Pioneering through the morass of
securities law can be quite overwhelming for investors and
lawyers alike. Federal and state statutes are reasonable
starting references, as usual, but merely scratch the surface of
what governs whom. The financial services industry is much
larger than products sold or services rendered by or through the
New York Stock Exchange, the American Stock Exchange, the
National Association of Securities Dealers (NASDAQ) exchange or
any other stock exchange, and its regulation is similarly and
necessarily vast. Finding civil liability on those
providing negligent or fraudulent financial planning, investment
advice or brokerage services requires a much deeper and thorough
understanding of securities and investment law. Alas, a
guiding light.
OVERVIEW
Many types of professionals offer services for a
fee to provide financial planning and investment
advice. The various specialties of
professionals include at least the following:
o
attorneys
o
accountants
o
financial planners (certified, non-certified or
other species of self-designated professionals)
o
advisors or consultants
o
estate planners
o
Medicare and Medicaid planners
o
insurance and annuity brokers
o
insurance underwriters
o
intermediaries
o
stock brokers
o
broker-dealers
o
registered and non-registered investment
advisors
o
investment advisor representatives
o
chartered and non-chartered financial analysts,
advisors, or consultants
o
registered or non-registered investment
representatives
o
sales agents.
When it comes to personal
finance, many people seek and rely on these
types of individuals for advice, or even to
manage their money directly.
Unfortunately, such individuals often abuse
their positions of trust and cause financial
harm to their clients. Whether the
misconduct of these so-called professionals
involves misrepresentations, omissions,
solicitation or sale of unsuitable products,
churning, breach of fiduciary duty, fraud,
conflict of interest, bad advice or mere
negligence, victims must often turn to the
governmental agencies or courts to seek a
remedy. The problem, of course, is
determining where and how to file such action
(federal court, state court, administrative
agencies); and then, how to win.
FEDERAL LAW
Congress has enacted generic laws to protect
individual investors from fraudulent practices.
The Securities Exchange Act of 1933 and 1934
created liability in civil enforcement actions,
administrative proceedings and private actions.
Section 10, codified as
15 U.S.C. § 78j, and promulgated under
federal regulations as
17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5, made it unlawful for
any person to employ, directly or indirectly,
manipulative and deceptive devices to defraud
public investors. This is commonly
referred to simply as Rule 10b-5, and it
provides as follows:
It shall be unlawful for any
person, directly or indirectly, by the use of
any means or instrumentality of interstate
commerce, or of the mails or of any facility of
any national securities exchange,
a. To employ any device,
scheme, or artifice to defraud,
b.
To make any untrue statement of a material fact
or to omit to state a material fact necessary in
order to make the statements made, in the light
of the circumstances under which they were made,
not misleading, or
c.
To engage in any act, practice, or course of
business which operates or would operate as a
fraud or deceit upon any person,
in connection with the
purchase or sale of any security.
The term “security” is
defined broadly, and has been interpreted by the
courts to encompass nearly any instrument
remotely related to an investment.
Reves v. Ernst & Young, 494 U.S. 56, 110 S.
Ct. 945 (1990). Rule 10b-5 expands the
federal statute to prohibit all types of fraud,
including misrepresentation. Liability
requires proof of scienter; i.e., that the
defendant intended to deceive or defraud the
investor.
Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder, 425 U.S. 185
(1976). However, this may be satisfied
under circumstances where the defendant acted
recklessly. Sundstrand Corp v. Sun
Chemical Corp, 553 F.2d 1033 (7th Cir. 1977).
15 U.S.C. § 78t specifically
holds controlling persons, and those who aid and
abet, jointly and severally liable for any
violation. See
Harrison v. Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc., 79
F.3d 609 (7th Cir. 1996)(upholding controlling
person liability of broker-dealer where
employees executed “Ponzi scheme” to defraud
investor). However, actions must be filed
within one year after discovery of the facts
constituting the violation and within three
years of the violation itself.
15 U.S.C. § 78aa-1.
The federal Racketeering
Influenced Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”),
codified under
18 U.S.C. § 1961, et seq., also provides
civil remedies for criminal acts of fraud and
misrepresentation within the securities arena.
Liability requires proof of an agreement between
two or more defendants to maintain an interest
or control of an enterprise, or to participate
in the affairs of an enterprise, through a
pattern of racketeering activity, and that each
defendant agreed to commit at least two
predicate acts to accomplish their goals.
Id. Victims are entitled to treble
damages, including costs and reasonable
attorney’s fees.
18 U.S.C. § 1964. But see Vicom, Inc.,
v. Harbridge, Merchant Services, Inc., 20 F.3d
771 (7th Cir. 1994)(RICO plaintiff must allege
that he was injured by reason of the use or
investment of the racketeering income and not
simply that he was injured by the racketeering
activity itself).
Lawsuits alleging violation
of any federal law may be commenced in federal
court, pursuant to
28 U.S.C. § 1331.
WISCONSIN LAW
State statutes governing
securities, formerly known as Blue-Sky laws,
were intended to supplement the federal laws for
the protection of public investors. In
many respects, the Wisconsin Uniform Securities
Law, codified under chapter 551 of the Wisconsin
Statutes, generically mirrors federal law.
Wis. Stat.
§ 551.41 provides nearly identical language
as Rule 10b-5 in its prohibitions against
fraudulent practices. Wis. Stat.
§ 551.42 prohibits market manipulation,
while Wis. Stat.
§ 551.43 is directed at broker-dealer
activities. Violators of these statutes
are subject to civil liability for compensatory
damages, attorney fees and costs, under Wis.
Stat.
§ 551.59. Likewise, investors are
subject to a three year statute of limitations.
Wis. Stat.
§ 551.59(5); Gieringer v. Silverman, 539 F.
Supp. 498 (E.D. Wis. 1982).
The statutes are supplemented
by the Wisconsin Administrative Code in chapter
Department of Financial Institutions –
Securities. These regulations impose
licensing and registration requirements and
procedures for broker-dealers, investment
advisors and investment advisor representatives.
Wis. Adm. Code ch. DFI – Sec.
§§ 4.05 and
4.06 establish rules of conduct and
prohibited business practices for
broker-dealers, while §§
5.05 and
5.06 do the same for investment advisors and
investment advisor representatives. The
regulations mandate particular action by
broker-dealers, such as the distribution of a
prospectus on a security immediately upon
inquiry or solicitation. Wis. Adm. Code ch.
DFI – Sec.
§ 3.03.
Wisconsin has its own version
of the federal-type RICO Act, known as the
Wisconsin Organized Crime Control Act (“WOCCA”),
and codified under Wis. Stat. §
946.80 – 946.88. Racketeering activity
is defined to include the attempt, conspiracy to
commit, or commission of any of the fraudulent
practices prohibited under Wis. Stat. §
551.41 – 551.44. Civil remedies for
violation of WOCCA include double damages,
attorney fees and costs, and punitive damages
where appropriate. Wis. Stat.
§ 946.87(4).
Fraudulent representations or
statements by a financial advisor in connection
with the solicitation of a security entitles one
who detrimentally relies on that statement to
recover any pecuniary loss, together with
attorney fees and costs. Wis. Stat.
§ 100.18. See also
Winkelman v. Kraft Foods, Inc., 2005 WL
171334, 2005 WI App 25, ___ Wis. 2d ___, ___
N.W. 2d ___ (Ct. App. 2005)(upholding an
arbitration award of attorney fees and costs,
pursuant to Wis. Stat. §
100.18).
While securities are broadly defined, some
insurance instruments do not qualify, and hence
are not governed by the same laws. For
example, not all annuities are considered
securities for regulatory purposes.
Associates In Adolescent Psychiatry, S.C. v.
Home Life Ins. Co., 941 F.2d 561 (7th Cir.
1991)(flexible annuity is not subject to
registration and is not therefore a security);
Peoria Union Stock Yards Co. Retirement Plan v.
Penn Mut. Life Ins. Co., 698 F.2d 320 (7th Cir.
1983)(variable annuity may be a security).
The NASD has nevertheless determined that
variable annuities are indeed subject to its
jurisdiction and rules because owners
necessarily assume certain investment risks.
NASD Notice 96-86: Sales of Variable
Contracts Subject to Suitability Requirements.
Due to heightened complaints of impropriety
regarding the solicitation and sale of variable
annuities in recent years, the NASD and
Securities and Exchange Commission have
sharpened their supervision of such investments
with stern warnings to members, investor alerts
and news releases. See
NASD Notice 99-35: Responsibilities
Regarding Sales of Variable Annuities;
NASD Notice 00-44: Responsibilities
Regarding Sales of Variable Life Insurance;
NASD Notice 04-45: Proposed Rule Governing
the Purchase, Sale, or Exchange of Deferred
Variable Annuities;
NASD Investor Alert: Should You Exchange Your
Variable Annuity? (2/15/00);
NASD Investor Alert: Variable Annuities: Beyond
the Hard Sell (5/27/03);
NASD News Release re: Enforcement Actions on
Sales of Variable Annuity and Life Ins.
(12/5/01);
NASD News Release re: Prohibited Variable
Annuities Sales (1/29/04);
NASD News Release re: Fines for Violations
Involving Variable Annuity Transactions
(5/20/04);
NASD News Release re: Deceptive Market Timing in
Variable Annuity Transactions (6/1/04);
Joint SEC/NASD Report: Broker/Dealer Sales of
Variable Ins. Products (6/20/04).
Nevertheless, annuities remain subject to many
of the same general prohibitions governing
securities under State insurance laws.
Wis. Stat.
§ 628.34 prohibits unfair insurance
marketing practices, including
misrepresentations about a product.
Moreover, Wis. Stat.
§ 628.347 mandates that annuity sales to
senior consumers satisfy the same suitability
requirements imposed by the NASD. And, to
be sure, the Wisconsin Administrative Code also
imposes certain disclosure requirements and
marketing prohibitions. See Wis. Adm. Code
ch. INS
§ 2.07,
2.15 and
2.16.
Wisconsin’s insurance laws
apply to both insurance agents and
“intermediaries”, as defined by Wis. Stat.
§ 628.02(1)(a) as one who does or assists
another in doing any of the following:
1. Solicits,
negotiates or places insurance or annuities on
behalf of an insurer or a person seeking
insurance or annuities; or
2. Advises other
persons about insurance needs and coverages.
Wis. Stat.
§ 628.03(1) requires all intermediaries to
be licensed. Controlling person liability
may exist under Wis. Stat. § 628.03(1) where an
unlicensed person is permitted to act as an
intermediary in Wisconsin.
Likewise, commission splits
between unlicensed intermediaries constitute a
violation of Wisconsin insurance law. Wis.
Stat.
§ 628.61(1) states as follows:
No intermediary or insurer
may pay any consideration, nor reimburse
out-of-pocket expenses, to any natural person
for services performed within this state as an
intermediary if he or she knows or should know
that the payee is not licensed under s. 628.04
or 628.09. No natural person may accept
compensation for service performed as an
intermediary unless the natural person is
licensed under s. 628.04 or 628.09.
Unlawful commission splits
also provide foundation for a claim of an
improper business exchange under Wis. Adm. Code
ch. Ins.
§ 6.66(3), which mandates appropriate
licensure before forwarding business to a listed
agent.
A plaintiff may commence a lawsuit in state
court alleging violations of state statutes and
regulations. Assuming there is not
complete diversity of citizenship between the
parties (or, if there is, the damages do not
exceed $75,000), the case will not be removable
to federal court.
NASD RULES
The National Association of Securities Dealers
(“NASD”) has created the largest dispute
resolution forum in the United States. All
stockbrokers and broker-dealers must be members
of the NASD, and are subject to its
jurisdiction. Therefore, most disputes
with investors are required to be arbitrated
under its procedural and substantive rules.
The NASD has promulgated rules governing its
members, many of which mirror federal and state
laws concerning fraudulent activity. The rules
are readily findable as part of the
NASD Manual Online. See NASD Rule 2120
(prohibiting use of manipulative, deceptive or
other fraudulent devices). However, its
most applicable and relevant rule concerns the
ubiquitous concept of suitability. NASD
Rule 2310: Recommendations to Customers
(Suitability) provides as follows:
(a) In recommending to a
customer the purchase, sale or exchange of any
security, a member shall have reasonable grounds
for believing that the recommendation is
suitable for such customer upon the basis of the
facts, if any, disclosed by such customer as to
his other security holdings and as to his
financial situation and needs.
(b) Prior to the execution of
a transaction recommended to a non-institutional
customer, other than transactions with customers
where investments are limited to money market
mutual funds, a member shall make reasonable
efforts to obtain information concerning:
(1) the customer's financial
status;
(2) the customer's tax
status;
(3) the customer's investment
objectives; and
(4) such other information
used or considered to be reasonable by such
member or registered representative in making
recommendations to the customer.
(c) For purposes of this
Rule, the term "non-institutional customer"
shall mean a customer that does not qualify as
an "institutional account" under Rule
3110(c)(4).
NASD members must carefully
abide by the letter of this rule, which normally
requires written documentation of their efforts.
New and updated account forms are supposed to
identify the customer’s financial and tax
status, risk tolerance, investment experience
and objectives to adequately ensure that
investments are suitable for the particular
customer. There is no “one size fits all”
investment; meaning each customer requires
individual attention and consideration.
Joint SEC/NASD Report: Broker/Dealer Sales of
Variable Ins. Products, p. 9 (6/20/04).
When no such documentation exists to prove the
member fulfilled his/her obligation under the
suitability rule, the law implies a rebuttable
presumption that a violation occurred.
On the other hand, even where
a new account form documents a customer’s
investment objectives and risk tolerances, the
customer may prevail by showing the inaccuracy
of such information. Many times, a
stockbroker will complete a new account form
haphazardly, without really knowing the
customer. The New York Stock Exchange has
a rule similar to the NASD suitability rule,
called the “Know Your Customer” rule. All
NYSE Rules are available online. NYSE
Rule 405: Diligence as to Accounts, provides as
follows:
Every member organization is
required through a general partner, a principal
executive officer or a person or persons
designated under the provisions of Rule
342(b)(1) to:
(1) Use due diligence to
learn the essential facts relative to every
customer, ever order, every cash or margin
account accepted or carried by such organization
and every person holding power of attorney over
any account accepted or carried by such
organization and every person holding power of
attorney over any account doing so, the broker
must consider the risk of any particular
investment recommendation or strategy employed.
This rule sets a standard for
all financial and investment advisors to
exercise due diligence throughout the
relationship with a customer.
The NASD places ultimate responsibility for
persons associated with its members on the
members themselves; i.e., the broker-dealers and
financial institutions are responsible for their
employees and agents. NASD Rule 3010
provides that “[f]inal responsibility for proper
supervision shall rest with the member.”
Members must have in place written supervisory
procedures to ensure their employees are
fulfilling their obligations under the rules,
toward the NASD and the public. Members
establish offices of supervisory jurisdiction
(“OSJs”) to search for red flags, such as
missing or incomplete new account forms, or
stated objectives out of line with stated risk
tolerances. Where an investor has suffered
a loss due to unsuitable investments, the member
may be ultimately liable for failure to
supervisor its employees.
Unsuitable investments can also be much more
surreptitious. Account forms may
accurately reflect investor sentiment, yet be
unsuitable. For example, a broker may ask
an elderly investor whether he wants his money
to grow; and, of course, the investor will
answer affirmatively. The broker will then
identify the investment objective as “growth” (a
term of art in the securities industry, meaning
the investor is willing to assume some risk for
a higher return) without having discussed the
other possible objectives, such as preservation
of capital or income. Often unbeknownst to
the investor, he has been pegged as one looking
for higher returns at the expense of higher
risk, when more conservative values had truly
been desired. When OSJs review the
documents and investments, there are no red
flags to get their attention. Proof of the
unsuitable nature of the investments must come
from the investor’s testimony about his actual
investment experience, objectives and risk
tolerance. Brokers will rely on the
account form documentation for their defense,
but where the investor is unsophisticated and
unfamiliar with the terms of art, such a defense
is not fail-safe. When brokers fail to
discuss this trade-off to allow the investor to
make an informed decision, they may be subject
to an NASD claim for unsuitability.
The NASD has also promulgated more specific
rules governing the conduct of its members.
Most of these rules fall under the general tenet
and “fundamental responsibility” of “Fair
Dealing with Customers”. NASD Rule 2310-2.
The following activities are deemed to “clearly
violate this responsibility for fair dealing”:
(1) recommending speculative low-priced
securities; (2) excessive trading activity; (3)
trading in mutual fund shares; (4)
nondiscretionary or unauthorized trading; (5)
forgery; (6) nondisclosure of material facts;
and (7) misrepresentation. NASD Rule
2310-2. These violations often overlap and
can be proven in conjunction with the more
general allegation of unsuitability.
The NASD has enacted its own Code of Arbitration
Procedure to govern its extremely high volume of
cases. Investors must file a Uniform
Arbitration Submission Agreement with a
Statement of Claim outlining the relevant facts,
allegations and remedies sought. NASD Rule
10314(a). There is a six year statute of
limitations for NASD arbitration. NASD
Rule 10304. Once filed, the
respondent-member must file an Answer with any
counter- or cross-claims within 45 days.
NASD Rule 10314(b). The parties then
select a panel of three arbitrators from a list
of candidates. NASD Rule 10308. The
discovery process requires parties to then
voluntarily exchange information, pursuant to
the NASD Discovery Guides, within 30 days.
NASD Rule 10321. These guides provide
lists of documents that are presumptively
discoverable by both sides. The parties
must fully disclose the identity of all
witnesses and documentary evidence at least
20-days before the arbitration hearing.
NASD Rule 10321(c). This is known as the
“20-day exchange” rule. The arbitration
panel will then hear the case and issue a
written decision, which is binding on the
parties, and made publicly available. NASD
Rule 10330. The panel has authority to
award compensatory and punitive damages, and
attorney fees and costs to either party, and
such awards are subject to extremely narrow
review by the courts.
Winkelman v. Kraft Foods, Inc., 2005 WL
171334, 2005 WI App 25, ___ Wis. 2d ___, ___
N.W. 2d ___ (Ct. App. 2005);
Mastrobuono v. Shearson Lehman Hutton, Inc.,
514 U.S. 52, 115 S.Ct. 1212 (1995).
Most, if not all, of the above information,
rules, procedures, notices, and news is
accessible from the NASD website at
www.nasd.com. It is a very useful tool
for lawyers, and a great resource for the
investing public.
COMMON LAW
Not all misconduct in the
financial services industry can be neatly
categorized or juxtaposed with a precise
governing statute, rule or regulation.
When promulgated laws fall short, the common law
will usually step in. The most common
example is ordinary negligence. So long as
the defendant had a duty to act or refrain from
acting in some manner, and the breach of that
duty caused financial harm to the plaintiff, an
action may be brought for negligence. A
company’s own policies, or any number of various
industry standards, may be used to prove the
defendant failed to exercise the requisite
standard of care toward the plaintiff.
Other common law theories of
liability include conversion or misappropriation
of property, strict liability misrepresentation,
breach of contract, and even civil conspiracy.
A civil conspiracy in Wisconsin is defined as “a
combination of two or more persons acting
together to accomplish an unlawful purpose or a
lawful purpose by unlawful means.” The
essence of a conspiracy is a combination or
agreement to violate or disregard the law.
Wis. JI-Civil, 2800. Principals have been
held liable in the financial services industry
for the fraudulent acts of their agents, and
even third parties, under a civil conspiracy
theory. See Matthews v. New Century
Mortgage Corp., 185 F. Supp. 2d 874 (S.D. Ohio
2002); and Williams v. Aetna Finance Company, 83
Ohio St. 3d 464, 700 N.E.2d 859 (Ohio
1998)(finding the defendant companies liable
under civil conspiracy theory for the fraudulent
acts committed by third persons because their
loans to such third parties were integral to the
furtherance of the fraudulent scheme).
SO
WHAT IS THE PROBLEM?
Despite what ostensibly
appears to be an excessive reach of overlapping
laws and regulations governing the securities
industry, significant and woeful loopholes
actually remain. This is because a large
percentage of persons who offer financial advice
for a fee fall between the cracks of
governmental regulations, and are for all
practical purposes unregulated. They can
often set up shop, hold themselves out as
experts in the field with little or no training
or licensing credentials, and advertise with
impunity, without ever violating any laws.
Investors should be wary of anyone purporting to
offer investment advice, especially those
without proper credentials, licensure and
affiliations with recognized and accredited
firms or institutions.
Those who feel they have been
duped, defrauded or taken advantaged of should
consult with an attorney knowledgeable in
securities law. Just as each investor
profile is unique, so is each potential claim,
and warrants individualized attention and
consideration. A lawyer can pull the facts
together with the law to determine whether a
claim has merit, and then decide which avenue to
pursue for recourse.
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