Rеfco, Inc., a commodities brokerage business, and its president, Thomas H. Dittmer, appeal from a general verdict against them awarding James K. Dudley, a Refco broker, $153,525 on his claims of fraud under section 4b, and market manipulation under section 9(b), of the Commоdities Exchange Act (CEA), 7 U.S.C. §§ 6b, 13(b) (1982). Refco and Dittmer argue principally that the evidence was insufficient to support the verdict on either theory of recovery. Dittmer also individually contests the trial court’s assertion of personal jurisdiction over him. We conclude that the court has jurisdiction over Dittmer. However, based on
Horn v. Ray E. Friedman & Co.,
James K. Dudley is one of several traders with Refco’s Springdale, Arkansas office tо bring suit against Refco and Ditt-mer to recover losses suffered in personal trading accounts during October and No
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vember 1979.
See Greenwood v. Dittmer,
Dudley alleges that he took the long positions in reliance on fraudulent misrepresentations by Dittmer which, he further alleges, Dittmer issued as part of a scheme to manipulate the market for live cattle futures. According to Dudley, during August and September 1979, Dittmer disseminated various fraudulent misrepresentations designed to encourage traders with Refco’s Springdale office to purchase long on live cattle сontracts. Dudley asserts that through these misrepresentations, Dittmer was able to drive up the cattle futures market and trade the rising market from the long side, to close out his long positions at a substantial profit when the price artificially peaked, then trade from the short side before the artificially high price dropped, to close out his short positions at a substantial profit when the price collapsed. Dudley alleges that through this scheme, Dittmer gained over $1,000,-000 in profits. He also alleges that the long positions he established during this period ultimately resulted in a personal loss of $307,050.
Dittmer’s alleged fraudulent misrepresentations, through which he allegedly was able to manipulate the market, and upon which Dudley testified he relied to establish long positions, reached Dudlеy in two ways. Dudley testified that on August 27, Dittmer telephoned Robert Bone, a broker with and the de facto manager of Refco’s Springdale office, and Dudley’s brother-in-law. The evidence showed that Dittmer knew that other brokers customarily listened to their conversations on the extension telephones. Dudley testified that Ditt-mer told Bone and others listening, Dudley among them, that his cattle feedlots were low, indicating that the price of October and December live cattle contracts would rise, and urged the Refco brokers to take long positions in those contracts and to advise their customers to do the same. According to Dudley, throughout September, Dittmer’s urgings became more frequent and forceful. Dudley asserts that Ditt-mer’s statement that his feedlots were low constitutes a misrepresentation of fact, in that Dittmer, in a hedge application made to the CME on October 5, admitted into evidence, stated that his feedlots were “at capacity.” The evidence also established that on the morning of October 2, Dittmer told Ed Aрel, a trader on the CME, that the correct position in the cattle futures market was the long position. Later that day, Apel, who as the evidence showed Dittmer knew usually spoke with Bone and others in the Refco Springdale office ten to twenty times a dаy, communicated Dittmer’s recommendation to Bone. Dudley testified that he overheard this conversation. Bone also passed on Dittmer’s recommendation to the other Springdale brokers. Documentary evidence established that on October 2, as Dudley and other brokers, purportedly relying on Dittmer’s advice, were adding to their long positions, Dittmer sold his long contracts and purchased short. By the end of the day, the market had collapsed and Dudley sustained substantial losses on his long contracts. Dittmer, however, having reversed his position as the market peaked, reaped substantial profits from the market’s precipitous fall.
Dudley brought suit against Refco and Dittmer claiming fraud and market manipulation under sections 4b and 9(b) of the CEA, respectively. The jury, not having been charged to return separate verdicts under each theory, returned a general ver- *672 diet in favor of Dudley. Refeo moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The motion was denied, and this appeal followed.
I.
Dittmer, not an Arkansas resident, charges that the trial сourt was without personal jurisdiction over him. The Arkansas long-arm statute allows a court in Arkansas to exercise jurisdiction over a person as to a cause of action arising from that person’s “transacting any business in this state.” Ark.Stat.Ann. § 27-2502(C)(1)(a) (Repl.1979). The Arkansas Supreme Court has held that the statute extends Arkansas’ jurisdiction over nonresidents to the limits permitted by the due process clause of the United States Constitution.
SD Leasing, Inc. v. Al Spain & Associates, Inc.,
In
International Shoe Co. v. Washington,
The evidence is undisputed that Dittmer made numerous telephone calls to the Ref-co office in Springdale in August and September of 1979. Further, it is undisputed that before the transactions of 1979, Ditt-mer paid two visits to Arkansas to meet with brokers in the Springdаle office. Although Dittmer argues that he telephoned and visited in his capacity as president of Refco, rather than to transact personal business, the evidence is clear that he, like the Refco brokers, traded both on customer accоunts and personal accounts. Indeed, Dudley alleges that as a result of communications with the Springdale office, Dittmer personally derived substantial.....profits. Based on these contacts, and more generally, on Dittmer’s purposeful direction of activities at, and establishment of continuing relationships with, Arkansas residents, out of which this litigation arises, we do not believe it is unfair to require Dittmer to defend this suit in Arkansas. Therefore, we conclude that the district court properly asserted personal jurisdiction over Dittmer.
II.
Refco and Dittmer contend that there was insufficient evidence to submit Dudley’s claim of fraud under section 4b of the CEA to the jury. An action for fraud under the CEA requires a false representa
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tion of material fact with knowledge and belief by the defendant that the reрresentation is false, and an intent to induce reliance on the representation.
See Greenwood v. Dittmer,
Dudley responds that the evidence was sufficient to establish fraud, and points to two allegedly knowing misrepresentations made by Dittmer. First, throughout August and September, when Dittmer allegedly was urging the brokers to buy long and to advise their customers also to buy long, Dittmer stated that the supply in his cattle feedlots was low. Dudley argues that these were knowing misrepresentations, since in the hedge application filed with the CME on October 5, Dittmer declared that his feedlots were “at capacity.” Second, on the morning of October 2, Dittmer told Apel that he expected the priсe of October and December cattle futures contracts to rise. Dittmer’s fraudulent intent is demonstrated, Dudley contends, by Dittmer’s unloading his long contracts and buying short contracts on that same day.
In
Horn v. Ray E. Friedman & Co.,
Horn
was decided after the trial in this case and the district court was without the benefit of its holding when it denied defendants’ motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. Nevertheless, the fraud сase presented to the jury in
Horn
is virtually identical to the case before us. Indeed, Dudley’s counsel at oral argument conceded that the trial records of the two cases cannot genuinely be distinguished. A decision of a panel of this court is the law of the circuit and we áre compelled to follow it.
United States v. Norton,
III.
The trial court submitted the case to the jury on both a fraud and a manipulation theory, and instructed that a general verdict be rendered. The jury returned a general verdict for Dudley of $153,525. Becаuse the jury returned a general verdict, however, we are unable to determine the extent to which the jury judgment rested on the improperly submitted fraud theory, or whether the jury would have granted the same award had the case been submitted on the market manipulаtion theory alone. The rule in this circuit is clear that when one of two theories has erroneously been submitted to the jury, a general verdict cannot stand.
Bone v. Refco, Inc.,
Because we remand this case for a new trial, we need not address defendants’ challenges to the trial court’s jury instructions or evidentiary rulings, nor need we review plaintiff’s challenge to the district court’s refusal to award pre-judgment interest. We further believe it prudent, since the record on retrial may differ from that before us now, to refrain from evaluating the sufficiency of the evidence presented on market manipulation. We do observe, however, that
Horn
dealt with the issue of fraud and did not decide sufficiency of the evidence under the theory of market manipulation. Thus, the discussion in
Horn
on this issue,
We reverse the general verdict, order that judgment be entered in favor of Refco and Dittmer on the fraud claim, and remand for retrial of the market manipulation claim.
