Plaintiff-appellant David Efron, a member of a limited partnership formed to build and operate an Embassy Suites hotel in Puerto Rico, claims that several of his partners intentionally caused the project to experience financial difficulties in a scheme to extract additional money from him and other investors and, ultimately, to squeeze down the value of Efron’s substantial interest in the partnership. Efron brought a civil suit under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c), (d), and Puer-to Rico law. Concluding that the allegations in the complaint did not show RICO violations, the court dismissed the federаl claims and declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the Commonwealth claims.
See Efron v. Embassy Suites (Puerto Rico), Inc.,
I. Factual Background
We narrate the allegations contained in the complaint and RICO case statement in the' light most favorable to appellant.
See Feinstein v. Resolution Trust Corp.,
Efron alleges that the defendants deliberately caused the hotel project to lose money by generating excessive construction costs, engaging in sweetheart leases with the on-site restaurant and gift shop, overpricing rooms, and performing other acts of mismanagement. According to the complaint, ESPR purposefully created artificial cash shortfalls, which under the Partnership agreement could be covered by capital calls to the limited partners. The agreement specified that a partner who did not provide the requested capital could have his interest reduced proportionately. Efron alleges that, to protect his initial investment and avoid losing his equity, he was forced to invest an additional $1 million in response to such cаpital calls. 1
Efron filed suit in October 1997. The amended complaint identified seventeen instances of alleged mail or wire fraud during a twenty-one-month period as the unlawful acts supporting a RICO claim, the first of which was a letter sent to the partners by Rubi on January 11, 1996, stating that the project was experiencing cost overruns of about $7 million. The subsequent letters fall into two general categories: (1) communications that relate to the project’s cost overruns and possible solutions, namely, capital contributions from the partners and refinancing, and (2) communications that concern appellant’s efforts to review the Partnership books and obtain information about the restaurant and other lease arrangements.
In addition to the substantive RICO claim, see 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c), the amend- ' ed complaint asserted a RICO conspiracy cause of action, see 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d), as well as claims under Commonwealth law for fraud, breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, and violation of the Puerto Rico RICO act.
The district court rejected defendants’ argument that the amended complaint lacked the particularity required for fraud claims under Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b), but it concluded that appellant had not adequately alleged a pattern of racketeering activity. It alternatively ruled that Efron lacked standing to bring the RICO claims either individually or derivatively on behalf of the Partnership. Having dismissed the federal RICO claims, the court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction to hear the Commonwealth law claims. On appeal, Efron contends that the court improperly viewed the alleged facts and inferences in the defendants’ favor, leading it to conclude wrongly that he had failed to establish the elements of a RICO violation and conspiracy. He further maintains that the amended complaint demonstrates his standing, both individually for his unique damages and derivatively for the Partnership.
We turn now to the issue which we deem dispositive — whether the amended complaint described a “pattern” of racketeering activity. We first sketch the general principles governing RICO claims and then evaluate appellant’s specific contentions in light of those standards.
II. Discussion
To state a RICO claim under section 1962(c), a plaintiff must allege each of the four elements required by the statute: “ ‘(1) conduct (2) of an enterprise (3)
*15
through a pattern (4) of racketeering activity.’ ”
Feinstein,
We have more than once remarked upon the difficulty of articulating concrete guidelines for this “continuity plus relationship” standard for identifying a pattern.
See Schultz v. Rhode Island Hosp. Trust Nat’l Bank, N.A.,
The continuity element, which lacks statutory illumination, has proved more puzzling. Noting that it is “difficult to formulate in the abstract any general tеst for continuity,” the Supreme Court in
H.J. Inc.
nonetheless provided a starting point for analysis.
See
For there to be continuity, the plaintiff must show that the related predicates “amounted to, or posed a threat of, continued criminal activity.” ... Under the “amounting] to” approach, “[a] party alleging a RICO violation may demonstrate continuity ... by proving a series of related predicates extending over a substantial period of time.” H.J.,492 U.S. at 242 ,109 S.Ct. 2893 . Because RICO was intended by Congress to apply only to enduring criminal conduct, “[predicate acts extending over a few weeks or months ... do not satisfy this requirement.” Id. Under the “threat” *16 approach, however, even where the predicate acts occur in a narrow time frame and suit is brought before the pattern has taken definitive shape, the requirement can still be satisfied by ... a showing that “the racketeering acts themselves include a specific threat of repetition extending indefinitely into the future [or] ... are part of an ongoing entity’s regular way of doing business.” Id.
Feinstein,
The Supreme Court thus described continuity as “both a closed-and open-ended concept, referring either to a closed period of repeated conduct, or to past conduct that by its nаture projects into the future with a threat of repetition.”
H.J. Inc.,
In this case, the district court ruled that the allegations in appellant’s complaint failed to establish either type of continuity. After trimming the number of actionable letters and faxes to eight,
4
it held that “[t]he acts are simply too few and the time period too short” to establish a closed period of racketeering activity,
see
Before we address the сourt’s conclusion on the merits, we discuss two preliminary issues. Efron claims on appeal that the court erred in disregarding the faxes and refusing to consider ah of the specified fraudulent mailings. He claims that, under
New England Data Servs., Inc. v. Becher,
A second preliminary issue merits comment. It is whether the pleadings sufficiently indicate that appellant’s injuries were caused by the predicate acts of wire and mail fraud. That such a causal nexus must exist is well established.
See Holmes v. Securities Investor Protection Corp.,
On the facts, the lack of causation seems to be a significant possibility. Efron entered the partnership before any of the alleged predicate acts occurred, and thus without reliance on any misrepresentations. He asserts that he was coerced into paying $1 million beyond his original contribution to preserve his equity, but he does not allege that he was deceived by the written requests for additional capital. Instead, he desсribes his “injury-in-fact” as the prospect of a squeezed-down equity position in the partnership, which would have been a by-product of his refusal to contribute all of the requested funds but not necessarily a loss occasioned by misrepresentations or false assurances. In his RICO case statement, Efron suggests that he was the only one of the three victim partners who was not deceived, asserting that the defendants “conducted their misdeeds under unsuspecting eyes, except for Efron.” (Emphasis added.)
Despite this seeming weakness in appellant’s RICO claim, we are disinclined to rest a judgment on a decision of the causation issue. It was alluded to in appellees’ briefs only in a list of pleading requirements, and it was the subject of brief treatment by the parties at oral argument. It is conceivable that an extremely generous reading of the complaint might allow the inference that Efron contributed $1 million beyond his original investment in response to the defendants’ written requests because he initially was deceived into believing there was a legitimate need for the funds. In any event, our disposition makes it unnecessary to explore further the question of whether the mailings caused a loss to appellant.
We therefore move to the merits and the issue of continuity, accepting for purposes of our discussion that all seventeen alleged acts of wire and mail fraud are viable predicate acts under the RICO statute. Although the twenty-one month time frame for these communications meets the Supreme Court’s requirement for closed continuity of more than “a few weeks or months,”
H.J. Inc.,
The Supreme Court in
H.J. Inc.
noted Congress’s “natural and commonsense approach to RICO’s pattern element,”
see
Having considered carefully the various factors here, we have concluded that the allegations do not demonstrate the kind of broad or ongoing criminal behavior at which the RICO statute was aimed. In essence, appellant alleges a scheme to diminish the value of the project in the short run, pressing plaintiff and two others to yield up their interests so that the schemers could own and control the whole project. Although multiple related acts of deception were claimed to underlay the faxes and mailings, all allegedly were aimed at the single goal of transforming the ownership of the Partnership during its early stages. See Amended Complaint, ¶ 19 (defendants’ goal was “to dilute the interests of the Special Partners and to siphon away Partnership assets” to gain “outright control of the Partnership”). The three named victims were not separately targeted through repetitions of criminal conduct, which could have reflected persistent or broad-based crime; their injury instead resulted from a single set of alleged misdeeds and occurred at the same time.
*19
This narrow attack on three partners’ participation in a particular business venture is qualitatively different from the single scheme underlying
H.J. Inc.
The plaintiffs there had alleged that telephone company officials and others had engaged in multiple acts of bribery over at least a six-year period to obtain approval for unfairly and unreasonably high rates.
Although a RICO pattern need not have countless victims, the finite nature of the racketeering activities alleged here, together with their occurrence over a relatively modest period of time, cannot, in our view, support a jury finding of a RICO pattern under the “closed” continuity approach. Our own precedent firmly rеjects RICO liability where “the alleged racketeering acts ..., ‘taken together, ... comprise a single effort’ to facilitate a single financial endeavor,”
Schultz,
Nor is it reasonable to infer from the allegations here that there is a risk of a broader scheme, or that the fraudulent acts directed at appellant would continue indefinitely into the future, either of which might support a conclusion of “open-ended” continuity. There is nothing to suggest that the defendants would seek to repeat their fraud in other partnerships or similar business settings, or to employ mail and wire fraud indefinitely in the Embassy Suites partnership, thereby showing that racketeering activity might be a “regular way of conducting defendant’s ongoing legitimate business ... or of conducting or participating in an ongoing and legitimate RICO ‘enterprise,’ ”
H.J. Inc.,
Viewing the Partnership as either the RICO enterprise or defendants’ “ongoing legitimate business,” the scenario painted by Efron’s pleadings does not threaten the “long-term criminal conduct” with which Congress was concerned,
see H.J. Inc.,
It is true that the scheme as alleged already had spanned twenty-one months, and that its exact endpoint could not be ascertained from the pleadings because it depended upon Efron’s and the other victim partners’ refusal to respond to capital calls large enough to result in squeezing down théir interests in the Partnership. This is far different, however, from the open-ended continuity illustrated by the single scheme described in
H.J. Inc.,
an endeavor that apparently would have gone on without end had it not been detected.
See
We note that courts, including our own, have suggested that RICO claims premised on mail or wire fraud must be particularly scrutinized because of the relative ease with which a plaintiff may mold a RICO pattern from allegations that, upon closer scrutiny, do not support it.
See, e.g., Schultz,
Virtually every garden-variety fraud is accomplished through a series of wire or mail fraud acts that are “related” by purpose and spread over a period of at least severаl months. Where such a fraudulent scheme inflicts or threatens only a single injury, we continue to doubt that Congress intended to make the availability of treble damages and augmented criminal sanctions [under RICO] dependent solely on whether the fraudulent scheme is well enough conceived to enjoy prompt success or requires pursuit for an extended period of *21 time. Given its “natural and common sense approach to RICO’s pattern element,” we think it unlikely that Congress intended RICO to apply in the absence of a more significant societal threat.
United States Textiles, Inc.,
In sum, while the complaint pleads a series of related racketeering acts and permits an inference that defendants defrauded appellant and two of his partners, we agree with the district court’s determination that no reasonable jury could find that these allegations establish a RICO “pattern.” Taken together, the acts as alleged comprise a single effort, over a finite period of time, to wrest control of a particular partnership from a limited number of its partners. This cannot be a RICO violation.
III. Other issues
Our conclusion that appellant has failed to adequately plead a substantive violation of RICO makes it unnecessary for us to consider his other claims оf error. Questions concerning his standing obviously are moot. In addition, his conspiracy claim is without merit. A conspiracy claim under section 1962(d) may survive
& fact-finder’s
conclusion that there is insufficient evidence to prove a RICO violation,
Howard v. America Online, Inc.,
The judgment of the district court is therefore affirmed.
Notes
. The complaint elaborated on the improper practices as follows: the cost overruns allegedly rеsulted from (1) payments to a Rubi-owned company in excess of the value of goods and services received; (2) subcontractor bills from other Rubi projects that were shifted onto the Partnership, and (3) construe-lion delays from the late addition to the project of the Outback restaurant. Cash shortfalls continued to build after the hotel was completed because the defendants allegedly overpriced rooms and failed to adequately market the hotel’s services. In addition, the lease arrangement with Outback allegedly benefited Rubi to the detriment of the Partnership, and the lease to the hotel’s gift shop allegedly was below market value,
. Section 1962(c) provides, in relevant part:
, „ , , . , . It shall be unlawful for any person employed by or associated with any enterprise engaged in, or the activities of which affect, interstate or foreign coimjjLerce, to conduct or participate, directly or ñidirectly, in the conduct of such enterprise's affairs through a pattern of racketeering activity-
. The "continuity plus relationship" description was quoted by the Supreme Court in
H.J.
/rec. from legislative history of the RICO statute.
See
. The court excluded seven faxes because Efron failed to allege that they had been transmitted interstate and eliminated two mailings as not in furtherance of the alleged scheme.
. The court gpinted out that, of the viable predicate actf] all but two occurred during a 90-day period from June to September 1997.
. Although the court in
Pelullo
concluded that 19 months was a sufficient period for a finding of continuity,
see
. The Third Circuit,
en banc,
later discussed the continuity requirement at length in a series of opinions.
See Tabas v. Tabas,
. In Apparel Art, then Chief Judge Breyer noted that the court deliberately used "a vague term like 'episode' ” to distinguish the concept of an isolated occurrence from the technical concept of a scheme, as used by the Supreme Court in H.J. Inc. See 967 F.2d at Ill.
. In
Alban Towers,
the court noted that “[t]he number of alleged predicate acts (fifteen), and the most generous estimate of the length of time the acts continued (three years ... ), are not enоugh to overwhelm the three narrowing factors.”
. In paragraph 19 of the amended complaint and on page 6 of the RICO case statement, for example, Efron describes the defendants' goal to be "gaining outright control of the Partnership." In paragraph 22 of the amended complaint, he alleges that MDC and Rubi made "continual capital calls either to defraud the Special Partners of more money or, alternatively, to try to 'squeeze down' their interests in the Partnership.” (Emphasis added.) Paragraph 41, section a, described the first alleged predicate act as a letter sent by Rubi to the special partners concerning cost overruns. Efrоn alleges: "This was the implementation, carrying out, and continuation of the previously designed scheme to defraud Efron out of additional monies or alternatively to dilute his interest and to deprive him of the full realization of his investment, or all of these." In section r of that paragraph, at the conclusion of the full list of predicate acts, he asserts: "All of the noted predicate acts were meant to defraud, misrepresent, mislead, and to deprive the Special Partners, including Efron, of their ownership interest in the Partnership.”
Thus, although the amended complaint and RICO case statement refer to a general goal to defraud Efron and the other victim partners of "more money,” the amended complaint read as a whole does not depict this as a long-term objective but simply as a necessary step toward defendants' specific goal of "takfing] unrestricted control of the enterprise.” See RICO case statement at 7. His brief and oral argument were framed similarly. See, e.g., Brief at 27 ("By their nature, the [defendants’] goals will not be reached, at least until such time as plaintiff loses his entire interest in the partnership.”)
. In
Tabas,
