Ahmad Baravati was employed as a broker in the Chicago office of Josephthal, Lyon & Ross, Inc. (JLR), a New York securities firm that is a member of the National Association of Securities Dealers. JLR fired Baravati. The NASD requires that whenever a broker is terminated, the member firm that employed him must fill out and submit to the association a termination notice form (form U-5), which the NASD retains and makes available to any member who wants information about the broker, perhaps because he has applied for a job with the member. The form asks the reason for the termination. The reason JLR listed was that Baravati was “under investigation by [JLR] for the fraudulent and wrongful taking of firm property in the amount of $7,650.25.” The parties agree that Baravati’s contract with JLR required disputes, tortious as well as contractual, arising under the contract to be arbitrated in accordance with the NASD’s Code of Arbitration Procedure. (Submission of disputes to arbitration is now a required term in employment contracts with members of NASD.
Kresock v. Bankers Trust Co.,
Judicial review of arbitration awards is tightly limited; perhaps it ought not be called “review” at all. By including an arbitration clause in their contract the parties agree to submit disputes arising out of the contract to a nonjudicial forum, and we do not allow the disappointed party to bring his dispute into court by the back door, arguing that he is entitled to appellate review of the arbitrators’ decision.
United Paperworkers International Union v. Misco, Inc.,
A number of courts, including our own, have said that they can set aside arbitral awards if the arbitrators exhibited a “manifest disregard of the law.”
Health Services Management Corp. v. Hughes,
JLR makes two points (the third, that Baravati waived his right to complain about being defamed, is frivolous and need not be discussed). The first is that under the law of Illinois the contents of the U-5 form
*707
that JLR filled out and submitted to the NASD are, like a pleading, testimony, exhibit, or opinion, absolutely privileged as a communication made in a judicial or quasi-judicial proceeding. The law of
Illinois?
Confirmation of the arbitrators’ award was sought under Title 9 of the U.S.Code, the Federal Arbitration Act. Yet one might think that in a case such as this, where the basis of federal jurisdiction is diversity of citizenship rather than the existence of a federal question (as it would be if, for example, an arbitration award based on a collective bargaining contract subject to section 301 of the Taft-Hartley Act, 29 U.S.C. § 185, were sought to be enforced), substantial constitutional questions would arise if the federal courts tried to create a body of substantive law to be applied by the arbitrators.
Erie R.R. v. Tompkins,
A standard way in which federal courts make federal common law is by adopting the law of the state whose law would govern in the absence of federal law, subject to the implicit proviso that the adopted state law be consistent with federal policy. The states have richer bodies of common law than the federal courts do and it is desirable to minimize the number of different legal rules to which people are subject.
Powers v. United States Postal Service,
That is easier said than done.
Fahnestock & Co. v. Wattman,
We need not wrestle this issue to the ground. JLR could not in any event assert the absolute privilege under the facts of this case. This is true even though federal securities law gives NASD quasi-judicial responsibilities. Those laws impose duties of self-regulation on stock exchanges and on, what is functionally the same thing, dealer associations in the over-the-counter markets. 15 U.S.C. § 78o-3;
SEC v. Waco Financial, Inc.,
We must not overdramatize. The employee can seek to clear his name by asking the NASD to investigate or by invoking the arbi-tral process, as Baravati did; in fact, the defendants told us without contradiction, Ba-ravati found employment with another member firm; and securities firms will be reluctant to give reasons for a termination that might scare their clients, although we do not know to what extent U-5s circulate outside the brokerage houses themselves. So the sky would not fall if the privilege were allowed to bar the kind of relief sought by Baravati. What is more, since the members are
required
to state the reason for termination on the U-5, denial of the privilege puts them in a hard place, where if they state a reason discreditable to the employee they may be sued for libel while if they lie about the reason they will be violating the association’s rules.
NASD Manual
¶ 1153 (C.C.H. 1993) (art. IV, § 3(a) of NASD’s by-laws). But it is only the
absolute
privilege that is in issue in this case. All concede that, just as in the ease of an employer’s character reference, the firm has a qualified privilege to defame the employee on the U-5, a privilege forfeited (under Illinois law) only if the firm knows or is reckless in failing to discover that it is defaming him falsely.
Mittelman v. Witous,
*709
JLR’s second argument is that the arbitrators exceeded their powers in awarding punitive damages. NASD’s Code of Arbitration Procedure, incorporated by reference in the contract between Baravati and JLR, requires arbitrators to provide “a summary of ... the damages and other relief awarded,” but contains no other reference to the arbitrators’ remedial powers.
Mastrobuono v. Shearson Lehman Hutton Inc.,
Mastrobuono
put us in conflict with four other circuits, which hold that such a choice of law designation does not override the power of arbitrators to award punitive damages, provided the rules that the parties have agreed are to govern the arbitration authorize the arbitrator, implicitly or explicitly, to award such damages.
Bonar v. Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc.,
This disagreement does not bear directly on the present case, however, where there is neither a choice of law provision nor a provision in the governing arbitration rules concerning the scope of the arbitrators’ remedial powers. We have suggested that if the court asked to enforce (or set aside) the arbitrators’ award had occasion to apply federal common law to some dispute (say over arbi-trability), it might well look to Illinois law for guidance. That is a different question from whether the
arbitrators
were required to look to Illinois law for guidance or remedies. The contract involved in the
Mastrobuono
case
told
the arbitrators to apply New York law, and the question was whether this
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meant remedial (as we thought, and the other circuits do not) as well as substantive law. There is no similar directive in this ease. We hesitate to infer one. It is commonplace to leave the arbitrators pretty much at large in the formulation of remedies, just as in the formulation of the principles of contract interpretation.
United Steelworkers v. Enterprise Wheel & Car Corp.,
Occasional statements that punitive damages are disfavored in arbitration, see, e.g.,
Miller Brewing Co. v. Brewery Workers, supra,
It remains to consider whether Illinois has a policy limiting the award of punitive damages by arbitrators that we should adopt as part of the federal common law of arbitration applicable to disputes that would be governed by Illinois law were they not within the purview of the Federal Arbitration Act.
Fahnestock & Co. v. Wattman, supra,
held that New York’s common law rule forbidding arbitrators to award punitive damages governed in an arbitration under the Federal Arbitration Act when, as in the present case, the arbitration was not being conducted under rules authorizing such relief. There was no question that that
was
New York’s rule. We have only one Illinois decision,
Edward Electric Co. v. Automation, Inc.,
Although Fahnestock is distinguishable from the present case, we will not be coy and *711 attempt to conceal our disagreement with it. Not only is a rule forbidding arbitrators to award punitive damages an implausible candidate for incorporation into the federal common law of arbitration, but Fahnestock appears to hold that state common law of arbitration governs cases under the Federal Arbitration Act unless the parties have expressed their intentions not to be bound by it, as by subscribing to rules of arbitration that authorize the award of relief barred by the common law. At that point, the court seems to have thought, federal common law would spring back into place. We don’t agree. State common law hostile to arbitration is preempted by federal common law friendly to it.
Of course if the Illinois law of defamation did not authorize the award of punitive damages in a case such as this, the arbitrators would be bound if we are correct that the parties’ agreement was that the arbitrators would apply the law of some state, plausibly Illinois’s, to tort claims arising out of the employment relation. That is not argued. The argument is that Illinois has some special rule concerning the award of punitive damages by arbitrators in any class of case. Such a rule, if it exists, is preempted by the Federal Arbitration Act.
The arbitrators’ award was lawful, and the judgment of the district court is therefore
AFFIRMED.
