Hаppy Radio, a closely held corporation formally incorporated on May 14, 1980, entered an agreement with Defendants E.B. and Naomi Groen, sole shareholders of Bret Broadcasting Company, in April 1980 to buy all of the Groens’ stock in Bret Broadcаsting over a twelve-year period. During this period, Happy Radio had the right to manage Bret Broadcasting’s radio station in Pontiac, Illinois. Plaintiff Sutter bought seventy percent of the shares of Happy Radio in March 1980 after reviewing the stock purchase аgreement and consulting with an attorney. Sutter participated in the formation of Happy Radio, and elected himself president.
Sutter’s complaint against the Groens alleged that they overstated Bret Broadcasting’s earnings in order to induce Happy Radio to buy Bret Broadcasting and to induce investors to buy stock in Happy Radio. Sutter claimed that those misrepresentations caused him to buy his Happy Radio stock, which now is worthless.
In the first appeal of this case,
Sutter v. Groen,
The principal issue in this appeal is whether Sutter’s purchase of seventy percent of the common stock of Happy Radio constituted a securities transaction within the scope of thе Securities Acts and there
*595
fore gave the district court jurisdiction to adjudicate Sutter’s claims of misrepresentation and fraud against the Groens. Sutter urges us to abandon the sale of business doctrine adopted in
Frederiksen v. Poloway,
I
The sale of business doctrine basically states that a sale of a business effectuated by a transfer of stock does not involve a security within the meaning of the Securities Acts when the transaction is a commercial venture rather than an investment. This circuit has been in the forefront of development of that doctrine. Our decisions reflect our belief that the sale of business doctrine most accurately reflects the economic reality of a transaction involving the sale of an entire business. 1
In
Frederiksen,
this court ruled that the sale of a business through a stock transfer did not involve a “security” under Section 78c(a)(10). The court found that, in economic reality, the sale constituted a commercial venture rather than an investment. To reach its result, the
Frederiksen
court first rejected the claim that because Section 78c(a)(10) specifies “stock” as a security, any transaсtion involving stock implicates federal securities laws. The court instead determined that the prefatory phrase “unless the context otherwise requires,” and the Supreme Court’s decision in
United Housing Foundation v. Forman,
The economic reality test outlined in
For-man
defines a transaction involving a security as “an investment in a common venture premised on a reasonable expectation of profits to be derived from the entrepreneurial or managerial еfforts of others.”
The
Forman
decision is not limited to instruments lacking the traditional characteristics of corporate stock.
Contra Golden v. Garafalo,
As we have recognized, a key element of аn “investment” is that the investor relies on other persons to produce profits.
Emisco Industries, Inc. v. Pro’s, Inc.,
The rebuttable presumption is a logical starting point for analysis of a transaction. Although the economic reality of a transaction depends on the circumstances of that transaction, common sense indicates that a purchaser generally will pay the premium for, and acquire the responsibility of, a controlling interest in a business only with the intention of exercising that control.
Sutter,
A 49-percent stockholder who acquires an additional two percent of the business’s stock may not intend to exercise control of the business. A 49-percent stockholder who buys an additional forty percent of the business’s stock also may intend to leave essential management decisions
3
to others, though this seems at least improbable. The circumstances of each transaction will become apparent to the trial court,
see King v. Winkler,
The facts of this ease generally are uncontested. We agree with the district court that Sutter bought seventy percent of Happy Radio in order to run the business as he saw fit rather than as an investment for others to manage. Sutter’s testimony indicates that he immediately elected himself president of Happy Radio to assert control over the management of the radio station Happy Radio operated. Sutter bought the large block of shares specifically so that he could control the station. He was prepared at the outset of the transaction to make whatever policy decisions and hire and replace whichever employees were necessary to run the radio station properly. His еxercise of influence was not merely a result of a belated discovery that the radio station was failing; instead, he worked from the beginning to establish and maintain a profitable enterprise. No one else in the business, including his partner, was in the position to exercise control without Sutter’s consent. Sutter made most essential management decisions.
The record clearly reveals that Sutter bought his shares in Happy Radio to acquire and operate a business enterprise rather than merely to make аn investment in an operation for others to manage. The federal securities laws do not apply to this type of transaction. Thus, the district court correctly dismissed count one of Sutter’s complaint. 4
II
Sutter’s other argument is that the district court erred in dismissing his state аnd common law claims. Because the district court did not have subject matter jurisdiction over Sutter’s federal law allegations, the court correctly concluded that it did not have pendent jurisdiction over his other claims.
Forman,
Sutter argues that the court incorrеctly ruled that there was no diversity between the parties to support federal jurisdiction. Sutter was a citizen of Illinois at the time this suit was filed.' The district court concluded that the defendants also were Illinois citizens at that time. The facts are not in dispute. The deсision rests on the district court’s conclusion that the defendants’ ties with Illinois and Defendant Egbert Groen’s testimony indicated that the defendants intended to remain citizens of Illinois despite spending a substantial amount of time in California. Our review of these district court findings is quite narrow.
Julien v. Sarkes Tarzian, Inc.,
Affirmed
Notes
. The Second Circuit,
Golden v. Garafalo,
. As noted in
Sutter,
the Supreme Court’s decision in
Marine Bank v. Weaver,
.
See Securities and Exchange Commission v. Glenn W. Turner Enterprises, Inc.,
. Sutter also argues that the Supreme Court’s ruling in
Bell v. Hood,
