OPINION
This appeal derives from a conflict over a disgorgement order. In 1994 defendant Robert Johnston signed a consent decree regarding his activities in the securities field, but he continues to contest disgorgement of his alleged “ill-gotten” gains. The district court determined that Johnston’s assets .in a company profit-sharing/pension plan could not be used to satisfy the disgorgement or-, der and that it was without jurisdiction to decide the motion of the Securities- and Exchange Commission (“Commission”) to vacate under Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b). SEC v. Johnston,
I.
When the Commission instituted- this action, Robert Johnston was the president, a director, and the owner of Fiduciary Planning, Inc., a financial-services company incorporated in Michigan. Johnston ran afoul of the Commission over his involvement in the sale of Eurobond investment securities. The Eurobond was a bond-based investment marketed by a firm that was purportedly incorporated in Switzerland. From June through December of 1989, Johnston and his company sold $1,423,000 worth of Eurobonds to eighteen people in the United States and earned $96,310 in sales commissions.
On. August 23, 1993, the Commission brought a six-count complaint in the Eastern District of Michigan against Johnston for his role in the sale of unregistered securities and asked for a permanent injunction and other equitable relief. Johnston signed consent decrees, personally and on behalf of his company, Fiduciary Planning, Inc., on February 14, 1994, and the district court entered a permanent injunction that enjoined Johnston from breaking securities laws in the future. On August 2, the district court issued an opinion on disgorgement. The district court held that Johnston must disgorge $96,310 in profits but that he was not liable for prejudgment interest. The court entered an amended order of disgorgement on September 26, ordering defendants to disgorge by October 31. On November 7, Johnston made a motion to wáive disgorgement based on inability to pay.
Johnston pled poverty, arguing that, as of January 31, 1995, Fiduciary Planning, Inc., had a net worth of negative $370,844. Johnston claimed that his personal net worth was negative $230,136.
On March 29, 1996, the district court issued an opinion granting defendants’ motion to waive disgorgement. Johnston,
The pension plan money is at issue in this case. While Johnston was coaxing investors to invest in Eurobond, he claims he also
Johnston claims the pension money is immune from disgorgement because it is part of an ERISA-qualified plan. According to Section 8.04 of Fiduciary Planning, Inc.’s, pension plan: “The interest in the trust fund of any member or his beneficiaries shall not be alienable by the member or his beneficiaries, either by assignment or any other method, and shall not be subject to be taken by his creditors by any process whatsoever.”
II.
The Commission raises two main questions on appeal: whether the district court correctly waived disgorgement and whether the district court correctly determined that it did not have jurisdiction to hear the Rule 60(b) motion.
A. The Disgorgement
This Court reviews a district court’s decision on disgorgement for abuse of discretion. SEC v. First Jersey Secs.,
The Commission raises several challenges to the district court’s decision to grant the motion to waive disgorgement, and one argument is dispositive. According to the Commission: “ERISA does not apply to any plan to the extent it benefits the sole owner of a business and his or her spouse.” This argument is based on the Sixth Circuit case of Fugarino v. Hartford Life & Accident Insurance Co.,
It is true that the plan at issue in Fugari-no is a welfare plan, as opposed to the pension plan at issue in this case, but the Fugar-ino court referred generically to “a plan” in discussing ERISA qualification.
Johnston contends that Fugarino and 29 C.F.R. § 2510.3-3 simply refer to whether an ERISA plan exists and not whether it is “ERISA qualified.” To the extent this argument is even accurate — the Fugarino court used the word “qualify” in reference to ERISA plans — it is a distinction without a
Disgorgement typically is not used for restitution. “The purpose of disgorgement is to force ‘a defendant to give up the amount by which he was unjustly enriched’ rather than to compensate the victims of fraud.” SEC v. Blavin,
B. The Rule 60(b) motion
|5J The district court determined that it did not have jurisdiction over the Rule 60(b) motion because the Commission filed a notice of appeal while the motion to vacate was still pending. The timing was as follows: order on disgorgement entered on April 1, 1996; motion to vacate filed on May 24; notice of appeal of order on disgorgement filed on May 30; and opinion and order on motion to vacate entered on September 18. The notice of appeal was, therefore, filed during the pendency of the motion to vacate, and the question to be determined is whether such timing deprives the district court of jurisdiction. “It is well settled that the granting of a motion to set aside a judgment under Rule 60(b)(1) is a matter addressed to the sound discretion of the trial court, and that determination will not be reversed except for abuse of discretion.” In re Salem Mortgage Co.,
The Sixth Circuit answered this question in Pittock v. Otis Elevator Co., 8 F.3d 325 (6th Cir.1993). In Pittock this Court determined that the district court did not retain jurisdiction to rule on a Rule 60(b) motion if the notice of appeal was filed before the court decided on the motion. Id. at 327. The Court noted that, “[ajs a general rule, a district court no longer has jurisdiction over an action as soon as a party files a notice of appeal, and at that point the appellate court assumes jurisdiction over the matter.” Id. The Court also noted that there are exceptions to the general rule because “the district court retains jurisdiction when the appeal is untimely, presents issues that the appellate court had previously decided in the same case, or is from a non-final, non-appealable order.” Id. None of these exceptions apply to the case at hand.
Pittock does not force litigants to make an either/or choice between filing a motion to vacate and a notice of appeal. The Commission would not have lost its right to appeal had it filed a timely Rule 60(b) motion. If a Rule 60(b) motion is served within 10 days of final judgment, the time for appeal is tolled during the pendency of the motion. Fed. R.App. P. 4(a)(4)(F). The Commission could have filed both the motion to vacate and notice of appeal had it done so in the proper sequence.
III.
The district court’s decision regarding the disgorgement order is reversed, and the disgorgement order is hereby reinstated. The district court’s decision regarding its jurisdiction to hear the Rule 60(b) motion is affirmed.
Notes
. Although it is not germane to this appeal, it is interesting to note that, whereas Johnston claims to be a pauper, his wile Phyllis appears to be quite wealthy. On January 31, 1995, she claimed to have a net worth of $1,495,620. She acquired several assets through the largesse of her husband. In 1989 and 1990, Johnston transferred his interest in an annuity and a life insurance policy to his wife. Johnston also transferred his joint tenancy interest in a California condominium to his wife in 1990, and she owned their home in Michigan. Johnston claimed that he transferred his property interests to his wife for "estate planning” purposes.
