Chamber of Commerce of the U.S. v. U.S. Dep't of Labor
This text of 885 F.3d 360 (Chamber of Commerce of the U.S. v. U.S. Dep't of Labor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinions
EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge:
*363Three business groups1 filed suits challenging the "Fiduciary Rule" promulgated by the Department of Labor (DOL) in April 2016. The Fiduciary Rule is a package of seven different rules that broadly reinterpret the term "investment advice fiduciary" and redefine exemptions to provisions concerning fiduciaries that appear in the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, Pub. L. No. 93-406,
The district court rejected all of these challenges. Finding merit in several of these objections, we VACATE the Rule.
I. BACKGROUND
As might be expected by a Rule that fundamentally transforms over fifty years of settled and hitherto legal practices in a large swath of the financial services and insurance industries, a full explanation of the relevant background is required to focus the legal issues raised here.
Congress passed ERISA in 1974 as a "comprehensive statute designed to promote *364the interests of employees and their beneficiaries in employee benefit plans." Shaw v. Delta Air Lines, Inc. ,
ERISA Title II created tax-deferred personal IRAs and similar accounts within the Internal Revenue Code.
The critical term "fiduciary" is defined alike in both Title I,
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EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge:
*363Three business groups1 filed suits challenging the "Fiduciary Rule" promulgated by the Department of Labor (DOL) in April 2016. The Fiduciary Rule is a package of seven different rules that broadly reinterpret the term "investment advice fiduciary" and redefine exemptions to provisions concerning fiduciaries that appear in the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, Pub. L. No. 93-406,
The district court rejected all of these challenges. Finding merit in several of these objections, we VACATE the Rule.
I. BACKGROUND
As might be expected by a Rule that fundamentally transforms over fifty years of settled and hitherto legal practices in a large swath of the financial services and insurance industries, a full explanation of the relevant background is required to focus the legal issues raised here.
Congress passed ERISA in 1974 as a "comprehensive statute designed to promote *364the interests of employees and their beneficiaries in employee benefit plans." Shaw v. Delta Air Lines, Inc. ,
ERISA Title II created tax-deferred personal IRAs and similar accounts within the Internal Revenue Code.
The critical term "fiduciary" is defined alike in both Title I,
• exercises any discretionary authority or discretionary control respecting management of such plan or exercises any authority or control respecting management or disposition of its assets,"29 U.S.C. § 1002 (21)(A)(i) ;
• "renders investment advice for a fee or other compensation, direct or indirect, with respect to any moneys or other property of such plan, or has any authority or responsibility to do so,"29 U.S.C. § 1002 (21)(A)(ii) ; or
• "has any discretionary authority or discretionary responsibility in the administration of such plan."29 U.S.C. § 1002 (21)(A)(iii).
Subsection ii of the "fiduciary" definition is in issue here.
In 1975, DOL promulgated a five-part conjunctive test for determining who is a fiduciary under the investment-advice subsection. Under that test, an investment-advice fiduciary is a person who (1) "renders advice...or makes recommendation[s] as to the advisability of investing in, purchasing, or selling securities or other property;" (2) "on a regular basis;" (3) "pursuant to a mutual agreement...between such person and the plan;" and the *365advice (4) "serve[s] as a primary basis for investment decisions with respect to plan assets;" and (5) is "individualized ... based on the particular needs of the plan."
The 1975 regulation captured the essence of a fiduciary relationship known to the common law as a special relationship of trust and confidence between the fiduciary and his client. See , e.g. , GEORGE TAYLOR BOGERT, ET AL., TRUSTS & TRUSTEES § 481 (2016 update). The regulation also echoed the then thirty-five-year old distinction drawn between an "investment adviser," who is a fiduciary regulated under the Investment Advisers Act, and a "broker or dealer" whose advice is "solely incidental to the conduct of his business as a broker or dealer and who receives no special compensation therefor." 15 U.S.C. § 80b-2(a)(11)(C). Thus, the DOL's original regulation specified that a fiduciary relationship would exist only if, inter alia , the adviser's services were furnished "regularly" and were the "primary basis" for the client's investment decisions.
In the decades following the passage of ERISA, the use of participant-directed IRA plans has mushroomed as a vehicle for retirement savings. Additionally, as members of the baby-boom generation retire, their ERISA plan accounts will roll over into IRAs. Yet individual investors, according to DOL, lack the sophistication and understanding of the financial marketplace possessed by investment professionals who manage ERISA employer-sponsored plans. Further, individuals may be persuaded to engage in transactions not in their best interests because advisers like brokers and dealers and insurance professionals, who sell products to them, have "conflicts of interest." DOL concluded that the regulation of those providing investment options and services to IRA holders is insufficient. One reason for this deficiency is the governing statutory architecture:
Although ERISA's statutory fiduciary obligations of prudence and loyalty do not govern the fiduciaries of IRAs and other plans not covered by ERISA, these fiduciaries are subject to prohibited transaction rules under the [Internal Revenue] Code. The statutory exemptions in the Code apply and the [DOL] has been given the statutory authority to grant administrative exemptions under the Code. [footnote omitted] In this context, however, the sole statutory sanction for engaging in the illegal transactions is the assessment of an excise tax enforced by the [IRS].
Definition of Fiduciary, 81 Fed. Reg. at 20946, 20953 (Apr. 8, 2015) (to be codified at 29 C.F.R. pts. 2509, 2510, 2550).
A second reason for the gap lies in the terms of the 1975 regulation's definition of an investment advice fiduciary. In particular, by requiring that the advice be given to the customer on a "regular basis" and that it must also be the "primary basis" for investment decisions, the definition excluded one-time transactions like IRA rollovers. As DOL saw it, the term "adviser" should extend well beyond investment advisers registered under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 or under state law. Semantically, the term "investment advice fiduciary" can include "an individual or entity who is, among other things, a representative of a registered investment adviser, a bank or similar financial institution, an insurance company, or a broker-dealer." 81 Fed. Reg. at 20946 n.1. Further, "[u]nless they are fiduciaries, ... these consultants and advisers are free under ERISA and the Code, not only to receive such conflicted compensation, but also to act on their conflicts of interest to the detriment of their customers." 81 Fed. Reg. at 20956.
*366Beginning in 2010, DOL set out to fill the perceived gap. The result, announced in April 2016, was an overhaul of the investment advice fiduciary definition, together with amendments to six existing exemptions and two new exemptions to the prohibited transaction provision in both ERISA and the Code (collectively, as previously noted, the Fiduciary Rule). The Fiduciary Rule is of monumental significance to the financial services and insurance sectors of the economy. The package of regulations and accompanying explanations, although full of repetition, runs 275 pages in the Federal Register. DOL estimates that compliance costs imposed on the regulated parties might amount to $31.5 billion over ten years with a "primary estimate" of $16.1 billion. 81 Fed. Reg. at 20951. In a novel assertion of DOL's power, the Fiduciary Rule directly disadvantages the market for fixed indexed annuities in comparison with competing annuity products. Finally, with unintentional irony, DOL pledged to alleviate the regulated parties' concerns about "compliance and interpretive issues" following this "issuance of highly technical or significant guidance" by drawing attention to its "broad assistance for regulated parties on the Affordable Care Act regulations ...." 81 Fed. Reg. at 20947.
II. THE FIDUCIARY RULE
Now to the relevant highlights of the Fiduciary Rule.3 In lieu of the 1975 definition of an investment advice fiduciary, the Fiduciary Rule provides that an individual "renders investment advice for a fee" whenever he is compensated in connection with a "recommendation as to the advisability of" buying, selling, or managing "investment property."
To be sure, the new rule purports to withdraw from fiduciary status communications that are not "recommendations," i.e. , those in which the "content, context, and presentation" would not objectively be viewed as "a suggestion that the advice recipient engage in or refrain from taking a particular course of action."
Critically, the new definition dispenses with the "regular basis" and "primary basis" criteria used in the regulation for the past forty years. Consequently, it encompasses virtually all financial and insurance professionals who do business with ERISA plans and IRA holders. Stockbrokers and insurance salespeople, for instance, are exposed to regulations including the prohibited transaction rules. The newcomers are thus barred, without an exemption, from being paid whatever transaction-based commissions and brokerage fees have been standard in their industry segments because those types of compensation are now deemed a conflict of interest.
The second novel component of the Fiduciary Rule is a "Best Interest Contract Exemption," (BICE) which, if adopted by *367"investment advice fiduciaries," allows them to avoid prohibited transactions penalties.
The BICE supplants former exemptions with a web of duties and legal vulnerabilities. To qualify for a BIC Exemption, providers of financial and insurance services must enter into contracts with clients that, inter alia, affirm their fiduciary status; incorporate "Impartial Conduct Standards" that include the duties of loyalty and prudence; "avoid[ ] misleading statements;" and charge no more than "reasonable compensation." As noted above, Title II service providers to IRA clients are not statutorily required to abide by duties of loyalty and prudence. Yet, to qualify as not being "investment advice fiduciaries" per the new definition, the financial service providers must deem themselves fiduciaries to their clients. In addition, the contracts may not include exculpatory clauses such as a liquidated damages provision nor may they require class action waivers. DOL contends that the enforceability of the BICE-created contract, "and the potential for liability" it offers, were "central goals of this regulatory project." 81 Fed. Reg. at 21021, 21033. In these respects, a BIC Exemption comes at a high price.5
The third relevant element of the Fiduciary Rule is the amended Prohibited Transaction Exemption 84-24. Since 1977, that exemption had covered transactions involving insurance and annuity contracts and permitted customary sales commissions where the terms were at least as favorable as those at arm's-length, provided for "reasonable" compensation, and included certain disclosures.
*368The President has directed DOL to reexamine the Fiduciary Rule and "prepare an updated economic and legal analysis" of its provisions,
Further, as DOL itself recognized, millions of IRA investors with small accounts prefer commission-based fees because they engage in few annual trading transactions. Yet these are the investors potentially deprived of all investment advice as a result of the Fiduciary Rule, because they cannot afford to pay account management fees, or brokerage and insurance firms cannot afford to service small accounts, given the regulatory burdens, for management fees alone.
The district court rejected all of the appellants' challenges to the Fiduciary Rule. Timely appeals were filed.
III. DISCUSSION
Appellants pose a series of legal issues, all of which are reviewed de novo on appeal, Kona Tech. Corp. v. S. Pac. Transp. Co. ,
Beyond that threshold are the questions whether the BICE exemption, including its impact on fixed indexed annuities, asserts affirmative regulatory power inconsistent with the bifurcated structure of Titles I and II and is invalid under the APA. Further, are the required BICE contractual provisions consistent with federal law in creating implied private rights of action and prohibiting certain waivers of arbitration rights?6
A. The Fiduciary Rule Conflicts with the Text of 29 U.S.C. Sec. 1002(21)(A)(ii) ; 26 U.S.C. Sec. 4975(e)(3)(B).
DOL expanded the statutory term "fiduciary" by redefining one out of three provisions explaining the scope of fiduciary *369responsibility under ERISA and the Internal Revenue Code. The second of these three provisions states that
a person is a fiduciary with respect to a plan to the extent ... he renders investment advice for a fee or other compensation, direct or indirect, with respect to any moneys or other property of such plan, or has any authority or responsibility to do so[.]
Expanding the scope of DOL regulation in vast and novel ways is valid only if it is authorized by ERISA Titles I and II. A regulator's authority is constrained by the authority that Congress delegated it by statute. Where the text and structure of a statute unambiguously foreclose an agency's statutory interpretation, the intent of Congress is clear, and "that is the end of the matter; for the court, as well as the agency, must give effect to the unambiguously expressed intent of Congress." Chevron ,
We conclude that DOL's interpretation of an "investment advice fiduciary" relies too narrowly on a purely semantic construction of one isolated provision and wrongly presupposes that the provision is inherently ambiguous. Properly construed, the statutory text is not ambiguous. Ambiguity, to the contrary, "is a creature not of definitional possibilities but of statutory context." Brown v. Gardner,
1. The Common Law Presumptively Applies
Congress's use of the word "fiduciary" triggers the "settled principle of interpretation that, absent other indication, *370'Congress intends to incorporate the well-settled meaning of the common-law terms it uses.' " United States v. Castleman , --- U.S. ----,
The common law term "fiduciary" falls within the scope of this presumption. In Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch, the Supreme Court cited Congress's use of "fiduciary" as one example of "ERISA abound[ing] with the language and terminology of trust law."
The common law understanding of fiduciary status is not only the proper starting point in this analysis, but is as specific as it is venerable. Fiduciary status turns on the existence of a relationship of trust and confidence between the fiduciary and client. "The concept of fiduciary responsibility dates back to fiducia of Roman law," and "[t]he entire concept was founded on concepts of sanctity, trust, confidence, honesty, fidelity, and integrity." George M. Turner, Revocable Trusts § 3:2 (Sept. 2016 Update). Indeed, "[t]he development of the term in legal history under the Common Law suggested a situation wherein a person assumed the character of a trustee, or an analogous relationship, where there was an underlying confidence involved that required scrupulous fidelity and honesty."
Congress did not expressly state the common law understanding of "fiduciary," but it provided a good indicator of its intention. In § 1002, ERISA's definitional section, 41 of 42 provisions begin by stating, "[t]he term ["X"] means ...."
The unique provision in which Congress did not take that route delineates the term "fiduciary." Instead, Congress stated that "a person is a fiduciary with respect to a plan to the extent" he performs any of the enumerated functions.
In any event, "absent other indication, 'Congress intend[ed] to incorporate the well-settled meaning' " of "fiduciary"-the very essence of which is a relationship of trust and confidence. See Castleman ,
2. Displacement of the Presumption?
DOL concedes the relevance of the common-law presumption and the common-law trust-and-confidence standard but then places all its eggs in one basket: displacement of the presumption. Invoking its favorite phrases from Varity Corp. , DOL argues that the common law is only "a starting point" and the presumption "is displaced if inconsistent with 'the language of the statute, its structure, or its purposes.' " (quoting Varity Corp. ,
As a preliminary matter, DOL neglects to mention two aspects of Varity Corp. that cut against its position. First, the phrase quoted above is significantly less absolute than DOL lets on: "In some instances , trust law will offer only a starting point, after which courts must go on to ask whether , or to what extent , the language of the statute, its structure, or its purposes require departing from common-law trust requirements." Varity Corp. ,
Even more important, DOL acknowledges appellants' argument "that there is nothing inherently inconsistent between the trust-and-confidence standard and ERISA's definition" of "fiduciary." The DOL's only response is that it "is not required to adopt semantically possible interpretations merely because they would comport with common-law standards." But this proves appellants' point: adopting "semantically possible" interpretations that do not "comport with common law standards" is contrary to Varity Corp. because the statute does not "require departing from [the] common-law" trust-and-confidence standard. Id . at 497,
3. Statutory Text-"investment advice fiduciary"
Even if the common law presumption did not apply, the Fiduciary Rule contradicts the text of the "investment advice fiduciary" provision and contemporary understandings of its language. To restate, a person is a fiduciary with respect to a plan to the extent "he renders investment advice for a fee or other compensation, direct or indirect, with respect to any moneys or other property of such plan, or has any authority or responsibility to do so[.]"
Going straight to dictionary definitions not only conflicts with Varity Corp. , but it also fails to take into account whether the words that Congress used were terms of art within the financial services industry. See, e.g. , Corning Glass Works v. Brennan ,
Properly considered, the statutory text equating the "rendering" of "investment advice for a fee" with fiduciary status comports with common law and the structure of the financial services industry. When enacting ERISA, Congress was well aware of the distinction, explained further below, between investment advisers, who were considered fiduciaries, and stockbrokers and insurance agents, who generally assumed no such status in selling products to their clients. The Fiduciary Rule improperly dispenses with this distinction. Had Congress intended to include as a fiduciary any financial services provider to investment plans, it could have written ERISA
*373to cover any person who renders "any investment advice for a fee...." The word "any" would have embodied DOL's expansive interpretation, and it is a word used five times in ERISA's tripartite fiduciary definition, e.g. "any authority or responsibility." See generally
Put otherwise, DOL's defense of the Fiduciary Rule contemplates a hypothetical law that states, "a person is a fiduciary with respect to a plan to the extent...he receives a fee, in whole or in part, in connection with any investment advice...." This language could have embraced individual sales transactions as well as the stand-alone furnishing of investment advice. But this iteration does not square with the last clause of the actual law, which includes a person who "has any authority or responsibility to [render investment advice]." Only in DOL's semantically created world do salespeople and insurance brokers have "authority" or "responsibility" to "render investment advice." The DOL interpretation, in sum, attempts to rewrite the law that is the sole source of its authority. This it cannot do.
Further, in law and the financial services industry, rendering "investment advice for a fee" customarily distinguished salespeople from investment advisers during the period leading up to ERISA's 1974 passage. Congress is presumed to have acted against a background of shared understanding of the terms it uses in statutes. Morissette v. United States ,
To begin with, DOL itself reflected this understanding in its 1975 definition of an "investment advice fiduciary." There, DOL there explained that a "fee or other compensation" for the rendering of investment advice under ERISA "should be deemed to include all fees or other compensation incident to the transaction in which the investment advice to the plan has been rendered or will be rendered." Definition of the Term "Fiduciary,"
DOL's 1975 regulation flowed directly from contemporary understanding of "investment advice for a fee," which contemplated an intimate relationship between adviser and client beyond ordinary buyer-seller interactions. The Fiduciary Rule is at odds with that understanding.
Substantial case law has followed and adopted DOL's original dichotomy between mere sales conduct, which does not usually create a fiduciary relationship under ERISA, and investment advice for a fee, which does. In the Fifth Circuit, this court held that "[s]imply urging the purchase of its products does not make an insurance company an ERISA fiduciary with respect to those products." Am. Fed'n of Unions v. Equitable Life Assurance Soc'y,
nothing in the record to indicate that Jones or its employees had agreed to render individualized investment advice to the Plan. ... The only 'agreement' between the parties was that the trustees would listen to Jones' sales pitch and if the trustees liked the pitch, the Plan would purchase from among the suggested investments, the very cornerstone of a typical broker-client relationship.
Farm King Supply, Inc. v. Edward D. Jones & Co.,
The SEC has also repeatedly held that "[t]he very function of furnishing [investment advice for compensation]-learning the personal and intimate details of the financial affairs of clients and making recommendations as to purchases and sales of securities-cultivates a confidential and intimate relationship"-rendering a broker-dealer who does so "a fiduciary." Hughes, Exchange Act Release No. 4048,
*375The SEC's industry-based distinction thus long predated the passage of ERISA.8
Significant federal and state legislation also used the term "investment adviser" to exclude broker-dealers when their investment advice was "solely incidental" to traditional broker-dealer activities and for which they received no "special compensation." The Investment Advisers Act of 1940, for example, defines "investment adviser" as "any person who, for compensation, engages in the business of advising others ... as to the value of securities or as to the advisability of investing in, purchasing, or selling securities[.]" 15 U.S.C. § 80b-2(a)(11). But the Act excludes "any broker or dealer whose performance of such services is solely incidental to the conduct of his business as a broker or dealer and who receives no special compensation therefor." Id .9 Later interpreting the Act, the Supreme Court highlighted legislative history in which "leading investment advisers emphasized their relationship of 'trust and confidence' with their clients," and the Court stated that the Act reflected Congress's recognition of "the delicate fiduciary nature of an investment advisory relationship." S.E.C. v. Capital Gains Research Bureau, Inc. ,
The contemporary case law similarly demonstrates that when investment advice was procured "on a fee basis," it entailed a substantial, ongoing relationship between adviser and client. See, e.g. , S.E.C. v. Ins. Sec., Inc. ,
In short, whether one looks at DOL's original regulation, the SEC, federal and state legislation governing investment adviser fiduciary status vis-à-vis broker-dealers, or case law tying investment advice for a fee to ongoing relationships between adviser and client, the answer is the same: "investment advice for a fee" was widely interpreted hand in hand with the relationship of trust and confidence that characterizes fiduciary status.
DOL's invocation of two dictionary definitions of "investment" and "advice" pales in comparison to this historical evidence. That DOL contradicts its own longstanding, contemporary interpretation of an "investment advice fiduciary" and cannot point to a single contemporary source that interprets the term to include stockbrokers and insurance agents indicates that the Rule is far afield from its enabling legislation. DOL admits as much in conceding that the new Rule would "sweep in some relationships" that "the Department does not believe Congress intended to cover as fiduciary."
Congress does not "hide elephants in mouseholes." Whitman v. Am. Trucking Ass'ns, Inc. ,
4. Consistency with other prongs of ERISA's "fiduciary" definition
In addition to the preceding flaws, the Fiduciary Rule renders the second prong of ERISA's fiduciary status definition in tension with its companion subsections. The Rule thus poses a serious harmonious-reading problem. See ANTONIN SCALIA & BRYAN A. GARNER, READING LAW: THE INTERPRETATION OF LEGAL TEXTS 180 (2012) ("The provisions of a text should be interpreted in a way that renders them compatible, not contradictory."). The investment-advice prong of the statutory application of "fiduciary" is bookended by one subsection that defines individuals as fiduciaries with respect to a plan to the extent they exercise "any discretionary authority or ... control" over the management of a retirement plan or "any authority or control" over its assets.
Sandwiched between the two "control and authority" prongs, the interpretation of an "investment advice fiduciary" should gauge that subdivision by the company it keeps and should uniformly apply the trust and confidence standard in all three provisions. Roberts v. Sea-Land Servs., Inc. ,
Countertextually, the Fiduciary Rule's interpretation of an "investment advice fiduciary" lacks any requirement of a special relationship. DOL thus asks us to differentiate within the definition of "fiduciary"-rendering the definition a moving target depending on which of the three prongs is at issue. Standard textual interpretation disavows that disharmony.
There is also no merit in DOL's reliance on Mertens for the broader proposition that ERISA departed from the common law definition of "fiduciary." DOL emphasizes the Court's statement that, by defining fiduciary in "functional" terms, Congress "expand[ed] the universe of persons subject to fiduciary duties." Mertens ,
DOL's quotation is correct but beside the point. The question in Mertens was whether individuals who were not subject to fiduciary duties at common law could be sued under ERISA. See
Under Mertens, ERISA eliminated the "formal trusteeship" requirement and applied fiduciary status to all individuals who have "control and authority over the plan."
Moreover, although ERISA "abrogate[d] the common law in certain respects" concerning "formal trusteeship," "we presume that Congress retained all other elements of common-law [fiduciary status] that are consistent with the statutory text because there are no textual indicia to the contrary." Universal Health Servs., Inc. v. United States , --- U.S. ----,
5. Purposes
DOL ultimately falls back on statutory purposes. DOL points to the alleged negative repercussions of appellants' position, namely that "many investment advisers would be able to 'play a central role in shaping' retirement investments without the fiduciary safeguards 'for persons having such influence and responsibility.' " (quoting
None of these arguments holds water. DOL's invocation of ERISA's purposes is unpersuasive in light of Mertens . There, the petitioners asked for a particular interpretation of ERISA "in order to achieve the 'purpose of ERISA to protect plan participants and beneficiaries.' "
Moreover, DOL's principal policy concern about the lack of fiduciary safeguards *379in Title II was present when the statute was enacted, but Congress chose not to require advisers to individual retirement plans to bear the duties of loyalty and prudence required of Title I ERISA plan fiduciaries. That times have changed, the financial market has become more complex, and IRA accounts have assumed enormous importance are arguments for Congress to make adjustments in the law, or for other appropriate federal or state regulators to act within their authority. A perceived "need" does not empower DOL to craft de facto statutory amendments or to act beyond its expressly defined authority.
Finally, DOL's reliance on Guidry is misleading and misplaced. Guidry was a criminal kidnapping-enhancement case in which this court was required to define the term "kidnap."
In sum, using the "regular interpretive method leaves no serious question, not even about purely textual ambiguity" in ERISA. Gen. DynamicsLand Sys., Inc. v. Cline ,
B. The Fiduciary Rule fails the "reasonableness" test of Chevron step 2 and the APA.
Under Step 2 of Chevron, "if the statute is silent or ambiguous with respect to the specific issue, the question for the court is whether the agency's answer is based on a permissible construction of the statute." Chevron,
*380In addition, the regulation must withstand APA review, ensuring it is not arbitrary, capricious, contrary to law or in excess of statutory authority.
Bear in mind that DOL's 1975 regulations only covered "investment advice fiduciaries" who rendered advice regularly and as the primary basis for clients' investment decisions. The Fiduciary Rule extends regulation to any financial transaction involving an ERISA or IRA plan in which "advice" plays a part, and a fee, "direct or indirect," is received. The Rule expressly includes one-time IRA rollover or annuity transactions where it is ordinarily inconceivable that financial salespeople or insurance agents will have an intimate relationship of trust and confidence with prospective purchasers. Through the BIC Exemption, the Rule undertakes to regulate these and myriad other transactions as if there were little difference between them and the activities of ERISA employer-sponsored plan fiduciaries. Finally, in failing to grant certain annuities the long-established protection of PTE 84-24, the Rule competitively disadvantages their market because DOL believes these annuities are unsuitable for IRA investors.
Not only does the Rule disregard the essential common law trust and confidence standard, but it does not holistically account for the language of the "investment advice fiduciary" provision or for the additional prongs of ERISA's fiduciary definition. The Supreme Court has warned that "there may be a question about whether [an agency's] departure from the common law...with respect to particular questions and in a particular statutory context[ ] renders its interpretation unreasonable." N.L.R.B. v. Town & Country Elec., Inc.,
Moreover, that it took DOL forty years to "discover" its novel interpretation further highlights the Rule's unreasonableness. See Util. Air Regulatory Grp. v. EPA , --- U.S. ----,
The following problems highlight the unreasonableness of the Rule and its incompatibility with APA standards.
First, the Rule ignores that ERISA Titles I and II distinguish between DOL's authority over ERISA employer-sponsored plans and individual IRA accounts. By statute, ERISA plan fiduciaries must adhere to the traditional common law duties of loyalty and prudence in fulfilling their functions, and it is up to DOL to craft regulations enforcing that provision.
DOL's response to the statutory distinction is that it has broad power to exempt "prohibited transactions." See
Additionally, the "exemptions" actually subject most of these newly regulated actors and transactions to a raft of affirmative obligations. Among the new requirements, brokers and insurance salespeople assume obligations of loyalty and prudence only statutorily required of ERISA plan fiduciaries. Further, when brokers and insurance representatives use the BICE exemptions (as they must in order to preserve their commissions), they are required to expose themselves to potential liability beyond the tax penalties provided for in ERISA Title II. See
Second, insofar as the Fiduciary Rule defines "investment advice fiduciary" to include anyone who makes a suggestion "to a specific advice recipient ... regarding the advisability of a particular investment ... decision," it comprises nearly any broker or insurance salesperson who deals with IRA clients. Under ERISA, however, fiduciaries are generally prohibited from selling financial products to plans.
Another such marker is the overbreadth of the BIC Exemption when compared with an exception that Congress enacted to the prohibited transactions provisions.
*383
Even more remarkable, DOL had to exclude Congress's nuanced § 4975(d)(17) exemption from the BICE exemption's onerous provisions.
[T]he PPA created a new statutory exemption that allows fiduciaries giving investment advice to individuals...to receive compensation from investment vehicles that they recommend in certain circumstances. 29 U.S.C. 1108(b)(14) ; 29 U.S.C. 4975(d)(17). Recognizing the risks presented when advisers receive fees from the investments they recommend to individuals, Congress placed important constraints on such advice arrangements that are calculated to limit the potential for abuse and self-dealing....Thus, the PPA statutory exemption remains available to parties that would become investment advice fiduciaries [under the Fiduciary Rule] because of the broader definition in this final rule ....
Unlike the BIC Exemption regulations, Congress's exemption did not require detailed contractual provisions or subject "fiduciaries" involved in Section 4975(d)(17) transactions to the possibility of class actions suits without damage limitations. When Congress has acted with a scalpel, it is not for the agency to wield a cudgel. See Fin. Planning Ass'n. v. S.E.C.,
Third, the Rule's status is not salvaged by the BICE, which as noted was designed to narrow the Rule's overbreadth. The Supreme Court addressed such a tactic when it held that agencies "are not free to adopt unreasonable interpretations of statutory provisions and then edit other statutory provisions to mitigate the unreasonableness." See U.A.R.G. , 134 S.Ct. at 2446 (internal quotations and alterations omitted). This is the vice in BICE, which exploits DOL's narrow exemptive power in order to "cure" the Rule's overbroad interpretation of the "investment advice fiduciary" provision. DOL admitted that without the BIC Exemptions, the Rule's overbreadth could have "serious adverse unintended consequences." 81 Fed. Reg. at 21062. That a cure was needed "should have alerted [the agency] that it had taken a wrong interpretive turn." U.A.R.G. , 134 S.Ct. at 2446. The BIC Exemption is integral to retaining the Rule. Because it is independently indefensible, this alone dooms the entire Rule.
Fourth, BICE extends far beyond creating "conditional" "exemptions" to ERISA's prohibited transactions provisions. Rather *384than ameliorate overbreadth, it deliberately extends ERISA Title I statutory duties of prudence and loyalty to brokers and insurance representatives who sell to IRA plans, although Title II has no such requirements. The BIC Exemption creates these duties and burdensome warranty and disclosure requirements by writing provisions for the regulated parties' contracts with IRA owners. The contractual mandates fulfilled a "critical" and "central goal" of BICE, ensuring IRA owners' ability to enforce them with lawsuits,
Fifth, the BICE provisions regarding lawsuits also violate the separation of powers, as reflected in Alexander v. Sandoval and its progeny. Armstrong v. Exceptional Child Ctr., Inc. , --- U.S. ----,
Further, whether federal or state law may be the vehicle for DOL's BICE-enabled lawsuits is immaterial in the absence of statutory authorization. If the IRA owners' lawsuits are intended to be cognizable under federal law, the absence of statutory basis is obvious. If the BICE-mandated provisions are intended to authorize new claims under the fifty states' different laws, they are no more than an end run around Congress's refusal to authorize private rights of action enforcing Title II fiduciary duties. Paraphrasing the Supreme Court, "[t]he absence of a private right to enforce [Title II fiduciary duties] would be rendered meaningless if [IRA owners] could overcome that obstacle by suing to enforce [DOL-imposed contractual] obligations instead. The statutory and contractual obligations, in short, are one and the same." Astra USA, Inc.,
Although it is now disavowed by DOL, another unsustainable feature of the BIC Exemption is the forced rejection, in transactions involving transaction-based compensation, of contractual provisions that would have allowed arbitration of class action claims. This contractual condition violates the Federal Arbitration Act. The Supreme Court has broadly applied the Federal Arbitration Act's promotion of voluntary arbitration agreements. Moses H. Cone Mem'l Hosp. v. Mercury Constr. Corp.,
The sixth "unreasonable" feature of the Fiduciary Rule lies in DOL's decision to outflank two Congressional initiatives to secure further oversight of broker/dealers handling IRA investments and the sale of fixed-indexed annuities. The 2010 Dodd Frank Act amended both the Securities Exchange Act and the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, empowering the SEC to promulgate enhanced, uniform standards of conduct for broker-dealers and investment advisers who render "personalized investment advice about securities to a retail customer...." Dodd-Frank Act Sec. 913(g)(1),
Another provision of Dodd-Frank was spawned by a federal court's rejection of an SEC initiative to regulate fixed indexed annuities as securities. See Am. Equity Inv. Life Ins. v. S.E.C.,
The Fiduciary Rule conflicts with both of these efforts. The SEC has the expertise and authority to regulate brokers and dealers uniformly. DOL has no such statutory warrant, but far from confining the Fiduciary Rule to IRA investors' transactions, DOL's regulations effect dramatic industry-wide changes because it is impractical to separate IRA transactions from non-IRA securities advice and brokerage. Rather than infringing on SEC
*386turf, DOL ought to have deferred to Congress's very specific Dodd-Frank delegations and conferred with and supported SEC practices to assist IRA and all other individual investors. By presumptively outlawing transaction-based compensation as "conflicted," the Fiduciary Rule also undercuts the Dodd-Frank provision that instructed SEC not to prohibit such standard forms of broker-dealers' compensation. And in direct conflict with Congress's approach to fixed indexed annuities, DOL's regulatory strategy not only deprives sellers of those products of the enhanced PTE 84-24 exemption but it also subjects them to the stark alternatives of using the BIC Exemption, creating entirely new compensation schemes, or withdrawing from the market. While Congress exhibited confidence in the states' insurance regulation, DOL criticizes the Dodd-Frank provisions as "insufficient" to protect the "subset" of retirement-related fixed-indexed annuities transactions within DOL's purview. Certainly, however, most such products are sold to retirement investors, so DOL is occupying the Dodd-Frank turf.
DOL contends that legislation pertaining to the SEC does not detract from its authority to regulate "fiduciaries" to IRA investors, but we are unconvinced. Congress does not ordinarily specifically delegate power to one agency while knowing that another federal agency stands poised to assert the very same power. DOL's direct imposition on the delegation to SEC is made plain by the text of Dodd-Frank Section 913(g)(2), which states:
The Commission may promulgate rules to provide that the standard of conduct for all brokers, dealers, and investment advisers, when providing personalized investment advice about securities to retail customers (and such other customers as the Commission may by rule provide), shall be to act in the best interest of the customer without regard to the financial or other interest of the broker, dealer, or investment adviser providing the advice. In accordance with such rules, any material conflicts of interest shall be disclosed and may be consented to by the customer. Such rules shall provide that such standard of conduct shall be no less stringent than the standard applicable to investment adviser[s] under sections 206(1) and (2) of this Act when providing personalized investment advice about securities, except the Commission shall not ascribe a meaning to the term customer that would include an investor in a private fund managed by an investment adviser, where such private fund has entered into an advisory contract with such adviser. The receipt of compensation based on commission or fees shall not, in and of itself, be considered a violation of such standard applied to a broker, dealer or investment adviser. (emphasis added)
As a major securities law treatise explains, the genesis of this provision was an SEC initiative commencing in 2006 to address "Trends Blurring the Distinction Between Broker-Dealers and Investment Advisers." See LOUIS LOSS, ET AL., 2 FUNDAMENTAL OF SECURITIES REGULATION 1090-94 (2011). Congress was concerned to protect all retail investment clients, and there is no evidence that Congress expected DOL to more restrictively regulate a trillion dollar portion of the market when it delegated the general question to the SEC (for broker-dealers and registered investment advisers) and conditionally deferred to state insurance practices.16
*387Seventh, regardless of the precise status of a "major questions" exception to Chevron analysis, see generally Josh Blackman, Gridlock , 130 HARV. L. REV. 241, 261 (2016), there is no doubt that the Supreme Court has been skeptical of federal regulations crafted from long-extant statutes that exert novel and extensive power over the American economy. See, e.g., King v. Burwell, --- U.S. ----,
These decisions are not, as DOL contends, distinguishable. They restate fundamental principles deriving from the Constitution's separation of powers within the federal government. Congress enacts laws that define and, equally important, circumscribe the power of the Executive to control the lives of the citizens. When agencies within the Executive Branch defy Congressional limits, they lord it over the people without proper authority. Most instances of regulatory activity, no doubt, are underpinned by direct or necessary consequences of enabling statutes. But the guiding inquiry under Chevron Step Two is whether Congress intended to delegate interpretive authority over a question to the agency asserting deference. City of Arlington,
DOL has made no secret of its intent to transform the trillion-dollar market for IRA investments, annuities and insurance products, and to regulate in a new way the thousands of people and organizations working in that market. Large portions of the financial services and insurance industries have been "woke" by the Fiduciary Rule and BIC Exemption. DOL utilized two transformative devices: it reinterpreted the forty-year old term "investment advice fiduciary" and exploited an exemption provision into a comprehensive regulatory framework. As in the U.A.R.G. case, DOL found "in a long-extant statute an unheralded power to regulate a significant portion of the American economy." And, *388although lacking direct regulatory authority over IRA "fiduciaries," DOL impermissibly bootstrapped what should have been safe harbor criteria into "backdoor regulation." Hearth, Patio & Barbecue Ass'n. v. U.S. Dep't of Energy,
CONCLUSION
The APA states that a "reviewing court shall...hold unlawful and set aside agency action...found to be...arbitrary, capricious,...not in accordance with law" or "in excess of statutory ...authority[ ] or limitations."
JUDGMENT REVERSED; FIDUCIARY RULE VACATE
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885 F.3d 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chamber-of-commerce-of-the-us-v-us-dept-of-labor-ca5-2018.