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Stoiber v. Securities & Exchange Commission

Court: Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
Date filed: 1998-12-08
Citations: 161 F.3d 745, 333 U.S. App. D.C. 195
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16 Citing Cases

                        United States Court of Appeals


                     FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT


             Argued November 9, 1998   Decided December 8, 1998 


                                 No. 98-1062


                             Gerald J. Stoiber, 

                                  Petitioner


                                      v.


                     Securities and Exchange Commission, 

                                  Respondent




     On Petition for Review of an Order of the 
         Securities and Exchange Commission

     Thomas D. Birge argued the cause and filed the briefs for 
petitioner.

     Randall W. Quinn, Assistant General Counsel, Securities 
and Exchange Commission, argued the cause for respondent.  
With him on the brief were Jacob H. Stillman, Associate 
General Counsel, and Paul Gonson, Solicitor.  Susan K. 
Straus, Attorney, entered an appearance.

     Before:  Wald, Williams and Henderson, Circuit Judges.

     Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge Wald.


     Wald, Circuit Judge:  Petitioner Gerald Stoiber is an Illi-
nois broker associated with American Investment Services, 
Inc. ("AIS").  AIS is a member of the National Association of 
Securities Dealers, Inc. ("NASD"), a self-regulatory organiza-
tion in the securities field.  Stoiber borrowed a total of 
$495,000 from his customers, gave the lenders promissory 
notes in exchange, and used most of the money to invest in 
commodities.  The NASD filed disciplinary charges against 
him, asserting that he violated the NASD Rules of Fair 
Practice by selling securities (the notes) without giving AIS 
prior written notice.  Stoiber was sanctioned by the NASD 
and appealed to the Securities and Exchange Commission 
("SEC" or "Commission"), which affirmed the sanctions.  See 
In re Gerald James Stoiber, 65 S.E.C. Docket 1097 (1997).  
The SEC denied a request for reconsideration.  See In re 
Gerald James Stoiber, 66 S.E.C. Docket 731 (1998).

     Stoiber petitions for review of the SEC's decision under 15 
U.S.C. s 78y.  He argues that the promissory notes are not 
securities, that the SEC misapplied the test articulated by the 
Supreme Court for determining whether a note is a security, 
that the Commission abused its discretion by approving the 
sanctions, and that the sanctions violate the Eighth Amend-
ment's Excessive Fines Clause.  We deny the petition for 
review because the SEC properly concluded that the notes 
are securities, the SEC did not abuse its discretion, and 
Stoiber waived the Excessive Fines argument by not raising 
it before the Commission.

                                I. Background


     From 1991 to 1993, Stoiber approached thirteen customers 
and asked to borrow various sums of money totaling 
$495,000.1  He explained that most of the money would be 
used for financing commodities trading in his own trading 

__________
     1 The proper initial date is ambiguous in the NASD's complaint.  
It first describes the period in question as March 1, 1992 to 
September 23, 1993.  Eleven notes were executed during that 
period.  The complaint, however, also includes a chart listing thir-
teen notes executed between March 1, 1991 and September 23, 


account and the rest for personal uses.2  Each customer gave 
him $10,000 to $200,000 and Stoiber executed unsecured 
promissory notes in return.  The notes provided for terms of 
two to five years3 and fixed interest rates ranging from six to 
twelve percent.  The record indicates that the interest rate 
on many of the notes was about two points over the prime 
rate at the time of execution.  Stoiber also borrowed money 
from his parents but did not give them any promissory notes;  
that borrowing was not part of the disciplinary action.

     Stoiber had known the note holders, on average, for over 
nine years when the notes were executed.  He testified 
before the NASD that he has meaningful social relations with 
all of them beyond the usual broker-customer relationship.  
He explained, for example, that they sent his children gifts on 
their birthdays and one is like a mother to him.

     The National Futures Association ("NFA") conducted a 
commodities review of AIS in 1993.  The NFA examiner 
learned of the notes and informed the NASD and the state of 
Illinois.  Both commenced investigations.  The Illinois inves-
tigation led to an agreement with Stoiber that he would offer 
rescission to the note holders;  every note holder declined the 
offer.

     On April 6, 1994, the NASD charged Stoiber with violations 
of Sections 1 and 40 of Article III of the NASD Rules of Fair 
Practice (since renamed Rules 2110 and 3040).  Section 1 
requires that "[a] member, in the conduct of his business, 
shall observe high standards of commercial honor and just 
and equitable principles of trade."  Section 40 is the focus of 
the allegations against Stoiber.  It provides, in relevant part:

     (a) Applicability--No person associated with a member 
     shall participate in any manner in a private securities 

__________
1993.  The record contains numerous indications from both parties 
that thirteen notes are under review.

     2 Stoiber estimated that he spent $50,000 on personal expenses (a 
$20,000 payment toward his mortgage and the rest for credit card 
and hospital bills).

     3 Some were subsequently extended.


     transaction except in accordance with the requirements 
     of this section.

     (b) Written Notice--Prior to participating in any private 
     securities transaction, an associated person shall provide 
     written notice to the member with which he is associated 
     describing in detail the proposed transaction and the 
     person's proposed role therein and stating whether he 
     has received or may receive selling compensation in 
     connection with the transaction;  provided however that, 
     in the case of a series of related transactions in which no 
     selling compensation has been or will be received, an 
     associated person may provide a single written notice.

The NASD asserted that the promissory notes are securities, 
a prerequisite to the applicability of Section 40, and that 
Stoiber sold them without giving AIS prior written notice.4

     A hearing was held before the NASD District Business 
Conduct Committee for District No. 8 which found that 
Stoiber had violated Sections 1 and 40.  On appeal, the NASD 
National Business Conduct Committee agreed.  The National 
Committee censured Stoiber, suspended him for six months, 
required $450,000 in restitution (the amount borrowed that 
was still outstanding), assessed costs totaling $1,299.25, and 
imposed a $450,000 fine, but allowed the fine to be reduced by 
the amount of restitution paid within sixty days.  Stoiber 
appealed to the SEC which affirmed the NASD and subse-
quently denied a request for reconsideration.5

__________
     4 The lack of written notice is not disputed.  Stoiber claims, 
however, that he gave oral notice to James Burgauer, the AIS 
director of compliance and part owner of the firm.  Both Stoiber 
and Burgauer agreed that, before the first note transaction, Stoiber 
asked Burgauer about how he should document any borrowing, and 
Burgauer gave him a copy of a promissory note he had on file.  
Stoiber claims that he told Burgauer that he might ask customers 
for money, but Burgauer did not remember this aspect of the 
conversation.

     5 The SEC did not address whether, if the notes are not securi-
ties, Stoiber had nonetheless violated Section 1, a conclusion the 


                                II. Discussion


     A.Whether the Promissory Notes are Securities

     Stoiber argues that the Commission erred in determining 
that the promissory notes he executed in return for the funds 
provided by his customers are properly classified as securi-
ties.  If the notes are not securities, he could not be held to 
have violated Section 40.

     The definition of "security" in section 3(a)(10) of the Securi-
ties Exchange Act of 1934, the source of the SEC's authority 
in this matter, includes a long list of financial instruments, 
beginning with "any note."6  Although courts initially inter-
preted "any note" literally, see Harold S. Bloomenthal & 

__________
NASD National Committee reached with little explanation.  The 
SEC addressed the Section 1 charge only in terms of the Section 40 
charge, stating that violation of the latter established violation of 
the former, a link that petitioner does not contest.  See In re 
Gerald James Stoiber, 65 S.E.C. Docket at 1101 n.22.

     6 The term is defined as

     any note, stock, treasury stock, bond, debenture, certificate of 
     interest or participation in any profit-sharing agreement or in 
     any oil, gas, or other mineral royalty or lease, any collateral-
     trust certificate, preorganization certificate or subscription, 
     transferable share, investment contract, voting-trust certificate, 
     certificate of deposit, for a security, any put, call, straddle, 
     option, or privilege on any security, certificate of deposit, or 
     group or index of securities (including any interest therein or 
     based on the value thereof), or any put, call, straddle, option, or 
     privilege entered into on a national securities exchange relating 
     to foreign currency, or in general, any instrument commonly 
     known as a "security";  or any certificate of interest or partic-
     ipation in, temporary or interim certificate for, receipt for, or 
     warrant or right to subscribe to or purchase, any of the 
     foregoing;  but shall not include currency or any note, draft, bill 
     of exchange, or banker's acceptance which has a maturity at 
     the time of issuance of not exceeding nine months, exclusive of 
     days of grace, or any renewal thereof the maturity of which is 
     likewise limited.


Holme Roberts & Owen, Securities Law Handbook s 2.04[2], 
at 42 (1998 ed.), an inquiry into whether a particular note is a 
security has become much more demanding under the test 
articulated by the Supreme Court in Reves v. Ernst & Young, 
494 U.S. 56 (1990).  The Court stated there that "the phrase 
'any note' should not be interpreted to mean literally 'any 
note,' but must be understood against the backdrop of what 
Congress was attempting to accomplish in enacting the Secu-
rities Acts."  Id. at 63.  Congress' purpose "was to regulate 
investments, in whatever form they are made and by whatev-
er name they are called."  Id. at 61 (emphasis in original).

     Under the Reves "family resemblance" test, every note is 
first presumed to be a security but the presumption may fall 
away under either step of a two-tiered analysis.  See id. at 67.  
In the first step the notes under review are compared to 
several types of notes that the Court specifically said are not 
securities.  Those are

     the note delivered in consumer financing, the note se-
     cured by a mortgage on a home, the short-term note 
     secured by a lien on a small business or some of its 
     assets, the note evidencing a 'character' loan to a bank 
     customer, short-term notes secured by an assignment of 
     accounts receivable, [ ] a note which simply formalizes an 
     open-account debt incurred in the ordinary course of 
     business (particularly if, as in the case of the customer of 
     a broker, it is collateralized)[, and] ... notes evidencing 
     loans by commercial banks for current operations.

Id. at 65 (quotation marks and citation omitted).  The com-
parison between the note in question and the excluded notes 
is to be made by considering four factors:  (1) "the motiva-
tions that would prompt a reasonable seller and buyer to 
enter into [the transaction]," (2) "the 'plan of distribution' of 
the instrument," (3) "the reasonable expectations of the in-
vesting public," and (4) "whether some factor such as the 
existence of another regulatory scheme significantly reduces 
the risk of the instrument, thereby rendering application of 

__________
15 U.S.C. s 78c(a)(10).  None of the notes here fall under the short 
term exception.


the Securities Acts unnecessary."  Id. at 66-67.  The note is 
not a security if this four-factor comparison reveals a "strong 
resemblance" to one of the enumerated types of notes.  Id. at 
67.  If a strong resemblance is not found, the court invokes 
the second step of the analysis--"the decision whether anoth-
er category should be added...."  Id.  This decision "is to 
be made by examining the same [four] factors."  Id.  Wheth-
er a note is a security is a question of law, so the court applies 
this test de novo.  See SEC v. Life Partners, Inc., 87 F.3d 
536, 541 (D.C.Cir.1996).7

1.The First Reves Factor--Motivation

     Reves explains the first factor as follows:

     First, we examine the transaction to assess the motiva-
     tions that would prompt a reasonable seller and buyer to 
     enter into it.  If the seller's purpose is to raise money for 
     the general use of a business enterprise or to finance 
     substantial investments and the buyer is interested pri-
     marily in the profit the note is expected to generate, the 
     instrument is likely to be a "security."  If the note is 
     exchanged to facilitate the purchase and sale of a minor 
     asset or consumer good, to correct for the seller's cash-
     flow difficulties, or to advance some other commercial or 
     consumer purpose, on the other hand, the note is less 
     sensibly described as a "security."

Reves, 494 U.S. at 66.

     We have little trouble concluding that Stoiber's main pur-
pose for using the notes points in the direction of their being 

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     7 At the outset we reject Stoiber's claim concerning the effect of 
the initial presumption in Reves that a note is a security.  He 
asserts that the mere introduction of some evidence suggesting that 
a note is not a security is enough to rebut the presumption.  The 
Supreme Court, however, stated that the "presumption may be 
rebutted only by a showing that the note bears a strong resem-
blance ... to one of the enumerated categories of instrument....  
[or that] another category should be added...."  Reves, 494 U.S. at 
67.  Thus, the presumption is only rebutted when the two-step, 
four-factor analysis based on all the evidence leads to the conclusion 
that a note is a not a security.


securities.  All but $50,000 of the $495,000 raised from his 
customers was used for commodities trading in his personal 
account.  Moreover, in reaffirmation statements signed when 
they declined Stoiber's rescission offers, the customers ac-
knowledged that they knew at the time of the transactions 
that most of the money would be used for such trading.  We 
think trading in commodities clearly falls under the "fi-
nanc[ing] substantial investments" language in Reves.

     Stoiber predictably disagrees.  He argues that he was in 
the business of selling commodities and that he used the 
money to purchase inventory which he then attempted to 
resell at a profit.  This he terms a commercial, not an 
investment purpose.  Stoiber's regular business, however, 
was buying and selling on behalf of his customers;  his 
earnings came not from the difference between the purchase 
and sale prices of the securities he traded but from commis-
sions.  Stoiber's trading in commodities was not part of his 
brokerage business, and so we cannot say that the commodi-
ties trading had a commercial purpose related to that busi-
ness.

     But even if we accept the proposition that personal com-
modities trading was a new business Stoiber planned to 
operate distinct from his usual brokerage business, use of the 
note money to buy an inventory of commodities is more akin 
to "rais[ing] money for the general use of a business enter-
prise" than the specific commercial uses cited in Reves such 
as remedying a cash flow deficit or purchasing a specific 
asset.  Although the line between commercial and investment 
uses may not always be sharp, Reves' examples appear to 
distinguish between funding the enterprise generally and 
funding a discrete component or department of the enter-
prise.  Because the purchase of commodities for reselling was 
at the core of Stoiber's "business" of trading in them, his use 
of the money to buy them is appropriately viewed as a 
general business use.

     We also perceive that Stoiber's customers were primarily 
motivated by the opportunity to earn a profit on their money.  
The NASD's investigator interviewed the note holders and 



testified that "the customers were providing the money be-
cause they knew Mr. Stoiber fairly well and trusted him and 
were interested in receiving a competitive interest rate."  
Transcript at 32 (emphasis added).  The rates they re-
ceived--two points over prime--were described by the SEC, 
possessed of greater expertise than we, as "favorable."  In re 
Gerald James Stoiber, 65 S.E.C. Docket at 1100.  And the 
Supreme Court has said a favorable interest rate indicates 
that profit was the primary goal of the lender.  See Reves, 
494 U.S. at 67-68 (variable rate designed to stay above rate 
offered by local financial institutions).  The fact that the rates 
were fixed and not variable does not suggest otherwise.  See 
Pollack v. Laidlaw Holdings, Inc., 27 F.3d 808, 813 (2d Cir. 
1994) (noting that fixed rate bonds are regulated as securi-
ties).

     Stoiber argues that the customers provided funds because 
of the personal relationships he had with them.  His evidence 
includes affidavits submitted by the note holders, which state 
that "I believe Mr. Stoiber is an honest and successful 
business person, and I believe him to be a good risk to repay 
me the loan;  that is the reason why I loaned him this 
money."  This display of trust, however, does not speak to 
the note holders' original motivations in making the loans.  
Rather, it speaks to the information available to them when 
deciding whether the notes involved a tolerable level of risk.  
The only evidence in the record that sheds light on the 
customers' motivations indicates that profit in the form of 
interest was their primary goal.

     There is also a substantial difference between the goals of 
the parties in this case and those involved when banks 
provide character loans or commercial loans for current oper-
ations--two types of lending evidenced by notes that are not 
considered securities under Reves, and which Stoiber argues 
bear a "family resemblance" to his notes.  Character loans 
are generally offered in an attempt to cement or maintain an 
ongoing commercial relationship with the borrower.  A loan 
for current operations allows the borrower to achieve the 
commercial goal of continuing to operate a business smoothly 
during a period when cash inflows and outflows do not match 



up.  These purposes do not characterize the notes here.  
Unlike with a character loan, the note holders were not trying 
to satisfy a potential or actual customer.  Unlike with a loan 
for current operations, Stoiber was funding his entire endeav-
or, not just getting past a cash crunch.

2.The Second Reves Factor--Plan of Distribution

     Under the second Reves factor, we examine the plan of 
distribution of a note "to determine whether it is an instru-
ment in which there is common trading for speculation or 
investment."  Reves, 494 U.S. at 66 (citation and internal 
quotation marks omitted).  "[T]he requisite 'common trad-
ing' " is established if the instrument is "offered and sold to a 
broad segment of the public...."  Id. at 68.  

     This factor points in no clear direction in this case.  While 
the terms of the notes do not preclude trading in a secondary 
market, none have been resold and there is no indication that 
anyone has considered reselling them.  Nor do we think 
thirteen customers with whom Stoiber had a personal rela-
tionship constitute "a broad segment of the public."

     On the other hand, Stoiber solicited individuals, not sophis-
ticated institutions.  While his solicitations included individual 
presentations, he offered his customers little detail.  These 
facts suggest common trading.  See RTC v. Stone, 998 F.2d 
1534, 1539 (10th Cir. 1993);  Banco Espanol de Credito v. 
Security Pac. Nat'l Bank, 973 F.2d 51, 55 (2d Cir. 1992).

3.The Third Reves Factor--Expectations

     The Supreme Court described the third factor as follows:
     Third, we examine the reasonable expectations of the 
     investing public:  The Court will consider instruments to 
     be "securities" on the basis of such public expectations, 
     even where an economic analysis of the circumstances of 
     the particular transaction might suggest that the instru-
     ments are not "securities" as used in that transaction.

Reves, 494 U.S. at 66.

     Whether notes are reasonably perceived as securities gen-
erally turns on whether they are reasonably viewed by pur-


chasers as investments.  See id. at 68-69;  Pollack, 27 F.3d at 
814;  SEC v. R.G. Reynolds Enters., Inc., 952 F.2d 1125, 1131 
(9th Cir. 1991).  When a note seller calls a note an invest-
ment, in the absence of contrary indications "it would be 
reasonable for a prospective purchaser to take the [offeror] at 
its word."  Reves, 494 U.S. at 69.  See also R.G. Reynolds 
Enters., Inc., 952 F.2d at 1131.  Conversely, when note 
purchasers are expressly put on notice that a note is not an 
investment, it is usually reasonable to conclude that the 
"investing public" would not expect the notes to be securities.  
See Banco Espanol de Credito, 973 F.2d at 55-56.  Here, 
there is no indication that Stoiber called the notes invest-
ments.  Although of questionable value due to their concluso-
ry character, affidavits submitted by the customers stated 
that the notes were not considered to be investments.  The 
limited evidence thus suggests that Stoiber's investing public 
did not reasonably view the notes as securities.

     This admission does not, however, add much to the inquiry 
into whether the promissory notes are securities.  The Su-
preme Court itself described this factor as a one-way ratchet.  
See Reves, 494 U.S. at 66.  It allows notes that would not be 
deemed securities under a balancing of the other three fac-
tors nonetheless to be treated as securities if the public has 
been led to believe they are.  It does not, however, allow 
notes which under the other factors would be deemed securi-
ties to escape the reach of regulatory laws.  In this case, 
then, the third Reves factor is basically a wash.

4.The Fourth Reves Factor--Need for Federal Securities 
          Laws

     The fourth and final inquiry looks to the adequacy of 
regulatory schemes other than the federal Securities Acts in 
reducing risk to the lender.  Reves indicates that an alterna-
tive regulatory scheme, collateral, and insurance are all capa-
ble of reducing the risk to note holders sufficiently to render 
the protection of federal securities laws unnecessary.  See id. 
at 69;  see also Stone, 998 F.2d at 1539 (collateral).

     Stoiber argues that "the circumstances of the loans and the 
creditor/debtor laws of the State of Illinois already provide 



adequate protection to the lenders."  The circumstances he 
refers to are provisions in the notes for acceleration of 
payment upon default and recovery of collection costs and 
attorney fees.  We think these are significantly less valuable 
than collateral or insurance and not by our thinking an 
adequate substitute for the protection of federal law.  Unlike 
the securities laws, they do not provide any oversight over 
the initiation of the transactions or Stoiber's handling of the 
funds.  Indeed, part of why the SEC believes that Stoiber's 
failure to provide his firm notice of the note transactions 
represents a serious omission is that it denied the note 
holders the value of oversight by the firm as to how he used 
the money and whether he fulfilled the note obligations.  
Unlike collateral and insurance, acceleration provisions and 
the like in the notes do not guarantee recovery by the note 
holders if Stoiber loses everything in his commodities invest-
ments or defaults for some other reason.

     As for protection afforded by Illinois laws, Stoiber's reli-
ance on them would expand the types of alternative protec-
tion cognizable beyond those contemplated in Reves.8  The 
risk reducing factors described by the Reves Court operate to 
prevent investors from harm in the first place or, like insur-
ance and collateral, make recovery more likely after injury.  
In explaining the fourth factor, the Court looked to Marine 
Bank v. Weaver, 455 U.S. 551, 557-58 (1982), which involved 
certificates of deposit that were insured by the FDIC and the 
subject of substantial federal banking regulations.  See Reves, 
494 U.S. at 67, 69.  Similarly, the Second Circuit found an 
alternative regulatory scheme sufficient when the sale of the 
notes at issue was governed by guidelines of the Comptroller 

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     8 Stoiber explains that the state statute of limitations is longer, 
that punitive damages are available, and that unlike under federal 
securities law plaintiffs can sometimes succeed under the Illinois 
Consumer Fraud Act without demonstrating scienter.  See Petition-
er's Brief at 32.  He also explains that the venue and process 
service provisions of federal law are unnecessary because all of the 
note holders are Illinois residents and that the federal securities law 
controlling person liability provisions are unnecessary because Stoi-
ber provided the notes in his individual capacity.  See id. at 31.



of the Currency.  See Banco Espanol de Credito, 973 F.2d at 
55-56.  The provisions of Illinois law relied on by Stoiber are 
of a different type;  he asserts basically only that state courts 
are open and that injured note holders can bring lawsuits.  
Like his "circumstances of the loans," however, this opportu-
nity only operates post-injury and offers much less certainty 
than collateral and insurance.  We do not think Illinois law 
renders the protection of federal securities law unnecessary 
in this case.9

     Comparing Stoiber's notes to character and commercial 
loans offered by banks also suggests that the protection of 
federal securities law is not redundant here.  We agree with 
the SEC that bank loans and Stoiber's notes are very differ-
ent;  a bank has the expertise and the access to records 
needed to carefully assess a person's creditworthiness and 
financial plans.  Stoiber's customers had no such expertise or 
access.  While the long-lasting relationships between Stoiber 
and his customers did give the note holders personal informa-
tion about their solicitor not always available to bankers, we 
do not think this can be an adequate substitute for the 
objective data and analytical skills possessed by lending insti-
tutions.  Information and evaluation of friends based on 
personal relationships is often subject to manipulation and 
skewed by other facets of the relationships.

5.The Reves Factors Viewed Collectively

     Based on the four Reves factors, then, we conclude that the 
promissory notes executed by Stoiber are securities.  They 
do not bear a strong enough resemblance to the categories of 
notes declared by the Supreme Court to be outside the 
definition of securities and the four factors do not suggest 
that these notes should be treated as a new non-security 
category.  Admittedly the plan of distribution in part signals 

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     9 We therefore need not reach the open question of whether state 
law can ever be an adequate substitute under the fourth Reves 
factor.  See Pollack, 27 F.3d at 815.  This question stems from the 
statement in Reves that "the notes here would escape federal 
regulations entirely if the [Securities] Acts were held not to apply."  
Reves, 494 U.S. at 69 (emphasis added).



that the notes might not be securities, but that factor by itself 
is not dispositive.  See Trust Co. of Louisiana v. NNP Inc., 
104 F.3d 1478, 1489 (5th Cir. 1997) ("A debt instrument may 
be distributed to but one investor, yet still be a security.").  
The motivations of Stoiber and his customers and the lack of 
sufficient risk reducing factors other than federal securities 
laws strongly favor treating the notes as securities, despite 
the close plan of distribution.  The remaining factor--the 
reasonable expectations of the investing public--is not rele-
vant in this case.

     B.Whether the SEC Erred in Affirming the NASD's Sanc-
     tions

     Having determined that the notes are securities to which 
NASD's Section 40 applied, we consider the appropriateness 
of the sanctions.  Stoiber objects to the suspension, the 
restitution requirement, and the fine.  We review an SEC 
decision affirming sanctions imposed by the NASD against a 
broker for an abuse of discretion.  See Svalberg v. SEC, 876 
F.2d 181, 184 (D.C. Cir. 1989) (per curiam);  Seaton v. SEC, 
670 F.2d 309, 311 (D.C. Cir. 1982) (per curiam).

     In affirming Stoiber's sanctions, the SEC explained that 
they fell within the NASD's recommended range for serious 
conduct that deprived public investors of protection and im-
properly exposed Stoiber's employer to risk.  We note that 
the SEC has indeed treated this kind of violation seriously on 
numerous prior occasions.  See, e.g., In re Gilbert M. Hair & 
Vladimir Chorny, 51 S.E.C. 374, 378 & n.10 (1993).  Stoiber 
nonetheless counters with numerous reasons why he should 
have been accorded less severe sanctions, i.e., whether the 
notes are securities is a close call, he did not act willfully, he 
did not try to conceal the notes, he gave his firm oral notice of 
the loans, the customers were not injured, the customers and 
his firm did not seek disciplinary action, he has a spotless 
disciplinary record, and the customers declined rescission.

     In Seaton, this court affirmed a one year suspension in a 
similar situation.  The broker there sold securities to custom-
ers three times without his employer's knowledge and also 
answered questions falsely on an application to work with 



another firm.  See Seaton, 670 F.2d at 310.  At that time the 
NASD Rules of Fair Practice did not include Section 40, but 
Section 1 had been interpreted to include the written notifica-
tion requirement for brokers participating in private securi-
ties transactions.  See id.;  In re William Louis Morgan, 51 
S.E.C. 622, 625 n.12 (1993).  The case did not involve fraud or 
harm to any investors.  See Seaton, 670 F.2d at 311.  We 
stated that:

     We will not lightly disturb the findings of an agency in 
     its area of expertise.  In this case there is an undisputed 
     pattern of repeated violations, the significance of which 
     the Commission is better equipped to judge than this 
     Court.  There is no indication that the Commission has 
     abused its discretion in affirming the sanctions.

Id.  In another similar case, the SEC described violations as 
willful and entered permanent suspensions, even though the 
brokers involved apparently acted on advice of counsel.  See 
O'Leary v. SEC, 424 F.2d 908, 909, 912 (D.C. Cir. 1970).  The 
brokers were evidently first offenders and investors did not 
suffer any injury.  See id. at 912.  We upheld the suspen-
sions, noting that while the mitigating factors " 'might have 
warranted a lighter sanction, they did not require one.' "  Id. 
(quoting Tager v. SEC, 344 F.2d 5, 8 (2d Cir. 1965)).  Addi-
tionally, the NASD Sanction Guidelines call for consideration 
of a suspension of up to two years or, in egregious cases, a 
permanent bar.  See NASD Regulation, Inc., NASD Sanction 
Guidelines 15 (1998) ("Guidelines").  In light of Seaton, 
O'Leary, and the Guidelines, we cannot say that the six 
month suspension of Stoiber was an abuse of discretion.

     Stoiber contends that the restitution requirement is unjust-
ifiable in light of the uniformly rejected rescission offers he 
made under his agreement with the state of Illinois.  The 
SEC's concerns are not identical to those of Illinois, however, 
and Illinois never found Stoiber in violation of state laws or 
regulations, whereas the SEC found violations of the NASD 
Rules.  A stiffer response from the SEC is thus not surpris-
ing.  As the notes were at the core of Stoiber's violations, it 
was not an abuse of discretion for the SEC to require Stoiber 



to disgorge what he had obtained improperly.  See Hateley v. 
SEC, 8 F.3d 653, 656-57 (9th Cir. 1993) (ordering disgorge-
ment in amount equal to ill-gotten gain);  see also Guidelines 
at 7 n.2 ("restitution is an appropriate method of depriving a 
respondent of his or her ill-gotten gain").

     The SEC makes a convincing case that the size of the fine, 
$450,000 less restitution made within sixty days, is appropri-
ate under the NASD Guidelines.  The Guidelines call for a 
fine of $5,000 to $50,000 for violation of the written notifica-
tion requirement.  The SEC correctly asserts that it is 
entitled to treat Stoiber's actions as thirteen separate viola-
tions, one for each note.  See Svalberg, 876 F.2d at 185.  At a 
maximum $50,000 per violation, the ceiling goes up to 
$650,000.10  The SEC also argues that the Guidelines allow 
the fine to be increased by the amount of money received 
from the note holders.  While the Guidelines do allow adjudi-
cators to "add[ ] the amount of a respondent's financial bene-
fit," Guidelines at 15 n.2, the benefit to Stoiber here was only 
the temporary use of the money, not the amount of the notes 
in full.  The SEC does not need this extra fillip since the 
$5,000 to $50,000 Guidelines range for each violation is 
sufficient to demonstrate that the fine was not excessive.  We 
also note that three of the four "principal considerations" 
listed in the Guidelines with respect to this kind of violation 
militate in favor of a severe fine:  Stoiber was affiliated with 
the issuer (he was the issuer), he sold the notes to customers 
of the firm, and he did not provide the firm with "verbal 
notice of all relevant factors."11  Guidelines at 15.  Addition-
ally, although Stoiber argues that the note holders have not 
suffered any injury, the Guidelines state that "[a]djudicators 
should not consider whether the investment or enterprise was 
successful."  Id. at 15 n.1.  We conclude then that the SEC 

__________
     10 Even if we considered only the eleven violations that occurred 
within the time frame initially listed in the complaint, see supra 
note 1, the ceiling would still be greater than the fine imposed.

     11 The SEC observed that Stoiber only "spoke [with the compli-
ance director] generically about obtaining loans."  In re Gerald 
James Stoiber, 65 S.E.C. Docket at 1101 n.23.



did not abuse its discretion in affirming the fine imposed by 
the NASD.

     C.Whether the Fine Violates the Eighth Amendment

     Stoiber also argues that the fine violates the Eighth 
Amendment's Excessive Fines Clause12 because it is not 
proportional to his misconduct.  We consider this argument 
waived because Stoiber failed to raise it before the SEC as 
required by statute:

     No objection to an order or rule of the Commission, for 
     which review is sought under this section, may be consid-
     ered by the court unless it was urged before the Com-
     mission or there was reasonable ground for failure to do 
     so.

15 U.S.C. s 78y(c)(1).  This requirement is not inapplicable 
solely because the objection not urged before the SEC is a 
constitutional one.  See C.E. Carlson, Inc. v. SEC, 859 F.2d 
1429, 1439 (10th Cir. 1988).

     The failure to raise an issue in a prior forum is excusable 
when due to an intervening change in the law, see Association 
of Bituminous Contractors, Inc. v. Apfel, 156 F.3d 1246, 1254 
n.5 (D.C. Cir. 1998);  Roosevelt v. E.I. Du Pont de Nemours & 
Co., 958 F.2d 416, 419 & n.5 (D.C. Cir. 1992), but no such 
exception is applicable here.  Stoiber contends that United 
States v. Bajakajian, 118 S. Ct. 2028 (1998), decided after the 
SEC affirmed the NASD in his case, "is a landmark decision 
that breathed new life into Eighth Amendment jurispru-
dence."  Although Bajakajian did reject a fine because of a 
lack of proportionality with the offense, it certainly was not 
the source of any new or novel proportionality requirement.  
See Pharaon v. Board of Governors of Fed. Reserve Sys., 135 
F.3d 148, 156 (D.C. Cir.), cert. denied, 119 S. Ct. 371 (1998) 
(stating, months before Bajakajian was decided, that the 
"Clause requires us to consider the value of the fine in 
relation to the offense").  Bajakajian did not elevate Stoi-
ber's Excessive Fines claim "from completely untenable to 

__________
     12 "Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines im-
posed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted."


plausible."  United States v. Byers, 740 F.2d 1104, 1116 n.11 
(D.C. Cir. 1984) (en banc).  Stoiber's objection to the fine on 
other grounds before the agency was not sufficient to avert 
waiver on this one.

                               III. Conclusion


     Because the SEC correctly determined that the promissory 
notes are securities, the sanctions do not constitute an abuse 
of discretion, and Stoiber waived his Eighth Amendment 
claim, the petition for review is denied.

So ordered.