OPINION
In our opinion and order of December 28, 1976,
Defendants have advanced a plethora of arguments in support of their motions. Several of these merit discussion, 2 in that they either address points which we did not dwell on in our original opinion or raise entirely new legal issues.
All of these contentions concern the Sixth Cause of Action, Amended Complaint at ¶¶ 60-66, which alleges that defendants violated Section 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933 as amended (15 U.S.C. § 77q(a)), Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 as amended (15 U.S.C. § 78j(b)) and Rule 10b-5 (17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5) promulgated under § 10(b). The thrust of this cause of action is that the defendants engaged in a scheme to misrepresent the financial condition of several corporations by, inter alia, reporting income improperly, stating incorrectly that increases in reported income were expected to continue and failing to disclose weaknesses in financing. Amended Complaint at ¶ 62. This scheme is alleged to have resulted in misrepresentations and omissions of material facts to purchasers and sellers of securities. Id. at 61. It is alleged that defendants entered into this scheme because they were parties to employment agreements with two of these corporations, of which they were officers and directors, compensating them on the basis of reported income, id. at ¶¶ 63-64, and that they received payments under those agreements which they would not have received had they'not made the misrepresentations and omissions which allegedly violated federal securities laws. Id. at ¶ 65.
Defendants.have devoted considerable effort in their briefs to formulating theories about the relationships between alleged misstatements and injuries to investors necessary for the SEC to state a claim under the antifraud provisions of the securities laws. As we deem it relevant, their argument is twofold: (1) the Amended Complaint avers defendants engaged in a *912 scheme to defraud two corporations by inducing the corporations to compensate them excessively, but because this alleged fraud was not in connection with the purchase or sale of securities, it is beyond the ambit of the federal securities laws, and (2) the SEC’s claim for disgorgement by defendants of the monies received under these agreements exceeds the relief possible in an enforcement action because those monies are not sufficiently related to any fraud in connection with the purchase or sale of a security. We will consider these contentions in turn. In addition, we will address defendants’ arguments that summary judgment should be granted because the plaintiff has failed to allege the required scienter and that if we deny their motions such denial should be certified for interlocutory appeal.
I. “INTERNAL MISMANAGEMENT” CLAIM and § 10(b):
A. “In Connection With” Requirement.
Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act covers fraud “in connection with” the purchase or sale of securities. 3 The purchase or sale requirement of § 10(b) contemplates a causal connection between the alleged fraud and the purchase or sale. In a sense, the requisite connection allegedly existed in this case in its most conventional form, since plaintiff alleges that defendants made material misrepresentations and omissions which defrauded purchasers and sellers of the securities of four corporations. Amended Complaint at ¶ 61. 4 It is these misrepresentations and omissions, along with the materiality of them to the reasonable investor in the securities of these corporations, which the SEC must establish in an enforcement action. See 2 A. Bromberg, Securities Law, Fraud, SEC Rule 10b-5 § 10.1, at 235 (1967).
Defendants advance the argument that the acts alleged in the Sixth Cause of Action, characterized as defrauding the corporations which paid them, constituted “internal mismanagement.” Contending that such acts are not actionable under the federal securities laws, defendants cite
Superintendent of Insurance v. Bankers Life & Casualty Co.,
As the Third Circuit has observed, a “classic 10b-5 violation” occurs when a defendant has “caused the corporation to issue materially false statements”.
Landy v. Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.,
As evidence of the fact that Judge Waterman’s opinion in Texas Gulf Sulphur is consistent on this point with our analysis, moreover, we point to the following language:
“Therefore it seems clear from the legislative purpose Congress expressed in the Act, and the legislative history of Section 10(b) that Congress when it used the phrase ‘in connection with the purchase or sale of any security’ intended only that the device employed, whatever it might be, be of a sort that would cause reasonable investors to rely thereon . . . .”401 F.2d at 860 (emphasis added).
We believe that the'required nexus between fraudulent conduct and the issuance of material misrepresentations to the investing public under Rule 10b-5 is most precisely and properly defined with reference to the concept of proximate cause, which courts have borrowed from tort law to define the necessary relationship between fraudulent conduct and damages recoverable under Rule 10b-5,
Miller v. Schweickart,
We consider our conclusion consistent, furthermore, with the Third Circuit’s reasoning in
Landy v. Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.,
where the court held that an accountant’s alleged misstatements in financial statements concerning a corporation were not actionable in a private damage suit under Rule 10b-5. The court said that the reports containing these misrepresentations had not been given to any members of the plaintiff class except the named plaintiff and that it was neither foreseen (nor, it was implied by use of the “reasonably calculated” language from
SEC
v.
Texas Gulf Sulphur,
reasonably foreseeable) by the accountant that these reports would be used by anyone outside the corporation.
Id.
at 167-69. The limitations on liability that are imposed by foreseeability are in this context very closely related, both doctrinally and in effect, to those which result from the requirement of proximate cause.
See 2
F. Harper and F. James,
The Law of Torts
§ 20.5, at 1137, 1141 (1956); W. Prosser,
The Law of Torts
§ 43 (4th ed. 1971). Moreover, the
Landy
court cited with approval
Wessel v. Buhler,
We believe that the Sixth Cause of Action alleges sufficiently that defendants’ fraudulent conduct, i. e., the misrepresentations of income to the corporations, proximately caused material misrepresentations to be made to investors. Moreover, we are unable to conclude at this time that as a matter of law the alleged fraud by defendants did not proximately cause the alleged material misrepresentations to investors, and' therefore we cannot grant defendants’ motion for summary judgment. If it did so “create” the misrepresentations, the defendants’ conduct clearly would amount to far more than “mere internal mismanagement”. It would, we conclude, “touch” the purchase and sales of securities sufficiently for the SEC to prevail.
B. The “Internal Mismanagement’’ Non-Exception.
We find, furthermore, that neither logic nor authority establishes any positive exception to the scope of the federal securities laws based on “internal mismanagement”. The Supreme Court’s dicta in
Superintendent of Insurance v. Bankers Life & Casualty Co.,
Our grant of summary judgment as to certain § 10(b) claims of private parties in
In re Penn Central Securities Litigation,
Plaintiff’s allegation that the defendants’ scheme involved material misrepresentations which defrauded purchasers *915 and sellers of securities is therefore sufficient to state a cause of action for § 10(b) enforcement. Furthermore, defendants’ characterization of these acts as internal mismanagement, based on the alleged incentive for that scheme, is irrelevant to the extent that it reveals the fraud alleged here afflicted the corporations as well as purchasers and sellers of securities. In no sense does it constitute a defense to plaintiffs’ claim of liability under the federal securities laws, so long as the requisites for that liability are established. We hold that a fraudulent scheme which proximately causes material omissions or misrepresentations to be made to purchasers and sellers is sufficient to state a violation of Rule 10b-5 in an enforcement proceeding and decline to speculate at this point what pattern of facts might be sufficient to establish that connection in this case. See 6 L. Loss, Securities Regulation 3631 (1969 Supp.).
C. The Impact of Green.
We have found that defendants’ alleged conduct in violation of the securities laws is not immunized from liability by being part of a scheme of corporate mismanagement, elements of which may be actionable under state law. Reinforcing our determination is the recent Supreme Court decision in
Santa Fe Industries, Inc. v. Green,
Secondly, the Court pointed to the existence
vel non
of a traditional state law remedy for the alleged wrong,
id.
at 478,
*916 II. SECTION 17(a):
Section 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933, by contrast, reaches only fraud “in the offer or sale” of securities. Quite clearly, the omission of the words “in connection with” makes the scope of § 17(a) narrower than that of § 10(b) in that the former requires a closer relationship between the fraud and the securities transaction. We would not go so far, however, as to accept the defendants’ contention and the court’s conclusion in'
Financial Programs, Inc. v. Falcon Financial Services, Inc.,
We consequently will deny the defendants’ motion for summary judgment as to the allegation of violations of § 17(a). We are disposed to do so particularly in light of the fact that granting the motion as to § 17(a) in no way would diminish the scope of the trial or the eventual liability or relief in this case, so long as the § 10(b)-based claim remained.
The balance of this opinion deals with the issues raised by defendants’ motions for summary judgment and for reconsideration under the more fully developed law of § 10(b) and Rule 10b-5, which we perceive as the heart of this case, with the caveat that much of the authority dealing with these issues blurs the distinctions between § 17(a) and § 10(b), and understandably so. We must emphasize, however, that the plaintiff will have to demonstrate at trial a more direct involvement in the offer or sale of securities to make out a § 17(a) violation than is necessary to establish a violation of § 10(b) and Rule 10b-5. See 1 A. Bromberg, Securities Law, Fraud, SEC Buie 10h-5 § 2.3(300), at 24 (1971 Supp.).
III. DISGORGEMENT:
Defendants contend that the relief sought by plaintiff, an injunction including the disgorgement of payments received from the corporations as a result of the scheme to inflate reported profits, cannot be granted on the grounds,
inter alia,
that various causal connections between these payments and securities transactions are not alleged. What these arguments fail to perceive is that determining the scope of the equitable remedy of disgorgement entails an analysis separate from assessing whether the SEC has stated a cause of action in an SEC enforcement case. Should we determine that any defendant violated § 17(a) or § 10(b), we have the discretion to fashion whatever equitable relief we deem necessary to deprive defendants of all gains flowing from the wrong.
J. I. Case Co. v. Borak,
The amount to be disgorged is not limited as a matter of law to the damages inflicted upon purchasers and sellers. The SEC does not stand in the shoes of the purchasers and sellers who it asserts were defrauded. While we know of no case going so far as to require disgorgement of compensation to corporate officers and directors, neither have we found any case in which the facts revealed such compensation to be the result of fraud violating the securities law as directly as those alleged here. As the facts are alleged, the excesses in compensation sought by plaintiff seem indeed to have “flowed” from the wrong. We are unable, consequently, to say at this point that none of the compensation was part of defendant’s wrongful gain. We
*917
find the case for restitution under the alleged facts to be more compelling than in
SEC v. Galaxy Foods, Inc.,
IV. SCIENTER:
Defendants contend that plaintiff has failed to allege scienter as an element of the cause of action under § 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 and that scienter is a necessary element of an enforcement action by the SEC.
We disagree with the first part of defendants’ assertion and reserve judgment as to the second. It is true that the amended complaint does not allege in a single terse statement that defendants caused the misrepresentations to be made with an “intent to deceive, manipulate or defraud,” which allegation is required in private damage actions under § 10(b) and Rule 10b-5,
Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder,
We have stated in the past our conviction that complaints should be construed liberally when faced with challenges to their specificity, in light of the notice-pleading mandate of F.R.Civ.P. 8,
Denny v. Carey,
The issue of whether scienter is required at all in an SEC enforcement action explicitly was left unresolved by the Supreme Court in
Hochfelder,
For the same reason, we do not now decide precisely what degree of scienter, if any, is necessary for plaintiff to prevail in an enforcement action. In particular, it is possible that the plaintiff will demonstrate that one or both defendants intentionally misrepresented facts to the corporations in order to enhance their compensation, which misrepresentations in turn caused material misrepresentations to be made to purchasers and sellers of securities with neither the intent nor recklessness of defendants. These facts would present a situation standing between the categories of negligence and scienter as Hochfelder presents them, and we shall not issue an advisory opinion as to the legal consequences of a hypothetical fact pattern.
V. INTERLOCUTORY APPEAL:
Defendants request that we certify for interlocutory appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) our denial of their motions. That statute permits us to certify the appeal of an order if (1) it involves a controlling question of law, (2) there is substantial ground for difference of opinion and (3) immediate appeal may materially speed termination of the litigation. The sole legal issue in this case which we perceive as satisfying the difference of opinion criterion of § 1292(b) is the degree of scienter, if any, required in an SEC enforcement action under § 17(a), § 10(b) and Rule 10b-5. As we have noted, however, resolution of that question could not terminate the action in this court, nor would it significantly hasten its end, since scienter has been alleged and trial would still be necessary to determine the factual issues of what knowledge and intent were present. To put it another way, we lack the “background of determined and immutable facts” necessary for certification under § 1292(b). 9 Moore’s Federal Practice § 110.22[2], at 261 (2d ed. 1975).
Notes
. Bevan, Caldwell and Wynne have entered into settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
. We will address only summarily the summary contentions raised in defendant Ray’s motion for change of venue. Ray asserts that because venue is not properly laid in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, this case should be transferred to the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas, since “most of” Ray’s activities alleged in the Amended Complaint occurred in that district. We disagree; venue is proper in this court. 15 U.S.C. § 78aa.
See also Dopp v. American Electronic Laboratories, Inc.,
. The distinction between § 10(b) and § 17(a) of the Securities Act as it is relevant to this case is discussed in Section II, infra.
. In this sense, this case differs dramatically from the more unusual fact patterns in the cases cited by defendants. In
Tuiiy v. Mott Supermarkets, Inc.,
. Defendants have also asserted that this disgorgement would be a penalty rather than restitution for a wrong. See
SEC v.
Texas
Gulf Sulphur Co.,
. The Third Circuit did not in its brief opinion in
Coleco
adopt or endorse any particular definition of recklessness, holding that a finding of recklessness was justified under any of the formulations that had been applied by courts. The most often used definition, and in our mind the most reasonable, is that first stated in
Franke v. Midwestern Oklahoma Development Authority,
“highly unreasonable [conduct], involving not merely simple, or even inexcusable, negligence, but an extreme departure from the standards of ordinary care, and which presents a danger of misleading buyers or sellers that is either known to the defendant or is so obvious that the actor must have been aware of it.”
. This case thus resembles
SEC v. Wills,
[1977-78 Transfer Binder]
Fed.Sec.L.Rep.
(CCH) ¶ 96, 102 (D.D.C.1977), in which the court deemed scattered references to omissions, deceptions, concealments and failures to disclose as sufficient, taken together, to constitute an allegation of scienter, and diverges from
Wolford v.
*918
Equity Resources Corp.,
