A. J. WHITE & CO. and Allen J. White, Petitioners, v. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION, Respondent

556 F.2d 619, 1977 U.S. App. LEXIS 12920
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJune 15, 1977
Docket76-1420
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 556 F.2d 619 (A. J. WHITE & CO. and Allen J. White, Petitioners, v. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION, Respondent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. J. WHITE & CO. and Allen J. White, Petitioners, v. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION, Respondent, 556 F.2d 619, 1977 U.S. App. LEXIS 12920 (1st Cir. 1977).

Opinion

ALDRICH, Senior Circuit Judge.

This is a petition for review of an SEC order revoking the registration of A. J. White & Co. (White & Co.), a broker-dealer, and barring its president, Allen J. White (White), from association with any broker-dealer. The order provides that after one year White may apply for leave to become associated with a broker-dealer in a nonproprietary capacity under adequate supervision. 1 Petitioner White & Co. was found to have willfully violated the antifraud, extension of credit, and prospectus delivery provisions of the securities acts, and White to have willfully aided and abetted these vio- ■ lations, in connection with its underwriting of a stock issue of a company called Develco, Inc. According to the prospectus, the underwriting was to be on a “best efforts 65,000 shares or none” basis, that is, although White & Co. was not committed to *621 purchasing any amount of the offering, if it was unable to sell at least 65,000 shares within sixty business days all money received from subscribers was to be refunded and the offering cancelled. Basically, the Commission’s contention is that White & Co. realized it would be unable to place the requisite number of shares, but rather than abort the offering, a scheme was devised to make it appear that the offering had been successful.

The facts, as found by the administrative law judge, and affirmed by the Commission, and for which we find substantial evidence in the record, are as follows. Sometime before the deadline for sale of the minimum amount, it became apparent that the offering was not going well. Indeed, the issuer’s attorney had threatened White & Co. with suit for failure to use its best efforts. About a week before the deadline, only about one-half of the minimum having been sold, a meeting was held attended by White, Noon, the underwriting manager of White & Co., and the three principals of the issuer. White informed the Develco principals that the offering might have to be aborted. Although at that time approximately $90,000 remained to be raised, the administrative law judge found that White told the Develco principals that they were only about $20,000 short. Either White or Noon suggested that the Develco principals could borrow money from the Industrial National Bank of Rhode Island and make it available to persons who could use it to purchase stock. Noon left the meeting to call the bank and returned with the information that two of the Develco principals could each borrow about $9,000, and that they should see a Mr. Glover at the bank. They did so, took out loans, and provided the funds to two Develco employees who purchased stock on the understanding that it would be resold shortly to pay off the loans.

The remaining $70,000 was raised in a similar fashion. Noon and Glover arranged that various friends of Glover, collectively referred to here as the “Warwick Jaycees,” take out loans, with the funds to be used for stock purchases. The stock was purchased in the name of six customers of White & Co., two of them supplied by White. Within a short time after the closing, the stock purchased in this manner was resold to pay off the loans. The extent to which the six purported purchasers were informed about the transaction varied. In at least one instance, the customer testified that he knew nothing about the deal until after it was completed. In other cases, including one of White’s customers, the individual was asked if he was interested in purchasing Develco stock and his consent was secured only on the understanding that he would not have to provide funds, and on White’s assurance that he should not worry because the stock would be resold quickly.

Petitioners’ factual contention, essentially, is that White “was not a party, even remotely, to the developments that led to the . . . loans to the Develco principals,” and that he did not know that the remaining $70,000 was provided through loans from the Industrial Bank. Although it should hardly be necessary, we begin by noting that our question is only whether the Commission’s findings are supported by substantial evidence, 15 U.S.C. § 78y(a)(4), and thus petitioners’ statement that they “cannot agree” with certain of these findings, and their continued objection to the Commission’s crediting some witnesses instead of others, based upon petitioners’ assessment of the evidence, are entirely beside the point. As to the loans to the Develco principals, petitioners’ contention does not meet even their own standard. Whether the loans were initially suggested by White or Noon, it is undisputed that White was present at the meeting, indeed he called it, and he heard and participated in the discussion. Moreover, he admitted that he “was in overall supervisory charge” of White & Co.’s operations, and “participate[d] with [Noon] in each underwriting.” 2 *622 As the man in charge, he can hardly wash his hands of the affair merely because he allowed Noon to do the talking.

White’s profession of ignorance concerning the other set of loans is more arguable, but we do not find the Commission’s conclusions impermissible. While there was no direct evidence that White participated in these loans, it was clear that Noon did so, and the Commission’s inference that White was fully aware of this was not improper. Aside from his close supervision of the firm, and Glover’s testimony that he never doubted that White was aware of the loans, White’s story that he believed that the money had been provided by the Warwick Jaycees as an investment club is not credible. White testified that the stock was placed in other accounts, rather than opening an account for the Warwick Jaycees, because he believed this would comport better with the “know your customer” rule, Rule 405 of the New York Stock Exchange. Whatever one may think of his understanding of that rule, his contention does not square with the facts.

To begin with, there is the fact that it was understood that the stock was to be resold quickly, as was done. If the Warwick Jaycees were actually putting up their own money as a bona fide investment, it is hard to see how White could be so confident that they would wish to resell the stock immediately. The most damaging evidence against White’s contention is his admission that he received approximately $5,000 from the Warwick Jaycees after the stock was resold in the form of a reduction in the principal of a loan he had outstanding at the Industrial Bank. It is difficult to understand why any ordinary customer would wish to confer a large gift upon his broker, and even more difficult to see why the gift should happen to take the form of paying off a loan at that particular bank. Moreover, several of the nominees retained some portion of the resale profits — another bit of unexplained generosity on the part of the Jaycees. On the other hand, the transactions are quite understandable on the assumption that White knew that the Jaycees were not bona fide customers who would, of course, expect to receive the full amount of the profits on the sale of their stock, but had merely allowed their names to be used on loans, with the profits on resale to be divided among the other participants. 3

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Bluebook (online)
556 F.2d 619, 1977 U.S. App. LEXIS 12920, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-j-white-co-and-allen-j-white-petitioners-v-securities-and-ca1-1977.