LTV Federal Credit Union (LTV) filed this diversity case as a declaratory judgment action seeking to sanction its unilateral breach of a Standby Commitment Agreement which it had entered two years earlier with UMIC Government Securities, Inc., (UMIC). UMIC in turn sued LTV for breach of contract and securities fraud, and, after complaint was filed, Banco de la Nación Argentina (Banco) was joined as a plaintiff with UMIC. The cases were consolidated and tried without a jury. The district judge found LTV liable in damages to UMIC and Banco for breach of contract in the aggregate judgment amount of $1,525,647.91. LTV has filed a timely appeal with this court.
The issues raised in this case are complex, and at first glance, confusing, but the district judge did an admirable job of sorting out and resolving the complexities. The district court’s findings are errorless and its conclusions of law comport fully with our conclusions. We therefore adopt Judge Higginbotham’s opinion as our opinion on appeal, see LTV Federal Credit Union v. UMIC Government Securities, Inc.,
I.
The contract at issue here is a standby commitment entered into by LTV and UMIC on June 26, 1978. In this type of agreement, a standby forward contract, the seller of the standby agrees to purchase a commodity, here Government National Mortgage Association securities (GNMA’s), at some time in the future for a set price, in return for a non-refundable fee from the purchaser of the standby. See SEC v. G. Weeks Securities,
It is only Judge Higginbotham’s finding that the standby commitment was not itself a security subject to registration under section 5 of the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. 77e, that we address here. Summarizing this issue, the district court noted:
From whatever definitional perspective the standby commitment is viewed, the economic reality remains unchanged. LTV did not enter into a common venture with UMIC, or rely on UMIC’s financial expertise, or place any capital at risk with UMIC. The parties to the standby commitment did no more than make an option contract to deliver a thing, the*201 value of which is under neither’s control. Each took a position on the market in the hope that the market would turn to its advantage and the other’s disadvantage. And even if the standby commitment is considered a ‘security’ then as a ‘stock option’ in GNMA’s, it is no more subject to registration than the underlying GNMA’s. UMIC thus did not violate the Securities Act by failing to register the agreement.
LTV,
At first glance it is uncertain that LTV has appealed this particular finding. In its statement of issues, LTV lists as issue number five “whether the LTV standby commitment was an unregistered security” under the Texas Securities Act and the 1933 and 1934 Federal Securities Acts, citing the general definitional sections of both the 1933 and 1934 Acts, 15 U.S.C. § 77b and 15 U.S.C. § 78c(a). Its discussion of this issue, however, is devoted almost entirely to the applicability of the Texas Securities Act. Buried within the discussion we do find the following: “It [?] is unregistered and its sale or purchase violated both securities acts. 15 U.S.C. § 77 and 15 U.S.C. § 78.” Assuming that this inarticulate statement and the ambiguous “it” refer to the LTV standby commitment (which is not clear in the context), we will address this issue.
II.
Absent congressional action prior to our decision in this appeal, there would be little need for us to write on this or on any other issue presented in this case. Rather, we would simply utilize our Rule 21, see 5th Cir. R.21; NLRB v. Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America,
We thus must take into account the Supreme Court’s admonition in Bradley v. Richmond School Board,
A court is to apply the law in effect at the time it renders its decision, unless doing so would result in manifest injustice or there is statutory direction or legislative history to the contrary.
See also, Payne v. Panama Canal Co.,
In applying this rule, we are also guided by Justice Marshall’s frequently cited opinion in United States v. Schooner Peggy,
It is true that in mere private cases between individuals, a court will and ought to struggle hard against a construction which will, by a retrospective operation affect the rights of parties, ....
See, e.g., City of Great Falls v. United States Department of Labor,
We therefore set out to determine whether the amendments to the securities laws which are in effect at the time we decide this appeal are to be applied retroactively to the June 26, 1978, transaction in question.
A.
We first note that the legislation comprising the amendments makes no mention of an effective date, much less of a directive as to the retroactive or prospective nature of the legislation. The slight one- and-one-quarter-page document simply ends with the following notation: “Approved October 13, 1982.” Pub.L. No. 97-303, 96 Stat. 14Ó9.
On the other hand, the legislative history of the bill, embodied in a rather lengthy House Energy and Commerce Committee report, is laced with such phrases as “clarification of SEC jurisdiction”, “long-standing Congressional intent that the SEC has the sole authority to regulate options on all securities, including exempted securities,” and “confirm the intent of Congress.” H.R. Rep. No. 97-626, 97th Cong., 2d Sess. 2, 8, 9, U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1982, pp. 2780, 2786-87. This clarification terminology is not in itself dispositive of the issue before us. Sikora v. American Can Co.,
The issue faced by the Seventh Circuit in Board of Trade v. SEC, and the catalyst for the 1982 Securities Act amendments, was which of two regulatory agencies had the authority to regulate trading in GNMA options, since GNMA’s are both commodities and securities. Board of Trade,
Further, the court stated explicitly that the proposed exchange-formed off-set GNMA options were not securities. Board of Trade,
While the exact form of option in Board of Trade is not now before us, the Seventh Circuit’s discussion of the legislative history of the two regulatory agencies would indicate that, congressional commentary notwithstanding, it was not clear that an option on an exempt security (GNMA’s) was itself a security for purposes of registration prior to the 1982 amendments. Board of Trade,
Supporting this conclusion is SEC v. G. Weeks Securities,
*203 From a securities law standpoint, the key element in both firm and standby forward contracts is that the only additional risks presented by forward, as opposed to a cash, contract are those of price movement during the executory period. Because prices are determined by competitive market forces, registration of forward contracts could provide no data about the seller which would be relevant to those market risks. The gain or loss stems from the impersonal marketplace alone. It is not the product of a commercial endeavor. Hence, under these circumstances, a forward contract does not meet the law’s test of a security subject to registration as “an investment of money in a common enterprise with profits to come solely from the efforts of others.”
Weeks,
Reasoning similar to that in Weeks was used by then-District Judge Rubin in equating a commodity futures contract with an option. Judge Rubin found that neither met the Howey test for an investment contract, McCurnin v. Kohlmeyer and Co.,
On the other hand, our research has disclosed no case holding that a standby forward contract in exempt securities, in effect a put option in GNMA’s, is itself a security subject to registration under the 1933 Securities Act.
We thus find that the statute provides no guidance as to retroactive or prospective application and that the clarification language used in the committee report, interpreting the intent of previous congresses, does not comport with the reality of the legal uncertainty created by case law, at least as it applies to the transaction at issue. It cannot be said that options on exempt government securities were considered separate securities for purposes of registration prior to the 1982 amendments. We are accordingly unpersuaded that either the statute itself or the legislative history mandates retroactive application of the October 1982 amendments to the standby forward commitment in question here; but neither, and more importantly under the Bradley analysis, does the statute or the legislative history direct that the statute be applied prospectively only.
B.
This conclusion therefore brings us to an examination of whether the retroactive application of the securities laws’ amendments would result in manifest injustice. Pertinent to this analysis are “(a) the nature and identification of the parties, (b) the nature of their rights, and (c) the nature of the impact of the change in the law upon those rights.” Bradley,
For purposes of defining when retroactive application might work an injustice, Bradley distinguishes routine private litigation between individuals from those cases vindicating rights of great national concern. Applicable to this determination is the ability of the parties adequately to present and protect their respective interests. Bradley,
We thus have two private parties who entered a single, private contract and who are now involved in a routine, private lawsuit stemming from a breach of that negotiated contract. From this perspective, clearly distinguishable from Bradley and falling within the ambit of Schooner Peggy, we have purely private parties seeking personal profit in the private market place.
We are therefore clearly convinced that the case before us meets the first criterion for the Bradley exception — purely private parties engaged in a routine lawsuit who are not vindicating any public right or matter of public interest. It only remains to be determined whether Gulfshore Oil Co. v. Mobil Oil Corp.,
Gulfshore Oil has been cited for the proposition that the importance of the public concerns-private party dichotomy has been diminished. See, e.g., City of Great Falls v. United States Department of Labor,
Unlike Gulfshore Oil, LTV here seeks, by retroactive application of the statute in question, to negate UMIC’s entire cause of action and to escape completely the obligations of the contract that it negotiated and from which it benefitted. In our view these factors serve to distinguish fully the instant situation from that in Gulfshore Oil. Concisely, Gulfshore Oil does not change our conclusion that an important consideration under the Bradley analysis is the private nature and purpose of the parties here.
Second, we turn to the nature of the rights which would be affected by retroactive application of the securities laws’ amendments. As with the parties involved, these rights were purely private rights stemming from a privately negotiated contract from which each party hoped to reap personal profit.
These private rights and personal obligations are clearly spelled out in the contract. UMIC was obligated to pay LTV $200,000 in return for the right to sell to LTV $4,000,000 in GNMA securities two years later should UMIC so choose. UMIC paid LTV the standby fee on July 28, 1978, and twenty months later gave LTV written notice that it would deliver the GNMA’s on June 22,1980, pursuant to the standby commitment. LTV, under the contract, was obligated to purchase the GNMA’s on June 22, 1980, upon twenty-days notice from UMIC in return for the right to the $200,-000 standby fee.
We thus note that the right which would be affected by retroactive application of the 1982 amendments is UMIC’s right to sell the GNMA’s to LTV under the contract, a right which fully matured on the date that the contract was entered, June 26, 1978. As Bradley noted, “The Court has refused to apply an intervening change to a pending action where it has concluded that to do so would infringe upon or deprive a person of a right that had matured or become uncon
Third, with respect to the impact that retroactive application of these amendments would have on these existing rights, to find now that the standby commitment is a security which UMIC was obligated to register would not only be to impose an unanticipated obligation on UMIC, see Bradley,
UMIC negotiated a contract and paid $200,000 for the option to sell the GNMA’s in question to LTV. It has fulfilled all of its obligations under the contract. The court below, deciding the case before the amendments were passed, awarded UMIC a $1,500,000 judgment. The retroactive application of the amendments would supposedly reduce that judgment to zero and extinguish every right which UMIC had under the contract. Now to legitimize LTV’s breach of the contract by the retroactive application of the October 1982 amendments would be unjustly to enrich LTV while unjustly penalizing UMIC.
On the other hand, the right which LTV here contends that it has lost is the right to have the standby commitment registered. Yet the one circuit which has considered the matter has found that registration of such an agreement would not provide someone in LTV’s position with any information relevant to the competitive market forces which determine the price of the contract and thus the risk involved in such an agreement. See SEC v. G. Weeks Securities,
Thus retroactive application of the 1982 amendments under these circumstances would give LTV a seemingly insubstantial right
Finally we note that the manifest injustice rule is an “equitable exception” to Bradley’s retroactive application presumption. Gulfshore Oil,
This consideration merely reaffirms our conviction that this case is an exception to the general rule stated in Bradley that intervening statutes or case law are to be applied retroactively. Thus, respectful of Justice Marshall’s admonition in Schooner Peggy, we decline to apply the amendments retroactively to the June 28, 1978, contract between these two private parties. We therefore affirm the district court’s holding on this issue, and on all other issues.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. With respect to our consideration, infra, of the equities involved in this issue, we do attach some significance to LTV’s indifferent treatment of this issue and the lack of any claim of real prejudice resulting from UMIC’s failure to register the standby agreement as a security.
. That’s right, onions.
. The SEC authority to regulate exchange-traded options is found in section 9 of the 1934 Securities Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78i. That section, however, specifically excludes exempted securities from its provisions. 15 U.S.C. 78i(f). The transaction at issue here is not an exchange-traded option, and it is in fact an option on an exempted security. 15 U.S.C. § 78c(a)(12) (exempted securities under 1934 Securities Exchange Act include those which are direct obligations of or obligations guaranteed as to principal or interest by the United States). Thus the SEC’s “plenary options authority” under section 9 did not include options on exempted securities prior to the October 1982 amendments.
. A later case in this circuit dealt, in part, with the similar question of whether contracts to sell GNMA securities were exempt from the registration requirements of the 1933 Act. G.A. Thompson and Co. v. Partridge,
. We do not intimate here that the registration requirements of the 1933 Securities Act are meritless. On the contrary, they play an important role in the protection of investors and potential investors in securities. Under the circumstances of this case, however, where we are called upon to determine the equity of applying a new law retroactively to the parties in this suit, we must balance the rights that will be obtained by retroactive application against the obligations that will be imposed.
