OPINION AND ORDER
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (“Commission” or “CFTC”) brought this action under the Commodity Exchange Act (“CEA”), 7 U.S.C. § 1
et seq.,
as amended by the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000 (“CFMA”), Pub.L. No. 106-554, 114 Stat. 2763, alleging that defendants fraudulently and without authorization engaged in transactions in foreign currency futures contracts. Defendants International Financial Services (New York), Inc. (“IFS Inc.”) and Sociedade Comercial Siu Lap Limitada (“Siu Lap”), which purportedly acted as, respectively, brokerage firm and clearinghouse for the orders, defaulted. The Commission now moves for summary judgment against the remaining defendants. It seeks permanently to enjoin them from violating the CEA and to recover, through the remedies of disgorgement, restitution, and statutory penalties, additional funds to compensate the victims of defendants’ alleged fraud. Defendant International Financial Services (New York), LLC (“IFS LLC”) cross-moves for summary judgment, arguing primarily that the Commission lacks jurisdiction under the Act, but also that IFS LLC cannot be held liable because, contrary to the Commission’s allegations, it did not engage in a
BACKGROUND
Because IFS Inc. defaulted and both Lai and Robinson invoked their Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination at their depositions, few of the relevant facts can be disputed. Defendants must rely almost exclusively on the Commission’s evidence in an effort to establish genuine issues of material fact sufficient to defeat summary judgment. The following recitation of facts is therefore drawn primarily from CFTC’s Local Rule 56.1 Statement of Undisputed Material Facts. Alleged factual disputes will be appraised, where relevant, in the course of the discussion below. IFS Inc.
In 1997, Lai, a controlling shareholder of Frankwell Commodities Limited (“Frank-well”), a Hong Kong company, participated in the establishment of IFS Inc., a New York corporation with offices in Manhattan and Houston, Texas. (P. Rule 56.1 Stmt. ¶¶ 1, 51-52, 58; Kang Decl., Ex. ZZ at 4 & nn. 15-17.) IFS Inc. purported to be a currency trading brokerage firm, but it never registered with the Commission. (Id. ¶¶ 2-3.) Lai sat on IFS Inc.’s board of directors and, in that capacity, advised Robinson, its president and chief executive officer. (Id. 34, 54-56.) Robinson oversaw IFS Inc.’s operations, supervised its employees, and handled customer complaints. (Id. ¶¶ 35-38, 41-42.)
By placing advertisements in the New York Times and foreign-language newspapers read by Chinese, Russian, and Korean immigrants, IFS Inc. recruited persons, whom it characterized as independent contractors (“ICs”), to act as foreign currency brokers, traders, and consultants. (Id. ¶¶ 71-74.) One of these advertisements, for example, which appeared in the Rus-skaya Reklama, a New York newspaper that caters to the Russian immigrant community, stated:
INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL SERVICES (NEW YORK) INC[.] American Company from Wall Street with 24 years experience on currency market needs smart, hard-working, energetic people for position as CURRENCY TRADE R[.] Two weeks seminar about currency trading, two months paid training, wide opportunity to make money, flexible work schedule.
(Kang Deck, Ex. MM ¶ 4.) The advertisements indicated that applicants need not have prior trading experience, and few ICs hired by IFS Inc. did. (P. Rule 56.1 Stmt. ¶¶ 75-76.)
IFS Inc. grouped the ICs into divisions based on their ethnicities, which included Korean, Chinese, and Russian, and management encouraged the ICs to solicit customers, including friends and relatives, from, their respective ethnic communities.
(Id.
¶¶ 74, 78-80; Kang Deck, Ex. LL ¶ 20, Ex. MM ¶ 17.) Management gave the ICs solicitation and training materials, including brochures and scripts for telephone calls, which included a number of misleading or false statements. (P. Rule 56.1 Stmt. ¶¶ 81-82.) IFS Inc. falsely repre
The solicitation materials, as well as oral representations made by the ICs at the direction or encouragement of IFS Inc.’s management, also misled prospective customers by representing that foreign currency trading offered a very high potential for returns and only a minimal risk of losses. IFS Inc.’s marketing brochure explained that
[t]he main advantage of the FOREX [foreign exchange] market is that there is no bear market as such, in that it is possible to benefit from currency movements whether they increase or decrease in value, so during times of uncertainty and adverse economic conditions the Spot FOREX market offers great opportunity for enhancing portfolio returns.
(Id. ¶ 84.) In a similar vein, IFS Inc.’s sales and marketing manual instructed the ICs to inform prospective customers that making money was the “easy part” of their job. (Id. ¶ 90.) The same proposed marketing script stated that IFS Inc. would “never exspose [sic ] more than 30% of the initial investment. The remaining principal stays in a segregated account at J.P. Morgan.” (Kang Deck, Ex. NN, Tab F at 9.) There is no evidence that IFS Inc. even created any client accounts at J.P. Morgan.
Affidavits from former IFS Inc. customers establish that the ICs routinely misled and lied to customers about the prospect for profits and the status of their accounts. In almost every case, customers lost virtually their entire investments. (P. Rule 56.1 Stmt. ¶¶ 92-102.) One IC told a customer that she stood to gain as much as 600% on her initial investment. In fact, she lost her entire $40,000 investment. The same customer testified that IFS Inc. representatives did not give her adequate time to read her customer contract, which they characterized as “just a formality.” (Kang Deck, Ex. PP ¶ 12.) Someone subsequently forged her initials on the first page of that contract. (Id. ¶ 14.) Another IC, Rene, told a customer, Karahan, that in the “worst-case scenario,” he could lose no more than approximately $1000 of his initial $20,000 investment. When Karahan said he would like to take home and review the IFS Inc. contract, Rene told him not to delay, that the contract simply repeated what she had already explained to him, and that in view of favorable market conditions, he should sign it immediately so that she could begin to invest for him. Kara-han lost virtually his entire life savings within ten weeks. (Kang Deck, Ex. OO.) Other affidavits from former ICs and customers of IFS Inc. establish that IFS Inc. falsely assured clients that trades would not be made without their express authorization, pressured them to sign account agreements without reading them carefully, refused to permit them to take those agreements out of IFS Inc.’s offices, and transacted with client funds without their authorization. (P. Rule 56.1 Stmt. ¶¶ 96-102.)
Robinson oversaw the daily operations of IFS Inc., supervised its employees, reviewed client accounts, and bore ultimate responsibility for handling customer complaints. (P. Rule 56.1 Stmt. ¶¶ 41-42, 145-
Joseph Merlino, an expert retained by the court-appointed receiver, concluded that, in all, IFS Inc. lost $25,428,840 of the $32,810,454 that it invested for some 820 active customer accounts, or, “[vjiewed another way, a total of $178.89 was lost (risk) for each dollar of profit (reward).” (Kang Decl., Ex. TT at 5-6.) The Commission ascribes these gargantuan losses to the minimal and misguided training that ICs received and to IFS Inc.’s derelict trading practices, which Ezra Zask, an expert for the Commission, thoroughly documented and analyzed. (Kang Decl., Ex. UU ¶¶ 45-51.) New ICs sat through a brief training course in which they learned how to convert the values of foreign currencies into their U.S. dollar equivalents and the history of the foreign exchange market, as well as how-to solicit customers, analyze the market (based primarily on charts showing market volatility), and place orders. (Kang Decl., Ex. LL ¶¶ 10-11.) They were also taught a hedging strategy whereby “[i]f a customer has a losing open position, the IC should open an equal, offsetting position in the same currency for the customer instead of closing out the original, losing position to • minimize the loss.” 2 (P. Rule 56.1 Stmt. ¶ 116.) Zask opines that this and other strategies encouraged by IFS Inc., “when executed by underqualified ICs, ... had the sole effect of diminishing the value of customer accounts while generating commission charges for IFS.” (Kang Deck, Ex. UU ¶ 45.) Moreover, because IFS Inc. charged customers “a $90 commission per round-turn transaction,” and because the ICs, in turn, “earned commissions based on the number of contract orders placed for customer accounts per month,” the ICs had a strong incentive to place orders even when that would be contrary to then-clients’ interests. (P. Rule 56.1 Stmt. ¶¶ 112-13.) Indeed, Rosen, a former IC, testified that management threatened the ICs with demotion or discharge if they failed to generate adequate commissions for IFS Inc. (Kang Decl., Ex. D at 58.)
IFS Inc.’s trading procedures also made it virtually impossible for the ICs to make money for their clients. IFS Inc.’s dealing room assistants provided the ICs price quotes for foreign currencies futures contracts, and if the ICs decided to place an order, the assistants would confirm the purchase or sale of the contract with Siu Lap, IFS Inc.’s exclusive “clearinghouse.” (P. Rule 56.1 Stmt. ¶¶ 105-06.) Because price quotes for the contracts received from the dealing room consistently differed from the market prices shown on a streaming Reuters ticker board, at times by as many as thirty to forty points, the dealing room quotes often made it impossible for the ICs to make a profit for their
In effect, then, IFS Inc. required the ICs to “buy” and “sell” (purported) foreign currency futures contracts at artificially inflated prices provided by IFS Inc.’s dealing room, which, in turn, received its price quotes from Siu Lap, IFS Inc.’s purported clearinghouse. “[T]he exclusive relationship between Siu Lap and IFS left the clients captive to Siu Lap’s pricing and rates, and placed the independent contractors and IFS’ clients at a great disadvantage.” (Kang Deck, Ex. NN at 51.) The ICs, moreover, made money exclusively through commissions generated by the trades, giving them perverse incentives to “buy” and “sell” at prices they knew would result in virtually certain losses for then-customers. (Id. 20-28.) And IFS Inc. instructed its ICs to employ “illogical and overly risky” trading strategies that would have been disastrous even had IFS Inc. legitimately been clearing trades through Siu Lap. (Kang Deck, Ex. TT ¶ 45.)
But the fraud apparently ran even deeper. At bottom, IFS Inc. rigged the market to ensure that, with few exceptions, its customers would lose their money to itself and Siu Lap, to whom, “as a general matter, clients’ money was wire-transferred.” (Kang Deck, Ex. NN at 17.) Yet no evidence shows “that IFS or ... Siu Lap ... had dealing lines or accounts with any participants of the inter-bank foreign currency markets” (Kang Deck, Ex. TT ¶ 41) or “that the foreign currency contracts purportedly purchased and sold by IFS were ever laid off in any foreign currency, futures or inter-bank, market.” (Id. ¶ 52.) Hence, “every dollar that was lost by a customer was a dollar gained by IFS” or its partner, Siu Lap. (Id. ¶ 61.) Siu Lap capitalized IFS Inc. and kept it solvent to enable IFS Inc. to continue to solicit client funds to be “invested” with Siu Lap. (Kang Deck, Ex. ZZ at 1-2, 4-6.) According to Merlino’s analysis, as summarized by the court-appointed receiver,
IFS’ reason for existence was to collect clients’ funds, transfer the funds to Siu Lap in Macao, and purposely arrange to “lose” these funds in alleged currency trading. It is unlikely that clients’ funds were actually traded. Since IFS and Siu Lap knew that clients’ positions would be traded to result in losses, there were possibilities of large and apparently illegal gains to be made (in the amount of the alleged investments). These illegal gains would be made by only reporting the alleged trades on clients’ statements, but not actually effecting these trades in the market, and,in the end, simply pocketing the clients’ money.
(Id. 9-10.) In short, IFS Inc. apparently accepted thousands of dollars in client funds, issued them statements purportedly showing trading losses, and sent the money to an overseas account holder, Siu Lap, which may well have been no more than an entity that received the stolen funds. (Kang Decl., Exs. WW, ZZ.) 4
IFS LLC
By letter dated April 6, 2001, Robinson was expressly advised that IFS Inc.’s failure to register with the Commission violated federal law. (Kang Decl., Ex. XX.) On February 12, 2002, Louis F. Burke, counsel for IFS Inc., wrote to the Commission to request that it take no action against IFS Inc. pending a contemplated restructuring and receipt of a decision on its application to register a new entity, IFS LLC, as a futures commission merchant (“FCM”). (P. Rule 56.1 Stmt. ¶ 10; Kang Deck, Ex. F, Tab 2.) The Commission refused to give IFS Inc. a “no action” letter because it failed timely to apply under the relevant laws. (P. Rule 56.1 Stmt. ¶ 6.)
On March 21, 2002, IFS LLC applied to the Commission to be registered as an FCM. (Kang Deck, Ex. G, Tab 2.) The application form represents that IFS LLC is a New York limited liability company, which maintains offices at 40 Wall Street in Manhattan, where IFS Inc. also has its offices; that IFS LLC’s telephone number is the same as that of IFS Inc.; that IFS Inc. is a corporate principal of IFS LLC; and that Johnny Wah Jung, the owner of IFS LLC, is chairman of IFS Inc. (Id. 1, 3.) On page ten of the application form, Jung signed the form as “Chairman” of IFS LLC. (Id. 10.) At his deposition, however, Jung testified that he had never before seen any part of the form except for page ten, and he denied the accuracy of much of the information contained in it, including IFS LLC’s address, telephone number, and corporate affiliation to IFS Inc. (Jung Tr. 81-93.) Jung further testified that neither he nor IFS LLC had any business relationship with IFS Inc., Lai or Siu Lap (id. 37, 42, 63), though he conceded that IFS Inc. had deposited a $250,000 check into IFS LLC’s bank account to help capitalize his company. (Id. 135^2.)
The Commission characterizes Jung’s deposition testimony as “not credible” (P. Br.40) and offers substantial documentary evidence to establish that IFS Inc. and IFS LLC engaged in a common enterprise. First, by letter dated February 7, 2002, Robinson, acting for IFS Inc., wrote to Burke, counsel for IFS Inc., about the company’s desire to register with the CFTC. The letter states in relevant part:
At this time we [IFS Inc.] need to establish the following LLC so that we can have the shareholder fund the necessary statutory capital prior to audit for application purposes:
INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL SERVICE (NEW YORK), LLC
Johnny Jung will inject $250,000 into IFS with the balance of $160,000.00 being invested directly into the LLC. Once the funds are cleared in the IFS account, IFS will transfer the additional $250,000 to the LLC. As a result of the foregoing, Johnny Jung will personally own 100% of IFS and 39% of the LLC and IFS will own the 61% balance of the LLC.... [T]he undersigned [Robinson] [will be] the President — Chief Executive Officer of both IFS and the LLC.
(Kang Decl., Ex. H.) Second, an IFS Inc. memorandum dated May 9, 2002, from Jung to Carol C. Poon, an employee of IFS Inc.’s accounting department, and copied to Robinson, states that “effective April 01, 2002, International Financial Services (New York), Inc. will paid [sic] to the undersigned $5,000.00 per month as Chairman/Officer Salary.” (Id., Ex. M.) Jung testified that he signed this memorandum, but denied that he wrote or dictated it and asserted that it reflected only IFS Inc.’s tentative offer to him with a view to potential future collaboration between IFS Inc. and IFS LLC. (Jung Tr. 112-24.) Third, two other memoranda, both signed by Jung and written on IFS Inc. letterhead, refer to Jung as “Chairman of the Board,” and one refers explicitly to Jung’s “recent acquisition of International Financial Services (New York), Inc.” (Kang Decl., Ex. M.) Jung conceded that his signature appears on these memoran-da, but testified that he does not recall signing them or understand their meaning. (Jung Tr. 125-35.) Fourth, Poon testified that she accompanied Jung to Chase Bank to open an account for IFS LLC because, as she understood it, “he’s [Jung] purchasing International Financial Services New York, Inc., and he’s opening up an International Financial Services New York, LLC account that is to prepare to meet the new whatever regulations ... to do business for FOREX trading.” (Poon Tr. 275-77.) Finally, the evidence discloses a series of financial transactions among Jung, IFS Inc., IFS LLC, and Siu Lap (P. Rule 56.1 Stmt. ¶¶ 20-23, 27-31; see Kang Decl. Exs. PS), notwithstanding Jung’s insistence that neither he nor IFS LLC had any relationship to IFS Inc. or Siu Lap; indeed, Jung testified that before July 2002, when the Commission brought this action, he had not heard of Siu Lap. (Jung Tr. 157-58.)
Procedural History
The Commission filed this action on July 17, 2002. Shortly thereafter, the parties submitted a Consent Order of Preliminary Injunction, which the Court entered as an Order dated August 8, 2002. The Order enjoined defendants from perpetrating certain conduct in violation of the CEA and the Commission’s regulations, froze defendants’ assets, and appointed a receiver, to whom defendants were directed to surrender those assets. Siu Lap and IFS Inc. defaulted and judgments were entered against them on, respectively, August 19, 2002, and July 7, 2003. The Commission now moves for summary judgment against the remaining defendants.
DISCUSSION
I. Standard for Summary Judgment
Summary judgment must be granted where “there is no genuine issue as to any. material fact and ... the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). A fact is “material” if it “might affect the outcome of the suit under the governing law”; an issue of fact is genuine where “the evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.”
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
■ To defeat summary judgment, however, the nonmoving party “must do more than
II. Jurisdiction
As a threshold issue, IFS LLC and Lai dispute the Commission’s jurisdiction, arguing that the transactions that IFS Inc. (purportedly) executed for its clients do not qualify as futures contracts over which the Commission possesses regulatory jurisdiction. Because IFS Inc. and Siu Lap defaulted, and both Robinson and Lai asserted their Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination, defendants cannot and do not dispute the factual characteristics of IFS Inc.’s transactions. They rather argue that those very characteristics refute the Commission’s assertion that they conducted transactions on a “board of trade” or dealt in “futures contracts” over which the Commission possesses jurisdiction.
A. The Treasury Amendment
IFS LLC first argues that IFS Inc.’s activities preceding December 22, 2000, the date on which the CFMA entered into force, constitute “off-exchange transactions,” which the Treasury Amendment to the CEA allegedly exempts from the Commission’s pre-CFMA jurisdiction. (IFS LLC Br. 8-9.) The Treasury Amendment, adopted in 1974,
see CFTC v. Baragosh,
Because of the breadth of the prior definition of “board of trade,” which “include[d] both formally organized exchanges and informal associations of persons engaged in the business of buying and selling commodities,” the “ ‘unless’ clause of the [Ajmendment [had] threaten[ed] to swallow the whole.”
CFTC v. Standard Forex, Inc.,
No. 93 Civ. 0088,
Noble Wealth recruited traders who had no prior trading experience and urged them to invest their own funds as well as to solicit their friends and families to invest with Noble Wealth. Noble Wealth provided traders with brochures and telephone scripts for use in soliciting potential customers. It also provided the mechanism for traders to get prices, make orders, execute orders and offset those orders with matching opposite transactions. It further confirmed, both orally and in writing, that the traders’ orders had been made.... The contracts could be held open indefinitely. They were closed out by entering into an offsetting transaction rather than by taking delivery. These features bring Noble Wealth’s activities squarely within the [CEAj’s statutory definition of the term “board of trade,” consequently within the jurisdiction of the Commission.
Id.
at 690-91. IFS Inc., too, recruited inexperienced traders, urged them to solicit customers, including friends and relatives, from their respective ethnic communities, provided the traders scripts and marketing brochures, operated a “dealing room” through which the traders purportedly made and cleared trades through Siu Lap, and offered contracts that “could be held open indefinitely” and that “were closed by entering into an offsetting transaction rather than taking delivery.” (P. Rule 56.1 Stmt. ¶¶ 71-73, 78-80, 81-84, 105-06, 128, 140.) Hence, while IFS Inc. clearly did not operate a formal, authorized exchange, it nonetheless operated a “board of trade,” as defined by the majority of the case law.
See Lehman Bros. Comm. Corp. v. Minmetals Int’l Non-Ferrous Metals Trading Co.,
IFS LLC, joined by Lai, also argues that the Commission lacks jurisdiction - both before and after the CFMA entered into force - because the transactions brokered by IFS Inc. were not, in fact, futures contracts. The parties do not dispute the relevant factual characteristics of the IFS Inc. contracts and transactions; their characterization presents a pure question of law. No statute, however, defines “futures contract.”
CFTC v. Hanover Trading Corp.,
In Hanover, the court stated that futures contracts
have two salient characteristics. First, futures contracts are contracts for the purchase or sale of a commodity for delivery in the future at a price that is established at the time the contract is initiated. Second, the ability to offset the obligation to purchase by selling the contract, or to offset the obligation to deliver by buying a contract, is essential, since investors rarely take delivery against the contracts. The lack of an expectation that delivery of the physical commodity will be made is an important factor indicating the presence of a futures contract.
On their face, the contracts and related transactions brokered by IFS Inc. exhibit most, if not all, of these characteristics. First, IFS Inc. entered into transactions on behalf of its clients whereby they agreed to purchase and sell certain quantities of various foreign currencies, in the future (albeit not on a predetermined date), for prices, or using pricing formulas, agreed upon at the times of the transac
Defendants argue, however, that as a matter of law, IFS Inc. brokered “spot,” not futures, contracts to its customers (IFS LLC Br. 21; Lai Br. 21), and therefore that the Commission lacks jurisdiction.
See
7 U.S.C. § 2(c)(2)(B) (defining Commission’s jurisdiction relative to foreign currency transactions);
see also Bank Brussels Lambert v. Intermetals Corp.,
Defendants argue principally that because the contracts IFS Inc. brokered did not call for future delivery at a fixed date (IFS LLC Br. 13), those contracts cannot properly be characterized as futures contracts. Defendants note, and the Commission emphatically agrees, that IFS Inc.’s customers never intended to take or make actual future delivery of foreign currency, nor did the contracts entered into by the ICs contain a fixed date for future delivery. (Id. 13-15.) This fact, defendants argue, is fatal to the Commission’s jurisdiction.
Because “[t]he lack of an expectation that delivery of the physical commodity will be made is an important factor indicating the presence of a futures contract,”
Hanover,
This argument fails as a matter of both fact and law. First, defendants offer no evidence to substantiate their factual claim that IFS Inc. engaged in transactions in the spot market, as the bank in
Bank Brussels
indisputably did on behalf of its customer.
See
[T]he actions undertaken by IFS in extending transactions from one day to the next are not equivalent to spot rate “rollovers” in the interbank spot market. ... [T]he IFS “rollover” transactions differed from the standard interbank spot market in at least two ways: First, the IFS transactions did not result in the consummation of the original transaction through the exchange of currencies; second, each day’s “rollover” resulted] in the effective cancellation of the previous day’s cont[r]act, whereas transactions in the spot market cannot be cancelled, but must result in the mutual delivery of currencies.
(Kang Supp. Deck, Ex. B ¶ 6.) In Bank Brussels, in other words, the investor actually executed one or more new transactions every two days, albeit often simply to extend or offset the original one. By contrast, IFS Inc.’s transactions did not call for settlement within two days, or indeed, by any fixed date. 10
to the extent that positions can be “rolled over” indefinitely into the future without delivery, their effective purpose and use becomes indistinguishable from that of a futures contracts. IFS account statements that I examined showed a large number of “floating” positions that are carried for several days at a single opening price. Such positions are distinct from typical rolling spot positions the price of which must be renegotiated at least once every two days.
(Kang Supp. Decl., Ex. A ¶ 17.) Such “short-maturity futures contracts”
(id.)
remain “futures contracts” within the Commission’s jurisdiction notwithstanding the absence of a fixed delivery date, for “[w]hen instruments have been determined to constitute the functional equivalent of futures contracts, neither [the Commission] nor the courts have hesitated to look behind whatever self-serving labels the instruments might bear.”
In re First Nat’l Monetary Corp.,
Defendants also argue that the contracts cannot be characterized as futures because they lacked a “fixed price that was established at the time they were initiated.” (IFS LLC Br. 22.) The Commission rightly points out that this argument conflates two issues. ICs, on behalf of IFS Inc.’s clients, entered into contracts for the purchase or sale of a foreign currencies in the future at prices fixed at the time of contracting. The ICs received price quotes for various currencies from IFS Inc.’s dealing-room employees. ‘ (P. Rule 56.1 Stmt. ¶¶ 105-06.) By contrast, the prices at which the contracts were ultimately offset were not - and indeed, could not be - fixed, for it is precisely this unknown variable that enables a market for foreign currency futures.
In the final analysis, defendants cannot dispute that IFS Inc.’s transactions exhibited the two salient features of futures contracts as set forth in
Hanover,
III. Liability
The Commission alleges that defendants engaged in illegal off-exchange trades, 7 U.S.C. § 6(a), solicitation fraud,
id.
§ 6b(a)(i), (iii), and unauthorized trades,
A. Illegal Off-Exchange Trades
The CEA prohibits commodities fu-' tures transactions not “conducted on or subject to the rules of a board of trade which has been designated or registered by the Commission as a contract market or derivatives transaction execution facility for such commodit[ies].” 7 U.S.C. § 6(a)(1); see
CFTC v. Noble Metals Int’l, Inc.,
B. Fraud
Title 7 U.S.C. § 6b(a) makes it unlawful
for any person, in or connection with any order to make, or the making of, any contract of sale of any commodity for future delivery, made, or to be made, for or on behalf of any other person .... (i) to cheat or defraud or attempt to cheat or defraud such other person; ... (in) willfully to deceive or attempt to deceive such other person....
To establish a violation of the CEA’s anti-fraud provisions, the Commission must prove “(1) the making of a misrepresentation, misleading statement, or a deceptive omission; (2) scienter; and (3) materiality.”
CFTC v. R.J. Fitzgerald & Co.,
The Commission’s evidence establishes that IFS Inc., both through its principals and its so-called “ICs,” systematically misled financially unsophisticated clients, often immigrants with poor language skills, into investing large sums of money in transactions virtually guaranteed, if not actually intended, to fail, thereby enriching IFS Inc. and its partner Siu Lap.
12
To perpetrate this fraudulent
Faced with the overwhelming evidence of fraud compiled by the Commission, defendant Lai argues, first, that certain risks disclosed by IFS Inc. in writing “establish that misstatements could not be material and could not properly be relied upon” (Lai Br. 12); and second, that for the Commission to prove a violation of the CEA’s anti-fraud provisions, it must establish that IFS Inc.’s customers relied on the misrepresentations in deciding to invest. (Id. 8-9.) Both of these contentions bear on the elements of materiality and scien-ter, and will be analyzed in that context.
A misleading statement or omission “is material if there is a substantial likelihood that a reasonable investor would consider it important in making an investment decision.”
Saxe,
Lai argues, however, that IFS Ine.’s misrepresentations were not material because before investing on behalf of customers, it required them to sign (1) a risk disclosure statement, which informed customers of the risks of foreign currency futures trading, that the trading strategies IFS Inc. employed could fail, and that customers could sustain substantial losses; and (2) a customer agreement, in which customers acknowledged that they understood the risks of foreign currency trading, that they had been advised to seek independent legal advice before signing the contracts, that IFS Inc. disclaimed guarantees of profitability, and that they understood that IFS Inc..did not guarantee either the accuracy of written materials supplied for informational purposes or any oral representations made by the ICs. (Lai Br. 9-11.) Lai’s emphasis on these purported disclosures is unavailing for two reasons.
First, the evidence shows that IFS Inc. and its ICs deliberately minimized the importance of these documents, which they characterized as “just a formality” (Kang Deck, Ex. PP), refused to permit customers to take them home to review them, and in one case even forged a customer’s initials on them.-
See McAnally v. Gildersleeve,
Second, Lai misconceives the real issue. Even if customers read, signed, and under
Lai’s other argument, that the Commission must also prove reliance, fails as a matter of both fact and law. First, as Lai concedes, “[r]eliance is inherent in the definition of material” (Lai Br. 8), and the CFTC’s evidence unequivocally establishes that IFS Inc.’s principal clientele, financially unsophisticated immigrants, relied on the oral representations of IFS Inc.’s principals and ICs, including statements discounting the significance of account documentation and risk disclosure statements that customers were required to sign. Second, this is not an action by the victims of IFS Inc.’s fraudulent scheme. Victims generally must prove reliance to show that they sustained damages as a result of material misrepresentations made by the defendants, for absent reliance, they cannot establish causation. But where, as here, the CFTC, an administrative agency, brings an enforcement action, reliance is not a necessary element of a violation under the CEA.
Slusser v. CFTC,
The final element of fraud under the CEA that the Commission must establish is scienter, which generally means “intent to deceive, manipulate or defraud.”
Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder,
C. Unauthorized Trading
The Commission also alleges that IFS Inc. engaged in unauthorized trading on customer accounts. 7 U.S.C. § 6b(a)(iv);
see Haltmier v. CFTC,
Lai argues that because each IFS Inc. client signed a power of attorney authorizing the ICs “to buy, sell, exchange or transfer at any price foreign exchange contracts ... and to give trading orders and instructions in connection therewith,” an issue of fact exists as to whether the powers of attorney authorized the trades, notwithstanding the Commission’s evidence that many clients “did not grasp the meaning of the power[s] of attorney.” (Lai Br. 16.) Furthermore, while the Commission proffers affidavits from clients who allege that ICs traded on their accounts without authorization or contrary to their instructions, Lai contends that this evidence is ambiguous. (Id. 16-18.) Neither of these contentions raises a genuine issue of material fact.
First, the “Special Power of Attorney” signed by IFS Inc.’s clients authorized the ICs, in relevant part, “to buy, sell, exchange, assign or transfer at any price [the IC] deems fair foreign exchange contracts or any other contracts or property as to which IFS transacts business.” (Kang Deck, Ex. MM, Tab 2) (first emphasis added). It did not authorize IFS Inc. or its ICs to engage in trades at price quotes that the ICs knew to be unfair to generate commissions for IFS Inc. The CFTC’s evidence establishes that IFS Inc. pressured the ICs to engage in numerous trades at highly unfavorable price quotes, which differed dramatically from those shown on a streaming Reuters feed and which made it virtually impossible for customers to profit. (P. Rule 56.1 Stmt. ¶¶ 106-107.)
Second, as the Commission argues at length, IFS Inc. both minimized the importance of the powers of attorney and made oral representations and assurances that, notwithstanding such documentation, trades would not be concluded without the customers’ specific authorization. (P. Br.37.) ICs told one client, for example that “the ‘power of attorney’ language in the customer agreement was IFS’s term for a broker, and that ... no trades would
Lai seeks to create an issue of fact by arguing that some of the customer affidavits do not conclusively establish that the ICs traded on customer accounts after being specifically instructed to cease all activity on those accounts. (Lai Br. 17-18; P. Br. 38.) But the Commission need not prove this proposition to prevail. It need only prove that the ICs traded on accounts without authorization or contrary to explicit constraints placed by the customers on the ICs when they opened their IFS Inc. accounts. The affidavits reviewed above establish just that. The CFTC therefore merits summary judgment on its allegation of unauthorized trading.
IV. Controlling Person Liability
The foregoing analysis overwhelmingly establishes IFS Inc.’s liability under the GEA. But IFS Inc., of course, has defaulted. While this preliminary analysis confirms its culpability, the question at this juncture is whether the individual defendants' Lai and Robinson can legally be characterized as controlling persons who bear liability for IFS Inc.’s violations.
Title 7 U.S.C. § 13c(b) provides:
Any person who, directly or indirectly, controls any person who has violated any provision of this chapter or any of the rules, regulations, or orders issued pursuant to this chapter may be held liable for such violation in any action brought by the Commission to the same extent as such controlled person. In such action, the Commission has the burden of proving that the controlling person did not act in good faith or knowingly induced, directly or indirectly, the act or acts constituting the violation.
This provision enables the Commission “to reach, behind the business entity to the controlling individual and to impose liability for violations of the Act directly on such individual.”
In re Currency Trading Sys.,
No. 00-06,
A. Robinson
While Robinson did not oppose the Commission’s summary judgment motion, it remains the Commission’s evidentiary burden to establish his liability under § 13c(b).
See Baragosh,
That evidence amply suffices to establish Robinson’s liability under § 13c(b). Robinson, the President and Chief Executive Officer of IFS Inc., ran IFS Inc.’s daily activities, supervised its employees, handled customer complaints, enjoyed general signatory authority over checking accounts held for IFS Inc., reviewed customer accounts regularly, and knew that IFS Inc.’s ICs operated under constraints that made it virtually impossible for customers to profit. (P. Rule 56.1 Stmt. ¶¶ 33-42, 145-51.) Both IFS Inc.’s ICs and their clients complained to Robinson about the losses caused by IFS Inc.’s trading practices and made him aware that those practices inevitably would cause further losses.
(Id.
¶¶ 149, 151-52; Kang Deck, Ex. LL at 9 ¶ 27-29.) But both the ICs, whom Robinson controlled, and Robinson himself, generally responded to complaints by telling customers that to recover their losses and regain any hope of profiting, they must add more money to their accounts. (P. Rule 56.1 Stmt. ¶ 153; Kang Deck, Ex. OO at 4 ¶ 17; Ex. SS at 3-4 ¶ 11; Ex. MM at 7 ¶ 27.) Unquestionably, Robinson “exercised general control over the operation of the entity principally liable
and
possessed the power or ability to control the specific transaction^] or activities] upon which the primary violation[s] w[ere] predicated.”
Baragosh,
B. Lai
Lai’s liability under § 13c(b) presents a slightly more complicated analysis. Because Lai failed timely to respond to Commission’s requests for admissions (P. Rule
Fed.R.Civ.P. 36(b) provides that “the court may permit withdrawal or amendment when the presentation of the merits of the action will be subserved thereby and the party who obtained the admission fails to satisfy the' court that withdrawal or amendment will prejudice that party in maintaining the action or defense on the merits.” The Commission correctly notes that
pro se
litigants must learn and comply with procedural rules in civil litigation.
McNeil v. United States,
Nevertheless, the Court remains reluctant to decide the merits of Lai’s potential liability as a controlling person based on admissions deemed conclusively established by the default of a pro se litigant with a poor command of English. Moreover, while Lai’s proposed responses add little, if anything, to the evidence, Lai’s assertion of his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination, which permits an adverse inference, differs significantly from an admission, which conclusively establishes a fact. Because the Court concludes that summary judgment should be granted against Lai in any event, and therefore that the Commission will not be prejudiced by the grant of Lai’s motion, the Court will deem Lai’s proposed answers (Kliegerman Deck, Ex. E) substituted for his default admissions and analyze Lai’s liability under § 13c(b) on that record.
In addition to this evidence, Lai asserted his Fifth Amendment privilege in response to the following requests for admissions, among many others:
Q69. Lai had knowledge that the IFS Inc. ICs solicited customers without making reference to IFS Inc.’s history of losses in customer accounts.
Q70. Lai had knowledge that ICs traded for customer accounts without obtaining the customer’s consent.
Q71. Lai was. responsible for setting out IFS Inc.’s practices, policies, and trading strategies.
Q72. Lai had knowledge that IFS Inc. customers could not make a profit based upon IFS Inc.’s commission and fees structure and trading strategy.
(Kliegerman Deck, Ex. E at 12.) Throughout his deposition, Lai asserted the Fifth Amendment in response to countless questions about his knowledge of and culpability for IFS Inc.’s practices. (Kang Deck, Ex. DD.) The evidence reviewed above, coupled with the adverse inferences to be drawn from Lai’s assertion of the Fifth Amendment at his deposition and in response to requests for admissions, amply supports the conclusion that Lai, as a shareholder and director of IFS Inc., enjoyed substantial authority to control IFS Inc.’s activities, had actual or constructive knowledge of its violations, and at a minimum, refrained from taking steps to forestall those violations, if not actually masterminded and encouraged them. Moreover, Lai cites no evidence in the record that tends to refute this conclu
V. IFS LLC’s Liability as a Common Enterprise
The Commission argues that, as a “common enterprise,” IFS LLC bears joint and several liability for IFS Inc.’s violations of the CEA. (P. Br.38^11.) The parties do not dispute the legal standard to be applied to determine whether a common enterprise existed. In Noble Wealth, the court articulated the following relevant in-dicia of a common enterprise:
common control, the sharing of office space and officers, whether business is transacted through a maze of interrelated companies, the commingling of corporate funds and failure to maintain separation of companies, unified advertising, and evidence which reveals that no real distinction existed between the Corporate Defendants.
The Commission’s evidence shows that on February 7, 2002, Robinson wrote to Burke, counsel for IFS Inc., about IFS Inc.’s intention to establish IFS LLC, which would be capitalized principally by contributions from Jung. Jung would then become the sole owner of IFS Inc. and a major shareholder of IFS LLC, while Robinson, according to the letter, would become the president and chief executive officer of both IFS Inc. and IFS LLC. (Kang Deck, Ex. H.) On February 12, 2002, Burke wrote to the Commission “Re: International Financial Services (New York), LLC,” explaining that IFS Inc. retained him to “restructure” the firm and register it as an FCM. (Kang Deck, Ex. G, Tab 3.) On February 20, 2002, Jung transferred $250,000 to IFS Inc.’s Chase Manhattan Bank account.
16
(Kang Deck, Ex. P.) On March 19, 2002, IFS Inc. wrote a check to IFS LLC, cosigned by Poon, an IFS Inc. employee, on which the words “capital injection” appear. (Kang Deck, Ex. Q.) Two days later, on March 21, 2002, IFS LLC applied to the Commission to be registered as an FCM. (Kang Deck, Ex. G, Tab 2.) The application represents that IFS Inc. and IFS LLC share the same office and telephone number; that IFS Inc. is IFS LLC’s corporate principal; and that Jung, the self-described “Chairman” of IFS LLC, is also chairman of IFS Inc.
(Id.)
Furthermore, an IFS Inc. memorandum dated May 9, 2002, from Jung to Poon, and copied to Robinson, states that Jung will be paid $5000 per month for his services as an officer or chairman of IFS
Against this mountain of evidence, IFS LLC proffers only Jung’s deposition. Jung denies that IFS LLC had any business relationship with IFS Inc., Lai or Siu Lap. (Jung Tr. 37, 42, 63.) He claims never to have seen IFS LLC’s application to the Commission, despite acknowledging that his signature appears on page ten of that application. (Id. 81-93.) He denies any recollection or understanding of the IFS Inc. memoranda that refer to his acquisition of IFS Inc., describe him as its chairman, and bear his signature. (Id. 125-35.) He cannot recall how it came to be that IFS Inc. wrote a check for $250,000 to IFS LLC. (Id. 138-43.) And he testifies that before July 2002, he had never heard of Siu Lap, notwithstanding the existence of bank records indicating that Siu Lap wired Jung substantial sums of money through the Bank of China on several occasions (id. 157-64; Kang DecL, Ex. R), and a letter from Jung, dated November 2, 2000, written as “Director” of Frankwell International Brokerage Services (Bahamas), Ltd., in which Jung states that Frankwell has assigned a client account to “[its] overseas broker, Socie-dade Comercial Siu Lap, Limitada.” (Kang DecL, Ex. YY.)
Of course, while Jung’s testimony is difficult to credit and contrary to the great weight of the evidence offered by the Commission, in general, the Court “do[es] not sit to judge witness credibility on a motion for summary judgment.”
Neidich v. Estate of Neidich,
It is in this context that IFS LLC moves to withdraw its admissions. The motion will be denied. First, unlike Lai, IFS LLC has never been
pro se.
17
It
The decision to permit withdrawal of admissions lies within the discretion of the district courts, and should be exercised “only when (1) the presentation of the merits with be aided
and
(2) no prejudice to the party obtaining the admission will result.”
Donovan v. Carls Drug Co.,
No. 82-6270,
With these admissions in evidence, there can be no question that IFS Inc. and IFS LLC engaged in a common enterprise. While it is true that IFS LLC did little more than apply for a license to become an FCM and open a bank account (IFS LLC Br. 28), IFS Inc. created IFS LLC and capitalized it to transact the same business as IFS Inc., at the direction of the same corporate officers and directors (Lai, Robinson, Jung), with the same foreign corporate partner (Siu Lap), operating out of the same office space.
See Noble Wealth,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, Lai’s motion to withdraw his admissions is granted; IFS LLC’s motion to withdraw its admissions and its cross-motion for summary judgment are denied; and the Commission’s motion for summary judgment is granted. The Commission shall submit a proposed order of judgment within ten days.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Lai and IFS LLC also move to withdraw certain admissions pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 36(b). Those motions will be dealt with in the context of resolving the Commission's motion for summary judgment.
. According to the opinions of the Commission's experts, as summarized by the CFTC, this strategy “locks the customer into a loss. No matter what happens, one position’s loss will offset any gain in the other. [A]ll that the strategy achieves, the elimination of further loss for the first open position, comes with the cost of another $90 commission charge to the account. The elimination of further losses, however, could be achieved simply by closing out the initial position at what would in effect be no additional cost.” (P. Rule 56.1 Stmt. ¶ 117.)
. The parties dispute whether IFS Inc.'s activities concerned "futures contracts” within the meaning of the CEA, vesting the Commission with jurisdiction. Facts relevant to this analysis will be set forth in connection with the discussion of jurisdiction below.
. In Merlino’s first report, he remarks: "Siu Lap was IFS’ exclusive currency broker, yet no person that I interviewed claims to have met anyone from Siu Lap, and only a few employees acknowledged having spoken on the telephone with anyone from Siu Lap.” (Kang Deck, Ex. NN at 32.)
. Since the CFMA’s entry into force, the CEA vests the- CFTC with jurisdiction over "an agreement, contract, or transaction in foreign currency that —(i) is a contract of sale of a commodity for future delivery” and “is offered to, or entered into with, a person that is not an eligible contract participant,” as defined in 7 U.S.C. § la(12), "unless the counterparty” qualifies as one of the entities enumerated in the statute, including financial institutions, registered brokers or dealers, persons associated 'with registered brokers or dealers, insurance companies, financial holding companies, and investment bank holding companies. 7 U.S.C. ,§ 2(c)(2)(B) (1994 & Supp.2003). The evidence establishes, and defendants do not dispute, that IFS Inc. placed orders on behalf of persons who do not qualify as "eligible contract participants,” which include, among others, persons with assets in excess of $10 million or, if such persons transact "to manage the risk associated with an asset owned or liability incurred,” $5 million.
Id.
§ la(12)(xi). Nor do defendants dispute that IFS Inc. and Siu Lap never registered with the CFTC in any capacity and do not qualify as one of the counterparties enumerated in § 2(c)(2)(B)(ii).
(See
P. Br. 30-31.) Accordingly, the CFTC also possesses juris
. The Commission’s views, while not controlling, merit deference.
CFTC v. Schor,
. According to one of the CFTC’s experts, forward contracts generally contemplate settlement within three days to five years. (Kang Decl., Ex. UU ¶ 31.)
. “The [CEA] pertains not only to the agricultural commodities, which composed its original concern, but also to 'all other goods and articles ... and all services, rights, and interests in which contracts for future delivery are presently or in the future dealt in,' 7 U.S.C. § 2, an enlargement due to the continued expansion of futures contracts based on new commodities.” NRT Metals, Inc. v. Manhattan Metals (Non-Ferrous) Ltd., 576 F.Supp. 1046, 1050 (S.D.N.Y.1983).
.
Frankwell Bullion,
. IFS LLC asserts that
CFTC v. Zelener,
03 Civ. 4346,
. IFS LLC seeks to deflect liability for all, purported violations by characterizing IFS Inc. as an "introducing broker” to Siu Lap, the alleged true counterparty to trades that IFS Inc. merely "facilitated.” (IFS LLC Br. 32-33; IFS LLC Reply Br. 15.) An introducing broker is a person who solicits orders for the purchase or sale of commodities futures, but "does not accept any money, securities, or properly (or extend credit in lieu thereof) to margin, guarantee, or secure any trades or contracts that result or may result therefrom.” 7 U.S.C. § la(23). The evidence establishes beyond doubt that IFS Inc. accepted money "to margin, guarantee, or secure” the purported trades that it executed on behalf of its clients.
. In a certain sense, the ICs may well have been as much victims of IFS Inc.’s fraud as their clients. Management taught the ICs negligent trading strategies, required them to
. The cases cited by Lai for the proposition that the Commission must establish reliance involved private plaintiffs’ actions for common-law fraud under New York law, not statutory fraud under the CEA. (Lai Br. 13.)
See, e.g., Grumman Allied Indus., Inc. v. Rohr Indus., Inc.,
. The Seventh Circuit has said that "[a] controlling person acts in bad faith if he did not maintain a reasonably adequate system of internal supervision and control ... or did not enforce with any reasonable diligence such system.”
Monieson,
. The cherry-picked evidence canvassed by Lai in his brief establishes only that he did not involve himself in certain aspects of IFS Inc.’s operations. (See Lai Br. 5.) For example, he "did not write the promotional or marketing material used by IFS,” "deal with customers” or "establish the curriculum for the [IC] training program.” (Id.) But Lai’s liability as a controlling person does not depend on his involvement in the daily operations of IFS Inc.; it depends on his knowledge and power, even if he did not exercise that power to control or influence certain aspects of IFS Inc.’s business.
. Also in evidence are the records of three other wire transfers, of $20,000, $32,000, and $13,000, from Jung to IFS Inc., which bear the dates January 20, February 10, and February 22, 2000, respectively. (Kang Deck, Ex. S.) Bank records also show that Jung received substantial sums of money from Siu Lap’s Bank of China account on several occasions. (Kang Deck, Ex. R.)
. Indeed, as a corporate entity, IFF LLC could not be
pro se. Rowland v. Cal. Men's
. Counsel for IFS LLC states that he received and reviewed the Commission's requests upon receipt, but neglected to put them on his calendar. (Burke Deck ¶ 2.) On April 30, 2003, he received the Commission's responses to IFS LLC’s own requests for admissions, but this event, too, did not remind him to respond to the Commission's requests. "A party is presumed to be adequately represented by the counsel of its choice, and hence the failure of counsel - if such it be - to provide timely discovery responses is imputed to the client.”
Beberaggi v. N.Y. City Transit Auth.,
No. 93 Civ. 1737,
. Several Courts of Appeals, including our own, prefer to pretend that ''unpublished” opinions (which of course are published electronically in databases in which they are searchable interchangeably with those opinions the Courts of Appeals are prepared to acknowledge) do not exist. While recognizing that such opinions do not constitute binding precedent in the Second Circuit, this Court finds even the less-considered words of distinguished panels of judges highly persuasive. Surely, such "unpublished" opinions are at least as valuable to a district judge considering thorny legal issues as the musings of the authors of student law-review notes, which are freely citable.
