This аppeal raises the vexing question how far instruments bearing the form'of promissory notes are securities within the anti-fraud provisions of the Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
The Facts and the Proceedings in the District Court
This action by The Exchange National Bank of Chicago (the Bank) against the well-known accounting firm of Touche, Ross & Company (Touche) was brought in the District Court for the Northern District of Illinois and was transferred, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a), to the District Court for the Southern District of New York. The complaint was in four counts. Count I alleged violation of § 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933, § 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and the SEC’s Rule 10b — 5; Count II claimed a violation of § 18(a) of the 1934 Act; Count IV asserted a violation of §§ 10(b), 15(c), 17(a) and 18(a) of the 1934 Act; and Count III was a pendent state law claim for negligence. All *1128 four counts concerned the same transactions by the Bank and, apparently, the same conduct by Touche. 1
The transactions were between the Bank and a New York brokerage firm, Weis, Voisin & Co., Inc., later Weis Securities, Inc. (Weis), which was a member of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) and the American Stock Exchange. These transactions were the^Bank’s purchase from Weis of three unsecured subordinated note^ dated July 31, 1972, in the aggregate principal amount of C$1 million} The conduct was Touche’s issuance on July 7, 1972, of opinions saying, among other things, that Weis’ Statement of Financial Condition as of May 26, 1972 (the “Statement”) and Weis’ “Answers to Financial Questionnaire and Additional Information” (the Report), which Weis filed with the SEC pursuant to § 17 of the Securities Exchange Act, fairly presented the financial position of Weis and conformed to generally accepted accounting principles. The Bank alleged that it had relied on these opinions as well as the Statement and the Report, and that the latter wére materially false and misleading in numerous respects as Touche knew or should havе known when it issued its opinions; that when the false and misleading entries were discovered in May, 1973, Weis had already been placed in receivership and was then being liquidated; and that the notes have become worthless.
Touche moved to dismiss the complaint. Although the motion claimed that the complaint was defective in its allegations of fraud 2 and that a curative amendment would not be possible, the attention of the parties and the district court seems to have become concentrated on the contention that the notes were not securities within the 1933 or 1934 Acts; that the court thus had no jurisdiction over the three federal counts; and that, diversity of citizenship being absent, the pendent count should likewise be dismissed. A memorandum accompanying the moving affidavit discussed the isgue of the status of the notes. Entitled ¿promissory NoteJ with the amount and the date, July 31,1972, at the top, each note extended over nearly nine typewritten pages. The three notes were payable on July 31,1973, October 31,1973, and January 31, 1974, respectively, “upon written demand received by the Company at least six (6) months prior to such date, or upon such date thereafter as may be specified by the Lender upon written demand received by the Company at least six months prior to the payment date so specified.” 3 Interest was payable after each note’s maturity date, at a rate “3% in excess of the prime commercial loan rate of the Lender then in effect for short-term borrowings, but in no event less than 9% per annum.” The rights of the holder were subject and subordinate to all general creditors but were senior to all other subordinated creditors except existing obligations to Fidelity Corporation and Security National Bank. 4 The note was prepayable on three days’ written notice from the Company with the prior writ *1129 ten approval of NYSE. If any actiоn were commenced by a general creditor within 12 months after the maturity of the note, Weis would furnish the holder with copies of the pleadings and the holder would have the right to contest the action if Weis did not do this in good faith. The note was transferable only to a person approved by NYSE as provided in its Rule 325.20. The Bank forewent any right to take as security any property of the “member organization” that might come into its possession and waived any right of set-off.
As indicated, several provisions of the notes were keyed to NYSE’s Rule 325, entitled “Capital Requirements for Member Organizations and Individual Members.” A basic proviso of this Rule was that no member “shall permit, in the ordinary course of business as a broker, his or its Aggregate Indebtedness to exceed 2000 per centum of his or its Net Capital. . . . ” 5 “Aggregate Indebtedness” was defined to exclude, inter alia, “liabilities subordinated to general creditors pursuant to a separate agreement approved by the Exchange.” Consistent with this, subordinated indebtedness appeared in Weis’ balance sheet along with stockholder equity rather than as a current liability.
Opposing affidavits of Melvin K. Lippe, Vice Chairman of the Board of the Bank, of counsel, of a partner of the accounting firm of Coopers & Lybrand, who acted for the Trustee in the SIPC liquidation of Weis, and of a supervisor of the Administrative Staff of the Trustee in the Weis liquidation added flesh to the bare bones of the notes. The Lippe affidavit set forth the circumstances under which the Bank purchased the notes. Stripped of self-serving characterizations such as consistent references to the notes as investments, his factual allegations were substantially as follows:
In the spring of 1972 Lippe was Executive Vice President and Chief Administrative Officer of the Bank and was particularly concerned with expanding the Bank’s business; he was not part of the staff which handled normal commercial loans. Early in March, 1972, he was notified by thе manager of the Bank’s recently opened branch office in Tel Aviv, Israel, that Weis had sought approximately $1 million for the expansion of its brokerage activities both in the United States and abroad. Because the Bank was interested in developing a closer relationship between its new Tel Aviv branch and that of Weis, the only American brokerage firm then operating in Israel, and the interest rate proposed by Weis was attractive, Lippe instructed the branch manager that the Bank might be interested.
Shortly thereafter Arthur T. Levine, Weis’ Chief Executive Officer, and Sol Leit, its Chief Operating Officer, came to Chicago to negotiate with Lippe. Lippe continued to be interested because of the potential for the Bank’s Tel Aviv branch. Levine and Leit indicated that the Bank would be expected to purchase subordinated promissory notes, which would be listed as part of Weis’ net capital pursuant to Rule 325; they presented a form of such a note which they said was in conformity with Rule 325. They also exhibited copies of the notes held by Security National Bank and Fidelity Corporation, see note 4 supra. Lippe requested the Weis representative to forward financial statements and any other documents certified by Touche; this led to the sending of the documents previously mentioned. On July 19, 1972, the Bank agreed to purchase for $890,750 three unsecured subordinated notes in the aggregate principal amount of $1 million and the transaction was consummated on August 7, 1972. 6
*1130 A reply affidavit by Touche’s counsel urged that “most of the matters upon which plaintiff Exchange Bank purports to rely” in establishing that the notes were securities “involve in large portion conversations and states of mind with respect to which defendant Touche Ross was not a party and had no prior knowledge, and which cannot bind defendant Touche Ross (if at all) unless it has the right to cross-examine in detail the makers of plaintiff’s affidavits and other pertinent witnesses.” Counsel requested that “if and to the extent that the affidavits submitted by plaintiff Exchange Bank are deemed to raise issues of fact, the Court should permit, as a preliminary matter, discovery limited to such issues so that a full record can be developed for the determination of the threshold issue of subject matter jurisdiction.” However, except for those conclusory assertions categorized as reflecting the Bank’s “investment motives,” which we have disregarded, the affidavit gave no indication what facts were disputed or as to precisely what discovery was sought.
After hearing argument Judge Wyatt denied the motion to dismiss for want of subject matter jurisdiction “on the ground that the transaction seems more in the character of an investment than of a commercial loan.” He believed, however, that the question was “a close one” which should be reviewed by this court before preparation for trial and offered to make the statement required by 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b). Such a statement was incorporated in the order denying the motion to dismiss, and a panel this court granted leave to appeal.
Propriety of Deciding a Rule 12(b)(1) Motion on Affidavits
We deal at the outset with a suggestion of the defendant that the district court could not properly deny its motion to dismiss for want of subject matter jurisdiction on the basis of factual statements in plaintiff’s affidavits.
In
Land v. Dollar,
In passing on a motion to dismiss because the complaint fails to state a cause of action, the facts set forth in the complaint are assumed to be true and affidavits and other evidence produced on application for a preliminary injunction may not be considered. But when a question of the District Court’s jurisdiction is raised, either by a party or by the court on its own motion, Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b), the court may inquire, by affidavits or otherwise, into the facts as they exist. (Citations omitted.)330 U.S. 735 , n. 4,67 S.Ct. 1009 , 1011,91 L.Ed. 1209 .
Since 1947, however, Rule 12(b) was amended, effective March 19,1948, to provide that a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim based on matter outside the pleadings can be treated as a motion for summary judgment, without any corresponding amendment authorizing affidavits or other extra-pleading materials to be considered on a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Thus there has been some controversy as to the use of such materials in the context of a 12(b)(1) motion, see
Winkelman v. New York Stock Exchange,
The argument ignores the important difference that judgments under Rule 12(b)(6)
*1131
are on the merits, with
res judicata
effects, whereas judgments under Rule 12(b)(1) are not. We thus see no reason to conclude that the 1948 amendments to Rule 12(b) altered the long-standing “rule that [evidentiary matter presented by affidavit or otherwise] is proper where jurisdiction is challenged . . . ,” Wright, Federal Courts 278-79 (1970). This was plainly the rule prior to the 1948 amendments, see
Land v. Dollar, supra,
and
Central Mexico L. & P. v. Munch,
The only relevance of Rule 56 to a motion under Rule 12(b)(1) is that a body of decisions has developed under Rule 56 that offer guidelines which assist in resolving the problem encountered if the affidavits submitted on a 12(b)(1) motion should reveal the existence of factual problems. If this should occur, a court should consider allowing a party to utilize some of the procedures outlined in Rule 56(e), if this is requested, and conceivably a case could arise where even these would not suffice. But just as under Rule 56, a party opposing a Rule 12(b)(1) motion cannot rest on the mere assertion that factual issues may exist.
Beal v. Lindsay,
The Merits
As we pointed out in
Zeller v. Bogue Electric Manufacturing Corp.,
The Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 differ in their method of handling short-term commercial paper. Under the 1933 Act, while § 2(1) provides that any note is a “security,” § 3(a)(3) exempts from the registration and prospectus requirements “[a]ny note, draft, bill of exchange, or banker’s acceptance which arises out of a current transaction or the proceeds of which have been or are to be used for current transactions, and which has a maturity at the time of issuance of not exceeding nine months, exclusive of days of grace, or any renewal thereof the maturity of which is likewise limited.” fHowever, § 17, the general anti-fraud provision, provides in subsection (c) that the exemptions of § 3 shall be inapplicable.) Instead of following this model in the Securities Exchange Act. Congress defined “security,” § 3(a)(10), to include “any note” but inserted in the same clause that this would not include “any note, draft, bill of exchange, or banker’s acceptance which has a maturity at the time of issuance of not exceeding nine months, exclusive of days of grace, or any renewal thereof the maturity of which is likewise limited.”
It should be added that the definition sections of both statutes, § 2 of the 1933 Act and § 3 of the 1934 Act, begin with the words:
When used in this title, unless the context otherwise requires—
The sparse legislative history is analyzed in a Note, The Commercial Paper Market and the Securities Acts, 39 U.Chi.L.Rev. 362, 381-83, 397-98 (1972). The source of the registration exemption in § 3(a)(3) of the 1933 Act was a letter from the Secretary of the Federal Reserve Board to the Chairmen of the House and Senate Committees. The Board thought it apparent that the proposed act was
*1132 intended to apply only to stocks, bonds, debentures, and other similar securities of the kind commonly known as investment securities, which are issued for the purpose of obtаining capital funds for business enterprises and are purchased by persons for investment.
The amendment was suggested because it seemed to the Board that the Act was
intended to apply to bankers’ acceptances or to short-time paper issued for the purpose of obtaining funds for current transactions in commerce, industry, or agriculture and purchased by banks and corporations as a means of employing temporarily idle funds. 7
^Except for the prefatory language in § 2, the terms of the 1933 Act would thus have the result of subjecting to the anti-fraud provisions, in contrast to the registration requirements, any note, however short the term and however far the transaction was being an investment security. 8
When the 1934 Act was passed there was no need for a special exemption of notes from registration, since the registration requirement was tied to transactions on a national stock exchange, § 12(a). 9 If notes wеre to have special treatment beyond this, the place to accord this had therefore to be in the definition of a security. Apparently there was general agreement that something of this sort should be done. The backing and filling was on whether the exemption should contain the “current transaction” language of § 3(a)(3) of the 1933 Act; ultimately this was deleted. The author of the Chicago Law Review note seems correct in concluding:
Since there is no legislative comment with respect to this deletion, it cannot be gainfully surmised whether the omission of the “current transactions” phrasing was an inadvertent mistake, an assumption on the part of the legislature that the clause was unnecessary, or a conscious attempt to distinguish section 3(a)(10) of the 1934 Act from section 3(a)(3) of the 1933 Act.
{Except for the prefatory language in § 3 the letter of the 1934 Act would thus have the result that any note with a maturity in excess of nine months would bе subject to the antifraud provisions whereas any note with a shorter maturity would be exempt [from them. 10
*1133 As will be seen,|courts have shrunk from a literal reading that would extend the reach of the statutes beyond what could reasonably be thought to have been intended in these two great pieces of legislation and would produce a seemingly irrational difference in the scope of their anti-fraud provisions. A further basis for utilizing the “unless the context otherwise requires” phrase is found in President Roosevelt’s messages urging enactment of both statutes and the Senate committee report on the 1933 Act, both of which reflect concern for the average investor against fraud in the public offering of common investment instruments. See Comment, Commercial Notes and Definition of ‘Security’ under Securities Exchange Act of 1934: A Note is a Note is a Note?, 52 Nebraska L.Rev. 478, 487-88 (1973).
This court’s first encounter with the problem whether notes were to be considerеd as securities within the 1934 Act came in
Movielab, Inc.
v.
Berkey Photo, Inc.,
Zeller, supra,
It does not follow, however, that every transaction within the introductory clause of § 10, which involves promissory notes, whether of less or more than nine months maturity, is within Rule 10b-5. The Act is for the protection of investors, and its provisions must be read accordingly. See Movielab, Inc. v. Berkey Photo, Inc.,452 F.2d 662 (2 Cir. 1971). But we see no reason to doubt that Belco stood in the position of an investor, although perhaps an involuntary one, with respect to Bogue.
Our opinion relied in considerable degree on Securities Act Release No. 4412, narrowly interpreting § 3(a)(3) of the 1933 Act, see
Nevertheless, the Fifth Circuit’s oft-cited dictum in
Lehigh Valley Trust Co. v. Central Nat’l Bank of Jacksonville,
The first blow by a court of appeals was struck in
Lino v. City Investing Co.,
The commercial context of this case requires a holding that the transaction did not involve a “purchase” of securities. These were personal promissory notes issued by a private party. There was no public offering of the notes, and the issuer was the person claiming to be defrauded. The notes were not procured for speculation or investment, and there is no indication that FI was soliciting venture capital from Lino. 12
As to the district court’s reliance on
Movie-lab,
the court said,
We are not faced with a situation such as confronted the Movielab court, and, in *1135 any event we are not bound by that decision. We hold only that this particular transaction before us does not fall within the ambit of the federal securitiеs law. 13
Next came two Fifth Circuit cases holding that notes issued to obtain bank loans were not securities within the federal securities law.
Bellah v. First National Bank of Hereford,
C.N.S. Enterprises, Inc. v. G. & G. Enterprises, Inc.,508 F.2d 1354 , cert.
whether promissory notes delivered to a bank for loans used to purchase the assets of a small business enterprise constitute “securities” under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, investing the maker of the notes with a jurisdictional basis for bringing suit in the federal courts.
In a thorough opinion which reviewed the pertinent court of appeals decisions, the court answered in the negative. Judge Sprecher recognized the difficulties of “the commercial-investment” dichotomy, saying,
In one sense every lender of money is an investor since he places his money at risk in anticipation of a profit in the form of interest. Also in a broad sense every investor lends his money to a borrower who uses it for a price and is expected to return it one day. On the other hand, the polarized extremes are conceptually identifiable: buying shares of the common stock of a publicly-held corporation, where the impetus for the transaction comes from the person with the money, is an investment; borrowing money from a bank to finance the purchase of an automobile, where the impetus for the transaction comes from the person who needs the money, is a loan. In between is a gray area which, m~the absence of fur *1136 ther congressional indication of intent or Supreme Court construction, has been and must be in the future subjected to (case-by-case) treatment.
He thought some help could be obtained by use of the criteria in 52 Nebraska L.Rev. at 510-24, cited above, and also referred to the conclusions reached in an article by two New York lawyers experienced in securities law which we quote in the margin.
15
The most recent court of appeals bank loan decision of which we are aware is
Great Western Bank & Trust v. Kotz,
What makes Judge Wright’s approach rather appealing is that the efforts to provide meaningful criteria for decision under “the commercial-investment” dichotomy do not seem to us to carry much promise of success. For example, we do not see much force in the test suggested by the
Great Western per curiam
“whether the funding party invested ‘risk capital’.” On the one hand, the securities laws cover debt, even supposedly gilt-edged debt, as well as equity; on the' other a $5,000 “character” six months’ bank loan to еnable an old customer to enter a new line of business would scarcely qualify as a “security” although it is surely risk capital. Frequent reference is made to the test laid down by the Supreme Court in
SEC v. W. J. Howey Co.,
Despite this we do not find ourselves able to accept Judge Wright’s suggestion that no note given to evidence a bank loan can be a “security.” One reason is that, in framing his exception, under the influence of the facts in the case in hand which are also present here, he seems to look at the matter solely, or at least principally, from the standpoint of a bank seeking to invoke the federal securities laws as a remedy supplementing those afforded by state laws. However, as shown by several of the cases cited, often it is the borrower who asserts fraud by the lender. Judge Wright’s arguments based on a bank’s superior bargaining position and its special investigatory facilities would have little bearing in such a case; indeed the former would weigh in favor of holding the note to be a security. Yet we see nothing in the statutes that would justify holding that the same note was a security when a borrower from a bank invoked federal law and not a security when the bank asserted this. 17 Even when it is the bank that invoked the federal securities laws, wе would find it hard to reconcile with the statutory language a holding that where a bank or a group of banks loaned many millions of dollars to a corporation for periods of several years, the anti-fraud provisions of the federal securities laws do not apply. While banks are in a favored position to obtain disclosure, the target of §§ 10(b) of the 1934 Act and 17(a) of the 1933 Act is fraud, which a bank’s? ability to obtain disclosure cannot always prevent.
The foregoing discussion suggests to us that, taking full account of the antiliteralist approach of the
Forman
opinion,
If ours is the correct approach, affirmance is clearly demanded — as it doubtless also would be by the “commercial-investment” dichotomy, although not, we suppose, by Judge Wright’s Great Western concurrence. (The Weis transaction is at the opposite pole from the typical “mercantile” transactions we have mentioned) The “loan” was negotiated with the Bank’s chief administrative officer, not with a lending officer. The form of the note was dictated not by the Bank but directly by the borrower and ultimately by NYSE. The notes themselves bore scant resemblance to the standard forms used in commercial lending. While the notes purported to mature at dates ranging from 12 to 18 months from issuance, collection at the stated dates or later depended on the lender’s giving six months’ written notice. More important of all were the subordinated character of the notes and the knowledge of both parties that the proceeds would be considered by NYSE as the equivalent of equity capital for the purpose of enabling Weis further to expand its business by borrowing sums that would permit it to extend more credit to major customers. Transferability of the *1139 notes was restricted to persons approved by NYSE and prepayment was prohibited without NYSE’s consent. The notes reflected the Bank’s foregoing of the usual and important rights to take as security any property of the borrower that came into its possession or to exercise a right of set-off. Finally, the Exchange National loan was no isolated transaction but a part of a large financing operation conducted by Weis’ combining 19 lenders who held subordinated notes, debentures and cash agreements totalling $8,735,275, with another 24 lenders who had subordinated accounts or notes to which their accounts were subordinated. We find nothing in this “context” that would justify a failure to apply the statutory language and much that demands its application.
We are not called upon to decide, and intimate no opinion concerning, the question whether these notes, though not within the 1934 Act’s exemption, are also outside the 1933 Act’s exception from registration. Apart from minor differences in language — principally the requirement of the 1933 Act that exempted notes should reflect a current transaction, an elusive concept given the almost universal practice of continuous roll-over — the purposes of the registration and anti-fraud provisions differ, thus altering the “context” to be examined to determine whether the admonition “unless the context otherwise requires” is to be applied.
The order denying Touche’s motion to dismiss on the ground that the notes were not “securities” within the federal securities laws is affirmed. It goes without saying that we hаve not passed on other defenses, notably the effect of the recent decision in
Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder,
Notes
. Count II alleged that Touche “made statements” which were false and misleading, but in the absence of more particularized pleading we must assume that these “statements” were the July 7 and May. 26 opinions that formed the basis of Count I.
. Although a similar motion had been denied by Judge Decker when presented to the court of the Northern District of Illinois, that court was presumably (no opinion accompanied the denial) relying on the then-recent Seventh Circuit decision in
Hochfelder v. Ernst & Ernst,
. The note would become immediately due and payable in the event of receivership, insolvency, etc.; in cеrtain other instances of serious adversity to Weis, the note, with accrued interest, could be made due and payable six months after a declaration by the Lender.
. The Fidelity Corporation Subordinated Note, dated February 23, 1971, was in the amount of $1 million. The Security National Bank held two Subordinated Notes, one dated November 26, 1971 and the other June 8, 1972, each in the amount of $1 million.
. This has since been amended to set the standard of aggregate indebtedness, when this standard is appropriate, at 1000% of net capital, see New York Stock Exchange Constitution and Rules, Rule 325(b)(2), fl 2325 (1976).
. The Bank learned “subsequently” — to wit, after Weis had gone into liquidation — that a bank and two insurance companies also held $3 million of Senior Subordinated Notes issued under an agreement dated September 29, 1972, and that 37 other lenders held subordinated notes pursuant to a variety of agreements (entitled “Agreement Subordinating Account,” “Agreement Subordinating Individual’s Account,” “Seсured Demand Note Collateral Agreement,” “Subordinated Debenture,” “Cash Subordina *1130 tion Agreement,” and “Subordinated Promissory Note”) while yet another dozen lenders held notes subordinated both to the general creditors and to creditors of a brokerage firm whose assets Weis had purchased.
. Although the letters refer to “this bill,” Hearings before the House Committee on Interstate Commerce, 73d Cong. 2d Sess. on H.R. 4314, p. 180 (1933), the amendment transmitted by the Federal Reserve Board dealt only with the registration requirement. The hearings brought forth considerable sentiment that compliance with registration requirements would cripple the entire commercial paper market; there was no claim that application of the anti-fraud provisions would impose a similar burden. The only remarks having any bearing on the applicability of the anti-fraud provisions were repeated assertions that banks and not the common investors who were the lambs tо be protected by the bill were the almost universal purchasers of such paper. However, these remarks were in the context of the registration requirement — the portion of the 1933 Act that occupied the center of the stage.
. This intention seems to be emphasized by the express declaration in § 17(c) of the 1933 Act that “The exemptions provided in section 3 shall not apply to the provisions of this section.”
. This situation was altered by the addition of § 12(g) in 1964, 78 Stat. 565, 566-68.
. In the six federal securities acts, passages of four — the Securities Act of 1933, § 2(1); the Trust Indenture Act of 1939, § 303(1); the Investment Company Act of 1940, § 2(a)(36); the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, § 202(a)(18) — define a “security” as
any note . . . evidence of indebtedness . investment contract . . .or, in general, any interest or instrument commonly known as a “security” ....
The Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935, § 2(a)(16), uses the slightly different version,
any note . . . investment contract or, in general, any instrument commonly known as a “security” . Thus none of these five acts limits the application of its provisions as they relate to notes by limiting the definition of a “security,” as does the 1934 Act’s § 3(a)(10). However, with the exception of the Investment Adviser’s Act, each provides an explicit exemption of some sort for activities in commercial paper. Besides the 1933 Act’s § 3(a)(3) exemption from registration, quoted in the text above, § 6(b) of the Public Utilities Holding Company Act provides
The provisions of subsection (a) of this section [making unlawful certain transactions *1133 by registered companies] shall not apply to the issue, renewal, or guaranty by a registered holding company or subsidiary company thereof of a note or draft (including the pledge of any security as collateral therefor) if such note or draft (1) is not part of a public offering, (2) matures or is renewed for not more than nine months, exclusive of days of grace, after the date of such issue, renewal, or guaranty thereof, and (3) aggregates (together with all other than outstanding notes and drafts of a maturity of nine months or less, exclusive of days of grace, as to which such company is primarily or secondarily liable) not more than 5 per centum of the principal amount and par value of the other securities of such company then outstanding, or such greater per centum thereof as the Commission upon application may by order authorize as necessary or appropriate in the public interest or for the protection of investors or consumers. ... 15 U.S.C. § 79f(b).
Section 304(a) of the Trust Indenture Act provides,
(a) The provisions of this subchapter [exempting securities and transactions] shall not apply to any of the following securities:
(1) any security other than (A) a note, bond, debenture, or evidence of indebtedness, whether or not secured, or (B) a certificate of interest or participation in any such note, bond, debenture, or evidence of indebtedness, or (C) a tеmporary certificate for, or guarantee of, any such note, bond, debenture, evidence of indebtedness, or certificate . . . 15 U.S.C. § 77ddd(a).
And § 3 of the Investment Company Act exempts, by declaring not to be an “investment company”
(3) Any bank or insurance company; any savings and loan association .
(5) Any person who is not engaged in the business of issuing redeemable securities, face-amount certificates of the installment type or periodic payment plan certificates, and who is primarily engaged in one or more of the following businesses: (A) Purchasing or otherwise acquiring notes, drafts, acceptances, open accounts receivable, and other obligations representing part or all of the sales price of merchandise, insurance, and services; (B) making loans to manufacturers, wholesalers, and retailers of, and to prospective purchasers of, specified merchandise, insurаnce, and services . 15 U.S.C. § 80a-3(c).
. Two important decisions by courts of appeals preceding
Zeller
are
Rekant v. Desser,
. Whether or not the
Lino
result was right, a point on which we express no opinion, we do not find some of this reasoning very persuasive. The anti-fraud provisions of the securities laws are not limited to public offerings and, as the opinion itself recognized,
. The court,
. Judge Roney noted with candor,
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. 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 mаy well wonder what happened to his carefully drawn 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 cases.
. Lipton & Katz, “Notes” Are (Are Not?) Always Securities — A Review, 29 Bus.Lawyer, 861, 866 (1974):
Not every note is a security. The commercial context of the underlying transaction has to be evaluated. Notes issued for personal loans and consumer installment purchases are not securities. Notes that are issued for investments and business acquisitions as well as commercial paper sold outside the normal institutional market are securities. The mid-die ground has been narrowed, but will still from time to time create a problem. The courts hаve seen the impact of the open “floodgates” in other areas and should pay heed to the legislative intent and policy considerations discussed above. The federal securities laws are not the appropriate vehicle for consumer protection on installment sales.
See also a postscript by the same authors, “Notes” Are Not Always Securities, 30 Bus. Lawyer 763 (1975).
. We do not hold that application of any single factor . . . compels us to affirm the judgment of the district court. Nor do we intimate that in a different case there would not be other factors to consider.”
Great Western Bank & Trust v. Kotz, supra,
. Another problem concerns cases where notes issued to a bank are discounted or hypothecated; if they are not “securities” in the hands of the payee bank, how could they become so when held by a pledgee?
. On the question whether § 17(a) of the 1933 Act provides a private civil remedy, see
SEC v. Texas Gulf Sulphur Co.,
. We leave for another day the status under the 1934 Act of a note with a maturity of nine months or less that does not bear such a strong family resemblance, and the question whether a note which because of its short term would not be a security under § 10(b) of the 1934 Act might be one within the anti-fraud provisions of the 1933 Act.
. The Code removes the need for an exception from registration, such as is contained in § 3(a)(3) of the 1933 Act, by provision for a “limited offering” § 227 (with banks excluded from this section’s numerical test), which is not a “distribution” subject to the Code’s filing requirement, § 501.
