A public building authority in Colorado issued bonds to finance infrastructure for a real estate development. Central Bank of Denver, N.A. served as the indenture trustee. The bond indenture and offering materials contemplated that the land securing the bonds would be periodically appraised and that certain value-related covenants would be observed before additional funds were released or additional bonds were issued. As market conditions softened, Central Bank's personnel grew concerned that the collateral might be insufficient under the indenture's appraisal requirements. At the request of the developer and others involved in the offering, a Central Bank officer agreed to delay commissioning or obtaining an updated independent appraisal until after the closing. The Official Statement did not disclose the known risk that an updated appraisal might show inadequate collateral or that the appraisal had been delayed. The project later experienced financial distress and the bonds defaulted. Purchasers of the bonds, including First Interstate Bank of Denver, N.A., sued various participants. They alleged that the issuer and others committed primary violations of §10(b) and Rule 10b‑5 by making material misstatements and omissions, and that Central Bank aided and abetted that fraud by intentionally or recklessly delaying the appraisal and thereby facilitating the misleading offering. The district court dismissed the aiding-and-abetting claim against Central Bank; the Tenth Circuit reversed, recognizing private aiding-and-abetting liability under §10(b). The Supreme Court granted certiorari.
Does §10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and SEC Rule 10b-5 permit a private right of action for aiding and abetting a securities fraud, where the defendant did not itself engage in a manipulative or deceptive act?
Section 10(b) prohibits the use or employment of any manipulative or deceptive device or contrivance in connection with the purchase or sale of any security, in violation of SEC rules. Rule 10b-5 implements §10(b) by forbidding, among other things, material misstatements or omissions (where there is a duty to disclose) and deceptive schemes or practices, made or engaged in with scienter, in connection with a securities transaction. The implied private right of action under §10(b)/Rule 10b-5 extends only to primary violators—those who themselves make a material misstatement or omission (with the requisite scienter and duty) or otherwise commit a manipulative or deceptive act upon which plaintiffs can base their claim. Mere aiding and abetting—i.e., knowingly or recklessly assisting another's violation without oneself committing a manipulative or deceptive act—is not actionable by private plaintiffs under §10(b).
No. Private civil liability under §10(b) and Rule 10b-5 does not encompass aiding and abetting. Because the statute's text prohibits only manipulative or deceptive conduct, private plaintiffs may sue only primary violators; an aider and abettor who does not engage in a manipulative or deceptive act is not liable in a private §10(b) action.
The Court, in an opinion by Justice Kennedy, anchored its analysis in the text of §10(b), which prohibits only the use or employment of a manipulative or deceptive device or contrivance in connection with a securities transaction. Aiding and abetting, by definition, imposes liability on a party that has not itself committed a manipulative or deceptive act but has only assisted another's violation. Because §10(b)'s language does not mention aiding-and-abetting liability, the Court refused to infer it for private suits. The Court emphasized that the §10(b) private right of action is implied, not express, and therefore should not be expanded beyond the statute's terms. Citing cases like Blue Chip Stamps v. Manor Drug Stores and Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder, the Court noted its history of hewing closely to statutory text and limiting judge-made expansions in §10(b) litigation. It also drew support from Pinter v. Dahl, where the Court declined to adopt an expansive "substantial factor" test under §12 of the Securities Act. These precedents favored a narrow construction of who can be sued in private securities fraud actions. Structural cues in the 1934 Act buttressed the conclusion. Where Congress intended to impose secondary liability, it did so expressly, as in §20(a)'s controlling-person liability provision; conversely, §10(b) contains no such language. The Court found it significant that Congress created explicit secondary liability in other contexts but omitted aiding-and-abetting from §10(b). It deemed it improper for courts to graft an aiding-and-abetting theory onto an implied cause of action when Congress had not chosen to do so. Nor did policy arguments for broader deterrence justify expanding liability. The Court recognized concerns about over-deterrence and unpredictability if lawyers, accountants, banks, and other secondary actors could be sued as aiders and abettors based on amorphous standards like recklessness without committing any deceptive act. The Court stressed that secondary actors are not immune: they can face primary §10(b) liability if they themselves make a material misstatement or omission (where they have a duty) or engage in a manipulative or deceptive scheme; and they can face liability under other provisions (e.g., §20(a) for controlling persons) or under professional and state-law regimes. But private plaintiffs cannot maintain aiding-and-abetting claims under §10(b). The Court expressly limited its holding to private actions and did not decide the SEC's enforcement authority under then-existing law.
Central Bank fundamentally reshaped private securities fraud litigation by eliminating aiding-and-abetting liability under §10(b)/Rule 10b‑5. It reduced exposure for secondary actors like banks, law firms, and auditors, and redirected plaintiffs toward proving primary violations, invoking controlling-person liability under §20(a), or pursuing alternative statutory or state-law theories. Congress subsequently enacted the PSLRA, which among other reforms authorized the SEC (in §20(e)) to bring aiding-and-abetting enforcement actions, while leaving the Central Bank bar intact for private plaintiffs. The decision set the stage for later Supreme Court rulings—Stoneridge (scheme liability and reliance), Janus (who is the "maker" of a statement), and Lorenzo (primary liability for dissemination)—that continue to delineate the boundaries between primary and secondary liability. For law students, Central Bank is essential for understanding textualism in securities regulation, the limits of implied rights of action, and the practical consequences for litigation strategy in complex financial cases.
Central Bank of Denver v. First Interstate reset the boundaries of private securities fraud litigation by insisting that liability track the statutory language of §10(b). The Court rejected broad judicially created doctrines that had swept in secondary actors for aiding and abetting, preserving private liability for those who themselves commit manipulative or deceptive acts and leaving broader secondary liability to explicit congressional design.