ROBERT W. GETTLEMAN, District Judge.
Plaintiffs Citadel Securities LLC, Ronin Capital, LLC, Susquehanna Securities, and Susquehanna Investment Group sued defendants Chicago Board Options Exchange, Inc., International Securities Exchange, LLC, NASDAQ PHLX, LLC, NYSE ARCA, Inc. and NYSE MKT, LLC, in the Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois, seeking to recover fees allegedly improperly charged to and paid by plaintiffs to defendants under certain "payment for order flow" ("PFOF") or "marketing fee" programs established by each defendant. Defendants removed the case to this court under 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a), asserting original and exclusive jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331 and/or 15 U.S.C. § 78aa because, according to defendants, the action alleges and seeks relief based on violations of rules promulgated under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 ("Exchange Act"), 15 U.S.C. § 78
Defendants are all National Securities Exchanges registered with the Securities Exchange Commission ("SEC") that operate as self regulatory organizations ("SROs"). As SROs, defendants are part of a comprehensive system adopted by Congress for regulating the securities markets.
Plaintiffs are market maker member firms of defendant exchanges. Plaintiffs allege that during the period in question each defendant exchange ran a "program" under which that exchange collected PFOF fees. PFOF is an arrangement by which a broker receives payment from a market maker in exchange for sending order flow to them. The fees are imposed to attract "order flow" to a market, thereby increasing liquidity and benefitting investors. Defendants have adopted rules creating the PFOF programs under which defendants imposed fees "designed to ensure that market makers that may trade with customers on the Exchange[s] contribute to the cost of attracting order flow."
This is not the first time plaintiffs have brought these claims. They initially filed suit in the Circuit Court of Cook County, (the "first complaint")Illinois, on May 22, 2013, alleging that defendants charged PFOF fees "in violation of their own rules." The first complaint alleged that the amount of allowable fees "is set forth in fee schedules that are noticed, published and approved by the SEC," that defendants' activity "violates their own rules and/or fee schedules," that plaintiffs "suffered harm because the [defendants] overcharged PFOF fees in violation of SEC-approved fee schedules," and that a dispute existed between the parties as to whether defendants "are required to comply with their rules and fee schedules."
Defendants removed the first complaint to this court. One month later plaintiffs voluntarily dismissed it. That same day plaintiffs filed a new complaint (the "second complaint"), again in the Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois. That complaint attempted to eliminate all reference to any violation by defendants of their own rules, replacing them with allegations that defendants charged fees that were not part of the "PFOF" Program." Instead of seeking a declaration that defendants "are required to comply with their own rules," the complaint sought a declaration that defendants many not "charge PFOF fees on orders that are not part of the Exchanges' PFOF Programs."
Defendants again removed the case to this court. Plaintiffs moved to remand, which the court denied.
Plaintiffs then brought a petition for administrative remedy before the SEC, requesting that the SEC order defendants to pay plaintiffs' damages in an amount equal to the PFOF fees that plaintiffs claim were improperly charged. Plaintiffs did not identify any basis for the SEC's jurisdiction in their petition, and in fact expressly stated that the "[SEC] does not have jurisdiction over the market makers' petition pursuant to its Rules of Practice," and that the "[SEC] has no statutory authority to exercise jurisdiction over this matter." Defendants asserted that the SEC had jurisdiction under § 19(h)(1) of the Exchange Act, which authorizes the SEC to institute proceedings to determine whether an SRO has violated any of its own rules and to take appropriate remedial action.
On July 15, 2016, the SEC issued an opinion explaining why it disagreed with the Seventh Circuit's opinion that the SEC had jurisdiction, and dismissed plaintiffs' petition.
The Seventh Circuit affirmed the SEC's decision, agreeing that § 19(h)(1) of the Exchange Act permits the SEC to take regulatory action against an exchange when "in its opinion such action is necessary or appropriate in the public interest, for protection of investors, or otherwise in furtherance of the purpose of the [Exchange Act]," but did not provide a jurisdiction over "law suits initiated by and between private parties."
Plaintiffs' current complaint asserts six state law claims. Count I seeks a declaration that defendants cannot charge PFOF fees for orders that are not part of the PFOF program. Count II seeks an accounting of the fees allegedly improperly charged. Count III alleges a breach of contract, Count IV is a claim for promissory estoppel, and Counts V and VI assert claims for restitution and rescission. Defendants have moved to dismiss all the claims arguing that: (1) the court lacks subject matter jurisdiction; (2) the claims are preempted by the Exchange Act; (3) defendants are absolutely immune from all claims based on the challenged conduct; (4) the claims are barred by defendants' rules; and (5) the claims fail to state claims under state law. Because the court agrees that defendants' claims are either preempted by the Exchange Act or defendants are completely immune from suit based on the alleged conduct, it need not reach defendants' other arguments.
Despite plaintiffs' efforts to artfully draft their claims, this court has already held, and the Seventh Circuit has agreed, that plaintiffs' complaint "alleges that defendants violated their own rules, which are established and approved by the SEC as part of its regulatory function and with which defendants are bound to comply under § 78(s)(g)(1) of the Exchange Act."
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The court then addressed immunity, indicating that "[w]hen an SRO acts under the aegis of the Exchange Act's delegated authority, it is absolutely immune from suit for the improper performance of regulatory, adjudicatory or prosecutorial duties delegated by the SEC."
Plaintiff acknowledges that SROs are immune from suit for claims alleging violations of their regulatory functions, but argue that the PFOF rules are operational, not regulatory.
The court agrees that SROs are entitled to immunity only for actions taken in their regulatory role. The court disagrees with plaintiffs, however, that enforcing PFOF fees is not regulatory. The claims in
In the instant case, that is precisely what plaintiffs do claim. They do not claim that defendants charged fees on orders that were properly marked as "house orders." Instead, they allege that fees were charged on "house orders" that were improperly marked by its members as "customer orders." Properly read, plaintiffs claim is that defendants failed to monitor their members to ensure proper marking. Indeed, in their brief in opposition to the motion to dismiss, plaintiffs make clear that they are alleging "willful misconduct and gross negligence on the part of the exchanges" in connection with those duties. Monitoring their members to ensure compliance with rules designed to promote fair distribution of the costs of attracting order flow as a result of the SEC's decision to promote the listing of options on more than one exchange (
For the reasons stated above defendants' motion to dismiss [doc. 49] is granted.