In this appeal, we must explain how the criminal and civil provisions of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1961-1968 (“RICO”) interact, and decide under what circumstances a civil RICO plaintiff may collaterally estop a defendant from contesting the facts proven against him in a previous criminal trial. We conclude that under the specific facts of this case, an individual who has been convicted of criminal RICO violations may be held civilly liable for damages flowing from the fraudulent scheme he masterminded, even where some of those damages represent money extracted by co-defendants who were acquitted at their own criminal trials.
The plaintiffs in this case are Allstate Insurance Company, Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company, and State Farm Fire and Casualty Company (collectively “the Insurers”). Defendant Lynn Boyd Stites is a former attorney who has been convicted of a criminal RICO violation and numerous counts of mail fraud for his role in an organization that defrauded the plaintiffs and other insurance companies out of millions of dollars by controlling both sides of several major lawsuits in order to inflate legal fees.
See United States v. Stites,
Stites’s scheme to “churn” litigation exploited California case law holding that insurance companies with a duty to defend their insureds must sometimes allow those insureds to select their own attorneys.
See, e.g., San Diego Navy Fed. Credit Union v. Cumis Ins. Soc’y Inc.,
Although Stites and many members of his “Alliance” were convicted of RICO violations and various predicate acts of mail fraud, several lawyers were acquitted of all charges. Among those acquitted were Douglas Caiafa and George Dezes. Another alleged member of the Alliance, Alan Arnold, was indicted but died before his trial.
After Stites’s criminal convictions became final, the Insurers sought summary judgment in their civil cases against him on the ground that Stites was collaterally estopped from challenging any issue regarding his involvement in the RICO scheme. The district court agreed, and granted partial summary judgment based on collateral estoppel. The court noted that, except as to the issues of causation and damages, the elements of criminal and civil RICO were the same, but held that the Insurers had submitted inadequate documentation of their damages. The Insurers then submitted a second summary judgment motion. The court determined that the Insurers had cured the problems with the documentation of their damages, and granted summary judgment for over twenty million dollars.
In his response to the Insurers’ second summary judgment motion, Stites argued that he could not be held liable for the fees paid to attorneys who had not been convicted of RICO charges, because the Insurers had not proved that those attorneys were members of the Alliance. Because this response was filed late, the district judge initially refused to consider it. Four months after the judgment had been entered, however, the Insurers requested that the district court consider Stites’s belated response. The district court did so, and modified the judgment under Rule 60(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
In granting partial relief from the judgment, the district court assumed that the Insurers could not recover fees paid to lawyers who were not members of the Alliance. The district court then subtracted from the judgment sums attributable to the fees of attorneys whom the Insurers had not proved were connected to the Alii-
DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
Although the order from which Stites appeals is an order modifying the judgment pursuant to Rule 60(b), in considering Stites’s belated response to the Insurers’ motion for summary judgment, the district judge considered afresh his earlier decision to grant summary judgment in favor of the Insurers. Therefore, our de novo standard of review for a district court’s summary judgment decisions governs.
See Balint v. Carson City,
B. Collateral Estoppel
1. Collateral Estoppel is Available to the Insurers
We must first address the threshold question that Stites raised in his reply brief-whether a party other than the United States may take advantage of offensive collateral estoppel in a civil RICO case. We answer this question affirmatively.
Title 18 U.S.C. § 1964(d) provides that: “[a] final judgment or decree rendered in favor of the United States in any criminal [RICO] proceeding ... shall estop the defendant from denying the essential allegations of the criminal offense in any subsequent civil proceeding brought by the United States.” (emphasis added). Stites argues that because the statute does not explicitly state that offensive collateral es-toppel is available to private citizens, it necessarily implies that such parties cannot use it. We reject his contention.
While the issue is one of first impression in the Ninth Circuit, several district courts have addressed, and rejected, identical arguments.
See County of Cook v. Lynch,
We find these cases persuasive, and adopt their reasoning. We doubt that Congress intended affirmatively to deny offensive non-mutual collateral estoppel to private plaintiffs seeking to recover losses caused by RICO enterprises. The most likely explanation for the lack of an explicit statement permitting private parties to use such estoppel is simply that it was unavailable when RICO was enacted. We
2. Collateral Estoppel and RICO Generally
We now examine whether the district court properly applied collateral estoppel to preclude Stites from relitigating issues that had been decided against him in his criminal trial. We conclude that it did.
As the district court noted, there are four elements in a criminal RICO case. To obtain a conviction, the government must prove that the defendant engaged in: 1) conduct 2) of an enterprise 3) through a pattern 4) of racketeering activity.
See
18 U.S.C.1962;
Sun Savings and Loan Ass’n v. Dierdorff,
The district court properly concluded that Stites could be estopped from contesting the first four of the five elements necessary to a civil RICO claim.
See
18 U.S.C. § 1964(c). The policy considerations discussed by the Supreme Court in
Parklane Hosiery
all cut in favor of applying offensive non-mutual collateral estoppel in this case. First, the Insurers could not have joined the criminal case.
See Parklane Hosiery,
Moreover, the criminal case also established that Stites and other members of the Alliance churned the very lawsuits for which the Insurers now seek damages. In this case, then, the guilty verdicts establish that Stites caused the Insurers’ injury. Stites was found guilty of various predicate acts of mail fraud in connection with each of the lawsuits or groups of lawsuits for which the Insurers seek damages. Because a conviction for mail fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 1341 requires that the government prove the existence of a “scheme to defraud,” those convictions prove that Stites’s RICO scheme extended to those lawsuits. In any event, Stites does not argue that the Insurers were not injured by his RICO enterprise in a general sense; he only disputes that certain lawyers’ fees were improperly included in the damages award. We now turn to that argument.
3. Whether Stites Can Be Liable For Fees Attributable to Arnold, Dezes, and Caiafa
Stites contends that the district court erred by concluding that he could be held liable for fees paid to the two attorneys who were acquitted of the criminal RICO and mail fraud charges, and the one attorney who died before trial. The es
We reject this contention for several reasons. First, it is irrelevant that Dezes and Caiafa were acquitted, and that Arnold was never tried and thus never proven guilty himself. As we have held, a failure to prove a fact beyond a reasonable doubt does not mean that it cannot be proven by a preponderance of the evidence.
See Borunda v. Richmond,
Stites’s claim also fails as a factual matter. We assume for the purposes of this appeal that the Insurers had to prove that each attorney whose fees they sought to recover was actually a member of the Alliance. 1 Because Stites does not argue that the Insurers’ proof was deficient with regard to any attorney other than Caiafa, Dezes, and Arnold, we limit our discussion to those individuals.
A comparison of the indictment to the verdict form in Stites’s criminal case indicates that he was found guilty of multiple predicate acts of mail fraud that involved mailings to or from Caiafa, Dezes, and Arnold. The district court relied on these convictions in rejecting Stites’s argument that he could not be liable for fees attributable to acquitted defendants:
[Defendant was convicted of numerous predicate acts of mail fraud for mailings that he neither sent nor received, but that were sent or received by ... Caiafa [and] Dezes, ... the individuals who were subsequently acquitted. Thus the [plaintiff] has met its burden of demonstrating proof by a preponderance of evidence that these individuals were members of the Alliance, and defendant has failed to come forth with evidence demonstrating a genuine issue as to whether in fact these individuals were members of the Alliance. Consequently, plaintiffs are entitled to fees paid to these individuals.
The same reasoning disposes of the claim that Arnold was not connected to the Alliance. 2
Although Stites assumes that the district court applied collateral estoppel in determining that he could be liable for the fees of Caiafa, Dezes, and Arnold, the district court actually relied on traditional summary judgment principles in rejecting his claims: “[T]he plaintiff has met its burden of demonstrating proof by preponderance of the evidence that [Caiafa and Dezes] were members of the Alliance, and defendant has failed to come forth with evidence demonstrating a genuine issue of material
4. Stites’s Remaining Collateral Estoppel Arguments Fail
Stites’s numerous remaining arguments challenging the district court’s use of collateral estoppel lack merit. First, the record citations Stites provides do not support his assertion that the Insurers received damages for cases for which he was not indicted and convicted, and we have found nothing else that would support this claim. Second, it is irrelevant that common law fraud must be proved by clear and convincing evidence, as we have held that a civil RICO plaintiff must prove his case only by a preponderance of the evidence.
See Wilcox v. First Interstate Bank of Oregon,
C. Evidentiary Arguments
Stites also raises a number of evidentiary challenges to the documents submitted by the Insurers to prove their damages. A district judge’s determination that particular evidence is or is not admissible is reviewed for an abuse of discretion.
See, e.g., Defenders of Wildlife v. Bernal,
We also reject Stites’s hearsay and best evidence objections to the Insurers’ evidence. The Insurers submitted detailed affidavits from employees who had worked for them at the time the fraudulent attorneys’ fees had been paid; these employees described in detail the procedures by which bills submitted by defense attorneys were processed and paid. The records submitted by the Insurers thus fell well within the business records exception to the hearsay rule. Fed.R.Evid. 803(6). Finally, the “best evidence” rule embodied in Rule 1002 is inapposite, because the checks and billing records the Insurers submitted were not offered to prove “the content of a writing” as required by the rule.
D. Effect of Stites’s Default
Stites finally argues that the district court’s summary judgment decisions were fatally flawed because he had been in default since 1991 for failure to pay attorneys’ fees incurred as discovery sanctions.
The gist of Stites’s argument as to why his default warrants a remand is that defaulted parties may not oppose the other party’s motions, and that therefore the district court denied him due process by granting motions that he was theoretically barred from opposing. However, Stites fully participated in the summary judgment proceedings, and was not barred from submitting motions opposing those of the Insurers. The district judge granted him extensions of time to file his motions, and even considered the substantive arguments in his belated opposition to the plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment. Stites’s assertion that he was denied due process is thus wildly inaccurate. As the district judge noted, “[a] defaulted party’s rights are not violated when a case proceeds on the merits rather than by means of a default judgment where the party is, as here, given full opportunity to litigate the case on the merits.”
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. This proposition, however, is far from clear. The Insurers correctly point out that they may recover all damages proximately caused by Stites’s RICO violations.
See, e.g., Forsyth,
. We note parenthetically that Stites did not raise this argument in the district court. Thus, we are not required to address his claim regarding Arnold. We do so only out of an abundance of caution.
