(1) Whether statutory provisions that empower the Securities and Exchange Commission to initiate and adjudicate administrative enforcement proceedings seeking civil penalties violate the Seventh Amendment; and
(2) whether statutory provisions that authorize the SEC to choose to enforce the securities laws through an agency adjudication instead of filing a district court action violate the nondelegation doctrine; and
(3) whether Congress violated Article II by granting for-cause removal protection to administrative law judges in agencies whose heads enjoy for-cause removal protection.
First, the enforcement of
Dodd Frank's civil penalties for securities fraud in the SEC's administrative proceedings violated the
Seventh Amendment's guarantee of a jury trial because (a) the case involved traditional common law claims (fraud), (b)
civil penalties are a
legal remedy to which the Seventh Amendment attaches, thus (c) the claims are not a matter of
public rights that can be adjudicated in
administrative proceedings on the mere basis the government is the plaintiff;[2][3] Second, under the first clause of Article I, where "All legislative Powers herein granted shall be vested in a Congress of the United States, which shall consist of a Senate and House of Representatives," Dodd Frank's broad grant of unfettered discretion to the SEC to choose between enforcing identical claims in either
federal district court or its own administrative tribunal violated the
Nondelegation Doctrine because (a) the assignment of claims to a non-
Article III tribunal is an
Article I power, and (b) Congress provided—as the SEC conceded[4][3]—no intelligible principle to the SEC. Third, the two layers of for-cause removal protections of ALJs violated
Article II'sTake Care Clause.[5][6][3]
The United States Supreme Court granted certiorari on June 30, 2023.[7]
Background
Prior[8] to the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act,[9] only registered entities like broker-dealers or licensed investment advisers were subject to the
Investment Advisers Act's administrative enforcement provisions. In response to the
2008 market crash,[10] Congress purported to empower[11] the SEC to impose harsh civil penalties[12] against any[8] private citizen through its own administrative adjudications with only limited, after-the-fact review by a federal court of appeals.[13] Dodd-Frank effectively bestowed[14] to the SEC "coextensive" authority with federal court to impose civil penalties.[15][8][11]
In 2007 and 2009,
George Jarkesy created two small hedge funds totaling $24 million that invested in bridge loans to start-up companies, equity investments principally in microcap companies, and life settlement policies. Jarkesy brought in Patriot28 LLC as an investment advisor to these funds.[16] In part due the
2008 market collapse, the funds lost value, and Jarkesy and Patriot28 were alleged by the SEC to have overestimated the value of the hedge fund assets and made other false claims.[17] Under Dodd-Frank's new provisions, after an investigation, the SEC opted to use internal proceedings rather than a jury trial to evaluate its claims against Jarkesy and Patriot28.[17] The SEC initiated the enforcement action on March 22, 2013, with its ALJ.[16][18] The SEC's enforcement mechanism does not provide a jury trial or access to an Article III judge, only an in-house administrative law judge at the SEC.[19]
In 2014, Jarkesy and Patriot28 filed a collateral challenge to the administrative enforcement action in district court to stay the administrative proceedings, alleging that the proceedings violated his Seventh Amendment[20] and Equal Protection rights,[21] that Dodd-Frank violated the Non-delegation Doctrine,[20] and that the ALJs violate the Appointments Clause.[20] On appeal, the
United States Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit in 2015 applied Thunder Basin Coal Co. v. Reich's[22] implied jurisdictional preclusion of collateral lawsuits to the SEC's statutory structure, holding[23] that federal courts do not have subject matter jurisdiction to hear even structural constitutional claims until after the adjudicative process and final order of the Commission.[24] The D.C. Circuit did not address the merits of the constitutional objections[25] but held that Jarkesy was required to raise and exhaust his constitutional objections—about the ALJs and the SEC—to the ALJ and the SEC before judicial review of final agency action is available.[26][21][20][25]
Five years after the SEC initiated the enforcement action against Jarkesy, the
Supreme Court of the United States held in Lucia v. Securities and Exchange Commission in 2018 that the SEC's ALJs are inferior officers of the Executive Branch subject to the
Appointments Clause of
Article II of the United States Constitution and must be appointed by the President or a delegated officer. The Supreme Court's decision allowed any defendant in pending SEC administrative proceedings before unconstitutionally appointed ALJs to request a new ALJ and hearing. Jarkesy and Patriot28 waived the Lucia error remedy to avoid prolonging the adjudicative process.
In 2020, seven years after initiating the enforcement action, the Commission concluded that based on existing evidence from the ALJ's proceedings, Jarkesy and Patriot28 were liable, and the Commission imposed $300,000 in civil penalties and $685,000 in disgorgement. Jarkesy was also barred from any future investments-related activities.[24] Like the ALJ, the commission also rejected each of Jarkesy's constitutional challenges. Jarkesy appealed to the Fifth Circuit.[27][17]
Five months after oral argument, the SEC issued a statement revealing a control deficiency where SEC staff misappropriated internal documents relating to Jarkesy along with Cochran v. SEC[28] which also raised constitutional challenges before the ALJ. Dating back to 2017, adjudication staff submitted memos to the commission, and because internal databases were improperly configured, personnel from the enforcement division had access to these adjudication memos. Under 5 U.S.C. § 554(d) of the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA), these memoranda are supposed to be kept confidential within divisions to keep adjudicative, investigative and prosecutorial staff separated. The SEC claimed that while ten reports were affected, they did not find any evidence that the improper disclosures impacted its findings.[29][30] This led to additional criticism of the SEC's enforcement practices from groups such as the
U.S. Chamber of Commerce and called for reform of the SEC.[29]
Fifth Circuit
The Fifth Circuit ruled on May 18, 2022, 2–1 in favor of Jarkesy. Judge
Jennifer Walker Elrod, writing for the majority, found the SEC's administrative enforcement against Jarkesy to be unconstitutional in three ways:[24]
The enforcement of civil penalties for fraud before ALJs denies [31] the accused the right to a jury trial [32] guaranteed by the
Seventh Amendment of the United States Constitution. Generally, Congress can create public rights[33] if Congress properly[34] assigns to administrative adjudication claims that are foreign to common law if jury trials would "go far to dismantle the statutory scheme" or "impede swift resolution" of the claims created by statute.[35] However, civil penalties for fraud were known[36] to the common law,[37][38] and Congress assigned the same claims to district court where the SEC routinely seeks civil penalties with jury trials.[31][39] Though The Supreme Court explained in Granfinanciera, S.A. v. Nordberg[40] that "Congress cannot eliminate a party’s Seventh Amendment right to a jury trial merely by relabelingthe cause of action to which it attaches and placing exclusive jurisdiction in an administrative agency or a specialized court of equity." Thus, the Fifth Circuit held that the claims were not properly assigned to an administrative tribunal, and the SEC's decade-long administrative enforcement action against Mr. Jarkesy violated his Seventh Amendment right to a jury trial.[31]
Congress' delegation to the SEC of absolute discretion[3] to select, carte blanche, either an in-house adjudication—in front of the SEC's own ALJs[41] and no Seventh Amendment right—or in federal district court—where defendants have a right to demand a jury trial—for the same claims violates the Nondelegation Doctrine because Congress provided no intelligible principle. The SEC contended that the agency's broad discretion under Dodd Frank to choose between administrative and district court did not have nor need an intelligible principle because, it contended, the choice of forum is prosecutorial discretion under Heckler v. Chaney, though there is no precedent[11] that applies unreviewable Heckler discretion to an agency's purported carte blanche choice of enforcing the same cases in either in-house administrative proceedings or in district court. Judge Elrod explained that Congress uniquely possesses the
power to assign claims to non-Article III tribunals and determine procedural rights for enforcement actions, and that power cannot be wholesale delegated to a federal agency with no intelligible principle to guide the agency's decision as to which claims and cases to assign to administrative proceedings.[31][3][11]
The attorney for Jarkesy is S. Michael McColloch, while Daniel J. Aguilar of the Civil Division of the Department of Justice argued for the SEC.[42][4]
Impact
ALJs are used by more than 30 administrative agencies, and the decision by the Fifth Circuit might impact how ALJs are used at these agencies if the decision stands.[17] However, at the end of March 2022, the SEC only had seven pending administrative enforcement actions in front of its three ALJs.[43] Legal experts believe Jarkesy is the first case that has held an administrative enforcement action brought to its ALJ must be tried by a jury.[5] Others point out that this is the first case in eighty years where Congress failed to provide an intelligible principle to survive a non-delegation challenge.[1]
The Supreme Court had already granted certiorari to Axon Enterprise, Inc. v. Federal Trade Commission and SEC v. Cochran for the 2022–23 term, which address whether defendants in administrative proceedings can challenge in district court the constitutionality of ALJs within the
Federal Trade Commission and the SEC before final agency action. The Supreme Court granted the petition for
certiorari in Cochran two days prior to the Fifth Circuit's decision.[5][44]
Notes
References
^
ab[1]Jarkesy v. SEC, No. 20-61007, 2022 U.S. App. LEXIS 13460 | __ F.4th __ | 2022 WL 1563613, 2022 BL 172464 (5th Cir. May 18, 2022).
^CompareDodd-Frank Act, Pub. L. No. 111-203, § 929P(a), 124 Stat. 1376, 1862 (2010) (amending 15 U.S.C. § 77h-1 to allow SEC to seek monetary penalties in cease and desist actions filed in administrative proceedings); with 15 U.S.C.§§78u-2(a), (b)(1) (2012) (allowing SEC to pursue civil monetary penalties in administrative hearings arising from violations of
1934 Act); and 15 U.S.C. § 77h-1(a) (2006) (allowing for cease and desist orders to be issued by SEC without going to court against any person that is "violating, has violated, or is about to violate"
Securities Act of 1933 "after notice and opportunity for hearing" in administrative proceeding).
^Congress wanted to “mak[e] the SEC’s authority in administrative penalty proceedings coextensive with its authority to seek penalties in Federal court.” H. Rep. No. 111-687, at 78 (2009) (House Report by Rep. Barney Frank for the Committee on Financial Services, discussing “The Investor Protection Act of 2009,” H.R. Res. 3817).
^Glassman, Thomas (2015). "Constitutional Challenges to SEC Administrative Proceedings". Constitutional Challenges to SEC Administrative Proceedings, 16 J. Bus. & Sec. L. 47 (2015). 16: 47.
^3 William Blackstone,
Commentaries on the Laws of England *42 (explaining the common-law courts’ jurisdiction over “actions on the case which allege any falsity or fraud; all of which savour of a criminal nature, although the action is brought for a civil remedy; and make the defendant liable in strictness to pay a fine to the king, as well as damages to the injured party”).
^See, e.g., SEC v. Fowler, 6 F.4th 255, 258–60 (2d Cir. 2021); SEC v. Johnston, 986 F.3d 63, 71 (1st Cir. 2021); SEC v. Life Partners Holdings, Inc., 854 F.3d 765, 772 (5th Cir. 2017); SEC v. Quan, 817 F.3d 583, 587 (8th Cir. 2016); SEC v. Miller, 808 F.3d 623, 626 (2d Cir. 2015); SEC v. Jasper, 678 F.3d 1116, 1119, 1121–22 (9th Cir. 2012); SEC v. Seghers, 298 F. App’x 319, 321 (5th Cir. 2008).