The instant case involves the enforcement of a disgorgement order entered by the district court on August 1,1990. The Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) appeals an order from the district court denying certain requested relief the SEC claimed was necessary to obtain compliance with the disgorgement order. The SEC filed a Motion to Dispense With Oral Argument and Summarily Reverse the District Court’s Decision, asserting that our recent holding in
Sec. Exch. Comm’n v. Huffman,
I.
Appellee, William B. Clark (“Clark”), was prosecuted by the SEC for alleged violations of the antifraud and other provisions of the federal securities laws. After negotiations, during which Clark was represented by independent counsel, Clark and the SEC on October 26, 1989, entered into a “Consent and Undertaking of William B. Clark” (the “consent agreement”) in which Clark consented to the entry of an agreed judgment, including (i) a permanent injunction against future violations of the securities laws alleged to have been violated, and (ii) a disgorgement order. This agreement was filed with the district court on February 2, 1990, and a final judgment of permanent injunction and other equitable relief was entered against Clark on February 5, 1990. 1
Although Clark agreed to the entry of a disgorgement order, he did not stipulate to a certain amount. Rather, the SEC and Clark agreed to negotiate further a disgorgement sum with the understanding that they could submit the controversy to the court if no such agreement could be reached. 2 When the parties failed to agree, the SEC motioned the district court to set a disgorgement amount, submitting documentation purportedly relating to Clark’s unlawful profits in support of its request. On August 1, 1990, the district court entered an Order Setting Disgorgement Amount (the “Disgorgement Order”), requiring Clark to pay $218,610, *73 plus post-judgment interest, into the registry of the court -within ten days of entry of the order.
Clark allegedly failed to comply with the Disgorgement Order, and the SEC filed a motion to show cause why he should not be held in civil contempt. As neither Clark nor his attorney attended the October 31, 1990, show cause hearing, the district court placed Clark in civil contempt. The SEC then requested the court below to impose contempt sanctions upon Clark to coerce compliance with the Disgorgement Order, suggesting that Clark should be required to pay $125,-000 of the amount due within a ninety-day period. If he failed to do so, the SEC asked that he be incarcerated until the payment was made. Clark responded that he was indigent and did not have the financial means to comply with the Disgorgement Order. As evidence of his financial inability, Clark provided the SEC and the district court with a financial statement and personal tax returns for the past three years. Both Clark and his wife submitted to depositions taken by the SEC. Clark also furnished sworn affidavits of “Indigency” and of “Financial Condition,” dated January 31, 1991, and December 20, 1991, respectively, as further support for his claim of indigence.
The district court reviewed the various documents provided by Clark and found that “the only meaningful asset belonging to Clark that suggests an ability to comply with the disgorgement [order] is his home, valued at $250,000, which he owns jointly free and clear with his wife.” The court determined that this asset was exempt from collection under the Federal Debt Collection Procedures Act of 1990, 28 U.S.C. § 3001 et seq. (the “Debt Collection Act”). It reasoned that Section 3014(a)(2)(A) of the Debt Collection Act permitted a defendant in an equitable proceeding — such as the one at bar — to “elect to take his available exemptions under Texas state law.” See 28 U.S.C. § 3014(a)(2)(A). Since Texas law provides an exemption from debt collection with respect to a defendant’s homestead, 3 and because Clark had no other demonstrable assets, the court concluded that Clark had satisfied his burden of showing financial inability to comply with the Disgorgement Order. In so holding, the court below intimated that it was unable to consider the value of the home in determining whether Clark had met his burden of showing financial inability.
II.
We note, as a preliminary matter, that financial inability is a defense for failure to comply with a court-ordered disgorgement.
Donovan v. Sovereign Sec., Ltd.,
A. Standard of Review
Normally, we review a district court’s decision whether to grant equitable relief with respect to a disgorgement order for an abuse of discretion.
E.g., Commodities Futures Trading Comm’n v. American Metals Exch. Corp.,
B. Treatment of The Disgorgement Order
The only issue raised in this appeal by the SEC is whether a standing disgorgement order constitutes a “debt,” thus subject to the provisions of the Debt Collection Act.
4
The district court implicitly held that it was when it concluded that the proceeding was subject to the Debt Collection Act. In an almost identical fact-setting, this court held that a disgorgement order does not amount to a “debt” for purposes of the Debt Collection Act.
See Huffman,
As this court notes in Huffman, the Debt Collection Act specifically excludes its application to the collection of any monies owed which are not debts. 28 U.S.C. § 3001(c). “Debt” is defined as:
(A) an amount that is owing to the United States on account of a direct loan, or loan insured or guaranteed by the United States; or
(B) an amount that is owing to the United States on account of a fee, duty, lease, rent, service, sale of real or personal property, overpayment, fine, assessment, penalty, restitution, damages, interest, tax, bail bond forfeiture, reimbursement, recovery of a cost incurred by the United States, or other source of indebtedness to the United States, but that is not owing under the terms of a contract originally entered into by only persons other than the United States; and includes any amount owing to the United States for the benefit of an Indian tribe or individual Indian, but excludes any amount to which the United States is entitled under Section 3011(a).[ 5 ]
28 U.S.C. § 3002(3)(A) and (B). Clark has not contended that Section 3002(3)(A) is relevant to this case, and there would be no basis for concluding that the provision has any application here. Accordingly, the proper focus is upon whether a disgorgement order falls within one of the terms defined in Section 3002(3)(B).
As the
Huffman
court previously decided, “disgorgement” does not really approximate any of the language used in Section 3002(3)(B). It comes closest to “restitution,” but it is important to note that' there are several significant differences for our purposes. In
Pierce v. Vision Invs., Inc.,
this court held that court-ordered “disgorgement” payments were in essence “an injunction in the public interest” rather than “a mere money judgment or debt.”
Although the facts presented here are virtually identical to those presented in
Huffman,
this court implied in
Huffman
that the result might have been different if the case had been decided on contract principles, noting that the “defendants made no admission of securities violations” and that “both sides assume that the amount ordered to be repaid here are a form of ‘disgorgement’ rather than the simple settlement of a lawsuit.”
See Huffman,
C. Effect of the Consent Agreement on the Disgorgement Order
In the instant case, however, the “contract principles” argument was arguably preserved. Since Clark is
pro se,
we must construe his allegations and briefs more permissively.
McCabe v. Arave,
We first examine the nature of a consent judgment. It is true that the underlying agreement between the SEC and Clark is in the nature of a settlement and has the elements of a contract.
See Local 93, Int’l Firefighters v. City of Cleveland,
The [consent] judgment is not, like the settlement agreement out of which it arose, a mere contract inter partes. The court is not properly a recorder of contracts; it is an organ of government constituted to make judicial decisions, and when it has rendered a consent judgment it has made an adjudication.
IB James W. MooRe, Moore’s Federal PRACTICE, ¶ 0.409[5], at III — 151 (2d ed. 1993).
Accord Kaspar Wire Works, Inc.,
Although a consent decree is sometimes “construed for enforcement purposes as a contract,”
ITT Continental,
It should also be noted in the instant case that the district court determined the amount of disgorgement based upon proof presented by the SEC. Although Clark agreed to disgorge certain gains alleged to have been procured as the result of fraudulent conduct, he did not stipulate as to the amount of such profits. Thus, the amount of the disgorgement order was arrived at by adjudication rather than by agreement. For these reasons, we hold that the underlying agreement supporting the disgorgement order did not transform the obligation into a “debt” for purposes of the Debt Collection Act.
III.
Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the district court and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion and with
Huffman.
In doing so, we acknowledge that the district court has discretion to refuse to subject Clark’s home to the disgorgement order;' it is not required to compel disgorgement of the residence to meet his obligation to the SEC.
See, e.g., Huffman,
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. Clark contends on appeal that the consent agreement filed with the district court was altered, since it did not include certain handwritten changes. However, we note that the document filed with the court below contained the changes in typewritten form.
. The consent agreement also provided that the SEC could "waivef ] ■ • • payment of any or all of such disgorgement amount ... based upon CLARK's demonstrated financial inability to make payment.”
. See Tex.Prop.Code Ann. § 41.002 (Vernon Supp. 1993).
.The appellee, Clark, attempts to enlarge the scope of the appeal by arguing that there is no evidence or insufficient evidence of any wrongdoing on his part to warrant the entry of the disgorgement order. Notwithstanding the fact that he did not file a cross-appeal to assert this point of
error
— see,
e.g., Ayers v. United States,
. Section 3011(a) relates to surcharges for collection expenses incurred by the United States. 28 U.S.C. § 3011(a).
.
Pierce
involved the issue of whether a contempt sanction enforcing disgorgement of unlawful gains under the Interstate Land Sales Full Disclosure Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1701-1720, violated federal and state prohibitions on imprisonment for debt.
Pierce v. Vision Invs., Inc.,
. Specifically, we held that the enforcement of the order through the court’s contempt powers was not in violation of prohibitions against placing debtors in prison.
See supra
note 6. Although
Pierce
involved construction of the Interstate Land Act, this court noted that the consent agreement calling for the disgorgement of ill-gotten profits under that Act was similar to the disgorgement remedy available to enforce federal securities laws.
Pierce,
. This reasoning is consistent with the enforcement purposes of the equitable remedy of disgorgement. As noted above, disgorgement is designed as a remedial measüre for violations of the securities laws. Its purpose is to "depriv[e] the wrongdoer of his ill-gotten gains and deter[ ] violations of the law.”
Sec. Exch. Comm'n v. Blatt,
