First Securities Company of Chicago, a registered broker-dealer, was led for decades by its president, Leston B. Nay. Beginning in the 1940s and continuing until 1968, Nay orchestrated a fraudulent 'escrow' or 'special reserve' scheme in which he induced certain customers—including the plaintiffs—to deliver funds to him personally for purported investment in a confidential, high-yield account. Using firm letterhead and his corporate position to lend credibility, Nay issued false receipts and correspondence while diverting the funds for his own use; no such escrow accounts existed. In 1968, as the scheme was about to be exposed, Nay committed suicide, and the fraud came to light. Ernst & Ernst (now Ernst & Young) served as First Securities' independent auditor during relevant years. Plaintiffs alleged that Ernst & Ernst negligently failed to design and perform audits in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards, ignored obvious internal control weaknesses, failed to conduct appropriate confirmations or other procedures that would have uncovered Nay's personal handling of customer funds, and thereby allowed the scheme to persist. The investors sued Ernst & Ernst in federal court under §10(b) and Rule 10b-5, asserting auditor negligence that 'operated as a fraud' upon purchasers of securities, along with pendent state-law claims. The district court entered judgment for Ernst & Ernst on the federal claim, concluding that negligence could not support a Rule 10b-5 damages action. The Seventh Circuit reversed, holding that negligence could suffice for liability under Rule 10b-5. The Supreme Court granted certiorari.
Whether a private action for damages under §10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and SEC Rule 10b-5 can be predicated on negligence, or whether the plaintiff must plead and prove scienter—an intent to deceive, manipulate, or defraud.
A private damages action under §10(b) and Rule 10b-5 requires proof of scienter—intent to deceive, manipulate, or defraud. Negligence, without more, is insufficient to establish liability. SEC rules may not expand the scope of conduct proscribed by §10(b), whose terms—'manipulative or deceptive device or contrivance'—connote intentional misconduct. The Court assumed, without deciding, the existence of an implied private right of action under §10(b) and Rule 10b-5 and did not resolve whether recklessness satisfies the scienter requirement.
Negligence does not suffice for a private damages action under §10(b) and Rule 10b-5. Scienter—intentional or knowing misconduct—is required. The Court reversed the judgment of the Seventh Circuit.
Text. The Court focused on the statutory language in §10(b), which prohibits the use of 'any manipulative or deceptive device or contrivance' in connection with the purchase or sale of securities in contravention of SEC rules. Terms like 'manipulative' and 'deceptive' inherently imply knowing or intentional wrongdoing rather than mere carelessness. 'Manipulative' is a term of art in securities regulation tied to intentional practices (e.g., wash sales, matched orders), and 'deceptive' likewise connotes deliberate misleading. Because Rule 10b-5 was promulgated under §10(b), the rule cannot extend liability beyond the statute's intentional-fraud focus. Structure. The Act elsewhere addresses negligent conduct expressly. Sections 9(e) and 18(a) provide specific civil remedies with their own elements and defenses where negligence may be relevant. Reading §10(b)/Rule 10b-5 to reach negligence would render these tailored provisions superfluous and distort the carefully constructed statutory scheme. The Court also noted the absence of any explicit congressional authorization of a broad negligence-based damages remedy under §10(b). Legislative history and purpose. The legislative record showed that Congress intended §10(b) as a 'catchall' to enable the SEC to prohibit new forms of manipulative or deceptive practices, not to impose general negligence liability in securities markets. While investor protection is an important goal, that policy cannot justify judicial enlargement of a statute's scope beyond its language. Limits on agency rulemaking. The Court emphasized that an SEC rule cannot go further than the statute it implements. Rule 10b-5's broad phrasing (including acts that 'operate as a fraud or deceit') must be read consistently with §10(b)'s textual requirement of a 'manipulative or deceptive device.' A negligence standard would impermissibly expand §10(b). Procedural posture and reservations. The Court assumed, without deciding, that a private right of action exists under §10(b)/Rule 10b-5 and did not decide whether recklessness would satisfy scienter. It confined its holding to rejecting negligence as a basis for damages liability under §10(b)/Rule 10b-5.
Hochfelder is the seminal authority that a plaintiff seeking damages under §10(b) and Rule 10b-5 must plead and prove scienter. It sharply distinguished federal securities fraud from negligence-based malpractice, reshaped auditor and gatekeeper liability, and aligned private 10b-5 actions with intentional fraud concepts. In the wake of Hochfelder, most circuits have held that 'severe' or 'deliberate' recklessness can satisfy scienter, although the Supreme Court left that question open in this case. The decision also underpins modern pleading doctrine: the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act (PSLRA) and cases like Tellabs require plaintiffs to allege particularized facts giving rise to a strong inference of scienter. For students, Hochfelder illuminates statutory interpretation, the limits of agency rulemaking, and the care courts take with implied rights of action and the mental-state elements of fraud.
Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder fixed a critical boundary in federal securities law: private damages under §10(b) and Rule 10b-5 target intentional fraud, not professional carelessness. By grounding the mental-state requirement in the text and structure of the Exchange Act, the Court prevented Rule 10b-5 from becoming a general negligence statute for the securities markets.