Zacharias v. Securities & Exchange Commission

569 F.3d 458
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJune 23, 2009
DocketNos. 08-1134, 08-1136, 08-1141
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 569 F.3d 458 (Zacharias v. Securities & Exchange Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zacharias v. Securities & Exchange Commission, 569 F.3d 458 (D.C. Cir. 2009).

Opinions

Opinion for the Court filed PER CURIAM.

Opinion dissenting in part filed by Senior Circuit Judge WILLIAMS.

PER CURIAM1:

The petitioners are John A. Carley and Christopher H. Zacharias, officers and directors of Starnet Communications International, Inc., and Thomas A. Kaufmann, a registered representative associated with Spencer Edwards Inc., a United States registered broker-dealer. They challenge the Securities and Exchange Commission’s finding that their participation in certain sales of unregistered securities violated §§ 5(a) and (c) of the Securities Act of 1933, as well as the Commission’s imposition of substantial monetary disgorgement orders. See John A. Carley, Opinion of the Commission and Order Imposing Remedial Sanctions, Admin. Proc. File No. 3-11626, Securities Act Release No. 8888, 92 SEC Docket 1693, 2008 WL 268598 (Jan. 31, mSWSEC Opinion ”). We affirm the SEC’s § 5 decision because the scheme at issue clearly involved an “underwriter,” which refutes petitioners’ theory that they properly relied on the Regulation S and § 4(1® exemptions. The SEC also found that petitioners Carley and Zacharias had failed to properly report the scheme on Starnet’s annual reports and that this omission violated the antifraud and reporting provisions of the securities laws. We will remand this issue to the SEC for it to explain its finding that the omissions involved a material fact.

Two minor housekeeping matters: First, petitioner Zacharias was also found to have violated § 16(a) of the Exchange Act for failing to file a single report relating to a change in his share ownership. SEC Opinion at 34. The Commission did not impose any sanction for this violation, id. at 43 n. 138, and Zacharias does not appeal the finding. Second, the Commission found that petitioners Carley and Zacharias committed a Rule 13a-ll violation, but it now admits the rule does not apply to the filings at issue here. See Respondent Br. at 50 (“The Commission’s mistaken finding of a Rule 13a-ll violation ... should be set aside.”). We therefore set aside the finding.

In Part I of the opinion we set forth the scheme in broad outline; Part II discusses the § 5 violations; Part III addresses the fraud and reporting violations; finally, Part IV addresses the SEC’s remedies.

I.

The scheme was quite complex. We will address factual details where necessary in discussion of petitioners’ legal claims, setting out here simply a bird’s eye view. On one hand were seven foreign entities controlled by Alfred Peeper (collectively, “the Peeper Entities”), owners of several million shares in Starnet, which they had purchased and held pursuant to Regulation S, and which they could lawfully resell to the public. In addition, the Peeper Entities held warrants to several additional [463]*463million shares — warrants that they had yet to exercise and that, before the hatching of the scheme, they seemed unlikely to exercise because the warrants’ purchase prices exceeded the market price. Had the Peeper Entities exercised these warrants without a view to the distribution of the resulting shares to the public, then their resale of these shares would likely have been legal as well.

On the other hand were petitioners Carley and Zacharias, who at the outset of the story held options to buy several hundred thousand Starnet shares. Sales to the public of shares acquired by exercise of their options would have been illegal unless a registration statement under § 5 had been in effect. A simple sale to the Peeper Entities, by contrast, would likely have been lawful had such a sale complied with certain holding periods as outlined in the SEC’s rules and not been part of any “chain of transactions ... involving any public offering.” 17 C.F.R. §§ 230.144(a), (d).

Carley and Zacharias did not, however, have a registration statement filed. Instead, they arranged with the Peeper Entities that the latter would sell several million of them original and warrant shares and would replace them with shares from Carley and Zacharias, acquired by the latter through exercise of their options. (Kaufmann, along with Eugene G. Geiger, another registered representative associated with Spencer Edwards, handled key aspects of the sales.)

Analyzing the events, the SEC in effect collapsed the transactions, and attributed the Peepers’ sales to petitioners. Specifically, the SEC found that Starnet had extended the period during which the Peeper Entities could exercise their warrants to enable the Peeper Entities to participate in the scheme. The Peeper Entities then exercised these warrants and “resold those shares, along with [their original shares] ... in connection with a distribution in order to fund the option exercises of the Starnet Option Holders.” SEC Opinion at 14. Because the Peeper Entities had exercised their warrants with the intention of distributing them to the public, the SEC concluded they were underwriters and were not exempt from the registration requirements of the securities laws. Furthermore, rather than view the option holders’ sales as somehow separate from the Peeper Entities’ illegal sales to the public, the SEC found that the option holders’ “sales to the Peeper Entities were a necessary and critical step in the overall distribution.” Id. at 15. Thus, because petitioners Carley and Zacharias had sold their option shares to the Peeper Entities and petitioner Kaufmann had executed these sales, the SEC concluded that they should be held liable as participants under §§ 5(a) and (c) of the Securities Act. As we shall see, that decision was a triumph of substance over form. Petitioners pose various legal challenges discussed below; to the extent that they raise “substantial evidence” objections not subsumed in the specific legal issues discussed, we reject such objections as frivolous.

In addition, because Starnet did not disclose the existence of the scheme in its annual report filed with the SEC, the Commission found that Carley and Zacharias violated § 17(a) of the Securities Act and § 10(b) of the Exchange Act (and Rule 10b-5 promulgated thereunder) (collectively, the “fraud violations”), as well as the reporting requirements of § 13(a) of the Exchange Act and various rules thereunder. Both the fraud and reporting violations turn on the SEC’s supposition that the scheme was a material fact for purposes of that report.

All three petitioners now challenge the SEC’s conclusions regarding § 5 and the resulting monetary penalties. In addition, [464]*464petitioners Carley and Zacharias challenge the SEC’s finding that they violated the antifraud and reporting requirements of the securities laws and its cease-and-desist order.

II.

We review the SEC’s findings of fact and legal conclusions under the familiar principles of administrative law. The findings of fact are subject to a review for substantial evidence, see Wonsover v. SEC, 205 F.3d 408, 412 (D.C.Cir.2000), and the “other conclusions may be set aside only if arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” Graham v. SEC, 222 F.3d 994, 999-1000 (D.C.Cir.2000) (internal quotation marks omitted).

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