OPINION OF THE COURT
We must decide whether plaintiff, All Seasons Resorts, Inc. (ASR), in marketing memberships in a system of outdoor resort campgrounds, is offering securities to the public so as to require compliance with the registration provisions of section 352-e of New York’s "Blue Sky” Law, the Martin Act (General Business Law art 23-A).
I
ASR owns and operates campgrounds for the use and enjoyment of its members in seven States outside of New York. Each campground contains parking sites for recreational vehicles improved with facilities for providing electrical, water and sewer services. In addition, at a typical campground ASR provides a general store, a recreational hall, a swimming area and facilities and equipment for various athletic and recreational activities. The rights and obligations of the members are spelled out in the membership agreement, the certificate of membership and a question and answer sheet.
Membership, as defined in the membership agreement, constitutes "only a license for nonexclusive use of such recreational facilities as may be provided from time to time by ASR”. The certificate of membership provides that a member "is entitled to use all present and future resorts available through ASR for the benefit of its membership as a whole, wheresoever such resorts are located * * * ASR may purchase, lease, operate, or otherwise make such resorts available. The location and nature of all such resorts and the properties, existing or intended, are subject to change by ASR but ASR agrees to use its best efforts to maintain or improve the existing quality of such properties and resorts * * * All such resorts will be developed in such manner as ASR may deem suitable for the enhancement of enjoyment and recreational value, provided, however (1) ASR shall be under no obligation to increase the number of resorts; and (2) ASR may dispose of resorts at any time and in any manner deemed appropriate by ASR, provided however, in such event ASR will provide alternate resort facilities.”
By specific terms of the agreement, members acquire no "legal or beneficial interest in ASR or its assets” and no "right or interest in property, contract rights or business of ASR”. Members are not entitled to "any share of income, gain or distribution by or of ASR”. Nor do members acquire "any voting rights in ASR or pertaining to its business” or any right to participate in ASR’s management.
In the agreement a member represents that he is acquiring the membership solely for his personal enjoyment and that of his immediate family and "not for resale or profit and that
The question and answer sheet provided to prospective members includes the following:
"does my membership represent a good investment?
"Only as an investment in your future outdoor recreational needs. ASR is selling use, not investment.”
Members must pay an initial fee which ranges from $4,495 to $6,095 depending upon which, if any, of certain optional features they purchase. Annual dues are $152. Increases in the dues are limited to the yearly increase in a specified consumer price index.
The Attorney-General moved to dismiss pursuant to CPLR 3211 (a) (7) and ASR cross-moved under CPLR 3211 (c) for summary judgment. Special Term concluded that ASR memberships are not participation interests or investments in real estate or cooperative interests in real estate as those terms are used in section 352-e (1) (a) and that the memberships do not come within the statute’s general definition of "securities”. The court declared that the registration requirements of section 352-e did not apply and granted injunctive relief. The Appellate Division reversed, noting that the Martin Act is a remedial statute which should be liberally interpreted. It held that, although a membership did not include the right to share in any profits and entailed no ownership interest in any of the assets of ASR, it should, nevertheless, in view of the large size of the initial fee, be construed as a participation interest in real estate within the sense of that term in section 352-e (1) (a). Plaintiff appeals as a matter of right (CPLR 5601 former [a] [ii]). For reasons hereinafter stated, we now reverse and reinstate the judgment of Special Term.
II
In construing section 352-e (1) (a), we are mindful that the statute, as part of New York’s Blue Sky Law, should be liberally construed to give effect to its remedial purpose of
Because the sole issue is whether ASR memberships are “securities” within section 352-e, our analysis must start with an examination of the definition of “securities” in the statute itself (see, McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 1, Statutes § 94). The pertinent statutory language is as follows: “securities constituted of participation interests or investments in real estate, mortgages or leases, including stocks, bonds, debentures, evidences of interest or indebtedness, limited partnership interests or other security or securities as defined in section three hundred fifty-two of this article, when such securities consist primarily of participation interests or investments in one or more real estate ventures, including cooperative interests in realty” (General Business Law § 352-e [1] [a]).
The definition includes a list of specific categories of interests or instruments which constitute securities and, in addition, a general category of “securities as defined in section [352
This two-fold analysis dictated by the statutory language comports with the analysis employed by the Supreme Court for determining the existence of a security (see, Landreth Timber Co. v Landreth,
Ill
In examining the specific categories in section 352-e (1) (a), it is apparent that only two can be applied to ASR memberships: (1) the category of "participation interests or investments in one or more real estate ventures” and (2) the included subcategory, "cooperative interests in realty”.
Similarly, because the members obtain no rights to share in any profits or gains, ASR memberships cannot constitute "participation interests in real estate”. It is significant that "participation interests” are treated in the statute not as a separate category but as being equivalent to and virtually synonymous with "investments”. Wherever the words "participation interests” appear in the statute they are paired with the word "investments” in the phrase "participation interests or investments”. Moreover, the statute specifically characterizes the interests as being participation interests "in real estate ventures’
Consistent with what appears to be the meaning attributed to the term in the statute, various courts have used the terms "participation” and "participation interests” as descriptive of forms of ownership in which the expectation of sharing of profits is an essential element (see, Reiter v Greenberg,
It is in this sense (i.e., as descriptive of participating interests in limited partnerships or syndicates) that, we believe, the term is used in section 352-e (1) (a). Such construction is consistent with the usual meaning of the term, with its use in the statute in conjunction with the terms "investments” and "real estate ventures”, with the title of the statute "The Real Estate Syndicate Act”, and with the statutory purpose in protecting the public from fraudulent exploitation in the marketing and sale of securities and speculative investment schemes (see, People v Lexington 61st Assoc.,
Nor do the ASR memberships fall within the term "cooperative interests in realty” estate. From its use elsewhere in our statutory law, the phrase "cooperative interests in realty” estate has acquired a meaning which includes cooperatives, as the term is usually understood, condominiums and interests in real estate owned through homeowner associations (see, Condominium Act, Real Property Law art 9-b, § 339-ee; General Business Law § 352-e [2-b]). ASR memberships do not fit any of these forms of interests in real property.
A person having a cooperative interest in real estate (e.g., a tenant-shareholder in a cooperative apartment) typically owns stock in a cooperative corporation and has a "proprietary” leasehold granted by the corporation (see, Matter of State Tax Commn. v Shor,
Membership in ASR does not convey a cooperative interest or a condominium interest because the members hold no stock in ASR and no ownership or leasehold interest in or right to exclusive possession of any of its property. Moreover, the characteristics of ownership through a homeowners association are simply not present. The common element in all of these forms of cooperative ownership — that the individual holds some ownership interest in the property — is absent. Indeed, by the very terms of the agreement, an ASR membership can constitute "only a license for nonexclusive use of * * * recreational facilities”.
We conclude, then, that ASR memberships are neither "participation interests or investments” in real estate ventures nor "cooperative interests in realty” within the meaning of section 352-e (1) (a).
IV
The next question is whether the ASR memberships are securities in the general or common-law sense as the term is used in the broad category "securities” in sections 352 and 352-e (1) (a). Although our court has not defined the term "securities”, there is ample authority in the decisions of lower courts in our State and the courts of other jurisdictions (see generally, What Constitutes an "Investment Contract” Within the Meaning of State Blue Sky Laws, Ann., 47 ALR3d 1375, 1382; Coffey, Economic Realities of a "Security”: Is There a More Meaningful Formula?, 18 W Res L Rev 367, 377 [1967]; Mihaly & Kaufmann, Practice Commentary, McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 19, General Business Law art 23-A, p 15; and see, Meagher v Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.,
If we apply the "Howey test” and the definition of profit formulated by the Supreme Court in United Hous. Found. v Forman (
Nor does the membership have the attributes of an investment (see, Matter of Waldstein,
The Attorney-General, however, asks us to avoid a restrictive application of the tests in Howey and Waldstein. He requests that we adopt instead a broader definition of "security”, one in which risk of loss of the subscriber’s initial value and an expectation of future benefits in excess of that value— instead of the expectation of financial gain or profit — are the essential elements. While the "Howey test” has been applied in New York (see, Matter of Gardner v Lefkowitz,
Special Term concluded that the ASR membership is not a security under the "Howey test” or the "investment” definition in Matter of Waldstein (
Suffice to say that a "risk capital” analysis, if used, would not affect the result. The memberships being sold are in an established business which operates several campground resorts in seven different States. A member and his family receive the immediate right to use all existing facilities without charge. Although the initial membership fee is substantial, a prospective member is not induced to join by representations that ASR will provide more or better campgrounds in the future. Indeed, the membership agreement specifies that ASR "shall be under no obligation to increase the number of resorts”. To be sure, the value of a membership — purchased in the expectation that the member and his family will for many years enjoy the use of ASR campgrounds — is not free from risk of loss or diminution. ASR is a young business and, as pointed out by Special Term, a member runs the risk that ASR "will go out of business due to poor management, embezzlement, etc., a risk which every business of necessity incurs”. But that is not the same as the risk incurred by one who puts up capital for a new enterprise in return not for what he then receives but for what he hopes to receive when the enterprise materializes. (See, Jet Set Travel Club v Corporation Commr., 21 Ore App 362,
We conclude, then, that ASR memberships as described in this record do not fall within any of the statutory categories or within the general definition of securities so as to require registration under General Business Law § 352-e. The order should, therefore, be reversed, with costs, and the judgment of Special Term reinstated.
Chief Judge Wachtler and Judges Meyer, Simons, Kaye, Alexander and Titone concur.
Order reversed, etc.
Notes
. "Securities” for purposes of compliance with the Martin Act is defined in General Business Law § 352-e (1) (a). (See, p 87, infra, for pertinent language of the statute.)
. The definition of securities in section 352 — incorporated by reference in the definition of that term in section 352-e — also includes a broad, catchall category of securities. The section 352 definition of securities is, in pertinent part, as follows: "any stocks, bonds, notes, evidences of interest or indebtedness or other securities, including” (emphasis added).
. Section 352-e (1) (a) refers to cooperative interests in realty thus: "participation interests or investments in one or more real estate ventures, including cooperative interests in realty”. (Emphasis added.)
. "Investment” is defined in Black’s Law Dictionary (5th ed) as follows: "An expenditure to acquire property or other assets in order to produce revenue; the asset so acquired. The placing of capital or laying out of money
. Black’s Law Dictionary (5th ed) defines "venture” as follows: "An undertaking attended with risk, especially one aiming at making money; business speculation.”
. In Jet Set Travel Club v Corporation Commr. (21 Ore App 362, 367,
. The Appellate Division held that the membership met the literal definition of participation interests under section 352-e (1) (a) relying on People v Development Servs. (
. For example, in State v Hawaii Mkt. Center (
