Kunz v. Securities & Exchange Commission

64 F. App'x 659
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedMarch 28, 2003
Docket02-9514
StatusUnpublished

This text of 64 F. App'x 659 (Kunz v. Securities & Exchange Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Kunz v. Securities & Exchange Commission, 64 F. App'x 659 (10th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

TACHA, Chief Circuit Judge.

Petitioners, Kevin Kunz and Kunz & Cline Investment Management (“Kunz & Cline”), appeal from an order of the Securities and Exchange Commission (“the Commission” or “SEC”) sustaining disciplinary action taken by the National Association of Securities Dealers (“NASD”). 1 For the reasons set forth below, we AFFIRM.

I. Background

A. VesCor

VesCor was in the business of originating, purchasing, and selling loans secured by real property. VesCor financed its business by selling to the public certain investment products, including Wholesale Accrual Notes (“Accrual Notes”), Wholesale Monthly Income Notes (“Monthly Notes”), and Wholesale Mortgage Loan Participation Interests (“MLP Interests”) (collectively, “the VesCor investment products”). Val E. Southwick (“Southwick”) was VesCor’s President, Chief Executive Officer, Corporate Secretary, Chairman, and the sole member of its Board of Directors. Petitioner Kunz worked for VesCor from August 1994 through December 1994. Prior to 1994, VesCor sold the VesCor investment products without registering them under the Securities Act.

B. The Nevada Investigation

In early 1994, Nevada began investigating VesCor’s activities. Nevada concluded that the Accrual Notes, Monthly Notes, and MLP Interests were “securities.” Nevada and VesCor entered into a settlement agreement, requiring VesCor to make rescission offers to current holders of the VesCor investment products in the state of Nevada.

In conjunction with the rescission offers, VesCor planned to simultaneously offer investors the opportunity to reinvest in the Accrual Notes, Monthly Notes, and MLP Interests. VesCor also decided to send the simultaneous rescission-reinvestment offers to investors in other states. In late 1994, Southwick decided that these transactions should be handled by a broker-dealer registered with the Commission. Accordingly, Southwick encouraged Kunz to leave VesCor to form his own brokerage firm.

*662 C. The Formation of Kunz & Cline

In December 1994, Kunz left VesCor and formed Kunz & Cline with Jeffrey Cline (“Cline”). Southwick, through VesCor, agreed to furnish the required start-up funds. According to Kunz’s testimony, Southwick expected Kunz D& Cline to be VesCor’s “captured broker.” The NASD approved Kunz & Cline’s application on December 13,1994.

D. The Simultaneous Rescission-Reinvestment Offers

VesCor created six Private Placement Memoranda (“PPMs”) to accompany the simultaneous rescission-reinvestment offers, providing two different PPMs for each of the three investment products. VesCor used one set of three for residents of Nevada, and the other set of three for non-Nevada residents.

1. Material not included in the PPMs

At the time VesCor issued the PPMs, $1.8 million in civil judgments were outstanding against Southwick, stemming from previous business activities. The Nevada PPMs contained five paragraphs concerning Southwick’s litigation history, 2 but the non-Nevada PPMs did not disclose this information. Further, none of the PPMs disclosed the relationship between VesCor and Kunz & Cline. 3

All six PPMs included the same financial statement, which Kunz testified that he saw for the first time in November 1994. According to Kunz’s testimony, he was surprised by the sizeable net operating loss that VesCor had accumulated since 1991. Although Kunz questioned South-wick about the losses, he conducted no investigation of the information contained in the financial statements.

The financial statements contained a balance sheet dated September 30, 1994, listing VesCor’s assets. Included in the “Assets” information was an entry for “Investments” valued at $12,265,322. The balance sheet indicated that, of this amount, $9,191,509 was attributable to a single asset—20,000 acres in .Cannon County, Tennessee—acquired in exchange for 750 shares of VesCor stock four days prior to the closing date of the balance sheet. The financial statement also contained a “Statement of Shareholders’ Equity” showing that (1) on September 26, 1994, 750 shares of stock were issued for the Tennessee land, with each share valued at $12,177.85; (2) on September 15, 1994, 250 shares of stock were issued “for services,” with each share valued at $63.80; and (3) on December 31, 1993, the remaining outstanding shares were valued at $1,250.92 per share. The balance sheet and accompanying notes documented that, without the inclusion of the Tennessee land, VesCor had assets of $5,671,761 and liabilities of $6,454,673, resulting in a negative net worth of $782,912.

Kunz testified that he understood the purpose of the Tennessee land deal to be a “balance sheet enhancement, meaning that [Southwick] would acquire the property for a short period of time to make [the] private placement look good and sellable.” Kunz also testified that he sought confir *663 mation from VesCor’s counsel that VesCor had proper title to the Tennessee land. VesCor’s counsel responded only that a deed was recorded. Kunz conducted no further investigation. 4

E. Kunz & Cline’s Dealings with Bruce Anderson

In 1994, Kunz met Bruce Anderson (“Anderson”) through Southwick. Prior to entering into two consulting agreements with Kunz & Cline 5 in 1994, Anderson had sold VesCor securities to numerous customers. Anderson was not properly registered under NASD rules to offer the VesCor securities for sale.

Since Anderson could not present the simultaneous rescission-reinvestment offers to his clients, Kunz met with Anderson and then personally or by mail furnished Anderson’s clients with the PPMs. Approximately eighty of Anderson’s clients reinvested their funds in the VesCor investment products. Kunz paid Anderson a “consulting fee” of $88,936. At the NASD hearing, Kunz conceded that this was the same amount Anderson would have received as a commission for sales of the VesCor securities. Specifically, Kunz testified that “[t]he reason we formalized the consulting agreement was to compensate [Anderson] in a manner that would have been consistent with commissions that he would have earned had he been licensed.”

F. The Commission’s Decision 6

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64 F. App'x 659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kunz-v-securities-exchange-commission-ca10-2003.