Judge CABRANES dissents, in a separate opinion.
This case returns to us from the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Richard M. Berman, Judge, following the entry of a final judgment dismissing the third amended complaint (or “Complaint”) of plaintiff Ideal Steel Supply Corporation (“Ideal”) under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”), 18 U.S.C. §§ 1961-1968, which principally alleged injury to Ideal’s business by reason of defendants’ establishment of a competing commercial enterprise through the investment of income derived from a pattern of racketeering activity — to wit, mail fraud and wire fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341 and 1343, in the filing of fraudulent tax returns and related information enabling the evasion of more than $1 million in income taxes — in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1962(a). The district court granted defendants’ motions for judgment on the pleadings, and in the alternative for summary judgment, on the grounds that the Complaint and the record were insufficient to show that any injury to Ideal’s business was proximately caused by defendants’ alleged violation of § 1962(a). For the reasons that follow, we vacate and remand for trial.
I. BACKGROUND
Much of the factual background of this litigation is described in prior opinions, familiarity with which is assumed.
See Ideal Steel Supply Corp. v. Anza,
A. The Parties and the Initial Claims: Ideal I and II
Ideal operates a retail business in the New York City boroughs of Queens and the Bronx, selling steel mill products and related hardware and services to professional ironworkers, small steel fabricators, and do-it-yourself homeowners in the New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut area. Defendant National Steel Supply, Inc., is owned by defendants Joseph and Vincent Anza (collectively “the Anzas”) and is Ideal’s competitor. National operates two retail outlets, one in Queens and one in the Bronx, each located a few minutes’ drive from the Ideal store in that borough. Ideal and National sell substantially the same
Ideal commenced the present action in 2002, principally-asserting two civil RICO claims. First, it asserted a claim against the Anzas, alleging that they had conducted, or participated in the conduct of, the affairs of an interstate-business enterprise through a pattern of racketeering activity, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c). Ideal alleged that, since at least 1998, National at its Queens store, at the direction of the Anzas, had engaged in a pattern of racketeering activity by (a) not charging sales tax to any customers who paid for their purchases in cash (the “cash-no-tax” scheme), thereby violating state laws that required merchants to charge and collect such taxes, and (b) then submitting, by mail and wire, fraudulent sales and income tax reports and returns that concealed National’s cash sales and misrepresented its total taxable sales, thereby evading substantial sums in income tax. Ideal alleged that by engaging in the cash-no-tax scheme through a pattern of mail and wire frauds in violation of § 1962(c), National injured Ideal’s business by luring away customers who chose to buy from National simply in order to save more than eight percent on their purchases by not paying the required sales tax.
Second, Ideal alleged that in 1999 and 2000, the Anzas and National, in violation of § 1962(a), invested funds derived from National’s Queens store’s cash-no-tax scheme to establish National’s store in the Bronx. The opening of that facility caused Ideal to lose a substantial amount of business at its Bronx store. Ideal also asserted a state-law claim for breach of an agreement that had settled prior litigation between Ideal and National.
In
Ideal I,
the district court dismissed Ideal’s federal claims pursuant to Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). Citing
Holmes v. Securities Investor Protection Corp.,
[i]n complaints predicated on mail or wire fraud, a plaintiff must plead “loss causation,” meaning that the misrepresentation must be both an actual and a proximate source of the loss that the plaintiffs suffered, ... and “transaction causation,” which requires a plaintiff to demonstrate that [plaintiff] relied on [defendants’ misrepresentations,
Ideal I,
[although Ideal alleges that the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance relied on Defendants’ alleged misrepresentations ..., Ideal has not alleged — indeed, can not allege — that Plaintiff relied on the sales tax returns Defendants mailed or wired to the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance. As a result, Ideal’s RICO claims fail.
Id. The court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over Ideal’s breach-of-contract claim.
In
Ideal II,
this Court vacated the
Ideal I
decision, noting that although there was language in
Moore
and
Powers
to the effect that a plaintiff itself must have relied
Focusing principally on Ideal’s claim under § 1962(c), we saw a critical distinction between that claim and the claims asserted in cases in which we had affirmed Rule 12(b)(6) dismissals of civil RICO claims for insufficient allegation of proximate cause. Those prior cases had involved claims of injury that were too remote from the alleged racketeering activity because, for example, the plaintiffs injuries were not “ ‘reasonably foreseeable’ ” or the “ ‘natural eonsequencefs] of the RICO violations,’ ”
Ideal II,
complaint contains allegations of facts to show that the defendant engaged in a pattern of fraudulent conduct that is within the RICO definition of racketeering activity and that was intended to and did give the defendant a competitive advantage over the plaintiff.
Ideal II,
[t]he principal intended victim of the scheme was Ideal, over which defendants sought to secure a competitive advantage by giving certain cash customers an unlawful benefit, and by concealing that unlawful conduct and retaining the resulting profits by means of racketeering activity,
id. at 264 (emphasis added), we concluded that
Ideal, as a competitor directly targeted by defendants for competitive injury, has standing to assert its RICO claims against defendants for violations of § 1962(c) based on the alleged predicate acts of mail and wire fraud,
id. We concluded that Ideal’s complaint adequately stated claims under both § 1962(c) and § 1962(a).
B. The Decision of the Supreme Court: Ideal III
In
Ideal III,
indicated the compensable injury flowing from a violation of that provision “necessarily is the harm caused by predicate acts sufficiently related to constitute a pattern, for the essence of the violation is the commission of those acts in connection with the conduct of an enterprise.”
Ideal III,
The Supreme Court found it clear that there was no direct relation between the injury asserted by Ideal and the Anzas’ alleged mail and wire frauds:
The RICO violation alleged by Ideal is that the Anzas conducted National’s affairs through a pattern of mail fraud and wire fraud. The direct victim of this conduct was the State of New York, not Ideal. It was the State that was being defrauded and the State that lost tax revenue as a result.
The proper referent of the proximate-cause analysis is an alleged practice of conducting National’s business through a pattern of defrauding the State. To be sure, Ideal asserts it suffered its own harms when the Anzas failed to charge customers for the applicable sales tax. The cause of Ideal’s asserted harms, however, is a set of actions (offering lower prices) entirely distinct from the alleged RICO violation (defrauding the State).
Ideal III,
The Court noted that one of the reasons for the directness requirement is that “ ‘[t]he less direct an injury is, the more difficult it becomes to ascertain the amount of a plaintiffs damages attributable to the violation, as distinct from other, independent, factors.’”
Id.
at 458,
The injury Ideal alleges is its own loss of sales resulting from National’s decreased prices for cash-paying customers. National, however, could have lowered its prices for any number of reasons unconnected to the asserted pattern of fraud. It may have received a cash inflow from some other source or concluded that the additional sales would justify a smaller profit margin. Its lowering of prices in no sense required it to defraud the state tax authority. Likewise, the fact that a company commits tax fraud does not mean the company will lower its prices; the additional cash could go anywhere from asset acquisition to research and development to dividend payouts.
Ideal III,
Ideal’s lost sales could have resulted from factors other than petitioners’ alleged acts of fraud. Businesses lose and gain customers for many reasons, and it would require a complex assessment to establish what portion of Ideal’s lostsales were the, product of National’s decreased prices.
Id.
at 459,
A court considering the claim would need to begin by calculating the portion of National’s price drop attributable to the alleged pattern of racketeering activity. It next would have to calculate the portion of Ideal’s lost sales attributable to the relevant part of the price drop. The element of proximate causation recognized in Holmes is meant to prevent these types of intricate, uncertain inquiries from overrunning RICO litigation.
Ideal III,
With respect to Ideal’s claim under § 1962(a), however, the Supreme Court vacated and remanded for further consideration. Because Ideal II had focused principally on Ideal’s § 1962(c) claim, without addressing the issue of proximate cause in connection with the claim under § 1962(a), and because the parties had devoted nearly all of their attention in the Supreme Court to the § 1962(c) claim, the Ideal III Court declined to resolve the viability of Ideal’s § 1962(a) claim. The Court remanded for further consideration of the proximate-cause issue in light of the differences between the two subsections:
[i]t is true that private actions for violations of § 1962(a), like actions for violations of § 1962(c), must be asserted under § 1964(c). It likewise is true that a claim is cognizable under § 1964(c) only if the defendant’s alleged violation proximately caused the plaintiffs injury. The proximate-cause inquiry, however, requires careful consideration of the “relation between the injury asserted and the injurious conduct alleged.” Holmes, supra, at 268 [112 S.Ct. 1311 ]. Because § 1962(c) and § 1962(a) set forth distinct prohibitions, it is at least debatable whether Ideal’s two claims should be analyzed in an identical fashion for proximate-cause purposes.
Ideal III,
C. The Decision of the District Court on the Subsection (a) Claim on Remand: Ideal IV
This Court remanded the matter to the district court for consideration, in light of Ideal III, of the issue of proximate cause with respect to Ideal’s claim under § 1962(a). Following our remand, Ideal filed its present Complaint, reasserting only its § 1962(a) claim and its state-law breach-of-contract claim, and additional discovery was conducted.
The Complaint again described the cash-no-tax scheme conducted at National’s Queens facility in the late 1990s and early 2000s, and the attendant mail and wire frauds that allowed defendants to retain unreported profits and avoid paying proper taxes. It alleged that defendants used the concealed unlawful profits and tax savings to finance the opening of the National store in the Bronx to compete with Ideal. According to the Complaint and materials developed in discovery, for 1999 and 2000 National filed tax returns reporting total income of $145,118. Following the commencement of the present lawsuit, however, National filed amended tax returns showing that its total income for those years had instead been nearly $1.7 million, and that for the period 1998-2003 National had underreported its taxable income by a total of $4.3 million, allowing it to underpay its taxes by approximately $1.7 million. Discovery and other proceedings revealed that the Anzas had created a corporation
Ideal asserted that prior to 2000 there were no companies capable — in either size or breadth of offerings — of competing with Ideal in the Bronx, and that in 1998-2000, Ideal consistently had annual sales in the range of $4 million — $4.6 million. It alleged that defendants’ opening of the National store in the Bronx injured Ideal in two ways. First, simply by being there and offering products and services comparable to those offered by Ideal, the new National store took customers from Ideal, causing Ideal’s annual sales in 2001-2002 to drop by about one-third, to $2.7 million — $2.9 million. Second, Ideal asserts that at the Bronx store National engaged in the same cash-no-tax scheme that it conducted in the Queens store, thus allowing National to lure customers with the lower prices financed by the prior tax frauds.
Defendants moved for judgment on the pleadings pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(c), or alternatively for summary judgment pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 56, dismissing the Complaint on the ground that Ideal could not show that its lost sales were proximately caused by the mere creation of National’s Bronx facility through the alleged investment of the proceeds of racketeering activity. In
Ideal Steel Supply Corp. v. Anza,
No. 02 Civ. 4788,
First, the court found that Ideal’s Complaint failed to meet the standard set by
Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly,
deficient ... in that it does not allege facts explaining how Defendants’ investment of purported racketeering income to establish and operate its Bronx business location proximately caused Ideal to lose sales, profits, and market share.... Plaintiffs allegations that “Defendants substantially decreased Ideal’s sales, profits, and local market share, and eliminated Ideal’s dominant market position, by using racketeering proceeds to acquire, establish, and operate their Bronx business operation,” ... are little more than “labels and conclusions,” Twombly,550 U.S. at 555 [127 S.Ct. 1955 ], and do not show how Defendants[’] “alleged violation [of RICO] led directly to [Ideal’s] injuries,” [Ideal] III,547 U.S. at 461 [126 S.Ct. 1991 ], They are insufficient to state a claim under Section 1962(a).
In the alternative, the district court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment. The court noted that the Supreme Court in
Ideal III
had found that proximate cause was lacking with respect to Ideal’s 1962(c) claim because “ ‘it would require a complex assessment to establish what portion of Ideal’s lost sales were the product of National’s [conduct]’ because ‘[businesses lose and gain customers for many reasons,’ ”
Ideal IV,
Plaintiffs Section 1962(a) RICO claim raises the same concerns in view of Plaintiffs assertions that its injuries include “a permanent loss of sales, profits, and market share.” ... That is, it would be purely speculative ... for this Court to conclude that Ideal’s alleged injuries resulted from Defendants’ conduct as opposed to other factors .... “The element of proximate causation ... is meant to prevent these types of intricate, uncertain inquiries from overrunning RICO litigation.” [Ideal] III,547 U.S. at 460 [126 S.Ct. 1991 ].
Ideal IV,
The court found that proximate cause was lacking because “there were intervening factors that may have caused Ideal’s alleged lost sales, profits, and diminution in market share.” Id. at *5.
For one thing, Ideal’s principal, Giacomo Brancato, testified that Ideal’s Bronx location had “thousands of customers that buy thousands of products for many different uses.” ... The decisions of individual purchasers, ie., in this case presumably not to buy steel products from Ideal, have been held to constitute an independent intervening act between the alleged RICO violations and the alleged injuries.
Id. (emphases added). The court also found that “Ideal’s Bronx operation had several competitors,” id. at *5 n.2, that Ideal “received and accepted” inferior products, id. at *6, and that Ideal made various business decisions such as deciding whether or not to lower its prices to match those of National, see id., all of which the court held constituted intervening factors preventing Ideal from establishing proximate cause.
Accordingly, the district court dismissed Ideal’s claim under § 1962(a). The court also declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over Ideal’s state-law contract claim and dismissed that claim without prejudice. See id. at *7.
II. DISCUSSION
On appeal, Ideal contends principally that the district court failed to take proper account of the different acts prohibited by § 1962(a) and § 1962(c) and thereby erred in concluding that Ideal could not show that defendants’ use or investment of the proceeds from their mail and wire frauds to establish their Bronx facility was the proximate cause of the alleged injury to Ideal’s business. It also contends,
inter alia,
that the court conflated proximate causation with actual causation, mischaracterized as conclusory certain of the Complaint’s allegations that were factual, disregarded evidence produced in discovery that supported Ideal’s § 1962(a) claim, and viewed disputed evidence in a light favoring the defendants. Defendants contend principally that the district court’s view that the proximate cause inquiry with respect to Ideal’s claim under subsection (a) was the same as that with respect to subsection (c) was correct because Ideal failed to plead injury on a use-or-investment theory that was distinct from the injury that
We conclude that to the extent that Ideal claims injury from National’s continuation in its Bronx store of the cash-no-tax scheme conducted in the Queens store, that claim appears to be conceptually indistinguishable from the § 1962(c) claim rejected by the Supreme Court in Ideal III. The lower prices afforded to National’s customers through this scheme do not involve the “investment” or “use” of the illegally derived funds.
To the extent, however, that Ideal claims that it lost sales to National because defendants invested the proceeds of their pattern of racketeering activity to establish and operate National’s new store in the Bronx, we reject defendants’ contentions and conclude, for the reasons that follow, that the district court erred in granting judgment on the pleadings on the basis of Twombly, and erred in granting summary judgment.
A. The Scope of Section 1962(a)
In enacting RICO, Congress was concerned about, inter alia, damage to the nation’s free enterprise system by persons or entities infiltrating or operating otherwise legitimate businesses by means of criminal activities. The statement of findings and purpose that prefaces the Organized Crime Control Act of 1970 (“OCCA”), of which RICO was Title IX, states, inter alia, that
organized crime activities in the United States weaken the stability of the Nation’s economic system, harm innocent investors and competing organizations, interfere with free competition, seriously burden interstate and foreign commerce, threaten the domestic security, and undermine the general welfare of the Nation and its citizens.
Pub.L. 91-452, 84 Stat. 922-23 (1970) (emphasis added). RICO provisions such as § 1962(a) reflect Congress’s concern about the control of otherwise legitimate business concerns “acquired by the sub rosa investment of profits acquired from illegal ventures,” S.Rep. No. 91-617, at 77 (1969); see id. (infiltration of organized crime into legitimate businesses portends the “effeetive[ ] elimination]” of “Competitors”).
When organized crime infiltrates a legitimate business, its whole method of operation counters our theories of free competition and acts as an illegal restraint of trade. Whether a business is purchased from funds derived from its many unlawful activities, or whether it is acquired by extortion and violence, its aim is monopoly.... The vast economic power concentrated in this giant criminal conglomerate constitutes a dire threat to the proper functioning of our economic system.
116 Cong. Rec. 602 (1970) (statement of Sen. Hruska). See also S.Rep. No. 91-617, at 78 (“The syndicate-owned business, financed by illegal revenues and operated outside the rules of fair competition of the American marketplace, cannot be tolerated in a system of free enterprise.” (internal quotation marks omitted)); id. at 81 (describing civil remedies intended to attack, inter alia, “corruption in the acquisition or operation of business”).
Among its civil remedies, RICO provides a private right of action for treble damages for a “person injured in his business or property by reason of a violation of section 1962.” 18 U.S.C. § 1964(c). Subsection (a) of § 1962 — the remaining federal-law focus of the present litigation — provides, in pertinent part, that
[i]t shall be unlawful for any person who has received any income derived, directly or indirectly, from a pattern of racketeering activity ... to use or invest, directly or indirectly, any part of such income, or the proceeds of such income, in ... the establishment or operation of, any enterprise which is engaged in, or the activities of which affect, interstate or foreign commerce.
18 U.S.C. § 1962(a) (emphases added). RICO defines “enterprise” to “include[] any individual, partnership, corporation, association, or other legal entity, and any union or group of individuals associated in fact although not a legal entity.” Id. § 1961(4). For the sake of brevity, we will refer to an “enterprise which is engaged in, or the activities of which affect, interstate or foreign commerce,” id. § 1962(a), as a “commerce-affecting enterprise.”
Subsection (c) of § 1962, which was the principal focus of
Ideal I, II,
and
III,
makes it unlawful for any person employed by or associated with a commerce-affecting enterprise “to conduct or participate, directly or indirectly, in the conduct of such enterprise’s affairs through a pattern of racketeering activity.” 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c). Thus, “the compensable injury flowing from a violation of that provision ‘necessarily is
the harm caused by predicate acts
sufficiently related to constitute a pattern.’ ”
Ideal III,
Subsection (a), in contrast, focuses the inquiry on conduct different from the conduct constituting the pattern of racketeering activity. After there have been sufficient predicate acts to constitute such a pattern, what is forbidden by subsection (a) is the investment or use of the proceeds of that activity to establish or operate a commerce-affecting enterprise. Thus, the plaintiff asserting a civil RICO claim based on a violation of subsection (a) must show injury caused not by the pattern of racketeering activity itself, but rather by the use or investment of the proceeds of that activity,
see, e.g., Ouaknine v. MacFarlane,
RICO is to be read broadly. This is the lesson not only of Congress’ self-consciously expansive language and overall approach, see United States v. Turkette,452 U.S. 576 , 586-587 [101 S.Ct. 2524 ,69 L.Ed.2d 246 ] (1981), but also of its express admonition that RICO is to “be liberally construed to effectuate its remedial purposes,” Pub.L. 91-452, § 904(a), 84 Stat. 947. The statute’s “remedial purposes” are nowhere more evident than in the provision of a private action for those injured by racketeering activity.
Sedima,
Given the breadth with which RICO is to be interpreted, we reject for two reasons defendants’ contention that § 1962(a)’s prohibition against the use or investment of racketeering activity proceeds is inapplicable to their alleged use of pattern-of-racketeering-activity proceeds to open National’s Bronx facility on the theory that that section does not apply when such proceeds are simply used or reinvested in the same entity that engaged in the racketeering activity. First, defendants’ factual premise is flawed; they did not merely reinvest in the same entity. Rather, the Anzas created a new company, Easton Corporation, to purchase the Bronx property for the new National store. Second, even if Congress did not intend subsection (a)’s prohibition to reach the use of RICO tainted funds by the RICO violator in its own ongoing operation, the legislative history does not permit the inference that Congress meant to allow such entities, with impunity, to use those funds to branch out to new locations.
Finally, in keeping with the proper recognition of RICO’s breadth, we note that “income” as used in § 1962(a) was doubtless not intended by Congress to be interpreted restrictively to exclude moneys unlawfully retained by means of racketeering activity. In describing the RICO sections of the bill that became the OCCA, the report of the Judiciary Committee of the House of Representatives stated that “[sjubsection (a) makes it unlawful to invest funds derived from a pattern of racketeering activity, as defined in section 1961(1),” H.R.Rep. No. 91-1549, at 57, reprinted in 1970 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin. News 4007, 4033 (emphasis added). We can discern no meaningful distinction, for RICO purposes, between income fraudulently acquired and income fraudulently retained; both result in funds not otherwise available but for the fraud. Thus we view moneys unlawfully saved or withheld by means of a pattern of mail and wire frauds, as is alleged in the present case, as falling within the meaning of § 1962(a)’s reference to “income.” Nor have defendants urged a narrower interpretation.
With these principles in mind, we turn to the matter of whether Ideal’s Complaint was properly dismissed on the ground that it failed to plead, or that Ideal failed to adduce evidence, that defendants’ investment or use of funds derived from the pattern of mail and wire frauds was a proximate cause of Ideal’s alleged injury at its Bronx store.
B. The Dismissal Pursuant to Rule 12(c)
As indicated in Part I.C. above, the district court dismissed the Complaint pursuant to Rule 12(e) on the grounds that it did not specify the amount of RICO proceeds used to create National’s Bronx facility,
Ideal IV,
First, the
Twombly
Court noted that Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(a)(2) “requires only ‘a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief,’ in order to give the defendant fair notice of what the ... claim is and the grounds upon which it rests,”
Twombly,
The district court in
Ideal IV
demanded of Ideal a pleading at a level of specificity that was not justified by
Twombly.
The Complaint’s “allegations that Defendants substantially decreased Ideal’s sales, profits, and local market share, and eliminated Ideal’s dominant market position, by using racketeering proceeds to acquire, establish, and operate their Bronx business operation,”
Ideal IV,
Second, although the standards for dismissal pursuant to Rule 12(c) are the same as for a dismissal pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6),
see, e.g., Rivera v. Heyman,
[W]hen the allegations in a complaint, however true, could not raise a claim of entitlement to relief, this basic deficiency should ... be exposed at the point of minimum expenditure of time and money by the parties and the court.
Twombly,
In light of the fact that discovery in this case had been completed prior to the decision in
Ideal IV,
we do not regard
Twombly
as requiring that defendants’ Rule 12(c) motion be granted if evidence that had already been produced during discovery would fill the perceived gaps in the Complaint. For example, although the district court found persuasive the defendants’ argument that the Complaint did not specify how much RICO income was invested to create the National facility in the Bronx, materials in the record showed that the purchase price of the property was $2.5 million; that of that sum, $500,000 in cash was paid at the closing, and that that $500,000 was provided by National
(see, e.g.,
Anza Dep. at 186-87, 435); that defendants admit that opening the Bronx store cost at least $850,000
(see, e.g.,
Anza Decl. ¶ 5); and that Ideal’s expert accountant estimated that the total cost exceeded $1 million. To the extent that the district court viewed as conclusory the Complaint’s allegations that defendants had filed income tax returns that substantially understated their taxable income, the court should have taken into account the tax returns in the record— both those that were originally filed by National showing less than $73,000 in taxable income for each of the years 1999 and 2000, and the amended returns showing taxable income for those two years totaling nearly $1.7 million, as well as the deposition testimony of an accountant for National that those and other amended returns filed for National showed that for 1998-2003 National had unreported income totaling approximately $4.3 million
(see
Deposition of Jay L. Ofsink at 40). And to the extent that the court viewed the Complaint’s allegation that Ideal’s Bronx operation lost sales after the advent of National as conclusory, it should have taken into consideration,
inter alia,
the deposition testimony of Ideal’s sole shareholder, Giacomo Brancato, who stated that in each of the years 1998, 1999, and 2000, Ideal had
In these circumstances, assuming the truth of the Complaint’s allegations and of evidence in the record supporting those allegations, if defendants’ investment of the proceeds of their alleged pattern of mail and wire frauds has not sufficiently directly harmed Ideal to meet the standard of proximate cause, we find it difficult to envision anyone who could show injury proximately caused by that investment — or to fathom to whom Congress meant to grant a private right of action under subsection (a). We conclude that the district court erred in dismissing Ideal’s Complaint pursuant to Rule 12(c).
C. Summary Judgment
The principles governing summary judgment are well established. Such a motion “may properly be granted — and the grant of summary judgment may properly be affirmed — only where there is no genuine issue of material fact to be tried, and the facts as to which there is no such issue warrant the entry of judgment for the moving party as a matter of law.”
Kaytor v. Electric Boat Corp.,
Applying these principles, we first reject defendants’ contention — which the district court did not adopt — that they are entitled to summary judgment on the ground that Ideal failed to prove that they invested funds derived from the alleged pattern of racketeering activity in the establishment of National’s Bronx facility. The matter of whether or not defendants “directly or indirectly” invested or used proceeds derived “directly or indirectly” from such activity, 18 U.S.C. § 1962(a), is clearly a question of fact that could not properly be resolved by the court on summary judgment.
The district court, as set forth in Part I.C. above, ruled that defendants were entitled to summary judgment because it found the evidence insufficient to show that Ideal’s alleged loss of sales was proximately caused by defendants’ conduct. In ruling that it would be “purely speculative ... to conclude that Ideal’s alleged injuries resulted from Defendants’ conduct,”
Ideal IV,
As a general matter, the district court viewed the proximate cause inquiry as the same for a claim under subsection (a) as for one under subsection (c), and it does not appear to have given effect to the different referents required by the different prohibitions. In
Ideal III,
the Court found that proximate cause was lacking for Ideal’s subsection (c) claim because “the cause of Ideal’s harm was ‘a set of actions (offering lower prices) entirely distinct from the alleged RICO violation (defrauding the State).’ ”
Hemi,
We note also that the only cases cited by the district court as holding that decisions of individual purchasers are an intervening cause that defeats proximate cause were district court cases. In
Bridge v. Phoenix Bond & Indemnity Co.,
suppose an enterprise that wants to get rid of rival businesses mails misrepresentations about them to their customers and suppliers, but not to the rivals themselves. If the rival businesses lose money as a result of the misrepresentations, it would certainly seem that they were injured in their business “by reason of’ a pattern of mail fraud, even though they never received, and therefore never relied on, the fraudulent mailings.
Id.
at 649-50,
The district court also found an intervening cause in the fact that “Brancato testified that at various times between 1996 and 2003 Ideal received and accepted from its vendors steel products that were bent and rusty.”
Ideal IV,
The court’s additional suggestion that Ideal may have lost sales because of “actions taken by other steel companies in the area,”
Ideal IV,
Finally, the court’s suggestion that Ideal may have lost sales because of its “business
decisions
— e.g., to lower its prices to compete with National,”
Ideal IV,
CONCLUSION
We have considered all of defendants’ arguments in support of the judgment and have found them to be without merit. The judgment of the district court is vacated, and the matter is remanded for trial.
We encounter here another chapter in the long saga of civil RICO and its discontents. Since its enactment in 1970, the civil RICO statute, Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1961-1968, has exasperated generations of federal judges and practitioners and generated a vast, and often skeptical, literature. 1
* * *
From its beginnings before Judge Richard Berman, a seasoned federal trial judge, the case has presented the question whether plaintiff Ideal Steel Corporation (“Ideal”) can deploy the heavy legal armaments of RICO in a civil action against its chief rival, National Steel Supply, Inc. (“National”), based on National’s alleged illegal business practices.
In its complaint, Ideal raised two distinct civil RICO claims, one under 18 U.S.C. § 1962(a)
2
and the other under 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c).
3
Claims under each of these provisions “must be asserted under [18 U.S.C.] § 1964(c),”
id.
at 461-62,
Ideal’s § 1962(c) claim alleged that National’s owners, Joseph and Vincent Anza, conducted the affairs of an interstate business enterprise (National) “through a pattern of racketeering activity” — specifically, by refraining from charging their cash-paying customers requisite New York sales tax and by subsequently filing false tax returns with the State of New York.
See Ideal Steel III,
I.
In
Ideal Steel III,
the Supreme Court held that Ideal could not maintain its RICO claim under § 1962(c),
see
note 2,
ante,
because it failed to satisfy the requirement of proximate causation set forth in
Holmes,
We must now evaluate whether Ideal’s claim under § 1962(a) can withstand the proximate causation analysis set forth in
Ideal Steel III
and
Holmes. See id.
at 462,
The essence of Ideal’s claim under § 1962(a) is that defendants used funds earned directly or indirectly from the alleged “pattern of racketeering activity” in order to help establish or operate a new facility in the Bronx, and that the operations of this new store had the effect of substantially decreasing Ideal’s sales, profits, and local market share.
See Ideal Steel Supply Corp. v. Anza,
No. 02 Civ. 4788,
The majority opinion concludes that this theory of causation for the § 1962(a) claim is more direct and certain than Ideal’s failed § 1962(c) claim.
See
Majority Op. at 321-22. The principal failure of the § 1962(c) claim, as the Supreme Court pointed out, was that plaintiffs could not demonstrate that the money defendants saved by allegedly committing tax fraud was used in such a way as to ultimately result in increased competition for Ideal’s business.
See Ideal Steel III,
Nevertheless, the link between (i) the use of racketeering (or, “ill-gotten”) funds to help establish National’s new store in the Bronx, and (ii) the ultimate impact on Ideal’s bottom line, is not nearly as direct as Ideal — and the majority — seems to believe. Critically, the alleged illegal activity is not National’s creation of a new store in the Bronx — on its own, a perfectly legitimate, competitive pursuit — but rather, defendants’ investment of ill-gotten proceeds.
This distinction is important. It may be that the Bronx facility would not exist but for the alleged ill-gotten investment; on the other hand, it may also be that the economic projections concerning the development of a National facility in the Bronx were so promising, and access to abundant capital so cheap, that the decision to open the Bronx store was unaffected (either in terms of its opening date or the scope of its operations) by whatever ill-gotten proceeds were available. Although the truth likely lies somewhere in between, it is doubtful that any court could come up with a reasonably certain answer in light of the overwhelming number of variables inherent in this inquiry.
Nor would the causation analysis be resolved, even if we assumed, for the argument, that the impact of the ill-gotten investment on the operation of National’s Bronx facility could be readily ascertained. Rather, we would next be obliged to determine precisely how this impact “injured” Ideal (apart from the myriad other factors that may have adversely affected Ideal’s business). “The element of proximate causation recognized in
Holmes
is meant to prevent these types of intricate, uncertain inquiries from overrunning RICO litigation. It has particular resonance when applied to claims brought by economic competitors, which, if left unchecked, could blur the line between RICO and the antitrust laws.”
Ideal Steel III,
II.
The danger of blurring the line between RICO and the antitrust laws is a real one. Justice Breyer’s separate opinion in
Ideal Steel III
is particularly instructive in explaining why this is so. If, as today’s panel opinion suggests, companies can pursue civil RICO claims against their competitors on the basis of allegations that ill-gotten proceeds have funded perfectly legitimate and competitive pursuits, RICO can be misused as a weapon against competition in the marketplace. As Justice Breyer observed, “[f]irms losing the competitive battle might find bases for a RICO attack on their more successful competitors in claimed misrepresentations or even comparatively minor misdeeds by that competitor.”
Ideal Steel III,
In light of (i) the broad scope of RICO (and what might constitute proceeds from a RICO “predicate act”), and (ii) the specter of paying treble damages, the mere threat of such a suit would chill competition. When one considers the number of different entities that could plausibly allege to have been “injured” by the market activity in question — various competitors, suppliers to the various competitors, etc.— the potential threat is compounded. As
If today’s majority were right on the law, the adverse consequences of its holding — stemming from a broad interpretation of the RICO statute — would ordinarily be a concern reserved for the attention of Congress. But, as Justice Breyer recognized, Congress has already spoken to this question through the antitrust laws. “The basic objective of antitrust law is to encourage the competitive process. In particular, [antitrust law] encourages businesses to compete by offering lower prices, better products, better methods of production, and better systems of distribution.”
Id.
at 482,
As Justice Breyer noted, it is difficult enough to establish causation in antitrust cases where plaintiffs seek to link certain economic injuries to specified
anti-competitive
conduct.
Id.
at 484,
Justice Breyer’s solution to the problems identified above was to assert that § 1964(c)’s proximate causation requirement (as applied to both § 1962(a)
and
§ 1962(c)) “places outside the provision[s] harms that are traceable to an unlawful act only through a form of legitimate competitive activity.”
Id.
at 486,
In sum, with Justice Breyer, “I believe that the financing of a new store-even with funds generated by unlawful activities — is not sufficient to create a private cause of action as long as the activity funded amounts to legitimate competitive activity.”
Id.
at 487,
Notes
. See, e.g., William H. Rehnquist, Remarks of the Chief Justice, 21 St. Mary's L.J. 5, 9-21 (1989); William H. Rehnquist, Get Rico Cases Out of My Courtroom, Wall St. J., May 19, 1989, at A14; David B. Sentelle, Civil RICO: The Judges’ Perspective, and Some Notes on Practice for North Carolina Lawyers, 12 Campbell L.Rev. 145 (1990).
To be sure, RICO — and its application in civil suits — is not without its defenders. See, e.g., G. Robert Blakey & Thomas A. Perry, An Analysis of the Myths that Bolster Efforts To Rewrite RICO and the Various Proposals for Reform: "Mother of God — Is this the End of RICO?”, 43 Vand. L.Rev. 851 (1990) (defending the "legitimacy” of RICO); G. Robert Blakey, Civil RICO: A Rebuttal to Some Myths Spmring Reform Effort in Congress, Nat! L.J., Aug. 3, 1987, at 26 (a defense of civil RICO). It should be noted, however, that its defender-in-chief, Professor Blakely, was the Chief Counsel of the Senate Subcommittee in Criminal Laws and Procedure when the RICO statute was passed, see Gary S. Abrams, The Civil RICO Controversy Reaches the Supreme Court, 13 Hofstra L.Rev. 147, 149 n.9 (1984), and is touted as one of its chief architects, see, e.g., G. Robert Blakey, The RICO Civil Fraud Action in Contaxt: Reflections on Bennett v. Berg, 58 Notre Dame L.Rev. 237, 237 n.3 (1982).
. In relevant part, § 1962(a) provides:
It shall be unlawful for any person who has received any income derived, directly or indirectly, from a pattern of racketeering activity or through collection of an unlawful debt in which such person has participated as a principal within the meaning of section 2, title 18, United States Code, to use or invest, directly or indirectly, any part of such income, or the proceeds of such income, in acquisition of any interest in, or the establishment or operation of, any enterprise which is engaged in, or the activities of which affect, interstate or foreign commerce.
18 U.S.C. § 1962(a).
. Section 1962(c) states, in full, that "[i]t shall be unlawful for any person employed by or associated with any enterprise engaged in, or the activities of which affect, interstate or foreign commerce, to conduct or participate, directly or indirectly, in the conduct of such enterprise’s affairs through a pattern of racketeering activity or collection of unlawful debt.” 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c) (emphasis added).
.In relevant part, § 1964(c) provides that "[a]ny person injured in his business or property by reason of a violation of section 1962 of this chapter may sue therefor in any appropriate United States district court and shall recover threefold the damages he sustains and the cost of the suit, including a reasonable attorney’s fee[.]” 18 U.S.C. § 1964(c).
