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Page 19
484 U.S. 19
108 S.Ct. 316 98 L.Ed.2d 275 David CARPENTER, Kenneth P. Felis,
and R. Foster Winans, Petitioners
v.
UNITED STATES.
No. 86-422.
Argued Oct. 7, 1987.
Decided Nov. 16, 1987.
Syllabus
Petitioner Winans was coauthor
of a Wall Street Journal investment advice
column which, because of its perceived
quality and integrity, had an impact on the
market prices of the stocks it discussed.
Although he was familiar with the Journal's
rule that the column's contents were the
Journal's confidential information prior to
publication, Winans entered into a scheme
with petitioner Felis and another
stockbroker who, in exchange for advance
information from Winans as to the timing and
contents of the column, bought and sold
stocks based on the column's probable impact
on the market and shared their profits with
Winans. On the basis of this scheme, Winans
and Felis were convicted of violations of
the federal securities laws and of the
federal mail and wire fraud statutes, 18
U.S.C. §§ 1341, 1343, which prohibit the use
of the mails or of electronic transmissions
to execute "any scheme or artifice to
defraud, or for obtaining money or property
by means of false or fraudulent pretenses,
representations, or promises"; petitioner
Carpenter was convicted of aiding and
abetting. The Court of Appeals affirmed.
Held:
1. Insofar as it affirmed
petitioners' convictions under the
securities laws, the judgment below is
affirmed by an equally divided Court. P. 24.
2. Petitioners' conspiracy to
trade on the Journal's confidential
information is within the reach of the mail
and wire fraud statutes. Pp. 25-28.
(a) The Journal had a
"property" right in keeping confidential and
making exclusive use, prior to publication,
of the schedule and contents of Winans'
columns, which right is protected by the
statutes. The intangible nature of the
Journal's right cannot affect this
determination, since
McNally v. United States, 483 U.S.
350, 107 S.Ct. 2875, 97 L.Ed.2d 292 (1987),
did not limit the scope of § 1341 to the
protection of tangible as opposed to
intangible property rights, but merely
distinguished protected property rights from
unprotected intangible rights to honest and
impartial government. Pp. 25-27.
(b) Petitioners' activities
constituted a scheme to defraud the Journal
within the meaning of the statutes. It is
irrelevant that petitioners might not have
interfered with the Journal's use of its
confidential information, publicized the
information, deprived the Journal of the
first public use of the information, or
caused the Journal monetary loss, it
Page 20
being sufficient that the Journal has
been deprived of its important right to
exclusive use of the information prior to
disclosing it to the public. The argument
that Winans' conduct merely violated
workplace rules and did not amount to
proscribed fraudulent activity is untenable,
since §§ 1341 and 1343 reach any scheme to
deprive another of property by means of
fraud, including the fraudulent
appropriation to one's own use of property
entrusted to one's care by another. Here,
Winans violated his fiduciary obligation to
protect his employer's confidential
information by exploiting that information
for his personal benefit, all the while
pretending to perform his duty of
safeguarding it. Furthermore, the evidence
strongly supports the conclusion that each
of the petitioners acted with the required
specific intent to defraud. Pp. 27-28.
(c) Petitioners' contention
that the use of the wires and the mail to
print and send the Journal to its customers
is insufficient to satisfy the statutory
requirement that the mails be used to
execute the scheme at issue is rejected.
Circulation of the column to Journal
customers was not only anticipated but was
an essential part of the scheme, since there
would have been no effect on stock prices
and no likelihood of profiting from the
leaked information without such circulation.
P. 28.
791 F.2d 1024 (CA2 1986),
affirmed.
WHITE, J., delivered the
opinion for a unanimous Court as to holding
number 2, above.
Don D. Buchwald, New York City,
for petitioners.
Sol. Gen. Charles Fried,
Washington, D.C., for respondent.
Justice WHITE delivered the
opinion of the Court.
Petitioners Kenneth Felis and
R. Foster Winans were convicted of violating
§ 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of
Page 21
1934, 48 Stat. 891, 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b),1
and Rule 10b-5, 17 CFR § 240.10b-5 (1987).2
United States v. Winans, 612 F.Supp.
827 (SDNY 1985). They were also found
guilty of violating the federal mail and
wire fraud statutes, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341,3
1343,4 and were convicted for
conspiracy under 18
Page 22
U.S.C. § 371.5 Petitioner
David Carpenter, Winans' roommate, was
convicted for aiding and abetting. With a
minor exception, the Court of Appeals for
the Second Circuit affirmed,
791 F.2d 1024
(1986); we granted certiorari, 479 U.S.
1016, 107 S.Ct. 666, 93 L.Ed.2d 718 (1986).
I
In 1981, Winans became a
reporter for the Wall Street Journal (the
Journal) and in the summer of 1982 became
one of the two writers of a daily column,
"Heard on the Street." That column discussed
selected stocks or groups of stocks, giving
positive and negative information about
those stocks and taking "a point of view
with respect to investment in the stocks
that it reviews." 612 F.Supp., at 830.
Winans regularly interviewed corporate
executives to put together interesting
perspectives on the stocks that would be
highlighted in upcoming columns, but, at
least for the columns at issue here, none
contained corporate inside information or
any "hold for release" information. Id.,
at 830, n. 2. Because of the "Heard"
column's perceived quality and integrity, it
had the potential of affecting the price of
the stocks which it examined. The District
Court concluded on the basis of testimony
presented at trial that the "Heard" column
"does have an im-
Page 23
pact on the market, difficult though it
may be to quantify in any particular case."
Id., at 830.
The official policy and
practice at the Journal was that prior to
publication, the contents of the column were
the Journal's confidential information.
Despite the rule, with which Winans was
familiar, he entered into a scheme in
October 1983 with Peter Brant and petitioner
Felis, both connected with the Kidder
Peabody brokerage firm in New York City, to
give them advance information as to the
timing and contents of the "Heard" column.
This permitted Brant and Felis and another
conspirator, David Clark, a client of Brant,
to buy or sell based on the probable impact
of the column on the market. Profits were to
be shared. The conspirators agreed that the
scheme would not affect the journalistic
purity of the "Heard" column, and the
District Court did not find that the
contents of any of the articles were altered
to further the profit potential of
petitioners' stock-trading scheme. Id.,
at 832, 834-835. Over a 4-month period, the
brokers made prepublication trades on the
basis of information given them by Winans
about the contents of some 27 "Heard"
columns. The net profits from these trades
were about $690,000.
In November 1983, correlations
between the "Heard" articles and trading in
the Clark and Felis accounts were noted at
Kidder Peabody and inquiries began. Brant
and Felis denied knowing anyone at the
Journal and took steps to conceal the
trades. Later, the Securities and Exchange
Commission began an investigation. Questions
were met by denials both by the brokers at
Kidder Peabody and by Winans at the Journal.
As the investigation progressed, the
conspirators quarreled, and on March 29,
1984, Winans and Carpenter went to the SEC
and revealed the entire scheme. This
indictment and a bench trial followed.
Brant, who had pleaded guilty under a plea
agreement, was a witness for the Government.
The District Court found, and
the Court of Appeals agreed, that Winans had
knowingly breached a duty of con-
Page 24
fidentiality by misappropriating
prepublication information regarding the
timing and contents of the "Heard" column,
information that had been gained in the
course of his employment under the
understanding that it would not be revealed
in advance of publication and that if it
were, he would report it to his employer. It
was this appropriation of confidential
information that underlay both the
securities laws and mail and wire fraud
counts. With respect to the § 10(b) charges,
the courts below held that the deliberate
breach of Winans' duty of confidentiality
and concealment of the scheme was a fraud
and deceit on the Journal. Although the
victim of the fraud, the Journal, was not a
buyer or seller of the stocks traded in or
otherwise a market participant, the fraud
was nevertheless considered to be "in
connection with" a purchase or sale of
securities within the meaning of the statute
and the rule. The courts reasoned that the
scheme's sole purpose was to buy and sell
securities at a profit based on advance
information of the column's contents. The
courts below rejected petitioners'
submission, which is one of the two
questions presented here, that criminal
liability could not be imposed on
petitioners under Rule 10b-5 because "the
newspaper is the only alleged victim of
fraud and has no interest in the securities
traded."
In affirming the mail and wire
fraud convictions, the Court of Appeals
ruled that Winans had fraudulently
misappropriated "property" within the
meaning of the mail and wire fraud statutes
and that its revelation had harmed the
Journal. It was held as well that the use of
the mail and wire services had a sufficient
nexus with the scheme to satisfy §§ 1341 and
1343. The petition for certiorari challenged
these conclusions.
The Court is evenly divided
with respect to the convictions under the
securities laws and for that reason affirms
the judgment below on those counts. For the
reasons that follow, we also affirm the
judgment with respect to the mail and wire
fraud convictions.
Page 25
II
Petitioners assert that their
activities were not a scheme to defraud the
Journal within the meaning of the mail and
wire fraud statutes;
6 and that
in any event, they did not obtain any "money
or property" from the Journal, which is a
necessary element of the crime under our
decision last Term
McNally v. United States, 483 U.S.
350, 107 S.Ct. 2875, 97 L.Ed.2d 292 (1987).
We are unpersuaded by either submission and
address the latter first.
We held in McNally that
the mail fraud statute does not reach
"schemes to defraud citizens of their
intangible rights to honest and impartial
government," id., at 355, 107 S.Ct.,
at 2879, and that the statute is "limited in
scope to the protection of property rights."
Id., at 360, 107 S.Ct., at 2882.
Petitioners argue that the Journal's
interest in prepublication confidentiality
for the "Heard" columns is no more than an
intangible consideration outside the reach
of § 1341; nor does that law, it is urged,
protect against mere injury to reputation.
This is not a case like McNally,
however. The Journal, as Winans' employer,
was defrauded of much more than its
contractual right to his honest and faithful
service, an interest too ethereal in itself
to fall within the protection of the mail
fraud statute, which "had its origin in the
desire to protect individual property
rights." McNally, supra, at 359, n.
8, 107 S.Ct., at 2881, n. 8. Here, the
object of the scheme was to take the
Journal's confidential business
informationthe publication schedule and
contents of the "Heard" columnand its
intangible nature does not make it any less
"property" protected by the mail and wire
fraud statutes. McNally did not limit
the scope of § 1341 to tangible as
distinguished from intangible property
rights.
Both courts below expressly
referred to the Journal's interest in the
confidentiality of the contents and timing
of the "Heard" column as a property right,
791 F.2d, at 1034-1035; 612 F.Supp., at 846,
and we agree with that conclusion.
Page 26
Confidential business information has
long been recognized as property.
Ruckelshaus v. Monsanto Co., 467 U.S.
986, 1001-1004, 104 S.Ct. 2862, 2874, 81
L.Ed.2d 815 (1984);
Dirks v. SEC,
463 U.S. 646, 653,
n. 10, 103 S.Ct. 3255, 3260, n. 10, 77
L.Ed.2d 911 (1983);
Board of Trade of Chicago v. Christie
Grain & Stock Co., 198 U.S. 236,
250-251, 25 S.Ct. 637, 639-40, 49 L.Ed. 1031
(1905); cf. 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(4).
"Confidential information acquired or
compiled by a corporation in the course and
conduct of its business is a species of
property to which the corporation has the
exclusive right and benefit, and which a
court of equity will protect through the
injunctive process or other appropriate
remedy." 3 W. Fletcher, Cyclopedia of Law of
Private Corporations § 857.1, p. 260 (rev.
ed. 1986) (footnote omitted). The Journal
had a property right in keeping confidential
and making exclusive use, prior to
publication, of the schedule and contents of
the "Heard" column. Christie Grain,
supra. As the Court has observed before:
"[N]ews matter, however little
susceptible of ownership or dominion in the
absolute sense, is stock in trade, to be
gathered at the cost of enterprise,
organization, skill, labor, and money, and
to be distributed and sold to those who will
pay money for it, as for any other
merchandise."
International News Service v. Associated
Press, 248 U.S. 215, 236, 39 S.Ct. 68,
71, 63 L.Ed. 211 (1918).
Petitioners' arguments that
they did not interfere with the Journal's
use of the information or did not publicize
it and deprive the Journal of the first
public use of it, see Reply Brief for
Petitioners 6, miss the point. The
confidential information was generated from
the business, and the business had a right
to decide how to use it prior to disclosing
it to the public. Petitioners cannot
successfully contend based on Associated
Press that a scheme to defraud requires
a monetary loss, such as giving the
information to a competitor; it is
sufficient that the Journal has been
deprived of its right to exclusive use of
the information, for exclusivity is an
important as-
Page 27
pect of confidential business information
and most private property for that matter.
We cannot accept petitioners'
further argument that Winans' conduct in
revealing prepublication information was no
more than a violation of workplace rules and
did not amount to fraudulent activity that
is proscribed by the mail fraud statute.
Sections 1341 and 1343 reach any scheme to
deprive another of money or property by
means of false or fraudulent pretenses,
representations, or promises. As we observed
last Term in McNally, the words "to
defraud" in the mail fraud statute have the
"common understanding" of " 'wronging one in
his property rights by dishonest methods or
schemes,' and 'usually signify the
deprivation of something of value by trick,
deceit, chicane or overreaching.' " 483
U.S., at 358, 107 S.Ct., at 2881 (quoting
Hammerschmidt v. United States, 265
U.S. 182, 188, 44 S.Ct. 511, 512, 68 L.Ed.
968 (1924)). The concept of "fraud"
includes the act of embezzlement, which is "
'the fraudulent appropriation to one's own
use of the money or goods entrusted to one's
care by another.' "
Grin v. Shine, 187 U.S. 181, 189, 23
S.Ct. 98, 102, 47 L.Ed. 130 (1902).
The District Court found that
Winans' undertaking at the Journal was not
to reveal prepublication information about
his column, a promise that became a sham
when in violation of his duty he passed
along to his co-conspirators confidential
information belonging to the Journal,
pursuant to an ongoing scheme to share
profits from trading in anticipation of the
"Heard" column's impact on the stock market.
Snepp v. United States, 444 U.S. 507,
515, n. 11, 100 S.Ct. 763, 768, n. 11,
62 L.Ed.2d 704 (1980) (per curiam),
although a decision grounded in the
provisions of a written trust agreement
prohibiting the unapproved use of
confidential Government information, we
noted the similar prohibitions of the common
law, that "even in the absence of a written
contract, an employee has a fiduciary
obligation to protect confidential
information obtained during the course of
his employment." As the New York courts have
recognized: "It is well established, as a
general proposition, that a person who
acquires special knowledge or information by
virtue of a confidential or fiduciary
relationship with another is not free
Page 28
to exploit that knowledge or information
for his own personal benefit but must
account to his principal for any profits
derived therefrom."
Diamond v. Oreamuno, 24 N.Y.2d 494,
497, 301 N.Y.S.2d 78, 80, 248 N.E.2d 910,
912 (1969); see also Restatement
(Second) of Agency §§ 388, Comment c,
396(c) (1958).
We have little trouble in
holding that the conspiracy here to trade on
the Journal's confidential information is
not outside the reach of the mail and wire
fraud statutes, provided the other elements
of the offenses are satisfied. The Journal's
business information that it intended to be
kept confidential was its property; the
declaration to that effect in the employee
manual merely removed any doubts on that
score and made the finding of specific
intent to defraud that much easier. Winans
continued in the employ of the Journal,
appropriating its confidential business
information for his own use, all the while
pretending to perform his duty of
safeguarding it. In fact, he told his
editors twice about leaks of confidential
information not related to the stock-trading
scheme, 612 F.Supp., at 831, demonstrating
both his knowledge that the Journal viewed
information concerning the "Heard" column as
confidential and his deceit as he played the
role of a loyal employee. Furthermore, the
District Court's conclusion that each of the
petitioners acted with the required specific
intent to defraud is strongly supported by
the evidence. Id., at 847-850.
Lastly, we reject the
submission that using the wires and the mail
to print and send the Journal to its
customers did not satisfy the requirement
that those mediums be used to execute the
scheme at issue. The courts below were quite
right in observing that circulation of the
"Heard" column was not only anticipated but
an essential part of the scheme. Had the
column not been made available to Journal
customers, there would have been no effect
on stock prices and no likelihood of
profiting from the information leaked by
Winans.
The judgment below is
Affirmed.
1 Section 10(b) provides:
"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
* * * * *
"(b) To use or employ, in connection with
the purchase or sale of any security
registered on a national securities exchange
or any security not so registered, any
manipulative or deceptive device or
contrivance in contravention of such rules
and regulations as the [Securities and
Exchange] Commission may prescribe as
necessary or appropriate in the public
interest or for the protection of
investors."
2 Rule 10b-5 provides:
"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 national
securities exchange,
"(a) To employ any device, scheme, or
artifice to defraud,
"(b) To 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, 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."
3 Section 1341 provides:
"Whoever, having devised or intending to
devise any scheme or artifice to defraud, or
for obtaining money or property by means of
false or fraudulent pretenses,
representations, or promises, or to sell,
dispose of, loan, exchange, alter, give
away, distribute, supply, or furnish or
procure for unlawful use any counterfeit or
spurious coin, obligation, security, or
other article, or anything represented to be
or intimated or held out to be such
counterfeit or spurious article, for the
purpose of executing such scheme or artifice
or attempting so to do, places in any post
office or authorized depository for mail
matter, any matter or thing whatever to be
sent or delivered by the Postal Service, or
takes or receives therefrom, any such matter
or thing, or knowingly causes to be
delivered by mail according to the direction
thereon, or at the place at which it is
directed to be delivered by the person to
whom it is addressed, any such matter or
thing, shall be fined not more than $1,000
or imprisoned not more than five years, or
both."
4 Section 1343 provides:
"Whoever, having devised or intending to
devise any scheme or artifice
to defraud, or for obtaining money or
property by means of false or fraudulent
pretenses, representations, or promises,
transmits or causes to be transmitted by
means of wire, radio, or television
communication in interstate or foreign
commerce, any writings, signs, signals,
pictures, or sounds for the purpose of
executing such scheme or artifice, shall be
fined not more than $1,000 or imprisoned not
more than five years, or both."
5 Section 371 provides:
"If two or more persons conspire either
to commit any offense against the United
States, or to defraud the United States, or
any agency thereof in any manner or for any
purpose, and one or more of such persons do
any act to effect the object of the
conspiracy, each shall be fined not more
than $10,000 or imprisoned not more than
five years, or both."
6 The mail and wire fraud
statutes share the same language in relevant
part, and accordingly we apply the same
analysis to both sets of offenses here.
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