Lead Opinion
We granted certiorari in Garvin v. Secretary of State,
The following facts are set forth in the opinion of the Court of Appeals. In 1999, Garvin, acting on behalf of Bee Communications, Inc. (“Bee”), sold Kommor five coin-operated payphones for $7,000 each. According to Kommor, she agreed to pay $35,000 for the payphones because Garvin sold them to her as part of an investment venture whereby she purchased the payphones from Bee and then, via an equipment lease program, leased them to ETS Payphones, Inc. (“ETS”) for five years. Garvin told Kommor that ETS would operate and maintain the payphones, and that she would receive a fixed monthly income of $75 from each payphone, regardless of the revenue generated by each payphone. However, ETS declared bankruptcy in 2000, and Kommor lost her investment.
Garvin was not registered to sell securities in Georgia pursuant to OCGA § 10-5-3, nor were the contracts involved in the investment sold to Kommor registered in Georgia as securities under OCGA § 10-5-5. Garvin contended that no registration was required because the contracts were not securities under the Act.
The Court of Appeals affirmed the superior court’s affirmance of the determination by the Commissioner of Securities that by selling and promoting the contracts as an investment venture, the contracts were securities under the Act. However, the Court of Appeals concluded that the term “willfully” in OCGA § 10-5-13 (a) (1) (A) (iv) required a knowing and intentional violation of the Act in order for the civil penalties authorized therein to be imposed, reversed that portion of the superior court’s judgment affirming the determination that Garvin’s conduct was willful and the resultant penalty, and remanded the case with the direction that the record on that issue be reconsidered in light of its determination of the legal standard of “willfully.” Garvin, supra at 71-74 (2).
The Court of Appeals’s conclusion was premised upon a flawed analysis. Section
(a) Whenever it may appear to the commissioner, either upon complaint or otherwise, that any person has engaged in or is engaging in or is about to engage in any act or practice or transaction which is prohibited by this chapter or by any rule, regulation, or order of the commissioner promulgated or issued pursuant to any Code section of this chapter or which is declared to be unlawful under this chapter, the commissioner may, at his or her discretion, act under any or all of the following paragraphs:
(1) Impose administrative sanctions as provided in this paragraph:
(A) Subject to notice and opportunity for hearing in accordance with Code Section 10-5-16, unless the right to notice is waived by the person against whom the sanction is imposed, the commissioner may: . . .
(iv) Issue an order against an applicant, registered person, or other person who willfully violates this chapter, imposing a civil penalty up to a maximum of $50,000.00 for a single violation or up to $500,000.00 for multiple violations in a single proceeding or a series of related proceedings;. . .
(Emphasis supplied.)
Acknowledging that the Act does not define the term “willfully,” the Court of Appeals relied on Greenhill v. State,
Another portion of the Act also sheds light on the appropriate standard for the imposition of administrative penalties. The term “willfully” appears in OCGA§ 10-5-4 (a) (2).
Likewise, numerous state courts in interpreting the term “willfully’ in the context of securities statutes have refused to adopt a requirement that the person intended to violate the law; the key is that the person intended to do the act prohibited by statute.
Finally, there are strong policy reasons to reject the standard adopted by the Court of Appeals. The Act is remedial in nature, intended for the protection of investors; therefore, it must be broadly and liberally construed to effectuate its aim. Dunwoody Country Club &c. v. Fortson,
The Court of Appeals’s interpretation of “willfully’ in this case is contrary to its own precedent, the weight of federal and state authority, and the goal of investor protection. Accordingly, the judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed.
Judgment reversed.
Notes
OCGA § 10-5-24 (a) provides:
Any person who shall willfully violate any provision of this chapter shall be guilty of a felony and, upon conviction thereof, shall be punished by a fine of not more than $500,000.00 or imprisonment for not less than one and not more than five years, or both.
OCGA § 10-5-4 (a) (2) provides:
(a) The commissioner, by order, may deny, suspend, or revoke a registration, limit the securities or investment advisory activities that an applicant or registered person may perform in this state, bar an applicant or registered person from association with a registered dealer, limited dealer, or investment adviser, or bar a person who is a partner, officer, director, or a person occupying a similar status or performing a similar function for an applicant or registered person from employment with a registered dealer, limited dealer, or investment adviser, if the commissioner finds that the order is in the public interest and that the applicant or registered person or, in the case of a dealer, limited dealer, or investment adviser, a partner, officer, or director, a person occupying a similar status or performing similar functions, or a person directly or indirectly controlling the dealer, limited dealer, or investment adviser: . . .
(2) Has willfully violated or willfully failed to comply with this chapter, a prior enactment, or a rule promulgated by the commissioner under this chapter or a prior enactment; . . .
(Emphasis supplied.)
The Uniform Securities Act (2002) was drafted by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws.
Unif. Sec. Act (2002) § 412 (d) (2) reads:
willfully violated or willfully failed to comply with this [Act] or the predecessor act or a rule adopted or order issued under this [Act] or the predecessor act within the previous 10 years;. . .
See, e.g., State v. Andresen,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
OCGA§ 10-5-13 (a) (1) (A) (iv) authorizes Secretary of State Cox, acting in her capacity as the Commissioner of Securities (Commissioner), to
[i]ssue an order against an applicant, registered person, or other person who willfully violates [the Georgia Securities Act of 1973 (Act)], imposing a civil penalty up to a maximum of $50,000.00 for a single violation or up to $500,000.00 for multiple violations in a single proceeding or a series of related proceedings. . . . (Emphasis supplied.)
The issue presented for resolution is the meaning of the statutory phrase “willfully violates.” The Court of Appeals held that it means that “there must be a knowing and intentional violation of the Act.” Garvin v. Secretary of State,
“Willful” means “[voluntary and intentional, but not necessarily malicious....” Black’s Law Dictionary (7th ed.), p. 1593. Derivations of that term appear only twice in OCGA § 10-5-13 (a) (1), which statute deals with the authority of the Commissioner to impose administrative sanctions. As noted, subparagraph (A) (iv) of the statute refers to the Commissioner’s power to sanction one who “willfully violates” a provision of the securities Act. Subparagraph (C), on the other hand, specifies that
[flor the purpose of determining the amount or extent of a sanction, if any, to be imposed under subparagraph (A) of this paragraph, the [C]ommissioner shall consider, among other factors, the ... willfulness of the conduct constituting a violation of this chapter. . . . (Emphasis supplied.)
Thus, only subparagraph (C) expressly focuses on the willfulness of a party’s conduct comprising the securities violation. In contrast, sub-paragraph (A) (iv) references the willfulness of the violation itself.
“Willful conduct” and a “willful violation” are not synonymous. “Willful conduct” is a neutral term which denotes acts that are voluntary and intentional. Thus, the concept of “willful conduct” does not incorporate a specific requirement that, in addition to committing a voluntary and intentional act, the perpetrator knew or should have known that he or she was violating a statute. On the other hand, “willful violation” is a more culpable term. It “constitutes something more than a violation of [a statute]. [Cit.]” Lee v. Nat. Bank & Trust Co.,
However, the majority holds that “willful violation” has the same meaning as “willful conduct.” Under its construction of subparagraph (A) (iv), the Commissioner is authorized to impose a civil penalty based upon a mere showing of the willfulness of the actor’s underlying conduct, even though the General Assembly unambiguously provided that the exercise of that authority is dependent upon a showing of a willful violation of the Act. I submit that such a construction is contrary to the “fundamental rule of statutory interpretation that, within an act, the same words have the same meanings and different words have different meanings. [Cits.]” Furnes v. Reeves,
By contrast, nothing in § 10-5-13 (a) (1) limited the cease and desist order issued by the Commissioner against Garvin to wilful violations of the Act. Accordingly, the Commissioner was entitled to issue the cease and desist order whether or not Garvin knowingly intended to violate the Act.
Garvin v. Secretary of State, supra at 71 (2). The establishment of an entirely different “willful violation” standard for the assessment of civil penalties under subparagraph (A) (iv) must signify the legislative intent to differentiate the Commissioner’s authority to impose those penalties from her power to assess the other administrative sanctions enumerated in subsection (a) (1). Had the General Assembly intended to authorize the Commissioner to impose the civil penalties specified in subparagraph (A) (iv) based upon the mere willfulness of the conduct, without regard to any knowledge or reckless disregard of a statutory prohibition, then it presumably would not have predicated the exercise of that authority on the willfulness of the violation. However, “[b]y using the terminology contained in the Act the
This construction of “willfully violates” in subparagraph (A) (iv) is consistent with OCGA § 10-5-24 (a), which provides that one who “shall willfully violate” a provision of the securities Act is guilty of a felony and subject to a fine of up to $500,000. As the majority recognizes, Greenhill v. State,
Since different words in the same act must be given different meanings, only those who “willfully’ violate the securities Act are subject to the Commissioner’s imposition of the civil penalties authorized by subparagraph (A) (iv) of OCGA§ 10-5-13 (a) (1). Because the same words in the same act should be given the same meaning, it also follows that only those who are most culpable by virtue of acting with knowledge of or in reckless disregard for the provisions of the Act are subject to a civil penalty assessed by the Commissioner under sub-paragraph (A) (iv) and to criminal prosecution by the State under OCGA § 10-5-24. The judgment of the Court of Appeals should be affirmed.
