Lance and Nancy Wise appeal from the district court’s refusal to set aside a decision by a panel of arbitrators that denied them relief. Before proceeding to the merits, we must consider a jurisdictional question mishandled by the parties and the district court. The jurisdictional statement in the plaintiffs’ brief bases federal jurisdiction on the Federal Arbitration Act, period. But the Act (9 U.S.C. §§ 1
et seq.)
confers federal jurisdiction in cases involving arbitration only of disputes that, were they litigated rather than arbitrated, would be within federal jurisdiction. 9 U.S.C. § 4;
Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital v. Mercury Construction
Corp.,
The parties’ insouciance about jurisdiction, besides being unprofessional, is particularly disturbing because the defendants are not standard business corporations, and any lawyer who practices in federal court should realize that ascertaining the citizenship of other artificial persons can be tricky. The NASD (formerly called the National Association of Securities Dealers) is a membership corporation — a corporation, ordinarily a nonprofit, that has members but not stock. Wachovia Securities is a limited liability company.
Because the overriding goal in crafting a jurisdictional rule is simplicity,
Budinich v. Becton Dickinson & Co.,
The Wises had become customers of an investment adviser named Scott Winters when he was employed by Merrill Lynch. Winters left Merrill for Wachovia and the Wises went with him, opening an account with Wachovia and agreeing to arbitrate under rules of the NASD any dispute arising from their dealings with the firm. In March 2000 Winters recommended that the Wises invest in a new investment fund called the “Titan Fund.” He told them he’d invested $2 million of his own money in Titan. On April 10 the Wises directed Winters to convert the holdings in their Wachovia account to cash. He did this, and three days later the Wises closed the account, which now had $135,000 in cash in it, and wired all the money to Titan. Winters had quit Wachovia the day before the Wises wired the money to Titan.
*268 Months later the Wises discovered that the Titan Fund was a sham and their entire investment lost. Securities regulators in California, where Winters lived, later ordered him to stop acting as an investment adviser in that state. The order was based on findings that he had made misrepresentations in marketing the Titan Fund; for example, his own investment in the fund had been not $2 million, but zero.
The Wises complained to Wachovia, contending that the firm was responsible for Winters’ fraud because he had hatched it before he resigned from the firm. They claimed to have had no idea that the Titan Fund had not been recommended by Wa-chovia&emdash;no idea that Winters had been on a frolic of his own in persuading them to invest in Titan.
Their complaint, rejected by Wachovia, was referred to arbitration pursuant to their contract with the firm. At the conclusion of discovery in the arbitration, Mr. Wise submitted an affidavit reciting the facts summarized above. He attached documents relating to his ill-starred investment in the Titan Fund. Wachovia submitted no evidence but moved for summary judgment, which the panel of arbitrators granted without explaining the basis of their decision. Arbitrators have, however, no duty to explain.
Bernhardt v. Poly-graphic Co. of America,
The Federal Arbitration Act lists the following grounds for setting aside an arbitral award (an arbitral decision is called an “award” whether or not it awards anything to the complainant).
(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 have been prejudiced; or
(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. § 10(a). The Wises argue that there was not even an atom of evidence to support summary judgment for Wachovia. The argument might seem to invoke the provision in section 10(a)(3) that authorizes vacating an award for “refusing to hear evidence pertinent and material to the controversy,” but the arbitrators did not limit the Wises’ presentation of evidence. The Wises further argue that since there was no evidence to support the award, the award must be set aside as being “arbitrary and capricious.” But “arbitrary and capricious” is not among the listed grounds for setting aside an award.
Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry.,
It is tempting to think that courts are engaged in judicial review of arbitration awards under the Federal Arbitration Act, but they are not.
Baravati v. Josephthal, Lyon & Ross, Inc.,
Reluctantly driven back to the statutory grounds for setting aside the arbitrators’ award, the Wises ask us to infer corruption, partiality, exceeding granted authority, etc., from the absence of any evidence to support the arbitrators’ award. Absence of evidence as such is not a statutory ground and does not fit our narrow concept of “manifest disregard,” though it may that of other courts. See
Labor Relations Division v. Teamsters Local 379,
The best interpretation of the Wises’ substantive claim is as follows: A principal generally is not liable for the wrongdoing of an agent who is acting wholly for himself. But there is an exception if, acting with apparent authority, the agent commits a fraud against a third party who reasonably believed that he was entering into a bona fide transaction with the agent’s principal. That is the rule of
Gleason v. Seaboard Air Line Ry.,
But they may have known that Winters was on a frolic of his own in marketing the Titan Fund to them, and if they knew this — knew that he was acting beyond the authority granted to him by his employ *270 er — they could not have been relying on any appearance of authority when they invested in the fund, and so their theory of liability would collapse. It is true that the only evidence before the arbitrators was Mr. Wise’s affidavit, which did not acknowledge that he knew that Winters was not acting for Wachovia. But arbitrators, like judges and jurors, are allowed to use their common sense and background knowledge to draw inferences from what the evidence shows. And from what it omits. The Wises’ relationship was with Winters rather than with Wachovia. They had been his customers when he was at Merrill Lynch and when he moved to Wa-chovia they moved with him. When he decided to leave Wachovia and make his fortune with the Titan Fund (of which he was the sponsor and president), the Wises decided to go with him once again, abandoning Wachovia' — or so at least the arbitrators could find without taking leave of their senses. The inference that the Wises were dealing with Winters as principal rather than as agent is reinforced by the curious fact that they closed their account with Wachovia. Ordinarily when an investor decides to change his investments, he directs his broker to replace the securities in his account with other securities — he doesn’t close the account. The closing of their account is a further indication that the Wises were indeed leaving Wachovia with Winters.
AFFIRMED.
