MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
In thе early spring of 1977, the price of several securities experienced a precipitous drop. Subsequently, seventeen separate actions were filed against Loeb Rhoades & Co. and Loeb Rhoades & Co., Inc. (collectively "Loeb Rhoades”). The seventeen cases, consolidated for discovery and trial, concern the alleged market manipulation of the common stocks of Stange Corp., Olympia Brewing Co., Lawry’s Foods, Inc. and Fay’s Drugs. The original pleadings ranged in kind from single-plaintiff and single-defendant complaints to multiple-party complaints. Some plaintiffs in their cases named as defendants individuals or entities who were plaintiffs in other cases.
Ten years later, after the matter was transferred to a different judge twice, after countless motions were briefed and ruled on and after settlement agreements were reached in the other cases, five cases remain. The plaintiffs in those cases are as follows:
(1) No. 77 C 3820 and 82 C 1519 — Janet Smithson and Paul Smithson, as Executrices of the Estate of Paul B. Smithson, Jr. and others (“the Smithson Parties”);
(2) No. 78 C 896 — Turn-key Enterprises, Andrew C. Papas, A. Patrick Papas, and John T. Papas (collectively “the Turn-Key Parties”);
(3) No. 78 C 2242 — Richard M. Shure, Peggy Shure, Strombecker Corp. and Penta Capital (collectively “the Shure Parties”);
(4)No. 81 C 3699 — Louis Singer (“Singer”) as successor in interest to Troster, Singer & Co.
The central figure linking these five cases is a former employee of Loeb Rhoades, Jack Bernhardt. Bernhardt allegedly informed his customers that the securities in question were takeover targets when in fact they were not. Based on this false information, the customers bought the securities. Bernhardt allegedly also bought, at times without authority, those same securities for his customer accounts. According to the complaints, these purchases artificially raised and maintained the prices of these securities. The essence of the plaintiffs’ claims in this case is that Loeb Rhoades failed to supervise and control Bernhardt, failed to disclose information which it should have, and is liable for Bernhardt’s actions based on respondeat superi- or. Loeb Rhoades denies that it acted wrongfully, denies responsibility for Bernhardt’s actions, and accuses certain plaintiffs of wrongful conduct which either contributed to the fraud or kept Loeb Rhoades from discovering what Bernhardt was doing. 1
The trial of these cases is scheduled to begin on Monday, May 4, 1987. In anticipation of trial, the parties have filed a number of motions to add to the already lengthy list of pending motions in this matter. The court, will address each motion separately.
I
Loeb Rhoades’ Motion for Leave to File Third Amended Counterclaim
Loeb Rhoades first moves the court for an order granting them leave to file its Third Amended Counterclaim. 2 According to Loeb Rhoades, the Third Amended Counterclaim modifies Loeb Rhoades’ Final Amended Counterclaim to comport with prior orders of this court, reflect recent *604 settlements and add an intent allegation to three of the remaining cases. The Shure Parties and the Smithson Parties object to any further amendment of the counterclaim on the grounds that the request for the amendment has been delayed without a valid reason and the amendment would unduly prejudice the affected plaintiffs.
In order to place this motion in proper perspective, the court must briefly review the history of Loeb Rhoades’ counterclaim. Loeb Rhoades filed its Counterclaim on February 23, 1979 and its Amended Counterclaim on March 14, 1980. In response to a motion to dismiss, Judge Getzendanner dismissed four of the counts of the Amended Counterclaim but let Loeb Rhoades’ indemnity and contribution claims survive subject to certain limitations she expressed in her opinion.
See Maryville Academy v. Loeb Rhoades & Co., Inc.,
The Final Amended Counterclaim consisted of two counts seeking implied indemnity (Counts I аnd II), one count seeking implied contribution (Count III) and a final count seeking contractual indemnity pursuant to the customer agreements between certain plaintiffs and Loeb Rhoades (Count IV). After the plaintiffs named as counter-defendants (“counterdefendants”) had moved to dismiss the Final Amended Counterclaim for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted,
see
Fed.R.Civ. P. 12(b)(6), the court granted the motion in part and denied it in part.
See In re Olympia Brewing Co. Securities Litigation,
No. 77 C 1206, slip op. at 20 (N.D.Ill. March 27, 1986) (Williams, J.) [Available on WESTLAW,
On February 5, 1987, two months before this ten-year old case was scheduled for trial, Loeb Rhoades filed its motion for leave to file its Third Amended Counterclaim. The most significant amendments are in Paragraphs 8 and 20, in which Loeb Rhoades has added the following underlined allegations:
8. During the period from approximately January 1, 1975 to March 15, 1977, counterdefendants and others, directly, or indirectly through their agents, conspired to, aided and abetted each other to and did secretly and fraudulently misuse the trading and credit facilities of Loeb Rhoades, other broker-dealers, and financial institutions as part of a fraudulent and manipulative scheme with an intent to enrich themselves at the risk and expense of others, including Loeb Rhoades, and to manipulate the price of the Securities in order to enhance the price of any takeover or acquisition with respect to those Securities_
Third Amended Counterclaim ¶ 8, at 5-6 (emphasis added);
20. Each of the counterdefendants named herein, if sued separately by a plaintiff other than itself in one of the lawsuits described in paragraph 5, supra, would have been liable to that plaintiff for that plaintiff’s damages as described in its complaint as a result of the conduct alleged above. The counterde-fendants engaged in the same conduct alleged against Loeb Rhoades in each of the actions set forth in paragraph 5, *605 supra, and did so with an intent to manipulate the price of the securities.
Id. ¶ 20, at 8-9 (emphasis added).
According to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, a party may amend its pleading only by leave of court or by written consent of the adverse party; leave shall be freely given when justice so requires. Fed. R.Civ.P. 15(a). The spirit of the Federal Rules is that controversies shall be decided on the merits and not in a game of skill in which one misstep by counsel may be decisive to the outcome.
See Conley v. Gibson,
In the absence of any apparent or declared reason — such as undue delay, bad faith or dilatory motive on the part of the movant, repeated failure to cure deficiencies by amendments previously allowed, undue prejudice to the opposing party by virtue of allowance of the amendment, futility of amendment, etc. — the leave should, as the rules require, be “freely given.”
Foman v. Davis,
The first issue appropriate for discussion concerns whether the court should deny Loeb Rhoades’ motion because the Third Amended Counterclaim fails to remedy the defects of the Final Amended Counterclaim. The Seventh Circuit permits a refusal to grant permission to file an amended pleading where the proposed amendment fails to allege facts which would support a valid theory of liability, or where the party moving to amend has not shown that the proposed amendment has substantial merit.
See, e.g., Goulding v. Feinglass,
The other circumstance in which the court also can deny leave to amend is when the amending party is guilty of bad faith in delaying presentation of the amendment.
Textor,
But the fact that the court finds it hard to forgive Loeb Rhoades for filing this so late in the game does not mean the court can reject the amendment. Instead, the court must also find undue prejudice to the opposing parties. Courts have found
*606
undue prejudice in cases where the amendment results in the incorporation of a new claim, the addition of a party or expensive and time-consuming new discovery.
See Conroy Datsun Ltd. v. Nissan Motor Corp. in U.S.A.,
Here no new discovery would be required if this court granted the amendment. The amendment adds no new parties and no claims that have not been asserted before. Although the counterdefen-dants have been proceeding under the assumption that they had to defend against only a contractual-indemnity claim, Loeb Rhoades had asserted the implied-indemnity and contribution claims for at least six years prior to this court’s dismissal of those claims on March 27, 1986. The mere assertion that the parties assumed for ten months that they would not have to defend against the implied-indemnity and contribution claims is not enough in a ten-year old case such as this to show prejudice. Since the court has moved the trial date to May 4, 1987, the counterdefendants will have been aware of the motion to amend for three months and of this court’s ruling for at least two weeks before the case goes to trial. That is adequate time to prepare.
For the foregoing reasons, the court grants Loeb Rhoades’ motion for leave to file its Third Amended Counterclaim.
II
Counterdefendants’ Motion to Dismiss Counts I and II of the Third Amended Counterclaim
In its Third Amended Counterclaim, Loeb Rhoades names as counterdefendants the Smithson Parties, the Turn-Key Parties and the Shure Parties. 4 See Third Amended Counterclaim ¶ 3, at 2-3. According to the Third Amended Counterclaim, during the period from approximately January 1, 1975 to March 15, 1977, the counterdefen-dants, directly or indirectly through their agents, conspired to, aided and abetted each other to and did secretly and fraudulently misuse the trading and credit facilities of Loeb Rhoades, other broker-dealers and financial institutions as part of a fraudulent and manipulative scheme. Id. 118, at 5-6. The counterdefendants allegedly committed the aforesaid acts with the intent to enrich themselves at the risk and expense of others, including Loeb Rhoades, and to manipulate the price of the securities at issue in this case in order to enhance the price of any takeover or acquisition with respect to those securities. Id. ¶ 8, at 6. The counterdefendants move this court to dismiss the Third Amended Counterclaim for failure to state a claim, see Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), and argue that the Third Amended Counterclaim fails to remedy the defects of the Final Amended Counterclaim as discussed in this court’s earlier opinion. See Olympia Brewing Co., slip op. at 6-20. Alternatively, the counterdefendants urge the court to reconsider the rationale of that opinion.
Loeb Rhoades unquеstionably seeks to comport its counterclaim with this court’s orders. Yet it is apparent to this court that the parties’ interpretations of this court’s March 27, 1986 order differ drastically. Loeb Rhoades believes that it has remedied the defects in its implied-indemnity and implied-contribution claims by the addition of the allegation that the counterdefendants acted with an intent to manipulate the market. But the counterdefendants believe that, for Loeb Rhoades to state a claim for either implied indemnity or implied contribution, Loeb Rhoades must allege more than a mere intent to manipulate the market; they must instead allege that the *607 counterdefendants participated in Bernhardt’s scheme to manipulate the market.
Due to the parties differing interpretations of that March 27,1986 order, the court will use this opportunity to clarify its earlier order and to narrow the issues relevant to a trial of this matter. Before doing so, the court briefly will review the standards for ruling on this motion to dismiss. The court must accept the well-pleaded allegations of the counterclaim as true.
Gomez v. Illinois State Bd. of Educ.,
In Count I of its Third Amended Counterclaim, Loeb Rhoades alleges that any liability imposed or to be imposed on Loeb Rhoades in any of the seventeen original consolidated cases was or will be based solely on principles of derivative or secondary liability. Third Amended Counterclaim 1119, at 8. Stated differently, Loeb Rhoades claims that any settlements it has paid or damages it will have to pay were or will be founded on the acts of an agent or employee of Loeb Rhoades. Loeb Rhoades in Count I asserts that since the counterde-fendants participated in a scheme to manipulate the price of the relevant stock in the market and since any liability of Loeb Rhoades arose or will arise solely by operation of law, each of the counterdefendants is jointly and severally liable to Loeb Rhoades for the entire amount of any such liability or settlement pursuant to princi-pies of indemnity. Id. In Count II, Loeb Rhoades alternatively requests that if the court finds Loeb Rhoades is liable to any plaintiff in the seventeen consolidated cases, the court also find that each of the counterdefendnts is liable to Loeb Rhoades according to principles of contribution. Id. ¶ 21, at 9.
Before proceeding further, the court must clarify what is meant by “indemnity” and “contribution,” because the terms are oftentimes confused. When the court requires an individual to indemnify a party liable for money damages, the court shifts the entire loss from one tort-feasor who has been compelled to pay the loss to the shoulders of another who should bear the loss instead. W. Prosser, The Law of Torts § 51, at 310 (4th ed. 1971). Although the court can discern no general rule for deciding when to allow indemnification, courts have permitted indemnification where the indemnitor owed a duty to the indemnitee, a great difference in the gravity of the fault of the two tort-feasors exists, or a difference in character of the duties owed by the two tort-feasors exists. Id. § 51, at 313 (cases cited therein). When the court concludes that contribution amongst joint tort-feasors is appropriate, the court distributes the loss among joint tort-feasors by the court’s requiring each tort-feasor to pay his proportionate share. Id. § 51, at 310. If several parties combine to create an injury, but only one of them faces legal responsibility for discharging the mutual obligation of making the injured person whole, the right of contribution gives the defendant recourse against his co-participants and thereby prevents unjust enrichment of the co-participants at the defendant’s expense. Note, Judicial Implication of Contribution Under Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act: Is the New Branch on the Judicial Oak Threatened by Strict Statutory Cоnstruction, 16 Suffolk U.L.Rev. 983, 984 (1982).
As already stated, Loeb Rhoades seeks indemnity and contribution from the counterdefendants for any liability Loeb Rhoades has incurred or will incur in any of the seventeen original suits filed
*608
against it. The court will not attempt to recount here the numerous statutes and theories under which those seventeen suits were filed. For present purposes, the court will divide the entire body of legal claims asserted against Loeb Rhoades into two categories — federal-law claims and state-law claims. Where indemnity and contribution are sought by Loeb Rhoades for paying damages for having violated a federal statute, the court must treat the question of the scope and limitations of indemnity and contribution as a question of federal law.
See, e.g., Donovan v. Robbins,
A. Federal Securities-Law Claims
The plaintiffs in these seventeeen cases filed suit based largely on the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. §§ 77a-77aa (1981) and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. §§ 78b-78kk (selected sections) (1981). Although the parties in their briefs devote little attention to the question of whether thе court has the authority to require indemnity or contribution,
5
that question is the threshold issue for the court to resolve here. In the Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, no provision expressly provides for a right , of indemnity and only three sections provide for a right of contribution.
6
Of the legal claims asserted by the plaintiffs in these consolidated cases, only section 9 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, dealing with the manipulation of security prices, expressly provides for a right of contribution.
See
15 U.S.C. § 78i(e) (1981). Since Congress did not expressly provide the right of indemnity or contribution under the provisions at issue here (with the exception of section 9 of the Securities Exchange Act), those rights can be created in one of two ways. First, the court may conclude, based on the analysis for recognizing an implied right of action,
see, e.g., Daily Income Fund, Inc. v. Fox,
If this were not a federal securities case, the analysis would be fairly straightforward. In
Cort v. Ash,
The Supreme Court’s admonitions against expansion of the federal common law are as clear as its admonitions against reading federal statutes broadly so as to imply a right of action. In
Texas Industries, Inc. v. Radcliff Materials, Inc.,
These instances are “few and restricted,” Wheeldin v. Wheeler,373 U.S. 647 , 651 [83 S.Ct. 1441 , 1445,10 L.Ed.2d 605 ] (1963), and fall into essentially two categories: those in which a federal rule of decision is “necessary to protect uniquely federal interests,” Banco Nacional de Cuba v. Sabbatino,376 U.S. 398 , 426 [84 S.Ct. 923 , 939,11 L.Ed.2d 804 ] (1964), and those in which Congress has given the courts the power to develop substantive law, Wheeldin v. Wheeler, supra, [373 U.S.] at 652 [83 S.Ct. at 1445 ].
Id.
While the court can give concrete meaning and application to broadly worded statutory provisions,
see Northwest Airlines, Inc.,
Applying these principles to other cases, the Supreme Court rejected the defendants’ claims for contribution in a civil rights case under the Equal Pay Act of 1963 and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964,
see Northwest Airlines, Inc.,
But since this case is a federal securities case, the analysis is far more complex. The Supreme Court began giving claims for an implied right of action the cold shoulder starting with Cort in 1975 and the Court’s frigidity has increased ever since. 8
*610
At another time, federal courts, relying primarily on common-law tort principles, were much more receptive to conferring rights of action on private litigants.
Community & Economic Dev. Ass’n,
Since the plaintiffs’ legal claims in this case include a claim based on section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 as well as other federal securities laws, the dilemma confronting this court is whether to apply pre- Cort or post- Cort principles in deciding whether an implied right of indemnity or contribution exists for damages assessed pursuant to section 10(b). Moreover, if the court finds that such a right exists it must decide what effect that decision has on the rest of the federal securities laws that do not expressly provide for indemnity or contribution. The Court will address the question of indemnity and the question of contribution separately.
1. Indemnity
Without discussion of the implied-right-of-action or federal-common-law issues, courts uniformly have denied defendants the right to indemnity in federal securities law cases where those defendants acted with an intent to commit a violation of those laws.
See Heizer Corp.,
While the federal courts consistently state that indemnity is not available in cases of intentional violation of the federal securities laws, the courts have differing views on whether indemnity is available if the defendant’s liability is based solely on negligence. One court adopted what this court terms the “comparative standard” and held that, in cases where a gross d;s-parity in the nature of the misconduct between the offending parties exists, the less culpable defendant can obtain indemnity from the defendant who is significantly more responsible for the injury to the plaintiff.
See Adalman v. Baker, Watts & Co.,
Loeb Rhoades contends that it is an even better candidate for indemnity than the negligent wrongdoer because its liability in this case, if any, will be based solely on the operation of law, not on negligent, much less purposeful, misconduct on its part.
10
Loeb Rhoades argues that in cases such as this, where the court finds that a defendant without fault still should be held liable, permitting that defendant to obtain indemnity from the real wrongdoers at fault would not subvert the deterrent purpose of the federal securities laws. This argument is not without some support. In
Thomas v. Duralite Co., Inc.,
What is remarkable about the evolution of the case law in this area is the complete failure of the courts to address the question of the court’s
authority
to create a right of indemnity.
12
Regardless of the policy implications, if the Congress did not intend for there to be such a right or for the courts to develop federal common law in this area, the court is powerless to do anything about it.
See Northwest Airlines, Inc.,
As this court stated earlier, to determine whether a federal statute impliedly creates a private right of аction, the court principally must attempt to discern the intent of Congress.
See, e.g., Daily Income Fund, Inc.,
While the intent of the legislature may be divined from other factors,
see Daily Income Fund, Inc.,
Furthermore, because this court does not find that any uniquely federal interests are involved or that Congress has given the federal courts the power to develop substantive law in this area, the court rejects the notion that a right to indemnity could arise under the securities laws as part of the federal common law. Indemnity does not implicate “uniquely federal interests” as defined by the case law because indemnity among securities wrongdoers does not involve the duties of the United States, the distribution of power in our federal system, or matters necessarily subject to federal control even in the absence of statutory authority.
See Texas Industries, Inc.,
Although the analysis may be different, the result does not change merely because the federal courts have already implied a right of action under section 10(b) of the 1934 Act. If Congress had considered the issue it is unlikely they would have found a right to indemnity when they did not provide for such a remedy in the case of the eight express rights of action under the federal securities laws. Even
t
if this court were to decide solely on policy grounds the issue of whether Loeb Rhoades should be indemnified, the court would respond in the negative for the following reasons. The Seventh Circuit has decided that indemnity is not available to federal securities-law violators because allowing indemnity would undermine the deterrent purpose of those laws.
See Heizer Corp.,
2. Contribution
Because courts usually have denied defendants a right to indemnity in federal securities cases on public-policy grounds, the courts’ failure to discuss the judicial-authority issue was inconsequential to the outcome of those cases. But because courts have had a differing perspective on the policy effects of allowing contribution in those same cases, failing to discuss the judicial authority to require contribution may have had a significant impact on the cases’ outcomes. But before this court confronts the judical authority issue head on, the court deems it appropriate to review the precedent on this issue even if the court later decides that that precedent was built on a foundation of sand.
The first case to address the issue of contribution in a federal securities case was
DeHaas v. Empire Petroleum Co.,
*615
But some courts have not stopped with section 10(b). Using both the logic of
De-Haas
for implying rights and the deterrent rationale, other courts implied a right of contribution in cases where the plaintiffs right of action was provided for
expressly
in a provision of the federal securities laws but in which a right of contribution was not provided.
17
See Adalman,
Only one court has addressed the judicial authority issue directly. In
In re National Student Marketing Litigation,
This court’s discussion of its authority to create a right to indemnity under the federal securities laws applies equally to contribution, so the court will not repeat itself here. Because of the number of cases involved in this consolidated matter, the court will begin with a statement of principles outlining whether contribution is available to Loeb Rhoades for liability under a particular provision of the 1933 or 1934 Act. Of course, if the provision expressly provides for a right of contribution, Loeb Rhoades has one. In the case of a provision that expressly provides for a right of action but not for contribution, the court finds that it has no authority to imply or create a right to contribution. 18 Given that Congress provided the right of action expressly in certain provisions of the legislative enactment, 19 it seems reasonable for this court to assume that if Congress had intended to allow for a right to contribution under one of those provisions Con *616 gress would have provided for one expressly-
But with regard to section 10(b) of the 1934 Act, the court’s analysis must be slightly different. Since federal courts have implied a right of action under section 10(b), for the court to now focus on legislative intent in deciding the contribution issue would be incongruous with the analysis that created a section 10(b) right of action.
See
Loewenstein,
Implied Contribution Under the Federal Securities Laws: A Reassessment,
1982 Duke L.J. 563-64. Consequently, this court must turn to the policy question of whether contribution
should
be implied for section 10(b) actions. Since the Seventh Circuit in
Heizer Corp. v. Ross,
If the same conduct violates section 10(b) as well as a federal securities provision which provides for a right of action but not contribution, thе foregoing may change. In those instances for the court to allow contribution would mean undermining the apparent congressional intent against allowing contribution for the conduct at issue. Consequently, the court is inclined, should such a situation arise, to forbid contribution even for section 10(b) violations in those cases. For the court to find otherwise would mean replacing its own view of public policy for that of Congress.
If Loeb Rhoades has a right to contribution, it can assert that right against “joint tort-feasors,” a term which has been defined in differing ways in federal securities cases. This court rejects the counterdefendants’ argument that the counterdefendants must have been participating in Bernhardt’s scheme for Loeb Rhoades to have a right to contribution.
But see Getter,
B. RICO Claims
This court already has considered and rejected Loeb Rhoades’ claims for indemnity and contribution for any liability for which it may be subject under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”), 18 U.S.C. §§ 1961-68 (1984).
See Olympia Brewing Co.,
slip op. at 16-17. The court’s rejection of this claim is consistent with the Supreme Court’s re
*617
strictive analysis for implied rights of actions.
See Miller v. Affiliated Financial Corp.,
C. Common-Law Claims
The plaintiffs also assert that Loeb Rhoades committed certain common-law violations, including fraud and breach of its duty to supervise its employees.
See, e.g.,
Shure Parties Final Amended Complaint, Counts III and IV at 13-15. Since the actions giving rise to the plaintiffs’ common-law claims occurred between 1974 and 1977, Loeb Rhoades has no right to contribution under Illinois law. The right to contribution, first provided by the Supreme Court of Illinois in
Skinner v. Reed-Prentice Division Package Machinery Co.,
Although this court recently determined that the Contribution Act extinguished any implied right to indemnity under Illinois law,
see TRW, Inc. v. Dart Indus., Inc.,
No. 84 C 3049, slip op. at 16 (N.D.Ill. March 6, 1986) [Available on WESTLAW,
Consistent with the rest of the history of this counterclaim, the court confronts one of the most muddled areas of Illinois law.
See
Bua,
Third-Party Practice in Illinois: Express and Implied Indemnity,
25 DePaul L.Rev. 287, 300 (1976). According to the Supreme Court of Illinois, in a case such as this where the third-party plaintiff has no right to contribution because the cause of action occurred prior to March 1, 1978, the third-party plaintiff must allege in its third-party complaint (1) a pre-tort relationship between thе third-party plaintiff and the third-party defendant, and (2) a qualitative distinction between the conduct of the third-party plaintiff and the third-party defendant.
See Van Slambrouck,
Under Illinois law, a party may be indemnified if held derivatively liable for damages caused by another.
See
Bua, 25 DePaul L.Rev. at 296. This derivative liability, which may have resulted from a legal doctrine such as respondeat superior, a lease arrangement, or a statutory tort, entitles the indemnitee to indemnity because the indemnitee’s liability is due solely to the technicalities of a legal doctrine or statute.
See id.
The classic pre-tort relationships giving rise to a duty to indemnify include lessor-lessee, employer-employee, master-servant and contractor-subcontractor.
See Van Slambrouck,
The key notion for our purposes is that in each of the above instances, the court held that the indemnitee was liable as a matter of law on the basis of the acts of the indemnitor. In this case, Loeb Rhoades unquestionably would be entitled to indemnity from its employee Jack Bernhardt if he were a counterdefendant because if Loeb Rhoades is found liable based on a theory of respondeat superior it will be due to Bernhardt’s acts. But the same cannot be said for the alleged actions of the coun-terdefendants. While Loeb Rhoades effectively alleges in its counterclaim that the counterdefendants committed certain acts which contributed to the plaintiffs’ injury, that allegation is not enough under this court’s understanding of a pre-tort relationship. Loeb Rhoades cannot possibly be found liable based on the alleged actions of one of the counterdefendants. In summary, since Loeb Rhoades cannot be found liable for the acts of the counterdefen-dants, the counterdefendants have no implied duty to indemnify Loeb Rhoades for any common-law liability.
D. Failure to Plead Fraud With Particularity
Although a portion of Loeb Rhoades’ contribution claim still remains in the race, that portion has another hurdle to leap. This court thus far has held that Loeb Rhoades in theory could request contribution if Loeb Rhoades is found liable under certain provisions of the federal securities laws.
24
To state a claim for contribution, however, Loeb Rhoades must still perform the mechanical task of pleading that claim as required by the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The essence of Loeb Rhoades’ claim in Count II is that the coun-terdefendants participated in a “fraudulent scheme” designed to manipulate the priсe of the securities at issue.
See
Third Amended Counterclaim ¶ 8, at 5-6. According to Rule 9(b) of the Federal Rules, “the circumstances constituting fraud or mistake shall be stated with particularity.” This requirement applies to counterclaims as well as complaints.
See
5 C. Wright & A. Miller,
Federal Practice and Procedure: Civil
§ 1297, at 406 (1969). Moreover, Rule 9(b) governs claims based on fraud and made pursuant to the federal securities laws.
See Tornera v. Galt,
*619
To satisfy the requirements of Rule 9(b), Loeb Rhoades need not plead the basis for its fraud claim in exhaustive detail. The court must view the particularity requirement of Rule 9(b) as derivative of the liberal notice-pleading requirement of Rule 8.
See Tornera,
The crucial allegations in the Third Amended Counterclaim are contained in paragraph 9.
25
Although Loeb Rhoades exhaustively alleges the
types
of transactions which the counterdefendants engaged in, Loeb Rhoades fails to focus in on the particulars of any one of the transactions. Loeb Rhoades first does not allege the time or place of any transaction as required by Rule 9(b).
See, e.g., Winkler v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc.,
Loeb Rhoades correctly asserts that when the alleged fraudulent transactions are numerous and take place over an extended period of time, Rule 9(b) requires less specificity than it normally requires.
Citing In re Catanella and E.F. Hutton and Co., Inc. Securities Litigation,
Conclusion
The court dismisses Counts I and II of the Third Amended Counterclaim. Because this is the first time that the coun-terdefendants have made the Rule 9(b) argument in the long history of the counterclaim, the court gives Loeb Rhoades leave to file another amended counterclaim within six (6) days which remedies the Rule 9(b) defects mentioned in this opinion. 27
*621 hi
Counterdefendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment on Count III of the Third Amended Counterclaim
The counterdefendants also move for summary judgment on Count III of the Third Amended Counterclaim. The court can grant summary judgment only if it appears “that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). In determining whether any issue of material fact is in dispute, the court must view the inferences drawn from the record in the light most favorable to Loeb Rhoades.
Bartman v. Allis-Chalmers Corp.,
In Count III of its Third Amended Counterclaim, Loeb Rhoades seeks express indemnity from the counter-defendants based on a provision (“indemnity clause”) of the Customer’s Agreement and Consent to Loan of Securities (“customer agreement”) signed by each counter-defendant. In relevant part, the indemnity clause provides as follows:
In the event any action or proceeding is commenced or claim or demand made by any person, firm, corporation or other entity against аny account of the [customer], or the securities or other property therein, or against [Loeb Rhoades] in connection with such account, securities or other property, the [customer] agrees to reimburse [Loeb Rhoades] for any loss, cost or expense, including reasonable attorneys’ and accountants’ fees, which may be incurred by [Loeb Rhoades] in connection therewith. 28
Judge Getzendanner and this court, when analyzing the indemnity clause, consistently have rejected the literal reading of the indemnity clause on public-policy grounds.
See, Olympia Brewing Co.
(March 27, 1986), slip op. at 19;
Maryville Academy,
530 F.Supp at 1071-72. A literal interpretation of the customer agreement would require a customer not even accused of any wrongdoing to indemnify Loeb Rhoades for liability imposed on Loeb Rhoades due to its own intentional misconduct. Since both Judge Getzendanner and this court recognized that a literal reading of the customer agreement violates the well-settled rule against indemnification for intentional misconduct,
see, e.g., Austro v. Niagra Mohawk Power Corp.,
The courts’ suggestions regarding the proper scope of the indemnity clause have varied depending on the court’s vision of the scope of implied indemnity in this case. But the courts agree that the customer agreement can allow for indemnity of federal securities-law liability оnly to the extent of Loeb Rhoades’ implied right of indemnity.
See Maryville Academy,
What remains is the possibility of indemnity pursuant to the customer agreement for common-law liability. The customer agreement explicitly provides that the law of New York shall govern the agreement’s interpretation; in this regard, the parties' intention as expressed in the agreement binds the court.
See Tele-Controls, Inc. v. Ford Indus., Inc.,
Because the counterdefendants have attached only the customer agreement to their motion, this court is unable to grant them summary judgment. Too many relevant questions remain unanswered. These questions include the sophistication of the parties involved as well as the circumstances under which the agreement was reached. While court cannot grant the counterdefendants summary judgment, the court is skeptical that this agreement was meant to require that an innocent customer must indemnify Loeb Rhoades for any liability imposed on Loeb Rhoades due to the intentional wrongdoing of a Loeb Rhoades employee such as Bernhardt. Therefore, unless Loeb Rhoades introduces evidence to the contrary, this court holds that as a matter of law the customer agreement provides that Loeb Rhoades can be indemnified by a customer for any common-law liability Loeb Rhoades incurs in connection with that customer’s account only if the customer actively participated in the fraudulent scheme for which he brought suit. Regardless of the extent of the particular counterdefendant's wrongdoing, however, the court holds that the agreement does not require that counterdefendant to indemnify Loeb Rhoades for liability Loeb Rhoades incurs in connection with other customer accounts. Consequently, in cases where a counterdefendant is a co-defendant with Loeb Rhoades and Loeb Rhoades must pay damages due to common-law liability, Loeb Rhoades has no right to indemnity from that counterdefendant under the customer agreement for that case. 29
A lingering issue not quite ripe for resolution remains. Under the framework the court has established, the possibility exists of Loeb Rhoades being held liable for both federal and common-law violations based on the same misconduct. Because Loeb Rhoades is not entitled to indemnity under federal law based on reasons already articulated, if Loeb Rhoades has a right to indemnity under the common law this court has a problem, for allowing indemnity under the common law would undermine the
*623
deterrent objectives of the federal law, since the same misconduct is at issue. Other courts have successfully avoided this difficult issue,
see, e.g., First Fed. Sav. & Loan v. Oppenheim, Appel, Dixon & Co.,
Conclusion
Pursuant to the terms of this opinion, the court denies the counterdefendants’ motion for summary judgment on Count III of the Third Amended Counterclaim. The court requests that the parties evaluate their positions in light of this opinion prior to the pre-trial conference scheduled for 2:00 p.m. on Monday, April 20, 1987. The court will refrain from considering the other pending motions until after the conference.
Notes
. The foregoing is a gross oversimplification of the lengthy factual background of these consolidated cases. The court intends for it to serve only as an introduction to the rest of this opinion.
. Although Loeb Rhoades’ newest amended counterclaim is actually its fourth, the court refers to it as the Third Amended Counterclaim because the parties refer to it as such in their briefs.
. Those counterdefendants were Swift, Henke & Co. and Richard Bertoldi.
. Loeb Rhoades does not name Singer as a counterdefendant in the Third Amended Counterclaim.
. The court did not discuss the issue of authority in its March 27, 1986 opinion.
. Those three sections are section 11 of the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. § 77k (1981) and sections 9 and 18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. §§ 78i, 78r (1981).
. A narrow reading of legislative intent which restricted the inquiry to the words of the statute would lead to the absurdity of the court attempting to imply a right of action from the express words of the statute.
. The Court recently wrote the following:
"The development of our framework for determining whether a private cause of action exists has proceeded only in the last 11 years, and its inception represented a significant change in our approach to congressional silence on the provision of remedies.”
*610
Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. v. Thompson,
— U.S. -,
. Some authority exists in this circuit for the proposition that indemnity is available even to intentional securities-law violators. The Seventh Circuit in
Madigan, Inc.
v.
Goodman,
. While this contention is certainly debatable since the plaintiffs sue Loeb Rhoades for its own intentional and negligent conduct as well as under a theory of vicarious liability, the court will not quibble with Loeb Rhoades; instead the court assumes the contention is true solely for purposes of deciding the motion to dismiss the Third Amended Counterclaim.
. Although the сourt has not chosen to do so, it could have dismissed a portion of Count I of the Third Amended Counterclaim because Loeb Rhoades failed to remedy the defect the court mentioned in its earlier opinion. The Third Amended Counterclaim still fails to allege that the counterdefendants participated in Bernhardt’s scheme.
. The court suspects that much of the confusion is a result of the Supreme Court's narrowing of the circumstances in which federal courts can imply a right of action, a narrowing that began with
Cort
in 1975. The seminal case on the issue of indemnity is considered to be
Globus v. Law Research Service, Inc.,
. Those provisions of the 1933 Act are the following: section 11(a), 15 U.S.C. § 77k(a) (1981); sections 12(1) and 12(2), 15 U.S.C. §§ 77/(1) and (2) (1981); and section 15, 15 U.S.C. § 77o (1976). The provisions of the 1934 Act are the following: section 9(e), 15 U.S.C. § 78i(e) (1981); section 16(b), 15 U.S.C. § 78p(b) (1981); section 18(a), 15 U.S.C. § 78r(a) (1981); and section 20(a), 15 U.S.C. § 78t(a) (1981).
. The legislative history of the 1933 and 1934 Acts has been compiled in a multi-volume set entitled Legislative History of the Securities Act of 1933 and Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (compiled by J. Ellenberger and E. Mahar) (1973).
. In so holding, the court has reconsidered its March 27, 1986 opinion and explicitly rejects the notion that Loeb Rhoades can be indemnified from the counterdefendants even if they conspired with Bernhardt to defraud the market. Since Loeb Rhoades does not seek indemnity from Bernhardt, the court need not address the issue of whether an employer can be indemnified from its employee for violations of the federal securities laws such as those alleged in this case.
. See supra note 6.
.The provisions that expressly provide a right of action but not of contribution are section 9, 15 U.S.C. § 78i (1981) and section 18, 15 U.S.C. § 78r (1981) of the 1934 Act and section 12, 15 U.S.C. § 77/ (1981) and section 15, 15 U.S.C. § 77o (1981) of the 1933 Act.
. This category includes the control-person provisions of the 1933 and 1934 Acts. See 15 U.S.C. §§ 77o, 78t(a) (1981).
. See supra note 6.
. The Heizer Corp. conclusion may be subject to criticism; contemporary analysis exists indicating that a rule denying contribution in section 10(b) cases may provide as great a deterrent to future wrongdoing as a rule permitting contribution. See Easterbrook, Landes & Pos-ner, Contribution Among Antitrust Defendants: A Legal and Economic Analysis, 23 J.Law & Econ. 331, 349 (1980). This court takes no position on the issue here.
. Moreover, if contribution is available under a particular provision of the securities laws, to insure that the deterrent purpose served by contribution is fulfilled the court will allow contribution for liability under that provision even if Loeb Rhoades is found to be an intentional as opposed to a negligent wrongdoer.
See Marrero,
. Illinois courts have rejected the argument that Loeb Rhoades made to Judge Getzendanner in
Maryville Academy,
. Some courts prior to the passage of the Contribution Act were so concerned by the harshness of the no-contribution rule that they eliminated the requirement of a pre-tort relationship in cases in which the disparity in fault was great.
Jethroe v. Koehring Co.,
. Those provisions are section 10(b) of the 1934 Act and any provision that expressly provides for a right of contribution.
. Paragraph 9 reads as follows:
The secret, fraudulent and deceitful conduct alleged in paragraph 8 included but was not limited to the following acts, practices and courses of conduct by the Shures, Myron B. Shure, Alan H. Shure, the Smithsons, the Papas Brothers, and Turn-Key:
(a) fraudulently placing or ratifying orders for the purchase of large quantities of the Securities without disclosing their intention not to complete these purchases on the settlement date of the transaction;
(b) falsely misrepresenting to Loeb Rhoades that funds were on hand sufficient to pay for the Securities ordered when, in fact, no such funds were on hand;
(c) fraudulently writing checks to pay for the Securities drawn on accounts with insufficient funds therein, with the secret intent to cover the checks by subsequent deposits of money from the sale of the same Securities;
(d) fraudulently misrepresenting to Loeb Rhoades that they intended to pay for the Securities ordered on the settlement date;
(e) secretly borrowing and lending funds among themselves and others to purchase the Securities without disclosing the existence of these loans to Loeb Rhoades;
(f) fraudulently obtaining funds to purchase the Securities by agreeing to pledge as collateral for loans, securities which could not be pledged as collateral for these loans, in violation of Section 7(f) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. 15 U.S.C. § 78g(f);
(g) fraudulently concealing from Loeb Rhoades and others the fact that in obtaining funds to purchase the Securities, they had engaged in violations of Regulations U and/or X promulgated by the Federal Reserve Board. 12 C.F.R. §§ 221.1 etseq., 224.1 et seq.;
(h) obtaining extensions of time to pay for the securities by fraudulently misrepresenting to Loeb Rhoades and others that payment for the securities was forthcoming;
(i) placing or ratifying orders for large quantities of the Securities with the secret knowledge or expectation that another person or entity would acquire the same shares if the person or entity placing the order was unwilling or unable to pay for the shares on the settlement date;
(j) fraudulently opening several accounts at Loeb Rhoades and other broker-dealers without disclosing to Loeb Rhoades their intention of using these multiple accounts to deceive Loeb Rhoades and circumvent Loeb Rhoades’ internal regulations and controls;
(k) fraudulently concealing from Loeb Rhoades and the public their knowledge of and participation in a scheme wherein certain persons and entities were purchasing large quantities of the Securities from Loeb Rhoades with the intention of improperly forming a syndicate and offering for sale and selling participations in the syndicate;
(/) fraudulently concealing from Loeb Rhoades and the public their intent to act as a group for the purpose of acquiring, holding, and/or disposing of the Securities in violation of Section 13(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder;
(m) fraudulently concealing the existence of this conduct from Loeb Rhoades, the market, and others by material omissions and misrepresentations.
. Although the question remains in this case whether the counterdefendants’ claims are defeated if the counterdefendants committed the misconduct that Loeb Rhoades alleges,
see Ma-ryville Academy,
. Since fraudulent intent may be averred generally, see Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b), Loeb Rhoades' general-intent allegation satisfies the pleading requirements of the Federal Rules. See Third Amended Counterclaim ¶ 8, at 5-6. Moreover, although Loeb Rhoades alleges in circuitous fashion that the counterdefendants' acts caused thе plaintiffs’ injury for which Loeb Rhoades might be held liable, see Third Amended Counterclaim ¶ 20, at 8-9, the court, reading the counterclaim liberally, deems the allegation satisfactory. In so holding, the court expressly reserves ruling on the evidence Loeb Rhoades plans to introduce at trial regarding the counter-defendants' alleged intent to manipulate the market of the securities at issue.
The court, however, has been reviewing one of the exhibits that Loeb Rhoades seeks to use at trial and to which the counterdefendants object. Through the exhibit, Defendants' Ex. No. 3008, Loeb Rhoades seeks to argue that its evidence that the Shure Parties illegally obtained the money they used to invest in the Bernhardt transactions is probative of the Shure Parties intent to manipulate the market. The court disagrees. Based on that evidence alone it is just as likely that the Shure Parties were convinced that the proposed transaction was a superb investment, an investment so good that they would do anything, including illegal acts, to make it. The court at this point expresses only its inclination and will consider further arguments in support of exhibits such as Defendants’ Ex. No. 3008 before ruling.
From the moment this case was transferred to this court, the counterdefendants have vocif *621 erously argued that Loeb Rhoades has no evidence of the "fraudulent scheme” alleged in the counterclaim. According to the counterdefen-dants, Loeb Rhoades’ objective is to convince the jury that the counterdefendants are bad people undeserving of a damage award as well as to confuse the jury in what is otherwise a clear-cut case. After the pre-trial conferences discussing proposed exhibits, the court fears that the coun-terdefendants’ argument may have some validity. Loeb Rhoades has presented no evidence this court considers probative of the alleged fraudulent scheme. Due to the obvious prejudicial nature of evidence such as Ex. No. 3008, the court orders Loeb Rhoades to make a written offer of proof outlining its evidence relating to the counterclaim and the means by which Loeb Rhoades will introduce such evidence. The written offer of proof should take priority over other pre-trial matters and is to be filed by Friday, April 24, 1987. The counterdefendants will be given an opportunity to respond.
. Paragraph 22 of the customer agreement provides that any controversies arising in the construction of a provision of the agreement shall be determined by arbitration. But because neither side has invoked the arbitration provision in the ten years since this matter began, the court deems that the parties have mutually agreed against arbitration of this dispute.
Cf. County of Middlesex v. Gevyn Constr. Corp.,
. To the extent any prior opinions of this court are inconsistent with this holding, the court has reconsidered those opinions.
. To the extent the
Maryville Academy
opinion holds otherwise,
see Maryville Academy,
