In this case we must determine whether minority shareholders of a Louisiana corporation have stated a claim for relief under various sections of the federal securities laws which entitles them to challenge in federal court, absent diversity, the way in which control of their corporation was sold to an Arizona-based complex of insurance companies. The District Court dismissed their complaint on the pleadings, thus relegating them to the state courts. This appeal requires us to consider basic aspects of the implied right of action for violation of section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b), and, more particularly, SEC Rule 10b-5, 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5, promulgated thereunder, which right was recognized by this Court in Reed v. Riddle Airlines, 5 Cir., 1959,
Plaintiffs are shareholders of National American Life Insurance Company, a Louisiana corporation. Plaintiffs brought this suit on behalf of themselves and similarly situated National Amer-ican shareholders, and derivatively on behalf of National American. It is a companion to Herpich v. Wilder, 5 Cir., 1970,
The Arizona Group is comprised of National Securities, Inc. (NSI), Old National Life Insurance Company, Robert *797 H. Wallace, and Jack E. Love. NSI, a Colorado corporation, has its headquarters in Arizona and carries on business through several wholly or partially owned subsidiary or affiliated corporations, including insurance companies. A majority of NSI’s stock is owned by Old National, an Alabama corporation. Old National is said by plaintiffs to be wholly owned by a voting trust of which Wallace and Love are equal beneficiaries. The non-Group defendants here are Luther D. Harris, a director and “controlling person” of National American since 1963, and Raymond A. Latta, who from time to time has served as a consulting actuary to National American.
Plaintiffs’ four-count complaint, as amended, alleges violations of section 10 (b) of the Exchange Act, Rule 10b-5, section 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. § 77q(a), various sections of the Investment Company Act, and applicable state law. Plaintiffs seek damages and injunctive relief where appropriate for themselves and the class of National American shareholders they seek to represent, and also on behalf of National American itself. Federal jurisdiction is predicated upon section 27 of the Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78aa, section 22 of the Securities Act, 15 U.S.C. § 77v, and section 44 of the Investment Company Act, 15 U.S.C. § 80a-43. 1 In the court below, defendants filed motions to dismiss for want of subject-matter jurisdiction and for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. The District Judge granted these motions, and plaintiffs appeal.
I.
From the amended complaint, sworn affidavits, and attached documents,1 2 the following allegedly occurred:. Until January 24, 1968, Robert E. Wilder, who is not a defendant in this case, 3 was the majority shareholder of First Colonial Corporation of America. First Colonial is an “investment company” within the meaning of the Investment Company Act of 1940, 4 but has never complied with the registration and qualifications imposed upon such companies by that act. Wilder owned 55.39 per cent of First Colonial’s outstanding common stock. This stock was worthless except for the value of First Colonial’s controlling interest in National American. Wilder, as a result of his stockholdings in First Colonial (which owned 26.81 per cent of National American’s outstanding common. stock), and in National American itself (6.32 per cent of the outstanding common), was in working control of National American. He exercised his power of control over the two corporations as president, director, and chairman of the board of National American and as president and director of First Colonial. This power of control was for sale.
A. The Sale of Control
In late November 1967, Wilder allegedly conspired and agreed with the Arizona Group to defraud National American and the other National American shareholders and to cause National American to transact business with the unregistered investment company that controlled it. Wilder would transfer control of National American to the Arizona Group at a *798 premium price payable to him in part by National American itself. This would be done by causing National American to acquire by indirection some of Wilder’s shares of National American and First Colonial stock at a price in excess of the market value of these shares. This result was to be accomplished by means of the following device: NSI would be caused to purchase all of Wilder’s shares of National American and First Colonial stock at a price, payable in NSI notes, at least $3,000,000 in excess of the then market value of these shares; the Arizona Group would then cause Alabama National Life Insurance Company, an Alabama corporation they controlled, 5 to replace the notes issued by NSI to Wilder with premium debentures of its own; finally, the Arizona Group would cause a merger into one company of Alabama National, National American, and another Arizona Group corporation. As a further inducement to Wilder, the Arizona Group would cause to be issued to him an option to purchase 54 per cent of the outstanding common stock of Capitol National Bank of Montgomery, Alabama. In return, Wilder would resign his positions at National American and facilitate the election of Wallace and Love and their associates to management positions there.
To carry out their plans, defendants, either as principals or as aiders and abettors, are alleged to have caused the following to be done: NSI and Wilder executed an agreement under which Wilder sold his First Colonial and National American stock to NSI for $5,000,000. This price was $3,000,000 in excess of the then market value of the stock. The Arizona Group paid this premium to acquire control of National American. Control was sought to enable the Arizona Group to loot the corporation and otherwise to waste the corporation’s assets to the detriment of the corporation and its shareholders. The Group did not offer to purchase National American stock from plaintiffs or other members of plaintiffs’ class on the same terms given Wilder. Defendants next caused National American and First Colonial to execute an agreement with Federated Investments, Inc. Under this agreement, First Colonial, then insolvent, was to purchase from Federated Investments 43,-200 shares of Capitol National Bank of Montgomery stock for $1,188,000. Purchase of these shares, which constituted 54 per cent of the outstanding common stock of the bank, was guaranteed by National American. On or about January 24, 1968, defendants caused NSI to grant Wilder an option to purchase these same shares of bank stock. This option was given as partial payment of the price due Wilder for his First Colonial and National American stock. Because defendants cast the transfer of control of National American as a sale of stock from Wilder to NSI, Wilder realized a premium for passing control of National American’s assets which was not made available to or enjoyed by the other shareholders of National American.
B. The Harris Transaction
The facts alleged by plaintiffs are as follows: When the Arizona Group acquired control of National American in January 1968, they caused the corporation to continue to honor its obligations under an agreement it made with Harris on February 24, 1967. Under this agreement, National American was to purchase 12,947 shares of First Colonial common stock from Harris, then a National American director, for the excessive price of $100,000. This stock was then worthless. Documents were drawn to indicate that the transaction was a loan by National American to Harris which was secured by a pledge of Harris’ stock. The principal amount of the purported loan was to be paid to Harris at the rate of $2,500 a month. In the *799 event Harris defaulted, National Ameri-can agreed that it would not assert a deficiency against the director regardless of the value of the pledged stock at the time of the default. The Arizona Group continues to cause the corporation to disburse $2,500 to Harris each month, thereby causing the corporation to purchase worthless stock. It does not appear that Harris is in default on the purported loan.
C. The Latta Transaction
Plaintiffs’ allegations show the following: On or about April 18, 1967, National American was caused by Latta to arrange the payment of $100,000 to Latta by the device of guaranteeing a “loan” by an unnamed person to Latta in that amount. This purported loan was made to finance Latta’s purchase of 20 per cent of the outstanding stock of Dawl Corporation, a Louisiana corporation then owned in part by Wilder. The Dawl stock purchased by Latta was pledged as security for the so-called loan. Subsequently, on or about July 1, 1967, Latta exchanged his Dawl stock for First Colonial stock. Although this First Colonial stock is not worth the amount Lat-. ta owes on the loan, National American was caused to agree to the substitution of this stock for the Dawl stock as security for the loan. In connection with the $100,000 transaction, National Amer-ican was caused to agree to pay Latta $45,000 for no consideration whatever to the corporation. It is not alleged that Latta is in default on the loan of $100,-000.
D. Mismanagement of National Ameri-can and the Proposed Merger
Since acquiring control of National American, it is alleged that the Arizona Group, aided and abetted by Latta and Harris, have wasted the assets of the corporation. They intend to engage in similar wasting in the future. Moreover, defendants propose to merge National American, Alabama National, and another corporation the Group controls into one company at terms disadvantageous to National American and the shareholders of National American. Specifically, National American will be caused by the terms of the merger to acquire Wilder’s First Colonial and National American stock at the excessive price NSI paid to Wilder for selling control of National American in the first place. To carry out this plan, defendants solicited proxies by mail in September 1968 to elect their nominees to the board of National American. These proxies are said to have been misleading in some manner not pleaded with particularity.
With respect to all wrongs alleged in the complaint, plaintiffs, one of whom was a director of National American, aver that they did not discover the facts they allege until February 14, 1968. Plaintiffs state that they could not have discovered these facts earlier by the exercise of any duty imposed upon them because defendants and those in conspiracy with defendants concealed and misrepresented the facts to prevent National American shareholders from discovering the fraud and deceit being practiced upon them.
All four counts of the amended complaint allege that defendants, either as principals or as aiders and abettors, have in various ways violated section 10 (b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and, more particularly, Rule 10b-5, promulgated thereunder by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). 6 Count one also alleges violations of the *800 Investment Company Act of 1940. The allegations of count one relate primarily to the sale of control by Wilder to the Arizona Group and the means by which this sale was and is being financed. Count two involves the Harris transaction, while count three involves the Latta transaction. Finally, count four, incorporating the allegations of count one by reference, relates primarily to the proposed merger of National American and other Arizona Group corporations into one company. Counts one, two, and three seek damages. Counts two and four seek injunctive relief. Use of the mails is alleged in all counts.
For reasons that follow, we conclude that plaintiffs have stated claims that are triable in the federal courts. Accordingly, without making any suggestion how this case should be determined on the merits,
e. g.,
Orr v. Thorpe, 5 Cir., 1970,
II.
Defendants contend that the “ultimate wisdom” on this case is that the complaint represents an attempt to bring a large state-law derivative action, absent diversity, into federal court on a poor 10b-5 theory. 7 They argue that plaintiffs lack standing to invoke the private right of action afforded by section 10(b) of the Exchange Act and Rule 10b-5 and that the conduct about which plaintiffs complain is not within the coverage of the section and the rule.
This Court has infrequently had occasion to consider 10b-5 theories, poor or otherwise.
8
Consequently, in determining the questions of standing and coverage presented in this ease, we proceed on a relatively unmarked trail. We are, however, not without some guidance, directed as we are by decisions from this and other Circuits and the “familiar canon of statutory construction that remedial legislation [such as the Exchange Act]
9
should be construed broadly to effectuate its purposes.” Tcherep-nin v. Knight,
Section 10 of the Exchange Act, entitled “Regulation of the Use of Manipulative and Deceptive Devices,” reads in relevant part as follows:
“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—
* * -X- * * *
“(b) To use or employ, in connection with the purchase or sale of any security * * *, any manipulative or deceptive device or contrivance in *801 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.”
By section 10(b) Congress meant to prevent manipulation and control of the prices at which securities are bought and sold and to enable buyers, sellers, and traders of securities to make a proper appraisal of the value of securities. Securities Exchange Act of 1934, § 2(3), 15 U.S.C. § 78b(3).
See also
Hearings on Stock Exchange Regulation Before the House Comm, on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, 73d Cong., 2d Sess. (1934); Ruder, Civil Liability Under Rule 10b-5: Judicial Revision of Legislative Intent?, 57 Nw.U.L.Rev. 627, 657 (1963).
10
Thus the section reflects the design of the Exchange Act as a means for preventing inequitable and unfair practices on securities exchanges and over-the-counter markets and for insuring fairness and honesty in securities transactions generally. 48 Stat. 881;
see
SEC v. Texas Gulf Sulphur Co., 2 Cir., 1968,
Rule 10b-5, entitled “Employment of Manipulative and Deceptive Devices,” reads as follows:
“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,
“(1) to employ any device, scheme, or artifice to defraud,
“(2) 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
. “(3) to engage in any act, practice, or course of business which operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit upon any person, in connéction with the purchase or sale of any security.”
The SEC adopted Rule 10b-5 in 1942 to close a “loophole in the protections
*802
against fraud administered by the Commission by prohibiting individuals or companies from buying securities if they engage in fraud in their purchase.” SEC See.Exch.Act Rel.No.3230 (May 21, 1942). The purpose of the rule, it seems clear, was to afford sellers of securities the same protections already afforded purchasers by the federal scheme of securities regulation. Previously, fraud on sellers, as distinct from fraud on purchasers,
see
Securities Act of 1933, § 17(a), 15 U.S.C. § 77q(a), was not covered by the securities acts unless committed by an over-the-counter .broker or dealer. 8 SEC Ann.Rep. 10 (1943);
see
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, § 15(c), 15 U.S.C. § 78o(c). Viewing the rule as an “additional protection to investors,” 8 SEC Ann.Rep. 10 (1943), the Commission fashioned it to “make applicable to the purchase of securities, the same broad antifraud provisions which the Congress has imposed in Section 17 (a) of the Securities Act of 1933, in connection with the sale of securities.” Ward La France Truck Corp., 13 S.E.C. 373, n. 8 (1943). To accomplish this end the Commission simply copied the language of section 17(a) of the Securities Act, with exceptions unimportant in this context, and applied it “in connection with the purchase or sale of any security,” this being the reach of section 10(b).
See also
Birnbaum v. Newport Steel Corp., 2 Cir., 1952,
Together the section and the rule aim at reaching “misleading or deceptive activities, whether or not they are precisely and technically sufficient to sustain a common law action for fraud and deceit,” Cady, Roberts & Co., 40 S.E.C. 907, (1961), carried on “in connection with” the purchase or sale of securities. They are not intended as a specification of particular acts or practices that constitute “manipulative or deceptive ,devices or contrivances,” but are instead designed to encompass the infinite variety of devices that are alien to the “climate of fair dealing,” SEC v. Capital Gains Research Bur.,
Where, as in this and the other Arizona Group eases decided today, serious questions of public law are presented on pleadings alone, we proceed cautiously, lest we are pulled into academic exercises in a case that factually may never be. Pred v. Board of Public Instruction of Dade County, Fla., 5 Cir., 1969,
III.
A. Count One
Plaintiffs contend that count one presents three interlocking but separate foundations for private actions under section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5. These foundations are as follows:
(1) National American and its shareholders other than defendants are said to have been defrauded “in connection with” Wilder’s sale of securities to the Arizona Group. Because Wilder and the Group defendants cast the sale of control of National American in the form of a sale of Wilder’s stock at a premium over market value, Wilder is said to have diverted a corporate opportunity to himself, aided and abetted by the other conspirators, in fraud of the corporation and its other shareholders.
(2) National American and its shareholders other than defendants are said to have been damaged as a result of acts done by defendants in furtherance of their scheme to cause National American indirectly to purchase Wilder’s stock in First Colonial and National American. Specifically, it is claimed that defendants agreed as part of their conspiracy that Wilder would transfer control of National American to the Arizona Group for the purpose of enabling the Group to loot the corporation and otherwise to waste its assets. The inducement to Wilder was the premium of $3,000,000 ultimately to be paid by National Ameri-can itself. As a party to the “plan” to merge National American and Alabama National into one company — thereby causing National American to purchase Wilder’s stock at the premium price — National American is said to be a “purchaser” defrauded “in connection with” its purchase of securities.
(3) As an integral part of the conspiracy between Wilder and the Group, National American was caused to guarantee a promise of First Colonial, then insolvent, to purchase 43,200 shares of Capitol National Bank stock from Federated Investments. Subsequently, NSI granted Wilder an option to purchase the same bank stock. The guarantee by National American is said to constitute a “purchase” “in connection with” which National American has been defrauded.
We consider these three purported bases for a Rule 10b-5 civil action insufficient support for plaintiffs’ argument that they are persons entitled to sue on behalf of themselves and their class of National American shareholders for rule violations based upon the allegations of count one. This is not to say, however, that plaintiffs have not stated a 10b-5 claim for relief on behalf of their corporation. As we shall discuss, count one does support a claim for derivative relief on behalf of National American. But on their own behalf, plaintiffs do not claim that they or other members of their class purchased or sold securities in connection with defendants’ alleged employment of manipulative or deceptive devices or contrivances; nor do they claim that their damage resulted from their participation in a securities transaction. Therefore, for reasons that follow, we conclude that they are not entitled to bring an action under Rule 10b-5 on behalf of themselves or their class, as distinct from a derivative action on behalf of National American, on the facts alleged in count one.
Private actions (as opposed to SEC actions) brought to enforce liabilities and duties created by the section and the rule have been recognized by this Court since 1959. Reed v. Riddle Airlines, 5 Cir., 1959,
The volume of private litigation under section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 has increased spectacularly in recent years; With this increase have come an “extraordinary expansion of subject-matter coverage” by the section and the rule and the possibility of “extraordinarily great liability” for their violation. Rekant v. Desser, 5 Cir., 1970,
In recognizing a private right of action and its corollary, implied civil liability, for violations of Rule 10b-5, courts have a duty to provide such remedies as are necessary to make effective the congressional purpose behind the section and the rule. J. I. Case Company v. Borak,
The standing of a private plaintiff to sue for violations of section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 is to be decided, of course, within the framework of Article III of the United States Constitution, which restricts federal judicial power to “cases” and “controversies.” Association of Data Processing Service Org., Inc. v. Camp,
When Congress vested federal district courts with exclusive jurisdiction of “all suits in equity and actions at law brought to enforce any liability or duty created by [the Exchange Act] or the rules and regulations thereunder,” Securities Exchange Act of 1934, § 27, 15 U.S.C. § 78aa, it must necessarily have assumed that this jurisdiction would be invoked only by those showing injury of the type that the Act seeks to prevent.
Cf.
SEC v. General Time Corp., 2 Cir., 1968,
We are of the opinion that only purchasers and sellers of securities involved in an alleged Rule 10b-5 violation — that is, securities in connection with which fraud has allegedly been committed — can show injury of the type the rule is meant to prevent. The rule was promulgated for their benefit,
see
Greater Iowa Corporation v. McLendon, 8 Cir., 1967,
We do not say that only those who are purchasers or sellers in the “strict common law traditional sense,” Hooper v. Mountain States Securities Corporation, 5 Cir., 1960,
Plaintiffs’ position as shareholders suing derivatively on behalf of National American differs from their position as individuals suing in their own right, for they do allege that National American has purchased securities in connection with the fraud alleged, and the shareholder bringing a derivative action need not personally be a purchaser or seller.
E. g.,
Rekant v. Desser, 5 Cir., 1970,
Plaintiffs contend that their corporation has standing to invoke the Rule 10b-5 right of action as a result of defendants’ scheme to cause a merger into one company of National American, Alabama National, and another Arizona Group corporation on terms disadvantageous to National American. The alleged effect of the merger, when it takes place, will be to cause National American to acquire ownership of Wilder’s control stock (both his First Colonial stock and his National American stock) at the premium price negotiated by the Arizona Group. Notwithstanding that the merger of the corporations has not yet been completed, plaintiffs argue that National American is a statutory “purchaser” entitled to damages under Rule 10b-5 for harmful acts already committed in furtherance of the plan to effect the merger. As authority for their proposition that damages may be awarded under Rule 10b-5 even though the securities transaction giving the plaintiff standing to sue has not been completed, plaintiffs rely upon Opper v. Hancock Securities Corporation, 2 Cir., 1966,
In
Opper
a customer sued a brokerage house for damages allegedly resulting from the latter’s failure to carry out his order to sell certain securitiés while the house was disposing of large amounts of similar securities it had held for its own account. The customer eventually sold his securities at a substantial loss. The Second Circuit, in affirming a judgment for the customer, stated, “Failure to carry out the order while disposing of its own similar stock was not only actionable under the contract but also a violation of the Securities Exchange Act.”
In
Goodman,
another customer-broker case, it was alleged that the broker had “sold” the customer nonexistent securities. The District Court upheld the customer’s right to sue under Rule 10b-5 over the broker’s argument that the Rule requires a completed purchase or sale of securities.
Unlike Opper and Goodman, customer-broker cases involving the sort of frauds associated with trading in the securities markets, count one catalogs a series of acts traditionally dealt with under state law as instances of corporate mismanagement or breaches of fiduciary duties in the corporate context. Plaintiffs seek to link these acts in a chain subject to federal law by their allegation of an overall scheme to defraud National American in connection with the planned merger of the latter. The broad purpose of this scheme, plaintiffs say, was to transfer control of National American from Wilder to the Arizona Group for a premium payable out of the assets of National American itself.
We begin by recognizing that violators of section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 are not immunized from civil liability for their unlawful acts merely because these acts were committed as part of a broader scheme of corporate mismanagement. Rekant v. Desser, 5 Cir., 1970,
State-law mismanagement claims cannot be. transformed into federal claims under Rule 10b-5, however, merely by means of general conclusionary allegations where one would otherwise not exist.
See
Lester v. Preco Industries, Inc., S.D.N.Y., 1965,
To state a Rule 10b-5 claim in a case involving the sort of scheme allegedly employed in this case in violation of the rule, a plaintiff must frame his complaint so that it appears with reasonable clarity therefrom either that a purchase
*809
or sale of securities by the plaintiff is the subject of the fraudulent scheme or that the inducement of such a purchase or sale is a purpose of the scheme. That the conduct complained of may be reprehensible does not require the conclusion that a federal remedy must be furnished. Iroquois Industries, Inc. v. Syracuse China Corporation, 2 Cir., 1969,
In the present ease, plaintiffs allege a broad scheme to defraud National American, involving corporate waste, deprivation of corporate opportunity, and the like, which, plaintiffs say, results or will result in an acquisition of securities by the corporation through a merger. We must ask whether defendants’ alleged conduct is the type of fraudulent behavior which was meant to be forbidden by section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5. Affidavits and attached papers made available to this Court by both sides to the litigation indicate that plaintiffs have grounds upon which to allege, that defendants have caused the National American board of directors to resolve that the merger with Alabama National and the other Arizona Group corporation be effected on the disadvantageous terms stated above. 14 The precise question presented, therefore, is whether, on these additional facts, National Ameri-can is a “purchaser” or “seller” of securities for purposes of the section and the rule.
Under the circumstances of this case, we conclude that the resolution to merge is not unlike a partially consummated contract to buy or sell securities, and that, consequently, the broad anti-fraud purposes of 10(b) and 10b-5 would be clearly furthered by their application to this situation.
See
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, § 3(a) (13)-(14), 15 U.S.C. § 78c(a) (13)—(14); SEC v. National Securities,
“ * * * When a person who is dealing with a corporation in a securities transaction denies the corporation’s directors access to material information known to him, the corpo *810 ration is disabled from availing itself of an informed judgment on the part of its board regarding the merits of the transaction. In this situation the private right of action recognized under Rule 10b-5 is available as a remedy for the corporate disability. We can make no meaningful distinction between this situation and [one in which] the other party to the securities transaction controls the judgment of all the corporation’s board members or conspires with them or the one controlling them to profit mutually at the expense of the corporation, [for] the corporation is no less disabled from availing itself of an informed judgment than if the outsider had simply lied to the board. * * *”
Shell v. Hensley, 5 Cir., 1970,
We have said that only purchasers or sellers of securities involved in an alleged Rule 10b-5 violation — that is, securities in connection with which fraud has allegedly been committed — can show injury of the type the rule is meant to prevent. It is they who have suffered legal injury as a result of a rule violation which is compensable in a private action. Section 28(a) of the Exchange Act provides that “[N]o person permitted to maintain a suit for damages under the provisions of this [Act] shall recover, through satisfaction of judgment in one or more actions, a total amount in excess of his actual damages on account of the act complained of.” 15 U.S.C. § 78bb(a).
Compare
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, § 28(a), 15 U.S.C. § 78bb(a),
with
Clayton Act § 4, 15 U.S. C. § 15.
See also
Green v. Wolf Corporation, 2 Cir., 1968,
B. Count Two
The fraud alleged in count two involves National American’s purported purchase *811 of worthless First Colonial stock from Harris for $100,000 by the pretext of a loan secured by a pledge of the stock actually purchased. Count two does not allege that the “loan” has been defaulted or that foreclosure on the stock has become necessary. Because such facts are not alleged, defendants argue that count two fails to allege a purchase of securities by National American. The question presented, consequently, is whether count two adequately states facts amounting to a “purchase” within the meaning of section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 so as to entitle plaintiffs to maintain a derivative action under the section and rule for damages and injunctive relief on behalf of their corporation. 15
Given the reading Conley v. Gibson,
Defendants argue that plaintiffs have not stated a claim under Rule 10b-5 because the complaint does not allege facts amounting to a deception of National American which is causally related to a purchase or sale of securities by the corporation. From the complaint, it appears that Harris, a director and “eon-trolling person” of National American, entered into an agreement with the corporation in which the latter agreed to purchase worthless stock from the director. For the reasons we have expressed in Shell v. Hensley, 5 Cir., 1970,
C. Count Three
Plaintiffs contend that count three sufficiently alleges a fraud on National American in connection with a purchase by it of securities. The allegations from which plaintiffs claim a securities purchase by National American should be gleaned are as follows: Latta borrowed money from an unnamed person in order to purchase Dawl stock and caused National American to guarantee this loan; Latta then pledged the Dawl stock he had purchased as security for the loan; subsequently, Latta exchanged his Dawl stock for First Colonial stock and caused National American to agree to a substitution of the First Colonial stock for the Dawl stock as security for the loan, even though the First Colonial stock was not worth the amount owed on the, loan. Plaintiffs’ position, apparently, is that National American, by virtue of its role as the guarantor of the loan to Latta, became a “purchaser” of securities when Latta pledged the stock he bought as col
*812
lateral for the loan. Plaintiffs base their argument upon the Second Circuit’s decision in SEC v. Guild Films Co., 2 Cir., 1960,
The Guild Films case arose under the Securities Act of 1933. There an individual caused a corporation he controlled to purchase from Guild Films unregistered stock in that company. He purported to take the stock for investment only, and a restriction to this effect was stamped on the certificates. Subsequently, this individual caused the stock to be pledged to certain banks as additional collateral for his already overdue personal notes. Upon his default, the banks attempted to sell the unregistered stock. The SEC then sought to enjoin the sale by the banks. Concluding that the banks were “underwriters” within the meaning of section 2(11) of the Securities Act, the Second Circuit stated:
“The banks cannot be exempted on the ground that they did not ‘purchase’ within the meaning of § 2(11). The term, although not defined in the [Securities] Act, should be interpreted in a manner complementary to ‘sale’ which is defined in § 2(3) as including ‘every * * * disposition of * * * a security or interest in a security, for value * * In fact, a proposed provision of the Act which expressly exempted sales ‘by or for the account of a pledge holder or mortgage selling or offering for sale or delivery in the ordinary course of business and not for the purpose of avoiding the provisions cf the Act, to liquidate a bona fide debt, a security pledged in good faith as collateral for such debt,’ was not accepted by Congress.”
Guild Films
is factually distinguishable in material respects from the situation alleged in count three. Here, there is no allegation that the loan has been defaulted or that foreclosure on the pledged stock has become necessary. It is not alleged that National American has paid anything for the purported interest in Latta’s securities it holds. Moreover, it is not alleged that National American was the pledgee; rather, the corporation was the guarantor of the pledgor. Apart from these distinctions, whatever the term “sale” means in section 2(11) of the Securities Act, we are here concerned only with whether the purposes of section 10(b) of the Exchange Act and Rule 10b-5 thereunder would be advanced by their application to the sort of loan-guarantee-pledge series of transactions presented in this case. Liberally viewed, count three shows that the effect of the fraud alleged is an extension of National American’s credit on Latta’s behalf. So far as the complaint reveals, this extension was made coincidentally with a stock purchase by Latta. It is not alleged that the corporate decision to make the extension was made in connection with Lat-ta’s personal transaction. On these facts, we conclude that defendants’ behavior in causing this extension, even if proved to be as alleged, is not the type of fraudulent conduct which was meant to be forbidden by the section and the rule.
See
SEC v. National Securities, Inc.,
We leave to the District Court on remand the determinations whether the claims presented in count three are within the court’s pendent jurisdiction, United Mine Workers of America v. Gibbs,
D. Count Four
In count four plaintiffs seek to enjoin defendants from consummating the merger of National American with Ala *813 bama National and one or more other Arizona Group companies. This merger allegedly will be disadvantageous to National American and its shareholders in that the merger calls for National Ameri-can, in effect, to pay Wilder the sale-of-control premium negotiated by the Arizona Group and for the present National American shareholders to receive stock in the post-merger corporation which is worth less than their National American stock is worth now. Count four also alleges in conclusionary terms that solicitations misleading in some way not pleaded have been mailed to National American shareholders to obtain proxies supporting the election of Arizona Group nominees to the National American board of directors.
Injunctive relief may be awarded to a private plaintiff under Rule 10b-5 in a proper case.
E. g.,
Kahan v. Rosenstiel, 3 Cir., 1970,
IV.
This Court has not previously had occasion to consider whether a private right of action exists for violations of the Investment Company Act of 1940, 15 U.S.C. § 80a-l et seq. The Second, Third, and Tenth Circuits have recognized such a right. Brown v. Bullock, 2 Cir., 1961,
The history of the investment company industry prior to the passage of the Investment Company Act has been well summarized as follows:
“Born in boom times, weaned upon the 1929 crash, and plagued with a fringe of thoroughly dishonest manipulators, the * * * industry grew without any effective regulation * * to reap the whirlwind. * * * [T]he picture presented by the Securities and Exchange Commission after a four-year investigation showed fantastic abuse of trust by management and wholesale victimizing of investment company security holders. In general the abuses stemmed from the control of investment companies by banking, brokerage, or dealer interests— a control founded in complicated capital structures, disguised behind meagre, and often misleading, reports to stockholders, and exercised to benefit the sponsor without regard to any *814 stewardship on behalf of the investors who put up the money.”
Comment, The Investment Company Act of 1940, 50 Yale L.J. 440, 441-442 (1941). 17 Determining that the disclosure treatment of the 1933 and 1934 Acts was insufficient to prevent these abuses Congress meant by the Investment Company Act to establish a comprehensive scheme for regulating issuers of securities which engage in the business of investing and trading in the securities of others. See 1 Loss, Securities Regulation, 144-147 (2d ed. 1961). The technique of the Act is to require registration with the SEC of all investment companies that use the mails or interstate facilities, with registration serving as the handle for the regulatory scheme. Section 7 of the Act imposes the penalty of exclusion from all channels of interstate commerce of investment companies that fail to register in compliance with section 8, 15 U.S.C. §§ 80a-7, 80a-8, and contracts made by unregistered companies are subject to the voiding provisions of section 47(b), 15 U.S.C. § 80a-46(b). The other sections of the Act concern the regulation of registered companies.
In the present case, plaintiffs allege that First Colonial is, and holds itself out to the public as being, an “investment company” within the meaning of section 3 of the Investment Company Act, 15 U.S.C. § 80a-3. They further allege that First Colonial has never complied with the registration provisions of • section 8. Count one of the amended complaint avers that National American and its shareholders have been damaged as a result of various transactions that defendants have caused National Ameri-can to enter into with First Colonial. Specifically, it is alleged that First Colonial was caused by defendants to dominate and control the affairs of National American in violation of section 7(a) (5) of the Act and to transact business with National American in interstate commerce in violation of section 7(a) (4), all to the damage of National American and its shareholders. Plaintiffs, on behalf of themselves and similarly situated National American shareholders and derivatively on behalf of National Ameri-can, seek to bring an action under the Investment Company Act to enforce the duties and liabilities that act imposes upon defendants.
Defendants argue that the amended complaint fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted under the Investment Company Act and that, in any event, plaintiffs lack standing to bring an action for the violations about which they complain. More particularly, defendants contend that the Act creates a private right of action only in favor of those who invest in the securities issued by investment companies and that a suit based upon nonregistration can be brought only if the plaintiff’s damage is a direct result of the failure to register.
In deciding the question of standing, we assume that First Colonial is an “investment company” and is not exempted from the registration requirements of the Investment Company Act.
*815
We also assume, for the purpose of deciding this question, that the Investment Company Act affords a private right of action for injury suffered from its violation to the class of persons whose interest the Act was designed to protect. Cf. Eastside Church of Christ v. National Plan, Inc., 5 Cir., 1968,
Section 1(a) of the Act presents the findings supporting the congressional conclusion that investment companies are affected with a national public interest. 15 U.S.C. § 80a-l(a). Section 1(b) declares that the national public interest and the interest of investors are adversely affected by various practices. 18 The enumerated practices found to have an adverse effect upon the national public interest and the interest of investors fall into the following categories: (1) failure to provide adequate, accurate information to prospective investors and shareholders in investment companies; (2) management of portfolios in the interests of managements and their affiliates rather than in the interests of the shareholders; (3) use of unsound, misleading, and unsupervised accounting practices; and (4) changes in the character of the company’s business without the consent of the shareholders. Motley, Jackson & Barnard, Federal Regulation of Investment Companies Since 1940, 63 Harv.L.Rev. 1134, 1140 n. 27 (1950). The purpose of the Act is to eliminate these abuses, 15 *816 U.S.C. § 80a-l(b), through the accomplishment of five basic objectives. These objectives are (1) adequate safeguards for investors in the distribution and sale of investment company securities, (2) honest, unbiased management of investment companies, (3) greater participation in management by holders of investment company securities, (4) creation and maintenance of adequate feasible capital structures of such companies, and (5) transmittal of adequate financial statements and promulgation of uniform accounting rules. See 10 SEC Ann.Rep. 162-163 (1944), in 1 Loss, Securities Regulation 149-152 (2d ed. 1961). The scheme of l’egulation designed to accomplish the statutory purpose, as indicated above, is pegged upon registration with the SEC of all investment companies doing business in interstate commerce which are not entitled to some exemption.
The Investment Company Act was the fifth in a series of federal statutes designed to eliminate certain abuses in the securities industry, abuses that were found to have contributed to the 1929 financial crash and the depression of the 1930’s. It was preceded by the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. § 77a
et seq.,
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78a
et seq.,
the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935, 15 U.S.C. § 79
et seq.,
and the Trust Indenture Act of 1939, 15 U.S.C. § 77aaa
et seq.
Like the earlier statutes, the Investment Company Act was meant to provide another step toward a return to the understanding that those who manage other people’s money are trustees acting for others.
Cf.
SEC v. Capital Gains Research Bur.,
Plaintiffs in the present case do not allege in count one that they or National American hold any ownership interest in First Colonial, the alleged investment company. Plaintiffs’ theory is that where an unregistered investment company such as First Colonial dominates another company, in violation of section 7(a) (5) of the Investment Company Act, 15 U.S.C. § 80a-7(a) (5), to the detriment of the dominated company and to the benefit of the unregistered company, a private right of action under the Investment Company Act should be afforded to, shareholders of the dominated company. We consider this theory unsound. In relation to First Colonial, plaintiffs and their class stand as fellow shareholders of National American. In essence, plaintiffs are complaining about the mismanagement of National American which allegedly has been effected by a controlling shareholder (First Colonial). The history and whole pattern of the Investment Company Act convince us that Congress by this statute intended to deter mismanagement of investment companies for the protection of investment company security holders,
see, e. g.,
Greater Iowa Corporation v. McLendon, 8 Cir., 1967,
V.
We turn finally to defendants’ contention that grounds independent of whether the District Court had subject-matter jurisdiction of plaintiffs’ claims or whether plaintiffs stated any claims upon which relief can be granted exist for sustaining the judgment below. These grounds are (1) want of indispensable parties and (2) failure of plaintiffs to comply with all requirements for the maintenance of a shareholder’s derivative action in federal court. Specifically, defendants argue that the decision below was correct because, under Fed.R.Civ.P. 19, the case could not proceed properly without Wilder and First Colonial as parties and because, under Fed.R.Civ.P. 23.1, plaintiffs did not make a demand for corrective action on the directors and shareholders of National American before bringing this derivative action on National American’s behalf. We disagree with defendants’ contentions.
The argument that Wilder and First Colonial should be described with the conclusory term “indispensable parties” is without merit.
See generally
Morrison v. New Orleans Public Service, Inc., 5 Cir., 1969,
The argument that plaintiffs have failed to comply with the demand requirements, such as they are, of Rule 23.1 similarly does not justify dismissal of the amended complaint. Rule 23.1 provides that in a shareholder’s derivative action, the complaint shall allege “with particularity the efforts, if any, made by the plaintiff to obtain the action he desires from the directors * * and, if necessary, from the shareholders * * * and the reasons for his failure to obtain the action or for not making *818 the effort.” Plaintiffs admit that a demand for corrective action was not made upon the National American board of directors or shareholders before this action was commenced, but argue that such demands would have been futile and unavailing. Under the circumstances alleged in the Conley-read complaint, we agree with plaintiffs. Accordingly, we conclude that plaintiffs cannot be foreclosed from maintaining this action' on the ground that they have not complied with Rule 23.1.
The judgment is affirmed in part and reversed in part, and the ease is remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Notes
. Plaintiffs also sought to invoke the pendent jurisdiction of the District Court,
see, e. g.,
United Mine Workers of America v. Gibbs,
. After the Court had heard oral argument in this and the related Arizona Group cases decided today, both sides filed supplemental memoranda with the Clerk. Sworn affidavits and attached copies of purported documents were also filed by plaintiffs, who allege that they obtained the information filed as a result of discovery in other Arizona Group cases proceeding in the federal and state courts.
. Plaintiffs filed a complaint against Wilder in the Middle District of Alabama. Herpich v. Wilder, M.D.Ala., 1969, Civ. No. 2747-N, rev’d, 5 Cir., 1970,
. Investment Company Act of 1940, § 3, 15 U.S.C. § 80a-3.
. The way in which the Arizona Group acquired Alabama National is being challenged by minority shareholders of that corporation in the Hensley group of cases.
E.
g., Shell v. Hensley, 5 Cir., 1970,
. Violations of section 17 (a) of the Securities Act of 1933, 15 Ü.S.C. § 77q(a), are also alleged. In this case, however, we need not reach the question whether an implied right of action should be recognized for violations of section 17 (a), since section 10(b) of the Exchange Act and Rule 10b-5 thereunder will support as well as would section 17 (a) an action for any monetary or injunctive relief to which plaintiffs or their corporation may be entitled.
See, e. g.,
Globus v. Law Research Service, Inc., 2 Cir., 1969,
. Defendants take their contention from a statement made by District Judge Frank M. Johnson, Jr., in the order dismissing plaintiffs’ original complaint in the Wilder case [No. 27385]: “* * * [I]t is only fair to note that this Court considers the present complaint an attempt to bring a large state law derivative action, absent diversity, into federal court on a poor 10b-5‘ theory.” Herpich v. Wilder, M.D. Ala., 1968, Civ. No. 2747-N.
. Various aspects of the rule have been considered in the following cases: Rekant v. Desser, 5 Cir., 1970,
. Tcherepnin v. Knight,
. This is not to say, however, that section 10(b) is limited to manipulative or deceptive devices employed with respect to the investment value of securities.
See
Hooper v. Mountain States Securities Corp., 5 Cir., 1960,
. “The Administration’s spokesman needed only a single sentence to dispose of the somewhat broader version of [§ 10(b)] which was § 9(c) of the original 1934 bills: ‘Subsection (c) says, “Thou shalt not devise any other cunning devices.” ’ ” 3 Loss, Securities Regulation 1424 (2d ed. 1961). See also, Ruder, Civil Liability Under Rule 10b-5: Judicial Revision of Legislative Intent?, 57 Nw.U.L. Rev. 627 (1963).
. “Thus, a requirement of privity was at first suggested, see Joseph v. Farnsworth Radio & Television Corp.,
. Plaintiffs also rely upon Barnett v. United States, 8 Cir., 1963,
. The papers submitted purport to document, among other matters, the agreement, as amended, between Wilder and NSI, the National American board meeting approving the merger plan, other aspects of the merger, and'the disposition of Wilder’s First Colonial and National American stock since the agreement between Wilder and NSI was first made.
. Plaintiffs have not argued that they have an action on behalf of themselves and their class of National American shareholders on the facts alleged in count two.
. The count reads in pertinent part:
“1. On, to-wit, February 24, 1967, National American Life Insurance Company agreed to purchase for One Hundred Thousand Dollars ($100,000) from Luther D. Harris, then one of its directors, Twelve Thousand Nine Hundred Forty-Seven (12,947) shares of the common stock of First Colonial Corporation of America, which were then and are now worth less.
“2. In order to conceal the true nature of said transaction, papers were drawn to indicate that the transaction was a loan * *
Elsewhere in the count it is alleged that the First Colonial stock was “worthless.”
. One commentator enumerated some of the abuses as follows:
“ * * * [i]n some instances investment companies were looted by strong-arm tactics involving actual fraud or larceny, and in other cases much the same result was obtained by a widespread employment of most of the known corporate abuses — the formation of companies on ‘shoestring’ capital; the use of broad charter provisions relative to powers of management and the corporate purpose; the inclusion of exculpatory clauses to shield mismanagement ; the failure of sponsors and officers to make capital contributions to some extent, at least, commensurate with their position in the company; perpetuation of control by such persons through proxy solicitations, staggered elections, and seriatim resignations of directors; excessive promotional and managerial expenses; inadequate disclosure of company activities; the failure of dummy directors and others to fulfill their fiduciary duties; and the complexities caused by pyramiding and cross or circular ownership.”
Note, The Investment Company Act of 1940, 41 Colum.L.Rev. 269, 273-274 (1941).
. Such adverse effects are caused
“(1) when investors purchase, pay for, exchange, receive dividends upon, vote, refrain from voting, sell, or surrender securities issued by investment companies without adequate, accurate, and explicit information, fairly presented, concerning the character of such securities and the circumstances, policies, and financial responsibility of such companies and their management;
“(2) when investment companies are organized, operated, managed, or their portfolio securities are selected, in the interest of directors, officers, investment advisers, depositors, or other affiliated persons thereof, in the interest of underwriters, brokers, or dealers, in the interest of special classes of their security holders, or in the interest of other investment companies or persons engaged in other lines of business, rather than in the interest of all classes of such companies’ security holders;
“(3) when investment companies issue securities containing inequitable or discriminatory provisions, or fail to protect the preferences and privileges of the holders of their outstanding securities ;
‘.‘(4) when the control of investment companies is unduly concentrated through pyramiding or inequitable methods of control, or is inequitably distributed, or when investment companies are managed by irresponsible persons;
“(5) when investment companies, in keeping their accounts, in maintaining reserves, and in computing their earnings and the asset value of their outstanding securities, employ unsound or misleading methods, or are not subjected to adequate independent scrutiny; “(6) when investment companies are reorganized, become inactive, or change the character of their business, or when the control or management thereof is transferred, without the consent of their security holders;
“(7) when investment companies by excessive borrowing and the issuance of excessive amounts of senior securities increase unduly the speculative character of their junior securities; or
“(8) when investment companies operate without adequate assets or reserves.” 15 U.S.C. § 80a-l(b).
. Plaintiffs also seek to bring an action under section 47(b) of the Investment Company Act, 15 U.S.C. § 80a-46(b). The language of section 47(b) establishes that violators and knowing successors in interest are precluded from enforcing contracts made in violation of the Act or any rule thereunder or whose performance would involve such a violation. Cf. Mills v. Electric Auto-Lite Co.,
