MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
I.
Defendants American Telephone & Telegraph Company (“AT & T”), Robert E. Allen (Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of AT & T), and Morris Tanenbaum (Vice Chairman and Chief Financial Officer of AT & T), move, pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), to dismiss the Amended Class Action Complaint (“Amended Complaint”). 1 The Amended Complaint is based on the claim that (stated generally) defendants are “carrying out a scheme to defraud class members” — holders of AT & T “calling cards,” i.e., telephone credit cards — “by inducing them to use AT & T calling cards in the belief that the card’s use is free (i.e., there is no additional charge for placing a call using the card),” whereas “[i]n fact, AT & T levies a substantial surcharge for their use.” (Am.Compl. H 1(A).)
Defendants also move for an order pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(c)(7) sealing the Amended Complaint and plaintiff’s Brief in Opposition to Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss, at least to the extent that they make public Exhibits A, B, C, D, F, and G to the Amended Complaint, and the information contained therein. 2
The Amended Complaint asserts three claims: the first for fraud, as a matter of federal common law, the second for violation of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”), and the third asserting deceptive acts and practices and false advertising in violation of New York General Business Law §§ 349 and 350, and the common law of New York. On the present motion, all well pleaded allegations of the Amended Complaint are taken as true, and all reasonable inferences from the facts alleged are drawn in plaintiff’s favor.
*1024 Defendants argue that the 18 U.S.C. § 1962(a) component of the RICO claim must be dismissed because it “fails to satisfy the well-established requirement that a plaintiffs injury be caused by the investment of racketeering proceeds as opposed to injury caused by the underlying predicate acts of fraud” and that the 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c) component must be dismissed as to Allen and Tanenbaum because it “fails even to purport to satisfy the minimal requirements of [Fed.R.Civ.P.] Rule 9(b), such as pleading facts concerning defendants Allen and Tanenbaum’s participation in the acts of alleged mail and wire fraud.” (Def. Reply Mem. at 2.) 3 The common law fraud claims, Allen and Tanenbaum assert, also fail to satisfy Rule 9(b). -The New York statutory and common law claims, defendants further argue, fail to state a claim for relief because the application of federal common law — which defendants do not dispute governs the first claim of the Amended Complaint — preempts the state law claims. Finally, according to defendants, the “filed rate doctrine” requires dismissal of all of plaintiffs claims.
II.
In
Nordlicht v. New York Telephone Co.,
III.
Plaintiff’s second claim, brought under RICO, turns on the charge that “[throughout the class period, defendants, in conducting the affairs of AT & T, knowingly and repeatedly misrepresented that AT & T’s calling card was ‘free’ and concealed or omitted to disclose in a non-misleading manner the material fact that AT & T imposed a substantial surcharge for its use.” (Am.Compl. ¶ 43.) The scheme involved, says plaintiff, “on more than many thousands of occasions and within the last ten years,” mail and wire communications in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341 and 1342. (Id. ¶ 44.)
Plaintiff alleges that “AT & T has received income that has been unlawfully used and invested in the operation of AT & T .. in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1962(a) and to the financial detriment of plaintiff and his class.”
(Id.
¶ 45(a).) To state a claim under § 1962(a), a plaintiff “must allege injury from the defendants’ investment of racketeering income in an enterprise.”
Ouaknine v. MacFarlane,
*1025 The causal connection is tenuous at best. The direct cause of plaintiffs’ alleged injuries was the fraudulent conduct. Plaintiffs have neither alleged nor demonstrated a connection with the use or investment of racketeering income other than the normal reinvestment of corporate profits.
If this remote connection were to suffice, the use-or-investment injury requirement would be almost completely eviscerated when the alleged pattern of racketeering is committed on behalf of a corporation. RICO’s pattern requirement generally requires long-term continuing criminal conduct. See H.J. Inc. v. Northwestern Bell Telephone Co.,492 U.S. 229 [109 S.Ct. 2893 ,106 L.Ed.2d 195 ] (1989). Over the long term, corporations generally reinvest their profits, regardless of the source. Consequently, almost every racketeering act by a corporation will have some connection to the proceeds of a previous act. Section 1962(c) is the proper avenue to redress injuries caused by the racketeering acts themselves. If plaintiffs’ reinvestment injury concept were accepted, almost every pattern of racketeering activity by a corporation would be actionable under § 1962(a), and the distinction between § 1962(a) and § 1962(c) would become meaningless.
Brittingham v. Mobil Corp.,
Plaintiffs’ RICO claim, to the extent that it alleges a violation of § 1962(a), is dismissed.
IV.
As regards plaintiff’s claim under 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c), defendants urge that, in the case of Allen and Tanenbaum, the Amended Complaint fails to satisfy the requirement of Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b) that “the circumstances constituting fraud ... shall be stated with particularity.” “At a minimum, a RICO pleading based on mail and wire fraud must aver the time, place and content of the allegedly fraudulent statements.”
A.R. Associates v. Atlantic-Pacific Collection Services, Inc.,
V.
The failure to plead fraud with particularity as against Allen and Tanenbaum is equally apparent in the first, common law fraud, claim of the Amended Complaint, and that claim, as well, is dismissed as to those defendants.
VI.
The third claim of the Amended Complaint alleges the violation of New York General Business Law §§ 349 and 350, and the common law of New York, asserting that “AT & T’s advertising is and has been a deceptive act or practice or false advertising respecting its calling card.” (Am. Compl. 11 51.)
Defendants, correctly in this Court’s view, urge that if federal common law applies to plaintiff’s fraud claims — as plaintiff asserts, and defendants concede that it does — then the law of New York cannot also apply, that federal common law preempts state law. In
Nordlicht,
the Second Circuit noted that in
Ivy Broadcasting
it had held that “federal common law preempts state law and supplies the rule of decision for tort and contract claims relating to the duties, charges, and liabilities of telephone carriers concerning interstate telecommunications.”
The third claim of the Amended Complaint is dismissed.
*1026 VII.
Defendants, finally, urge that under the filed rate doctrine, the entire complaint must be dismissed. That doctrine, they urge, “forbids a regulated entity to charge rates for its services other than those properly filed with the appropriate federal regulatory authority.”
Arkansas Louisiana Gas Co. (Arkla) v. Hall,
Here, it is not disputed on the present motion at least that AT & T has filed a tariff specifying its charges for use of the calling card. Plaintiff, however, does not challenge “the reasonableness .of the surcharge imposed for use of the card. Rather, plaintiffs only claim is one of market fraud in advertising, that is, an effort by deceit to induce use of the card.” (Pi’s. Mem. at 12.) Since, as appears above, plaintiff’s claims against AT & T (although not Allen and Tanenbaum) for fraud as a matter of federal common law and for violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c) survive the present motion, the issue whether those claims are barred by the filed rate doctrine must be determined.
Because the liability issue in this case is not what a reasonable rate should be but whether defendant AT & T committed fraud and violated RICO in inducing customers’ use of its calling card's, a determination of what the rate should have been can enter in (if at all) only at the point of determining damages. As the Court’s discussion will highlight, the usual policy justifications for applying the filed rate doctrine are thus not applicable to the nature of the fraud alleged here. Insofar as the federal common law fraud claim and the RICO claim are predicated upon the same allegedly fraudulent conduct, the Court’s analysis of the applicability of the filed rate doctrine necessarily applies to both claims. In considering the issue of damages infra, the Court will discuss the RICO claim separately. 5
A.
Development of Filed Rate Doctnne
The plaintiff in
Keogh,,
a manufacturer, brought an action under § 7 of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act against various carriers for damages resulting from the carriers’ conspiratorial effort to exact a rate higher than that which would otherwise have prevailed. The Court’s reasoning made clear one of the long-standing policy justifications for the filed rate doctrine. “This stringent rule prevails, because otherwise the paramount .purpose of Congress — prevention of unjust discrimination — might be defeated/’
Keogh,
In
Montana-Dakota Utilities Co. v. Northwestern Public Service Co.,
The Supreme Court’s most recent decision dealing with the filed rate doctrine demonstrates the Court’s continued adherence to the principles underlying the doctrine.
Maislin Industries U.S. v. Primary Steel, Inc.,
The Court was unpersuaded by the ICC’s argument that the carrier should not receive a windfall for its failure to comply with the statute by registering its negotiated rate. Justifying its holding, the Court reasoned that punishment for fraudulent conduct, such as a “bait and switch” tactic of negotiating one rate, stating it had been filed when it had not been, and then insisting upon collection of the higher rate, is punishable under 49 U.S.C. § 11903(b) (1988). The Court further noted that “this risk of intentional misconduct on the part of a carrier has always existed and has never been considered sufficient to justify a less stringent interpretation of § 10761.”
Id:
at 132 n. 12,
The Supreme Court cases illustrate the two core principles of the filed rate doctrine: that legislative bodies design agencies for the purpose of setting uniform rates and that courts are not institutionally well suited to engage in retroactive rate setting.
See Wegoland, Ltd. v. NYNEX Corp.,
In filed rate cases alleging fraud or other illegal activity, the Supreme Court has not sanctioned a
general
exception to the filed
*1028
rate doctrine. Indeed, the
Keogh
case described
supra
involved a type of fraud, an alleged conspiracy to fix rates at an unreasonably high level. The
Arkla
case,
Moreover, while the Court seemed to . acknowledge that certain developments may have undermined somewhat the original rationale underlying Keogh, it declined to undermine the established interstices of the filed rate doctrine. Judge Friendly’s list of “developments” thus failed to move the Supreme Court to overrule Keogh. The developments Judge Friendly discussed and the Supreme Court listed in its own discussion were
the development of class actions, which might alleviate the expressed concern about unfair rebates; the emergence of precedents permitting treble-damages remedies even when there is a regulatory' remedy available; the greater sophistication in evaluating damages, which might mitigate the expressed fears about the speculative nature of damages; and the development of procedures in which judicial proceedings can be stayed pending regulatory proceedings.
Id.
at 423,
While committed to the filed rate doctrine as a matter of
stare decisis,
however, the Court has not recently expressed an inclination to extend the filed rate doctrine beyond contexts clearly implicating the anti-discrimination or non-justiciability rationales for the rule. The fact that a class action — the “development” on Judge Friendly’s list most relevant to the present case — can eliminate or minimize the anti-discriminatory strand of the filed rate doctrine has not been directly addressed by the Court outside the passing reference in
Square D.
Nor, moreover, has this Court discovered cases seizing upon the class action aspect of a case as a justification for undermining the filed rate doctrine.
See, e.g. Wegoland,
Defendants cite case law from various other circuits which have held that the filed rate doctrine bars claims of fraud based upon a carrier’s concealment or misrepresentation of a filed rate.
See Marco Supply Co. v. AT & T Communications, Inc.,
B.
Application of Filed Rate Doctrine
In considering the application of Supreme Court precedent to the present case, this Court is not persuaded that the particular facts alleged here fall within the factual predicates upon which the filed rate doctrine developed. The alleged fraudulent conduct forming the basis for both the federal common law claim and the RICO claim squarely implicates neither the anti-discrimination strand nor the non-justiciability strand of the filed rate doctrine.
Plaintiffs claim does not take issue with the reasonableness of defendant AT & T’s filed rates nor does plaintiff seek to have any individual calling card holders charged a different rate. Moreover, plaintiff concedes that under the filed rate doctrine, if each member of the putative class were to bring a separate action alleging fraud, such “actions would in effect result in price discrimination because any corrective' relief would ultimately necessitate a piecemeal deviation from the filed tariff rates.” (PI. Opp.Mem. at 12.) This admission is not insignificant when the Court appraises the possible remedies relating to Plaintiffs claims. Whether resolution of these claims would involve a violation of the principles of the filed rate doctrine seems to depend upon whether “damages in the amount of the surcharge” (as requested in the Amended Complaint at ¶¶ 34, 41) (due to the alleged fraudulent advertising campaign inducing unknowing individuals to acquire and use an AT & T calling card) are awarded to individual plaintiffs or whether a class is certified (which certification has not yet taken place) and all' cardholders receive damages. To grant damages to only some cardholders would effectively result in a discriminatory departure from the filed rates in violation of the filed rate doctrine. Moreover, even if the class is certified (which certification itself would depend partially upon the feasibility of determining and awarding damages to the class), the mere granting of a damages award may, in this context, run afoul of the filed rate doctrine. The Court will further discuss this issue infra.
The cases decided by the Courts of Appeals have involved situations clearly implicating the anti-discrimination and the nonjusticiability strands of the doctrine.
Marco Supply,
There is little relevant precedent in the Second Circuit regarding the applicability of the doctrine in cases of fraud. This Court need not take the broad language appearing in the dicta of the district court and the Court of Appeals in
Nordlicht v. New York Telephone Co.,
One aspect of the courts’ rationale for applying the filed rate doctrine despite the harsh results for individual plaintiffs with claims of apparent merit but for the doctrine is that due to the “public” nature of agency rate making procedures, “the shipper’s knowledge of the lawful rate is conclusively presumed.”
Kansas City S.R. Co. v. Carl,
Plaintiff’s claims assail defendant AT & T’s advertising practices. The alleged fraud in this case does not directly relate to the jurisdiction of the FCC, in contrast to the hypothetical constructed by the Supreme Court in Nader. In a footnote, the Court stated that
if respondent’s [airline’s] overbooking practices were detailed in its tariff and therefore available to the public, a court presented with a claim of misrepresentation based on failure to disclose need not make prior reference to the Board, as it should if presented with a suit challenging the reasonableness of practices detailed in a tariff. Rather, : the court could, applying settled principles of tort law, determine that the tariff provided sufficient notice to the party who brought the suit.
Nader,
The fact that the fraud plaintiff alleges is of a
universal
nature further undermines the relevance of the “presumed knowledge” rationale. In virtually all . other claims involving the filed rate doctrine, a single litigant or a very small group, allegedly wronged, have brought suit. Presumably, without the operation of the filed rate doctrine, numerous other individuals would
*1031
be left to pay the lawfully filed rate, thus creating an unequal situation contrary to the legislative intent in mandating uniform rates.
But see Wegoland,
In addition to the universal nature of the fraud alleged in the present case, plaintiffs fraud allegation does not attack the “reasonableness” of the rates: The difficulty of determining reasonableness of rates retroactively and the discrimination involved in refunding to particular individuals filed rates paid on grounds of fraud are at the heart of courts’ reluctance to entertain claims involving rate-making, even where fraudulent conduct involving the carrier and/or the regulating agency is involved.
See H.J., Inc. v. Northwestern Bell Telephone Co.,
Claims of fraud are different. The filed tariff doctrine is designed to protect utilities charging filed rates for lawfully provided service. It is of no help to a defendant which fraudulently induces a plaintiff to pay a filed rate or which otherwise exacts payment by fraud. There- is nothing in the policy underpinnings of the doctrine which would cause it to protect a defendant which unlawfully exacts payment, even at a lawful rate.
The language in Nordlicht is clearly dicta, because the court dismissed the claim for failure to adequately allege fraud. The Court of Appeals specifically addressed the district court’s dismissal of the fraud claim, stating that “Nordlicht’s fraud claim also had potential viability” and that had he alleged affirmative misrepresentation by the phone company, “Nordlicht would indeed have established a right to recover for fraud.” Id. at 866. The Court of Appeals did not discuss the filed rate doctrine.
At least two decisions have expressly noted the inapplicability of the reasoning in
Nordlicht
to their cases because the nature of the claims required a reasonableness determination.
See H.J., Inc.,
Because the fraudulent conduct alleged involves universal fraud and concealment of rates as to all cardholders by defendant AT & T (rather than fraud directed at a particular customer) and because the claim does not implicate in any manner the reasonableness of the filed rate, this Court rules that the filed rate doctrine does not apply. However, the Court’s holding is a limited one in light of the Court’s view that the filed rate doctrine may prohibit retroactive rate setting as part of the remedy. Plaintiff’s monetary damages claim and claims for declaratory and injunctive relief will be discussed in turn.
Monetary Damages
In denying the motion to dismiss, the Court reserves judgment as to whether the filed rate doctrine requires dismissal of plaintiff's damages claim. In their briefs pertaining to plaintiff’s anticipated motion for class certification, the parties are directed to address the appropriateness of a damages award in light of the filed rate doctrine and the likelihood of arriving at a justiciable standard in light of the large class which plaintiff will seek to certify. The Court underscores its understanding that plaintiff’s claim does not attack the filed tariff, but rather Defendant AT & T’s advertising campaign. Plaintiff’s claim, however, may indirectly implicate the rates, insofar as the monetary damages claim may (or must) ultimately reference the rates. As plaintiff’s counsel pointed out in oral argument, the claim may involve “some impact on rates, but ... what doesn’t? That’s how AT & T lives, through its rates.” (Transcript of Oral Argument at 20.) The issue, then, is whether an award of monetary damages against a regulated utility is prohibited by the filed rate doctrine despite the fact that the nature of the alleged fraud precludes applicability of the doctrine.
RICO Damages
As Judge Wood noted in
Wegoland,
“The statutory reference point for applying the filed rate doctrine is the statute (or statutes) empowering agencies to approve rates, not the statutes under which plaintiffs allege a cause of action____ I note that it is entirely consistent with this opinion that a cause of action under RICO for fraud upon a regulatory agency would survive the filed rate doctrine.”
Wegoland,
The Second Circuit’s decision in
County of Suffolk v. Long Island Lighting Co. (LILCO),
demonstrate^] a willingness to permit an award of damages in a RICO suit to be determined by a court, even when that award required determining what portion *1033 of a filed rate resulted from fraud. And, the Second Circuit’s discussion (in dictum) of jurisdictional doctrines manifested a relaxed conception of the boundaries between courts and agencies, and a relatively expansive conception of federal court jurisdiction in rate-making cases.
Wegoland,
After the parties brief the damages issue, this Court will determine whether RICO (and other) monetary damages woiild be “unusually benign” as in LILCO or a similarly complicated, retroactive and inappropriate interference with a rate making agency as in Wegoland.
Declaratory or Injunctive Relief
Regardless of the Court’s decision as to monetary damages, the Court is convinced that the filed rate doctrine does not affect plaintiff’s claim for declaratory or injunctive relief. Several courts have permitted such injunctive relief claims to move forward, even as the filed rate doctrine required dismissal of the claim for damages. In Square D, the Supreme Court explained the disposition of the case below:
The Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit affirmed insofar as the District Court’s judgment dismissed the claims for treble damages based on respondents’ filed rates, but remanded for a further hearing to determine whether petitioners are entitled to injunctive relief and to give them an opportunity to amend their complaints to state possible claims for damages not arising from the filed tariffs.
The Sixth Circuit in
Pinney Dock and Transport Co. v. Penn Central Corp.,
It is clear to this Court that plaintiff has stated a federal common law fraud action and a RICO claim under 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c) that survive dismissal notwithstanding the filed rate doctrine. The parties shall address the appropriateness of money damages in the present case given the limitations posed by the filed rate doctrine when plaintiff files his motion for class certification, which motion shall be filed within 60 days of the date of this Memorandum and Order.
VIII.
Defendants move for an order to seal Exhibits A, B, C, D, F and G as identified by plaintiffs Amended Complaint and as quoted in plaintiffs Brief in Opposition to Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss, pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(c). As a preliminary observation, the Court discerns no evidentiary reason or procedural requirement to account for plaintiff’s decision to annex the exhibits in question to the Complaint; this tactic may have been an effort to gain publicity somewhat prematurely. However, in any event, the standard under Rule 26(c) is the relevant legal standard and defendants’ motion must be evaluated thereunder. Rule 26(c) states, in relevant part, that
upon motion by a party ... and for good cause shown, the court ... may make any order which justice requires to protect a party or person from annoyance, embarrassment, oppression or undue burden or expense, including ... that a trade secret or other confidential research, development, or commercial information not be disclosed or be disclosed only in a designated way.
The decision to limit the open and far-reaching discovery permitted under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure is left to the discretion of the trial court in light of the relevant facts and circumstances of a particular case.
See Nixon v. Warner Communications,
[a] plain reading of the language of Rule 26(c) demonstrates that the party seeking a protective order has the burden of showing that good cause exists for issuance of that order____ [I]f good cause is not shown, the discovery materials in question should not receive judicial protection and therefore would be open to the public for inspection.
* Jjc * # * #
[W]e note that access [by class action litigants and the general public to discovery materials] is particularly appropriate when the subject matter of the litigation is of especial public interest.
In re “Agent Orange”,
As explained in
John Does I-VI v. Yogi,
A trade secret has been defined with reference to § 757 of the Restatement (First) of Torts. “[A] trade secret is any ‘formula, pattern, device or compilation of information which is used in one’s business, and which gives him an opportunity to obtain an advantage over competitors who do not know or use it____’ ”
I.B.M.
Plaintiff does not object to defendants’ motion insofar as it concerns Exhibits F and G. The Court agrees with defendants’ statement that Exhibits F and G are “more traditional examples of confidential information rising to the level of a trade secret.” (Def. Mem. at 14.) These exhibits are not central to plaintiff’s claims, but rather they center on internal financial operations. While they provide information relevant to this lawsuit (the volume of AT & T revenue attributable to calling cards), the information is also potentially valuable commercial information which, wholly independent of the unlawful conduct alleged by this lawsuit, could alter defendant AT & T’s competitive position in the telecommunications market. Therefore, a protective order will be issued as to Exhibits F and G.
As to Exhibits A-D, the Court undertakes a more thorough analysis because of plaintiff’s vigorous opposition to the Motion to Seal. Defendants object to the possible dissemination of these documents. The defendants have shown that the “compilation[s] of information” at issue in the present case are used internally and constitute potential negative publicity about its marketing tactics. Internal corporate documents do not automatically merit protective orders, nor is a party entitled under Rule 26(c) to keep documents under seal in order to shield the party from negative publicity. However, defendants’ assertion that its competitors who do not now have this information could use it to do competitive injury to the defendants is, on the facts of this case, a sufficient basis to grant defendants’ motion to seal at least at this stage of this litigation. As defendants recognize, the exhibits it desires to keep confidential are not “trade secrets” in the traditional sense, but their potential to do commercial harm and the fact that the information — while perhaps not used in the manner alleged by plaintiff — was quite arguably a part of defendant AT & T’s efforts to gain competitive advantage are dispositive to the Court’s decision to seal the exhibits in question.
For the reasons addressed infra, the Court is nonetheless extremely reluctant to grant this Order and therefore the Order may well remain limited in duration. Defendants contend that the Court of Appeals’ discussion in In re “Agent Orange” of the need for public access was due to the unique public health risk posed by defendant’s product. While no such health risk is involved here, the presumption in favor of a public proceeding which exists in all cases is heightened by the public’s interest in the behavior of a utility touching the lives of a huge number of people. Moreover, large numbers of people may have been and may still be unknowingly paying to use a service they believe is free. While large sums of money are probably not involved in the cases of most customers, the sum does not alter the principle that everyone has a right to know what they are paying for. . The Court’s decision on whether to grant a protective order must rest upon balancing defendant AT & T’s claim to privacy against the plaintiff class’s and the general public’s interest in disclosure.
The interest in disclosure is certainly very high in this case. If publicizing the information — even if incomplete and taken out of context — could reveal to many calling card holders, who are not now cognizant that they pay an additional 80 cents per call, the true nature of the rate structure, then such publicity could only be positive. On the other hand, the possibility of commercially damaging exploitation of these internal documents prior to trial is a consideration this Court cannot ignore. The Supreme Court’s decision in
Seattle Times v. Rhinehart,
The Complaint is dismissed as to defendants Allen and Tanenbaum. Plaintiffs claim brought against defendant AT & T under § 1962(a) of RICO is dismissed. Defendant AT & T’s motion to dismiss the federal common law fraud claim and the § 1962(c) RICO claim on the basis of the filed rate doctrine is denied. All of plaintiff’s state law fraud claims are dismissed.
Defendants’ motion to seal Exhibits A-D and F and G to the Complaint and quotations therefrom in the Amended Complaint and in Plaintiff’s Brief in Opposition to Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss is granted. The Court’s Order sealing Exhibits A-D and F and G will remain in place until such time as plaintiff’s Motion for Class Certification is granted, if such Motion is granted, at which time the Court will reconsider its Order to Seal and both parties may renew their arguments in favor of and against the sealing.
The parties are directed to submit an order on notice with respect to implementation of the sealing of the exhibits to the Amended Complaint and quotations therefrom or copies thereof used in other documents submitted by plaintiff and defendants in this action, without unnecessarily sealing entire documents. The order should be submitted to the Court for approval within 14 days of the date of this Memorandum and Order.
Plaintiff is ordered to file his Motion for Class Certification within 60 days of the date of this Memorandum and Order. Until that time, plaintiff and counsel for plaintiff shall continue to have access to all discovered materials, including the sealed documents, for litigation purposes, but the exhibits to be sealed shall not be publicly disseminated.
SO ORDERED.
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON REARGUMENT
Defendants’ letter of February 10, 1993 and plaintiff’s letter of February 17, 1993 are treated as motions for reargument of the Court’s Memorandum of February 8, 1993. Both applications for reargument are denied.
To the extent that the February 8, 1993 Memorandum can be read to suggest that plaintiff asserted a claim against AT & T under 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c), that reading is incorrect. The Court reads the amended complaint to allege an 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c) claim against the individual defendants (including John Doe defendants) only. The fact that information may be uncovered warranting a claim under 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c) against persons whose names are not known at present (the John Doe defendants) is not ground for permitting that claim to stand while the information is sought. Should facts supporting such a claim appear — and can they be stated with adequate particularity — plaintiff may move to amend. The Court does not consider the amended complaint to plead a claim under 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c) against Allen and Tanenbaum with adequate particularity, and “personal awareness of the misleading nature of AT & T’s advertising,” Letter Feb. 17, 1993 at 1 n. 1, on the part of Mr. Allen does not cure this defect.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. No motion to certify the alleged class has, as yet, been filed. None of the alleged John Does I-X, "various corporations, partnerships, directors, officers, principals, trustees, agents, or representatives of AT & T who have engaged or participated in the unlawful acts alleged” in the Amended Complaint, id. ¶ 8, have been served or identified.
. The materials and information sought to be protected have, by agreement, been maintained as confidential pending determination of this aspect of defendants’ motion.
. The Amended Complaint withdraws the allegations with respect to 18 U.S.C. § 1962(b) contained in the original complaint. (See Pl. Mem. at 16.)
. Defendants do assert, however, that plaintiffs first claim should be dismissed: as failing to comply with Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b) in the case of Allen and Tanenbaum, and as barred by the filed rate doctrine in the case of all defendants. See below.
. The fact that other RICO claims implicating the filed rate doctrine have been dismissed is not necessarily dispositive of the present RICO claim. In other cases, the decisions to apply the filed rate doctrine and dismiss the RICO claims were primarily predicated upon the nature of the underlying fraudulent conduct, and not merely upon the fact that the claims were brought under RICO. The applicability of the filed rate doctrine is determined by the statutes empowering agencies to approve rates, not the statutes under which a plaintiff alleges a cause of action. However, as discussed infra, at least one Court of Appeals has considered the unique nature of RICO claims as a factor in determining the appropriateness of relief within the constraints of the filed rate doctrine.
. In his dissent, Justice Stevens, joined by Chief Justice Rehnquist, argued that the majority was applying the filed rate doctrine outside its previous bounds, thereby undermining the ICC’s attempt to carry out the plainly expressed intent of Congress by going against the agency's reasonable action in contravention of
Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
. The other relevant district court opinions dealing with the filed rate doctrine in this circuit have involved the anti-discrimination or the non-justiciability strand of the filed rate doctrine.
Wegoland,
. The applicability of the filed rate doctrine may depend upon the nature of the relief sought. To . the extent that Plaintiff seeks declaratory or injunctive relief, the filed rate doctrine would seem inapplicable. As the Court will discuss infra, the issue of money damages is more complex.
. Plaintiff’s discussion of the
Noerr-Pennington
doctrine is relevant insofar as the cases cited illustrate courts’ reluctance to "immunize a regulated entity from antitrust scrutiny” where "the issue ... is not the reasonableness of the ... tariff rate .. but instead ... whether there should have been any charge at all."
Litton,
. The Court has uncovered only one case that tentatively links the court's decision to apply the filed rate doctrine to the fact that the damages award would in effect result in a retroactive damages award
and
(because a RICO claim was involved) a more burdensome
treble
damages award. In
Taffet v. Southern Co.,
. The Court of Appeals held that RICO is applicable to a public state-regulated utility. Id. at 1305.
. In
Seattle Times,
the Supreme Court upheld a lower court’s discretion to issue a protective order as a check on the prevention of abuse that can attend the coerced production of information during discovery, notwithstanding the First Amendment interest prohibiting restraints on free expression. Thus the Court held that where the protective order is limited to the context of pretrial civil discovery and it does not restrict the dissemination of the information if gained
*1036
from other sources, it does not offend the First Amendment.
Id.
at 34-36,
