Carr Investments, Inc. v. Commodity Futures Trading Commission

87 F.3d 9, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 15177, 1996 WL 332822
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJune 24, 1996
Docket95-2106
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 87 F.3d 9 (Carr Investments, Inc. v. Commodity Futures Trading Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carr Investments, Inc. v. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, 87 F.3d 9, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 15177, 1996 WL 332822 (1st Cir. 1996).

Opinion

STAHL, Circuit Judge.

Appellants Carr Investments, Inc. and Edward Carr seek review of an order of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission reversing, as an abuse of discretion, an administrative law judge’s decision to award them attorney’s fees and costs. Because we find that the Commission’s decision was not the product of reasoned decisionmaking, we vacate its order and remand for further consideration consistent with this opinion.

I.

Background

A. The Relevant Facts

In January 1992, Richard Davis opened a futures and options trading account with Carr Investments, Inc. (“CII”), a commodity futures brokerage firm. Edward Carr was Davis’s account executive. In March 1992, Davis gave Carr discretionary authority to trade his account. Over the subsequent months, Davis deposited a total of $66,500 into the account, and Carr actively traded options and futures contracts on Davis’s behalf. However, by December 1992, trading losses had exhausted Davis’s $66,500 account balance, and the account was closed.

Vexed by the loss, Davis filed a reparation complaint with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (“CFTC” or “the Commission”) charging CII and Carr with fraudulently inducing him to open the account, churning, breach of fiduciary duty, and unauthorized trading, all in violation of the Commodity Exchange Act and certain of the *11 Commission’s regulations. Davis sought to recover $66,500 in out-of-pocket losses and $78,155 in lost profits. Davis also requested that the case proceed under the Commission’s voluntary decisional proceeding, 17 C.F.R. §§ 12.100-.106, and paid the required $25 filing fee, 49 Fed.Reg. 6692 (Feb. 22, 1984). 1

A voluntary decisional proceeding is a “no-frills” adjudication by a CFTC Judgment Officer based on the parties’ documentary and tangible submissions of proof. Both parties must elect this proceeding for it to apply. 17 C.F.R. § 12.26(a). In agreeing to a voluntary decisional proceeding, the parties waive their rights to an oral evidentiary hearing, to a written statement of findings of fact and conclusions of law, to the recovery of attorney’s fees and costs, and to appeal the final decision to the Commission. Id. §§ 12.100(b), 12.105-.106.

In their answer, however, CII and Carr elected the Commission’s formal decisional proceeding, a “full-blown” adjudication by an administrative law judge (“ALJ”) that includes all of the rights waived in a voluntary decisional proceeding. Id. §§ 12.300-315. At the relevant time, in order to invoke a formal decisional proceeding, the amount of the claim had to exceed $10,000 and only one of the parties needed to elect it. 49 Fed. Reg. 6630 (Feb. 22, 1984). By electing the formal decisional procedure, respondents had to pay a $175 filing fee. Id. at 6629. Finding these requirements satisfied here, the Commission commenced a formal decisional proceeding and assigned the case to an ALJ. After considering the evidence presented at an oral evidentiary hearing and the parties’ post-hearing memoranda, the ALJ issued his decision.

B. The ALJ’s Decision

The ALJ’s decision had two principal holdings. First, the ALJ held that Davis failed to establish CII’s and Carr’s liability on any of his four claims. Specifically, the ALJ found that Davis had undermined the merits of all but one of his claims (as well as his credibility) by disavowing, at the evidentiary hearing, the key facts alleged in his complaint. The ALJ noted that minutes after Davis’s attorney outlined his claims in opening argument, Davis recanted many of them, testifying that Carr had not guaranteed him any profit much less “enormous profits,” and that he was aware of the risks associated with options and futures trading. In fact, the ALJ observed, Davis conceded that he was an extremely sophisticated and experienced investor. As for Davis’s remaining claim, the ALJ concluded that the record contained no credible evidence of unauthorized trading.

Second, citing his discretion under 17 C.F.R. § 12.314(c) and CFTC precedent for awarding attorney’s fees and costs to a prevailing litigant if the losing party acted in bad faith, the ALJ held that Davis’s bad faith in pursuing the action warranted an award of attorney’s fees and costs to CII and Carr. The ALJ inferred Davis’s bad faith from the following facts: the gross contradictions between the representations in his filings and his testimony at the evidentiary hearing, his contradictory testimony on whether he had in fact read the complaint, his concession that certain of his discovery responses and statements in his complaint were misleading, and his assertion in post-hearing filings of allegations he had repudiated at the evidentiary hearing. Citing the dual purpose of compensating CII and Carr and deterring other .complainants from such abusive conduct, the ALJ ordered Davis to pay CII and Carr $19,417.75 for attorney’s fees and costs incurred in defending the litigation.

C. The CFTC’s Order

Davis appealed the ALJ’s decision to the Commission, challenging, inter alia, the “no liability” determination and the propriety of the fee award. After reviewing the parties’ appellate briefs and the record below, the Commission issued its order, affirming the ALJ’s “no liability” determination but reversing the fee award. In affirming the ALJ’s “no liability” determination, the Commission *12 summarily adopted the findings and conclusions of the ALJ. In reversing the fee award, however, the Commission supplied its own analysis, sustaining the ALJ’s finding of Davis’s bad faith but concluding that the ALJ’s fee award was an abuse of discretion because of “four mitigating factors.”

First, the Commission referred generally to the circumstances under which Davis signed the complaint. Specifically, the Commission noted that the complaint in the record contained only a faxed copy of the signature page, although there was no evidence that the faxed signature was not in fact that of Davis. Recognizing the ALJ’s “strenuous efforts” to determine whether Davis had read the complaint (i.e., the ALJ garnered conflicting testimony from Davis on this issue), the Commission nevertheless concluded that it was reluctant to award attorney’s fees and costs “in the absence of Davis’s original signature.”

Second, the Commission noted the relative culpability of Davis and his attorney. Although it sustained the ALJ’s finding of Davis’s bad faith, the Commission found that Davis’s attorney, not Davis, was responsible for the majority of the problems that the ALJ relied upon in deciding to assess attorney’s fees and costs against Davis. Noting that its regulations, unlike Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure

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Bluebook (online)
87 F.3d 9, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 15177, 1996 WL 332822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carr-investments-inc-v-commodity-futures-trading-commission-ca1-1996.