Seventy-five defendants allegedly engaged in a fraudulent scheme of stock market manipulation that ultimately caused the failure of two securities brokerages and the loss of many of the brokerage customers’ securities and cash. Appellant, Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC), liquidated the brokerages and reimbursed their customers for the value of the cash and securities as of the liquidation.
SIPC sued the brokers and the third-party defendants as subrogee of the brokers’ customers and in its own right. It alleged several theories of liability, one being securities fraud under Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. §§ 78j(b) (1982); 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5 (1984) (the Exchange Act claims). The court dismissed the Exchange Act claims on the ground that SIPC could not satisfy the purchase-or-sale requirement of an Exchange Act securities fraud claim.
PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In July 1981, SIPC instituted liquidation proceedings against two securities brokerages, First State Securities Corporation (FSSC) and Joseph Sebag Incorporated (Se-bag) (collectively “the brokerages” or “the brokers”). SIPC brought suit in July 1983, after disbursing the brokerages’ assets and reimbursing their customers for the difference between their statutory claims and the brokerage assets. The complaint alleged, among other claims, securities fraud in violation of Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act and Rule 10b-5 thereunder.
See Securities Investor Protection Corporation v. Vigman,
The district court consolidated Cain v. Vigman, No. CV-83-5674-AWT (C.D.Cal.) with SIPC’s action. The Cain case is a class action by the brokerages’ customers against the defendants. After allowing an amendment to SIPC’s complaint, the district court orally granted the defendants’ consolidated motion under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) to dismiss SIPC’s Exchange Act claims, holding that SIPC lacked standing to assert those claims. The court reasoned that the Cain class would “be the more appropriate plaintiff.” It entered final judgment on those claims under Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(b).
SIPC appealed. After we heard oral argument and submitted the appeal for decision, we withdrew submission to allow the parties to submit supplemental briefs on several questions that we propounded. The Securities Exchange Commission submitted an amicus brief, which we found helpful. We now order the appeal resubmitted for decision.
FACTS
SIPC alleges that, from 1964 through July 1981, the defendants engaged in a scheme to inflate the prices for the stocks of six companies. The scheme was carried out by cooperation among the defendants, who were officers and directors of the six companies and principals and employees of the brokerages.
SIPC alleges that the six companies’ prospects were misrepresented through statements by company officials, press releases and financial statements. The illusion of active markets in the six stocks was allegedly maintained by misleading transactions in the defendants’ accounts, in the brokerage proprietary accounts, and in accounts of unsuspecting customers.
When the scheme was uncovered, the prices of the six stocks fell drastically. Because the defendants had allegedly prostituted the brokerages by loading the proprietary accounts with the stock of the six companies, SIPC placed the brokerages under a protective decree in July 1981. In the process of liquidating the brokerages, SIPC allegedly had to disburse nearly $13 million to meet customers’ claims for which the brokerages’ assets were insufficient.
*1516 STANDARD OF REVIEW
This court reviews
de novo
a dismissal for failure to state a claim.
Robertson v. Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc.,
ANALYSIS
A. Extent of SIPC Subrogation
In their briefs, the parties argued vigorously over the extent of SIPC’s subrogation rights. At oral argument, they seemed to agree on this question. But we set forth briefly the law on this subject to avoid misunderstanding.
SIPC is a nonprofit corporation created by the Securities Investor Protection Act of 1970, as amended, 15 U.S.C. §§
78aaa-78III
(1982) (SIPA). It protects, from a broker’s financial failure, the customers of securities brokers by insuring the net equity of customers’ accounts up to specified maxima.
See Touche Ross & Co. v. Redington,
SIPC is obligated to insure only the value of brokerage customers’ “net equity” as of the initiation of the liquidation proceedings. See 15 U.S.C. §§ 78fff-3(a), mil (11) (1982). “Net equity” is a term defined in the Securities Investor Protection Act (SIPA). See 15 U.S.C. § 78ZM(11) (1982). It is the amount that the broker would have owed each customer had it liquidated all the customer’s holdings on the date the SIPC filed for a protective decree, less any outstanding debt the customer owed to the broker. Id.
Under SIPA, a trustee may be appointed to return customer property, complete open transactions, enforce rights of subrogation and liquidate the business of the brokerage. 15 U.S.C. §§ 78eee(b)(3), 78fff-l, 78fff-2;
see SIPC v. Barbour,
B. Securities Fraud Claims
The district court dismissed SIPC’s Exchange Act claims because SIPC could not meet the purchase-or-sale requirement for standing to bring a private cause of action under Rule 10b-5.
SIPC asserts that the customers could have stated Exchange Act claims for the losses they would have suffered, had SIPC not reimbursed them. Instead of alleging specific purchases or sales that were tainted by the fraudulent scheme, however, SIPC contends that it may rely on any purchase or sale that was “touched” by fraud,
Superintendent of Insurance v. Bankers Life and Casualty Co.,
1. Birnbaum Rule
In
Blue Chip Stamps v. Manor Drug Stores,
SIPC’s argument, that it may rely on any sale or purchase made by customers during the time of the alleged fraudulent activity, does not persuade us. The fraud that it alleges must be causally related to the claims to which it is subrogated.
See Hatrock v. Edward D. Jones & Co.,
SIPC contends that when it paid customers the value of missing securities, it constructively purchased them, and may now sue in its own right as purchaser.
See Rich v. Touche Ross & Co.,
To further support its Exchange Act claims, SIPC alleges specific fraudulent transactions by the brokerages. It also contends, under a theory resembling res ipsa loquitur, that its payment of nearly $13 million to meet the customers’ net equity claims should support an Exchange Act claim. These allegations fail to support a *1518 claim under a strict application of the Birnbaum rule.
2. Exceptions to Birnbaum. Rule
The
Birnbaum
rule has not been applied without flexibility, as the Court recognized in
Blue Chip Stamps,
a. Aborted Seller
The first is the aborted seller or purchaser doctrine. This proceeds on the strength of § 3(a)(13)-(14) of the Exchange Act, which includes contracts to purchase and contracts to sell within the definitions of “purchase” and “sell.” 15 U.S.C. § 78c(a)(13)-(14).
See Ohashi,
b. Pledge Seller
The second modification of the
Birnbaum
rule is the pledge doctrine. Under this doctrine, when stock is pledged as collateral for a loan, the pledgor has constructively sold the stock and the pledgee constructively bought it, even though no foreclosure has taken place.
See Rubin v. United States,
c. Forced Seller
The third doctrine ameliorating the
Birnbaum
rule is the forced seller doctrine which arose in connection with mergers in which a plaintiff alleged fraud in the procurement of the merger.
See Shivers v. Amerco,
Without modification, the application of none of these three doctrines is sufficient to overturn the district court’s dismissal of SIPC’s Exchange Act claims.
SIPC alleges that customers’ requests to sell securities were ignored as a part of the defendants’ fraudulent scheme. This does not give SIPC standing under the aborted seller doctrine. At most it provides the plaintiff class a claim for breach of the brokers’ fiduciary duty. Further, the alleged failure to sell is not causally related to SIPC’s net equity losses, because SIPC is required to reimburse customers only for the securities in customers’ accounts as of *1519 liquidation. Since the securities were never sold, SIPC had only to deliver them.
SIPC alleges that FSSC pledged its customers’ securities as collateral for loans to FSSC. In cases that have applied the pledge doctrine the pledgor owned the security. The pledge was a sufficient substitute for a sale and purchase. Here, SIPC has alleged that the brokers pledged customers’ stock. Thus the pledge doctrine cases are not directly on point.
The forced seller doctrine is probably SIPC’s strongest basis for establishing its standing to assert Exchange Act claims. If the Exchange Act provides a remedy in those cases in which “a defendant is engaged in a scheme for the purpose of forcing the plaintiffs to convert their shares for money or other considerations,”
Mosher,
For essentially the same reason that we rejected SIPC’s “constructive purchase” theory, we reject its forced sale theory. The analysis proves too much. Were we to apply the forced seller doctrine to every instance in which SIPC liquidates a brokerage and satisfies customer claims with cash, we would eliminate the purchase-or-sale requirement. Simple thefts and conversions would become forced sales merely because an insurer reimbursed the loss. The
Bimbaum
rule binds us. Until the Supreme Court repudiates it, we are unable to do so.
See Santa Fe Industries, Inc. v. Green,
3. Valid Claims
Even though we hold that SIPC has shown, under the established exceptions to the Bimbaum rule, no set of facts under which it would be entitled to Exchange Act relief, we are unconvinced that no set of facts could be proven that would entitle it to Exchange Act relief. There are many reasons why the securities that FSSC and Sebag were supposed to be holding could be missing. “[Securities belonging to customers may have been lost, improperly hypothecated, misappropriated, never purchased or even stolen____” S.Rep. No. 95-763, reprinted in 1978 U.S. Code Cong. & Ad.News 764, 765. Most of these reasons would not satisfy the purchase-or-sale requirement of Blue Chip Stamps.
SIPC has alleged, however, that the defendants made unauthorized transactions in customers’ accounts as part of their fraudulent scheme. If so, some of those transactions could satisfy the
Bimbaum
rule. Where a broker abuses his customer’s trust through unauthorized transactions, there is no reason why the
Bimbaum
rule should not be applied flexibly. We hold that when a broker makes an unauthorized purchase or sale of securities with his customer’s assets, that purchase or sale may be attributed to the customer for purposes of satisfying the
Birnbaum
rule.
2
See Smoky Greenhaw Cotton Co. v.
*1520
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc., 785
F.2d 1274, 1277 (5th Cir.1986) (unauthorized commodity trades). Allowing an Exchange Act claim for such a transaction implicates none of the concerns before the Court in
Blue Chip Stamps. See
Under our holding, the district court erred in dismissing SIPC’s Exchange Act claims. Our conclusion applies to SIPC, of course, only if it reimbursed a customer for the cash or securities the brokers were supposed to be holding, that is, the net equity of the customer’s account before the unauthorized transactions. If the customer’s reimbursement were based on the net equity of his or her account as though the transactions were authorized, that is, the net equity of the account after the unauthorized transactions, then the customer, not SIPC, has standing to assert the Exchange Act claim. In that case, SIPC would be relegated to more pedestrian theories, such as conversion, to recover on the claim to which it is subrogated.
CONCLUSION
The district court did not err in dismissing SIPC’s Exchange Act claims under a strict application of the Bimbaum rule. Nor did it err under any of the current doctrines ameliorating the harsh effect of the rule. We hold, however, that a broker’s unauthorized purchase or sale of securities using a customer’s assets may be attributed to the customer, and through the customer to SIPC, satisfying the purchase- or-sale requirement for an Exchange Act claim. Since a set of facts exists under which SIPC may be entitled to relief, we must allow SIPC an opportunity to prove those facts.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. Without more, had the brokerages held every share of stock they should have, there would have been no subrogation link to
securities
at all, regardless of how much cash was missing or how little the shares of the stock were worth. SIPC is required to reimburse customers for the value of the securities "as of the close of business on the filing date." 15 U.S.C. § 78fff-2(c)(1). In reimbursing customers for their securities, it has the option of delivering the named securities, or securities of the same description.
See SEC v. Albert & Maguire Securities Co.,
SIPC’s allegations show a fraudulent market manipulation scheme which, if true, might support securities fraud recoveries for those in the class action who bought stock at inflated prices and held either the stock or a net equity claim for it when prices fell.
For example, if a broker used fraudulent means to convince a customer to purchase a stock and the customer left that stock with the broker, who subsequently became insolvent, SIPC would be required by SIPA only to return the stock to the customer. 15 U.S.C. § 78fff-2(c)(2);
see also In re June S. Jones Co.,
If the stock in question were missing from the broker’s inventory of stocks, SIPC could return to the customer the value of the stock as of the date of filing a protective decree, 15 U.S.C. § 78fff-2(b), or, if it could purchase the stock in an orderly market, SIPC could- deliver other shares of the same class in the same company to satisfy the customer’s claim, 15 U.S.C. § 78fff-2(d). Here too, the customer would retain any securities fraud claim against the broker for inducing the original purchase. SIPC would be entitled to assert a claim, though not necessarily a securities fraud claim, against the broker for the missing stock.
The importance of the proper allocation of claims is evident by the consolidated class action pending before the district court, in which the brokerage customers are pressing claims against the defendants. The class action claims, however, are not before us.
. Examples of unauthorized transactions in which the broker’s purchase or sale should be attributed to the customer include:
1. Those in which a broker acting as a bailee of his customer’s cash, see Rich,415 F.Supp. at 99 , uses the funds without authorization to purchase securities;
2. Those in which a broker acting as bailee of his customer’s securities sells or pledges the securities without authorization. *1520 In these cases, the purchase or sale made by the broker "passes through" to the customer for purposes of the Bimbaum rule. If on remand, however, SIPC can show no more than that the cash or securities are missing and cannot show that the broker engaged in an unauthorized transaction, no purchase or sale has been shown and recovery under section 10(b) or rule 10b-5 is inappropriate.
