158 Wash. 2d 247 | Wash. | 2006
¶1
Stock seller John Molino seeks review of a partially published Court of Appeals decision affirming
¶2 We hold that such defenses are unavailable in claims brought under RCW 21.20.010(2). We therefore affirm the Court of Appeals.
FACTS
¶3 On October 22, 1999, Go2Net purchased Molino’s FreeYellow for $1 million in cash and $18.5 million in unregistered Go2Net stock. Shortly after Go2Net announced the acquisition to the press, Go2Net received a phone call from an Arizona attorney representing Patricia Warren, who claimed to have a 50 percent interest in the company Go2Net had just purchased. In the phone call and in a follow-up letter on November 9, 1999, Warren’s attorney explained that Warren and Molino had jointly owned an Arizona Internet company formed in 1997, the Free Yellow Pages Corporation, and that, in response to problems in that business relationship, Molino had moved the company’s assets to Florida, transferring them to his newly incorporated company, FreeYellow, without compensating Warren.
¶4 In response to the letter from Warren’s attorney, Go2Net contacted Molino and sought full disclosure regard
¶5 In March 2002, the trial court granted Go2Net’s summary judgment motion dismissing Molino’s equitable defenses of waiver and estoppel. The trial court dismissed Molino’s unjust enrichment and conversion claims in June 2002. The case was tried to a jury in August 2002. At the close of Go2Net’s case, the court dismissed Go2Net’s fraudulent inducement claim. In response to special interrogatories, the jury found that, with regard to Go2Net’s acquisition of FreeYellow, Molino made an “untrue statement of fact” or “omit [ted] to state a fact necessary in order to make the statements made, in the light of circumstances in which they were made, not misleading.”
¶6 As the trial court’s judgment acknowledged, the jury’s findings on the verdict form established Molino’s violation of the Act and mandated the trial court’s imposition of the remedies set forth in RCW 21.20.430. Go2Net and Molino
¶7 Molino appealed, and Division One of the Court of Appeals affirmed. Go2Net, Inc. v. FreeYellow.com, Inc., 126 Wn. App. 769, 109 P.3d 875 (2005). We granted Molino’s petition for review at 156 Wn.2d 1024 (2006).
ISSUE
¶8 In an action claiming that a seller violated the Act by misrepresenting or omitting material facts prior to sale, may the seller assert the equitable defenses of waiver and estoppel?
ANALYSIS
¶9 Standard of Review. An appellate court reviews a trial court’s decision on summary judgment de novo. Troxell v. Rainier Pub. Sch. Dist. No. 307, 154 Wn.2d 345, 350, 111 P.3d 1173 (2005). CR 56(c) provides that summary
¶10 Availability of Equitable Defenses under the Act. The “primary purpose” of the Act is “to protect investors from speculative or fraudulent schemes of promoters.” Cellular Eng’g, Ltd. v. O’Neill, 118 Wn.2d 16, 23, 820 P.2d 941 (1991) (emphasis added). The Act “is remedial in nature and has as its purpose broad protection of the public.” McClellan v. Sundholm, 89 Wn.2d 527, 533, 574 P.2d 371 (1978) (emphasis added). When interpreting this “remedial legislation,” the court is “guided by the principle that ‘remedial statutes are liberally construed to suppress the evil and advance the remedy.’ ” Kittilson v. Ford, 23 Wn. App. 402, 407, 595 P.2d 944 (1979) (quoting 3 C. Dallas Sands, Statutes and Statutory Construction § 60.01 (4th ed. 1973)), aff’d, 93 Wn.2d 223, 608 P.2d 264 (1980). Describing one of “the evils” to be suppressed, the antifraud provision makes it “unlawful for any person, in connection with the offer, sale or purchase of any security, directly or indirectly... [t]o 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 are made, not misleading.” RCW 21.20.010(2) (emphasis added). The Act thus requires only proof of the seller’s material, preclosing misrepresentation or omission; it does not require proof of the seller’s intent to defraud, Kittilson, 93 Wn.2d at 225, nor does it require a showing that the misrepresentation or omission actually caused a purchaser to incur losses in a securities transaction. Hines v. Data Line Sys., Inc., 114 Wn.2d 127, 135, 787 P.2d 8 (1990). Simply put, a seller’s “violation [of the Act] is in the misrepresentation itself.” Id. For a purchaser who still owns the security, the remedy for “the evil” of a seller’s
¶11 We reject Molino’s contention that waiver and estoppel should be available defenses to a claimed violation of the Act. First, permitting a seller to assert equitable defenses is contrary to the Act’s primary purpose of protecting investors. Because the Act is intended to deter a seller’s presale misrepresentations and omissions, a seller should not be permitted to avoid statutory liability by shifting the focus to the postsale conduct of the uninformed investor. Second, because the Act sets forth a limited number of defenses to claimed violations of the Act, the Act’s silence with respect to the equitable defenses of waiver and estoppel suggests that the legislature intended to exclude them. See RCW 21.20.430(3) (providing reasonable care defense for persons with control authority in liable entities); RCW 21.20.430(4)(b) (imposing three-year statute of limitations for civil actions); RCW 21.20.430(4)(b) (eliminating liability for person making written rescission offer); RCW 21.20.490 (providing defense for persons acting in good faith in conformity with rule, form, or order). Third, as the Court of Appeals noted in the present case, the legislature’s “intention to hold violators strictly accountable” is apparent in RCW 21.20.430(5), which voids any contract provision requiring a purchaser “to waive compliance with [the Act].” 126 Wn. App. at 782. In other words, the Act prohibits a purchaser, such as Go2Net, from contractually agreeing to waive the protections of the Act’s remedy provision, RCW 21.20.430(1). This strong antiwaiver provision is inconsistent with Molino’s notion that Go2Net’s postsale conduct could be interpreted under the Act as an implicit waiver of its entitlement to the Act’s remedies.
¶13 In sum, Midwest and Logan would be analogous to the present case only if Go2Net’s basis for rescinding its purchase of FreeYellow had been the Act’s registration requirement, RCW 21.20.140, rather than its antifraud provision, RCW 21.20.010. And, even if Molino’s violation had been a failure to comply with the registration requirement, Midwest and Logan would have to be weighed against the Missouri Supreme Court’s contrary decision in Covert v. Cross, 331 S.W.2d 576 (Mo. 1960). There, the purchasers of securities related to oil well leases sought rescission of the sale on the grounds that the securities had not been properly registered. The sellers wished to defend by showing that the purchasers had sought rescission only after learning that the oil wells were not productive, but the court refused to allow the estoppel defense, reasoning that it “would tend to nullify and defeat the very purpose of the statute, which is clearly penal in nature.” Id. at 585; see also Gowdy v. Richter, 20 Ill. App. 3d 514, 525, 314 N.E.2d 549 (1974) (concluding that the Illinois Blue Sky Law “is clear in allowing only statutory, not equitable, defenses” and observing that the Law’s “penal character” forecloses the “in pari delicto or estoppel defenses”). The rejection of the estoppel defense in Covert and Gowdy is especially persuasive, given that rescission was sought on the basis of the sellers’ technical violations — their noncompliance with the registration requirement — and not, as here, on the seller’s material misrepresentation concerning his ownership of the securities.
¶15 Even if the reasoning in Royal Air were apt, we would not be compelled to follow Royal Air. The Act is patterned after the Uniform Securities Act of 1956, which “has been wholly or substantially enacted in the great majority of states.” Go2Net, 126 Wn. App. at 776 (citing Cellular Eng’g, 118 Wn.2d at 23-24). RCW 21.20.900 pro
CONCLUSION
¶16 We agree with the Court of Appeals that the trial court properly dismissed Molino’s equitable defenses of estoppel and waiver. While the Court of Appeals concluded “that equitable defenses are not available in an action under the Securities Act of Washington,” 126 Wn. App. at 783, we hold that such defenses are unavailable in claims brought under RCW 21.20.010(2), saving for another day the question of whether equitable defenses may be permissible in actions alleging a violation of RCW 21.20.140, the Act’s registration provision.
Alexander, C.J., and C. Johnson, Madsen, Sanders, Bridge, Chambers, Fairhurst, and J.M. Johnson, JJ., concur.
Molino settled Warren’s initial suit but failed to make the first payment under the settlement agreement, prompting Warren’s second suit against Molino. Warren’s “claims were finally settled on August 8, 2002, well after witnesses had already begun testifying at trial in [the present case].” Br. of Resp’t at 18 n.6 (citing Report of Proceedings (RP) (Aug. 21, 2002) at 82; Ex. 245).
CP at 1792; see RCW 21.20.010(2). Molino “represented that the assets of FreeYellow.com were ‘free and clear of any claims ... or encumbrances of any kind whatsoever.’ ” Resp’t’s Answer to Amicus Br. of Dep’t of Fin. Insts. at 6 n.3 (quoting Ex. 43, at § 3.10(a)).
Pointing out that “Molino only earned $14,000 in the year in which he operated [FreeYellow],” Go2Net emphasized that “Molino benefited substantially from Go2Net’s stewardship of the business,” since FreeYellow earned more than $970,000 over the three-year period between acquisition and rescission. Suppl. Br. of Resp’t at 6.
Even though Molino’s Go2Net shares had remained unregistered, Molino was able to “use them as the basis for a stock swap or ‘collar’ transaction that netted him $2.2 million. . .. Go2Net never requested, and the trial court never ordered Molino to return, any of that money.” Answer to Pet. for Review at 7 n.5 (citing RP (Aug. 21, 2002) at 122; Ex. 181). Go2Net notes that “Molino has retained $1 million in cash he received from Go2Net at closing and $2.2 million in cash from the stock collar transaction,” whereas, in contrast, Go2Net has been unable to collect anything on its $1.2 million judgment. Suppl. Br. of Resp’t at 7.
Suppl. Br. of Resp’t at 11. “The name that is given to the law indicates the evil at which it is aimed, that is, to use the language of a cited case, ‘speculative schemes which have no more basis than so many feet of “blue sky” or, as stated by counsel in another case, ‘to stop the sale of stock in fly-by-night concerns, visionary oil wells, distant gold mines and other like fraudulent exploitations.’ ” Hall v. Geiger-Jones Co., 242 U.S. 539, 550, 37 S. Ct. 217, 61 L. Ed. 480 (1917).
In Pinter v. Dahl, 486 U.S. 622, 108 S. Ct. 2063, 100 L. Ed. 2d 658 (1988), the United States Supreme Court considered the availability of the equitable defense of in pari delicto in a rescission suit based on the sale of unregistered securities. The Court permitted the defense “only where the plaintiff’s role in the offering or sale of nonexempted, unregistered securities is more as a promoter than as an investor.” id. at 639. In the Court’s view, “[b]ecause the Act is specifically designed to protect investors, even where a[n investor] actively participates in the distribution of unregistered securities, his suit should not be barred [by equitable