|
Page 222
445 U.S. 222
100 S.Ct. 1108 63 L.Ed.2d 348 Vincent F. CHIARELLA, Petitioner,
v.
UNITED STATES.
No. 78-1202.
Argued Nov. 5, 1979.
Decided March 18, 1980.
Syllabus
Section 10(b) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 prohibits the use "in
connection with the purchase or sale of any
security . . . [of] any manipulative or
deceptive device or contrivance in
contravention of such rules and regulations
as the [Securities and Exchange] Commission
may prescribe." Rule 10b-5 of the Securities
and Exchange Commission (SEC), promulgated
under § 10(b), makes it unlawful for any
person to "employ any device, scheme, or
artifice to defraud," or to "engage in any
act, practice, or course of business which
operates or would operate as a fraud or
deceit upon any person, in connection with
the purchase or sale of any security."
Petitioner, who was employed by a financial
printer that had been engaged by certain
corporations to print corporate takeover
bids, deduced the names of the target
companies from information contained in
documents delivered to the printer by the
acquiring companies and, without disclosing
his knowledge, purchased stock in the target
companies and sold the shares immediately
after the takeover attempts were made
public. After the SEC began an investigation
of his trading activities, petitioner
entered into a consent decree with the SEC
in which he agreed to return his profits to
the sellers of the shares. Thereafter,
petitioner was indicted and convicted for
violating § 10(b) of the Act and SEC Rule
10b-5. The District Court's charge permitted
the jury to convict the petitioner if it
found that he willfully failed to inform
sellers of target company securities that he
knew of a forthcoming takeover bid that
would make their shares more valuable.
Petitioner's conviction was affirmed by the
Court of Appeals.
Held: Petitioner's
conduct did not constitute a violation of §
10(b), and hence his conviction was
improper. Pp. 225-237.
(a) Administrative and judicial
interpretations have established that
silence in connection with the purchase or
sale of securities may operate as a fraud
actionable under § 10(b) despite the absence
of statutory language or legislative history
specifically addressing the legality of
nondisclosure. However, such liability is
premised upon a duty to disclose (such as
that of a corporate insider to shareholders
of his cor-
Page 223
poration) arising from a relationship of
trust and confidence between parties to a
transaction. Pp. 225-230.
(b) Here, petitioner had no
affirmative duty to disclose the information
as to the plans of the acquiring companies.
He was not a corporate insider, and he
received no confidential information from
the target companies. Nor could any duty
arise from petitioner's relationship with
the sellers of the target companies'
securities, for he had no prior dealings
with them, was not their agent, was not a
fiduciary, and was not a person in whom the
sellers had placed their trust and
confidence. A duty to disclose under § 10(b)
does not arise from the mere possession of
nonpublic market information. Pp. 231-235.
(c) This Court need not decide
whether petitioner's conviction can be
supported on the alternative theory that he
breached a duty to the acquiring
corporation, since such theory was not
submitted to the jury. The jury instructions
demonstrate that petitioner was convicted
merely because of his failure to disclose
material, nonpublic information to sellers
from whom he bought the stock of target
corporations. The conviction cannot be
affirmed on the basis of a theory not
presented to the jury. Pp. 235-237.
588 F.2d 1358, reversed.
Stanley S. Arkin, New York
City, for petitioner.
Stephen M. Shapiro, Washington,
D. C., for respondent.
Page 224
Mr. Justice POWELL delivered
the opinion of the Court.
The question in this case is
whether a person who learns from the
confidential documents of one corporation
that it is planning an attempt to secure
control of a second corporation violates §
10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
if he fails to disclose the impending
takeover before trading in the target
company's securities.
I
Petitioner is a printer by
trade. In 1975 and 1976, he worked as a
"markup man" in the New York composing room
of Pandick Press, a financial printer. Among
documents that petitioner handled were five
announcements of corporate takeover bids.
When these documents were delivered to the
printer, the identities of the acquiring and
target corporations were concealed by blank
spaces or false names. The true names were
sent to the printer on the night of the
final printing.
The petitioner, however, was
able to deduce the names of the target
companies before the final printing from
other information contained in the
documents. Without disclosing his knowledge,
petitioner purchased stock in the target
companies and sold the shares immediately
after the takeover attempts were made
public.1 By this method,
petitioner realized a gain of slightly more
than $30,000 in the course of 14 months.
Subsequently, the Securities and Exchange
Commission (Commission or SEC) began an
investigation of his trading activities. In
May 1977, petitioner entered into a consent
decree with the Commission in which he
agreed to return his profits to the sellers
of the shares.2 On the same day,
he was discharged by Pandick Press.
Page 225
In January 1978, petitioner was
indicted on 17 counts of violating § 10(b)
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (1934
Act) and SEC Rule 10b-5.3 After
petitioner unsuccessfully moved to dismiss
the indictment,4 he was brought
to trial and convicted on all counts.
The Court of Appeals for the
Second Circuit affirmed petitioner's
conviction.
588 F.2d 1358 (1978). We granted
certiorari, 441 U.S. 942, 99 S.Ct. 2158, 60
L.Ed.2d 1043 (1979), and we now reverse.
II
Section 10(b) of the 1934 Act,
48 Stat. 891, 15 U.S.C. § 78j, prohibits the
use "in connection with the purchase or sale
of any security . . . [of] any manipulative
or deceptive device or contrivance in
contravention of such rules and regulations
as the Commission may prescribe." Pursuant
to this section, the SEC promulgated Rule
10b-5 which provides in pertinent part:5
"It shall be unlawful
for any person, directly or indirectly, by
the use of any means or instrumentality of
interstate commerce, or of the mails or of
any facility of any national securities
exchange,
Page 226
"(a) To employ any
device, scheme, or artifice to defraud, [or]
* * * * *
"(c) To engage in any
act, practice, or course of business which
operates or would operate as a fraud or
deceit upon any person, in connection with
the purchase or sale of any security." 17
CFR § 240.10b-5 (1979).
This case concerns the legal
effect of the petitioner's silence. The
District Court's charge permitted the jury
to convict the petitioner if it found that
he willfully failed to inform sellers of
target company securities that he knew of a
forthcoming takeover bid that would make
their shares more valuable.6 In
order to decide whether silence in such
circumstances violates § 10(b), it is
necessary to review the language and
legislative history of that statute as well
as its interpretation by the Commission and
the federal courts.
Although the starting point of
our inquiry is the language of the statute,
Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder, 425 U.S.
185, 197, 96 S.Ct. 1375, 1382, 47 L.Ed.2d
668 (1976), § 10(b) does not state
whether silence may constitute a
manipulative or deceptive device. Section
10(b) was designed as a catch-all clause to
prevent fraudulent practices.
425 U.S., at 202, 206. But neither the legislative
history nor the statute itself affords
specific guidance for the resolution of this
case. When Rule 10b-5 was promulgated in
1942, the SEC did not discuss the
possibility that failure to provide
information might run afoul of § 10(b).7
The SEC took an important step
in the development of § 10(b) when it held
that a broker-dealer and his firm violated
that section by selling securities on the
basis of undisclosed information obtained
from a director of the issuer corporation
who was also a registered representative of
the brokerage firm. In Cady, Roberts & Co.,
40 S.E.C. 907
Page 227
(1961), the Commission decided that a
corporate insider must abstain from trading
in the shares of his corporation unless he
has first disclosed all material inside
information known to him. The obligation to
disclose or abstain derives from
"[a]n affirmative duty to
disclose material information[, which] has
been traditionally imposed on corporate
'insiders,' particular officers, directors,
or controlling stockholders. We, and the
courts have consistently held that insiders
must disclose material facts which are known
to them by virtue of their position but
which are not known to persons with whom
they deal and which, if known, would affect
their investment judgment." Id., at
911.
The Commission emphasized that
the duty arose from (i) the existence of a
relationship affording access to inside
information intended to be available only
for a corporate purpose, and (ii) the
unfairness of allowing a corporate insider
to take advantage of that information by
trading without disclosure. Id., at
912, and n. 15.8
That the relationship between a
corporate insider and the stockholders of
his corporation gives rise to a disclosure
obligation is not a novel twist of the law.
At common law, misrepresentation made for
the purpose of inducing reliance
Page 228
upon the false statement is fraudulent.
But one who fails to disclose material
information prior to the consummation of a
transaction commits fraud only when he is
under a duty to do so. And the duty to
disclose arises when one party has
information "that the other [party] is
entitled to know because of a fiduciary or
other similar relation of trust and
confidence between them."
9 In
its Cady, Roberts decision, the
Commission recognized a relationship of
trust and confidence between the
shareholders of a corporation and those
insiders who have obtained confidential
information by reason of their position with
that corporation.10 This
relationship gives rise to a duty to
disclose because of the "necessity of
preventing a corporate insider from . . .
tak[ing] unfair advantage of the
Page 229
uninformed minority stockholders."
Speed v. Transamerica Corp., 99 F.Supp.
808, 829 (D.Del.1951).
The federal courts have found
violations of § 10(b) where corporate
insiders used undisclosed information for
their own benefit. E. g., SEC v. Texas
Gulf Sulphur Co.,
401 F.2d 833 (CA2
1968), cert. denied, 404 U.S. 1005, 92 S.Ct.
561, 30 L.Ed.2d 558 (1971). The cases also
have emphasized, in accordance with the
common-law rule, that "[t]he party charged
with failing to disclose market information
must be under a duty to disclose it."
Frigitemp Corp. v. Financial Dynamics Fund,
Inc.,
524 F.2d 275, 282 (CA2 1975).
Accordingly, a purchaser of stock who has no
duty to a prospective seller because he is
neither an insider nor a fiduciary has been
held to have no obligation to reveal
material facts. See General Time Corp. v.
Talley Industries, Inc.,
403 F.2d 159, 164 (CA2 1968), cert. denied, 393 U.S. 1026,
89 S.Ct. 631, 21 L.Ed.2d 570 (1969).11
This Court followed the same
approach
Affiliated Ute Citizens v. United States,
406 U.S. 128, 92 S.Ct. 1456, 31 L.Ed.2d 741
(1972). A group of American Indians
formed a corporation to manage joint assets
derived from tribal holdings. The
corporation issued stock to its Indian
shareholders and designated a local bank as
its transfer agent. Because of the
speculative nature of the corporate assets
and the difficulty of ascertaining the true
value of a share, the corporation requested
the bank to stress to its stockholders the
importance of retaining the stock. Id.,
at 146, 92 S.Ct., at 1468. Two of the bank's
assistant managers aided the shareholders in
disposing of stock which the managers knew
was traded in two separate marketsa primary
market of
Page 230
Indians selling to non-Indians through
the bank and a resale market consisting
entirely of non-Indians. Indian sellers
charged that the assistant managers had
violated § 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 by failing
to inform them of the higher prices
prevailing in the resale market. The Court
recognized that no duty of disclosure would
exist if the bank merely had acted as a
transfer agent. But the bank also had
assumed a duty to act on behalf of the
shareholders, and the Indian sellers had
relied upon its personnel when they sold
their stock.
406 U.S., at 152, 92 S.Ct., at
1471. Because these officers of the bank
were charged with a responsibility to the
shareholders, they could not act as market
makers inducing the Indians to sell their
stock without disclosing the existence of
the more favorable non-Indian market. Id.,
at 152-153, 92 S.Ct., at 1471-1472.
Thus, administrative and
judicial interpretations have established
that silence in connection with the purchase
or sale of securities may operate as a fraud
actionable under § 10(b) despite the absence
of statutory language or legislative history
specifically addressing the legality of
nondisclosure. But such liability is
premised upon a duty to disclose arising
from a relationship of trust and confidence
between parties to a transaction.
Application of a duty to disclose prior to
trading guarantees that corporate insiders,
who have an obligation to place the
shareholder's welfare before their own, will
not benefit personally through fraudulent
use of material, nonpublic information.12
Page 231
III
In this case, the petitioner
was convicted of violating § 10(b) although
he was not a corporate insider and he
received no confidential information from
the target company. Moreover, the "market
information" upon which he relied did not
concern the earning power or operations of
the target company, but only the plans of
the acquiring company.13
Petitioner's use of that information was not
a fraud under § 10(b) unless he was subject
to an affirmative duty to disclose it before
trading. In this case, the jury instructions
failed to specify any such duty. In effect,
the trial court instructed the jury that
petitioner owed a duty to everyone; to all
sellers, indeed, to the market as a whole.
The jury simply was told to decide whether
petitioner used material, nonpublic
information at a time when "he knew other
people trading in the securities market did
not have access to the same information."
Record 677.
The Court of Appeals affirmed
the conviction by holding that "[a]nyone
corporate insider or notwho regularly
receives material nonpublic information may
not use that information to trade in
securities without incurring an affirmative
duty to disclose." 588 F.2d, at 1365
(emphasis in original). Although the court
said that its test would include only
persons who regularly receive material,
nonpublic information, id., at 1366,
its rationale for that limitation is
unrelated to the existence of a duty to
disclose.14 The Court of
Page 232
Appeals, like the trial court, failed to
identify a relationship between petitioner
and the sellers that could give rise to a
duty. Its decision thus rested solely upon
its belief that the federal securities laws
have "created a system providing equal
access to information necessary for reasoned
and intelligent investment decisions." Id.,
at 1362. The use by anyone of material
information not generally available is
fraudulent, this theory suggests, because
such information gives certain buyers or
sellers an unfair advantage over less
informed buyers and sellers.
This reasoning suffers from two
defects. First not every instance of
financial unfairness constitutes fraudulent
activity under § 10(b).
Santa Fe Industries, Inc. v. Green,
430 U.S. 462, 474-477, 97 S.Ct. 1292,
1301-1303, 51 L.Ed.2d 480 (1977).
Second, the element required to make silence
fraudulenta duty to discloseis absent in
this case. No duty could arise from
petitioner's relationship with the sellers
of the target company's securities, for
petitioner had no prior dealings with them.
He was not their agent, he was not a
fiduciary, he was not a person in whom the
sellers had placed their trust and
confidence. He was, in fact, a com-
Page 233
plete stranger who dealt with the sellers
only through impersonal market transactions.
We cannot affirm petitioner's
conviction without recognizing a general
duty between all participants in market
transactions to forgo actions based on
material, nonpublic information. Formulation
of such a broad duty, which departs
radically from the established doctrine that
duty arises from a specific relationship
between two parties, see n. 9, supra,
should not be undertaken absent some
explicit evidence of congressional intent.
As we have seen, no such
evidence emerges from the language or
legislative history of § 10(b). Moreover,
neither the Congress nor the Commission ever
has adopted a parity-of-information rule.
Instead the problems caused by misuse of
market information have been addressed by
detailed and sophisticated regulation that
recognizes when use of market information
may not harm operation of the securities
markets. For example, the Williams Act
15 limits but does not completely
prohibit a tender offeror's purchases of
target corporation stock before public
announcement of the offer. Congress' careful
action in this and other areas
16
contrasts, and
Page 234
is in some tension, with the broad rule
of liability we are asked to adopt in this
case.
Indeed, the theory upon which
the petitioner was convicted is at odds with
the Commission's view of § 10(b) as applied
to activity that has the same effect on
sellers as the petitioner's purchases.
"Warehousing" takes place when a corporation
gives advance notice of its intention to
launch a tender offer to institutional
investors who then are able to purchase
stock in the target company before the
tender offer is made public and the price of
shares rises.17 In this case, as
in warehousing, a buyer of securities
purchases stock in a target corporation on
the basis of market information which is
unknown to the seller. In both of these
situations, the seller's behavior presumably
would be altered if he had the nonpublic
information. Significantly, however, the
Commission has acted to bar warehousing
under its authority to regulate tender
offers
18 after recognizing that
action under § 10(b) would rest on a
"somewhat different theory" than that
previously used to regulate insider trading
as fraudulent activity.19
We see no basis for applying
such a new and different theory of liability
in this case. As we have emphasized before,
the 1934 Act cannot be read " 'more broadly
than its language and the statutory scheme
reasonably permit.' "
Touche Ross & Co. v. Redington, 442
U.S. 560, 578, 99 S.Ct. 2479, 2490, 61
L.Ed.2d 82 (1979), quoting
SEC v. Sloan, 436 U.S. 103, 116, 98
S.Ct. 1702, 1711, 56 L.Ed.2d 148 (1978).
Section 10(b) is aptly
Page 235
described as a catchall provision, but
what it catches must be fraud. When an
allegation of fraud is based upon
nondisclosure, there can be no fraud absent
a duty to speak. We hold that a duty to
disclose under § 10(b) does not arise from
the mere possession of nonpublic market
information. The contrary result is without
support in the legislative history of §
10(b) and would be inconsistent with the
careful plan that Congress has enacted for
regulation of the securities markets. Cf.
Santa Fe Industries, Inc. v. Green,
430 U.S., at 479, 97 S.Ct., at 1304.20
IV
In its brief to this Court, the
United States offers an alternative theory
to support petitioner's conviction. It
argues that petitioner breached a duty to
the acquiring corporation when he acted upon
information that he obtained by virtue of
his position as an employee of a printer
employed by the corporation. The breach of
this duty is said to support a
Page 236
conviction under § 10(b) for fraud
perpetrated upon both the acquiring
corporation and the sellers.
We need not decide whether this
theory has merit for it was not submitted to
the jury. The jury was told, in the language
of Rule 10b-5, that it could convict the
petitioner if it concluded that he either
(i) employed a device, scheme, or artifice
to defraud or (ii) engaged in an act,
practice, or course of business which
operated or would operate as a fraud or
deceit upon any person. Record 681. The
trial judge stated that a "scheme to
defraud" is a plan to obtain money by trick
or deceit and that "a failure by Chiarella
to disclose material, non-public information
in connection with his purchase of stock
would constitute deceit." Id., at
683. Accordingly, the jury was instructed
that the petitioner employed a scheme to
defraud if he "did not disclose . . .
material non-public information in
connection with the purchases of the stock."
Id., at 685-686.
Alternatively, the jury was
instructed that it could convict if
"Chiarella's alleged conduct of having
purchased securities without disclosing
material, nonpublic information would have
or did have the effect of operating as a
fraud upon a seller." Id., at 686.
The judge earlier had stated that fraud
"embraces all the means which human
ingenuity can devise and which are resorted
to by one individual to gain an advantage
over another by false misrepresentation,
suggestions or by suppression of the truth."
Id., at 683.
The jury instructions
demonstrate that petitioner was convicted
merely because of his failure to disclose
material, nonpublic information to sellers
from whom he bought the stock of target
corporations. The jury was not instructed on
the nature or elements of a duty owed by
petitioner to anyone other than the sellers.
Because we cannot affirm a criminal
conviction on the basis of a theory not
presented to the jury,
Rewis v. United States, 401 U.S. 808,
814, 91 S.Ct. 1056, 1060, 28 L.Ed.2d 493
(1971), see Dunn v. United States,
442U.S. 100, 106, 99 S.Ct. 2190, 2194, 60
L.Ed.2d 743 (1979), we will not speculate
upon whether such a duty exists, whether it
has been
Page 237
breached, or whether such a breach
constitutes a violation of § 10(b).21
The judgment of the Court of
Appeals is
Reversed.
Mr. Justice STEVENS,
concurring.
Before liability, civil or
criminal, may be imposed for a Rule 10b-5
violation, it is necessary to identify the
duty that the defendant has breached.
Arguably, when petitioner bought securities
in the open market, he violated (a) a duty
to disclose owed to the sellers from whom he
purchased target company stock and (b) a
duty of silence owed to the acquiring
companies. I agree with the Court's
determination that petitioner owed no duty
of disclosure to the sellers, that his
conviction rested on the erroneous premise
that he did owe them such a duty, and that
the judgment of the Court of Appeals must
therefore be reversed.
Page 238
The Court correctly does not
address the second question: whether the
petitioner's breach of his duty of silencea
duty he unquestionably owed to his employer
and to his employer's customerscould give
rise to criminal liability under Rule 10b-5.
Respectable arguments could be made in
support of either position. On the one hand,
if we assume that petitioner breached a duty
to the acquiring companies that had
entrusted confidential information to his
employers, a legitimate argument could be
made that his actions constituted "a fraud
or a deceit" upon those companies "in
connection with the purchase or sale of any
security."
* On the other hand,
inasmuch as those companies would not be
able to recover damages from petitioner for
violating Rule 10b-5 because they were
neither purchasers nor sellers of target
company securities,
Blue Chip Stamps v. Manor Drug Stores,
421 U.S. 723, 95 S.Ct. 1917, 44 L.Ed.2d 539,
it could also be argued that no actionable
violation of Rule 10b-5 had occurred. I
think the Court wisely leaves the resolution
of this issue for another day.
I write simply to emphasize the
fact that we have not necessarily placed any
stamp of approval on what this petitioner
did, nor have we held that similar actions
must be considered lawful in the future.
Rather, we have merely held that
petitioner's criminal conviction cannot rest
on the theory that he breached a duty he did
not owe.
I join the Court's opinion.
Mr. Justice BRENNAN,
concurring in the judgment.
The Court holds, correctly in
my view, that "a duty to disclose under §
10(b) does not arise from the mere posses-
Page 239
sion, 445 U.S. 239 of nonpublic market
information." Ante, at 235. Prior to
so holding, however, it suggests that no
violation of § 10(b) could be made out
absent a breach of some duty arising out of
a fiduciary relationship between buyer and
seller. I cannot subscribe to that
suggestion. On the contrary, it seems to me
that Part I of THE CHIEF JUSTICE'S dissent,
post, at 239-243, correctly states
the applicable substantive lawa person
violates § 10(b) whenever he improperly
obtains or converts to his own benefit
nonpublic information which he then uses in
connection with the purchase or sale of
securities.
While I agree with Part I of
THE CHIEF JUSTICE'S dissent, I am unable to
agree with Part II. Rather, I concur in the
judgment of the majority because I think it
clear that the legal theory sketched by THE
CHIEF JUSTICE is not the one presented to
the jury. As I read them, the instructions
in effect permitted the jurors to return a
verdict of guilty merely upon a finding of
failure to disclose material, nonpublic
information in connection with the purchase
of stock. I can find no instruction
suggesting that one element of the offense
was the improper conversion or
misappropriation of that nonpublic
information. Ambiguous suggestions in the
indictment and the prosecutor's opening and
closing remarks are no substitute for the
proper instructions. And neither reference
to the harmless-error doctrine nor some
post hoc theory of constructive
stipulation can cure the defect. The simple
fact is that to affirm the conviction
without an adequate instruction would be
tantamount to directing a verdict of guilty,
and that we plainly may not do.
Mr. Chief Justice BURGER,
dissenting.
I believe that the jury
instructions in this case properly charged a
violation of § 10(b) and Rule 10b-5, and I
would affirm the conviction.
I
As a general rule, neither
party to an arm's-length business
transaction has an obligation to disclose
information to the
Page 240
other unless the parties stand in some
confidential or fiduciary relation. See W.
Prosser, Law of Torts § 106 (2d ed. 1955).
This rule permits a businessman to
capitalize on his experience and skill in
securing and evaluating relevant
information; it provides incentive for hard
work, careful analysis, and astute
forecasting. But the policies that underlie
the rule also should limit its scope. In
particular, the rule should give way when an
informational advantage is obtained, not by
superior experience, foresight, or industry,
but by some unlawful means. One commentator
has written:
"[T]he way in which the buyer
acquires the information which he conceals
from the vendor should be a material
circumstance. The information might have
been acquired as the result of his bringing
to bear a superior knowledge, intelligence,
skill or technical judgment; it might have
been acquired by mere chance; or it might
have been acquired by means of some tortious
action on his part. . . . Any time
information is acquired by mere an illegal
act it would seem that there should be a
duty to disclose that information."
Keeton, FraudConcealment and
Non-Disclosure, 15 Texas L.Rev. 1, 25-26
(1936) (emphasis added).
I would read § 10(b) and Rule
10b-5 to encompass and build on this
principle: to mean that a person who has
misappropriated nonpublic information has an
absolute duty to disclose that information
or to refrain from trading.
The language of § 10(b) and of
Rule 10b-5 plainly supports such a reading.
By their terms, these provisions reach
any person engaged in any
fraudulent scheme. This broad language
negates the suggestion that congressional
concern was limited to trading by "corporate
insiders" or to deceptive practices related
to "corporate information."
1a
Just as surely
Page 241
Congress cannot have intended one
standard of fair dealing for "white collar"
insiders and another for the "blue collar"
level. The very language of § 10(b) and Rule
10b-5 "by repeated use of the word 'any'
[was] obviously meant to be inclusive."
Affiliated Ute Citizens v. United States,
406 U.S. 128, 151, 92 S.Ct. 1456, 1471, 31
L.Ed.2d 741 (1972).
The history of the statute and
of the Rule also supports this reading. The
antifraud provisions were designed in large
measure "to assure that dealing in
securities is fair and without undue
preferences or advantages among investors."
H.R.Conf.Rep.No.94-229, p. 91 (1975),
U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1975, p. 323.
These provisions prohibit "those
manipulative and deceptive practices which
have been demonstrated to fulfill no useful
function." S.Rep.No.792, 73d Cong., 2d
Sess., 6 (1934). An investor who purchases
securities on the basis of misappropriated
nonpublic information possesses just such an
"undue" trading advantage; his conduct quite
clearly serves no useful function except his
own enrichment at the expense of others.
This interpretation of § 10(b)
and Rule 10b-5 is in no sense novel. It
follows naturally from legal principles
enunciated by the Securities and Exchange
Commission in its seminal Cady, Roberts
decision. 40 S.E.C. 907 (1961). There, the
Commission relied upon two factors to impose
a duty to disclose on corporate insiders:
(1) " . . . access . . . to information
intended to be available only for a
corporate purpose and not for the
personal benefit of anyone " (emphasis
added); and (2) the unfairness inherent in
trading on such information when it is
inaccessible to those with whom one is
dealing. Both of these factors are present
whenever a party gains an
Page 242
informational advantage by unlawful
means.2a Indeed, in In re Blyth
& Co., 43 S.E.C. 1037 (1969), the
Commission applied its Cady, Roberts
decision in just such a context. In that
case a broker-dealer had traded in
Government securities on the basis of
confidential Treasury Department information
which it received from a Federal Reserve
Bank employee. The Commission ruled that the
trading was "improper use of inside
information," violative of § 10(b) and Rule
10b-5. 43 S.E.C., at 1040. It did not
hesitate to extend Cady, Roberts to
reach a "tippee" of a Government insider.3a
Finally, it bears emphasis that
this reading of § 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 would
not threaten legitimate business practices.
So read, the antifraud provisions would not
impose a duty on a tender offeror to
disclose its acquisition plans during the
period in which it "tests the water" prior
to purchasing a full 5% of the target
company's stock. Nor would it proscribe
"warehousing." See generally SEC,
Institutional Investor Study Report,
H.R.Doc.No. 92-64, pt. 4, p. 2273 (1971).
Likewise, market specialist would not be
subject to a disclose-or-refrain requirement
in the performance of their every-
Page 243
day market functions. In each of these
instances, trading is accomplished on the
basis of material, nonpublic information,
but the information has not been unlawfully
converted for personal gain.
II
The Court's opinion, as I read
it, leaves open the question whether § 10(b)
and Rule 10b-5 prohibit trading on
misappropriated nonpublic information.4a
Instead, the Court apparently concludes that
this theory of the case was not submitted to
the jury. In the Court's view, the
instructions given the jury were premised on
the erroneous notion that the mere failure
to disclose nonpublic information, however
acquired, is a deceptive practice. And
because of this premise, the jury was not
instructed that the means by which Chiarella
acquired his informational advantageby
violating a duty owed to the acquiring
companieswas an element of the offense. See
ante, at 236.
The Court's reading of the
District Court's charge is unduly
restrictive. Fairly read as a whole and in
the context of the trial, the instructions
required the jury to find that Chiarella
obtained his trading advantage by
misappropriating the property of his
employer's customers. The jury was charged
that "[i]n simple terms, the charge is that
Chiarella wrongfully took advantage of
information he acquired in the course of
his confidential position at Pandick Press
and secretly used that information when he
knew other people trading in the securities
market did not have access to the same
information
Page 244
that he had at a time when he knew that
that information was material to the value
of the stock." Record 677 (emphasis added).
The language parallels that in the
indictment, and the jury had that indictment
during its deliberations; it charged that
Chiarella had traded "without disclosing the
material nonpublic information he had
obtained in connection with his employment."
It is underscored by the clarity which the
prosecutor exhibited in his opening
statement to the jury. No juror could
possibly have failed to understand what the
case was about after the prosecutor said:
"In sum what the indictment charges is that
Chiarella misused material non-public
information for personal gain and that he
took unfair advantage of his position of
trust with the full knowledge that it was
wrong to do so. That is what the case is
about. It is that simple." Id., at
46. Moreover, experienced defense counsel
took no exception and uttered no complaint
that the instructions were inadequate in
this regard.
In any event, even assuming the
instructions were deficient in not charging
misappropriation with sufficient precision,
on this record any error was harmless beyond
a reasonable doubt. Here, Chiarella,
himself, testified that he obtained his
informational advantage by decoding
confidential material entrusted to his
employer by its customers. Id., at
474-475. He admitted that the information he
traded on was "confidential," not "to be
use[d] . . . for personal gain." Id.,
at 496. In light of this testimony, it is
simply inconceivable to me that any
shortcoming in the instructions could have
"possibly influenced the jury adversely to
[the defendant]."
Chapman v. California, 386 U.S. 18,
23, 87 S.Ct. 824, 828, 17 L.Ed.2d 705 (1967).
United States v. Park, 421 U.S. 658,
673-676, 95 S.Ct. 1903, 1912-1914, 44
L.Ed.2d 489 (1975). Even more telling
perhaps is Chiarella's counsel's statement
in closing argument:
"Let me say right up
front, too, Mr. Chiarella got on the stand
and he conceded, he said candidly, 'I used
clues I got while I was at work. I looked at
these various doc-
Page 245
uments and I deciphered them
and I decoded them and I used that
information as a basis for purchasing
stock.' There is no question about that. We
don't have to go through a hullabaloo about
that. It is something he concedes. There is
no mystery about that." Record 621.
In this Court, counsel
similarly conceded that "[w]e do not dispute
the proposition that Chiarella violated
his duty as an agent of the offeror
corporations not to use their confidential
information for personal profit." Reply
Brief for Petitioner 4 (emphasis added). See
Restatement (Second) of Agency § 395 (1958).
These statements are tantamount to a formal
stipulation that Chiarella's informational
advantage was unlawfully obtained. And it is
established law that a stipulation related
to an essential element of a crime must be
regarded by the jury as a fact conclusively
proved. See 8 J. Wigmore, Evidence § 2590
(McNaughton rev. 1961);
United States v. Houston, 547 F.2d
104 (CA9 1976).
In sum, the evidence shows
beyond all doubt that Chiarella, working
literally in the shadows of the warning
signs in the printshop misappropriatedstole
to put it bluntlyvaluable nonpublic
information entrusted to him in the utmost
confidence. He then exploited his ill-gotten
informational advantage by purchasing
securities in the market. In my view, such
conduct plainly violates § 10(b) and Rule
10b-5. Accordingly, I would affirm the
judgment of the Court of Appeals.
Mr. Justice BLACKMUN, with
whom Mr. Justice MARSHALL joins, dissenting.
Although I agree with much of
what is said in Part I of the dissenting
opinion of THE CHIEF JUSTICE, ante,
p. 239, I write separately because, in my
view, it is unnecessary to rest petitioner's
conviction on a "misappropriation" theory.
The fact that petitioner Chiarella
purloined, or, to use THE CHIEF
Page 246
JUSTICE's word, ante, at 245,
"stole," information concerning pending
tender offers certainly is the most dramatic
evidence that petitioner was guilty of
fraud. He has conceded that he knew it was
wrong, and he and his co-workers in the
printshop were specifically warned by their
employer that actions of this kind were
improper and forbidden. But I also would
find petitioner's conduct fraudulent within
the meaning of § 10(b) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b),
and the Securities and Exchange Commission's
Rule 10b-5, 17 CFR § 240.10b-5 (1979), even
if he had obtained the blessing of his
employer's principals before embarking on
his profiteering scheme. Indeed, I think
petitioner's brand of manipulative trading,
with or without such approval, lies close to
the heart of what the securities laws are
intended to prohibit.
The Court continues to pursue a
course, charted in certain recent decisions,
designed to transform § 10(b) from an
intentionally elastic "catchall" provision
to one that catches relatively little of the
misbehavior that all too often makes
investment in securities a needlessly risky
business for the uninitiated investor. See,
e. g.,
Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder,
425 U.S. 185, 96 S.Ct. 1375, 47 L.Ed.2d 668
(1976);
Blue Chip Stamps v. Manor Drug Stores,
421 U.S. 723, 95 S.Ct. 1917, 44 L.Ed.2d 539
(1975). Such confinement in this case is
now achieved by imposition of a requirement
of a "special relationship" akin to
fiduciary duty before the statute gives rise
to a duty to disclose or to abstain from
trading upon material, nonpublic
information.1b The Court admits
that this conclusion finds no mandate in the
language of the statute or its legislative
history. Ante, at 226. Yet the Court
fails even to attempt a justification of its
ruling in terms of the purposes
Page 247
of the securities laws, or to square that
ruling with the long-standing but now much
abused principle that the federal securities
laws are to be construed flexibly rather
than with narrow technicality.
Affiliated Ute Citizens v. United States,
406 U.S. 128, 151, 92 S.Ct. 1456, 1471, 31
L.Ed.2d 741 (1972); Superintendent of
Insurance v. Bankers Life & Casualty Co.,
404 U.S. 6, 12, 92 S.Ct. 165, 169, 30
L.Ed.2d 128 (1971);
SEC v. Capital Gains Research Bureau,
375 U.S. 180, 186, 84 S.Ct. 275, 280, 11
L.Ed.2d 237 (1963).
I, of course, agree with the
Court that a relationship of trust can
establish a duty to disclose under § 10(b)
and Rule 10b-5. But I do not agree that a
failure to disclose violates the Rule only
when the responsibilities of a relationship
of that kind have been breached. As applied
to this case, the Court's approach unduly
minimizes the importance of petitioner's
access to confidential information that
the honest investor no matter how diligently
he tried, could not legally obtain. In doing
so, it further advances an interpretation of
§ 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 that stops short of
their full implications. Although the Court
draws support for its position from certain
precedent, I find its decision neither fully
consistent with developments in the common
law of fraud, nor fully in step with
administrative and judicial application of
Rule 10b-5 to "insider" trading.
The common law of actionable
misrepresentation long has treated the
possession of "special facts" as a key
ingredient in the duty to disclose.
Strong v. Repide, 213 U.S. 419,
431-433, 29 S.Ct. 521, 525-526, 53 L.Ed.2d
853 (1909); 1 F. Harper & F. James, Law
of Torts § 7.14 (1956). Traditionally, this
factor has been prominent in cases involving
confidential or fiduciary relations, where
one party's inferiority of knowledge and
dependence upon fair treatment is a matter
of legal definition, as well as in cases
where one party is on notice that the other
is "acting under a mistaken belief with
respect to a material fact." Frigitemp
Corp. v. Financial Dynamics Fund, Inc.,
524 F.2d 275, 283 (CA2 1975); see also
Restatement of Torts § 551 (1938). Even at
common law, however, there has been a trend
away from strict adherence to the harsh
maxim caveat emptor and
Page 248
toward a more flexible, less formalistic
understanding of the duty to disclose. See,
e. g., Keeton FraudConcealment and
Non-Disclosure, 15 Texas L.Rev. 1, 31
(1936). Steps have been taken toward
application of the "special facts" doctrine
in a broader array of contexts where one
party's superior knowledge of essential
facts renders a transaction without
disclosure inherently unfair. See James &
Gray, MisrepresentationPart II, 37
Md.L.Rev. 488, 526-527 (1978); 3 Restatement
(Second) of Torts § 551(e), Comment l
(1977); id., at 166-167 (Tent.Draft
No. 10, 1964). See alsoLingsch
v. Savage, 213 Cal.App.2d 729, 735-737,
29 Cal.Rptr. 201, 204-206 (1963);
Jenkins v. McCormick, 184 Kan. 842,
844-845, 339 P.2d 8, 11 (1959);
Jones v. Arnold, 359 Mo. 161,
169-170, 221 S.W.2d 187, 193-194 (1949);
Simmons v. Evans, 185 Tenn. 282,
285-287, 206 S.W.2d 295, 296-297 (1947).
By its narrow construction of §
10(b) and Rule 10b-5, the Court places the
federal securities laws in the rearguard of
this movement, a position opposite to the
expectations of Congress at the time the
securities laws were enacted. Cf.
H.R.Rep.No. 1383, 73d Cong., 2d Sess., 5
(1934). I cannot agree that the statute and
Rule are so limited. The Court has observed
that the securities laws were not intended
to replicate the law of fiduciary relations.
Santa Fe Industries, Inc. v. Green,
430 U.S. 462, 474-476, 97 S.Ct. 1292,
1301-1302, 51 L.Ed.2d 480 (1977).
Rather, their purpose is to ensure the fair
and honest functioning of impersonal
national securities markets where common-law
protections have proved inadequate.
United States v. Naftalin, 441 U.S.
768, 775, 99 S.Ct. 2077, 2082, 60 L.Ed.2d
624 (1979). As Congress itself has
recognized, it is integral to this purpose
"to assure that dealing in securities is
fair and without undue preferences or
advantages among investors."
H.R.Conf.Rep.No. 94-229, p. 91 (1975),
U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1975, p. 323.
Indeed, the importance of
access to "special facts" has been a
recurrent theme in administrative and
judicial application
Page 249
of Rule 10b-5 to insider trading. Both
the SEC and the courts have stressed the
insider's misuse of secret knowledge as the
gravamen of illegal conduct. The Court, I
think, unduly minimizes this aspect of prior
decisions.
Cady, Roberts & Co., 40
S.E.C. 907 (1961), which the Court discusses
at some length, provides an illustration. In
that case, the Commission defined the
category of "insiders" subject to a
disclose-or-abstain obligation according to
two factors:
"[F]irst, the existence of a
relationship giving access, directly or
indirectly, to information intended to be
available only for a corporate purpose and
not for the personal benefit of anyone, and
second, the inherent unfairness involved
where a party takes advantage of such
information knowing it is unavailable to
those with whom he is dealing." Id.,
at 912 (footnote omitted).
The Commission, thus regarded
the insider "relationship" primarily in
terms of access to nonpublic
information, and not merely in terms of the
presence of a common-law fiduciary duty or
the like. This approach was deemed to be in
keeping with the principle that "the broad
language of the anti-fraud provisions"
should not be "circumscribed by fine
distinctions and rigid classifications,"
such as those that prevailed under the
common law. Ibid. The duty to abstain
or disclose arose, not merely as an incident
of fiduciary responsibility, but as a result
of the "inherent unfairness" of turning
secret information to account for personal
profit. This understanding of Rule 10b-5 was
reinforced when Investors Management Co.,
44 S.E.C. 633, 643 (1971), specifically
rejected the contention that a "special
relationship" between the alleged violator
and an "insider" source was a necessary
requirement for liability.
A similar approach has been
followed by the courts. In SEC v. Texas
Gulf Sulphur Co., 401 F.2d 833, 848 (CA2
Page 250
1968) (en banc), cert. denied sub nom.
Coates v. SEC,
394 U.S. 976, 89 S.Ct. 1454, 22 L.Ed.2d 756
(1969), the court specifically mentioned
the common-law "special facts" doctrine as
one source for Rule 10b-5, and it reasoned
that the Rule is "based in policy on the
justifiable expectation of the securities
marketplace that all investors trading on
impersonal exchanges have relatively equal
access to material information." See also
Lewelling v. First California Co., 564
F.2d 1277, 1280 (CA9 1977); Speed v.
Transamerica Corp., 99 F.Supp. 808, 829
(D.Del.1951). In addition, cases such as
Myzel v. Fields, 386 F.2d 718, 739
(CA8 1967), cert. denied, 390 U.S. 951,
88 S.Ct. 1043, 19 L.Ed.2d 1143 (1968), and
A. T. Brod & Co. v. Perlow, 375 F.2d
393, 397 (CA2 1967), have stressed that
§ 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 apply to any kind of
fraud by any person. The concept of the
"insider" itself has been flexible; wherever
confidential information has been abused,
prophylaxis has followed. See, e. g.,
Zweig v. Hearst Corp., 594 F.2d 1261
(CA9 1979) (financial columnist); Shapiro
v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith,
Inc.,
495 F.2d 228 (CA2 1974)
(institutional investor);
SEC v. Shapiro,
494 F.2d 1301 (CA2
1974) (merger negotiator); Chasins v.
Smith, Barney & Co., 438 F.2d 1167 (CA2
1970) (market maker). See generally 2 A.
Bromberg & L. Lowenfels, Securities Law &
Commodities Fraud § 7.4(6)(b) (1979).
I believe, and surely thought,
that this broad understanding of the duty to
disclose under Rule 10b-5 was recognized and
approved
Affiliated Ute Citizens v. United States,
406 U.S. 128, 92 S.Ct. 1456, 31 L.Ed.2d 741
(1972). That case held that bank agents
dealing in the stock of a Ute Indian
development corporation had a duty to reveal
to mixed-blood Indian customers that their
shares could bring a higher price on a
non-Indian market of which the sellers were
unaware. Id., at 150-153, 92 S.Ct.,
at 1470-1472. The Court recognized that "by
repeated use of the word 'any,' " the
statute and Rule "are obviously meant to be
inclusive." Id., at 151, 92 S.Ct., at
1471. Although it found a relationship of
trust between
Page 251
the agents and the Indian sellers, the
Court also clearly established that the bank
and its agents were subject to the
strictures of Rule 10b-5 because of their
strategic position in the marketplace. The
Indian sellers had no knowledge of the
non-Indian market. The bank agents, in
contrast, had intimate familiarity with the
non-Indian market, which they had promoted
actively, and from which they and their bank
both profited. In these circumstances, the
Court held that the bank and its agents
"possessed the affirmative duty under the
Rule" to disclose market information to the
Indian sellers, and that the latter "had the
right to know" that their shares would sell
for a higher price in another market. Id.,
at 153, 92 S.Ct., at 1472.
It seems to me that the Court,
ante, at 229-230, gives Affiliated
Ute Citizens an unduly narrow
interpretation. As I now read my opinion
there for the Court, it lends strong support
to the principle that a structural disparity
in access to material information is a
critical factor under Rule 10b-5 in
establishing a duty either to disclose the
information or to abstain from trading.
Given the factual posture of the case, it
was unnecessary to resolve the question
whether such a structural disparity could
sustain a duty to disclose even absent "a
relationship of trust and confidence between
parties to a transaction." Ante, at
230. Nevertheless, I think the rationale of
Affiliated Ute Citizens definitely
points toward an affirmative answer to that
question. Although I am not sure I fully
accept the "market insider" category created
by the Court of Appeals, I would hold that
persons having access to confidential
material information that is not legally
available to others generally are prohibited
by Rule 10b-5 from engaging in schemes to
exploit their structural informational
advantage through trading in affected
securities. To hold otherwise, it seems to
me, is to tolerate a wide range of
manipulative and deceitful behavior. See
Blyth & Co., 43 S.E.C. 1037 (1969);
Herbert L. Honohan, 13 S.E.C. 754
(1943); see generally Brudney, Insiders,
Outsiders, and Informational Advantages
Page 252
under the Federal Securities Laws, 93
Harv.L.Rev. 322 (1979).2b
Whatever the outer limits of
the Rule, petitioner Chiarella's case fits
neatly near the center of its analytical
framework. He occupied a relationship to the
takeover companies giving him intimate
access to concededly material information
that was sedulously guarded from public
access. The information, in the words of
Cady, Roberts & Co., 40 S.E.C., at 912,
was "intended to be available only for a
corporate purpose and not for the personal
benefit of anyone." Petitioner, moreover,
knew that the information was unavailable to
those with whom he dealt. And he took full,
virtually riskless advantage of this
artificial information gap by selling the
stocks shortly after each takeover bid was
announced. By any reasonable definition, his
trading was "inherent[ly] unfai[r]." Ibid.
This misuse of confidential information was
clearly placed before the jury. Petitioner's
conviction, therefore, should be upheld, and
I dissent from the Court's upsetting that
conviction.
1 Of the five transactions,
four involved tender offers and one
concerned a merger.
588 F.2d 1358, 1363, n.
2 (CA2 1978).
2 SEC v. Chiarella,
No. 77 Civ. Action No. 2534 (GLG) (SDNY May
24, 1977).
3 Section 32(a) of the 1934
Act sanctions criminal penalties against any
person who willfully violates the Act. 15
U.S.C. § 78ff(a) (1976 ed., Supp. II).
Petitioner was charged with 17 counts of
violating the Act because he had received 17
letters confirming purchase of shares.
4 450 F.Supp. 95 (SDNY 1978).
5 Only Rules 10b-5(a) and (c)
are at issue here. Rule 10b-5(b) provides
that it shall be unlawful "[t]o make any
untrue statement of a material fact or to
omit 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." 17 CFR §
240.10b-5(b) (1979). The portion of the
indictment based on this provision was
dismissed because the petitioner made no
statements at all in connection with the
purchase of stock.
6 Record 682-683, 686.
7 See Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 3230 (May 21, 1942), 7 Fed.Reg.
3804 (1942).
8 In Cady, Roberts,
the broker-dealer was liable under § 10(b)
because it received nonpublic information
from a corporate insider of the issuer.
Since the insider could not use the
information, neither could the partners in
the brokerage firm with which he was
associated. The transaction in Cady,
Roberts involved sale of stock to
persons who previously may not have been
shareholders in the corporation. 40 S.E.C.,
at 913, and n. 21. The Commission embraced
the reasoning of Judge Learned Hand that
"the director or officer assumed a fiduciary
relation to the buyer by the very sale; for
it would be a sorry distinction to allow him
to use the advantage of his position to
induce the buyer into the position of a
beneficiary although he was forbidden to do
so once the buyer had become one." Id.,
at 914, n. 23, quoting
Gratz v. Claughton, 187 F.2d 46, 49
(CA2), cert. denied, 341 U.S. 920, 71 S.Ct.
741, 95 L.Ed. 1353 (1951).
9 Restatement (Second) of
Torts § 551(2)(a) (1976). See James & Gray,
MisrepresentationPart II, 37 Md.L.Rev. 488,
523-527 (1978). As regards securities
transactions, the American Law Institute
recognizes that "silence when there is a
duty to . . . speak may be a fraudulent
act." ALI, Federal Securities Code § 262(b)
(Prop. Off. Draft 1978).
10 See 3 W. Fletcher,
Cyclopedia of the Law of Private
Corporations § 838 (rev. 1975); 3A id.,
§§ 1168.2, 1171, 1174; 3 L. Loss, Securities
Regulation 1446-1448 (2d ed. 1961); 6 id.,
at 3557-3558 (1969 Supp.). See also
Brophy v. Cities Service Co., 31 Del.Ch.
241, 70 A.2d 5 (1949). See generally Note,
Rule 10b-5: Elements of a Private Right of
Action, 43 N.Y.U.L.Rev. 541, 552-553, and n.
71 (1968); 75 Harv.L.Rev. 1449, 1450 (1962);
Daum & Phillips, The Implications of Cady,
Roberts, 17 Bus.L. 939, 945 (1962).
The dissent of Mr. Justice BLACKMUN
suggests that the "special facts" doctrine
may be applied to find that silence
constitutes fraud where one party has
superior information to another. Post,
at 247-248. This Court has never so held.
Strong v. Repide, 213 U.S. 419,
431-434, 29 S.Ct. 521, 525, 526, 53 L.Ed.
853 (1909), this Court applied the
special-facts doctrine to conclude that a
corporate insider had a duty to disclose to
a shareholder. In that case, the majority
shareholder of a corporation secretly
purchased the stock of another shareholder
without revealing that the corporation,
under the insider's direction, was about to
sell corporate assets at a price that would
greatly enhance the value of the stock. The
decision in Strong v. Repide was
premised upon the fiduciary duty between the
corporate insider and the shareholder.
Pepper v. Litton, 308 U.S. 295, 307,
n. 15, 60 S.Ct. 238, 245, n. 15, 84 L.Ed.
281 (1939).
11 See also SEC v. Great
American Industries, Inc., 407 F.2d 453,
460 (CA2 1968), cert. denied, 395 U.S. 920,
89 S.Ct. 1770, 23 L.Ed.2d 237 (1969);
Kohler v. Kohler Co., 319 F.2d 634,
637-638 (CA7 1963); Note, 43 N.Y.U.L.Rev.,
supra, n. 10, at 554; Note, The
Regulation of Corporate Tender Offers Under
Federal Securities Law: A New Challenge for
Rule 10b-5, 33 U.Chi.L.Rev. 359, 373-374
(1966). See generally Note, Civil Liability
under Rule X-10b-5, 42 Va.L.Rev. 537,
554-561 (1956).
12 "Tippees" of corporate
insiders have been held liable under § 10(b)
because they have a duty not to profit from
the use of inside information that they know
is confidential and know or should know came
from a corporate insider, Shapiro v.
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc.,
495 F.2d 228, 237-238 (CA2 1974). The
tippee's obligation has been viewed as
arising from his role as a participant after
the fact in the insider's breach of a
fiduciary duty. Subcommittees of American
Bar Association Section of Corporation,
Banking, and Business Law, Comment Letter on
Material, Non-Public Information (Oct. 15,
1973), reprinted in BNA, Securities
Regulation & Law Report No. 233, pp. D-1,
D-2 (Jan. 2, 1974).
13 See Fleischer, Mundheim, &
Murphy, An Initial Inquiry into the
Responsibility to Disclose Market
Information, 121 U.Pa.L.Rev. 798, 799
(1973).
14 The Court of Appeals said
that its "regular access to market
information" test would create a workable
rule embracing "those who occupy . . .
strategic places in the market mechanism."
588 F.2d, at 1365. These considerations are
insufficient to support a duty to disclose.
A duty arises from the relationship between
parties, see nn. 9 and 10, supra, and
accompanying text, and not merely from one's
ability to acquire information because of
his position in the market.
The Court of Appeals also suggested that
the acquiring corporation itself would not
be a "market insider" because a tender
offeror creates, rather than receives,
information and takes a substantial economic
risk that its offer will be unsuccessful.
588 F.2d, at 1366-1367. Again, the Court of
Appeals departed from the analysis
appropriate to recognition of a duty. The
Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
previously held, in a manner consistent with
our analysis here, that a tender offeror
does not violate § 10(b) when it makes
preannouncement purchases precisely because
there is no relationship between the offeror
and the seller:
"We know of no rule of law . . . that a
purchaser of stock, who was not an 'insider'
and had no fiduciary relation to a
prospective seller, had any obligation to
reveal circumstances that might raise a
seller's demands and thus abort the sale."
General Time Corp. v. Talley Industries,
Inc.,
403 F.2d 159, 164 (1968), cert.
denied, 393 U.S. 1026, 89 S.Ct. 631, 21
L.Ed.2d 570 (1969).
15 Title 15 U.S.C. §
78m(d)(1) (1976 ed., Supp. II) permits a
tender offeror to purchase 5% of the target
company's stock prior to disclosure of its
plans for acquisition.
16 Section 11 of the 1934 Act
generally forbids a member of a national
securities exchange from effecting any
transaction on the exchange for its own
account. 15 U.S.C. § 78k(a)(1). But Congress
has specifically exempted specialists from
this prohibitionbroker-dealers who execute
orders for customers trading in a specific
corporation's stock, while at the same time
buying and selling that corporation's stock
on their own behalf. § 11(a)(1)(A), 15
U.S.C. § 78k(a)(1)(A); see S.Rep.No. 94-75,
p. 99 (1975), U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News
1975, p. 179; Securities and Exchange
Commission, Report of Special Study of
Securities Markets, H.R.Doc.No. 95, 88th
Cong., 1st Sess., pt. 2, pp. 57-58, 76
(1963). See generally S. Robbins, The
Securities Markets 191-193 (1966). The
exception is based upon Congress'
recognition that specialists contribute to a
fair and orderly marketplace at the same
time they exploit the informational
advantage that comes from their possession
of buy and sell orders. H.R.Doc.No. 95,
supra, at 78-80. Similar concerns with
the functioning of the market prompted
Congress to exempt market makers, block
positioners, registered odd-lot dealers,
bona fide arbitrageurs, and risk
arbitrageurs from § 11's general prohibition
on member trading. 15 U.S.C. §§
78k(a)(1)(A)-(D); see S.Rep.No. 94-75,
supra, at 99. See also Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 34-9950, 38
Fed.Reg. 3902, 3918 (1973).
17 Fleischer, Mundheim, &
Murphy, supra n. 13, at 811-812.
18 SEC Proposed Rule §
240.14e-3, 44 Fed.Reg. 70352-70355, 70359
(1979).
19 1 SEC Institutional
Investor Study Report, H.R.Doc.No. 92-64,
pt. 1, p. xxxii (1971).
20 Mr. Justice BLACKMUN's
dissent would establish the following
standard for imposing criminal and civil
liability under § 10(b) and Rule 10b-5:
"[P]ersons having access to confidential
material information that is not legally
available to others generally are prohibited
. . . from engaging in schemes to exploit
their structural informational advantage
through trading in affected securities."
Post, at 251.
This view is not substantially different
from the Court of Appeals' theory that
anyone "who regularly receives material
nonpublic information may not use that
information to trade in securities without
incurring an affirmative duty to disclose,"
quoting 588 F.2d, at 1365, and must be
rejected for the reasons stated in Part III.
Additionally, a judicial holding that
certain undefined activities "generally are
prohibited" by § 10(b) would raise questions
whether either criminal or civil defendants
would be given fair notice that they have
engaged in illegal activity.
Grayned v. City of Rockford, 408 U.S.
104, 108-109, 92 S.Ct. 2294, 2298-2299, 33
L.Ed.2d 222 (1972).
It is worth noting that this is
apparently the first case in which criminal
liability has been imposed upon a purchaser
for § 10(b) nondisclosure. Petitioner was
sentenced to a year in prison, suspended
except for one month, and a 5-year term of
probation. 588 F.2d, at 1373, 1378 (Meskill,
J., dissenting).
21 The dissent of THE CHIEF
JUSTICE relies upon a single phrase from the
jury instructions, which states that the
petitioner held a "confidential position" at
Pandick Press, to argue that the jury was
properly instructed on the theory "that a
person who has misappropriated nonpublic
information has an absolute duty to disclose
that information or to refrain from
trading." Post, at 240. The few words
upon which this thesis is based do not
explain to the jury the nature and scope of
the petitioner's duty to his employer, the
nature and scope of petitioner's duty, if
any, to the acquiring corporation, or the
elements of the tort of misappropriation.
Nor do the jury instructions suggest that a
"confidential position" is a necessary
element of the offense for which petitioner
was charged. Thus, we do not believe that a
"misappropriation" theory was included in
the jury instructions.
The conviction would have to be reversed
even if the jury had been instructed that it
could convict the petitioner either (1)
because of his failure to disclose material,
nonpublic information to sellers or (2)
because of a breach of a duty to the
acquiring corporation. We may not uphold a
criminal conviction if it is impossible to
ascertain whether the defendant has been
punished for noncriminal conduct.
United States v. Gallagher, 576 F.2d
1028, 1046 (CA3 1978);
Leary v. United States, 395 U.S. 6,
31-32, 89 S.Ct. 1532, 1545-1546, 23 L.Ed.2d
57 (1969);
Stromberg v. California, 283 U.S.
359, 369-370, 51 S.Ct. 532, 535-536, 75
L.Ed. 1117 (1931).
*
Eason v. General Motors Acceptance Corp.,
490 F.2d 654 (CA7 1973), cert. denied,
416 U.S. 960, 94 S.Ct. 1979, 40 L.Ed.2d 312.
The specific holding in Eason was
rejected
Blue Chip Stamps v. Manor Drug Stores,
421 U.S. 723, 95 S.Ct. 1917, 44 L.Ed.2d 539.
However, the limitation on the right to
recover pecuniary damages in a private
action identified in Blue Chip is not
necessarily coextensive with the limits of
the rule itself.
Piper v. Chris-Craft Industries, Inc.,
430 U.S. 1, 42, n. 28, 43, n. 30, 47, n.
33, 97 S.Ct. 926, 949, n. 28, 950, n. 30,
952, n. 33, 51 L.Ed.2d 124.
1a Academic writing in recent
years has distinguished between "corporate
information"information which comes from
within the corporation and reflects on
expected earnings or assetsand "market
information." See, e. g., Fleischer,
Mundheim, & Murphy, An Initial Inquiry into
the Responsibility to Disclose Market
Information, 121 U.Pa.L.Rev. 798, 799
(1973). It is clear that § 10(b) and Rule
10b-5 by their terms and by their history
make no such distinction. See Brudney,
Insiders, Outsiders, and Informational
Advantages Under the Federal Securities
Laws, 93 Harv.L.Rev. 322, 329-333 (1979).
2a See Financial Analysts
Rec., Oct. 7, 1968, pp. 3, 5 (interview with
SEC General Counsel Philip A. Loomis, Jr.)
(the essential characteristic of insider
information is that it is "received in
confidence for a purpose other than to use
it for the person's own advantage and to the
disadvantage of the investing public in the
market"). See also Note, The Government
Insider and Rule 10b-5: A New Application
for an Expanding Doctrine, 47 S.Cal.L.Rev.
1491, 1498-1502 (1974).
3a This interpretation of the
antifraud provisions also finds support in
the recently proposed Federal Securities
Code prepared by the American Law Institute
under the direction of Professor Louis Loss.
The ALI Code would construe the antifraud
provisions to cover a class of
"quasi-insiders," including a judge's law
clerk who trades on information in an
unpublished opinion or a Government employee
who trades on a secret report. See ALI
Federal Securities Code § 1603, comment
3(d), pp. 538-539 (Prop.Off.Draft 1978).
These quasi-insiders share the
characteristic that their informational
advantage is obtained by conversion and not
by legitimate economic activity that society
seeks to encourage.
4a There is some language in
the Court's opinion to suggest that only "a
relationship between petitioner and the
sellers . . . could give rise to a duty [to
disclose]." Ante, at 232. The Court's
holding, however, is much more limited,
namely, that mere possession of material,
nonpublic information is insufficient to
create a duty to disclose or to refrain from
trading. Ante, at 235. Accordingly,
it is my understanding that the Court has
not rejected the view, advanced above, that
an absolute duty to disclose or refrain
arises from the very act of misappropriating
nonpublic information.
1b The Court fails to specify
whether the obligations of a special
relationship must fall directly upon the
person engaging in an allegedly fraudulent
transaction, or whether the derivative
obligations of "tippees," that lower courts
long have recognized, are encompassed by its
rule. See ante, at 230, n. 12; cf.
Foremost-McKesson, Inc. v. Provident
Securities Co., 423 U.S. 232, 255, n.
29, 96 S.Ct. 508, 521, n. 29, 46 L.Ed.2d 464
(1976).
2b The Court observes that
several provisions of the federal securities
laws limit but do not prohibit trading by
certain investors who may possess nonpublic
market information. Ante, at 233-234.
It also asserts that "neither the Congress
nor the Commission ever has adopted a
parity-of-information rule." Ante, at
233. In my judgment, neither the observation
nor the assertion undermines the
interpretation of Rule 10b-5 that I support
and that I have endeavored briefly to
outline. The statutory provisions cited by
the Court betoken a congressional purpose
not to leave the exploitation of structural
informational advantages unregulated.
Letting Rule 10b-5 operate as a "catchall"
to ensure that these narrow exceptions
granted by Congress are not expanded by
circumvention completes this statutory
scheme. Furthermore, there is a significant
conceptual distinction between parity of
information and parity of access to
material information. The latter gives free
rein to certain kinds of informational
advantages that the former might foreclose,
such as those that result from differences
in diligence or acumen. Indeed, by limiting
opportunities for profit from manipulation
of confidential connections or resort to
stealth, equal access helps to ensure that
advantages obtained by honest means reap
their full reward. |