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Page 56
494 U.S. 56
110 S.Ct. 945 108 L.Ed.2d 47 Bob REVES, et al., Petitioners
v.
ERNST & YOUNG.
No. 88-1480.
Argued Nov. 27, 1989.
Decided Feb. 21, 1990.
Rehearing Denied April 16, 1990.
See 494 U.S.
1092, 110 S.Ct. 1840.
Syllabus
In order to raise money to
support its general business operations, the
Farmers Cooperative of Arkansas and Oklahoma
(Co-Op) sold uncollateralized and uninsured
promissory notes payable on demand by the
holder. Offered to both Co-Op members and
nonmembers and marketed as an "Investment
Program," the notes paid a variable interest
rate higher than that of local financial
institutions. After the Co-Op filed for
bankruptcy, petitioners, holders of the
notes, filed suit in the District Court
against the Co-Op's auditor, respondent's
predecessor, alleging, inter alia,
that it had violated the antifraud
provisions of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934which regulates certain specified
instruments, including "any note[s]"and
Arkansas' securities laws by intentionally
failing to follow generally accepted
accounting principles that would have made
the Co-Op's insolvency apparent to potential
note purchasers. Petitioners prevailed at
trial, but the Court of Appeals reversed.
Applying the test created in SEC v. W.J.
Howey Co., 328 U.S. 293, 66 S.Ct. 1100,
90 L.Ed. 1244, to determine whether an
instrument is an "investment contract" to
the determination whether the Co-Op's
instruments were "notes," the court held
that the notes were not securities under the
1934 Act or Arkansas law, and that the
statutes' antifraud provisions therefore did
not apply.
Held: The demand notes
issued by the Co-Op fall under the "note"
category of instruments that are
"securities." Pp. 60-76.
(a) Congress' purpose in
enacting the securities laws was to regulate
investments, in whatever form they
are made and by whatever name they are
called. However, notes are used in a variety
of settings, not all of which involve
investments. Thus, they are not securities
per se, but must be defined using the
"family resemblance" test. Under that test,
a note is presumed to be a security unless
it bears a strong resemblance, determined by
examining four specified factors, to one of
a judicially crafted list of categories of
instrument that are not securities. If the
instrument is not sufficiently similar to a
listed item, a court must decide whether
another category should be added by
examining the same factors. The application
of the Howey test to notes is
rejected, since to hold that a "note" is not
a "security" unless it meets a test designed
for
Page 57
an entirely different variety of
instrument would make the 1933 Securities
Act's and 1934 Act's enumeration of many
types of instruments superfluous and would
be inconsistent with Congress' intent in
enacting the laws. Pp. 60-67.
(b) Applying the family
resemblance approach, the notes at issue are
"securities." They do not resemble any of
the enumerated categories of nonsecurities.
Nor does an examination of the four relevant
factors suggest that they should be treated
as nonsecurities: (1) the Co-Op sold them to
raise capital, and purchasers bought them to
earn a profit in the form of interest, so
that they are most naturally conceived as
investments in a business enterprise; (2)
there was "common trading" of the notes,
which were offered and sold to a broad
segment of the public; (3) the public
reasonably perceived from advertisements for
the notes that they were investments, and
there were no countervailing factors that
would have led a reasonable person to
question this characterization; and (4)
there was no risk-reducing factor that would
make the application of the Securities Acts
unnecessary, since the notes were
uncollateralized and uninsured and would
escape federal regulation entirely if the
Acts were held not to apply. The lower
court's argument that the demand nature of
the notes is very uncharacteristic of a
security is unpersuasive, since an
instrument's liquidity does not eliminate
the risk associated with securities. Pp.
67-70.
(c) Respondent's contention
that the notes fall within the statutory
exception for "any note . . . which has a
maturity at the time of issuance of not
exceeding nine months" is rejected, since it
rests entirely on the premise that Arkansas'
statute of limitations for suits to collect
demand noteswhich are due immediatelyis
determinative of the notes' "maturity," as
that term is used in the federal
Securities Acts. The "maturity" of notes is
a question of federal law, and Congress
could not have intended that the Acts be
applied differently to the same transactions
depending on the accident of which State's
law happens to apply. Pp. 70-72.
(d) Since, as a matter of
federal law, the words of the statutory
exception are far from plain with regard to
demand notes, the exclusion must be
interpreted in accordance with the
exception's purpose. Even assuming that
Congress intended to create a bright-line
rule exempting from coverage all
notes of less than nine months' duration on
the ground that short-term notes are
sufficiently safe that the Securities Acts
need not apply, that exemption would not
cover the notes at issue here, which do not
necessarily have short terms, since demand
could just as easily be made years or
decades into the future. Pp. 72-73.
856 F.2d 52 (CA8 1988),
reversed and remanded.
Page 58
MARSHALL, J., delivered the
opinion for a unanimous Court with respect
to Part II, and the opinion of the Court
with respect to Parts I, III, and IV, in
which BRENNAN, BLACKMUN, STEVENS, and
KENNEDY, JJ., joined. STEVENS, J., filed a
concurring opinion, post, p. 73.
REHNQUIST, C.J., filed an opinion concurring
in part and dissenting in part, in which
WHITE, O'CONNOR, and SCALIA, JJ., joined,
post, p. 76.
John R. McCambridge, Chicago,
Ill., for petitioners.
Michael R. Lazerwitz,
Washington, D.C. for Security Exchange
Com'n, as amicus curiae, in support of the
petitioners, by special leave of Court.
John Matson for respondent.
Justice MARSHALL delivered the
opinion of the Court.
This case presents the question
whether certain demand notes issued by the
Farmers Cooperative of Arkansas and Oklahoma
(Co-Op) are "securities" within the meaning
of § 3(a)(10) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934. We conclude that they are.
I
The Co-Op is an agricultural
cooperative that, at the time relevant here,
had approximately 23,000 members. In order
to raise money to support its general
business operations, the Co-Op sold
promissory notes payable on demand by the
holder. Although the notes were
uncollateralized and uninsured, they paid a
variable rate of interest that was adjusted
Page 59
monthly to keep it higher than the rate
paid by local financial institutions. The
Co-Op offered the notes to both members and
nonmembers, marketing the scheme as an
"Investment Program." Advertisements for the
notes, which appeared in each Co-Op
newsletter, read in part: "YOUR CO-OP has
more than $11,000,000 in assets to stand
behind your investments. The Investment is
not Federal [sic ] insured but it is
. . . Safe . . . Secure . . . and available
when you need it." App. 5 (ellipses in
original). Despite these assurances, the
Co-Op filed for bankruptcy in 1984. At the
time of the filing, over 1,600 people held
notes worth a total of $10 million.
After the Co-Op filed for
bankruptcy, petitioners, a class of holders
of the notes, filed suit against Arthur
Young & Co., the firm that had audited the
Co-Op's financial statements (and the
predecessor to respondent Ernst & Young).
Petitioners alleged, inter alia, that
Arthur Young had intentionally failed to
follow generally accepted accounting
principles in its audit, specifically with
respect to the valuation of one of the
Co-Op's major assets, a gasohol plant.
Petitioners claimed that Arthur Young
violated these principles in an effort to
inflate the assets and net worth of the
Co-Op. Petitioners maintained that, had
Arthur Young properly treated the plant in
its audits, they would not have purchased
demand notes because the Co-Op's insolvency
would have been apparent. On the basis of
these allegations, petitioners claimed that
Arthur Young had violated the antifraud
provisions of the 1934 Act as well as
Arkansas' securities laws.
Petitioners prevailed at trial
on both their federal and state claims,
receiving a $6.1 million judgment. Arthur
Young appealed, claiming that the demand
notes were not "securities" under either the
1934 Act or Arkansas law, and that the
statutes' antifraud provisions therefore did
not apply. A panel of the Eighth Circuit,
agreeing with Arthur Young on both the state
and federal issues, reversed.
Arthur Young & Co. v. Reves, 856 F.2d
52 (1988). We granted certiorari to ad-
Page 60
dress the federal issue, 490 U.S. 1105,
109 S.Ct. 3154, 104 L.Ed.2d 1018 (1989), and
now reverse the judgment of the Court of
Appeals.
II
A.
This case requires us to decide
whether the note issued by the Co-Op is a
"security" within the meaning of the 1934
Act. Section 3(a)(10) of that Act is our
starting point:
"The term 'security' means any
note, stock, treasury stock, bond,
debenture, certificate of interest or
participation in any profit-sharing
agreement or in any oil, gas, or other
mineral royalty or lease, any
collateral-trust certificate,
preorganization certificate or subscription,
transferable share, investment contract,
voting-trust certificate, certificate of
deposit, for a security, any put, call,
straddle, option, or privilege on any
security, certificate of deposit, or group
or index of securities (including any
interest therein or based on the value
thereof), or any put, call, straddle,
option, or privilege entered into on a
national securities exchange relating to
foreign currency, or in general, any
instrument commonly known as a 'security';
or any certificate of interest or
participation in, temporary or interim
certificate for, receipt for, or warrant or
right to subscribe to or purchase, any of
the foregoing; but shall not include
currency or any note, draft, bill of
exchange, or banker's acceptance which has a
maturity at the time of issuance of not
exceeding nine months, exclusive of days of
grace, or any renewal thereof the maturity
of which is likewise limited." 48 Stat. 884,
as amended, 15 U.S.C. § 78c(a)(10).
The fundamental purpose
undergirding the Securities Acts is "to
eliminate serious abuses in a largely
unregulated securities market."
United Housing Foundation, Inc. v.
Forman, 421 U.S. 837, 849, 95 S.Ct.
2051, 2059, 44 L.Ed.2d 621 (1975). In
defining the scope of the market that it
wished to regulate, Congress painted with a
broad brush. It recognized the virtually
limitless scope of
Page 61
human ingenuity, especially in the
creation of "countless and variable schemes
devised by those who seek the use of the
money of others on the promise of profits,"
SEC v. W.J. Howey Co., 328 U.S. 293,
299, 66 S.Ct. 1100, 1103, 90 L.Ed. 1244
(1946), and determined that the best way to
achieve its goal of protecting investors was
"to define 'the term "security" in
sufficiently broad and general terms so as
to include within that definition the many
types of instruments that in our commercial
world fall within the ordinary concept of a
security.' " Forman, supra,
421 U.S., at 847-848, 95 S.Ct., at 2058-2059 (quoting
H.R.Rep. No. 85, 73d Cong., 1st Sess., 11
(1933)). Congress therefore did not attempt
precisely to cabin the scope of the
Securities Acts.1 Rather, it
enacted a definition of "security"
sufficiently broad to encompass virtually
any instrument that might be sold as an
investment.
Congress did not, however,
"intend to provide a broad federal remedy
for all fraud."
Marine Bank v. Weaver, 455 U.S. 551,
556, 102 S.Ct. 1220, 1223, 71 L.Ed.2d 409
(1982). Accordingly, "[t]he task has
fallen to the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC), the body charged with
administering the Securities Acts, and
ultimately to the federal courts to decide
which of the myriad financial transactions
in our society come within the coverage of
these statutes." Forman, supra,
421 U.S., at 848, 95 S.Ct., at 2059. In
discharging our duty, we are not bound by
legal formalisms, but instead take account
of the economics of the transaction under
investigation. See, e.g.,
Tcherepnin v. Knight,
389 U.S. 332, 336, 88 S.Ct. 548, 553, 19
L.Ed.2d 564 (1967) (in interpreting the
term "security," "form should be disregarded
for substance and the emphasis should be on
economic reality"). Congress' purpose in
enacting the securities laws was to regulate
investments, in whatever form they
are made and by whatever name they are
called.
Page 62
A commitment to an examination
of the economic realities of a transaction
does not necessarily entail a case-by-case
analysis of every instrument, however. Some
instruments are obviously within the class
Congress intended to regulate because they
are by their nature investments.
Landreth Timber Co. v. Landreth, 471
U.S. 681, 105 S.Ct. 2297, 85 L.Ed.2d 692
(1985), we held that an instrument
bearing the name "stock" that, among other
things, is negotiable, offers the
possibility of capital appreciation, and
carries the right to dividends contingent on
the profits of a business enterprise is
plainly within the class of instruments
Congress intended the securities laws to
cover. Landreth Timber does not
signify a lack of concern with economic
reality; rather, it signals a recognition
that stock is, as a practical matter, always
an investment if it has the economic
characteristics traditionally associated
with stock. Even if sparse exceptions to
this generalization can be found, the public
perception of common stock as the paradigm
of a security suggests that stock, in
whatever context it is sold, should be
treated as within the ambit of the Acts.
Id., at 687, 693, 105 S.Ct., at 2302,
2305.
We made clear in Landreth
Timber that stock was a special case,
explicitly limiting our holding to that sort
of instrument. Id., at 694, 105
S.Ct., at 2304. Although we refused finally
to rule out a similar per se rule for
notes, we intimated that such a rule would
be unjustified. Unlike "stock," we said, "
'note' may now be viewed as a relatively
broad term that encompasses instruments with
widely varying characteristics, depending on
whether issued in a consumer context, as
commercial paper, or in some other
investment context." Ibid. (citing
Securities Industry Assn. v. Board of
Governors of Federal Reserve System,
468 U.S. 137, 149-153, 104 S.Ct. 2979, 2985-88,
82 L.Ed.2d 107 (1984)). While common
stock is the quintessence of a security,
Landreth Timber, supra,
471 U.S., at 693, 105 S.Ct., at 2305, and investors
therefore justifiably assume that a sale of
stock is covered by the Securities Acts, the
same simply cannot be said of notes, which
are used in a variety of settings, not all
of which involve investments. Thus,
Page 63
the phrase "any note" should not be
interpreted to mean literally "any note,"
but must be understood against the backdrop
of what Congress was attempting to
accomplish in enacting the Securities Acts.2
Because the Landreth Timber
formula cannot sensibly be applied to notes,
some other principle must be developed to
define the term "note." A majority of the
Courts of Appeals that have considered the
issue have adopted, in varying forms,
"investment versus commercial" approaches
that distinguish, on the basis of all of the
circumstances surrounding the transactions,
notes issued in an investment context (which
are "securities") from notes issued in a
commercial or consumer context (which are
not). See, e.g.,
Futura Development Corp. v. Centex Corp.,
761 F.2d 33, 40-41 (CA1 1985);
McClure v. First Nat. Bank of Lubbock,
Texas, 497 F.2d 490, 492-494 (CA5 1974);
Hunssinger v. Rockford Business Credits,
Inc., 745 F.2d 484, 488 (CA7 1984);
Holloway v. Peat, Marwick, Mitchell &
Co., 879 F.2d 772, 778-779 (CA10 1989),
cert. pending No. 89-532.
The Second Circuit's "family
resemblance" approach begins with a
presumption that any note with a term
of more than nine months is a "security."
See, e.g.,
Exchange Nat. Bank of Chicago v. Touche Ross
& Co.,
544 F.2d 1126, 1137 (CA2 1976).
Recognizing that not all notes are
securities, however, the Second Circuit has
also devised a list of notes that it has
decided are obviously not securities.
Accord-
Page 64
ingly, the "family resemblance" test
permits an issuer to rebut the presumption
that a note is a security if it can show
that the note in question "bear[s] a strong
family resemblance" to an item on the
judicially crafted list of exceptions,
id., at 1137-1138, or convinces the
court to add a new instrument to the list,
see, e.g.,
Chemical Bank v. Arthur Andersen & Co.,
726 F.2d 930, 939 (CA2 1984).
In contrast, the Eighth and
District of Columbia Circuits apply the test
we created in SEC v. W.J. Howey Co.,
328 U.S. 293, 66 S.Ct. 1100, 90 L.Ed. 1244
(1946), to determine whether an instrument
is an "investment contract" to the
determination whether an instrument is a
"note." Under this test, a note is a
security only if it evidences "(1) an
investment; (2) in a common enterprise; (3)
with a reasonable expectation of profits;
(4) to be derived from the entrepreneurial
or managerial efforts of others." 856 F.2d,
at 54 (case below). Accord,
Baurer v. Planning Group, Inc., 215
U.S.App.D.C. 384, 391-393, 669 F.2d 770,
777-779 (1981).
Underhill v. Royal,
769 F.2d 1426, 1431 (CA9 1985) (setting forth what it
terms a "risk capital" approach that is
virtually identical to the Howey
test).
We reject the approaches of
those courts that have applied the Howey
test to notes; Howey provides a
mechanism for determining whether an
instrument is an "investment contract." The
demand notes here may well not be
"investment contracts," but that does not
mean they are not "notes." To hold that a
"note" is not a "security" unless it meets a
test designed for an entirely different
variety of instrument "would make the Acts'
enumeration of many types of instruments
superfluous," Landreth Timber,
471 U.S., at 692, 105 S.Ct., at 2305, and would
be inconsistent with Congress' intent to
regulate the entire body of instruments sold
as investments, see supra, at 60-62.
The other two contendersthe
"family resemblance" and "investment versus
commercial" testsare really two ways of
formulating the same general approach.
Because we
Page 65
think the "family resemblance" test
provides a more promising framework for
analysis, however, we adopt it. The test
begins with the language of the statute;
because the Securities Acts define
"security" to include "any note," we begin
with a presumption that every note is a
security.3 We nonetheless
recognize that this presumption cannot be
irrebuttable. As we have said, supra,
at 61, Congress was concerned with
regulating the investment market, not with
creating a general federal cause of action
for fraud. In an attempt to give more
content to that dividing line, the Second
Circuit has identified a list of instruments
commonly denominated "notes" that
nonetheless fall without the "security"
category. See Exchange Nat. Bank, supra,
at 1138 (types of notes that are not
"securities" include "the note delivered in
consumer financing, the note secured by a
mortgage on a home, the short-term note
secured by a lien on a small business or
some of its assets, the note evidencing a
'character' loan to a bank customer,
short-term notes secured by an assignment of
accounts receivable, or a note which simply
formalizes an open-account debt incurred in
the ordinary course of business
(particularly if, as in the case of the
customer of a broker, it is
collateralized)"); Chemical Bank, supra,
at 939 (adding to list "notes evidencing
loans by commercial banks for current
operations").
We agree that the items
identified by the Second Circuit are not
properly viewed as "securities." More
guidance, though, is needed. It is
impossible to make any meaningful inquiry
into whether an instrument bears a
"resemblance" to
Page 66
one of the instruments identified by the
Second Circuit without specifying what it is
about those instruments that makes
them non-"securities." Moreover, as the
Second Circuit itself has noted, its list is
"not graven in stone,"
726 F.2d, at 939, and
is therefore capable of expansion. Thus,
some standards must be developed for
determining when an item should be added to
the list.
An examination of the list
itself makes clear what those standards
should be. In creating its list, the Second
Circuit was applying the same factors that
this Court has held apply in deciding
whether a transaction involves a "security."
First, we examine the transaction to assess
the motivations that would prompt a
reasonable seller and buyer to enter into
it. If the seller's purpose is to raise
money for the general use of a business
enterprise or to finance substantial
investments and the buyer is interested
primarily in the profit the note is expected
to generate, the instrument is likely to be
a "security." If the note is exchanged to
facilitate the purchase and sale of a minor
asset or consumer good, to correct for the
seller's cash-flow difficulties, or to
advance some other commercial or consumer
purpose, on the other hand, the note is less
sensibly described as a "security." See,
e.g., Forman,
421 U.S., at 851, 95
S.Ct., at 2060 (share of "stock" carrying a
right to subsidized housing not a security
because "the inducement to purchase was
solely to acquire subsidized low-cost living
space; it was not to invest for profit").
Second, we examine the "plan of
distribution" of the instrument, SEC v.
C.M. Joiner Leasing Corp.,
320 U.S. 344, 353, 64 S.Ct. 120, 124, 88 L.Ed. 88 (1943),
to determine whether it is an instrument in
which there is "common trading for
speculation or investment," id., at
351, 64 S.Ct., at 123. Third, we examine the
reasonable expectations of the investing
public: The Court will consider instruments
to be "securities" on the basis of such
public expectations, even where an economic
analysis of the circumstances of the
particular transaction might suggest that
the instruments are not "securities" as used
in that transaction. Compare Landreth
Timber, 471
Page 67
U.S., at 687, 693, 105 S.Ct., at 2302,
2305 (relying on public expectations in
holding that common stock is always a
security), with id., at 697-700, 105
S.Ct., at 2307-2308 (STEVENS, J.,
dissenting) (arguing that sale of business
to single informed purchaser through stock
is not within the purview of the Acts under
the economic reality test). See also
Forman, supra, at 851, 95 S.Ct., at
2060. Finally, we examine whether some
factor such as the existence of another
regulatory scheme significantly reduces the
risk of the instrument, thereby rendering
application of the Securities Acts
unnecessary. See, e.g., Marine Bank,
455 U.S., at 557-559, and n. 7, 102 S.Ct.,
at 1224-1225, and n. 7.
We conclude, then, that in
determining whether an instrument
denominated a "note" is a "security," courts
are to apply the version of the "family
resemblance" test that we have articulated
here: A note is presumed to be a "security,"
and that presumption may be rebutted only by
a showing that the note bears a strong
resemblance (in terms of the four factors we
have identified) to one of the enumerated
categories of instrument. If an instrument
is not sufficiently similar to an item on
the list, the decision whether another
category should be added is to be made by
examining the same factors.
B
Applying the family resemblance
approach to this case, we have little
difficulty in concluding that the notes at
issue here are "securities." Ernst & Young
admits that "a demand note does not closely
resemble any of the Second Circuit's family
resemblance examples." Brief for Respondent
43. Nor does an examination of the four
factors we have identified as being relevant
to our inquiry suggest that the demand notes
here are not "securities" despite their lack
of similarity to any of the enumerated
categories. The Co-Op sold the notes in an
effort to raise capital for its general
business operations, and purchasers bought
them in order to earn a profit
Page 68
in the form of interest.4
Indeed, one of the primary inducements
offered purchasers was an interest rate
constantly revised to keep it slightly above
the rate paid by local banks and savings and
loans. From both sides, then, the
transaction is most naturally conceived as
an investment in a business enterprise
rather than as a purely commercial or
consumer transaction.
As to the plan of distribution,
the Co-Op offered the notes over an extended
period to its 23,000 members, as well as to
nonmembers, and more than 1,600 people held
notes when the Co-Op filed for bankruptcy.
To be sure, the notes were not traded on an
exchange. They were, however, offered and
sold to a broad segment of the public, and
that is all we have held to be necessary to
establish the requisite "common trading" in
an instrument. See, e.g., Landreth
Timber, supra (stock of closely held
corporation not traded on any exchange held
to be a "security"); Tcherepnin,
389 U.S., at 337, 88 S.Ct., at 553
(nonnegotiable but transferable
"withdrawable capital shares" in savings and
loan association held to be a "security");
Howey,
328 U.S., at 295, 66 S.Ct., at
1101 (units of citrus grove and maintenance
contract "securities" although not traded on
exchange).
The third factorthe public's
reasonable perceptionsalso supports a
finding that the notes in this case are
"securities." We have consistently
identified the fundamental essence of a
Page 69
"security" to be its character as an
"investment." See supra, at 61, 65.
The advertisements for the notes here
characterized them as "investments," see
supra, at 59, and there were no
countervailing factors that would have led a
reasonable person to question this
characterization. In these circumstances, it
would be reasonable for a prospective
purchaser to take the Co-Op at its word.
Finally, we find no
risk-reducing factor to suggest that these
instruments are not in fact securities. The
notes are uncollateralized and uninsured.
Moreover, unlike the certificates of deposit
in Marine Bank, supra, at 557-558,
which were insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation and subject to
substantial regulation under the federal
banking laws, and unlike the pension plan
Teamsters v. Daniel, 439 U.S. 551,
569-570, 99 S.Ct. 790, 801-802, 58 L.Ed.2d
808 (1979), which was comprehensively
regulated under the Employee Retirement
Income Security Act of 1974, 88 Stat. 829,
29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq. (1982 ed.),
the notes here would escape federal
regulation entirely if the Acts were held
not to apply.
The court below found that
"[t]he demand nature of the notes is very
uncharacteristic of a security," 856 F.2d,
at 54, on the theory that the virtually
instant liquidity associated with demand
notes is inconsistent with the risk
ordinarily associated with "securities."
This argument is unpersuasive. Common stock
traded on a national exchange is the
paradigm of a security, and it is as readily
convertible into cash as is a demand note.
The same is true of publicly traded
corporate bonds, debentures, and any number
of other instruments that are plainly within
the purview of the Acts. The demand feature
of a note does permit a holder to eliminate
risk quickly by making a demand, but just as
with publicly traded stock, the liquidity of
the instrument does not eliminate risk
altogether. Indeed, publicly traded stock is
even more readily liquid than are demand
notes, in that a demand only eliminates risk
when, and if, payment is made, whereas the
Page 70
sale of a share of stock through a
national exchange and the receipt of the
proceeds usually occur simultaneously.
We therefore hold that the
notes at issue here are within the term
"note" in § 3(a)(10).
III
Relying on the exception in the
statute for "any note . . . which has a
maturity at the time of issuance of not
exceeding nine months," 15 U.S.C. §
78c(a)(10), respondent contends that the
notes here are not "securities," even if
they would otherwise qualify. Respondent
cites Arkansas cases standing for the
proposition that, in the context of the
state statute of limitations, "[a] note
payable on demand is due immediately." See,
e.g., McMahon v. O'Keefe, 213 Ark.
105, 106, 209 S.W.2d 449, 450 (1948)
(statute of limitations is triggered by the
date of issuance rather than by date of
first demand). Respondent concludes from
this rule that the "maturity" of a demand
note within the meaning of § 3(a)(10) is
immediate, which is, of course, less than
nine months. Respondent therefore contends
that the notes fall within the plain words
of the exclusion and are thus not
"securities."
Petitioners counter that the
"plain words" of the exclusion should not
govern. Petitioners cite the legislative
history of a similar provision of the 1933
Act, 48 Stat. 76, 15 U.S.C. § 77c(a)(3), for
the proposition that the purpose of the
exclusion is to except from the coverage of
the Acts only commercial paper short-term,
high quality instruments issued to fund
current operations and sold only to highly
sophisticated investors. See S.Rep. No. 47,
73d Cong., 1st Sess., 3-4 (1933); H.R.Rep.
No. 85, 73d Cong., 1st Sess., 15 (1933).
Petitioners also emphasize that this Court
has repeatedly held (see supra, at
60-63) that the plain words of the
definition of a "security" are not
dispositive, and that we consider the
economic reality of the transaction to
determine whether Congress intended the
Securities Acts to apply. Petitioners
therefore argue, with some force, that
reading the exception
Page 71
for short-term notes to exclude from the
Acts' coverage investment notes of less than
nine months' duration would be inconsistent
with Congress' evident desire to permit the
SEC and the courts flexibility to ensure
that the Acts are not manipulated to
investors' detriment. If petitioners are
correct that the exclusion is intended to
cover only commercial paper, these notes,
which were sold in a large scale offering to
unsophisticated members of the public,
plainly should not fall within the
exclusion.
We need not decide, however,
whether petitioners' interpretation of the
exception is correct, for we conclude that
even if we give literal effect to the
exception, the notes do not fall within its
terms.
Respondent's contention that
the demand notes fall within the "plain
words" of the statute rests entirely upon
the premise that Arkansas' statute of
limitations for suits to collect demand
notes is determinative of the "maturity" of
the notes, as that term is used in the
federal Securities Acts. The "maturity"
of the notes, however, is a question of
federal law. To regard States' statutes of
limitations law as controlling the scope of
the Securities Acts would be to hold that a
particular instrument is a "security" under
the 1934 Act in some States, but that the
same instrument is not a "security" in
others. Compare McMahon, supra, at
106, 209 S.W.2d 449 (statute runs from date
of note), with 42 Pa.Cons.Stat. § 5525(7)
(1988) (statute runs "from the later of
either demand or any payment of principal of
or interest on the instrument"). We are
unpersuaded that Congress intended the
Securities Acts to apply differently to the
same transactions depending on the accident
of which State's law happens to apply.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE's argument in
partial dissent is but a more artful
statement of respondent's contention, and it
suffers from the same defect. THE CHIEF
JUSTICE begins by defining "maturity" to
mean the time when a note becomes due.
Post, at 77 (quoting Black's Law
Dictionary 1170 (3d ed. 1933)). Because a
demand note is "immediately 'due' such
Page 72
that an action could be brought at any
time without any other demand than the
suit," post, at 77, THE CHIEF JUSTICE
concludes that a demand note is due
immediately for purposes of the federal
securities laws. Even if THE CHIEF JUSTICE
is correct that the "maturity" of a note
corresponds to the time at which it "becomes
due," the authority he cites for the
proposition that, as a matter of federal
law, a demand note "becomes due" immediately
(as opposed to when demand is made or
expected to be made) is no more dispositive
than is Arkansas case law. THE CHIEF
JUSTICE's primary source of authority is a
treatise regarding the state law of
negotiable instruments, particularly the
Uniform Negotiable Instruments Law. See M.
Bigelow, Law of Bills, Notes, and Checks
v-vii (3d ed. W. Lile rev. 1928). The
quotation upon which THE CHIEF JUSTICE
relies is concerned with articulating the
general state-law rule regarding when
suit may be filed. The only other authority
THE CHIEF JUSTICE cites makes plain that
state-law rules governing when a demand note
becomes due are significant only in that
they control the date on which statutes of
limitation begins to run and whether demand
must precede suit. See 8 C.J. Bills and
Notes § 602, p. 406 (1916). Indeed, the
treatise suggests that States were no more
unanimous on those questions in 1933 than
they are now. Ibid. In short, the
dissent adds nothing to respondent's
argument other than additional authority for
what "maturity" means in certain state-law
contexts. The dissent provides no argument
for its implicit, but essential, premise
that state rules concerning the proper
method of collecting a debt control the
resolution of the federal question before
us.
Neither the law of Arkansas nor
that of any other State provides an answer
to the federal question, and as a matter of
federal law, the words of the statute are
far from "plain" with regard to whether
demand notes fall within the exclusion. If
it is plausible to regard a demand note as
having an immediate maturity because demand
could be made immediately, it is also
plausible to regard the maturity of a demand
note as
Page 73
being in excess of nine months because
demand could be made many years or
decades into the future. Given this
ambiguity, the exclusion must be interpreted
in accordance with its purpose. As we have
said, we will assume for argument's sake
that petitioners are incorrect in their view
that the exclusion is intended to exempt
only commercial paper. Respondent presents
no competing view to explain why Congress
would have enacted respondent's version of
the exclusion, however, and the only theory
that we can imagine that would support
respondent's interpretation is that Congress
intended to create a bright-line rule
exempting from the 1934 Act's coverage
all notes of less than nine months'
duration, because short-term notes are, as a
general rule, sufficiently safe that the
Securities Acts need not apply. As we have
said, however, demand notes do not
necessarily have short terms. In light of
Congress' broader purpose in the Acts of
ensuring that investments of all
descriptions be regulated to prevent fraud
and abuse, we interpret the exception not to
cover the demand notes at issue here.
Although the result might be different if
the design of the transaction suggested that
both parties contemplated that demand would
be made within the statutory period, that is
not the case before us.
IV
For the foregoing reasons, we
conclude that the demand notes at issue here
fall under the "note" category of
instruments that are "securities" under the
1933 and 1934 Acts. We also conclude that,
even under respondent's preferred approach
to § 3(a)(10)'s exclusion for short-term
notes, these demand notes do not fall within
the exclusion. Accordingly, we reverse the
judgment of the Court of Appeals and remand
the case for further proceedings consistent
with this opinion.
So ordered.
Justice STEVENS, concurring.
While I join the Court's
opinion, an important additional
consideration supports my conclusion that
these notes are se-
Page 74
curities notwithstanding the statute's
exclusion for currency and commercial paper
that has a maturity of no more than nine
months. See 15 U.S.C. § 78c(a)(10) (§
3(a)(10) of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934). The Courts of Appeals have been
unanimous in rejecting a literal reading of
that exclusion. They have instead concluded
that "when Congress spoke of notes with a
maturity not exceeding nine months, it meant
commercial paper, not investment
securities."
Sanders v. John Nuveen & Co., 463
F.2d 1075, 1080 (CA7), cert. denied, 409
U.S. 1009, 93 S.Ct. 443, 34 L.Ed.2d 302
(1972). This view was first set out in an
opinion by Judge Sprecher, and soon
thereafter endorsed by Chief Judge Friendly.
Zeller v. Bogue Electric Mfg. Corp.,
476 F.2d 795, 800 (CA2), cert. denied,
414 U.S. 908, 94 S.Ct. 217, 38 L.Ed.2d 146
(1973). Others have adopted the same
position since. See, e.g.,
McClure v. First Nat. Bank of Lubbock,
Texas,
497 F.2d 490, 494-495 (CA5 1974), cert.
denied, 420 U.S. 930, 95 S.Ct. 1132, 43
L.Ed.2d 402 (1975);
Holloway v. Peat, Marwick, Mitchell &
Co., 879 F.2d 772, 778 (CA10 1989);
Baurer v. Planning Group, Inc., 215
U.S. App.D.C. 384, 389-391, 669 F.2d 770,
775-777 (1981).
In my view such a settled
construction of an important federal statute
should not be disturbed unless and until
Congress so decides. "[A]fter a statute has
been construed, either by this Court or by a
consistent course of decision by other
federal judges and agencies, it acquires a
meaning that should be as clear as if the
judicial gloss had been drafted by the
Congress itself." Shearson/American
Express Inc. v. McMahon,
482 U.S. 220, 268, 107 S.Ct. 2332, 2359, 96
L.Ed.2d 185 (1987) (STEVENS, J.,
concurring in part and dissenting in part);
Chesapeake & Ohio R. Co. v. Schwalb,
493 U.S. 40, 51, 110 S.Ct. 381, 387, 107
L.Ed.2d 278 (1989) (STEVENS, J.,
concurring in judgment). What I have said
before of taxation applies equally to
securities regulation: "there is a strong
interest in enabling" those affected "to
predict the legal consequences of their
proposed actions, and there is an even
stronger general interest in ensuring that
the responsibility for making changes in
settled law rests squarely on
Page 75
the shoulders of Congress."
Commissioner v. Fink, 483 U.S. 89,
101, 107 S.Ct. 2729, 2736, 97 L.Ed.2d 74
(1987) (dissenting opinion). Past errors
may in rare cases be "sufficiently blatant"
to overcome the " 'strong presumption of
continued validity that adheres in the
judicial interpretation of a statute,' " but
this is not such a case. Id., at 103,
107 S.Ct., at 2737 (quoting
Square D Co. v. Niagara Frontier Tariff
Bureau, Inc., 476 U.S. 409, 424, 106
S.Ct. 1922, 1930, 90 L.Ed.2d 413 (1986)).
Indeed, the agreement among the
Courts of Appeals is made all the more
impressive in this case because it is
buttressed by the views of the Securities
and Exchange Commission. See Securities Act
Release No. 33-4412, 26 Fed.Reg. 9158 (1961)
(construing § 3(a)(3) of the Securities Act
of 1933, the 1933 Act's counterpart to §
3(a)(10) of the 1934 Act). We have ourselves
referred to the exclusion for notes with a
maturity not exceeding nine months as an
exclusion for "commercial paper."
Securities Industry Assn. v. Board of
Governors of Federal Reserve System,
468 U.S. 137, 150-152, 104 S.Ct. 2979, 2986-87,
82 L.Ed.2d 107 (1984). Perhaps because
the restriction of the exclusion to
commercial paper is so well established,
respondents admit that they did not even
argue before the Court of Appeals that their
notes were covered by the exclusion. A
departure from this reliable consensus would
upset the justified expectations of both the
legal and investment communities.
Moreover, I am satisfied that
the interpretation of the statute expounded
by Judge Sprecher and Judge Friendly was
entirely correct. As Judge Friendly has
observed, the exclusion for short-term notes
must be read in light of the prefatory
language in § 2 of the 1933 Act and § 3 of
the 1934 Act.
Exchange Nat. Bank of Chicago v. Touche
Ross & Co.,
544 F.2d 1126, 1131-1132,
and nn. 7-10 (CA2 1976). Pursuant to that
language, definitions specified by the Acts
may not apply if the "context otherwise
requires."
Marine Bank v. Weaver, 455 U.S. 551,
556, 102 S.Ct. 1220, 1223, 71 L.Ed.2d 409
(1982) (the "broad statutory definition
is preceded, however, by the statement that
the terms mentioned are not to be considered
securities if 'the context otherwise
requires . . .' "); accord, Landreth
Timber
Page 76
Co. v. Landreth, 471 U.S. 681, 697-698, 105
S.Ct. 2297, 2312-13, 85 L.Ed.2d 692 (1985)
(STEVENS, J., dissenting). The context
clause thus permits a judicial construction
of the statute which harmonizes the facially
rigid terms of the 9-month exclusion with
the evident intent of Congress. Exchange
Nat. Bank, 544 F.2d, at 1132-1133. The
legislative history of § 3(a)(3) of the 1933
Act indicates that the exclusion was
intended to cover only commercial paper, and
the SEC has so construed it. Sanders,
463 F.2d, at 1079, and nn. 12-13; Zeller,
476 F.2d, at 799-800, and n. 6. As the
Courts of Appeals have agreed, there is no
apparent reason to construe § 3(a)(10) of
the 1934 Act differently. Sanders,
463 F.2d, at 1079-1080, and n. 15;
Zeller, 476 F.2d, at 800. See also
Comment, The Commercial Paper Market and the
Securities Acts, 39 U.Chi.L.Rev. 362, 398
(1972).
For these reasons and those
stated in the opinion of the Court, I
conclude that the notes issued by
respondents are securities within the
meaning of the 1934 Act.
Chief Justice REHNQUIST, with
whom Justice WHITE, Justice O'CONNOR, and
Justice SCALIA join, concurring in part and
dissenting in part.
I join Part II of the Court's
opinion, but dissent from Part III and the
statements of the Court's judgment in Parts
I and IV. In Part III, the Court holds that
these notes were not covered by the
statutory exemption for "any note . . .
which has a maturity at the time of issuance
of not exceeding nine months." Treating
demand notes as if they were a recent
development in the law of negotiable
instruments, the Court says "if it is
plausible to regard a demand note as having
an immediate maturity because demand
could be made immediately, it is also
plausible to regard the maturity of a demand
note as being in excess of nine months
because demand could be made many
years or decades into the future. Given this
ambiguity, the exclusion must be interpreted
in accordance with its purpose." Ante,
at 72-73.
Page 77
But the terms "note" and
"maturity" did not spring full blown from
the head of Congress in 1934. Neither are
demand notes of recent vintage. "Note" and
"maturity" have been terms of art in the
legal profession for centuries, and a body
of law concerning the characteristics of
demand notes, including their maturity, was
in existence at the time Congress passed the
1934 Act.
In construing any terms whose
meanings are less than plain, we depend on
the common understanding of those terms at
the time of the statute's creation.
Gilbert v. United States, 370 U.S.
650, 655, 82 S.Ct. 1399, 1402, 8 L.Ed.2d 750
(1962) ("[I]n the absence of anything to
the contrary it is fair to assume that
Congress use[s a] word in [a] statute in its
common-law sense");
Roadway Express, Inc. v. Piper, 447
U.S. 752, 759, 100 S.Ct. 2455, 2460, 65
L.Ed.2d 488 (1980) (in construing a word
in a statute, "we may look to the
contemporaneous understanding of the term");
Standard Oil Co. of New Jersey v. United
States, 221 U.S. 1, 59, 31 S.Ct. 502,
516, 55 L.Ed. 619 (1911) (common-law
meaning "presumed" to have been Congress'
intent);
Lorillard v. Pons, 434 U.S. 575, 583,
98 S.Ct. 866, 871, 55 L.Ed.2d 40 (1978);
United States v. Spencer, 839 F.2d
1341, 1344 (CA9 1988). Contemporaneous
editions of legal dictionaries defined
"maturity" as "[t]he time when a . . . note
becomes due." Black's Law Dictionary 1170
(3d ed. 1933); Cyclopedic Law Dictionary 649
(2d ed. 1922). Pursuant to the dominant
consensus in the case law, instruments
payable on demand were considered
immediately "due" such that an action could
be brought at any time without any other
demand than the suit. See, e.g., M.
Bigelow, Law of Bills, Notes, and Checks §
349, p. 265 (3d ed. W. Lile rev. 1928); 8
C.J., Bills and Notes § 602, p. 406, and n.
83 (1916). According to Bigelow:
"So far as maker and acceptor
are concerned, paper payable . . . 'on
demand' is due from the moment of its
delivery, and payment may be required on any
business day, including the day of its
issue, within the statute of limitations. In
other words, as to these parties the
paper is at maturity all the time, and
no demand of payment is-
Page 78
nec essary before suit
thereon." Bigelow, supra, § 349, at
265 (emphasis added; emphasis in original
deleted; footnote omitted).
To be sure, demand instruments
were considered to have "the peculiar
quality of having two maturity datesone for
the purpose of holding to his obligation the
party primarily liable (e.g. maker),
and the other for enforcing the contracts of
parties secondarily liable (e.g.
drawer and indorsers)." Bigelow, supra,
§ 350, at 266 (emphasis omitted). But only
the rule of immediate maturity respecting
makers of demand notes has any bearing on
our examination of the exemption; the
language in the Act makes clear that it is
the "maturity at time of issuance" with
which we are concerned. 15 U.S.C. §
78c(a)(10). Accordingly, in the absence of
some compelling indication to the contrary,
the maturity date exemption must encompass
demand notes because they possess "maturity
at the time of issuance of not exceeding
nine months."*
Page 79
Petitioners and the lower court
decisions cited by Justice STEVENS rely,
virtually exclusively, on the legislative
history of § 3(a)(3) of the 1933 Act for the
proposition that the term "any note" in the
exemption in § 3(a)(10) of the 1934 Act
encompass only notes having the character of
short-term "commercial paper" exchanged
among sophisticated traders. I am not
altogether convinced that the legislative
history of § 3(a)(3) supports that
interpretation even with respect to the term
"any note" in the exemption in § 3(a)(3),
and to bodily transpose that legislative
history to another statute has little to
commend it as a method of statutory
construction.
The legislative history of the
1934 Actunder which this case
arisescontains nothing which would support
a restrictive reading of the exemption in
question. Nor does the legislative history
of § 3(a)(3) of the 1933 Act support the
asserted limited construction of the
exemption in § 3(a)(10) of the 1934 Act.
Though the two most pertinent sources of
congressional commentary on §
3(a)(3)H.R.Rep. No. 85, 73d Cong., 1st
Sess., 15 (1933) and S.Rep. No. 47, 73d
Cong., 1st Sess., 3-4 (1933)do suggest an
intent to limit § 3(a)(3)'s exemption to
short-term commercial paper, the references
in those Reports to commercial paper simply
did not survive in the language of the
enactment. Indeed, the Senate Report stated
"[n]otes, drafts, bills of exchange, and
bankers' acceptances which are commercial
paper and arise out of current
commercial, agricultural, or industrial
transactions, and which are not intended
to be marketed to the public, are
exempted. . . ." S.Rep. No. 47, supra,
at 3-4 (emphasis added). Yet the provision
enacted in § 3(a)(3)
Page 80
of the 1933 Act exempts "[a]ny
note, draft, bill of exchange, or banker's
acceptance which arises out of a current
transaction or the proceeds of which have
been or are to be used for current
transactions, and which has a maturity at
the time of issuance of not exceeding nine
months. . . ." 15 U.S.C. § 77c(a)(3)
(emphasis added).
Such broadening of the language
in the enacted version of § 3(a)(3),
relative to the prototype from which it
sprang, cannot easily be dismissed in
interpreting § 3(a)(3). A fortiori,
the legislative history's restrictive
meaning cannot be imputed to the facially
broader language in a different provision of
another Act. Although I do not doubt that
both the 1933 and 1934 Act exemptions
encompass short-term commercial paper, the
expansive language in the statutory
provisions is strong evidence that, in the
end, Congress meant for commercial paper
merely to be a subset of a larger class of
exempted short-term instruments.
The plausibility of imputing a
restrictive reading to § 3(a)(10) from the
legislative history of § 3(a)(3) is further
weakened by the imperfect analogy between
the two provisions in terms of both
phraseology and nature. Section 3(a)(10)
lacks the cryptic phrase in § 3(a)(3) which
qualifies the class of instruments eligible
for exemption as those arising "out of . . .
current transaction[s] or the proceeds of
which have been or are to be used for
current transactions. . . ." While that
passage somehow may strengthen an argument
for limiting the exemption in § 3(a)(3) to
commercial paper, its absence in § 3(a)(10)
conversely militates against placing the
same limitation thereon.
The exemption in § 3(a)(3)
excepts the short-term instruments it covers
solely from the registration requirements of
the 1933 Act. The same instruments are not
exempted from the 1933 Act's antifraud
provisions. Compare 15 U.S.C. § 77c(a)(3)
with 15 U.S.C. §§ 77l (2) and 77q(c);
see also Securities Industry Assn. v.
Board of Governors of Federal
Page 81
Reserve System,
468 U.S. 137, 151, 104
S.Ct. 2979, 2986-87, 82 L.Ed.2d 107 (1984).
By contrast, the exemption in § 3(a)(10) of
the 1934 Act exempts instruments encompassed
thereunder from the entirety of the coverage
of the 1934 Act including, conspicuously,
the Act's antifraud provisions.
Justice STEVENS argues that the
suggested limited reading of the exemption
in § 3(a)(10) of the 1934 Act "harmonizes"
the plain terms of that provision with the
legislative history of the 1933 Act.
Ante, at 76. In his view, such harmony
is required by the "context clause" at the
beginning of the 1934 Act's general
definition of "security." It seems to me,
instead, that harmony is called for
primarily between § 3(a)(10)'s general
definition and its specific exemption. The
fairest reading of the exemption in light of
the context clause is that the situation
described in the exemptionnotes with
maturities at issue of less than nine
monthsis one contextual exception Congress
especially wanted courts to recognize. Such
a reading does not render the context clause
superfluous; it merely leaves it to the
judiciary to flesh out additional "context
clause" exceptions.
Justice STEVENS also states
that we have previously referred to the
exemption in § 3(a)(10) as an exclusion for
commercial paper. Ante, at 76 (citing
Securities Industry Assn., supra, 468
U.S., at 150-152, 104 S.Ct., at 2986-87). In
the Securities Industry Assn. dictum,
however, we described the exemption in §
3(a)(10) merely as "encompass[ing]"
commercial paper and in no way concluded
that the exemption was limited to commercial
paper. See 468 U.S., at 150-151, 104 S.Ct.,
at 2986. Indeed, in Securities Industry
Assn., our purpose in referring to §
3(a)(10) was to assist our determination
whether commercial paper was even
included in the 73d Congress' use of the
words "notes . . . or other securities" in
the Glass-Steagall Banking Act of 1933.
In sum, there is no
justification for looking beyond the plain
terms of § 3(a)(10), save for ascertaining
the meaning of "maturity" with respect to
demand notes. That inquiry re-
Page 82
veals that the Co-Op's demand notes come
within the purview of the section's
exemption for short-term securities. I would
therefore affirm the judgment of the Court
of Appeals, though on different reasoning.
1 We have consistently held
that "[t]he definition of a security in §
3(a)(10) of the 1934 Act, . . . is virtually
identical [to the definition in the
Securities Act of 1933] and, for present
purposes, the coverage of the two Acts may
be considered the same."
United Housing Foundation, Inc. v.
Forman, 421 U.S. 837, 847, n. 12, 95
S.Ct. 2051, 2058, n. 12, 44 L.Ed.2d 621
(1975) (citations omitted). We reaffirm that
principle here.
2 An approach founded on
economic reality rather than on a set of
per se rules is subject to the criticism
that whether a particular note is a
"security" may not be entirely clear at the
time it is issued. Such an approach has the
corresponding advantage, though, of
permitting the SEC and the courts sufficient
flexibility to ensure that those who market
investments are not able to escape the
coverage of the Securities Acts by creating
new instruments that would not be covered by
a more determinate definition. One could
question whether, at the expense of the goal
of clarity, Congress overvalued the goal of
avoiding manipulation by the clever and
dishonest. If Congress erred, however, it is
for that body, and not this Court, to
correct its mistake.
3 The Second Circuit's
version of the family resemblance test
provided that only notes with a term of
more than nine months are presumed to be
"securities." See supra, at 63. No
presumption of any kind attached to notes of
less than nine months' duration. The Second
Circuit's refusal to extend the presumption
to all notes was apparently founded
on its interpretation of the statutory
exception for notes with a maturity of nine
months or less. Because we do not reach the
question of how to interpret that exception,
see infra, at 71, we likewise express
no view on how that exception might affect
the presumption that a note is a "security."
4 We emphasize that by
"profit" in the context of notes, we mean "a
valuable return on an investment," which
undoubtedly includes interest. We have, of
course, defined "profit" more restrictively
in applying the Howey test to what
are claimed to be "investment contracts."
See, e.g., Forman,
421 U.S., at 852,
95 S.Ct., at 2060 ("[P]rofit" under the
Howey test means either "capital
appreciation" or "a participation in
earnings"). To apply this restrictive
definition to the determination whether an
instrument is a "note" would be to suggest
that notes paying a rate of interest not
keyed to the earning of the enterprise are
not "notes" within the meaning of the
Securities Acts. Because the Howey
test is irrelevant to the issue before us
today, see supra, at 64, we decline
to extend its definition of "profit" beyond
the realm in which that definition applies.
*Reference to the state
common law of negotiable instruments does
not suggest that "Congress intended the
Securities Acts to apply differently to the
same transactions depending on the accident
of which State's law happens to apply." See
ante, at 71. Rather, in the absence
of a federal law of negotiable
instruments,
De Sylva v. Ballentine, 351 U.S. 570,
580, 76 S.Ct. 974, 980, 100 L.Ed. 1415
(1956) ("[T]here is no federal law of
domestic relations, which is primarily a
matter of state concern"), or other
alternative sources for discerning the
applicability of the statutory term
"maturity" to demand notes, we are dependent
on the state common law at the time of the
Act's creation as a basis for a nationally
uniform answer to this "federal question."
As we said
Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians v.
Holyfield, 490 U.S. 30, 47, 109 S.Ct.
1597, 1608, 104 L.Ed.2d 29 (1989):
"That we are dealing with a uniform
federal rather than a state definition does
not, of course, prevent us from drawing on
general state-law principles to determine
'the ordinary meaning of the words used.'
Well-settled state law can inform our
understanding of what Congress had in mind
when it employed a term it did not define."
See also 2A C. Sutherland on Statutory
Construction § 50.04, pp. 438-439 (4th ed.
1984) (noting the "utility" found by various
courts, including this Court, in "examining
a federal statute with reference to the
common law of the various states as it
existed at the time the statute was
enacted"). In 1934, when this statute was
enacted, as is true today, the American law
of negotiable instruments was found in the
state-court reporters. Though the States
were not unanimous on the issue of the time
of maturity of demand notes, virtually every
matter of state common law evokes a majority
and minority position. The vast number of
courts that adopted the majority view of
immediate maturity, see 8 C.J., Bills and
Notes § 602, p. 406, n. 83 (1916), compels
the conclusion that the immediate maturity
rule constituted "well-settled state law" or
a "general state-law principle" at the time
§ 3(a)(10) was enacted. |