Donoghue v. Bulldog Investors General Part
Filing
OPINION, affirming judgment of the district court , by RSP., RR., GEL., FILED.[734056] [11-1708]
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11-1708-cv
Donoghue v. Bulldog Investors Gen. P’ship
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
August Term, 2011
(Argued: June 21, 2012
Decided: October 1, 2012)
Docket No. 11-1708-cv
DEBORAH DONOGHUE,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
BULLDOG INVESTORS GENERAL PARTNERSHIP, PHILLIP GOLDSTEIN,
Defendants-Appellants.
Before:
POOLER, RAGGI, and LYNCH, Circuit Judges.
Appeal from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District
of New York (Denise L. Cote, Judge), awarding to plaintiff, suing on behalf of an issuer of
securities, the short-swing profits realized by defendants from trading in the issuer’s stock
in violation of Section 16(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, see 15 U.S.C. § 78p(b).
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Defendants challenge plaintiff’s constitutional standing to maintain this action, arguing that
the proscribed trading caused no actual injury to the issuer as required to establish a genuine
case or controversy.
AFFIRMED.
KEENAN D. KMIEC (James A. Hunter, on the brief), Hunter & Kmiec,
Los Angeles, California; David Lopez, Esq., Southampton, New
York, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
RICHARD W. COHEN (Scott V. Papp, Uriel Rabinovitz, on the brief),
Lowey Dannenberg Cohen & Hart, P.C., White Plains, New
York, for Defendants-Appellants.
REENA RAGGI, Circuit Judge:
Defendants Bulldog Investors General Partnership and principal Phillip Goldstein
(collectively, “Bulldog”) appeal from a judgment entered on March 31, 2011, by the United
States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Denise L. Cote, Judge), in favor
of plaintiff Deborah Donoghue suing on behalf of Invesco High Yield Investments Fund, Inc.
(“Invesco”). The judgment awards plaintiff $85,491.00, representing profits realized by
Bulldog from “short-swing” trading in Invesco common shares in violation of Section 16(b)
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the “Exchange Act”), see 15 U.S.C. § 78p(b)
(“§ 16(b)”). Bulldog argues that the judgment must be vacated for lack of standing because
plaintiff failed to demonstrate that the proscribed short-swing trading caused Invesco actual
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injury as necessary to satisfy the case-or-controversy requirement of Article III of the
Constitution.1 Specifically, although Bulldog concedes that § 16(b) prohibited it, as the
beneficial owner of more than 10% of Invesco’s common stock, from engaging in any
short-swing trading, it submits that in the absence of further wrongdoing, plaintiff cannot
claim any cognizable injury resulting from that trading. We disagree and, therefore, affirm
the judgment.
I.
Background
The facts relevant to this disgorgement action are straightforward and largely
undisputed. During July 2008, Bulldog filed a beneficial ownership report on Schedule 13D
with the Securities and Exchange Commission, reporting the hedge fund’s ownership of
nearly two million shares, comprising almost 15%, of the common stock of Invesco, a
diversified closed-end management investment company.2 In the publicly available Schedule
13D, Bulldog characterized its acquisitive purpose to include “‘consider[ing] whether to take
actions intended to afford all shareholders an opportunity to realize net asset value for their
shares,’” which “‘may include submitting a shareholder proposal, seeking representation on
[Invesco’s] board of directors and conducting a tender offer to acquire additional shares.’”
1
Because Bulldog concedes plaintiff’s satisfaction of all statutory requirements to
maintain this § 16(b) action, we need only address the question of constitutional standing in
this opinion.
2
The complaint names as a nominal defendant the Morgan Stanley High Yield Fund,
predecessor in interest to the Invesco fund in question, whose shares continue to trade
publicly on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol “MSY.”
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Compl. ¶ 15 (quoting Schedule 13D). To this end, Bulldog allegedly has attempted on
several occasions to make demands upon Invesco’s management and to persuade other
shareholders to vote in opposition to management proposals. See id. ¶ 17.
Between November 2009 and March 2010, while continuing beneficially to own more
than 10% of Invesco’s outstanding common stock, Bulldog purchased and then sold 200,000
additional Invesco shares on the open market, realizing a profit of $85,491.00. Section 16(b)
effectively prohibits such short-swing trading by a 10% beneficial owner of an issuer’s
equity securities, by providing that the realized short-swing profits “shall inure to and be
recoverable by the issuer.” 15 U.S.C. § 78p(b). Donoghue, an Invesco shareholder,
requested that Invesco sue Bulldog for violating § 16(b) and when, after 60 days, the
company failed to take such action, Donoghue herself commenced this suit for disgorgement
in April 2010. See id. (setting forth demand requirement and waiting period before
shareholder may instigate § 16(b) lawsuit).
Bulldog moved to dismiss the complaint pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(1) for lack
of constitutional standing, maintaining that plaintiff failed to allege any actual injury to
Invesco from Bulldog’s short-swing trades. The district court denied Bulldog’s motion,
relying on the language of § 16(b), which affords the issuer a legally protected interest in
proscribed short-swing profits, and Gollust v. Mendell, 501 U.S. 115, 118 (1991), which
holds that a shareholder plaintiff’s ongoing financial interest in recovering short-swing
profits pursuant to § 16(b) is sufficient to satisfy the injury-in-fact requirement of Article III
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as to that shareholder. See Donoghue v. Morgan Stanley High Yield Fund, No. 10 Civ.
3131 (DLC), 2010 WL 2143664, at *1–2. (S.D.N.Y. May 27, 2010).
Following this denial, the parties stipulated to the entry of judgment against Bulldog
in the total amount of the alleged short-swing profits, with Bulldog preserving the right to
appeal the district court’s standing determination.
II.
Discussion
In conducting de novo review of the denial of a Rule 12(b)(1) motion to dismiss for
lack of standing, we borrow from the familiar Rule 12(b)(6) standard, construing the
complaint in plaintiff’s favor and accepting as true all material factual allegations contained
therein. See Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 561 (1992); accord W.R. Huff
Asset Mgmt. Co. v. Deloitte & Touche LLP, 549 F.3d 100, 106 (2d Cir. 2008).
A.
Section 16(b)
A vital component of the Exchange Act, § 16(b) was designed to prevent an issuer’s
directors, officers, and principal stockholders “from engaging in speculative transactions on
the basis of information not available to others.” Huppe v. WPCS Int’l Inc., 670 F.3d 214,
218 (2d Cir. 2012); see Kern Cnty. Land Co. v. Occidental Petroleum Corp., 411 U.S. 582,
608 (1973) (observing that congressional investigations leading to enactment of Exchange
Act “revealed widespread use of confidential information by corporate insiders to gain an
unfair advantage in trading their corporations’ securities”). Section 16(b) does not itself
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proscribe trading on inside information.3 Rather, Congress determined that the “only
method . . . effective to curb the evils of insider trading was a flat rule taking the profits out
of a class of transactions in which the possibility of abuse was believed to be intolerably
great.” Reliance Elec. Co. v. Emerson Elec. Co., 404 U.S. 418, 422 (1972); see also Huppe
v. WPCS Int’l Inc., 670 F.3d at 218 (stating that “no showing of actual misuse of inside
information or of unlawful intent is necessary to compel disgorgement” under § 16(b)).
Thus, § 16(b) was crafted as a “blunt instrument,” Magma Power Co. v. Dow Chem. Co., 136
F.3d 316, 321 (2d Cir. 1998), to “impose[] a form of strict liability,” Credit Suisse Sec.
(USA) LLC v. Simmonds, 132 S. Ct. 1414, 1417 (2012) (internal quotation marks omitted),
by stating that any profits accruing to a director, officer, or 10% beneficial owner of an issuer
“within any period of less than six months . . . shall inure to and be recoverable by the
issuer,” 15 U.S.C. § 78p(b); see Analytical Surveys, Inc. v. Tonga Partners, L.P., 684 F.3d
36, 43 (2d Cir. 2012) (observing that § 16(b) establishes 10% beneficial owners as “statutory
insiders” who, like directors and officers, are required “to disgorge all profits realized from
any purchase and sale (or sale and purchase) of the same security made within a six month
period”).
3
Such a prohibition has since been derived from the “antifraud provisions found in
section 10(b) and SEC Rule 10b-5.” 4 Thomas L. Hazen, Law of Securities Regulation:
Insider Trading & Rule 10b-5 § 12.17 (6th ed. rev. 2012).
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In contrast to “most of the federal securities laws, § 16(b) does not confer enforcement
authority on the Securities and Exchange Commission.” Gollust v. Mendell, 501 U.S. at 122.
Rather, the statute authorizes two categories of private persons to sue for relief: (1) “the
issuer” of the security traded in violation of § 16(b); or (2) “the owner of any security of the
issuer in the name and in behalf of the issuer,” but only “if the issuer shall fail or refuse to
bring such suit within sixty days after the request or shall fail diligently to prosecute the same
thereafter.” 15 U.S.C. § 78p(b). It has been suggested that the statute thus recruits the issuer
(and, if necessary, its security holders) as “‘policemen’” by imbuing them with “‘a
private-profit motive’” to enforce the law’s prohibition on short-swing trading by insiders.
Gollust v. Mendell, 501 U.S. at 124–25 (quoting Hearings on H.R. 7852 and H.R. 8720
before House Committee on Interstate & Foreign Commerce, 73d Cong., 2d Sess. 136 (1934)
(testimony of Thomas G. Corcoran)).
B.
Constitutional Standing
It is undisputed that the complaint in this case adequately alleges a § 16(b) claim
against Bulldog and that Donoghue, as an Invesco shareholder, is a person statutorily
authorized to file such a claim. Bulldog nevertheless contends that the district court was
without jurisdiction to hear the claim because it presents no live case or controversy
affording plaintiff standing to sue. See U.S. Const. art. III, § 2; W.R. Huff Asset Mgmt. Co.
v. Deloitte & Touche LLP, 549 F.3d at 106 (distinguishing statutory standing from
constitutional standing in securities fraud context). Bulldog submits that the absence of a
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case or controversy is evident from plaintiff’s inability to satisfy the first requirement of
constitutional standing: an injury in fact. See, e.g., Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S.
at 560–61 (identifying “injury in fact,” “causation,” and “redressability” as three elements
of constitutional standing); accord W.R. Huff Asset Mgmt. Co. v. Deloitte & Touche LLP,
549 F.3d at 106.4
The injury in fact required to support constitutional standing is “an invasion of a
legally protected interest which is (a) concrete and particularized, and (b) actual or imminent,
not conjectural or hypothetical.” Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. at 560–61
(internal quotation marks and citations omitted); accord W.R. Huff Asset Mgmt. Co. v.
Deloitte & Touche LLP, 549 F.3d at 106. While the injury-in-fact requirement “is a hard
floor of Article III jurisdiction that cannot be removed by statute,” Summers v. Earth Island
Inst., 555 U.S. 488, 497 (2009), it has long been recognized that a legally protected interest
may exist solely by virtue of “statutes creating legal rights, the invasion of which creates
standing, even though no injury would exist without the statute,” Linda R.S. v. Richard D.,
410 U.S. 614, 617 n.3 (1973); accord Warth v. Seldin, 422 U.S. 490, 500 (1975); see also
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. at 578 (stating that nothing in denying standing to
citizens at large to enforce public rights contradicts principle that statutes may confer rights
on specified individuals, the breach of which suffices for standing).
4
Bulldog does not challenge plaintiff’s satisfaction of the causation and redressability
requirements of standing. Thus, in this opinion we discuss only the requirement of an injury
in fact.
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With these principles in mind, we consider plaintiff’s standing to sue under § 16(b)
in this case.
C.
Section 16(b) Confers on Issuers a Legal Right to the Short-Swing Profits of
Insiders Sufficient To Establish Constitutional Standing
While Bulldog acknowledges that it engaged in precisely the type of short-swing
trading in Invesco stock that § 16(b) proscribes, it argues that it cannot be sued for that
violation because Invesco, and therefore Donoghue, cannot demonstrate the injury in fact
necessary for constitutional standing. Where, as here, a shareholder plaintiff pursues a
§ 16(b) claim on behalf of an issuer, the claim “is derivative in the sense that the corporation
is the instrument . . . for the effectuation of the statutory policy.” Magida v. Cont’l Can Co.,
231 F.2d 843, 846–47 (2d Cir. 1956); see 15 U.S.C. § 78p(b) (authorizing security holder to
bring suit only “in the name and in behalf of the issuer”); Morales v. Quintel Entm’t, Inc.,
249 F.3d 115, 121 (2d Cir. 2001) (referring to § 16(b) suit by shareholder as “derivative
suit”). In such cases, there appear to be two steps to injury analysis. First, because a
derivative action generally is “a mere procedural device to enforce” substantive rights
belonging to the issuer, Phillips v. Tobin, 548 F.2d 408, 411 (2d Cir. 1976); see Gollust v.
Mendell, 501 U.S. at 127 (recognizing that security holder “will have no direct financial
interest in the outcome of [§ 16(b)] litigation, since any recovery will inure only to the
issuer’s benefit”), there must be injury in fact to that real party in interest, see generally
Tooley v. Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette, Inc., 845 A.2d 1031, 1039 (Del. 2004) (setting forth
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widely accepted definition of derivative claim as one “asserting injury to the corporate
entity” and requesting “relief that would go [to] the corporation”). Second, the Supreme
Court has recognized that when an issuer’s interests are pursued derivatively by a
shareholder, a “serious constitutional question” would arise if the shareholder were allowed
to maintain the § 16(b) claim even after losing all personal financial interest in the outcome
of the litigation. Gollust v. Mendell, 501 U.S. at 126.5
This second step of analysis need not detain us. Neither in the district court nor on
appeal has Bulldog challenged Donoghue’s allegation of a “continuing financial stake” in
this litigation. Id. at 125. Instead, Bulldog argues that plaintiff cannot demonstrate any
injury to the issuer from the alleged § 16(b) violation because Invesco “was a non-party to
the trades at issue, and no issue of ‘corporate opportunity,’ fiduciary duty, breach of contract
or misappropriation is on the table.” Bulldog Br. 16. Indeed, Bulldog insists that it is a
“consummate ‘outsider,’” lacking any “fiduciary, contractual or confidential relationship
with Invesco.” Id. at 5. We reject Bulldog’s argument as without merit. To explain, we
5
Although Gollust indicated that the absence of such a shareholder’s financial interest
in the outcome of a § 16(b) derivative action would raise Article III concerns, see 501 U.S.
at 125–26, we do not understand it to hold that such an interest is alone sufficient to
demonstrate Article III standing in the absence of injury to the real party in interest, the
issuer. Satisfaction of that standing requirement appears to have been undisputed and
assumed in Gollust. We note that Gollust pre-dated the Supreme Court’s 1998 ruling in Steel
Co. v. Citizens for a Better Environment, 523 U.S. 83 (1998), holding that a federal court
must satisfy itself as to “constitutional jurisdiction, including a determination that the
plaintiff has Article III standing, before deciding a case on the merits.” Alliance For Envt’l
Renewal, Inc. v. Pyramid Crossgates Co., 436 F.3d 82, 85 (2d Cir. 2006) (citing Steel Co.
v. Citizens for a Better Env’t, 523 U.S. at 101)).
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must consider not only the purpose animating § 16(b), but the legal rights that Congress
conferred on issuers in order to further that purpose. It is Bulldog’s invasion of those rights
that supports plaintiff’s standing.
The purpose of § 16(b) is stated in its opening clause: to prevent “the unfair use of
information which may have been obtained by [a] beneficial owner, director, or officer by
reason of his relationship to the issuer.” 15 U.S.C. § 78p(b). As we have already noted, to
serve that purpose, Congress did not simply proscribe trading on inside information; rather,
it enacted a “flat rule” that takes the profits out of an entire “class of transactions” occurring
within a prescribed time frame “in which the possibility of abuse” of inside information “was
believed to be intolerably great.” Reliance Elec. Co. v. Emerson Elec. Co., 404 U.S. at 422.
In discussing the reason for § 16(b)’s rule of strict liability, Judge Learned Hand observed
that “[i]f only those persons were liable, who could be proved to have a bargaining
advantage, the execution of the statute would be so encumbered as to defeat its whole
purpose.” Gratz v. Claughton, 187 F.2d 46, 50 (2d Cir. 1951) (reiterating well-settled
principle “that a statute may provide any means which can reasonably be thought necessary
to deal with the [identified] evil, even though they may cover instances where it is not
present”).
More pertinent to the questions of injury and standing that concern us today is Gratz’s
recognition that § 16(b)’s flat rule effectively makes 10% “beneficial owners fiduciaries as
directors and officers were anyway,” at least to the extent of making all short-swing
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transactions by such persons in the issuer’s stock “breaches of trust.” Id. at 49 (internal
quotation marks omitted); see also Adler v. Klawans, 267 F.2d 840, 844 (2d Cir. 1959)
(commenting that Congress’s “intent in the enactment of § 16(b) was to discourage what was
reasonably thought to be a widespread abuse of a fiduciary relationship” by “three classes
of persons”). Thus, Bulldog cannot maintain that it owed no fiduciary duty to Invesco. That
fiduciary duty was created by § 16(b), and it conferred upon Invesco an enforceable legal
right to expect Bulldog to refrain from engaging in any short-swing trading in its stock. The
deprivation of this right establishes Article III standing. See, e.g., Warth v. Seldin, 422 U.S.
at 500.
Nor can Bulldog deny any injury to the issuer from its short-swing trading by pointing
to the fact that § 16(b) operates without regard to whether the statutory fiduciaries were
actually privy to inside information or whether they traded with the intent to profit from such
information. This confuses the wrongdoing that prompted the enactment of § 16(b)—trading
on inside information—with the legal right that Congress created to address that
wrongdoing—a 10% beneficial owner’s fiduciary duty to the issuer not to engage in any
short-swing trading. As Judge Hand explained, even at common law, a fiduciary’s duty to
a beneficiary often required more than the avoidance of actual unfair dealing: “‘A trustee
with power to sell trust property is under a duty not to sell to himself either at private sale or
at auction, whether the property has a market price or not, and whether the trustee makes a
profit thereby.’” Gratz v. Claughton, 187 F.2d at 49 (quoting Restatement of Trusts § 170(1),
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cmt. b). Drawing an analogy between trust law and the fiduciary duty created by § 16(b),
Judge Hand observed that “[n]obody is obliged to become a director, an officer, or a
‘beneficial owner’; just as nobody is obliged to become the trustee of a private trust; but, as
soon as he does so, he accepts whatever are the limitations, obligations and conditions
attached to the position, and any default in fulfilling them is as much a ‘violation’ of law as
though it were attended by the sanction of imprisonment.” Id. (emphasis added).6
Thus, pursuant to § 16(b), when a stock purchaser chooses to acquire a 10% beneficial
ownership stake in an issuer, he becomes a corporate insider and thereby accepts “the
limitation[]” that attaches to his fiduciary status: not to engage in any short-swing trading in
the issuer’s stock. Id.7 At that point, injury depends not on whether the § 16(b) fiduciary
traded on inside information but on whether he traded at all. A corporate issuer, after all, has
an “interest in maintaining a reputation of integrity, an image of probity,” for its § 16(b)
insiders “and in insuring the continued public acceptance and marketability of its stock.”
6
Contemporary commentary recognizes the benefits of this “trust law approach” to
fiduciary duty. See generally Robert H. Sitkoff, Trust Law, Corporate Law, and Capital
Market Efficiency, 28 J. Corp. L. 565, 573 (2003) (“By rendering all evidence of intrinsic
fairness irrelevant and employing a disgorgement remedy, the no-further-inquiry rule creates
a strong incentive for trustees to abstain from self-dealing . . . .”).
7
Gratz suggests that beneficial owners, directors, and officers of an issuer may owe
a duty to the purchasers of their shares. See 187 F.2d at 49. Because this case presents us
with no occasion to discuss that point, we here focus only on the fiduciary duty that § 16(b)
imposes in favor of the issuer.
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Diamond v. Oreamuno, 24 N.Y.2d 494, 499, 301 N.Y.S.2d 78, 82 (1969) (discussing New
York law intended to remedy “the same sort of ‘abuse of a fiduciary relationship’ as is
condemned by” § 16(b)). This interest is injured not only by actual insider trading but by any
trading in violation of an insider’s fiduciary duty, including the trading altogether prohibited
by § 16(b). The fact that such injury to the issuer is not easily calculated does not make it
less real for purposes of identifying an actual case or controversy. In any event, § 16(b)
eliminates any calculation concerns by providing the issuer, upon breach of the fiduciary
duty created by that statute, with the right to any profits realized from the unfaithful insider’s
short-swing trading.
To be sure, this statutory arrangement provides issuers (and their shareholders) with
an incentive to police short-swing trading by beneficial owners, directors, and officers, to the
benefit of the market as a whole. Nevertheless, because the issuer’s right to profits under
§ 16(b) derives from breach of a fiduciary duty created by the statute in favor of the issuer,
the issuer is no mere bounty hunter but, rather, a person with a cognizable claim to
compensation for the invasion of a legal right. This distinguishes the instant case from
Vermont Agency of Natural Resources v. United States ex rel. Stevens, 529 U.S. 765 (2000),
a qui tam action under the False Claims Act, in which the Supreme Court ruled that a
claimant needs more than an interest in “the bounty he will receive if the suit is successful”
to establish constitutional standing. Id. at 772–73 (comparing such interest to “wager” on
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suit’s outcome). The claimant’s alleged “interest must consist of obtaining compensation for,
or preventing, the violation of a legally protected right.” Id. (holding relator-plaintiff to
satisfy injury-in-fact requirement in False Claims Act case due to statute’s implied partial
assignment of government’s damages claim). As we recognized in Gratz, § 16(b) effectively
gives issuers a legally protected fiduciary right to expect statutory insiders not to engage in
short-swing trading of their stock, and compensates them for the violation of that right by
allowing them to claim any profits realized from such trading.
Further, because the fiduciary obligation created by § 16(b) is not general, but rather
confers a specific right on issuers to expect their insiders not to engage in short-swing
trading, this case is distinguishable from Kendall v. Employees Retirement Plan of Avon
Products, 561 F.3d 112 (2d Cir. 2009). There, we held that an ERISA plaintiff bringing a
disgorgement claim could not satisfy the injury requirement of standing by alleging
defendant’s general “breach of fiduciary duty under ERISA without a showing of
individualized harm.” Id. at 120 (rejecting proffered Article III injury of “right to a plan that
complies with ERISA”). Instead, such a plaintiff “must allege some injury or deprivation of
a specific right that arose from a violation of that duty.” Id. at 119.
In distinguishing these cases, we note that where, as here, a plaintiff’s claim of injury
in fact depends on legal rights conferred by statute, it is the particular statute and the rights
it conveys that guide the standing determination. See generally Warth v. Seldin, 422 U.S.
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at 500 (“Essentially, the standing question in such cases is whether the constitutional or
statutory provision on which the claim rests properly can be understood as granting persons
in the plaintiff’s position a right to judicial relief.”). Thus, just as § 16(b) and the fiduciary
right it effectively confers on issuers are distinct from the right to maintain a qui tam action
under the False Claims Act or the right to sue for breach of fiduciary duty under ERISA, so
are they distinct from the right to recovery afforded by the Real Estate Settlement Procedures
Act of 1974 (“RESPA”), see 12 U.S.C. § 2601 et seq., relied on in Edwards v. First
American Corp., 610 F.3d 514, 515 (9th Cir. 2010), to support standing.
The parties discuss Edwards at length because that standing determination was
pending review in the Supreme Court at the time we heard oral argument. See No. 10-708,
131 S. Ct. 3022 (June 20, 2011) (granting writ of certiorari in part). In Edwards, the Ninth
Circuit upheld a plaintiff’s standing to sue under RESPA to recover three times the amount
of any charge paid for real estate settlement services provided in violation of that law even
though the plaintiff did not—and could not—allege that the charges were higher than they
would have been but for the violation. See 610 F.3d at 516 (observing that state law dictated
that all providers charge same specified amount for settlement services at issue).
Nevertheless, because it construed RESPA’s text to confer on plaintiff a legal right to
recovery without regard to an overcharge, the Ninth Circuit held that the plaintiff had
satisfied the injury requirement of Article III. See id. at 517. In light of the Supreme Court’s
dismissal of its writ of certiorari, see No. 10-708, 132 S. Ct. 2536 (June 28, 2012)
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(dismissing writ as improvidently granted), Edwards remains good law in the Ninth Circuit,
and has been cited approvingly in our own, see Galiano v. Fid. Nat’l Title Ins. Co., 684 F.3d
309, 315 n.9 (2d Cir. 2012) (“An allegation of overcharge is not necessary to sustain a
[RESPA] claim.” (citing Edwards v. First Am. Corp., 610 F.3d at 518)).
To the extent this case differs from Edwards, the differences provide greater support
for recognizing plaintiff’s standing here. Unlike RESPA, § 16(b) is not a law that permits
defendants to engage in particular conduct, specifically, short-swing trading, subject to
certain conditions. Much less is this a case in which Bulldog can argue that, although it
failed to comply with § 16(b), the prices at which it bought and sold Invesco shares and the
profit realized therefrom were all dictated by some law that applied uniformly to all buyers
and sellers, negating the possibility of actual injury to anyone. As we recognized in Gratz,
§ 16(b) is a statute that addresses the problem of insider trading by conferring on securities
issuers a legal right, one that makes 10% beneficial owners “constructive trustee[s] of the
corporation,” 187 F.2d at 48, with a fiduciary duty not to engage in short-swing trading of
the issuer’s stock at the risk of having to remit to the issuer any profits realized from such
trading. It is the invasion of this legal right, without regard to whether the trading was based
on inside information, that causes an issuer injury in fact and that compels our recognition
of plaintiff’s standing to pursue a § 16(b) claim here.
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While this particular legal right might not have existed but for the enactment of
§ 16(b), Congress’s legislative authority to broaden the injuries that can support
constitutional standing is beyond dispute. “Statutory broadening of the categories of injuries
that may be alleged in support of standing is a different matter from abandoning the
requirement that the party seeking review must himself have suffered an injury.” Lujan v.
Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. at 578 (internal quotation marks and brackets omitted).
While the principle is not so elastic as to permit the general “public interest in proper
administration of the laws [to] be converted into an individual right by a statute that
denominates it as such, and that permits all citizens (or, for that matter, a subclass of citizens
who suffer no distinctive concrete harm) to sue,” id. at 576–77, that is hardly this case.
Although Congress enacted § 16(b) to serve a general interest in safeguarding the
integrity of the stock market against insider trading, it did not eliminate the injury
requirement of standing. Rather, it created legal rights that clarified the injury that would
support standing, specifically, the breach by a statutory insider of a fiduciary duty owed to
the issuer not to engage in and profit from any short-swing trading of its stock. Such an
injury in fact to Invesco having been satisfactorily alleged in this case, we reject Bulldog’s
standing challenge as without merit.
18
Case: 11-1708
III.
Document: 70-1
Page: 19
10/01/2012
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Conclusion
To summarize, we conclude that short-swing trading in an issuer’s stock by a 10%
beneficial owner in violation of Section 16(b) of the Securities Exchange Act causes injury
to the issuer sufficient for constitutional standing.
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
19
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