The appellant, a subcontractor, brought this lawsuit under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”), 18 U.S.C. §§ 1961-1968, against a contractor. The subcontractor claimed that the contractor, by defrauding the federal government in various ways, injured the subcontractor as well as the government. The district court dismissed the suit on the ground that the subcontractor had already litigated its RICO claim in an earlier arbitration proceeding; hence principles of res judicata barred the present action. We affirm the district court’s dismissal, but for a different reason.
See Rodriguez-Antuna v. Chase Manhattan Bank Corp.,
I
Background
A
The Complaint’s RICO Allegations
The Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act- permits “any person injured in his business or property,” 18 U.S.C. § 1964(c), by “a pattern of racketeering activity,” 18 U.S.C. § 1962, (including at least two acts of certain specified crimes, 18 U.S.C. § 1961(5)) to obtain treble damages from the racketeers. 18 U.S.C. § 1964(c). The subcontractor’s complaint says that the contractor engaged in a “pattern of racketeering activity,” primarily with the objective of obtaining a particular Defense Department contract to make camouflaged chemical protection suits.
The complaint specifically alleges the following unlawful activity:
1. Bribes. In late 1984 or early 1985, the contractor, Amertex International, provided a Defense Department contracting officer with lodging on three vacation trips in Puerto Rico, a free boat trip and airplane trip, and $25,000 in cash. In return, in February 1985, the officer awarded Amertex a $96 million chemical protection suit contract.
2. False Statements. During approximately the same time period, Amertex, in order to qualify for the contract, falsely told the Defense Department that it was a small business, that is, that it had fewer than 500 employees. Later, it tried to cover up by making it appear that various additional employees worked for an independent “temporary personnel” agency.
3. Obtaining Confidential Government Information. At about the same time, the president of Amertex, Leon Jacobson, obtained confidential information that the Defense Department intended to amend the terms of the chemical protection suit contract, making it more profitable than it appeared to be.
4. Failure to Disclose. After Amertex obtained the contract, it awarded a subcontract to the plaintiff, Apparel Art International. When doing so, Amertex did not tell Apparel about the bribes and lies that would (and did) lead to cancellation of the main contract by the Defense Department.
5. Fraudulent Conveyance. Amer-tex’s bribes came to light, the Defense Department cancelled the contract, Apparel brought an arbitration proceeding (as provided in the subcontract), and Apparel recovered a damage award of $338,000. In the meantime, Amertex fraudulently conveyed its assets to its owners, and to others, in order to prevent Apparel from reaching those assets to satisfy the award.
As a result of this “pattern of racketeering activity,” says Apparel’s complaint, Amer-tex, and certain of its owners and officers, harmed Apparel, in the amount of approximately $4,817,750 (or, $14,453,250, when trebled).
B
Key Procedural Events
The key procedural events in this litigation include the following:
1. November 1986. Apparel brought its arbitration proceeding, in which, as we have said, it obtained an award for $338,000.
2. September 1989. Apparel sued in federal district court to confirm the arbitrator’s award. See 9 U.S.C. § 9.
3. April 1990. The federal court confirmed the award.
4. June 1990. Apparel filed the present RICO complaint (in the same federal district court, but assigned to a different judge).
5. August 1990. The RICO defendants filed a motion to dismiss the RICO complaint on the grounds that it did not allege a “pattern of racketeering activity” and failed to satisfy certain other ' statutory requirements.
6. August 1991. The court dismissed the RICO complaint for a reason that the parties had not argued, namely that, given the previous arbitration proceeding, principles of res judicata barred the present RICO claim.
The plaintiff, Apparel, now appeals the dismissal, arguing that the arbitrators did not permit it to assert its RICO claim in the arbitration; hence, it should be able to assert the claim in a second, federal court action.
See, e.g., Kremer v. Chemical Constr. Corp.,
II
Dismissal of the RICO Complaint— Lack of a “Pattern”
Apparel’s claim that the district court improperly applied re's judicata raises a very substantial issue. However, we need not decide it because we can affirm the district court’s decision on the different ground that the defendants asserted, and the parties fully briefed, in the court below.
See Rodriguez-Antuna,
We believe it possible to make clear why this is so without trying to find, or to explain, some alternative
verbal
formulation for the word “pattern,” a task that courts have found difficult to carry out.
See, e.g., H.J. Inc.,
We can begin with the Supreme Court’s statement that, to prove a “pattern of racketeering activity,” one must show separate predicate acts that 1) are “related,” and 2) “amount to or pose a threat of continued criminal activity.”
H.J. Inc.,
Moving now to the opposite extreme, we can also be reasonably certain that, to show a “pattern,” one must do more than simply show several different but totally “separate” instances of criminal conduct taking place over time. One 1982 securities fraud and one 1987 drug importation, for example, presumably constitute two separate instances of “racketeering activity.”
See
18 U.S.C. § 1961(1) (including these among acts constituting “racketeering activity”). But, if the two separate securities fraud and drug episodes take place several years apart and involve different victims, methods, purposes, and (almost all) participants, they may well lack the requisite “racketeering” relationship to each other. Thus, they would not constitute a “pattern of racketeering activity.”
See H.J. Inc.,
We can imagine some cases in which it is difficult to say whether several instances of criminal conduct are but parts of a single criminal instance or episode, or constitute several episodes making up a “pattern” (say, several minor frauds designed to raise money in order to finance an effort to rob Fort Knox).
Cf, e.g., id.
And, we can imagine other cases in which it is difficult to decide whether several, quite separate, instances of criminal conduct bear the requisite “racketeering relationship” one to the other (say, multiple instances of fraud over a long time).
See, e.g., Feinstein v. Resolution Trust Corp.,
We note that the courts have not found “patterns” despite circumstances more elaborate, complex, and longer lasting, than those alleged here.
See, e.g., Feinstein,
The one alleged fact that amounts to a conceivable exception to what we have just said consists of the fraudulent conveyance. That conveyance was not part of the conduct aimed at securing the contract, and, according to the complaint, it took place several years later. If we assume that this activity falls within the scope of a RICO predicate criminal statute,
see
18 U.S.C. § 1961(1), we nonetheless find the conduct too
un related
— too separate,
too
distinct,
too
obviously related to a simple effort to avoid a later court judgment — to permit a finding that, taken together with the earlier acts, it is part of a racketeering “pattern.” The relation here seems like that between the 1982 securities fraud and the 1987 drug importation.
See
page 723,
supra.
“A pattern is not formed by ‘sporadic activity.’ ”
H.J. Inc.,
In sum, we conclude that the complaint does not allege the two or more separate acts that bear a relationship, each to the others, either “amountpng] to,” or “pos[ing] a threat of,” the kind of “continued” criminal activity at which the RICO statute was aimed.
See H.J. Inc.,
We add that we have decided this case with the benefit of the legal memoranda that the parties filed on this issue in the district court — memoranda contained in the record before us. In light of the thorough arguments in those memoranda, we have found no need to remand the case, or to ask for further briefing on the issue.
Cf. Triad Assoc., Inc. v. Chicago Housing Authority,
The judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
