|
Page 622
486 U.S. 622
108 S.Ct. 2063 100 L.Ed.2d 658 Billy J. "B.J." PINTER, et al.,
Petitioners
v.
Maurice DAHL, et al.
No. 86-805.
Argued Dec. 9, 1987.
Decided June 15, 1988.
Syllabus
Petitioner Pinter, an oil and
gas producer and registered securities
dealer, sold unregistered securities
consisting of fractional undivided interests
in oil and gas leases to respondent Dahl, a
real estate broker and investor who was
experienced in oil and gas ventures. Dahl
touted the venture to the other
respondentshis friends, family, and
business associatesand assisted them in
completing subscription agreement forms
prepared by Pinter, but received no
commission from Pinter when each of them
invested in unregistered interests on the
basis of Dahl's involvement. When the
venture failed, respondents sued Pinter in
Federal District Court, seeking rescission
under § 12(1) of the Securities Act of 1933
(Act) for the unlawful sale of unregistered
securities. After a bench trial, the court
granted judgment for respondents, apparently
rejecting Pinter's common-law in pari
delicto defense to Dahl's suit. The
Court of Appeals affirmed, ruling that such
defense was not available because § 12(1)
creates a "strict liability offense" rather
than liability based on intentional conduct,
and distinguishing
Bateman Eichler, Hill Richards, Inc. v.
Berner, 472 U.S. 299, 105 S.Ct. 2622, 86
L.Ed.2d 215, which held that the defense
applies in actions under § 10(b) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, on the
ground that § 10(b) contains an element of
scienter. The court also held that Dahl was
not a "seller" within the meaning of § 12(1)
and therefore could not be held liable in
contribution for the other respondents'
claims against Pinter, since, although
Dahl's conduct was a "substantial factor" in
causing the other respondents' purchases,
there was no evidence that he had sought or
received financial benefit for himself or
anyone other than the other respondents.
Held:
1. The in pari delicto
defense is available in a § 12(1) private
rescission action. Pp. 632-641.
(a) Bateman Eichler is
not limited to § 10(b) claims, to cases
involving willful or negligent misconduct,
or to implied, as opposed to express,
private causes of action. Rather, the
decision provides the appropriate test for
allowance of the in pari delicto
defense in a private action under any of the
federal securities laws, including a § 12(1)
rescission suit. Pp. 633-635.
Page 623
(b) The first prong of the
Bateman Eichler test is satisfied in the
§ 12(1) context if the plaintiff is at least
equally responsible for the issuer's illegal
failure to register the securities or to
conduct the sale in a manner that satisfies
the Act's registration exemption provisions.
A purchaser's knowledge that the securities
are unregistered cannot, by itself,
constitute equal culpability, even where he
is a sophisticated buyer who may not
necessarily need the Act's protection.
Rather, the relative responsibility
assessment turns upon the facts of each
case. The second prong of the Bateman
Eichler test is satisfied in the § 12(1)
context where the plaintiff's role is
primarily as a promoter rather than as an
investor. The determination depends on a
host of readily accessible factors,
including, but not limited to, the extent of
the plaintiff's financial involvement
compared to that of the third parties he
solicited, the incidental nature of his
promotional activities, the benefits he
received for those activities, and the
extent of his involvement in the offering's
planning stages. Pp. 635-639.
(c) The District Court's
findings are inadequate to determine whether
Dahl may be subjected to Pinter's in pari
delicto defense under the Bateman
Eichler test, as it applies to § 12(1)
actions. Pp. 639-641.
2. A nonowner of securities
must solicit the purchase, motivated at
least in part by a desire to serve his own
financial interests or those of the
securities owner, in order to qualify as a
"seller" within the meaning of § 12(1),
which provides that "[a]ny person who . . .
offers or sells a security" in violation of
the Act's registration requirement "shall be
liable to the person purchasing such
security from him." Pp. 641-655.
(a) Section 12(1)'s language
and history, as well as the statutory
purpose of protecting investors, demonstrate
that "seller" is not limited to an owner who
passes title, or other interest in a
security, to the buyer for value, but
extends to a broker or other person who
successfully solicits a purchase of
securities, so long as he is motivated at
least in part by a desire to serve his own
financial interests or those of the
securities owner. It strains the meaning of
§ 2(3) of the Act, which defines "offer" for
§ 12(1)'s purposes as including every
"solicitation of an offer to buy . . . for
value," to say that a person who
gratuitously urges another, even strongly or
enthusiastically, to make a securities
purchase solely for the buyer's benefit is
"soliciting" or is requesting value in
exchange for his suggestion or seeking the
value the titleholder will obtain in
exchange for the ultimate sale. Only if the
soliciting person is motivated by such a
financial interest can it be fairly said
that the buyer "purchased" the security from
him, such that he can be aligned with the
owner in a rescission action. Pp. 642-647.
(b) The language, history, and
statutory context of § 12(1) demonstrate
that the "substantial factor" test, whereby
a nontransferor seller
Page 624
is defined as one whose participation in
the buy-sell transaction is a substantial
factor in causing the transaction to take
place, is not an appropriate standard for
assessing § 12(1) liability as a statutory
seller. Without affording guidelines for
determining when the defendant's conduct is
sufficiently integral to the sale, the test
would expand primary § 12(1) liability
beyond persons who pass title and those who
"offer" or "solicit" offers for financial
gain to persons who merely participate in
unlawful sales transactions but are only
remotely related to the relevant aspects of
the transactions, including accountants and
lawyers simply performing their professional
services. Such persons do not even arguably
fit within the definitions set out in §
2(3). Congress did not intend such a gross
departure from the statutory language. Pp.
648-654.
(c) The record is insufficient
to determine whether Dahl may be liable as a
statutory "seller" under § 12(1). The
District Court's finding that Dahl solicited
the other respondents' purchases is not
clearly erroneous. However, the Court of
Appeals' apparent conclusion that Dahl was
motivated entirely by a gratuitous desire to
share an attractive investment opportunity
with his friends and associates was
premature, since the District Court made no
findings that focused on whether he urged
the other respondents' purchases in order to
further some financial interest of his own
or of Pinter. Pp. 654-655.
787 F.2d 985, vacated and
remanded.
BLACKMUN, J., delivered the
opinion of the Court, in which REHNQUIST,
C.J., and BRENNAN, WHITE, MARSHALL,
O'CONNOR, and SCALIA, JJ., joined. STEVENS,
J., filed a dissenting opinion, post,
p. ----. KENNEDY, J., took no part in the
consideration or decision of the case.
Braden W. Sparks, Dallas, Tex.,
for petitioners.
Richard G. Taranto, Washington,
D.C., for Security Exchange Com'n, as amicus
curiae supporting petitioners, by special
leave of Court.
John A. Spinuzzi, Denton, Tex.,
for respondents.
Justice BLACKMUN delivered the
opinion of the Court.
The questions presented by this
case are (a) whether the common-law in
pari delicto defense is available in a
private
Page 625
action brought under § 12(1) of the
Securities Act of 1933 (Securities Act), 48
Stat. 74, as amended, 15 U.S.C. § 77a et
seq., for the rescission of the sale of
unregistered securities, and (b) whether one
must intend to confer a benefit on himself
or on a third party in order to qualify as a
"seller" within the meaning of § 12(1).
I
The controversy arises out of
the sale prior to 1982 of unregistered
securities (fractional undivided interests
in oil and gas leases) by petitioner Billy
J. "B.J." Pinter to respondents Maurice Dahl
and Dahl's friends, family, and business
associates.1 Pinter is an oil and
gas producer in Texas and Oklahoma, and a
registered securities dealer in Texas. Dahl
is a California real estate broker and
investor, who, at the time of his dealings
with Pinter, was a veteran of two
unsuccessful oil and gas ventures. In
pursuit of further investment opportunities,
Dahl employed an oil field expert to locate
and acquire oil and gas leases. This expert
introduced Dahl to Pinter. Dahl advanced
$20,000 to Pinter to acquire leases, with
the understanding that they would be held in
the name of Pinter's Black Gold Oil Company
and that Dahl would have a right of first
refusal to drill certain wells on the
leasehold properties. Pinter located leases
in Oklahoma, and Dahl toured the properties,
often without Pinter, in order to talk to
others and "get a feel for the properties."
App. to Pet.
Page 626
for Cert. 32. Upon examining the geology,
drilling logs, and production history
assembled by Pinter, Dahl concluded, in the
words of the District Court, that "there was
no way to lose." Ibid.
After investing approximately
$310,000 in the properties, Dahl told the
other respondents about the venture. Except
for Dahl and respondent Grantham, none of
the respondents spoke to or met Pinter or
toured the properties. Because of Dahl's
involvement in the venture, each of the
other respondents decided to invest about
$7,500.2
Dahl assisted his fellow
investors in completing the
subscription-agreement form prepared by
Pinter. Each letter-contract signed by the
purchaser stated that the participating
interests were being sold without the
benefit of registration under the Securities
Act, in reliance on Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC or Commission) Rule 146, 17
CFR § 230.146 (1982).3 In fact,
the oil and gas interests involved in this
suit were never registered with the
Commission. Respondents' investment checks
were made payable to Black Gold Oil Company.
Dahl received no commission from Pinter in
connection with the other respondents'
purchases.
Page 627
When the venture failed and
their interests proved to be worthless,
respondents brought suit against Pinter in
the United States District Court for the
Northern District of Texas, seeking
rescission under § 12(1) of the Securities
Act, 15 U.S.C. § 77l (1), for the
unlawful sale of unregistered securities.4
Page 628
In a counterclaim, Pinter
alleged that Dahl, by means of fraudulent
misrepresentations and concealment of facts,
induced Pinter to sell and deliver the
securities. Pinter averred that Dahl falsely
assured Pinter that he would provide other
qualified, sophisticated, and knowledgeable
investors with all the information necessary
for evaluation of the investment. Dahl
allegedly agreed to raise the funds for the
venture from those investors, with the
understanding that Pinter would simply be
the "operator" of the wells. App. 69-73.5
Pinter also asserted, on the basis of the
same factual allegations, that Dahl's suit
was barred by the equitable defenses of
estoppel and in pari delicto. Id., at
66-67.6
The District Court, after a
bench trial, granted judgment for
respondent-investors. Id., at 92. The
court concluded that Pinter had not proved
that the oil and gas interests were entitled
to the private-offering exemption from
registration. App. to Pet. for Cert. a-37.
Accordingly, the court ruled
Page 629
that, because the securities were
unregistered, respondents were entitled to
rescission pursuant to § 12(1). Ibid.7
The court also concluded that the evidence
was insufficient to sustain Pinter's
counterclaim against Dahl. The District
Court made no mention of the equitable
defenses asserted by Pinter, but it
apparently rejected them.
A divided panel of the Court of
Appeals for the Fifth Circuit affirmed. 787
F.2d 985 (1986). The court first held that
Dahl's involvement in the sales to the other
respondents did not give Pinter an in
pari delicto defense to Dahl's recovery.
Id., at 988.8 The court
concluded that the defense is not available
in an action under § 12(1) because that
section creates "a strict liability offense"
rather than liability based on intentional
misconduct. It thereby distinguished our
recent decision
Bateman Eichler, Hill Richards, Inc. v.
Berner, 472 U.S. 299, 105 S.Ct. 2622, 86
L.Ed.2d 215 (1985), where we held that
the in pari delicto defense is
applicable in an action under § 10(b) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 48 Stat.
891, 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b), which contains an
element of scienter. Noting that Dahl was
"as 'culpable' as Pinter in the sense that
his conduct was an equal producing cause of
the illegal transaction," the court
nevertheless held that "[a]bsent a showing
that Dahl's conduct was 'offensive to the
dictates of natural justice,' " the in
pari delicto defense was not available.
787 F.2d, at 988, quoting
Keystone Driller Co. v. General Excavator
Co., 290 U.S. 240, 245, 54 S.Ct. 146,
147, 78 L.Ed. 293 (1933).
The Court of Appeals next
considered whether Dahl was himself a
"seller" of the oil and gas interests within
the meaning of § 12(1), for if he was, the
court assumed, he could be held liable in
contribution for the other plaintiffs'
claims
Page 630
against Pinter.9 787 F.2d, at
990, and n. 8. Citing Fifth Circuit
precedent, the court described a statutory
seller as "(1) one who parts with title to
securities in exchange for consideration or
(2) one whose participation in the buy-sell
transaction is a substantial factor in
causing the transaction to take place."
Id., at 990. While acknowledging that
Dahl's conduct was a "substantial factor" in
causing the other plaintiffs to purchase
securities from Pinter, the court declined
to hold that Dahl was a "seller" for
purposes of § 12(1). Instead, the court went
on to refine its test to include a threshold
requirement that one who acts as a
"promoter" be "motivated by a desire to
confer a direct or indirect benefit on
someone other than the person he has advised
to purchase." 787 F.2d, at 991. The court
reasoned that "a rule imposing liability
(without fault or knowledge) on friends and
family members who give one another
gratuitous advise on investment matters
unreasonably interferes with
well-established patterns
Page 631
of social discourse." Ibid.
Accordingly, since the court found no
evidence that Dahl sought or received any
financial benefit in return for his advice,
it declined to impose liability on Dahl for
"mere gregariousness." Ibid.
The dissenting judge took issue
with the majority's analysis on both points.
First, assuming that this Court's decision
in Bateman Eichler applied to all
securities cases, the dissent concluded that
Dahl's suit should be barred by the in
pari delicto doctrine because Dahl was a
"catalyst" for the entire transaction and
knew that the securities were unregistered.
787 F.2d, at 991. In addition, the dissent
maintained that Dahl's conduct transformed
him into a "seller" of unregistered
securities to the other plaintiffs under the
Fifth Circuit's established "substantial
factor" test. Id., at 991-992. It
added that, even under the majority's
expectation-of-financial-benefit refinement,
Dahl's promotional activities rendered him a
"seller" because "[m]ore investors means
that the investment program receives the
requisite amount of financing at a smaller
risk to each investor." Id., at 992,
n. 3.10
The Court of Appeals, by an
8-to-6 vote, denied rehearing en banc. 794
F.2d 1016 (1986). The judges who dissented
from that denial asserted that the panel
majority's addition of the financial-benefit
requirement to the definition of a "seller,"
"has absolutely no foundation in either
settled securities law or its underlying
policies." Id., at 1017. They also
criticized the panel majority for
misinterpreting Bateman Eichler to
limit application of the in pari delicto
doctrine to fraud actions under § 10(b). 794
F.2d, at 1017.
Page 632
Because of the importance of
the issues involved to the administration of
the federal securities laws, we granted
certiorari. 481 U.S. 1012, 107 S.Ct. 1885,
95 L.Ed.2d 493 (1987).
II
The equitable defense of in
pari delicto, which literally means "in
equal fault," is rooted in the common-law
notion that a plaintiff's recovery may be
barred by his own wrongful conduct. See
Bateman Eichler,
472 U.S., at 306, and
nn. 12 and 13, 105 S.Ct., at 2626, and nn.
12 and 13. Traditionally, the defense was
limited to situations where the plaintiff
bore "at least substantially equal
responsibility for his injury," id.,
at 307, 105 S.Ct., at 2627, and where the
parties' culpability arose out of the same
illegal act. 1 J. Story, Equity
Jurisprudence 399-400 (14th ed. 1918).
Contemporary courts have expanded the
defense's application to situations more
closely analogous to those encompassed by
the "unclean hands" doctrine, where the
plaintiff has participated "in some of the
same sort of wrongdoing" as the defendant.
Perma Life Mufflers, Inc. v.
International Parts Corp., 392 U.S. 134,
138, 88 S.Ct. 1981, 1984, 20 L.Ed.2d 982
(1968). In Perma Life, however,
the Court concluded that this broadened
construction is not appropriate in
litigation arising under federal regulatory
statutes. Ibid. Nevertheless, in
separate opinions, five Justices recognized
that a narrow, more traditional formulation
should be available in private actions under
the antitrust laws. See id., at 145,
88 S.Ct., at 1987 (WHITE, J., concurring);
id., at 147-148, 88 S.Ct., at
1988-1989 (Fortas, J., concurring in
result); id., at 148-149, 151, 88
S.Ct. at 1989, 1990 (MARSHALL, J.,
concurring in result); id., at
154-155, 88 S.Ct., at 1992 (Harlan, J.,
joined by Stewart, J., concurring in part
and dissenting in part).
In Bateman Eichler, the
Court addressed the scope of the in pari
delicto defense in the context of an
action brought by securities investors under
the antifraud provisions of § 10(b) and Rule
10b-5, alleging that the broker-dealer and
corporate insider defendants had induced the
plaintiffs to purchase large quantities of
stock by divulging false and materially
incomplete information on the pretext that
it was ac-
Page 633
curate inside information. The defendants
argued that the scope should be broader
where the private cause of action is
implied, as in a § 10(b) action, rather than
expressly provided by Congress, as in an
antitrust action. The Court rejected this
distinction, concluding that "the views
expressed in Perma Life apply with
full force to implied causes of action under
the federal securities laws."
472 U.S., at 310, 105 S.Ct. at 2629. Accordingly, it held
that the in pari delicto defense is
available "only where (1) as a direct result
of his own actions, the plaintiff bears at
least substantially equal responsibility for
the violations he seeks to redress, and (2)
preclusion of suit would not significantly
interfere with the effective enforcement of
the securities laws and protection of the
investing public." Id., at 310-311,
105 S.Ct., at 2629. The first prong of this
test captures the essential elements of the
classic in pari delicto doctrine. See
id., at 307, 105 S.Ct. at 2627. The
second prong, which embodies the doctrine's
traditional requirement that public policy
implications be carefully considered before
the defense is allowed, see ibid.,
ensures that the broad judge-made law does
not undermine the congressional policy
favoring private suits as an important mode
of enforcing federal securities statutes.
Cf. Perma Life, 392 U.S., at 139-140,
88 S.Ct., at 1984-1985. Applying this test
to the § 10(b) claim before it, the Court
concluded that in such tipster-tippee
situations, the two factors precluded
recognition of the in pari delicto
defense. Bateman Eichler,
472 U.S., at 317, 105 S.Ct., at 2632.
A.
We do not share the Court of
Appeals' narrow vision of the applicability
of Bateman Eichler. Nothing in this
Court's opinion in that case suggests that
the in pari delicto defense is
limited to § 10(b) claims. Nor does the
opinion suggest that the doctrine applies
only when the plaintiff's fault is
intentional or willful.
We feel that the Court of
Appeals' notion that the in pari delicto
defense should not be allowed in actions
involving
Page 634
strict liability offenses is without
support in history or logic.11
The doctrine traditionally has been applied
in any action based on conduct that
"transgresses statutory prohibitions." 2
Restatement of Contracts § 598, Comment a
(1932). Courts have recognized the defense
in cases involving strict liability
offenses. See, e.g., UFITEC,
S.A. v. Carter,
20 Cal.3d 238, 250, 142 Cal.Rptr. 279,
285-286, 571 P.2d 990, 996-997 (1977)
(violation of Federal Reserve margin
requirements);
Miller v. California Roofing Co., 55
Cal.App.2d 136, 130 P.2d 740 (1942)
(sale of stock without permit from State
Corporation Commission). One of the premises
on which the in pari delicto doctrine
is grounded is that "denying judicial relief
to an admitted wrongdoer is an effective
means of deterring illegality." Bateman
Eichler,
472 U.S., at 306, 105 S.Ct., at
2626-2627. The need to deter illegal conduct
is not eliminated simply because a statute
creates a strict liability offense rather
than punishing willful or negligent
misconduct. Regardless of the degree of
scienter, there may be circumstances in
which the statutory goal of deterring
illegal conduct is served more effectively
by preclusion of suit than by recovery. In
those circumstances, the in pari delicto
defense should be afforded. Cf. A.C.
Frost & Co. v. Coeur D'Alene Mines Corp.,
312 U.S. 38, 43-44, 61 S.Ct. 414, 417, 85
L.Ed. 500, and n. 2 (1941).
In Bateman Eichler, the
Court granted certiorari to resolve a
conflict of authority "over the proper scope
of the in pari delicto defense in
securities litigation."
472 U.S., at 305,
105 S.Ct., at 2626. The Court formulated the
standards under which the defense should be
recognized in language applicable generally
to fed-
Page 635
eral securities litigation. The
formulation was articulated in the specific
context of deciding when "a private action
for damages [in implied causes of action
under the federal securities laws] may be
barred on the grounds of the plaintiff's own
culpability." Id., at 310, 105 S.Ct.,
at 2629. Nevertheless, the Court's rejection
of the distinction between implied and
express private causes of action, especially
when considered in light of the broad
question on which the Court granted
certiorari, makes clear that the Court
assumed that the in pari delicto
defense should be equally available when
Congress expressly provides for private
remedies. Thus, we conclude that Bateman
Eichler provides the appropriate test
for allowance of the in pari delicto
defense in a private action under any of the
federal securities laws.
Our task, then, is to determine
whether, pursuant to this test, recognition
of the defense is proper in a suit for
rescission brought under § 12(1) of the
Securities Act. All parties in this case, as
well as the Commission, maintain that the
defense should be available.12 We
agree, but find it necessary to circumscribe
the scope of its application.
B
Under the first prong of the
Bateman Eichler test, as we have noted
above, a defendant cannot escape liability
unless, as a direct result of the
plaintiff's own actions, the plaintiff bears
at least substantially equal responsibility
for the under-
Page 636
lying illegality. The plaintiff must be
an active, voluntary participant in the
unlawful activity that is the subject of the
suit. See Woolf v. S.D. Cohn & Co.,
515 F.2d 591, 604 (CA5 1975), vacated and
remanded on other grounds, 426 U.S. 944, 96
S.Ct. 3161, 49 L.Ed.2d 1181 (1976); see also
Bateman Eichler,
472 U.S., at 312,
105 S.Ct. at 2630. "Plaintiffs who are truly
in pari delicto are those who have
themselves violated the law in cooperation
with the defendant." Perma Life, 392
U.S., at 153, 88 S.Ct., at 1992 (Harlan, J.,
concurring in part and dissenting in part).
Unless the degrees of fault are essentially
indistinguishable or the plaintiff's
responsibility is clearly greater, the in
pari delicto defense should not be
allowed, and the plaintiff should be
compensated. See id., at 146, 88
S.Ct., at 1992 (WHITE, J., concurring);
id., at 147, 88 S.Ct., at 1989 (Fortas,
J., concurring in result); id., at
149, 88 S.Ct., at 1989 (MARSHALL, J.,
concurring in result); Bateman Eichler,
472 U.S., at 312-314, 105 S.Ct., at
2630-2631. Refusal of relief to those less
blameworthy would frustrate the purpose of
the securities laws; it would not serve to
discourage the actions of those most
responsible for organizing forbidden
schemes; and it would sacrifice protection
of the general investing public in pursuit
of individual punishment.
Can-Am Petroleum Co. v. Beck,
331 F.2d 371, 373 (CA10 1964).
In the context of a private
action under § 12(1), the first prong of the
Bateman Eichler test is satisfied if
the plaintiff is at least equally
responsible for the actions that render the
sale of the unregistered securities
illegalthe issuer's failure to register the
securities before offering them for sale, or
his failure to conduct the sale in such a
manner as to meet the registration exemption
provisions. As the parties and the
Commission agree, a purchaser's knowledge
that the securities are unregistered cannot,
by itself, constitute equal culpability,
even where the investor is a sophisticated
buyer who may not necessarily need the
protection of the Securities Act. Barring
the investor's recovery under the in pari
delicto doctrine, "at least on the basis
solely of the buyer's knowledge of the
violation, is so foreign to the purpose of
the section that there is hardly a trace of
it in the decisions under
Page 637
y(3)27 § 12(1)." 3 L. Loss, Securities
Regulation 1694 (2d ed. 1961).13
Although a court's assessment of the
relative responsibility of the plaintiff
will necessarily vary depending on the facts
of the particular case, courts frequently
have focused on the extent to which the
plaintiff and the defendant cooperated in
developing and carrying out the scheme to
distribute unregistered securities. See,
e.g.,
Katz v. Amos Treat & Co.,
411 F.2d 1046, 1054 (CA2 1969);
Lawler v. Gilliam, 569 F.2d 1283,
1292-1293 (CA4 1978);
Malamphy v. Real-Tex Enterprises, Inc.,
527 F.2d 978 (CA4 1975). In addition, if
the plaintiff were found to have induced the
issuer not to register, he well might be
precluded from obtaining § 12(1) rescission.
Under the second prong of the
Bateman Eichler test, a plaintiff's
recovery may be barred only if preclusion of
suit
Page 638
does not offend the underlying statutory
policies. The primary purpose of the
Securities Act is to protect investors by
requiring publication of material
information thought necessary to allow them
to make informed investment decisions
concerning public offerings of securities in
interstate commerce.
SEC v. Ralston Purina Co., 346 U.S.
119, 124, 73 S.Ct. 981, 984, 97 L.Ed. 1494
(1953); A.C. Frost & Co. v. Coeur
D'Alene Mines Corp., 312 U.S., at 43,
and n. 2, 61 S.Ct., at 417 and n. 2. See
H.R.Rep. No. 85, 73d Cong., 1st Sess., 1-5
(1933).14 The registration
requirements are the heart of the Act, and §
12(1) imposes strict liability for violating
those requirements. Liability under § 12(1)
is a particularly important enforcement
tool, because in many instances a private
suit is the only effective means of
detecting and deterring a seller's wrongful
failure to register securities before
offering them for sale. Lawler v.
Gilliam,
569 F.2d, at 1293, citing
Woolf v. S.D. Cohn & Co., 515 F.2d, at
605. See also Bateman Eichler,
472 U.S., at 310, 105 S.Ct., at 2628.
In our view, where the § 12(1)
plaintiff is primarily an investor,
precluding suit would interfere
significantly with effective enforcement of
the securities laws and frustrate the
primary objective of the Securities Act. The
Commission, too, takes this position.
Because the Act is specifically designed to
protect investors, even where a plaintiff
actively participates in the distribution of
unregistered securities, his
Page 639
suit should not be barred where his
promotional efforts are incidental to his
role as an investor. See Can-Am Petroleum
Co. v. Beck, 331 F.2d, at 373-374
(plaintiff's "relationship as a pure
investor became adulterated when she
actively assisted in selling others but she
at no time had the degree of culpability
attributed to defendants and should not be
considered as in pari delicto ").
Athas v. Day, 186 F.Supp. 385, 389
(Colo.1960) (barring recovery to
plaintiff who participated extensively as
promoter of unlawful securities
distribution). Thus, the in pari delicto
defense may defeat recovery in a § 12(1)
action only where the plaintiff's role in
the offering or sale of nonexempted,
unregistered securities is more as a
promoter than as an investor.
Whether the plaintiff in a
particular case is primarily an investor or
primarily a promoter depends upon a host of
factors, all readily accessible to trial
courts. These factors include the extent of
the plaintiff's financial involvement
compared to that of third parties solicited
by the plaintiff, compare Can-Am
Petroleum Co. v. Beck, supra, with
Athas v. Day, supra; the incidental
nature of the plaintiff's promotional
activities, see Malamphy v. Real-Tex
Enterprises, Inc., 527 F.2d, at 980; the
benefits received by the plaintiff from his
promotional activities; and the extent of
the plaintiff's involvement in the planning
stages of the offering (such as whether the
plaintiff has arranged an underwriting or
prepared the offering materials). We do not
mean to suggest that these factors provide
conclusive evidence of culpable promotional
activity, or that they constitute an
exhaustive list of factors to be considered.
The courts are free, in the exercise of
their sound discretion, to consider whatever
facts are relevant to the inquiry.
C
Given the record in this case,
we cannot ascertain whether Pinter may
successfully assert an in pari delicto
defense
Page 640
against Dahl's § 12(1) claim.15
The District Court's findings in this case
are not adequate to determine whether Dahl
bears at least substantially equal
responsibility for the failure to register
the oil and gas interests or to distribute
the securities in a manner that conformed
with the statutory exemption, and whether he
was primarily a promoter of the offering.16
The findings indicate, on the one hand, that
Dahl may have participated in initiating the
entire investment, and that he loaned money
to Pinter and solicited his associates'
participation in the venture, but, on the
other hand, that Dahl invested substantially
more money than the other
investor-respondents, expected and received
no commission
Page 641
for his endeavors, and drafted none of
the offering documents. Furthermore, the
District Court made no findings as to who
was responsible for the failure to register
or for the manner in which the offering was
conducted. Those findings will be made on
the remand of this case for further
proceedings.
III
What we have said as to the
availability to Pinter of the in pari
delicto defense against Dahl's § 12(1)
action does not obviate the need to consider
the second question presented by
petitioners.17 We turn now to
that issue.
In determining whether Dahl may
be deemed a "seller" for purposes of §
12(1), such that he may be held liable for
the sale of unregistered securities to the
other investor-respondents, we look first at
the language of § 12(1).
Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder, 425 U.S.
185, 197, 96 S.Ct. 1375, 1382, 47 L.Ed.2d
668 (1976). That statute provides, in
pertinent part: "Any person who . . . offers
or sells a security" in violation of the
registration requirement of the Securities
Act "shall be liable to the person
purchasing such security from him." 15
U.S.C. § 77l. This provision defines
the class of defendants who may be subject
to liability
18 as those who
offer or sell unregistered
Page 642
securities.19 But the
Securities Act nowhere delineates who may be
regarded as a statutory seller, and the
sparse legislative history sheds no light on
the issue. The courts, on their part, have
not defined the term uniformly.
At the very least, however, the
language of § 12(1) contemplates a
buyer-seller relationship not unlike
traditional contractual privity. Thus, it is
settled that § 12(1) imposes liability on
the owner who passed title, or other
interest in the security, to the buyer for
value. See Loss, at 1016. Dahl, of course,
was not a seller in this conventional sense,
and therefore may be held liable only if §
12(1) liability extends to persons other
than the person who passes title.20
In common parlance, a person
may offer or sell property without
necessarily being the person who transfers
title to,
Page 643
or other interest in, that property. We
need not rely entirely on ordinary
understanding of the statutory language,
however, for the Securities Act defines the
operative terms of § 12(1). Section 2(3)
defines "sale" or "sell" to include "every
contract of sale or disposition of a
security or interest in a security, for
value," and the terms "offer to sell,"
"offer for sale," or "offer" to include
"every attempt or offer to dispose of, or
solicitation of an offer to buy, a security
or interest in a security, for value." 15
U.S.C. § 77b(3). Under these definitions,
the range of persons potentially liable
under § 12(1) is not limited to persons who
pass title. The inclusion of the phrase
"solicitation of an offer to buy" within the
definition of "offer" brings an individual
who engages in solicitation, an activity not
inherently confined to the actual owner,
within the scope of § 12. See Loss, at 1016;
Douglas & Bates, The Federal Securities Act
of 1933, 43 Yale L.J. 171, 206-207 (1933).
Indeed, the Court has made clear, in the
context of interpreting § 17(a) of the
Securities Act, 15 U.S.C. § 77q(a), that
transactions other than traditional sales of
securities are within the scope of § 2(3)
and passage of title is not important.
United States v. Naftalin, 441 U.S.
768, 773, 99 S.Ct. 2077, 2081, 60 L.Ed.2d
624 (1979). We there explained: "The
statutory terms ["offer" and "sell"], which
Congress expressly intended to define
broadly, . . . are expansive enough to
encompass the entire selling process,
including the seller/agent transaction."
Ibid.
Rubin v. United States, 449 U.S. 424,
430, 101 S.Ct. 698, 701, 66 L.Ed.2d 633
(1981) ("It is not essential under the
terms of the Act that full title pass to a
transferee for the transaction to be an
'offer' or a 'sale' ").
Determining that the activity
in question falls within the definition of
"offer" or "sell" in § 2(3), however, is
only half of the analysis. The second clause
of § 12(1), which provides that only a
defendant "from" whom the plaintiff
"purchased" securities may be liable,
narrows the field of potential sell-
Page 644
ers.21 Several courts and
commentators have stated that the purchase
requirement necessarily restricts § 12
primary liability to the owner of the
security. E.g.,
Beck v. Cantor, Fitzgerald & Co.,
621 F.Supp. 1547, 1560-1561 (ND Ill.1985);
Abrams, The Scope of Liability Under Section
12 of the Securities Act of 1933:
"Participation" and the Pertinent
Legislative Materials, 15 Ford. Urban L.J.
877 (1987);
Collins v. Signetics Corp.,
605 F.2d 110, 113 (CA3 1979) (absent some
"special relationship"e.g.,
control§ 12 requires privity between
statutory seller and buyer). In effect,
these authorities interpret the term
"purchase" as complementary to only the term
"sell" defined in § 2(3). Thus, an offeror,
as defined by § 2(3), may incur § 12
liability only if the offeror also "sells"
the security to the plaintiff, in the sense
of transferring title for value. Abrams, 15
Ford. Urban L.J., at 922-923.
We do not read § 12(1) so
restrictively. The purchase requirement
clearly confines § 12 liability to those
situations in which a sale has taken place.
Thus, a prospective buyer has no recourse
against a person who touts unregistered
securities to him if he does not purchase
the securities. Loss, at 884. The
requirement, however, does not exclude
solicitation from the category of activities
that may render a person liable when a sale
has taken place. A natural reading of the
statutory language would include in the
statutory seller status at least some
persons who urged the buyer to purchase. For
example, a securities vendor's agent who
solicited the purchase would commonly be
said, and would be thought by the buyer, to
be among those "from" whom the buyer
"purchased," even though the agent himself
did not pass title.
Cady v. Murphy,
113 F.2d 988, 990
(CA1) (finding bro-
Page 645
ker acting as agent of the owner liable
as a statutory seller), cert. denied, 311
U.S. 705, 61 S.Ct. 175, 85 L.Ed. 58 (1940).
The Securities Act does not
define the term "purchase." The soundest
interpretation of the term, however, is as a
correlative to both "sell" and "offer," at
least to the extent that the latter entails
active solicitation of an offer to buy. This
interpretation is supported by the history
of the phrase "offers or sells," as it is
used in § 12(1). As enacted in 1933, § 12(1)
imposed liability on "[a]ny person who . . .
sells a security." 48 Stat. 84. The
statutory definition of "sell" included
"offer" and the activities now encompassed
by that term, including solicitation.
Id., at 74. The words "offer or" were
added to § 12(1) by the 1954 amendments to
the Securities Act, when the original
definition of "sell" in § 2(3) was split
into separate definitions of "sell" and
"offer" in order to accommodate changes in §
5. 68 Stat. 683, 686. Since "sells" and
"purchases" have obvious correlative
meanings, Congress' express definition of
"sells" in the original Securities Act to
include solicitation suggests that the class
of those from whom the buyer "purchases"
extended to persons who solicit him. The
1954 amendment to § 12(1) was intended to
preserve existing law, including the
liability provisions of the Act. H.R.Rep.
No. 1542, 83d Cong., 2d Sess., 26 (1954),
U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1954, p. 2973;
S.Rep. No. 1036, 83d Cong., 2d Sess., 18
(1954); Loss, at 884. Hence, there is no
reason to think Congress intended to narrow
the meaning of "purchased from" when it
amended the statute to include
"solicitation" in the statutory definition
of "offer" alone.22
Page 646
The applicability of § 12
liability to brokers and others who solicit
securities purchases has been recognized
frequently since the passage of the
Securities Act. It long has been "quite
clear," that when a broker acting as agent
of one of the principals to the transaction
successfully solicits a purchase, he is a
person from whom the buyer purchases within
the meaning of § 12 and is therefore liable
as a statutory seller. See Loss, at 1016.
Indeed, courts had found liability on this
basis prior to the 1954 amendment of the
statute. See, e.g.,
Wall v. Wagner,
125 F.Supp. 854, 858 (Neb.1954), aff'd
sub nom.
Whittaker v. Wall,
226 F.2d 868, 873 (CA8 1955) (principal
and its agents);
Schillner v. H. Vaughan Clarke & Co.,
134 F.2d 875, 879 (CA2 1943) (seller's
broker); Cady v. Murphy, supra
(seller's broker);
Boehm v. Granger, 181 Misc. 680, 42
N.Y.S.2d 246, 248 (Sup.1943), aff'd, 268
App.Div. 855, 50 N.Y.S.2d 845 (1944)
(buyer's broker). Had Congress intended
liability to be restricted to those who pass
title, it could have effectuated its intent
by not adding the phrase "offers or" when it
split the definition of "sell" in § 2(3).
An interpretation of statutory
seller that includes brokers and others who
solicit offers to purchase securities
furthers the purposes of the Securities
Actto promote full and fair disclosure of
information to the public in the sales of
securities. In order to effectuate Congress'
intent that § 12(1) civil liability be in
terrorem, see Douglas & Bates, 43 Yale
L.J., at 173; Shulman, 43 Yale L.J., at 227,
the risk of its invocation should be felt by
solicitors of purchases. The solicitation of
a buyer is perhaps the most critical stage
of the selling transaction. It is the first
stage of a traditional securities sale to
involve the buyer, and it is directed at
producing the sale. In addition, brokers and
other solicitors are well positioned to
control the flow of information to a
potential purchaser, and, in fact, such
persons are the participants in the selling
transaction who most often disseminate
material information to investors. Thus,
solicitation is the stage at which an
investor is most likely to be injured, that
is, by
Page 647
being persuaded to purchase securities
without full and fair information. Given
Congress' overriding goal of preventing this
injury, we may infer that Congress intended
solicitation to fall under the mantle of §
12(1).
Although we conclude that
Congress intended § 12(1) liability to
extend to those who solicit securities
purchases, we share the Court of Appeals'
conclusion that Congress did not intend to
impose rescission based on strict liability
on a person who urges the purchase but whose
motivation is solely to benefit the buyer.
When a person who urges another to make a
securities purchase acts merely to assist
the buyer, not only is it uncommon to say
that the buyer "purchased" from him, but it
is also strained to describe the giving of
gratuitous advice, even strongly or
enthusiastically, as "soliciting." Section
2(3) defines an offer as a "solicitation of
an offer to buy . . . for value." The person
who gratuitously urges another to make a
particular investment decision is not, in
any meaningful sense, requesting value in
exchange for his suggestion or seeking the
value the titleholder will obtain in
exchange for the ultimate sale. The language
and purpose of § 12(1) suggest that
liability extends only to the person who
successfully solicits the purchase,
motivated at least in part by a desire to
serve his own financial interests or those
of the securities owner. If he had such a
motivation, it is fair to say that the buyer
"purchased" the security from him and to
align him with the owner in a rescission
action.23
Page 648
B
Petitioner is not satisfied
with extending § 12(1) primary liability to
one who solicits securities sales for
financial gain. Pinter assumes, without
explication, that liability is not limited
to the person who actually parts title with
the securities, and urges us to validate, as
the standard by which additional
defendant-sellers are identified, that
version of the "substantial factor" test
utilized by the Fifth Circuit before the
refinement espoused in this case.24
Under that approach,
Page 649
grounded in tort doctrine, a
nontransferor § 12(1) seller is defined as
one "whose participation in the buy-sell
transaction is a substantial factor in
causing the transaction to take place."
Pharo v. Smith, 621 F.2d 656, 667
(CA5 1980).25
Page 650
The Court of Appeals acknowledged that
Dahl would be liable as a statutory seller
under this test. 787 F.2d, at 990.
We do not agree that Congress
contemplated imposing § 12(1) liability
under the broad terms petitioners advocate.
There is no support in the statutory
language or legislative history for
expansion of § 12(1) primary liability
beyond persons who pass title and persons
who "offer," including those who "solicit"
offers. Indeed, § 12's failure to impose
express liability for mere participation in
unlawful sales transactions suggests that
Congress did not intend that the section
impose liability on participants' collateral
to the offer or sale. When Congress wished
to create such liability, it had little
trouble doing so.
Touche Ross & Co. v. Redington, 442
U.S. 560, 572, 99 S.Ct. 2479, 2487, 61
L.Ed.2d 82 (1979).26
Page 651
The deficiency of the
substantial-factor test is that it divorces
the analysis of seller status from any
reference to the applicable statutory
language and from any examination of § 12 in
the context of the total statutory scheme.
Those courts that have adopted the approach
have not attempted to ground their analysis
in the statutory language. See n. 25,
supra. Instead, they substitute the
concept of substantial participation in the
sales transaction, or proximate causation of
the plaintiff's purchase, for the words
"offers or sells" in § 12. The "purchase
from" requirement of § 12 focuses on the
defendant's relationship with the
plaintiff-purchaser. The substantial-factor
test, on the other hand, focuses on the
defendant's degree of involvement in the
securities transaction and its surrounding
circumstances. Thus, although the
substantial-factor test undoubtedly embraces
persons who pass title and who solicit the
purchase of unregistered securities as
statutory sellers, the test also would
extend § 12(1) liability to participants
only remotely related to the relevant
aspects of the sales transaction. Indeed, it
might expose securities professionals, such
as accountants and lawyers, whose
involvement is only the performance of their
professional services, to § 12(1) strict
liability for rescission. The buyer does
not, in any meaningful sense, "purchas[e]
the security from" such a person.27
Page 652
Further, no congressional
intent to incorporate tort law doctrines of
reliance and causation into § 12(1) emerges
from the language or the legislative history
of the statute. Indeed, the strict liability
nature of the statutory cause of action
suggests the opposite. See Douglas & Bates,
43 Yale L.J., at 177. By injecting these
concepts into § 12(1) litigation, the
substantial-factor test introduces an
element of uncertainty into an area that
demands certainty and predictability. As the
Fifth Circuit has conceded, the test affords
no guidelines for distinguishing between the
defendant whose conduct rises to a level of
significance sufficient to trigger seller
status, and the defendant whose conduct is
not sufficiently integral to the sale. See
Pharo v. Smith, 621 F.2d, at 667.28
None of the courts employing the approach
has articulated what measure of
participation qualifies a person for seller
status, and logically sound limitations
would be difficult to develop. As a result,
decisions are made on an ad hoc basis,
offering little predictive value to
participants in securities transactions.
Croy v. Campbell,
624 F.2d 709, 714
(CA5 1980); Pharo v. Smith, 621
F.2d, at 667. We find it particularly
unlikely that Congress would have ordained
sub silentio the imposition of strict
liability on such an unpredictably defined
class of defendants.
Not surprisingly, Pinter makes
no attempt to justify the substantial-factor
test as a matter of statutory construction.
Instead, the sole justification Pinter
advances is that extend-
Page 653
ing § 12 liability pursuant to the test
protects investors and serves the "remedial
purposes" of the Securities Act. See also,
e.g.,
Lennerth v. Mendenhall,
234 F.Supp. 59, 65 (ND Ohio 1964). The
Court has acknowledged that "it is proper
for a court to consider . . . policy
considerations in construing terms in [the
federal securities] Acts."
Landreth Timber Co. v. Landreth, 471
U.S. 681, 695, n. 7, 105 S.Ct. 2297,
2307, n. 7, 85 L.Ed.2d 692 (1985). And the
Court has recognized that Congress had
"broad remedial goals" in enacting the
securities laws and providing civil
remedies. Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder,
425 U.S., at 200, 96 S.Ct., at 1384;
Tcherepnin v. Knight, 389 U.S. 332,
336, 88 S.Ct. 548, 553, 19 L.Ed.2d 564
(1967). Accordingly, the Court itself
has construed securities law provisions "
'not technically and restrictively, but
flexibly to effectuate [their] remedial
purposes.' "
Affiliated Ute Citizens v. United States,
406 U.S. 128, 151, 92 S.Ct. 1456, 1471, 31
L.Ed.2d 741 (1972), quotingSEC
v. Capital Gains Research Bureau, Inc.,
375 U.S. 180, 195, 84 S.Ct. 275, 284, 11
L.Ed.2d 237 (1963). But the Court never
has conducted its analysis entirely apart
from the statutory language. "The ultimate
question is one of congressional intent, not
one of whether this Court thinks it can
improve upon the statutory scheme that
Congress enacted into law." Touche Ross &
Co. v. Redington,
442 U.S., at 578, 99
S.Ct., at 2490. The ascertainment of
congressional intent with respect to the
scope of liability created by a particular
section of the Securities Act must rest
primarily on the language of that section.
Santa Fe Industries, Inc. v. Green,
430 U.S. 462, 472, 97 S.Ct. 1292, 1300, 51
L.Ed.2d 480 (1977). The broad remedial
goals of the Securities Act are insufficient
justification for interpreting a specific
provision " 'more broadly than its language
and the statutory scheme reasonably permit.'
" Touche Ross,
442 U.S., at 578, 99
S.Ct., at 2490, quoting
SEC v. Sloan, 436 U.S. 103, 116, 98
S.Ct. 1702, 1711, 56 L.Ed.2d 148 (1978).
We must assume that Congress meant what it
said.
The substantial-factor test
reaches participants in sales transactions
who do not even arguably fit within the
definitions set out in § 2(3); it "would add
a gloss to the operative language of [§
12(1) ] quite different from its commonly
ac-
Page 654
cepted meaning." Ernst & Ernst v.
Hochfelder,
425 U.S., at 199, 96 S.Ct.,
at 1983. We conclude that Congress did not
intend such a gross departure from the
statutory language. Accordingly, we need not
entertain Pinter's policy arguments.29
Being merely a "substantial factor" in
causing the sale of unregistered securities
is not sufficient in itself to render a
defendant liable under § 12(1).
C
We are unable to determine
whether Dahl may be held liable as a
statutory seller under § 12(1). The District
Court explicitly found that "Dahl solicited
each of the other plaintiffs (save perhaps
Grantham) in connection with the offer,
purchase, and receipt of their oil and gas
interests." App. to Pet. for Cert. a-34. We
cannot conclude that this finding was
clearly erroneous. It is not clear, however,
that Dahl had the kind of interest in the
sales that make him liable as a statutory
seller. We do know that he received no
commission from Pinter in connection with
the other sales, but this is not conclusive.
Typically, a person who solicits the
purchase will have sought or received a
personal financial benefit from the sale,
such as where he "anticipat[es] a share of
the profits," Lawler v. Gilliam,
569 F.2d, at 1288, or receives a brokerage
commission, Cady v. Murphy, 113 F.2d,
at 990. But
Page 655
a person who solicits the buyer's
purchase in order to serve the financial
interests of the owner may properly be
liable under § 12(1) without showing that he
expects to participate in the benefits the
owner enjoys.
The Court of Appeals apparently
concluded that Dahl was motivated entirely
by a gratuitous desire to share an
attractive investment opportunity with his
friends and associates. See 787 F.2d, at
991. This conclusion, in our view, was
premature. The District Court made no
findings that focused on whether Dahl urged
the other purchases in order to further some
financial interest of his own or of Pinter.
Accordingly, further findings are necessary
to assess Dahl's liability.30
IV
The judgment of the Court of
Appeals is vacated, and the case is remanded
for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
It is so ordered.
Justice KENNEDY took no part in
the consideration or decision of this case.
Justice STEVENS, dissenting.
Although I substantially agree
with the Court's discussion of the in
pari delicto defense in Parts II-A and
II-B of its opinion, I disagree with its
application of that discussion to the facts
of this case.1a Moreover, I am
unable to join Part
Page 656
III because I am persuaded that the
discussion of the § 12(1) term "seller" in
the context of a contribution suit is both
advisory, because no such suit was brought
in this case, and misleading, because it
assumes that the class of persons who sell
securities to purchasers (i.e., §
12(1) "sellers") is coextensive with the
class of potential defendants in claims for
contribution, not brought directly under §
12(1), asserted by § 12(1) sellers. § 12(1),
Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. § 77l
(1).
I
In this case, Pinter had the
burden of proving that Dahl shared at least
equal responsibility for the action that
resulted in the § 12(1) violation, i.e.,
the failure to register the securities. But,
as the Court notes, Pinter has conceded that
"nothing in the record indicates whether
Dahl was a participant in the decision not
to register the securities." Ante, at
640, n. 15; see Brief for Petitioners 27.
Further, the Court of Appeals concluded, and
it is undisputed here, that there is no
evidence that Dahl knew that the failure to
register the securities was unlawful.2a
Page 657
Because "the District Court
made no findings as to who was responsible
for the failure to register or for the
manner in which the offering was conducted,"
ante, at 395, the majority concludes
that we must remand for further findings. It
seems to me, though, that the District
Court's failure to make findings on the
critical issue of responsibility for failure
to register is properly attributed to
Pinter's failure to direct the court's
attention to the issue. Pinter pleaded his
in pari delicto defense as follows:
"The Plaintiff, M.
Dahl, engaged in fraudulent
misrepresentations to Pinter and the other
Plaintiffs, all as set forth in the
Defendant's Counterclaim. He is therefore
barred from recovery for the causes of
action set forth in [Plaintiffs' First
Amended Complaint], by reason of his conduct
in pari delicto in connection with
the offer, sale and delivery of the
securities of that which he complains." App.
67.
In light of the fact that the
District Court expressly found that the
"evidence did not establish that defendants
are entitled to any relief on their
counterclaims," App. to Pet. for Cert. a-38,
it would seem to follow that the District
Court also found that there was no factual
basis for the in pari delicto
affirmative defense as pleaded.
Pinter did, though, in his
proposed findings of fact and conclusions of
law, set forth a somewhat different theory
for the in pari delicto defense. He
proposed as a conclusion of law that "[a]s a
result of his participation in the
solicitation of the investment by other
Plaintiffs in the subject lease
transactions, Dahl is in pari delicto and
cannot recover in this action as a matter of
law." 2 Record 274. Thus, if one construes
this proposal liberally as amending the
pleading, it is fair to conclude that the
District Court was at least directed to
examine the nature of Dahl's participation
in the solicitation of others to invest in
the Pinter leases. But nowhere in his
proposed findings of fact or conclusions of
law did Pinter suggest that Dahl played any
role in the failure to register the
Page 658
securities. To be sure, in arguing that
the private offering exemption should apply,
Pinter asked the court to find that Dahl
"received or collected most of the
investment proceeds from [the other
investors] and hand delivered the funds to
Pinter. He had disclosure of or access to
all of the information requisite to a
registration statement." Id., at 395.
But all of this was proposed to convince the
court that the private offering exemption
applied, and, more importantly, none of it
suggests that Dahl aided Pinter in any way
in the latter's decision not to (or failure
to) register the securities. Thus, by
permitting Pinter to argue now, on remand,
for the first time, that Dahl played a role
in the failure to register, the majority
gives Pinter a second chance to litigate an
issue that he was in no way prevented from
litigating the first time before the
District Court. Since there is nothing in
the record to suggest that the District
Court committed any error of law in
rejecting the in pari delicto
defense, the fact that the Court of Appeals
may have entertained a different legal view
of the defense than we do is not a
sufficient reason for giving Pinter another
opportunity to prove facts that he failed to
establish at trial.3a
II
The question concerning
Pinter's possible right to contribution from
Dahl relates only to the proceeds of the
sales to the
Page 659
plaintiffs other than Dahl who elected to
sue Pinter and not Dahl. Initially, it is
unclear how this matter is properly before
us. The Court acknowledges that "Pinter's
pleadings do not state an explicit cause of
action for contribution against Dahl," see
ante, at 630, n. 9, and suggests that
"the Court of Appeals construed Pinter's
affirmative defense for contributory fault
and his incorporation of this defense into
his counterclaims, as effectively seeking
contribution." Ibid. If this were so
then the matter is easily resolvable, for as
I have pointed out supra, at 657, the
District Court expressly found that the
"evidence did not establish that defendants
are entitled to any relief on their
counterclaims," and there is nothing in the
record indicating (nor any assertion here)
that the District Court applied an erroneous
legal standard in rejecting the
counterclaims. In any event, Pinter in fact
brought no claim for contribution, and the
fact that the Court of Appeals saw fit to
discuss whether Dahl could be held liable in
such a hypothetical lawsuit does not, in my
opinion, justify the issuance of an advisory
opinion by this Court.4a
Even if there is a right to
contribution in cases like this,5a
and even if Pinter had alleged a claim for
contribution against
Page 660
Dahl, I see no reason for assuming that
the merits of such a claim would be governed
by the definition of the term "seller" as
used in § 12(1). For even if Dahl might be
regarded as a seller in an action brought by
the other purchasers of unregistered
securities, Pinter would have a right to
contribution against Dahl only if Dahl had
received some of the proceeds of sale for
which Pinter had been held accountable.
Moreover, the contours of the right to
contribution may be such that if Dahl had
shared in those proceeds knowing that they
had been obtained in violation of law, he
might have to return his share even if he
was not technically a "seller" of any
securities. For it is by no means clear that
the class of persons who may be held liable
for contribution to those held primarily
liable in § 12(1) rescission actions should
be limited to those who "successfully
solici[t] the purchase, motivated at least
in part by a desire to serve his own
financial interests or those of the
securities owner." Ante, at 647.
Thus, the Court's discussion of the "seller"
issue is neither sufficient nor necessary
for the resolution of Pinter's putative
contribution claim.
It would be necessary, however,
in resolving a contribution claim such as
this, to determine whether the defendant had
to account for any proceeds that were
actually held by the third-party
(contribution) defendant. For § 12(1) is an
action for rescission. The statute expressly
provides that the purchaser of an
unregistered security may "recover the
consideration paid for such security with
interest thereon, less the amount of any
income received thereon, upon the tender of
Page 661
such security. . . ." 15 U.S.C. § 77l
(1). The judgment entered by the District
Court tracked the language of the statute.
After reciting that the plaintiffs had made
a tender of the securities purchased from
Pinter, it ordered that each of them "have
judgment against B.J. Pinter, individually
and d/b/a Black Gold Oil Company, in the
amount of their purchase price for the
securities purchased, plus prejudgment
interest thereon at the rate of 6% annum
from the date of payment of their purchase
price in May, 1981, less the amount of any
income a Plaintiff received on the security.
. . ." App. 92.
The District Court found that
all of the unregistered securities were
"offered, sold and delivered" by the
defendant Pinter "individually and d/b/a
Black Gold Oil Company," App. to Pet. for
Cert. a-32, and it is undisputed that all of
the proceeds of sale were received by
Pinter. Specifically, the District Court
found:
"Dahl did not receive
from defendants any commission, by way of
discount or otherwise, in connection with
the purchase by any plaintiff of the
fractional undivided oil and gas interests
involved in this suit." Id., at a-34.
Given the undisputed facts, the
statutory remedy of rescission
6a
was complete when the securities were
returned in exchange for the purchase price
plus interest. Even if there may be a basis
for a right to contribution in cases in
which one seller has shared the proceeds of
sale with another and has been held liable
for those proceeds, it seems obvious to me
that the scheme of the statute would be
frustrated by allowing a seller to recover
from a third party who did not receive any
part of the purchase price.7a The
Court of Appeals
Page 662
expressly recognized this independent
basis for affirmance when it stated:
"In light of the clear purpose
of section 12(1) to disgorge the purchase
price from the seller of unregistered
securities, we view as unsound any result
which would permit Pinter to retain part of
the consideration paid by plaintiffs." 787
F.2d 985, 990, n. 8 (CA5 1986).
In my opinion, this is a
sufficient reason for affirming the judgment
of the Court of Appeals.
1 Petitioners are Pinter,
individually and d.b.a. Black Gold Oil
Company, Pinter Energy Company, and Pinter
Oil Company. Throughout this opinion, we
often refer to petitioners collectively as
"Pinter."
Respondents are Maurice Dahl, Gary Clark,
W. Grantham, Robert J. Daniele, Charles
Dahl, Dowayne C. Bockman, Ray Dilbeck,
Richard Koon, Art Overgaard, Jack Yeager,
Accra Tronics Seals Corp., and Aaron Heller.
These are Dahl's brother, his accountant,
his partner in a construction business, the
bank officer handling his construction
loans, his construction-business insurance
agent, a business owned by a longtime
friend, and other business associates and
friends of Maurice Dahl. See App. 101-104.
2 The venture included still
others who were either interested in
additional ventures organized by Pinter or
were new investors who met Pinter through
sources other than Dahl. Those investors are
not parties to this litigation.
3 Specifically, each document
recited:
"WHEREAS the parties constitute a
predetermined and limited group of
sophisticated and knowledgeable well
informed investors who desire to arrange for
participation in an oil and/or gas drilling
venture as an investment and do declare that
it is not for the purpose of reselling their
interest therein. (These participating
interests are being sold without the benefit
of registration under the Securities Act of
1933, as amended, and on reliance of rule
146 thereunder)." App. 95.
See also n. 4, infra.
Rule 146 was rescinded, effective June
30, 1982, by SEC Release No. 33-6389, 47
Fed.Reg. 11251 (1982), and superseded by
provisions of Regulation D, 17 CFR, p. 425
(1987).
4 Section 12 provides:
"Any person who(1) offers or sells a
security in violation of section [5] . . .
shall be liable to the person purchasing
such security from him, who may sue either
at law or in equity in any court of
competent jurisdiction, to recover the
consideration paid for such security with
interest thereon, less the amount of any
income received thereon, upon the tender of
such security, or for damages if he no
longer owns the security."
Section 5, 15 U.S.C. § 77e, referred to
in § 12, states, in pertinent part, that if
a security is unregistered, it is unlawful
for a person to sell or deliver the security
in interstate commerce.
A number of exemptions, however, enable
an issuer to avoid the registration
requirement of the Securities Act. One of
these, § 4(2), 15 U.S.C. § 77d(2), commonly
referred to as the "private-offering"
exemption, relieves from registration
"transactions by an issuer not involving any
public offering."
SEC v. Ralston Purina Co., 346 U.S.
119, 73 S.Ct. 981, 97 L.Ed. 1494 (1953)
(establishing criteria for determining
whether an offering fits the
private-offering exemption).
In 1974, the Commission sought to provide
"objective standards" under § 4(2) by
adopting Rule 146. Rule 146 Transactions by
an Issuer Deemed Not to Involve Any Public
Offering, Securities Act Rel. No. 33-5487
(effective June 10, 1974), 39 Fed.Reg. 15261
(1974), CCH Fed.Sec.L.Rep. 2710, p. 2902.
It has been said that the Rule, which is now
superseded by provisions of Regulation D,
see n. 3, supra, provided that a
transaction by an issuer would not be deemed
to involve a public offering within the
meaning of § 4(2) if it was part of an
offering that met the following conditions:
"[T]he offering must 1) not be made by
any means or form of general solicitation or
advertising; 2) be made only to those
persons whom the issuer has reasonable
grounds to believe are of knowledge and
experience which would enable them to
evaluate the merits of the issue or who are
financially able to bear the risk; 3) be
made only to those persons who have access
to the same kind of information as would be
contained in a registration statement. Under
this rule, the issuer must have reasonable
grounds to believe, and must believe, that
there are no more than thirty-five
purchasers from the issuer."
Mary S. Krech Trust v. Lakes Apartments,
642 F.2d 98, 101 (CA5 1981).
See 3 H. Bloomenthal, Securities and
Federal Corporate Law § 4.05[2] (1981 ed.).
Pinter sought to take advantage of this
"safe harbor" in issuing the oil and gas
interests involved in this case.
In addition to their § 12(1) claim,
respondents alleged that Pinter made
material misrepresentations regarding the
oil and gas properties and his oil
experience, thereby entitling them to
damages under § 10(b) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, 48 Stat. 891, 15
U.S.C. § 78j(b), and SEC Rule 10b-5
thereunder, 17 CFR § 240.10b-5 (1987), and
to rescission under § 12(2) of the
Securities Act, 15 U.S.C. § 77l (2).
Respondents also asserted pendent claims
under Texas and California law. None of
these additional claims is before us.
5 Pinter apparently meant to
contend that Dahl was responsible for the
loss of the private-offering exemption from
registration under § 4(2) and Rule 146, see
n. 4, supra, although Pinter did not
make this assertion explicit in his
pleadings. Cf. Second Amended Proposed
Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law of
Defendants Billy J. "B.J." Pinter, et al.,
App. 85-86 (claiming that petitioners had
met the requirements of the private-offering
exemption).
6 Pinter contended that all
the respondents should be estopped from
recovery because of Dahl's fraudulent
conduct. He asserted his in pari delicto
defense solely against Dahl.
7 Having reached this
conclusion, the District Court found it
unnecessary to consider respondents' § 12(2)
claim. App. to Pet. for Cert. 37-38. The
court rejected respondents' claim under §
10(b) and Rule 10b-5. App. to Pet. for Cert.
a-37.
8 The court also rejected
Pinter's estoppel defense. 787 F.2d, at
988-989. That holding is not challenged in
this Court. We express no view as to whether
this equitable defense is available in a §
12(1) action.
9 Because none of the other
plaintiffs sought recovery from Dahl, Dahl's
liability on their claims is at issue only
if contribution is available to Pinter.
The Court of Appeals addressed Pinter's
contention that Dahl was liable as a § 12(1)
seller and thus should be accountable to
Pinter in contribution for the amounts
awarded to the other plaintiffs. 787 F.2d,
at 987. It is not entirely clear how this
claim was raised below. Pinter's pleadings
do not state an explicit cause of action for
contribution against Dahl, although Pinter
did move, albeit unsuccessfully, to realign
Dahl as a third-party defendant, based on
Pinter's assertion that Dahl was a "seller"
of the unregistered securities to the
remaining plaintiffs and had made the
allegedly actionable misrepresentations to
them in connection with the sales. See 1
Record 164-165, 189. Presumably, the Court
of Appeals construed Pinter's affirmative
defense for contributory fault and his
incorporation of this defense into his
counterclaims, as effectively seeking
contribution.
Unlike § 11 of the Securities Act, see 15
U.S.C. § 77k(f), § 12 does not expressly
provide for contribution. The Court of
Appeals did not reach the question whether
Pinter is entitled to contribution under §
12(1) because it found that Dahl was not a
seller for purposes of § 12(1), and
therefore would not be the proper subject of
a contribution claim. The parties have not
raised or addressed the contribution issue
before this Court, and we express no view as
to whether a right of contribution exists
under § 12(1).
10 The dissent addressed the
"seller" issue in the context of Pinter's
asserted in pari delicto defense. In
its view, Dahl's role as a seller of the
unregistered securities "put him in the same
boat as Pinter," making him vulnerable to
that defense. 787 F.2d, at 991. The dissent
also indicated that it "would go further"
and hold that "Pinter is entitled to
contribution from Dahl since Dahl is at
least equally culpable for the sale to the
other plaintiffs." Id., at 995, n. 5.
11 The Court of Appeals found
that this conclusion was compelled by its
decision
Henderson v. Hayden, Stone Inc.,
461 F.2d 1069 (1972). See 787 F.2d, at
987-988. That case, we note, does not
discuss the in pari delicto defense.
Accord, 794 F.2d 1016, 1017 (1986) (opinion
dissenting from denial of rehearing of the
present case en banc).
12 Among the Courts of
Appeals that have addressed the issue, the
Fifth Circuit is alone in concluding that
the defense is unavailable. The defense,
however, rarely has succeeded on the facts
of any particular case. See, e.g.,
Lawler v. Gilliam,
569 F.2d 1283, 1294 (CA4 1978); Woolf
v. S.D. Cohn & Co., 515 F.2d 591, 604
(CA5 1975), vacated and remanded on other
grounds, 426 U.S. 944, 96 S.Ct. 3161, 49
L.Ed.2d 1181 (1976);
Malamphy v. Real-Tex Enterprises, Inc.,
527 F.2d 978 (CA4 1975);
Katz v. Amos Treat & Co.,
411 F.2d 1046, 1054 (CA2 1969);
Can-Am Petroleum Co. v. Beck,
331 F.2d 371, 373-374 (CA10 1964).
Commentators also have suggested that the
defense should be available under proper
circumstances in actions under § 12(1). See,
e.g., Ruder, Multiple Defendants in
Securities Law Fraud Cases: Aiding and
Abetting, Conspiracy, In Pari Delicto,
Indemnification, and Contribution, 120
U.Pa.L.Rev. 597, 662-663 (1971-1972); Note,
In Pari Delicto Under the Federal Securities
Laws:
Bateman Eichler, Hill Richards, Inc. v.
Berner, 72 Cornell L.Rev. 345, 359-362
(1987).
13 The panel dissent below
expressed concern that failure to provide
the in pari delicto defense in these
circumstances would allow sophisticated
investors who purchase unregistered
securities to place themselves in a no-lose
situation. If the venture proves profitable,
the buyer comes out ahead. If the investment
goes bad, the buyer can sue to recover his
investment in a § 12(1) action. See 787
F.2d, at 995. The statute, however, permits
such maneuvers. See Shulman, Civil Liability
and the Securities Act, 43 Yale L.J. 227,
246-247 (1933) (Shulman); accord, L. Loss,
Fundamentals of Securities Regulation 1003,
n. 74 (2d ed. 1988) (Loss). Section 12(1)'s
deterrent effect is achieved, to a great
extent, by a provision allowing suits for a
full year following sale. See 15 U.S.C. §
77m. Thus, the purchaser of unregistered
securities may keep his securities and reap
his profit if the securities perform well
during the year, but rescind the sale if
they do not. See, e.g.,
Straley v. Universal Uranium & Milling
Corp.,
289 F.2d 370 (CA9 1961). Although this
provision may appear to offend a sense of
fair play, allowing the investor to sue,
regardless of his knowledge of the violation
when he purchased the securities, furthers
the interest of the Securities Act: the
seller then has strong incentive to comply
with the registration disclosure provisions.
These provisions are concerned with
affording the unsophisticated investor
information necessary to make a
knowledgeable investment decision.
Permitting the sophisticated investor to
recover also serves to protect the unknowing
and innocent investor.
14 Courts have discerned
beneath the registration provisions the same
broad policies as those furthered by the
securities laws generally: protection of
investors as a group, not as individuals,
and the need for a healthy economy
constantly purged by full disclosure. See,
e.g.,
SEC v. North American Research & Development
Corp.,
280 F.Supp. 106, 121 (SDNY 1968)
(purpose of § 5 is to protect public
investors through disclosure), aff'd in part
and vacated in part on other grounds, 424
F.2d 63 (CA2 1970). See generally, 1 Loss,
Securities Regulation 178-179 (2d ed. 1961)
(aim of registration provision is " 'to
protect honest enterprise . . .; to restore
the confidence of the prospective investor .
. .; to bring into productive channels of
industry and development capital which has
grown timid . . .; and to aid in providing
employment and restoring buying and consumer
power' "), quoting S.Rep. No. 47, 73d Cong.,
1st Sess., 1 (1933).
15 The parties vigorously
dispute whether Pinter has a valid defense
under the in pari delicto doctrine.
Pinter argues that Dahl was a "preeminent
factor in the violations he seeks to
redress." Brief for Petitioners 29. He
maintains that the venture would not have
been undertaken or, at least, completed, had
it not been for Dahl's involvement.
According to Pinter, Dahl's responsibility
for causing the unlawful sales was at least
substantially equal to his own.
Nevertheless, Pinter concedes that nothing
in the record indicates whether Dahl was a
participant in the decision not to register
the securities, although Pinter would infer
that Dahl was aware of the duty to register.
See id., at 27.
Dahl contends that his actions were not
of equal fault to those of Pinter. He
suggests that Pinter, as the issuer of the
securities, was entirely responsible for the
failure to register and to fulfill the
requirements of Rule 146, although he points
to no evidence in the record to support
either position. Dahl further argues, in a
conclusory fashion, that he was not a
promoter of any of the securities in which
his co-respondents invested. Finally, he
asserts that he should be permitted to
recover because "Pinter made the first step
in the dissemination of unregistered
securities and he will be more responsive to
the deterrent pressure of potential
sanctions." Brief for Respondents 98.
16 In dictum, the Court of
Appeals ventured that even if it were to
apply the Bateman Eichler standard,
Pinter would not be permitted to advance an
in pari delicto defense against
Dahl's recovery. 787 F.2d, at 989, n. 6.
Because the court did not have our
delineation today of the proper inquiry
regarding § 12(1) actions, and because we
conclude that the District Court's findings
were insufficient to conduct this analysis,
the Court of Appeals' views on this point
are not conclusive of the issue.
17 Even if the Court of
Appeals were ultimately to conclude that
Dahl's actions bar his recovery against
Pinter pursuant to the in pari delicto
doctrine, that conclusion would not resolve
the issue whether, based on Dahl's actions
as a "seller" under § 12(1), Dahl might be
held liable for contribution as to the
remaining investor-respondents' claims
against Pinter. We therefore are constrained
to address, as did the Court of Appeals,
whether Dahl is a "seller" for purposes of §
12(1).
18 Section 12 was adapted
from common-law (or equitable) rescission,
Loss, at 888, which provided for restoration
of the status quo by requiring the buyer to
return what he received from the seller. The
statute, however, differs significantly from
the source material. In particular, it
permits the buyer who has disposed of the
security to sue for damages"the
consideration paid for such security with
interest thereon, less the amount of any
income received thereon." 15 U.S.C. § 77l.
This damages calculation results in what is
the substantial equivalent of rescission.
Randall v. Loftsgaarden, 478 U.S.
647, 655-656, 106 S.Ct. 3143, 3149, 92
L.Ed.2d 525 (1986); Loss, at 886;
Shulman, 43 Yale L.J., at 244.
19 In addition, § 15 of the
Securities Act, 15 U.S.C. § 77o,
makes a "controlling person" liable for the
§ 12 liability of a controlled person. That
provision is not at issue in this case.
20 The "offers or sells" and
the "purchasing such security from him"
language that governs § 12(1) also governs §
12(2), which provides a securities purchaser
with a similar rescissionary cause of action
for misrepresentation. See 15 U.S.C. § 77l.
Most courts and commentators have not
defined the defendant class differently for
purposes of the two provisions. See,
e.g.,
Pharo v. Smith,
621 F.2d 656, 665-668, and nn. 6-8 (CA5
1980); Schneider, Section 12 of the
Securities Act of 1933: The Privity
Requirement in the Contemporary Securities
Law Perspective, 51 Tenn.L.Rev. 235, 261,
and nn. 144 and 145 (1983-1984).
Schillner v. H. Vaughan Clarke & Co.,
134 F.2d 875, 878 (CA2 1943) ("Clearly
the word [sell] has the same meaning in
subdivision (2) as in subdivision (1) of
section 12").
The question whether anyone beyond the
transferor of title, or immediate vendor,
may be deemed a seller for purposes of § 12
has been litigated in actions under both §
12(1) and § 12(2). Decisions under § 12(2)
addressing the "seller" question are thus
relevant to the issue presented to us in
this case, and, to that extent, we discuss
them here. Nevertheless, this case does not
present, nor do we take a position on, the
scope of a statutory seller for purposes of
§ 12(2).
21 One important consequence
of this provision is that § 12(1) imposes
liability on only the buyer's immediate
seller; remote purchasers are precluded from
bringing actions against remote sellers.
Thus, a buyer cannot recover against his
seller's seller. Loss, at 1023-1024; Douglas
& Bates, 43 Yale L.J., at 177.
22 It is noteworthy that in
1940 Congress considered a proposal that
would have excluded the solicitation clause
from the definition of "sell" in § 2(3). See
S. 3985, 76th Cong., 3d Sess., 1-2 (1940),
as introduced, 86 Cong.Rec. 6026 (1940).
This amendment clearly would have reduced
the meaning of the term "sell" to
transferring title for value and would have
eliminated the potential for liability of
brokers or other persons soliciting a sale
of securities. The proposal was not adopted.
23 Those commentators who
argue that § 12 confines seller status to
the transferor maintain that the section's
provision of rescissionary relief supports
their conclusion. E.g., Abrams, 15
Ford. Urban L.J., at 924. There is authority
at common law, however, for granting a
plaintiff rescission against a defendant who
was not a party to the contract in question,
in particular, against the agent of the
vendor. See, e.g.,
Keskal v. Modrakowski,
249 N.Y. 406, 408, 164 N.E. 333 (1928);
Peterson v. McManus, 187 Iowa 522,
545-549, 172 N.W. 460, 468-470 (1919).
Indeed, there is nothing incongruous about
forcing a broker or other solicitor to
assume ownership of the securities. When
rescission is predicated on fraud, rather
than based on contract theory, privity is
not essential. Loss, at 1017, quoting
Gordon v. Burr, 506 F.2d 1080, 1085
(CA2 1974) ("[A]s between the innocent
purchaser and the wrongdoer who, though not
a privy to the fraudulent contract,
nonetheless induced the victim to make the
purchase, equity requires the wrongdoer to
restore the victim to the status quo"). In
any event, there is no reason to think that
Congress wanted to bind itself to the
common-law notion of the circumstances in
which rescission is an appropriate remedy.
The Court, in the context of § 12(2), has
noted that Congress enabled investors to
demand rescission upon tender of the
securities to the defendant, in part because
of the additional measure of deterrence
provided by rescission as compared to a
purely compensatory measure of damages.
Randall v. Loftsgaarden,
478 U.S., at 659, 106 S.Ct., at 3151. Thus, we may infer
that Congress, in order to effectuate its
goals, chose to impose this relief on any
defendant it classified as a statutory
seller, regardless of the fact that such
imposition was somewhat inconsistent with
the use of rescission at common law.
Congress chose rescission for its effects;
there is no indication that Congress
employed the remedy for its delineation of
potential defendants.
24 The Fifth Circuit's test
is only one of several approaches that have
emerged in expanding § 12 liability beyond
the security titleholder. See generally
O'Hara, Erosion of the Privity Requirement
in Section 12(2) of the Securities Act of
1933: The Expanded Meaning of Seller, 31
UCLA L.Rev. 921 (1983-1984); Rapp, Expanded
Liability Under Section 12 of the Securities
Act: When Is a Seller Not a Seller?, 27 Case
W.Res.L.Rev. 445 (1977); Note, Seller
Liability Under Section 12(2) of the
Securities Act of 1933: A Proximate
Cause-Substantial Factor Approach Limited by
a Duty of Inquiry, 36 Vand.L.Rev. 361
(1983); Comment, Attorneys and Participant
Liability Under § 12(2) of the Securities
Act of 1933, 1982 Ariz.S.L.J. 529. All but
one of these theories reflect the courts'
views of who constitutes a § 12 seller. The
remaining approachthe aiding and abetting
theoryis actually a method by which courts
create secondary liability in persons other
than the statutory seller. See, e.g.,
Mayer v. Oil Field Systems Corp.,
803 F.2d 749, 756 (CA2 1986);
In re Caesars Palace Securities
Litigation, 360 F.Supp. 366 (SDNY 1973);
Collins v. Signetics Corp.,
605 F.2d 110, 113-114 (CA3 1979) (leaving open
whether aidin |