8 minute read | July.02.2024
The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that defendants in securities fraud cases brought by the SEC are entitled by the Seventh Amendment to have the SEC’s claims for civil money penalties decided by a jury and not in an administrative proceeding. The opinion is narrower than it might have been as the Court did not rule on two other questions the case presented. It also is unclear how broadly the rule it announced will be applied and what impact it will have on dozens of other federal agencies that can seek civil penalties for violations of law.
The case—SEC v. Jarkesy—originated with an administrative proceeding brought by the SEC against a hedge fund founder and the fund’s investment adviser that the agency claimed made material misleading statements to investors to collect larger management fees.
An administrative law judge (ALJ) barred the defendants from the securities industry, fined them $300,000, and required them to disgorge more than $600,000 in earnings. The SEC brought the case as an administrative proceeding through authority granted to it through the Dodd-Frank Act.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit vacated the ALJ’s final order, holding that the SEC’s decision to adjudicate the matter in an administrative forum violated the defendants’ Seventh Amendment right to a jury trial. The appeals court also ruled that SEC ALJs are unconstitutionally protected from removal and that under the nondelegation doctrine, Congress lacks the power to give the SEC the ability to decide whether to bring cases in an administrative proceeding or by filing a case in federal court.
The majority opinion, authored by Chief Justice Roberts and joined by five other justices, held that the SEC’s claims fell under the Seventh Amendment’s right to a jury trial, meaning the SEC must seek civil money penalties in an Article III court instead of through an administrative proceeding.
In reaching this conclusion, the majority focused on the nature of the SEC’s claims and whether they are “made of the stuff of the traditional actions at common law tried by the courts at Westminster in 1789,” and concluded that “[t]he SEC’s antifraud provisions replicate common law fraud, and it is well established that common law claims must be heard by a jury.”
The opinion also explained that the public rights doctrine did not apply, and also made clear that the Court was not overruling the Atlas Roofing decision, which permits OSHA to seek civil money penalties in administrative proceedings. The majority explained that, in Atlas Roofing, the enabling statute created a new “public right” and authorized the agency to bring a type of claim that did not exist at common law and to enforce those claims in administrative proceedings.
As Justice Sotomayor’s dissent argued, this leaves open the question of whether and how the two decisions can be reconciled and further muddies the waters on the scope and application of the public rights doctrine.
1. Expect litigation challenging the practices of at least two dozen federal agencies that can seek monetary penalties via administrative proceedings.
2. Given that the case did not overrule Atlas Roofing and eliminate the public rights doctrine, agencies will have to litigate whether a remedy is more akin to a common law fraud claim that falls under the Seventh Amendment’s right to a jury trial, or more like OSHA violations that enforce a “public right” that did not exist under common law.
3. Agencies whose statutes do not permit them to bring cases in Article III courts, such as FERC, will need a statutory fix. Other agencies could try to sidestep the ruling by changing their rules to allow defendants to move proceedings to an Article III court.
1. The Court’s ruling did not address the administrative law judge’s order banning Jarkesy from the securities industry. As a result, it seems that proceedings seeking to bar individuals from a regulated industry can likely proceed in administrative courts.
2. The ruling will not directly affect proceedings in state-level administrative tribunals.
3. The ruling does not impact an agency’s ability to resolve claims via consent orders or other settlements.
1. It’s unclear what impact, if any, the decision will have on proceedings brought by self-regulatory organizations (SROs), such as FINRA, which can impose monetary penalties on securities industry professionals through its own administrative forums.
2. It will be important to watch how this ruling impacts federal banking regulators—the FDIC, OCC and Federal Reserve Bank.
3. The Court’s ruling did not address two of the three questions presented in the case.
4. It remains to be seen how the SEC will handle the Supreme Court’s decision from a strategic perspective.
5. It’s unclear if this ruling will present an opportunity for the Court to revisit binding arbitration provisions.
If you have any questions, reach out to our authors ( Leslie Meredith, Amanda Lawrence, Ignacio Sandoval and Amy Walsh) or another member of the Orrick team.