| Page 1082 458 F.2d 1082
28 A.L.R.Fed. 781, Fed. Sec. L. Rep.
P 93,344 SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
MANOR NURSING CENTERS, INC., et al.,
Defendants-Appellants. Nos. 407-409, Dockets 71-2011,
71-2012, 71-2026. United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit. Argued Dec. 9, 1971.
Decided Jan. 21, 1972.
Page 1087
Walter P. North, Associate Gen.
Counsel, and Harvey L. Pitt, Special
Counsel, SEC, Washington, D. C. (G. Bradford
Cook, Gen. Counsel, Frederic T. Spindel and
Thomas R. Beirne, Attys., Washington, D. C.,
and William Nortman, Atty., New York City,
on the brief), for appellee Securities and
Exchange Commission.
Lawson F. Bernstein, New York
City (Harold B. Obstfeld and Charles J.
Hecht, New York City, on the brief), for
appellants Manor Nursing Centers, Inc.,
Capital Cities Nursing Centers, Inc., Ira
Feinberg, Manor Construction Company, Samuel
Feinberg, Suzanne Marnane and Gladys
Halford.
Richard F. Horowitz, New York
City (Jacob W. Heller, Howard L. Mann, and
Weiss, Bronston, Rosenthal, Heller &
Schwartzman, New York City, on the brief),
for appellants Ivan Ezrine, Glendale, Inc.
and Atlantic Services, Inc.
Bernard Jay Coven, New York City,
for appellants Christos Netelkos, Method
Page 1088 Leasing Corporation and Upton Corporation.
Nathan D. Lobell, New York City,
Court Appointed Trustee, pro se.
Before ANDERSON, OAKES and
TIMBERS, Circuit Judges.
TIMBERS, Circuit Judge:
These appeals present again
questions with respect to the scope of the
antifraud provisions and of the
prospectus-delivery requirement of the
federal securities laws. Also involved is
the type of ancillary relief necessary to
effectuate the broad remedial purposes of
the federal securities laws.
The Securities and Exchange
Commission brought this action pursuant to
Section 22(a) of the Securities Act of 1933,
15 U.S.C. Sec. 77v(a) (1970), and Section 27
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15
U.S.C. Sec. 78aa (1970). The complaint
alleged violations of the antifraud
provisions of both acts, Section 17(a) of
the 1933 Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 77q(a) (1970),
Section 10(b) of the 1934 Act, 15 U.S.C.
Sec. 78j(b) (1970), and of Rule 10b-5
promulgated thereunder, 17 C.F.R. Sec.
240.10b-5 (1971); it also alleged violations
of the prospectus-delivery requirement of
Section 5(b) (2) of the 1933 Act, 15 U.S.C.
Sec. 77e(b) (2) (1970). After a five day
non-jury trial in the Southern District of
New York, Constance Baker Motley, District
Judge, the court concluded that appellants
had violated the antifraud provisions of the
1933 and 1934 Acts and the
prospectus-delivery requirement of the 1933
Act.
1
Accordingly, the court permanently enjoined
certain appellants from further violations
of the antifraud provisions and the
prospectus-delivery requirement; ordered all
appellants to disgorge any proceeds, profits
and income received in connection with the
sale of the common stock of Manor Nursing
Centers, Inc.; appointed a trustee to
receive these funds and to distribute them
to defrauded public investors; and ordered a
freeze on the assets of all appellants until
such time as they had transferred to the
trustee the proceeds received from the sale.
For the reasons stated below, we affirm in
part, and reverse and remand in part.
I. Transactions Underlying Violations
Charged
In order to understand the issues
raised on appeal and our rulings thereon, we
set forth the following statement of the
events which culminated in this
litigation-based on the district court's
findings which are supported by substantial
evidence adduced at trial.
2
Page 1089
In 1968, appellant Ira Feinberg
("Feinberg", to be distinguished from his
father, Samuel Feinberg, another appellant)
was the sole owner of a corporation known as
133 County Road, Inc., the only activity of
which was the operation of a 64-bed nursing
home in Tenafly, New Jersey. In that same
year, Feinberg met appellant Ivan Ezrine, a
New York attorney specializing in securities
laws. After several social and business
meetings, Feinberg and Ezrine jointly
decided to obtain public financing for
Feinberg's nursing home business.
As a first step in the process of
selling shares to the public, a new
corporation-appellant Manor Nursing Centers,
Inc. ("Manor")-was organized on March 19,
1969. Manor acquired all the assets of 133
County Road and issued approximately 1.2
million shares of 5 cents par value common
stock to Feinberg who then sold 62,000
shares to certain of his relatives and
friends-appellants Samuel Feinberg (his
father), Gladys Halford (his mother-in-law),
Suzanne Marnane (his employee) and defendant
Arthur Sutton (his friend). In addition,
Feinberg acquiesced in Ezrine's request that
nearly 138,000 shares of Manor be sold to
two corporations which Ezrine controlled
3-appellants
Glendale, Inc. ("Glendale") and Atlantic
Services, Inc. ("Atlantic").
4
Ezrine and Feinberg then decided
that Manor would offer 350,000 shares of
newly issued 5 cents par value common stock
to the public at a price of $10 per share.
After expenses, this offering would raise
approximately $3 million for the operation
of Feinberg's nursing home business. In
addition, Ezrine and Feinberg decided that
100,000 shares held by Manor's stockholders
would be offered at the same $10 price.
After expenses, approximately $868,000 would
then be paid to the selling stockholders in
the following amounts:
Selling Shareholder Shares Offered Net Proceeds
Feinberg 62,500 $542,500
Glendale 15,000 130,200
Atlantic 10,000 86,800
Samuel Feinberg 2,500 21,700
Marnane 2,500 21,700
Halford 2,500 21,700
Sutton 5,000 43,400
-------------- ------------
Totals 100,000 $868,000
To Ezrine was entrusted the
preparation of the registration statement
and all other documents necessary to offer
Manor shares to the public. Ezrine also
selected the accountant for the offering as
well as the underwriter, defendant Benjamin
Werner & Company, of which defendant
Benjamin Werner is the owner. The evidence
showed, however, that Ezrine consulted with
Feinberg when questions arose about the
offering and supporting documentation.
With respect to the issues raised
on this appeal, it is important to note
several representations which Manor and its
principals made concerning the terms of the
offering. First, the offering was presented
on an "all or nothing" basis.
Page 1090 This meant, according to the prospectus,
that:
"Unless all such 450,000 shares are sold
to the public and the proceeds received
therefrom within such sixty (60) day period
(unless extended for an additional thirty
day period), the offering will terminate and
all funds will be returned, without
interest, to subscribers."
Secondly, the prospectus stated
that "subscribers' funds will be maintained
in escrow [and] will not be available for
other use . . . ." In this connection, the
prospectus represented that "[a]rrangements
have been made with Chemical Bank for the
escrow of the funds received during the
course of such offering." Thirdly, the
registration statement indicated that shares
sold in the offering would be sold only for
cash.
5 Finally,
the documents prepared in connection with
the Manor offering did not disclose that
certain purchasers and participating
brokerage firms would be offered or would
receive special compensation for their
agreement to participate in the offering.
The offering of Manor shares
began promptly on December 8, 1969, the
effective date of the registration
statement. Contrary to the representation
made in the prospectus, however, Benjamin
Werner, the underwriter, had not arranged
for an escrow account for the proceeds of
the offering. No such account was ever
established.
From the very outset, Werner
encountered difficulty in selling Manor
shares and requested assistance from Ezrine
and Feinberg. In response to Werner's
request, Ezrine and Feinberg personally
solicited brokerage firms, various
corporations and individuals in an attempt
to interest them in the Manor offering.
As a result of his inquiries,
Feinberg arranged to meet with
representatives of a New Jersey-based
brokerage firm, Carlton Cambridge & Co.,
Inc., and ultimately with one of its
principals, appellant Christos Netelkos, who
demanded special compensation as a condition
to participating in the Manor offering.
After conferring with Ezrine, Feinberg
agreed to give Netelkos, at no cost, 15,000
Manor shares, issued in the name of Lausanne
Investment Company, a dormant company
previously organized by Ezrine.
6 Feinberg also agreed to
guarantee a $250,000 bank loan to Netelkos
with funds received from the offering. In
exchange for the free shares and the loan
guarantee, Netelkos agreed that he and
Carlton Cambridge would sell 142,500 Manor
shares. Of these 142,500 shares, 5,000
eventually were purchased by Carlton
Cambridge for its customers and 40,000 were
purchased by Orvis Brothers, another
broker-dealer, for its customers. The
remainder-97,500 shares-were to be purchased
by appellants Method Leasing Corporation and
Upton Corporation, each of which was owned
and controlled by Netelkos. As stated above,
the Manor prospectus did not disclose the
existence of any special compensation offers
or agreements.
In an effort to find additional
willing buyers, Ezrine arranged a meeting
with defendant Deneso Corporation and its
principals, defendants Joseph Delmonico and
Jack Naiman. At the meeting which both
Feinberg and Ezrine attended, Delmonico and
Naiman refused to participate in the Manor
offering without some form of special
compensation. After several subsequent
conversations, the Deneso
Page 1091 group agreed to purchase 170,000 Manor
shares in exchange for an arrangement
whereby Deneso would be protected from any
loss as a result of its subscription and
Ezrine would cause appellant Glendale to
repurchase Deneso's Manor shares at a
substantial profit to Deneso.
7
This arrangement with Deneso was not
disclosed in the Manor prospectus. Thus, at
the same time that unsuspecting public
investors were being offered and were buying
Manor shares at the full price of $10 per
share, Netelkos and Deneso were purchasing
Manor shares for substantially less than the
price announced in the prospectus.
Needing the proceeds of the
offering to take advantage of certain
business opportunities, Manor and its
principals decided to hold a closing of the
offering on February 20, 1970, several weeks
prior to the March 8 selling deadline. It
soon became apparent, however, that not all
of the 450,000 Manor shares had been
purchased. Rather than cancel or postpone
the closing, Feinberg and Ezrine attempted
to dispose of all the remaining shares by
engaging in a series of transactions which
violated the terms of the offering.
As a first step, Carlton
Cambridge was informed that its selling
commission on the 142,500 Manor shares which
had been allotted to it and
Netelkos-$142,500-would be paid in
securities rather than cash. Carlton
Cambridge and Netelkos therefore subscribed
to 142,500 shares but paid for only 128,250,
despite the explicit provisions of the Manor
offering that shares would be sold only for
cash and that selling commissions could not
and would not be paid until all 450,000
shares had been sold.
Even after disposing of these
14,250 shares, the Manor offering was not
fully subscribed. Ezrine and Feinberg then
participated in several transactions
designed to "sell" an additional 39,200
Manor shares. First, Ezrine accepted 5,000
Manor shares in lieu of his $50,000 legal
fee as special counsel to Manor for the
offering, notwithstanding that the
registration statement by its terms
precluded sales of securities for
consideration other than cash. In addition,
appellants Glendale and Atlantic, the two
corporations controlled by Ezrine which were
selling stockholders, purchased a total of
21,700 shares. Contrary to the terms of the
prospectus, however, these 21,700 shares
were purchased with checks which were drawn
against the proceeds of the
offering-proceeds to which Glendale and
Atlantic were not entitled until all the
Manor shares had been sold and full payment
had been received. Similar to Glendale's and
Atlantic's premature use of the proceeds,
Feinberg drew a check against the proceeds
of the offering for $133,000 payable to
Great Oil Basin, a corporation controlled by
Ezrine, in purported repayment of a loan
made by Great Oil Basin to Manor. Ezrine on
behalf of Great Oil Basin then endorsed the
check and purchased 12,500 Manor shares. It
is clear that Ezrine purchased the Manor
shares on behalf of his corporations knowing
that each of these transactions violated the
explicit language of the prospectus and
registration statement which he had
prepared.
The purchases by the corporations
controlled by Ezrine did not result in the
complete subscription of the Manor offering.
Feinberg and Ezrine then permitted the
distribution of over 14,000 Manor shares to
certain of Manor's trade creditors in full
payment of outstanding indebtedness,
notwithstanding that the registration
statement stated that Manor securities would
be issued only for cash.
Page 1092
Despite these various
transactions which contravened the stated
terms of the offering, there still remained
11,368 shares of Manor stock for which no
purchaser had been found. Feinberg purchased
these shares for his friends, with all but
$200 of the total $113,368 coming from
checks drawn against the proceeds of the
offering.
Through the device of these
various "bootstrap" transactions (purchasing
shares by checks drawn against proceeds) and
the issuance of shares for consideration
other than cash, Manor and its principals
were able to make it appear that all 450,000
shares had been sold. It is obvious,
however, that Benjamin Werner, the
underwriter, received far less than the $4.5
million in proceeds necessary to a valid
closing. Moreover, through their
participation in the various transactions
outlined above, appellants Manor, Feinberg,
Ezrine, Atlantic, Glendale, Netelkos, Method
Leasing and Upton knew that a valid closing
had not occurred.
Despite the fact that all the
proceeds from the offering had not been
received, Werner issued checks to Manor and
the selling stockholders on February 20,
1970. Apparently concerned about the risk
involved in relying upon the large number of
uncertified checks which he had received,
Werner did advise the bank to delay payment
on his checks for one day to permit
clearance of the uncertified checks he had
been tendered.
On February 24, 1970, the first
business day after the purported closing,
Ezrine caused a sticker amendment to the
Manor registration statement to be filed
with the Commission.
8
Although the amendment purported to disclose
the full underwriter's compensation Carlton
Cambridge was to receive, it significantly
omitted any mention of the additional
compensation appellant Netelkos had demanded
and received from Manor. The amendment also
explicitly represented that the entire Manor
issue had been sold. At no time thereafter
was this representation amended to reflect
that the issue was not sold. No further
amendment to the registration statement was
ever filed with the Commission.
On February 24, the same day the
sticker amendment was filed, Werner learned
that checks issued by Deneso and Netelkos at
the closing, totaling approximately $2.5
million, had been returned for insufficient
funds when presented for payment. Werner
informed Ezrine and Feinberg of this
development. Following Ezrine's
instructions, Werner stopped payment on the
checks he had issued at the closing.
Werner's check to Feinberg, however, for
more than $559,000, the amount to which
Feinberg was entitled if the offering had
been completely subscribed, could not be
stopped because Werner's bank erroneously
had certified the check to Feinberg's bank.
With this money, Feinberg purchased a
$250,000 certificate of deposit with which
to furnish collateral for the loan he had
promised to guarantee for Netelkos.
9
Upon the return of the Netelkos
and Deneso checks for insufficient funds, it
became painfully obvious to Feinberg and
Ezrine that the distribution of the proceeds
did not comply with the terms of the
offering, since all of the proceeds had not
been received. Nevertheless, rather than
recapturing and returning the public
investors' money, Ezrine and
Page 1093 Feinberg embarked on a frantic campaign
either to collect the money from Deneso and
Netelkos or, failing in that effort, to
reoffer their shares.
Feinberg's subsequent attempts to
collect the $832,500 from Netelkos proved to
be futile. Moreover, Netelkos defaulted on
the $250,000 loan which Feinberg had
guaranteed with proceeds from the offering,
and Feinberg was called upon to repay the
loan. Some months after the closing,
Netelkos did give Feinberg and Manor
approximately $200,000. Netelkos also
returned his 83,250 shares and the 15,000
shares issued in the name of Lausanne
Investment Company. These 98,250 shares,
which were retired by Manor, were never
sold.
Ezrine likewise was unable to
collect on the Deneso check. In early March
1970, with the March 8, 1970 deadline fast
approaching, Ezrine decided to reoffer the
Deneso shares. On March 4, with Feinberg's
knowledge, Ezrine arranged to sell 60,000
Manor shares to a David Haber of New York
City. The district court found that Haber's
purchase was induced by Ezrine's oral
promise to protect him against loss on his
investment and to give him $60,000. On March
5, Haber returned the shares, and Ezrine
renewed his promise to pay Haber the
guaranteed profit of $60,000.
10
Between March 5, when Haber
returned the 60,000 Manor shares, and March
8, the last offering date for sale of the
shares, Ezrine was unable to find any
purchasers. Ten days after the offering
period had expired, however, Ezrine arranged
to sell 60,000 Manor shares to the Daytona
Beach General Hospital. Any facade of
compliance with the terms of the offering
was now completely dropped. Not only were
the shares sold after the selling deadline,
but they were sold at a price of $11 per
share, rather than the original price of
$10. Ezrine also represented that Manor
agreed to furnish Daytona with extra
compensation.
11
Ezrine's efforts thus resulted in
the sale of only 60,000 of the 170,000
Deneso shares. The remaining 110,000 shares
were retired by Manor. As a result of
Netelkos' and Deneso's failure to pay for
their shares, therefore, more than 200,000
of the 450,000 shares involved in the Manor
offering were never sold. Despite this,
neither Ezrine nor Feinberg informed the SEC
that, contrary to the representation made in
the sticker amendment filed on February 24,
1970, the issue had not been completely
subscribed. In addition, notwithstanding
that all 450,000 shares had not been sold,
appellants did not attempt to return the
money obtained from the public investors.
Moreover, while some appellants claim they
derived no financial benefit from the
offering, the evidence shows that Manor and
the other appellants received and retained
at least $1.3 million in cash proceeds from
public investors.
12
There can be no doubt that
Feinberg and the corporations which he
controlled
Page 1094 derived a substantial financial benefit from
the offering. Feinberg received a valid
check from Werner for $559,000 on the day of
the purported closing. It is undisputed that
from March 5, 1970 to May 1970 Manor
received and retained more than $1 million
in proceeds from the offering. Moreover,
appellant Capital Cities Nursing Centers,
Inc., which succeeded to the business and
operations of Manor by virtue of a
transaction in which Manor sold its assets
to Capital Cities on July 27, 1970 and
which, as the district court found, is
"simply a new name for Manor," also derived
financial benefit from the offering by
acquiring Manor's assets which included some
of the proceeds of the offering. In
addition, the SEC presented evidence that
appellant Manor Construction Company, a
company controlled by Feinberg, accepted
between $100,000 and $200,000 in proceeds
from the sale of Manor stock.
Ezrine, as well as Glendale and
Atlantic, claim that they retained no
proceeds from the Manor offering. Sometime
after the purported closing on February 20,
however, Ezrine and an affiliated company,
Great Oil Basin, sold 17,000 Manor shares to
the public for $170,000. At least $125,000
of the money Ezrine used to make the
original purchase of these shares came from
the public investor funds received by Manor
at the closing.
The SEC also presented evidence
that appellants Samuel Feinberg, Marnane and
Halford, as well as defendant Sutton,
received in cash the money to which they
would have been entitled had the issue been
fully subscribed. The checks which
originally had been issued by Werner on
February 20, 1970 to these selling
shareholders were not honored. More than a
month later and after the March 8, 1970
selling deadline, however, Ira Feinberg drew
checks totaling $108,500 payable to the
order of Samuel Feinberg, Halford, Marnane
and Sutton. These appellants have not
returned these funds; Sutton did consent,
however, to an order requiring him to pay
into the registry of the court the $43,000
received in connection with the Manor
offering. See note 1 supra.
Appellant Netelkos also has
retained some proceeds from the offering.
Feinberg guaranteed a $250,000 loan for
Netelkos by purchasing a certificate of
deposit with some of the proceeds of the
offering. When Netelkos defaulted on the
loan, the bank called upon Feinberg to pay
the loan. While Netelkos has paid some money
to Feinberg, it does not appear that he has
repaid the entire $250,000.
II. Violations of Antifraud Provisions of
1933 and 1934 Acts
The conduct of appellants in
connection with the public offering of Manor
shares, upon analysis, demonstrates beyond a
peradventure of a doubt that they violated
the antifraud provisions of the federal
securities laws-Sec. 17(a) of the 1933 Act
and Sec. 10(b) of the 1934 Act.
The gravamen of this case is that
each of the appellants participated in a
continuing course of conduct whereby public
investors were fraudulently induced to part
with their money in the expectation that
Manor and the selling stockholders would
return the money if all Manor shares were
not sold and all the proceeds from the sale
were not received by March 8, 1970. It is
undisputed that, as of March 8, Manor and
the selling stockholders had not sold all
the 450,000 shares and that all the proceeds
expected from the sale had not been
received. Moreover, it is clear that all
appellants knew, or should have known, that
the preconditions for their retaining the
proceeds of the offering had not been
satisfied. Nevertheless, rather than
complying with the terms of the offering by
returning the funds of public investors,
appellants retained these funds for their
own financial benefit. This misappropriation
of the proceeds of the Manor offering
constituted a fraud on public investors and
violated the antifraud provisions of the
federal securities laws.
Superintendent of Insurance of the State of
New York v. Bankers Life & Casualty Co., 404
U.S. 6, 10 n. 7
Page 1095 (1971);
Richardson v. MacArthur, 451 F.2d 35, 40-41
(10 Cir. 1971);
A. T. Brod & Co. v. Perlow, 375 F.2d 393,
397 (2 Cir. 1967);
Cooper v. North Jersey Trust Company, 226
F.Supp. 972, 978 (S.D.N.Y.1964). As we
said in A. T. Brod & Co. v. Perlow, supra,
375 F.2d at 397: "We believe that Sec. 10(b)
and Rule 10b-5 prohibit all fraudulent
schemes in connection with the purchase or
sale of securities, whether the artifices
employed involve a garden type variety of
fraud, or present a unique form of
deception." In the instant case, we hold
that the "misappropriation [of the proceeds]
is a 'garden variety' type of fraud . . . ."
Superintendent of Insurance of the State of
New York v. Bankers Life & Casualty Co.,
supra, 404 U.S. at 10 n. 7.
All appellants also violated Sec.
10(b) of the 1934 Act and Rule 10b-9
promulgated thereunder by making a
misrepresentation with respect to the terms
of an "all or nothing" offering. Recognizing
the great potential for fraudulent conduct
on the part of persons in connection with
public offerings of securities on an "all or
nothing" basis,
13
the SEC in 1962 adopted Rule 10b-9, which
provides in relevant part:
"It shall constitute a 'manipulative or
deceptive device or contrivance,' . . . to
make any representation:
(1) to the effect that the security is
being offered or sold on an 'allor-none'
basis, unless the security is part of an
offering or distribution being made on the
condition that all or a specified amount of
the consideration paid for such security
will be promptly refunded to the purchaser
unless (A) all of the securities being
offered are sold at a specified price within
a specified time, and (B) the total amount
due to the seller is received by him by a
specified date. . . ."
Here, it is clear that all
appellants knew that the offering was
presented on an "all or nothing" basis.
Moreover, the evidence established that
appellants knew, or should have known, that
all of the shares had not been sold and that
all of the proceeds had not been received by
March 8, 1970. Under the circumstances,
there can be no doubt that representing that
the offering would be on an "all or nothing"
basis violated Rule 10b-9.
13a
It also is clear that appellants
violated the antifraud provisions of the
federal securities laws by offering Manor
shares when they knew, or should have known,
that the Manor prospectus was misleading in
several material respects. After the
registration statement became effective on
December 8, 1969, at least four developments
occurred which made the prospectus
misleading: the public's funds were not
returned even though the issue was not fully
subscribed; an escrow account for the
proceeds of the offering was not
established; shares were issued for
consideration other than cash; and certain
individuals received extra compensation for
agreeing to participate in the offering.
These developments were not disclosed to the
public investors. That these developments
occurred after the effective date of the
registration statement did not provide a
license to appellants to ignore them.
Post-effective developments which materially
alter the picture presented in the
registration statement must be brought to
the attention of public investors.
14
Page 1096
"The effect of the antifraud provisions of
the Securities Act (Sec. 17(a)) and of the
Exchange Act (Sec. 10(b) and Rule 10b-5) is
to require the prospectus to reflect any
post-effective changes necessary to keep the
prospectus from being misleading in any
material respect . . . ."
SEC v. Bangor Punta Corp., 331 F.Supp. 1154,
1160 n. 10 (S.D.N.Y.1971).
Accord, Danser v. United States, 281 F.2d
492, 496-97 (1 Cir. 1960). See 1 Loss
Securities Regulation 293 (2d ed. 1961,
Supp. 1969).
While appellants admit that
public investors were defrauded, they seek
to exculpate themselves from liability for
their acts by arguing that they acted in
good faith. Appellants' contention that
their good faith should bar liability under
the antifraud provisions of the federal
securities laws, however, must be assessed
in light of the Supreme Court's admonition
that securities legislation enacted for the
purpose of avoiding frauds must be construed
"flexibly to effectuate its remedial
purposes."
SEC v. Capital Gains Bureau, 375 U.S. 180,
195 (1963). It is now well established
that "[b]efore there may be a violation of
the securities acts there need not be
present all of the same elements essential
to common law fraud . . . ."
Globus v. Law Research Service, Inc., 418
F.2d 1276, 1290-91 (2 Cir. 1969).
Accord, SEC v. Capital Gains Bureau, supra,
375 U.S. at 193-95. Moreover, in an
enforcement proceeding for equitable or
prophylactic relief, such as the one here,
we have held that mere negligence is a
sufficient basis for liability.
Hanly v. SEC, 415 F.2d 589, 597 (2 Cir.
1969);
SEC v. Texas Gulf Sulphur Co., 401 F.2d 833,
854-55 (2 Cir. 1968) (en banc), cert.
denied sub nom.
Coates v. SEC, 394 U.S. 976 (1969).
15 Accordingly,
appellants' claim that they acted in good
faith, even if accepted, would not bar their
liability under Sec. 17(a) of the 1933 Act
or Sec. 10(b) of the 1934 Act.
We hold, however, that the
evidence established that appellants, with
the exception of Samuel Feinberg, Marnane
and Halford, did not act in good faith.
Feinberg,
16 as
the district court properly found, has had
considerable experience in complex financing
arrangements. Thus, it would strain
credulity to suggest that Feinberg did not
know that the closing on February 20 was
invalid. Any doubt about the invalidity of
the closing, moreover, must have been
completely dissipated by the news that the
Netelkos and Deneso checks had been returned
for insufficient funds. In addition, even
assuming Feinberg reoffered the Netelkos and
Deneso shares in good faith, he knew that
neither he nor Ezrine had been successful in
selling them all and that more than 200,000
of the 450,000 shares involved in the
offering were retired without having been
purchased. Nevertheless, Feinberg did not
attempt to return the proceeds of the
offering until the SEC had begun its
investigation. In view of these
circumstances, it cannot be said that the
district court was clearly erroneous in
finding that Feinberg knowingly had
participated in the fraud. As Judge Learned
Hand said in a similar context, ". . . the
cumulation of instances, each explicable
only by extreme credulity or professional
inexpertness, may have a probative force
immensely greater than any one of them
alone."
United States v. White, 124 F.2d 181, 185 (2
Cir. 1941).
Ezrine's claim that he acted in
good faith likewise is belied by the
evidence adduced at trial.
17
As an experienced securities lawyer, he was
well aware that failure to correct a
misleading prospectus and retention of the
proceeds even though
Page 1097 the issue had not been fully subscribed
constituted violations of the antifraud
provisions of the securities laws. Indeed,
Ezrine's knowledge that the federal
securities laws required public disclosure
of developments which occurred subsequent to
the effective date of the registration
statement is indicated by his supplementing
the Manor prospectus on February 24 to
reflect Carlton Cambridge's participation in
the offering as an underwriter.
The district court also properly
found that Netelkos knowingly violated the
antifraud provisions.
18
While Netelkos admits that the prospectus
was misleading in several material respects,
he claims that he was under no duty to
inform public investors that the prospectus
did not present an accurate picture. The
evidence shows, however, that Netelkos was
actively involved in selling the issue and
therefore was obligated to bring to the
attention of offerees any developments which
made the prospectus misleading in any
material respect. Moreover, since Netelkos
did not pay for his shares, it is clear that
he retained some of the proceeds of the
offering knowing that all of the 450,000
shares had not been sold and that all of the
proceeds had not been received.
19
As for appellants Samuel
Feinberg, Marnane and Halford, the evidence
did not show, nor did the district court
find, that they had acted in bad faith.
Nevertheless, the court correctly held that
these appellants had violated the antifraud
provisions of the 1933 and 1934 Acts. Each
of these appellants received signals which
should have alerted them to the fact that
the Manor issue was never fully subscribed.
On February 20, 1970, all of the selling
shareholders received checks from the
underwriter representing the proceeds due
them from their sales. Four days later,
these appellants learned that payment on the
checks had to be stopped because the
underwriter did not have sufficient funds on
deposit to honor the checks. At this point,
these appellants should have inquired about
the progress of the offering, for if the
arrangements described in the prospectus had
been followed and the entire issue had been
sold, there would be no reason for the
underwriter not to have had sufficient funds
to cover the checks. Nevertheless, there is
no evidence that these appellants even
questioned any of the principal figures
about the status of the offering. Samuel
Feinberg, Marnane and Halford ultimately
were paid the amounts of money to which each
would have been entitled had the entire
issue been sold. These appellants received
checks drawn on Manor's account which were
signed by Ira Feinberg. Rather than raising
any questions as to why the first checks
were not honored and why they subsequently
were paid by checks drawn on Manor's
account, they simply accepted the money. In
view of their failure to make any inquiry
whatsoever, it is clear that these
appellants deliberately closed their eyes to
facts which they, as selling shareholders
who were to receive a substantial financial
benefit, were under a duty to see and to act
accordingly.
United States v. Benjamin,
328 F.2d 854, 862
(2 Cir.), cert. denied, 377 U.S. 953 (1964).
Whether their conduct be termed lack of due
diligence or negligence, the district court
properly held that these appellants violated
Sec. 17(a) of the 1933 Act and Sec. 10(b) of
the 1934 Act.
Page 1098
III. Violations of Prospectus-Delivery
Requirement of
1933 Act
In addition to concluding that
appellants had violated the antifraud
provisions of the federal securities laws,
the district court also correctly held that
they had violated the prospectus-delivery
requirement of Section 5(b)(2) of the 1933
Act.
Section 5(b)(2) prohibits the
delivery of a security for the purpose of
sale unless the security is accompanied or
preceded by a prospectus which meets the
requirements of Section 10(a) of the 1933
Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 77j(a) (1970).
20 To meet the
requirements of Sec. 10(a), a prospectus
must contain, with specified exceptions, all
"the information contained in the
registration statement . . . ." In turn, the
registration statement, pursuant to Section
7 of the 1933 Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 77g
(1970), must set forth certain information
specified in Schedule A of the 1933 Act, 15
U.S.C. Sec. 77aa (1970). Among the items of
information which Schedule A requires the
registration statement, and therefore the
prospectus, to contain are the use of
proceeds (item 13), the estimated net
proceeds (item 15), the price at which the
security will be offered to the public and
any variation therefrom (item 16), and all
commissions or discounts paid to
underwriters, directly or indirectly (item
17).
The Manor prospectus purported to
disclose the information required by the
above items of Schedule A. The evidence
adduced at trial showed, however, that
developments subsequent to the effective
date of the registration statement made this
information false and misleading.
21 Moreover, Manor and
its principals did not amend or supplement
the prospectus to reflect the changes which
had made inaccurate the information which
Sec. 10(a) required the prospectus to
disclose. We hold that implicit in the
statutory provision that the prospectus
contain certain information is the
requirement that such information be true
and correct.
SEC v. North American Finance Co., 214
F.Supp. 197, 201 (D.Ariz.1959); Eugene
Rosenson, 40 S.E.C. 948, 952 (1961).
22 A prospectus does not
meet the requirements of Sec. 10(a),
therefore, if information required to be
disclosed is materially false or misleading.
Appellants violated Sec. 5(b)(2) by
delivering Manor securities for sale
accompanied by a prospectus which did not
meet the requirements of Sec. 10(a) in that
the prospectus contained materially false
and misleading statements with respect to
information required by Sec. 10(a) to be
disclosed.
Page 1099
Manor contends, however, that
Sec. 5(b)(2) does not require that a
prospectus be amended to reflect material
developments which occur subsequent to the
effective date of the registration
statement. This contention is premised on
the assumptions that the prospectus spoke
only as of the effective date of the
registration statement and that the
prospectus contained no false or misleading
statements as of the effective date-December
8, 1969. Assuming the Manor prospectus was
accurate as of December 8, 1969, appellants'
claim is without merit.
In support of their argument that
the prospectus need not be amended or
supplemented to reflect posteffective
developments, appellants cite an
administrative decision in which the SEC
held that it will not issue a stop order
with respect to a registration statement
which becomes misleading subsequent to its
effective date because of material
post-effective events. Funeral Directors
Manufacturing and Supply Co., 39 S.E.C. 33,
34 (1959). See also Charles A. Howard, 1
S.E.C. 6, 10 (1934). Under this line of SEC
decisions, a registration statement need not
be amended after its effective date to
reflect post-effective developments.
23 These decisions,
however, are not apposite here. Assuming
that the registration statement does speak
as of its effective date and that Manor did
not have to amend its registration
statement,
24
appellants were obliged to reflect the
post-effective developments referred to
above in the prospectus. Even those SEC
decisions holding that the registration
statement need not be amended to reflect
post-effective developments recognize that
the prospectus must be amended or
supplemented in some manner to reflect such
changes. See Charles A. Howard, supra, at
10. In addition, as noted above in Part II
of this opinion, the effect of the antifraud
provisions of the 1933 and 1934 Acts is to
require that the prospectus reflect
post-effective developments which make the
prospectus misleading in any material
respect. There is no authority for the
proposition that a prospectus speaks always
as of the effective date of the registration
statement.
25
Page 1100
We hold that appellants were
under a duty to amend or supplement the
Manor prospectus to reflect post-effective
developments; that their failure to do so
stripped the Manor prospectus of compliance
with Sec. 10(a); and that appellants
therefore violated Sec. 5(b)(2).
IV. Injunctive Relief Granted
Having concluded that appellants
had violated the federal securities laws,
the district court permanently enjoined all
appellants, except Samuel Feinberg, Marnane
and Halford,
26
from further violations of the antifraud
provisions of the 1933 and 1934 Acts; and
also permanently enjoined appellants Manor,
Feinberg, Ezrine, Glendale and Atlantic from
further violations of Sec. 5(b)(2) of the
1933 Act. Appellants' claim that the
district court abused its discretion in
granting such injunctive relief is without
merit.
In an action, such as the instant
one, where the SEC sought injunctive relief
under Section 20(b) of the 1933 Act, 15
U.S.C. Sec. 77t(b) (1970), and under Section
21(e) of the 1934 Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 78u(e)
(1970), a district court has broad
discretion to enjoin possible future
violations of law where past violations have
been shown, and the court's determination
that the public interest requires the
imposition of a permanent restraint should
not be disturbed on appeal unless there has
been a clear abuse of discretion.
SEC v. Texas Gulf Sulphur Co., 446 F.2d
1301, 1306-7 (2 Cir.), cert. denied, 404
U.S. 1005 (1971);
SEC v. Culpepper, 270 F.2d 241, 250 (2 Cir.
1959). Moreover, the party seeking to
overturn the district court's exercise of
discretion has the burden of showing that
the court abused that discretion, and the
burden necessarily is a heavy one. SEC v.
Culpepper, supra, 270 F.2d at 250;
United States v. W. T. Grant Co., 345 U.S.
629, 633 (1953). In the instant case, we
hold that appellants have not sustained that
burden, for the record amply supports the
district court's conclusion that the
issuance of a permanent injunction was
appropriate.
The critical question for a
district court in deciding whether to issue
a permanent injunction in view of past
violations is whether there is a reasonable
likelihood that the wrong will be repeated.
SEC v. Culpepper, supra, 270 F.2d at 249;
United States v. W. T. Grant Co., supra, 345
U.S. at 633. Here there were several factors
which supported the district court's
conclusion that a reasonable likelihood of
future violations existed. First, fraudulent
past conduct gives rise to an inference of a
reasonable expectation of continued
violations,
SEC v. Keller Corporation, 323 F.2d 397, 402
(7 Cir. 1963); SEC v. Culpepper, supra,
270 F.2d at 250; we believe that the drawing
of such an inference was particularly
appropriate here where appellants did not
attempt to cease or undo the effects of
their unlawful activity until the
institution of an investigation. Secondly,
having in mind that the nature of past
violations has an important bearing on the
reasonable expectation of future violations,
SEC v. Culpepper, supra, 270 F.2d at 250;
United States v. W. T. Grant Co., supra, 345
U.S. at 633, the district court's conclusion
below that there was a reasonable
expectation
Page 1101 of future violations was supported by its
finding that appellants' "violations were
willful, blatant, and often completely
outrageous." Thirdly, the fact that these
appellants continued to maintain that their
past conduct was blameless was a factor
appropriately considered by the district
court in assessing the need for a permanent
injunction.
SEC v. MacElvain, 417 F.2d 1134, 1137 (5
Cir. 1969), cert. denied, 397 U.S. 972
(1970);
Hecht Co. v. Bowles, 321 U.S. 321, 331
(1944). Finally, the district court had
ample opportunity to evaluate the sincerity
of appellants' assurances that they would
not again violate the federal securities
laws. In view of the inconsistencies in each
appellant's testimony and the conflicting
stories told by different appellants, the
district court was justified in doubting the
veracity of appellants' assurances. Under
all the circumstances, it cannot be said
that the district court abused its
discretion in granting permanent injunctive
relief.
Appellants argue, however, that
the SEC must show more than a reasonable
likelihood of future violations. They
maintain that appellants must be shown to
have a propensity or natural inclination to
violate the securities laws. Appellants'
reliance on
SEC v. Bangor Punta Corporation, 331 F.Supp.
1154, 1163 (S.D.N.Y.1971), for this
proposition is misplaced. There the district
court, in concluding under the circumstances
there presented that a permanent injunction
should not issue, said:
"Under all the facts and circumstances in
this case, the Commission has failed to
carry its burden to establish, with
persuasive evidence, that Bangor Punta, its
officers, directors and employees, have a
propensity or natural inclination to violate
the securities law.
Securities and Exchange Commission v. Texas
Gulf Sulphur Co.,
446 F.2d 1301 (2d Cir.
June 10, 1971)." 331 F.Supp. at 1162-63.
In relying upon our decision in
Texas Gulf Sulphur, which applied the
reasonable likelihood standard, the district
court demonstrated that it was not
purporting to apply a new standard for the
issuance of an injunction. In any event, we
adhere to our well established rule and hold
that the SEC has demonstrated the necessity
for injunctive relief since there is a
reasonable likelihood of future violations
on the part of appellants. SEC v. Culpepper,
supra, 270 F.2d at 249.
Appellants also maintain that the
district court's abuse of discretion is
shown by the fact that appellants had ceased
any illegal activities prior to the
institution of suit. It is well settled,
however, that cessation of illegal
activities in contemplation of an SEC suit
does not preclude the issuance of an
injunction enjoining violations. SEC v.
Keller Corporation, supra, 323 F.2d at 402;
SEC v. Boren, 283 F.2d 312, 313 (2 Cir.
1960); SEC v. Culpepper, supra, 270 F.2d
at 250. As the Supreme Court said in an
analogous situation:
"The courts have an obligation, once a
violation has been established, to protect
the public from a continuation of the
harmful and unlawful activities. A trial
court's wide discretion in fashioning
remedies is not to be exercised to deny
relief altogether by lightly inferring an
abandonment of the unlawful activities from
a cessation which seems timed to anticipate
suit."
United States v. Parke, Davis & Co., 362
U.S. 29, 48 (1960).
Appellants Manor, Capital Cities
and Feinberg claim that an injunction should
not have been issued against them because of
their good faith reliance on advice of their
counsel, appellant Ezrine. As we have held
in Part II of this opinion, however, the
district court was not clearly erroneous in
finding that these appellants knowingly had
violated the federal securities laws. While
good faith reliance on advice of counsel may
be a factor to consider in deciding whether
to grant injunctive relief, appellants'
proven lack of good faith here precludes
them from relying on this argument.
Moreover, SEC v. Harwyn Industries
Corporation,
326 F.Supp. 943 (S.D.N.Y.1971),
upon which
Page 1102 appellants strongly rely, is not to the
contrary. Unlike the situation here, the
court there found that defendants had relied
in good faith on counsel's advice and that
counsel's interpretation of the law was
"neither frivolous nor wholly unreasonable."
326 F.Supp. at 954.
Appellants Ezrine and Netelkos
contend that the issuance of an injunction
against them was inappropriate because of
the resulting harmful impact on their
professional reputations and legitimate
business activities. True, in deciding
whether to grant injunctive relief, a
district court is called upon to assess all
those considerations of fairness that have
been the traditional concern of equity
courts. Hecht Co. v. Bowles, supra, 321 U.S.
at 328-30. Accordingly, the adverse effect
of an injunction upon defendants is a factor
to be considered by the district court in
exercising its discretion. SEC v. Harwyn
Industries Corporation, supra, 326 F.Supp.
at 957;
SEC v. Broadwell Securities, Inc., 240
F.Supp. 962, 967 (S.D.N.Y.1965). The
record before us clearly demonstrates that
the district court, having considered the
harmful impact of injunctive relief on
Ezrine's and Netelkos' professional
reputations, nevertheless concluded that
public investors needed the protection of an
injunction. As we said in SEC v. Culpepper,
supra, 270 F.2d at 250, "The public
interest, when in conflict with private
interest, is paramount." Moreover, in view
of the "blatant" nature of the violations
found by the district court to have been
committed by Ezrine and Netelkos and in view
of their professional occupations which
place them in positions where they could
misappropriate public investor funds in
other offerings, the district court's
decision to enjoin them from further
violations was not an unreasonable one.
Finally, appellants challenge the
scope of the injunctive relief on two
grounds. First, they contend that the
district court abused its discretion in
enjoining appellants from further violations
involving any security, rather than just
Manor securities. Secondly, appellants claim
that the court erred in enjoining them from
committing acts which bear little
resemblance to their alleged illegal
activities. While there is a dearth of
authority squarely in point with respect to
the appropriate scope of injunctive relief
in SEC enforcement actions, we are satisfied
that the district court's injunctive
provisions are not overly broad under all
the circumstances of this case.
The principles which we believe
to be controlling in regard to the
appropriate breadth of injunctive relief are
those expressed
NLRB v. Express Publishing Co., 312 U.S. 426
(1941).
Hillsborough Investment Corporation v. SEC,
276 F.2d 665, 667 (1 Cir. 1960). In
Express Publishing the Supreme Court said:
"A federal court has broad power to restrain
acts which are of the same type or class as
unlawful acts which the court has found to
have been committed or whose commission in
the future, unless enjoined, may fairly be
anticipated from the defendant's conduct in
the past." 312 U.S. at 435. In view of the
principal appellants' conduct in the instant
case, the district court was justified in
believing that an injunction limited to
violations involving Manor shares only would
not adequately protect public investors. The
violations of the federal securities laws
committed by appellants Feinberg, Ezrine and
Netelkos demonstrated their propensity to
use various corporate entities to achieve
unlawful objectives. While Feinberg and
Ezrine decided to obtain public financing
for Feinberg's nursing home business by
offering Manor shares, coupled with a
complex maze of transactions involving other
entities, they could just as easily have
decided to secure financing for Feinberg's
business by issuing and selling shares in
any number of corporations controlled by
either or both of them. It is a fair
inference, therefore, based on appellants'
utilization of various corporate entities to
attain their goals, that any future
violations of the securities laws might well
involve corporate entities other than Manor.
This is buttressed
Page 1103 by the fact that, for all practical
purposes, Manor no longer exists. Capital
Cities acquired all of its assets on July
27, 1970. If the district court were to
enjoin fraudulent transactions involving
only Manor and Capital Cities securities, it
is not unlikely that yet another corporation
controlled by appellants would acquire the
assets of the nursing home business and
would attempt to obtain public financing.
Under the circumstances, it cannot be said
that the district court abused its
discretion in framing the injunction to
cover not merely the security to which the
proof directly related, but any security.
See SEC v. Seaboard Securities Corporation,
CCH Fed.Sec.L.Rep. p91,697, at 95,564
(S.D.N.Y.1966); SEC v. Keller Corporation,
supra, 323 F.2d at 402-03.
We likewise find no merit in
appellants' claim that the district court
enjoined violations that bear little
resemblance to those which appellants
allegedly committed. With respect to the
provision enjoining appellants Feinberg,
Ezrine, Manor, Glendale and Atlantic from
further violations of the
prospectus-delivery requirement of Sec.
5(b)(2) of the 1933 Act, the district
court's order merely parroted the language
of that Section. There can be no abuse of
discretion in framing an injunction in terms
of the specific statutory provision which
the court concludes has been violated.
Vanity Fair Paper Mills, Inc. v. FTC, 311
F.2d 480, 487-88 (2 Cir. 1962); 3 Loss,
Securities Regulation 1978 (2d ed. 1961,
Supp. 1969). As for that part of the
injunction enjoining further violations of
the antifraud provisions of the federal
securities laws, the district court framed
the order in language virtually identical to
that of Rule 10b-5. In view of the various
types of fraud committed by appellants, the
court was justified in framing an injunction
appropriately broad in scope. See SEC v.
Keller Corporation, supra, 323 F.2d at 402;
Los Angeles Trust Deed & Mortgage Exchange
v. SEC, 285 F.2d 162, 181 (9 Cir. 1960);
3 Loss, Securities Regulation 1978 n. 19 (2d
ed. 1961, Supp. 1969).
V. Ancillary Relief Granted
In addition to granting the SEC's
request for injunctive relief, the district
court ordered appellants to disgorge all the
proceeds, profits and income received in
connection with the public offering of Manor
stock; appointed a trustee to receive such
funds, to distribute them to defrauded
public investors and to report to the court
on the true state of affairs; and, to
prevent a wasting of assets, ordered a
temporary freeze on appellants' assets
pending transfer of the funds to the
trustee. With the exception of one aspect of
these provisions of the district court's
order, we hold that the grant of this
ancillary relief was a proper exercise of
the district court's equity powers.
It is now well established that
Section 22(a) of the 1933 Act, 15 U.S.C.
Sec. 77v(a) (1970), and Section 27 of the
1934 Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 78aa (1970), confer
general equity powers upon the district
courts. SEC v. Texas Gulf Sulphur Co.,
supra, 446 F.2d at 1307;
SEC v. S & P National Corporation, 360 F.2d
741, 750 (2 Cir. 1966);
Lankenau v. Coggeshall & Hicks, 350 F.2d 61,
63 (2 Cir. 1965);
Esbitt v. Dutch-American Mercantile
Corporation, 335 F.2d 141, 143 (2 Cir. 1964).
Once the equity jurisdiction of the district
court has been properly invoked by a showing
of a securities law violation, the court
possesses the necessary power to fashion an
appropriate remedy. Thus, while neither the
1933 nor 1934 Acts specifically authorize
the ancillary relief granted in this case,
"[i]t is for the federal courts to adjust
their remedies so as to grant the necessary
relief where federally secured rights are
invaded."
J. I. Case Co. v. Borak, 377 U.S. 426, 433
(1964).
Accord, Deckert v. Independence Corporation,
311 U.S. 282, 288 (1940). Moreover, as
the Supreme Court said
Mills v. Electric Auto-Lite Co., 396 U.S.
375, 391 (1970): "[W]e cannot fairly
infer from the
Page 1104 Securities Exchange Act of 1934 a purpose to
circumscribe the courts' power to grant
appropriate remedies." It is true that Mills
and Borak involved relief to private
litigants. Nevertheless, we recently said
that "we deem the above statement [in Mills]
to be fully applicable in enforcement
actions by the SEC." SEC v. Texas Gulf
Sulphur Co., supra, 446 F.2d at 1308.
Accordingly, we reiterate our previous
holding in Texas Gulf Sulphur that the SEC
may seek other than injunctive relief to
effectuate the purposes of the federal
securities laws. 446 F.2d at 1308.
Appellants contend that, even if
the district court had the power to grant
ancillary relief, the relief granted was
inappropriate in this case. We hold, with
the exception of the one aspect of the
district court's order referred to below,
that the grant of ancillary relief in the
instant case was supported by ample
precedent.
Clearly the provision requiring
the disgorging of proceeds received in
connection with the Manor offering was a
proper exercise of the district court's
equity powers. The effective enforcement of
the federal securities laws requires that
the SEC be able to make violations
unprofitable. The deterrent effect of an SEC
enforcement action would be greatly
undermined if securities law violators were
not required to disgorge illicit profits. As
Judge Waterman said in SEC v. Texas Gulf
Sulphur Co., supra, 446 F.2d at 1308: "It
would severely defeat the purposes of the
Act if a violator of Rule 10b-5 were allowed
to retain the profits from his violation."
Accord, SEC v. Golconda Mining Co., 327
F.Supp. 257, 259 (S.D.N.Y.1971). We hold
that it was appropriate for the district
court to order appellants to disgorge the
proceeds received in connection with the
Manor offering.
Having held that ordering the
refunding of the proceeds was a proper
exercise of the district court's equity
powers, we hold that the court erred in
ordering appellants to transfer to the
trustee all the profits and income earned on
such proceeds. As we noted in SEC v. Texas
Gulf Sulphur Co., supra, 446 F.2d at 1308,
the SEC may seek other than injunctive
relief, "so long as such relief is remedial
relief and is not a penalty assessment." We
believe that ordering the disgorging of
profits and income earned on the proceeds is
in fact a penalty assessment. This provision
of the order cannot be justified as remedial
relief to purchasers of Manor shares. As
defrauded purchasers in a private
enforcement action, public investors would
be entitled "to recover only the excess of
what they paid over the value of what they
got."
Levine v. Seilon, Inc., 439 F.2d 328, 334 (2
Cir. 1971). While not conclusive, we
think that it is significant that defendants
in private litigation would not be required
to pay defrauded purchasers the profits on
the proceeds.
Janigan v. Taylor, 344 F.2d 781, 786 (1 Cir.
1965). Moreover, refunding the profits
on the proceeds cannot be justified as
compensation to the issuing corporation for
harm done to it by its officers and
employees. See SEC v. Texas Gulf Sulphur
Co., supra, 446 F.2d at 1308. The concept of
harm to the corporation should not apply
here, particularly where one appellant,
Feinberg, now completely controls the
corporation and any compensation paid to the
corporation would simply go into his pocket.
Furthermore, as previously noted, Manor is
now only a corporate shell.
The only plausible justification
for this part of the court's order is that
the deterrent force of requiring the
disgorging of the profits on the proceeds is
essential to effective enforcement of the
federal securities laws. In balance,
however, we believe that the injunctive
relief and the requirement that the proceeds
be returned are sufficient deterrence to
further violations. While compelling the
transfer of the profits on the proceeds
arguably might add to the deterrent effect
of the court's order, this in our view does
not justify arbitrarily requiring those
appellants who invested
Page 1105 wisely to refund substantially more than
other appellants. Accordingly, we reverse
that part of the court's order which
provides for disgorgement of the profits and
income earned on the proceeds, and remand to
the district court for modification of its
order so as to require appellants to
transfer to the trustee only the proceeds
received in connection with the Manor
offering, together with interest at the New
York legal rate from the date appellants
received the proceeds.
SEC v. Texas Gulf Sulphur Co., 312 F.Supp.
77, 93 (S.D.N.Y.1970), aff'd,
446 F.2d 1301 (2 Cir.), cert. denied, 404 U.S. 1005
(1971).
Appellants also contend that the
district court abused its discretion by
appointing a trustee to receive the
proceeds, to distribute them to defrauded
public investors and to report to the court
on the true state of affairs. Despite the
absence of explicit statutory authority,
however, we repeatedly have upheld the
appointment of trustees or receivers to
effectuate the purposes of the federal
securities laws.
SEC v. S & P National Corporation, 360 F.2d
741, 750 (2 Cir. 1966);
Lankenau v. Coggeshall & Hicks, 350 F.2d 61,
63 (2 Cir. 1965);
Esbitt v. Dutch-American Mercantile
Corporation, 335 F.2d 141, 143 (2 Cir. 1964).
Moreover, while the appointment
of trustees should not follow requests by
the SEC as a matter of course, the
appointment of a trustee in this case was an
appropriate exercise by the district court
of its equity powers.
27
Because of the conflicting accounts of the
Manor offering given by various appellants
and the numerous bootstrap transactions, it
was impossible for the district court to
determine, on the record before it, the
total amount of proceeds collected and the
exact amount each appellant received. Thus,
the appointment of a trustee to help
preserve the status quo while the various
transactions were unraveled was necessary to
obtain an accurate picture of what
transpired. Moreover, without the
appointment of a trustee, it would be
difficult to implement the court's order to
refund the misappropriated proceeds to
defrauded public investors. In view of
appellants' fraudulent conduct, it was not
unreasonable for the court to conclude that
it could not rely on appellants to locate
purchasers of Manor shares and to refund to
them the proceeds of the offering.
Accordingly, we cannot say that the district
court was unjustified in deciding that these
circumstances warranted the appointment of a
trustee with specific powers.
SEC v. Bowler, 427 F.2d 190, 198 (4 Cir.
1970);
SEC v. Keller Corporation, 323 F.2d 397, 403
(7 Cir. 1963).
28
While we find that the temporary
freeze of appellants' assets presents a more
difficult question, we likewise hold that it
was not an inappropriate exercise by the
district court of its equity powers.
At the outset, we believe that
the decision to order a temporary freeze on
defendants' assets as ancillary relief in an
SEC enforcement action requires particularly
careful consideration by the district court.
One of the chief reasons for requiring
defendants to refund illegally obtained
proceeds of a public offering is to
compensate defrauded investors.
Page 1106 To effect this purpose, there may be
circumstances where a district court should
temporarily freeze defendants' assets to
insure that they will be available to
compensate public investors. Freezing assets
under certain circumstances, however, might
thwart the goal of compensating investors if
the freeze were to cause such disruption of
defendants' business affairs that they would
be financially destroyed. Thus, the
disadvantages and possible deleterious
effect of a freeze must be weighed against
the considerations indicating the need for
such relief.
Here, while the question is a
close one, we are satisfied that in balance
the district court's decision temporarily to
freeze appellants' assets was justified.
Because of the fraudulent nature of
appellants' violations, the court could not
be assured that appellants would not waste
their assets prior to refunding public
investors' money. Moreover, at the time the
court's order was entered, a great deal of
uncertainty existed with respect to the
total amount of proceeds received and their
location. Appellants' failure to present
evidence to remove this uncertainty
warranted a measure designed to preserve the
status quo while the court could obtain an
accurate picture of the whereabouts of the
proceeds of the public offering. In
addition, the continued failure of some
appellants to furnish the information
necessary to a complete understanding of the
current situation justified extension of the
temporary freeze until appellants have
refunded the proceeds.
29
Under the circumstances, we hold that there
is no basis for disturbing the district
court's finding that a temporary freeze was
necessary to protect the public interest.
We have considered appellants'
other claims of error and find them to be
without merit.
The judgment of the district
court is affirmed in all respects except to
the extent that it orders disgorgement of
the profits and income earned on the
proceeds of the public offering; as to this,
we reverse and remand for modification of
the order in accordance with this opinion.
1 Six defendants did not appeal from the
judgment entered below.
Defendants Deneso Corporation, Joseph
Delmonico and Jack Naiman failed to file any
pleadings or to make any appearance in this
action. The court held that these defendants
had violated the antifraud provisions,
enjoined them from further such violations
and ordered them to disgorge any proceeds
received in connection with the Manor
offering.
Defendant Arthur Sutton, a selling
shareholder, consented to the entry of a
decree enjoining him from future violations
of the antifraud provisions and the
prospectus-delivery requirement. He also
consented to an order requiring him to pay
into the registry of the court the $43,000
he received in connection with the Manor
offering.
Defendants Benjamin Werner and Benjamin
Werner & Co. were found to have violated the
antifraud provisions, the
prospectus-delivery requirement and Section
15(c) (2) of the 1934 Act and Rule 15c2-4
promulgated thereunder. The court enjoined
these defendants from further violations of
these provisions of the securities laws and
ordered them to disgorge any proceeds
received in connection with the Manor
offering. On December 9, 1971, this Court
granted the motion by these two defendants
to dismiss their appeals.
2 When the instant complaint was filed,
the SEC sought and obtained a temporary
restraining order pending the hearing and
determination of the SEC's motion for a
preliminary injunction. The hearing on the
preliminary injunction motion began on
August 19, 1971 and was concluded on August
20. After this hearing, the court
reconsidered and granted the SEC's motion to
advance the date of trial and to consolidate
it with the hearing on the preliminary
injunction motion. The trial commenced on
September 30, 1971. Thus, the trial record
includes some evidence which actually was
presented at the hearing on the preliminary
injunction motion. Rule 65(a) (2),
Fed.R.Civ.P.
3 There is ample evidence to support the
district court's finding that "Ezrine
exercised blanket authority in the matter of
securities transactions in connection with
the Manor offering" for both Glendale and
Atlantic. Accordingly, we hold that Glendale
and Atlantic are corporate embodiments of
Ezrine and his awareness of the securities
laws violations are imputed to them.
SEC v. North American R. & D. Corp., 424
F.2d 63, 79 (2 Cir. 1970).
4 After these various sales of Manor
stock, appellants and defendant Sutton owned
the following number of shares:
Name Shares Owned
Appellant Feinberg .............. 975,000
Appellant Glendale .............. 127,500
Appellant Atlantic ............... 10,000
Appellant Samuel Feinberg ........ 10,000
Appellant Marnane ................ 12,500
Appellant Halford ................. 5,000
Defendant Sutton ................. 34,600
------------
Total ....................... 1,174,600
5 Item number four of the Cross-Reference
Sheet in Manor's registration statement was
entitled "Sales Otherwise Than for Cash."
Manor indicated that this item was "not
applicable" to its offering.
6 Despite Ezrine's denials, we find ample
evidence to support the district court's
finding that Ezrine knew about and
authorized the special compensation given to
Netelkos. Ezrine himself concedes that
Feinberg consulted him about the propriety
of granting Netelkos special compensation
for participating in the Manor offering.
Moreover, the 15,000 Manor shares which
Netelkos was to receive without cost to him
were issued in the name of a
company-Lausanne Investment Company-which
Ezrine had organized and with which Ezrine
was closely affiliated.
7 We hold that there was sufficient
evidence to support the district court's
finding that a special compensation
agreement was made with the Deneso group.
Feinberg testified that an agreement to
furnish extra compensation had been reached
and that he had retained a copy of the
agreement. Moreover, Ezrine and Feinberg
continued to meet with representatives of
Deneso after Deneso informed them that they
would not participate in the offering
without some form of special compensation.
8 The sticker read in full:
"Aggregate net proceeds of $4,027,500
were received by the Company ($3,132,500)
and the Selling Stockholders ($895,000) from
the Underwriter on February 20, 1970, from
the sale of the 450,000 shares offered
hereby. Carlton Cambridge & Co., Inc., one
of the selling group members, may be deemed
to be an 'underwriter' under the Securities
Act of 1933, as amended, by reason of such
firm's (i) sale of 142,500 of the shares
offered hereby and (ii) receipt of payment
by such firm from the Underwriter of $71,250
($.50 per share) for dealer's concessions
and $71,250 ($.50 per share) for expenses in
connection therewith."
9 Feinberg also used this money to
purchase the additional shares at the
closing to make it appear the offering had
been fully subscribed.
10 After Ezrine reneged on this
agreement, Haber instituted a lawsuit to
recover the $60,000.
11 Daytona Beach General Hospital has
sued Manor as a result of this transaction.
12 This approximate figure was computed
as follows:
Source of Funds Amount Received
Daytona Beach General Hospital ........ $ 600,000
Orvis' Customers ........................ 400,000
Carlton Cambridge's Customers ............ 50,000
Other Purchases by Public ............... 317,000
---------------
$1,367,000
The amounts received from Daytona, Orvis
and Carlton Cambridge are not disputed. In
an affidavit filed with the district court,
Feinberg claimed that Manor collected an
additional $317,000 from public investors.
We emphasize that these figures are only
approximate. It is for the trustee to
compute the exact amount which Manor and the
other appellants received from legitimate
public investors as a result of the
offering.
13 See Securities Exchange Act Release
No. 6864, p. 1 (July 30, 1962).
13a While the district court found that
appellants had engaged in conduct which is
proscribed by Rule 10b-9, the court did not
specifically find that appellants had
violated this rule. Rather, the court held
that appellants had violated Rule 10b-5,
which also prohibits the conduct proscribed
by Rule 10b-9.
14 "The way the new facts . . . are
brought to the attention of offerees as a
matter of mechanics is by putting a sticker
on the prospectus or supplementing it
otherwise, not by amending the registration
statement." 1 Loss, Securities Regulation
293 (2d ed. 1961, Supp. 1969). See 17 C.F.R.
Sec. 230.424(c) (1971).
15 We recently have held that more than
mere negligence is required in order to
permit plaintiffs to recover damages in a
private action under Sec. 17(a) or Sec.
10(b).
Shemtob v. Shearson, Hammill & Co., 448 F.2d
442, 445 (2 Cir. 1971).
16 Feinberg's knowledge is imputed to the
corporations which he controlled-appellants
Manor, Capital Cities and Manor
Construction. See supra note 3.
17 Ezrine's knowledge is imputed to the
corporations which he controlled-appellants
Glendale and Atlantic. See supra note 3.
18 Netelkos' knowledge is imputed to the
corporations which he controlled-appellants
Method Leasing and Upton. See supra note 3.
19 The district court also properly held
that appellants Netelkos, Method Leasing and
Upton violated Sec. 17(a) of the 1933 Act
and Sec. 10(b) of the 1934 Act by obtaining
securities from Manor and the selling
shareholders without disclosing that they
did not intend to pay for them. See
Richardson v. MacArthur, supra, 451 F.2d at
40-41; A. T. Brod & Co. v. Perlow, supra,
375 F.2d at 397.
20 Section 5(b)(2) of the 1933 Act, 15
U.S.C. Sec. 77e(b)(2)(1970) provides:
"(b) It shall be unlawful for any person,
directly or indirectly-
(2) to carry or cause to be carried
through the mails or in interstate commerce
any such security for the purpose of sale or
for delivery after sale, unless accompanied
or preceded by a prospectus that meets the
requirements of subsection (a) of section
77j of this title."
21 For example, the prospectus stated
that Manor shares would be sold at the price
of $10 per share. The SEC presented
evidence, however, that some Manor shares
were "sold" to Netelkos for considerably
less than $10 per share and that 60,000
shares were sold to Daytona Beach General
Hospital for $11 per share. Moreover, the
sticker amendment to the Manor prospectus
stated that the net proceeds received from
the offering was $4,027,500. The evidence
adduced at trial, however, showed that this
figure was grossly inflated. In addition,
the prospectus did not reflect the extra
compensation paid to Netelkos for his
participating in the offering and therefore
did not contain all the commissions and
discounts paid to underwriters, as required
by item 17 of Schedule A.
22 In analogous situations under the 1934
Act, the SEC has held that the statutory
provision that records be kept and that
reports be filed by registered
broker-dealers embodies the requirement that
such records and reports be true and
correct. Talmage Wilcher, Inc., Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 6284 (June 13,
1960); Hermand Bud Rothbard, Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 5998 (June 30,
1959); Pilgrim Securities, Inc., Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 5958 (May 15,
1959); Lowell Niebuhr & Co., 18 S.E.C. 471
(1945).
GAF Corp. v. Milstein,
453 F.2d 709, 720 (2
Cir. 1971).
23 The SEC has held that in some
situations it may be necessary to amend the
registration statement to reflect
post-effective changes. As noted in Part II
of this opinion, supra note 14,
post-effective developments generally are
brought to the attention of offerees by
putting a sticker on the prospectus or
otherwise supplementing it. However, the SEC
has held that supplementing the prospectus
"is inadequate and misleading when numerous
and significant changes in the issuer's
affairs . . . have clearly outdated the
original prospectus." Franchard Corporation,
Securities Act Release No. 4710 (July 31,
1964). We do not reach the question whether
merely supplementing the prospectus would
have been adequate in the instant case.
24 As to what date the registration
statement speaks, there appears to be some
ambiguity in the statute. Section 11 of the
1933 Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 77k (1970), imposes
civil liability on the issuer and other
persons "[i]n case any part of the
registration statement, when such part
became effective, contained an untrue
statement . . . ." On the other hand,
Section 8(d) of the 1933 Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec.
77h(d) (1970), authorizes a stop order "[i]f
it appears to the Commission at any time
that the registration statement includes any
untrue statement . . . ." (Emphasis added).
The House Report supports the view that the
SEC can require the issuer to amend the
registration statement to reflect
post-effective developments:
"In determining whether a stop order
should issue, the Commission will naturally
have regard to the facts as they then exist
and will stop the further sale of
securities, even though the registration
statement was true when made, [and] it has
become untrue or misleading by reason of
subsequent developments." H.R.Rep.No.85, 73d
Cong., 1st Sess. 20 (1933).
See 1 Loss, Securities Regulation 290 (2d
ed. 1961, Supp.1969). In view of our
construction of Secs. 5(b)(2) and 10(a) of
the 1933 Act, we do not reach the question
whether the registration statement speaks
only as of its effective date.
25 Appellants' reliance on the above line
of SEC decisions perhaps is attributable to
appellants' misinterpretation of Sec. 10(a)
of the 1933 Act which provides that a
prospectus "shall contain the information
contained in the registration statement . .
. ." While there is a paucity of authority,
we believe, contrary to appellants' apparent
interpretation, that there may be
circumstances where a prospectus does not
comply with Sec. 10(a) even though it
contains the same information as the
registration statement. Thus, a prospectus
fails to comply with Sec. 10(a), even though
it sets forth the same information as the
registration statement, if that information
is inaccurate or incomplete. See Eugene M.
Rosenson, 40 S.E.C. 948, 952 (1961);
SEC v. North American Finance Co., 214
F.Supp. 197, 201 (D.Ariz.1959).
Moreover, where, as here, a prospectus
contains the same information as the
registration statement, it nevertheless
fails to comply with Sec. 10(a) if there was
a duty to supplement the prospectus to
reflect post-effective developments even
though there was no corresponding duty to
amend the registration statement.
26 The SEC has not appealed from the
district court's denial of injunctive relief
as to these appellants.
27 We assume that the district court in
due course will enter an appropriate order
providing for payment to the trustee of
reasonable compensation for his services and
reimbursement of his expenses.
Mills v. Electric Auto-Lite Co., 396 U.S.
375, 389-97 (1970).
28 On November 2, 1971, appellant
Feinberg filed on behalf of his controlled
companies a voluntary petition in bankruptcy
under Chapter XI in the United States
District Court for the District of New
Jersey. On December 14, 1971, a referee in
the bankruptcy court ordered the Chapter XI
receiver to take possession of all assets,
apparently including the proceeds of the
Manor offering, and to proceed to administer
the estate. The trustee appointed by the
district court in the instant case has
contested this ruling. The question as to
which fiduciary has priority over the
proceeds of the Manor offering is not before
us and we make no ruling thereon.
29 On October 21, 1971, the date the
order was entered below the district court
requested each appellant to file with the
trustee and the court within seven days an
affidavit setting forth the exact amount of
proceeds each appellant had received and the
location of the proceeds. Despite this
order, on the day of oral argument, more
than a month after the deadline for filing
such affidavits, the trustee and the court
had not received these affidavits from some
of the appellants. |