MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Riсhard Dickieson was vice president of operations for DER Travel Service from 1996 to 2000, when he was fired after— and, he says, because — he cooperated with a criminal antitrust investigation into DER’s possibly anticompetitive practices in Europe. He sued in Illinois state cоurt, alleging violations of 42 U.S.C. § 1985(2) (conspiracy to interfere with civil rights) because he maintains that the defendants retaliated against him for assisting the authorities. Dickieson also brings several state law claims. The defendants removed to federal court.
Barbara Schmidt moves for judgment on the pleadings on counts II-IV of the amended complaint. DER (of Delaware only) (“DER-DE”) and Heinz Wesner move to dismiss counts II-IV for failure to state a claim. Because they also file an answer, I treat their motion as a motion for judgment on the pleadings. 5A Charles Alan Wright
&
Arthur R. Miller,
Fed. Prac. & Proc. Civ.2d
§ 1357, at 236 (Supp.2000). The standards for these two motions are the same.
Hentosh v. Herman M. Finch Univ. of Health Sciences/The Chicago Medical School,
I.
DER-DE and Wesner argue that the claim that the defendants violated 42 U.S.C. § 1985, which is the basis for federal jurisdiction here, is barred by claim preclusion, having been decided in a deei
A.
The issue presented here is whether Dickieson can avoid claim preclusion on his current § 1985 claim by adding a party. I conclude that he can. He now alleges a conspiracy among Schmidt, Wes-ner, DER-DE, and DER (of California) (“DER-CA”). Dickieson says DER-CA is the new party, which was not sued in the prior action.
1
Federal rules of claim preclusion apply when, as here, the previous case was federal.
EEOC v. Harris Chernin, Inc.,
Because Dickieson now names DER-CA, a separate corporate entity, as an additional party, he argues that the requirements of claim preclusion are not satisfied. I agree. Claim preclusion is not party preclusion. Although the “very object” of the doctrine of claim preclusion is to prevent people from breaking up their claims into separate little pieces and trying to make each one the basis for a separate lawsuit,
Rekhi v. Wildwood Indus., Inc.,
The defendants respond that claim preclusion applies nonetheless either because DER-CA “was merely the predecessor” of DER-DE or if, as they concede in reply, DER-CA and DER-DE are separate corporations, and as such, are legally capable of conspiring, there is no conspiracy alleged here. Instead, they say, Dickieson alleges merely that Dickieson was employed first by DER-CA and then DER-DE (DER-DE reply memorandum at 11) or the officers of the two corporations are the same and therefore there can be no intracorporate conspiracy (Schmidt reply at 7). Defendants state that Dickieson alleges that in March 2000, DER-CA’s assets were transferred to DER-DE, which became the operating company, and assumеd Dickieson’s employment contract. The relevant paragraphs of the amended complaint, Nos. 44 and 45, say that the defendants transferred “some or all” of DER-CA’s assets to DER-DE and that DER-DE “purports” to have assumed DER-CA’s obligations with regard to his employment contract. Read in the light mоst favorable to Dickieson, the allegations of the complaint, which I must accept as true for the purposes of this motion, assert the factual non-identity of DER-CA and DER-DE. See Amended Complaint, paragraphs 3 and 4 (identifying the corporations as legally separate entities), аnd passim (treating them as separate throughout). Beyond the statement that DER-DE acquired some or all of the assets of DER-CA, the complaint says nothing about relations of successorship between the firms. At any rate, defendants in their replies concede the separate legal relationship between DER-CA and DER-DE.
B.
Because the parties are distinct, claim preclusion does not apply, and Dickieson may sue at least DER-CA under § 1985. In addition, he may maintain a § 1985 lawsuit against DER-DE, although not the one alleging a conspiracy between DER-DE and its officers that was dismissed on thе merits. Dickieson argues the contrary because, he says, he dismissed his prior case voluntarily under Rule 41(a)(1)®, and so the dismissal of the prior § 1985 claim was not a dismissal on the merits.
See Szabo Food Service, Inc. v. Canteen Corp.,
However, Dickieson is not barred by claim preclusion from maintaining § 1985 claims alleging that the corporate defendants, DER-DE and DER-CA, conspired with each other. Corporations, like natural persons, can conspire with one an
Defendants argue that the corporations are not alleged to have conspired with one another. In paragraph 47, however, Dickieson alleges that DER-DE has “acted in concert and by -agreement with DER-CA, Wesner and Schmidt to continue the discipline and the illegal scheme of reprisal against Dickieson .... ” Under federal notice pleading, this is a sufficient allegation of concertеd conduct to withstand a motion to dismiss or judgment on the pleadings.
It is not clear that Dickieson is claiming that a conspiracy existed between the individual defendant officers of DER-CA. Judge Shadur rejected such a claim between the same officers on the ground that the previous complaint speaks “of defendants and their concerns
collectively
as well as individually.”
Dickieson v. Der Travel Service, Inc.,
00 C 4385,
II.
I now consider Wesner’s motion for judgment on the pleadings with rеspect to the state law claims. (Schmidt’s motions are substantively identical). According to Dickieson, Wesner, motivated by a desire to punish Dickieson for cooperating with the authorities, tortiously interfered with his contract by taking a number of acts, including warning Dickieson that he might lose some responsibilities, taking control of a department that had been under Dickie-son’s supervision, removing Dickieson from control of a “Call Center,” and refusing to extend Dickieson’s contract when it expired.
A claim for tortious interference with contractual rights requires: (1) the existence of a valid and enforceable contract between the plaintiff and another; (2) the defendant’s awareness of this contractual relation; (3) the defendant’s intentional and unjustified inducement of a breach of the contract; (4) a subsequent breach by the other, caused by the defendant’s wrongful conduct; and (5) damage.
HPI Health Care v. Mt. Vernon Hosp.,
Wesner argues, first, that he is a corporate officer of DER-DE, and not “another.”
See Quist v. Bd. of Trustees of Comm. Coll. Dist. No. 525,
In his complaint, Dickieson specifically aheges that Wesner acted to protect him
Wesner also claims that because Dickie-son alleges that the acts in question were done to punish him for cooperating with the antitrust investigation, he must concede that they had a DER-DE related purpose. This would be true only if DER-DE concedes that evading a criminal investigation by punishing a whistleblower is within the scope of DER-DE’s purposes. The allegation would seem, rather, to fall squarely under the “solely for the purpose of harming the plaintiff’ fork of the Chapman exception.
Next, Wesner opposes the claim that he tortiously interfered with Dickieson’s prospective economic advantage. This cause of action requires that: (1) the plaintiff must have a reasonable expectancy of a valid business relationship; (2) defendant must know about it; (3) the defendant must intentionally interfere with the expectancy, and so prevent it from ripening into a valid business relationship; and (4) the intentional interference must injure the plaintiff.
Schuler v. Abbott Labs.,
Further, Wesner argues that the business expectancies at issue involved an agreement between DER-DE and the SABRE travel service, and so belong to DER-DE and not to Dickieson. However, Dickieson alleges that he was in line to receive a substantial commission for his role in negotiating the agreement, and so he has pleaded a valid business expectancy. Wesner argues that if the contract was between DER-DE and SABRE, then Dickieson (or La Ola) had no expectancy, but Dickieson’s allegation that he would have been entitled to a commission of savings from the SABRE deal suffices as a response.
III.
I therefore Deny DER-DE’s and Wes-ner’s motion for judgment on the pleadings on count IV of the first amended complaint (the § 1985 claim) as against all parties. Wesner’s and DER-DE’s motions for judgment on the pleadings on counts II and III are Denied. Schmidt’s motions, being identical to DER-DE’s and Wes-ner’s, are also Denied.
Notes
. The prior suit contained the same allegatiоns, almost word for word, now made against DER-CA. In that suit, the named defendant was DER Travel Services, Inc., which Dickieson now says is separate from DER-CA.
.
Compare Copperweld Corp. v. Independence Tube Corp.,
