AMERICAN BIOCARE INC.; JIRA Holdings LLC; KJJ Holdings, LLC; Health Care Partners, Inc.; Southwest Home Health Care Holdings, LLC; SWHHC Management-Central Texas, LLC; Southwest Home Health Care Central Texas LP; Southwest Home Health Care of Harris, LLC; Southwest Home Health Care of East Texas; Southwest Home Health Care of Dallas, LLC, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. HOWARD & HOWARD ATTORNEYS PLLC; JIRA LLC; JIRA III, LLC; Redemption Health Care LLC; SHHC Services TX, LLC, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 16-2535
United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.
Filed August 17, 2017
702 Fed. Appx. 416
Patrick Michael McCarthy, Howard & Howard, Ann Arbor, MI, Thomas William Cranmer, Miller Canfield, Troy, MI, David Danny O‘Brien, Miller, Canfield, Paddock & Stone, Ann Arbor, MI, Brad Alan Rayle, Brandon John Wilson, Howard & Howard, Royal Oak, MI, for Defendant-Appellee Howard & Howard Attorneys PLLC
Eric James Wejroch, Joseph A. Lavigne, Law Office, Farmington Hills, MI, for Defendants-Appellees JIRA LLC, JIRA III, LLC, Redemption Health Care LLC, SHHC Services TX, LLC
BEFORE: MOORE, GILMAN, and COOK, Circuit Judges.
COOK, Circuit Judge.
I. Background Facts
A. The Original Acquisition
American BioCare, Inc. (“ABI“), is a holding company that specializes in purchasing and managing home healthcare companies (“HHCs“). In December 2011, three of ABI‘s subsidiaries—JIRA Holdings, LLC; KJJ Holdings, LLC; and Healthcare Partners, Inc.—acquired a set of HHCs from businessman Kevin Ruark, his son Jamin Ruark, and their business partner Jason Laing (collectively, the “Ruark Individuals“). The subsidiaries partially financed the acquisition with a $3.9 million loan from FirstMerit Bank (“FirstMerit“).1 Although not a named borrower, ABI pledged as collateral its ownership stakes in its subsidiaries and the acquired HHCs (collectively, “ABI Entities” or “Entities“), along with the assets of those Entities, to guarantee the loan.
As part of the deal, the Ruark Individuals agreed not to work for or own any competing HHCs. But ABI alleges that the Ruark Individuals immediately violated the non-compete agreement by forming companies to acquire or partner with other HHCs. In April 2013, ABI sued the Ruark Individuals in Oakland County Circuit Court, which issued a stipulated status quo order requiring the Ruark Individuals to abstain from purchasing or managing HHCs in certain states.
B. Loan Default and Foreclosure Sale
In October 2013, the ABI subsidiaries defaulted on their FirstMerit loan. ABI blames the default on the machinations of Vicki Welty and Tina Griffith (collectively, the “Back Office Managers“), alleging that the pair caused the default by “delaying and/or failing to produce timely and accurate financial reporting that was required by Plaintiffs’ investors and lenders.”
As a result of the default, FirstMerit initiated foreclosure proceedings to sell off the collateral (i.e., the ABI Entities’ assets
ABI alleges that during the collateral-sale negotiations, the Ruark Individuals’ lawyer, Brandon Booth of the firm Howard & Howard Attorneys PLLC (“H&H“), misrepresented to FirstMerit that selling to the Ruark Individuals would not violate any existing court order. According to ABI, the foreclosure sale directly contravened the status quo order requiring the Ruark Individuals to refrain from owning or operating HHCs. The Oakland County Circuit Court agreed, holding the Ruark Individuals in contempt for disobeying the order.
C. The Alleged CHC Fraud
Knowing that it would have to prove a second predicate act (as required under RICO, see infra Section III, A), ABI alleges that the Ruark Individuals and H&H also perpetrated a second fraud, this one against Contemporary Health Care Fund I, L.P. (“CHC“). Specifically, ABI claims that the Ruark Individuals misrepresented their ownership of certain assets in order to forestall foreclosure of a $4 million loan they received from CHC. ABI concedes that the alleged CHC fraud did not directly affect or otherwise injure ABI.
D. Procedural History
ABI sued JIRA LLC; JIRA III, LLC; SHHC Services TX, LLC; Redemption (collectively, the “JIRA Defendants“); and H&H in federal district court, arguing that the defendants violated and conspired to violate RICO (specifically,
The JIRA Defendants moved to dismiss the ABI Entities under Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
The district court dismissed the ABI Entities from the suit, determining that because ABI no longer owned an interest in the Entities after the FirstMerit foreclosure, ABI lacked standing to sue on the Entities’ behalf. The court also dismissed the suit against the JIRA Defendants because ABI failed to allege facts with particularity—as required under
II. ABI‘s Standing to Sue on the ABI Entities’ Behalf
“We normally review de novo the district court‘s decision to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction under
Although the ABI Entities’ current owners—the JIRA Defendants—did not authorize the ABI Entities to sue (and in fact sought to dismiss the Entities from the suit), ABI listed the Entities as plaintiffs in its amended complaint. ABI makes two arguments to justify its ability to sue on behalf of the ABI Entities. First, it asserts that the district court should have decided the standing issue under
A. Whether the district court properly decided the issue of standing under Rule 12(b)(1) rather than Rule 12(b)(6)
Article III standing is a question of subject matter jurisdiction properly decided under
ABI rests its entire argument for
ABI analogizes this case to Block, arguing that “whether ... ABI had standing to pursue claims on behalf of the [ABI Entities] is a legal issue that went directly to the merits of Plaintiffs’ claim for declaratory judgment regarding the ownership interests in the [ABI Entities].”
ABI misreads Block. The Block court‘s statement that “standing” was “a misnomer” refers to a conflation of two different usages of the term “standing“: standing under Article III of the U.S. Constitution and statutory “standing” under Michigan‘s mortgage-foreclosure laws. See El-Seblani v. IndyMac Mortg. Servs., 510 Fed. Appx. 425, 427-30 (6th Cir. 2013); Block, 2012 WL 2031640, at *2. The former, of course, involves whether a plaintiff has satisfied
B. Whether the district court properly dismissed the ABI Entities under Rule 12(b)(1)
ABI argues that even under
To start, the district court made multiple findings of fact about ABI‘s ownership rights. First, it found that ABI no longer holds a possessory interest in the ABI Entities because FirstMerit foreclosed on ABI‘s ownership stake. Second, the court found that the JIRA Defendants who participated in the sale did not act in bad faith—i.e., the JIRA Defendants did not collude with FirstMerit or have knowledge of defects in the foreclosure sale when obtaining the ABI Entities and assets. Third, the court credited Jason Laing‘s affidavit, which stated that the JIRA Defendants not only refused to authorize the suit but also sought dismissal of the Entities.
ABI acknowledges that a foreclosure sale occurred, but replies that it nevertheless retains a possessory interest in the Entities because the Ruark Individuals violated the good-faith requirement when they lied to FirstMerit about the existence of a court order barring the Individuals from owning any HHCs. See
But we need not address the issue because, even assuming that ABI retains ownership in the ABI Entities, it still lacked standing to sue in their names. “As a general rule, two separate corporations are regarded as distinct legal entities even if the stock of one is owned wholly or partly by the other.” 1 William Meade Fletcher et al., Fletcher Cyclopedia of the Law of Corporations § 43 (perm. ed., rev.
III. RICO and RICO-conspiracy claims
“We review de novo a district court‘s dismissal of a plaintiff‘s complaint for failure to state a claim under
A. RICO: The Predicate Offenses
ABI brings a civil RICO claim for a violation of
To establish a “pattern of racketeering activity,” ABI must show that the defendants committed at least two predicate offenses.
Despite its 76 pages, ABI‘s complaint lacks sufficient facts to meet this standard. We focus first on the alleged FirstMerit foreclosure-sale fraud. The only paragraphs describing the alleged misrepresentations to FirstMerit state that:
144. Prior to November 7, 2013, to induce First Merit [sic] to enter into the sale, the Ruark Individuals (most specifically, Jason Laing) and Howard & Howard (by its partner, attorney Brandon Booth) expressly represented to First Merit [sic] that the transaction would not violate any agreements or court orders bound or applied to the purchasers.
145. On Thursday, September 4, 2014 via telephone, counsel for First Merit [sic] Bank, Donald F. Baty (“Baty“) told ABI‘s counsel that Howard & Howard attorney Brandon Booth expressly represented to him that the asset foreclosure sale would not violate any court orders. Baty further stated that Booth‘s representation to Baty was the reason that a warranty and representation to that effect was expressly included in the sale agreements. Howard & Howard communicated its representations via telephone calls and emails.
Although the two paragraphs cobble together a few details, they fail to give even one date on which an alleged misrepresentation occurred. That alone dooms ABI‘s ability to allege fraud with particularity. See Heinrich, 668 F.3d at 403 (finding that a plaintiff failed to allege fraud with sufficient particularity because she “d[id] not include [in her affidavit] the date she received the allegedly fraudulent email from the defendants.“); see also United States ex rel. Bledsoe v. Cmty. Health Sys., Inc., 501 F.3d 493, 504-05 (6th Cir. 2007) (holding that pleading was insufficient where the plaintiff failed to, among other things, set forth the dates of any fraudulent statements); United States ex rel. Hirt v. Walgreen Co., 846 F.3d 879, 881 (6th Cir. 2017) (same).
The two dates provided in paragraphs 144 and 145 simply highlight the lack of specificity. The first—“[p]rior to November 7, 2013“—implies a general time frame, but does not pinpoint a particular day or time when a misrepresentation occurred. The second—September 4, 2014—is the date that FirstMerit‘s counsel spoke to ABI about the misrepresentations, not the date of the misrepresentations themselves; those allegedly happened at least ten months earlier, i.e., sometime before November 7, 2013.
Moreover, even when examining the jumble of details that ABI actually sets forth, we cannot discern a single, discrete instance of fraud related to the FirstMerit foreclosure. For example, despite claiming that emails and the sales agreement documented the misrepresentations, ABI fails to identify misleading language from or ascribe a date to either source. Additionally, ABI notes that H&H “expressly represented” to FirstMerit that “the asset foreclosure sale would not violate any court orders.” Similarly, the complaint names Laing as one of the defrauders. But those two allegations bring us no closer to the particularity required under
The complaint alleges only one other RICO predicate: the CHC fraud. Even assuming that ABI sufficiently pled this fraud, ABI‘s RICO claim fails for want of a second predicate act. See
B. RICO Conspiracy
To prove a conspiracy to violate RICO, a plaintiff must allege all the elements of a RICO action plus one additional element: “an illicit agreement to violate the substantive RICO provision.” Grubbs v. Sheakley Grp., Inc., 807 F.3d 785, 806 (6th Cir. 2015) (quoting Heinrich, 668 F.3d at 411) (internal quotation mark omitted). Given that ABI cannot prove the underlying RICO violation, it follows that ABI cannot prove a RICO conspiracy.
IV. Conclusion
For all of the above reasons, we AFFIRM.
