| Page 1080 506 F.2d 1080
Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 94,874
Irving GORDON, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Robert L. BURR and Elpac, Inc.,
Defendants-Appellees, and
Arnold Lord and Philips, Appel & Walden,
Inc.
(sued herein as Philips, Appel &
Walden),
Defendants-Appellees-
Appellants. Nos. 179, 310 and 311, Dockets
74-1749, 74-1865 and 74-1840. United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit. Argued Oct. 9, 1974.
Decided Nov. 20, 1974.
Page 1081
John C. Klotz, New York City,
(Leonard Loewinthan, New York City, of
counsel), for plaintiff-appellant Gordon.
Michael C. Devine, New York City,
(Butowsky, Schwenke & Devine, New York
City), for defendant-appellee,
cross-appellant Lord.
Steven H. Lipsitz, New York City,
(Bressler, Meislin, Tauber & Lipsitz, Neil
M. Berson, New York City, of counsel), for
defendant-appellee, cross-appellant Philips,
Appel & Walden, Inc.
Harry Balterman, New York City,
for defendant-appellee Elpac, Inc.
Before KAUFMAN, Chief Judge, and
SMITH and TIMBERS, Circuit Judges.
J. JOSEPH SMITH, Circuit Judge.
Irving Gordon, a purchaser of
securities issued by Elpac, Inc., sued for
rescission of his purchase and restitution
of his $45,000 payment against: Robert L.
Burr, as seller of the shares; Arnold Lord,
as the salesman; Philips, Appel & Walden,
Inc. (P.A.W.), as Lord's brokerage firm; and
Elpac, Inc., as the issuer. After a non-jury
trial, Judge Arnold Bauman of the Southern
District of New York, in an opinion reported
at 366 F.Supp. 156 (1973), accepted Gordon's
claims that Burr and Lord had violated 10(b)
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15
U.S.C. 78j(b),
1
by misrepresenting material facts in the
transaction with Gordon and that P.A.W. had
violated 20(a) of the Act, 15 U.S.C. 78t(a),
2 as a
'controlling person' of a 10(b) violator,
Lord. The court rejected Gordon's attempt to
implicate Elpac in the fraud as a
controlling person of Burr, Elpac's
president during most of the negotiations
preceding Gordon's purchase and a director
alone for the remainder of the period
relating to the transaction. Judge Bauman
granted the requested rescission relief
against Burr but held that as a matter of
law such relief was inapplicable to persons
not in privity of contract with the
defrauded purchaser. Thus, although he went
on to find that Lord and P.A.W. had violated
the securities laws, Judge Bauman deemed
them
Page 1082 immune from a rescission remedy. He held
that damages, if proven, would lie against
Lord and P.A.W., but that Gordon had made no
effort to establish damages, despite the
indication in the complaint (later orally
disavowed) that he would and the court's
invitation at trial to do so. In light of
this conscious by-passing of a damages
theory at trial, the court then rejected
Gordon's post-trial motions under
Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(a), 60(b), to amend the
judgment to reflect Lord's and P.A.W.'s
liability to Gordon in damages or, in the
alternative, to hold a new trial limited to
the issue of damages.
On appeal, Gordon contests the
district court's understanding of rescission
as a remedy available only against the
fraudulent seller. Alternatively, he renews
his request for an opportunity to prove
damages against those who fraudulently
induced his purchase. In addition, by
challenging the court's conclusion that
Elpac was not guilty of securities fraud,
Gordon seeks to enlarge the group from which
he might recover under either a rescission
or damages theory. Burr does not appeal from
the judgment against him; Elpac defends the
finding in its favor; and Lord and P.A.W.
cross-appeal from the adjudication of their
violations, which would become relevant in
the event that this court either accepts the
appellant's characterization of the scope of
rescission relief or orders a new trial on
damages.
For the reasons detailed below,
we disagree with the district court's view
of the remedy of rescission and find it
applicable against persons not in privity
with the defrauded purchaser but who are
party to the fraud. Because we also differ
with the district court as to the liability
of P.A.W., this reversal on the issue of
rescission adds only Lord to those from whom
Gordon may seek restitution of his purchase
price. In all other respects, we affirm.
I. THE FACTS
Gordon became interested in
purchasing Elpac stock as a result of a
fortuitous encounter in June, 1968, with
Howard Mann, an old acquaintance who had
recently bought 5,000 shares of Elpac. Both
Mann and his companion at the time, Lord,
spoke highly to Gordon of Elpac stock.
Shortly thereafter, Gordon received a
telephone call from Lord inviting him to a
meeting of prospective purchasers of a new
Elpac offering. Gordon attended the select
gathering, which included two brokers from
P.A.W. in addition to Lord; all present,
except Lord, were strangers to Gordon. At
the meeting, Burr, president of Elpac at the
time, offered to sell 20,000 shares of his
holdings in Elpac. He asserted, however,
that he would sell no shares to the group
unless they agreed to purchase all 20,000.
By reference to subsequent events, the
district court found that this statement
constituted a material misrepresentation in
violation of 10(b) of the 1934 Act. 366
F.Supp. at 164.
The group departed without any
commitments made. Within two weeks, however,
Lord informed Gordon that the other offerees
had already completed documents to expedite
their purchase and thus that the ostensibly
requisite block purchase awaited only
Gordon's completion of these documents for
its speedy realization. This statement,
belied by later developments, became a basis
for Lord's 10(b) liability. 366 F.Supp. at
164.
Approximately one month after
Gordon complied with this request, Burr
pressed completion of the transaction. On
August 20, he offered Gordon by telegram
4,500 shares at $10 per share. After a brief
delay, Gordon arranged for the funds to be
wired to Burr. On the 22nd, Gordon met with
Lord and Burr, who both explained that,
despite delays in the arrival of documents
approving the sale as well as sundry other
apparent irregularities, there were no
problems with either the Burr offering or
Elpac's business health in general. They
specifically reassured Gordon that the other
offerees had already made payment for their
shares-- a material misrepresentation, in
the court's view. 366 F.Supp. at 164.
Page 1083
Subsequently, Gordon fruitlessly
sought to locate Lord in order to inquire
about the whereabouts of the documents of
approval and, now, his stock certificates as
well. When he telephoned and visited
P.A.W.'s offices in search of Lord, the
firm's employees indicated only that Lord
was not in-- not, as was in fact the case,
that Lord had left the firm in late 1968.
Finally, Gordon managed to reach Lord, who
told him that the certificates were at
P.A.W. On this second trip to the firm's
offices, Gordon did not find his
certificates. He did meet, however, one of
the offerees present at the June, 1968,
meeting, and the latter informed Gordon that
neither he nor any of the others who
attended the meeting had purchased stock
from Burr. The certificates did arrive
shortly after, but Gordon's attention had
turned to procuring a refund of the $45,000
which he had invested in the stock-- already
a losing venture. Unable to procure the
refund by persuasion alone, Gordon brought
the instant suit for rescission based on
various alleged misrepresentations made to
him by Burr and Lord of facts material to
his decision to purchase the stock. The
court found 'at least one determinative
misstatement' by each, 366 F.Supp. at 164,
but as indicated above, held that Lord's
violation of the 1934 Act did not give rise
to relief against him or P.A.W., which he
held qualified as a 'controlling person'
within 20(a) of the Act.
II. RESCISSION AGAINST PERSONS
NOT IN PRIVITY
Although Judge Bauman concluded
that Lord and P.A.W. had violated 10(b) and
20(a) of the 1934 Act respectively, he found
them to be outside the scope of an action
for rescission. The court regarded
rescission as a remedy available only
against the tortfeasor who is party to the
contract with the victim of the fraud; under
this view, therefore, rescission relief
would apply only to Burr, the seller. Where
an action for rescission is based on a
contract theory-- mistake, or breach of
contract-- this circumscription of the class
from whom restitution may be sought is
undoubtedly correct. See generally, 3 A.
Corbin, Contracts 613 (1960); 5 id. 1104.
But where such a suit is predicated instead
on fraud, the authorities do not adhere to a
privity theory with the uniformity which the
district court-- as one infers from its
essentially parenthetical disposition of the
issue
3 --
apparently assumed. See cases cited infra.
As indicated below, we believe that the
district court took too narrow a view of its
powers as a court of equity and erred in
placing a violator of 10(b) or 20(a) beyond
the reach of a rescission remedy. Because we
resolve this issue in the appellant's favor,
we need not review his alternative claim
that the court abused its discretion in not
granting his post-trial motions regarding a
damages award.
The majority view regarding the
availability of rescission against parties
not in privity with the defrauded person
favors a broad conception of the scope of
rescission relief where the theory relied
upon is fraud. Thus, the New York courts
have long held rescission applicable against
a defrauder not in privity of contract with
the victim of the fraud.
See, Keskal v. Modrakowski, 249 N.Y. 406,
164 N.E. 333 (1928);
Kaufman v. Jaffee, 244 App.Div. 344, 279
N.Y.S. 392 (1st Dept. 1935).
4 Iowa's high court was
emphatic to similar effect:
Of course, if the principal makes
restoration, there is an end. But if he
Page 1084 does not restore, why should not the agent
be made to return money that would never
have reached the principal if the agent had
not, by fraud, induced the one he dealt with
to part with the money?
Peterson
v. McManus, 187 Iowa 522, 546, 172 N.W. 460,
469 (1919). See also,
Cox v. National Coal & Oil Investment Co.,
61 W.Va. 291, 56 S.E. 494 (1907).
Johns Hopkins University v. Hutton,
297 F.Supp. 1165 (D.Md.1968), aff'd in part,
rev'd in part & remanded,
422 F.2d 1124 (4th
Cir. 1970),
343 F.Supp. 245 (D.Md.1972),
aff'd in part, rev'd in part & remanded, 488
F.2d 912 (4th Cir. 1973), cert. denied, 416
U.S. 916, 94 S.Ct. 1622, 1623, 40 L.Ed.2d
118 (1974), the district court granted
rescission against the co-partners of W. E.
Hutton & Co., a brokerage firm, for
misrepresentations made in arranging a sale
of oil and gas production payments from
Trice Production Company to the plaintiff
university. Although the Fourth Circuit
reversed portions of both lower court
orders, it plainly upheld the lower court's
conception of rescission as a remedy
available against persons not in privity of
contract with the victim of a fraud. Among
the violations of the securities laws to
which the court had applied this expansive
view of rescission was-- as in the instant
case-- a violation of 10(b) of the 1934 Act.
The First Circuit has also approved the
application of rescission against
tortfeasors not in privity with the
defrauded party.
Cady v. Murphy,
113 F.2d 988, 991 (1st
Cir.), cert. denied, 311 U.S. 705, 61 S.Ct.
175, 85 L.Ed. 458 (1940) (dictum). Indeed,
the only federal or upper-level state court
decision we have found to the contrary is
Huffman v. Bankers Automobile Insurance Co.,
112 Neb. 283, 200 N.W. 994 (1924), an
opinion sharply criticized, 3 Neb.L.Bull.
436 (1925), shortly after its rendition.
5 Moreover, this
resolution of the problem is indicated by a
consideration of the basic equities of the
situation.
As between two tortfeasors, one
the seller and the other not a privy to the
transaction, it is desirable that the seller
Page 1085 be the person from whom the purchaser
recover; otherwise, the seller will benefit
from his fraud to the extent of the purchase
price. The choice, then is between returning
the seller to the status quo prevailing
prior to the fraud or forcing the defrauder
not in privity to a worse status than he
occupied quo ante. To avoid unjust
enrichment, general equitable principles
indicate the preferability of the purchaser
pursuing first the seller, rather than his
partner in the fraud. However, as 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.
Since the district court erred in
its ruling on rescission, we reverse as to
the availability of rescission against Lord
and P.A.W. insofar as they may be violators
of the 1934 Act. Accordingly, their
cross-appeals, disputing the court's finding
that they violated the Act, must now be
considered.
III. THE CROSS-APPEALS
Judge Bauman held Lord in
violation of 10(b) on the basis of two
misrepresentations: shortly after the June,
1968, meeting, Lord advised Gordon that the
other offeress had already indicated their
intention to purchase by completing certain
documents; and the day after Gordon wired
Burr the funds, Lord (along with Burr)
reassured Gordon that the other offerees had
also completed their purchases. On appeal,
Lord concedes that the court enunciated the
correct standard for determining the
presence of a 10(b) violation. He differs,
though, with the court's application of this
standard. Specifically, Lord contends that
the representations which Judge Bauman
singled out as violative of the 1934 Act
were neither false nor material within the
meaning of 10(b) and, in any event, could
not have been a proximate cause of Gordon's
purchase of the Elpac stock.
We agree that the court below
correctly stated the 10(b) standard. See
generally,
List v. Fashion Park, Inc.,
340 F.2d 457
(2d Cir.), cert. denied sub nom.,
List v. Lerner, 382 U.S. 811, 86 S.Ct. 23,
15 L.Ed.2d 60 (1965), and find
substantial evidence in the record to
support its application of the standard to
Lord's two statements. The
misrepresentations as to participation of
the others were clearly material to one in
Gordon's position contemplating a
substantial investment in the venture
painted as it was as a simultaneous purchase
by all the members of the group.
Accordingly, we uphold Lord's liability to
Gordon for violating 10(b) of the 1934 Act.
If P.A.W. is also liable to
Gordon, it must be derivatively-- as a
'controlling person' of Lord, within the
meaning of 20(a) of the 1934 Act.
Lanza v. Drexel & Co., 479 F.2d 1277, 1299
(2d Cir. 1973) (en banc), we had
occasion to comment on the scope of the
secondary liability established by 20(a):
The intent of Congress in adding
this section . . . was obviously to impose
liability only on those directors who fall
within its definition of control and who are
in some meaningful sense culpable
participants in the fraud perpetrated by
controlled persons.
In light of the evidence
marshalled by Judge Bauman relevant to
P.A.W.'s culpability as well as his remarks
regarding the applicable standard, we are
convinced that the court erred in applying
too stringent a test of liability to P.A.W.
Significantly, Gordon was not a regular
customer of the firm and P.A.W. did not
manage the Burr transaction; its brokers at
the June, 1968, meeting were present in
their private capacities, not as
representatives of the firm. But the court
minimized the importance of 'these facts . .
. (for day) only tend to establish that
P.A.W. could not be held primarily liable
under 10(b); the standard under 20(a) is a
Page 1086 far lower one.' 366 F.Supp. at 168. We fail
to find in the record support for a finding
that P.A.W. had knowledge of the fraudulent
representations or in any meaningful sense
culpably participated in them. We conclude
that the district court required P.A.W. to
vindicate its good faith after a lesser
showing by Gordon of P.A.W.'s culpability
than 20(a) demands. See, Lanza v. Drexel &
Co., supra; cf. Securities and Exchange
Commission v. Lum's Inc., 365 F.Supp. 1046,
1064-1065 (S.D.N.Y.1973). The court's
conclusion that P.A.W. is liable to Gordon
for violating 20(a) of the 1934 Act must
therefore be reversed.
IV. LIABILITY OF ELPAC
Like P.A.W., Elpac stands to be
adjudged liable to Gordon in rescission only
derivatively-- in this instance, for Burr's
violation of 10(b). The record however, is
lacking in evidence that Burr was acting for
Elpac in his sale of his own shares or his
representations to Gordon.
Though in effect conceding his
failure at trial to offer positive proof of
Elpac's culpability, Gordon seeks to
predicate 20(a) liability on the negative
inference which the court might have drawn
from Elpac's failure to present certain
evidence at trial conceivably within its
ability to produce. Plainly, this inference
is far less compulsory than Gordon would
have it.
Kirby v. Tallmadge, 160 U.S. 379, 383, 16
S.Ct. 349, 40 L.Ed. 463 (1896), cited by
Gordon as authority and quoted by him at
length in his brief, characterizes a failure
to produce evidence within one's control as
no more than 'a proper subject of comment.'
Whatever inference the court below may have
drawn from Elpac's alleged non-production of
evidence,
6 it was
hardly error for the court not to make this
permissible inference. In any event, it
appears highly dubious that this inference
from nonproduction of evidence could supply
sufficient evidence to hold Elpac liable
under 20(a). We reject Gordon's claim that
Elpac violated 20(a) of the 1934 Act.
Reversed as to availability of
rescission against Lord and as to liability
of Philips, Appel & Walden, Inc., and
remanded for entry of appropriate judgment;
otherwise affirmed.
1 78j. Manipulative and deceptive devices
It shall be unlawful for any person,
directly or indirectly, by the use of any
means or instrumentality of interstate
commerce or of the mails, or of any facility
of any national securities exchange-- (b) To
use or employ, in connection with the
purchase or sale of any security registered
on a national securities exchange or any
security not so registered, any manipulative
or deceptive device or contrivance in
contravention of such rules and regulations
as the Commission may prescribe as necessary
or appropriate in the public interest or for
the protection of investors.
2 78t. Liabilities of controlling persons
(a) Every person who, directly or
indirectly, controls any person liable under
any provision of this chapter or of any rule
or regulation thereunder shall also be
liable jointly and severally with and to the
same extent as such controlled person to any
person to whom such controlled person is
liable, unless the controlling person acted
in good faith and did not directly or
indirectly induce the act or acts
constituting the violation or cause of
action.
3 It should be noted at the outset that
the discussion of the liability of Lord,
Elpac and P.A.W. is rendered wholly academic
by plaintiff's choice of the remedy of
rescission . . . which is available only
against Burr, the seller of the securities.
366 F.Supp. at 164.
4 Although Gordon urges Mack v. Latta,
178 N.Y, 525, 71 N.E. 97 (1904), as
authority for his position and the appellees
dispute its applicability, we need not
decide among their competing interpretations
of Mack. The appellees argue that Mack holds
no more than that a court sitting in equity
will permit joinder of an action for damages
against tortfeasors not in privity with the
defrauded party, and a bill for rescission
against the fraudulent seller. Under their
view, then, the case deals with a procedural
issue (joinder), not the substantive problem
of the persons against whom a bill in
rescission may lie. This may well capture
what the Mack court meant. Subsequent to
Mack, however, the New York Court of Appeals
has made clear that it reads that case for--
or at least regards as Mack's ratio
decidendi-- the proposition propounded by
the appellant. See, Keskal v. Modrakowski,
supra. Whatever the court in Mack intended
to say, then, is rather beside the point,
for the state's high court has since
elucidated in no uncertain terms that New
York recognizes the availability of
rescission against tortfeasors not in
privity with the victim of the fraud.
5 Although Professor Loss seems in a
passing reference to resolve availability in
the negative, 3 L. Loss, Securities
Regulation 1627 (2d ed. 1961), he elsewhere
clarifies his position on this issue along
the lines which we suggest, 3 id. 1713-15,
1769-70. The Second Restatement of Agency
(1958) also offers support for allowing
rescission relief against all persons party
to a fraud:
339. Other Party Rescinds for Cause
Existing at Time of Transaction; Principal
Disclosed for Partially Disclosed An agent
who has received things from another for a
disclosed or partially disclosed principal
in a transaction conducted by him has a duty
to return them or their proceeds if the
other rescinds the transaction for a cause
existing at the time of their receipt, to
the extent that the agent has not, before
notice of rescission and in good faith,
changed his position. (Comment:)
f. Change of position. A person who, as
agent, receives things from a third person
for the principal is not thereby under a
duty to return what he has received if,
before demand, he has in good faith changed
his position.
If the agent has notice that the other
has rescinded or, if he learns of facts from
which he should realize that the other is
entitled to and will demand rescission, as
where the agent or principal was fraudulent
in inducing the transaction, a subsequent
change
Page 1086 of position does not relieve him from the
duty of returning what he has received . .
..
See also, Comment, 3 Neb.L.Bull. 436
(1925).
6 Even on its own terms, this claim of
non-production of evidence is unconvincing.
For at least one piece of allegedly withheld
evidence, minutes of a meeting, was in fact
proffered by Elpac. Transcript at 258. |