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Page 418
404 U.S. 418
92 S.Ct. 596 30 L.Ed.2d 575 RELIANCE ELECTRIC COMPANY,
Petitioner,
v.
EMERSON ELECTRIC COMPANY.
No. 7079.
Argued Nov. 10, 11, 1971.
Decided Jan. 11, 1972.
Rehearing Denied Feb. 28, 1972.
See 405 U.S. 969, 92 S.Ct.
1162.
Syllabus
Respondent, the owner of more
than 10% of Dodge Mfg. Co.'s stock, within
six months of the purchase thereof sold
enough shares to a broker to reduce its
holding to 9.96%, for the purpose of
immunizing the disposal of the remainder
from liability under § 16(b) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Under that
provision a corporation may recover for
itself the profits realized by an owner of
more than 10% of its shares from a purchase
and sale of its stock within any six-month
period, provided the owner held more than
10% 'both at the time of purchase and sale.'
Held: Under the terms of § 16(b) respondent
is not liable to petitioner (Dodge's
successor) for profits derived from the sale
of the 9.96% to Dodge within six months of
purchase. Pp. 422427.
434 F.2d 918, affirmed.
Thomas P. Mulliganm, Cleveland,
Ohio, for petitioner.
Walter P. North, Washington,
D.C., for Securities and Exchange
Commission, as amicus curiae, by special
leave of Court.
Albert E. Jenner, Jr., Chicago,
Ill., for respondent.
Thomas P. Mulligan, Cleveland,
Ohio, opinion of the Court.
Page 419
Section 16(b) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, 48 Stat. 896, 15
U.S.C. § 78p(b), provides, among other
things, that a corporation may recover for
itself the profits realized by an owner of
more than 10% of its shares from a purchase
and sale of its stock within any six-month
period, provided that the owner held more
than 10% 'both at the time of the purchase
and sale.'1 In this case, the
respondent, the owner of 13.2% of a
corporation's shares, disposed of its entire
holdings in two sales, both of them within
six months of purchase. The
Page 420
first sale reduced the respondent's
holdings to 9.96%, and the second disposed
of the remainder. The question presented is
whether the profits derived from the second
sale are recoverable by the Corporation
under § 16(b). We hold that they are not.
I
On June 16, 1967, the
respondent, Emerson Electric Co., acquired
13.2% of the outstanding common stock of
Dodge Manufacturing Co., pursuant to a
tender offer made in an unsuccessful attempt
to take over Dodge. The purchase price for
this stock was $63 per share. Shortly
thereafter, the shareholders of Dodge
approved a merger with the petitioner,
Reliance Electric Co. Faced with the certain
failure of any further attempt to take over
Dodge, and with the prospect of being forced
to exchange its Dodge shares for stock in
the merged corporation in the near future,2
Emerson, following a plan outlined by its
general counsel, decided to dispose of
enough shares to bring its holdings below
10%, in order to immunize the disposal of
the remainder of its shares from liability
under § 16(b). Pursuant to counsel's
recommendation, Emerson on August 28 sold
37,000 shares of Dodge common stock to a
brokerage house at $68 per share. This sale
reduced Emerson's holdings in Dodge to 9.96%
of the outstanding common stock. The
remaining shares were then sold to Dodge at
$69 per share on September 11.
After a demand on it by
Reliance for the profits realized on both
sales, Emerson filed this action seeking a
declaratory judgment as to its liability
under § 16(b). Emerson first claimed that it
was not liable at all,
Page 421
because it was not a 10% owner at the
time of the purchase of the Dodge shares.
The District Court disagreed, holding that a
purchase of stock falls within § 16(b) where
the purchaser becomes a 10% owner by virtue
of the purchase. The Court of Appeals
affirmed this holding, and Emerson did not
cross-petition for certiorari. Thus that
question is not before us.
Emerson alternatively argued to
the District Court that, assuming it was a
10% stockholder at the time of the purchase,
it was liable only for the profits on the
August 28 sale of 37,000 shares, because
after that time it was no longer a 10% owner
within the meaning of § 16(b). After trial
on the issue of liability alone, the
District Court held Emerson liable for the
entire amount of its profits. The court
found that Emerson's sales of Dodge stock
were 'effected pursuant to a single
predetermined plan of disposition with the
overall intent and purpose of avoiding
Section 16(b) liability,' and construed the
term 'time of . . . sale' to include 'the
entire period during which a series of
related transactions take place pursuant to
a plan by which a 10% beneficial owner
disposes of his stock, holdings.' 306
F.Supp. 588, 592.
On an interlocutory appeal
under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), the Court of
Appeals upheld the finding that Emerson
'split' its sale of Dodge stock simply in
order to avoid most of its potential
liability under § 16(b), but it held this
fact irrelevant under the statute so long as
the two sales are 'not legally tied to each
other and (are) made at different times to
different buyers . . ..' 434 F.2d 918, 926.
Accordingly, the Court of Appeals reversed
the District Court's judgment as to
Emerson's liability for its profits on the
September 11 sale, and remanded for a
determination of the amount of Emerson's
liability on the August 28 sale. Reliance
filed a petition for certiorari, which we
granted
Page 422
in order to consider an unresolved
question under an important federal statute.
401 U.S. 1008, 91 S.Ct. 1257, 28 L.Ed.2d
544.
II
The history and purpose of §
16(b) have been exhaustively reviewed by
federal courts on several occasions since
its enactment in 1934. See, e.g.,
Smolowe v. Delendo Corp.,
136 F.2d 231;
Adler v. Klawans, 267 F.2d 840;
Blau v. Max Factor & Co., 342 F.2d 304.
Those courts have recognized that the only
method Congress deemed effective to curb the
evils of insider trading was a flat rule
taking the profits out of a class of
transactions in which the possibility of
abuse was believed to be intolerably great.
As one court observed:
'In order to achieve its goals,
Congress chose a relatively arbitrary rule
capable of easy administration. The
objective standard of Section 16(b) imposes
strict liability upon substantially all
transactions occurring within the statutory
time period, regardless of the intent of the
insider or the existence of actual
speculation. This approach maximized the
ability of the rule to eradicate speculative
abuses by reducing difficulties in proof.
Such arbitrary and sweeping coverage was
deemed necessary to insure the optimum
prophylactic effect.'
Bershad v. McDonough,428 F.2d 693, 696.
Thus Congress did not reach
every transaction in which an investor
actually relies on inside information. A
person avoids liability if he does not meet
the statutory definition of an 'insider,' or
if he sells more than six months after
purchase. Liability cannot be imposed simply
because the investor structured his
transaction with the intent of avoiding
liability under § 16(b). The question is,
rather, whether the method used to 'avoid'
liability is one permitted by the statute.
Page 423
Among the 'objective standards'
contained in § 16(b) is the requirement that
a 10% owner be such 'both at the time of the
purchase and sale . . . of the security
involved.' Read literally, this language
clearly contemplates that a statutory
insider might sell enough shares to bring
his holdings below 10%, and laterbut still
within six monthssell additional shares
free from liability under the statute.
Indeed, commentators on the securities laws
have recommended this exact procedure for a
10% owner who, like Emerson, wishes to
dispose of his holdings within six months of
their purchase.3
Under the approach urged by
Reliance, and adopted by the District Court,
the apparent immunity of profits derived
from Emerson's second sale is lost where the
two sales, though independent in every other
respect, are 'interrelated parts of a single
plan.' 306 F.Supp., at 592. But a 'plan' to
sell that is conceived within six months of
purchase clearly would not fall within §
16(b) if the sale were made after the six
months had expired, and we see no basis in
the statute for a different result where the
10% requirement is involved rather than the
six-month limitation.
The dissenting opinion, post,
at 442, reasons that 'the 10% rule is based
upon a conclusive statutory presumption that
ownership of this quantity of stock suffices
to
Page 424
provide access to inside information,'
and that it thus 'follows that all sales by
a more-than-10% owner within the six-month
period carry the presumption of a taint,
even if a prior transaction within the
period has reduced the beneficial ownership
to 10% or below.' While there may be logic
in this position, it was clearly rejected as
a basis for liability when Congress included
the proviso that a 10% owner must be such
both at the time of the purchase and of the
sale. Although the legislative history
affords no explanation of the purpose of the
proviso, it may be that Congress regarded
one with a long-term investment of more than
10% as more likely to have access to inside
information than one who moves in and out of
the 10% category. But whatever the rationale
of the proviso, it cannot be disregarded
simply on the ground that it may be
inconsistent with our assessment of the
'wholesome purpose' of the Act.
To be sure, where alternative
constructions of the terms of § 16(b) are
possible, those terms are to be given the
construction that best serves the
congressional purpose of curbing short-swing
speculation by corporate insiders.
4
But a construction of the term 'at the time
Page 425
of . . . sale' that treats two sales as
one upon proof of a pre-existing intent by
the seller is scarcely in harmony with the
congressional design of predicating
liability upon an 'objective measure of
proof.' Smolowe v. Delendo Corp., supra,
136 F.2d, at 235. Were we to adopt the approach
urged by Reliance, we could be sure that
investors would not in the future provide
such convenient proof of their intent as
Emerson did in this case. If a 'two-step'
sale of a 10% owner's holdings within six
months of purchase is thought to give rise
to the kind of evil that Congress sought to
correct through § 16(b), those transactions
can be more effectively deterred by an
amendment to the statute that preserves its
mechanical quality than by a judicial search
for the will-o'-the-wisp of an investor's
'intent' in each litigated case.
III
The Securities and Exchange
Commission, participating as amicus curiae,
argues for an interpretation of the statute
that both covers Emerson's transaction and
preserves the mechanical quality of the
statute. Seizing upon a fragment of
legislative historya brief exchange between
one of the principal authors of the bill and
two members of the Senate Committee during
hearings on the bill
5the
Commission suggests that the sole pur-
Page 426
pose of the requirement of 10% ownership
at the time of both purchase and sale was to
exclude from the statute's coverage those
persons who became 10% shareholders
'involuntarily,' as, for example, by legal
succession or by a reduction in the total
number of outstanding shares of the
corporation. The effect of such an
interpretation would be to bring within §
16(b) all sales within six months by one who
has gained the position of a 10% owner
through voluntary purchase, regardless of
the amount of his holdings at the time of
the sale. We cannot accept such a
construction of the Act.
In the first place, we note
that the SEC's own rules undercut such an
interpretation. Recognizing the
interrelatedness of § 16(a) and § 16(b) of
the Act, the Commission has used its power
to grant exemptions under § 16(b) to exclude
from liability any transaction that does not
fall within the reporting requirements of §
16(a).6 A 10% owner is required
by that section to report at the end of each
month any changes in his holdings in the
corporation during that month. The
Commission has interpreted this provision to
require a report only if the stockholder
held more than 10% of the corporation's
shares at some time during the month.7
Thus, a 10% owner who, like Emerson, sells
down to 9.96% one month and disposes of the
remainder the following month, would
presumably be exempt from the reporting
requirement and hence from § 16(b) under the
SEC's own rules, without regard to whether
he acquired the stock 'voluntarily.'
But the SEC's argument would
fail even if it were not contradicted by the
Commission's own previous construction of
the Act. As we said in Blau v. Lehman,
Page 427
368 U.S. 403, 411, 82 S.Ct. 451, 456, 7
L.Ed.2d 403, one 'may agree that . . . the
Commission present(s) persuasive policy
arguments that the Act should be broadened .
. . to prevent 'the unfair use of
information' more effectively than can be
accomplished by leaving the Act so as to
require forfeiture of profits only by those
specifically designated by Congress to
suffer those losses.' But we are not free to
adopt a construction that not only strains,
but flatly contradicts, the words of the
statute.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Mr. Justice POWELL and Mr.
Justice REHNQUIST took no part in the
consideration or decision of this case.
Mr. Justice DOUGLAS, with whom
Mr. Justice BRENNAN and Mr. Justice WHITE
concur, dissenting.
On June 16, 1967, Emerson
Electric Co., in an attempt to wrest control
from the incumbent management, acquired more
than 10% of the outstanding common stock of
Dodge Manufacturing Co. Dodge successfully
resisted the take-over bid by means of a
defensive merger with petitioner, Reliance
Electric Co. Emerson then sold the shares it
had accumulated, within six months of their
purchase, for a profit exceeding $900,000.
Because this sale purportedly
comprised two 'independent' transactions,
the first of which reduced Emerson's
holdings to 9.96% of the outstanding Dodge
common stock, the Court today holds that the
profit from the second transaction is beyond
the contemplation of § 16(b) of the
Securities Exchange Act.1a So
Emerson
Page 428
need not account to the corporation for
these gains. In my view, this result is a
mutilation of the Act, contrary to its broad
remedial purpose, inconsistent with the
flexibility required in the interpretation
of securities legislation, and not required
by the language of the statute itself.
I
Section 16(b) is a
'prophylactic' rule,
Blau v. Lehman,
368 U.S. 403, 413, 82 S.Ct.
451, 556, 7 L.Ed.2d 403, whose wholesome
purpose is to control the insiders whose
access to confidential information gives
them unfair advantage in the trading of
their corporation's securities.2a
Page 429
The congressional
investigations which led to the enactment of
the Securities Exchange Act unearthed
convincing evidence that disregard by
corporate insiders of their fiduciary
positions was widespread and pervasive.3a
Indeed,
'the flagrant betrayal of their
fiduciary duties by directors and officers
of corporations who used their positions of
trust and the confidential information which
came to them in such positions, to aid them
in their market activities,'
Page 430
was reported by the Senate
subcommittee charged with the investigation
to be '(a)mong the most vicious practices
unearthed at the hearings.' S.Rep.No. 1455,
73d Cong., 2d Sess., 55 (1934). The
subcommittee did not limit its attack to
directors and officers.
'Closely allied to this type of
abuse was the unscrupulous employment of
inside information by large stockholders
who, while not directors and officers,
exercised sufficient control over the
destinies of their companies to enable them
to acquire and profit by information not
available to others.' Ibid.
Despite its flagrantly
inequitable character, the most respected
pillars of the business and financial
communities considered windfall profits from
'surething' speculation in their own
company's stock to be one of the usual
emoluments of their position. Cook &
Feldman, Insider Trading Under the
Securities Eschange Act, 66 Harv.L.Rev. 385,
386 (1953); 10 SEC Ann.Rep. 50 (1944). These
abuses were perpetrated by such ostensibly
reliable men and institutions as Richard
Whitney, President of the New York Stock
Exchange,4a Albert H. Wiggin and
the Chase National Bank, of which he was the
chief executive officer,5a and
Charles E. Mitchell and the National City
Bank, of which he was Chairman of the Board.6a
Section 16(b) was drafted to
combat these 'predatory operations,'
S.Rep.No. 1455, supra, at 68, by removing
all possibility of profit from those
short-swing insider trades occurring within
the statutory period of six
Page 431
months.7a The statute is
written broadly, and the liability it
imposes is strict. Profits are forfeit
without proof of an insider's intent to gain
from inside information, and without proof
that the insider was even privy to such
information.8a
Feder v. Martin Marietta Corp., 406 F.2d
260, 262 (CA2).
II
Today, however, in the guise of
an 'objective' approach, the Court
undermines the statute. By the simple
expedient of dividing what would ordinarily
be a single transaction into two partsboth
of which could be performed on the same day,
so far as it appears from the Court's
opiniona more-than-10% owner may reap
windfall profits on 10% of his corporation's
outstanding stock. This result, "plainly at
variance with the policy of the legislation
as a whole," United States v. American
Page 432
Trucking Assns., 310 U.S. 534, 543, 60
S.Ct. 1059, 1064, 84 L.Ed. 1345, is said to
be required because Emerson, owning only
9.96%, was not a 'beneficial owner' of more
than 10% within the meaning of § 16(b) 'at
the time of' the disposition of this block
of Dodge stock.
If § 16(b) is to have the
'optimum prophylactic effect' which its
architects intended, insiders must not be
permitted so easily to circumvent its broad
mandate. We should hold that there was only
one salea plan of distribution conceived
'at the time' Emerson owned 13.2% of the
Dodge stock, and implemented within six
months of a matching purchase. Moreover, in
the spirit of the Act we should presume that
any such 'split-sale' by a more-than-10%
owner was part of a single plan of
disposition for purposes of § 16(b)
liability.
This construction of 'the
sequence of relevant transactions,'
Bershad v. McDonough, 428 F.2d 693, 697
(CA7), is not foreclosed by any language in
the statute. The statutory definitions of
such terms as 'purchase,' 'sale,'
'beneficial owner,' 'insider,' and 'at the
time of' are not, as one might infer from
the Court's opinion, objectively defined
words with precise meanings.
'Whatever the terms 'purchase'
and 'sale' may mean in other contexts,' they
should be construed in a manner which will
effectuate the purposes of the specific
section of the (Securities Exchange) Act in
which they are used.
SEC v. National Securities, Inc., 393 U.S.
453, 467, 89 S.Ct. 564, 572, 21 L.Ed.2d 668.'
Id., at 696.
Mr. Justice Stewart, while on
the Court of Appeals, explained the manner
appropriate for the construction of the
statutory definitions in the context of §
16(b):
'Every transaction which can
reasonably be defined as a purchase will be
so defined, if the transaction is of a kind
which can possibly lend itself to the
speculation encompassed by Section 16(b).'
Ferraiolo v. Newman,
259 F.2d 342, 345
(CA6).
Page 433
Applying this salutary approach
toward the statutory definitions, the courts
have reasoned that, because of the
opportunities for abuse inhering in his
position, a director must account both for
purchases made shortly before his
appointment,
Adler v. Klawans, 267 F.2d 840 (CA2),
and for sales made shortly after his
resignation, Feder v. Martin Marietta Corp.,
supra, 'Options,' which played such a large
role in the manipulative practices disclosed
during the 1930's,9a are not
ordinarily thought to be 'purchases' or
'sales' of the underlying commodity; yet,
because of the opportunity for abuse
inherent in the device, courts have held
that an option can be a 'sale,' when
granted, within the meaning of § 16(b).
Bershad v. McDonough, supra. But, in order
to bring the underlying transaction within
the six-month limitation of § 16(b), an
option was also held to be a 'purchase' when
exercised.
Booth v. Varian Associates, 334 F.2d 1
(CA1). Similarly, where there was an
opportunity for the abuse of inside
information, a conversion of debentures into
common stock was held to be a 'sale';
Park & Tilford v. Schulte,
160 F.2d 984
(CA2); but where there was no such
opportunity, a similar conversion was held
not to be
Blau v. Lamb,
363 F.2d 507 (CA2).
The common thread running
through the decisions is that whether we
approach the problem of this case as a
question of 'beneficial ownership' at the
time of the second transaction, or as a
question whether the two transactions were
one 'sale,' it 'is not in any event
primarily a semantic one, but must be
resolved in the light of the legislative
purposeto curb short swing speculation by
insiders.' Ferraiolo v. Newman, supra, 259
F.2d, at 344.
Until today, the federal courts
have been almost universally faithful to
this philosophy, 'even departing where
necessary from the literal statutory
language.'
Page 434
Feder v. Martin Marietta Corp., supra,
406 F.2d, at 262. Thus, a tender offer,
although it may justifiably be described as
a series of discrete purchases, has been
treated as a single purchase.
Abrams v. Occidental Petroleum, 323 F.Supp.
570, 579 (SDNY), rev'd on other grounds,
450 F.2d 157 (CA2). And, in order to prevent
a construction of the statute whereby
'it would be possible for a
person to purchase a large block of stock,
sell it out until his ownership was reduced
to less than 10%, and then repeat the
process, ad infinitum,'
the phrase 'at the time of the
purchase and sale,' on which the Court
places such heavy reliance, was defined to
mean 'simultaneously with' purchase, and
'just prior to' sale.
Stella v. Graham-Paige Motors, 104 F.Supp.
957, 959 (SDNY). As one commentator
noted, this holding
'necessitates a logical
inconsistency insofar as the phrase 'at the
time of purchase and sale' is treated as
meaning the moment after purchase and the
moment before sale.' Recent Developments, 57
Col.L.Rev. 287, 289.
Yet, as in the present case,
'the discrepancy seems slight in view of the
broader statutory policies involved.' Ibid.
Thus, should the broadly
remedial statutory purpose of § 16(b)
require it, the literal language of the
statute would not preclude an analysis in
which the two transactions herein at issue
are treated as part of a single 'sale.'
III
The potential for abuse of
inside information in the present case is
self-evident. Equally obvious is the fact
Page 435
that the modern-day insider is no less
prone than his counterpart of a generation
ago to succumb to the lure of insider
trading where windfall profits are in the
offing. Indeed, in a survey of 'reputable'
businessmen, 42% of those responding
indicated they would themselves trade on
inside information, and 61% believed that
the 'average' executive would do likewise.10a
Thus, it would appear both that § 16(b) was
directed at such conduct as is herein at
issue and that the protection § 16(b)
affords is as necessary today as it was when
the statute was enacted.
Despite the fact that the
decision below strikes at the vitals of the
statute, the Court says it must be affirmed
because to treat 'two sales as one upon
proof of a pre-existing intent by the
seller' detracts from the 'mechanical
quality' of the statute and is 'scarcely in
harmony with the congressional design of
predicating liability upon an 'objective
measure of proof." Ante, at 425.
This 'mechanical quality,'
however, is illusory.
'There is no rule so
'objective' ('automatic' would be a better
word) that it does not require some mental
effort in applying it on the part of the
person or persons entrusted by law with its
application.' Blau v. Lamb, supra,
363 F.2d, at 520.
Thus, the deterrent value of §
16(b) depends not so
Page 436
much on its vaunted 'objectivity' as on
its 'thoroughgoing' qualities.
'We must suppose that the
statute was intended to be thoroughgoing, to
squeeze all possible profits out of stock
transactions, and thus to establish a
standard so high as to prevent any conflict
between the selfish interest of a fiduciary
officer, director, or stockholder and the
faithful performance of his duty.'
Smolowe v. Delendo Corp., 136 F.2d 231, 239
(CA2).
Insiders have come to recognize
that 'in order not to defeat (§ 16(b)'s)
avowed objective,' federal courts will
resolve 'all doubts and ambiguities against
insiders.' Blau v. Oppenheim, D.C., 250
F.Supp. 881, 884885.
Moreover, courts have not
shirked this responsibility simply because,
as here, such a resolution may require a
factual inquiry. In Blau v. Lehman, supra,
this Court said that on an appropriate
factual showing, an investment banking firm
might be forced to disgorge profits made
from short-swing trades in the stock of a
corporation on whose board a partner of the
firm was 'deputized' to sit. Id., 368 U.S.,
at 410, 82 S.Ct., at 455, 7 L.Ed.2d 403.
Colby v. Klune, 178 F.2d 872 (CA2),
cited by the majority, the court permitted a
factual inquiry into the possibility that an
individual might be a 'de facto' officer or
director, although not formally labeled as
such. Virtually all courts faced with §
16(b) problems now inquire into the
opportunity for abuse inherent in a
particular type of transaction, in order to
see if applying the statute would serve its
purposes. See, e.g., Bershad v. McDonough,
supra;
Blau v. Max Factor & Co., 342 F.2d 304
(CA9); Booth v. Varian Associates, supra;
Ferraiolo v. Newman, supra. And, even under
the narrow approach of the majority, I
presume it would still be open, in cases
like this one, to inquire whether the
ostensibly separate sales are 'legally
Page 437
tied'.11a It follows that the
necessity of a factual inquiry is no bar to
the application of the statute to the
present case.
It is beyond question, of
course, that a prime concern of the statute
was that a requirement of positive proof of
an insider's 'intent' would render the
statute ineffective. Insofar as the District
Court's approach appears to place the burden
on the plaintiff to demonstrate the
existence of a 'plan of distribution,' it is
justifiably open to criticism. The broad
sweep of § 16(b) requires that a minimal
burden be placed on putative plaintiffs.
But this goalelimination of
proof problemsis subsidiary to the
statute's main aimcurbing insider
speculation. Whatever 'mechanical quality'
the statute possesses, it was intended to
ease the plaintiff's burden, not to insulate
the insider's profits.
Thus, we should not conclude,
as does the majority, that there is no
enforceable way to combat the potential
Page 438
for sharp practices which inheres in the
'splitsale' scheme.
'(T)he 'objective' or 'rule of
thumb' approach need not compel a court to
wink at the substantial effects of a
transaction which is rife with potential
sharp practices in order to preserve the
easy application of the short-swing
provisions under Section 16(b). Certainly
the interest of simple application of the
prohibitions of Section 16(b) does not carry
so far as to facilitate evasion of that
provision's function by formalistic
devices.' Bershad v. McDonough, supra,
428 F.2d, at 697 n. 5.
A series of sales, spaced close
together, is more than likely part of a
single plan of disposition. Plain common
sense would indicate that Emerson's conduct
in the present case had probably been
planned, even if there were no confirmation
in the form of an admission. It is
statistically probable that any series of
sales made by a benefical owner of more than
10%, within six months, in which he disposes
of a major part of his holdings, would be
similarly connected.
We, therefore, should construe
the statute as allowing a rebuttable
presumption that any such series of
dispositive transactions will be deemed to
be part of a single plan of disposition, and
will be treated as a single 'sale' for the
purposes of § 16(b).12a Because
the burden
Page 439
would be on the defendant, not the
plaintiff, such a rule would operate with
virtually the same less-than-perfectly
automatic efficiency that the statute now
does, and it would comport far more closely
with the statute's broad, remedial sweep
than does the approach taken by the Court.
Such a rule would not,
moreover, import questions of 'intent' into
the statutory scheme. Any factual inquiry
would involve only on objective analysis of
the circumstances of the various
dispositions in the series, applying the
'various tests' established by the cases 'to
determine whether a transaction, objectively
defined, falls within or without the terms
of the statute.' Ante, at 424, n. 4.
Page 440
Only if a beneficial owner
carried an affirmative burden of proofthat
his series of dispositive transactions was
not of a type that afforded him an
opportunity for speculative abuse of his
position as an insidershould we say that he
was not such a beneficial owner 'at the time
of . . . sale.'13a
IV
The Court suggests two
additional factors militating against
Emerson's liability under § 16(b). First,
the Court implies that it is contrary to the
SEC's own rules. This argument rests on the
power given to the SEC by § 16(b) to exempt
from its scope those transactions that are
'not comprehended within the purpose' of the
section. Pursuant to this authority, the SEC
has promulgated Rule 16a10, providing that
transactions not required to be reported
under § 16(a) are exempt from § 16(b) as
well.
The SEC's reporting
requirements are contained in 'Form 4.'
Until recently, this Form required
insidersofficers, directors, and
more-than-10% ownersonly to report
transactions occurring in a calendar month
in which they met the formal requirements to
be denominated such an insider. Emerson sold
down to 9.96% in August, then sold out in
September. Presumably, it did not have to
report the September sale on Form 4, and
thus, by operation of Rule 16a 10, the
September sale is argued to be exempt from
the operations of § 16(b) as well.
Page 441
Inasmuch as the SEC's power to
promulgate such a rule is not 'a matter
solely within the expertise of the SEC and
therefore beyond the scope of judicial
review,'
Greene v. Dietz, 247 F.2d 689, 692
(CA2), this argument loses substantially all
its force after Feder v. Martin Marietta
Corp., supra. There, the court held, in the
face of the identical argument that Rule
16a10 was invalid, insofar as it operated
through Form 4 to exempt transactions by
ex-directors from liability under § 16(b).
The court reasoned that the limitation of
the reporting requirement to the calendar
month in which a transaction occurred was
'an arbitrary . . . (and) unnecessary
loophole in the effective operation of the
statutory scheme,' id.,
406 F.2d, at 269,
because it required reporting of some
transactions 30 days after an ex-director's
resignation, but insulated others taking
place the very next day.
Form 4 did, however, extend §
16(b) liability to at least some
transactions occurring after resignation.
'Therefore, inasmuch as Form 4,
a valid exercise of the SEC's power, has
already extended § 16(b) to cover, in part,
an ex-director's activities, a less
arbitrarily defined reporting requirement
for ex-directors is but a logical extension
of § 16(b) coverage, would be a coverage in
line with the congressional aims, and would
afford greater assurance that the lawmakers'
intent will be effectuated.' Ibid.14a
This analysis is equally
applicable to the reporting requirements of
ex-10% owners.
Page 442
Second, the Court analogizes
Emerson's 'plan' to a sale 'conceived'
during the six-month period but not made
until after the expiration of the statutory
limitation. The Court incorrectly assumes
that such a sale could not fall within §
16(b). If the 'conception' were sufficiently
concrete to be construed as a 'contract to
sell,' or an 'option,' there would indeed be
liability. Cf. Bershad v. McDonough, supra.
In any event, the analogy fails because the
purposes of the six-month rule are different
from the purpose of the 10% rule.
The six-month limitation is
based on Congress' estimation that beyond
this time period, normal market fluctuations
sufficiently deter attempts to trade on
inside information. Blau v. Max Factor, &
Co., supra, 342 F.2d, at 308. Thus, it is
consistent with the statutory scheme to
permit an insider to 'plan' a sale within
the six-month period that will not take
place until six months have passed from a
matching purchase.
But the 10% rule is based upon
a conclusive statutory presumption that
ownership of this quantity of stock suffices
to provide access to inside information.
Newmark v. RKO General, Inc.,
425 F.2d 348
(CA2). The rationale of the six-month rule
implies that such information will be
presumed to be useful during that length of
time. It follows that all sales by a
more-than-10% owner within the six-month
period carry the presumption of a taint,
even if a prior transaction within the
period has reduced the beneficial ownership
to 10% or below.
V
In sum, neither the statutory
language nor the purposes articulated by the
majority justify the result reached today.
Rather than deprive § 16(b) of vitality in
the course of a vain search for a
nonexistent purity of operation, we should
reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals
and remand the case for further proceedings.
1 Section 16(b) provides:
'For the purpose of preventing the unfair
use of information which may have been
obtained by such beneficial owner, director,
or officer by reason of his relationship to
the issuer, any profit realized by him from
any purchase and sale, or any sale and
purchase, of any equity security of such
issuer (other than an exempted security)
within any period of less than six months .
. . shall inure to and be recoverable by the
issuer, irrespective of any intention on the
part of such beneficial owner, director, or
officer in entering into such transaction of
holding the security purchased or of not
repurchasing the security sold for a period
exceeding six months . . . This subsection
shall not be construed to cover any
transaction where such beneficial owner was
not such both at the time of the purchase
and sale, or the sale and purchase, of the
security involved, or any transaction or
transactions which the Commission by rules
and regulations may exempt as not
comprehended within the purpose of this
subsection.' 15 U.S.C. § 78p(b).
The term 'such beneficial owner' refers
to one who owns 'more than 10 per centum of
any class of any equity security (other than
an exempted security) which is registered
pursuant to section (12) of this title.'
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, § 16(a), 15
U.S.C. § 78p(a).
2 The Court of Appeals for
the Second Circuit has held that an exchange
of shares in one corporation for those of
another pursuant to a merger agreement
constitutes a 'sale' within the meaning of §
16(b).
Newmark v. RKO General, Inc., 425 F.2d 348,
354.
3 '(A) person who owns 15
percent and wants to sell down to 5 percent
should sell 5-plus percent in one
transaction and then, after he becomes a
holder of slightly less than 10 percent,
sell out the remainder.' 2 L. Loss,
Securities Regulation 1060 (2d ed. 1961).
'(T)he intention of the language was to
exclude the second sale in a case where 10%
is purchased, 5% sold within three months
and the remaining 5% a month later. This
latter construction of the Act is, it is
believed, the only safe one to rely upon.'
Seligman, Problems Under the Securities
Exchange Act, 21 Va.L.Rev. 1, 20 (1934).
4 See, e.g.,
Adler v. Klawans, 267 F.2d 840 (one who
is a director at the time of sale need not
also have been a director at the time of
purchase). In interpreting the terms
'purchase' and 'sale,' courts have properly
asked whether the particular type of
transaction involved is one that gives rise
to speculative abuse. See, e.g.,
Bershad v. McDonough,
428 F.2d 693
(granting of an option to purchase
constitutes a 'sale'). And in deciding
whether an investor is an 'officer' or
'director' within the meaning of § 16(b),
courts have allowed proof that the investor
performed the functions of an officer or
director even though not formally
denominated as such.
Colby v. Klune, 178 F.2d 872, 873;
Feder v. Martin Marietta Corp.,
406 F.2d 260, 262263. The various tests employed
in these cases are used to determine whether
a transaction, objectively defined, falls
within or without the terms of the statute.
In no case is liability predicated upon
'considerations of intent, lack of motive,
or improper conduct' that are irrelevant in
§ 16(b) suits.
Blau v. Oppenheim, 250 F.Supp. 881, 887.
5 That exchange was as
follows:
'Senator Carey. Suppose this stock passed
to an estate, and the estate had to raise
money?
'Mr. Corcoran. I do not think, in that
case, sir, the statute would apply.
'Senator Kean. Why not?
'Senator Carey. The estate is the
beneficiary.
'Mr. Corcoran. I do not believe it would.
Certainly the intention was that it should
not apply to that sort of a situation.'
Hearings on Stock Exchange Practices before
the Senate Committee on Banking and Currency
pursuant to S.Res. 84, 56, and 97, 73d
Cong., 1st and 2d Sess., pt. 15, p. 6558. It
was sometime after this exchange that the
bill was revised to add the exemptive
provision.
6 SEC Rule 16a10, 17 C.F.R.
§ 240.16a10.
7 Form 4 Securities Exchange
Act Release No. 6487 (Mar. 9, 1961).
1a 15 U.S.C. § 78p(b):
'For the purpose of preventing the unfair
use of information which may have been
obtained by such beneficial owner, director,
or officer by reason of his relationship to
the issuer, any profit realized by him from
any purchase and sale, or any sale and
purchase, of any equity security of such
issuer (other than an exempted security)
within any period of less than six months,
unless such security was acquired in good
faith in connection with a debt previously
contracted, shall inure to and be
recoverable by the issuer, irrespective of
any intention on the part of such beneficial
owner, director, or officer in entering into
such transaction of holding the security
purchased or of not repurchasing the
security sold for a period exceeding six
months. Suit to recover such profit may be
instituted at law or in equity in any court
of competent jurisdiction by the issuer, or
by the owner of any security of the issuer
in the name and in behalf of the issuer if
the issuer shall fail or refuse to bring
such suit within sixty days after request or
shall fail diligently to prosecute the same
thereafter; but no such suit shall be
brought more than two years after the date
such profit was realized. This subsection
shall not be construed to cover any
transaction where such beneficial owner was
not such both at the time of the purchase
and sale, or the sale and purchase, of the
security involved, or any transaction or
transactions which the Commission by rules
and regulations may exempt as not
comprehended within the purpose of this
subsection.'
2a 'Next comes the everlasting
problem of protecting the fellow on the
outside from the insider . . . That is, the
problem of protecting the stockholderand
every fellow who buys into the market is a
stockholderwho does not know as much about
the company as the fellow on the inside. . .
. (T) he poor little fellow does not know
what he is getting into, and it is just as
important in preventing unwarranted and
destructive speculation, to have the fellow
on the outside protected from the fellow on
the inside who is an officer or director of
the corporation or a pool with inside
information, as it is not to let the little
fellow buy too much stock by setting the
margins too low.' Hearings on H.R. 7852 and
H.R. 8720 before the House Committee on
Interstate and Foreign Commerce, 73d Cong.,
2d Sess., 82 (1934) (testimony of Thomas
Corcoran).
3a One particularly glaring
example concerned two brothers whose
ownership of a little over 10% of a
company's stock gave them a controlling
interest. Just before the company voted to
omit a dividend the brothers disposed of
their holdings for about $16,000,000. When
news of the dividend omission became public
a short time later, they repurchased an
equivalent amount of stock for about
$7,000,000, showing a profit of some
$9,000,000 on the short-swing deal.
S.Rep.No.792, 73d Cong., 2d Sess., 9 (1934).
Much of the insider abuse involved
participation in so-called 'pools,' which
were dummy accounts in a corporation's stock
established to buy and sell, at the same
time, and at a frenetic pace. By so churning
the account, it was often possible to
engineer a false impression of immense
activity in the stock, and to arrange
spectacular, but artificial, price rises.
One pool bought and sold almost 1,500,000
shares of RCA stock in a single seven-day
period in 1929, at a net profit to its
members of almost $5,000,000. S.Rep.No.1455,
73d Cong., 2d Sess., 3233, 47 (1934).
Another famous pool involved the stock of
the American Commercial Alcohol Co. During
the summer of 1933, eight insiders and their
associates reaped a profit of $300,000 on an
investment of $62,000. A third pool, in the
stock of the Fox Film Corporation, made
$2,000,000 in fave months. This pool was
notable for the extent to which large
stockholders participated. Id., at 5568.
During 1929, over 100 stocks listed on the
New York Stock Exchange were subjects of
pools. Id., at 32. Insider participation in
these pools was ubiquitous. See generally F.
Pecora, Wall Street Under Oath (1939).
4a See SEC, Report on
Investigation in the Matter of Richard
Whitney Pursuant to Section 21(a) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Nov. 1,
1938).
5a See Pecora, supra, n. 3, at
131188.
6a Id., at 70130.
7a The six-month period is, as
Mr. Corcoran said during the hearings on the
bill, a 'crude rule of thumb,' Hearings on
Stock Exchange Practices before the Senate
Committee on Banking and Currency pursuant
to S.Res. 84, 56, and 97, 73d Cong., 1st and
2d Sess., pt. 15, p. 6557. It represents a
balance struck between the need to deter
short-swings based on inside information and
a desire to avoid unduly inhibiting
long-term corporate investment. S.Rep.No.
792, 73d Cong., 2d Sess., 6. Six months was
hit upon, presumably, on the view that
'where the insider is obliged to hold the
original security . . . for longer than six
months . . . market fluctuations are likely
to wipe out his profits.' Comment, 117
U.Pa.L.Rev. 1034, 1054 (1969).
8a 'This approach maximized
the ability of the rule to eradicate
speculative abuses by reducing difficulties
in proof. Such arbitrary and sweeping
coverage was deemed necessary to insure the
optimum prophylactic effect.'
Bershad v. McDonough, 428 F.2d 693, 696
(CA7).
It is somewhat anomalous that the
majority relies on a feature of the
statutory scheme designed to broaden its
scope in order to insulate from the
operation of the statute a device by which
the goals of the statute can be largely
frustrated.
9a See Twentieth Century Fund,
Stock Market Control 114118 (1934).
10a Baumhart, How Ethical Are
Businessmen?, Harv.Bus.Rev., July-Aug. 1961,
p. 6, at 16. The survey had posed the
following hypothetical:
'What would you do if . . . as a director
of a large corporation, you learned at a
board meeting of an impending merger with a
smaller company? Suppose this company has
had an unprofitable year, and its stock is
selling at a price so low that you are
certain it will rise when news of the merger
becomes public knowledge.' Id., at 7.
11a Such an inquiry might well
be extensive. The following commentary,
aimed at the Court of Appeals decision
below, applies with equal force to the
majority's approach:
'Even if the statute could be construed
as allowing an exception for a severed sale
of the final 9.9 percent of stock otherwise
within section 16(b), when are sales to be
found separate and independent? The Emerson
decision provides no guidelines. All it says
is: 'The factual question as to whether a
particular sale is a separate and
independent sale is a matter for decision
under the peculiar facts of the particular
case. In this regard each case must stand or
fall on its own facts.' What facts? What of
separate sales to the same vendee? How
separate must the parties bedifferent
companies, different corporations, different
entities? Must there be an interval between
the sales? How long? If Emerson is to be
followed, would the question be not so much
how discreet (sic) the sales are as how
discreet counsel has been? The inquiry seems
to lead away from the legislative intent
that all potential violators be held to the
full sanctions of section 16(b).' Recent
Decisions, 5 Ga.L.Rev. 584, 590 (footnote
omitted).
12a Such a presumption is not
a novel suggestion in the interpretation of
securities legislation. The Securities Act
of 1933, 48 Stat. 74, as amended, 15 U.S.C.
§ 77a et seq., for example, requires that
public securities offerings be registered
with the SEC. § 5, 15 U.S.C. § 77e. But
registration is not required of stock sold
in a so-called 'private placement.' § 4(2),
15 U.S.C. § 77d(2). The purchaser of such
stock, however, cannot avoid the
registration requirements when he resells it
unless his original purchase was not made
'with a view to . . . distribution.' §
2(11), 15 U.S.C. § 77b(11). The difficulties
inherent in determining this elusive 'view,'
see 1 L. Loss,
Securities Regulation 665687 (2d ed.
1961), have prompted the suggestion that
there be a rebuttable presumption that a
sale made within two years of purchase
indicates the original purchase was made
with a view to distribution. 4 id., at 2652
(Supplement to 2d ed. 1969); see also The
Wheat Report, Disclosure to Investors 165 (CCH
1969).
A similar rebuttable presumption applies
in the case of a 'controlling person,' (as
defined in Rule 405, 17 CFR § 230.405(f)).
Such a person need not register his sales
under the 1933 Act if in any six-month
period they amount to no more than 1% of the
issuer's outstanding stock. Rule 154, 17 CFR
§ 230.154. But, 'if a plan exists to effect
a series of sales during successive 6 months
' periods, such sales cannot be considered
in the category of routine trades but must
be deemed a distribution not exempted by the
rule.' Securities Act Release No. 4818, 31
Fed.Reg. 2545 (1966).
Different policies, of course, underlie
the 1933 and 1934 Acts. Yet, the
above-described provisions of the 1933 Act,
like § 16(b) in the 1934 Act, are aimed at
deterring certain transactions because of
their inherent opportunities for abuse. The
1933 Act presumptions are based on a
judgment that a short-term series of sales
is statistically likely to reflect an
'intent' to engage in a public distribution
without registration. The presumption I
would apply in the case of § 16(b) is
justified by a similar statistical
likelihood that a series of dispositive
transactions, like Emerson's, undertaken
within six months of a matching purchase,
was pursuant to a 'plan of disposition.'
13a It is conceded that
Emerson could not meet such a burden in the
present case. In general, an insider could
perhaps defeat the presumption of a plan by
showing 'changed circumstances' similar to
those required to avoid registration
requirements under the private offering
exemption of the 1933 Act. See 1 Loss,
Securities Regulation, supra, at 665673; 4
id., at 26462654 (1969).
14a In response to the Feder
case, the SEC amended its rules to require
disclosure of all transactions by directors
and officers within six months prior to
their appointment and for six months after
their resignations. Rule 16a1, 17 CFR §
240.16a 1(d), (e) (as amended, Sept. 30,
1969). Thus, the restrictive reporting
requirements relied upon by the majority
apply only to beneficial owners, itself an
arbitrary distinction. |