| Page 453 75 F.Supp. 453
MOORE
v.
GORMAN et al. District Court, S. D. New York.
January 20, 1948.
Page 454
Action by Frank C. Moore, doing
business as Frank C. Moore & Company,
against Harold D. Gorman and others, to
recover purchase price of stock sold. On
motion by defendant Roy R. Coffin and others
to dismiss.
Motion denied.
John H. Kelley, of New York City
(John F. Davidson, of New York City, of
counsel), for plaintiff.
Emmet, Marvin & Martin, of New
York City (Grenville T. Emmet, Jr., of New
York City, of counsel), for defendants doing
business under firm name of Coffin, Betz &
Sullivan.
RYAN, District Judge.
Certain of the defendants,
individually and as co-partners conducting
business under the name of Coffin, Betz &
Sullivan (sometimes hereinafter called
defendants), move to dismiss the action. The
stated grounds of the motion are: Lack of
jurisdiction over the subject matter; lack
of jurisdiction over their persons; and
improper venue. The motion is made under
Rule 12(b) (1) (2) and (3) of the Rules of
Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A. following
section 723c.
The defendants are named as such
only in the first of the five claims alleged
in the complaint. Accordingly, the motion
was heard and is determined in respect to
the first claim and on the facts presented
in the affidavits as well as on the law.
Moore's Federal Practice, Vol. 1, p. 646 et
seq. The allegations of the first claim
embrace all the defendants joined in the
action.
The following is a brief
statement of the facts alleged in the
complaint and, for the purpose of this
motion, established by the affidavits: In
October, 1946, the defendants entered into
an agreement to sell plaintiff an aggregate
of 10,000 shares of the common stock of
Medisan Corporation for an aggregate price
of $40,000. They, together with other
defendants, owned shares of that stock in
various amounts aggregating the required
total number of shares. Plaintiff agreed to
purchase the securities only if they could
be re-sold lawfully by plaintiff, as an
underwriter, to the public without
registration under the Securities Act of
1933. Defendants represented and agreed that
they would take all steps necessary to
procure and would procure an exemption from
registration of the securities under
Regulation A of the Securities and Exchange
Commission, and that the stock was entitled
to such exemption.
On October 31, 1946, John M.
McCutcheon received the assembled block of
10,000 shares of stock of Medisan
Corporation from the defendants in
Philadelphia. He transported them via the
Pennsylvania Railroad to New York City. Here
he delivered them to plaintiff's bank and
received therefor a check for $40,000.
McCutcheon, with the check, returned to
Philadelphia via the same railroad and
delivered the check to defendants' agent.
The avails of the check were then
proportionately distributed to the
defendants. They paid McCutcheon a
commission in connection with the sale.
The defendants, prior to that
time, had not filed a registration statement
with the Securities Exchange Commission
concerning
Page 455
the 10,000 shares of stock of Medisan
corporation. On November 14 and 25, 1946,
the defendants filed with the Commission
letters of notification in an attempt to
procure exemption of those shares of stock
from registration under Regulation A. One of
the notification letters was signed by the
defendants, the other by their attorney.
Rule 220 of Regulation A (General
Rules and Regulations under the Securities
Act of 1933, as amended, as issued by the
United States Government Printing Office
Washington, 1947), provides in substance
that certain securities shall under certain
circumstances be exempt from registration
"Except as provided in rule 221 * * *."
Rule 221 provides, so far as here
material, that:
"No exemption under this
regulation shall be available for * * *
"(g) Any securities of an issuer
if the issuer, any promoter of the issuer
presently connected with the issuer in any
capacity, or any person controlling,
controlled by, or under common control with
the issuer (1) has been convicted within
five years preceding the filing of the
letter of notification of any felony or
misdemeanor involving the sale of any
security. * * *."
An exemption from registration
under Regulation A could not be procured,
because one of the defendants, Harry
Liberman, a promoter, vice-president and
director of Medisan Corporation, had been
convicted of a felony involving the sale of
securities in violation of Section 9(a)(2)
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15
U.S.C.A. § 78i(a)(2). On December 3, 1946,
the defendants and plaintiff were so
notified by the regional administrator of
the New York office of the Commission. Prior
thereto plaintiff had no knowledge of
Liberman's conviction.
Upon learning that fact,
plaintiff re-purchased all the shares of
stock sold to him by the defendants, which
he had re-sold to the public at $4.50 per
share. Thereafter, he tendered the stock
back to the defendants and demanded that
they refund the consideration of $40,000,
which he had paid for it. The defendants,
Coffin, Betz and Sullivan refunded the
plaintiff $8,250, the net amount, after
commissions paid to McCutcheon, which they
had received for their part of the shares
involved in the sale. Refunds were made in
various amounts by certain other defendants.
The total of all refunds received by
plaintiff is $26,250. Plaintiff demands
judgment against all the defendants,
including the members of the firm of Coffin,
Betz & Sullivan, individually and as
co-partners, for $13,750, the unrefunded
balance of the consideration of $40,000 paid
by plaintiff to the defendants for the
10,000 shares of stock.
The material portions of Section
12 of the Securities Act of 1933, 15
U.S.C.A. § 77l provide:
"Any person who
"(1) sells a security in
violation of section 77e, or
"(2) sells a security * * * by
the use of any means or instruments of
transportation or communication in
interstate commerce or of the mails, by
means of a prospectus or oral communication,
which includes an untrue statement of a
material fact or omits to state a material
fact necessary in order to make the
statements, in the light of the
circumstances under which they were made,
not misleading (the purchaser not knowing of
such untruth or omission), and who shall not
sustain the burden of proof that he did not
know, and in the exercise of reasonable care
could not have known of such untruth or
omission, 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. May 27, 1933, c.
38, Title I, § 12, 48 Stat. 84."
It will be observed that this
imposes civil liabilities for the acts
therein described. Plaintiff predicates
defendants' liability upon this section.
Defendants' first contention is
that the court lacks jurisdiction over the
subject matter of the action because their
transaction with plaintiff was allegedly
"exempted" under Section 4 of the Act, 15
U.S.C.A. § 77d.
Page 456
So far as here material, section
4 of the Act, 15 U.S.C.A. § 77d, provides:
"The provisions of section 77e
shall not apply to any of the following
transactions:
"(1) Transactions by any person
other than an issuer, underwriter, or
dealer; transactions by an issuer not
involving any public offering; or
transactions by a dealer * * * except
transactions within one year after the first
date upon which the security was bona fide
offered to the public by the issuer or by or
through an underwriter * * * and except
transactions as to securities constituting
the whole or a part of an unsold allotment
to or subscription by such dealer as a
participant in the distribution of such
securities by the issuer or by or through an
underwriter."
The exemption conferred by
section 4 is in relation to section 5 of the
Act, 15 U.S. C.A. § 77e. Section 5
prescribes prohibitions relating to the use
of the mails or means or instruments of
transportation or communication in
interstate commerce in certain transactions
"Unless a registration statement is in
effect" as to the security involved in those
transactions.
Section 4, however, does not
purport to, nor does it, confer any
exemption from the civil liability imposed
by section 12(2).
Moreover, defendants' contention
that the transaction was exempted fails to
meet the essence of the matter. The gravamen
of the complaint is that defendants agreed
and represented they would procure an
exemption from registration of the Medisan
stock to enable plaintiff, as underwriter,
to re-sell it to the public free of the
prohibitions prescribed in section 5, and
that the stock was entitled to such
exemption under Regulation A. The sale of
the stock by defendants to plaintiff and the
alleged exemption of that transaction
between them from registration is to be
distinguished from the re-sale of the stock
by plaintiff, as underwriter, to the public,
and the exemption from registration which
defendants represented could and would be
procured by them for plaintiff in connection
therewith. Those representations, if proved,
would establish liability under section
12(2) regardless of the alleged exemption
from registration under section 4 of the
mediate sale between defendants and
plaintiff which preceded the latter's
contemplated re-sale, as underwriter, of the
stock to the public. On that ground, there
is no lack of jurisdiction over the subject
matter of the action.
It is therefore unnecessary to
determine the issue, which is one of fact,
of whether or not the mediate transaction
between defendants and plaintiff was
exempted under section 4. Cf. In the Matter
of Harry Marks, Exchange Act Release No.
3906, January 30, 1947, C.C.H. Federal
Securities Reports, p. 77, 751, 77, 753, not
officially reported; opinion of General
Counsel of Commission, Release No. 603
(Class C) December 16, 1935, C.C.H. Federal
Securities Law Service, vol. 1, p. 1233, not
officially reported.
Defendants further contend that
the court lacks jurisdiction over the
subject matter of the action because
McCutcheon's transportation of the stock
from Philadelphia to New York via the
Pennsylvania Railroad did not constitute the
"use of any means or instruments of
transportation or communication in
interstate commerce" under section 12(2).
McCutcheon's acts as described above are not
disputed. The contention that those acts did
not constitute the "use of any means or
instruments of transportation * * * in
interstate commerce" is without merit.
Defendants also contend that the
court lacks jurisdiction over the subject
matter of the action because McCutcheon was
plaintiff's agent. They urge that all his
acts were plaintiff's and that there was no
act by them upon which to predicate civil
liability under section 12(2).
I am not called upon, on this
motion, to make a final decision on the
merits as to whether McCutcheon was the
exclusive agent of the plaintiff, or the
exclusive agent of defendants, or the agent
of both in one or more of those acts. That
issue is left for final determination at the
trial. For the purposes of this motion, I
find that McCutcheon, who was paid a
commission by defendants, was authorized by
them at least to effectuate the delivery of
the stock and procure payment to them of the
consideration
Page 457
therefor by employing, as he did, a means
of transportation in interstate commerce. It
is incredible that defendants handed to
McCutcheon in Philadelphia 10,000 shares of
stock in negotiable form, having a purchase
price of $40,000., without instructions
concerning the delivery of such valuable
property against payment of the purchase
price by the buyer in New York.
Subsidiary to defendants'
argument concerning McCutcheon's agency is
defendants' contention that no misleading
statement was transmitted between defendants
and plaintiff by an interstate
instrumentality of transportation or
communication. Defendants had their offices
in Philadelphia. They did not come to New
York. There were no written communications
across state lines. The sale consisted of
the oral agreement and representations
apparently made in Philadelphia when
plaintiff went there to negotiate the sale
with defendants, and the acts of delivery
and payment for the stock through McCutcheon
described above.
Nevertheless, it is clear in
principle that jurisdiction of the subject
matter of this action exists under section
12(2). In Schillner v. H. Vaughan Clarke &
Co., 2 Cir., 134 F.2d 875, the Circuit Court
of Appeals of the Second Circuit considered
that interesting problem against a somewhat
different factual background. In that case,
unlike this, the securities were delivered
by mail. But there, as here, the false
representations were not made by any
instrumentality of interstate transportation
or communication. It was held,
notwithstanding dicts to the contrary in
other jurisdictions noted in its opinion,
that (134 F.2d at page 877):
"In the case at bar the contract
of sale was concluded orally and the stock
was paid for by the buyers without any use
of the mails, but the mails were used for
delivery of the stock certificate to the
buyers. In our opinion such a transaction
falls within both the letter and the purpose
of the statute. Section 2(3) of the Act, 15
U.S.C.A. § 77b(3) provides that `unless the
context otherwise requires' the term `sale'
or `sell' `shall include every contract of
sale or disposition of * * * a security or
interest in a security, for value.' Delivery
of the stock certificate pursuant to a
contract of sale would seem to be a
`disposition of * * * a security' within
this definition; consequently the seller who
mails the certificate to the buyer `sells a
security * * * by the use * * * of the
mails.'"
There is no distinction in law
between delivery of securities by mail, as
in the Schillner case, and delivery of
securities by transportation, as in this
case, by a person who employs an interstate
instrumentality of transportation to make
the delivery. Such delivery, like delivery
by mail, constitutes a "disposition of * * *
a security" within the meaning of "sale" or
"sell," as defined in section 2(3) of the
Act, 15 U.S.C.A. § 77b(3). A seller who thus
causes securities to be delivered to a buyer
"sells a security * * * by the use of any
means or instruments of transportation * * *
in interstate commerce," within the purview
of section 12(2). Accordingly, defendants'
contention of lack of jurisdiction over the
subject matter of the action, on the ground
that the misrepresentations were not
transmitted by interstate means of
transportation or communication, is without
merit.
Defendants also contend that
jurisdiction over the subject matter cannot
be based on the diversity clause of section
24 of the Judicial Code, 28 U.S.C.A. § 41(1)
(b), on the alleged ground that the
agreement constituted several rather than a
joint sale by defendants, with the
consequences that the amount actually in
controversy in respect to them is less than
$3,000, exclusive of interest and costs. The
clauses of section 24 of the Judicial Code
concerning diversity and amount in
controversy are inapplicable here. Section
22(a) of the Act, 15 U.S.C.A. § 77v(a),
confers upon the district court jurisdiction
of an action arising under the Act, whether
or not diversity exists and regardless of
the amount in controversy.
Deckert v. Independence Shares Corporation,
311 U.S. 282, 288 et seq., 61 S.Ct. 229,
85 L.Ed. 189; 28 U.S.C.A. § 41(1), last
sentence, and (8) of that section.
Page 458
In so far as here material, this
section provides:
"(a) The district courts of the
United States * * * shall have jurisdiction
* * * of all suits in equity and actions at
law brought to enforce any liability or duty
created by this subchapter. Any such suit or
action may be brought in the district
wherein the defendant is found or is an
inhabitant or transacts business, or in the
district where the sale took place, if the
defendant participated therein, and process
in such cases may be served in any other
district of which the defendant is an
inhabitant or wherever the defendant may be
found. * * *"
Defendants' remaining contentions
concern improper venue and lack of
jurisdiction over their persons. The
defendants are not residents of this
district. They conduct their business in
Philadelphia. The complaint was served on
them there, beyond the territorial
boundaries of this court. Plaintiff is a
resident of New Jersey. The action was
brought in this court in a district in which
neither plaintiff nor defendants are
residents.
Section 22(a) of the Act permits
an action to be brought "in the district
where the sale took place, if the defendant
participated therein." The sale took place
within this district, when title to the
stock was transferred to plaintiff buyer by
delivery thereof to his bank and plaintiff
paid the purchase price. Defendants were the
owners of part of the shares of stock thus
sold to plaintiff. They, therefore, as such
owners, "participated" in the sale within
this district in New York City,
notwithstanding the fact that they were not
physically present in this district when it
took place. In Schillner v. H. Vaughan
Clarke & Co., supra, the Circuit Court of
Appeals, upon similar facts, held at page
879 of 134 F.2d: "* * * if the shares
purchased by the plaintiffs where owned by
Mr. Clarke, he undoubtedly `participated' in
the sales * * *." Cf. also, Personal
Property Law, Consol.Laws, c. 41, § 162.
Accordingly, there is no basis to
defendants' contention of improper venue.
Section 22(a), which permits the
action to be brought in the district where
the sale took place if the defendant
participated therein, permits "in such
cases" service of process "wherever the
defendant may be found." Service of process
upon the defendants herein beyond the
territorial limits of this court was proper
and conferred jurisdiction over their
persons.
The motion is in all respects
denied. |