National Ass'n of Securities Dealers, Inc. v. Securities & Exchange Commission

143 F.2d 62, 3 SEC Jud. Dec. 706, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 4176
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedApril 20, 1944
DocketNo. 8464
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 143 F.2d 62 (National Ass'n of Securities Dealers, Inc. v. Securities & Exchange Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third 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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National Ass'n of Securities Dealers, Inc. v. Securities & Exchange Commission, 143 F.2d 62, 3 SEC Jud. Dec. 706, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 4176 (3d Cir. 1944).

Opinion

BIGGS, Circuit Judge.

In this case we must decide whether a determination by the Securities and Exchange Commission that there exists in the vicinity of the New York Curb Exchange sufficiently widespread public distribution ol certain bonds1 and sufficient public trading activity in them to render the extension of unlisted trading privileges on the Curb to that security necessary or appropriate in the public interest or for the protection of investors.

The Curb, a registered national securities exchange, filed with the Commission its application pursuant to Section 12(f), clause (3), oí the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 as amended asking the extension of unlisted trading privileges to Kentucky 4%• bonds.2 National Association of Security Dealers, Inc.,3 intervened in the proceedings before the Commission. The Curb’s application asserted that the portion of the [64]*64United States lying east of the Mississippi River constituted its “vicinity” as to the Kentucky 4% bonds. NASD contended that that vicinity should be restricted to an extent which we will point out hereafter. Notice was given and a hearing was had before a trial examiner who filed advisory findings which need not be set out here. Exceptions were filed to these findings and argument was had before the Commission. After a review of the record the Commission found4 that “ * * * there exists in the vicinity of the Curb Exchange sufficiently widespread public distribution of the bonds and sufficient public trading activity therein to render the extension of unlisted trading privileges on the Curb to the bonds necessary and appropriate in the public interest and for the protection of investors * * *.”

Pursuant to the provisions of Section 25(a) of the Act, 15 U.S.C.A. § 78y(a) NASD petitioned this court to review the Commission’s order and to set it aside insofar as it approves the Curb’s application to extend unlisted trading privileges to the bonds.

The petitioner asserts first that the Commission erred in defining the “vicinity” of the Curb Exchange. Direct evidence of the vicinity or area in which investors regard the Curb as a market being unavailable, the Curb, as it had done in many other cases,5 introduced evidence showing the location of offices of Curb members and the maintenance of Curb ticker service in certain localities. Assuming, as we must, that trading courses through those channels which are the most open to it, the Commission’s inference that offices of Curb members would not be maintained and that facilities would not exist in localities which do not supply business for the exchange, is a fair one. Conversely, the inference that there is some business where offices and facilities exist, is a supportable one. The Commission also received evidence as to the number of persons to whom the bonds had been distributed originally, the amount of bonds so distributed and the localities of the distributees by States. We shall not review specifically the evidence which was before the Commission. It is sufficient to state that the Commission reached the conclusion that the vicinity of the Curb should include for the purpose of the application which we are discussing, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Ohio. The petitioner had insisted that the vicinity must be limited either to New York City, to an area within one hour’s commuting distance of New York City, or to a territory enclosed by lines midway between New York City and Philadelphia and New York City and Boston, Philadelphia and Boston being those cities nearest to New York City in which there are securities exchanges extending unlisted trading privileges.

What is the “vicinity” of the Curb? The word certainly is not one of art. It is capable of a broad or narrow construction, depending upon the object to which it is to be related. For example, New Jersey and Delaware both may be said to be in the vicinity of Pennsylvania. On the other hand the vicinity of City Hall Square, Philadelphia, would not take one to the suburbs of Philadelphia. The word is not defined in the Act.6 We con-[65]*65elude, therefore, that Congress intended a practical test. The Commission invariably lias endeavored to apply such a test.

There have been many decisions by the Commission as to what constitutes the vicinity of the Curb in respect to extending unlisted trading privileges to securities. In the Matter of Applications by the New York Curb Exchange for Unlisted Trading Privileges, 3 SEC 81, 83, the Curb had insisted that its vicinity included the whole of the United States. The Commission stated that “Congress must have had in mind something more than the mere circulation of information [concerning securities to possible customers] or it would have chosen a more appropriate word than ‘vicinity’. Rather, we interpret ‘vicinity’ to mean the particular geographical section or sections in which a particular exchange ranks as the, or one of the, national exchanges to which investors would look for an exchange market in the securities for which unlisted trading is sought.” It will be noted that emphasis was laid on the relation of the securities for which unlisted trading privileges are sought to the applicant exchange as well as upon the geographical section or sections in which that exchange could be considered to rank as one of the national exchanges. Obviously the Commission considered that one of the essential elements to be employed in determining the vicinity of the exchange is the nature of the security for which unlisted trading privileges are sought, and the extent and kind of the public holdings in it. The vicinity, therefore, of a particular exchange may vary with the distribution and other factors relating to a particular security. It seems to us that the Commission itself clearly has recognized this fact in numerous decisions.7

In respect to applications made by the New York Curb Exchange the Commission has allowed to it different and varying vicinities depending upon the securities involved, their distribution and other factors relating to them as well as to the facilities possessed by the exchange itself, such as members’ offices and ticker services.8 These vicinities have varied from that allowed the Curb in the instant case. In Applications by the San Francisco Curb Exchange, 2 SEC 653, in note 6 at p. 657, the Commission commented upon this conception of varying vicinity and expressly disapproved it. The Commission stated, “It is true that the concept of the .vicinity of an exchange is a flexible one, the limits of which may differ under different circumstances. But under Section 12(f), we must first determine the vicinity of the exchange and then consider whether distribution of the security within that vicinity is sufficient. The vicinity of the exchange thus constitutes the area within which the distribution of the security must be sufficient. It would reverse the plain meaning of Section 12(f) to hold that the area within which the distribution of the security is deemed to be sufficient constitutes or largely determines the vicinity of the exchange, although conceivably in some cases it might he relevant to such a determination.” The position of the Commission is ambiguous for it seems to us that in determining vicinity the Commission has of necessity considered the nature of the security, its distribution and other factors which must be distinguished from simple geographical area.

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143 F.2d 62, 3 SEC Jud. Dec. 706, 1944 U.S. App. LEXIS 4176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-assn-of-securities-dealers-inc-v-securities-exchange-ca3-1944.