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D R A F T



FOR APPROVAL







UNIFORM SECURITIES ACT (2002)



_____________________________________________________



NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF COMMISSIONERS



ON UNIFORM STATE LAWS

____________________________________________________



MEETING IN ITS ONE-HUNDRED-AND-ELEVENTH YEAR

TUCSON, ARIZONA

JULY 26 - AUGUST 2, 2002







UNIFORM SECURITIES ACT (2002)







WITH PREFATORY NOTE AND PROPOSED COMMENTS







Copyright ©2002

By

NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF COMMISSIONERS

ON UNIFORM STATE LAWS



_______________________________________________________________ ______________________________________



The ideas and conclusions set forth in this draft, including the proposed statutory language and any comments or reporter's notes, have not been passed upon by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws or the Drafting Committee. They do not necessarily reflect the views of the Conference and its Commissioners and the Drafting Committee and its Members and Reporters. Proposed statutory language may not be used to ascertain the intent or meaning of any promulgated final statutory proposal.

DRAFTING COMMITTEE TO REVISE

UNIFORM SECURITIES ACT



RICHARD B. SMITH, 450 Lexington Ave., New York, NY 10017, Chair

JOHN FOX ARNOLD, 714 Locust St., St. Louis, MO 63101

HENRY M. KITTLESON, P.O. Box 32092, 92 Lake Wire Dr., Lakeland, FL 33802-2092

ANDREW RICHNER, Room 585, P.O. Box 30014, Lansing, MI 48909-7514

MICHAEL P. SULLIVAN, State House, Room 200, Boston, MA 02133-1053

HOWARD J. SWIBEL, Suite 1200, 120 S. Riverside Plaza, Chicago, IL 60606

JUSTIN L. VIGDOR, 2400 Chase Square, Rochester, NY 14604

LEE YEAKEL, P.O. Box 164196, Austin, TX 78716-4196

JOEL SELIGMAN,Washington University School of Law, Campus Box 1120, One Brookings Dr., St. Louis, MO 63130, Reporter



EX OFFICIO



K. KING BURNETT, P.O. Box 910, Salisbury, MD 21803-0910, President

CARL LISMAN, 84 Pine St., P.O. Box 728, Burlington, VT 05402, Division Chair



AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION ADVISOR



ALAN P. BADEN, 666 Fifth Ave., 26th Floor, New York, NY 10103, ABA Advisor

W. REECE BADER, 1020 Marsh Rd., Menlo Park, CA 94025, ABA Litigation Section Advisor

CHARLES BRAISTED, 167 Orchard Run, 45 Rockefeller Plaza, Cornwall, VT 05753, ABA Business Law Section Advisor



EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR



WILLIAM HENNING, University of Missouri-Columbia, School of Law, 313 Hulston Hall, Columbia, MO 65211, Executive Director

FRED H. MILLER, University of Oklahoma, College of Law, 300 Timberdell Road, Norman, OK 73019, Executive Director Emeritus

WILLIAM J. PIERCE, 1505 Roxbury Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48104, Executive Director Emeritus



Copies of this Act may be obtained from:

NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF COMMISSIONERS

ON UNIFORM STATE LAWS

211 E. Ontario Street, Suite 1300

Chicago, Illinois 60611

312/915-0195

www.nccusl.org

UNIFORM SECURITIES ACT (2002)



TABLE OF CONTENTS

Prefatory Note 1

ARTICLE 1
GENERAL PROVISIONS

SECTION 101. SHORT TITLE. 9

SECTION 102. DEFINITIONS. 9

SECTION 103. REFERENCES TO FEDERAL STATUTES. 33

SECTION 104. ELECTRONIC RECORDS AND SIGNATURES. 34

ARTICLE 2
EXEMPTIONS FROM REGISTRATION OF SECURITIES

SECTION 201. EXEMPT SECURITIES. 35

SECTION 202. EXEMPT TRANSACTIONS. 43

SECTION 203. ADDITIONAL EXEMPTIONS AND WAIVERS. 57

SECTION 204. DENIAL, SUSPENSION, CONDITION OR LIMITATION OF EXEMPTIONS. 58

ARTICLE 3
REGISTRATION OF SECURITIES AND NOTICE FILINGS OF FEDERAL COVERED SECURITIES

SECTION 301. SECURITIES REGISTRATION REQUIREMENT. 60

SECTION 302. NOTICE FILINGS. 61

SECTION 303. SECURITIES REGISTRATION BY COORDINATION. 63

SECTION 304. SECURITIES REGISTRATION BY QUALIFICATION. 66

SECTION 305. SECURITIES REGISTRATION FILINGS. 72

SECTION 306. DENIAL, SUSPENSION, AND REVOCATION OF SECURITIES REGISTRATION. 76

SECTION 307. WAIVERS. 83



ARTICLE 4

BROKER-DEALERS, AGENTS, INVESTMENT ADVISERS, INVESTMENT ADVISER REPRESENTATIVES, AND FEDERAL COVERED INVESTMENT ADVISERS

SECTION 401. BROKER-DEALER REGISTRATION REQUIREMENT AND EXEMPTIONS. 84

SECTION 402. AGENT REGISTRATION REQUIREMENT AND EXEMPTIONS. 88

SECTION 403. INVESTMENT ADVISER REGISTRATION REQUIREMENT AND EXEMPTIONS. 91

SECTION 404. INVESTMENT ADVISER REPRESENTATIVE REGISTRATION REQUIREMENT AND

EXEMPTIONS. 93

SECTION 405. FEDERAL COVERED INVESTMENT ADVISER NOTICE FILING REQUIREMENT. 95

SECTION 406. REGISTRATION BY BROKER-DEALERS, AGENTS, INVESTMENT ADVISERS, AND

INVESTMENT ADVISER REPRESENTATIVES. 97

SECTION 407. SUCCESSION AND CHANGE IN REGISTRATION OF BROKER-DEALER OR INVESTMENT ADVISER. 99

SECTION 408. TERMINATION OF EMPLOYMENT OR ASSOCIATION OF AGENTS AND INVESTMENT ADVISER REPRESENTATIVE AND TRANSFER OF EMPLOYMENT OR ASSOCIATION. 100

SECTION 409. WITHDRAWAL OF REGISTRATION OF BROKER-DEALERS, AGENTS, INVESTMENT

ADVISERS, AND INVESTMENT ADVISERS REPRESENTATIVES. 103

SECTION 410. FILING FEES. 103

SECTION 411. POSTREGISTRATION REQUIREMENTS. 105

SECTION 412. DENIAL, REVOCATION, SUSPENSION, CANCELLATION, WITHDRAWAL, RESTRICTION, CONDITION, OR LIMITATION OF REGISTRATION. 109



ARTICLE 5
FRAUD AND LIABILITIES

SECTION 501. GENERAL FRAUD. 118

SECTION 502. PROHIBITED CONDUCT IN PROVIDING INVESTMENT ADVICE. 119

SECTION 503. EVIDENTIARY BURDEN. 120

SECTION 504. FILING OF SALES AND ADVERTISING LITERATURE. 121

SECTION 505. MISLEADING FILINGS. 122

SECTION 506. MISREPRESENTATIONS CONCERNING REGISTRATION OR EXEMPTION. 122

SECTION 507. QUALIFIED IMMUNITY. 123

SECTION 508. CRIMINAL PENALTIES. 124

SECTION 509. CIVIL LIABILITY. 127

SECTION 510. RESCISSION OFFERS. 136



ARTICLE 6

ADMINISTRATION AND JUDICIAL REVIEW

SECTION 601. ADMINISTRATION OF [ACT]. 140

SECTION 602. INVESTIGATIONS AND SUBPOENAS. 142

SECTION 603. CIVIL ENFORCEMENT. 145

SECTION 604. ADMINISTRATIVE ENFORCEMENT. 147

SECTION 605. RULES, FORMS, ORDERS, INTERPRETATIVE OPINIONS, AND HEARINGS. 150
SECTION 606. ADMINISTRATIVE FILES AND OPINIONS. 152

SECTION 607. PUBLIC RECORDS; CONFIDENTIALITY. 153

SECTION 608. UNIFORMITY AND COOPERATION WITH OTHER AGENCIES. 155

SECTION 609. JUDICIAL REVIEW. 157

SECTION 610. JURISDICTION. 160

SECTION 611. SERVICE OF PROCESS. 165

SECTION 612. SEVERABILITY CLAUSE. 168

ARTICLE 7
TRANSITION

SECTION 701. EFFECTIVE DATE. 169
SECTION 702. REPEALS. 169

SECTION 703. APPLICATION TO EXISTING PROCEEDING. 169





UNIFORM SECURITIES ACT (2002)



Prefatory Note



There are two versions of the Uniform Securities Act currently in force.



The Uniform Securities Act of 1956 ("1956 Act") has been adopted at one time or another, in whole or in part, by 37 jurisdictions.



The Revised Uniform Securities Act of 1985 ("RUSA") has been adopted in only a few States.



Both Acts have been preempted in part by the National Securities Markets Improvement Act of 1996 and the Securities Litigation Uniform Standards Act of 1998.



The need to modernize the Uniform Securities Act is a consequence of a combination of the new federal preemptive legislation, significant recent changes in the technology of securities trading and regulation, and the increasingly interstate and international aspects of securities transactions.



The approach of this Act is to use the substance and vocabulary of the more widely adopted 1956 Act, when appropriate. The Act also takes into account RUSA, federal preemptive legislation, and the other developments that are described in this Preface and the Proposed Comments.



The Act has been reorganized to follow in large part the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws ("NCCUSL") Procedural and Drafting Manual 15-41 (1997).



This is a new Uniform Securities Act. Amendment of the earlier 1956 Act or RUSA would not be wise given the different versions of the 1956 Act enacted by the States and the determination to seek enactment in all state jurisdictions of the new Uniform Securities Act after it is adopted by the National Conference.



The Act is solely a new Uniform Securities Act. It does not codify or append related regulations or guidelines. The Act also authorizes state administrators in Section 203 to adopt further exemptions without statutory amendment.



The Act includes headings for subsections as an aid to readers. Unlike section captions, subsection headings are not a part of the official text. Each jurisdiction in which this Act is introduced may consider whether to adopt the headings as a part of the statute and whether to adopt a provision clarifying the effect, if any, to be given to the headings.



The Drafting Committee reviewed several drafts in meetings between 1998 and 2002. The Committee had the assistance of advisors, consultants, and observers from several interested groups, including, among others, the American Bankers Association, the American Bar Association, the American Council of Life Insurers, the Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards, the Financial Planning Association, the Investment Company Institute, the Investment Counsel Association of America, the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc., the New York Stock Exchange, the North American Securities Administrators Association, the Securities and Exchange Commission, and the Securities Industry Association. In addition, the Reporter and the Chair met on several occasions with committees or representatives of these and other groups.



In drafting the new Act, the Reporter and the Drafting Committee recognized two fundamental challenges. First, there was a general recognition among all involved of the desirability of drafting an Act that would receive broad consensus support. The success of RUSA had been limited because of fundamental differences among relevant constituencies on several issues. After the National Securities Markets Improvement Act of 1996 preempted specified aspects of state securities law with respect to federal covered securities, the opportunity to draft an Act in a less contentious atmosphere was available. Given the number of industry, investor, and regulatory interests affected by the Act and the complexity of the Act itself, building consensus was the Act's most significant drafting challenge.



Second, there was the technical challenge of drafting a new Act that could achieve the basic goal of uniformity among states and with applicable federal law against the backdrop of 46 years of experience with the 1956 Act. Over time both Uniform and non-Uniform Act states have, to varying degrees, evolved local solutions to a number of securities law issues. In increasingly global securities market, the need for uniformity has become more important. Drafting language to achieve the greatest practicable uniformity, given differences in state practice, was a key aspiration of this Act. In a few instances, such as dollar amounts for fees the Act defers to local practice. On a few other issues, bracketed language or the Official Comments articulate an alternative some states may choose to adopt rather than the language of the Act itself.



The Act is in seven Articles:



1. Title and Definitions

2. Exemptions from Registration of Securities

3. Registration of Securities and Notice Filings of Federal Covered Securities

4. Broker-Dealers, Agents, Investment Advisers, Investment Adviser Representatives, and Federal Covered Investment Advisers

5. Fraud and Liabilities

6. Administration and Judicial Review

7. Transition



There are has three overarching themes of the Act.

First, Section 608 articulates in greater detail than the 1956 Act's Section 415 the objectives of uniformity, cooperation among relevant state and federal organizations and self-regulatory organizations, investor protection and, to the extent practicable, capital formation. The theme of uniformity and the aspiration of coordination of state and local securities law is particularly stressed in the Act and Official Comments. Section 602(e), consistent with the Federal Securities Litigation Uniform Standard Act of 1998, is a new provision encouraging reciprocal state enforcement assistance.



A second overarching theme of the Act is coordination with the National Securities Markets Improvement Act of 1996 ("NSMIA"). New definitions were added to define in Section 102(6), federal covered investment adviser, and in Section 102(7), federal covered security. NSMIA also had implications for several securities registration exemptions (see Section 201(3), 201(4), 201(6), 202(4), 202(6), 202(13), 202(14), 202(15) and 202(16)); securities registration (Sections 301(1) and 302); and the broker-dealer, agent, investment adviser, and investment adviser representatives provisions (see especially Sections 402(b)(1) and (5), 403(b)(1)(A) and (2), 405 and 411).



A third theme of the Act involves facilitating electronic records, signatures, and filing. New definitions were added to address filing (Section 102(8)), record (Section 102(25), and sign (Section 102(30). Section 104 expressly permits the filing of electronic signatures and records. Collectively these provisions are intended to permit electronic filing in central information depositories such as the Web-CRD (Central Registration Depository), Investment Adviser Registration Depository (IARD), the Securities and Exchange Commission's Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis and Retrieval System (EDGAR) or successor institutions. Electronic communications also has led to an amplification of Section 610, the jurisdiction section.



The new Act makes several other significant changes compared to the 1956 Act or RUSA.



(1) The definition of "security" in Section 102(28) has been modernized to take into account amendments to the counterpart federal provisions; add new language to expressly include uncertificated securities; exclude contributory or noncontributory ERISA plans; and amplify the definition of investment contract so that it can expressly reach interests in limited partnerships, limited liability companies, or limited liability partnerships, or viatical settlement agreements, among other contracts, when they satisfy the definition of investment contract.



The new Act does not expressly exclude from the definition of security variable insurance products, but does exempt variable insurance product from securities registration in Section 201(4). The states are divided on the question of whether variable insurance products should be excluded (and not subject to fraud enforcement) or exempted (and subject to fraud enforcement). For those states that wish to continue or adopt an exclusion for variable insurance products from the definition of security, proposed statutory language is included in the Official Comments.



(2) Nineteen new definitions were added to define "bank" (Section 102(3)), "depository institution" (Section 102(5)), "federal covered investment adviser" (Section 102(6)), "federal covered security" (Section 102(7)), "filing" (Section 102(8)), "institutional investor" (Section 102(11)), "insurance company" (Section 102(12)), "insured" (Section 102(13)), "international banking institution" (Section 102(14)), "investment adviser representative" (Section 102(16)), "offer to purchase" (Section 102(19)), "place of business" (Section 102(21)), "predecessor act" (Section 102(22)), "price amendment" (Section 102(23)), "principal place of business" (Section 102(24)), "record" (Section 102(25)), "Securities and Exchange Commission" (Section 102(27)), "self-regulatory organization" (Section 102(29)), and "sign" (Section 102(30)). The growth in definitions is suggestive of the increased complexity and detail of several revised provisions in the new Act.



(3) Specific exemptions from securities registration are broadened. Most significant is Section 202(13) which builds on a new definition of institutional investors that parallels Rule 501(a) of the Securities Act of 1933, with $10 million rather than $5 million thresholds in Sections 102(11)(F) - (K), and (O), and addresses specified employee plans, trusts, Internal Revenue Code Section 501(c)(3) organizations, small business investment companies licensed by the Small Business Administration, private business development companies under Section 202(a)(22) of the Investment Advisers Act, and other institutional purchasers. The definition of institutional investor also reaches qualified institutional buyers under Rule 144A(a)(1) of the Securities Act of 1933, major U.S. institutional investors as defined in Rule 15a-6(b)(4)(i) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and federal covered investment advisers acting for their own accounts. The new institutional investor transaction exemption in Section 202(13) will also reach other persons specified by rule or order of the administrator.



The limited offering transaction exemption in Section 202(14) was broadened to reach 25 persons, in addition to those exempted by the institutional investor exemption, on condition that the transaction is part of a single issue, and other specified conditions are satisfied.



If the SEC adopts a new definition of qualified purchaser as it has proposed under Rule 146(c) of the Securities Act of 1933, there may ultimately be four preemptive or exemptive types of provision applicable to the new Act: (1) the SEC qualified purchaser provision; (2) Section 18(b)(3) which provides preemptive treatment for Rule 506 offerings under the Securities Act of 1933; (3) specified investors in Section 202(13); and (4) limited offerings in Section 202(14).



The options exemption in Section 201(6) was broadened; the "manual" exemption in Section 202(2) has been modernized for an electronic age; a broadened exemption has been provided for specified foreign securities in Section 202(3); a new exemption has been added for nonissuer transactions in securities subject to Securities Exchange Act reporting in Section 202(4); a new exemption has been added for nonissuer transactions rated at the time of a transaction by a nationally recognized statistical rating organization in one of the four highest rating categories in Section 202(5)(A); and new exemptions were added for specified foreign issuers whose securities are traded on designated securities exchanges in Section 202(9), control transactions in Section 202(18), specified out-of-state offers or sales in Section 202(20), specified sales transactions in Section 202(22), and specified exchange transactions in Section 202(23).



The administrator must expressly authorize one of three exemptions of notes, bonds, debentures, or other evidences of indebtedness for nonprofit organizations under Section 201(7) and new conditions have been added to the unit secured transactions exemption in Section 202(11) to address two substantial areas of state regulatory concern.



The emphasis on the securities registration exemptive area is on flexibility. Securities administrators are both given broad powers to exempt other securities, transactions, or offers in Section 203 and to deny, suspend, condition or limit specified exemptions in Section 204.



(4) Relatively modest changes were made to Article 3, which concerns registration of securities. A new notice filing provision was added in Section 302. A generic waiver provision was added in Section 307. New procedural provisions for stop orders were added in Section 306(d)-(f).



Merit regulation was among the most divisive issues that confronted the RUSA Drafting Committee. After the National Securities Market Improvement Act of 1996 preempted states from applying merit regulation provisions to federal covered securities, this became a less controversial issue. The approach in this Act retains two widely adopted merit regulation provisions in Section 306(a)(7)(A)-(B):