On May 25, 2017, the original Plaintiffs (including the first-named Plaintiff Andrei Fenner) filed a complaint against Defendant General Motors LLC ("GM"), Robert Bosch GmbH, and Robert Bosch LLC ("Bosch" and, collectively, the "Defendants"). ECF No. 1. The suit was assigned to United States District Judge George Caram Steeh. On July 25, 2017, Judge Steeh issued a stipulated proposed order which consolidated the Fenner class action with another class action (Carrie Mizell et al. v. General Motors LLC, et al., Case No. 17-11984) also pending before him at the time. ECF No. 16. Pursuant to that stipulated proposed order, the "caption for the Consolidated Action" was designated as
At the deadline for responsive pleadings, Defendants filed two motions to dismiss the consolidated amended complaint. ECF Nos. 44, 45.
I.
All well-pleaded factual allegations are assumed to be true at the pleading stage. The consolidated amended complaint names thirteen Plaintiffs residing in ten states.
A.
According to Plaintiffs, GM represented the Duramax engine as providing both low emissions and high performance.
scientifically valid emissions testing has revealed that the Silverado and Sierra 2500 and 3500 models emit levels of NOx many times higher than (i) their gasoline counterparts, (ii) what a reasonable consumer would expect, (iii) what GM had advertised, (iv) the Environmental Protection Agency's maximum standards, and (v) the levels set for the vehicles to obtain a certificate of compliance that allows them to be sold in the United States.
In other words, the Duramax engine does not actually combine high power and low
The Duramax engine allegedly achieves this feat by employing "defeat devices."
Testing reveals that at temperatures below 68°F (the lower limit of the certification test temperature), stop and go emissions are 2.1 times the emissions standard at 428 mg/mile (the standard is 200 mg/mile). At temperatures above 86°F, stop and go emissions are an average of 2.4 times the standard with some emissions as high as 5.8 times the standard.
The third defeat device "reduces the level of emissions controls after 200-500 seconds of steady speed operation in all temperature windows, causing emissions to increase on average of a factor of 4.5."
Plaintiffs provide a technical explanation for how GM was able to leverage these devices to "obtain and market higher power and fuel efficiency from its engines while still passing the cold-start emissions certification tests."
B.
1.
Plaintiffs allege that, in developing this solution, "GM did not act alone."
According to a Bosch press release quoted by Plaintiffs, the EDC17 device controls " 'the precise timing and quantity of injection, exhaust gas recirculation, and manifold pressure regulation.' "
According to Plaintiffs, "Bosch participated not just in the development of the defeat device, but also in the scheme to prevent U.S. regulators from uncovering the device's true functionality."
2.
In their complaint, Plaintiffs repeatedly reference allegedly similar conduct by other automobile manufacturers. Plaintiffs explain that, in recent years, "almost all of the major automobile manufacturers rushed to develop 'clean diesel' and promoted new diesel vehicles as environmentally friendly and clean."
C.
Unlike gasoline engines, diesel engines "compress a mist of liquid fuel and air to very high temperatures and pressures, which causes the diesel to spontaneously combust."
NOx pollution contributes to nitrogen dioxide, particulate matter in the air, and reacts with sunlight in the atmosphere to form ozone. Exposure to these pollutants has been linked with serious health dangers, including asthma attacks and other respiratory illnesses serious enough to send people to the hospital. Ozone and particulate matter exposure have been associated with premature death due to respiratory-related or cardiovascular-related effects. Children, the elderly, and people with pre-existing respiratory illness are at acute risk of health effects from these pollutants. As a ground level pollutant, NO2, a common byproduct of NOx reduction systems using an oxidation catalyst, is highly toxic in comparison to nitric oxide (NO). If overall NOx levels are not sufficiently controlled, then concentrations of NO2 levels at ground level can be quite high, where they have adverse acute health effects.
Plaintiffs further allege that the EPA believes that NOx contributes to increases in the amount of acid rain, water quality deterioration, toxic chemicals, smog, nitric acid vapor, and global warming.
D.
In the consolidated amended complaint, Plaintiffs repeatedly reference the pollution standards promulgated by the EPA and other entities. They allege that GM and Bosch conspired to conceal the defeat devices in the Duramax engine from the EPA and allege that, because of the defeat devices, the vehicles in question do not comply with emission pollution standards, despite being certified as conforming to those requirements. See, e.g. ,
In the consolidated amended complaint, Plaintiffs quote, summarize, or reproduce approximately ten pages of GM advertising, press releases, and publications related to the emissions production and fuel economy of its diesel engines. See
Plaintiffs allege that the disparity between the way the Duramax engine was characterized as operating and the way in which its emissions reductions systems
First, Plaintiffs allege that they "paid a premium of nearly $9,000 [because] GM charged more for its Duramax engine than a comparable gas car."
Had Plaintiffs and Class members known of the higher emissions at the time they purchased or leased their Polluting Vehicles, they would not have purchased or leased those vehicles, or would have paid substantially less for the vehicles than they did. Moreover, when and if GM recalls the Polluting Vehicles and degrades the GM Clean Diesel engine performance and fuel efficiency in order to make the Polluting Vehicles compliant with EPA standards, Plaintiffs and Class members will be required to spend additional sums on fuel and will not obtain the performance characteristics of their vehicles when purchased. Moreover, Polluting Vehicles will necessarily be worth less in the marketplace because of their decrease in performance and efficiency and increased wear on their cars' engines.
E.
The consolidated amended complaint includes fifty-four counts. The first count alleges that the Defendants violated the RICO statute. The remaining fifty-three counts are state law claims predicated on the fraudulent concealment and consumer protection laws of forty-three different states. Thirty-three of the state law claims originate from states where no named Plaintiff resides.
II.
Defendants have moved for dismissal pursuant to Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 8(a), 9(b), 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6). Rule 8(a)(2) mandates that pleadings, including complaints, must contain "a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief."
Rule 12(b)(1) provides the means by which a party may assert lack of subject-matter jurisdiction as a defense. "A Rule 12(b)(1) motion for lack of subject matter jurisdiction can challenge the sufficiency of the pleading itself (facial attack) or the factual existence of subject matter jurisdiction (factual attack)." Cartwright v. Garner ,
A pleading fails to state a claim under Rule 12(b)(6) if it does not contain allegations that support recovery under any recognizable legal theory. Ashcroft v. Iqbal ,
III.
In the present motions to dismiss, Defendants argue that Plaintiffs lack standing to bring suit, that the consolidated amended complaint is impermissibly vague, that all of Plaintiffs' claims are preempted, that any surviving claims should be stayed, and that Plaintiffs have failed to state a cognizable RICO claim. Those arguments will be addressed in roughly that order. Before proceeding further, the Court must confirm its jurisdiction. After analyzing jurisdictional issues, the next question is whether the complaint is sufficiently clear and specific to comply with federal pleading requirements. The cognizability of Plaintiffs' claims involving the alleged misrepresentation, concealment, or omission of material facts is inextricably intertwined with the question of whether those claims are preempted and the related question of whether this suit should be stayed in favor of an EPA investigation. Accordingly, those questions will be considered together. Next, Defendants' arguments for dismissal of the RICO claim will be considered. Finally, the dispute over whether Plaintiffs lack standing to assert claims premised on the laws of states where no named Plaintiff resides will be addressed.
Both GM and Bosch have filed separate motions to dismiss. While the two motions travel similar ground (and refer to and rely upon each other), they also contain distinct arguments. An effort will be made to specifically identify which Defendant's arguments are being addressed and the impact of each conclusion on each Defendant. However, one of the disputes is whether the complaint is adequately specific in its allegations about which Defendant took what action. For that reason, some generalization will be inevitable.
A.
Federal courts have a duty to confirm subject matter jurisdiction in every case pending before them. Valinski v. Detroit Edison ,
Bosch argues that the Plaintiffs lack Article III standing because they have not identified an injury in fact which is traceable to the actions of Bosch. GM has not briefed the question of Article III standing, but has incorporated by reference Bosch's brief on the issue. See GM Mot. Dismiss at 16-17 n.18, ECF No. 45.
1.
Plaintiffs' overpayment theory suffices to provide standing to sue GM, which manufactured the vehicles and authorized their sale. Accepting Plaintiffs' allegations as true, they paid a premium for a "clean diesel" vehicle which actually polluted at levels dramatically higher than a reasonable consumer would expect. In other words, they paid for a product which did not operate in the way they believed it did. Claims of overpayment, wherein a plaintiff paid a premium but did not receive the anticipated consideration, are cognizable injuries in fact. See Wuliger v. Manufacturers Life Ins. Co. ,
Bosch's connection to the alleged overpayment, however, is more attenuated. Bosch did not manufacture the Duramax engine, advertise vehicles containing that engine, or establish the MSRP. Accordingly, Bosch argues that any overpayment by Plaintiffs is attributable solely to GM's actions. That assertion mischaracterizes the allegations in the consolidated amended complaint. Plaintiffs allege that
Bosch participated not just in the development of the defeat device, but also in the scheme to prevent U.S. regulators from uncovering the device's true functionality. Moreover, Bosch's participation was not limited to engineering the defeat device (in a collaboration described as unusually close). Rather, Bosch GmbH and Bosch LLC marketed "clean diesel" in the United States and lobbied U.S. regulators to approve "clean diesel," another highly unusual activity for a mere supplier.
Con. Am. Compl. at 39.
In other words, "Bosch GmbH and Bosch LLC have enabled over 1.3 million vehicles to be on the road in the United States polluting at levels that exceed emissions standards and which use software that manipulate emissions controls in a manner not expected by a reasonable consumer." Id. at 40.
Bosch admits that it supplied components to the diesel vehicles in question, but argues that it did not market those vehicles or enter into any contractual relationships with any of the Plaintiffs. As stated, however, that is not entirely true. Plaintiffs allege that Bosch "marketed 'clean diesel' in the United States." Id. at 39. While the exact nature of that marketing is unclear, it is plausible that Bosch's efforts contributed to the market demand for "clean diesel" vehicles, generally, in the United States. See id. at 5-6. The premiums which Plaintiffs paid for vehicles with Duramax engines were a natural consequence of that market demand. Similarly, Plaintiffs allege that Bosch enabled GM to deceive consumers and thus contributed to the overpayment. Plaintiffs emphasize the close relationship between GM and Bosch, including the joint efforts to calibrate EDC17 for the Duramax engine. The allegations in the consolidated amended complaint, if true, clearly establish that Bosch developed the vehicle component which has caused Plaintiffs' injury, that Bosch was aware of the deception that component would inevitably contribute to, and that Bosch was aware that consumers would pay a premium for vehicle capabilities that the component would not deliver. In other words, Plaintiffs overpaid for their vehicles because Bosch worked closely with GM to install working defeat devices in the Duramax vehicles.
There can be no dispute that, compared to GM, Bosch has a more indirect relationship with United States consumers. But "[p]roximate causation is not a requirement of Article III standing." Lexmark Int'l, Inc. v. Static Control Components, Inc. , --- U.S. ----,
None of the (noncontrolling) cases which Bosch cites in support of its argument compel a different result because each is legally or factually distinguishable. Bosch cites In re Schering Plough Corp. Intron/Temodar Consumer Class Action for the proposition that overpayment damages provide standing only if traceable to the actions of the defendant.
2.
Plaintiffs' allegations of overpayment are sufficient to enable them to advance their state law consumer protection and fraudulent concealment claims. Plaintiffs' other alleged damages (essentially that, if the existence of a defeat device is proven, the value of their vehicles will decrease) need not be considered for standing purposes. Defendants separately challenge Plaintiffs' standing to bring a RICO claim. That argument is based upon a statutory standing requirement, not Article III standards, and thus will be considered below.
B.
Defendants next challenge the form of the consolidated amended complaint. GM argues, first, that the entire complaint should be dismissed because it does not contain a "short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief," as required by
1.
Rule 8(a)(2) mandates that pleadings, including complaints, must contain "a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief."
2.
Defendants also argue that Plaintiffs have failed to meet the heightened pleading standards of Rule 9(b) with respect to their allegations of fraud. The adequacy of Plaintiffs' fraud allegations are best resolved in conjunction with the analysis of whether Plaintiffs have stated a claim. However, one general point will be taken up separately.
The specificity required for allegations of affirmative misrepresentations is necessarily different than the specificity required for allegations of fraudulent omissions.
As this Court explained in Counts , the Sixth Circuit has rejected the argument that it has the authority to "relax" the
3.
Bosch further argues that the Plaintiffs have engaged in impermissible group pleading. This argument is primarily focused on Plaintiffs' RICO claim. As discussed below, Plaintiffs have adequately alleged the prima facie elements of a RICO claim with sufficient specificity to put Defendants on notice of their alleged involvement in the enterprise. Bosch further objects to Plaintiffs' decision to define "Bosch" as including both Bosch LLC and Bosch Gmbh. Bosch contends that Plaintiffs' failure to distinguish between these two entities precludes Bosch from understanding exactly what its constituent entities are accused of.
When asserting claims of fraud, plaintiffs are not permitted to "generally assert all claims against all defendants." State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Universal Health Grp., Inc. , No. 14-CV-10266,
Plaintiffs allege that "[b]oth Bosch GmbH and Bosch LLC...operate under the umbrella of the Bosch Group." Con. Am. Compl. at 41. Members of both Bosch GmbH and Bosch LLC were involved in the alleged conspiracy here. Plaintiffs indicate that the "acts of individuals described in this Complaint have been associated with Bosch GmbH and Bosch LLC whenever possible."
Given Plaintiffs' allegation that Bosch employees and constituent entities often blur the legal boundaries between Bosch subsidiaries, the allegations against the Bosch Defendants are sufficiently specific. Plaintiffs are proceeding primarily on a theory of fraudulent omissions, and Bosch's alleged role within that fraudulent scheme is clear. " Rule 9(b) is not to be read in isolation, but is to be interpreted in conjunction with Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8." U.S. ex rel. Bledsoe v. Cmty. Health Sys., Inc. ,
In other words, the Rule 9(b) requirements are not meant to be an insurmountable barrier. Although the precise identity of the subsidiary and/or employee which may have taken certain actions is unclear, that level of detail is unnecessary to put the Bosch Defendants on notice of the claims made against them. The consolidated amended complaint will not be dismissed without prejudice for engaging in group pleading.
IV.
Defendants seek dismissal of the state law claims. First, they argue that Plaintiffs have failed to state claims for affirmative misrepresentation. Second, Defendants argue that Plaintiffs' fraudulent omission claims should be dismissed or stayed. Specifically, Defendants assert that Plaintiffs' concealment or omission claims are preempted, have not been plausibly pled, and should be stayed under the primary jurisdiction doctrine. In response, Plaintiffs deny that they are advancing any fraud claims premised on affirmative misrepresentations. See Pl. Resp. GM Mot. Dismiss at 9-10 ("But Plaintiffs do not sue for common law fraud under state law for affirmative misrepresentations."). Rather, "Plaintiffs sue for omissions of material fact, fraudulent concealment, violation of state law consumer protection statutes, and violation of RICO." Id. at 10. Plaintiffs further challenge the assertion that the state consumer protection laws on which it relies incorporate only claims of "common law fraud": "The consumer protection statutes bar not only fraud but also deceptive, unfair, and unlawful conduct." Id. For similar reasons, Plaintiffs contend that GM's argument that Plaintiffs have failed to plead reliance on affirmative misrepresentations is irrelevant.
Plaintiffs acknowledge that the consolidated amended complaint includes an extended discussion of various advertisements and press releases which GM issued regarding vehicles equipped with the Duramax engine. Those allegations, Plaintiffs explain, are not meant to buttress affirmative misrepresentation claims. They are meant "to show that Defendants' omissions were material for purposes of claims under consumer protection statutes and RICO." Id. at 11. To repeat: "The relevance of those promises is GM's acknowledgement that low emissions are material...to a reasonable consumer." Id. at 12.
Given Plaintiffs' decision to disavow any affirmative misrepresentation claims, the remaining issues are whether Plaintiffs' state law claims are preempted by the Clean Air Act (CAA), whether Plaintiffs have plausibly pleaded fraudulent omission claims, and whether any plausibly pleaded fraudulent omission claims should be stayed pursuant to the primary jurisdiction doctrine. Each question will be addressed in turn.
A.
"Pre-emption may be either expressed or implied, and 'is compelled whether Congress' command is explicitly stated in the statute's language or implicitly contained in its structure and purpose.' " Gade v. Nat'l Solid Wastes Mgmt. Ass'n ,
two types of implied pre-emption: field pre-emption, where the scheme of federal regulation is so pervasive as to make reasonable the inference that Congress left no room for the States to supplement it, and conflict pre-emption, where compliance with both federal and state regulations is a physical impossibility, or where state law stands as an obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of the full purposes and objectives of Congress.
Gade ,
Defendants' preemption arguments arise out of Section 209 of the CAA. That section, codified at
No State or any political subdivision thereof shall adopt or attempt to enforce any standard relating to the control of emissions from new motor vehicles or new motor vehicle engines subject to this part. No State shall require certification, inspection, or any other approval relating to the control of emissions from any new motor vehicle or new motor vehicle engine as condition precedent to the initial retail sale, titling (if any), or registration of such motor vehicle, motor vehicle engine, or equipment.
Section 7543 also specifies, however, that "[n]othing in this part shall preclude or deny to any State or political subdivision thereof the right otherwise to control, regulate, or restrict the use, operation, or movement of registered or licensed motor vehicles."
1.
The initial question is whether Plaintiffs' suit (and the state law claims it is premised upon) represents an attempt to establish a "standard" relating to the control of emissions or involves "certification, inspection, or any other approval relating to the control of emissions." The Supreme Court has interpreted "standard" in § 7543(a) to mean "requirements such as numerical emission levels with which vehicles or engines must comply...or emission-control technology with which they must be equipped." Engine Mfrs. Ass'n v. S. Coast Air Quality Mgmt. Dist. ,
Accordingly, if Plaintiffs' state law claims represent veiled attempts to establish a "standard relating to the control of emissions," they are expressly preempted. But Plaintiffs' suit is not a disguised attempt to impose a standard on GM by mandating maximum "numerical emission levels" for its diesel vehicles or requiring certain emission-control technology. Rather than imposing requirements regarding the type of emissions technology which GM must include in its vehicles, Plaintiffs' suit seeks compensation for GM's fraudulent concealment of the actual operation of the emissions technology in its diesel vehicles from consumers.
GM further argues that Plaintiffs' suit represents an attempt to require "disclosure" of "information regarding AECDs-a technology for the 'control of emissions'-before a car can be sold." GM Mot. Dismiss at 25. According to GM, the suit is thus preempted because this disclosure requirement constitutes a "straightforward effort to 'require certification, inspection, or any other approval relating to the control of emissions...as a condition precedent to the initial retail sale' of a new motor vehicle."
2.
GM nevertheless argues that the suit is preempted because Plaintiffs' claims "relate
This line of reasoning can be sustained only by selectively characterizing Plaintiffs' allegations and claims. But notwithstanding Defendants' understandable desire to reframe Plaintiffs' allegations in a light favorable to their preferred defenses, the Court cannot do the same. When considering "well-pleaded factual allegations," the Court must "assume their veracity and then determine whether they plausibly give rise to an entitlement to relief." Iqbal ,
GM customers could conceivably attempt to bring suit against GM and Bosch for noncompliance with EPA emission standards. And there can be no doubt that such a suit would be preempted. See Engine Mfrs. Ass'n ,
i.
First, Defendants emphasize that Plaintiffs' claims "rest exclusively on the presence of an 'illegal' 'defeat device.' " GM Mot. Dismiss at 19. By that assertion, Defendants mean that the complaint "alleges only one type of defeat device, i.e. one whose purpose is to defeat EPA certification testing and evade federal emissions standards." Id. at 20. Thus, Defendants believe Plaintiffs' claims will require proof that the Duramax engine includes a " 'defeat device' as defined by the EPA ." Id. (emphasis added). That is not the definition given by Plaintiffs in the consolidated amended complaint. According to Plaintiffs, "[a] defeat device means an auxiliary emissions control device that reduces the effectiveness of the emission control system under conditions which may reasonably be expected to be encountered in normal vehicle operation and use." Con. Am. Compl. at 2.
It is undoubtedly true that the consolidated amended complaint includes references to EPA standards, emissions testing, and Plaintiffs' belief that the vehicles at issue violate EPA regulations. See, e.g., id. at 2, 3, 6. But Plaintiffs can prevail on
A reasonable consumer would not expect their Silverado or Sierra vehicle to spew unmitigated NOx in this fashion while driving in the city or on the highway, nor would a reasonable consumer expect that fuel economy was achieved in part by turning off or derating the emission systems, nor would a reasonable consumer expect that if the emissions were as promised the advertised fuel economy and performance could not be achieved....GM never disclosed to consumers that the Polluting Vehicles may be "clean" diesels in very limited circumstances but are "dirty" diesels under most driving conditions. GM never disclosed to consumers that it programs its emissions systems to work only under certain conditions. GM never disclosed that it prioritizes engine power and profits over the environment. GM never disclosed that the Polluting Vehicles' emissions materially exceed the emissions from gasoline-powered vehicles, that the emissions exceed what a reasonable consumer would expect from a "low emissions" vehicle, and that the emissions materially exceed applicable emissions limits in real-world driving conditions.
Id. at 8, 9-10.
None of these allegations, with the exception of the very last phrase,
ii.
Second, Defendants assert that Plaintiffs are asking the Court to "declare the EPA's existing compliance determination invalid-and any such effort is an affront to the EPA's exclusive jurisdiction." GM Mot. Dismiss at 22 (emphasis in
On their face, these allegations do not require proof of noncompliance with EPA regulations. In fact, it is conceivably possible that Defendants could simultaneously comply with EPA regulations while still concealing material information from consumers. Defendants' arguments to the contrary are premised on the assumption that consumers only care about compliance with emission standards, not the total level of emissions by a certain vehicle or the different levels of pollution emitted by competing vehicles. But that assumption cannot be true: the significant market for environmentally friendly vehicles-which are designed to emit pollution far below the regulatory maximums-directly contradicts that assertion. As noted above, the advertisements and press releases which GM issued regarding the Duramax engine and subject vehicles repeatedly emphasized the engine's low emissions, but never expressly referenced EPA regulations. In other words, GM's own conduct reveals an understanding that consumers believe emission levels are material to their purchasing decisions separate and apart from the regulatory maximum emission standards. Thus, the allegation that the subject vehicles do not comply with EPA regulations is consistent with Plaintiffs' theory of harm, but proof of noncompliance is not required.
If Plaintiffs' claims were predicated on proving noncompliance with EPA regulations or with demonstrating that Defendants had defrauded the EPA, they would be preempted. See Jackson ,
iii.
Defendants rely upon a number of cases to support their express preemption argument, but each are distinguishable. For example, Defendants cite a several cases where state governmental entities brought claims against vehicle manufacturers alleging unlawful levels of emissions. See In re Office of Attorney Gen. of State of New York ,
Defendants also cite Jackson v. General Motors Corp. ,
In other words, Defendants rely upon cases where the claims depended upon direct proof of noncompliance with federal emission regulations. Plaintiffs, on the other hand, are bringing consumer protection and fraudulent concealment claims which do not require direct proof of noncompliance. None of the courts which have considered such claims have concluded that they are preempted. See Felix v. Volkswagen Grp. of Am., Inc. , No. A-0585-16T3,
3.
Because Plaintiffs' claims are not expressly preempted, the next question is whether they are implicitly preempted. As explained above, there are two types of implied preemption. The first, field preemption, occurs where federal regulations are so expansive that Congress has left no room for supplemental state regulation. Defendants do not advance a field preemption argument. And because the CAA includes a "savings clause" wherein Congress expressly confirms that states retain the ability to regulate "the use, operation, or movement" of motor vehicles, that decision was reasonable. § 7543(d). See also Geier v. Am. Honda Motor Co. ,
Specifically, GM argues that "[t]o the extent that Plaintiffs' claims are based on GM's failure to publically disclose (or only partially disclose) specific aspects of its AECDs, these claims are preempted" because "the EPA has already decided what should and should not be disclosed to the public with respect to emissions controls" and thus "the EPA has decided that [this information] may remain confidential." GM Mot. Dismiss at 24-27.
The question raised by GM's argument is whether Congress intended the CAA (or EPA) to regulate the scope of vehicle manufacturer's disclosure obligations to consumers. GM has provided no legal authority to support the proposition that the CAA and/or the EPA is responsible for determining the extent to which vehicle manufacturers must disclose information about the emissions produced by their cars to consumers. The EPA is tasked with environmental protection, not consumer protection. Defendants have not provided "any basis to conclude, that a significant federal regulatory goal of the CAA is consumer protection from false advertising claims regarding emissions compliance, vehicle efficiency, or implementation of new emissions technology." In re Volkswagen "Clean Diesel" Litigation ,
It is undoubtedly true, as Defendants argue, that the EPA requires vehicle manufacturers to provide extensive disclosures to the EPA so that it may determine emissions compliance. And the EPA has further concluded that some of those disclosures will not be made public record by the agency. See, e.g. , EPA Class Determination 1-13, ECF No. 45, Ex. 2. Defendants reference a document produced by the EPA which explains that the EPA will not produce information under the Freedom of Information Act if the requested information involves confidential trade secrets. Id. at 2. GM appears to argue that because the EPA does not have a legal duty to disclose certain information to the public, GM does not have a duty to disclose that information to the public. Simply put, the EPA's duty to disclose information to the public is entirely untethered from GM's duty to disclose information to the public. The idea that the EPA's interpretation of its obligations under the Freedom of Information Act has any bearing on Defendants' obligations to disclose material information to consumers simply has no merit.
B.
Defendants argue that, even if Plaintiffs' claims are not preempted, "Plaintiffs have not plausibly pled that there is any kind of 'defeat device' other than the kind used to defeat EPA regulations that would be material to a reasonable consumers." GM Mot. Dismiss at 28 (emphasis in original). In other words, "[w]hile it might plausibly be material to a reasonable consumer that [the level of emissions allegedly revealed by Plaintiffs' testing] does not comply with EPA regulations, it is not plausible that a reasonable consumer would care about those numbers outside the context of EPA regulations." Id.
This is an argument for a jury. In essence, GM is arguing that consumers care only about compliance with EPA regulations, as opposed to the true level of emissions. That assertion might be true for some consumers, but it cannot possibly be generally accepted as true as a matter of law. Plaintiffs allege that there is a significant consumer demand for environmentally friendly vehicles. See Con. Am. Compl. at 5. And that fact is common knowledge. Many of these vehicles, like the Toyota Prius, emit pollution far below the regulatory maximums. If consumers only cared about regulatory compliance and not the quantitative level of emissions, then vehicle manufacturers would focus their advertising on regulatory compliance, not environmental friendliness. But as already noted twice, Plaintiffs have summarized or reproduced over ten pages of GM advertisements and press releases where the company repeatedly touts the low emissions and environmentally friendly nature of the Duramax engine, but never expressly states that the engine complies with emission regulations. That fact goes without saying: all consumers naturally expect their vehicles to be compliant. Consumers who purposefully buy a "green" vehicle, then, must be (at least partially) basing their purchase decision on the technology in the vehicle which reduces emissions far below that maximum level. Plaintiffs allege that the subject vehicles operate with significant portions of its emissions reduction technology inactive for 65 to 70% of the miles driven. Id. at 3. It is very plausible that a consumer who bought a vehicle because it purportedly contained advanced emissions reduction technology would consider that fact to be material. Id. at 3.
C.
Finally, Defendants argue that this case should be stayed pursuant to the primary jurisdiction doctrine in favor of an EPA investigation. "The doctrine of primary jurisdiction arises when a claim is properly cognizable in court but contains some issue within the special competence of an administrative agency." United States v. Haun ,
Neither factor supports a stay here. The Court has already explained why Plaintiffs' claims are not premised on proof that the Duramax engine involves an "illegal" defeat device or is noncompliant with EPA regulations. Accordingly, the factual questions raised by Plaintiffs' suit are only tangentially within the EPA's specialty. See In re Ford Fusion & C-Max Fuel Econ. Litig. , No. 13-MD-2450 KMK,
Additionally, the primary jurisdiction doctrine should not be invoked if "no administrative forum is available." Haun ,
V.
Defendants also seek dismissal of Plaintiffs' RICO claim, which is contained in the first count in the consolidated amended complaint. In Plaintiffs' words,
For many years now, the RICO Defendants have aggressively sought to increase the sales of Polluting Vehicles in an effort to bolster revenue, augment profits, and increase GM's share of the diesel truck market. Finding it impossible to achieve their goals lawfully, however, the RICO Defendants resorted instead to orchestrating a fraudulent scheme and conspiracy. In particular, the RICO Defendants, along with other entities and individuals, created and/or participated in the affairs of an illegal enterprise ("Clean Diesel Fraud Enterprise") whose direct purpose was to deceive the regulators and the public into believing the Polluting Vehicles were "clean" and "environmentally friendly."
Con. Am. Compl. at 128-29.
The Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act establishes bases for both criminal and civil suits. A RICO civil suit may be brought by "[a]ny person injured in his business or property by reason of a violation of section 1962 of this chapter."
Defendants argue both that Plaintiffs have not established their standing to bring a civil RICO suit and also that Plaintiffs have not adequately alleged the prima facie elements of a RICO claim. GM additionally argues that the RICO claim is an improper attempt to enforce the provisions of the Clean Air Act ("CAA"), violations of which may be prosecuted exclusively pursuant the CAA.
A.
Plaintiffs may assert a RICO claim only if they can identify an injury to their "business or property by reason of a violation of section 1962."
In Reiter v. Sonotone Corp. , the Supreme Court interpreted § 4 of the Clayton Act, which authorizes "[a]ny person who shall be injured in his business or property" by reason of an antitrust law violation to bring suit.
1.
Plaintiffs' alleged injury appears to be analogous: the price of the vehicles they bought was "artificially inflated by reason of [Defendants' fraudulent scheme]."
Defendants argue that In re Bridgestone/Firestone, Inc. Tires Prod. Liab. Litig. supports their interpretation of the RICO injury requirement.
The district court concluded that these alleged injuries were speculative and contingent on future events:
Plaintiffs' assertion of financial loss is grounded in the possibility of future events that may cause them to suffer the loss associated with the products they claim are defective or diminished in value: the tires that they have unilaterally replaced or may replace in the future may suffer tread separation; they may receive on trade-in or resale of their Explorers (or other vehicles equipped with the Tires) less than they would have received absent the alleged defects.
In other words, "[t]he actual failure of the Tires...is a contingency upon which Plaintiffs' economic damages are dependent."
In re: Gen. Motors LLC Ignition Switch Litig. is also instructive. No. 14-MC-2543 (JMF),
McLaughlin addresses the distinction between out-of-pocket-losses (which are cognizable RICO injuries) and benefit-of-the-bargain and price impact damages theories, which are not (because both are expectation-based). That class action case centered on the allegation that the defendant tobacco companies had fraudulently marketed "light cigarettes" as healthier than "full-flavored" cigarettes.
The Second Circuit held that this expectation-based theory was essentially based on a "benefit-of-the-bargain" rationale and that such damages are generally unavailable in RICO suits.
Several Sixth Circuit cases also provide guidance. In Hofstetter v. Fletcher , the RICO defendants "sold millions of dollars worth of insurance policies to scores of individual clients throughout the country by means of a fraudulent promotion whereby the defendants falsely represented that the potential investors could completely avoid payment of any future federal income taxes."
In contrast, the plaintiffs in Fleischhauer v. Feltner brought a RICO claim arising out of the defendants' sale of "non-theatrical rights to distribution of 23 full length feature motion pictures."
2.
To summarize, courts have generally held that damages theories premised on the expectation of future value or profits are too speculative and contingent to establish injury for purposes of RICO. However, "courts have recognized expectation damages under RICO...where an agreement between the parties provided for a certain performance guarantee that the defendant had no intention of keeping." Ignition Switch Litigation ,
There are a number of analogous cases. See In re Merrill Lynch Ltd. Partnerships Litig. ,
In other words, a distinction must be made between damages theories where the (ascertainable and reasonably quantifiable) overpayment occurred at the time of injury and speculative damages theories which are contingent on some future event, lost profit, or unanticipated future expense. Thus, a RICO plaintiff may recover
Plaintiffs allege both speculative and nonspeculative damages here. Some of Plaintiffs' alleged damages are clearly speculative. For example, they allege that "when and if GM recalls the Polluting Vehicles and degrades the GM Clean Diesel engine performance and fuel efficiency in order to make the Polluting Vehicles compliant with EPA standards, Plaintiffs and Class members will be required to spend additional sums on fuel and will not obtain the performance characteristics of their vehicles when purchased." Con. Am. Compl. at 117. Likewise, Plaintiffs allege that "Polluting Vehicles will necessarily be worth less in the marketplace because of their decrease in performance and efficiency and increased wear on their cars' engines."
Plaintiffs additionally allege that "[h]ad Plaintiffs and Class members known of the higher emissions at the time they purchased or leased their Polluting Vehicles, they would not have purchased or leased those vehicles, or would have paid substantially less for the vehicles than they did." Con. Am. Compl. at 117. This alleged injury straddles the line between speculative and concrete. Consumers weigh many factors in choosing a vehicle. While emissions are undoubtedly one such factor, the assertion that the unexpectedly high emissions would have been a material factor for all the Plaintiffs is questionable. Accepting all well-pleaded allegations as true, Plaintiffs have alleged that they would not have purchased the vehicles in question had they known of the true emissions level. Fair enough. But the contention that they "would have paid substantially less" appears to be premised on some approximation of what the new market value for the vehicles would have been. Determining what that decrease in value would have been seems hopelessly speculative. See McLaughlin ,
However, Plaintiffs' first alleged injury clearly suffices to create RICO standing. Plaintiffs contend that they "paid a premium of nearly $9,000, as GM charged more for its Duramax engine than a comparable gas car." Con. Am. Compl. at 115. Plaintiffs thus identify a specific payment attributable directly to the vehicle component at issue which they opted to purchase
Admittedly, several cases appear to support the opposite conclusion. The Ignition Switch Litigation opinion does suggest that a plaintiff who purchases a defective car for more than they would have paid if they were aware of a defect does not state a RICO injury.
More importantly, the Ignition Switch Litigation opinion relies heavily upon the Second Circuit's opinion in McLaughlin , but appears to overlook a crucial aspect of that opinion. In McLaughlin , the Second Circuit was reviewing a district court decision to certify a class action advancing a RICO claim. The court explained that "[o]nly by showing that plaintiffs paid more for light cigarettes than they would have but for defendants' misrepresentation can plaintiffs establish the requisite injury under civil RICO." McLaughlin v. Am. Tobacco Co. ,
To the extent the rationale in Ignition Switch Litigation and Tri-State Express cannot be squared with the conclusion that Plaintiffs have alleged a RICO injury, the Court declines to follow their reasoning. Indeed, such a reading of those two cases appears to be incompatible with the Supreme Court's conclusions in Reiter and the Sixth Circuit's decision in Hofstetter .
B.
Bosch argues that, even if Plaintiffs' alleged injury is sufficient to confer standing to bring a RICO claim against GM, they have not alleged that their injuries were proximately caused by Bosch's conduct. The RICO proximate causation analysis is closely related to (even subsumed in) the statutory standing analysis. The Supreme Court has "held that a plaintiff's right to sue...required a showing that the defendant's violation not only was a 'but for' cause of his injury, but was the proximate cause as well." Holmes ,
In Holmes , a "Securities Investor Protection Corporation" (SIPC) brought suit against defendants who allegedly "conspired in a stock-manipulation scheme." Id. at 261,
In Hemi Grp., LLC v. City of New York, N.Y. , the Supreme Court rejected another RICO claim because the plaintiff's causal theory was even more attenuated than in Holmes . The City of New York advanced the following causal theory:
Hemi committed fraud by selling cigarettes to city residents and failing to submit the required customer information to the State. Without the reportsfrom Hemi, the State could not pass on the information to the City, even if it had been so inclined. Some of the customers legally obligated to pay the cigarette tax to the City failed to do so. Because the City did not receive the customer information, the City could not determine which customers had failed to pay the tax. The City thus could not pursue those customers for payment. The City thereby was injured in the amount of the portion of back taxes that were never collected.
The Supreme Court held that this relationship was too attenuated. The Court explained: "The City's theory thus requires that we extend RICO liability to situations where the defendant's fraud on the third party (the State) has made it easier for a fourth party (the taxpayer) to cause harm to the plaintiff (the City)."
Plaintiffs allege that the direct relationship between Bosch's predicate acts and their injury is "plain-Bosch developed the defeat devices that are at the core of this litigation while knowing that GM would sell Affected Vehicles without revealing the existence of those devices to consumers or anyone else and that consumers would buy them." Pl. Res. Bosch Mot. Dismiss at 25. Bosch argues that this theory is insufficient for several reasons.
1.
First, Bosch contends that "Plaintiffs' alleged harms here are premised upon the 'premium' GM charged for the Subject Vehicles, which GM determined alone." Bosch Mot. Dismiss at 26. Because Bosch was not involved in the pricing decisions, Plaintiffs' injury stems from "separate actions carried out by separate parties." Hemi ,
Bosch does argue, correctly, that the proximate causation analysis must be conducted for each defendant in a RICO case. But, when a conspiracy is alleged, it is inevitable that not all of the RICO defendants will be directly involved in every action which injures the plaintiff.
2.
Bosch next argues that its alleged conduct was not a substantial factor in causing Plaintiffs' injuries. Specifically, Bosch contends that "Plaintiffs' alleged injury was the result of a host of factors including GM's advertising campaign;...the 'premiums' GM charged based on consumer demand for certain features;...reputation of local dealers; market forces such as competition; and promotional discounts." Bosch Mot. Dismiss at 27. Bosch further argues that Plaintiffs' injuries might be "dependent on GM's ability to provide a fix, if necessary, for the Subject Vehicles."
That final argument is clearly inconsistent with Sixth Circuit (and Supreme Court) precedent. As the Sixth Circuit has recently held, "[a]lthough civil RICO plaintiffs must establish proximate causation, they need not necessarily show that they relied on any misrepresentations." In re ClassicStar Mare Lease Litig. ,
In Bridge v. Phoenix Bond & Indem. Co. , the Supreme Court addressed, in detail, the question of whether reliance is an element of a RICO cause of action.
In Bridge , the RICO defendants conspired to "fraudulently obtain[ ] a disproportionate share of [tax] liens by violating the Single, Simultaneous Bidder Rule at" Cook County tax lien auctions.
For similar reasons, Plaintiffs have plausibly alleged that Bosch's joint activities with GM were a substantial factor contributing to their injury. EDC17 is the means by which Plaintiffs were injured. According to Plaintiffs, Bosch "exerts near-total control" over the customization of EDC17, eliminating the possibility that GM programmed the functionality which enables use of defeat devices without Bosch's knowledge. See Con. Am. Compl. at 94-95. Plaintiffs thus plausibly allege that Bosch developed the vehicle component which has caused Plaintiffs' injury, that Bosch was aware of the deception that component would inevitably contribute to, and that Bosch was aware that consumers would pay a premium for vehicle capabilities that the component would not deliver.
To repeat, Plaintiffs were financially injured when they paid a premium for a vehicle component which did not work as a reasonable consumer would have expected. GM and Bosch worked closely together to develop that component, and any injury which resulted was a "foreseeable and natural consequence" of their efforts. Bridge ,
It was also the proximate cause. "[P]roximate cause is not...the same thing as a sole cause." Cox v. Adm'r U.S. Steel & Carnegie ,
3.
Third, Bosch argues that "the difficulty of apportioning damages between Bosch LLC and GM creates the risk of double recovery." Bosch Mot. Dismiss at 28. It is true that the Supreme Court has identified the difficulties of apportioning treble damages among multiple dissimilarly situated plaintiffs as a factor to consider in conducting the proximate causation analysis. See Holmes ,
C.
Defendants alternatively argue that, even if Plaintiffs have standing to bring a RICO claim, they have not alleged the prima facie elements of a RICO claim. The elements of a prima facie RICO claim are: " '(1) conduct (2) of an enterprise (3) through a pattern (4) of racketeering activity.' " Heinrich ,
1.
Defendants argue that Plaintiffs have not adequately alleged either the existence of an enterprise or the required pattern of predicate acts. Bosch additionally argues that Plaintiffs have not plausibly alleged that Bosch participated in the "conduct" of
i.
In order to state a RICO claim, the Plaintiffs must plausibly allege the existence of an enterprise engaged in a pattern of racketeering activity.
Bosch first argues that Plaintiffs have not plausibly alleged that Bosch and GM shared a "common purpose." Turkette ,
GM, the Bosch defendants, and other entities and individuals associated for the common purpose of designing, manufacturing, distributing, testing, and selling the Polluting Vehicles through fraudulent COCs [certificates of compliance] and EOs [Executive Orders], false emissions tests, deceptive and misleading marketing and materials, and deriving profits and revenues from those activities. Each member of the Clean Diesel Fraud Enterprise shared in the bounty generated by the enterprise-i.e., by sharing the benefit derived from increased sales revenue generated by the scheme to defraud consumers and franchise dealers alike nationwide.
Id. at 132-133.
Bosch contends that these allegations do not specify a common purpose. First, Bosch notes that "Plaintiffs make no allegations that Bosch LLC played any role in obtaining the COCs and EOs for GM and the Subject Vehicles." Bosch Mot. Dismiss at 30. Bosch further characterizes the complaint as framing "generalized allegations concerning unspecified communications with regulators that fail to specify the who, what, when, and where of the alleged communications or any reason to believe they were truthful." Id. In fact, Bosch attempts to explain away all of Bosch's alleged involvement as being related only to the Volkswagen emissions scandal.
These arguments miss the point. Plaintiffs' essential theory is that Bosch and GM
ii.
Second, Defendants argue that any alleged relationship between them is simply a routine business relationship which is insufficient to create RICO liability. "[S]imply conspiring to commit a fraud is not enough to trigger the Act if the parties are not organized in a fashion that would enable them to function as a racketeering organization for other purposes." VanDenBroeck v. CommonPoint Mortg. Co. ,
1) individual defendants are always distinct from corporate enterprises because they are legally distinct entities, even when those individuals own the corporations or act only on their behalf; and 2) corporate defendants are distinct from RICO enterprises when they are functionally separate, as when they perform different roles within the enterprise or use their separate legal incorporation to facilitate racketeering activity.
In re ClassicStar Mare Lease Litig. ,
Here, GM and Bosch are clearly different corporate entities and performed different roles within the enterprise. Their association thus satisfies the fundamental requirements of a RICO enterprise.
Defendants correctly argue that courts have overwhelming held that a "routine commercial relationship" is insufficient to form the basis for a RICO enterprise. The district court in Gomez v. Guthy-Renker, LLC has provided both an exhaustive exposition of the law and an example of the typical fact pattern which plaintiffs allege. No. EDCV1401425JGBKKX,
Some provider of services ("Provider") has a business client ("Business"). Completely unbeknownst to Provider, Business is conducting its affairs fraudulently. Someone ("Injured Party") is injured by Business's fraudulent practices andwishes to seek compensation from Business.
"Despite the widespread consensus among courts that such routine business relationships are insufficient to impose RICO liability, there has been very little agreement among courts as to which particular RICO requirement fails under such circumstances." Id. at *9. Some courts, like the Second Circuit, require that "the common purpose of an association be fraudulent in order for it to constitute a RICO enterprise." Id. (citing First Capital Asset Mgmt., Inc. v. Satinwood, Inc. ,
The Gomez court discusses other rationales that various courts have promulgated when confronted with this issue, but all can be summarized as demonstrating "a remarkable uniformity [among federal courts] that RICO liability must be predicated on a relationship more substantial than a routine contract between a service provider and its client." Id. at *11. The alleged business relationship which the Defendants entered into here, however, is far from "routine." Defendants' assertion that Bosch has supplied a number of legitimate vehicle components to GM is, simply, irrelevant. Those contractual relationships are not part of the illegal enterprise which Plaintiffs allege existed.
Plaintiffs allege that Defendants participated in an enterprise with the purpose of defrauding consumers. They "associated for the common purpose of designing, manufacturing, distributing, testing, and selling the Polluting Vehicles through fraudulent COCs and EOs, false emissions tests, and deceptive and misleading marketing and materials, and deriving profits and revenues from those activities." Con. Am. Compl. at 132. The alleged course of conduct is inherently deceptive: Bosch and GM collaborated to create an engine which performed one way when being tested for emissions and another way when in normal use. See also In re Volkswagen "Clean Diesel" Mktg., Sales Practices, & Prod. Liab. Litig. ,
In other words, Plaintiffs have plausibly alleged that both Bosch and GM were engaged in an enterprise with the manifest purpose of defrauding both regulators and consumers.
Bosch alternatively argues that no RICO enterprise exists because Plaintiffs do not allege that Bosch "had any financial interest in the success of the purported enterprise other than its own compensation for performing the tasks for which it was hired." Bosch Mot. Dismiss at 32. Bosch cites Guaranteed Rate, Inc. v. Barr for that proposition.
The Court agrees. And, more importantly, Bosch's argument is factually suspect. Although GM's profits from sales of Duramax-equipped vehicles might be distinct from Bosch's profits for development and implementation of EDC17 in those vehicles, all Defendants clearly profited from the alleged scheme. EDC17 enabled GM to produce diesel vehicles with an apparent blend of high power, high fuel efficiency, and low emission levels. Because that combination was attractive to consumers, the scheme resulted in higher demand for GM's diesel vehicles, which in turn increased GM's demand for EDC17 devices. The scheme thus plausibly resulted both in higher sales of diesel vehicles for GM and higher sales of EDC17 for Bosch.
The next question is whether Plaintiffs have alleged that the Defendants both engaged in a pattern of racketeering activity. Pursuant to § 1961(d), a " 'pattern of racketeering activity' requires at least two acts of racketeering activity, one of which occurred after the effective date of this chapter and the last of which occurred within ten years (excluding any period of imprisonment) after the commission of a prior act of racketeering activity." Defendants argue, correctly, that Plaintiffs must allege that each Defendant engaged in two predicate acts of racketeering activity. See Kerrigan v. ViSalus, Inc. ,
Here, Plaintiffs allege that Defendants engaged in multiple predicate acts of mail and wire fraud. To state a claim based on mail or wire fraud, the Plaintiffs must allege the following three elements: "(1) devising or intending to devise a scheme to defraud (or to perform specified fraudulent acts); (2) involving a use of the mails; and (3) for the purpose of executing the scheme or attempting to do so. United States v. Kennedy ,
Importantly, "[a] defendant may commit mail fraud even if he personally has not used the mails." Frost ,
"When pleading predicate acts of mail or wire fraud, in order to satisfy the heightened pleading requirements of Rule 9(b), a plaintiff must '(1) specify the statements that the plaintiff contends were fraudulent, (2) identify the speaker, (3) state where and when the statements were made, and (4) explain why the statements were fraudulent.' " Heinrich ,
GM argues, first, that Plaintiffs' allegations regarding GM's advertising campaign are insufficient to establish affirmative misrepresentations because all claims made in that campaign are nonactionable puffery. Plaintiffs contend that their "RICO claim does not require any proof of affirmative misrepresentations because the omission of material facts suffices to prove the predicate acts of mail or wire fraud." Pl. Resp. GM Mot. Dismiss at 10. That is correct. See Bender ,
The more pertinent question, then, is whether Plaintiffs have adequately alleged fraudulent omissions. Defendants contend that Plaintiffs do not allege any fraudulent omissions "with the factual specificity mandated by Rule 9(b)." GM Mot. Dismiss at 40. But, as discussed earlier, allegations of omissions-as opposed to affirmative misrepresentations-will inevitably be less specific. Misrepresentations occur at a definite point in time, but omissions occur over periods of time. And, because misrepresentations involve action while omissions involve inaction, plaintiffs are less likely to uncover discrete evidence of omissions. See Beck ,
When considered from that perspective, Plaintiffs' allegations of fraudulent conduct are clearly sufficient to apprise Defendants of the alleged fraudulent scheme. Defendants argue that Plaintiffs have not plausibly alleged that both GM and Bosch had specific intent to defraud consumers. But, as explained above, that intent can be inferred from the nature of the alleged conduct. The way in which EDC17 interacted with the Duramax engine is inherently deceptive. The alleged purpose of the device is to provide the perception of reduced emissions while avoiding the reality of reduced emissions. Defendants cannot reasonably argue that the deceptive nature of EDC17 was unanticipated or unintended, and even if they do, that argument could be resolved only by a jury. Plaintiffs have plausibly alleged that the purpose of EDC17 was deception, and so Defendants' protestations that it has an innocent and lawful purpose are noncognizable at the pleading stage.
Defendants also appear to argue that Plaintiffs have not plausibly alleged or specifically identified specific uses of the mail or wire which were fraudulent. But the Sixth Circuit has clearly held that a RICO claim can exist even if the mailings were "innocent" or "legally necessary." Frost ,
In making the argument that Plaintiffs must specifically allege fraudulent uses of the mail and wires, Defendants conflate several legal requirements. As described above, Plaintiffs bear the burden of alleging
Plaintiffs have adequately alleged a number of uses of the mail and wire which furthered the fraudulent scheme. GM submitted applications to government regulators which affirmed that the vehicles complied with emission standards. Without those mailings and electronic communications, GM would have been unable to sell the vehicles. The applications and resulting certificates also increased the likelihood that consumers would perceive the Duramax vehicles as emitting pollution at a low level. And although Bosch may not have directly used the mail or wire to further the fraudulent scheme, GM's uses of the mail and wire were inevitable and thus reasonably foreseeable. Plaintiffs have not specifically alleged the date of the applications or the specific identity of the employee who prepared them, but Plaintiffs have alleged enough detail to put Defendants on notice of the alleged predicate acts.
Additionally, Plaintiffs have identified a number of advertisements made by GM which characterized the Duramax vehicles as having low emissions and as being friendly to the environment. See Con. Am. Compl. at 61-70. If Plaintiffs were relying on these advertisements as the basis for its claim of fraud, then Defendants' arguments regarding puffery and duty to disclose would become relevant. However, these representations do not constitute the fraudulent scheme; they merely further it. The level of emissions produced by a diesel engine was a material consideration for consumers purchasing a vehicle. GM's extensive advertising which emphasized the low emissions and environmentally-friendly nature of its "clean diesel" engine underscores its understanding of that fact. Thus, regardless of whether these advertisements would be actionable on their own, they were material to the scheme. The advertisements urged consumers to buy Duramax vehicles because they were environmentally friendly even though the Defendants had purposefully worked together to obfuscate the true level of emissions.
Plaintiffs have specifically identified a number of communications that were "reasonably calculated to deceive persons of ordinary prudence and comprehension." Bender ,
ii.
Bosch alternatively argues that Plaintiffs cannot rely on alleged omissions unless they can demonstrate that Bosch had an independent duty to disclose. Some noncontrolling cases do appear to support this proposition. See United States v. Skeddle ,
But other courts have squarely rejected this rationale. United States v. Colton ,
Neither Plaintiffs nor Defendants have identified Sixth Circuit authority which expressly addresses this question. The Sixth Circuit has, however, repeatedly confirmed that concealment of material facts can constitute a fraudulent scheme sufficient to establish RICO liability. See, e.g., Daniel,
And, importantly, "[a] false or fraudulent representation, within the meaning of
3.
Finally, Bosch argues that Plaintiffs have not plausibly alleged that Bosch participated in the conduct of the RICO enterprise by directing the enterprise's affairs. Bosch similarly argues that Plaintiffs cannot join Bosch as a RICO Defendant by alleging that Bosch aided and abetted GM in violating the wire and mail fraud statutes. Finally, Bosch and GM both argue that Plaintiffs cannot maintain a RICO conspiracy claim if they do not allege a cognizable substantive RICO claim.
i.
In Reves v. Ernst & Young , the Supreme Court addressed the requirement that a RICO defendant "conduct or participate, directly or indirectly, in the conduct of such enterprise's affairs."
Once we understand the word "conduct" to require some degree of direction and the word "participate" to require some part in that direction, the meaning of § 1962(c) comes into focus. In order to "participate, directly or indirectly, in the conduct of such enterprise's affairs," one must have some part in directing those affairs. Of course, the word "participate" makes clear that RICO liability is not limited to those with primary responsibility for the enterprise's affairs, just as the phrase "directly or indirectly" makes clear that RICO liability is not limited to those with a formal position in the enterprise, but some part in directing the enterprise's affairs is required.
"[L]iability [under § 1962(c) ] depends on showing that the defendants conducted or participated in the conduct of the "enterprise's affairs," not just their own affairs."
Bosch argues that Plaintiffs' allegations establish simply that Bosch "worked together with GM to design and implement software and that Bosch LLC participated in promoting clean diesel technology generally." Bosch Mot. Dismiss at 35. According
This argument is simply a repackaging of Bosch's previous argument that no RICO enterprise has been alleged because the relationship between the Defendants was merely a routine business relationship. That argument was rejected above and carries no additional persuasive weight here. Plaintiffs allege that Bosch was an integral part of the operation of the enterprise because Bosch "locked out" EDC17 so that its customers could not make significant changes to the component. Rather, Bosch worked closely with its customers to customize EDC17. Plaintiffs' allegations characterize EDC17 as performing an inherently deceptive function. Thus, the operation of EDC17 is the apparent heart of the fraudulent enterprise and, because Bosch bears primary responsibility for programming EDC17, it "knowingly carried...out" core aspects of the alleged enterprise. Fowler ,
ii.
Thus, Plaintiffs have adequately alleged the elements of a § 1962(c) substantive RICO claim against both GM and Bosch. Both Defendants argue that, to the extent Plaintiffs have not alleged a cognizable substantive RICO claim, they cannot maintain a § 1962(d) RICO conspiracy claim against the Defendants. The premise of that argument has been rejected, and so the RICO conspiracy claim will not be dismissed.
D.
Finally, GM argues that Plaintiffs' RICO claim must be dismissed because it is essentially an attempt to enforce the Clean Air Act via a civil suit. In support of that argument, GM cites three cases (none involving suits to enforce the CAA) where courts concluded that extensive regulatory schemes provided the exclusive remedies for violations of regulatory statutes and preventing the plaintiffs from invoking RICO to obtain treble damages. See Ayres v. Gen. Motors Corp. ,
This argument is largely coterminous with Defendants' argument, rejected above, that Plaintiffs' state law claims are preempted by the CAA. Plaintiffs' allegations are not dependent upon proof of violation of federal emission regulations. That said, Plaintiffs' allegations are confusing because they repeatedly allege that Defendants purposefully deceived government regulators about the true emission levels of the Duramax engine. Plaintiffs allege, however, that their suit is "not based on these laws but on deception aimed at consumers." Con. Am. Compl. at 5.
For largely the same reasons articulated while rejecting Defendants' argument that Plaintiffs' state law claims are preempted, Plaintiffs' RICO claim is not primarily premised on proof of violation of EPA regulations and thus is cognizable. The alleged common purpose at the heart of the RICO scheme is the deception of consumers. The alleged injury is overpayment by consumers. The identified predicate acts of mail and wire fraud involve communications to consumers. Admittedly, Plaintiffs also allege that the RICO Defendants intended to deceive regulators and made fraudulent mail and wire communications to regulators. But neither of those allegations are essential to Plaintiffs' RICO claim. Accordingly, they are best construed as "collateral matter[s]" that are "only peripherally related to the" regulatory concerns advanced by EPA regulations. Norman ,
VI.
The final question is whether Plaintiffs should be permitted to proceed to discovery on state law claims advanced on behalf of unnamed, putative class members. Defendants argue that these claims should be dismissed because Plaintiffs do not have standing to advance claims on behalf of unnamed Plaintiffs prior to class certification. Plaintiffs argue that this analysis is best reserved until class certification because that determination will resolve the standing issue.
"Threshold individual standing is a prerequisite for all actions, including class actions." Fallick v. Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co. ,
GM attempts to argue that the standing question would exist regardless of whether Plaintiffs filed their claims alone or as part of a putative class action. But GM does not explain why that is the case, and the Court cannot conceive of a reason. The named Plaintiffs have Article III standing and, if the class is certified, then those Plaintiffs will be able to advance state law claims on behalf of unnamed Plaintiffs. The question of whether the state law claims may be advanced on behalf of unnamed Plaintiffs, then, is indistinguishable from the Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23 analysis. See Kaatz ,
VII.
Accordingly, it is ORDERED that Defendants' motions to dismiss, ECF No. 44, 45, are DENIED.
It is further ORDERED that Plaintiffs' motion for leave to file a surreply, ECF No. 58, is DENIED as moot.
It is further ORDERED that Defendant GM's motion to file a surresponse, ECF No. 60, is DENIED as moot.
Notes
Prior to filing, GM and Bosch requested leave to submit briefs of 80 (and 60, respectively) pages in support of their motions to dismiss. ECF Nos. 35, 39. In response, the Court directed the Defendants to submit an outline of their anticipated briefs and suggested that judicial efficiency might be served by waiting to advance state-specific challenges to Plaintiffs' claims in a motion filed pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(c). ECF No. 36. Defendants were amenable to the latter suggestion and, accordingly, the Court granted the parties leave to submit briefs of 50 pages (and reply briefs of 15 pages). ECF No. 42.
Those states are Arizona, Arkansas, California, Louisiana, Michigan, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, and Texas.
This purported achievement would be particularly noteworthy because diesel engines "have an inherent trade-off between power, fuel efficiency, and emissions: the greater the power and fuel efficiency, the dirtier and more harmful the emissions." Id. at 46.
In the consolidated amended complaint, Plaintiffs summarize, in detail, the testing they conducted on a 2013 Silverado 2500. Id. at 70-92.
Plaintiffs analogize these alleged devices to those which Volkswagen has recently pleaded guilty to including in their diesel vehicles and which other vehicle manufacturers have been accused of utilizing. See id. at 2.
The SCR converts oxides of nitrogen (a harmful pollutant produced by diesel engines) into nitrogen gas and water "by means of a reduction reaction." Id. at 50. The DPF traps and stores particulate matter (soot). Id. at 51. The DPF is "cleaned through a process known as regeneration." Id. "Passive regeneration" is a "continuously occurring process" which occurs whenever "the exhaust gas temperature is high enough to burn the particulate matter trapped by the filter." Id. "Active regeneration occurs only when the engine senses that the DPF needs to be cleaned as the DPF is approaching maximum capacity and generating too much exhaust backpressure." Id. In that scenario, "fuel is injected into the exhaust stream via the HCI to increase the exhaust gas temperature so that the particulate matter can be burned off at carbon's non-catalytic oxidation temperature." Id. Because fuel is being used for a purpose other than propulsion, "[a]ctive regeneration dramatically reduces fuel economy." Id.
This decision is puzzling because Bosch appears to admit in their briefing that Plaintiffs' "overpayment" theory is sufficient to establish standing to sue GM. Bosch focuses its argument on the assertion that any such overpayment is not attributable to Bosch's actions. See Bosch. Mot. Dismiss at 12, ECF No. 44 ("But Plaintiffs do not have standing to sue Bosch LLC-rather than GM-unless their injury "fairly can be traced" to the actions of Bosch LLC....Any overpayment based on artificially inflated market price cannot fairly be traced to the actions of Bosch LLC, which is not alleged to have advertised directly to consumers or have had any control over the price of the Subject Vehicles."). Nevertheless, because the Court has an independent obligation to confirm its own jurisdiction, Plaintiffs' standing to sue GM will be briefly addressed.
Bosch also argues that Plaintiffs' overpayment theory should be interpreted as essentially a "benefit-of-the-bargain" argument and suggests that such a theory is insufficient to establish standing because Bosch was not a party to any vehicle-purchase contracts with consumers. But a consumer can establish a concrete injury by alleging that he or she "received a product that failed to work for its intended purpose or was worth objectively less than what one could reasonably expect," regardless of whether the purchase was made pursuant to a contract. Koronthaly v. L'Oreal USA, Inc. ,
Plaintiffs have expressly disclaimed any claims premised on affirmative misrepresentation (discussed below).
In further support of the contention that GM has publically disclosed the existence of AECDs which are present in the subject vehicles, GM points to a publically available document which purports to show that GM provided "AECD Descriptions" to the EPA. See GM Reply Br. at 5 & Ex. 5, ECF No. 57. Information from outside the pleadings cannot be considered at the pleading stage, with several limited exceptions. Tackett v. M & G Polymers, USA, L.L.C. ,
The relevance of the document purportedly submitted to the EPA is the primary subject of the parties' motions for leave to file surreplies. See ECF No. 58, 60. Because the document cannot be considered for the purpose it was submitted and would not change the Court's analysis even if reviewed, those motions will be denied as moot.
There are a number of potential theories which Plaintiffs could have conceivably advanced and which would have been squarely preempted. For example, if Plaintiffs were seeking damages based solely on Defendants' alleged violations of the CAA, their suit would be preempted. Likewise, if Plaintiffs' claims were "predicated on deceit against the EPA during new-vehicle certification," their claims would be preempted. In re Volkswagen "Clean Diesel" Mktg., Sales Practices, & Prod. Liab. Litig. ,
The consolidated amended complaint also discusses the EPA's definition of a defeat device, but that definition is alleged in connection with allegations regarding the EPA's conclusion that Volkswagen's diesel vehicles violated the CAA. Id. at 6. In their briefing, Defendants repeatedly contend that allegations regarding the conduct of other diesel vehicle manufacturers is irrelevant, and so Defendants cannot reasonably point to these allegations when arguing that Plaintiffs' claims should be preempted.
And even this allegation is focused on consumer expectations about compliance, not the compliance itself. See In re Volkswagen "Clean Diesel" Litigation ,
Notwithstanding this fact, Plaintiffs (and the Court) frequently use the term "defeat device" as a short hand for the manner in which EDC17 allegedly uses several features to bypass or derate emissions reduction technologies in certain circumstances. That term has entered the common parlance, and so the fact that the EPA has also provided a legal definition for the term "defeat device" does not mean that every use of the term "defeat device" necessarily involves a reference to that regulatory definition.
In other words, proof that Defendants concealed material information from the EPA will almost certainly provide the factual predicate to sustain Plaintiffs' state law claims, but the inverse is not necessarily true.
GM's argument regarding implied preemption might have merit if "Plaintiffs' claims could be construed as alleging that AEDC disclosures to the government should have been made public," but as explained above Plaintiffs' claims are premised on Defendants' nondisclosures to consumers, not the EPA. GM. Mot. Dismiss at 27.
Bosch also argues that the state law claims brought against it should be dismissed because they are preempted. In so arguing, Bosch also attempts to argue that all of Plaintiffs' claims against them are expressly premised on Bosch's alleged efforts to evade United States emission requirements. But Plaintiffs are not advancing state law claims of that nature. To the extent Bosch argues that Plaintiffs have not stated any state law claims against them because they have not plausibly pleaded a connection between Bosch's conduct and the fraudulent concealment, that argument is best left for the (presumptive) motions by Defendants for judgment on the pleadings.
The Clayton Act included a civil-action provision which permitted private parties to sue for injuries arising out of antitrust law violations. The Supreme Court has "repeatedly observed...that Congress modeled § 1964(c) on the civil-action provision of the federal antitrust law." Holmes v. Sec. Inv'r Prot. Corp. ,
Thus, even though the alleged RICO injury is sufficient to create standing, the nature of the alleged injury might prevent class certification.
And Chief Justice Robert's opinion (joined by three justices) took care to reject the argument advanced by three dissenting justices that "RICO's proximate cause requirement [should] turn on foreseeability, rather than on the existence of a sufficiently 'direct relationship' between the fraud and the harm." Id. at 12,
This is not the say, however, that Plaintiffs may advance a § 1962(c) RICO claim against Bosch without identifying specific predicate acts committed by Bosch. See Kerrigan v. ViSalus, Inc. ,
Bosch's arguments conflate the distinction between (1) the requirement that Plaintiffs allege a causal link between their injury and the predicate acts and (2) the elements of mail and wire fraud. As discussed below, a party can be guilty of mail fraud even if they did not personally use the mail. The fact that GM, not Bosch, is the party who used the mail and wire to make representations to regulators and consumers is thus not determinative. See United States v. Stapleton ,
The Defendants do not attempt to argue that the relationship which Plaintiffs allege existed between them was too short to give rise to a RICO association-in-fact. And Defendants decline to make that argument for good reason: Plaintiffs allege that Defendants' enterprise spanned years.
Plaintiffs allege that Bosch and GM conspired together. The additional allegation that Bosch also conspired in similar manner with Volkswagen is largely irrelevant. It is, at the very least, consistent with Plaintiffs' theory. Bosch's apparent belief that the alleged existence of a similar but separate agreement affirmatively establishes that no such agreement existed between Bosch and GM is unexplained. The Plaintiffs' well-pleaded allegations must be construed in their favor and accepted as true at this stage.
The nature of the common purpose distinguishes this case from others, like Shaw v. Nissan N. Am., Inc. , where the alleged purpose was to continue selling vehicles that (might have) contained defects.
The fact that two distinct companies (Bosch and GM) associated together for a common purpose is important. That fact distinguishes the present case from several which Defendants cite. See Ignition Switch Litig. ,
The Sixth Circuit has "interpreted the mail-fraud and wire-fraud statutes as having essentially the same elements, except for the use of the mails versus the wires." Kennedy ,
As the Kerrigan Court explained, when the RICO claim is premised on a concealment theory of fraud, the plaintiffs do not need to meet the Rule 9(b) heightened pleading standard when identifying the mailings. Rather, Plaintiffs need only "provide a detailed description of the fraudulent scheme and a clear explanation of each Defendant's alleged role in it."
Bosch also argues that Plaintiffs cannot satisfy the predicate act requirement by alleging that Bosch "aided and abetted" GM in violating the mail and wire fraud statutes. As explained above, this argument conflates several legal requirements. Plaintiffs must allege that Bosch engaged in two predicate acts under the RICO statute. The alleged predicate acts, mail and wire fraud, can be committed without actually using the mail or wire. A charge of mail or wire fraud, then, bears a certain resemblance to conspiracy law. As explained above, Plaintiffs have plausibly alleged that Bosch committed predicate acts of mail and wire fraud. Thus, Plaintiffs' RICO theory does not rely upon "aiding or abetting" liability.
