Disgorgement After Liu v. SEC: The Game Is On!

Experienced litigators know that an adverse appellate decision (even from the U.S. Supreme Court) rarely ends their case. The question is instead: What is the next move? What defenses do we fall back on? So it is likely to be with Liu v. SEC,[1] which, by an 8-1 margin, resolved that the SEC does have the authority to order disgorgement. Still, the Court subjected this authority to the important qualifications that: (1) the ill-gotten gains consist only of the net gains (with all “legitimate expenses” being deducted); (2) the recovery is returned to the injured investors (and thus not transferred to the U.S. Treasury); and (3) there is no “joint and several liability,” unless the parties were engaged in “concerted wrongdoing” — a phrase that would suggest conspiratorial liability, except that the Court carefully avoided using this phrase. Each of these conditions can spawn a host of subsidiary issues.

In addition, the Court remanded the case to the Ninth Circuit to consider if further exceptions should be carved out. Procedurally, this was a questionable move. On remand, the Ninth Circuit will be asked to consider whether the SEC can transfer the disgorgement it obtains to the Treasury if it is infeasible to identify and compensate the victims. Yet, because the victims are easily identifiable in Liu, and because a trustee has been appointed who seems intent on distributing the funds to them, there is little need to address this question in this case. To be sure, if there is one circuit that might be happy to offer its dicta, it probably would be the Ninth Circuit (whose record in the Supreme Court approaches the won/loss record of the old St. Louis Browns — millennials can look that up). More importantly, it might be foolish for the SEC to take the position that it can turn disgorgement over to the Treasury because, as next discussed, the SEC has more to gain than to lose by strictly complying with the Court’s suggested position.

I. Does Liu Potentially Overrule Kokesh?

In Kokesh v. SEC,[2] the Court held that disgorgement awarded in an SEC administrative action was a “penalty,” and thus implied that the five-year statute of limitations under 28 U.S.C. §2462 applied (which statute is applicable only to fines, penalties, and forfeitures). This was a serious loss for the SEC because no statute of limitations applies to equitable relief, and the five-year rule of §2462 is cutting off many potential cases.

But is disgorgement still a “penalty” after Liu? In Kokesh, the Court described disgorgement, as then used, as more punitive than compensatory in character and also saw it being primarily employed as a deterrent. But if after Liu, the defendant’s “legitimate expenses” must be deducted, if the disgorgement goes only to victims of the crime, and if joint and several liability is ended (in most cases) so that only the person who received the ill-gotten gain is liable for its return, then disgorgement looks much more compensatory. Equitable relief is not intended to be punitive, and thus, if disgorgement is equitable relief, it seems more difficult to characterize as a penalty.

Sooner or later, the SEC has to make this argument. Will it work? Although it is a logical position, this Court does not reverse itself easily (as it showed when it recently refused in Halliburton Co. v. Erica P. John Fund, Inc.[3] to reverse Basic, Inc. v. Levinson[4]). Stare decisis could win in the end, but in the meantime, the commission would be foolish to hurt its non-trivial chances of reversing Kokesh by paying disgorgement funds it receives to the U.S. Treasury or seeking to impose anything close to joint and several liability. Because there is no statute of limitations on equitable relief, the SEC could in theory recover disgorgement any time it could show it was entitled to an injunction — a major victory.

II. Can Tippers Be Held Liable for the Tippee’s Gains?

Traditionally, the SEC requires a tipper to disgorge the tippee’s gain in an insider trading case. After Liu, it seemingly must show that the tipper was engaged in “concerted wrongdoing” with the tippee. If so, then arguably both are liable for the tippee’s gains under Liu, but in cases involving remote tippees, the tipper may be safe from disgorgement.

But, there are nuances here. Under Dirks v. SEC,[5] if an insider tips a friend or relative, this is regarded as a “gift” of information by the insider/tipper to his tippee and is viewed as if the tipper traded and passed on the proceeds to his friend or relative as a gift. Id. at 664. If we see the profit as truly realized first by the tipper, then it follows that he should be required to disgorge his ill-gotten gain. But this is a very constructive theory, arguably adopted by the Court to preclude CEOs from tipping their wives and relatives with impunity. Whether courts will follow “gift theory” when it comes to determining who owes disgorgement remains to be seen. This battle is inevitable.

III.   Some Clear Violations of Law Will Not Produce “Ill-Gotten Gains” that Can Be Disgorged

The federal securities laws seek to protect persons other than investors. The clearest example may be the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, which broadly prohibits payments to foreign officials or political parties for the purposes of obtaining or retaining business. The original goal here was to protect U.S. foreign policy from scandals. Now, suppose the CEO of XYZ approves a $10 million bribe to the defense minister of Nowhereland in order to win a $10 billion contract for the company’s new jet fighter. No short-run impact on XYZ’s stock price is evident, and the CEO did not receive any special bonus (but does hold significant stock options). Arguably, the bribe may even have resulted in a large profit. Although there are criminal penalties potentially available, it is not clear that there is any ill-gotten gain here to be disgorged by the CEO. Even a bonus awarded by the board is not easily characterized as an ill-gotten gain without evidence strongly linking the bonus to the bribe. Conceivably, the CEO could be said to have engaged in “concerted wrongdoing” with XYZ, and so arguably should be liable for XYZ’s gains. But these gains were also shared with the stockholders. Not only is this a novel theory, but normally an officer cannot conspire with the corporation that employs him. A derivative suit can seek to hold the officer liable for any criminal penalties imposed on his corporation, but the SEC does not seem to have any equitable remedy available here.

In other, more traditional cases, the violation of a prophylactic rule may still not produce a gain to the company, even if it does produce losses to some investors. The Williams Act has an All Holders Rule (Rule 14d-10(a)(1)) and a Best Price Rule (Rule 14d-10(a)(2)). Let’s suppose a bidder seeks to acquire 40% of the target’s stock and solicits some 35 institutional investors, offering all the same price (except a large asset manager known as “Black Pebble,” to whom it agrees to pay $2 more a share). Investors who received the lower price assert this was an unconventional tender offer that violated the Best Price Rule, and investors who received no offer at all claim that this alleged tender offer violated the All Holders Rule. The alleged losses may come to $1 billion or more. But if the aggrieved plaintiffs seek to sue based on a private cause of action for damages, they will likely run into the problem (at least in some circuits) that there is no private cause of action for damages under the Williams Act.[6] Thus, their hope is that the SEC will sue and force disgorgement.

But even if rules have been violated, has the defendant received any ill-gotten gain here? Plaintiffs may understandably feel that they were damaged by the failure to pay them a higher price (or extend the tender offer to them), but that was not a gain in the sense that the defendant received any identifiable funds or property that it can disgorge. Nor would the tax laws see any gain on these facts. At most, the SEC might seek an injunction against the consummation of the tender offer, but not disgorgement.

IV. Suppose the Investor Losses Exceed the Gain Disgorged by the Defendant by Over a 100 to 1 Margin. In Such a Case, May the SEC Pay this Amount to the Treasury?

This will not be an uncommon case. For example, in an insider trading case, the SEC can seek a penalty of up to three times the gain or loss averted under §21A of the 1934 Act and it can also seek disgorgement. Also, investors can bring a private cause of action under §20A of the 1934 Act (but they seldom do because the damages are too modest).

Next, suppose the amount so disgorged is only $50,000. Must the commission try and prorate this amount among the 25,000 investors who traded contemporaneously in the opposite direction to the defendant? Or can they just turn this amount over to the Treasury?

The problem with the SEC taking the easier course is that it makes the disgorgement look more like a penalty (and hence subject to the five-year statute of limitations). So what is a reasonable alternative? The SEC could establish an investors compensation Ffund and give investors a period of time to file their claim for their share of the $50,000 amount disgorged. Few would file because the likely recovery seems too small to interest most investors. But after some period (say, a year), the balance on this small fund could become part of a broader investor compensation fund covering victims of all securities frauds where the SEC has recovered disgorgement that went unclaimed. Over time, numerous small recoveries, such as this one, would build up and enable the SEC to pay investors some recovery in many cases where it could not today. Sharing the recovery among investors in this fashion is the pursuit of compensation and is fully consistent with the nature of an equitable remedy. In many frauds, there is no recovery because the defendants either disappear or are bankrupt; thus, amounts not claimed in other cases could go to their benefit. Defendants will dispute whether the SEC should play Santa Claus in this fashion, but no identifiable person benefits much when the $50,000 disappears into the U.S. Treasury.

Defendants will raise other issues: For example, can disgorgement be awarded in a case where the SEC is not required to prove scienter (such as under §17 of the 1933 Act). Does mere negligence give rise to a truly “ill-gotten” gain? Sometimes, as in a “books and records” case under §13 of the 1934 Act, the gain from inadequate books and records may be infeasible to calculate. Other times, the problem is whether equitable remedies and “penalty” are compatible concepts. To the extent that disgorgement continues to be considered a penalty,  then such an award may be inappropriate when the SEC alleges only negligence. Conversely, if the SEC can consider disgorgement to be only an equitable remedy, then it seems appropriate in a scienter-less case to order that injured investors be compensated by a return of the gain. These and other issues will keep courts and commentators busy for possibly a decade. The Ninth Circuit may soon have the first word on these questions, but it will hardly be the last word.

ENDNOTES

[1] 2020 U.S. LEXIS 3374 (June 22, 2020).

[2] 137 S. Ct. 1635 (2017).

[3] 134 S. Ct. 2398 (2014).

[4] 485 U.S. 224 (1988).

[5] 463 U.S. 646 (1983).

[6] There are decisions recognizing a private cause of action for damages under the Williams Act. See Howing Co. v. Nationwide Corp., 826 F.2d 1470 (6th Cir. 1987). But their continuing validity seems highly questionable in light of Alexander v. Sandoval, 532 U.S. 275 (2001). Injunctive relief under the Williams Act is, however, generally available.

This post comes to us from John C. Coffee, Jr., the Adolf A. Berle Professor of Law at Columbia University Law School and Director of its Center on Corporate Governance.