MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
I. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
This multidistrict litigation involves allegations of massive fraud in connection with the sale of mortgage pool certificates to numerous savings banks and savings and loan associations (“Investor Institutions”). Before the Court are several defendants’ motions to dismiss the complaints in four of these actions, as well as two plaintiffs’ motions to dismiss certain counterclaims. 1
The complaints under attack are those of Riverhead Savings Bank (“Riverhead”), Missouri Savings Association (“Missouri”), First Federal Savings and Loan Association (“First Federal”), and Bank of America (“B of A” or the “Bank”).
2
B of A’s complaint differs significantly from the other three.
This opinion addresses only the motions to dismiss directed at B of A’s complaint. The motions to dismiss the other three complaints, as well as the motions to dismiss certain counterclaims, will be addressed in a separate memorandum opinion to be filed shortly.
II. THE ALLEGED FACTS 4
A. FORMATION AND MARKETING OF THE POOLS
Defendant David A. Feldman (“Feldman”), promoted, organized and managed defendant National Mortgage Equity Corporation (“NMEC”). 5 Beginning in 1981, NMEC organized pools of real estate loans secured by first or second deeds of trust on residential real property, located primarily in California and Texas. Riverhead, Missouri and First Federal allege that defendants Wells Fargo Bank (“Wells Fargo”) and Advance Mortgage Corporation (“Advance”) 6 also played a role in promoting the formation of certain of the pools during 1981 and 1982. In connection with these mortgage pools, NMEC marketed “Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates” (the “Certificates”) to various financial institutions, i.e., the Investor Institutions. Each Certificate represented an undivided interest in an individual pool. The Certificate holder was entitled to receive interest at a fixed “pass-through” rate, regardless of the rates paid by individual mortgagors. NMEC solicited buyers of Certificates, i.e., Investor Institutions, through various means, including, as alleged by B of A, through Private Placement Memoranda (“PPM”). The PPM were prepared by defendant law firm Lord, Bissell and Brook (“Lord Bissell”). Defendant Leslie W. Michael (“Michael”), is a partner in Lord Bis-sell and was also a part owner and officer of NMEC.
NMEC was responsible for the initial selection of loans to be included in the pools. B of A was to act as escrow agent for each pool. Advance was to act as servicer on the mortgages for at least some of the pools, and did so act until March, 1983, when it resigned and was replaced by NMEC. NMEC apparently at all times acted as servicer for all the loans in the pools that form the basis of B of A’s complaint. A trustee was appointed for each pool. B of A was trustee for most of the pools, but with respect to four pools, Wells Fargo acted as trustee. 7 In their respective roles as trustees, Wells Fargo and B of A were to review the documentation NMEC provided regarding each mortgage in order to determine whether it complied with all the applicable standards set out in the pooling and service agreements.
B. THE FRAUD
The essence of the fraud allegations is that despite defendants’ representations respecting the high standards used to select mortgages for the pools, defendants actually were engaged in a widespread series of sham mortgage transactions between various related entities that diverted the Investor Institutions’ funds for defendants’ personal benefit. Entities and individuals related to or controlled by NMEC, including Michael, Glacier, Energy Resources Financial Inc. (“Energy Resources”), Marvin Weiss (“Weiss”), West Pac Corporation (“West Pac”), and Kent B. Rogers (“Rogers”) 9 would obtain funds from NMEC. These entities or individuals would then use these funds to purchase properties through still other related entities. After obtaining a fraudulently inflated appraisal of the property, the related entities would arrange a “loan” between themselves, secured by a note and deed of trust on the overvalued property. The “loan” would then be transferred to NMEC’s mortgage pools in exchange for cash the Investor Institutions had entrusted to NMEC.
B of A alleges that Glacier and Pacific American were an integral part of this scheme. It is alleged that these insurance companies were selected to insure the mortgages not because of their ability to provide adequate coverage but because they were related, through common principals, to one or more of the other participants in the scheme. It also is alleged that the insurance companies actively participated in the scheme by recycling properties on which borrowers had defaulted back into the NMEC pools.
This scheme began to unravel in late 1984 and early 1985. In October, 1984, the Seaman’s Bank for Savings, one of the Investor Institutions for which B of A acted as trustee, advised the Bank of “certain irregularities in the processing and documentation” of the mortgages comprising Seaman’s pool. B of A responded by conducting an investigation into NMEC pools. Through this investigation, the Bank learned not only of the 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.
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. The Bank paid in cash and replacement collateral to the Investor Institutions a total of $133 million (which apparently was 100 percent of the funds
Unlike B of A, Wells Fargo chose not to pay off its beneficiaries. Therefore, Wells Fargo, which had performed essentially the same trustee functions as B of A with respect to Riverhead’s, Missouri’s and First Federal’s mortgage pools, was named by its beneficiaries as a defendant in this litigation.
B of A charges defendants NMEC, Feldman, Lord Bissell, Michael, West Pac, and Rogers with violations of: § 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b), and Securities and Exchange Commission Rule 10b-5, 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5; § 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. § 77q(a); the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organization Act, Title IX of the Organized Crime Control Act of 1969 (“RICO”), 18 U.S.C. §§ 1961 et seq.; Cal. Corp.Code §§ 25401, 25501 & 25504.1; and common law fraud. There is also a claim against NMEC, Feldman, Lord Bissell and Michael under § 12(2) of the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. § 77/(2), and a claim for breach of contract against NMEC alone. The Bank brings all of the above claims as assignee with the exception of the RICO claim, which is brought both as assignee and in the Bank’s own right and one count of common law fraud, which is brought in the Bank’s own right.
III. DISCUSSION
In their motion to dismiss B of A’s complaint, Lord Bissell and Michael (hereinafter, collectively “Lord Bissell”) assert that each of the claims the Bank brings against them
11
as assignee should be dismissed under the “one-satisfaction rule,” which is set forth in the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 885(3) (1979)
12
The one-satisfaction rule recognizes the principle that an injured party may recover only once for a single injury; its corollary is that any payment made by any person in compensation for a harm diminishes proportionally the injured party’s claim against any tortfeasors. Lord Bissell contends that B of A’s payments to its Investor Institutions constitute full satisfaction of those Investor Institutions’ claims and, thus, operate to discharge fully all other tortfeasors from any liability to those Investor Institutions.
See
Restatement § 900(l)(b) & comment 5.
13
Lord Bissell
The Court agrees with Lord Bissell’s contentions with respect to the applicability of the one-satisfaction rule here and the assignability of the federal and state securities claims and the common law fraud claim. Consequently, those counts must be dismissed; however, B of A will be granted leave to file an amended complaint for contribution and/or indemnity, if it so elects. 14 I further conclude that the RICO claims are assignable and that B of A should be permitted to pursue the Investor Institutions’ RICO claims, as their assignee.
A. ASSIGNABILITY OF FEDERAL SECURITIES CLAIMS AND STATE LAW CLAIMS
Before discussing the validity of the Investor Institutions’ assignments, the Court first must consider whether the one-satisfaction rule applies to the types of claims the Investor Institutions have assigned to the Bank. The applicability of the single-satisfaction rule to federal statutory claims in general, and securities claims specifically, is not in doubt.
E.g., Zenith Radio Corp. v. Hazeltine Research, Inc.,
It likewise is settled that the rule applies to the claims the Bank brings under California law. California expressly recognizes the one-satisfaction rule. CaLCode Civ.Proc. § 877
15
California courts applying § 877 have held that if the amount paid to an injured party equals or exceeds the amount of the loss, no claim remains against other joint tortfeasors.
E.g., Jaramillo v. California,
Next, the Court must consider whether the single-satisfaction rule applies in the specific factual circumstances of this case. The rule explicitly states that an injured party’s claim is diminished to the extent that payments are made “in compensation” for an injury. Thus, the rule by its terms does not apply in cases where a third party merely purchases the injured party’s cause of action. The compensation requirement is met here, however, both on the face of the complaint and by counsel’s admission at oral argument that B of A “stepped up to its responsibility and absolved the liability and took over the claims.”
Not only does the one-satisfaction rule apply in this case, but so does the “discharge” rule of Restatement § 900(l)(b). That rule provides that if an injured party accepts one tortfeasor’s payment as pay
In sum, it appears that Restatement §§ 885(3) & 900(l)(b) ordinarily would have extinguished completely the Investor Institutions’ claims against any other defendants as soon as the Bank paid off those Investor Institutions in full. However, the analysis must now turn to the more difficult aspect of this case, i.e., whether and to what extent the purported assignments effect application of the Restatement rules.
There are surprisingly few reported cases that address the question presented here,
i.e.,
whether a party who has been fully compensated for an injury nonetheless may assign its claims to someone else. The parties here, after exhaustive research, have between them, cited to the Court only three federal cases arguably on point. I find persuasive the reasoning of
St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. v. Michigan Nat’l Bank,
In American Sur., an insurer had fully paid an insured party for its loss and subsequently took an assignment of that party’s claims against a bank. The Ninth Circuit, applying Oregon law, first decided that the insurer was not entitled to equitable subrogation, 16 then decided that the “assignment” did not give the insurer a right to sue the bank:
If Insurers have no right to subrogation, their position is not improved by the assignments to them of insured’s claim against Bank. When Insurers paid [the insured], the right of [the insured] to pursue its claim against Bank was destroyed as [the insured] would not be permitted a dual recovery. Therefore, there was in existence no enforceable claim against Bank which [the insured] could assign to Insurers, and which would support recovery in favor of Insurers.
In
St. Paul Fire & Marine,
the Sixth Circuit applied Michigan law to a similar situation. There, St. Paul, acting as surety on a contractor’s bond, paid the claim of a subcontractor that had been injured by a bank’s untimely dishonor of the contractor’s check. St. Paul then obtained from the subcontractor a release and an assignment of the subcontractor’s claim against the bank. The Sixth Circuit held that St. Paul could not bring such an action as assignee because “after the underlying obligation had been satisfied by St. Paul, no cause of action against Michigan Bank remained in existence that could be assigned.”
... allowing an assignee to maintain a cause of action against one independently liable when the injured party has already received full compensation from another who is also liable would, in effect, give the injured party double recovery.
Id. at 199.
Two related principles emerge from these cases. First is the concern with
B of A argues strenuously that the first of the above-described principles — the prohibition against double recovery— should not bar the assignments in the case at bench. The Bank urges the Court to take a “realistic view” of the instant case and recognize that there is no danger of an actual double recovery here by the assign- or-investor Institutions. 18 The Bank thus urges the Court to ignore the holdings of cases such as American Sur. and St. Paul, which the Bank characterizes as “embodying an anachronistically formal view of the law.” However, even were I persuaded by the Bank’s argument regarding double recovery, the Bank has not adequately refuted the other prong of the analysis — -that once an injured party receives compensation for a claim, that party is left with nothing to assign.
The primary case relied on by the Bank,
American Commercial Lines,
is not convincing. In that case, two ships passed each other closely on the Mississippi River and one of the ships collided with some shoreline structures. The ship that actually struck the property (American), paid the injured property owners $33,000 in return for a release and an assignment of the injured parties’ claims against the other ship (Valley). American then brought suit against Valley on the assigned claims. Valley argued that by releasing American, the injured parties also released Valley; therefore, that the injured parties had nothing left to assign. A split panel rejected that argument, holding that in executing the release and assignment, the injured parties clearly intended to “(1) give a release of their claims against American ...; (2) retain, for purposes of giving an assignment, their claims against Valley; and (3) give an assignment of their claims against Valley to American.”
With respect, I cannot accept the reasoning in
American Commercial.
First, the majority did not even consider the single-satisfaction rule, but instead grounded its decision on a contractual construction theory. Thus the case sheds no light on the legal principles that control the instant case. Moreover, by focusing on the intent of the parties, the decision contravenes Restatement § 885(3), which provides that a payment made in compensation of a harm diminishes the claim against other tortfeasors
“whether or not it is so agreed at the time of payment.”
(Emphasis added.)
See also Screen Gems,
As stated previously, the Bank did not pay off its Investor Institutions for altruistic reasons. Rather, it is clear that the Bank, after its investigation of the NMEC pools, realized that it bore at least some of the responsibility for the Investor Institutions’ losses. Had the Bank not reimbursed the Investor Institutions for their losses, it almost certainly would have found itself in the same position as Wells Fargo — a named defendant. As the Bank itself stated in its complaint:
The Bank recognized that the Investor Institutions would lose all or a significant portion of their investments in the NMEC pools. In response to the Investor Institutions’ demands, the Bank undertook to resolve its obligations tothem by repurchasing the Certificates or replacing the mortgages represented by the Certificates.
Comp., 1155 (emphasis added). The Bank thereafter took these assignments, obviously hoping to recoup its losses from the defendants. This is precisely the type of situation that the law of contribution and indemnity is intended to govern.
It is critical to the course of this litigation that the parties be aligned properly. If the Bank is permitted to appear as a plaintiff bringing direct claims, rather than as a party seeking contribution or indemnity, it would have a profound effect on the other litigants’ defenses, discovery, and overall strategies. Allowing the assignments in this case would permit the Bank to pursue theories of recovery it could not pursue in an action for indemnity or contribution. For example, the Bank has brought assigned claims that seek relief under the Securities Act of 1933. Those claims seek complete recovery for all losses the Investor Institutions may have sustained from violations of that Act. Absent the assignments however, the Bank would not be able to seek such a complete recovery, since the Ninth Circuit has denied a right to indemnification under the 1933 Act.
Laventkol, Krekstein, Horwath & Howath v. Horwitch,
The Court cannot permit such drastic alteration of the procedural and substantive posture of this litigation that would result from permitting these assignments to stand. As stated in the Restatement of Restitution § 86, comment c:
Neither in the case of indemnity nor in the case of contribution can a person obtain an advantage by taking an assignment of the claim of the injured person either before or after judgment.
The Court’s conclusion is buttressed by a line of California cases holding that assignments may not be maintained in situations where, as here, the effect of the assignment would be somehow to circumvent restrictions imposed by the law of contribution. For example, California courts, as well as federal courts applying California law, have barred the assignment of claims where the practical effect of the assignment would have been to permit contribution between joint, intentional tortfeasors, to whom California expressly denies a right of contribution under Cal.Code Civ.Proc. § 875(d).
E.g., Bartneck v. Dunkin,
Finally, the policy argument that B of A asserts to justify these assignments is not convincing. The Bank argues it “did the right thing” by settling with its Investor Institutions, rather than forcing them to litigate their claims and that such settlements should be encouraged. However, the same laudable result can be achieved, while complying with the laws of contribution and indemnity. Those laws clearly permit a party in the Bank’s position to recover from other wrongdoers without involving completely innocent parties in protracted litigation. The difference, however, is that unlike proceeding by way of assignments and bringing the Investor Institutions’ claims in a plaintiff’s posture, the Bank’s potential recovery is limited, as
B. ASSIGNABILITY OF RICO CLAIMS
As explained more fully below, I conclude that while the one-satisfaction rule applies to RICO, it does not operate to extinguish fully the Investor Institutions’ RICO claims in this case. I also conclude that the assignments of the RICO claims are valid. However, I conclude that B of A’s RICO allegations are deficient. Accordingly, the RICO claims will be dismissed, but with leave to amend.
1. Applicability of the One-Satisfaction Rule
Although there appears to be no cases addressing the issue, the Court believes it quite clear that the basic principle expressed in the single-satisfaction rule is as applicable to a RICO claim as it is to any other claim by which a plaintiff seeks damages to redress an injury. The extent to which the rule extinguishes the Investor Institutions’ RICO claims is complicated, however, by RICO’s treble damage provision, 18 U.S.C. § 1964(c). To determine the proper scope of the rule’s application in this case, the Court must answer the question, What constitutes “full satisfaction” of a treble damages claim?
There are two possible approaches to the problem. On the one hand, it can be argued that since the one-satisfaction rule diminishes a plaintiff’s claim “at least to the extent of the payment made,” Restatement § 885(3), the Bank’s payments to the Investor Institutions should constitute compensation for only the first one-third of the treble damages to which the Investor Institutions would have been entitled under § 1964(c). Under this approach, the other two-thirds of the Investor Institutions’ potential treble damage awards would remain unaffected by the one-satisfaction rule, and (assuming RICO claims are assignable) could be assigned to the Bank. Under the other possible approach, it could be argued that the Bank’s payments to the Investor Institutions constituted full compensation for any actual damages suffered by reason of any RICO violation; therefore, that the entire RICO claim should be deemed extinguished, because no actual damages remain, which could be trebled. I conclude the former approach is more likely to effectuate the purposes for which RICO was enacted.
The case at bar analytically is indistinguishable from an antitrust case in which a plaintiff sues multiple defendants for treble damages, settles with one or more of them and then prevails at trial against the remaining defendants). In such cases, the court must decide whether, in crediting the settlement payments against the treble damage award, to do so before or after the trebling of actual damages. Without exception, courts hold that the full award to which such plaintiffs are entitled is an amount three times the proven actual damages and that, to ensure that plaintiffs receive complete satisfaction of their claims, settlement payments should be deducted from the award against the non-settling defendants)
after
actual damages are trebled.
E.g., Flintkote Co. v. Lysfjord,
Irrespective of the nature of the cause of action, a plaintiff is entitled to one full satisfaction of his claim in an action against joint defendants. In the case at bar ... such satisfaction would not be achieved by the award of any sum, which added to the settlement sum, did not total [three times the jury’s actual damage award].
Id. (emphasis added). Thus, “[a]ny other method [of calculating damages] would have resulted in plaintiffs’ receiving less than the whole to which they were entitled.” Id.
First, the antitrust laws provide that the plaintiff should receive three times the proven actual damages. If settlement proceeds are deducted before trebling, the plaintiff’s total award is less than what the law allows. Since antitrust defendants are joint tortfeasors, each is liable to complete the total deserved damages irrespective of fault. Second, ... one purpose of the trebling provision is to encourage private plaintiffs to bring suit. Any ultimate recovery totalling less than three times proven damages would weaken the statutory incentive through judicial construction. Third, deduction of settlement proceeds before trebling would discourage settlement by making litigation relatively more profitable for plaintiffs; every dollar received in settlement would cause a three dollar reduction in the judgment at trial.
Id.
The Court concludes that the Flintkote rule and its rationale are applicable to RICO treble damage claims. The Court acknowledges that the facts of the instant case differ somewhat from those of the antitrust cases cited above, since here, the Investor Institutions’ actual damages were completely, rather than only partially, satisfied. However, that factual distinction does not alter the analysis, because the critical factor is that the “full satisfaction” to which treble damage claimants are entitled is “three times the proven actual damages” — any award less than that amount constitutes an incomplete recovery. Therefore, the Court concludes that the single-satisfaction rule did not extinguish the Investor Institutions’ RICO claims. However, it should be noted that under this rule, it is clear that if defendants ultimately are found liable on the assigned RICO claims, they are entitled to the “Flintkote credit,” i.e., that they may assert the Bank’s payments to the Investor Institutions as an offset against the treble damage award.
2. Should “Penal” Nature of RICO Damages Affect Assignability
The question of whether a RICO treble damage claim is assignable apparently is one of first impression. The RICO statute itself is silent on the issue. Where a claim for relief is created by a federal statute, federal law governs the assignability of the claim.
In re Fine Paper Litig.,
B of A argues that in the absence of express statutory language, the court should look for guidance to analogous statutes, in this case to the antitrust laws. The Bank contends that, since it is well established that'antitrust claims are assignable,
e.g. Hicks v. Bekins Moving & Storage Co.,
On the other hand, Lord Bissell argues that, rather than simply analogizing to antitrust law, the inquiry regarding RICO’s assignability more properly should focus on the character of the RICO treble damages provision itself, 18 U.S.C. § 1964(c), to determine whether it is penal or remedial in nature. Lord Bissell asserts the following three-part argument: (1) the RICO treble damages provision is best characterized as penal,
see, e.g. Summers v. FDIC,
An action to recover damages [under the Sherman Act] is not an action to recover a penalty ... [s]uch a cause of action does survive the death of the injured party and is assignable.
We begin the analysis by examining the nature of the RICO treble damages provision. It is by no means clear that RICO treble damages are, in fact, penal in nature. The few courts that have directly addressed the question and attempted to characterize it have reached conflicting conclusions, even though each of those courts applied the same test. That test was first set out in
Murphy v. Household Fin. Co.,
In applying this test, the court in
State Farm
concluded that the RICO treble damage provision is remedial in nature. With respect to the first factor,
State Farm
reasoned that since § 1964(c) specifically provides that any person injured by reason of a violation of § 1962 may sue for damages, the plain purpose of § 1964(c) must be to redress wrongs suffered by the individual.
Contrariwise, in both
Summers v. FDIC
and
First Interstate Bank,
the courts’ analyses under the
Murphy
test led them to the opposite conclusion from that reached in
State Farm.
Indeed, both of those cases were quite critical of
State
Farm's analysis.
Summers
and
First Interstate
both concluded that while the second
Murphy
factor is indicative of a remedial purpose, the other two factors suggest that RICO’s treble damage provision is “primarily” penal.
Summers,
I am persuaded that
State Farm
states the better view. As the foregoing discussion indicates, RICO’s treble damage provision, like the antitrust treble damage provision, is not readily susceptible of characterization as either “penal” or “remedial”. Rather, it contains elements of both. The courts that have attempted to characterize § 4 of the Clayton Act as “penal” or “compensatory” also have reached divergent conclusions.
Compare Hydrolevel Corp.,
The Supreme Court also has indicated the hybrid nature of antitrust treble damages. In
Brunswick Corp. v. Pueblo Bowl-O-Mat, Inc.,
This review of the case law indicates that there is no clear-cut distinction in the cases as to whether antitrust treble damages are penal or remedial. The nature of the RICO treble damage provision is equally unclear. Nonetheless, such treble damage actions are almost universally considered assignable. Thus, it would appear that the crux of Lord Bissell’s argument,
i.e.,
that the assignability of RICO claims is wholly dependent on the proper characterization of the treble damage provision as either punitive or remedial is untenable. This conclusion becomes all the more compelling in light of this Circuit’s recognition that antitrust claims are assignable, despite the strong indication in
Kline,
Having concluded that the penal-remedial dichotomy does not control a RICO claim’s assignability, there is no reason why the court should not look to analogous antitrust law for guidance in construing RICO’s treble damage provisions. While it is true that Congress did not intend to import all of existing antitrust law into RICO, it appears that Congress’ intent in this regard was to keep from
restricting
RICO’s reach by burdening private RICO litigants with antitrust concepts of standing and proximate cause.
24
Permitting the
3. Availability of In Pari Delicto Defense
Lord Bissell contends that there is no justification for permitting a RICO assignment in the particular circumstances of the case at bar. Lord Bissell argues that B of A is also a wrongdoer here and, as such, should not be rewarded with a “triple indemnification for its misconduct”. This argument although not framed as such is, in essence, the assertion of the
in pari delicto
defense and can be answered by another analogy to antitrust law. The Supreme Court has held that the common law doctrine of
in pari delicto
is not a defense in antitrust treble damage actions.
Perma Life Mufflers, Inc. v. International Parts Corp.,
This reasoning is equally applicable to RICO treble damage actions. The fact, if it be a fact, that B of A may to some extent be embarking on this litigation with unclean hands should not by itself prohibit the Bank from bringing an action that otherwise advances RICO’s broad anti-racketeering policies. 25
Moreover, permitting the Bank to bring these assigned RICO claims (and the RICO claim brought in its own right as well), does not necessarily, as Lord Bissell contends, amount to permitting “one racketeer to sue another.”
Lopez v. Dean Witter Reynold, Inc.,
B of A’s complaint contains a single RICO claim, with allegations that do not distinguish between the Bank’s own RICO claim and the assigned claims. Each of the defendants has moved to dismiss the RICO claim for various reasons, which the court will discuss in turn.
Before discussing the individual grounds for dismissal, it is helpful first to review RICO’s pleading requirements. To make out a civil RICO claim under § 1962(c), a plaintiff must plead the following elements: “(1) conduct (2) of an enterprise (3) through a pattern, i.e., at least two acts that are sufficiently related, (4) of racketeering activity.”
Miller v. Glen & Helen Aircraft, Inc., 777
F.2d 496, 498 (9th Cir.1985), citing
Sedima,
1. Injury “By Reason Of” a RICO Violation
While it is clear that the “by reason of” language of § 1964(c) does not require allegation of a distinct “racketeering injury”,
Sedima,
This litigation promises to be enormously complex. The parties have estimated the number of documents related to this case at between a half million and a million, a number that is likely to rise as discovery proceeds. The Court believes it most inappropriate in a case of this nature to make such a fact-based determination as causation solely on the basis of the pleadings. More importantly, the complaint simply does not establish a lack of causation as neatly as defendants assume. The allegations do not foreclose the possibility that B of A was a concurrent cause, rather that a supervening cause, of the injuries. 27 While defendants’ causation argument might ultimately prove to have merit, it is improper to assert such a fact-based argument in derogation of the complaint at the pleading stage.
2. The Predicate Act Allegations
B of A alleges securities fraud and mail and wire fraud as the predicate acts that constitute the “pattern of racketeering activity”. Section 1961, which lists the acts that can constitute “racketeering activity”, refers to any
offense
involving fraud in the sale of securities. Lord Bissell contends that liability for a securities “offense” must be based on willful violations of the securities laws, and that the Bank’s allegations of reckless conduct are insufficient to support a finding of criminal securities violations. However, in this Circuit, “reckless disregard for truth or falsity is sufficient to sustain a finding of securities fraud” in a criminal case.
United States v. Farris,
Next, all defendants challenge the predicate act allegations as deficient under F-R.Civ.P. 9(b). When the pattern of rack
This Circuit has stated that Rule 9(b) “does not require nor make legitimate the pleading of detailed evidentiary matter”, but only requires “identification of the circumstances constituting fraud so that the defendant can prepare an adequate answer from the allegations.”
Walling v. Beverly Enterprises,
After reviewing the complaint, the Court concludes that the Bank’s securities fraud allegations are as detailed as can be expected while still complying with Rule 8’s command of “a short and plain statement of the claim.” Defendants argue that the securities fraud-based claims consist of collective allegations that lump together the 19 assignor-investor Institutions’ claims and fail to specify
which
transactions involved
what
misrepresentations to
which
Investor Institution. Defendants want the Bank to make particularized allegations with respect to each individual transaction. However, such allegations would unduly lengthen the complaint.
See In re Nat’l Student Marketing Litig.,
The complaint also contains multi-paragraph sections that identify the role of each defendant in the alleged fraud in a manner sufficient to allow defendants to prepare a responsive pleading. Nonetheless, Lord Bissell argues that the complaint contains only collective allegations of misrepresentations and omissions by all defendants, and does not attribute any specific misrepresentations to Lord Bissell and Michael. Those defendants argue that, as lawyers, they simply drafted the language of the PPM and cannot be responsible for the misrepresentations of other defendants found in those documents. However, the complaint does allege that Lord Bissell and Michael continued to prepare misleading PPM even after they received notice of the fraud in the form of a letter from Advance in December 1982, that outlined many of the deficiencies in the NMEC pools.
Next, the Court finds that the mail and wire fraud allegations also comply with Rule 9(b). The Bank adequately has alleged the essential elements of mail/wire fraud, which are the formation of a fraudulent scheme and use of the mails or interstate wires in furtherance of that scheme.
United States v. Bohonus,
This Court concludes that Seville’s flexible approach is appropriate in the case at hand. The Bank’s complaint as a whole gives defendants adequate notice of the basis of the mail and wire fraud charges. Of course, to prevail on its RICO claim the Bank eventually will have to prove that the defendants made specific mailings or wire communications in furtherance of the fraudulent scheme and the Bank’s claim as to what such mailings and communications were will be subject to discovery. While the Court believes the notice pleading requirements of the Federal Rules make it unnecessary for the Bank now to plead those specifics, the Court expects that the Bank’s contentions in this regard will have been crystallized and clarified for defendants by the time of the pretrial conference.
Defendants make an additional, related argument with respect to the mail and wire fraud allegations. Section 1961(1)(A) refers to any act
indictable
under the relevant mail or wire fraud statutes. Defendants argue that for an act to be indictable, it must be supported by enough specificity to show probable cause that a crime has been committed and that to find probable cause a court can require a bill of particulars.
See Bache Halsey Stuart Shield Inc. v. Tracy Collins Bank & Trust Co.,
3. The “Pattern” of Racketeering Activity
Although their argument is somewhat difficult to follow, defendants West Pac and Rogers appear to contend that B of A has not pleaded adequately a “pattern” of racketeering activity. This contention is meritless. In
Sedima,
The leading case dealing with RICO’s “enterprise” requirement is
United States v. Turkette,
The enterprise is an entity, for present purposes a group of persons associated together for a common purpose of engaging in a course of conduct. The pattern of racketeering activity is, on the other hand, a series of criminal acts as defined by the statute ... The former is proved by evidence of an ongoing organization, formal or informal, and by evidence that the various associates function as a continuing unit. The latter is proved by evidence of the requisite number of acts of racketeering committed by the participants in the enterprise. While the proof used to establish these separate elements may in particular cases coalesce, proof of one does not necessarily establish the other. The “enterprise” is not the “pattern of racketeering activity”; it is an entity separate and apart from the pattern of activity in which it engages.
Id.
at 583,
There is a well known split among the Circuit’s as to the proper application of Turkette’s “enterprise” standards. The Third, Fourth and Eighth Circuits, each employing slightly different formulations, require proof of an “enterprise” that has an independent, identifiable existence separate and apart from that necessary merely to engage in the acts constituting the pattern of racketeering activity.
See United States v. Tillett,
The Ninth Circuit’s position in this debate in unclear; the cases do not squarely address the issue.
See United States v. DeRosa,
Recently, in
Allington,
the court analyzed and compared the Eighth and Second Circuits’ positions and concluded that the Eighth Circuit’s view “is more consistent with statutory language and congressional intent.”
In the case at bench, B of A’s complaint alleges that all defendants violated § 1962(c), which prohibits persons from conducting or participating in directly or in indirectly, the conduct of an enterprise through a pattern of racketeering activity. However, the “enterprise” is alleged to be nothing more than “a continuing unit for the common purpose of engaging in a conspiracy to defraud designed to induce the Investor Institutions to purchase the mortgage-backed Certificates and to induce the Bank to serve as escrow agent and trustee in connection with fraudulent securities
5. Section 1962(d) Conspiracy
The complaint also alleges a RICO conspiracy in violation of § 1962(d), which, among other things, makes it unlawful to conspire to conduct the affairs of an enterprise through a pattern of racketeering activity. As just described, the Bank has not pleaded an enterprise but merely a conspiracy to commit the predicate acts.Section 1962(d) does not proscribe conspiracies to conspire.
See Allington, id.
Further, because of § 1964(c)’s “injury” requirement, “in order for a plaintiff to have a private cause of action under 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d), there must at the very least be one or more overt acts causing injury to the plaintiff or ‘his business or property’ under 18 U.S.C. § 1964(c).”
Medallion TV Enter., Inc. v. Selec TV of Calif, Inc.,
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons discussed above, I conclude that the tort and securities claims asserted under state law and all federal claims, except the RICO claims, which B of A brings as assignee of the Investor Institutions, are barred, in their assigned form, under the single-satisfaction rule. B of A, however, is not necessarily barred on the facts now before the Court from pursuit of its remedies against any asserted joint tortfeasors under the laws of indemnity and contribution. Because payment by B of A to the Investor Institutions has not fully satisfied the latter’s claims under RICO, the single-satisfaction rule bars neither the assignment of the Investor Institutions’ RICO claims nor their prosecution by the Bank. And federal law does not otherwise prohibit the assignment of RICO treble damage claims. However, the Bank’s single RICO claim (which does not distinguish between its own claim and the assigned claims) is deficient in failing adequately to allege a RICO “enterprise” and a RICO conspiracy. Leave to amend will be granted to allow B of A the opportunity to amend its complaint in accordance herewith.
IT IS ORDERED, that the First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth and Sixth Claims of Bank of America’s Complaint are dismissed with 30 days’ leave to amend; in all other respects, the motions to dismiss said complaint are denied.
MEMORANDUM OPINION II AND ORDER
I. PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
By its Memorandum Opinion and Order (“Memo.Op. I”), filed May 13, 1986, the Court ruled on the motions to dismiss the Complaint of B of A. 1 This opinion addresses the motions to dismiss the Complaints of Riverhead, Missouri and First Federal (collectively the “Savings Banks” or “plaintiffs”) and Missouri’s and First Federal’s motions to dismiss certain counterclaims.
The pertinent allegations were set forth in Part II of Memo.Op. I, at 1144-1146,
II. DISCUSSION
A. ARE THE CERTIFICATES “SECURITIES”
Defendants contend that the federal and state securities law claims should be dismissed because the Certificates are not “securities” within the meaning of the securities laws.
2
They contend that NMEC’s mortgage pool program represents a conventional commercial lending transaction in which the Savings Banks agreed to participate in loans made to the underlying mortgagors, rather than an investment of capital that would be covered by the securities laws. Thus, the issue in this case is whether the Certificates constitute “investment contracts” as that term is used,
e.g.,
in § 2(1) of the 1933 Act, 15 U.S.C. § 77b(l).
3
The classic formulation for determining whether a contract is one for investment was first set out in
SEC v. Howey Co.,
The test is whether the scheme involves [1] an investment of money [2] in a common enterprise [3] with profits to come solely from the efforts of others. 4
This Circuit has also adopted a “risk capital” test to determine if a transaction involves a security.
Great W. Bank & Trust v. Kotz,
As the Ninth Circuit has stated on several occasions, risk capital analysis combines the Supreme Court’s “economic realities” standard
5
with this Circuit’s emphasis on an expectation of profit from the entrepreneurial efforts of others.
Under-hill v. Royal,
In
Kotz,
the court compiled a non-exhaustive list of six factors, none of them dispositive, to be utilized in distinguishing between transactions that are “risky loans”, and thus exempt from the securities laws, and investments of “risk capital”, which are not. The
Kotz
factors are: (1) time; (2) collateralization; (3) form of the obligation; (4) circumstances of issuance; (5) relationship between the amount borrowed and the size of the borrower’s business; and (6) contemplated use of the proceeds.
The test is not applied in cases where the “investment” prong of
Howey
either clearly is satisfied or is not a matter of dispute,
see, e.g., SEC v. Goldfield Deep Mines,
The risk capital test is ... an adaptation and elaboration of Howey which is particularly applicable to the characterization of certain types of transactions. It can lead and most often has lead to the conelusion that a given transaction is not an investment in securities but a commercial loan.
Wright v. Schock,
Reviewing the allegations of the Savings Banks’ complaints in the light most favorable to them, I cannot say that, as a matter of law, they fail sufficiently to allege facts to meet the
Howey
test, as amplified by the
Kotz
six-factor analysis. While it is true that if the complaint clearly discloses that the transaction pleaded is not a “security”, dismissal for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted is proper,
Amfac Mortgage Corp. v. Arizona Mall of Tempe, Inc.,
In addition, there remain open factual questions that go to elements of both the Kotz and Howey tests. For example, the nature and extent of any negotiations is important in determining whether or not the transaction is a commercial lending arrangement. Defendants maintain that each Certificate was issued after separate face to face negotiations but there is nothing before the Court concerning what transpired in those negotiations.
Finally, this case is quite different from
Amfac.
There, not only was the court supplied with the relevant “basic documents,” but the transaction itself involved a relatively straightforward construction financing arrangement.
B. SUFFICIENCY OF FRAUD ALLEGATIONS
Lord Bissell and NMEC contend that the fraud allegations do not comply with the particularity requirement of F.R.Civ.P. 9(b). Taken as a whole, the allegations of each complaint adequately identify the circumstances constituting fraud.
See Walling v. Beverly Enterprises,
Lord Bissell and Michael also contend that, at best, Riverhead pleads only a misrepresentation from Lord Bissell to Umpqua and not to Riverhead. This contention ignores the allegation that Lord Bissell still was NMEC’s counsel in April, 1984, when Riverhead obtained its interest in the Series “C” pool pursuant to a Second Amendment to the PSA. It also ignores Michael’s continuing relationship with NMEC through 1984.
Lord Bissell also argues that to the extent Missouri’s and First Federal’s common law fraud claims are based on an alleged failure to disclose material facts, they must fail because mere nondisclosure is not actionable unless the defendant is a fiduciary with a duty to disclose. However, the sentence in Witkin’s California Procedure on which Lord Bissell relies is followed immediately by this sentence: “But active concealment or suppression of facts by a nonfiduciary is the equivalent of a false representation, i.e., actual fraud.1.” 3 Witkin, California Procedure, Pleading § 582, p. 2220 (2d ed. 1971) (emphasis in original).
C. SECTION 10(b) AND RULE 10b-5 CLAIMS
Each of the complaints allege violations of § 10(b) of the 1934 Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b), and SEC Rule 10b-5, 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5. Missouri and First Federal allege primary and aiding and abetting liability on the part of all defendants. Missouri claims Michael also is liable as a control person of NMEC, while First Federal alleges control person liability on the part of both Feldman and Michael. River-head charges all defendants, except Feldman, with primary and aiding and abetting
First, they contend that to the extent the Rule 10b-5 claims are based on alleged misrepresentations, the Savings Banks have not pleaded any false representations by Lord Bissell. The Court rejects this contention for the reasons previously stated in Part II.B, above.
Next, Lord Bissell and Michael argue that they are not liable under an omissions theory of Rule 10b-5, because the Savings Banks have not alleged a duty to disclose on their part. A defendant’s duty to disclose under Rule 10b-5 is determined by the five-part test of
White v. Abrams,
Lord Bissell and Michael also challenge the aid and abet allegations based on the purported absence of a duty to disclose. They argue that absent such a duty, liability can only be imposed “if scienter of the high ‘conscious intent’ variety can be proved,”
Woodward v. Metro Bank,
Finally, Michael challenges the sufficiency of the control person allegations. See § 20(a) of the 1934 Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78t(a). This Circuit has stated that:
A controlling person is liable for the acts of another if the controlling person “acted in bad faith and directly or indirectly induced the conduct constituting a violation or cause of action” ... there can be no liability if the controlling person “was not a participant in ... activities which are claimed to violate the securities laws”....
This Circuit expressly has declined to decide whether § 20(a) requires a showing of “culpable” participation by the control person in the activities of those controlled.
Christoffel v. E.F. Hutton & Co., Inc.,
Under the principles outlined above, the Court concludes that the Savings Banks’ control person allegations are sufficient. Plaintiffs allege not just that Michael was an officer of NMEC, but also that he was a principal shareholder of what appears to have been a closely held corporation. The complaints also allege that Michael participated in the organization of NMEC and in the offer and sale of the Certificates with knowledge that the PSAs were misleading.
D. SECTION 12(1) CLAIMS
1. Statute of Limitations
Plaintiffs allege violations of § 12(1) of the 1933 Act, 15 U.S.C. § 771(1). That provision imposes liability on those who offer or sell unregistered securities in violation of § 5 of the 1933 Act, 15 U.S.C. § 77e. Lord Bissell contends that First Federal’s and Missouri’s § 12(1) claims are barred by the limitations period of § 13 of the 1933 Act, 15 U.S.C. § 77m. .
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.” It is plaintiffs’ burden affirmatively to plead facts showing compliance with § 13’s limitations periods.
Toombs v. Leone, 111
F.2d 465, 468 (9th Cir.1985). Further, the one-year and three-year periods are cumulative, not alternative,
i.e.,
plaintiff must demonstrate compliance with both periods.
Morley v. Cohen,
The statute begins to run from the date of defendant’s last sales-related activity, i.e., offer, sale or delivery of the security. Toombs v. Leone, 111 F.2d at 968; L. Loss, Fundamentals of Securities Regulation, 1164 (1983) (“Loss”). In this case, 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. Since both plaintiffs filed their complaints on March 22, 1985, more than one year after the last sales-related activity alleged, their § 12(1) claims are time barred unless, as plaintiffs argue, the claims can be saved by the doctrine of fraudulent concealment.
This Circuit has not decided the question whether § 13’s one-year limitation on § 12(1) actions can be equitably tolled by fraudulent concealment. Lord Bissell points to
SEC v. Seaboard Corp. (Admiralty Fund v. Hugh Johnson & Co., Inc.),
While some of the other courts that have directly addressed the question have held that the one-year period cannot be tolled in a § 12(1) claim,
e.g., Cook v. Avien, Inc.,
Although the Court concludes that the statute is subject to tolling, plaintiffs clearly have failed adequately to plead fraudulent concealment. Proper allegations of fraudulent concealment must contain “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 must also state “facts showing [plaintiff’s] due diligence in trying to uncover the facts.”
Rutledge v. Boston Woven Hose & Rubber Co.,
In the context of § 12(1) claims, plaintiffs who seek to allege fraudulent concealment have a particularly heavy pleading burden. They must plead with at least some particularity why they did not know the securities should have been registered, when they first discovered registration was required, what circumstances or events led to that discovery and why they did not discover those facts earlier. The instant complaints fall far short of this standard. They contain only conclusory allegations that defendants “affirmatively misrepresented” to plaintiffs that the Certificates were exempt from registration, “actively concealed” that the fractional interests in the mortgage pools did not qualify for any exemption from registration and failed to disclose or provide access to the kind of information required to be in a registration statement.
Obviously, plaintiffs knew full well the securities were not registered; moreover, these allegations do not begin to explain how defendants were able to conceal material facts regarding securities registration requirements from sophisticated financial institutions such as First Federal and Missouri. Although the complaints do contain some factual allegations regarding fraudulent concealment, none of those allegations pertain to the fact the securities were not registered. Accordingly, plaintiffs' § 12(1) claims must be dismissed as time barred, although First Federal will be granted leave to amend, as will Missouri with respect to its § 12(1) claim based on its Series “D” Certificate. However, Missouri’s § 12(1) claim based on the Series “A” Certificate falls outside § 13’s absolute three-year time limit and thus must be dismissed with prejudice.
Missouri attempts to save its Series “A” Certificate claim by arguing that defendants’ offer of numerous mortgage-backed Certificates to various prospective purchasers during the period 1981-1984 constitutes a single “integrated offering” of a security, and that the three-year time period should not begin to run until the
last
offering of the security.
Hudson I,
[1982-83 Transfer Binder] Fed.Sec.L.Rep. (CCH) at 95,896 n. 3 (relevant offering for purposes of § 13’s three-year limit on § 12(1) actions is the last offering of the security). This argument is not persuasive. First, most authorities conclude, and the Court agrees, that the relevant offering under § 13 is the
first
offering of the security.
See Morley v. Cohen,
Here there are five plaintiffs, each (for all that appears from the complaint) making separate purchases at separate times. No reason in law or logic is suggested why a purchase by one plaintiff in, say, 1978 should operate to preserve as timely a claim brought by a different plaintiff for a different purchase in 1975. 9
Riverhead's § 12(1) claim is timely, having purchased its Series “C” Certificate on April 30, 1984, and filed its complaint on March 22, 1985. Therefore, the Court must address Lord Bissell's argument that it is not a “seller” within the meaning of § 12.
2. Who Are “Sellers”
Defendants argue that in
Feldman v. Simpkins Indus., Inc.,
Under the “substantial participation” test, defendant must have been both (1) “necessary to” the sale of the security,
i.e.,
he must have been a “but for” cause, and (2) a “substantial factor” in the sales transaction.
Murphy,
If the defendant is not in literal privity with the plaintiff, his conduct must proximately cause the sale, or he must be a “motivating force” behind the sale; mere participation in the events leading up to the sale is not sufficient.
The Court concludes that dismissal on the basis that Lord Bissell and Michael were not “sellers” would be premature. The complaints allege more than that Michael and Lord Bissell provided legal services to NMEC in the form of preparing documentation for the pools. Michael also is alleged to be an officer and part owner of NMEC who was involved in NMEC’s operations from the very beginning. While the complaints do not set out the exact nature of defendants’ relationship to the NMEC sales program, the allegations are sufficient in the circumstances here to withstand a motion to dismiss.
E. SECTION 12(2) CLAIMS
1. Statute of Limitations
Claims brought under § 12(2) of the 1933 Act, 15 U.S.C. § 771 (2), also are governed by § 13’s limitations period,
i.e.,
they must
First Federal and Missouri allege they did not discover the fraud until January, 1985, when payments to Certificate holders ceased and B of A publicly disclosed the facts of the scheme. Plaintiffs’ allegations of fraudulent concealment are sufficient.
See Hudson I,
[1982-83 Transfer Binder] Fed.Sec.L.Rep. (CCH) at 95,907. They allege that defendants covered up the high default rates in the earlier pools by using funds obtained from the sale of later Certificates to advance payments to the earlier Certificate holders. However, plaintiffs have not adequately pleaded due diligence.
See id.
at 95,908. They mention a letter from Advance to Wells Fargo written in December, 1982, in which Advance described the high default rates, questionable appraisals, and other suspect practices connected with the pools. Although plaintiffs allege they knew none of this information until January, 1985, they do not allege when they first learned of the Advance letter. Moreover, the complaints also 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.
11
It may be that reasonable inquiry would have revealed facts putting plaintiffs on notice of the fraud. Since First Federal and Missouri have not met their burden of affirmatively pleading facts to show compliance with the statute of limitations,
Toombs v. Leone,
2. Knowledge of Falsity
Riverhead’s § 12(2) claim is timely. However, Lord Bissell attacks this claim on other grounds. Section 12(2) expressly requires that the purchaser be unaware of the false statement or omission connected with the sale of the security. Lord Bissell contends that because Wells Fargo was on notice of the fraud in 1982 (through the Advance letter), Wells Fargo’s knowledge should be imputed to Riverhead, since Wells Fargo was acting as Riverhead’s fiduciary at the time of purchase in 1984. This argument must be rejected. First, the cases Lord Bissell cites deal with imputation of knowledge in a husband-wife relationship,
Parsons v. Homblower & Weeks-Hemphill Noyes,
3. Aider and Abettor Liability
Finally, the Court agrees with Lord Bissell that aiding and abetting liability cannot be imposed under § 12(2).
Hokama,
566 F.Supp. at.642. Where a statute expressly limits the class of persons subject to liability — in this case “offerors or sellers” — courts should not extend liability, under aiding and abetting, to persons not included in that class.
See In re Equity Funding Corp. Sec. Litig.,
F. STATE SECURITIES LAW CLAIMS
The applicable statute of limitations for the Savings Banks’ state securities law claims is Cal.Corp.Code § 25506. That statute requires plaintiffs to bring their actions within four years after the act upon which the violation is based or within one year after discovery of the facts constituting the violation, whichever occurs first. The one-year period begins to run when the plaintiff “discovers the facts constituting the violation or in the exercise of reasonable diligence should have discovered them.”
Kramas v. Security Gas & Oil, Inc.,
Riverhead’s timely claim alleges all defendants except Lord Bissell violated Cal.Corp.Code § 25501, which states: “Any person who violates Section 25401 shall be liable to the person who purchases a security from him or sells a security to him.” Liability is limited to actual sellers.
SEC v. Seaboard Corp. (Admiralty Fund v. Jones),
However, Michael may be subject to liability under § 25504.1, which imposes joint and several liability on persons who “materially assist” in violations of § 25401. Section 25504.1 in effect establishes aiding and abetting liability. Hudson I, [1982-83 Transfer Binder] Fed.Sec.L.Rep. (CCH) 95,-906. As the Court has explained, plaintiffs’ aiding and abetting allegations are sufficient.
G. RICO CLAIMS
All plaintiffs bring claims under the Racketeering Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”), 18 U.S.C. §§ 1961 et seq. Each complaint alleges securities fraud and mail and wire fraud as the predicate acts constituting the requisite “pattern of racketeering activity.” See 18 U.S.C. § 1961. For the reasons discussed in Memo.Op. I, Part III.C.2, the predicate act allegations of each of the Savings Banks are adequate.
First Federal and Riverhead charge NMEC, Feldman and Michael with violations of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1962(c) (conducting the affairs of a RICO “enterprise” through a “pattern of racketeering activity”), and 1962(d) (conspiring to violate § 1962(c)). For the reasons stated in Memo.Op. I, Part III.C.4, the RICO “enterprise” allegations are deficient. As in B of A’s complaint, the “enterprise” is alleged to be nothing more than an association in fact formed for the purpose of committing the predict® acts of fraud. Similarly, the RICO conspiracy allegations are insufficient. See Memo.Op. I, Part III.C.5. Accordingly, these RICO claims are dismissed with leave to amend.
Missouri’s RICO claim is substantially different from the others, because it names NMEC itself as the RICO enterprise. It then charges Michael with violations of § 1962(a) (using income received from a pattern of racketeering activity to acquire an interest in or operate an enterprise) and § 1962(b) (acquiring or maintaining an interest in an enterprise through a pattern of racketeering activity), and both Michael and Lord Bissell with violations of §§ 1962(c) and (d).
Defendants next argue that Missouri’s § 1962(c) claim fails because it alleges only that defendants used money from the sale of Certificates to operate NMEC’s business, but does not properly allege that defendants actually “conducted” NMEC’s affairs. They also argue that a § 1962(c) claim “ordinarily will require some participation in the
operation or management
of the enterprise itself.”
Bennett v. Berg,
The Court rejects both contentions. The first argument focuses on an isolated sentence in the RICO count and ignores the rest of the complaint which adequately alleges defendants’ participation in the conduct of NMEC’s affairs. As for the degree of participation § 1962(c) requires, the Court adopts the reasoning of
Bank of America NT & SA v. Touche Ross & Co.,
RICO does not require the degree of participation urged by defendants. It is not necessary that a RICO defendant participate in the management or operation of the enterprise. On its face, the statute requires only that the defendant “participate, directly or indirectly in the conduct of [the] enterprise’s affairs ...” ******
The complaint alleges sufficient participation to withstand a 12(b)(6) motion.
The banks have alleged that defendants assisted in the preparation and dissemination of false financial statements. These financial statements were helpful to International Horizons because they allegedly induced the banks to lend money to the enterprise. The word “conduct” in § 1962(c) simply means the performance of activities necessary or helpful to the operation of the enterprise. [Citations omitted.]
This construction of the statute comports with the Court’s approach in
Sedima, S.P.R.L. v. Imrex Co., Inc.,
— U.S. —,
Finally, with respect to the § 1962(d) theory, the parties do not differentiate between it and § 1962(c), agreeing that it rises and falls with the § 1962(c) claim. However, this fails to address the “injury” requirement imposed on a private litigant under § 1964(c). Like the other Savings Banks, Missouri also fails to plead this requirement; therefore, its RICO conspiracy claim must be dismissed. See Memo.Op. I, Part III.C.5. Because Missouri pleads a single RICO claim embracing all theories, including conspiracy, although the claim is otherwise sufficient, the entire RICO claim will be dismissed with leave to amend.
H. UMPQUA’S MOTION
Riverhead has made a number of fraud-based claims against Umpqua, i.e., under § 12(2), Rule 10b-5, state securities law and common law fraud. However, the complaint contains only two paragraphs that purport to describe Umpqua’s role in the fraud, and those paragraphs simply lump together Umpqua with other defendants in alleging that Umpqua failed to disclose certain material facts, including the facts contained in Advance’s December, 1982 letter to Wells Fargo. However, the complaint does not allege that Umpqua had any knowledge of the allegedly omitted facts or had any reason to know them.
The irony of Riverhead’s position is evident. On the one hand, Riverhead portrays
Therefore, all of Riverhead’s fraud-based claims are dismissed for failure to comply with F.R.Civ.P. 9(b).
See Walling v. Beverly Enterprises,
Riverhead has stated a claim under § 12(1) however, because that provision is not grounded in fraud. Umpqua first contends that it is not a “seller” under § 12. This argument borders on the frivolous. The complaint clearly alleges that Umpqua, through a broker, MEBAC, sold its interest in the Series “C” pool to Riverhead. The sale was consummated pursuant to an amendment to the PSA, which was executed by Wells Fargo, NMEC, Riverhead and Umpqua. Clearly, Umpqua was at least a “substantial participant” in the sales transaction. Umpqua’s argument that it is not a “seller” because the Certificate Riverhead purchased was “different” than the one Umpqua purchased is equally meritless. Riverhead, of course, received a different piece of paper called a “Certificate”, but the paper represented the same interest, i.e., an undivided interest in the Series “C” pool. That Riverhead’s Certificate may have contained slightly different terms 14 does not affect Umpqua’s “seller” status for the purposes of this motion.
Umpqua also contends that it should be exempted under § 4(1) of the 1933 Act, 15 U.S.C. § 77d(l), which provides an exemption from § 5’s registration requirement for “transactions by any person other than an issuer, underwriter or dealer.” The burden of proof is on the party claiming the exemption.
Pennaluna & Co., Inc. v. SEC,
Section 4(1) was designed to exempt routine trading transactions with respect to securities already issued and not to exempt distributions by issuers or acts of others who engage in steps necessary to such distributions ... The section exempts transactions, not persons, ... and it is inapplicable in cases involving a distribution of new securities by an issuer. [Citations omitted; emphasis added.]
Thus, as Murphy noted, the Second Circuit long ago rejected Umpqua’s argument:
Even if the defendant is not itself “an issuer, underwriter or dealer” it was participating in a transaction with an issuer, to wit, the Chinese government. The argument in behalf of the defendant incorrectly assumes that Section 4(1) applies to the component parts of the entire transaction we have mentioned and thus exempts defendant unless it is an underwriter for the Chinese Republic.
Thus, for Umpqua to claim the § 4(1) exemption, it must show that the transaction is exempt. Here, there is no showing that the sale in question was a “routine trading transaction with respect to securities already issued,” or any other showing sufficient to bring the transaction within § 4(l)’s ambit.
I. DISMISSAL OF COUNTERCLAIMS
Lomas & Nettleton (“L & N”), the successor in interest to Advance, has counterclaimed against First Federal and Missouri. L & N alleges that pursuant to the terms of the PSAs for the Series “A”, “B” and “D” pools, the Trust Funds and Certificate Accounts administered by Wells Fargo are required to indemnify L & N for any losses, legal expenses and costs L & N incurs in this action, should L & N be found free of wilfull misfeasance, bad faith or negligence. L & N claims that if the funds held in trust by Wells Fargo are insufficient fully to reimburse L & N, an “equitable trust” should be impressed on Missouri and First Federal “to the extent [they have] received any funds from Wells Fargo Bank as trustee.”
L & N essentially is urging the Court to impose a constructive trust on the funds in question.
15
“A constructive trust is an equitable remedy imposed where the defendant holds title or some interest in certain property which it is inequitable for him to enjoy as against the plaintiff.”
Kraus v. Willow Park Public Golf Course,
III. ORDER
IT IS ORDERED:
1. The First, Second, Fourth and Fifth Claims of the complaints of all three Savings Banks and the Third and Sixth Claims of the complaint of Riverhead, as against defendant Umpqua, are dismissed with 30 days’ leave to file and serve amended complaints, except that dismissal of the First Claim of the complaint of Missouri with respect to the Series “A” Certificate is without leave to amend.
2. In all other respects the motions to dismiss the complaints or any claims of the Savings Banks are denied.
3. The counterclaims of Lomas & Nettleton against First Federal and Missouri are dismissed without leave to amend.
Notes
. The motion for summary adjudication of defendants Wells Fargo Bank and William Van Zile (“Van Zile”), which had been noticed for hearing at the same time as the motions to dismiss, was ordered off calendar by the Court.
. The actions of the first three plaintiffs were transferred here from the Northern District of California by the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation and bear individual docket numbers CV 85-5493 AWT, CV 85-5494 AWT and CV 85-5495 AWT, respectively, in this Court. B of A’s action, No. CV 85-1415 AWT, was originally commenced in this Court.
. The Investor Institutions that assigned their claims to Bank of America are: The Seamen’s Bank for Savings, Liberty Federal Savings and Loan Association, Whitestone Savings and Loan, First Federal Savings of Philadelphia, Irving Savings and Loan Association, Columbia Federal Savings Bank, Provident Savings and Loan, Oneonta Federal Savings and Loan Association, United Federal Savings Bank of Iowa, Beacon Federal Savings and Loan Association, Bay Ridge Federal Savings, Riverhead Savings and Loan, Missouri Savings Association, City Federal Savings and Loan Association, Citizens Federal Savings and Loan Association of Cleveland, Anchor Savings Bank FSB, South Weymouth Savings Bank, Richmond Hill Savings Bank and Fidelity Savings Association.
. Each of the four complaints which is the subject of a motion to dismiss alleges substantially the same facts as the others. Any material differences between the allegations in these complaints will be noted in the course of this recitation.
. NMEC and Feldman are named as defendants in all four complaints, as are Lord, Bissell and Brook, and Leslie W. Michael.
. Advance is the successor in interest to Advance Mortgage Company, Ltd. Neither Advance nor Wells Fargo is named as a defendant in B of A’s complaint.
. Among the pools for which Wells Fargo acted as trustee are the pools that form the basis of Riverhead’s, Missouri’s and First Federal’s complaints.
. Riverhead’s, Missouri's and First Federal’s complaints also allege representations and omissions on the part of Wells Fargo, Advance, and Van Zile (an officer of Wells Fargo).
. West Pac and Rogers are named as defendants in B of A’s complaint. The Bank alleges that West Pac was the mortgagor on a large number of the loans NMEC selected for the mortgage pools. Energy Resources and Weiss are named as third-party and crossclaim defendants by Wells Fargo and Van Zile.
. B of A’s complaint alleges:
Bank of America is the assignee of all claims that exist on behalf of the Investor Institutions, and each of them, against the Defendants, and each of them, by reason of certain written agreements entered into between the Bank and the Investor Institutions. Plaintiff has succeeded to the claims of the Investor Institutions by operation of law.
Comp., 1f 6. It is also alleged that in exchange for the Bank’s repurchasing of the Certificates or replacing the mortgages represented by the Certificates, "the Investor Institutions assigned to the Bank all interest they had in any properties or mortgage insurance securing the NMECoriginated loans.” Comp., ¶ 55.
. Because Lord Bissell and Michael are not named as defendants in the breach of contract claim, their motion is not directed against that claim. Therefore, assignment of the contract claim is unchallenged and the Court need not address that issue.
. All further references to the Restatement (Second) of Torts will be cited as the “Restatement." Restatement § 885(3) provides:
A payment by any person made in compensation of a claim for a harm fof which others are liable as tortfeasors diminishes the claim against the tortfeasors, at least to the extent of the payment made, whether or not the person making the payment is liable to the injured person and whether or not it is so agreed at the time of payment or the payment is made before or after judgment.
. Section 900(l)(b) provides that a cause of action for a tort may be discharged by a "satisfaction." Comment
b,
in turn, states, “A satisfaction is the payment made by the tortfeasor or by one acting in behalf of him of an amount
. Such a claim clearly is one that arises under state law. Since complete diversity is absent, subject matter jurisdiction exists only under this Court's discretionary pendent jurisdiction.
UMW v. Gibbs,
. CaLCode Civ.Proc. § 877 states in pertinent part:
Where a release ... or a covenant not to sue ... is given in good faith before verdict or judgment to one or more of a number of tortfeasors claimed to be liable for the same tort—
(a) ... it shall reduce the claims against the others in the amount stipulated by the release ... or the covenant____
. It does not appear that B of A would be entitled to equitable subrogation in this case. Although the Bank’s complaint (¶ 6] states that the Bank has “succeeded to the claims of the Investor Institutions by operation of law,” the Bank has not seriously pursued that argument. The argument must fail in any event, because under basic subrogation principles, subrogation applies only where "one person is required to pay a debt for which
another
is primarily responsible."
American Sur.,
. It is hornbook law that an assignee can acquire no greater right, title or interest than that enjoyed by its assignor. E.g., 6 Am.Jur.2d, Assignments, § 119; 1 Witkin, Summary of Calif. Law, Contracts § 750, p. 627 (8th ed. 1973).
. This argument fails to recognize that, for obvious reasons, the prohibition against double recovery applies as much to assignees of a claimant, as well as to the claimant itself.
. The Court expresses no opinion at this time as to which claims the Bank would be entitled to seek contribution or indemnity. Those questions must await the filing of the amended complaint.
. B of A has conceded that under California law it cannot pursue punitive damages under the assigned common law fraud claims.
. Lord Bissell also argues that antitrust principles should not be applied to RICO because, while RICO is "penal” in nature, and has "criminal enforcement goals,” the antitrust laws are “regulatory” in nature, with the "goals of regulating competition.” This argument is derived from a portion of RICO’s legislative history referred to in this Court’s opinion in
Harper v. New Japan Sec. Int'l, Inc.,
. The vitality of this argument has been severely undercut by the Supreme Court’s later holding in
Sedima
that there is no prior conviction requirement in bringing a civil RICO claim and its rejection of any organized crime nexus as a requirement.
. Moreover, even in those circuits which hold that antitrust treble damages are penal, and ■ therefore survive only for actual, not treble damages, treble damage claims still are considered assignable.
E.g.,
Second Circuit:
compare Vandervelde v. Put & Call Brokers & Dealers Ass’n,
. RICO originally was proposed as an amendment to the Sherman Act, prohibiting the investment or business use of unreported income. S. 2048, 90th Cong., 1st Sess. (1967)
reprinted in part
in
Techniques
at 72-73. The Antitrust Sec
. The extent and nature of the Bank’s participation in the alleged RICO violations may be relevant, assuming it turns out that defendants are entitled to raise the defense of "complete involvement.”
See Thi-Hawaii, Inc. v. First Commerce Fin. Corp.,
. As an alternative argument against permitting the Bank to proceed with its RICO claim, Lord Bissell asserts that even if the Bank’s role in the fraud is discounted and the Bank is considered to be a mere "unwitting tool” of a RICO enterprise, the Bank’s claim still is barred by
Cenco, Inc. v. Seidman & Seidman,
. It is elemental that dismissal is improper "unless it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his claim which would entitle him to relief."
Conley v. Gibson,
.
Miscellaneous Serv. Workers Local #427 v. Philco-Ford Corp.,
. The terminology used in Memo.Op. I also will be used throughout this opinion.
. In determining whether or not a "security” is involved, it is unnecessary to distinguish between the applicable securities laws. The definitions of "security are virtually identical under both the Securities Act of 1933 (the "1933 Act”), and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the “1934 Act"), and are treated as such.
Landreth Timber Co.
v.
Landreth,
— U.S. -,
. Plaintiffs do not contend that the Certificates are “notes” within the meaning of the securities laws. However, they do argue that the Certificates evidence the kind of "interest or participation” in a note,
i.e.,
the underlying mortgage-backed notes, or in a profit sharing agreement,
i.e.,
the pooling and service agreement, that would bring the Certificates within the definition of a security found in § 2(1) of the 1933 Act, 15 U.S.C. § 77b, or § 3(a)(10) of the 1934 Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78c(a).
See Amfac Mortgage Corp. v. Arizona Mall of Tempe, Inc.,
. Although the
Howey
test arose in the context of defining an "investment contract," the Court since has indicated that the test, "in shorthand form, embodies the essential attributes that run through all of the Court’s decisions defining a security."
United Housing Found., Inc. v. For-man,
. In
Forman,
the court stated that the application of the securities laws should turn on "the economic realities underlying a transaction, and not on the name appended thereto."
. Although
El Khadem
was decided before
Kotz,
its analysis is consistent with
Kotz,
In fact,
Kotz
cited
El Khadem
in stating, "[t]he inquiry is whether the funding party invested ‘risk capital.’ ”
. Because plaintiffs have pleaded actual knowledge-as scienter, the Court need not reach the question of whether plaintiffs’ recklessness allegations are sufficient. Recklessness suffices if a defendant is under a "special duty to disclose based on insider status or a fiduciary or similar relationship.”
Hudson
v.
Capital Management Int'l, Inc.,
. In reaching this conclusion, the Court does not rely on
Katz v. Amos Treat & Co.,
. The Court also agrees with Homburger’s conclusion that
SEC
v.
Murphy,
Thus, Murphy has no bearing on the statute of limitations issue.
. The so-called "transactional privity" test imposes § 12 liability only on the purchaser's immediate seller.
See Collins
v.
Signetics Corp.,
. In their briefs, the Savings Banks state that Wells Fargo inquired into the allegations made in the Advance letter, but that Lord Bissell fraudulently concealed the true facts from Wells Fargo. Supposedly, Lord Bissell represented to Wells Fargo that Lord Bissell had made a thorough investigation into Advance’s charges, and determined that NMEC was innocent of any wrongdoing. Even if this contention were true, it does not explain what due diligence the Savings Banks undertook to uncover their claim.
. Because, as stated, the California statute contains a four-year maximum period, rather than the three-year period of § 13, Missouri’s state securities law claim based on its Series "A" Certificate is not absolutely barred.
. This pleading also raises serious questions with respect to the requisite scienter for each of the fraud-based claims.
. Umpqua also contends that Riverhead’s Series "C" Certificate was secured by a "different mix” of notes and collateral. This contention, however, is not supported by the record and will not be considered on the motion to dismiss.
. L & N argues that use of the term "constructive trust" to describe its claim is inappropriate - because it somehow misconstrues L & N’s theory of recovery. However, L & N itself describes its claim as one sounding "in equity on a theory of unjust enrichment." That is precisely the theory embodied in the concept of constructive trust. "The concept of constructive trust is ... one of equitable remedy ... to prevent unjust enrichment and enforce restitution.”
Haskel Engr’g & Supply Co. v. Hartford Accident & Indent. Co.,
