AER Advisors Inc. v. Fidelity Brokerage Svcs., LLC , 921 F.3d 282 ( 2019 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 18-1884
    AER ADVISORS, INC.; WILLIAM J. DEUTSCH; PETER E. DEUTSCH,
    Plaintiffs, Appellants,
    v.
    FIDELITY BROKERAGE SERVICES, LLC,
    Defendant, Appellee.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
    [Hon. Patti B. Saris, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Thompson, Circuit Judge,
    Souter,* Associate Justice,
    and Lipez, Circuit Judge.
    David Graff, with whom Graff Silverstein LLP, Howard Graff,
    Arent Fox LLP, Irwin B. Schwartz, Nicholas R. Cassie, and BLA
    Schwartz, PC were on brief, for appellants.
    Christopher R.J. Pace, with whom Christopher M. Morrison and
    Jones Day were on brief, for appellee.
    Ira D. Hammerman, Kevin M. Carroll, Securities Industry and
    Financial Markets Association, Colleen P. Mahoney, James R.
    Carroll, Alisha Q. Nanda, Immanuel R. Foster, Skadden, Arps, Slate,
    Meagher & Flom LLP, on brief for the Securities Industry and
    Financial Markets Association (SIFMA), amicus curiae in support of
    affirmance.
    * Hon. David H. Souter, Associate Justice (Ret.) of the
    Supreme Court of the United States, sitting by designation.
    April 17, 2019
    THOMPSON, Circuit Judge.         William and Peter Deutsch,
    father and son, together with their financial advisor, AER Advisors
    ("AER"), ask us to undo the district judge's decision dismissing
    their       complaint    against   Fidelity     Brokerage     Services,   LLC
    ("Fidelity") under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6).1          The judge had deemed
    Fidelity immune from suit here based on an immunity provision in
    the Bank Secrecy Act ("BSA"), 31 U.S.C. § 5318(g)(3)(A) — a
    provision      that     says,   most    pertinently,   that    a   "financial
    institution that makes a voluntary disclosure of any possible
    violation of law or regulation to a government agency . . . shall
    not be liable to any person under any law or regulation of the
    United States, [or] any constitution, law, or regulation of any
    State . . ., for such disclosure."             Seeing no reason to reverse
    the judge's thoughtful decision, we affirm.
    How the Case Got Here
    We draw the facts from the complaint's allegations,
    which at this stage of the litigation we must accept as true and
    construe in the light most favorable to plaintiffs.                See, e.g.,
    Schatz v. Republican State Leadership Comm., 
    669 F.3d 50
    , 55 (1st
    Cir. 2012).
    1
    For convenience, we will sometimes refer to AER, William
    Deutsch, and Peter Deutsch, collectively, as "plaintiffs."
    - 3 -
    Parties' Dealings
    At all times relevant to this suit, AER operated as a
    registered investment advisor, serving wealthy clients nationally.
    In 2009, AER joined Fidelity's Wealth Central platform, giving it
    access to Fidelity's investment technologies — technologies that
    AER relied on in advising its clients.       William and Peter were two
    of AER's clients.     And they were and are, respectively, chairman
    and chief executive officer of a billion-dollar company called
    Deutsch Family Wine & Spirits.
    Starting in 2011 and continuing through part of 2012,
    the   Deutsches    pursued    a   "China   Gold"   investment   strategy
    introduced by AER and supported by Fidelity — a strategy that
    resulted in their acquiring millions of shares of China Medical
    Technologies, Inc. ("China Medical"), all in the hopes of making
    a profit from an eventual management buy-out or a third-party
    acquisition of that company.      In March 2012, Fidelity offered the
    Deutsches the chance to participate in its "fully paid lending
    program," in which they would lend Fidelity their China Medical
    shares for an interest-based fee.          If they accepted Fidelity's
    offer, they probably would have been able to engineer a "short
    squeeze."2     But they declined, saying they had no interest in
    lending stock.
    2   A "short squeeze" involves a
    - 4 -
    Apparently unwilling to take no for an answer, Fidelity
    lent about 1.8 million of the Deutsches' China Medical shares to
    situation when prices of a stock . . . start to move up
    sharply and many traders with short positions are forced
    to buy stocks or commodities . . . to cover their
    positions and prevent losses.     This sudden surge of
    buying leads to even higher prices, further aggravating
    the losses of short sellers who have not covered their
    positions.
    Tello v. Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc., 
    410 F.3d 1275
    , 1277 n.3 (11th
    Cir. 2005) (quoting John Downes & Jordan Elliot Goodman, Barron's
    Finance & Investment Handbook 807 (6th ed. 2003)), abrogated on
    other grounds by Merck & Co. v. Reynolds, 
    559 U.S. 633
    (2010). To
    bring a little more clarity to the matter, we note that a "short
    position" — mentioned in the short-squeeze definition — is a
    technique used by some investors. As a leading treatise explains:
    A "short sale" is . . . any sale of a security which the
    seller does not own or any sale which is consummated by
    the delivery of a security borrowed by, or for the
    account of, the seller. Short selling can be a logical
    trading strategy for a trader who believes that the price
    of shares is likely to decline over the near-term. To
    sell short, the trader typically borrows the shares from
    a broker who obtains them either from its own reserves
    or from an external source. The trader then sells the
    borrowed shares in the open market. At this point, the
    trader has an "open short position" in the stock. At
    some point in the future, the trader "covers" the short
    position by purchasing an identical number of shares and
    returning them to the lender. [If,] as the trader hopes,
    the share price declines, the trader earns a profit equal
    to the difference between the price at which she sold
    short and the price at which she purchased the shares
    back to cover the short position (not taking into account
    fees or commissions).    Short selling can be extremely
    risky because if the stock price rises, the trader must
    cover the short position at a loss.
    23A Jerry W. Markham and Thomas Lee Hazen, Broker-Dealer Operations
    Sec. & Comm. Law § 9.7 (citations and some internal quotation marks
    omitted) (quoting SEC v. Colonial Inv. Mgmt. LLC, 
    659 F. Supp. 2d 467
    , 470 (S.D.N.Y. 2009), aff'd, 
    381 F. App'x 27
    (2d Cir. 2010)).
    - 5 -
    short sellers or their brokers between May and early June 2012.
    Fidelity made money from these loans.                  But the Deutsches got
    nothing — no notice of what Fidelity was up to, no collateral to
    protect their interests, and no compensation.
    On June 11, 2012, after "a routine monthly transfer of
    [China Medical] shares between the Deutsches' margin accounts,"
    Fidelity's surreptitious lending triggered a recall obligation,
    basically     because    Fidelity    had      loaned     more   China    Medical
    securities than legally permitted (fyi, all dates in the rest of
    this paragraph refer to 2012 as well). Over the next several days,
    Fidelity issued recall notices for about 1.8 million shares.                    The
    recalls for about 1.2 million shares failed, however, causing
    Fidelity to believe a short squeeze would occur. Ultimately, China
    Medical's stock price went from $4.00 per share on June 13 to
    $11.80 per share on June 29.        Fidelity ended up buying roughly 1.2
    million shares on the open market between June 19 and June 27.
    And the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") halted trading
    in China Medical securities on July 29.
    Investigations
    Sometime    around    July    5,    2012,    Fidelity      filed     a
    suspicious    activity    report    ("SAR")     with    the   federal   Treasury
    Department's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, accusing the
    Deutsches of manipulating China Medical's stock price.               Plaintiffs
    base this allegation on an internal memo written by David Whitlock,
    - 6 -
    an employee in Fidelity's Compliance Department, which they say
    "upon information and belief . . . reflects the contents" of the
    SAR.3       Whitlock's memo recommended that Fidelity's Investigations,
    Evaluation and Response Department investigate the Deutsches'
    China Medical-related activities because they had "the appearance
    of attempting to influence a short squeeze in the stock of China
    Medical."       And "a scheme to manipulate the price or availability
    of stock in order to cause a short squeeze is illegal," his memo
    added.
    In August 2012, the SEC kicked off an investigation of
    both AER and Peter Deutsch for (in plaintiffs' words) "possible
    market manipulation in the equities of China Medical."        AER, for
    example, received one SEC subpoena and participated in one SEC
    interview.       Peter also participated in one SEC interview.   State
    securities agencies investigated AER as well.          William was not
    investigated at all, apparently (he makes no allegation that he
    was).       Ultimately, neither the SEC nor the state agencies pursued
    enforcement actions against AER or Peter.       Still, AER had to spend
    3
    Because a major goal of the BSA is to help law enforcement
    react quickly to evidence of financial chicanery, federal law
    mandates that SARs be kept confidential so that the SARs' subjects
    do not learn that they have come under suspicion. In fact, federal
    law forbids financial institutions, government authorities, and
    their respective employees from disclosing SARs or even "any
    information that would reveal the[ir] existence."       31 C.F.R.
    § 1023.320(e)(1)(i); 31 U.S.C. § 5318(g)(2)(A). Indeed, federal
    law makes it a federal crime to willfully disclose the existence
    or contents of an SAR. See 31 U.S.C. § 5322(a).
    - 7 -
    hundreds of thousands of dollars in defending itself and did not
    "economically recover" from the ordeal.                     Peter had to spend
    hundreds   of   thousands       of   dollars    too   and    suffered   emotional
    distress as well.
    Proceedings in the Southern District of Florida
    Invoking diversity jurisdiction, the Deutsches and AER
    later sued Fidelity in Florida's federal district court.                    Their
    operative complaint contained an array of Florida-law claims,
    including claims predicated on the SAR — e.g., negligent reporting
    and   misrepresentation,        fraud,    and   tortious     interference    with
    existing and prospective business relations.
    Fidelity eventually moved to dismiss the complaint or to
    transfer the case to Massachusetts's federal district court.                 Most
    pertinently     for    our    purposes,   Fidelity's        dismissal   arguments
    pushed the idea that the BSA immunized it from any civil liability
    for filing the SAR.          And its transfer arguments pushed the notion
    that all the events leading to the suit happened in or around
    Massachusetts.        Plaintiffs opposed the motion, contending among
    other things that the BSA did not shield Fidelity from liability
    for its "bad faith" filing of the SAR and that Florida was a
    reasonably convenient forum for all concerned.
    Noting "the vast majority of the facts underpinning
    [p]laintiffs' cause[s] of action did not occur in . . . Florida,"
    the federal district court in Florida held that "the locus of
    - 8 -
    operative facts in this case favors a transfer to the District of
    Massachusetts."    So    that   court   transferred   the   action   to
    Massachusetts under 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a) and denied Fidelity's
    "other arguments and requests" as moot.4      To use some legalese,
    the Florida federal court here was the "transferor court" and the
    Massachusetts federal court was the "transferee court."       See Atl.
    Marine Constr. Co. v. U.S. Dist. Court for W. Dist. of Tex., 
    571 U.S. 49
    , 64-65 (2013).
    Proceedings in the District of Massachusetts
    Again asserting diversity jurisdiction, plaintiffs filed
    an amended complaint after the transfer, alleging Florida-law
    claims for negligent reporting, interference with existing and
    prospective business relations, breach of contract, breach of good
    faith and fair dealing, promissory estoppel, breach of fiduciary
    duty, unjust enrichment, negligence or gross negligence, deceptive
    and unfair trade practices, and prima facie tort.      A common theme
    in each claim was that Fidelity filed an SAR falsely accusing
    4 Section 1404(a) states that "[f]or the convenience of
    parties and witnesses, in the interest of justice, a district court
    may transfer any civil action to any other district or division
    where it might have been brought or to any district or division to
    which all parties have consented."
    - 9 -
    plaintiffs of trying to manipulate the market for China Medical
    stock, which sparked the governmental investigations.
    Fidelity     responded     with   a   motion   to   dismiss    the
    complaint.   First Fidelity argued that First Circuit law applied
    to federal questions transferred here under § 1404(a). Then citing
    Stoutt v. Banco Popular de Puerto Rico, 
    320 F.3d 26
    (1st Cir.
    2003),   Fidelity    wrote   "that    the   BSA   provides    a   financial
    institution with absolute immunity from civil liability for filing
    a[n] SAR."   The provision Fidelity relied on says (as we said
    earlier) that a "financial institution that makes a voluntary
    disclosure of any possible violation of law or regulation to a
    government agency . . . shall not be liable to any person under
    any law or regulation of the United States, [or] any constitution,
    law, or regulation of any State . . ., for such disclosure."             See
    31 U.S.C. § 5318(g)(3)(A) (emphasis added).           Keep the italicized
    phrase "any possible violation of law" in mind.
    Plaintiffs     opposed     the    motion,   arguing     that   the
    § 1404(a) transfer left the applicable law unaffected. Which meant
    Eleventh Circuit law, specifically Lopez v. First Union National
    Bank of Florida, 
    129 F.3d 1186
    (11th Cir. 1997), controlled and
    (to quote their memo) holds "that immunity may be conferred in
    this case (transferred from Florida District Court) only with
    respect to a[n] SAR filing made in good faith."           And, plaintiffs
    continued, because Fidelity used the SAR "as a smoke screen to
    - 10 -
    camouflage     [its]   own   contraventions   of   law"    and   did   not
    "objective[ly] identif[y] a possible violation" by plaintiffs,
    Fidelity's "bad faith" filing precluded a grant of immunity under
    the BSA.
    Taking up the motion, the district judge wrote that when
    federal-law questions arise, "the transferee court will apply the
    law of its own circuit" — a "general rule" that "applies with equal
    force where a transferee court is considering a federal statutory
    defense in a diversity case."         AER Advisors Inc. v. Fidelity
    Brokerage Servs. LLC, 
    327 F. Supp. 3d 278
    , 284 (D. Mass. 2018).
    And with that, the judge applied this Circuit's interpretation of
    the BSA.   
    Id. Relying on
    Stoutt, the judge then wrote that the BSA
    grants financial institutions "absolute immunity from suit, even
    when [their] disclosures are fabricated or made with malice" — in
    other words, there is no "good faith qualification to [civil]
    immunity," meaning this immunity applies even to fraudulent SARs
    filed by an institution to "falsely point blame at others to cover
    up its own wrongdoing."       AER Advisors 
    Inc., 327 F. Supp. 3d at 284-85
    (discussing 
    Stoutt, 320 F.3d at 30-33
    ).            The judge also
    rejected plaintiffs' theory that Fidelity's SAR could not have
    stated a "possible violation of law." 
    Id. at 285.
    Even if Fidelity
    "'knew that there was (in reality) no violation,'" the judge
    reasoned, "[b]ased on [p]laintiffs' own allegations, the SAR . . .
    - 11 -
    'was cast' as a disclosure of a possible violation of securities
    law."     
    Id. (quoting Stoutt,
    320 F.3d at 30).   Criminal law, the
    judge added, is the mechanism to deter and remedy false reports to
    the government, whose agents are quite capable of "filter[ing] out
    SARs reporting 'false charges' and decid[ing] not to pursue those
    investigations."    
    Id. (quoting Stoutt,
    320 F.3d at 32).       So the
    judge dismissed the case under Rule 12(b)(6).     
    Id. at 280.
    The Parties' Principal Appellate Arguments
    Unhappy with the judge's ruling, plaintiffs appeal,
    making two basic arguments (echoing their positions in the district
    court).     One is that Eleventh Circuit precedent applies because
    the case came to our Circuit via a transfer order from a court in
    the Eleventh Circuit.      And, plaintiffs say, Eleventh Circuit
    precedent holds that BSA immunity requires a good-faith filing —
    a requirement not met here because Fidelity filed "an intentionally
    misleading SAR . . . to cover up [its] own wrongdoing."    The second
    argument is that even if First Circuit precedent applies, we (in
    their words) must not read the BSA as "immuniz[ing] an institution
    that filed a report disclosing an objectively impossible violation
    that falsely implicated the victim of the financial institution's
    own wrongdoing — leading the government to investigate the victim
    rather than the perpetrator."     To let Fidelity escape scot-free
    would frustrate the congressional purpose behind the BSA, which is
    to help "law enforcement by incentivizing reports of violations of
    - 12 -
    law" — "not to incentivize the issuance of reports that will be of
    no use to law enforcement; i.e., reported facts that could not
    possibly constitute a violation of law" (quotations taken from
    their brief).   And they insist that a trio of state-court opinions
    support their view of how BSA immunity should work.
    Fidelity, for its part, thinks that plaintiffs are wrong
    across the board (repeating what they argued below).     Courts of
    appeals, Fidelity writes, regularly hold "that a district court"
    must "appl[y] the law of its own Circuit to federal questions (such
    as whether BSA immunity applies to Fidelity), including in cases
    transferred from another Circuit."   So, Fidelity continues, Stoutt
    applies and gives "a financial institution . . .      BSA immunity
    even if it files a[n] SAR that is 'wholly unfounded'" (the interior
    quotation is from 
    Stoutt, 320 F.3d at 31
    ).     On the public-policy
    front, Fidelity writes that "[u]nqualified BSA immunity" is key to
    the SAR regime — to create an atmosphere that encourages financial
    institutions to report dishonest-looking activities without the
    fear of reprisals in civil lawsuits.         And finally, Fidelity
    protests that the state-court cases plaintiffs champion cannot
    trump our Stoutt opinion.
    The Standard of Review
    We review the judge's dismissal decision with fresh
    eyes, knowing that she could grant Fidelity's BSA-immunity-based
    dismissal motion only if, after taking the complaint's well-
    - 13 -
    pleaded facts as true and drawing every reasonable inference in
    plaintiffs'     favor,   see     
    Schatz, 669 F.3d at 55
    ,   the   facts
    establishing Fidelity's immunity "are clear on the face of . . .
    plaintiff[s'] pleading[]," see Medina-Padilla v. U.S. Aviation
    Underwriters, Inc., 
    815 F.3d 83
    , 85 (1st Cir. 2016); see also
    DeGrandis v. Children's Hosp. Boston, 
    806 F.3d 13
    , 16 (1st. Cir.
    2015).
    Our Take
    First Circuit Law Governs this Case
    First up is plaintiffs' claim that the judge should have
    applied the Eleventh Circuit's interpretation of BSA immunity in
    Lopez,    not   our   interpretation   in     Stoutt.    Unfortunately    for
    plaintiffs, however, we — like Fidelity — side with the district
    judge on this issue.      And we spill a bit of ink to explain why.
    While we have yet to consider the subject, every Circuit
    to do so has concluded that when one district court transfers a
    case to another, the norm is that the transferee court applies its
    own Circuit's cases on the meaning of federal law — and for a good
    reason:    as Justice (then Judge) Ginsburg pithily put it, in "the
    adjudication     of    federal    claims,"    federal   courts     ordinarily
    "comprise a single system in which each tribunal endeavors to apply
    a single body of law," and if different circuits view federal law
    differently, then the Supreme Court can restore "uniformity."              In
    re Korean Air Lines Disaster of Sept. 1, 1983, 
    829 F.2d 1171
    , 1175,
    - 14 -
    1176 (D.C. Cir. 1987) (brackets and internal quotation marks
    omitted), aff'd on other grounds sub nom. Chan v. Korean Air Lines,
    Ltd., 
    490 U.S. 122
    (1989).5        Notably, and as footnote 5 of our
    opinion shows, even the Eleventh Circuit — the very Circuit whose
    law plaintiffs say should apply — flatly rejects the notion that
    a   transferee   court   must   always   use   the   transferor   Circuit's
    interpretation of federal law.           See 
    Murphy, 208 F.3d at 966
    5Cases from the Second, Fourth, Fifth, Eighth, Ninth, and
    Eleventh Circuits come out the same way. See Menowitz v. Brown,
    
    991 F.2d 36
    , 40 (2d Cir. 1993) (noting that "a transferee federal
    court should apply its interpretations of federal law, not the
    construction of federal law of the transferor circuit"); Bradley
    v. United States, 
    161 F.3d 777
    , 782 n.4 (4th Cir. 1998) (explaining
    that "this court cannot and does not apply the law of another
    circuit simply because the case was transferred from the other
    circuit"); Tel-Phonic Servs., Inc. v. TBS Int'l, Inc., 
    975 F.2d 1134
    , 1138 (5th Cir. 1992) (emphasizing that "[w]hen a case is
    transferred from a district in another circuit, the precedent of
    the circuit court encompassing the transferee district court
    applies to the case on matters of federal law"); In re TMJ Implants
    Prods. Liab. Litig., 
    97 F.3d 1050
    , 1055 (8th Cir. 1996) (agreeing
    that "[w]hen analyzing questions of federal law, the transferee
    court should apply the law of the circuit in which it is located");
    Newton v. Thomason, 
    22 F.3d 1455
    , 1460 (9th Cir. 1994) (declaring
    that "when reviewing federal claims, a transferee court in this
    circuit is bound only by our circuit's precedent"); Murphy v. FDIC,
    
    208 F.3d 959
    , 964, 966 (11th Cir. 2000) (holding that a "transferee
    court should apply its own interpretation of federal law"). And
    cases from the Seventh and Tenth Circuits reached the same
    conclusion, albeit in dicta. See Eckstein v. Balcor Film Inv'rs,
    
    8 F.3d 1121
    , 1126 (7th Cir. 1993) (pointing out that although
    "Congress might require one federal court to apply another's
    interpretation of federal law, . . . § 1404(a) does not itself do
    so," and "agree[ing] with Korean Air Lines that a transferee court
    normally should use its own best judgment about the meaning of
    federal law when evaluating a federal claim"); Olcott v. Del. Flood
    Co., 
    76 F.3d 1538
    , 1546 (10th Cir. 1996) (same). We will have
    more to say about Eckstein and Olcott later.
    - 15 -
    (concluding that in dealing with a federal common-law defense, the
    transferee court correctly applied its own Circuit's law instead
    of the transferor Circuit's law — the rationale being that "[s]ince
    the federal courts are all interpreting the same federal law,
    uniformity does not require that transferee courts defer to the
    law   of   the    transferor     circuit").       Persuaded       by   their   legal
    analyses, today we join those Circuits and thus conclude that First
    Circuit law governs this case.
    Hold on, plaintiffs insist:           two Supreme Court opinions
    — Van Dusen v. Barrack, 
    376 U.S. 612
    , 636 (1964), and Ferens v.
    John Deere Co., 
    494 U.S. 516
    , 522-23 (1990) — say that a transfer
    under § 1404(a) accomplishes "a change in courtrooms" only, not "a
    change of law."      Which means, according to plaintiffs, the law of
    the transferor Circuit — here, Eleventh Circuit law — always
    follows the case.      Though artfully presented, this argument is not
    a difference-maker.
    Van    Dusen   and    Ferens    say   that   if   a    federal     court
    transfers a diversity case under § 1404(a), the transferee court
    applies the state law that the transferor court would have applied
    to any questions of state law.             See Van 
    Dusen, 376 U.S. at 627
    ;
    
    Ferens, 494 U.S. at 524-25
    .           Van Dusen, for example, held that
    "where the defendants seek transfer, the transferee district court
    must be obligated to apply the state law that would have been
    applied if there had been no change of venue" — in other words, a
    - 16 -
    venue change "under § 1404(a) generally should be, with respect to
    state law, but a change of courtrooms."                
    See 376 U.S. at 639
    (emphasis added).         Van Dusen left open the question whether the
    same rule "would govern if a plaintiff," rather than a defendant,
    "sought transfer under § 1404(a)."              
    Id. at 640.
       Ferens answered
    that question by holding "that the transferor law should apply
    regardless of who makes the § 1404(a) 
    motion." 494 U.S. at 531
    .
    Van Dusen and Ferens are diversity cases.              And with
    diversity cases, federalism commands that federal judges apply
    state substantive law exactly as a state court would, see Erie
    R.R. Co. v. Tompkins, 
    304 U.S. 64
    , 78 (1938) — a rule that aims to
    accomplish two things:          prevent forum-shopping, "which had been
    encouraged by a regime in which the choice of state or federal
    court       might   determine   what   substantive    law   would   govern   the
    litigation," S.A. Healy Co. v. Milwaukee Metro. Sewerage Dist., 
    60 F.3d 305
    , 309 (7th Cir. 1995) (Posner, C.J.); and "avoid[]" the
    "inequitable administration of the laws," Hanna v. Plumer, 
    380 U.S. 460
    , 468 (1965).6           Ultimately, and importantly here, the
    concern animating Erie — maintaining the dual dignity of our state
    and federal systems — animates Van Dusen and Ferens too.               See Van
    
    Dusen, 376 U.S. at 638
    (explaining that in "[a]pplying" Erie's
    6
    Actually, though Erie's rule comes into play most often in
    diversity cases, it also applies to state-law claims brought to
    federal court via supplemental jurisdiction. See Felder v. Casey,
    
    487 U.S. 131
    , 151 (1988).
    - 17 -
    "analysis to § 1404(a)," courts "should ensure that the 'accident'
    of federal diversity jurisdiction does not enable a party to
    utilize a transfer to achieve a result in federal court which could
    not have been achieved in the courts of the State where the action
    was filed"); 
    Ferens, 494 U.S. at 524
    (stressing that "[t]he policy
    that § 1404(a) should not deprive parties of state-law advantages,
    although perhaps discernible in the legislative history, has its
    real foundation in Erie").
    As for our situation, yes, plaintiffs filed a diversity
    complaint alleging scads of state-law claims.        But as the parties
    recognize, the present appeal (to borrow from plaintiffs' brief)
    "devolves from a dispute surrounding the scope and application" of
    a federal statutory defense —— which makes this case unlike Van
    Dusen and Ferens.      And we cannot say it any clearer than now-
    Justice Ginsburg did many years ago:          "[n]othing" in Van Dusen
    compels one federal court to apply another's interpretation of
    federal law after a case's transfer.          See Korean Air 
    Lines, 829 F.2d at 1186
    . The same goes for Ferens, by the way. So plaintiffs'
    Van Dusen/Ferens-based arguments go nowhere.
    Now, true, Congress sometimes tells a federal court to
    apply another's interpretation of federal law — like when "Congress
    . . . instruct[s] federal courts to adopt state law or federal law
    of individual circuits as of a given date," which implies that
    "some   aspects   of   federal   law   will   be   'geographically   non-
    - 18 -
    uniform.'"        See 15 Charles Alan Wright et al., Federal Practice
    and Procedure § 3846 (4th ed. 2018).           And in that situation, "some
    courts conclude that the transferee court should apply the law
    that would have been applied by the transferor court's circuit."
    
    Id. Two cases
    plaintiffs cite to fall in that category:
    Eckstein, a Seventh Circuit opinion, and Olcott, a Tenth Circuit
    opinion.        See 
    Eckstein, 8 F.3d at 1126
    ("agree[ing] with Korean
    Air Lines that a transferee court" should typically consider
    federal questions "independently and reach[] its own decision,
    without regard to the geographic location of the events giving
    rise       to   the   litigation,"   but   concluding   that   §   27A   of   the
    Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78aa-1, "instructs us
    to act differently" on a statute-of-limitations issue); 
    Olcott, 76 F.3d at 1545-46
    (same, quoting Eckstein).7 Our situation, however,
    does not involve any congressional command compelling a transferee
    court to apply another Circuit's understanding of federal law.                So
    7
    See generally McMasters v. United States, 
    260 F.3d 814
    , 819
    (7th Cir. 2001) (emphasizing that "[o]nly where the law of the
    United States is specifically intended to be geographically non-
    uniform" — such as with § 27A — "should the transferee court apply
    the circuit precedent of the transferor court"). But see 
    Menowitz, 991 F.2d at 40
    (holding that because "federal law (unlike state
    law) is supposed to be unitary," a transferee court should use the
    law of its Circuit and not the law of the transferor court when
    dealing with a § 27A limitations issue).
    - 19 -
    despite plaintiffs' best efforts, they get no help from Eckstein
    and Olcott.
    Plaintiffs'    brief     also     hypes     two   district    court
    opinions:     In re Fresenius Granuflo/NaturaLyte Dialysate Prods.
    Liab. Litig., 
    76 F. Supp. 3d 294
    (D. Mass. 2015), and In re Methyl
    Tertiary Butyl Ether (MTBE) Prods. Liab. Litig., 
    241 F.R.D. 435
    (S.D.N.Y. 2007).     Fresenius did not involve a § 1404(a) transfer,
    however.     The issue there was what state law should apply to
    plaintiffs' state-law consumer protection claim.              See 
    76 F. Supp. 3d
    at 300-05. And nothing in Fresenius suggests the district court
    believed it had to apply the federal law of any Circuit other than
    the First Circuit.     In MTBE, the judicial panel on multi-district
    litigation transferred plaintiffs' state-tort lawsuit to a single
    district    court   (the   "MDL    court")    for     consolidated   pre-trial
    proceedings with other similar suits, knowing that once these
    proceedings concluded, each case not terminated would return to
    the original district court for trial.          
    See 241 F.R.D. at 437-40
    ;
    28 U.S.C. § 1407.     The MDL court held that "[i]n the context of
    pre-trial issues such as motions to dismiss . . . section 1407
    requires the application of the law of the transferee circuit where
    the motions are being considered."           
    MTBE, 241 F.R.D. at 439
    .       But
    for "issues inherently enmeshed with the trial," the MDL court
    said that the law of the transferor courts should apply because
    the cases would have to go back to them for any trial.                   
    Id. at -
    20 -
    440-41. That situation is nothing like the one before us. Plainly
    then, neither of these non-binding district court opinions helps
    plaintiffs' cause.8
    The long and the short of it is that First Circuit
    caselaw   interpreting   BSA   immunity   applies   here,   not   Eleventh
    Circuit caselaw.   And we trudge on.
    8 As a parting shot on this issue, plaintiffs fume that
    Fidelity pulled a fast one, convincing the Florida federal court
    to transfer the case (as they put it) for "the conveniences of
    administering discovery and trial," but then moving to dismiss
    their claims after the transfer (they make this argument under the
    heading blasting the Massachusetts federal court's use of First
    Circuit law). To their way of thinking, principles of judicial
    estoppel precluded Fidelity from asking the transferee court to
    jettison their claims, thus eliminating the need for discovery and
    trial. But their argument does not hold together.
    Judicial estoppel applies "when a litigant is playing fast
    and loose with the courts, and when intentional self-contradiction
    is being used as a means of obtaining unfair advantage" — with
    "[u]nfair advantage generally" meaning the "party . . . succeeded
    previously with a position directly inconsistent with the one it
    currently espouses." Franco v. Selective Ins. Co., 
    184 F.3d 4
    , 9
    (1st Cir. 1999) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Alt.
    Sys. Concepts, Inc. v. Synopsys, Inc., 
    374 F.3d 23
    , 33 (1st Cir.
    2004) (emphasizing that "[t]he doctrine's primary utility is to
    safeguard the integrity of the courts by preventing parties from
    improperly manipulating the machinery of the justice system").
    Nothing approaching that scenario happened here.        Plaintiffs
    suggest that Fidelity kept the BSA-immunity theory under wraps for
    later use in the transferee court. Yet, on this record, that is
    pure speculation — really, it is worse than that, since the record
    (don't forget) shows Fidelity invoked BSA immunity in the very
    same motion in which it alternatively argued for a transfer. Plus
    plaintiffs cite no authority (nor can we think of any) embracing
    their view that a litigant in Fidelity's shoes cannot later move
    to dismiss a case after securing a § 1404(a) transfer.
    - 21 -
    First Circuit Law Bars Plaintiffs' Claims
    Again, plaintiffs' basic theory is that Fidelity cannot
    get BSA immunity.    And that is because, according to plaintiffs,
    Fidelity acted in "bad faith" by "intentionally" filing an SAR
    that accused them of manipulating the market to create a short
    squeeze — all the while knowing it was "objectively impossible"
    for them to have done so, since Fidelity knew its own misconduct
    had triggered the short squeeze.         And plaintiffs make several
    arguments for why they are right and thus should get to bring their
    case to trial.    But our Stoutt opinion — which involved a criminal
    referral form ("CRF"), a predecessor form to the SAR — pulls the
    rug out from under them.
    The defendant bank in Stoutt filed a CRF with the FBI,
    accusing Palmer Stoutt of passing a check he knew he did not have
    cash to 
    cover. 320 F.3d at 28
    . He alleged that the bank encouraged
    him to do what he did (for reasons not relevant here).    
    Id. at 27-
    28, 32.   The bank "cast" the CRF "as the disclosure of a possible
    case of bank fraud," unquestionably "a possible" federal offense.
    
    Id. at 30.
       And after the FBI investigated and arrested him, a
    federal grand jury indicted him for that crime.        
    Id. at 28-29.
    But the government dismissed the charges (for reasons not revealed
    in the record).    
    Id. at 29.
      Unwilling to let bygones be bygones,
    Stoutt (as relevant here) sued the bank in federal court, alleging
    only local-law torts.      See 
    id. As an
    affirmative defense, the
    - 22 -
    bank claimed immunity from all of Stoutt's local-law claims under
    the BSA's "safe harbor provision," which "protects disclosures of
    'any possible violation of law.'" 
    Id. at 29,
    30.9 And the district
    court       later   granted   the    bank's    BSA-immunity-based          motion    for
    summary judgment.        
    Id. at 29.
    Zeroing   in   on    the    "any    possible    violation        of   law"
    phrasing, Stoutt argued on appeal that the provision implicitly
    requires that "any suspicions conveyed to the authorities be held
    in good faith" — a prerequisite missing there "because the Bank
    knew that [he] was innocent of criminal conduct."                         
    Id. But we
    would have none of it.              "Conceivably," we wrote, "Stoutt could
    argue that the report was not one of a possible violation, even
    though so termed and colorably disclosing a possible crime, if the
    Bank knew that there was (in reality) no violation."                       
    Id. at 30.
    "But," we added, "this is a non-literal reading of the statute,
    which speaks of 'any possible violation.'"                    
    Id. And, we
    noted,
    "whatever its internal beliefs" — Stoutt, again, claimed the bank
    was dead certain that he was guiltless — "the Bank did by any
    objective test identify a 'possible violation.'"                    
    Id. As support
    for our position, we drove home these points:
    Congress could have easily added a good-faith requirement to the
    9
    The version of the BSA that applied in Stoutt is slightly
    different from the one that applies now. See 
    id. at 29
    n.3. But
    the difference does not matter, because both grant civil immunity
    for a "disclosure of any possible violation of law."
    - 23 -
    statute but did not.      
    Id. at 31.
      Actually, such a "requirement
    . . . was at one time in the proposed immunity provision" but got
    pulled before passage. 
    Id. Which makes
    sense, since the provision
    was (according to its congressional author) "intended to provide
    'the broadest possible exemption from civil liability for the
    reporting of suspicious transactions.'"        
    Id. (quoting 139
    Cong.
    Rec. E57-02 (1993)).      And as far as Congress's policy concerns,
    "any qualification" on the immunity created by the BSA "poses
    practical   problems,"    including    that   imposing   an   "objective
    reasonableness" or a "subjective good faith" requirement on a
    filing would "obviously create[] a risk of second guessing" and
    discourage disclosure.     
    Id. (emphasis added).
      More, the risk that
    an "unfounded" or "malicious" filing will result in "false charges"
    is slight since "ordinarily the disclosures will as a practical
    matter be made to the [government] authorities, who provide their
    own filter as to what investigations are pursued and made public."
    
    Id. at 32.
    More still, "remedies other than private damage actions
    are available for wilfully false reports:       private sanctions such
    as employment termination, and government penalties such as fines
    and imprisonment."10     
    Id. (citing 18
    U.S.C. §§ 1001, 1517).
    10 "Wilfully" is the British spelling of the American
    "willfully." See Bryan A. Garner, Garner's Modern American Usage
    864 (3d ed. 2009).
    - 24 -
    Given this compendium of considerations, we concluded
    that   the   BSA    immunizes    financial      institutions   even    if    their
    "disclosures       [are]   unfounded,       incomplete,    careless    and     even
    malicious," just so long as they identify "a possible violation"
    of law — something the bank had done there. See 
    id. at 32
    (internal
    quotation marks omitted).             And in doing so, we rejected the
    Eleventh Circuit's view in 
    Lopez, 129 F.3d at 1192-93
    — the very
    opinion our plaintiffs urge us to follow — that immunity applies
    only when "a financial institution ha[s] a good faith suspicion
    that a law or regulation may have been violated."                  Instead, we
    accepted the Second Circuit's position in Lee v. Bankers Trust
    Company, 
    166 F.3d 540
    , 544 (2d Cir. 1999), that the "plain language
    of the safe harbor provision describes an unqualified privilege,
    never mentioning good faith or any suggestive analogue thereof."
    See 
    Stoutt, 320 F.3d at 30
    (siding with the Second Circuit over
    the Eleventh Circuit).
    Now    back   to   our   case.     Calling    Fidelity's    conduct
    "deceptive,"       "fraudulent,"      and   "misleading"   —   words    they   use
    because Fidelity submitted the SAR to conceal its own crime —
    plaintiffs' brief argues at length that financial institutions
    cannot get BSA immunity if they acted in "bad faith."                   Which is
    simply another way of saying financial institutions can get BSA
    immunity only if they acted in "good faith."                But that argument
    goes poof, given how it is just like the one we shot down in
    - 25 -
    Stoutt.    
    See 320 F.3d at 30-32
    .
    Ditto for plaintiffs' contention that BSA immunity does
    not apply if the SAR accuses someone of an "objectively impossible"
    violation of law — "objectively impossible," the argument goes,
    because Fidelity caused the illegal short squeeze, not them.                     But,
    to repeat, Stoutt expressly refused to limit BSA immunity by
    splicing    an    "objective      reasonableness"        requirement      into    the
    statute.     See    
    id. at 31.
         Anyway,   if   an    SAR    discloses    an
    "objectively impossible" violation of law — plaintiffs offer the
    hypothetical example of an SAR accusing the Deutsch family of
    "kill[ing] Abraham Lincoln in 2012" — we doubt the government would
    investigate or prosecute such an accusation.                    Stoutt also said
    with crystalline clarity that this immunity applies even if a
    financial institution files an SAR that is "wholly unfounded."
    
    Id. And we
    think that phrase is broad enough to encompass a
    situation where the SAR claims an "impossible" or "objectively
    impossible" violation of law.
    Stoutt similarly precludes plaintiffs' argument "that an
    intentionally misleading SAR" prevents Fidelity from getting BSA
    immunity.        After    all,   Stoutt    firmly   ruled      that   a   financial
    institution receives BSA immunity for SAR disclosures even for
    "malicious" or "wilfully false" disclosures.                  
    Id. at 31-33.
    And plaintiffs' argument about congressional policy is
    hardly a difference-maker either.               That is so because Stoutt
    - 26 -
    factored Congress's policy concerns into its decisional mix and
    reached a result that cuts against the very one plaintiffs push
    for here.
    Having said all this, however, we think it equally
    important to reemphasize something Stoutt emphasized.               Which is
    that even though private actions are off the table, financial
    institutions that file malicious or intentionally false SARs are
    hardly untouchable. Among other things, and as Stoutt was at pains
    to explain, the federal government can go after them, with fines
    and prison time where appropriate.           
    Id. at 32.
    Undaunted by Stoutt, plaintiffs still believe they hold
    a winning hand, thanks to three state-court opinions that withheld
    BSA immunity from an SAR filer that twisted the truth in its
    report, just like Fidelity did by not disclosing that it — and not
    the Deutsches — had illegally manipulated the market.              The three
    cases are Bank of Eureka Springs v. Evans, 
    109 S.W.3d 672
    (Ark.
    2003), Digby v. Tex. Bank, 
    943 S.W.2d 914
    (Tex. App. 1997), and
    Walls v. First State Bank of Miami, 
    900 S.W.2d 117
    (Tex. App.
    1995). The difficulty for plaintiffs is that a prior panel opinion
    like Stoutt remains binding on us until (a) the Supreme Court or
    the   First    Circuit   sitting    en   banc   judicially    overrules   it;
    (b) Congress      statutorily      overrules    it;   or,    in   exceedingly
    infrequent situations, (c) non-binding but compelling caselaw
    convinces us to abandon it.         See, e.g., United States v. Walker-
    - 27 -
    Couvertier, 
    860 F.3d 1
    , 8 (1st Cir. 2017), cert. denied sub nom.
    Lugo-Diaz v. United States, 
    138 S. Ct. 1303
    (2018), and cert.
    denied, 
    138 S. Ct. 1339
    (2018).     Exceptions (a) and (b) do not
    apply here.   As for exception (c), Digby and Walls predate Stoutt
    and so lacked the benefit of Stoutt's reasoning. And Evans misread
    Stoutt as requiring an objective basis for an SAR filing, 
    see 109 S.W.3d at 680
    , when Stoutt rejected such a requirement, 
    see 320 F.3d at 31-32
    .    Evans also provoked a spirited dissent, which
    scolded the majority for "substitut[ing]" its "interpretation of
    a federal statute for that announced by the great majority of
    federal courts interpreting that same statute."   
    See 109 S.W.3d at 686-87
    (Thornton, J., dissenting) (emphasis added).   All of which
    is to say that we must — and do — follow Stoutt.11
    Final Words
    Having worked our way through the issues, we affirm the
    judgment entered below.12   Each party shall bear its own costs on
    11 As a last gasp, plaintiffs suggest that because Stoutt
    decided the BSA-immunity issue on summary judgment after
    discovery, our judge acted "unprecedented[ly]" by kicking out
    their claims on a motion to dismiss.     The easy answer to this
    contention is that the Second Circuit in Lee resolved a BSA-
    immunity issue in the context of a motion to dismiss. 
    See 166 F.3d at 543
    . And we embraced Lee in Stoutt. 
    See 320 F.3d at 30
    .
    Which means plaintiffs' suggestion does not change the outcome of
    this case.
    12One last matter. Fidelity also argues that we can affirm
    on an alternative ground — namely, that federal law bars it "from
    disclosing even whether a[n] SAR was filed, let alone its
    contents"; so "[p]laintiffs can never prove that [it] filed an
    inaccurate SAR"; and thus it "cannot be forced to defend against
    - 28 -
    appeal.
    [their] claims while, at the same time, being prohibited from using
    key exculpatory evidence."     But given our holding, we do not
    address that argument.
    - 29 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 18-1884P

Citation Numbers: 921 F.3d 282

Judges: Thompson, Souter, Lipez

Filed Date: 4/17/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024

Authorities (24)

Securities and Exchange Commission v. COLONIAL INVESTMENT ... , 659 F. Supp. 2d 467 ( 2009 )

Hanna v. Plumer , 85 S. Ct. 1136 ( 1965 )

Erie Railroad v. Tompkins , 58 S. Ct. 817 ( 1938 )

Felder v. Casey , 108 S. Ct. 2302 ( 1988 )

Chan v. Korean Air Lines, Ltd. , 109 S. Ct. 1676 ( 1989 )

Ferens v. John Deere Co. , 110 S. Ct. 1274 ( 1990 )

palmer-paxton-stoutt-rancal-international-inc-rancal-corp-ltd-v-banco , 320 F.3d 26 ( 2003 )

Robert Eckstein v. Balcor Film Investors , 8 F.3d 1121 ( 1993 )

Debra McMasters v. United States of America and the ... , 260 F.3d 814 ( 2001 )

Michael Franco v. Selective Insurance Company, New Jersey ... , 184 F.3d 4 ( 1999 )

Alternative System Concepts, Inc. v. Synopsys, Inc. , 374 F.3d 23 ( 2004 )

Digby v. Texas Bank , 943 S.W.2d 914 ( 1997 )

prodliabrep-cch-p-14749-in-re-temporomandibular-joint-tmj-implants , 97 F.3d 1050 ( 1996 )

fed-sec-l-rep-p-97393-harold-menowitz-stanton-spritzler-and-harry , 991 F.2d 36 ( 1993 )

Murphy v. FDIC , 208 F.3d 959 ( 2000 )

Let W. Lee v. Bankers Trust Company , 166 F.3d 540 ( 1999 )

Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 99,059 , 76 F.3d 1538 ( 1996 )

Walls v. First State Bank of Miami , 900 S.W.2d 117 ( 1995 )

wood-newton-v-harry-thomason-linda-bloodworth-thomason-burt-reynolds , 22 F.3d 1455 ( 1994 )

Van Dusen v. Barrack , 84 S. Ct. 805 ( 1964 )

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