ON REMAND FROM THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
In 2002, wе decided Charles E. Edwards’s (Edwards) appeal from the district court’s grant of the Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) motion for preliminary injunction and asset freeze against Edwards. The asset freeze included the assets of Edwards’s wholly-owned corporation, Twinleaf, Inc. (Twinleaf). We determined that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiсtion because the investments offered by Edwards were not “securities” under federal securities laws.
SEC v. ETS Payphones, Inc.,
Edwards’s original appeal, by remand from the Supreme Court, is before us again. In the interim, Edwards moved the district court for a modification of the asset freeze to permit Twinleaf to pay its attorneys fees. The district court denied Edwards’s motion, and he appealed.
We now consider both appeals. We must decide, specifically, whether (1) the transactions offered by Edwards were securities under the Securities Aсts of 1933 and 1934; (2) the district court clearly erred when it found Edwards was likely to violate securities laws in the future; (3) Edwards can be personally liable for violations of federal securities acts; and (4) the district court erred by denying Twinleaf, Inc., use of its funds to pay attorneys fees for this action.
FACTS
We adopt the statement of facts from our earlier opinion reported in
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review a trial court’s decision to grant injunction under the abuse of discretion standard.
Klay v. United Healthgroup, Inc.,
JURISDICTION
The Securities Acts of 1933 and 1934 define a “security” as including “investment contract.” 15 U.S.C. §§ 77b(a)(l), 78c(a)(10). The Supreme Court has set out the test for determining whether a transaction qualifies as an “investment contract” in
SEC v. W.J. Howey Co.,
Our prior decision in this case concluded that the transactions involved an investment of money.
In our earlier ruling, we reaffirmed this Circuit’s adherence to thе “broad vertical commonality” test for determining whether investors operated under a common enterprise.
ETS Payphones, Inc.,
The district court found that “ETS had to attract an ever expanding number of investors to meet its obligation to existing investors.”
ETS Payphones, Inc.,
The fourth element of the
Howey
test asks the “amount of control that the investors retain[ed] under their written agreements.”
Albanese v. Fla. Nat’l Bank of Orlando,
REASONABLE LIKELIHOOD OF CONTINUING VIOLATIONS
To grant a preliminary injunction in a securities case, a plaintiff must provide, among other elements, “positive proof’ that the defendant will likely violate securities laws in the future.
SEC v. Caterinicchia,
The district court concluded that the SEC met this burden.
ETS Payphones, Inc.,
When weighing these issues, we must also recognize “that for the matter in question there is a range of choice for the district court and so long as its decision does not amount to a clear error of judgment wе will not reverse even if we would have gone the other way had the choice been ours to make.”
McMahan v. Toto,
INDIVIDUAL LIABILITY
Edwards argues that, if the investments were securities, they were issued by ETS, not by him. This argument is without merit.
United States v. Rachal,
Edwards also challenges the court’s finding of scienter, a necessary element of fraud under the securities laws. The district court, found that ETS “always lost money on its payphone operations.”
SEC v. ETS Payphones, Inc.,
We review findings of scienter for clear error.
Lucas v. Fla. Power & Light Co.,
EDWARDS’S ASSET FREEZE
The district court ordered that Edwards’s assets be frozen to preserve sufficient funds for potential disgorgment.
ETS Payphones Inc.,
We reject Edwards’s facial challenges. Edwards argues that the Supreme Court decision of
Grupo Mexicano de Desarrollo,
S.A.
v. Alliance Bond Fund, Inc.,
The Fourth Circuit recently addressed this issue and said that in cases involving equitable relief, even where money damages are also claimed,
Deckert
controls.
United States v. Oncology Assoc’s, P.C.,
We acknowledge that the SEC also seeks the legal remedy of civil damages. But, the asset freeze is justified as a means of preserving funds for the equitable remedy of disgorgment. We do not believe. that the inclusion of a claim for civil penalty damages.makes the remedies sought wholly legal and not equitable.
Edwards’s second facial challenge is based' on the SEC’s decision not to follow the procedures set forth in the Federal *735 Debt Collection Act (“FDCA”). 28 U.S.C. § 3001 et seq. The FDCA applies to situations where the government seeks “to recover a judgment on a debt; or to obtain, before judgment on a claim for a debt, a remedy in connection with such cláim.” 28 U.S.C. § 3001(a).
The FDCA is inapplicable to this case for two reasons. First, the SEC is not now seeking to recover for. a judgment or “obtain” any assets. At this point, the SEC is attempting to freeze assets to'рrevent their disbursement; no money is being transferred to the federal treasury or registry of the court. Second, the statutory definition of “prejudgment remedy” does not include disgorgement. 28 U.S.C. § 3002(11). Accordingly, even if we assume, without deciding, that a claim for disgorgement seeks collection of a “debt” as defined by the FDCA, the means the SEC employed to secure.that debt in this case (disgorgement) is not one of the prejudgment remedies covered by the FDCA. 7 The asset freeze, as it applies to funds potentially subject to disgorgement, is facially sound. We reserve judgment on the applicability of the FDCA to the SEC’s claim for civil penalties.
Edwards also challenges the scope of thе asset freeze. The SEC’s burden for showing the amount of assets subject to disgorgement (and, therefore available for freeze) is light: “a reasonable approximation of a defendant’s ill-gotten gains [is required] ... Exactitude is not a requirement.”
SEC v. Calvo,
Given our other conclusions, we can presume gains from ETS were acquired through fraud. Accordingly, any money distributed from ETS to Twinleaf or Edwards would be subject to a disgorgement order. “The purpose of disgorgement is ... to deprive the wrongdoer of his ill-gotten gain.”
Blatt,
The SEC continually citеs $300 million as the total amount of ill-gotten gains by ETS, but neither the record before us nor a finding of the district court sufficiently establishes that amount. The record is consistent with the SEC’s appellate brief: the SEC suggests, without a specific rebuttal from Edwards, that from 1996 through 2000, Edwards personally received at least $3.04 million in compensation from ETS and Twinleaf. 8 Twinleаf obtained at least $18.4 million in payments and- interest free loans from ETS. Accordingly, approximately $21 million should be subject to disgorgement.
Against this potential equitable liability of $21 million, the district court found that Edwards possesses $7 million in personal real estate assets.
When totaling Twinleafs value with Edwards’s personal assets, it appears that the most Edwards possessed in 2000 was $22 million; the least he controlled was $20 million. Accordingly, Edwards failed to meet his burden of showing the SEC’s fallback number of $19 million for potential liability is an unreasonable approximation.
SEC v. Calvo,
MODIFICATION OF ASSET FREEZE FOR ATTORNEYS FEES
Edwards also appeals the district court’s denial of his request to permit Twinleaf to use its assets to pay its attorneys fees. These fees accrued during attempted settlement negotiations with the SEC and as a result of submitting account-ings and weekly financial reports.
In addition to the challenges discussed above, Edwards argues that the asset freeze violates Twinleafs rights under the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Edwards also argues that, under Georgia law of corporations, he cannot be responsible for Twinleafs legal fees.
The standing and mootness doctrines bar us from deciding whether Twin-leaf should be permitted to pay its own legal expenses. Edwards concedes that Twinleaf is a nonparty to this litigation. Therefore, to achieve standing, Edwards must show that he and Twinleaf have a close relationship, and that “some obstacle” prevents Twinleaf from asserting its rights.
See Planned Parenthood Ass’n of Atlanta Area, Inc. v. Miller,
We also reject Edwards’s argument that Twinleaf should pay for the weekly reports of revenues earned by it. Edwards
personally
agreed, by consent order, to provide such rеports. The consent order is interpreted as a contract, and he is bound by it.
See Robinson v. Vollert,
*737 Thus, in all matters, the district court’s orders are affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
.In
Unique Fin. Concepts,
this Court derived a three-element test from
Howey.
. In
Bonner v. City of Prichard,
. In making this determination, we often look to the actual relationship between the parties.
See Albanese,
. Edwards admittedly did not employ the Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP). The SEC demonstrated that when GAAP methods are employed, ETS's financial losses are undeniable. The Government expert conceded, however, that under the methods used by ETS, no loss was apparent. The trial court considered this testimony when ruling and rejected Edwards’s purported reliance on the non-standard methods.
. The SEC argues that Edwards did not preserve his appeal on the scope of the asset freeze.
See Federal Trade Comm’n v. Atlantex Assoc's,
. Contrary to Edwards's assertions, disgorgment is an equitable remedy.
See, e.g., SEC v. Yun,
. Edwards also argues that Rule 64 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure should have controlled the lower court’s disposition of his assets. We disagree. Rule 64 applies in cases of "arrest, attachment, garnishment, re-plevin, sequestration, and other corresponding or equivalent remedies.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 64. Disgorgement is unlike these remedies.
See generally, Blatt,
. .The SEC stresses that Edwards’s own testimony at the preliminary hearing revealed the $2.24 million figure. Edwards's accounting, however, shows him receiving over $2.7 million in compensation from ETS and Twinleaf for the same period.
. This number, cited by the SEC in its brief, is exclusive of prejudgment interest.
. Edwards also argues that the district court erroneously relied on two cases from the Seventh Circuit.
SEC v. Quinn,
