OPINION
Plaintiff James Robinson filed suit against Thomas Glynn, Glynn Scientific, Inc., and GeoPhone Company, LLC, alleging that Glynn committed federal securities fraud when he sold Robinson a partial interest in Geophone Company. The district court found that Robinson’s membership interest in GeoPhone was not a security within the meaning of the federal securities laws, and it dismissed Robinson’s securities fraud claim. Because Robinson was an active and knowledgeable executive at GeoPhone, rather than a mere passive investor in the company, we affirm. To do otherwise would unjustifiably expand the scope of the federal securities laws by treating an ordinary commercial venture as an investment contract.
I.
Robinson appeals from a grant of summary judgment to Glynn, and accordingly we take the facts in the light most favorable to Robinson.
See, e.g., McLean v. Patten Communities, Inc.,
In March 1995, Glynn and his associates contacted James Robinson, a businessman with no prior telecommunications experience, in an effort to raise capital for Geo-Phone. Over the next several months, Glynn met and corresponded with Robinson, attempting to convince Robinson to invest in GeoPhone. Glynn described to Robinson the CAMA technology, its centrality to the GeoPhone system, and Geo-Phone’s business plan. In July 1995, Robinson agreed to loan Glynn $1 million so that Glynn could perform a field test of the GeoPhone system and the CAMA technology-
In addition to Robinson’s loan, in August 1995 Robinson and Glynn executed a “Letter of Intent,” in which Robinson pledged to invest up to $25 million in GeoPhone, LLC if the field test indicated that CAMA worked in the GeoPhone system. Robinson’s $25 million investment was to be comprised of his initial $1 million loan, an immediate $14 million investment upon successful completion of the field test, and a later $10 million investment. In October 1995, engineers hired by Glynn performed the field test, but, apparently with Glynn’s knowledge, they did not use CAMA in the test. Nevertheless, Glynn allegedly told Robinson that the field test had been a success.
Consistent with the Letter of Intent, in December 1995 Robinson and Glynn executed an “Agreement to Purchase Membership Interests in GeoPhone” (APMIG). Under the APMIG, Robinson agreed to convert his $1 million loan and his $14 million investment into equity and subsequently to invest the additional $10 million. Robinson and Glynn also entered into an “Amended and Restated GeoPhone
Pursuant to the ARGOA, Robinson received 33,333 of GeoPhone’s 133,333 shares. On the back of the share certificates that Robinson received, the restrictive legend referred to the certificates as “shares” and “securities.” It also specified that the certificates were exempt from registration under the Securities Act of 1933, and stated that the certificates could not be transferred without proper registration under the federal and state securities laws.
In addition, the ARGOA established a seven-person board of managers that was authorized to manage GeoPhone’s affairs. Two of the managers were to be appointed by Robinson with the remaining five appointed by Glynn and his brother. Finally, the ARGOA vested management of GeoPhone in Robinson and Glynn based on each member’s ownership share. Robinson was named GeoPhone’s treasurer, and he was appointed to the board of managers and the company’s executive committee. Glynn served as GeoPhone’s chairman and was intimately involved in the company’s operations and technical development.
Trouble first surfaced only a few months later in April 1996, when Robinson sued Glynn in Maryland state court. Robinson alleged breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, and conversion, all due to Glynn’s purported mismanagement of GeoPhone funds. In October 1997, Robinson and Glynn settled the state court action, and as part of the settlement in November 1997 they entered into a “Membership Interest Purchase Agreement” (MIPA). Under the MIPA, Robinson purchased all of Glynn’s shares in GeoPhone.
Yet in 1998 Robinson allegedly learned for the first time that the CAMA technology had never been implemented in the GeoPhone system — not even in the field test that had provided the basis for Robinson’s investment. Robinson then filed suit in federal court, claiming violation of the federal securities laws, specifically § 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5. The district court, however, granted summary judgment to Glynn, because it found that Robinson’s membership interest in GeoPhone, LLC did not constitute a security under the federal securities laws. Robinson now challenges the district court’s dismissal of his federal securities law claim. 1
II.
In order to establish a claim under Rule 10b-5, Robinson must prove fraud in connection with the purchase of securities.
See
17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5;
Gasner v. Board of Supervisors of the County of Dinwiddie,
A.
The district court determined that Robinson’s interest in GeoPhone was not an investment contract, a question of law that we review de novo. The Supreme Court has defined an investment contract as “a contract, transaction or scheme whereby a person invests his money in a common enterprise and is led to expect profits solely from the efforts of the promoter or a third party.”
S.E.C. v. W.J. Howey, Co.,
Since
Howey,
however, the Supreme Court has endorsed relaxation of the requirement that an investor rely only on others’ efforts, by omitting the word “solely” from its restatements of the
Howey
test.
See Int’l Bhd. of Teamsters v. Daniel,
What matters more than the form of an investment scheme is the “economic reality” that it represents.
See Rivanna,
B.
In looking at the powers accorded Robinson under GeoPhone’s operating agreement, as well as Robinson’s activity as an executive at GeoPhone, it is clear that Robinson was no passive investor heavily dependent on the efforts of others like Glynn. Under the ARGOA, management authority for GeoPhone resided in a board of managers. Robinson not only had the power to appoint two of the board members, but he himself assumed one of the board seats and was named as the board’s vice-chairman. The board, in turn, delegated extensive responsibility to a
In addition, Robinson served as Geo-Phone’s Treasurer. Among his powers were the ability to select external financial and legal consultants; to consult with Geo-Phone’s Chief Financial Officer on all financial matters relating to the company; to review status reports from the President and other officers; and to assemble the executive committee in order to discuss variations from GeoPhone’s operating plan. Beyond even these fairly extensive powers, the ARGOA forbade GeoPhone from either incurring any indebtedness outside the normal course of business without Robinson’s approval or diluting his interest in GeoPhone without first consulting him. In short, Robinson carefully negotiated for a level of control “antithetical to the notion of member passivity” required to find an investment contract under the federal securities laws.
Keith v. Black Diamond Advisors, Inc.,
None of this, of course, establishes that Robinson could entirely direct the affairs of GeoPhone. He controlled neither the board nor the executive committee, and he lacked the technological expertise of Glynn and others at the company. But Robinson was not interested in sole managerial control of GeoPhone; he was interested instead in sufficient managerial control to ensure that other managers like Glynn could neither harm nor dilute his investment. Through his positions as Treasurer, Vice-Chairman of the Board, and member of GeoPhone’s executive committee, Robinson may have lacked “decisive control over major decisions,” but he preserved “the sort of influence which generally provide[d][him] with access to important information and protection against a dependence on others.”
Rivanna,
Robinson argues, however, that his lack of technological expertise relative to Glynn prevented him from meaningfully exercising his rights. We faced essentially the same legal argument in
Rivanna,
and found that it assumed too much.
See id.
at 242 n. 10. To the extent that Robinson needed assistance in understanding any particular aspect of the CAMA technology, nothing prevented him from seeking it from outside parties or others at Geo-Phone.
See id.; Banghart v. Hollywood Gen. P’ship,
Indeed, the record amply supports the district court’s conclusion that Robinson exercised his management rights despite his lack of technical expertise. For instance, Robinson reviewed GeoPhone’s technology and financial records, as well as weekly status reports from GeoPhone’s President, Chief Operating Officer, and Chief Financial Officer covering numerous aspects of GeoPhone’s operation. He disapproved disbursements and proposed licenses of the GeoPhone technology. Robinson even expressed to the board of managers problems he perceived with GeoPhone, including the company’s technological development, its management, and marketability. In the end, Robinson generally asserts that he lacked technical sophistication, without explaining in any detail what was beyond his ken or why it left him powerless to exercise his management rights.
Moreover, Robinson’s argument would work a fundamental and unjustifiable expansion in the securities laws by bringing innumerable commercial ventures within their purview. Business ventures often
Robinson’s opportunity, especially as an executive at GeoPhone, to oversee his interests distinguishes his case from
Bailey v. J.W.K. Properties, Inc.,
Finally, Robinson argues that he and Glynn considered his interest in GeoPhone a security, based on language in the AP-MIG, in the ARGOA, and on the back of Robinson’s GeoPhone certificates. For instance, the restrictive legend on the back of Robinson’s certificates refers to the certificates as “shares” and “securities.” While this may be persuasive evidence that Robinson and Glynn believed the securities laws to apply, it does not indicate that their understanding was well-founded. Just as agreements cannot evade the securities laws by reserving powers to members unable to exercise them, neither can agreements invoke those same laws simply by labelling commercial ventures as securities. It is the “economic reality” of a particular instrument, rather than the label attached to it, that ultimately determines whether it falls within the reach of the securities laws.
See Great Rivers Coop. v. Farmland Indus., Inc.,
III.
Robinson further claims that his membership interest in GeoPhone was not only an “investment contract” within the meaning of the federal securities laws, but “stock” as well.
3
Congress intended eatch-
The characteristics typically associated with common stock are (i) the right to receive dividends contingent upon an apportionment of profits; (ii) negotiability; (iii) the ability to be pledged or hypothecated; (iv) the conferring of voting rights in proportion to the number of shares owned; and (v) the capacity to appreciate in value.
See id.
Robinson’s membership interest in GeoPhone lacked several of these characteristics. Consider
Great Lakes Chemical Corp. v. Monsanto Co.,
First, as is common with interests in LLCs, GeoPhone’s members did not share in the profits in proportion to the number of their shares. See Larry E. Ribstein, Form and Substance in the Definition of a “Security": The Case of Limited Liability Companies, 51 Wash. & Lee L. Rev. 807, 833 (1994) (noting that “LLC statutes usually do not provide for dividend rights”). Pursuant to the ARGOA, Robinson was to receive 100 percent of GeoPhone’s net profits up to a certain amount, only after which were funds to be distributed pro rata to the members in proportion to their relative shares.
Second, like interests in LLCs more generally, Robinson’s membership interests were not freely negotiable. See id. (observing that LLC statutes “invariably restrict transferability of management rights”). According to the ARGOA, Robinson could only transfer his interests if he first offered other members the opportunity to purchase his interests on similar terms. Moreover, unlike with stock (except some stock in close corporations), anyone to whom Robinson or other members transferred their interests would not have thereby acquired any of the control or management rights that normally attend a stock transfer. See Carol R. Go-forth, Why Limited Liability Company Membership Interests Should Not Be Treated as Securities and Possible Steps to Encourage This Result, 45 Hastings L.J. 1223, 1247 (1994) (discussing ability of corporate stockholders, unlike owners of LLC interests, to convey all attributes of ownership without additional third-party consent). Rather, the ARGOA requires that transferees satisfy several conditions to become members, in addition to receiving the approval of a majority of Geo-Phone’s managers.
Similarly, Robinson could pledge his interest, but the pledgee would acquire only distribution rights and not control rights.
See id.
(“Unlike stock, however, the pledgee [of a LLC membership interest] acquires no rights to become a substitute owner with rights to participate in control of the entity upon default of the pledgor.”). As for the apportionment of voting rights, the parties dispute whether voting rights were conferred in proportion to members’ interests in GeoPhone. Even resolving
Finally, from the very beginning Robinson and Glynn consistently viewed Robinson’s investment as a “membership interest,” and never as “stock.” The purchase and operating agreements that Robinson and Glynn executed, as well as the agreement in which Robinson bought out Glynn’s interest in GeoPhone, all termed Robinson’s investment as a “membership interest” rather than “stock.” Even the shares that Robinson received as a result of his investments declared Robinson the holder of “membership interests in Geo-Phone Company, L.L.C., within the meaning of the Delaware Limited Liability Company Act.” Robinson thus cannot argue that he was misled into believing that his membership interests were stock whose purchases were governed by the securities laws.
See Landreth,
IV.
The parties have vigorously urged us to rule broadly in this case, asking that we generally classify interests in limited liability companies, or LLCs, as investment contracts (Robinson’s view) or non-securities (Glynn’s view). LLCs are particularly difficult to categorize under the securities laws, however, because they are hybrid business entities that combine features of corporations, general partnerships, and limited partnerships.
See, e.g., Great Lakes,
Precisely because LLCs lack standardized membership rights or organizational structures, they can assume an almost unlimited variety of forms. It becomes, then, exceedingly difficult to declare that LLCs, whatever their form, either possess or lack the economic characteristics associated with investment contracts. Even drawing firm lines between member-managed and manager-managed LLCs threatens imper-missibly to elevate form over substance. Certainly the members in a member-managed LLC will often have powers too significant to be considered passive investors under the securities laws. And yet even members in a member-managed LLC may be unable as a practical matter to exercise any meaningful control, perhaps because they are too numerous, inexperienced, or geographically disparate.
See, e.g., Nutek Info. Sys., Inc. v. Arizona Corp. Comm’n,
AFFIRMED
Notes
. In addition to his federal securities law claim, Robinson also brought several state law claims. Once the district court had dismissed Robinson’s federal claim, it declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over his remaining state law claims. Robinson does not challenge this aspect of the district court’s decision.
. The Securities Acts’ definitions of "security” differ in wording only slightly and are generally treated as identical in meaning.
See Teague v. Bakker,
. The Securities Acts define a "security” as "any note, stock, treasury stock, security fu
. The weaknesses of Robinson's case are highlighted by comparison to
S.E.C. v. ETS Payphones, Inc.,
. After the district court’s dismissal of Robinson’s suit, Robinson refiled his suit in state court, where it remains pending. See Tape of Oral Argument, Sept. 24, 2003 (Appellant’s Opening Argument).
