Source: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-ca2-19-00560/USCOURTS-ca2-19-00560-0/pdf.json

Nature of Suit Code: 850
Nature of Suit: Securities, Commodities, Exchange
Cause of Action: 

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19-560-cv

Rubenstein v. Int’l Value Advisers, LLC

1

1 In the

2 United States Court of Appeals

3 For the Second Circuit

4

5

6 August Term 2019

7

8 No. 19-560-cv

9

10

11 AARON RUBENSTEIN,

12 Plaintiff-Appellant,

13

14 v.

15

16 INTERNATIONAL VALUE ADVISERS, LLC, CHARLES DE VAULX, CHARLES DE 

17 LARDEMELLE,

18 Defendants-Appellees,

19

20 ADTALEM GLOBAL EDUCATION SERVICES (F/K/A DEVRY EDUCATION GROUP, INC.),

21 Nominal Defendant22 Appellee,

23

24 JOHN DOE, AN UNIDENTIFIED IVA CLIENT,

Defendant.† 25

26

27

28

29 Appeal from the United States District Court

30 for the Southern District of New York

31 No. 18-cv-81,

32 Paul A. Engelmayer, District Judge, Presiding.

33 (Argued October 23, 2019; Decided May 20, 2020)

34

† The Clerk of Court is directed to modify the caption to conform to the above.

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1

2

3 Before: KEARSE, PARKER, and SULLIVAN, Circuit Judges.

4

5 Plaintiff-Appellant Aaron Rubenstein appeals from an order of the United 

6 States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Engelmayer, J.)

7 dismissing his complaint under Section 16(b) of the Securities Exchange Act for 

8 failure to state a claim. We hold that an investment management agreement 

9 delegating discretionary investment authority to an investment advisor is not an 

10 agreement to trade in the securities of an issuer and, therefore, is not a

11 standalone basis for membership in an insider group. Moreover, we hold that 

12 such an investment advisor’s client does not become an insider group member 

13 simply because the advisor has filed a Schedule 13D or deputized a director on 

14 an issuer’s board. Consequently, clients who have not entered an issuer-specific 

15 trading agreement are not liable for disgorgement of short-swing profits solely 

16 by virtue of their investment advisor’s insider status.

17

18 AFFIRMED.

19

20 MIRIAM TAUBER (David Lopez, Law 

21 Office of David Lopez, Southampton, 

22 NY, on the brief), Miriam Tauber Law 

23 PLLC, New York, NY, for Plaintiff24 Appellant.

25

26 DENNIS HENRY TRACEY, III (Robin Muir, 

27 on the brief), Hogan Lovells US LLP, 

28 New York, NY, for Defendants-Appellees.

29

30 SUSAN SALTZSTEIN, Skadden, Arps, 

31 Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP, New York, 

32 NY, for Nominal Defendant-Appellee.

33

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1 BARRINGTON D. PARKER, Circuit Judge:

2 Plaintiff-Appellant Aaron Rubenstein appeals from an order of the United 

3 States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Engelmayer, J.) 

4 dismissing, under Rule 12(b)(6), his complaint alleging violations of Section 16(b) 

5 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the “‘34 Act”). The issue presented is 

6 whether a client of an investment advisor became a member of a Section 13(d) 

7 group with his investment advisor and the advisor’s other clients merely because 

8 he and the other clients had delegated discretionary investment authority to the 

9 advisor and the advisor had purchased for the client’s account shares of the same

10 issuer that was the subject of the advisor’s Schedule 13D filing. We agree with 

11 the court below that the client did not thereby become a member of a group and

12 that the client was not obliged to disgorge his short-swing profits. Accordingly,

13 we affirm the order of the district court.

14 To prevent insiders of a securities issuer from trading on material non15 public information, Section 16(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 imposes 

16 strict liability on certain insiders of an issuer, requiring them to disgorge to the 

17 issuer any profits they realize from short-swing trading in the issuer’s securities. 

18 As defined by Section 16(b), short-swing trading is “any purchase and sale, or 

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1 any sale and purchase, of any equity security of such issuer . . . within any period 

2 of less than six months . . . irrespective of any intention on the part of [the 

3 insider].” 15 U.S.C. § 78p(b). Among the insiders subject to the rule are directors 

4 and officers of the issuer, as well as “[e]very person who is directly or indirectly 

5 the beneficial owner of more than 10 percent of any class of any equity security” 

of the issuer. Id.1 6 Section 16(b) is known as the “short-swing profit rule.”

7 In addition to requiring individual statutory insiders to disgorge short8 swing profits, the ’34 Act provides for “group” liability. Section 13(d)(3) provides 

9 that “[w]hen two or more persons act as a . . . group for the purpose of acquiring, 

10 holding, or disposing of securities of an issuer,” the group shall be deemed a

1 The definition of “beneficial owner” under the statute is somewhat involved. 

First, Section 13(d) defines a “beneficial owner” as “any person who . . . has or 

shares: (1) Voting power which includes the power to vote, or to direct the voting 

of, [a] security; and/or, (2) Investment power which includes the power to 

dispose, or to direct the disposition of, [a] security.” 17 C.F.R. § 240.13d-3(a). 

With certain exceptions, this definition is employed to determine who qualifies 

as a statutory insider subject to the short-swing profit rule. Id. § 240.16a-1(a)(1). 

Next, Section 16(b) narrows the class of transactions subject to the rule by 

defining “beneficial owner” as “any person who, directly or indirectly . . . has or 

shares a direct or indirect pecuniary interest in the equity securities.” Id. § 

240.16a-1(a)(2). A pecuniary interest is an “opportunity, directly or indirectly, to 

profit or share in any profit derived from a transaction in the subject securities,” 

id. § 240.16a-1(a)(2)(i), and may include a “performance-related fee, other than an 

asset-based fee, received by . . . [an] investment manager,” id. § 240.16a1(a)(2)(ii)(C).

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”person” subject to Section 16(b). Id. § 78m(d)(3). 1 2 A group is formed “[w]hen 

2 two or more persons agree to act together for the purpose of acquiring, holding, 

3 voting or disposing of equity securities of an issuer.” 17 C.F.R. § 240.13d-5(b)(1).

4 The group is then “deemed to have acquired beneficial ownership . . . of all 

5 equity securities of that issuer beneficially owned by any [group members].” Id. 

6 Consequently, if members of a group collectively hold more than 10% of any 

7 class of equity securities of an issuer, each member of the group is subject to the 

8 short-swing profit rule. See id. § 240.16a-1(a)(3). The dispositive issue on this 

9 appeal is whether John Doe, an anonymous defendant, became a member of such 

10 a group.

11 Defendant International Value Advisers (“IVA”) is an investment advisor 

12 registered under Section 203 of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940. Defendants 

13 Charles de Vaulx and Charles de Lardemelle are the managing members of IVA, 

14 as well as portfolio managers for IVA-managed funds and separately managed 

15 client accounts. Rubenstein holds shares in AdTalem Global Education Services,

16 formerly known as DeVry Education Group (“DeVry”). The “John Doe” 

17 defendant is the owner of a brokerage trading account managed by IVA, and

2 See also 17 C.F.R. § 240.16a-1(a)(1) (applying the preceding definition, drawn 

from Section 13(d), for purposes of Section 16(b) liability).

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1 IVA exercises discretionary authority over that account. That account holds 

2 shares of DeVry selected and purchased for it by IVA acting as its investment

3 manager. Although that account does not hold more than 10% of DeVry shares, 

4 John Doe, the IVA defendants, and IVA’s other clients collectively owned 19.5% 

5 of DeVry’s outstanding common stock.

6 Between June and December 2016, the IVA defendants reported on 

7 ownership reports filed under Section 13(d) and Section 16(a) of the ’34 Act that 

8 they beneficially owned, through their voting and investment power over their 

9 advisee-clients, more than 10% of DeVry’s outstanding common stock.

10 Specifically, at various times in 2016, the IVA defendants filed Schedule 13Ds

11 with the SEC indicating that, in accumulating their position in DeVry, they had 

12 formed a “control purpose” with respect to DeVry and that they sought the 

13 appointment of IVA’s managing partner to the DeVry board to represent the 

14 investment interests of IVA and its clients who held DeVry shares.

15 No one disputes that, at this point, the IVA defendants were subject to 

16 Section 16(b)’s short-swing profit rule. In July 2016, IVA, as investment manager 

17 for John Doe’s account, purchased 31,847 shares of DeVry and within six months 

18 sold DeVry shares at a profit. If John Doe were a member of a group with the 

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1 IVA defendants and their other clients, he would have been a statutory insider 

2 subject to the short-swing profit rule because the IVA defendants were insiders 

3 and their clients collectively owned more than 10% of DeVry common stock. If 

4 not, he would not have been subject to the rule. Accordingly, what the parties

5 contest is whether John Doe was a member of an insider group with IVA and its 

6 clients and consequently obligated to return the short-swing profits. 

7 Rubenstein sued, alleging that John Doe was a member of a group with the 

8 IVA defendants and IVA’s other clients. He contended that John Doe’s 

9 investment management agreement with IVA qualified as an agreement to trade 

10 in the securities of an issuer under Section 13(d). He further theorized that the 

11 IVA defendants’ filing of a Schedule 13D automatically caused John Doe to 

12 become a member of a group by “silent acquiescence.” In other words,

13 Rubenstein alleged that the filing of the Schedule 13D put an owner of DeVry 

14 shares in a managed account (such as John Doe) on notice of the IVA defendants’

15 control purpose and that the owner thereby “agreed” to become part of the 

16 group by failing to terminate the IVA defendants’ control of the managed 

17 account.

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Rubenstein v. Int’l Value Advisers, LLC

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1 Defendants moved to dismiss the complaint and the district court granted 

2 the motion. The court observed that the touchstone of a group under Section 

3 13(d) is that its members combined in furtherance of a common objective. The 

4 court held that the complaint did not plausibly allege a common objective 

5 between the IVA defendants, who had a control purpose, and John Doe, whose 

6 DeVry shares had been purchased for his account on a discretionary basis by his 

7 investment manager. In other words, the court held that Rubenstein had not 

8 plausibly pled the existence of a Section 13(d) agreement. Rubenstein v. Int’l Value 

9 Advisers, LLC, 363 F. Supp. 3d 379, 394-95 (S.D.N.Y. 2019).

10 The court further concluded that the applicable Section 13(d) rule, in 

11 addition to requiring an agreement, required its members to have acted together 

12 for the purpose of acquiring not just any security but the securities of “an issuer,” 

13 meaning a particular issuer. Because the complaint did not plausibly allege that 

14 this had occurred, the court determined that John Doe did not become a member 

15 of a 13(d) group and could not be required to return his DeVry profits. Id. at 392.

16 This appeal followed. “We review a district court’s grant of a motion to 

17 dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) de novo.” Edwards v. Sequoia Fund, Inc., 938 F.3d 8, 12 

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1 (2d Cir. 2019); see also Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 678 (2009); Bell Atl. Corp. v. 

2 Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 555-56 (2007).

3 DISCUSSION

4 Resolution of this appeal turns on whether John Doe was a member of an 

5 insider group. We hold that he was not. Our holding follows from the text and 

6 structure of the ’34 Act and its implementing regulations, as well as the 

7 legislative purpose behind the short-swing profit rule. Moreover, we are 

8 unmoved by Rubenstein’s arguments to the contrary, which are based either on a 

9 misunderstanding of certain regulatory exemptions or on erroneous legal 

10 positions.

11 I.

12 A Section 13(d) group is formed “[w]hen two or more persons agree to act 

13 together for the purpose of acquiring, holding, voting or disposing of equity 

14 securities of an issuer.” 17 C.F.R. § 240.13d-5(b)(1). The group is then deemed to 

15 have acquired beneficial ownership of all equity securities of that issuer 

16 beneficially owned by any group members. If the group’s collective holdings 

17 exceed 10% of any class of the issuer’s outstanding equity securities, then each

18 group member is subject to the short-swing profit rule. See id. § 240.16a-1(a)(3).

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1 Rubenstein does not allege that any defendants are liable for short-swing 

2 profits except John Doe, who realized the profits in an account managed for him 

3 by IVA. It is not disputed that the other defendants were statutory insiders who 

4 would have been obligated to return short-swing profits had they realized them. 

5 They were required to file, and did file, Schedule 13Ds.

6 Rubenstein relies principally on the theory that IVA’s clients became 

7 members of a group with their investment advisor and its other clients when 

8 they signed investment management agreements delegating discretionary 

9 trading authority to IVA. We do not agree. Rubenstein’s theory is incompatible 

10 with the text of the ’34 Act and its implementing regulations. Both provide that a 

11 group is formed when multiple individuals agree to act together “for the 

12 purpose of acquiring, holding, or disposing of securities of an issuer.” 15 U.S.C. § 

13 78m(d)(3) (emphasis added); see also 17 C.F.R. § 240.13d-5(b)(1). The regulations 

14 then deem the group members “to have acquired beneficial ownership . . . of all 

15 equity securities of that issuer beneficially owned by any [group members].” 17 

16 C.F.R. § 240.13d-5(b)(1) (emphasis added).

17 We straightforwardly conclude that these provisions impose liability only 

18 when insiders enter an agreement, as defined in 17 C.F.R. § 13d-5(b)(1), to trade

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1 the securities of a particular issuer. In American Standard, Inc. v. Crane Co., we said 

2 that because Section 16(b) “speaks of ‘such issuer’ in the singular,” there is “no 

3 room for a grammatical construction that would convert the singular into a 

4 plural.” 510 F.2d 1043, 1058 (2d Cir. 1974); see also Roth v. Jennings, 489 F.3d 499, 

5 510-12 (2d Cir. 2007); Morales v. Quintel Entm’t, Inc., 249 F.3d 115, 125-26 (2d Cir. 

6 2001); Morales v. Freund, 163 F.3d 763, 767 (2d Cir. 1999).

7 Rubenstein does not allege the existence of any such agreement. He admits

8 that the only agreement between the IVA defendants and John Doe is an 

9 investment management agreement under which John Doe gave the IVA 

10 defendants discretionary authority to trade securities in his account and agreed 

11 to pay them a fee for these services. Neither DeVry nor any other issuer was 

12 identified as one whose stock IVA might purchase for John Doe’s account. In 

13 addition, the investment management agreement did not address whether, or to 

14 what extent, the IVA defendants might purchase or sell the same securities for 

15 the other accounts they managed; nor did the investment management 

16 agreement touch on the subject of whether the IVA defendants might seek to 

17 influence or control an issuer whose shares might be in an account they 

18 managed. Consequently, Rubenstein is simply wrong when he contends that the 

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1 investment management agreement constituted an “agreement” to trade in

2 DeVry securities under Section 13(d) and 17 C.F.R. § 240.13d-5(b)(1).

3 An investment advisory client does not form a group with its investment 

4 advisor by merely entering into an investment advisory relationship. Nor does 

5 an investor become a member of a group solely because his or her advisor caused 

6 other (or all) of its clients to invest in securities of the same issuer. And 

7 Rubenstein points us to nothing else that might constitute an “agreement” or

8 demonstrate a “common objective” to trade in the securities of “an issuer.”

9 II.

10 In addition to its incompatibility with the text of the statutes and rules, 

11 Rubenstein’s interpretation does not serve the purpose of the statute, which is 

12 designed to “prevent a group of persons who seek to pool their voting or other 

13 interests in the securities of an issuer from evading the provisions of the statute 

14 because no one individual owns more than 10 percent of the securities.” H.R. 

15 Rep. No. 90-1711 (1968), as reprinted in 1968 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2811, 2818; see also 

16 Quintel, 249 F.3d at 123 (“[T]he purpose of the provision was to prevent evasion 

17 of the disclosure requirement.”). Rubenstein has never alleged that IVA’s clients 

18 sought to pool their shares to evade the requirements of the statute. See generally 

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1 Magma Power Co. v. Dow Chem. Co., 136 F.3d 316, 320 (2d Cir. 1998) (holding that 

2 courts should evaluate short-swing transactions pragmatically to determine 

3 whether they serve as a “vehicle for the evil which Congress sought to prevent”

4 (quoting Kern Cty. Land Co. v. Occidental Petroleum Corp., 411 U.S. 582, 594 

5 (1973))).

6 Nonetheless, Rubenstein offers a variety of policy arguments in support of 

7 his position, none of which persuades us. For example, he contends that our 

8 holding will facilitate illicit insider trading. Section 16(b) is designed to prevent 

9 abuse of inside information by prohibiting a narrow class of trades that Congress 

10 viewed as particularly likely to be based on such information. Rubenstein voices

11 the concern that our holding will enable investment managers to evade Section 

12 16(b) and to abuse inside information by trading in client funds rather than their 

13 own funds because client funds may not be subject to disgorgement. He argues 

14 that if clients are not members of a group with their advisor, then their advisor 

15 will be able to trade its clients’ shares using inside information and to earn 

16 profits from those trades.

17 Because of the strict liability imposed by Section 16(b), the Supreme Court 

18 has cautioned against exceeding the “narrowly drawn limits” on the class of 

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1 corporate insiders who may be subject to the statute. Gollust v. Mendell, 501 U.S. 

2 115, 122 (1991) (quoting Foremost-McKesson, Inc. v. Provident Sec. Co., 423 U.S. 232, 

3 251 (1976)); accord Reliance Elec. Co. v. Emerson Elec. Co., 404 U.S. 418, 427 (1972).

4 Accordingly, we may not expand the boundaries of the statute merely to address 

5 Rubenstein’s concerns.

6 In any case, Congress has chosen to address Rubenstein’s concerns in other 

7 ways. Exempting certain client profits from Section 16(b) does not insulate 

8 investment advisors from liability under the more general anti-fraud provisions 

9 of the ‘34 Act: Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5. If IVA had improperly used inside 

10 information to trade in its clients’ accounts, it could be subject to Rule 10b-5, 

11 regardless of whether its clients were part of an insider group. Section 16(b) 

12 addresses only a narrow class of potential insider trading. By contrast, Rule 10b-5 

13 addresses a broader sphere, including the insider trading that Rubenstein asks 

14 Section 16(b) to police. Trading that passes muster under Section 16(b) may not 

15 do so under Rule 10b-5. Rubenstein’s fear that our holding will offer a safe 

16 harbor to investment managers engaged in insider trading is consequently 

17 unwarranted. Suffice it to say that his complaint contains no allegations that Rule 

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1 10b-5 has been violated, and that provision plays no part in our resolution of this 

2 case.

3 Rubenstein next complains that our holding will undermine Section 13(d)’s 

disclosure requirement.3 4 Section 13(d) requires persons who are the beneficial 

5 owners of more than 5% of a company’s shares to file a disclosure statement with 

6 the SEC. 15 U.S.C. § 78m(d). The requirement is designed to alert investors when 

7 shareholders acquire potentially controlling interests in corporations. Rubenstein

8 argues that our holding will enable investment advisors to exercise control over 

9 companies without disclosing their interests if they distribute shares among their 

10 clients’ accounts such that the advisors’ own holdings never reach the 5%

11 threshold.

12 However, this argument overlooks the fact that investment advisors may 

13 qualify as beneficial owners of shares in their clients’ accounts, for purposes of 

14 Section 13(d), regardless of whether they form an insider group with their clients.

15 When their clients’ holdings in a security collectively reach the 5% threshold, the

16 advisors may be subject to Section 13(d)’s reporting requirements. This is 

17 because Rule 13d-3 defines beneficial ownership not by pecuniary interest in a 

3 The definition of “group” that applies in Section 16(b) cases is drawn from 

Section 13(d).

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1 security but rather by reference to the power to vote or dispose of that security. 

17 C.F.R. § 240.13d-3(a). 2 4 Consequently, investment advisors who trade their 

3 clients’ shares are deemed beneficial owners of those shares, and their clients’ 

4 holdings count toward their own beneficial ownership of a security, under 

5 Section 13(d). Advisors who purchase a sufficient quantity of a security in their 

6 clients’ managed accounts will become subject to Section 13(d)’s disclosure 

7 requirement even if they do not form an insider group with their clients. Indeed, 

8 this is one reason why IVA filed a Schedule 13D disclosing its insider status with 

9 respect to DeVry. Consequently, Rubenstein’s concern is misplaced, and his 

10 policy arguments do not persuade us that IVA formed an insider group with its 

11 clients.

12 III.

13 Seeking to expand the scope of group liability, Rubenstein points us to 

14 Rule 16a-1’s exemption of certain registered investment advisors (“RIAs”) from 

the short-swing profit rule. 15 5 This exemption applies to enumerated “institutions 

4 As discussed above, Section 16(b) adopts a second definition of beneficial 

ownership to narrow the class of transactions subject to the short-swing profit 

rule. The Section 16(b) definition does refer to pecuniary interest in a security, 

but that definition does not apply to Section 13(d)’s disclosure requirement.

5 The SEC adopted this exemption “to avoid undue interference with the day-today business of banks, brokers, dealers, investment advisers and other specified 

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1 or persons” who hold securities “for the benefit of third parties or in customer or 

2 fiduciary accounts in the ordinary course of business,” provided that the shares 

3 are acquired “without the purpose or effect of changing or influencing control of 

4 the issuer or [evading reporting requirements].” 17 C.F.R. § 240.16a-1(a)(1).

5 When a covered institution or person satisfies these requirements, it does not 

6 qualify as the beneficial owner of its customers’ securities for the purpose of the 

7 short-swing profit rule’s 10% ownership threshold (i.e., its customers’ holdings 

do not count toward its own holdings).6 8

9 Rubenstein argues that because IVA does not qualify for the RIA 

10 exemption, given its control purpose with respect to DeVry, its clients must be 

institutional fiduciaries and custodians.” Ownership Reports and Trading by 

Officers, Directors and Principal Security Holders, Exchange Act Release No. 

27148, 54 Fed. Reg. 35667 (Aug. 29, 1989).

6 Above, we emphasized that a client’s holdings generally count toward its 

investment manager’s beneficial ownership of a security for purposes of Section 

13(d). Rule 16a-1’s RIA exemption applies only to Section 16—which employs a 

second definition of beneficial ownership and does not affect our analysis of 

Section 13(d). Additionally, the RIA exemption applies “[s]olely for purposes of 

determining whether a person is a beneficial owner of more than ten percent of 

any class of equity securities.” 17 C.F.R. § 240.16a-1(a)(1). Once a person is 

deemed the beneficial owner of more than 10%, then the RIA exemption is no 

longer relevant. For this reason, an advisor who satisfies the RIA exemption but 

independently qualifies as a statutory insider (e.g., holds more than 10% of a 

class of securities in its own account or has deputized a director on an issuer’s 

board) may be required to disgorge its performance-related fees. See id. § 240.16a1(a)(2)(ii)(C).

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1 liable as a group. Through this argument, he attempts to turn an exemption that 

2 may provide advisors a safe harbor into a rule that advisors must satisfy. In

3 making this attempt, he misses the mark because it is the liability of an IVA 

4 client, rather than IVA itself, that is at issue. The RIA exemption excludes certain

5 RIAs from the definition of “beneficial owner”; it does not affect persons who are 

6 not RIAs (e.g., their clients). Even more importantly, the exemption makes no

7 reference to group agreements. Whether IVA satisfied the RIA exemption or was

8 a beneficial owner of the securities in question has no bearing on the question of 

9 whether it and its clients entered an agreement that would subject it to group 

10 liability.

11 The structure of the statute and rules confirms the independence of the 

12 RIA exemption from the definition of a group. “Group” is defined in Section 

13 13(d) of the ’34 Act, and this definition is applied to Section 16(b) by Rule 16a-1. 

14 The RIA exemption, however, applies “solely to Section 16 of the Act.” 17 C.F.R. 

15 § 240.16a-1. Accordingly, it filters certain persons who are subject to Section 13(d) 

16 out of the pool of persons subject to Section 16(b); it does not expand the class of 

17 persons treated as group members under Section 13(d). In a group liability case, 

18 if a court determines that a Section 13(d) group has not been formed, the RIA 

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1 exemption issue falls by the wayside. In other words, if a group liability 

2 defendant has not entered an issuer-specific trading agreement, a court need not 

3 ask whether his investment advisor satisfies the RIA exemption.

4 In pursuit of this argument, Rubenstein directs us to Egghead.com, Inc. v. 

5 Brookhaven Capital Management Co., in which we held that investment advisors 

6 are not deemed beneficial owners of their clients’ shares, for purposes of Section 

7 16(b), when they satisfy the RIA exemption. 340 F.3d 79, 84 (2d Cir. 2003). This 

8 straightforward rule does not change our result. This case turns on the criteria for 

9 group agreement, not on whether IVA was a beneficial owner of its clients’ 

10 securities. Moreover, Egghead says nothing about liability when an advisor does

11 not meet the RIA exemption.

12 Simply put, the RIA exemption is a separate component of the short-swing 

13 profit rule that is not relevant to this case. When an investment advisor and its 

14 clients have not entered an agreement to acquire, hold, vote, or dispose of the 

15 securities of a particular issuer, they do not qualify as an insider group. This 

16 result is not changed by the RIA exemption. 

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1 IV.

2 In the absence of any agreement to trade in the securities of an issuer,

3 Rubenstein argues for a theory of implied agreement. IVA was a statutory 

4 insider that filed a Schedule 13D with the SEC disclosing its status. Rubenstein 

5 contends that by silently acquiescing in their advisor’s trading for their benefit 

6 after the advisor filed that form, IVA’s clients implicitly agreed to trade in the 

7 securities of DeVry as members of the insider group.

8 We find no support for this theory in the relevant statutes or regulations.

9 Rubenstein would have us treat all investors as though they were conscious of 

10 the securities held by their advisors’ other clients and would mandate that they

11 tailor their investment decisions to those other clients’ trades. He would further 

12 require them to monitor their advisors’ activity on various corporate boards and 

13 to assess whether their advisors may have adopted a control purpose with 

14 respect to particular issuers. Such requirements are impracticable ones that are 

15 not contemplated by the securities laws. Section 16(b) is not designed to threaten 

16 liability based on the trades of other investors to whom a defendant’s only 

17 connection is sharing an investment advisor.

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1 Rubenstein claims that these difficulties can be avoided if investment 

2 advisors adopt compliance procedures that prevent short-swing trading. 

3 However, Rubenstein seeks to hold advisors’ clients liable, and those clients may 

4 have no control over their advisor’s compliance procedures. Rubenstein’s 

5 proposed theory of liability would demand that clients, who may be 

6 unsophisticated individual investors, adopt procedures for monitoring the 

7 investments of their advisors’ other clients. Rubenstein would hold a retiree on 

8 the beach in Florida liable when he fails to conduct an ongoing analysis of his 

9 IRA manager’s trading in other clients’ accounts. We decline to go down this 

10 road. 

11 V.

12 Rubenstein’s final theory of liability, raised for the first time on appeal, is 

13 that IVA acted as an agent and director by deputization for its clients. We see no 

14 merit in this theory. To be sure, there is some support in our precedent for the 

15 theory that a statutory insider may not escape liability by merely delegating 

16 investment responsibility to an agent. See, e.g., Huppe v. WPCS Int’l Inc., 670 F.3d 

17 214, 221-22 (2d Cir. 2012). That is, an insider principal cannot shed its insider 

18 status by transferring trading authority to a non-insider agent. For example, the

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1 owner of 10% of the outstanding shares of a security may not delegate authority 

2 over 5% to an agent and thereby claim to be a 5% shareholder who is not subject 

3 to Section 16(b). No authority, however, suggests that a non-insider principal 

4 may unknowingly inherit the insider status of its agent.

5 Rubenstein also points us to a “director by deputization” theory, under 

6 which an investor becomes a statutory insider when it deputizes an individual to 

7 serve as its representative on an issuer’s board of directors. See generally Blau v. 

8 Lehman, 368 U.S. 403, 408-10 (1962); Roth ex rel. Beacon Power Corp. v. Perseus,

9 L.L.C., 522 F.3d 242, 246 (2d Cir. 2008). IVA argues that, under this theory, IVA’s 

10 clients were insiders because they hired IVA as their investment advisor and IVA 

11 then appointed a director to DeVry’s board. Although this appointment may 

12 have rendered IVA a statutory insider, it did not render its clients insiders. IVA’s 

13 clients did not deputize anyone as a director. It is unlikely that most of these 

14 clients were even aware that their advisor had deputized a director on the DeVry 

15 board. And even if some clients were so aware, there is no indication that they 

16 agreed to the deputization. In any event, we conclude that further discussion of 

17 these theories is not appropriate because they were not raised in the court below.

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1 In sum, group liability under Sections 13(d) and 16(b) requires that group 

2 members “agree to act together for the purpose of acquiring, holding, voting or 

3 disposing of equity securities of an issuer.” 17 C.F.R. § 240.13d-5(b)(1); see also 15 

4 U.S.C. § 78m(d)(3). Because Rubenstein’s interpretation would read the 

5 requirements of agreement and issuer-specificity out of the statute, we reject it.

6 CONCLUSION

7 For the foregoing reasons, the order of the district court is AFFIRMED.

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