Pinter, an oil-and-gas operator, offered and sold fractional interests in drilling ventures without registering the securities under §5 of the Securities Act of 1933. Dahl bought interests from Pinter and then encouraged and helped arrange purchases by acquaintances, urging them to invest, assisting with paperwork and transmission of funds, and anticipating benefits tied to the success of the offering or to the number of investors he recruited. When the ventures failed, Dahl (along with other purchasers) sued Pinter under §12(1) (now §12(a)(1)), seeking rescission for the unlawful sale of unregistered securities. Pinter denied liability and asserted that Dahl himself qualified as a statutory "seller" because he actively solicited others to buy and stood to gain financially; Pinter invoked an in pari delicto theory to bar Dahl's claim and also sought to shift or share liability with Dahl. The lower courts imposed liability on Pinter and rejected attempts to characterize Dahl as a seller under a broad "substantial factor" approach. The Supreme Court granted certiorari to resolve the proper definition of a §12 "seller" and to address the availability of an in pari delicto defense.
Under §12(1) of the Securities Act of 1933, who qualifies as a statutory "seller" liable to a purchaser of unregistered securities, and may a defendant invoke in pari delicto to bar recovery when the plaintiff actively participated in the unlawful sale?
A person is a statutory "seller" under §12 if he (1) passes title, or other interest in the security, to the purchaser, or (2) successfully solicits the purchase, motivated at least in part by a desire to serve his own financial interests or those of the securities owner. Mere participation in the sale—such as providing professional services, drafting documents, or other collateral involvement—without solicitation does not create §12 liability. Section 12 imposes liability only to "the person purchasing such security from him," reflecting a privity-like requirement that bars claims by remote purchasers. A limited in pari delicto defense is available to §12(1) claims to the extent the plaintiff is not within the class the statute was designed to protect—e.g., where the plaintiff actively solicited purchases for financial gain and thus participated as a seller in the unlawful distribution.
The Court held that §12 seller liability extends to (1) those who pass title and (2) those who successfully solicit purchases for their own or the issuer's financial benefit; it rejected the broader "substantial factor" test that would reach collateral participants who neither transfer title nor solicit. The Court further held that a limited in pari delicto defense may bar a §12(1) plaintiff's recovery if the plaintiff actively participated in the unlawful sale and is therefore outside the intended class of protected purchasers. The case was remanded to determine whether Dahl's conduct constituted solicitation motivated by financial interest.
Text and structure: The Court began with §12's language imposing liability on a person who "offers or sells" a security "to the person purchasing such security from him." Read with §2(3)'s definitions of "offer" and "sale," the statute captures two categories: the owner who transfers title and one who, by solicitation, is a proximate cause of the purchase. The "from him" clause signals a privity-like limitation—liability runs to the immediate purchaser in the defendant's selling effort, not to remote market participants. The Court rejected the "substantial factor" test because it untethered liability from the statute's text and risked sweeping in lawyers, accountants, and other professionals who facilitate transactions but do not solicit purchases. Purpose and policy: Section 12 is a targeted, remedial scheme. For §12(1), Congress imposed near-strict liability to deter unlawful distributions of unregistered securities and to afford rescission to purchasers. But Congress did not intend open-ended liability for collateral actors; tying liability to title transfer or solicitation prevents §12 from morphing into broad tort aiding-and-abetting. Requiring solicitation "motivated at least in part by a desire to serve [the solicitor's] own financial interests or those of the securities owner" ensures that the statute reaches promoters and finders who function like salespersons while excluding neutral service providers. Application and defenses: The Court held that Dahl's role—urging friends to invest, facilitating the transactions, and expecting a financial benefit—could qualify him as a statutory seller through solicitation. If so, his status would support a limited in pari delicto defense against his own §12(1) claim because the 1933 Act was not designed to protect participants who themselves promoted the unlawful distribution. The Court emphasized that in pari delicto does not bar claims by ordinary purchasers who are merely negligent or aware of risks; it applies where the plaintiff's active, financially motivated solicitation makes him part of the selling effort. The Court remanded for factual determinations under the proper standard and made clear that its seller definition applies to both §12(1) and §12(2), given their shared language.
Pinter supplies the definitive test for who is a statutory seller under §12: title transfer or successful, financially motivated solicitation. It rejects expansive tort-like liability for peripheral participants and thereby protects lawyers, accountants, and other non-soliciting professionals from primary §12 exposure. The decision also crystallizes the privity-like "from him" requirement, shaping who can sue whom under §12. Equally important, Pinter recognizes a narrow in pari delicto defense in §12(1) actions. Plaintiffs who functioned as promoters or solicitors for their own or the issuer's financial benefit may be outside the class of protected purchasers and thus barred from rescission. The decision is widely cited in §12(a)(2) misrepresentation cases and informs modern underwriting, finders' activities, and marketing practices in offerings.
Pinter v. Dahl stands as the Supreme Court's authoritative construction of §12 seller liability. By tethering liability to the statutory text—title passage or successful solicitation with a financial motive—and by rejecting the amorphous "substantial factor" approach, the Court delineated clear boundaries for primary civil liability in Securities Act offerings. Its privity-like reading of "from him" further focuses §12 suits on the immediate selling relationship.