This is an interlocutory appeal from an order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Milton Pollack, J., that remanded an arbitration proceeding to the arbitrators to fulfill their “obligation to furnish some explanation of the ultimate findings embodied in their decision.”
*1212 I
The arbitration that led to this appeal was first requested in November 1967 by appellee Herbert Sobel, who was a customer of appellant Hertz, Warner & Co., a stock brokerage firm and a member of the New York Stock Exchange. 1 As a customer, Sobel had the right under Article VIII of the Constitution of the New York Stock Exchange to demand arbitration of any controversy he might have with a member firm growing out of its “business.” 2 Briefly, Sobel claimed that between December 1965 and March 1966 he had purchased 10,200 shares of the common stock of Hercules Galion Products, Inc., upon the recommendation of his long-time broker, Edward Wetzel, and Michael Geier, both then employed by Hertz, Warner, and that Wetzel and Geier had made fraudulent misstatements and omissions of material facts on which Sobel had relied to his detriment. As their employer, Hertz, Warner was, according to Sobel, liable for the damages he had suffered. 3 Sobel continued to hold his Hercules shares until Hertz, Warner demanded, in connection with the arbitration, that they be sold to fix damages. This was done in May 1968, and Sobel thereafter claimed a direct loss of about $34,000. 4
In 1970, both parties signed a formal submission to arbitration pursuant to the provisions of the Stock Exchange Constitution and the rules of the Board of Governors. Under the Constitution, Sobel’s claim was heard by a panel consisting of two persons “engaged in the securities business” and three not so engaged. The panel held two hearings at which it heard the testimony of three witnesses and received documentary evidence. At the hearings, of which there is a full transcript, both sides were ably represented by counsel.
In May 1971, the panel issued the following decision:
We, the undersigned, being the arbitrators selected to hear and determine a matter in controversy between the above-mentioned claimant and respondents set forth in a submission to arbitration signed by the parties on April 6, 1970 and April 10, 1970 respectively ;
And having heard and considered the proofs of the parties, have decided and determined that the claim of the claimant be and hereby is in all respects dismissed;
That the costs, $240.00, be and hereby are assessed against the claimant.
After an unsuccessful request to the arbitrators for reconsideration, Sobel moved in the Southern District under 9 U.S.C. § 10 to vacate the arbitration award on the grounds that it had been “procured by undue means” and “that the Award is contrary to public policy, in that the arbitrators refused to make their Award in accordance with the applicable Federal Securities laws.” Judge Pollack heard argument on the motion to vacate and concluded, in an exhaustive opinion, that he could not decide the question without “an indication, now wholly lacking from the record, of the basis on which the petitioner’s claim was dismissed.”
II
Although Sobel’s claims before the arbitrators rested on state statutory law and common law fraud concepts, as well as on federal securities acts, only the last are significant on this appeal. The district judge was clearly disturbed by Sobel’s claim that the arbitrators must have ignored the prohibitions of sections 12(2) and 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. §§ 771(2),77q (a), section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b), and Rule 10b-5 promulgated thereunder. The judge’s opinion emphasized that Wetzel and Geier had been indicted in 1967 — not long after the transactions complained of by Sobel — for conspiring to create market activity in the Hercules shares and to induce the purchase of the security by others, and that in 1971 Wetzel had pleaded guilty to the conspiracy charge and Geier had been found guilty of that and other counts after a jury trial. Sobel argued to the district court that unless the arbitrators explained their decision, there was no way of telling whether it was in “manifest disregard” of the provisions of the securities acts. The quotation is from Wilko v. Swan,
Power to vacate an award is limited. While it may be true, as the Court of Appeals thought, that a failure of the arbitrators to decide in accordance with the provisions of the Securities Act would “constitute grounds for vacating the award pursuant to section 10 of the Federal Arbitration Act,” that failure would need to be made clearly to appear. In unrestricted submissions, such as the present margin agreements envisage, the interpretations of the law by the arbitrators in contrast to manifest disregard are not subject, in the federal courts, to judicial review for error in interpretation. [Emphasis added; footnotes omitted.]
Id. at 436-437,
The first issue before us is what is the issue before us. In one portion of his memorandum opinion certifying an interlocutory appeal, the district judge described the question as
whether an arbitration award in a case involving federal securities law standards which fails to provide some indication of the basis of the arbitration panel’s decision may be set aside and resubmitted to the arbitration panel pursuant to 9 U.S.C. §§ 10(d) and (e),
The question so phrased, of course, is still a narrow one. We are not asked to decide whether arbitration was an inappropriate forum here in the first place. Cf. American Safety Equipment Corp. v. J. P. Maguire & Co.,
Nonetheless, the extent of an arbitrator’s obligation to explain his award is necessarily related to the scope
of judicial review of it. That issue, insofar as it leads to attempts to define “manifest disregard,” is particularly troublesome. See, e. g., San Martine Companía de Navegacion v. Saguenay Terminals Ltd.,
Presumably based upon the foregoing considerations, the Supreme Court has made it clear that there is no general requirement that arbitrators explain the reasons for their award. In Wilko v. Swan,
supra,
just before the language quoted above at page 1213 the Court pointed out that an award by arbitrators
*1215
“may be made without explanation of their reasons and without a complete record of their proceedings . . . . ”
*1216
Sobel cites a number of cases in support of the district court order. Courts have, on occasion, remanded awards to arbitrators for clarification, but they generally have done so to find out whether an issue has already been decided in arbitration rather than to discover whether the arbitrators had good reasons for their award. E. g., Galt v. Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass Co.,
In short, we believe that the district court erred in remanding the arbitration proceeding to the arbitrators. We do not agree with its conclusion that “the present state of the record is not sufficient to justify final determination of the issues petitioner has raised.”
Case remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. At the time of the events in question, the firm name was Hertz, Neuttiark & Warner.
. Article VIII provided, in relevant part:
Sec. 1. Any controversy between a non-member and a . member firm . . . arising out of the business of such . . . member firm, . . . shall, at the instance of such non-member, be submitted for arbitration, in accordance with the provisions of the constitution and the rules of the Board of Governors.
. Sobel’s claim also included damages for the purchase of stock of another company. That aspect of the arbitration is not before us.
. Sobel's total claimed loss — including interest paid on his margin account and loss of the use of capital — was $70,986.
.
Arbitrators may not disregard the law. Specifically they are, as Chief Judge Swan pointed out, “bound to decide in accordance with the provisions of section 12(2).” On this we are all agreed. It is suggested, however, that there is no effective way of assuring obedience by the arbitrators to the governing law. But since their failure to observe this law “would . . . constitute grounds for vacating the award pursuant to section 10 of the Federal Arbitration Act,”201 F.2d 439 , 445, appropriate means for judicial scrutiny must be implied, in the form of some record or opinion, however informal, whereby such compliance will appear, or want of it will upset the award. [Emphasis added.]
. E. g., the representations to Sobel may have been true when made, or Hertz, Warner may have exercised reasonable supervision over its employees and not had reason to know of their fraudulent activities. Cf. Kamen & Co. v. Paul H. Aschkar & Co.,
. The New York Stock Exchange in an amicus brief suggests that in the context now before us such a requirement may put an end to arbitration altogether. The district court noted that the Exchange was not required to arbitrate non-member disputes.
