Case Information
*1 In the
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
Nos. 99-4142, 99-4143 & 00-3734 Commodity Trend Service, Inc., Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Defendant-Appellee.
Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Petitioner-Appellee,
v.
Dennis Blitz and Nick Van Nice, Respondents-Appellants.
Appeals from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
Nos. 97 C 2362 & 98 C 6057--Wayne R. Andersen, Judge.
In Re:
CTS Financial Publishing, Inc., f/k/a Commodity Trend Service, Inc., Dennis Blitz, Nick Van Nice, and Dearborn Financial Publishing, Inc., Petitioners.
Petition for Writ of Injunction against the Commodity Futures Trading Commission No. 00-34
Argued November 9, 2000--Decided November 28, 2000
Before Flaum, Chief Judge, and Ripple and *2 Kanne, Circuit Judges.
Flaum, Chief Judge. Plaintiff Commodity Trend Service, Inc., now known as CTS Financial Publishing, Inc. ("CTS"), appeals the determination that it is subject to the antifraud provisions of the Commodity Exchange Act ("CEA"). The principals of CTS, Dennis Blitz and Nick Van Nice, appeal the enforcement of an administrative subpoena issued by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission ("CFTC"). For the reasons stated herein, we affirm both of the district court’s decisions.
I. Background
CTS provides impersonal advice about the commodities markets to its customers through a number of publications and other means, such as faxes and telephone messages. CTS does not tailor its advice based on the particular circumstances or financial goals of its customers, nor does it execute any trades on their behalf. In addition to these products, CTS distributes advertisements that provide both information regarding its wares and testimonials about the profits that can be generated by following CTS’s recommendations. In July 1996, the CFTC began investigating CTS to determine whether the business should be required to register as a commodity trading advisor ("CTA") under 7 U.S.C. sec. 6m.
The CFTC sought to subpoena a wide range of documents from Nice and Blitz regarding CTS’s advertisements, publications, and other products. CTS filed a complaint claiming on First Amendment grounds that the CEA’s registration requirements were both overbroad and could not be applied to CTS. The district court held that CTS’s claims were unripe, but we reversed in the first decision regarding this case.
See Commodity Trend Serv. v. CFTC, 149 F.3d 679 (7th Cir. 1998).
On remand, CTS continued its facial and as-applied First Amendment challenges to the registration requirements and added new arguments attacking 7 U.S.C. sec. 6b and 7 U.S.C. sec. 6o, which are antifraud provisions of the CEA, as well as 17 C.F.R. sec. 4.41, which is an antifraud regulation promulgated by the CFTC that applies to advertising. After considering CTS’s arguments, the district court found *3 that the registration requirements of the CEA as applied to an impersonal advisor such as CTS are a prior restraint that violates the Constitution. However, the court also held that sec. 6o and Regulation 4.41 apply to CTS, rejecting CTS’s statutory and constitutional arguments (the court did not reach the question of whether sec. 6b covers CTS).
On the basis of its decision, the district court granted the CFTC’s motion to enforce its administrative subpoenas to the extent that the CFTC was seeking to investigate CTS regarding activities prohibited by the CEA’s antifraud laws.
The court denied CTS’s motion to stay the enforcement of the subpoenas pending this appeal, and CTS was required to turn over various products and documents to the CFTC.
CTS appeals the district court’s decision that it is subject to the CEA’s antifraud provisions, and Nice and Blitz appeal the subpoena enforcement based on that decision./1 CTS does not challenge the determination that it falls within the definition of a CTA. Shortly before oral argument in this case, the CFTC, in part because of the materials discovered through its subpoenas, issued a complaint against CTS, initiating an administrative enforcement proceeding. CTS filed a motion to enjoin these proceedings until this court decided the instant case.
CTS’s request for an injunction is rendered moot by this decision.
II. Discussion
This case presents three stages of analysis. Initially, we must determine whether CTS’s challenges are ripe for resolution by the courts. If this case is ripe, then we must consider if two provisions of the CEA and one CFTC regulation apply to CTS as a matter of statutory interpretation. Finally, if CTS is covered by any of these statutes or regulations, we must determine whether these laws are constitutional as applied to CTS.
A. Ripeness
The CFTC argues that neither CTS’s statutory and as-applied First Amendment challenges nor its identical claims in the subpoena enforcement proceeding are ripe for judicial decision. Analyzing *4 each case under the applicable legal standards, we reject the CFTC’s contentions and find that both cases are susceptible of judicial resolution with the exception of one constitutional issue discussed below.
1. CTS’s complaint.
The legal standards for determining when
an as-applied constitutional challenge is
ripe are set forth in Commodity Trend
Service,
The CFTC focuses its challenge on the first part of the ripeness determination.
The CFTC claims that this case presented a purely legal question the first time because CTS admitted that it was covered by the registration requirements of sec.
6m, and so no facts were in dispute. By contrast, in the current stage of this litigation, CTS does not admit that it is committing fraud punishable under the relevant provisions of the CEA. The CFTC argues that further factual development through administrative procedures in order to determine whether CTS is committing fraud is necessary before a court should intervene.
The CFTC’s argument is foreclosed by
this court’s prior decision, where we
held that a case is ripe under Abbott
Laboratories when Babbitt v. United Farm
Workers Nat’l Union,
CTS’s position is identical in all relevant respects to the Babbitt plaintiffs. CTS alleges that it does not intend to make false statements about the commodities markets, but given the volume of its publications some misstatements are inevitable. Such falsehoods would subject them to administrative investigation and proceedings by the CFTC. Because CTS had a reasonable fear of being subject to administrative proceedings at the time CTS filed itscomplaint, given CFTC’s investigation and subpoenas, no further factual development is necessary. We hold that the purely legal question presented by CTS’s challenge--namely, is an impersonal trading advisor subject to the fraud provisions of the CEA--combined with these facts showing a reasonable fear of prosecution satisfy the first part of the Abbott Laboratories test. Thus, CTS’s complaint is ripe.
2. Subpoena enforcement proceedings.
A court exercises only limited review of an agency’s actions in a subpoena enforcement proceeding and does not normally consider the merits of a party’s claim that it has not violated a statute administered by the agency. As a general rule, courts enforce an administrative subpoena if: (1) it reasonably relates to an investigation within the agency’s authority, (2) the specific inquiry is relevant to that purpose and is not too indefinite, (3) the proper administrative procedures have been followed, and (4) the subpoena does not demand information *6 for an illegitimate purpose. See CFTC v.
Tokheim,
1998); EEOC v. Quad/Graphics, Inc., 63
F.3d 642, 645 (7th Cir. 1995). An agency
may investigate to determine whether it
has jurisdiction over a party as long as
the party’s conduct superficially appears
to bring it within the jurisdiction of
the agency, that is, as long as the
agency is not engaged in impermissible
overreaching. See Tokheim,
We hold that the CFTC’s subpoenas
satisfy the four-part test, but that the
excessive burden exception applies. 7
U.S.C. sec. 12(a) gives the CFTC the
power to investigate persons that are
covered by the CEA; CTS does not contest
that it is a CTA and so subject to the
CEA. The subpoenas are reasonably
definite in requesting materials from CTS
that are relevant to investigating
whether the CEA’s antifraud provisions
have been violated. There is no
allegation that the CFTC has not followed
the proper procedures or is acting in bad
faith. However, the issuance of the
subpoenas has altered the normal
operations of CTS’s business, as related
in this court’s first opinion, and their
enforcement would (and did) exacerbate
these effects.
CTS has been forced to phase out three of its employee positions in response to its declining revenues. In addition, two of CTS’s columnists have refused to write articles for fear of government reprisal.
Such facts demonstrate that the subpoenas have changed the normal operations of CTS’s business, and thus the merits of CTS’s legal challenge can be considered *7 at the subpoena enforcement stage./2 B. Statutory Interpretation Having found that CTS’s challenges are ripe, we address its statutory arguments.
CTS claims that the antifraud provisions of the CEA do not apply to impersonal commodity advisors as a matter of interpretation. The CFTC’s construction of the CEA is entitled to Chevron deference. See CFTC v. Schor, 478 U.S.
833, 844 (1986); Indosuez Carr Futures,
Inc. v. CFTC,
1291, 1300 (2000). If not, then we defer to the CFTC’s construction of the CEA as long as it is reasonable. Id.
1. 7 U.S.C. sec. 6o and 17 C.F.R. sec.
4.41.
7 U.S.C. sec. 6o(1) states in relevant part:
It shall be unlawful for a commodity trading advisor . . . by use of the mails or any means or instrumentality of interstate commerce, directly or indirectly--
(A) to employ any device, scheme, or artifice to defraud any client . . . or prospective client . . .; or (B) to engage in any transaction, practice, or course of business which operates as a fraud or deceit upon any client . . . or prospective client . . .
.
The relevant part of 17 C.F.R. sec.
4.41(a) contains nearly identical language and prohibits CTAs from advertising in a manner that violates sec. 6o(1). Both the statute and the regulation speak of defrauding "clients." CTS argues that the plain meaning of "client" is one who receives personalized advice within a fiduciary relationship or one on whose behalf a broker executes trades. Because CTS provides only impersonal advice and is not a broker, CTS claims that holding it liable under *8 sec. 6o or Regulation 4.41 would be contrary to the intent of Congress. Under the first step of Chevron, we must determine whether the word "client" as used in the statute is ambiguous./3 CTS provides a number of reasons as to why "client" unambiguously refers to only brokers or those who provide personalized advice, but none of these is convincing.
CTS first argues that the Supreme Court has held that "client" is limited to personalized relationships or to brokers in a similar statute. Lowe v. SEC, 472 U.S. 181 (1985) held that impersonal advisors are exempt from regulation under the Investment Advisers Act ("IAA"). The Court stated that two factors were "significant" in reaching its conclusion that the IAA applies only to those "who provide personalized advice attuned to a client’s concerns." Id. at 207-08 & n.54, 210 n.57. First, the Court noted that the IAA "repeatedly refers to ’clients,’ not ’subscribers.’" Id. at 208 n.54; see also id. at 201 n.45. Second, the SEC did not establish that Lowe and the other petitioners had "authority over the funds of subscribers," "been delegated decisionmaking authority to handle subscribers’ portfolios or accounts," or "individualized, investment-related interactions" with their subscribers. Id.
at 210 n.57. Also, the Court concluded by stating that Lowe and his corporations were presumptively not within the IAA as long as "the communications between petitioners and their subscribers remain entirely impersonal and do not develop into the kind of fiduciary, person-to- person relationships . . . that are characteristic of investment adviser- client relationships." Id. at 210.
However, at least two reasons exist for deciding that the word "client" in the CEA is not limited to personalized relationships or brokers. First, the CEA has a broader scope than the IAA. In Lowe, the Supreme Court held that impersonal advisors are excluded from the key definition of "investment adviser" ("IA") in the IAA because they fit within the exception for publishers. 15 U.S.C.
sec. 80b-2(a) (11)(D);
While some persons are excluded from the definition of an IA only if their advice concerning securities is solely incidental to their other activities, the exceptions for publishers is not so *9 limited. 15 U.S.C. sec. 80b-2(a)(11).
Thus, bona fide publishers are not IAs even if their entire business concerns giving impersonal securities trading advice. Moreover, because impersonal advisors are excluded from the definition of IAs, they are wholly exempt from the IAA because the antifraud and other provisions of that Act apply only to IAs.
By contrast, the CEA exempts publishers from the definition of CTA only if their giving of advice concerning the commodities markets is solely incidental to their publishing business. 7 U.S.C.
sec. 1a(5). Impersonal publishers such as CTS, whose commodities advising is conceded to be more than solely incidental to its publishing activities, are included within the definition of CTA, even though an analogous publisher would be excluded from the definition of IA. Because CTS is a CTA, all of the provisions of the CEA regarding CTAs, including sec. 6o and Regulation 4.41, are applicable to CTS. If the antifraud provisions did not apply to CTS because the use of the word "client" limited these provisions only to personalized relationships, then CTS would be subject to the CEA because of its status as a CTA, but almost none of the CEA’s provisions would apply to it (the significance of the one part of the statute that appears to draw a distinction between "subscribers" and "clients" is addressed below). This anomalous result casts doubt on CTS’s claim that "client" refers only to those with whom an advisor has a personalized relationship or for whom a person serves as a broker.
Second, in the CEA section that announces congressional findings, Congress states that CTAs’ "advice, counsel, publications, writings, analyses, and reports . . . and theircontracts, solicitations, subscriptions, agreements, and other arrangements with clients" are affected with a national public interest. 7 U.S.C.
sec. 6l. The breadth of the language used in this statement indicates that Congress intended to include impersonal advisors within the definition of CTA and intended to subject such advisors to the antifraud provisions of the CEA. In particular, this section shows that "subscriptions" *10 are a kind of arrangement with "clients," indicating that even those who merely subscribe to impersonal publications are "clients" of a CTA. Admittedly, this section does not explicitly state that clients include those who receive impersonal advice, but its broad language brings the opposite assertion into question.
CTS’s second claim is that the
definition of "client" in everyday
language includes only those with whom
one has a personalized or fiduciary
relationship. The CEA does not define
client, so we assume that Congress
intended the word to have its ordinary
meaning. See, e.g., Williams v. Taylor,
___ U.S. ___,
1989) ("a customer"); The Random House Dictionary 386 (2d. ed. 1987) ("a customer"); Webster’s Third New International Dictionary (1981) ("PATRON, CUSTOMER") (all capitalization and italics in originals). "The existence of alternative dictionary definitions of" a word, "each making some sense under the statute, itself indicates that the statute is open to interpretation" and the word is ambiguous as between the two meanings. National R.R. Passenger Corp.
v. Boston & Maine Corp.,
v. AT & T Co.,
The use of both "client" and "subscriber" in one provision of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. sec. 6n(3)(A), and in some of the CFTC’s regulations, 17 C.F.R.
sec.sec. 4.33(a), 166.1(c), forms the
basis of CTS’s third contention. CTS
claims that "subscriber" covers customers
who receive only impersonal advice while
*11
"client" means customers who receive
personal advice. If "client" includes
those who receive impersonal advice, then
"subscriber" will be rendered mere
surplusage in contravention of the
interpretive canon that all words in a
statute should, if possible, be given
effect. See Dunn v. CFTC,
6l indicates that subscriptions are a type of arrangement with clients for the purposes of the CEA and so "subscribers" are a type of "client." Thus, the statutory text implies that the word "subscriber" is subsumed by the word "client," which is sufficient to rebut the canon that each word or phrase in a statute should be given independent meaning. Therefore, the presumption against treating statutory terms as surplusage does not aid CTS.
CTS’s fourth argument is that interpreting "client" to include impersonal advisors would lead to absurd results because the CFTC has interpreted the CEA’s antifraud provisions to impose fiduciary duties. CTS posits examples such as parties on opposite sides of a commodities transaction each relying on CTS’s products, in which case CTS would have violated its duty of loyalty to both parties. The CFTC agrees that the CEA imposes fiduciary obligations, but claims that the content of these duties varies depending on the type of CTA.
However, the CEA does not impose fiduciary duties on impersonal advisors.
The leading authority for the proposition that the CEA imposes fiduciary obligations on all CTAs is Savage v.
CFTC,
However, Savage cannot be read so broadly; the party in that case offered personalized advice, id. at 194, and so would be considered a fiduciary under the common law. Nothing in sec. 6o indicates an intent on the part of Congress to impose fiduciary duties on impersonal advisors. Section 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. sec. 77q(a), which contains language similar to 7 U.S.C.
sec. 6o, does not impose fiduciary
duties. See Trussell v. United
*12
Underwriters, Ltd.,
Heritage Capital Advisory Servs., Ltd.,
Fifth and finally, CTS claims that the
antifraud provisions of the CEA raise
serious constitutional questions and we
should interpret the statute to avoid
*13
such issues. See, e.g., Jones v. United
States,
However, the parts of the CEA at issue do not present such grave questions that the constitutional avoidance canon should be employed. See Rust v. Sullivan, 500 U.S.
173, 191 (1991); see also Almendarez-
Torres v. United States,
To the extent that constitutional
concerns motivated the majority’s opinion
in Lowe, these were directed at the IAA’s
registration requirements.
None of CTS’s contentions demonstrates that the word "client" as used in the CEA unambiguously means only those who receive personalized advice. Instead, the definition of "client" is uncertain because it can refer to merely those who receive tailored advice from professionals or those who receive any kind of service regardless of whether it is personalized. Thus, the first step of Chevron is satisfied in favor of the CFTC and we proceed to the second step: determining whether the agency’s interpretation is reasonable. CTS does not make any arguments on this point, and we find no reason to conclude that the CFTC’s construction is unreasonable. 7 U.S.C. sec. 6l indicates that Congress *14 intended for the CEA to have a broad reach, and the CFTC appears to be effectuating that purpose. Thus, we defer to the CFTC’s interpretation of "client" in applying the CEA and conclude that sec. 6o and Regulation 4.41 can be applied to CTS.
2. sec. 6b.
The relevant part of 7 U.S.C. sec. 6b(a) states that:
It shall be unlawful . . . (2) for any person, in or in 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 if such contract for future delivery is or may be used for . . . (B) determining the price basis of any transaction in interstate commerce in such commodity . . . --[to commit fraud, willful deception, or certain manipulative acts].
CTS claims that the "for or on behalf of" language relates back to "any person." According to CTS, sec. 6b only applies to people who make contracts "for or on behalf of" other people, that is, brokers and other agents. The CFTC claims that this key phrase relates back to "any contract," and thus any person, not just a broker, who commits fraud in connection with a contract made for another person has violated sec. 6b./4
CTS is correct regarding the meaning of
sec. 6b. The CFTC’s reading would render
the "for or on behalf of" language mere
surplusage. According to the CFTC, this
phrase only specifies that the contract
must be made on behalf of someone other
than the party committing fraud. Since a
person cannot defraud him or herself
through contract or otherwise, Congress
could have omitted "for or on behalf of"
and the statute would have the exact same
meaning as the CFTC now proposes. Thus,
the CFTC’s construction contravenes the
aforementioned canon that each word or
phrase in a statute should be given
effect if possible. See Dunn,
6b(a). Thus, "for or on behalf" unambiguously refers to "any person," and therefore the provision applies only to brokers or others who have an agency relationship with their clients./5 Because CTS does not have such a relationship with its customers, sec. 6b cannot be applied to CTS.
C. Constitutionality
Because sec. 6o and Regulation 4.41 as reasonably construed by the CFTC apply to CTS’s activities, we must consider CTS’s constitutional claims. CTS contends that sec. 6o and Regulation 4.41 cannot be applied to an impersonal speaker on a public topic, such as the commodities markets, consistent with the First Amendment because parts of these provisions lack a scienter requirement.
CTS also objects on constitutional grounds to any attempt by the CFTC to force CTS to make affirmative disclosures, claiming that this compelled speech violates CTS’s First Amendment rights. We first examine whether the antifraud provisions can be used to punish CTS for speaking, and then consider whether CTS can be forced to speak.
1. Restricted speech.
a) Overview of fraud and the First Amendment.
The case law regarding fraudulent speech and the First Amendment establishes a number of general principles which guide this court’s inquiry. Laws directly punishing fraudulent speech survive constitutional scrutiny even where applied to pure, fully protected speech.
See McIntyre v. Ohio Elections Com’n, 514
U.S. 334, 357 (1995); Riley v. National
Fed’n of the Blind of N.C., Inc., 487
U.S. 781, 795, 800 (1988); Village of
Schaumburg v. Citizens for a Better
Environment,
180, 192 (1963); Black’s Law Dictionary
670-71 (7th ed. 1999). The government is
not limited only to explicit antifraud
measures to prevent its citizens from
*16
being defrauded; certain other narrowly
tailored measures with a direct
relationship to preventing fraud may be
used as well. See McIntyre,
Likewise, the government cannot label certain speech as fraudulent so as to deprive it of First Amendment protection.
See Riley,
Commensurate with its subordinate position within the First Amendment hierarchy, advertising receives less pro tection from regulation than fully protected speech. Misleading or deceptive advertising may be prohibited in addition to fraudulent commercial speech. See Florida Bar v. Went For It, Inc., 515 U.S. 618, 623-24 (1995); Edenfield v.
Fane,
See Went For It,
b) The CEA provision and the CFTC’s regulation.
To understand CTS’s challenge, a distinction between the two parts contained in both sec. 6o(1) and Regulation 4.41(a) must be recognized.
The first part of each of the CEA provision and CFTC regulation prohibit a CTA from employing "any device, scheme, or artifice to defraud." 7 U.S.C. sec.
6o(1) (A); 17 C.F.R. sec. 4.41(a)(1).
This language requires that a CTA act
with scienter before being punished for
violating the statute. See Aaron v. SEC,
Hutton & Co.,
Applying the principles elaborated in
the previous section to the CEA antifraud
laws, we hold that all of the provisions
challenged by CTS pass constitutional
muster. Section 6o(1)(A) and Regulation
4.41(a)(1) require scienter and do no
more than prohibit common law fraud in
commodities transactions. Explicit
antifraud measures such as these do not
violate the First Amendment. While the
remaining two provisions do not require
scienter, both are of limited scope. Each
prohibits only certain activities that
deceive or defraud a CTA’s customers,
Messer,
Hughes Capital Corp.,
On the limited record before us, we must
assume that the CFTC intends to regulate
CTS only within the limits prescribed by
these provisions. If the CFTC were to
apply these laws more broadly to restrict
protected speech that cannot be shown to
be fraudulent as a matter of fact, then a
different case would be presented. In
particular, if the CFTC were to attempt
to punish statements that are more a
matter of opinion or belief, rather than
statements that could be empirically
shown to be false or deceptive, then more
serious constitutional issues would
exist. Cf. Riley,
2. Compelled speech.
CTS seeks to prevent the CFTC from imposing any affirmative disclosure obligations on its publications. The judicial tests for compelled speech, as elaborated below, require that a court know the specific reason why the disclosure was required and the content of the disclosure. Because we have neither of these facts, we hold that CTS’s challenges are unripe. We divide the discussion between commercial speech and non-commercial speech.
The government can impose affirmative
disclosures in commercial advertising if
these are reasonably related to
preventing the public from being deceived
or misled. See Zauderer v. Office of
Disciplinary Counsel,
v. FTC,
1979); Porter & Dietsch, Inc. v. FTC, 605 F.2d 294, 307 (7th Cir. 1979); National Comm’n on Egg Nutrition v. FTC, 570 F.2d 157, 164 (7th Cir. 1977). This inquiry is *19 inherently fact-intensive because a court must examine the particular speech that the government claims deceives or misleads the public and determine whether the specific affirmative disclosure remedy imposed is no broader than necessary to cure this problem. In the instant case, we do not know what statements of CTS’s that the CFTC has found to be deceiving or misleading or why. Nor do we know the language of the affirmative disclosure that the CFTC may impose on CTS’s advertisements. Because of the absence of these crucial facts, CTS’s challenge to any affirmative disclosures in its commercial advertising are not fit for judicial decision and are thus unripe.
Regarding CTS’s fully protected speech,
the government’s power to compel speech
is "constitutional[ly] equivalen[t]" to
its power to silence speech. See Riley,
constitutionally permissible. As with commercial speech, affirmative disclosures required in more protected forms of speech must also be no broader than necessary. We do not have sufficient facts to apply these principles to any potential affirmative disclosures that may be required of CTS by the CFTC because of the same lack of factual development described above.
III. Conclusion
CTS’s statutory challenge and some of its constitutional claims are ripe for judicial resolution. Section 6o and Regulation 4.41 apply to CTS because of Chevron deference. Section 6b is limited by its own language to agency relationships and thus does not encompass impersonal advisors such as CTS. The CEA provisions either prohibit fraud, regulate misleading commercial advertising, or are narrowly drawn and have a direct relationship to preventing fraud, and thus are constitutional.
Further factual development is necessary before we can determine whether affirmative disclosure requirements by the CFTC would violate the First *20 Amendment. This decision moots CTS’s request for a temporary injunction. The district court’s decisions granting partial summary judgment against CTS and enforcing in part the CFTC’s subpoenas are Affirmed.
/1 The CFTC originally appealed the district court’s decision that the registration requirements of sec. 6m are unconstitutional as applied to CTS, but voluntarily dismissed that appeal. The CFTC has recently adopted a rule exempting from registration CTAs that do not direct client accounts and provide only impersonal trading advice. 17 C.F.R. sec. 4.14(a)(9).
/2 Both parties focus on FTC v. Miller, 549 F.2d 452, 460-61 (1977), which appears to include a broad exception to the normal rule that judicial review of a party’s legal challenges in a subpoena enforcement proceeding are limited. Because the extreme burden exception applies to CTS, we need not determine whether and how subsequent decisions have limited Miller.
/3 Neither CTS nor the CFTC rely on the legislative history of the CEA as a means of determining Congress’s intent. Thus, the only evidence we use to determine whether Congress intended for the antifraud provisions to apply only to personalized advisors or brokers is the statutory language.
/4 The CFTC also directs this court’s attention to
a number of cases that have given a broad
interpretation to the "in or in connection with"
language in the statute, such as Hirk v.
Agri-Research Council, Inc.,
/5 In addition, we note that the CFTC has
interpreted sec. 6b to apply only to agency
relationships. See Hammond v. Smith Barney,
Harris Upham & Co., [1987-1990 Transfer Binder]
/6 While Aaron interpreted Section 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. sec. 77q(a), this statute contains language almost identical *21 to the commodity laws in question. Thus, like the Eleventh Circuit in Messer, we rely on judicial interpretations of Section 17(a) in interpreting 7 U.S.C. sec. 6o(1).
/7 CTS alleges that its advertisements contain both
commercial and non-commercial speech. Assuming
this is true, the analysis is not seriously
affected. Commercial speech is separable from
other kinds of speech, and the CFTC must apply
the appropriate standard to the speech on which
it seeks to hang CTS’s liability. See City of
Cincinnati v. Discovery Network, Inc., 507 U.S.
410, 426 n.21 (1993); Board of Trustees of State
Univ. of N.Y. v. Fox,
