(a) The longstanding judicial acceptance of the rule, together
with Congress' failure to reject its interpretation of § 10(b)
Page 421 U. S. 724
argues significantly in favor of this Court's acceptance of the
rule. P.
421 U. S.
733.
(b) Evidence from the texts of the Act and the Securities Act of
1933 supports the
Birnbaum rule. When Congress wished to
provide statutory remedies to others than purchasers or sellers of
securities, it did so expressly. Pp.
421 U. S.
733-736.
(c) Policy considerations predominantly favor adherence to the
rule. Failure to follow it could well result in vexatious
litigation caused by a widely expanded class of plaintiffs bringing
"strike" suits under Rule 10b-5 and opening litigation to hazy
factual issues the proof of which would largely depend on
uncorroborated oral testimony to the effect that a person situated
like respondent consulted the security issuer's prospectus, and
paid attention to it, and that its representations injured him. Pp.
421 U. S.
737-749.
(d) Respondent, who derives no entitlement from the antitrust
decree and does not otherwise possess any contractual rights
relating to the offered stock, occupies the same position as any
other disappointed offeree of stock registered under the 1933 Act
who claims that an overly pessimistic prospectus has caused him to
pass up the chance to purchase, and there is ample evidence that
Congress did not intend to extend a private cause of action for
money damages to the nonpurchasing offeree of stock registered
under the 1933 Act for loss of the opportunity to purchase due to
an overly pessimistic prospectus. Pp.
421 U. S.
749-754.
(e) The exception to the
Birnbaum rule that the Court
of Appeals relied upon would expose the rule to case-by-case
erosion depending upon whether a particular group of plaintiffs was
deemed more discrete than potential purchasers in general so as to
warrant departing from the rule, and would result in an
unsatisfactory basis for establishing liability for the conduct of
business transactions. Pp. 754-755.
492 F.2d 136, reversed.
REHNQUIST, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
BURGER, C.J., and STEWART, WHITE, MARSHALL, and POWELL, JJ.,
joined. POWELL, J., filed a concurring opinion, in which STEWART
and MARSHALL, JJ., joined,
post, p.
421 U. S. 755.
BLACKMUN, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which DOUGLAS and
BRENNAN, JJ., joined,
post, p.
421 U. S.
761.
Page 421 U. S. 725
MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case requires us to consider whether the offerees of a
stock offering, made pursuant to an antitrust consent decree and
registered under the Securities Act of 1933, 48 Stat. 74, as
amended, 15 U.S.C. § 77a
et seq. (1933 Act), may maintain
a private cause of action for money damages where they allege that
the offeror has violated the provisions of Rule 10b-5 of the
Securities and Exchange Commission, but where they have neither
purchased nor sold any of the offered shares.
See Birnbaum v.
Newport Steel Corp., 193 F.2d 461 (CA2),
cert.
denied, 343 U.S. 956 (1952).
I
In 1963, the United States filed a civil antitrust action
against Blue Chip Stamp Co. (Old Blue Chip), a company in the
business of providing trading stamps to retailers, and nine
retailers who owned 90% of its shares. In 1967, the action was
terminated by the entry of a consent decree.
United States v.
Blue Chip Stamp Co., 272 F.
Supp. 432 (CD Cal.),
aff'd sub nom. Thrifty Shoppers Scrip
Co. v. United States, 389 U. S. 580
(1968). [
Footnote 1] The decree
contemplated a plan of reorganization
Page 421 U. S. 726
whereby Old Blue Chip was to be merged into a newly formed
corporation, Blue Chip Stamps (New Blue Chip). The holdings of the
majority shareholders of Old Blue Chip were to be reduced, and New
Blue Chip, one of the petitioners here, was required under the plan
to offer a substantial number of its shares of common stock to
retailers who had used the stamp service in the past but who were
not shareholders in the old company. Under the terms of the plan,
the offering to nonshareholder users was to be proportional to past
stamp usage, and the shares were to be offered in units consisting
of common stock and debentures.
The reorganization plan was carried out, the offering was
registered with the SEC as required by the 1933 Act, and a
prospectus was distributed to all offerees as required by § 5 of
that Act, 15 U.S.C. § 77e. Somewhat more than 50% of the offered
units were actually purchased. In 1970, two years after the
offering, respondent, a former user of the stamp service and
therefore an offeree of the 1968 offering, filed this suit in the
United States District Court for the Central District of
California. Defendants below and petitioners here are Old and New
Blue Chip, eight of the nine majority shareholders of Old Blue
Chip, and the directors of New Blue Chip (collectively called Blue
Chip).
Respondent's complaint alleged,
inter alia, that the
prospectus prepared and distributed by Blue Chip in connection with
the offering was materially misleading in its overly pessimistic
appraisal of Blue Chip's status and future prospects. It alleged
that Blue Chip intentionally made the prospectus overly pessimistic
in order to discourage respondent and other members of the
allegedly large class whom it represents from accepting what
was
Page 421 U. S. 727
intended to be a bargain offer, so that the rejected shares
might later be offered to the public at a higher price. The
complaint alleged that class members, because of and in reliance on
the false and misleading prospectus, failed to purchase the offered
units. Respondent therefore sought on behalf of the alleged class
some $21,400,000 in damages representing the lost opportunity to
purchase the units; the right to purchase the previously rejected
units at the 1968 price; and in addition, it sought some
$25,000,000 in exemplary damages.
The only portion of the litigation thus initiated which is
before us is whether respondent may base its action on Rule 10b-5
of the Securities and Exchange Commission without having either
bought or sold the securities described in the allegedly misleading
prospectus. The District Court dismissed respondent's complaint for
failure to state a claim upon which relief might be granted.
[
Footnote 2] On appeal to the
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, respondent
pressed only its asserted claim under Rule 10b-5, and a divided
panel of the Court of Appeals sustained its position and reversed
the District Court. [
Footnote
3] After the Ninth Circuit denied rehearing en banc, we granted
Blue Chip's petition for certiorari. 419 U.S. 992 (1974). Our
consideration of the correctness of the determination of the Court
of Appeals requires us to consider what limitations there are on
the class of plaintiffs who may maintain a private cause of action
for money damages for violation of Rule 10b-5, and whether
respondent was within that class.
II
During the early days of the New Deal, Congress enacted two
landmark statutes regulating securities.
Page 421 U. S. 728
The 1933 Act was described as an Act to
"provide full and fair disclosure of the character of securities
sold in interstate and foreign commerce and through the mails, and
to prevent frauds in the sale thereof, and for other purposes."
The Securities Exchange Act of 1934. 48 Stat. 881, as amended,
15 U.S.C. § 78a
et seq. (1934 Act), was described as an
Act
"to provide for the regulation of securities exchanges and of
over-the-counter markets operating in interstate and foreign
commerce and through the mails, to prevent inequitable and unfair
practices on such exchanges and markets, and for other
purposes."
The various sections of the 1933 Act dealt at some length with
the required contents of registration statements and prospectuses,
and expressly provided for private civil causes of action. Section
11(a) gave a right of action by reason of a false registration
statement to "any person acquiring" the security, and § 12 of that
Act gave a right to sue the seller of a security who had engaged in
proscribed practices with respect to prospectuses and communication
to "the person purchasing such security from him."
The 1934 Act was divided into two titles. Title I was
denominated "Regulation of Securities Exchanges," and Title II was
denominated "Amendments to Securities Act of 1933." Section 10 of
that Act makes it
"unlawful for any person . . . (b) [t]o 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."
The "Commission" referred to in the section was the Securities
and Exchange Commission
Page 421 U. S. 729
created by § 4(a) of the 1934 Act. Section 29 of that Act
provided that "[e]very contract made in violation of any provision
of this chapter or of any rule or regulation thereunder" should be
void.
In 1942, acting under the authority granted to it by § 10(b) of
the 1934 Act, the Commission promulgated Rule 10b-5, 17 CFR §
240.10b-5, now providing as follows:
"§ 240.10b-5 Employment of 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,"
"(a) To employ any device, scheme, or artifice to defraud,"
"(b) To make any untrue statement of a material fact or to omit
to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements
made, in the light of the circumstances under which they were made,
not misleading, or"
"(c) To engage in any act, practice, or course of business which
operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit upon any
person,"
"in connection with the purchase or sale of any security."
Section 10(b) of the 1934 Act does not, by its terms, provide an
express civil remedy for its violation. Nor does the history of
this provision provide any indication that Congress considered the
problem of private suits under it at the time of its passage.
See, e.g., Note, Implied Liability Under the Securities
Exchange Act, 61 Harv.L.Rev. 858, 861 (1948); A. Bromberg,
Securities Law: Fraud -- SEC Rule 10b-5 § 2.2 (300)-(340) (1968)
(hereinafter Bromberg); S.Rep. No. 792, 73d Cong., 2d
Page 421 U. S. 730
Sess., 5-6 (1934). Similarly, there is no indication that the
Commission, in adopting Rule 10b-5, considered the question of
private civil remedies under this provision. SEC Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 3230 (1942); Conference on Codification of
the Federal Securities Laws, 22 Bus.Law. 793, 922 (1967);
Birnbaum v. Newport Steel Corp., 193 F.2d at 463; 3 L.
Loss, Securities Regulation 1469 n. 87 (2d ed.1961).
Despite the contrast between the provisions of Rule 10b-5 and
the numerous carefully drawn express civil remedies provided in the
Acts of both 1933 and 1934, [
Footnote 4] it was held in 1946 by the United States
District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania that there
was an implied private right of action under the Rule.
Kardon
v. National Gypsum Co., 69 F. Supp.
512. This Court had no occasion to deal with the subject until
25 years later, and, at that time, we confirmed with virtually no
discussion the overwhelming consensus of the District Courts and
Courts of Appeals that such a cause of action did exist.
Superintendent of Insurance v. Bankers Life & Cas.
Co., 404 U. S. 6,
404 U. S. 13 n. 9
(1971);
Affiliated Ute Citizens v. United States,
406 U. S. 128,
406 U. S.
150-154 (1972). Such a conclusion was, of course,
entirely consistent with the Court's recognition in
J. I. Case
Co. v. Borak, 377 U. S. 426,
377 U. S. 432
(1964), that private enforcement of Commission rules may "[provide]
a necessary supplement to Commission action."
Within a few years after the seminal
Kardon decision,
the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit concluded that the
plaintiff class for purposes of a private damage action under §
10(b) and Rule 10b-5 was limited to actual purchasers and sellers
of securities.
Birnbaum v. Newport Steel Corp., supra.
Page 421 U. S. 731
The Court of Appeals in this case did not repudiate
Birnbaum; indeed, another panel of that court (in an
opinion by Judge Ely) had but a short time earlier affirmed the
rule of that case.
Mount Clemens Industries, Inc. v. Bell,
464 F.2d 339 (1972). But in this case. a majority of the Court of
Appeals found that the facts warranted an exception to the
Birnbaum rule. For the reasons hereinafter stated, we are
of the opinion that
Birnbaum was rightly decided, and that
it bars respondent from maintaining this suit under Rule 10b-5.
III
The panel which decided
Birnbaum consisted of Chief
Judge Swan and Judges Learned Hand and Augustus Hand: the opinion
was written by the last named. Since both § 10(b) and Rule 10b-5
proscribed only fraud "in connection with the purchase or sale" of
securities, and since the history of § 10(b) revealed no
congressional intention to extend a private civil remedy for money
damages to other than defrauded purchasers or sellers of
securities, in contrast to the express civil remedy provided by §
16(b) of the 1934 Act, the court concluded that the plaintiff class
in a Rule 10b-5 action was limited to actual purchasers and
sellers. 193 F.2d at 463-464.
Just as this Court had no occasion to consider the validity of
the
Kardon holding that there was a private cause of
action under Rule 10b-5 until 20-odd years later, nearly the same
period of time has gone by between the
Birnbaum decision
and our consideration of the case now before us. As with
Kardon, virtually all lower federal courts facing the
issue in the hundreds of reported cases presenting this question
over the past quarter century have reaffirmed
Birnbaum's
conclusion that the plaintiff class for purposes of § 10(b) and
Rule 10b-5 private damage actions is limited to purchasers and
sellers
Page 421 U. S. 732
of securities.
See 6 L. Loss, Securities Regulation
3617 (1969).
See, e.g., Haterman v. Murchison, 468 F.2d
1305, 1311 (CA2 1972);
Landy v. FDIC, 486 F.2d 139,
156-157 (CA3 1973),
cert. denied, 416 U.S. 960 (1974);
Sargent v. Genesco, Inc., 492 F.2d 750, 763 (CA5 1974);
Simmons v. Wolfson, 428 F.2d 455, 456 (CA6 1970),
cert. denied, 400 U. S. 99
(1971);
City National Bank v. Vanderboom, 422 F.2d 221,
227-228 (CA8),
cert. denied, 399 U.S. 905 (1970);
Mount Clemens Industries, Inc. v. Bell, supra; Jensen v.
Voyles, 393 F.2d 131, 133 (CA10 1968).
Compare Eason v.
General Motors Acceptance Corp., 490 F.2d 654 (CA7 1973),
cert. denied, 416 U.S. 960 (1974),
with Dasho v.
Susquehanna Corp., 380 F.2d 262 (CA7),
cert. denied sub
nom. Bard v. Dasho, 389 U.S. 977 (1967).
In 1957 and again in 1959, the Securities and Exchange
Commission sought from Congress amendment of 10(b) to change its
wording from "in connection with the purchase or sale of any
security" to "in connection with the purchase or sale of,
or
any attempt to purchase or sell, any security." 103 Cong.Rec.
11636 (1957) (emphasis added); SEC Legislation, Hearings on S.
1178-1182 before a Subcommittee of the Senate Committee on Banking
& Currency, 86th Cong., 1st Sess., 367-368 (1959); S. 2545,
85th Cong., 1st Sess. (1957); S. 1179, 86th Cong., 1st Sess.
(1959). In the words of a memorandum submitted by the Commission to
a congressional committee, the purpose of the proposed change was
"to make section 10(b) also applicable to manipulative activities
in connection with any attempt to purchase or sell any security."
Hearings on S. 1178-1182,
supra, at 331. Opposition to the
amendment was based on fears of the extension of civil liability
under § 10(b) that it would cause.
Id. at 368. Neither
change was adopted by Congress.
Page 421 U. S. 733
The longstanding acceptance by the courts, coupled with
Congress' failure to reject
Birnbaum's reasonable
interpretation of the wording of § 10(b), wording which is directed
toward injury suffered "in connection with the purchase or sale" of
securities, [
Footnote 5] argues
significantly in favor of acceptance of the
Birnbaum rule
by this Court.
Blau v. Lehman, 368 U.
S. 403,
368 U. S. 413
(1962).
Available evidence from the texts of the 1933 and 1934 Acts as
to the congressional scheme in this regard, though not conclusive,
supports the result reached by the
Birnbaum court. The
wording of § 10(b) directed at fraud "in connection with the
purchase or sale" of securities stands in contrast with the
parallel anti-fraud provision of the 1933 Act, § 17(a), as amended,
68 Stat. 686, 15 U.S.C. § 77q, [
Footnote 6] reaching fraud
Page 421 U. S. 734
"in the offer or sale" of securities.
Cf. § 5 of the
1933 Act, 5 U.S.C. § 77e. When Congress wished to provide a remedy
to those who neither purchase nor sell securities, it had little
trouble in doing so expressly.
Cf. § 16(b) of the 1934
Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78p(b).
Section 28(a) of the 1934 Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78bb(a), which limits
recovery in any private damages action brought under the 1934 Act
to "actual damages," likewise provides some support for the
purchaser-seller rule.
See, e.g., Bromberg § 8.8, p. 221.
While the damages suffered by purchasers and sellers pursuing a §
10(b) cause of action may on occasion be difficult to ascertain,
Affiliated Ute Citizens v. United States, 406 U.S. at
406 U. S. 155,
in the main, such purchasers and sellers at least seek to base
recovery on a demonstrable number of shares traded. In contrast, a
putative plaintiff, who neither purchases nor sells securities but
sues instead for intangible economic injury such as loss of a
noncontractual opportunity to buy or sell, is more likely to be
seeking a
Page 421 U. S. 735
largely conjectural and speculative recovery in which the number
of shares involved will depend on the plaintiff's subjective
hypothesis.
Cf. Estate Counseling Service, Inc. v. Merrill
Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc., 303 F.2d 527, 533
(CA10 1962);
Levine v. Seilon, Inc., 439 F.2d 328, 335
(CA2 1971);
Wolf v. Frank, 477 F.2d 467, 478 (CA5
1973).
One of the justifications advanced for implication of a cause of
action under § 10(b) lies in § 29(b) of the 1934 Act, 15 U.S.C. §
78cc(b), providing that a contract made in violation of any
provision of the 1934 Act is voidable at the option of the deceived
party. [
Footnote 7]
See,
e.g., Kardon v. National Gypsum Co., 69 F. Supp. at 514;
Slavin v. Germantown Fire Insurance Co., 174 F.2d 799, 815
(CA3 1949);
Fischman v. Raytheon Mfg. Co., 188 F.2d 783,
787 n. 4 (CA2 1951); Bromberg § 2.4(1)(b). But that justification
is absent when there is no actual purchase or sale of securities,
or a contract to purchase or sell, affected or tainted by a
violation of § 10(b).
Cf. Mount Clemens Industries, Inc. v.
Bell, supra.
The principal express nonderivative private civil remedies,
Page 421 U. S. 736
created by Congress contemporaneously with the passage of §
10(b), for violations of various provisions of the 1933 and 1934
Acts are, by their terms, expressly limited to purchasers or
sellers of securities. Thus, § 11(a) of the 1933 Act confines the
cause of action it grants to "any person acquiring such security,"
while the remedy granted by § 12 of that Act is limited to the
"person purchasing such security." Section 9 of the 1934 Act,
prohibiting a variety of fraudulent and manipulative devices,
limits the express civil remedy provided for its violation to "any
person who shall purchase or sell any security" in a transaction
affected by a violation of the provision. Section 18 of the 1934
Act, prohibiting false or misleading statements in reports or other
documents required to be filed by the 1934 Act, limits the express
remedy provided for its violation to "any person . . . who . . .
shall have purchased or sold a security at a price which was
affected by such statement. . . ." It would indeed be anomalous to
impute to Congress an intention to expand the plaintiff class for a
judicially implied cause of action beyond the bounds it delineated
for comparable express causes of action. [
Footnote 8]
Page 421 U. S. 737
Having said all this, we would by no means be understood as
suggesting that we are able to divine from the language of § 10(b)
the express "intent of Congress" as to the contours of a private
cause of action under Rule 10b-5. When we deal with private actions
under Rule 10b-5, we deal with a judicial oak which has grown from
little more than a legislative acorn. Such growth may be quite
consistent with the congressional enactment and with the role of
the federal judiciary in interpreting it,
see J. I. Case Co. v.
Borak, supra, but it would be disingenuous to suggest that
either Congress in 1934 or the Securities and Exchange Commission
in 1942 foreordained the present state of the law with respect to
Rule 10b-5. It is therefore proper that we consider, in addition to
the factors already discussed, what may be described as policy
considerations when we come to flesh out the portions of the law
with respect to which neither the congressional enactment nor the
administrative regulations offer conclusive guidance.
Three principal classes of potential plaintiffs are presently
barred by the
Birnbaum rule. First are potential
purchasers of shares, either in a new offering or on the Nation's
post-distribution trading markets, who allege that they decided not
to purchase because of an unduly gloomy representation or the
omission of favorable material which made the issuer appear to be a
less favorable investment vehicle than it actually was. Second are
actual shareholders in the issuer who allege that they decided not
to sell their shares because of an
Page 421 U. S. 738
unduly rosy representation or a failure to disclose unfavorable
material. Third are shareholders, creditors, and perhaps others
related to an issuer who suffered loss in the value of their
investment due to corporate or insider activities in connection
with the purchase or sale of securities which violate Rule 10b-5.
It has been held that shareholder members of the second and third
of these classes may frequently be able to circumvent the
Birnbaum limitation through bringing a derivative action
on behalf of the corporate issuer if the latter is itself a
purchaser or seller of securities.
See, e.g., Schoenbaum v.
Firstbrook, 405 F.2d 215, 219 (CA2 1968),
cert. denied sub
nom. Manley v. Schoenbaum, 395 U.S. 906 (1969). But the first
of these classes, of which respondent is a member, cannot claim the
benefit of such a rule.
A great majority of the many commentators on the issue before us
have taken the view that the
Birnbaum limitation on the
plaintiff class in a Rule 10b-5 action for damages is an arbitrary
restriction which unreasonably prevents some deserving plaintiffs
from recovering damages which have, in fact, been caused by
violations of Rule 10b-5.
See, e.g., Lowenfels, The Demise
of the
Birnbaum Doctrine: A New Era for Rule 10b-5, 54
Va.L.Rev. 268 (1968). The Securities and Exchange Commission has
filed an
amicus brief in this case espousing that same
view. We have no doubt that this is indeed a disadvantage of the
Birnbaum rule, [
Footnote
9] and if it
Page 421 U. S. 739
had no countervailing advantages it would be undesirable as a
matter of policy, however much it might be supported by precedent
and legislative history. But we are of the opinion that there are
countervailing advantages to the
Birnbaum rule, purely as
a matter of policy, although those advantages are more difficult to
articulate than is the disadvantage.
There has been widespread recognition that litigation under Rule
10b-5 presents a danger of vexatiousness different in degree and in
kind from that which accompanies litigation in general. This fact
was recognized by Judge Browning in his opinion for the majority of
the Court of Appeals in this case, 492 F.2d at 141, and by Judge
Hufstedler in her dissenting opinion when she said:
"The purchaser-seller rule has maintained the balances built
into the congressional scheme by permitting damage actions to be
brought only by those persons whose active participation in the
marketing transaction promises enforcement of the statute without
undue risk of abuse of the litigation process and without
distorting the securities market."
Id. at 147.
Judge Friendly in commenting on another aspect of Rule 10b-5
litigation has referred to the possibility that unduly expansive
imposition of civil liability "will lead to large judgments,
payable in the last analysis by innocent investors, for the benefit
of speculators and their lawyers. . . ."
SEC v. Texas Gulf
Sulphur Co., 401 F.2d 833, 867 (CA2 1968) (concurring
opinion).
See also
Page 421 U. S. 740
Boone & McGowan, Standing to Sue under SEC Rule 10b-5, 49
Tex.L.Rev. 617, 64649 (1971).
We believe that the concern expressed for the danger of
vexatious litigation which could result from a widely expanded
class of plaintiffs under Rule 10b-5 is founded in something more
substantial than the common complaint of the many defendants who
would prefer avoiding lawsuits entirely to either settling them or
trying them. These concerns have two largely separate grounds.
The first of these concerns is that, in the field of federal
securities laws governing disclosure of information, even a
complaint which by objective standards may have very little chance
of success at trial has a settlement value to the plaintiff out of
any proportion to its prospect of success at trial so long as he
may prevent the suit from being resolved against him by dismissal
or summary judgment. The very pendency of the lawsuit may frustrate
or delay normal business activity of the defendant which is totally
unrelated to the lawsuit.
See, e.g., Sargent, The SEC and
the Individual Investor: Restoring His Confidence in the Market, 60
Va.L.Rev. 553, 562-572 (1974); Dooley, The Effects of Civil
Liability on Investment Banking and the New Issues Market, 58
Va.L.Rev. 776, 822-843 (1972).
Congress itself recognized the potential for nuisance or
"strike" suits in this type of litigation, and, in Title II of the
1934 Act, amended § 11 of the 1933 Act to provide that:
"In any suit under this or any other section of this title the
court may, in its discretion, require an undertaking for the
payment of the costs of such suit, including reasonable attorney's
fees. . . ."
§ 206(d), 48 Stat. 881, 908.
Senator Fletcher, Chairman of the Senate Banking and Finance
Committee, in introducing Title II of the 1934
Page 421 U. S. 741
Act on the floor of the Senate, stated in explaining the
amendment to § 11(e): "This amendment is the most important of
all." 78 Cong.Rec. 8669. Among its purposes was to provide "a
defense against blackmail suits."
Ibid.
Where Congress in those sections of the 1933 Act which expressly
conferred a private cause of action for damages, adopted a
provision uniformly regarded as designed to deter "strike" or
nuisance actions,
Cohen v. Beneficial Loan Corp.,
337 U. S. 541,
337 U. S.
548-549 (1949), that fact alone justifies our
consideration of such potential in determining the limits of the
class of plaintiffs who may sue in an action wholly implied from
the language of the 1934 Act.
The potential for possible abuse of the liberal discovery
provisions of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure may likewise
exist in this type of case to a greater extent than they do in
other litigation. The prospect of extensive deposition of the
defendant's officers and associates and the concomitant opportunity
for extensive discovery of business documents, is a common
occurrence in this and similar types of litigation. To the extent
that this process eventually produces relevant evidence which is
useful in determining the merits of the claims asserted by the
parties, it bears the imprimatur of those Rules and of the many
cases liberally interpreting them. But, to the extent that it
permits a plaintiff with a largely groundless claim to simply take
up the time of a number of other people, with the right to do so
representing an in terrorem increment of the settlement value,
rather than a reasonably founded hope that the process will reveal
relevant evidence, it is a social cost, rather than a benefit. Yet
to broadly expand the class of plaintiffs who may sue under Rule
10b-5 would appear to encourage the least appealing aspect of the
use of the discovery rules.
Page 421 U. S. 742
Without the
Birnbaum rule, an action under Rule 10b-5
will turn largely on which oral version of a series of occurrences
the jury may decide to credit, and therefore, no matter how
improbable the allegations of the plaintiff, the case will be
virtually impossible to dispose of prior to trial other than by
settlement. In the words of Judge Hufstedler's dissenting opinion
in the Court of Appeals:
"The great ease with which plaintiffs can allege the
requirements for the majority's standing rule and the greater
difficulty that plaintiffs are going to have proving the
allegations suggests that the majority's rule will allow a
relatively high proportion of 'bad' cases into court. The risk of
strike suits is particularly high in such cases; although they are
difficult to prove at trial, they are even more difficult to
dispose of before trial."
492 F.2d at 147 n. 9.
The
Birnbaum rule, on the other hand, permits exclusion
prior to trial of those plaintiffs who were not themselves
purchasers or sellers of the stock in question. The fact of
purchase of stock and the fact of sale of stock are generally
matters which are verifiable by documentation, and do not depend
upon oral recollection, so that failure to qualify under the
Birnbaum rule is a matter that can normally be established
by the defendant either on a motion to dismiss or on a motion for
summary judgment.
Obviously there is no general legal principle that courts, in
fashioning substantive law, should do so in a manner which makes it
easier, rather than more difficult, for a defendant to obtain a
summary judgment. But in this type of litigation, where the mere
existence of an unresolved lawsuit has settlement value to the
plaintiff not only because of the possibility that he may prevail
on the merits, an entirely legitimate component of settlement
value, but because of the threat of extensive discovery
Page 421 U. S. 743
and disruption of normal business activities which may accompany
a lawsuit which is groundless in any event, but cannot be proved so
before trial, such a factor is not to be totally dismissed. The
Birnbaum rule undoubtedly excludes plaintiffs who have, in
fact, been damaged by violations of Rule 10b-5, and, to that
extent, it is undesirable. But it also separates in a readily
demonstrable manner the group of plaintiffs who actually purchased
or actually sold, and whose version of the facts is therefore more
likely to be believed by the trier of fact, from the vastly larger
world of potential plaintiffs who might successfully allege a claim
but could seldom succeed in proving it. And this fact is one of its
advantages.
The second ground for fear of vexatious litigation is based on
the concern that, given the generalized contours of liability, the
abolition of the
Birnbaum rule would throw open to the
trier of fact many rather hazy issues of historical fact the proof
of which depended almost entirely on oral testimony. We in no way
disparage the worth and frequent high value of oral testimony when
we say that dangers of its abuse appear to exist in this type of
action to a peculiarly high degree. The Securities and Exchange
Commission, while opposing the adoption of the
Birnbaum
rule by this Court, states that it agrees with petitioners
"that the effect, if any, of a deceptive practice on someone who
has neither purchased nor sold securities may be more difficult to
demonstrate than is the effect on a purchaser or seller."
Brief for the Securities and Exchange Commission as
Amicus
Curiae 225. The brief also points out that frivolous suits can
be brought whatever the rules of standing, and reminds us of this
Court's recognition "in a different context" that "the expense and
annoyance of litigation is
part of the social burden of living
under
Page 421 U. S.
744
government.'" Id. at 24 n. 30. See Petroleum
Exploration, Inc. v. Public Service Comm'n, 304 U.
S. 209, 304 U. S. 222
(1938). The Commission suggests that, in particular cases
additional requirements of corroboration of testimony and more
limited measure of damages would correct the dangers of an expanded
class of plaintiffs.
But the very necessity, or at least the desirability, of
fashioning unique rules of corroboration and damages as a
correlative to the abolition of the
Birnbaum rule suggests
that the rule itself may have something to be said for it.
In considering the policy underlying the
Birnbaum rule,
it is not inappropriate to advert briefly to the tort of
misrepresentation and deceit, to which a claim under Rule 10b-5
certainly has some relationship. Originally, under the common law
of England, such an action was not available to one other than a
party to a business transaction. That limitation was eliminated in
Pasley v. Freeman, 3 T.R. 51, 100 Eng.Rep. 450 (1789).
Under the earlier law, the misrepresentation was generally required
to be one of fact, rather than opinion, but that requirement, too,
was gradually relaxed. Lord Bowen's famous comment in
Edgington
v. Fitzmaurice, [1882] L.R. 29 Ch. Div. 459, 483, that "the
state of a man's mind is as much a fact as the state of his
digestion," suggests that this distinction, too, may have been
somewhat arbitrary. And it has long been established in the
ordinary case of deceit that a misrepresentation which leads to a
refusal to purchase or to sell is actionable in just the same way
as a misrepresentation which leads to the consummation of a
purchase or sale.
Butler v.
Watkins, 13 Wall. 456 (1872). These aspects of the
evolution of the tort of deceit and misrepresentation suggest a
direction away from rules such as
Birnbaum.
But the typical fact situation in which the classic tort
Page 421 U. S. 745
of misrepresentation and deceit evolved was light years away
from the world of commercial transactions to which Rule 10b-5 is
applicable. The plaintiff in
Butler, supra, for example,
claimed that he had held off the market a patented machine for
tying cotton bales which he had developed by reason of the
fraudulent representations of the defendant. But the report of the
case leaves no doubt that the plaintiff and defendant met with one
another in New Orleans, that one presented a draft agreement to the
other, and that letters were exchanged relating to that agreement.
Although the claim to damages was based on an allegedly
fraudulently induced decision not to put the machines on the
market, the plaintiff and the defendant had concededly been engaged
in the course of business dealings with one another, and would
presumably have recognized one another on the street had they
met.
In today's universe of transactions governed by the 1934 Act,
privity of dealing or even personal contact between potential
defendant and potential plaintiff is the exception and not the
rule. The stock of issuers is listed on financial exchanges
utilized by tens of millions of investors, and corporate
representations reach a potential audience, encompassing not only
the diligent few who peruse filed corporate reports or the sizable
number of subscribers to financial journals, but the readership of
the Nation's daily newspapers. Obviously neither the fact that
issuers or other potential defendants under Rule 10b-5 reach a
large number of potential investors or the fact that they are
required by law to make their disclosures conform to certain
standards should in any way absolve them from liability for
misconduct which is proscribed by Rule 10b-5.
But in the absence of the
Birnbaum rule, it would be
sufficient for a plaintiff to prove that he had failed to
Page 421 U. S. 746
purchase or sell stock by reason of a defendant's violation of
Rule 10b-5. The manner in which the defendant's violation caused
the plaintiff to fail to act could be as a result of the reading of
a prospectus, as respondent claims here, but it could just as
easily come as a result of a claimed reading of information
contained in the financial pages of a local newspaper. Plaintiff's
proof would not be that he purchased or sold stock, a fact which
would be capable of documentary verification in most situations,
but instead that he decided
not to purchase or sell stock.
Plaintiff's entire testimony could be dependent upon uncorroborated
oral evidence of many of the crucial elements of his claim, and
still be sufficient to go to the jury. The jury would not even have
the benefit of weighing the plaintiff's version against the
defendant's version, since the elements to which the plaintiff
would testify would be, in many cases, totally unknown and
unknowable to the defendant. The very real risk in permitting those
in respondent's position to sue under Rule 10b-5 is that the door
will be open to recovery of substantial damages on the part of one
who offers only his own testimony to prove that he ever consulted a
prospectus of the issuer, that he paid any attention to it, or that
the representations contained in it damaged him. [
Footnote 10]
Page 421 U. S. 747
The virtue of the
Birnbaum rule, simply stated, in this
situation, is that it limits the class of plaintiffs to those who
have at least dealt in the security to which the prospectus,
representation, or omission relates. And their dealing in the
security, whether by way of purchase or sale, will generally be an
objectively demonstrable fact in an area of the law otherwise very
much dependent upon oral testimony. In the absence of the
Birnbaum doctrine, bystanders to the securities marketing
process could await developments on the sidelines without risk,
claiming that inaccuracies in disclosure caused nonselling in a
falling market and that unduly pessimistic predictions by the
issuer followed by a rising market caused them to allow
retrospectively golden opportunities to pass.
While much of the development of the law of deceit has been the
elimination of artificial barriers to recovery on just claims, we
are not the first court to express concern that the inexorable
broadening of the class of plaintiff
Page 421 U. S. 748
who may sue in this area of the law will ultimately result in
more harm than good. In
Ultramares Corp. v. Touche, 255
N.Y. 170, 174 N.E. 441 (1931), Chief Judge Cardozo observed with
respect to "a liability in an indeterminate amount for an
indeterminate time to an indeterminate class":
"The hazards of a business conducted on these terms are so
extreme as to enkindle doubt whether a flaw may not exist in the
implication of a duty that exposes to these consequences."
Id. at 179-180, 174 N.E. at 444.
In
Herpich v. Wallace, 430 F.2d 792, 804-805 (CA5
1970), a case adopting the
Birnbaum limitation on the
class of plaintiffs who might bring an action for damages based on
a violation of Rule 10b-5, Judge Ainsworth expressed concern
similar to that expressed by Chief Judge Cardozo. Judge Stevens,
writing in
Eason v. General Motors Acceptance Corp., 490
F.2d at 660, stated that court's view that these concerns were
unduly emphasized, and went on to say that "we may not for that
reason reject what we believe to be a correct interpretation of the
statute or the rule." He relied in part on the view that Rule 10b-5
should be interpreted, in keeping with this Court's repeated
admonition, "
not technically and restrictively, but flexibly to
effectuate its remedial purposes.'" Affiliated Ute Citizens v.
United States, 406 U.S. at 406 U. S.
151.
We quite agree that, if Congress had legislated the elements of
a private cause of action for damages, the duty of the Judicial
Branch would be to administer the law which Congress enacted; the
Judiciary may not circumscribe a right which Congress has conferred
because of any disagreement it might have with Congress about the
wisdom of creating so expansive a liability. But, as we have
pointed out, we are not dealing here with
Page 421 U. S. 749
any private right created by the express language of § 10(b) or
of Rule 10b-5. No language in either of those provisions speaks at
all to the contours of a private cause of action for their
violation. However flexibly we may construe the language of both
provisions, nothing in such construction militates against the
Birnbaum rule. We are dealing with a private cause of
action which has been judicially found to exist, and which will
have to be judicially delimited one way or another unless and until
Congress addresses the question. Given the peculiar blend of
legislative, administrative, and judicial history which now
surrounds Rule 10b-5, we believe that practical factors to which we
have adverted, and to which other courts have referred, are
entitled to a good deal of weight.
Thus, we conclude that what may be called considerations of
policy, which we are free to weigh in deciding this case, are by no
means entirely on one side of the scale. Taken together with the
precedential support for the
Birnbaum rule over a period
of more than 20 years, and the consistency of that rule with what
we can glean from the intent of Congress, they lead us to conclude
that it is a sound rule, and should be followed.
IV
The majority of the Court of Appeals in this case expressed no
disagreement with the general proposition that one asserting a
claim for damages based on the violation of Rule 10b-5 must be
either a purchaser or seller of securities. However, it noted that,
prior cases have held that persons owning contractual rights to buy
or sell securities are not excluded by the
Birnbaum rule.
Relying on these cases, it concluded that respondent's status as an
offeree pursuant to the terms of the consent decree served the same
function, for purposes
Page 421 U. S. 750
of delimiting the class of plaintiffs, as is normally performed
by the requirement of a contractual relationship. 492 F.2d at
142.
The Court of Appeals recognized, and respondent concedes here,
[
Footnote 11] that a well
settled line of authority from this Court establishes that a
consent decree is not enforceable directly or in collateral
proceedings by those who are not parties to it, even though they
were intended to be benefited by it.
United States v. Armour
& Co., 402 U. S. 673
(1971);
Buckeye Co. v. Hockng Valley Co., 269 U. S.
42 (1925). [
Footnote
12]
A contract to purchase or sell securities is expressly defined
by § 3(a) of the 1934 Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78c(a), [
Footnote 13]
Page 421 U. S. 751
as a purchase or sale of securities for the purposes of that
Act. Unlike respondent, which had no contractual right or duty to
purchase Blue Chip's securities, the holders of puts, calls,
options, and other contractual rights or duties to purchase or sell
securities have been recognized as "purchasers" or "sellers" of
securities for purposes of Rule 10b-5 not because of a judicial
conclusion that they were similarly situated to "purchasers" or
"sellers," but because the definitional provisions of the 1934 Act
themselves grant them such a status.
Even if we were to accept the notion that the
Birnbaum
rule could be circumvented on a case-by-case basis through
particularized judicial inquiry into the facts surrounding a
complaint, this respondent and the members of its alleged class
would be unlikely candidates for such a judicially created
exception. While the
Birnbaum rule has been flexibly
interpreted by lower federal courts, [
Footnote 14] we have been unable to locate a single
decided case from any court in the 20-odd years of litigation since
the
Birnbaum decision which would support the right of
persons who were in the position of respondent here to bring a
private suit under Rule 10b-5. Respondent was not only not a buyer
or seller of any security,
Page 421 U. S. 752
but it was not even a shareholder of the corporate
petitioners.
As indicated, the 1934 Act, under which respondent seeks to
assert a cause of action, is general in scope, but chiefly
concerned with the regulation of post-distribution trading on the
Nation's stock exchanges and securities trading markets. The 1933
Act is a far narrower statute chiefly concerned with disclosure and
fraud in connection with offerings of securities -- primarily, as
here, initial distributions of newly issued stock from corporate
issuers. 1 L. Loss, Securities Regulation 130-131 (2d ed.1961).
Respondent, who derives no entitlement from the antitrust consent
decree and does not otherwise possess any contractual rights
relating to the offered stock, stands in the same position as any
other disappointed offeree of a stock offering registered under the
1933 Act who claims that an overly pessimistic prospectus, prepared
and distributed as required by §§ 5 and 10 of the 1933 Act, has
caused it to allow its opportunity to purchase to pass.
There is strong evidence that application of the
Birnbaum rule to preclude suit by the disappointed offeree
of a registered 1933 Act offering under Rule 10b-5 furthers the
intention of Congress as expressed in the 1933 Act. [
Footnote 15] Congress left little doubt
that its purpose in imposing the prospectus and registration
requirements of the 1933 Act was to prevent the "[h]igh pressure
salesmanship, rather than careful counsel," causing inflated
Page 421 U. S. 753
new issues, through direct limitation by the SEC of "the selling
arguments hitherto employed." H.R.Rep. No. 85, 73d Cong., 1st
Sess., 2, 8 (1933).
"Any objection that the compulsory incorporation in selling
literature and sales argument of substantially all information
concerning the issue, will frighten the buyer with the intricacy of
the transaction, states one of the best arguments for the
provision."
Id. at 8. The SEC, in accord with the congressional
purposes, specifically requires prominent emphasis be given in
filed registration statements and prospectuses to material adverse
contingencies.
See, e.g., SEC Securities Act Release No.
4936, Guides for the Preparation and Filing of Registration
Statements 6, � 6 (1968);
In re Universal Camera Corp., 19
S.E.C. 648, 654-656 (1945); Wheat & Blackstone, Guideposts for
a First Public Offering, 15 Bus.Law. 539, 560-562 (1960).
Sections 11 and 12 of the 1933 Act provide express civil
remedies for misrepresentations and omissions in registration
statements and prospectuses filed under the Act, as here charged,
but restrict recovery to the offering price of shares actually
purchased:
"To impose a greater responsibility, apart from constitutional
doubts, would unnecessarily restrain the conscientious
administration of honest business with no compensating advantage to
the public."
H.R.Rep. No. 85,
supra, at 9. And in Title II of the
1934 Act, 48 Stat. 905-908, the same Act adopting § 10(b), Congress
amended § 11 of the 1933 Act to limit still further the express
civil remedy it conferred.
See generally James, Amendments
to the Securities Act of 1933, 32 Mich.L.Rev. 1130, 1134 (1934).
The additional congressional restrictions,
Page 421 U. S. 754
contained in Title II of the 1934 Act, on the already limited
express civil remedies provided by the 1933 Act for
misrepresentations or omissions in a registration statement or
prospectus reflected congressional concern over the impact of even
these limited remedies on the new issues market. 78 Cong.Rec.
8668-8669 (1934). There is thus ample evidence that Congress did
not intend to extend a private cause of action for money damages to
the nonpurchasing offeree of a stock offering registered under the
1933 Act for loss of the opportunity to purchase due to an overly
pessimistic prospectus.
Beyond the difficulties evident in an extension of standing to
this respondent, we do not believe that the
Birnbaum rule
is merely a shorthand judgment on the nature of a particular
plaintiff's proof. As a purely practical matter, it is doubtless
true that respondent and the members of its class, as offerees and
recipients of the prospectus of New Blue Chip, are a smaller class
of potential plaintiffs than would be all those who might
conceivably assert that they obtained information violative of Rule
10b-5 and attributable to the issuer in the financial pages of
their local newspaper. And since respondent likewise had a prior
connection with some of petitioners as a result of using the
trading stamps marketed by Old Blue Chip, and was intended to
benefit from the provisions of the consent decree, there is
doubtless more likelihood that its managers read and were damaged
by the allegedly misleading statements in the prospectus than there
would be in a case filed by a complete stranger to the
corporation.
But respondent and the members of its class are neither
"purchasers" nor "sellers," as those terms are defined in the 1934
Act, and therefore, to the extent that their claim of standing to
sue were recognized, it would mean that the lesser practical
difficulties of corroborating
Page 421 U. S. 755
at least some elements of their proof would be regarded as
sufficient to avoid the
Birnbaum rule. While we have noted
that these practical difficulties, particularly in the case of a
complete stranger to the corporation, support the retention of that
rule, they are by no means the only factor which does so. The
general adoption of the rule by other federal courts in the 25
years since it was announced, and the consistency of the rule with
the statutes involved and their legislative history, are likewise
bases for retaining the rule. Were we to agree with the Court of
Appeals in this case, we would leave the
Birnbaum rule
open to endless case-by-case erosion depending on whether a
particular group of plaintiffs was thought by the court in which
the issue was being litigated to be sufficiently more discrete than
the world of potential purchasers at large to justify an exception.
We do not believe that such a shifting and highly fact-oriented
disposition of the issue of who may bring a damages claim for
violation of Rule 10b-5 is a satisfactory basis for a rule of
liability imposed on the conduct of business transactions. Nor is
it as consistent as a straightforward application of the
Birnbaum rule with the other factors which support the
retention of that rule. We therefore hold that respondent was not
entitled to sue for violation of Rule 10b-5, and the judgment of
the Court of Appeals is
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
Neither respondent nor any of the members of its alleged class
were parties to the antitrust action. The antitrust decree itself
provided no plan for the reorganization of Old Blue Chip, but
instead merely directed the parties to the consent decree to
present to the court such a plan. App. 27, 31.
[
Footnote 2]
The District Court opinion is reported at
339 F. Supp.
35 (1971).
[
Footnote 3]
The Court of Appeals opinion is reported at 492 F.2d 136
(1973).
[
Footnote 4]
See, e.g., §§ 11, 12, 15 of the 1933 Act, 15 U.S.C. §§
77k, 77
l, 77
o; §§ 9, 16, 18, 20 of the 1934 Act,
15 U.S.C. §§ 78i, 78p, 78r, 78t.
[
Footnote 5]
MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN, dissenting,
post at
421 U. S.
764-765, finds support in the literal language of §
10(b), since he concludes that, in his view,
"the word 'sale' ordinarily and naturally may be understood to
mean not only a single, individualized act transferring property
from one party to another, but also the generalized event of public
disposal of property through advertisement, auction, or some other
market mechanism."
But this ignores the fact that this carefully drawn statute
itself defines the term "sale" for purposes of the Act, and, as we
have noted,
infra at
421 U. S. 751
n. 13, Congress expressly deleted from the Act's definition events
such as offers and advertisements which may ultimately lead to a
completed sale. Moreover, the extension of the word "sale" to
include offers is quite incompatible with Congress' separate
definition and use of these terms in the 1933 and 1934 Acts.
Cf. § 2(3) of the 1933 Act, 15 U.S.C. § 77b(3). Beyond
this, the wording of § 10(b), making fraud
in connection with
the purchase or sale of a security a violation of the Act, is
surely badly strained when construed to provide a cause of action,
not to purchasers and sellers of securities, but to the world at
large.
[
Footnote 6]
Section 17(a) of the 1933 Act provides in wording virtually
identical to that of Rule 10b-5 with the exception of the
italicized portion that:
"It shall be unlawful for any person
in the offer or
sale of any securities by the use of any means or instruments of
transportation or communication in interstate commerce or by the
use of the mails, directly or indirectly -- "
"(1) to employ any device, scheme, or artifice to defraud,
or"
"(2) to obtain money or property by means of any untrue
statement of a material fact or any omission to state a material
fact necessary in order to make the statements made, in the light
of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading,
or"
"(3) to engage in any transaction, practice, or course of
business which operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit upon
the purchaser."
(Emphasis added.) We express, of course, no opinion on whether §
17(a), in light of the express civil remedies of the 1933 Act,
gives rise to an implied cause of action.
Compare Greater Iowa
Corp. v. McLendon, 378 F.2d 783, 788-791 (CA8 1967),
with
Fleischman v. Raytheon Mfg. Co., 188 F.2d 783, 787 (CA2 1951).
See, e.g., SEC v. Texas Gulf Sulphur Co., 401 F.2d 833,
867 (CA2 1968) (Friendly, J., concurring),
cert. denied sub
nom. Coates v. SEC, 394 U.S. 976 (1969); 3 L. Loss, Securities
Regulation 1785 (2d ed.1961).
[
Footnote 7]
Section 29(b) of the 1934 Act provides in part:
"Every contract made in violation of any provision of this
chapter or of any rule or regulation thereunder, and every contract
(including any contract for listing a security on an exchange)
heretofore or hereafter made, the performance of which involves the
violation of, or the continuance of any relationship or practice in
violation of, any provision of this chapter or any rule or
regulation thereunder, shall be void (1) as regards the rights of
any person who, in violation of any such provision, rule, or
regulation, shall have made or engaged in the performance of any
such contract, and (2) as regards the rights of any person who, not
being a party to such contract, shall have acquired any right
thereunder with actual knowledge of the facts by reason of which
the making or performance of such contract was in violation of any
such provision, rule, or regulation. . . ."
Cf. Decker v. Independence Shares Corp., 311 U.
S. 282 (1940).
[
Footnote 8]
MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN, dissenting,
post at
421 U. S. 762,
finds the
Birnbaum rule incompatible with the purpose and
history of § 10(b) and Rule 10b-5. But it is worthy of more than
passing note that the history of Rule 10b-5 itself, recounted at
some length in the dissent,
post at
421 U. S.
766-767, strongly supports the purchaser-seller
limitation. As the dissent notes, Rule 10b-5 was adopted in order
to close
"a loophole in the protections against fraud . . . by
prohibiting individuals or companies from buying securities if they
engage in fraud in their purchase."
See SEC Release No. 3230 (May 21, 1942); remarks of
Milton Freeman, Conference on Codification of the Federal
Securities Laws, 22 Bus.Law. 793, 922 (1967). The modest aims and
origins of the Rule as recounted by the dissent stand in stark
contrast with its far-ranging conclusion that a remedy exists under
Rule 10b-5 whenever there is "a logical nexus between the alleged
fraud and the sale or purchase of a security."
Post at
421 U. S. 770.
On these facts, as we have indicated,
infra at
421 U. S.
752-754, extension of a Rule 105 cause of action, far
from closing an unforeseen loophole, would extend a private right
of action for misrepresentations in a 1933 Act prospectus to those
whom Congress excluded from the express civil remedies provided in
the 1933 Act to cover such a violation.
[
Footnote 9]
Obviously this disadvantage is attenuated to the extent that
remedies are available to nonpurchasers and nonsellers under state
law.
Cf. § 28 of the 1934 Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78bb.
See
Iroquois Industries, Inc. v. Syracuse China Corp., 417 F.2d
963, 969 (CA2 1969),
cert. denied, 399 U.S. 909 (1970).
Thus, for example, in
Birnbaum itself, while the
plaintiffs found themselves without federal remedies, the conduct
alleged as the gravamen of the federal complaint later provided the
basis for recovery in a cause of action based on state law.
See 3 L. Loss, Securities Regulation 1469 (2d ed.1961).
And, in the immediate case, respondent has filed a state court
class action held in abeyance pending the outcome of this suit.
Manor Drug Stores v. Blue Chip Stamps, No. C-5652
(Superior Court, County of Los Angeles, Cal.)
[
Footnote 10]
The SEC, recognizing the necessity for limitations on
nonpurchaser, nonseller plaintiffs in the absence of the
Birnbaum rule, suggests two such limitations to mitigate
the practical adverse effects flowing from abolition of the rule.
First, it suggests requiring some corroborative evidence in
addition to oral testimony tending to show that the investment
decision of a plaintiff was affected by an omission or
misrepresentation. Brief for the Securities and Exchange Commission
as
Amicus Curiae 226. Apparently ownership of stock or
receipt of a prospectus or press release would be sufficient
corroborative evidence, in the view of the SEC, to reach the jury.
We do not believe that such a requirement would adequately respond
to the concerns in part underlying the
Birnbaum rule.
Ownership of stock or receipt of a prospectus says little about
whether a plaintiff's investment decision was affected by a
violation of Rule 10b-5 or whether a decision was even made.
Second, the SEC would limit the vicarious liability of corporate
issuers to nonpurchasers and nonsellers to situations where the
corporate issuer has been unjustly enriched by a violation. We have
no occasion to pass upon the compatibility of this limitation with
§ 20(a) of the 1934 Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78t(a). We do not believe that
this proposed limitation is relevant to the concerns underlying in
part the
Birnbaum rule as we have expressed them. We are
not alone in feeling that the limitations proposed by the SEC are
not adequate to deal with the adverse effects which would flow from
abolition of the
Birnbaum rule.
See, e.g., Vine v.
Beneficial Finance Co., 374 F.2d 627, 636 (CA2),
cert.
denied, 389 U.S. 970 (1967);
Iroquois Industries, Inc. v.
Syracuse China Corp., 417 F.2d at 967;
Rekant v.
Desser, 425 F.2d 872, 879 (CA5 1970);
GAF Corp. v.
Milstein, 453 F.2d 709, 721 (CA2 1971),
cert. denied,
406 U.S. 910 (1972);
Drachman v. Harve, 453 F.2d 722, 736,
738 (CA2 1972) (en banc);
Mount Clemens Industries, Inc. v.
Bell, 464 F.2d 339, 341 (CA9 1972).
[
Footnote 11]
See Brief for Respondent 60.
[
Footnote 12]
See n 1,
supra; 492 F.2d at 144 n. 3 (Hufstedler, J.,
dissenting).
[
Footnote 13]
Section 3(a)(13) of the 1934 Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78c(a)(13),
provides:
"The terms 'buy' and 'purchase' each include any contract to
buy, purchase, or otherwise acquire."
Section 3(a)(14) of the 1934 Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78c(a)(14),
provides:
"The terms 'sale' and 'sell' each include any contract to sell
or otherwise dispose of."
These provisions, as enacted, starkly contrast with the wording
of the bill which became the 1934 Act when it emerged from
committee and was presented on the Senate floor by Senator
Fletcher, the chairman of the Senate Committee on Banking and
Finance.
See S. 2693, 73d Cong., 2d Sess. (1934). Section
3(11) of the bill as presented to the Senate provided:
"The terms 'buy' and 'purchase' each include any contract to
buy, purchase, or otherwise acquire, contract of purchase,
attempt or offer to acquire or solicitation of an offer to sen
a security or any interest in a security."
(Emphasis added.) And § 3(12) of the bill provided:
"The terms 'sale' and 'sell' each include any contract of sale
or disposition of, contract to sell or dispose of,
attempt or
offer to dispose of, or solicitation of an offer to buy a security
or any interest therein."
(Emphasis added.) During consideration of the bill on the Senate
floor, the ambit of these provisions was narrowed through amendment
into the present wording of §§ 3(a)(13) and (14). 48 Stat. 884. In
arguing that it, as an offeree of stock, ought to be treated as a
purchaser or seller for purposes of the Act, respondent is in
effect seeking a judicial reinsertion of language into the Act that
Congress had before it but deleted prior to passage.
[
Footnote 14]
Our decision in
SEC v. National Securities, Inc.,
393 U. S. 453
(1969), established that the purchaser-seller rule imposes no
limitation on the standing of the SEC to bring actions for
injunctive relief under § 10(b) and Rule 10b.
[
Footnote 15]
Blue Chip did not here present the question of whether an
implied action under § 10(b) of the 1934 Act and Rule 10b-5 will
lie for actions made a violation of the 1933 Act and the subject of
express civil remedies under the 1933 Act. We therefore have no
occasion to pass on this issue.
Compare Rosenberg v. Globe
Aircraft Corp., 80 F. Supp.
123 (ED Pa.1948),
with Thiele v.
Shields, 131 F.
Supp. 416 (SDNY 1955).
Cf. 3 L. Loss, Securities
Regulation 1787-1791 (2d ed.1961); 6 L. Loss, Securities Regulation
3915-3917 (1969); Bromberg § 2.4(2).
MR. JUSTICE POWELL, with whom MR. JUSTICE STEWART and MR.
JUSTICE MARSHALL join, concurring.
Although I join the opinion of the Court, I write to emphasize
the significance of the texts of the Acts of 1933 and 1934 and
especially the language of § 10(b) and Rule 10b-5.
Page 421 U. S. 756
I
The starting point in every case involving construction of a
statute is the language itself. The critical phrase in both the
statute and the Rule is "in connection with the
purchase
or
sale of any security." 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b); 17 CFR §
240.10b-5 (1975) (emphasis added). Section 3(a)(14) of the 1934
Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78c(a)(14), provides that the term "sale" shall
"include any contract to sell or otherwise dispose of" securities.
There is no hint in any provision of the Act that the term "sale,"
as used in § 10(b), was intended -- in addition to its
long-established legal meaning -- to include an "offer to sell."
Respondent, nevertheless, would have us amend the controlling
language in § 10(b) to read:
"in connection with the purchase or sale of, or an offer to
sell, any security."
Before a court properly could consider taking such liberty with
statutory language, there should be, at least, unmistakable support
in the history and structure of the legislation. None exists in
this case.
Nothing in the history of the 1933 and 1934 Acts supports any
congressional intent to include mere offers in § 10(b). Moreover,
as the Court's opinion indicates, impressive evidence in the texts
of the two Acts demonstrates clearly that Congress selectively and
carefully distinguished between offers, purchases, and sales. For
example, § 17(a), the anti-fraud provision of the 1933 Act, 15
U.S.C. § 77q(a), expressly includes "offer[s]" of securities within
its terms, while § 10(b) of the 1934 Act and Rule 10b-5 do not. The
1933 Act also defines "offer to sell" as something distinct from a
sale. § 2(3), 15 U.S.C. § 77b(3).
If further evidence of congressional intent were needed, it may
be found in the subsequent history of these Acts.
Page 421 U. S. 757
As noted in the Court's opinion, the Securities and Exchange
Commission unsuccessfully sought, in 1957 and again in 1959, to
persuade Congress to broaden § 10(b) by adding to the critical
language: "or any attempt to purchase or sell" any security.
See ante at
421 U. S.
732.
This case involves no "purchase or sale" of securities.
[
Footnote 2/1] Respondent was a
mere offeree, which instituted this suit some two years after the
shares were issued and after the market price had soared. Having
"missed the market" on a stock, it is hardly in a unique position.
The capital that fuels our enterprise system comes from investors
who have frequent opportunities to purchase, or not to purchase,
securities being offered publicly. The market prices of new issues
rarely remain static: almost invariably they go up or down, and
they often fluctuate widely over a period far less than the two
years during which respondent reflected on its lost opportunity.
Most investors have unhappy memories of decisions not to buy stocks
which later performed well.
The opinion of the Court, and the dissenting opinion of Judge
Hufstedler in the Court of Appeals, correctly emphasize the
subjective nature of the inevitable inquiry if the term "offer"
were read into the Act and some arguable error could be found in an
offering prospectus: "Would I have purchased this particular
security at the time it was offered if I had known the correct
facts?" Apart from the human temptation for the plaintiff to answer
this question in a self-serving fashion, the offeror
Page 421 U. S. 758
of the securities -- defendant in the suit -- is severely
handicapped in challenging the predictable testimony. [
Footnote 2/2] The subjective issues would
be even more speculative in the class actions that inevitably would
follow if we held that offers to sell securities are covered by §
10(b) and Rule 10b-5.
In this case, respondent was clearly identifiable as an offeree,
as here the shares were offered to designated persons. [
Footnote 2/3] In the more customary public
sale of securities, identification of those who, in fact, were
bona fide offerees would present severe problems of proof.
The 1933 Act requires that offers to sell registered securities be
made by means of an effective prospectus. § 5(b), 15 U.S.C. §
77e(b). Issues are usually marketed through underwriters and
dealers, often including scores of investment banking and brokerage
firms across the country. Copies of the prospectus may be widely
distributed through the dealer group, and then passed hand to hand
among countless persons whose identities cannot be known. If §
10(b) were extended to embrace offers to sell, the number of
persons claiming to have been
Page 421 U. S. 759
offerees could be legion with respect to any security that
subsequently proved to be a rewarding investment.
We are entitled to assume that the Congress, in enacting § 10(b)
and in subsequently declining to extend it, took into account these
and similar considerations. The courts already have inferred a
private cause of action that was not authorized by the legislation.
In doing this, however, it was unnecessary to rewrite the precise
language of § 10(b) and Rule 10b-5. This is exactly what respondent
-- joined, surprisingly, by the SEC -- sought in this case.
[
Footnote 2/4] If such a
far-reaching change is to
Page 421 U. S. 760
be made, with unpredictable consequences for the process of
raising capital so necessary to our economic wellbeing, it is a
matter for the Congress, not the courts.
II
MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN's dissent charges the Court with "a
preternatural solicitousness for corporate wellbeing and a seeming
callousness toward the investing public." Our task in this case is
to construe a statute. In my view, the answer is plainly compelled
by the language as well as the legislative history of the 1933 and
1934 Acts. But even if the language is not "plain" to all, I would
have thought none could doubt that the statute can be read fairly
to support the result the Court reaches. Indeed, if one takes a
different view -- and imputes callousness to all who disagree -- he
must attribute a lack of legal and social perception to the scores
of federal judges who have followed
Birnbaum for two
decades.
The dissenting opinion also charges the Court with paying "no
heed to the unremedied wrong" arising from the type of "fraud" that
may result from reaffirmance of the
Birnbaum rule. If an
issue of statutory construction is to be decided on the basis of
assuring a federal remedy -- in addition to state remedies -- for
every perceived fraud, at least we should strike a balance between
the opportunities for fraud presented by the contending views. It
may well be conceded that
Birnbaum does allow some fraud
to go unremedied under the federal securities Acts. But the
construction advocated by the dissent could result in wider
opportunities for fraud. As the Court's opinion makes plain,
abandoning the
Birnbaum construction in favor of the rule
urged by the dissent would invite any person who failed to purchase
a
Page 421 U. S. 761
newly offered security that subsequently enjoyed substantial
market appreciation to file a claim alleging that the offering
prospectus understated the company's potential. The number of
possible plaintiffs with respect to a public offering would be
virtually unlimited. As noted above (at
421 U. S. 758
n. 2), an honest offeror could be confronted with subjective claims
by plaintiffs who had neither purchased its securities nor
seriously considered the investment. It frequently would be
impossible to refute a plaintiff's assertion that he relied on the
prospectus, or even that he made a decision not to buy the offered
securities. A rule allowing this type of open-ended litigation
would itself be an invitation to fraud. [
Footnote 2/5]
[
Footnote 2/1]
It is argued that the language "in connection with" justifies
extending § 10(b) to include offers which necessarily precede a
purchase or sale. The short answer is that the statute requires a
purchase or a sale of a security, and no offer was made to
respondent in connection with either. Its complaint rests upon the
absence of a sale to or purchase by it.
[
Footnote 2/2]
Proving, after the fact, what "one would have done" encompasses
a number of conjectural, as well as subjective, issues: would the
offeree have bought at all; how many shares would he have bought;
how long would he have held the shares; were there other "buys" on
the market at the time that may have been more attractive even had
the offeree known the facts; did he, in fact, use his available
funds (if any) more advantageously by purchasing something
else?
[
Footnote 2/3]
It is argued that the special facts of this case justify
extending the benefit of § 10(b) to this respondent, even if the
statute ordinarily requires a purchase or a sale. But this
resolution also would require judicial extension of the terms of
the statute. The mere fact that securities are offered to a limited
class of offerees may eliminate some of the problems of proof but
it does not avoid the fatal objection that no offer of securities,
absent a purchase or sale, is covered by the statute.
[
Footnote 2/4]
It is more than curious that the SEC should seek this change in
the 1934 Act by judicial action. The stated purpose of the 1933 Act
was "[t]o provide full and fair disclosure of the character of
securities sold in interstate and foreign commerce. . . ."
See preamble to Act, 48 Stat. 74. The evil addressed was
the tendency of the seller to exaggerate, to "puff," and sometimes
fraudulently to overstate the prospects and earning capabilities of
the issuing corporation. The decade of the 1920's was marked by
financings in which the buying public was oversold, and often
misled, by the buoyant optimism of issuers and underwriters. The
1933 Act was intended to compel moderation and caution in
prospectuses, and this is precisely the way that Act has been
administered by the SEC for more than 40 years. Precise factual
accuracy with respect to a corporate enterprise is frequently
impossible, except with respect to hard facts. The outcome of
pending litigation, the effect of relatively new legislation, the
possible enactment of adverse legislation, the cost of projected
construction or of entering new markets, the expenditures needed to
meet changing environmental regulations, the likelihood and effect
of new competition or of new technology, and many similar matters
of potential relevancy must be addressed in registration statements
and prospectuses. In administering the 1933 Act, the SEC
traditionally and consistently has encouraged and often required
offerors to take conservative postures in prospectuses, especially
with respect to judgmental and possibly unfavorable matters. If a
different philosophy now were to be read into the 1934 Act,
inviting litigation for arguably misleading understatement as well
as for overstatement of the issuer's prospects, the hazard of
"going to market" -- already not inconsequential -- would be
immeasurably increased.
[
Footnote 2/5]
The dissent also charges that we are callous toward the
"investing public" -- a term it does not define. It would have been
more accurate, perhaps, to have spoken of the noninvesting public,
because the Court's decision does not abandon the investing public.
The great majority of registered issues of securities are offered
by established corporations that have shares outstanding and held
by members of the investing public. The types of suits that the
dissent would encourage could result in large damage claims, costly
litigation, generous settlements to avoid such cost, and often --
where the litigation runs its course -- in large verdicts. The
shareholders of the defendant corporations -- the "investing
public" -- would ultimately bear the burden of this litigation,
including the fraudulent suits that would not be screened out by
the dissent's bare requirement of a "logical nexus between the
alleged fraud and the sale or purchase of a security."
MR JUSTICE BLACKMUN, with whom MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS and MR.
JUSTICE BRENNAN join, dissenting.
Today the Court graves into stone
Birnbaum's [
Footnote 3/1] arbitrary principle of
standing. For this task, the Court, unfortunately, chooses to
utilize three blunt chisels: (1) reliance on the legislative
history of the 1933 and
Page 421 U. S. 762
1934 Securities Acts, conceded as inconclusive in this
particular context; (2) acceptance as precedent of two decades of
lower court decisions following a doctrine, never before examined
here, that was pronounced by a justifiably esteemed panel of that
Court of Appeals regarded as the "Mother Court" in this area of the
law, [
Footnote 3/2] but under
entirely different circumstances; and (3) resort to utter
pragmaticality and a conjectural assertion of "policy
considerations" deemed to arise in distinguishing the meritorious
Rule 10b-5 suit from the meretricious one. In so doing, the Court
exhibits a preternatural solicitousness for corporate wellbeing and
a seeming callousness toward the investing public quite out of
keeping, it seems to me, with our own traditions and the intent of
the securities laws.
See Affiliated Ute Citizens v. United
States, 406 U. S. 128,
406 U. S. 151
(1972);
Superintendent of Insurance v. Bankers Life & Cas.
Co., 404 U. S. 6,
404 U. S. 12
(1971);
SEC v. National Securities, Inc., 393 U.
S. 453,
393 U. S. 463
(1969);
Tcherepnin v. Knight, 389 U.
S. 332,
389 U. S. 336
(1967);
SEC v. Capital Gains Bureau, 375 U.
S. 180,
375 U. S. 195
(1963).
The plaintiff's complaint -- and that is all that is before us
now -- raises disturbing claims of fraud. It alleges that the
directors of "New Blue Chip" and the majority shareholders of "Old
Blue Chip" engaged in a deceptive and manipulative scheme designed
to subvert the intent of the 1967 antitrust consent decree and to
enhance the value of their own shares in a subsequent offering.
Although the complaint is too long to reproduce here,
see
App. 22, the plaintiff, in short, contends that the much-negotiated
plan of reorganization of Old Blue
Page 421 U. S. 763
Chip, pursuant to the decree and approved by the District Court,
was intended to compensate former retailer-users of Blue Chip
stamps for damages suffered as a result of the antitrust
violations. Accordingly, the majority shareholders were to be
divested of 55% of their interest; Old Blue Chip was to be merged
into a new company; and 55% of the common shares of the new company
were to be offered to the former users on a
pro rata
basis, determined by the quantity of stamps issued to each of these
nonshareholding users during a designated period. Some 621,000
shares were thus to be offered in units, each consisting of three
shares of common and a $100 debenture, in return for $101 cash.
It is the plaintiff's pleaded position that this offer to the
former users was intended by the antitrust court and the Government
to be a "bargain," since the then reasonable market value of each
unit was actually $315. The plaintiff alleged, however, that the
offering shareholders had no intention of complying in good faith
with the terms of the consent decree and of permitting the former
users of Blue Chip stamps to obtain the bargain offering. Rather,
they conspired to dissuade the offerees from purchasing the units
by including substantially misleading and negative information in
the prospectus under the heading "Items of Special Interest." The
prospectus contained the following statements, allegedly false and
allegedly made to deter the plaintiff and its class from purchasing
the units: (1) that "[n]et income for the current fiscal year will
be adversely affected by payments aggregating $8,486,000 made since
March 2, 1968, in settlement of claims" against New Blue Chip; (2)
that net income "would be adversely affected by a substantial
decrease in the use of the Company's trading stamp service"; (3)
that net income "would be adversely affected by a sale of one-third
of the Company's trading stamp
Page 421 U. S. 764
business in California"; (4) that "Claims or Causes of Action
(as defined) against the Company, including prayers for treble
damages, now aggregate approximately $29,000,000"; and (5) that,
based upon "statistical evaluations," "the Company presently
estimates that 97.5% of all stamps issued will ultimately be
redeemed." App. 56, 66.
Plaintiff alleged that these negative statements were known, or
should have been known, by the defendants to be false since, for
example, the $29,000,000 in purported legal claims were settled for
less than $1,000,000 only three months later, and, as a historical
fact, less than 90% of all trading stamps are redeemed.
Importantly, when the defendants offered their own shares for sale
to the public a year later, the prospectus issued at that time made
no reference to these factors even though, to the extent that they
were relevant on the date of the first prospectus, one year
earlier, they would have been equally relevant on the date of the
second. As a result of the defendants' negative statements,
plaintiff claims that it and its class were dissuaded from
exercising their option to purchase Blue Chip shares, and that they
were damaged accordingly.
From a reading of the complaint in relation to the language of §
10(b) of the 1934 Act and of Rule 10b-5, it is manifest that
plaintiff has alleged the use of a deceptive scheme "in connection
with the purchase or sale of any security." To my mind, the word
"sale" ordinarily and naturally may be understood to mean not only
a single, individualized act transferring property from one party
to another, but also the generalized event of public disposal of
property through advertisement, auction, or some other market
mechanism. Here, there is an obvious, indeed a court-ordered,
"sale" of securities in the special offering of New Blue Chip
shares and debentures to former users. Yet the Court denies
this
Page 421 U. S. 765
plaintiff the right to maintain a suit under Rule 10b-5 because
it does not fit into the mechanistic categories of either
"purchaser" or "seller." This, surely, is an anomaly, for the very
purpose of the alleged scheme was to inhibit this plaintiff from
ever acquiring the status of "purchaser." Faced with this abnormal
divergence from the usual pattern of securities frauds, the Court
pays no heed to the unremedied wrong or to the portmanteau nature
of § 10(b).
The broad purpose and scope of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934 are manifest. Senator Fletcher, Chairman of the Senate
Committee on Banking and Currency, in introducing S. 2693, the bill
that became the 1934 Act, reviewed the general purposes of the
legislation:
"Manipulators who have in the past had a comparatively free hand
to befuddle and fool the public and to extract from the public
millions of dollars through stock exchange operations are to be
curbed and deprived of the opportunity to grow fat on the savings
of the average man and woman of America. Under this bill, the
securities exchanges will not only have the appearance of an open
market place for investors, but will be truly open to them, free
from the hectic operations and dangerous practices which, in the
past, have enabled a handful of men to operate with stacked cards
against the general body of the outside investors. For example,
besides forbidding fraudulent practices and unwholesome
manipulations by professional market operators, the bill seeks to
deprive corporate directors, corporate officers, and other
corporate insiders of the opportunity to play the stocks of their
companies against the interests of the stockholders of their
companies."
78 Cong.Rec. 2271 (1934).
Page 421 U. S. 766
The Senator went on to describe the function of each of the many
provisions of the bill, including § 9(c) which, without significant
alteration, became § 10(b) of the Act. He said, as to this section,
in terms that surely are broad:
"The Commission is also given power to forbid any other devices
in connection with security transactions which it finds detrimental
to the public interest or to the proper protection of
investors."
Ibid.
Similarly, the broad scope of the identical provision in the
House version of the bill was emphasized by one of the principal
draftsmen, in testimony before the House Committee on Interstate
and Foreign Commerce. Summing up § 9(c), he stated:
"Subsection (c) says, 'Thou shalt not devise any other cunning
devices.'"
"
* * * *"
". . . Of course, subsection (c) is a catch-all clause to
prevent manipulative devices[.] I do not think there is any
objection to that kind of a clause. The Commission should have the
authority to deal with new manipulative devices."
Testimony of Thomas G. Corcoran, Hearing on H.R. 7852 and H.R.
8720 before the House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce,
73d Cong., 2d Sess., 115 (1934).
In adopting Rule 10b-5 in 1942, the Securities and Exchange
Commission issued a press release stating:
"The new rule closes a loophole in the protections against fraud
administered by the Commission by prohibiting individuals or
companies from buying securities if they engage in fraud in their
purchase."
SEC Release No. 3230 (May 21, 1942). To say specifically that
certain types of fraud are within Rule 10b-5, of course, is not to
say that others are necessarily excluded. That this
Page 421 U. S. 767
is so is confirmed by the apparently casual origins of the Rule,
as recalled by a former SEC staff attorney in remarks made at a
conference on federal securities laws several years ago:
"It was one day in the year 1943, I believe. I was sitting in my
office in the S.E.C. building in Philadelphia and I received a call
from Jim Treanor, who was then the Director of the Trading and
Exchange Division. He said, 'I have just been on the telephone with
Paul Rowen,' who was then the S.E.C. Regional Administrator in
Boston,"
"and he has told me about the president of some company in
Boston who is going around buying up the stock of his company from
his own shareholders at $4.00 a share, and he has been telling them
that the company is doing very badly, whereas, in fact, the
earnings are going to be quadrupled, and will be $2.00 a share for
this coming year. Is there anything we can do about it?"
"So he came upstairs and I called in my secretary and I looked
at Section 10(b) and I looked at Section 17, and I put them
together, and the only discussion we had there was where 'in
connection with the purchase or sale' should be, and we decided it
should be at the end."
"We called the Commission and we got on the calendar, and I
don't remember whether we got there that morning or after lunch. We
passed a piece of paper around to all the commissioners. All the
commissioners read the rule, and they tossed it on the table,
indicating approval. Nobody said anything except Sumner Pike, who
said, 'Well,' he said, 'we are against fraud, aren't we?' That is
how it happened."
Remarks of Milton Freeman, Conference on Codification of the
Federal Securities Laws, 22 Bus.Law. 793, 922 (1967).
Page 421 U. S. 768
The question under both Rule 105 and its parent statute, §
10(b), is whether fraud was employed -- and the language is
critical -- by "any person . . . in connection with the purchase or
sale of any security." On the allegations here, the nexus between
the asserted fraud and the conducting of a "sale" is obvious and
inescapable, and no more should be required to sustain the
plaintiff's complaint against a motion to dismiss.
The fact situation in
Birnbaum itself, of course, is
far removed from that now before the Court, for there, the
fundament of the complaint was that the controlling shareholder had
misrepresented the circumstances of an attractive merger offer and
then, after rejecting the merger, had sold his controlling shares
at a price double their then market value to a corporation formed
by 10 manufacturers who wished control of a captive source's supply
when there was a market shortage. The Second Circuit turned aside
an effort by small shareholders to bring this claim of breach of
fiduciary duty under Rule 10b-5 by concluding that the Rule and §
10(b) protected only those who had bought or had sold
securities.
Many cases applying the
Birnbaum doctrine and
continuing critical comments from the academic world [
Footnote 3/3] followed
Page 421 U. S. 769
in its wake, but, until today, the Court remained serenely above
the fray.
To support its decision to adopt the
Birnbaum doctrine,
the Court points to the "longstanding acceptance by the courts" and
to "Congress' failure to reject
Birnbaum's reasonable
interpretational of the wording of 10(b)."
Ante at
421 U. S. 733.
In addition, the Court purports to find support in "evidence from
the texts of the 1933 and 1934 Acts," although it concedes this to
be "not conclusive."
Ibid. But the greater portion of the
Court's opinion is devoted to its discussion of the "danger of
vexatiousness,"
ante at
421 U. S. 739,
that accompanies litigation under Rule 10b-5 and that is said to be
"different in degree and in kind from that which accompanies
litigation in general."
Ibid. It speaks of harm from the
"very pendency of the lawsuit,"
ante at
421 U. S. 740,
something like the recognized dilemma of the physician sued for
malpractice; of the "disruption of normal business activities which
may accompany a lawsuit,"
ante at
421 U. S. 743;
and of "proof . . . which depend[s] almost entirely on oral
testimony,"
ibid., as if all these were unknown to
lawsuits taking place in America's courthouses every day. In
turning to, and being influenced by, these "policy considerations,"
ante at
421 U. S. 737,
or these "considerations of policy,"
ante at
421 U. S. 749,
the Court, in my view, unfortunately mires itself in speculation
and conjecture
Page 421 U. S. 770
not usually seen in its opinions. In order to support an
interpretation that obviously narrows a provision of the securities
laws designed to be a "catch-all," the Court takes alarm at the
"practical difficulties,"
ante at
421 U. S. 754,
421 U. S. 755,
that would follow the removal of
Birnbaum's barrier.
Certainly, this Court must be aware of the realities of life,
but it is unwarranted for the Court to take a form of attenuated
judicial notice of the motivations that defense counsel may have in
settling a case, or of the difficulties that a plaintiff may have
in proving his claim.
Perhaps it is true that more cases that come within the
Birnbaum doctrine can be properly proved than those that
fall outside it. But this is no reason for denying standing to sue
to plaintiffs, such as the one in this case, who allegedly are
injured by novel forms of manipulation. We should be wary about
heeding the seductive call of expediency and about substituting
convenience and ease of processing for the more difficult task of
separating the genuine claim from the unfounded one.
Instead of the artificiality of
Birnbaum, the essential
test of a valid Rule 10b-5 claim, it seems to me, must be the
showing of a logical nexus between the alleged fraud and the sale
or purchase of a security. It is inconceivable that Congress could
have intended a broad-ranging anti-fraud provision, such as §
10(b), and, at the same time, have intended to impose, or be deemed
to welcome, a mechanical overtone and requirement such as the
Birnbaum doctrine. The facts of this case, if proved and
accepted by the factfinder, surely are within the conduct that
Congress intended to ban. Whether this particular plaintiff, or any
plaintiff, will be able eventually to carry the burdens of proving
fraud and of proving reliance and damage -- that is, causality and
injury -- is a matter that should not be left to speculations
Page 421 U. S. 771
of "policy" of the kind now advanced in this forum so far
removed from witnesses and evidence.
Finally, I am uneasy about the type of precedent the present
decision establishes. Policy considerations can be applied and
utilized in like fashion in other situations. The acceptance of
this decisional route in this case may well come back to haunt us
elsewhere before long. I would decide the case to fulfill the broad
purpose that the language of the statutes and the legislative
history dictate, and I would avoid the Court's pragmatic solution
resting upon a 20-odd-year-old, severely criticized doctrine
enunciated for a factually distinct situation.
In short, I would abandon the
Birnbaum doctrine as a
rule of decision in favor of a more general test of nexus, just as
the Seventh Circuit did in
Eason v. General Motors Acceptance
Corp., 490 F.2d 654, 661 (1973),
cert. denied, 416
U.S. 960 (1974). I would not worry about any imagined inability of
our federal trial and appellate courts to control the flowering of
the types of cases that the Court fears might result. Nor would I
yet be disturbed about dire consequences that a basically
pessimistic attitude foresees if the
Birnbaum doctrine
were allowed quietly to expire. Sensible standards of proof and of
demonstrable damages would evolve and serve to protect the worthy
and shut out the frivolous.
[
Footnote 3/1]
Birnbaum v. Newport Steel Corp., 193 F.2d 461 (CA2),
cert. denied, 343 U.S. 956 (1952).
[
Footnote 3/2]
Just this Term, however, we did not view with such tender regard
another decision by the very same panel.
See United States v.
Feola, 420 U. S. 671
(1975), and its treatment of an analogy advanced in
United
States v. Crimmins, 123 F.2d 271 (CA2 1941).
[
Footnote 3/3]
See, e.g., Lowenfels, The Demise of the
Birnbaum Doctrine: A New Era for Rule 10b-5, 54 Va.L.Rev.
268 (1968); Boone & McGowan, Standing to Sue Under SEC Rule
10b-5, 49 Tex.L.Rev. 617 (1971); Whitaker, The
Birnbaum
Doctrine: An Assessment, 23 Ala.L.Rev. 543 (1971); Ruder, Current
Developments in the Federal Law of Corporate Fiduciary Relations --
Standing to Sue Under Rule 10b-5, 26 Bus.Law. 1289 (1971); Fuller,
Another Demise of the
Birnbaum Doctrine: "Tolls the Knell
of Parting Day?", 25 Miami L.Rev. 131 (1970); Comment, Dumping
Birnbaum to Force Analysis of the Standing Requirement
under Rule 10b-5, 6 Loyola L.J. 230 (1975); Note, Standing to Sue
in 10b-5 Actions, 49 Notre Dame Law. 1131 (1974); Comment, 105
Standing Under
Birnbaum: The Case of the Missing Remedy,
24 Hastings L.J. 1007 (1973); Comment, The Purchaser-Seller
Requirement of Rule 105 Reevaluated, 44 U.Colo.L.Rev. 151 (1972);
Comment, Inroads on the Necessity for a Consummated Purchase or
Sale Under Rule 105, 1969 Duke L.J. 349; Comment, The Decline of
the Purchaser-Seller Requirement of Rule 105, 14 Villanova L.Rev.
499 (1969); Comment, The Purchaser-Seller Limitation to SEC Rule
105, 53 Cornell L.Rev. 684 (1968); Comment, The Purchaser-Seller
Rule: An Archaic Tool for Determining Standing Under Rule 105, 56
Geo.L.J. 1177 (1968).
See Note, Limiting the Plaintiff
Class: Rule 105 and the Federal Securities Code, 72 Mich.L.Rev.
1398, 1412 (1974).