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SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 17–1077
_________________
FRANCIS V. LORENZO, PETITIONER
v.
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
on writ of certiorari to the united states
court of appeals for the district of columbia circuit
[March 27, 2019]
Justice Breyer delivered the opinion of the
Court.
Securities and Exchange Commission Rule 10b–5
makes it unlawful:
“(a) To employ any device, scheme, or artifice
to defraud,
“(b) To make any untrue statement of a material
fact . . . , or
“(c) To engage in any act, practice, or course
of business which operates or would operate as a fraud or
deceit . . .
in connection with the purchase or sale of any
security.” 17 CFR §240.10b–5 (2018).
In
Janus Capital Group, Inc. v.
First
Derivative Traders, 564 U.S.
135 (2011), we examined the second of these provisions, Rule
10b–5(b), which forbids the “mak[ing]” of “any untrue statement of
a material fact.” We held that the “
maker of a statement is
the person or entity with ultimate authority over the statement,
including its content and whether and how to communicate it.”
Id., at 142 (emphasis added). We said that “[w]ithout
control, a person or entity can merely suggest what to say, not
‘make’ a statement in its own right.”
Ibid. And we
illustrated our holding with an analogy: “[W]hen a speechwriter
drafts a speech, the content is entirely within the control of the
person who delivers it. And it is the speaker who takes credit—or
blame—for what is ultimately said.”
Id., at 143. On the
facts of
Janus, this meant that an investment adviser who
had merely “participat[ed] in the drafting of a false statement”
“made” by another could not be held liable in a private action
under subsection (b) of Rule 10b–5.
Id., at 145.
In this case, we consider whether those who do
not “make” statements (as
Janus defined “make”), but who
disseminate false or misleading statements to potential investors
with the intent to defraud, can be found to have violated the
other parts of Rule 10b–5, subsections (a) and (c), as well
as related provisions of the securities laws, §10(b) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 48Stat. 891, as amended, 15
U. S. C. §78j(b), and §17(a)(1) of the Securities Act of
1933, 48Stat. 84–85, as amended, 15 U. S. C. §77q(a)(1).
We believe that they can.
I
A
For our purposes, the relevant facts are not
in dispute. Francis Lorenzo, the petitioner, was the director of
investment banking at Charles Vista, LLC, a registered
broker-dealer in Staten Island, New York. Lorenzo’s only investment
banking client at the time was Waste2Energy Holdings, Inc., a
company developing technology to convert “solid waste” into “clean
renewable energy.”
In a June 2009 public filing, Waste2Energy
stated that its total assets were worth about $14 million. This
figure included intangible assets, namely, intellectual property,
valued at more than $10 million. Lorenzo was skeptical of this
valuation, later testifying that the intangibles were a “dead
asset” because the technology “didn’t really work.”
During the summer and early fall of 2009,
Waste2Energy hired Lorenzo’s firm, Charles Vista, to sell to
investors $15 million worth of debentures, a form of “debt secured
only by the debtor’s earning power, not by a lien on any specific
asset,” Black’s Law Dictionary 486 (10th ed. 2014).
In early October 2009, Waste2Energy publicly
disclosed, and Lorenzo was told, that its intellectual property was
worthless, that it had “ ‘ “[w]rit[ten] off
. . . all [of its] intangible assets,” ’ ” and
that its total assets (as of March 31, 2009) amounted to
$370,552.
Shortly thereafter, on October 14, 2009, Lorenzo
sent two e-mails to prospective investors describing the debenture
offering. According to later testimony by Lorenzo, he sent the
e-mails at the direction of his boss, who supplied the content and
“approved” the messages. The e-mails described the investment in
Waste2Energy as having “3 layers of protection,” including $10
million in “confirmed assets.” The e-mails nowhere revealed the
fact that Waste2Energy had publicly stated that its assets were in
fact worth less than $400,000. Lorenzo signed the e-mails with his
own name, he identified himself as “Vice President—Investment
Banking,” and he invited the recipients to “call with any
questions.”
B
In 2013, the Securities and Exchange
Commission instituted proceedings against Lorenzo (along with his
boss and Charles Vista). The Commission charged that Lorenzo had
violated Rule 10b–5, §10(b) of the Exchange Act, and §17(a)(1) of
the Securities Act. Ultimately, the Commission found that Lorenzo
had run afoul of these provisions by sending false and misleading
statements to investors with intent to defraud. As a sanction, it
fined Lorenzo $15,000, ordered him to cease and desist from
violating the securities laws, and barred him from working in the
securities industry for life.
Lorenzo appealed, arguing primarily that in
sending the e-mails he lacked the intent required to establish a
violation of Rule 10b–5, §10(b), and §17(a)(1), which we have
characterized as “ ‘a mental state embracing intent to
deceive, manipulate, or defraud.’ ”
Aaron v.
SEC,
446 U.S.
680, 686, and n. 5 (1980). With one judge dissenting, the
Court of Appeals panel rejected Lorenzo’s lack-of-intent argument.
872 F.3d 578, 583 (CADC 2017). Lorenzo does not challenge the
panel’s scienter finding. Reply Brief 17.
Lorenzo also argued that, in light of
Janus, he could not be held liable under subsection (b) of
Rule 10b–5. 872 F. 3d, at 586–587. The panel agreed. Because
his boss “asked Lorenzo to send the emails, supplied the central
content, and approved the messages for distribution,”
id.,
at 588, it was the boss that had “ultimate authority” over the
content of the statement “and whether and how to communicate it,”
Janus, 563 U. S., at 142. (We took this case on the
assumption that Lorenzo was not a “maker” under subsection (b) of
Rule 10b–5, and do not revisit the court’s decision on this
point.)
The Court of Appeals nonetheless sustained (with
one judge dissenting) the Commission’s finding that, by knowingly
disseminating false information to prospective investors, Lorenzo
had violated other parts of Rule 10b–5, subsections (a) and (c), as
well as §10(b) and §17(a)(1).
Lorenzo then filed a petition for certiorari in
this Court. We granted review to resolve disagreement about whether
someone who is not a “maker” of a misstatement under
Janus
can nevertheless be found to have violated the other subsections of
Rule 10b–5 and related provisions of the securities laws, when the
only conduct involved concerns a misstatement. Compare
e.g.,
872 F.3d 578, with
WPP Luxembourg Gamma Three Sarl v.
Spot Runner, Inc., 655 F.3d 1039, 1057–1058 (CA9 2011).
II
A
At the outset, we review the relevant
provisions of Rule 10b–5 and of the statutes. See Appendix,
infra. As we have said, subsection (a) of the Rule makes it
unlawful to “employ any device, scheme, or artifice to defraud.”
Subsection (b) makes it unlawful to “make any untrue statement of a
material fact.” And subsection (c) makes it unlawful to “engage in
any act, practice
, or course of business” that “operates
. . . as a fraud or deceit.” See 17 CFR §240.10b–5.
There are also two statutes at issue. Section
10(b) makes it unlawful to “use or employ . . . any
manipulative or deceptive device or contrivance” in contravention
of Commission rules and regulations. 15 U. S. C. §78j(b).
By its authority under that section, the Commission promulgated
Rule 10b–5. The second statutory provision is §17(a), which, like
Rule 10b–5, is organized into three subsections. 15
U. S. C. §77q(a). Here, however, we consider only the
first subsection, §17(a)(1), for this is the only subsection that
the Commission charged Lorenzo with violating. Like Rule 10b–5(a),
(a)(1) makes it unlawful to “employ any device, scheme, or artifice
to defraud.”
B
After examining the relevant language,
precedent, and purpose, we conclude that (assuming other
here-irrelevant legal requirements are met) dissemination of false
or misleading statements with intent to defraud can fall within the
scope of subsections (a) and (c) of Rule 10b–5, as well as the
relevant statutory provisions. In our view, that is so even if the
disseminator did not “make” the statements and consequently falls
outside subsection (b) of the Rule.
It would seem obvious that the words in these
provisions are, as ordinarily used, sufficiently broad to include
within their scope the dissemination of false or misleading
information with the intent to defraud. By sending emails he
understood to contain material untruths, Lorenzo “employ[ed]” a
“device,” “scheme,” and “artifice to defraud” within the meaning of
subsection (a) of the Rule, §10(b), and §17(a)(1). By the same
conduct, he “engage[d] in a[n] act, practice, or course of
business” that “operate[d] . . . as a fraud or deceit”
under subsection (c) of the Rule. Recall that Lorenzo does not
challenge the appeals court’s scienter finding, so we take for
granted that he sent the emails with “intent to deceive,
manipulate, or defraud” the recipients.
Aaron, 446
U. S., at 686, n. 5. Under the circumstances, it is difficult
to see how his actions could escape the reach of those
provisions.
Resort to dictionary definitions only
strengthens this conclusion. A “ ‘device,’ ” we have
observed, is simply “ ‘[t]hat which is devised, or formed by
design’ ”; a “ ‘scheme’ ” is a
“ ‘project,’ ” “ ‘plan[,] or program of something to
be done’ ”; and an “ ‘artifice’ ” is “ ‘an
artful stratagem or trick.’ ”
Id., at 696, n. 13
(quoting Webster’s International Dictionary 713, 2234, 157 (2d ed.
1934) (Webster’s Second)). By these lights, dissemination of false
or misleading material is easily an “artful stratagem” or a “plan,”
“devised” to defraud an investor under subsection (a). See Rule
10b–5(a) (making it unlawful to “employ any device, scheme, or
artifice to defraud”); §17(a)(1) (same). The words “act” and
“practice” in subsection (c) are similarly expansive. Webster’s
Second 25 (defining “act” as “a doing” or a “thing done”);
id., at 1937 (defining “practice” as an “action” or “deed”);
see Rule 10b–5(c) (making it unlawful to “engage in a[n] act,
practice, or course of business” that “operates . . . as
a fraud or deceit”).
These provisions capture a wide range of
conduct. Applying them may present difficult problems of scope in
borderline cases. Purpose, precedent, and circumstance could lead
to narrowing their reach in other contexts. But we see nothing
borderline about this case, where the relevant conduct (as found by
the Commission) consists of disseminating false or misleading
information to prospective investors with the intent to defraud.
And while one can readily imagine other actors tangentially
involved in dissemination—say, a mailroom clerk—for whom liability
would typically be inappropriate, the petitioner in this case sent
false statements directly to investors, invited them to follow up
with questions, and did so in his capacity as vice president of an
investment banking company.
C
Lorenzo argues that, despite the natural
meaning of these provisions, they should not reach his conduct.
This is so, he says, because the only way to be liable for false
statements is through those provisions that refer
specifically to false statements. Other provisions, he says,
concern “scheme liability claims” and are violated only when
conduct other than misstatements is involved. Brief for Petitioner
4–6, 28–30. Thus, only those who “make” untrue statements under
subsection (b) can violate Rule 10b–5 in connection with
statements. (Similarly, §17(a)(2) would be the sole route for
finding liability for statements under §17(a).) Holding to the
contrary, he and the dissent insist, would render subsection (b) of
Rule 10b–5 “superfluous.” See
post, at 6–7 (opinion of
Thomas, J.).
The premise of this argument is that each of
these provisions should be read as governing different, mutually
exclusive, spheres of conduct. But this Court and the Commission
have long recognized considerable overlap among the subsections of
the Rule and related provisions of the securities laws. See
Herman & MacLean v.
Huddleston,
459 U.S.
375, 383 (1983) (“[I]t is hardly a novel proposition that”
different portions of the securities laws “prohibit some of the
same conduct” (internal quotation marks omitted)). As we have
explained, these laws marked the “first experiment in federal
regulation of the securities industry.”
SEC v.
Capital
Gains Research Bureau, Inc.,
375 U.S.
180, 198 (1963). It is “understandable, therefore,” that “in
declaring certain practices unlawful,” it was thought prudent “to
include both a general proscription against fraudulent and
deceptive practices and, out of an abundance of caution, a specific
proscription against nondisclosure” even though “a specific
proscription against nondisclosure” might in other circumstances be
deemed “surplusage.”
Id., at 198–199.
“Each
succeeding prohibition” was thus “meant to cover additional kinds
of illegalities—not to narrow the reach of the prior sections.”
United States v.
Naftalin,
441
U.S. 768, 774 (1979). We have found “ ‘no warrant for
narrowing alternative provisions . . . adopted with the
purpose of affording added safeguards.’ ”
Ibid.
(quoting
United States v.
Gilliland,
312 U.S.
86, 93 (1941)); see
Affiliated Ute Citizens of Utah v.
United States,
406 U.S.
128, 152–153 (1972) (While “the second subparagraph of [Rule
10b–5] specifies the making of an untrue statement
. . . [t]he first and third subparagraphs are not
so restricted”). And since its earliest days, the Commission has
not viewed these provisions as mutually exclusive. See,
e.g., In
re R. D. Bayly & Co., 19 S. E. C. 773 (1945) (finding
violations of what would become Rules 10b–5(b) and (c) based on the
same misrepresentations and omissions);
In re Arthur Hays
& Co., 5 S. E. C. 271 (1939) (finding violations of both
§§17(a)(2) and (a)(3) based on false representations in stock
sales).
The idea that each subsection of Rule 10b–5
governs a separate type of conduct is also difficult to reconcile
with the language of subsections (a) and (c). It should go without
saying that at least some conduct amounts to “employ[ing]” a
“device, scheme, or artifice to defraud” under subsection (a) as
well as “engag[ing] in a[n] act . . . which operates
. . . as a fraud” under subsection (c). In
Affiliated
Ute, for instance, we described the “defendants’ activities” as
falling “within the very language of one or the other of those
subparagraphs, a ‘course of business’ or a ‘device, scheme, or
artifice’ that operated as a fraud.” 406 U. S., at 153. (The
dissent, for its part, offers no account of how the superfluity
problems that motivate its interpretation can be avoided where
subsections (a) and (c) are concerned.)
Coupled with the Rule’s expansive language,
which readily embraces the conduct before us, this considerable
overlap suggests we should not hesitate to hold that Lorenzo’s
conduct ran afoul of subsections (a) and (c), as well as the
related statutory provisions. Our conviction is strengthened by the
fact that we here confront behavior that, though plainly
fraudulent, might otherwise fall outside the scope of the Rule.
Lorenzo’s view that subsection (b), the making-false-statements
provision,
exclusively regulates conduct involving false or
misleading statements would mean those who disseminate false
statements with the intent to cheat investors might escape
liability under the Rule altogether. But using false
representations to induce the purchase of securities would seem a
paradigmatic example of securities fraud. We do not know why
Congress or the Commission would have wanted to disarm enforcement
in this way. And we cannot easily reconcile Lorenzo’s approach with
the basic purpose behind these laws: “to substitute a philosophy of
full disclosure for the philosophy of
caveat emptor and thus
to achieve a high standard of business ethics in the securities
industry.”
Capital Gains, 375 U. S., at 186. See also,
e.g., SEC v.
W. J. Howey Co.,
328 U.S.
293, 299 (1946) (the securities laws were designed “to meet the
countless and variable schemes devised by those who seek the use of
the money of others on the promise of profits”).
III
Lorenzo and the dissent make a few other
important arguments. They contend that applying subsections (a) or
(c) of Rule 10b–5 to conduct like his would render our decision in
Janus (which we described at the outset,
supra, at
1–2) “a dead letter
,” post, at 9. But we do not see how that
is so. In
Janus, we considered the language in subsection
(b), which prohibits the “mak[ing]” of “any untrue statement of a
material fact.” See 564 U. S., at 141–143. We held that the
“maker” of a “statement” is the “person or entity with ultimate
authority over the statement.”
Id., at 142. And we found
that subsection (b) did not (under the circumstances) cover an
investment adviser who helped
draft misstatements issued by
a
different entity that controlled the statements’ content.
Id., at 146–148
. We said nothing about the Rule’s
application to the dissemination of false or misleading
information. And we can assume that
Janus would remain
relevant (and preclude liability) where an individual neither
makes nor
disseminates false information—provided, of
course, that the individual is not involved in some other form of
fraud.
Next, Lorenzo points to the statute’s “aiding
and abetting” provision. 15 U. S. C. §78t(e). This
provision, enforceable only by the Commission (and not by private
parties), makes it unlawful to “knowingly or recklessly
. . . provid[e] substantial assistance to another person”
who violates the Rule.
Ibid.; see
Janus, 564
U. S., at 143 (citing
Central Bank of Denver, N. A. v.
First Interstate Bank of Denver, N. A.,
511 U.S.
164 (1994)). Lorenzo claims that imposing primary liability
upon his conduct would erase or at least weaken what is otherwise a
clear distinction between primary and secondary (
i.e.,
aiding and abetting) liability. He emphasizes that, under today’s
holding, a disseminator might be a primary offender with respect to
subsection (a) of Rule 10b–5 (by employing a “scheme” to “defraud”)
and also secondarily liable as an aider and abettor with respect to
subsection (b) (by providing substantial assistance to one who
“makes” a false statement). And he refers to two cases that, in his
view, argue in favor of circumscribing primary liability. See
Central Bank, 511 U. S., at 164;
Stoneridge
Investment Partners,
LLC v.
Scientific-Atlanta,
Inc.,
552 U.S.
148 (2008).
We do not believe, however, that our decision
creates a serious anomaly or otherwise weakens the distinction
between primary and secondary liability. For one thing, it is
hardly unusual for the same conduct to be a primary violation with
respect to one offense and aiding and abetting with respect to
another. John, for example, might sell Bill an unregistered firearm
in order to help Bill rob a bank, under circumstances that make him
primarily li- able for the gun sale and secondarily liable for the
bank robbery.
For another, the cases to which Lorenzo refers
do not help his cause. Take
Central Bank, where we held that
Rule 10b–5’s private right of action does not permit suits against
secondary violators. 511 U. S., at 177. The holding of
Central Bank, we have said, suggests the need for a “clean
line” between conduct that constitutes a primary violation of Rule
10b–5 and conduct that amounts to a secondary violation.
Janus, 564 U. S., at 143, and n. 6. Thus, in
Janus, we sought an interpretation of “make” that could
neatly divide primary violators and actors too far removed from the
ultimate decision to communicate a statement.
Ibid. (citing
Central Bank, 511 U. S. 164). The line we adopt today
is just as administrable: Those who disseminate false statements
with intent to defraud are primarily liable under Rules 10b–5(a)
and (c), §10(b), and §17(a)(1), even if they are secondarily liable
under Rule 10b–5(b). Lorenzo suggests that classifying
dissemination as a primary violation would inappropriately subject
peripheral players in fraud (including him, naturally) to
substantial liability. We suspect the investors who received
Lorenzo’s e-mails would not view the deception so favorably. And as
Central Bank itself made clear, even a bit participant in
the securities markets “may be liable as a primary violator under
[Rule] 10b–5” so long as “all of the requirements for primary
liability . . . are met.”
Id., at 191.
Lorenzo’s reliance on
Stoneridge is even
further afield. There, we held that private plaintiffs could not
bring suit against certain securities defendants based on
undisclosed deceptions upon which the plaintiffs could not
have relied. 552 U. S., at 159. But the Commission, unlike
private parties, need not show reliance in its enforcement actions.
And even supposing reliance were relevant here, Lorenzo’s conduct
involved the direct transmission of false statements to prospective
investors intended to induce reliance—far from the kind of
concealed fraud at issue in
Stoneridge.
As for Lorenzo’s suggestion that those like him
ought to be held secondarily liable, this offer will, far too
often, prove illusory. In instances where a “maker” of a false
statement does
not violate subsection (b) of the Rule
(perhaps because he lacked the necessary intent), a disseminator of
those statements, even one knowingly engaged in an egregious fraud,
could not be held to have violated the “aiding and abetting”
statute. That is because the statute insists that there be a
primary violator to whom the secondary violator provided
“substantial assistance.” 15 U. S. C. §78t(e). And the
latter can be “deemed to be in violation” of the provision only “to
the same extent as the person to whom such assistance is provided.”
Ibid. In other words, if Acme Corp. could not be held liable
under subsection (b) for a statement it made, then a knowing
disseminator of those statements could not be held liable for
aiding and abetting Acme under subsection (b). And if, as Lorenzo
claims, the disseminator has not primarily violated other parts of
Rule 10b–5, then such a fraud, whatever its intent or consequences,
might escape liability altogether.
That is not what Congress intended. Rather,
Congress intended to root out all manner of fraud in the securities
industry. And it gave to the Commission the tools to accomplish
that job.
* * *
For these reasons, the judgment of the Court
of Appeals is affirmed.
So ordered.
Justice Kavanaugh took no part in the
consideration or decision of this case.
APPENDIX
17 CFR §240.10b–5
“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.”
15 U. S. C. §78j
“It shall be unlawful for any person, directly
or in- directly, by the use of any means or instrumentality of in-
terstate commerce or of the mails, or of any facility of any
national securities exchange—
* * *
“(b) To use or employ, in connection with the
purchase or sale of any security registered on a national
securities ex- change or any security not so registered, or any
securities-based swap agreement[,] any manipulative or decep- tive
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.”
15 U. S. C. §77q
“(a) Use of interstate commerce for purpose of
fraud or deceit
“It shall be unlawful for any person in the
offer or sale of any securities (including security-based swaps) or
any security-based swap agreement . . . by the use of any
means or instruments of transportation or communication in
interstate commerce or by 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
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.”
15 U. S. C. §78t
“(e) Prosecution of persons who aid and abet
violations
“For purposes of any action brought by the
Commission . . . , any person that knowingly or
recklessly provides substantial assistance to another person in
violation of a provision of this chapter, or of any rule or
regulation issued under this chapter, shall be deemed in violation
of such provision to the same extent as the person to whom such
assistance is provided.