Myles M. SPICER, individually and as a partner of the Myles
and Richard Spicer partnership; John A. Brittain; and
Buys-MacGregor, MacNaughton, Greenwalt & Co., a corporation,
on behalf of themselves and all others similarly situated,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
CHICAGO BOARD OF OPTIONS EXCHANGE, INC., and Michael B.
Saltzman, et al., Defendants-Appellees.
Nos. 91-1488, 91-1918.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Argued Jan. 17, 1992.
Decided Sept. 24, 1992.
Ronald L. Futterman, James G. Bradtke, Hartunian & Associates, Stephen B. Diamond, Beeler, Schad & Diamond, Philip Fertik, Herbert Beigel, Leigh R. Lasky (argued), Brian R. Worth, Beigel & Sandler, Chicago, Ill., Steve J. Toll, Cohen, Milstein & Hausfeld, Washington, D.C., Ron M. Landsman, Bethesda, Md., Edward T. Joyce, James X. Bormes, Paul A. Castiglione, Joyce & Kubasiak, Chicago, Ill., for plaintiffs-appellants.
Lloyd A. Kadish, Kadish & Associates, Jerrold E. Salzman, Phillip L. Stern, Freeman, Freeman & Salzman, Kevin M. Flynn, Shelley R. Weinberg, Coffield, Ungaretti, Harris & Slavin, Harry P. Lamberson, David S. Barritt, Chapman & Cutler, Paul B. Uhlenhop, Charles J. Risch, Michael Wise, Lawrence, Kamin, Saunders & Uhlenhop, Joseph D. Keenan, III, Sklodowski, Franklin, Puchalski & Reimer, Robert A. Vanasco, Matthew D. Wayne, Fishman & Merrick, Aaron E. Hoffman, Schwartz & Freeman, Lawrence R. Samuels, Jacquelyn F. Kidder, Ross & Hardies, Garrett B. Johnson, Robert S. Steigerwald, David M. Matteson, Mark S. Bernstein, Kirkland & Ellis, David C. Bohan (argued), Jenner & Block, Roger Pascal, Burton R. Rissman, Paul E. Dengel (argued), Jeanne L. Nowaczewski, Amy S. Belcove, Schiff, Hardin & Waite, Chicago, Ill., for defendants-appellees.
Before FLAUM and MANION, Circuit Judges, and CURRAN, District Judge.*
FLAUM, Circuit Judge.
Section 6 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Exchange Act), 15 U.S.C. § 78f (1988), governs, among other things, the registration of national securities exchanges with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the Commission). Subsection 6(b), id. § 78f(b), provides that the Commission may register an exchange only if the exchange has established rules to govern trading, internal operations, and the discipline of wayward exchange members, and has demonstrated the capacity to comply with those rules and enforce compliance by its members. The plaintiffs, who purchased securities on a national securities exchange, maintain that § 6(b) furnishes them an implied private right of action against members of the exchange who allegedly violated certain exchange trading rules, and against the exchange itself for failing to enforce compliance with those rules, and for violating, on its own accord, other exchange rules. We decline to announce a categorical rule regarding all potential private actions under this provision. We hold only that § 6(b) may never support a private suit against an exchange for violating or failing to enforce its own rules, and that it does not support an action against exchange members for violating the exchange rules at issue in this case.
I.
This lawsuit, like many before it, arises from the ashes of Black Monday, the stock market crash of October 19, 1987. See, e.g., Ruffolo v. Oppenheimer & Co.,
On October 20, the plaintiffs issued "market orders"--meaning orders to buy (or, as the case may be but is not here, sell) S & P 100 options at the prevailing market price--to their brokers. The gravamen of their lawsuit is that when their brokers executed those orders, the participants, who sold the options, charged grossly inflated prices to recoup losses they had suffered the previous day. The CBOE, the investors allege, facilitated the participants' wrongdoing by violating the securities laws and certain CBOE rules, and by failing to enforce compliance by the market-makers with other exchange rules. The nonparticipants are also alleged to have facilitated the wrongdoing by failing to appear for trading on October 20, in violation of yet another CBOE rule.
The basis of the plaintiffs' lawsuit might appear odd from the perspective of commonly accepted finance principles. The price of an option is determined by a number of factors, one being the price volatility of the underlying security, see generally Julian Walmsky, The New Financial Instruments 156-61 (1988), which in this case is the S & P 100 stock index. October 19 and 20 were arguably the most volatile days in the history of the stock market. See Report of the Presidential Task Force on Market Mechanisms (The Brady Report), [1987-88 Transfer Binder] Fed.Sec.L.Rep. (CCH) p 84,213. The S & P 100 stock index lost about 21% of its value on October 19; in the first two and one-half hours of trading on October 20, the Dow Jones Industrial Average experienced more than a 23% swing in value. In light of this unprecedented volatility, it should have come as no surprise that the price of S & P 100 index options was much higher than usual. But these observations are relevant primarily to liability and damages; at issue here is whether the plaintiffs' complaint states a valid cause of action under federal law.
The plaintiffs brought suit under the Securities Act of 1933 and the Exchange Act, and under state law for negligence and breach of fiduciary duty. The complaint sought relief from the market-makers under only one count, which alleged that they had violated § 6(b) of the Exchange Act by failing to comply with CBOE Rules 4.1 and 8.7. Likewise, one of the several counts against the CBOE alleged that it had violated § 6(b) by failing to enforce compliance by the market-makers with those rules, and by violating itself other CBOE rules. The district court dismissed both of these counts under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), reasoning that § 6(b) does not provide an implied private right of action (all agree that there is no express right of action) for the violation of or the failure to enforce exchange rules. Spicer v. Chicago Bd. Options Exchange, Inc.,
II.
About five years ago, in the context of another lawsuit brought by investors against an exchange and its members, we observed that the whole question of implied private rights of action "is deeply vexed," Bosco v. Serhant,
In light of these concerns and difficulties, Justice Scalia has proposed that the judiciary "get out of the business of implied private rights of action altogether." Thompson v. Thompson,
We do know some things for certain. The four-part test from Cort v. Ash,
III.
We first examine whether § 6(b) grants investors a private right of action against an exchange for violating and failing to enforce exchange rules.2 Any inquiry into congressional intent must begin with the language of the statute. TAMA,
We find no basis in the plain language of § 6(b) from which to infer a private right of action in favor of investors who allege that an exchange has violated of failed to enforce its own rules. The provision merely outlines the prerequisites of registration and the mechanics by which the Commission can grant registration. If § 6(b) imposes any affirmative legal duties, it does so on the Commission. See generally Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. v. Ware,
Granted, § 6(b) states that an exchange seeking registration must promulgate certain rules and demonstrate the capacity to comply and enforce compliance with those rules. From this, it might appear a short step to infer in § 6(b) a requirement that a registered exchange actually do what it has demonstrated the capacity to do. Putting aside the question of whether inferring such a requirement would necessarily create a private remedy for its enforcement--as noted, it does not, see, e.g., Middlesex County Sewerage Auth. v. National Sea Clammers Ass'n,
The plaintiffs direct a great deal of fire towards fitting this case within the rubric of Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. v. Curran, supra. Curran held that the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA), 7 U.S.C. § 1 et seq. (1976 and Supp. IV) (amended 1982), grants investors in the futures market an implied private right of action against brokers who violate the antifraud provisions of the CEA, and against commodity exchanges that fail to enforce their own rules against price manipulation. Congress did not expressly provide for a private remedy against these violations when it enacted the CEA in 1922; nor did it do so when it substantially revised the statute in 1974. Prior to 1974, however, federal courts interpreting the CEA had "routinely and consistently" implied such private rights of action. Curran,
The plaintiffs contend that we face the same situation here. Congress did not expressly provide a private remedy under § 6(b) when it enacted the Exchange Act in 1934, and again did not do so when it comprehensively revised the Exchange Act, including § 6(b), in 1975. Prior to 1975, however, a number of federal courts, starting with Baird v. Franklin,
We need not resolve whether Curran is distinguishable on these two grounds, for even assuming it is not, the CBOE still prevails. Section 6(b) has been part of the Exchange Act from its inception in 1934, and was substantially revised when Congress amended the statute in 1975. Securities Acts Amendments of 1975, § 4, Pub.L. 94-29, 89 Stat. 97, 104-09 (1975). In 1975, Congress also enacted § 19(g)(1), which, as noted, explicitly imposes upon exchanges the duty to follow and enforce their own rules. Id. § 16, at 152. Thus, even assuming that the pre-1975 version of § 6(b) implicitly imposed the same duty, and approved of private actions to enforce that duty, the text of the 1975 Amendments clearly removes that duty from the scope of § 6(b) by placing it squarely (and explicitly) in § 19(g)(1). The legislative history reinforces our conclusion. S.Rep. No. 75, 94th Cong., 1st Sess. 133 (1975), reprinted in 1975 U.S.C.A.A.N. 179, 310 ("This subsection [§ 19(g)(1) ] make[s] explicit the duty of each self-regulatory organization to comply with ... its own rules [and to] enforce compliance ... by its members.") (emphasis supplied).
Accordingly, Curran does not govern this portion of the case. To the extent, if any, that § 6(b) once provided an implied remedy against an exchange for failing to comply with or enforce its own rules, the 1975 Amendments conclusively demonstrate that Congress did not intend to preserve that remedy, at least in § 6(b). This ends our inquiry, Sierra Club,
We next consider whether § 6(b) grants the plaintiffs an implied right of action against the market-makers for their alleged violation of certain CBOE trading rules. The plaintiffs maintain that the participants, in violation of CBOE Rules 4.1 and 8.7, fraudulently charged exorbitant prices for S & P 100 index options during trading on October 20, 1987. They also allege that the non-participants willfully breached CBOE Rule 8.7 by failing to appear and trade for their accounts on that day. These violations, the investors contend, are actionable in federal court under § 6(b)(5).
Such a contention surely cannot rest upon the plain language of that statute. Section 6(b)(5) provides that the Commission may not register an exchange unless it has promulgated rules designed to prevent fraudulent practices, promote just and equitable principles of trading, perfect the mechanism of a free and open market, and the like. 15 U.S.C. § 78f(b)(5) (quoted at footnote 4, supra ). True, § 6(b)(5) is tangentially related to the actions of exchange members, a group which includes market-makers; it requires that an exchange, as a prerequisite to registration, establish rules prohibiting fraudulent practices by its members. But that is a far cry from providing a private remedy for an exchange member's violation of those rules. As we discussed earlier, the provision pertains solely to the registration of national securities exchanges, and does not confer any rights upon private parties. More important, it does not make unlawful any act or omission by an exchange member. Touche Ross,
The legislative history of § 6(b) is silent on this issue, which compels the plaintiffs once again to turn to Curran. They contend that when Congress enacted the 1975 Amendments to the Exchange Act, federal courts had routinely and consistently held that § 6 granted an implied remedy against exchange members who violated internal rules designed to protect investors. The market-makers respond that Curran may be distinguished, and rely upon many of the same points raised by the CBOE. We earlier sidestepped some difficult issues raised by the CBOE and the investors regarding the meaning of "routine and consistent" under Curran because § 19(g)(1) made their resolution unnecessary. Here, we are afforded no such luxury, for Congress has not enacted a provision, analogous to § 19(g)(1), explicitly requiring exchange members to comply with exchange rules.
Curran held, among other things, that Congress, in amending the CEA in 1974, intended by its silence to preserve a judicially recognized private remedy against commodity exchanges that do not enforce their own rules regarding price manipulation. As an original matter, one could construe this holding either broadly or narrowly. Read broadly, Curran stands for the proposition that Congress intended to create an implied private cause of action for a commodity exchange's failure to enforce any exchange rule. Read narrowly, it recognizes a private remedy only in those types of cases that had been the subject of private actions prior to the 1974 amendments. By way of illustration, suppose that a commodities exchange had two rules, A and B. Suppose further that before 1974 courts had consistently granted an implied remedy for investors harmed by an exchange member's violation of Rule A, but had not considered whether a similar action would lie for a violation of Rule B. A broad reading of Curran would hold that the 1974 amendments to the CEA had preserved a private remedy for the violation of Rules A and B, while a narrow reading would recognize a remedy only for the violation of Rule A.
Courts following Curran, including our own, have adopted the narrow approach. See Marshall v. Green Giant Co.,
We apply the narrow approach here, not only for the sake of adhering to precedent, but also because it best resolves the mild tension between the competing institutional and prudential concerns to which we referred earlier. Implying private remedies is hardly an exact science. Words are ambiguous enough, see, e.g., United States v. Burke, --- U.S. ----,
Unresolved questions linger even under the narrow approach. Consider once again the imaginary commodity exchange rules discussed above. Assuming that a private right of action lies for a violation of Rule A, will one also lie for a violation of a similar, though not identical, rule of a different exchange? If so, how similar to Rule A must that rule be? To decide the case sub judice, we need not enter this thicket; the legal landscape surrounding passage of the 1975 Amendments was (sparsely) populated with successful cases that bear little, if any, resemblance to the one the investors have brought against the market-makers. Colonial Realty Corp. v. Bache & Co.,
Although Colonial Realty opened the door, very few courts prior to the 1975 Amendments had occasion to address which exchange rules, if violated by a member, could support a private right of action under § 6(b). Only one discernible line of cases, starting with Buttrey v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc.,
Against this backdrop, it should be clear that Congress, in amending the Exchange Act, did not intend to provide an implied remedy under § 6(b) for the exchange rule violations alleged in this case. The plaintiffs, as noted, charge that the participants violated CBOE Rules 4.1 and 8.7(a) by fraudulently charging exorbitant and unreasonable prices for certain index options. We assume at this stage of the litigation that their charge is accurate. Rule 4.1 provides that exchange members shall not "engage in acts or practices inconsistent with just and equitable principles of trade." Rule 8.7(a) provides that market makers should engage in transactions that "constitute a course of dealings reasonably calculated to contribute to the maintenance of a fair and orderly market." The investors do not cite, nor did our research discover,11 any case recognizing an implied remedy under § 6(b)(5) for the violation of an exchange rule similar to either Rule 4.1 or 8.7(a). In fact, Rule 4.1 is nearly identical to the "just and equitable principles of trade" rule Colonial Realty held could not support an implied private remedy. Rule 8.7(a), while worded somewhat differently, is also a vague, "catch-all" standard whose enforcement Colonial Realty thought best left to the exchanges. Colonial Realty,
The investors also charge that the non-participants violated CBOE Rule 8.7(b) by failing to appear and trade for their accounts on the day following Black Monday. The non-participants concede that they did not show up for trading, and we assume without deciding that this constitutes a violation of Rule 8.7(b). Nonetheless, the investors again do not cite, nor could we find, any pre-1975 case recognizing an implied remedy against an exchange member for anything remotely resembling this conduct. See footnote 11, supra (citing sources). Nor do they contend that Rule 8.7(b) is in any way analogous to New York Stock Exchange Rule 405 for which the Buttrey line of cases had recognized an implied remedy. This concedes any argument --an argument that would have been extremely difficult to make in any event--that the two rules are so similar that Congress, in preserving a remedy for violations of Rule 405, also intended to create a remedy for violations of Rule 8.7(b).
The investors do contend, however, that we should recognize an implied action for the knowing violation of "important, non-discretionary" exchange rules, a class of which they assert Rule 8.7(b) is a member. They glean the term in quotations from our discussion in Bosco,
We hold, in conclusion, that § 6(b) does not grant an implied private right of action to investors who charge that market-makers, or any exchange member, violated CBOE Rules 4.1, 8.7(a) or 8.7(b). In so doing, we reserve judgment on broader issues resolved by the Eleventh and Ninth Circuits. See, e.g., Thompson v. Smith Barney, Harris Upham & Co.,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
The Honorable Thomas J. Curran, Eastern District of Wisconsin, sitting by designation
The Cort test reads in encapsulated form:
In determining whether a private remedy is implicit in a statute not expressly providing one, several factors are relevant. First, is the plaintiff 'one of the class for whose especial benefit the statute was enacted,'--that is, does the statute create a federal right in favor of the plaintiff? Second, is there any indication of legislative intent, explicit or implicit, either to create such a remedy or deny one? Third, is it consistent with the underlying purposes of the legislative scheme to imply such a remedy for the plaintiff? And finally, is the cause of action one traditionally relegated to state law, in an area basically the concern of the States, so that it would be inappropriate to infer a cause of action based solely on federal law?
Cort,
Of the few district courts, including the court in this case, that have reached this issue, all agree that the current version of § 6--meaning, as we shall see later, the post-1975 version--does not grant such a remedy. See, e.g., Ferreri v. Mainardi,
This provision reads:
(a) An exchange may be registered as a national securities exchange under the terms and conditions hereinafter provided in this section and in accordance with the provisions of section 78s(a) of this title, by filing with the Commission an application for registration in such form as the Commission, by rule, may prescribe containing the rules of the exchange and such other information and documents as the Commission, by rule, may prescribe as necessary or appropriate in the public interest or for the protection of investors.
15 U.S.C. § 78f(a).
This provision reads in relevant part:
(b) An exchange shall not be registered as a national securities exchange unless the Commission determines that--
(1) Such exchange is so organized and has the capacity to ... comply, and ... to enforce compliance by its members and persons associated with its members, with ... the rules of the exchange....
(5) The rules of the exchange are designed to prevent fraudulent and manipulative practices, to promote just and equitable principles of trade, to foster cooperation and coordination with persons engaged in regulating, clearing, settling, processing information with respect to, and facilitating transactions in securities, to remove impediments to and perfect the mechanism of a free and open market and a national market system, and, in general, to protect investors and the public interest; and are not designed to permit unfair discrimination between customers, issuers, brokers, or dealers....
(6) The rules of the exchange provide that ... its members and persons associated with its members shall be appropriately disciplined for violation of ... the rules of the exchange....
15 U.S.C. § 78f(b).
Section 19(g)(1) provides in relevant part:
(g)(1) Every self-regulatory organization shall comply with the provisions of ... its own rules, and ... absent reasonable justification or excuse enforce compliance--
(A) in the case of a national securities exchange, with such provisions by its members and persons associated with its members....
15 U.S.C. § 78s(g)(1) (1988).
See, e.g., Butterman v. Walston & Co.,
The district court addressed the issue of whether § 19(g)(1) grants an implied remedy against the CBOE, and concluded that it did not. Dist. Op. at 20. Its decision to reach § 19(g)(1) seems to have been based upon an extremely charitable reading of the plaintiffs' complaint. That complaint mentions § 19(g)(1) only once, in the section entitled "Jurisdiction and Venue," see Pl.'s Fifth Amended Complaint p 2 (Jan. 5, 1990), not in Count II, which deals with the CBOE's alleged violation of and failure to enforce compliance with exchange rules, and does not in any way refer to § 19(g)(1). See id. p 54. The district court gave the plaintiffs a break by reading their complaint to allege a cause of action under § 19(g)(1), although the break ultimately was to no avail. Even assuming that the complaint advanced a claim under § 19(g)(1), the plaintiffs clearly abandoned it on appeal. Their brief mentions § 19(g)(1) only once, and even then only in the context of reviewing the district court's ruling in the "Statement of Facts" section. Pl.'s Br. at 12. The body of the brief contends only that § 6 grants an implied right of action. Id. at 15-33. It is for this reason that we addressed only the question of implied remedies under § 6, although we observe here in passing that the district court, in all likelihood, correctly ruled on the § 19(g)(1) issue
Even a narrow reading does so in cases, such as this one, where the legislative history does not demonstrate that Congress was aware that courts had been implying private remedies. Curran placed great emphasis on the fact that Congress, when amending the CEA in 1974, was familiar with the pre-1974 implied private remedy; this supported the Court's inference that Congress' silence evinced an intent to preserve that remedy. Curran,
At all relevant times, Rule 405 read in pertinent part:
Every member organization is required through a general partner or an officer who is a holder of voting stock to
(1) Use due diligence to learn the essential facts relative to every customer, every order, every cash or margin account accepted or carried by such organization and every person holding power of attorney over any account accepted or carried by such organizations.
(2) Supervise diligently all accounts handled by registered representatives of the organization.
(3) Specifically approve the opening of an account prior to or promptly after the completion of any transaction for the account of or with a customer....
Buttrey,
Landy casts grave doubt upon any contention that a private right of action for the violation of Rule 405 had been "routinely and consistently" recognized by the courts prior to the 1975 Amendments. In finding an implied remedy in the post-1974 version of the CEA, Curran observed that prior to 1974, "federal courts and federal practitioners ... simply assumed that the remedy was available." Curran,
The pre-1975 case law is discussed extensively in Eunice A. Eichelberger, Annotation, Private Federal Right of Action Against Brokerage Firm for Violation of Exchange or Dealer Association Rule, 54 A.L.R.Fed. 11, 11-49, 62-64 (1981); Patrick H. Allen, Liability Under the Securities Exchange Act for Violation of Stock Exchange Rules, Bus.Law. 1493, 1496-1500 (July 1970); Phillip J. Hoblin, Jr., A Stock Broker's Implied Liability to Its Customer for Violation of a Rule of a Registered Stock Exchange, 39 Ford.L.Rev. 253, 258-68 (1970); Nicholas Wolfson & Thomas A. Russo, The Stock Exchange Member: Liability for Violation of Stock Exchange Rules, 58 Calif.L.Rev. 1120, 1126-35 (1970); Lowenfels, supra, at 21-24
