MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
Bеfore the Court in this multidistrict litigation are several defendants’ motions to dismiss the First Amended Complaints of Riverhead Savings Bank (“Riverhead”), Missouri Savings Association (“Missouri”) and First Federal Savings and Loan Association (“First Federal”) (collectively the “Savings Banks”) and the Second Amended Complaint of Bank of America (“B of A” or the “Bank”).
The Savings Banks’ First Amended Complaints differ significantly from B of A’s Second Amended Complaint. Consequently, this memorandum opinion consists of two parts. PART ONE addresses the motions to dismiss the Savings Banks’ First Amended Complaints. PART TWO addresses the motions to dismiss B of A’s Second Amended Complaint.
This is the second wave of motions to dismiss in these actions. The factual allegations concerning the formation and marketing of the pools and the fraud are set forth in ample detail in the Court’s Memorandum Opinion and Order on the first set of motions to dismiss and will only be supplemented here where necessary.
See In re National Mortgage Equity Corp. Mortgage Pool Certificates Sec. Litig.,
PART ONE: THE SAVINGS BANKS’ FIRST AMENDED COMPLAINTS
PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On the prior round of the various motions to dismiss the Savings Banks’ original complaints, which were granted in part and denied in part, the Court granted leave to amend on all of the dismissed claims, except for Missouri’s First Claim with respect to the Series “A” Certificate. That claim was held to be barred by the statute of limitations.
NMEC,
The Savings Banks’ First Amended Complaints address the deficiencies found on the first round of motions to dismiss, add сlaims for breach of contract, breach of duty and negligence against Wells Fargo Bank (“Wells Fargo”) and add Manufacturers Hanover Trust Company of California (“Manufacturers Hanover”) as a defendant. Riverhead also added Advance Mortgage Corporation and its successor-in-interest, the Lomas & Nettleton Company (collectively “Advance”), as defendants, asserting claims for breach of contract and negligence against it. Advance had already been named as a defendant on similar claims by First Federal and Missouri in their original complaints.
Before the Court are motions to dismiss the Savings Banks’ First Amended Complaints by defendants National Mortgage Equity Corporation (“NMEC”), David A. Feldman (“Feldman”), Advance, Manufacturers Hanover, Leslie W. Michael (“Michael”), and Lord Bissell & Brook, the part *1077 ners of Lord Bissell & Brook and Kay Aevermann (collectively “Lord Bissell”). Defendants advance a wide array of grounds in support of their motions. These are discussed below.
DISCUSSION
I. STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS
A. Section 12(1) Claims
The Savings Banks allege violations of § 12(1) of the Securities Act of 1933, (the “1933 Act”), 15 U.S.C. § 771(1), which imposes liability on those who offer to sell or sell unregistered securities in violation of § 5 of the 1933 Act, 15 U.S.C. § 77e. 1 Defendants contend that First Federal and Missouri’s § 12(1) claims are barred by the limitations period of § 13 of the 1933 Act, 15 U.S.C. § 77m. 2
Section 13 requires a § 12(1) action to be brought within one year after the violation of § 5 and “in no event ... more than three years after the security was bona fide offered to the public.”
3
The statute begins to run from the date of defendant’s last sales-related activity,
i.e.,
offer, sale or delivery of the security.
NMEC,
Here, First Federal purchased its Series “B” pool Certificate on March 23, 1982, while Missouri purchased its Series “A” pool Certificate on January 29, 1982, and its Series “D” pool Certificate on July 15, 1982. First Federal filed its complaint on March 22, 1985. Missouri filed its complaint on April 18,1985. 4 Since these dates are more than one year after the last sales-related activity alleged, First Federal and Missouri’s § 12(1) claims are time-barred, unless they can be saved by the doctrine of fraudulent concealment.
The Court held on the first round of motions to dismiss that § 13’s one-year limitation on § 12(1) actions can be equitably tolled by fraudulent concealment.
Id.
at 1167. Proper allegations of fraudulent concealment state “facts showing affirmative conduct upon the part of the defendant which would, under the circumstances of the case, lead a reasonable person to believe that he did not have a claim for relief,” and also state “facts showing [plaintiff’s] due diligence in trying to uncover the facts.”
Rutledge v. Boston Woven Hose & Rubber Co.,
The Court held that First Federal and Missouri failed adequately to plead fraudulent concealment in their original complaints.
NMEC,
First Federal and Missouri allege that defendants affirmatively represented that the certificates were exempt from registration and that all information necessary to enable them to make an investment decision had been provided. Amend.Comps. 1111 56, 59. Plaintiffs allege that they believed that the certificates were exempt from registration under § 4(2) of the 1933 Act, 15 U.S.C. § 77d(2), which exempts transactions “not involving a public offering” from the registration requirements of § 5. They argue that they had no reason to believe that the certificates were not entitled to the private placement exemption because they closely resembled government guaranteed mortgage-backed certificates, which are exempt from registration. They allege that they had no reason to believe that the sale of the certificates was part of an overall scheme that constituted an integrated, nonexempt public offering until January, 1985, when they finally received a copy of Advance’s letter of December, 1982, in which it resigned as the servicer of the pools and outlined a number of irregularities in the pools. It was at this point, they allege, that they discovered that they and a number of other investors had been defrauded.
Putting aside the incredibleness of their explanation of why they did not know the securities should have been registered at the time, First Federal and Missouri still fail to plead with particularity why they did not discover those facts earlier, i.e., facts showing their due diligence.
First Federal and Missouri argue that paragraphs 44-53 of their First Amended Complaints contain sufficient allegations of due diligence. Yet these sections only allege why they believed they had no reason to conduct an independent investigation of Advance’s resignation. They provide no explanation of why they failed to discover sooner that the offer and sale of these mortgage-backed certificates constituted an integrated public offering. First Federal and Missouri admit that they knew at least as early as May, 1983, 5 that NMEC was “servicing numerous newly formed pools.” Amend.Comps. ¶ 47. Given this knowledge, First Federal and Missouri had at least inquiry notice suggesting the integration problem, yet they do not allege any efforts to discover whether their pools were, part of an integrated offering. Thus, they have failed to meet their burden of particularly pleading equitable tolling of their § 12(1) claims. Those claims are now dismissed. 6
B. Section 12(2) and State Securities Law Claims
Claims brought under § 12(2) of the 1933 Act, 15 U.S.C. § 77Z(2), also are governed by § 13’s limitations period,
i.e.,
they must be brought “within one year after the discovery оf the untrue statement, or after such discovery should have been made by the exercise of reasonable diligence,” and “in no event ... more than three years after the sale.” The applicable statute of limitations for the state securities law claims embodies the same standard applied to § 12(2) claims.
See
Cal.Corp.Code § 25506;
NMEC,
On the previous motions to dismiss, the Court dismissed First Federal and Missouri’s § 12(2) and state securities law claims, 7 finding that although their allega *1079 tions of fraudulent concealment were sufficient, they failed to plead facts showing their due diligence. Id. at 1169. The Court noted that:
the complaints ... state that Advance resigned as servicer in March 1983. While the complaints intimate that Wells Fargo pressured plaintiffs into approving the substitution of NMEC as servicer, plaintiffs do not allege what steps, if any, they took to investigate the circumstances surrounding Advance’s resignation. It may be that reasonable inquiry would have revealed facts putting plaintiffs on notice of the fraud.
Id. First Federal and Missouri admit in their Amended Complaints that they made no “independent investigation of the facts and circumstances surrounding Advance’s resignation and NMEC’s appointment as servicer_” Amend.Comps. 1147. Instead, they allege why they had no reason to suspect wrongdoing by defendants and why they were entitled to rely on Wells Fargo’s investigation of the resignation and its assurances that there were no problems. Amend.Comps. ¶¶ 44-53.
As the Court previously stated, the investigation that
others
undertook is irrelevant to the issue of “what due diligence
the Savings Banks
undertook to uncover their claim.”
NMEC,
First Federal and Missouri allege that two material factors in their decisions to invest in the pools were that Advance was to service the pools and that the mortgages to be included in the pools were to meet stringent criteria of creditworthiness. Amend.Comps. ¶¶ 30-34, 37. Nevertheless, they allege no attempts to investigate or even inquire about the reasons behind Advance’s resignation in March, 1983. Nor do they allege any efforts to question Wells Fargo about the status of the pools after it sent them each a letter in May, 1983, informing them that "it was having difficulty finding a servicer other than NMEC to replace Advance because of the ‘high number of defaults and foreclosures in the mortgage pools.’ ” Amend.Comps. 1146 (quoting from Wells Fargo’s letter of May, 1983). 8
In light of these clear indications of trouble,
9
it was not reasonable for First Federal and Missouri simply to rely on Wells Fargo’s investigation and assurances.
See Volk,
*1080 II. RICO CLAIMS
The Savings Banks have cured the defects in their original RICO claims under 18 U.S.C. § 1962(a)-(d).
See NMEC,
A. Sufficiency of § 1962(a) and (b) Allegations
Defendants Michael and Feldman challenge the sufficiency of the § 1962(a) and (b) allegations. Section 1962(a) provides that “It 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 acquisition of any interest in, or the establishment or operation of, any enterprise....” The Savings Banks’ § 1962(a) claims allege that “defendants Feldman and Michael received income from the above mentioned pattern of racketeering activity and used this income in the operation of NMEC, an enterprise_” First Federal, Missouri Amend.Comps. If 85; Riverhead Amend.Comp. ¶ 74.
Defendants contend that these allegations are insufficient in that they fail to describe specific facts concerning the use of the racketeering income. This argument is meritless. Plaintiffs are not required to plead additional facts in support of their § 1962(a) claims.
11
See Schreiber Distrib. Co. v. Serv-Well Furniture Co.,
Section 1962(b) states that: “It shall be unlawful for any рerson through a pattern of racketeering activity ... to acquire or maintain, directly or indirectly, any interest in or control of any enterprise....” The Savings Banks allege “that defendants Feldman and Michael acquired or maintained their interest or control of the enterprise NMEC through this pattern of racketeering activity.” First Federal, Missouri Amend.Comps. ¶ 86; Riverhead Amend. Comp. ¶ 75. These allegations are sufficient to state a § 1962(b) claim. Id.
Michael and Feldman argue that the requirement that a § 1962(b) defendant engage in a pattern of racketeering activity to “maintain” an interest in an enterprise means that plaintiffs must allege some “threat” to the enterprise to which defendants responded by engaging in racketeering activity, citing
von Bulow by Auersperg v. von Bulow,
B. Standing Under § 1962(a) and (b)
Michael and Feldman contend that plaintiffs lack standing to bring claims under § 1962(a), (b) and (d) (conspiracy predicated on a § 1962(a) or (b) claim) because they allege that they have been injured only by the underlying predicate acts, which violate § 1962(c). Defendants cite several cases that hold that to state a claim under § 1962(a) or (b), a plaintiff must allege that its injury was caused, not just by the predicate acts of racketeering, but also by the investment and use of funds in the enterprise (§ 1962(a)) or the acquisition or maintenance of defendants’ interest in or cоntrol of the enterprise (§ 1962(b)).
See Prodex v. Legg Mason Wood Walker,
No. 86-1950, slip op. (E.D.Pa., Feb. 5, 1987) [Available on WESTLAW,
The Court declines to follow these cases in imposing a separate standing requirement for § 1962(a), (b) and (d). To impose such a requirement would be to revive the concept of a “distinct racketeering injury” rejected by the Supreme Court in
Sedima S.P.R.L. v. Imrex Co.,
In Sedima the Supreme Court rejected the notion that in order to have standing under RICO a plaintiff must suffer a “racketeering injury” separate and apart from any injuries he or she has sustained as a result of the predicate acts. While Sedima involved an alleged violation of subsection (c), the same arguments defendants advance here were urged upon the Court there—namely that a plaintiff injured only by the underlying predicate racketeering acts lacked standing to bring a civil action. The Court rejected those arguments in no uncertain terms as to subsection (c), and in so doing did not in any way limit its reasoning to that subsection.
King v. E.F. Hutton & Co.,
[current] RICO Bus. Disputes Guide (CCH) ¶ 6578, at 6840 (D.D.C.1987) [Available on WESTLAW,
The Ninth Circuit has also implicitly rejected a “separate injury” requirement for § 1962(a) and (d). In
Wilcox v. First Interstate Bank,
The Supreme Court recently expressly rejected the “racketeering enterprise injury” rule relied on by the district court.... The Court emphasized that a plaintiff must still allege each element prescribed in the statute to state a claim. The statute, however, requires no more. The compensable injury is the harm caused by the predicate act relied upon.
Id.
at 529. The court drew no distinction between the plaintiff’s claims under § 1962(a), (c) and (d).
See also Virden v. Graphics One,
*1082
The Court declines to imply an additional standing requirement into § 1962(a), (b) and (c).
Accord Snider v. Lone Star Art Trading Co.,
C. Riverhead’s § 1962(c) and (d) Claims
Lord Bissell and Michael contend that Riverhead’s Amended Complaint is defective in that it fails to plead that River-head was injured in its business or property by the conduct constituting the § 1962(c) and (d) violations.
Defendants cannot dispute that River-head alleges that defendants’ RICO violations were the proximate cause of its injury. Riverhead Amend.Comp. ¶ 72. Defendants’ argument is that Riverhead cannot claim its injuries were proximately caused by defendants’ alleged § 1962(c) and (d) violations because Umpqua was the original purchaser of the Series “C” Certificate, which it subsequently resold to Rivеr-head.
See NMEC,
Essentially, defendants are asking the Court to rule as a matter of law based on the pleadings that defendants’ alleged RICO violations were not a proximate cause of Riverhead’s injury. The Court has previously stated that it declines to make such a fact-based determination on a motion to dismiss in such a complex case.
Id.
at 1157. Although that ruling concerned the issue of whether B of A’s alleged misconduct was a supervening cause of the harm caused to the Investor Institutions,
15
the principle is the same and the Court adheres to its earlier position. Moreover, there is substantial authority rejecting defendants’ primary/secondary and direct/indirect injury distinctions.
See Miller v. Glen & Helen Aircraft, Inc.,
D. Pattern of Racketeering Activity
Feldman argues that First Federal and Riverhead’s § 1962(c) claims are deficient in that they allege only a single loss caused by a one-time purchase of one mortgage-backed certificate. Feldman contends that such allegations of a single criminal episode as to each plaintiff is insufficient to constitute a pattern of racketeering activity.
This contention is clearly without merit. The Court has already ruled that plaintiffs have alleged sufficiently a pattern of racketeering.
See NMEC,
For all of the above reasons, the various motions to dismiss the Savings Banks’ RICO claims are denied. However, the Savings Banks concede that the motions to strike their requests for injunctive relief under RICO must be granted in light of
Religious Technology Center v. Wollersheim,
III. SECTION 10(b) AND RULE 10b-5 CLAIMS
Advance attacks First Federal and Missouri’s claims under § 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b) (the “1934 Act”), and Rule 10b-5, of the regulations promulgated thereunder, 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5, on a number of grounds, but they are all without merit.
Contrary to Advance’s assertions, First Federal and Missouri have alleged the elements required to' state claims under § 10(b) and Rule 10b-5. They have alleged that Advance was a seller, First Federal, Missouri Amend.Comps. ¶¶ 14, 37, and actionable misrepresentations.
Id.
¶¶ 30-33, 35. Even a superficial reading of the complaints reveals that they allege Advance’s duty to disclose under the factors identified in
White v. Abrams,
IV. BREACH OF FIDUCIARY DUTY
First Federal and Missouri charges Advance with breach of fiduciary duty for its alleged misconduct in servicing the pools. All of the Savings Banks also charge NMEC, which replaced Advance as the servicer of the pools after Advance resigned in March, 1983, with breach of fiduciary duty. NMEC and Advance contend that they owed no fiduciary duty to the Savings Banks, that their obligations were limited and fixed under the terms of the Pooling and Servicing Agreements.
The Savings Banks contend that NMEC and Advance became the equivalent of common, law trustees when they agreed to service the pools. The Savings Banks argue that a fiduciary relationship arises when one party has a great degree of control over another’s money or property.
See Vai v. Bank of America,
This issue requires factual development.
17
The Court cannot conclude to a certainty, based on the pleadings, that the Savings Banks will be able to prove no set of facts entitling them to relief for breach of fiduciary duty.
See NL Indus., Inc. v.
*1084
Kaplan,
V. THE IMPLIED COVENANT OF GOOD FAITH AND FAIR DEALING
First Federal and Missouri charge Wells Fargo, Advance and NMEC with tortious breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. Riverhead alleges the same claims against Wells Fargo and NMEC. 18
A breach of the implied covenant may give rise to a cause of action sounding in tort if the contracting parties have a “special relationship.”
May v. Watt,
VI. ASSIGNMENT AND PRIVITY OF CONTRACT RE RIVERHEAD
The Series “C” Certificate was originally purchased by Umpqua in April, 1982. In April, 1984, Riverhead purchased this Certificate from Umpqua through its broker MEBAC. Advance contends that Riverhead fails to show an assignment of a breach of contract claim from Umpqua to Riverhead. In a related argument, Advance contends that Riverhead’s claim for negligent performance of duty fails because Riverhead has not shown privity of contract between it and Advance because Advance had resigned as servicer before Umpqua sold its certificate to Riverhead.
Advance, in essencе, raises factual issues that cannot be resolved on a motion to dismiss. Riverhead has pleaded all that it must at this stage regarding the assignment of the breach of contract claim. Riverhead Amend.Comp. ¶ 113.
See Stanton v. Pratt,
*1085 The determination whether in a specific ease the defendant will be held liable to a third person not in privity is a matter of policy and involves the balancing of various factors, among which are the extent to which the transaction was intended to affect the plaintiff, the foreseeability of harm to him, the degree of certainty that the plaintiff suffered injury, the closeness of the connection between the defendant’s conduct and the injury suffered, the moral blame attached to the defendant’s conduct, and the policy of preventing future harm.
Biakanja v. Irving,
VII. JOINDER OF MANUFACTURERS HANOVER
Manufacturers Hanover was added as a defendant in all three of the Savings Banks’ First Amended Complaints. Manufacturers Hanover argues, inter alia, that it has been improperly joined at a late date in this case and that the First Amendеd Complaints fail to state either a direct claim or a claim of successor-in-interest liability against it.
The Savings Banks appear to concede that the proper procedure would have been to seek a court order under F.R.Civ.P. 21, permitting the joinder of Manufacturers Hanover.
See Pacific Gas & Elec. Co. v. Fibreboard Prod., Inc.,
The Savings Banks conceded at the hearing on these motions that the only claim they could plead against Manufacturers Hanover would be for breach of contract under their Ninth Claim. They also implicitly concede, as they should, that their First Amended Complaints do not state claims for breach of contract against Manufacturers Hanover. They have attached a proposed amendment in which they attempt to clarify the relationship between Manufacturers Hanover and Wells Fargo. The Court will, thus, treat this as a motion for leave to add Manufacturers Hanover as a defendant under F.R.Civ.P. 21 and to amend the Savings Banks First Amended Complaints under F.R.Civ.P. 15(a).
Under Rule 15(a), leave to amend “shall be freely given when justice so requires.” “Valid reasons for denying leave to amend include undue delay, bad faith, prejudice, and futility.”
California Architectural Bldg. Prod., Inc. v. Franciscan Ceramics, Inc.,
Plaintiffs would allege Manufacturers Hanover’s liability as a successor-in-interest to Wells Fargo. Yet they have failed to allege any facts that support that theory of liability.
See Ghouth v. Conticommodity Serv., Inc.,
VIII. MOTIONS TO STRIKE
Aside from the motion to strike the Savings Banks’ requеst for injunctive relief under RICO, which is well-founded as discussed in Part II, supra, all of defendants’ motions to strike are denied for the reasons discussed in PART TWO, infra.
PART TWO: BANK OF AMERICA’S SECOND AMENDED COMPLAINT
PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
As indicated, dismissal in part of B of A’s original complaint was with leave to amend.
NMEC,
B of A’s First Amended Complaint added as defendants John C. Hayden, president of Glacier General Assurance Company, one of the alleged conspiring mortgage insurers; Marvin H. Weiss, a principal in alleged shell corporations that posed as lenders and borrowers on loans in the NMEC pools; Ben Adelman, an attorney who represented NMEC, Feldman, Glacier and several of the alleged Weiss shell companies; Kay M. Aevermann, a Lord Bissell attorney who provided substantial legal assistance to NMEC in connection with its mortgage-backed certificate program; and the partners of Lord Bissell. To rectify the problems in its original complaint, B of A added allegаtions naming NMEC as the RICO enterprise and allegations of overt acts in furtherance of the RICO conspiracy. It also added claims against Feldman and Michael for violations of § 1962(a), (b) and (d) (to its already pending § 1962(c) and (d) claims). B of A also alleged a claim for equitable indemnity based on defendants’ violations of federal and state securities laws and their acts of fraud and negligence. Finally, the First Amended Complaint alleged claims against all defendants for fraud and conspiracy to defraud and, as the Investor Institutions’ assignee, against NMEC for breach of contract.
Motions to dismiss B of A’s First Amended Complaint were filed by Lord Bissell, the Lord Bissell partners, Aevermann, Michael, West Pac Corporation and Kent B. Rogers (collectively “West Pac”), NMEC, Feldman and Adelman.
21
The only basis on which subject matter jurisdiction was predicated as to the Bank’s claims against NMEC was that the equitable indemnity claims based on defendants’ alleged violations of federal securities laws “arise under” federal law. 28 U.S.C. § 1331. Because the existence of jurisdiction on this basis was unclear to the Court,
22
and because the Ninth Circuit’s intervening decision in
Schreiber,
B of A’s Second Amended Complaint is identical to the First Amendеd Complaint, except that it names NMEC in addition to Feldman and Michael in its claims for relief under § 1962(a) and (d) (Second Claim for Relief) and under § 1962(b) and (d) (Third Claim for Relief). 25 DISCUSSION
I. COMPARATIVE EQUITABLE INDEMNITY
To discuss this issue, it is necessary to summarize briefly B of A’s role in the alleged fraud and in this litigation. B of A was appointed escrow agent and trustee for most of the NMEC pools. Wells Fargo, a defendant in the Savings Banks’ action, was the trustee for the other pools. See PART ONE, supra. As trustees of their respective pools, B of A and Wells Fargo were to review the documentation NMEC provided regarding each mortgage in order to see that it complied with all applicable standards set out in the pooling and servicing agreements.
In October, 1984, one of the Investor Institutions for which B of A acted as trustee, advised it of “certain irregularities in the processing and documentation” of the mortgages comprising that Investor Institution’s pool. B of A initiated an investigation of the NMEC pools. In its investigation, the Bank learned not only of the alleged NMEC-managed fraud, but also that its own employees had not, in the Bank’s words, “adequately discharged the Bank’s responsibilities” as escrow agent and trustee. As a result of its investigation, B of A filed an action in California state court against several of its own employees for their roles in the handling of the NMEC pools, alleging claims for indemnity, negligence, gross negligence, breach of fiduciary duty, equitable subrogation, breach of insurance contracts and declaratory relief regarding insurance agreements. 26
B of A’s investigation also led it to conclude that as a result of the fraud, the Investor Institutions for which it had acted as trustee stood to lose all or most of their investments in the NMEC pools. The Bank, therefore, decided to “resolve its liability” to those Investor Institutions by repurchasing their certificates or by replacing the mortgages in the pools represented by the certificates. 27 After compensating the Investor Institutions for their losses, the Bank was left with a net loss of $95 million. However, in return for the compensation, the Investor Institutions assigned to B of A any claims they might have against any of the defendants. B of A then filed this action alleging claims for violation of federal and state securities laws, common law fraud and breach of *1088 contract as the assignee of the Investor Institutions. B of A also brought a RICO claim both as an assignee and in its own right.
The Court held on the earlier round of motions to dismiss that all of the claims brought by the Bank as assignee, except the RICO claims, were barred by the “one-satisfaction rule.”
NMEC,
In its Second Amended Complaint, B of A alleges six claims for “equitable indemnity.” Three of these claims are based on asserted underlying violations of federal securities laws by defendants (§ 10(b) of the 1934 Act and §§ 17(a) and 12(2) of the 1933 Act). One claim is based on violation of state securities laws (Cal.Corp.Code §§ 25401, 25501 and 25504.1). The two remaining claims are based on common law theories of fraud and negligence.
On each of these claims, the Bank seeks total or partial equitable indemnity under the doctrine of comparative equitable indemnity,
29
set forth in
American Motorcycle Ass’n v. Superior Court,
the equitable indemnity doctrine originated in the common sense proposition that when two individuals are responsible for a loss, but one of the two is more culpable than the other, it is only fair that the more culpable party should bear a greater share of the loss. Of course, at the time the doctrine developed, common law percepts precluded any attempt to ascertain comparative fault; as a consequence, equitable indemnity, like the contributory negligence dоctrine, developed as an all-or-nothing proposition.
Id.
at 593,
However, California courts were “reluctant to shift the entire loss to a party who was simply slightly more culpable than another.”
Id.
at 594,
Although
American Motorcycle Ass’n
involved concurrent tortfeasors, compara
*1089
tive equitable indemnity is also available among successive tortfeasors who become legally obligated to an injured party for the same injury,
see, e.g., Sacramento v. Gemsch Inv. Co.,
The Bank pleads its comparative equitable indemnity claim in the following manner. It first pleads the elements necessary to establish the defendants’ tortious conduct on each claim and alleges that those tortious acts proximately caused the injury to the Investor Institutions. It then pleads that it compensated the Investor Institutions for their losses. The Bank alleges that its liability for these losses “was vicarious and secondary and arose solely as a result of the wrongful acts of certain employees in the performance of the escrow and trust services provided under the written escrow instructions and Servicing Agreements in connection with the NMEC transactions.” Thus, the Bank contends that the defendants and the Bank were joint tortfeasors. The Bank then requests total or partial equitable indemnity from defendants.
Defendants raise a variety of objections to these claims. NMEC and Feldman contend that comparative equitable indemnity applies only in a personal injury or noncommercial lawsuit, citing
Carroll v. Gava,
NMEC and Feldman argue that even if comparative equitable indemnity does apply to business tort litigation, the Bank has not stated claims under the doctrine because its pleadings in the state court action against its employees contain admissions thаt it is an intentional tortfeasor, thus, barring it from any award of equitable indemnity. It is well-established that an intentional tort-feasor cannot seek either total or partial equitable indemnity.
See
Cal.Code Civ. Proc. § 875(d);
Allen,
Even so, however, the Bank’s admissions in the state court action against its employees and in its claims here preclude it from seeking
total
equitable indemnity from defendants in this action. The Bank’s standing to bring its equitable indemnity claims is predicated on its admitted, indeed, vigorously argued, status as a joint tortfeasor in causing the Investor Institutions’ injury. However, B of A argues that it is entitled to total indemnity because it was only “vicariously” liable to the Investor Institutions because of its employees wrongful conduct. B of A contends that where a party seeking comparative equitable indemnity is only vicariously liable, the total loss may be apportionment to the actual wrongdoers, citing
Standard Pac. v. A. A. Baxter Corp.,
B of A confuses the imputed liability arising from the doctrine of respondeat superior with the vicarious liability at issue in strict liability cases, such as Standard Pac. That case concerned apportionment between a settling defendant and a nonsettling defendant who had been held strictly liable (public policy imposed non-negligent liability) who attempted to obtain total indemnification from the settling defendant. 31
B of A’s posture here
vis-a-vis
the defendants is very different from that of the strictly liable defendant
vis-a-vis
the other tortfeasors in the
Standard Pac.
situation. As B of A argues, the goal of comparative equitable indemnity is to apportion liability to joint tortfeasors according to their respective culpability. However, because B of A is a corporation, it “in a literal sense can never be guilty of ‘actual’ negligence ... except to the extent that the acts of [its] agents, servants and employees are imputable and chargeable to [it].”
Horn & Barker, Inc. v. Macco Corp.,
Defendants raise several arguments directed specifically at the Bank’s claims for equitable indemnity based on defendants’ violations of federal securities laws. NMEC and Feldman argue that it is hornbook law that the availability of contribution or indemnification for violations of the securities laws is a matter of federal law, not state law.
33
See Heizer Corp. v. Ross,
State law is preempted only when Congress demonstrates an intent to “occupy a given field” to the complete exclusion of state regulation or when the state regulation “actually conflicts with federal law, that is, when it is impossible to comply with both state and federal law, or where the state law stands as an obstacle to the accomplishment of the full purposes and objectives of Congress.”
Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee Corp.,
Congress clearly has not intended to occupy the field of securities fraud regulation. Both the 1933 and 1934 Acts contain provisions explicitly saving consistent state regulation from preemption. 15 U.S.C. § 77r; 15 U.S.C. § 78bb(a). Indeed, 15 U.S.C. § 78bb(a) explicitly provides that “the rights and remedies provided by [the 1934 Act] shall be in addition to any and all other rights and remedies that may exist at law or equity.”
Cf. Globus v. Law Research Serv.,
Nor would a rule permitting a party who is a joint tortfeasor under state law to obtain partial equitable indemnity from a federal securities law violator conflict with federal law.
35
Courts have recognized implied rights of contribution under both § 12(2),
e.g., Wassel v. Eglowsky,
However, the Bank may no longer pursue its claim for equitable indemnity based on defendants’ violation of § 17(a) of the ’33 Act, since the Ninth Circuit no longer recognizes a private right of action under § 17(a).
In re Washington Pub. Power Supply Sys. Sec. Lit.,
Thus, the Court concludes that B of A may pursue its claims for partial equitable indemnity based on defendants’ violations of §§ 10(b) and 12(2), as well as their violations of state securities laws, common law fraud and negligence (Claims Four, Six, Seven, Eight and Nine). 36
Having resolved this issue, determination of a number of related issues raised by defendants fall easily into place. NMEC argues that the Bank was not a purchaser or seller, so it cannot recover for a violation of § 10(b). That the Bank was not a purchaser or seller is irrelevant, because the Investor Institutions were purchasers and the Bank seeks merely to establish defendants’ liability as joint tortfeasors based on their conduct toward the Investor Institutions. NMEC also contends that the statute of limitations has run on the securities violations alleged. Again, this misses the point that the Bank is asserting a state law, not a federal law claim. B of A’s cause of action for equitable indemnity arose when it paid the tort victims, not when the victims’ claims against the securities violators accrued.
See People v. Superior Court,
West Paс attempts to defeat the Bank’s equitable indemnity claims by arguing an issue settled on the first round of motions to dismiss — that these certificates were not “securities.” The Court abides by its earlier ruling that it will not decide that issue on a motion to dismiss.
NMEC,
II. RICO CLAIMS
The Court previously determined that the assignments of the RICO claims were valid, but dismissed them because B of A failed sufficiently to plead the existence of an enterprise and overt acts in furtherance of the alleged RICO conspiracy. Defendants raise a host of new objections to the Bank’s RICO claims in its Second Amended complaint, especially concerning the Bank’s addition of NMEC as a defendant in the § 1962(a) and (b) claims. However, virtually all of these issues have been resolved by the rulings on the first round of motions to dismiss or by the Court’s rulings in PART ONE, supra.
NMEC contends that the Bank’s new RICO claims under § 1962(a) and (b) must be dismissed because it fails to show a benefit to NMEC as required under the statutes. However, B of A does allege a benefit to NMEC. Amend.Comp. ¶¶ 103, 110. Virtually identical allegations wеre held to be sufficient to state § 1962(a) and (b) claims in
Schreiber,
NMEC next argues that B of A’s § 1962(a) and (b) claims must fail because it fails to allege any injury caused by conduct violative of those subsections. This is the same argument made by Michael and Feldman against the Savings Banks and is rejected for the reasons set forth therein. See PART ONE, II.B, supra.
Defendants raise several arguments in opposition to the RICO claims generally. NMEC and West Pac argue that the Bank has not alleged an “injury” by reason of a RICO violation because it admits that the payments it made to the Investor Institutions were voluntary. This is an issue of causation, which the Court has refused to decide on these motions to dismiss.
NMEC,
Defendants argue that the Investor Institutions suffered no “injury” under RICO because they had their claims paid off in full by the Bank; thus, the Investor Institutions had nothing to assign. The Court has already ruled that the Investor Institutions’ claims were assignable.
Id.
at 1151. That ruling is the law of the case and will not be reconsidered here. NMEC’s argument that the Bank has failed adequately to allege specific intent to commit the predicate acts and West Pac’s argument challenging the particularity of the predicate act allegations fail for the same reason.
See NMEC,
On the first round of motions to dismiss, the Court ruled that B of A had adequately pleaded a pattern of racketeering activity.
Id.
at 1157. Adelman, however, contends that no pattern has been alleged as to him. The Bank is not required to allege facts showing that Adelman, who is charged with the RICO conspiracy under § 1962(d), personally participated in or agreed to commit two predicate
*1094
offenses.
See United States v. Tille,
Finally, NMEC and Feldman contend that the Bank’s RICO claims are barred by the statute of limitations. Defendants’ argument is clearly foreclosed by the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Agency Holding Corp. v. Malley-Duff & Assoc., Inc.,
— U.S. —,
III. THE SINGLE SATISFACTION RULE AND BREACH OF CONTRACT
In its First Amended Complaint, B of A, as the assignee of the Investor Institutions, alleged a breach of contract claim against NMEC. In its motion to dismiss, NMEC argued that the single satisfaction rule barred the assignment of the breach of contract claim. In its opposition to the motions to dismiss its First Amended Compalint and at the oral argument, B of A asked for leave to amend to state direct claims against NMEC for breach of contract, which the Court granted. B of A apparently has chosen not to amend this claim. Nonetheless, the Court concludes that the single satisfaction rule does not apply to breach of contract claims.
See PART ONE,
I,
supra;
Cal.Civ.Code § 1543;
Tucker v. Nicholson,
IV. MOTIONS TO STRIKE
NMEC and Feldman raise several objections to various аllegations of the Bank which are essentially the same objections they make to the Savings Banks’ allegations. These motions to stike are wholly without merit.
Defendants object to the plaintiffs’ references to Feldman’s prior criminal conviction because he has not put his character in issue. This argument is wholly frivolous. Plaintiffs allege Feldman’s conviction as a material fact that Feldman failed to disclose to investors in violation of the securities laws. NMEC and Feldman’s similar objections to the references to Feldman’s “misleading” testimony, the Van Kampen pools and Advance’s letter outlining the problems with the NMEC pools are similarly misplaced. These facts are alleged in support of plaintiffs’ claims, as they are fully entitled to do. Finally, NMEC and Feldman accuse plaintiffs of improperly using the terms “securities” and “investor institutions,” arguing that the Court has not yet decided whether these certificates are securities and that plaintiffs are trying to “infect” these proceedings with a presumption that the certificates are in fact securities. This argument also is frivolous; the Court is immune from “infectious presumptions” and it is premature to determine what properly should be placed before the jury.
PART THREE: CONCLUSION AND ORDER
IT IS ORDERED:
A. With respect to the motions to dismiss the First Amended Complaints of the Savings Banks:
1. First Federal and Missouri’s First, Second, Sixth, Eleventh, Fifteenth and Nineteenth Claims for Relief are DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE.
*1095 2. Riverhead’s Eleventh and Seventeenth Claims for Relief are DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE.
3. Defendants’ Motion to Strike the request for injunctive relief pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 1964(a) in First Federal, Missouri and Riverhead’s Fourth and Fifth Claims for Relief and in the Prayer for Relief on said claims is GRANTED.
4. Defendants’ motions are DENIED in all other respects.
5. The Savings Banks’ motion for leave to join Manufacturers Hanover as a defendant is DENIED.
B. With respect to the motions to dismiss the Second Amended Complaint of Bank of America:
1. The Bank’s claims for total equitable indemnity in Claims Four through Nine are DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE. The motions to dismiss are DENIED as to the Bank’s request for partial equitable indemnity on Claims Four and Six through Nine.
2. The Bank’s Fifth Claim for equitable indemnity based on defendants’ violations of § 17(a) of the 1933 Act is DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE, since defendants could not be held liable on such a claim in a private action.
3. Defendants’ motions, including the motions to strike, are DENIED in all other respects.
C. Leave to further amend is DENIED as to all plaintiffs.
D. All moving defendants who have not yet done so are granted 30 days from the date of this Order within which to file and serve their respective Answers to the remaining allegations of the Savings Banks’ First Amended Complaints and Bank of America’s Second Amended Complaint.
Notes
. NMEC contends that the mortgage-backed certificates in this case are not governed by the securities laws because they are participation interests in loan pools that are governed exclusively by regulations promulgated by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board. NMEC's argument does not appear to have merit. However, the Court has alrеady ruled that whether the certificates are "securities” is not an issue susceptible of determination on a motion to dismiss in these cases.
NMEC,
. On the first round of motions to dismiss, the Court held that Riverhead’s §§ 12(1), 12(2) and state securities laws claims, based on the Series "C” Certificate it purchased in April, 1984, from Umpqua Savings and Loan Association ("Umpqua”) through its broker MEBAC, were timely.
NMEC.
. It is plaintiffs’ burden affirmatively to plead facts showing compliance with § 13’s limitations periods.
Toombs v. Leone,
. The earlier Memorandum Opinion mistakenly states that both First Federal and Missouri’s complaints were filed on March 22, 1985.
NMEC,
. This was when they received a letter from Wells Fargo announcing Advance’s resignation as servicer of the pools and NMEC’s appointment as Advance’s replacement.
. Advance also contends that the § 12 claims against it must fail because it was not a "seller” within the meaning of that statute. In light of the disposition of the statute of limitations issue, it is unnecessary to reach this issue.
.Because the California statute provides a four-year period, rather than the three-year period of § 13, Missouri's state securities law claim based on its Series “A” Certificate was not absolutely barred. However, the Court concluded that Missouri had failed to allege due diligence in discovering this claim and thus dismissed it together with Missouri’s claim based on the Series "D” Certificate.
. First Federal and Missouri attempt to explain why they ignored this clear warning signal by arguing that they believed the problems Wells Fargo described were in the other pools, not their own, because they were receiving payments. But surely such problems should have given them cause to at least inquire about potential problems with their pools, given the representations defendants allegedly had made about the solid creditworthiness of the mortgages.
. Lord Bissell also moved for summary judgment on Missouri’s § 12(2) and state securities law claims, relying on Missouri’s response to an interrogatory showing that it had knowledge in 1983 of Feldman’s conviction, one of the material facts it alleges defendants failed to reveal. See Missouri Amend.Comp. ¶ 36(a). This provides additional support for dismissal of Missouri’s claims as barred by the statute of limitations.
. NMEC and Feldman make two additional arguments, but they are clearly without merit. They contend that First Federal and Missouri’s common law claims are also barred by the statute of limitations and were improperly joined to the First Amended Complaints without seeking leave of court. However, unlike the § 12 and state securities law claims, the common law claims are not barred on the face of the complaint. Plaintiffs allege that they were not on notice of their claims until January, 1985. The actual date of notice is thus a question of fact and cannot be decided on a motion to dismiss. See SEC v. Seabord Corp., 677 F.2d 1301, 1309 (9th Cir.1982). Moreover, the Court *1080 looks to the date the original complaint was filed (March 22, 1985, as to First Federal and April 17, 1985, as to Missouri). The new common law claims clearly arise from the same transaction or occurrence as the claims set forth in the original complaints, so that the amendments relate back to the date of the original complaint. F.R.Civ.P. 15(c).
The common law claims were not improperly joined. Under F.R.Civ.P. 15(a), a plaintiff has a right to amend its complaint once as a matter of course before a responsive pleading is served. A motion to dismiss is not a responsive pleading under F.R.Civ.P. 7(a). The fact that a co-defendant has answered does not affect a plaintiffs right to amend the claims against a nonanswering defendant.
See Barksdale
v.
King,
.Michael cites
Haynes v. Anderson & Strudwick, Inc.,
. Moreover, even if such particularity were required, these complaints taken as a whole, plead such additional facts. The Amended Complaints allege overall that Feldman and Michael initially took a small scheme and built it up into a huge fraudulent operation. Given defendants’ concession that the complaints read liberally allege that defendants received income from racketeering activity, it is also reasonable to read the complaints as alleging that defendants used some or all of that income to operate and escalate the enterprise, i.e., NMEC.
. Even if allegations of a "threat” were required, Advance's letter to Wells Fargo, expressing concern about the irregularities in the mortgage pools, could be read as a threat to which Feldman and Michael responded by engaging in *1081 a further pattern of racketeering to cover up the fraud. First Federal, Missouri Amend. Comps. ¶ 53; Riverhead Amend.Comp. ¶ 40.
. Because claims under § 1962(a) and (b) are sufficiently pleaded, defendants’ argument that no conspiracy claim is stated under § 1962(d) must also fail. Plaintiffs have remedied the defect in their original claim under § 1962(d) by adding allegations of overt acts by the defendants in furtherance of the conspiracy.
See NMEC,
. The "Investor Institutions" are described and identified in
NMEC,
. "The fact that the last of a series of predicate acts may have completed the criminal scheme does not necessarily preclude a finding of continuity. As long as a threat of continuing activity exists at some point during the racketeering activity, the continuity requirement is satisfied.” Id. at 194 n. 5.
. However, there was, as the Savings Banks admit, a formal trustee in this arrangement—Wells Fargo.
See NMEC,
. Although not entirely clear from the Amended Complaints, the Savings Banks contend that these claims sound in tort. Savings Banks Consol. Mem. in Opp. at 71-74. They also seek leave to amend their complaints to add allegations to support their prayers for punitive damages on these claims, which were inadvertantly omitted from these claims, except those against Wells Fargo. In light of the disposition of these claims, leave to amend wоuld be futile and, therefore, is denied.
. The Savings Banks reliance on
Quigley v. Pet, Inc.,
. To the extent that Riverhead seeks leave of Court for an order permitting its joinder of Advance in its First Amended Complaint, such leave is granted. Advance has not objected to its being joined as a defendant.
. B of A and Lord Bissell subsequently reached a settlement and the motions of these defendants were withdrawn.
. If no independent basis of subject matter jurisdiction over the claims against NMEC were present, NMEC would be a "pendent party” as to whom the Court would not have jurisdiction.
.In
Schreiber,
the Ninth Circuit held that the "enterprise" need not be a separate and distinct entity from the "person” under § 1962(a) and (b).
. Because the additional claim allowed would directly affect only NMEC, NMEC was permitted to file a supplemental memorandum in support of its motion to dismiss and it has done so. West Pac also filed a Supplemental Motion to Dismiss, although it is not named in the Bank’s Second Claim for reliеf for violations of § 1962(a), (b) and (d). Moreover, these supplemental papers raise no issues as to the amendments adding NMEC to that claim. Consequently, its papers have been disregarded by the Court. The Bank has asked for sanctions under F.R.Civ.P. 11 and Local Rule 27. However, such sanctions do not appear to be warranted for what appears to be a misunderstanding of the Court’s supplemental briefing order.
. The Second Amended Complaint also differs from the First Amended Complaint in that it pleads violations of § 1962(a) and (b) (and subsection (d) conspiracies based on those violations) as separate claims.
.
Bank of America N.T. & S.A. v. Powers, et al.,
Los Angeles County Superior Court, Case No. C-536776
(“Powers").
On these motions, the Court takes judicial notice of the allegations of B of A’s First Amended Complaint in
Powers. See Mack v. South Bay Beer Distrib., Inc.,
. Unlike B of A, Wells Fargo chose not to pay off its beneficiaries. Therefore, as discussed in PART ONE, Wells Fargo, which had performed essentially the same trustee functions as B of A with respect to the Savings Banks’ mortgage pools, was named by its beneficiaries, the Savings Banks, as a defendant.
. The Court expressed no opinion at that time as to whether B of A would be able to state a claim for contribution or indemnity. Id. at 1150 n. 19.
. Under federal securities caselaw, the sharing of liability based on comparative fault is generally known as "contribution.” The total shifting of liability to another tortfeasor is termed "indemnity.” The Court will use these terms when discussing federal caselaw and will use "partial equitable indemnity" and "totаl equitable indemnity” when discussing the Bank's state law indemnity claims, although these latter terms appear to describe essentially the same concepts as "contribution” and "indemnity,” respectively.
.
Carroll
also stated that "application of comparative fault principles, designed to mitigate the often catastrophic consequences of personal injury, would only create unnecessary confusion and complexity [in commercial litigation].”
. The California authorities are split on the issue of whether, despite a good faith determination under Cal.Code Civ.Proc. § 877.6, a non-settling defendant, who is factually innocent of any wrongdoing, but is held liable by contract, statute or other public policy considerations, is entitled to seek total equitable indemnity.
Standard Pac.,
which held that a "good faith settlement bars the common law total equitable indemnification claim by a defendant who is only secondarily or vicariously liable,” represents the majority view.
See Stratton v. Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co.,
.Even accepting the Bank’s premise that, as between it and its employees, it is only secondarily liable, it should not be able to apportion the primary liability of its own employees on to defendants here. We are not here concerned with the rights and liabilities as between the Bank and its employees. Those issues are before the state court in Powers and may also be involved in Schwartz v. BankAmerica Corp., No. 85-2732, slip op. (9th Cir. Sep. 2, 1987). If the Bank were permitted to pursue and recover on a total indemnity claim here and if it were also successfully to pursue its claims against its employees in Powers, the Bank would be reaping a double recovery.
Although the allegations of B of A’s Second Amended Complaint are not necessarily limited to such a reading, B of A has been vigorous in characterizing its Fourth, Fifth and Sixth Claims as claims only for equitable indemnity under state law,
i.e.,
they are not pursuing equitable contribution under federal law. This may be because of the Court’s earlier statements that under federal law (total) indemnity was unavailable and the Bank’s recovery would be limited to a "proportionate share” contribution,
NMEC,
. Thus, NMEC and Feldman argue that the Bank cannot seek contribution because it is available only to joint securities laws violators and the Bank has not alleged it is a securities law violator.
See Laventhol, Krekstein, Horwath & Horwath v. Horwitch,
. A state law indemnity or contribution claim based on a violation of a federal statute is not unprecedented. The Bank points to a line of cases approving state law indemnity in favor of railroads held liable under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act against a third party guilty of state law negligence.
See Southern Pac. Transp. Co. v. Ohbayashi Am. Corp.,
. Because of the holding that the Bank is not entitled to total equitable indemnity on these facts, it is unnecessary to reach the issue of whether federal law preempts such a right.
. On the last set of motions to dismiss, the Court declined to decide whether the exercise of pendent jurisdiction over the state-law claims would be appropriate. The Court now concludes, in the exercise of its discretion, that the exercise of pendent jurisdiction is appropriate in this case. This determination at the pleading stage does not foreclose further consideration of the issue at later stages of these actions.
. Adelman argues that the fraud/conspiracy to defraud claim must be dismissed as to him for a similar reason — his participation was too limited. As the allegations of ¶¶ 77-81 of the Second Amended Complaint show, this argument is also without merit.
