Martin Frank, an attorney, appeals, 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a) (1), from a temporary injunction issued by Judge Tyler in the District Court for the Southern District of New York, in an action by the SEC with respect to alleged violations of the fraud provisions of the securities laws, § 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933 and § 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. The order enjoined Frank pendente lite from “drafting or causing to be drafted any offering circular, prospectus or other document or writing containing any untrue statements of material facts, or omissions to state material facts necessary in order to make the statements made in the light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading, concerning Nylo-Thane Plastics Corp.’s principal product, a chemical additive ingredient purportedly designed to reduce the time required in curing rubber * *
Nylo-Thane, a defendant in this action, had acquired from Maurice Minuto, whose wife owned two-thirds of its stock, a chemical additive designed to accelerate the curing of rubber. During 1966 it sold 100,000 shares at $3 per share in what purported to be an intra-state offering, in connection with which Minuto had retained Frank to represent it. An offering circular dated October 31, 1966, and an amended offering circular dated March 9, 1967, contained, under the heading “Business of the Company,” references to the additive which are reproduced in the margin. 1 Immediately after *488 completion of the offering the stock rose as high as $17.50 per share.
On learning what it considered to be serious misrepresentations in the offering circular with respect to the additive, the SEC, on April 27, 1967, suspended trading in the stock. The company retained a new securities law specialist, who worked out with the Commission a letter correcting the misrepresentations. On May 26 the Commission instituted this action against the company, three officers or stockholders, a financial consultant, and Frank, to enjoin further misrepresentations. All the defendants save Frank, while neither admitting nor denying the allegations of the complaint, consented to entry of a permanent injunction. The Commission thereupon announced that it would not continue the suspension beyond May 27, when the current 10-day suspension order expired, advising investors to “consider carefully information made available by the company concerning its product and information made available in' connection with the Commission’s injunctive action before effecting transactions in this stock.” Securities Exchange Act of 1934 Release No. 8089.
Frank having declined to join the other defendants in consenting to an injunction, the Commission on June 20 moved for a temporary injunction against him. The motion was supported by numerous affidavits and extracts from testimony by Frank and others at an administrative hearing which were alleged to show that he had been aware of the falsity of representations concerning the additive. Frank countered with a notice to take the depositions of various employees of the Commission, as to which the Commission obtained a stay, and with answering affidavits of himself and others. His position, broadly stated, was that the portion of the offering circular alleged to misrepresent the additive had been prepared by the officers of Nylo-Thane and that his function had been that of a scrivener helping them to place their ideas in proper form. Further affidavits were filed by both sides and the SEC’s application was argued on July 19. Judge Tyler endorsed on the motion papers a memorandum opinion granting the injunction 2 and this later issued.
Although Frank makes much of this being the first instance in which the Commission has obtained an injunction against an attorney for participation in the preparation of an allegedly misleading offering circular or prospectus, we find this unimpressive. As this court said in United States v. Benjamin, 328
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F.2d 854, 863 (2 Cir.), cert, denied,
Although the moving affidavits of the SEC investigator and others gave ample basis for belief that the circular conveyed what executives of Nylo-Thane must have known to be a misleading impression of the extent to which the additive had proved valuable in practice or even in' theoretical testing, the only specific statements as to what Frank knew were that he had seen letters from Genruco Processing Co. and the Army, dated December 6, 1965, and August 4, 1966, respectively, and that Braunston, president of Nylo-Thane, had told him that the Army tests indicated use of the additive resulted in “sulphur bloom” and that “the Company cannot always guarantee that the additive will work.”
While the letter from Genruco was not in the SEC’s papers, the investigator quoted a statement “that there had not been enough time to have all the physical * * * (properties) * * * checked out.” The Army report recited favorable effect with one rubber compound, lack of effect with another, but “prominent blooming” in the former. An answering affidavit of Braunston gave the text of the letter from Genruco a portion of which, not quoted by the SEC investigator, was highly enthusiastic about the additive but which did clearly indicate that factory trials were yet to be made. Braunston added a letter from Vulcanized Rubber and Plastics Co., dated November 30, 1966, given to Frank, which was also optimistic, and denied making the statements the investigator had attributed to him. An answering affidavit by Minuto included a report from Armstrong Rubber Co. dated June 10, 1965, of a rather technical nature, allegedly shown to Frank and claimed to differ materially- — -to the advantage of the additive — from one described in an affidavit of an Armstrong chemical engineer which the SEC had submitted. Minuto also denied that he or Braunston had ever mentioned “sulphur bloom” to Frank, and asserted that the phenomenon was due to the A.rmy’s using a compound with excessive sulphur content and could easily be corrected. A reply affi *490 davit of the SEC investigator sought to respond to these and other claims; among other things it cited testimony by Minuto at an administrative hearing that he had told Frank about the sulphur bloom, and contended that Minuto had told Frank that the additive tested by the Army reduced the abrasive resistance of the final product and that Braunston had reported that the Army tests were inconclusive. Supplemental affidavits submitted by Frank’s lawyer and by Braun-ston sought to rebut these charges.
Frank contends that the order granting a preliminary injunction is procedurally defective in two respects. First, no evidentiary hearing was conducted though the affidavits revealed a dispute about the critical facts. Second, the judge’s memorandum did not set forth adequately the necessary findings of fact as required by Rule 52(a). 3
Decisions on the extent to which F.R.Civ.P. 65 requires a district court to take evidence rather than rely on affidavits before granting or refusing a temporary injunction reflect a tension between the need for speedy action and the desire for certainty and complete fairness. In recognition of the former, Rule 65(b) authorizes a temporary restraining order which may be issued without a hearing. But see Arvida Corp. v. Sugarman,
While it may be impossible to reconcile all the apparently conflicting statements as to the need for taking evidence before issuing a temporary injunction, see 7 Moore, Federal Practice ¶ 65.04 [3]; Sims v. Greene,
The Commission says that, however all this may be in private litigation, a less strict standard as to the need for taking evidence prevails when suit has been brought by an agency representing the public interest. Congress is, of,, course, free, within the broad limits of due process, to dispense with the requirement of an evidentiary hearing when a federal agency seeks an interlocutory injunction. But the courts have required Congress to speak clearly if it desires to modify basic principles governing equitable relief. See Hecht Co. v. Bowles,
It is true that cases where a government agency seeks interlocutory relief may often be of one or the other of the first two types discussed above; an evidentiary hearing is not required when the dispute concerns only “legislative facts,” see 1 Davis, Administrative Law Treatise, § 7.06, or it is evident that the breadth of the issue having to be explored would prevent a meaningful
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“trial-type” hearing within the allotted time.
5
But where, as in this case, issuance of an injunction on the ground of fraud turns on the knowledge and intent of an individual during a short period of time, we perceive no basis for dispensing with the evidentiary hearing normally required simply because the plaintiff is a government agency, for whose vigorous efforts to eradicate securities abuses this court entertains the highest respect. Rather, we follow the early ruling in SEC v. Andrews, 1 SEC Jud.Dec. 265 (S.D.N.Y.1936), where Judge Mack denied a temporary injunction under the 1934 Act when the affidavits revealed a factual dispute as to the defendants’ intent, concluding that “while in my opinion, it is not unreasonable to infer that the orders were entered ‘for the purpose of creating a false or misleading appearance of active trading’ * * * I am loath, merely on affidavits, to deem such an inference so clear or irresistible in this case as to justify the granting of a preliminary injunction.” Id. at 269. See also, SEC v. A. G. Beilin Securities Corp.,
The
per curiam
opinion in SEC v. Boren,
We hold, on similar grounds, that the judge’s conclusion, see fn. 2, that “the affidavits of the Commission” — apparently considered without regard to Frank’s — “establish a likelihood of success in establishing knowing violations of Section 17a of the Securities Act of
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1933,” did not satisfy Rule 52(a). No one could reasonably demand that a judge pause overlong for detailed findings before issuing a temporary injunction if some gigantic fraud impended or the welfare of the nation was at stake, although courts have taken the time to make findings in such a case, see, e. g., United States v. United Steelworkers of America,
While “findings ‘are not a jurisdictional requirement of appeal’ but only ‘aid appellate courts in reviewing the decision below,’ ” Rossiter v. Vogel,
The judgment is. reversed for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. “To demonstrate the efficacy of the. product, and to determine its value to rubber manufacturers, sami>le quantities of the additive were made available by others to producers of rubber and rubber-like tires, bowling balls, battery cases, seals, gaskets, sheets, molded parts, extrusions, tubing, etc., for testing purposes. It was found that the use of the additive in compounds specified by these manufacturers resulted in finished products cured in fractions of the time currently deemed normal for this procedure. Moreover, it was found that the physical properties of the items produced with the additive included in the formulation were at least equal, and in numerous cases superior, to those of the same compounds when cured at longer time cycles without the additive, while increasing processing safety. The effect of this time-saving was, in each case tested, a substantial reduction in molding time costs; and, more importantly, also released the molds and presses for further production, thereby increasing the productive capacity of the manufacturer without capital investment of any kind whatsoever on his part. In short, the use of the additive was effectively shown, through practical factory testing, to make it possible for a fabricator of rubber or rubber-like products to turn out substantially larger quantities of such products without higher costs for plant, machinery or labor, by reason of the greatly reduced curing time effected by the use of such additive.
“According to available statistics from the United States Department of Commerce, upwards of five billion pounds of natural and synthetic rubber are processed annually in the United States. Practically all of such processing necessitates curing, so that the potential market for the additive, in view of its proven value in speeding and increasing produc *488 tion, appears to be of considerable proportions, even if only a small percentage of tlie rubber fabricators adopt its use in their formulations. It is, of course, highly speculative and quite impossible to estimate how much, if any, of this potential market will actually become users of the additive and customers of the Company. However, again assuming that even a small percentage of the manufacturers comprising this market will adopt the use of the additive on the basis of its proven productive value, the Company envisions potential sales of its product in quantities of millions of pounds, which, if realized, would result in a large volume of sales and a considerable potential profit. Management has tentatively fixed the sales price of its additive product to provide a reasonable return to the Company and at the same time should constitute an appealing cost to the prospective buyer, in view of the additive’s ability to raise productive capacity in a degree substantially exceeding the expense of its usage in production.”
“The Company's additive was subjected to various tests by the United States Army laboratory at Natick, Massachusetts as well as by a number of leading rubber companies. While the Company was extremely satisfied with the results, there is no assurance that the results of the tost will bring the Company any orders for the additive.”
. This was as follows:
“After hearing today, I am convinced that the affidavits of the Commission establish a likelihood of success in establishing knowing violations of Section 37a, of the Securities Act of 1933 and a need pending this litigation to prevent any further possible misstatements in offering circulars and writings relating to Nylo-Thane Plastics Corp. securities. A narrowly drawn injunction order as described by the Court during argument should be settled on notice.”
. “In all actions tried upon the facts with out a jury * * * the court shall find the facts specially and state separately its conclusions of law thereon * * * and in granting or refusing interlocutory injunctions the court shall similarly set forth the findings of fact and conclusions of law which constitute the grounds of its action. * * * ”
. Both section 20(b) of the Securities Act of 1933 and section 21(e) of the Securities Act of 1934 read as follows:
“Whenever it shall appear to the Commission that any person is engaged or about to engage in any acts or practices which constitute or will constitute a violation of the provisions of this subehap-ter, or of any rule or regulation prescribed under authority thereof, it may in its discretion, bring an action in any district court of the United States * * * to enjoin such acts or practices, and upon a proper showing a permanent or temporary injunction or restraining order shall be granted without bond * *
. A familiar instance where these factors co-exist is an action by the United States for an emergency injunction under § 208 (a) of the Taft-Hartley Act. See United Steelworkers of America v. United States,
. While we have noted the contention of the. SEC that Frank waived any objection to the court’s proceeding on the basis of affidavits, our upholding his objection as to lack of findings makes it unnecessary for us to pass on this. In fact the two issues are interrelated; we are confident that if the judge had endeavored to frame findings, the inadequacy of the affidavits as a basis would have become apparent to him. However, there is merit to the position that if a party is unwilling to have the issuance of a temporary injunction decided on affidavits, he must make his objection known; he may not gamble on the judge’s accepting his affidavits rather than his adversary’s and then seek a reversal if the result is disappointing.
