DECISION AND ORDER
This lawsuit is a putative class action on behalf of individuals and entities (collec *356 tively, “Plaintiffs”) who invested large sums of money in four hedge funds founded and operated by the Fairfield Greenwich Group (“Fairfield Greenwich”). The overwhelming majority of Plaintiffs’ money was in turn invested in Bernard Madoffs Ponzi scheme. Plaintiffs are now suing a number of Fairfield Greenwich companies, directors, and others who audited or administered the hedge funds. The complaint alleges violations of federal securities law and common law tort, breach of contract and quasi-contract causes of action. Fairfield Greenwich and numerous co-defendants (collectively, “Defendants”) move to dismiss the complaint in its entirety, asserting defenses grounded in federal and state law.
Because of the breadth of issues raised in Defendants’ various submissions, the Court considers their motions in two separate rulings. This Decision and Order, to be referred to as “Anwar I,” disposes of arguments made by Defendants that all of Plaintiffs’ common law claims, save for fraud, are preempted by New York State’s Martin Act (the “Martin Act”), N.Y. Gen. Bus. Law, Art. 23-A, §§ 352-359. The remainder of Defendants’ arguments are addressed in a companion Decision and Order issued separately.
Defendants’ preemption argument — that the Martin Act, the state law granting the New York State Attorney General (“Attorney General”) power to prosecute fraud in the securities market, forecloses any private common law causes of action except for fraud — has been accepted by the majority of courts that have considered the issue in the Southern District of New York, as well as by numerous New York state courts.
See Nanopierce Tech., Inc. v. Southridge Capital Mgmt. LLC,
No. 02 Civ. 0767,
I. DISCUSSION
A. A FOX TERRIER COMES TO COURT
In a recurring theme that inspired many of his books and essays on natural history, the prominent biologist Stephen Jay Gould often documented how, not uncommonly, an error enters into scientific theories and writings, and later becomes perpetuated when the fallacy is uncritically adopted and copied by subsequent scholars, at times expressed with identical phrases, arguments and illustrations. See, e.g., Stephen Jay Gould, Bully for Brontosaurus 163-64 (1991) (finding the description of Eohippus, the so-called dawn horse, as resembling “the size of a fox terrier” in two-thirds of modern American biology textbooks, and tracing the archaic simile verbatim to a 1904 article by an eminent American scholar). In consequence, flawed or false concepts gain currency in scientific literature, and then become axiomatic through generations of literal repetition in succeeding texts, sometimes long after the rationale for the original proposition has been lost, and even after the theory has been roundly discredited or disproved. The law has its own version of this practice reflected in some judicial opinions. 1 A body of federal and state court decisions interpreting and *357 applying one aspect of the Martin Act presents a case in point.
The unwitting perpetuation of error, in this Court’s reading of the law, comes in judicial decisions ruling that the Martin Act preempts common law causes of action that exist independent of the Martin Act but whose proof relies on the same facts that would support a Martin Act prosecution by the Attorney General. Speaking generally, the Martin Act “authorizes the Attorney General [of New York] to investigate and enjoin fraudulent practices in the marketing of stocks, bonds and other securities within or from New York State.”
Kerusa Co. LLC v. W10Z/515 Real Estate Ltd.,
Most cases finding Martin Act preemption have arisen in the Southern District of New York.
See Stephenson v. Citco Group Ltd.,
In addition to this divergent line of federal authority, the Attorney General, in two cases pending before the First Department, has taken a position against total preemption,
see
Brief for the Attorney General of the State of New York as Amicus Curiae,
CMMF, LLC. v. J.P. Morgan Inv. Mgmt., Inc.,
No. 601924/09 (App. Div. 1st Dep’t Apr. 7, 2010) (“Attorney General Brief’); Brief for the Attorney General of the State of New York as Amicus Curiae,
Assured Guaranty (UK) Ltd. v. J.P. Morgan Inv. Mgmt., Inc.,
No. 603755/08, 2010
*358
WL 2977934 (App.Div. 1st Dep’t Apr. 7, 2010). New York appellate courts that have considered preemption have rejected it.
See Scalp & Blade, Inc. v. Advest, Inc.,
B. LONG-STANDING RULES OF STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION FORECLOSE PREEMPTION
As a starting point, “it is a general rule of statutory construction that a clear and specific legislative intent is required to override the common law.”
Hechter v. New York Ins. Co.,
Another “general rule is and long has been that when the common law gives a remedy, and another remedy is provided by statute, the latter is cumulative, unless made exclusive by the statute.”
Burns Jackson Miller Summit & Spitzer v. Lindner,
When these well-accepted rules of statutory construction are applied to the Martin Act, it is startling that the statute would be given a broad preemptive reading. The plain language of the Martin Act, while granting the Attorney General investigatory and enforcement powers and prescribing various penalties, nowhere mentions or otherwise contemplates erasing common law causes of action. See N.Y. Gen. Bus. Law, Art. 23-A, §§ 352-59.
C. THE MARTIN ACT’S GENESIS AND HISTORY OFFER NO SUPPORT FOR PREEMPTION
Nor does the Martin Act’s development suggest a desire on the part of the legislature to preempt common law actions. Named after Assemblyman Louis M. Martin and originally enacted in 1921 to allow the Attorney General to intervene in imminent fraud in the investment securities market, the Martin Act constituted New York’s “blue sky” law, one of many in the nation, so-called because they prohibited schemes with no more basis than “so many feet of ‘blue sky.’ ”
See
Patrick M. Connors,
The Smwey of New York Practice,
61 St. John’s L.Rev. 194, 210 n. 1 (1986)
(citing Hall v. Geiger-Jones Co.,
When first enacted, the Martin Act limited the Attorney General’s enforcement power to injunctions of fraudulent behavior. See Connors, supra, at 211 n. 5. But after experience showed that injunctive relief alone was insufficient to prosecute frauds, the Attorney General requested the authority to institute criminal and civil proceedings without always being required to establish all the elements that are usually prerequisites in fraud claims, namely deceitful intent and reliance. See id. at 211 n. 4. These additional enforcement powers were added to the Martin Act in 1955. See id. at 210-11; see also N.Y. Gen. Bus. Law § 352-c (the “Enforcement Section”); Maranda E. Fritz & Michael C. Miller, The Martin Act: Securities Fraud Statute, N.Y.L.J., Dec. 5, 1991, at 5 (noting that substantive felony penalties were added to the Martin Act in 1982).
Amendments to the Martin Act after the addition of the Enforcement Section provide important qualifications on the reasoning that underlies preemption. In particular, a 1960 amendment addressed “purchasers in offerings of cooperative and condominium units.”
Kerusa,
At first, federal courts allowed private litigants to bring causes of action directly under the Enforcement Section.
See Lupardo v. I.N.M. Indus. Corp.,
McKesson
is equally important for what it did not decide. The Court of Appeals’
*360
opinion did not expressly review whether the Martin Act broadly preempted common law causes of action arising out of the same facts that would support a Martin Act proceeding. To the contrary, even while barring private causes of action under the Martin Act, the court allowed the plaintiff to proceed with a common law fraud claim,
see
Tellingly, on the same day
McKesson
was issued, the Court of Appeals addressed on the merits certain breach of fiduciary duty claims in the investment securities context, after noting that plaintiffs’ claims under the Enforcement Section were not allowed.
See Green v. Santa Fe Indus., Inc.,
A Court of Appeals decision four years prior to
McKesson
explains why preemption did not need to enter the picture when this trio of cases was handed down. In
Burns Jackson,
which
McKesson
relied on,
see
*361 Burns Jackson’s holding regarding preemption of common law rights is equally applicable to the Martin Act. Only by reading McKesson, Green, and Loengard as dramatically altering the legal landscape by precluding common law causes of action and doing so not only without comment but contrary to ancient canons of statutory construction, could these three cases provide support for a broad preemptive reading of the Martin Act.
In applying the Martin Act, New York appellate courts certainly have not given
McKesson
such a broad reading. As mentioned above, the Martin Act regulates both investment securities and certain real estate offerings and
McKesson
was immediately applied only in real estate cases. New York courts considering these cases used a rule of artful pleading to forbid causes of action that “substitute[d]” an obligation under the Martin Act for “a fiduciary relationship of trust and confidence.”
Horn v. 440 East 57th Co.,
Since McKesson was applied largely in the context of real estate transactions where the Martin Act had expressly imposed significant new burdens that could be enforced only by the Attorney General, it is not surprising that the state appellate courts summarily and uniformly dismissed causes of action that merely embodied Martin Act violations cloaked in the language of the common law. These decisions did not hold that the Martin Act sweepingly preempted common law causes of action — they merely barred claims that relied on the Martin Act as the source of authority to frame and sustain a cause of action. See Matthew W. Woodruff, Does the Martin Act Preempt Common-Law Causes of Action?, N.Y.L.J., Sept. 4, 2008, at 4.
A recent New York state trial court decision summarizes the better analysis and understanding of the jurisprudence in the state courts: Though the Martin Act “vests in the Attorney General exclusive authority to investigate and prosecute false or fraudulent representations” in certain real estate filings, the Martin Act “does not pre-empt the prosecution of private common law claims” including breach of contract, “fraud, misrepresentation or negligence independent of the duty imposed under the Martin Act.”
Bridge Street Homeowners
Assoc.
v. Brick Condo. Developers, LLC,
No. 26507/06,
D.- WHILE MANY FEDERAL COURTS ADOPTED MARTIN ACT PREEMPTION, SOME STATE COURTS REJECTED IT
Preemption of common law claims entered the picture ten years after
McKesson
was handed down. Immediately after
McKesson
was rendered, many federal courts, though acknowledging that the Martin Act created no private right of action, allowed common law causes of action where plaintiffs would have also brought Martin Act violations. For example, in
Beres v. Thomson McKinnon Sec., Inc.,
the district court considered a lawsuit alleging “omissions and misstatements made by the general partners, the securities broker, and various individual defendants, pursuant to the sale of [gas and oil exploration] partnerships.” No. 85 Civ. 6674,
This state of affairs changed in 1996 when a federal court first embraced Martin Act preemption by dismissing common law claims of breach of fiduciary duty and negligent misrepresentation against an investment advisor on the grounds that any cause of action “covered by the Martin Act” was also preempted by the Martin Act.
Foresters,
Foresters relied on five other New York cases, in addition to McKesson, to hold that the Martin Act preempted common law causes of action. See id. But none of these decisions ever reached the question of preemption. The opinions in some of them are laconic, and, to that extent, easy to misconstrue. Thus, it is understandable that, if read without the context of the Martin Act’s overall legislative history and development, some of the early state court cases may be understood as supporting preemption. The Court will therefore examine each of these cases in close and perhaps belabored detail.
In the earliest
post-McKesson
case cited by
Foresters, Horn v. 440 East 57th Co.,
the plaintiff pressed, among other causes of action, claims alleging negligent misrepresentation and breach of fiduciary duty concerning shares purchased in a residential cooperative corporation.
See
Though the exact source of the improper “substitution]” the
Horn
court refers to is puzzling, the Attorney General, after examining the relevant appellate briefs, confirms that the
Horn
plaintiffs had argued that the Martin Act supplied the special relationship.
See
Attorney General Brief at 17 n. 5. Even without this confirmation, it strains the opinion’s holding to cast it as preempting common law actions. Indeed,
Horn
left open the possibility that the defendant’s violation of Martin Act requirements in excess of the common law may be actionable under a breach of warranty theory if the Martin Act had been written into the contract, granting plaintiff “what is, in effect, a private right of action under the Martin Act.”
Rego Park,
another case cited by
Foresters,
is similarly opaque at first reading.
Rego Park
considered a negligent misrepresentation claim “arising out of the conversion of eight buildings to condominium/co-operative ownership.”
Eagle Tenants Corp. v. Fishbein,
Foresters
also cited yet another real estate case,
Ansonia Tenants’ Coalition, Inc. v. Ansonia Associates,
Finally,
Foresters
relied on
Breakwaters Townhomes Ass’n of Buffalo, Inc. v. Breakwaters of Buffalo, Inc.,
which explicitly found that “plaintiffs essentially seek recovery based on violations of the Martin Act.”
Foresters’ restatement of this language from Breakwaters constitutes the misreading that gave rise to broad preemption: Breakwater’s “no implied private cause of action for violation of the antifraud provisions of that statute” became Foresters’ “no private right of action for claims covered by the Martin Act.” When “violation of’ swelled to “covered by,” the specific became general. Foresters treated this expansion as accomplished fact and supported it only through citation to the inapposite real estate cases discussed above.
Given the somewhat terse and murky opinions in these cases, a rule that any claim “covered” by the Martin Act is preempted as a common law cause of action is not entirely incongruous. But legally it is no less entirely unmoored. By considering whether a cause of action was merely “covered” by the Martin Act instead of “created” by the Martin Act, Foresters significantly expanded the rule from the state courts, which had only dismissed claims relying solely on real estate regulations promulgated by the Attorney General under the Martin Act and had never preempted any causes of action that existed independent of the Martin Act.
Based on the lone paragraph of analysis from
Foresters,
Martin Act preemption quickly went viral.
See, e.g., Vannest v. Sage, Rutty & Co., Inc.,
If this Court’s inquiry and analysis are correct, nowadays, fourteen years after
Foresters,
the snake has eaten its own tail and many courts apply preemption simply by citing to other decisions that have found preemption, without examining whether the doctrine was warranted in the first place. Even in the cases that undertake thorough analysis and endeavor plausible reasoning to support a preemption rule, the lineage of their holding ultimately traces to
Foresters
and the state court cases from which its progeny issue.
See, e.g., Nanopierce Tech.,
The Second Circuit has had little opportunity to solve the Martin Act preemption question, dealing cursorily with it in two cases decided in 2001. In the first,
Suez Equity Investors, L.P. v. Toronto-Dominion Bank,
the Circuit Court, though declining to reach the preemption issue because it was raised for the first time on appeal, noted in dicta that the New York appellate division decisions did not explore preemption with a “level of depth” and that the New York Court of Appeals had “not yet addressed this issue.”
More recently, some state appellate courts have clarified the limits of their application of
McKesson.
Two years ago, the Second Department directly confronted whether the Martin Act preempted common law causes of action based on facts that would also support a Martin Act prosecution. The court held that no precedent from the Court of Appeals “abrogated or supplanted an otherwise viable private cause of action whenever the allegations would support a Martin Act violation” and that finding preemption would be contrary to “basic tenets of statutory construction.”
Caboara v. Babylon Cove Dev.,
This holding agreed with a similar case from the Fourth Department,
Scalp & Blade, Inc. v. Advest, Inc.,
The Attorney General also argues that a Third Department case,
Rasmussen v. A.C.T. Environmental Services, Inc.,
The preemption question is squarely before the First Department in two pending cases,
see CMMF,
Index No. 601924/09 (argued May 26, 2010);
Assured Guaranty (UK) Ltd.,
Index No. 603755/08 (argued May 26, 2010), and it is possible that, in the light of
Caboara, Scalp & Blade,
and
Rasmussen,
the First Appellate Division would decline to find that the Martin Act implicitly overrode the common law. In a similar situation,
Belco Petroleum Corp. v. AIG Oil Rig, Inc.,
the First Department held that New York Insurance Law § 2601 did not preempt the common law of punitive damages.
See
Finally, the most recent New York Court of Appeals case to consider the interaction between the Martin Act and common law causes of action,
Kerusa,
The upshot of this jurisprudence is that the Martin Act should rarely have relevance in federal court securities litigation. As in the case at hand, defendants in federal court typically invoke the Martin Act to dismiss state common law claims brought in investment securities fraud cases. But these common law causes of action do not “substitute” onto themselves requirements imposed by the Martin Act that are more burdensome than the common law requires. Federal courts that have found Martin Act preemption have done so by relying on the mirage created by state courts dismissing claims in real estate cases where the Martin Act, through the regulations promulgated by the Attorney General, imposes more burdens than the common law.
E. NEW YORK’S ATTORNEY GENERAL REJECTS PREEMPTION
The Court also finds particularly persuasive that the Attorney General has flatly rejected a preemptive reading of the Martin Act. In amicus briefs filed in the cases pending before the First Department described above, the Attorney General speaks strongly about correcting the “mistaken understanding” of the Martin Act leading to preemption. Attorney General Brief at 9. The Attorney General’s position is that the “Martin Act, which is enforceable only by the Attorney General, neither increased nor diminished the remedies available to private litigants.” Id. In fact, “[pjrivate common-law actions for the most part advance, and do not hinder, the Attorney General’s fundamental mission under the Martin Act ... because the Attorney General cannot possibly take sole responsibility for policing the marketplace in securities for fraud.” Id. In short, the Martin Act “does not preempt common-law remedies whose source is independent of the statute.” Id. at 8.
F. PREEMPTION CLASHES WITH THE MARTIN ACT’S GOALS
The Attorney General’s conclusion is consistent with the policy goals of the Martin Act. The Martin Act exists “to prevent all types of fraud in connection with the sale of securities and commodities and to defeat economically unsubstantial and visionary schemes in relation to sales whereby the public is fraudulently exposed.”
Sopher v. Abrams,
These policy goals are ill-served by expansive preemption of common law actions. The premise behind the preemptive theory is that “allowing private litigants to press common law claims ‘covered’ by the Martin Act would upset the Attorney General’s exclusive enforcement power in exactly the same way that it would upset the exclusive enforcement power to allow private claims pleaded under the Martin Act
*368
itself.”
Nanopierce Tech.,
It is true that the Martin Act includes a provision for restitution to victims of fraudulent schemes.
See
N.Y. Gen. Bus. L. § 353(3) (allowing Attorney General to file “an application to direct restitution of any moneys or property obtained directly or indirectly by any such fraudulent practice”);
New York v. Barrington & Co.,
However, to broadly preempt private causes of action grants the Attorney General nearly exclusive and final say as to whether the perpetrators of fraudulent securities schemes are held liable under New York law. If the Attorney General chooses not to prosecute or investigates and declines to proceed, remedies for defrauded investors are severely limited and private plaintiffs are left only with common law fraud litigation as a remedy. No other remedies are available, including causes of action with less stringent requirements such as simple negligence or breach of fiduciary duty.
See Gabriel Capital, L.P. v. Natwest Fin., Inc.,
But there is no convincing argument that justifies a finding that private litigation necessarily impinges on the Attorney General’s otherwise exclusive prosecutorial authority to allow fraud lawsuits in the first place. Fraud’s exemption from Martin Act preemption arose because
McKesson
allowed a fraud claim without any
*369
special commentary about its relationship to the Martin Act.
See
The court in
Nanopierce
explained the fraud exception and its rationale as addressing a “concern [ ] with preserving the Attorney General’s exclusive domain” by “precluding] claims which essentially mimic the Martin Act, but permit[ting] common law fraud claims, which require an additional element” of proof of deceitful intent.
Of course, the entire premise of preempting causes of action that “mimic” the Martin Act is itself questionable, as many supposedly preempted causes of action require proof of elements not required in Martin Act prosecutions. For example, as the Attorney General points out, proof of a breach of fiduciary duty requires proving the existence of a fiduciary relationship,
see, e.g., Pension Comm. of Univ. of Montreal Pension Plan v. Banc of Am. Sec., LLC,
*370
Next, though no court has articulated this rationale, preemption advocates may suggest that allowing simultaneous prosecutions by both the Attorney General and private litigants unduly burdens defendants by subjecting them to a war on two fronts, thereby promoting unwarranted settlements.
See Belco Petroleum Corp.,
Finally, though courts finding preclusion of common law claims have “sought to cabin the scope of that preemption to the narrow outlines of the Martin Act,”
Nanopierce Tech.,
Such aggressive interpretations of the law ensure that courts never know for certain what causes of action are allowed and which are not if any cause of action merely “covered” by the Martin Act is preempted.
See New York v. Federated Radio Corp.,
*371
Leaving the Martin Act’s enforcement solely to the Attorney General is one thing. It is quite another to use the Martin Act to carve the common law out of the securities market and deny defrauded investors themselves long-standing common law remedies that predate the Martin Act. Such an interpretation leaves the marketplace arguably less protected than it was before the Martin’s Act passage, which can hardly have been the goal of its drafters. Reading the Martin Act as broadly preempting common law causes of action represents a distortion of its role as a consumer protection law intended “to defeat any scheme whereby the public is exploited.”
New York v. Cadplaz Sponsors, Inc.,
Notwithstanding the Second Circuit’s decision in
Castellano
summarily affirming dismissal of a breach of fiduciary duty claim as preempted by the Martin Act, this Court’s duty when interpreting state law is to reach, based on sound analysis of the relevant law, the same conclusion as it could reasonably predict the New York Court of Appeals would.
See Sprint PCS L.P. v. Connecticut Siting Council,
G. A FEDERAL BRONTOSAURUS
Ultimately, the jurisprudential development of Martin Act preemption in the courts mirrors almost uncannily another phenomenon that Stephen Jay Gould describes in the title tale of Bully for Brontosaurus, that of the “discovery” of the dinosaur known as brontosaurus. Despite its ubiquity in popular culture, such a beast never existed. See generally, John Noble Wilford, The Riddle of the Dinosaur 105-29, 184-86 (1987). The confusion began in 1879 when paleontologist Othniel Charles Marsh unearthed an apatosaurus skeleton that was intact except for the skull. Motivated by a fierce rivalry with fellow bone-digger Edward Drinker Cope, Marsh scoured the excavation site and surrounding areas for a skull that might reasonably be paired with the body he had found. Miles away from his original find, he scored a likely candidate. The skull was actually that of a camarasaurus, but that did not stop Marsh, who called his newly-crowned apatosaurus a “brontosaurus.” What Marsh had “discovered” was nothing more than what was biological and historical reality, and soon became common knowledge, at least to scientists: that Marsh’s find was nothing more than a familiar skeleton with a mismatched cranium.
By essentially grafting a preemption provision to the body of the Martin Act, some courts have completed a similarly flawed process of excavation and misidentification. This result, perpetuated from opinion to opinion with little second-guessing, is unsupported by the Martin Act’s plain language, its legislative design, its *372 past interpretation or the Attorney General’s own views. Though Marsh’s mistake was corrected in the literature relatively soon after it was first made, it took almost one hundred years for the publicly displayed skulls and skeletons he had unearthed to be shown, in the correct pairings. This Court is hopeful that federal district courts, the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, or the New York Court of Appeals will not take as long to correct the Martin Act’s misapplication before it fossilizes any further.
II. ORDER
Accordingly, it is hereby
ORDERED that defendants (Docket Nos. 316, 318, 321, 325, 329, 334, 340, 344, 356, 359, 360, 361) motions to dismiss plaintiffs’ common law claims as preempted by New York’s Martin Act is DENIED.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes expressed his characteristically caustic views on this subject in his familiar warning against the perpetuation of legal rules inadequately examined. Holmes complained about "havfing] no better reason for a rule of law than that so it was laid down in the time of Henry IV,” especially "if the grounds upon which it was laid down have vanished long since, and the rule simply persists from blind imitation of the past.” Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., The Path of the Law, 10 Harv. L.Rev. 457, 469 (1897).
.
Burns Jackson
also noted that it was "fortified in [its] conclusion by-similar decisions of courts of other States.”
Id.
at 467. Accordingly, this Court notes that its research has found no other state that preempts common law actions under its blue sky law. Every court to have considered the issue has held the statutory and common law remedies to be cumulative, often relying on express statutory language that common law remedies were not to be preempted.
See, e.g., Kansas State Bank in Holton v. Citizens Bank of Windsor,
