David Kurz and Raymond Heinzl are former investors in portfolios managed by Fidelity Management & Research Co. and FMR Co., Inc. (We refer to the plaintiffs and the class they represent, as Kurz and the defendants as Fidelity.) Kurz filed suit in state court, invoking state law and asserting that Fidelity broke a contract when some of its employees placed trades through Jeffries & Co. According to the complaint, Jeffries bribed the employees to send business its way. Trading through a broker that paid under the table violated the duty of “best execution” stated in rules of the National Association of Securities Dealers (now known just as its acronym NASD), according to the complaint.
“Best execution” — getting the optimal combination of price, speed, and liquidity for a securities trade, see Jonathan R. Macey & Maureen O’Hara,
The Law and Economics of Best Execution,
6 J. Financial Intermediation 188 (1997) — affects the net price that investors pay or receive for securities and is accordingly widely understood as a subject of regulation under the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934 and related laws, such as the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 and the Investment Company Act of 1940. See, e.g.,
Newton v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc.,
Like the SEC, Fidelity took the position that the misconduct of its employees (more precisely, its failure to disclose that misconduct to investors) is a securities-law issue and removed the proceeding to federal court under the Securities Litigation Uniform Standards Act of 1998. The relevant part of this statute, 15 U.S.C. § 78bb(f), provides:
(1) No covered class action based upon the statutory or common law of any State or subdivision thereof may be maintained in any State or Federal court by any private party alleging—
(A) a misrepresentation or omission of a material fact in connection with the purchase or sale of a covered security; or
(B) that the defendant used or employed any manipulative or deceptive device or contrivance in connection with the purchase or sale of a covered security.
(2) Any covered class action brought in any State court involving a covered security, as set forth in paragraph (1), shall be removable to the Federal district court for the district in which the action is pending, and shall be subject to paragraph (1).
See also
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc. v. Dabit,
Section 78bb(f)(3) excludes some actions from the scope of removal and preemption. For example, a derivative action against an issuer, under the law of the issuer’s state of incorporation, is excluded by subsection (f)(3)(A)(i). Kurz has not pursued a derivative claim — not only because he did not invest in Fidelity itself but also because he no longer holds a portfolio under Fidelity’s management. (That Fidelity fired the misbehaving employees, none of whom was in senior management, and cooperated with the SEC to reduce the risk of recurrence, also would prevent resort to derivative litigation.) Kurz does not invoke any of the 1998 Act’s other exceptions. He contends instead that the suit rests on contract law rather than “a misrepresentation or omission of a material fact” and therefore does not come within the 1998 Act in the first place. He also contends that the duty of best execution is not “in connection with the purchase or sale” of securities. That argument is frivolous, given
Dabit,
Our opinion in
Kircher
observed that a genuine contract action would be outside the scope of the 1998 Act. See
NASD’s rules themselves are part of the apparatus of federal securities regulation. NASD is a “self-regulatory organization”; its requirements are adopted by notice-
Fidelity did not break a promise to Kurz. The promise — if there was any independent of the NASD’s rules — was made by Fidelity’s employees to Fidelity itself. The employees promised to' supply their honest services, and didn’t. Kurz needs a way to turn the employees’ misconduct into a legal claim in investors’ favor. Contract law does not do the trick: if some of IBM’s employees take bribes and this leads to higher prices for computers, IBM’s customers could not sue IBM on a contract theory.
What does produce a claim is securities law. How Fidelity discharges its duties toward investors is a subject requiring disclosure under federal law. And although Fidelity itself (which is to say its top managers and board) did not know about the defalcations among members of the staff, and thus did not act with the scienter required for federal securities liability, see
Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder,
The district court thus was right: Kurz had a federal securities claim, or he had nothing. And it is a bad securities claim, given the expiration of the federal statute of limitations and the class’s inability to show loss causation. See
Dura Pharmaceuticals, Inc. v. Broudo,
AFFIRMED.
