There are two issues in this 10b-5 securities fraud case:
first,
whether the promissory note given together with a trust deed for a bank loan is a security controlled by the federal securities acts, and
second,
whether the pledge of corporate stock for renewal of the bank loan constituted a sale within the meaning of the securities law. On a motion to dismiss, the District Court hеld that under the allegations of fact in the complaint, neither the execution and delivery of the promissory note nor any of the associated transactions, which included the pledge of stock, constituted a sale of a security within the meaning of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. The Court, therefore, dismissed the complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
The facts are fully set forth in the District Court opinion. Briefly, plaintiff Juanita Hanslik McClure was taken advantage of by her ex-husband, Adolph Hanslik, who has been discharged in bankruptcy so that any financial relief available to her must come from the First National Bank of Lubbock, Texas, and its vice-president and loan officer, Sterling Emens, Jr. The fraud theory against these two defendants is based on a $200,000 loan made by the Bank to a corporation, Gaines County Developments (GCD), which was half owned by Mrs. McClure. The stock had been divided between her and her husband in a domestic property settlement. Suing individually and derivatively on behalf of GCD, Mrs. McClure alleges that Hanslik *492 and Emens on representations of corporate need, obtained her consent to the loan from the Bank to GCD on a one-year promissory note and a deed of trust on corporation land, but then used the $200,000 to repay unsecured personal debts of Hanslik to the Bank, rather than to pay corporate obligations. Hanslik gave his worthless personal note to the corporation for funds that he had thus diverted to his personal obligations. The Bank subsequently extended the one-year note but required Mrs. MсClure to pledge her corporate stock as additional collateral. With the note unpaid, the Bank eventually foreclosed on the corporation’s land, its only substantial asset, so that even though not foreclosed, the pledged stock in the corporation became essentiаlly worthless.
Since this case comes to us for review of a dismissal of a complaint on jurisdictional grounds, we do not reach factual issues and need not concern ourselves with whether actionable fraud is alleged in the complaint either under federal securities law or under state law. Fraud is assumed for the purpose of this review. If the District Court had jurisdiction of the subject matter of the complaint, the case would have to be remanded for full development of the facts and issues surrounding these transactions. Subject matter jurisdiction must be found, if at all, under section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C.A. § 78j(b), аnd SEC Rule 10b-5, 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5 (1973). The decision as to whether the Court had subject matter jurisdiction turns on whether under the facts of this case there was a purchase or sale of a security within the meaning of the Act.
I.
The first question is whether the note given to the Bank for the loan is a security within the meaning of the Act. Although the Securities Exchangе Act of 1934 provides that the term security means “any” note, judicial decisions have restricted the application of the Act to those notes that are investment in nature and have excluded notes which are only reflective of individual commercial transactions. The path laid down by these deсisions is not entirely clear because of the difficulty in expressing in judicial opinions the characteristics of those note transactions to which the term “any note” does not apply. The authorities are reasonably consistent, however, in holding that the Act does not cover
all
notes. A review of thе decisions convinces us that the notes executed and delivered to the Bank are the kind that are not covered. Indeed, the way to this decision has been clearly indicated by a recently published opinion by Judge Walter P. Gewin, writing for another panel of .this Court, which says that the reasoning of the District Judge in this case is compelling. Bellah v. First National Bank,
In
Bellah,
the Cоurt had under consideration a 10b-5 fraud complaint brought by two individuals against a bank which had renewed prior credit to them upon execution of a new promissory note and a deed of trust. Since the notes were of a six-month duration, the Court was considering whether the exemption in the Act of “any note . . . which hаs a maturity at the time of issuance of not exceeding nine months” should be applied. 15 U.S.C.A. § 78c(a)(10). Finding that judicial decisions had modified the exemption of “any” such note to exclude only so-called commercial notes, and not investment notes, the Court was compelled to determine whether the prоmissory note and deed of trust executed in favor of a bank for funds loaned for use in the borrowers livestock business were issued in the context of a commercial loan transaction and “beyond the purview of the Act.”
*493
Although not all of the securities eases dealing with notes can be brought into line, analysis оf the factual situations upon which the various cases were decided supports our holding that in this case the note falls outside of the purview of the Act.
1
The cases excluding certain notes from the coverage of the Act generally involved underlying transactions between payor and payеe which were not of an investment nature.
See
Bellah v. First National Bank,
On the other hand, where notes have been deemed securities within the meaning of the securities laws, either of two factors, not present here, usually indicated the investment overtones of the underlying transactions.
2
First, in this case, only the Bank and GCD were involved in the execution of documents related to a commercial loan. GCD’s notes were neither offered to some class of investors, nor were they acquired by the Bank for speculation or investment.
See
Sanders v. John Nuveen & Co.,
Second, in the case at bar, the Bank ostensibly extended its loan so that GCD might pay off its business debt. Thus, GCD did not obtain investment assets, directly or indirectly, in exchange for its notes.
See
Rekant v. Desser,
We realize that our holding today that the Act does not apply to commercial notes of a longer duration than nine months, taken with the decisions voiding the short-term exemption as to investment paper, virtually writes that exemption out of the law. On one hand, the Act covers all investment notes, no matter how short their maturity, because they are not encompassed by the “any note” language of the exemption. *495 On the other hand, the Act does not cover any commercial notes, no matter how long their maturity, because they fall outside the “any note” definition of a security. Thus, the investment or commercial nature of a note entirely controls the applicability of the Act, depriving of all utility the exemption based on maturity-length. The original scrivener of the definitional section may well wonder what happened to his carefully drаwn exemption on the way to the courthouse, but if the judicial decisions do not properly reflect the intent of Congress as to the coverage of the Act, only that body can properly rectify the situation at this point, if stare decisis is to apply and the Supreme Court does not make some definitive decision contrary to the presently decided eases.
II.
Mrs. McClure’s second argument is that her pledge of her stock in consideration for the Bank’s renewal of the GCD loan was a “sale of any security” protected by the anti-fraud provisions of section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act and SEC Rulе 10b-5. We do not doubt that a pledge of securities can constitute a “sale” in some cases, but we hold that the pledge was not a sale in the circumstances of this case.
The securities acts have as their fundamental purpose the protection of investors. To this end they are designed to “substitutе a philosophy of full disclosure for the philosophy of
caveat em/ptor
and thus achieve a high standard of business ethics in the securities industry.” Affiliated Ute Citizens v. United States,
The cases relied upon by Mrs. McClure, SEC v. Guild Films Co.,
Affirmed.
Notes
. A number of the note cases were decided under the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C.A. § 77a et seq., rather than under Mrs. McClure’s asserted jurisdictional predicate, the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. For present purposes the distinction is of little moment. In spite of occasional differences in wording, the definitions of “security” in the two Acts are functionally equivalent.
See
Tcherepnin v. Knight,
. The two factors identified here are not necessarily the only ones appropriate for consideration.
See generally
Comment, Commercial Notes and Definition of ‘Security’ Under Securities Exchange Act of 1934: A Note is a Note is a Nоte?, 52 Neb.L.Rev. 478, 510-524 (1973). Each case must turn on “the complete context of each transaction.” Lino v. City Invg. Co.,
. Four oases do not fit easily into the foregoing classification of cases. See Zeller v. Bogue Elec. Mfg. Corp.,
