David and Rita Brown appeal from the district court’s order denying their motion to vacate an arbitration award,
I. STATEMENT OF THE CASE
On November 4, 1984, David Brown, a resident of Florida, opened a securities brokerage account with the Dallas, Texas, office of Rauscher Pierce Refsnes, Inc. (“RPR”). 1 Brown came to RPR when his long-time broker, A1 Gilbertson, joined the firm. Gil-bertson serviced the Brown account until his death in July 1985. Upon Gilbertson’s death, Brown requested that William H. Brashears, another RPR broker, serve as his account executive. Brashears agreed, and thereafter serviced the account.
*778 Prior to Brashears’ assumption of the account, Gilbertson and Brown had pursued an aggressive profit taking strategy by acquiring large positions, usually on margin. After becoming account executive in July 1985, Brashears continued to pursue this aggressive profit taking strategy at Brown’s request. Brown and Brashears remained in constant contact, phoning one another several times daily and mailing various documents and confirmation tickets back and forth.
Eventually, this aggressive strategy resulted in substantial losses to the Brown account, which the Browns sought to recover from RPR and Brashears. Pursuant to them customer agreement, the Browns instituted an arbitration proceeding against RPR and Brashears before an arbitration panel of the New York Stock Exchange (the “Panel”). The Browns alleged several violations of Florida’s securities laws, including churning, unsuitable transactions and failure to supervise. In addition, the Browns alleged that for three of the four years Brashears had served as their account executive, Brashears had not been registered with the Florida Department of Banking and Finance to sell securities. See Fla.Stat.Ann. § 517.12 (West Supp.1993).
During their arbitration hearing, the Browns abandoned their claims for churning, unsuitability, and failure to supervise, proceeding only on their claim that Brashears was not registered in the state of Florida to sell securities. RPR and Brashears countered that Brashears’ failure to register was mere inadvertence, and that in any case the registration requirement did not apply to sellers such as Brashears. The Panel issued, without explanation, a lump-sum award in the Browns’ favor for $16,000 in damages and $4,000 in forum fees.
The Browns filed a motion in the Middle District of Florida to vacate the arbitration award and enter final judgment in their favor for $721,762.91 plus costs and interest. See 9 U.S.C.A. § 10(a) (West Supp.1993). The Browns argued that because the Panel had ruled in their favor, the Panel was required to apply Florida’s statutory damages formula. See Fla.Stat.Ann. § 517.211. That formula provides that a plaintiff who successfully sues a seller of securities for failing to register with the Banking Department is entitled to recover all losses sustained during the period the seller was unregistered, and that those losses are not to be offset against profits. RPR opposed the motion and requested that the Panel’s award be confirmed, arguing that so long as there was a possible basis for the award, the award should be allowed to stand.
Faced with a sharp dispute between the parties concerning the possible basis for the award, the district court remanded the award to the Panel for clarification. The Panel responded:
In reaching our decision, the Panel carefully considered the intent of the Florida law requiring qualification of brokers through licensing. We concluded that while Brash-ears failed to become licensed in Florida upon assuming this unsolicited account, his failure to do so was by oversight, rather than any effort to take advantage of his clients. We found an equal failure on the part of [RPR] to supervise their own procedures adequately so that his intended licensing would be verified before any business was conducted with the Browns. For these administrative and procedural oversights the Panel found for the claimants in the amounts cited in our award.
After receiving the Panel’s response, the district court denied the Browns’ motion to vacate and granted RPR’s motion to confirm the arbitration award. The Browns now appeal.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
A. Review of Arbitration Awards Generally
Our review of commercial arbitration awards is controlled by the Federal Arbitration Act (“FAA”).
See
9 U.S.C.A. §§ 1-16. Judicial review of arbitration awards under the FAA is very limited.
Booth v. Hume Publishing, Inc.,
When considering a motion to vacate on one of these non-statutory grounds, the reviewing court begins by looking to the award itself. When no rationale is given for a lump-sum award, the reviewing court first reviews the ai’bitration award to determine if there is a rational basis for the award.
Robbins,
B. The District Court’s Consideration of the Award
The Browns challenged the Panel’s initial lump-sum award as being arbitrary and capricious and against public policy.' RPR and Brashears countered, contending that the award had a rational basis and was neither arbitrary and capricious nor against public policy. Faced with this dispute, the district court remanded the award to the arbitration panel for clarification. Upon receipt of the clarified award which now contained an explanation, the district followed the procedure set forth in Robbins, examining the award to determine if it had a rational basis. Concluding that the award had a rational basis which the Browns were unable to refute, the district court held that the Browns were limited to the FAA’s four statutory bases for vacatur, and were precluded from attacking the award as being arbitrary and capricious or against public policy. Accordingly, the *780 district court denied the Browns’ motion to vacate the award.
We review the- district court’s denial of a motion to vacate an arbitration award for an abuse of discretion.
Robbins,
The district court failed to properly apply the framework we have enunciated for the review of arbitration awards. The clarified award reviewed by the district court was not silent as to its rationale. Thus, rather than divining whether the award had a proper basis, the district court should have proceeded directly to the Browns’ contentions that the Panel’s award was arbitrary and capricious and contrary to public policy. The district court’s failure to follow the correct procedure in analyzing the award constitutes an abuse of discretion.
Cf. Noonan South, Inc. v. County of Volusia,
*781
When a district court has abused its discretion by failing to follow the prescribed procedural framework, our normal procedure is to remand the case for further proceedings. In this case, however, we choose not to remand the case for two reasons. First, the issues raised by the Browns — whether the award is arbitrary and capricious or violates public policy — are both legal issues, which we are well equipped to evaluate.
See Ainsworth,
III. DISCUSSION
A. The Award is not Arbitrary and Capricious :
The Browns first argue that the award should be vacated because it is arbitrary and capricious. Our precedent reveals that the arbitrary and capricious ground permits courts to vacate arbitration awards in two kinds of cases. First, courts may vacate an award as arbitrary and capricious when the award exhibits a wholesale departure from the law.
Ainsworth,
The Browns’ challenge is of the first type. They argue that the award is arbitrary and capricious because although the Panel found that Brashears had failed to register, the Panel failed to award damages as required by Florida law. For an award to be vacated as arbitrary and capricious, the Panel’s award must contain more than an error of law or interpretation.
Ainsworth,
We reject the Browns’ argument that we are bound by Ainsworth to vacate the Pan *782 el’s award. In Ainsworth, as in this case, we reviewed an arbitration award considering Florida’s statute requiring sellers of securities to register with the Banking Department. The arbitration panel in Ainsworth found that the defendant had not registered, but refused to award damages. On consideration of the plaintiffs motion to vacate, the district court remanded the decision to the arbitration panel, instructing them that if they found a violation of the registration law, damages were mandatory. The panel affirmed its prior finding, stating that although the seller had been negligent, the plaintiff had not suffered any damages. The district court vacated the award. . On appeal, we affirmed the district court’s judgment, holding that the panel’s award was arbitrary and capricious. The crucial difference between Ainsworth and the case before us today is that the arbitration panel in Ainsworth had been instructed by the district court as to the correct law, yet refused to abide by it. In contrast, the Panel here' received no such instruction. As the Panel was not instructed otherwise, its interpretation of Florida, law was not so palpably faulty that no judge could have applied the law as it did. 7
B. The Award does not Violate Public Policy
The public policy exception to the enforcement of arbitration awards allows courts to refuse to enforce arbitration awards where enforcement “would violate ‘some explicit public policy’ that is ‘well defined and dominant, and is to be ascertained by reference to the laws and legal precedents and not from general considerations of supposed public interests.’ ”
United Paperworkers Int’l Union v. Misco, Inc.,
Typically, the public policy exception is implicated when enforcement of the award compels one of the parties to take action which directly conflicts with public policy.
Revere Copper and Brass Inc. v. Overseas Private Inv. Corp.,
At its core, the Browns’ public policy argument is no more than a complaint that the Panel failed to interpret the law correctly. We may not set aside an arbitration award because the arbitration panel erred in its interpretation of the law.
Burchell v. Marsh,
58 U.S. (17 Howard) 344, 349,
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s judgment confirming the award rendered by the Panel is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Sometime in 1988, Brown converted his account into a joint account, naming his wife, Rita Brown, as joint account holder.
. The FAA provides that a district court may vacate an award for the following reasons:
(1) Where the award was procured by corruption, fraud, or undue means.
(2) Where there was evident partiality or corruption in the arbitrators, or either of them.
(3) Where the arbitrators were guilty of misconduct in refusing to postpone the hearing, upon sufficient cause shown, or in refusing to hear evidence pertinent and material to the controversy; or of any other misbehavior by which the rights of any party may have been prejudiced.
(4) Where the arbitrators exceeded their powers, or so imperfectly executed them that a mutual, final, and definite award upon the subject matter submitted was not made.
9 U.S.C.A. § 10(a).
. In addition, some circuits have recognized a third non-statutoiy basis for vacating an arbitration award — manifest disregard of law.
See Jenkins v. Prudential-Bache Securities, Inc.,
. The district court's application of the
Robbins
framework to this case was not its only error. The district court's initial error was to remand the case to the arbitrators for clarification. A remand for clarification is proper only when the award itself can be interpreted in a variety of ways.
Ainsworth v. Skurnick,
The district court also erred in its interpretation of what
Robbins
requires of district courts. When analyzing a lump sum award,
Robbins
instructs district courts to determine if the award has a "rational basis.”
Robbins,
Somehow confused by this straightforward procedure, the district court concluded that by "proper basis,” we intended that district courts examine arbitration awards for "evidence of overt misconduct or impartiality.”
Brown v. Rauscher Pierce Refsnes, Inc.,
. In so doing, our review will be the same as if the district court had granted the Browns’ motion for vacatur.
See Robbins,
. The First Circuit has commented that, although the nomenclature varies from circuit to circuit, every circuit recognizes these two grounds — no basis in law or no basis in the contract — as non-statutoiy grounds for vacatur.
See Advest, Inc. v. McCarthy,
. The difference between this case and
Ainsworth
is highlighted when the cases are examined under the "manifest disregard of the law” standard. To vacate an award on the ground that the Panel manifestly disregarded the law, "there must be some showing in the record, other than the result obtained, that the arbitrators knew the law and expressly disregarded it."
O.R. Securities v. Professional Planning Assocs., Inc.,
