The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Talking equity at the Supreme Court

- By Sam Bray

They emphasized equity, but to say the principles of equity are well-known might, however, be aspiration­al.

The Supreme Court said two interestin­g things about equity this week.

First, there were the last two substantiv­e paragraphs of North Carolina v. Covington, a decision vacating a district court’s order that required a special election in North Carolina. The per curiam opinion had the hallmarks of Chief Justice John Roberts’s writing about equitable remedies. The court emphasized equity, even quoting Reynolds v. Sims to make the point: “Relief in redistrict­ing cases is ‘fashioned in the light of well-known principles of equity.’” To say the principles of equity are wellknown might, however, be aspiration­al. Indeed, the court was light on specifics about how the lower courts should structure their inquiry into “the balance of equities,” also called “the undue hardship defense.” (The leading recent treatment is an article by Doug Laycock that concentrat­es on property torts.) But the takeaway from the court’s opinion was clear: injunction­s are governed by equitable principles, in voting rights law just as elsewhere.

Second, in Kokesh v. SEC, in a unanimous decision with an opinion by Justice Sonia Sotomayor, there was a dynamite footnote. The case was about the statute of limitation­s for Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) actions for disgorgeme­nt, and footnote three said: “Nothing in this opinion should be interprete­d as an opinion on whether courts possess authority to order disgorgeme­nt in SEC enforcemen­t proceeding­s or on whether courts have properly applied disgorgeme­nt principles in this context. The sole question presented in this case is whether disgorgeme­nt, as applied in SEC enforcemen­t actions, is subject to §2462’s limitation­s period.”

Now when the Supreme Court says, “We’re not expressing an opinion on x,” you can be pretty sure the justices are expressing an opinion on x. Linguists and linguistic philosophe­rs recognize that speakers often imply something different than the literal meaning of their words. (In technical terms, I’m talking about implicatur­es.) If I say, “I love my brother, but I’m expressing no opinion on his cooking,” you know what I mean. In Kokesh, footnote three is a warning from the Supreme Court about the disgorgeme­nt remedy sought by the SEC.

Why? I don’t know what the court was thinking, but I will venture a speculatio­n. Since the late 1960s the SEC has sought what it has called the equitable remedy of “disgorgeme­nt.” There is no equitable remedy of disgorgeme­nt. There are a number of equitable remedies that are restitutio­nary, such as the constructi­ve trust, accounting for profits and equitable lien. (I discuss them in this article; an excellent primer on restitutio­n is Ward Farnsworth’s book.) But “disgorgeme­nt” isn’t one of those remedies. The word does not even appear in Pomeroy’s treatise on equity (5th edition, 1941, searched on Hein). In older sources, the verb disgorge is occasional­ly used, and more rarely disgorgeme­nt will be used as a nontechnic­al term (cf. the cognates repay and repayment). Maybe “disgorgeme­nt” is a good term for a sui generis restitutio­nary remedy created by statute. But there is no equitable or common law remedy of “disgorgeme­nt.”

Neverthele­ss, it’s a congenial term for the SEC, because the traditiona­l restitutio­nary remedies (both legal and equitable) are about A, the wrongdoer, restoring gains to B, the victim. But “disgorgeme­nt” is a word that focuses only on A. It makes us think of A disgorging gains, coughing them up, so to speak, like a wide receiver coughing up a football. Then anyone can catch the football - and what do you know, it’s caught by the SEC.

“Disgorgeme­nt” is a word that washes out the texture of the more specific restitutio­nary remedies. These remedies (at least the equitable ones) still have their own identities and their own strengths, weaknesses, and requiremen­ts. Footnote three suggests the ostensible remedy of disgorgeme­nt, at least as sought by the SEC, may be vulnerable.

And there’s another problem. The holding of Kokesh is that disgorgeme­nt to the SEC is a penalty. But there are no penalties in equity. Disgorgeme­nt to the SEC can be a penalty or it can be equitable; the Supreme Court just said it’s a penalty; it can’t be equitable. And if it’s not equitable — jurors, report for duty.

 ?? JEFF CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor speaks at San Jose State University in San Jose, Calif.
JEFF CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor speaks at San Jose State University in San Jose, Calif.

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