This is another chapter in the continuing saga of “flexible” or “enhanced” hedge-to-arrive contracts (we’ll call these “flex HTAs”); for the earlier chapters see
Lachmund v. ADM Investor Services, Inc.,
The plaintiffs in these five consolidated cases are farmers who entered into contracts to deliver grain to grain elevators and other grain merchants, the defendants, at a specified future date. So far, we are describing an ordinary forward (sometimes called “cash forward”) contract, a contract that provides for delivery at some future date at the price specified in the contract.
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. v. Curran,
That’s a simple HTA contract; the “flex” feature of the HTA contracts involved in this case comes from the fact thаt they allow the farmer to defer delivery of the grain. (On the difference between simple and flex HTAs, see the lucid discussion in Charles F. Reid, Note, “Risky Business: HTAs, The Cash Forward Exclusion and Top of Iowa Cooperative v. Schewe,” 44 Vill. L. Rev. 125, 134-37 (1999).) Such a contract specifies a delivery date but allows the farmer, upon the payment of a fee and an appropriate adjustment in the price to reflect changed conditions, to defer delivery beyond that date. A farmer who exercises this deferral option is doing what is called “rolling the hedge.” The merchant, if he wants to hedge against price fluctuations during the extended period of the contract, will close out his existing futures contract by buying an offsetting contract and will then buy a new futures contract to expire at the new delivery date. When the new delivery date arrives, the farmer can again roll the hedge.
Why might a farmer want to roll the hedge? If the market price rose between the signing of the original contract with the merchant and the delivery date specified in the contract, and the farmer expected it to fall later, he could, by rolling the hedge, sell his grain at the current market price (since he wouldn’t have to deliver it to the merchant), which by assumption is higher than the price fixed in the contract; and then, just before the new delivery date, he could buy at the then current price, exрected to be lower, the amount of grain he was obligated to deliver and deliver it at the price fixed in the contract. The flex feature thus enables the farmer to speculate on fluctuations in the market price of his grain.
The plaintiffs did this in 1995, but unfortunately for them prices stayed up and to satisfy their contractual obligаtions they had to buy grain at prices above the prices fixed in their contracts with the merchants, sustaining large losses as a consequence. They seek in these suits to get out of the contracts by arguing that flex HTA contracts are futures contracts. The Commodity Exchange Act, 7 U.S.C. §§ 1
et seq.,
requires that futures contracts be sold through commodity exchanges and the futures commission merchants registered on those exchanges, 7 U.S.C. § 6(a); the defendants fall into neither category. The section just cited declares futures contracts not sold through commodity exchanges and registered futures commission merchants unlawful,
CFTC v. Topworth Int’l, Ltd.,
We cannot find any case that holds this, although several cases require disgorgement of profits obtained under such unlawful contracts, see
id.
at 582-84;
CFTC v. American Metals Exchange Corp.,
The Act defines a futures contract as a contract for future delivery, but defines future delivery to exclude “any sale of any cash commodity for deferred shipment or delivery,” 7 U.S.C. § la(11), that is, any forward contract.
Lachmund v. ADM Investor Services, Inc., supra,
Although futures contracts sрecify delivery as a possible method of satisfying the short’s obligations, it is much more common for such contracts to be closed out by the “buyer’s” taking an offsetting position in a new contract identical but for its price.
Dunn v. CFTC,
The flex feature in the HTA contracts moves these contracts in the direction of futures contracts by attenuating the obligation to deliver, and there is anxiety that by loading such features onto what would otherwise seem to be garden-variety forward contracts the regulatory scheme will be evaded. This led our court in the
La-
*441
chmund,
case to look with favor upon a “totality of the circumstances” approach for determining whether a contract is a futures contract or a forward contract,
As is often true of multifactor legal tests, the “totality of circumstances” approach turns out in practice to give controlling significance to a handful of circumstances; and fortunately they can usually be ascertained just by reading the contract. The cases indicate that when the following circumstances are present, the contract will be deemed a forward contract (see
Lachmund v. ADM Investor Services, Inc., supra,
(1) The contract specifies idiosyncratic terms regarding place of delivery, quantity, or other terms, and so is not fungible with other contracts for the sale of the commodity, аs securities are fungible. But there is an exception for the case in which the seller of the contract promises to sell another contract against which the buyer can offset the first contract, as in In re Bybee,945 F.2d 309 , 313 (9th Cir.1991), and CFTC v. Co Pe-tro Marketing Group, Inc., supra,680 F.2d at 580 . That promise could create a futures contract.
(2) The contract is between industry participants, such as farmers and grain merchants, rather than arbitrageurs and other sрeculators who are interested in transacting in contracts rather than in the actual commodities.
(3) Delivery cannot be deferred forever, because the contract requires the farmer to pay an additional charge every time he rolls the hedge.
As long as all three features that we have identified are present, eventual delivery is reasonably assured, unlike the case of a futures contract — and remember that the Commodity Exchange Act is explicit that a contract for delivery in the future is not a futures contract. If one or more of the features is absent, the contracts may or may not be futures contracts.
This. refinеment of the “totality of circumstances” approach that we adopt today, while it will not resolve every case, will protect forward contracts from the sword of Damocles that these plaintiffs wish to wave above the defendants’ heads, yet at the same time will prevent evasion of the Commodity Exchange Act by mere clever draftsmanship.
The three features are present here, as can be ascertained from the contracts themselves; and while the plaintiffs allege that there are oral as well as written terms in some of the contracts with the defendants, they have not alleged any oral terms that would prevent eventual delivery *442 or cancel the fee for rolling, which places a practical limit on how long delivery can be deferred. The district court was therefore correct to dismiss the plaintiffs’ complaint, and we proceed to the question whether the court was also correct to confirm the arbitratiоn awards in favor of the grain merchants.
For the reasons stated in
Harter,
a materially identical case, we think the court was correct. But there is an issue not addressed in
Harter
that may repay discussion, although it turns out to be academic. A regulation promulgated under the Commodity Exchange Act, 17 C.F.R. § 180.2; see
id.
§ 180.3(b)(7), imposes certain procedural formalities on arbitrations under the Act, such as a right to cross-examine witnesses, that are not found in the Federal Arbitration Act, under which the awards challenged by the plaintiffs were confirmed. The defendants point out that the regulation is limited to disputes arising under the Commodity Exchange Act, which a dispute concerning a forward contract does not аrise under; that
Prima Paint Corp. v. Flood & Conklin Mfg. Co.,
The plaintiffs reply that if the parties to a contract are free to establish a bob-tailed arbitration procedure for determining the contract’s validity, the Act will be circumvented. But the inapplicability of the regulation to arbitral determinations of validity did not make the arbitration procedurally inadequate. It just meant it was governed by the Federal Arbitration Act, which establishes procedural minima deemed adequate to enable arbitrators to make responsible decisions on issues of validity. 9 U.S.C. § 10;
Harter v. Iowa Grain Co., supra,
The only other issue that merits discussion is whether the district court was premature in denying class certification; it was not. As is often and puzzlingly the case, see
Amati v. City of Woodstock,
*443
In any event, we do not find persuasive the plaintiffs’ argument, perfunctorily made, that the district court could not deny class status on its own initiative without giving the plaintiffs a chance to introduce evidence cоncerning the suitability of the case to be a class action. The case had been pending for several years when the court ruled, and the plaintiffs had never during that period moved for class certification, even though Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the cases interpreting it require that the issue of сlass certification be resolved as quickly after the suit is filed as practicable. Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(c)(1);
Crawford v. Equifax Payment Services, Inc.,
It was apparent, moreover, both thаt each class member had a sufficiently large stake to be able to afford to litigate on his own — a consideration that weighs against allowing a suit to proceed as a class action,
Amchem Products, Inc. v. Windsor, supra,
Affirmed.
