and were a Court of
Equity once to lay down rules, how far they
would go, and no farther, in extending their
relief against it, or to define strictly the
species or evidence of it, the jurisdiction
would be cramped, and perpetually eluded by
new schemes which the fertility of man's
invention would contrive.'
42 De Funiak, Handbook of
Modern Equity (2d ed. 1956), 235.
43
Moore v. Crawford, 130 U.S. 122, 128, 9
S.Ct. 447, 448, 32 L.Ed. 878, quoting 1
Story, Equity Jur. § 187.
44 Prosser, Law of Torts
(1955), 534535 (citing cases). See
generally Keeton, FraudConcealment and
Non-Disclosure, 15 Texas L.Rev. 1.
45 1 Harper and James, The
Law of Torts (1956), 541.
46 See generally Shulman,
Civil Liability and the Securities Act, 43
Yale L.J. 227 (1933).
47 3 Sutherland, Statutory
Construction (3d ed. 1943), 382 et seq.
(citing cases). See Note, 38 N.Y.U.L.Rev.
985; Comment, 30 U. of Chi.L.Rev. 121,
131147.
48 See text accompanying note
27, supra.
49 For a discussion of the
effects of investment advisory service
recommendations on the market price of
securities, see Note, 51 Calif.L.Rev. 232,
233.
50 This Court, in discussing
conflicts of interest, has said:
'The rea on of the rule inhibiting a
party who occupies confidential and
fiduciary relations toward another from
assuming antagonistic positions to his
principal in matters involving the subject
matter of the trust is sometimes said to
rest in a sound public policy, but it also
is justified in a recognition of the
authoritative declaration that no man can
serve two masters; and considering that
human nature must be dealt with, the rule
does not stop with actual violations of such
trust relations, but includes within its
purpose the removal of any temptation to
violate them. * * *
'* * *
Hazelton v. Sheckells, 202 U.S. 71, 79, 26
S.Ct. 567, 568, 50 L.Ed. 939, we said:
'The objection * * * rests in their
tendency, not in what was done in the
particular case. * * * The court will not
inquire what was done. If that should be
improper it probably would be hidden, and
would not appear."
United States v. Mississippi Valley
Generating Co., 364 U.S. 520, 550, 81 S.Ct.
294, 309, 5 L.Ed.2d 268, n. 14.
51 48 Stat. 84, as amended,
15 U.S.C. § 77q(a), provides:
'It shall be unlawful for any person in
the offer or sale of any securities by the
use of any means or instruments of
transportation or communication in
interstate commerce or by the use of the
mails, directly or indirectly
'(1) to employ any device, scheme, or
artifice to defraud, or
'(2) to obtain money or property by means
of any untrue statement of a material fact
or any omission to state a material fact
necessary in order to make the statements
made, in the light of the circumstances
under which they were made, not misleading,
or
'(3) to engage in any transaction,
practice, or course of business which
operates or would operate as a fraud or
deceit upon the purchaser.'
52 See Archer v. Securities &
Exchange Comm'n, 133 F.2d 795 (C.A.8th
Cir.), cert. denied, 319 U.S. 767, 63 S.Ct.
1330, 87 L.Ed. 1717; Charles Hughes & Co. v.
Securities & Exchange Comm'n,
139 F.2d 434
(C.A.2d Cir.), cert. denied, 321 U.S. 786,
64 S.Ct. 781, 88 L.Ed. 1077; Hughes v.
Securities & Exchange Comm'n, 85
U.S.App.D.C. 56, 174, F.2d 969; Norris &
Hirshberg v. Securities & Exchange Comm'n,
85 U.S.App.D.C. 268, 177 F.2d 228;
Speed v. Transamerica Corp., 235 F.2d 369
(C.A.3d Cir.).
53 74 Stat. 887, 15 U.S.C.
(Supp. IV) § 80b6(4).
The amendment, as it is relevant here,
made it unlawful for an investment adviser:
'(4) to engage in any act, practice, or
course of business which is fraudulent,
deceptive, or manipulative. The Commission
shall, for the purposes of this paragraph
(4) by rules and regulations define, and
prescribe means reasonably designed to
prevent, such acts, practices, and courses
of business as are fraudulent, deceptive, or
manipulative.'
54 See, e.g., 48 Stat. 895,
as amended, 15 U.S.C. § 78o(c)(1), which
refers to such devices 'as are manipulative,
deceptive, or otherwise fraudulent.'
(Emphasis added.)
55
Stonemets v. Head, 248 Mo. 243, 263, 154
S.W. 108, 114. See also note 41, supra.
56 Shulman, Civil Liability
and the Securities Act, 43 Yale L.J. 227,
242.
1a According to respondents'
brief (and the fact does not appear to be
contested), the annual gross income of
Capital Gains Research Bureau from
publishing investment information and advice
was some $570,000. Even accepting the
S.E.C.'s figures, respondents' profit from
the trading transactions in question was
somewhat less than $20,000. Thus any basis
for an inference that respondents' advice
was tainted by self-interest, which might
have been drawn had respondents' buying and
selling activities been more significant, is
lacking on this record.
2a That section makes it
unlawful 'to obtain money or property by
means of * * * any omission to state a
material fact necessary in order to make the
statements made, in the light of the
circumstances under which they were made,
not misleading * * *.'
3a Section 17(a) of the 1933
Act makes it unlawful '(1) to employ any
device, scheme, or artifice to defraud * * *
(3) to engage in any transaction, practice,
or course of business which operates or
would operate as a fraud or deceit upon the
purchaser.' Compare the language of these
provisions with that of § 206(1), (2) of the
Investment Advisers Act, supra, p. 203.
4a. The argument is that by the
time of enactment of the Investment Advisers
Act in 1940 Congress had become aware that
the courts 'we e merging the proscription
against nondisclosure (contained in the 1933
Securities Act) into the general
proscription against fraud' also found in
the same act. Ante, 198. However, the only
federal pre-1940 case cited is Securities &
Exchange Comm'n v. Torr, ante, 198, and
supra, p. 204. There the failure of a
fiduciary to disclose that his advice was
prompted by a 'bribe' was equated by the
trial judge with deceit. Such a decision can
hardly be deemed to establish that any
nondisclosure of a fact material to the
recipient of investment advice is fraud or
deceit. Saying the least, it strains
credulity that a provision expressly
proscribing material omissions would be
thought by Congress to be 'surplusage' when
it came to enacting the 1940 Act. This is
particularly so when it is remembered that
violation of the fraud and deceit section is
punishable criminally (§ 217 of the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940, 54 Stat.
857); Congress must have known that the
courts do not favor expansive constructions
of criminal statutes. |