MEMORANDUM OPINION
“The United States’ housing market collapse in 2008-2009 and the ensuing global financial crisis are widely considered the worst financial disasters since the Great Depression; their causes have been hotly debated.”
In October 2013, the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC” or “Com
After some initial skirmishing before the SEC administrative law judge (“ALJ”),
Plaintiffs’ application for a temporary restraining order was denied.
The matter now is before the Court on (1) plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary in
Discussion
I. The Standard Governing Motions to Dismiss for Lack of Subject Matter Jurisdiction
The Court must address the threshold question of whether it has subject matter jurisdiction before considering the merits.
II. Subject Matter Jurisdiction and Administrative Adjudication
Plaintiffs ask this Court to interrupt an ongoing agency adjudication. The question is whether the Court has the power to do so in these circumstances.
Article III allows Congress “to delay judicial review of administrative action”
“Generally, when Congress creates procedures ‘designed to permit agency expertise to be brought to bear on particular problems,’ those procedures ‘are to be exclusive.’ ”
The Supreme Court affirmed the Tenth Circuit. It reasoned that to “uphold the District Court’s jurisdiction in these circumstances would be inimical to the structure and the purposes of the Mine Act.”
In Free Enterprise Fund v. Public Company Accounting Oversight Board,
III. Circuit Precedent
We begin by canvassing four previous cases in this circuit involving pre-enforcement challenges to administrative adjudications.
The first case was Altman v. SEC,
The district court held that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction.
The Second Circuit affirmed.
Shortly after the district court ruled in Altman (but before the Second Circuit’s affirmance), another court in this district
Applying Thunder Basin, the district court held that it had jurisdiction to hear Gupta’s equal protection claim. First, it concluded that forcing Gupta to adjudicate his constitutional claims before the SEC would foreclose judicial review because the SEC’s discovery rules would make it impossible to develop an adequate record to support those claims.
Two of my colleagues took a different tack in Cleantech Innovations, Inc. v. NASDAQ Stock Market, LLC.
The most recent case is Arjent LLC v. SEC.
Plaintiffs and the SEC urge the Court to draw sweeping — and opposite — conclusions from these cases. Harding and Chau contend that the logic of Gupta and Arjent is dispositive.
Altman, Gupta, Cleantech, and Arjent resist easy distillation into a black and white rule — and for good reason. Thunder Basin and Free Enterprise Fund teach that the question of whether a special statutory scheme provides for adequate review of administrative actions involves case-specific determinations. Whether jurisdiction exists in a particular instance depends in significant part on the nature of the constitutional claim at issue — whether it is “wholly collateral to a statute’s review provisions” — and on a party’s ability to litigate that claim in an administrative proceeding and obtain adequate judicial review if it loses — whether “preclusion could foreclose all meaningful judicial review.”
Even so, this quartet of recent cases yields one clear conclusion. At least some SEC respondents seem to believe that they can procure a one-way ticket out of an agency proceeding and into district court simply by raising a constitutional allegation. Thunder Basin, Free Enterprise Fund, and good sense say otherwise. This Court’s jurisdiction is not an escape hatch for litigants to delay or derail an administrative action when statutory channels of review are entirely adequate.
For reasons that will appear, the Court concludes that permitting plaintiffs to seek pre-enforcement relief from the SEC in
TV. Plaintiffs’ Due Process Claim
In order to determine whether there is jurisdiction over plaintiffs’ due process claims, it is important to specify the claims with precision. There is an important distinction between a. claim that an administrative scheme is unconstitutional in all instances — a facial challenge— and a claim that it violates a particular plaintiffs rights in light of the facts of a specific case — an as-applied challenge. As between the two, courts are more likely to sustain pre-enforcement jurisdiction over “broad facial and systematic challenges,” such as the claim at issue in Free Enterprise Fund.
Our analysis begins with SEC Rule of Practice 360, which is the principal source of plaintiffs’ alleged due process injuries. It states that, “[i]n the Commission’s discretion, after consideration of the nature, complexity, and urgency, of' the subject matter, and with due regard for the public interest and the protection of investors, [the time period in which the hearing officer’s initial decision must be filed] will be either 120, 210 or 300 days from the date of service” of an order instituting proceedings.
Plaintiffs initially raised their due process concerns in a December 2013 motion before the ALJ.
Chau and Harding made three additional requests. First, they argued that due process required a mechanism that would “significantly narrow the issues in the case.”
The ALJ denied the motion on January 24, 2014.
“I am sympathetic to Respondents’ situation, and there may one day be an administrative proceeding where the difficulties of preparing for hearing within the time specified by Rule 360(a) are found to warrant some of the extraordinary relief Respondents request. But this is not that proceeding. Given the manner in which the Division has produced the investigative files, including files from other investigations, and given the representations the Division has made regarding them, Respondents should be able to meaningfully prioritize their review.”80
The ALJ made also the reasonable point that, for all of plaintiffs’ sturm und drang over the SEC’s 22 million-document production, “if it is true that the investigative file is larger than the entire printed Library of Congress, as Respondents assert, it stands to reason that the Division did not actually review every page in all the investigative files it produced” and “[tjhis fact alone should permit Respondents to focus their review efforts on a small subset of the investigative files.”
On February 14, 2014 plaintiffs reasserted their due process claims and raised also a separate equal protection claim in an emergency motion before the ALJ.
What these facts show is that, at every moment between December 2013 and March 2014, Harding and Chau’s due process claim has been that the SEC’s procedural rules, including its 300-day deadline, are unfair in light of “the facts and circumstances of [their] case.”
Now that the SEC hearing has concluded, a due process claim that had been forward-looking — i.e., that it would be unfair to force plaintiffs to adjudicate their case administratively without more time to prepare — has shifted from the subjunctive to the indicative mood. Plaintiffs now can point to occurrences in the administrative record that, they claim, evidence due process violations. They devote seventeen pages of their brief to a detailed account of "how the SEC’s rules allegedly “made it impossible for Plaintiffs’ counsel to conduct adequate document review and other fact development,” how plaintiffs allegedly “were unable to meet, let alone depose, most of the witnesses with relevant information prior to the hearing,” and how plaintiffs allegedly “were unable to engage experts timely and were unable to take full advantage of the capabilities of the experts they did hire.”
The SEC argues that plaintiffs’ briefing “forcefully demonstrates why this court lacks jurisdiction all [of plaintiffs’] complaints are inextricably intertwined with [the] ongoing administrative proceeding and can be reviewed by a court of appeals, if necessary, when the Commission enters a final order.”
First, SEC adjudication would not “foreclose all meaningful judicial review” of
Second, plaintiffs’ due process arguments are not “wholly collateral” to the SEC proceeding.
The same logic applies here. Chau and Harding themselves characterize their due process claim as depending on “the application of the Commission’s [administrative proceeding] rules to the facts and circumstances of this case.”
Indeed, on this question of what claims are “collateral” to an adjudication, one passage in plaintiffs’ brief is especially telling. Harding and Chau claim that they have been “forced to expend enormous resources responding to a litany of unfair surprises” and assert that, “[u]nlike large corporate defendants, [they] do not have unlimited resources ... to continue to litigate” this case.
This bid to evoke sympathy highlights the remarkably problematic nature of plaintiffs’ due process arguments. Criminal defendants face trial every day in this and other courthouses — often with poorly paid, court-appointed counsel because they cannot afford any private representation, let alone the same representation as “large corporate defendants.” Those defendants, many of whom face peril far greater than the administrative penalties facing plaintiffs, cannot interrupt their prosecutions and trials to appeal an allegedly inade
Third, plaintiffs fail to articulate any convincing reason why the SEC lacks the competence to consider the fairness of proceedings before its ALJs. This is not a situation, as in Free Enterprise Fund, where a litigant is asking an agency to conclude that the very existence of one of its constituent parts is unconstitutional. Rather, plaintiffs’ challenge is to the fairness of their particular hearing.
Harding and Chau insist that they should not have to wait. They believe that the unfairness in their proceeding is manifest now. Perhaps. Perhaps not. Indeed, if plaintiffs’ arguments are as strong as they insist, then vindication will be theirs should the time come. But plaintiffs offer no compelling reason why the congressionally.-specified route of review is inappropriate here, and the Court sees none.
The SEC’s appellate review scheme is entirely adequate for addressing plaintiffs’ due process arguments. The Court thus lacks jurisdiction over plaintiffs’ due process claim.
V. Plaintiffs’ Equal Protection Claim
The Court turns next to plaintiffs’ equal protection claim.
Plaintiffs identify three other SEC cases involving CDOs
Notably, plaintiffs do not allege that they are members of a protected class. Instead, theirs is a so-called “class of one” claim. They assert only that they have been “intentionally treated differently from others similarly situated and that there is no rational basis for the difference in treatment.”
In reaching this determination, the Court has considered carefully the reasoning of Gupta.
As an initial matter, Gupta is distinguishable. That case involved an allegation of unequal treatment relative to twenty-eight comparator parties who allegedly participated in the same insider trading ring.
First, adjudication of plaintiffs’ equal protection claim before the SEC will not “foreclose all meaningful judicial review.”
In short, plaintiffs have been litigating their equal protection claim actively. While they no doubt disagree with the ALJ’s privilege determinations, they can appeal those decisions to the full Commission. If they lose there, and if a court of appeals later finds those decisions problematic, it can order whatever relief it deems proper, including directing the SEC’s staff to produce the contested discovery and the ALJ to take additional evidence.
The Court recognizes that Gupta stated that obtaining “meaningful judicial review” of an equal protection claim before the SEC would be difficult because the Commission “would be inherently conflicted in assessing such a claim, and, at a minimum, Gupta would be forced to endure the very proceeding he alleges is the device by which unequal treatment is being visited
Touche Ross & Co. v. SEC
The Supreme Court’s decision in FTC v. Standard Oil Company of California
To be sure, these principles are not necessarily absolute. There may be cases in which courts will not require litigants to “bet the farm” in order to attempt to
Second, plaintiffs’ equal protection claim is not “wholly collateral” to the SEC proceeding.
Moreover, Harding and Chau’s equal protection claim does relate to the outcome of the SEC action. As the SEC has pointed out — correctly, in this Court’s view— many of plaintiffs’ claims about the differences between their case and other CDO-related cases “appear,' at their core, to be more about the evidence and theories of liability.”
Third, plaintiffs’ equal protection claim is not “outside the [SEC’s] expertise.”
Taken to its logical conclusion, Harding and Chau’s approach to agency competence would upend all manner of administrative enforcement schemes. Numerous provisions of administrative law empower the executive branch to choose among enforcement strategies. The Clayton and Federal Trade Commission Acts, for example, empower the Justice Department and the FTC to challenge allegedly anticom-petitive mergers and acquisitions, although the Justice Department acts through civil suits
If anything, the SEC is especially competent when it comes to determining which CDO-related cases are appropriately brought in a district court and which in an administrative proceeding. The Supreme Court’s decision in Moog Industries v. FTC is instructive.
The Court concludes that the normal channels of statutory review are adequate for adjudication of plaintiffs’ equal protection claim. The Court therefore lacks subject matter jurisdiction over both plaintiffs’ constitutional claims and must dismiss the case.
Conclusion
The Court recognizes that the growth of administrative adjudication, especially in preference to adjudication by Article III courts and perhaps particularly in the field of securities regulation, troubles some.
Part of the concern no doubt comes from persons charged with violations of the securities laws and their counsel. In the time-honored and entirely appropriate way of so many litigants, they usually want a particular forum, and deride alternatives, for no reason more exalted than self-interest. They seek the forum that they believe, rightly or wrongly, would be more likely to find in their favor.
Another source of concern is apprehension that allowing the SEC to pursue some cases in administrative proceedings rather than in Article III courts will increase the role of the Commission in interpreting the securities laws to the detriment or exclusion of the long standing interpretative role of the courts. This apprehension rests on an underlying concern that the Supreme Court eventually might extend broad Chevron deference to SEC interpretations of the securities laws articulated by the Commission in the determination of administrative proceedings.
This Court’s role is a modest one. It is merely to determine whether the Court has the power to reach the merits of plaintiffs’ constitutional claims. Applying Thunder Basin and Free Enterprise Fund, this Court holds that it does not. If plaintiffs lose before the Commission, they will have a full opportunity to present their arguments in a court of appeals. In reaching this conclusion, moreover, this Court has not considered any views concerning the proper or wise allocation of interpretive functions between the Commission and the courts. Those are policy matters committed to the legislative and executive branches of government.
Plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction [DI 2] is denied. The SEC’s motion to dismiss the action [DI 16] is granted in all respects. The Clerk shall enter judgment and close the case.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Chau v. Lewis,
. Harding is a registered investment adviser, and Chau is Harding's president and managing member. Compl. [DI 2] ¶¶ 10-11.
. Chau,
. See 15 U.S.C. § 77h-l (Securities Act); 15 U.S.C. § 80b-3(e), (£), (k) (Advisors Act).
. Deck of Alex Lipman [DI 24] Ex. 1 (Order Instituting Administrative and Cease-and-Desist Proceedings (Oct. 18, 2013)); DI 2 ¶ 24.
. DI 24 Ex. 1 ¶¶ 8, 25, 59; DI 2 ¶¶ 25-26.
. On December 20, 2013, plaintiffs moved the ALJ for (i) a six-month adjournment, (ii) application of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure to the administrative proceeding, and (iii) an order directing that the SEC turn over documents in a fashion more to their liking. DI 24 Ex. 7; DI 2 ¶ 51. The ALJ denied the motion on January 24, 2014. DI 24 Ex. 11. On February 14, 2014 plaintiffs filed an emergency motion before the ALJ, asserting a violation of their due process and equal protection rights. DI 24 Ex. 33. The ALJ denied the motion on February 19, 2014. DI 24 Ex. 34. On February 26, 2014, plaintiffs filed a petition for interlocutory review before the SEC. DI 24 Ex. 35. The SEC denied the petition on March 14, 2014. DI 24 Ex. 38; DI 2 ¶ 51.
. DI 2 ¶ 54.
. Tr. of Mar. 19, 2014 Oral Arg. [DI 6] at 17:3-19.
. The administrative hearing took place between March 31 and April 30. See SEC's Mem. of Law in Opposition to Plaintiffs’ Motion for Preliminary Injunction and Motion to Dismiss [DI 16] at 12.
. The ALJ initially was to have issued a decision by September 15. DI 16 at 14. That deadline has been extended until January 12, 2015. See Harding Advisory LLC & Wing F. Chau, Securities Act Release No. 9632, Investment Advisers Act Release No. 3901, Investment Company Act Release No. 31219,
. See, e.g., 15 U.S.C. § 77i(a) ("Any person aggrieved by an order of the Commission may obtain a review of such order in the court of appeals of the United States, within any circuit wherein such person resides or has his principal place of business, or in the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia_") (provision applicable to do
. Sinochem Int’l Co. v. Malay. Int’l Shipping Corp.,
. Morrison v. Nat’l Austl. Bank Ltd.,
. Id. (quoting APWU v. Potter,
. See Makarova v. United States,
. 33 Charles Alan Wright & Charles H. Koch, Jr, Federal Practice and Procedure Judicial Review § 8364 (1st ed.2006).
. Watts v. SEC,
. Thunder Basin Coal Co. v. Reich,
. Free Enter. Fund v. Public Co. Accounting Oversight Bd.,
.
. See 30 U.S.C. § 813(f) (the "Federal Mine Safety and Health Amendments Act of 1977”).
. Thunder Basin Coal Co. v. Martin,
.
. Id. at 212-13,
.
. See 15 U.S.C. § 7211.
.
. Id. at 490,
.Id. at 491,
. Compare Mem. of Law in Support of Plaintiffs’ Motion for a Temporary Restraining Order and a Preliminary Injunction [DI 25] at 27-28, with DI 16 at 17-27.
. See also Connecticut v. Spellings,
.
. Id. at 557.
. Id. at 557-58.
. Id. at 562.
. Id. at 561.
. Id. at 560.
. Id.
. Altman v. SEC,
. Id. at 46.
.
. Id. at 506.
. Id. at 506-07.
. Id. at 513-14.
. Id. at 513.
. Id. at 512.
.
.
. The case was initially before Judge Sullivan and concluded before Judge Forrest. See No. 11 Civ. 9358(RJS),
.
. Id.
. Id. at *3.
. Id. at *3 n. 2.
.
. Id. at *2-3.
. Id. at *1-2.
.
. Id. at 380.
. Id. at 385.
. See Plaintiffs' Mem. of Law in Further Support of Motion for Preliminary Injunction and in Opposition to the SEC’s Motion To Dismiss [DI 20] at 23.
. The Second Circuit's Altman decision did not mention Gupta at all, and the Court finds the SEC’s argument that Altman in substance disapproved Gupta unconvincing.
. Thunder Basin,
. Id. at 216,
. Elk Run Coal Co., Inc. v. Dep’t of Labor,
. Elgin v. Dep’t of Treasury, — U.S. —,
. 17 C.F.R. § 201.360(a)(2).
. DI 24 Ex. 1 at 14.
. DI 24 Ex. 6 at 2.
. DI 24 Ex. 7.
. Id. at 2 (emphasis in original).
. 17 C.F.R. § 201.161(a). .
. DI 24 Ex. 7 at 7-8.
. Id. at 10.
. Id.
. Id. at 10-11 (discussing Federal Rules 26, 30, 31, 33, and 36).
. Id. at 12.
. Id. at 15.
. DI 24 Ex. 11.
. Id. at 2 (emphasis added).
. Id.
. DI 24 Ex. 33. The February 14 motion raised also, for the first time but in a footnote, the argument that the SEC’s rules violated plaintiffs’ right to a jury trial under the Sev
. DI 24 Ex. 34 at 2.
. DI 24 Ex. 35.
.DI 24 Ex. 38.
. Id. at 13.
. DI 2 ¶ 6.
. DI 20 at 3.
. Id. at 4.
. Id. at 11.
. Id. at 16.
. SEC’s Reply in Support of Its Motion to Dismiss [DI 22] at 2.
. Thunder Basin,
. Cf. LaVallee Northside Civic Ass’n v. V.I. Coastal Zone Mgmt. Comm’n,
. Thunder Basin,
.
. Id. at 35-36,
. Id.
. Id. (quoting Free Enter. Fund,
. DI 2 ¶ 6.
. DI 20 at 4.
. See Stans v. Gagliardi,
. See United States v. Zimmelman,
. See SEC v. Rajaratnam,
. Cf. Altman,
. The three cases are SEC v. Stoker, No. 11 Civ. 7388 (S.D.N.Y.) (leading to a jury verdict of not liable); SEC v. Steffelin, No. 11 Civ. 4204 (in which the SEC dismissed remaining charges after Judge Cedarbaum partially granted a motion to dismiss); and SEC v. Goldman Sachs & Co. & Fabrice Tourre, No. 10 Civ. 3229 (S.D.N.Y.) (leading to a jury verdict of liable).
. DI 2 ¶ 30.
. Id. ¶35.
. Id. ^2.
. Vill. of Willowbrook v. Olech,
.
. DI 20 at 24.
.
. Thunder Basin,
. DI 25 at 27.
.
. See DI 16 Ex. C at 3207:1-3208:21 (Tr. of SEC Hr’g (Apr. 21, 2014)); id. at 4445:20-23, 4446:11-16 (Tr. of SEC Hr'g (Apr. 25, 2014)).
. Id. at 3193:14-3195:25 (Tr. of SEC Hr'g (Apr. 21,' 2014)).
. Id. at 3201:15-19.
. Id. at 3213:2-3215:21.
. The ALJ declined to examine the action memoranda in the three other cases. Id. at 4457:11-21 (Tr. of SEC Hr’g (Apr. 25, 2014)). Portions of the memorandum for this case that the ALJ reviewed first were redacted to remove staff legal analysis that was not relevant to the SEC's choice of forum. Id. at 4459:20-25, 4461:5-13, 4464:24-4466:2.
. Id. at 4691 (Tr. of SEC Hr’g (Apr. 30, 2014)).
. See, e.g., SEC v. Nacchio, No. 05 Civ. 480(MS),
. See 15 U.S.C. §§ 77i(a) ("If either party shall apply to the court for leave to adduce additional evidence, and shall show to the satisfaction of the court that such additional evidence is material and that there were reasonable grounds for failure to adduce such evidence in the hearing before the Commission, the court may order such additional evidence to be taken before the Commission ....”); see also 15 U.S.C. §§ 80b-13(a), 80a-42(a) (same).
.
.
. Id. at 573.
. Id. at 575. In particular, the respondents took issue with the fact that the SEC sought to adjudicate the case against them in a public, rather than a private, hearing. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id. at 583 (Kaufman, J., concurring).
.
. Id. at 235,
. Id. at 245-46,
. Id. at 244,
. MedImmune, Inc. v. Genentech, Inc.,
.
. Jarkesy,
. Thunder Basin,
. DI 25 at 28 (citing Gupta,
. See Touche Ross,
. USAA Fed. Sav. Bank v. McLaughlin,
. DI 24 Ex. 38 at 12.
. Thunder Basin,
. See Cooper v. Aaron,
. Gupta,
. DI 24 Ex. 34 at 2 (citing United States v. Am. Elec. Power Serv. Corp.,
. DI 24 Ex. 38 at 12 (citing Vill. of Willowbrook,
. Cf. Cleantech,
. 15 U.S.C. § 25.
. Id. § 21.
^ DI 25 at 28.
.
. Id. at 411-12,
. Id. at 413,
. Id.
. Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
Chevron deference typically has not been afforded "where ... the agency’s interpretation is presented in the course of litigation and has not been 'articulated before in a rule or regulation.' ” SEC v. Rosenthal,650 F.3d 156 , 160 (2d Cir.2011). A footnote, however, in another roughly contemporaneous Second Circuit case — decided by a different panel and without discussion of Rosenthal or the previous Second Circuit case upon which Rosenthal relied — observed that an interpretation by the Commission that it characterized as "a formal adjudicatory decision” " 'trump[ed]’ our [i.e., the Second Circuit’s] prior interpretation” on the same point. VanCook v. SEC,653 F.3d 130 , 140 n. 8 (2d Cir.2011).
*437 In view of the apparent conflict between Rosenthal and VanCook, it is not at all clear that the Second Circuit definitively has taken the position that Commission interpretations in adjudicatory proceedings are entitled to Chevron was not the product of an adversary litigation, but a consent order entered to settle an administrative case. VanCook,653 F.3d at 140 n. 8 (citing David A. Finnerty, Exchange Act Rel. No. 59,998, 95 SEC Docket No. 2534,2009 WL 1490212 (May 28, 2009)). And regardless of what position the Second Circuit takes with respect to Chevron deference, the ultimate determiner of the issue will be the Supreme Court.
