Securities and Exchange Commission Historical Society

Chasing the Devil Around the Stump: Securities Regulation, the SEC and the Courts

Limits of Federal Regulation

The Norm of Common Law: Strong v. Repide and Standard Oil v. United States

“Stone grows on one. Many of my insights are not his. But he is brave and honorable. He thinks straight. He fights for his principles, and I think he knows, in the way I hope to have known, the necessary limitations we must place on ourselves as a court.”

1925 – 1932 Excerpts of letters from Associate Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes to Professor Harold Laski

In the late 1890s and early 1900s, the Supreme Court decided a mere handful of cases affecting the securities markets. This was due in large part to the lack of a strong national regulatory presence in market regulation. When it faced such cases, the Court often used common law rules to make its decisions.

The development of common law rules -- rules made by courts that espoused general principles which would then be applied to other cases with similar facts -- were first developed by state courts. The federal court system did not have an independent source of common law rules. When a case arose where the law of several states might apply, federal courts would apply the state statutory law of the relevant jurisdiction.9

In 1909, the Supreme Court, in Strong v. Repide, gave impetus to the trend of using the common law of fraud to permit recovery by plaintiffs. Strong v. Repide was an insider trading case arising from the sale of stock in the Philippine Sugar Estates Development Company to one of the directors of the company. The defendant, while negotiating the purchase of the plaintiff's stock, was simultaneously negotiating the sale of the corporate land assets to the Philippine government.10

The defendant took extraordinary efforts to conceal the information about the negotiations, and was able to purchase the stock from the stockholder for about one-tenth of its actual value. In a decision written by Justice Peckham, the Supreme Court refused to follow either the then-accepted majority or minority rule, adopting instead a third approach. It held that, under the special facts of the case, "the law would indeed be impotent if the sale could not be set aside or the defendant case in damages for his fraud."11 This new rule meant that, although directors generally had no duty to disclose material facts when trading with shareholders, a duty might arise where there were special circumstances, such as concealment of the defendant-seller's identity (the corporate officer had used an agent go-between to avoid detection of his actions by the seller) and a failure to disclose significant facts that materially affected the price of the stock.

Although in Strong v. Repide, the Supreme Court developed and applied common law fraud principles to protect an innocent purchaser, in many other areas of financial regulation, deference to the accepted boundaries of state economic regulation meant that those cases often remained beyond the purview of national regulation. In 1911, antitrust law became an exception to that practice when the Supreme Court revisited the meaning of the federal Sherman Antitrust Act in Standard Oil Company v. United States.

For years, progressives had been attempting to stop the powerful misconduct of the company which had left a trail of ruined competitors in its wake. Standard Oil had grown its national monopoly by acquiring stock control of numerous refining companies, extracting preferential rail rates from shippers, and aggregating so vast a capital as to exclude others from the oil drilling, refining and retail markets. At issue was whether Standard Oil had violated the Sherman Act and should be dissolved. Justice White, writing for the majority, returned to common law principles in holding that, while Congress did not specify in the antitrust act a standard to judge which restraints under the Sherman Act were illegal, the statute “indubitably contemplating and requiring a standard” must have intended to employ the common law “standard of reason.”12 In these cases, the Supreme Court used the common law as a legitimate and principled tool for adjudicating economic disputes while protecting individual liberty of contract.


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Footnotes:

(9) See Swift v Tyson, 41 US 1 (1842), overruled in Erie Railroad v. Tompkins, 304 US 64 (1938). Where the national interest was so strong, the doctrine of federal preemption might apply as an exception to federal application of state common law rule. See Richard A. Epstein and Michael S. Greve, Federal Preemption: States’ Powers (National Interests, AIE Press: Washington, DC, 2007).

(11) Strong v. Repide, 430.

(12) Standard Oil Company v United States, 221 US 1 (1911); see also Edward F. Mannino, Shaping America: The Supreme Court and American Society (The University of South Carolina Press: Columbia, 2009), 98-99.


Related Museum Resources

Papers

March 10, 1897
transcript pdf (Willis Van Devanter Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
March 11, 1897
transcript pdf (Willis Van Devanter Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
September 11, 1897
image pdf (Melville W. Fuller Papers, courtesy of Library of Congress)
December 8, 1903
transcript pdf (Melville W. Fuller Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
December 14, 1903
image pdf (Melville W. Fuller Papers, courtesy of Library of Congress)
January 24, 1907
transcript pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
February 14, 1907
transcript pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
January 1910
transcript pdf (Courtesy of National Archives and Records Administration)
March 11, 1910
transcript pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
April 2, 1910
transcript pdf (Willis Van Devanter Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
April 6, 1910
transcript pdf (Willis Van Devanter Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
October 25, 1910
transcript pdf (Willis Van Devanter Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
October 25, 1910
transcript pdf (Willis Van Devanter Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
November 16, 1910
transcript pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
January 25, 1911
transcript pdf (Courtesy of National Archives and Records Administration)
April 10, 1911
transcript pdf (Willis Van Devanter Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
May 29, 1911
transcript pdf (Willis Van Devanter Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
June 1, 1911
transcript pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
June 4, 1911
transcript pdf (Willis Van Devanter Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
July 12, 1911
transcript pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
July 13, 1911
transcript pdf (Willis Van Devanter Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
July 24, 1911
transcript pdf (Willis Van Devanter Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
August 16, 1911
transcript pdf (Willis Van Devanter Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
November 1, 1911
transcript pdf (Willis Van Devanter Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
February 9, 1912
transcript pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
March 5, 1912
transcript pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
November 13, 1913
transcript pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
April 25, 1914
transcript pdf (Willis Van Devanter Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
January 7, 1916
image pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy of Library of Congress)
March 9, 1916
transcript pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
June 30, 1916
image pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy of Library of Congress)
November 11, 1916
image pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy of Library of Congress)
September 6, 1917
transcript pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
July 3, 1918
transcript pdf (Louis D. Brandeis Papers, Brandeis School of Law, University of Louisville)
July 19, 1918
transcript pdf (Louis D. Brandeis Papers, Brandeis School of Law, University of Louisville)
March 15, 1920
transcript pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
June 26, 1920
transcript pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
November 10, 1920
transcript pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
December 10, 1920
transcript pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
May 12, 1922
transcript pdf (Willis Van Devanter Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
August 31, 1922
transcript pdf (Willis Van Devanter Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
September 4, 1922
transcript pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
September 10, 1922
transcript pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
April 10, 1923
transcript pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
May 5, 1923
image pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy of Library of Congress)
1925 - 1932
transcript pdf (Earl Warren Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
December 11, 1925
transcript pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
December 17, 1925
transcript pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
January 13, 1926
transcript pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
July 17, 1926
transcript pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
July 25, 1928
transcript pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
December 28, 1928
transcript pdf (William H. Moody Papers, courtesy Library of Congress)
June 27, 1963
transcript pdf (With permission of the Pierce Butler Family Papers, Minnesota Historical Society)

Galleries

Fair To All People: The SEC and the Regulation of Insider Trading

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