| Page 871 452 F.2d 871
Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 93,302
Ben DISKIN, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
LOMASNEY & CO., a Partnership, and Myron A.
Lomasney,
Defendants-Appellees. No. 272, Docket 71-1735.
United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit. Submitted Nov. 10, 1971.
Decided Dec. 13, 1971.
Page 873
Ruben Schwartz, New York City
(Martin N. Whyman, New York City, of
counsel), for plaintiff-appellant.
No appearance for appellees.
*
Before FRIENDLY, Chief Judge,
FEINBERG, Circuit Judge, and DAVIS,
Associate Judge.
**
FRIENDLY, Chief Judge:
During the summer of 1968
plaintiff Diskin had conversations with
defendant Lomasney, general partner of
defendant Lomasney & Co., a broker-dealer,
with respect to securities of two companies,
Ski Park City West, S.I. and Continental
Travel, Ltd. Lomasney & Co. had agreed to
sell up to 60,000 common shares of the
former on a "best efforts" basis and was the
principal underwriter for the sale of
350,000 common shares of the latter. A
preliminary registration statement with
respect to the shares of Continental Travel
had been filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission on August 28, 1968, but
did not become effective until February 11,
1969. On September 17, 1968, Lomasney sent
Diskin a final prospectus for the Ski Park
City West, S.I., stock, along with a letter,
the body of which read as follows:
I am enclosing herewith, a copy of the
Prospectus on SKI PARK CITY WEST. This
letter will also assure you that if you take
1,000 shares of SKI PARK CITY WEST at the
issue price, we will commit to you the sale
at the public offering price when, as and if
issued, 5,000 shares of CONTINENTAL TRAVEL,
LTD.
On the same day Diskin placed an
order for the 1,000 shares of Ski Park City
West and received a written confirmation. He
later paid for these, and the validity of
their offer and sale is unquestioned.
On February 12, 1969, Lomasney
sent Diskin a confirmation of the sale of
5,000 shares of Continental Travel at $12
per share, apparently without any further
communication. Diskin received from Lomasney
a final prospectus and registration
statement for these shares prior to February
28, 1969, when he paid the bill of $60,000,
and received delivery. On November 19, 1969,
Diskin demanded rescission. Having received
no answer, he brought this action in the
District Court for the Southern District of
New York on January 6, 1970, claiming that
the letter of September 17, 1968, insofar as
it related to shares of Continental Travel,
was a violation of Sec. 5(b) (1) of the
Securities Act of 1933.
1
This provision makes it unlawful for any
person
to make use of any means or instruments
of transportation or communication in
interstate commerce or of the mails to carry
or transmit any prospectus relating to any
security with respect to which a
registration statement has been filed under
this subchapter, unless such prospectus
meets the requirements of section 77j.
Section 2(10), so far as here
pertinent, defines "prospectus" as
any prospectus, notice, circular,
advertisement, letter, or communication,
written or by radio or television, which
offers any security for sale or confirms the
sale of any security; . . . .
Section 12(1) provides that any
person who offers or sells a security in
violation of section 5
Page 874
shall be liable to the person purchasing
such security from him, who may sue either
at law or in equity in any court of
competent jurisdiction, to recover the
consideration paid for such security with
interest thereon, less the amount of any
income received thereon, upon the tender of
such security, or for damages if he no
longer owns the security.
The parties submitted agreed
findings of fact and stipulated that the
case should be decided thereon. The district
judge dismissed the complaint on a ground
not raised in the memorandum of law filed by
the defendants. This was that the portion of
the September 17 letter relating to the
Continental Travel shares came within the
exclusion set forth in the last sentence of
Sec. 2(3) of the Securities Act, providing:
The issue or transfer of a right or
privilege, when originally issued or
transferred with a security, giving the
holder of such security the right to convert
such security into another security of the
same issuer or of another person, or giving
a right to subscribe to another security of
the same issuer or of another person, which
right cannot be exercised until some future
date, shall not be deemed to be an offer or
sale of such other security; but the issue
or transfer of such other security upon the
exercise of such right of conversion or
subscription shall be deemed a sale of such
other security.
We think the judge misapplied the
last sentence of Sec. 2(3). Although the
reasons for the quoted exclusion are
somewhat obscure and its administration has
given rise to difficulties, see I Loss,
Securities Regulation 299-300 (2d ed. 1961);
IV Loss, Securities Regulation 2348-49
(Supp.1969), Congress could not have meant
it to cover a letter sent by a dealer
coupling the sale of a security which had
been registered or the registration of which
was not required for a valid offer or sale
(e. g., because of Sec. 4(3)), with an
otherwise prohibited proffer of another
security. Even if a completely literal
reading would lead to that conclusion, which
we rather doubt, "[t]here is no surer way to
misread any document than to read it
literally."
Guiseppi v. Walling, 144 F.2d 608, 624 (2
Cir. 1944) (concurring opinion of L.
Hand, J.), aff'd sub nom.
Gemsco, Inc. v. Walling, 324 U.S. 244, 65
S.Ct. 605, 89 L.Ed. 921 (1945).
Cabell v. Markham, 148 F.2d 737, 739 (2
Cir.), aff'd, 326 U.S. 404, 66 S.Ct. 193, 90
L.Ed. 165 (1945). Manifestly, Congress did
not intend that a sale of a few shares of a
registered security or in a transaction
exempted by Sec. 4 should enable a dealer to
offer the purchaser the "right to subscribe"
to thousands of shares of some gamy
unregistered issue without conforming with
the requirements of the statute-thereby
opening not a mere hole but a large sluice
in the protection the Securities Act was
intended to afford. The exclusion must be
read as limited to rights or privileges
embodied in or annexed to the security
itself. For example, if a corporation issued
bonds together with rights, not immediately
exercisable, for common stock of the
corporation, there would be no "offer" of
the stock.
We have considered whether,
despite the error in dismissing the
complaint on this ground, the judgment could
be affirmed on the basis that a registration
statement concerning the Continental Travel
shares had been filed prior to September 17,
1968, although it had not yet become
effective. See Sec. 5(c). However, the mere
filing of a registration statement does not
ensure the legality of any written offer
made during the post-filing, pre-effective
period; to be lawful, such written offers
must be made by way of a "prospectus" which
meets the requirements of Sec. 10. See Sec.
5(b) (1). See also H.R. Rep. No. 1542,
reprinted in U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News,
83d Cong., 2d Sess. 2973, 2983, 2996-2997
(1954). We perceive no basis for disagreeing
with Professor
Page 875 Loss' summary of the law in this respect:
In sum, there are five legal ways in
which offers may be made during the waiting
period even if the mails or interstate
facilities are used: by means of (1) oral
communication, (2) the "tombstone ad,"
whether the old-fashioned variety under Sec.
2(10) (b) or the expanded type under Rule
134 (successor to the old "identifying
statement"), (3) the preliminary prospectus
under Rule 433 [issued pursuant to Sec.
10(b)] (successor to the "red herring
prospectus"), (4) the "buff card" type of
summary prospectus independently prepared
under Sec. 10(b) and Rule 434, and (5) the
summary prospectus filed as part of the
registration statement under Sec. 10(b) and
Rule 434a (successor to the old "newspaper
prospectus" but not limited to newspapers).
I Loss, Securities Regulation 243
(2d ed. 1961). See also Jennings & Marsh,
Securities Regulation 89-92 (2d ed. 1968).
The letter of September 17, 1968, was none
of these. Indeed, the confirmation of
February 12, 1969, was a further violation
unless a prospectus had been furnished, see
Secs. 2(10) and 5(b) (1), which the agreed
statement does not say.
We pass therefore to the
arguments which defendants made in their
memorandum, which the district court did not
reach. These were (1) that the letter was
not an "offer" but was a mere expression of
willingness to sell; (2) that the violation
was cured by Diskin's receipt of a
prospectus prior to the actual purchase; and
(3) that the action was brought more than
one year after the violation and was thus
untimely under Sec. 13 of the Securities
Act.
Although there is a paucity of
authority on these issues, we think none
constituted a valid defense. The statutory
language defining "offer" in Sec. 2(3)
2 "goes well
beyond the common law concept of an offer."
I Loss, supra, at 181; cf. Carl M. Loeb,
Rhoades & Co., Securities Exch. Act Release
No. 5870, at 7-8 (1959);
People v. Jacques, 137 Cal. App.2d 823, 832,
291 P.2d 124, 129-130 (1955).
Consequently, we entertain no doubt that the
portion of the letter of September 17
dealing with the Continental Travel shares
constituted an "offer" within Sec. 2(3).
Moreover, whether or not a dealer can
lawfully "make a conditional and revocable
offer to sell [without employing any of the
five established procedures] if it is made
clear that the offer cannot be accepted
until the effective date," see I Loss,
supra, at 224, the offer of September 17 did
not measure up to that standard since it was
not revocable. This case, where Lomasney
apparently confirmed the sale without any
further word from Diskin, would be a
peculiarly unattractive one for endeavoring
to carve out an exception to the statutory
words. Indeed, as previously indicated, the
confirmation, if unaccompanied by a
prospectus, was itself a violation of Sec.
5(b) (1).
On the second point, we again
agree with Professor Loss that "[w]hatever
doubt there may once have been as to the
applicability of Sec. 12(1) to illegal
offers [followed by legal sales] was
resolved when the original definition of
sale was split into separate definitions of
'sale' and 'offer' in 1954, with the
incidental amendment of Sec. 12(1) to refer
to any person 'who offers or sells a
security in violation of section 5' so as
'to preserve the effect of the present law'
by not excluding the newly permissible
pre-effective offers from liabilities under
Sec. 12." III Loss, supra, at 1695-96. With
respect to the one-year period of
limitation, although Sec. 13 dates this from
the "violation" in cases of claims under
Sec. 12(1), it would be unreasonable to read
Sec. 13 as starting the
Page 876 short period for an action at a date before
the action could have been brought-a
construction which might lead in some
extreme cases to a running of the statute of
limitations before the claim had even
arisen. Furthermore, the limitation argument
would be wholly drained of force if, as
seems likely, the confirmation of February
12, 1968, was itself a violation.
The result here reached may
appear to be harsh, since Diskin had an
opportunity to read the final prospectus
before he paid for the shares. But the 1954
Congress quite obviously meant to allow
rescission or damages in the case of illegal
offers as well as of illegal sales. Very
likely Congress thought that, when it had
done so much to broaden the methods for
making legal offers during the "waiting
period" between the filing and the taking
effect of a registration statement, it
should make sure that still other methods
were not attempted. Here all Lomasney needed
to have done was to accompany the September
17, 1968 letter with any one of the three
types of prospectus for the Continental
shares mentioned in the extract we have
quoted from Professor Loss' treatise. Very
likely Congress thought a better time for
meaningful prospectus reading was at the
time of the offer rather than in the context
of confirmation and demand for payment. In
any event, it made altogether clear that an
offeror of a security who had failed to
follow one of the allowed paths could not
achieve absolution simply by returning to
the road of virtue before receiving payment.
The judgment dismissing the
complaint is reversed, with instructions to
enter judgment for the plaintiff that, upon
delivery of 5,000 shares of Continental
Travel, Ltd., he shall receive $60,000 with
interest from February 28, 1969,
3 and costs.
* Appellees were given permission to file
a brief on or before November 30, 1971. A
motion for a further extension until January
31, 1972, was denied in light of the
availability of the memorandum of law
submitted in the district court, which has
been carefully considered.
** Of the United States Court of Claims,
sitting by designation.
1 The complaint also claimed violations
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and
of New York State law. The parties
subsequently stipulated that the sole claim
at issue was that raised under Sec. 5 of the
Securities Act of 1933.
2 "The term 'offer to sell,' 'offer for
sale,' or 'offer' shall include every
attempt or offer to dispose of, or
solicitation of an offer to buy, a security
or interest in a security, for value."
3 We assume no dividends have been paid.
If any have been, they should be deducted. |