From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Securities and Exchange Commission v. Zahareas

United States Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit
Feb 9, 1999
167 F.3d 396 (8th Cir. 1999)

Opinion

Nos. 98-1524, 98-1527

Submitted: November 19, 1998

Filed: February 9, 1999

Appeals from the United States District Court for the District of Minnesota.

Counsel who presented argument on behalf of the appellants John M. Tuschner and Tuschner Company was James H. Schropp. Michael L. Berde appeared on the brief.

Counsel who presented argument on behalf of appellants Euroamerican and Nicholas Zahareas was Christopher Morris.

Counsel who presented argument on behalf of the appellee was Eric Summergrad. Paul Gonson, Solicitor and Rada Potts, Senior Counsel, also appeared on the brief.

Before BEAM, MAGILL, and MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, Circuit Judges.


Nicholas Zahareas, Euroamerican Securities, S. A., John M. Tuschner, and Tuschner Co. appeal the district court's order granting a preliminary injunction to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and denying their motions to dismiss for lack of personal and subject-matter jurisdiction. Zahareas is currently subject to a 1993 SEC bar order prohibiting him from associating with a broker or dealer. The preliminary injunction (1) mandates that Zahareas comply with the 1993 bar order and enjoins him from associating with a broker or dealer; (2) enjoins Tuschner Co. from permitting a person subject to a bar order to become associated with Tuschner Co.; and (3) enjoins Zahareas, Tuschner and their agents from aiding and abetting any violations of 15 U.S.C. § 78o(b)(6)(B)(i) and (ii).

The Honorable David S. Doty, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota.

After careful review of the record and the parties' briefs, we affirm for the reasons set forth in the district court's opinion. See 8th Cir. R. 47B.


After consenting to a 1993 SEC order that permanently barred him from participation in the securities industry in the United States, Mr. Zahareas established a broker-dealer business called Euroamerican in Athens, Greece. Tuschner Co., a Minneapolis broker-dealer registered with the SEC, procured American securities for Euroamerican's Greek clients. The SEC commenced this enforcement action claiming that Mr. Zahareas violated the law by associating with a registered broker-dealer, that Tuschner Co. violated the law by associating with a barred person, and that the parties aided and abetted each other in these violations.

The order entered against Mr. Zahareas did not allow him to "associate with" broker-dealers. Section 3(a)(18) of the Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78c(a)(18), defines a "person associated with a broker or dealer" or an "associated person" as "any partner, officer, director, or branch manager of such broker or dealer (or any person occupying a similar status or performing similar functions), any person directly or indirectly controlling, controlled by, or under common control with such broker or dealer, or any employee of such broker or dealer." The SEC argued below, and the trial court held, that the acts performed by Mr. Zahareas and Euroamerican were similar to those performed by an employee, and that Mr. Zahareas was therefore an "associated person" of Tuschner Co.

The difficulty with this holding, as Defendants point out, is that the parenthetical language relied upon by the SEC and the trial court for this proposition ("or any person occupying a similar status or performing similar functions"), is located directly after the portion of the definition referring to partners, officers, directors, and branch managers. This language does not in any way purport to modify the part of the statute that defines employees, and thus cannot expand the definition of an employee. Therefore only actual employees (and not persons similar to employees) can be "associated persons."

On appeal, the SEC appears to have abandoned its original position in favor of an argument that Mr. Zahareas was an "associated person" because he was under Tuschner Co.'s control. The parties agree that the issue of control should be decided by basic principles of agency law. The considerations that guide the inquiry into whether control existed include where the right to control the means and manner of performance resided, what the mode of payment was, who furnished relevant materials and tools, who controlled the workplace, and who had the right to discharge. See, e. g., Guhlke v. Roberts Truck Lines, 128 N.W.2d 324, 326 (1964). The most important of these considerations is who had the right to control the means and manner of performance. Id. The evidence before the district court in this case tended to show that Euroamerican operated with separate materials and tools at a separate location in a separate nation that Tuschner Co.'s leadership had never visited; that neither party had a right to discharge the other, although both had a right to sever their business relationship; and, most important, that Tuschner Co. had no right to control the means and manner of Euroamerican's and Mr. Zahareas's business. Euroamerican had its own clients before it started working with Tuschner Co., and was free to advise those clients however it wanted and engage in any business that it wanted with those clients.

The SEC calls our attention to several facts that it believes support its claim that Mr. Zahareas was an agent of Tuschner Co., none of which is particularly persuasive to me. The SEC contends that Mr. Zahareas acted in a manner similar to that of a Tuschner Co. representative, but the activities to which it points were not inconsistent with two separate companies doing business with each other; it points out that Tuschner Co.'s compliance officer reviewed all orders and documents, but that is only to be expected because Tuschner Co. was the registered broker-dealer subject to SEC regulation; and it notes that Tuschner Co. kept Euroamerican's clients when Tuschner Co. severed its relationship with Euroamerican and Mr. Zahareas, but that could simply be because those clients wished to continue investments in American securities, a service it appeared that Mr. Zahareas could no longer provide. Considering all these facts, it seems clear to me that the SEC has failed to establish that Mr. Zahareas was under Tuschner Co.'s control.

Although the briefs in this case do not raise the matter, I note that the trial court's findings on the relevant factual issues seem to be self-contradictory. The trial court found both that Mr. Zahareas was an employee of Tuschner Co. and that he exercised control over Tuschner Co. Since the core of an employer/employee relationship is control, the court effectively found that Tuschner Co. and Mr. Zahareas were employees of each other. The two businesses appear to have had some degree of influence over one another, as well as differing degrees of control over the various components of the business deals they executed together, but neither was legally under the control of the other.

On the present state of the record, it appears to me that the district court erred in entering the preliminary injunction. I would therefore reverse the judgment and remand for further proceedings.


Summaries of

Securities and Exchange Commission v. Zahareas

United States Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit
Feb 9, 1999
167 F.3d 396 (8th Cir. 1999)
Case details for

Securities and Exchange Commission v. Zahareas

Case Details

Full title:Securities and Exchange Commission, sued as United States Securities and…

Court:United States Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit

Date published: Feb 9, 1999

Citations

167 F.3d 396 (8th Cir. 1999)

Citing Cases

U.S.S.E.C. v. Zahareas

The defendants appealed the injunction and a divided panel of this court affirmed the district court's order.…

U.S. v. Zahareas

In June 1998, we affirmed the district court's preliminary injunction in favor of the SEC based on the…