PTR, Inc. v. Securities & Exchange Commission

159 F. App'x 338
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedNovember 9, 2005
Docket04-4451
StatusUnpublished

This text of 159 F. App'x 338 (PTR, Inc. v. Securities & Exchange Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
PTR, Inc. v. Securities & Exchange Commission, 159 F. App'x 338 (3d Cir. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

FISHER, Circuit Judge.

At issue in this case are disciplinary sanctions imposed by the Philadelphia Stock Exchange, Inc. (“Exchange”), against one of its members, PTR, Inc. (“PTR”), and PTR’s executive vice presi *340 dent, Dennis McBride (“McBride”). McBride was found to have, among other things, misrepresented eighty-six trading orders from “broker-dealers” as orders from “public customers,” in violation of Exchange rules. 1 The Exchange imposed upon PTR and McBride a fine of $86,000 and a suspension from the Exchange of three months. The SEC subsequently sustained this decision.

This timely petition for review followed. PTR and McBride claim that the Exchange violated its governing procedural rules and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, Pub.L. No. 73-290, 48 Stat. 881, and that the SEC erred in finding that the sanctions imposed on petitioners were not excessive or oppressive. We have jurisdiction under 15 U.S.C. § 78y and will deny the petition.

I.

The Philadelphia Stock Exchange is a national securities exchange registered with the SEC under the Securities Exchange Act. The Act allows a registered exchange to promulgate rules regulating the conduct of members and to enforce those rules through disciplinary proceedings and the imposition of sanctions. See 15 U.S.C. §§ 78f, 78s.

Pursuant to this authority, the Exchange has promulgated a series of rules governing members’ conduct and establishing a multi-tiered disciplinary process. Violations of the rules are adjudicated in the first instance by the Business Conduct Committee (“BCC”), which investigates possible violations and, following a hearing, decides whether a violation has occurred and what sanctions are appropriate. If exceptions are filed to the decision of the BCC, the matter is reviewed by the Board of Governors (“Board”). The Board may refer the matter to an advisory committee, made up of three Board members, for a recommendation prior to decision. The final determination of the Board constitutes the final disciplinary decision of the Exchange.

Disciplinary proceedings against PTR and McBride commenced in July 2002. McBride was charged with, among other things, failing to “make reasonable efforts to ascertain whether each order entrusted to [him was] for the account of a [public] customer or a broker-dealer.” PTR was charged with the same violations under an Exchange rule allowing a “member organization [to] be charged with any violation ... committed by its officers ... as though such violation were its own.”

The BCC conducted a three-day hearing on the matter. McBride conceded that he had executed eighty-six separate orders from “broker-dealers” as orders from “public customers” without making reasonable efforts to confirm the source of the orders. However, he argued that his mistakes had been inadvertent. More notably, he stated that, at the time of the violations, he had not viewed compliance with the rule as his obligation.

McBride also admitted that this was not the first time that he had failed to comply with the rule. In 1998, he was found to have caused three broker-dealer orders to be executed as if they were public-customer orders. Pursuant to a settlement with the Exchange, he was fined $500 for each *341 violation, for a total of $1,500. The fine was paid by PTR.

Following the hearing, the BCC found that McBride had committed the alleged violations and that both PTR and McBride were responsible for them. It discounted as unconvincing and irrelevant McBride’s claims that the violations were the result of excusable negligence. It censured PTR and McBride, imposed a fine of $86,000 (jointly and severally), and suspended McBride from association with any member of the Exchange for a period of one week.

PTR and McBride sought review of the BCC’s decision by the Board of Governors. The petition for review asserted that the fine imposed by the BCC was excessive in light of the nature of the violations and comparable sanctions imposed against similarly situated traders. The petition did not expressly challenge the one-week suspension.

The matter was referred to an advisory committee. The committee heard oral argument and issued a recommendation to the Board of Governors suggesting that the sanctions imposed on PTR and McBride were appropriate in light of McBride’s disciplinary history.

The Board issued its final decision soon thereafter. It affirmed the fine of $86,000 but rejected, as an abuse of discretion, the suspension of one week. It reasoned:

Increasing the effectiveness of suspension as a sanction is especially necessary in this case, where, in light of McBride’s disciplinary history, he should have had an intimate familiarity with the requirements of [the rule], and exercised the affirmative due diligence required to assure himself that the rule was not being violated.... A one-week suspension could be used by an individual to take a vacation or to conduct other' personal business without imposing any particular difficulties or hardship on the individual, making it a fairly ineffective sanction.

(A. 135a (footnotes omitted).) The Board concluded that a three-month suspension was necessary to ensure that the sanction would have “more than a minimal impact.”

PTR and McBride petitioned the SEC for review of the decision of the Board of Governors pursuant to section 19(d)(2) of the Securities Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78s(d)(2) (“Any [disciplinary] action ... [by] a self-regulatory organization ... shall be subject to review by the appropriate regulatory agency....”). The SEC affirmed the decision of the Board. Finding that McBride’s conduct and testimony “evidences a disturbing disregard for the standards that govern the conduct of securities professionals doing business on the Exchange,” it concluded that “[t]he Exchange was justified in serving notice with its sanctions that such an attitude cannot be tolerated if further violations are to be prevented.”

II.

A.

PTR and McBride assert that, by increasing the term of the suspension without notice or a hearing, the Board violated procedural provisions of Exchange rules and the Securities Exchange Act. 2 Wheth *342 er an administrative entity has complied with regulatory and statutory procedural requirements is a question of law, subject to plenary review with due deference to any interpretation followed by the administrative entity. See, e.g., SEC v. Zandford, 535 U.S. 813, 819-20, 122 S.Ct. 1899, 153 L.Ed.2d 1 (2002); Levine v. SEC, 407 F.3d 178, 182 (3d Cir.2005);

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159 F. App'x 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ptr-inc-v-securities-exchange-commission-ca3-2005.