A foundation created by Jay Hayden, and the estates of his mother and of another woman (R. Maurine Johnson), brought this RICO suit against a bank, two law firms, and seven persons connected with either the bank or the law firms. The suit charges that the defendants (along with others not named as defendants, in particular Robert Cochonour) had formed an informal RICO enterprise that had defrauded the foundation and the estates. Without waiting to file an answer to the complaint, the defendants moved to dismiss the suit pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), on the ground that the complaint itself showed that the plaintiffs had missed the four-year deadline governing RICO suits.
Rotella v. Wood,
The complaint alleges that the fraud began, and the RICO enterprise (if that is what it is) came into existence, in 1985, when the plaintiff foundation was created by Hayden’s will. But the plaintiffs argue that although they were reasonably diligent they didn’t discover the fraud before May 5, 2004, four years before they filed suit; and that even if that argument is rejected and a finding made that they did discover it before then, the defendants prevented them from obtaining information essential to their being able to file a complaint that would withstand dismissal.
Our only source of facts is the 252 paragraphs of the second amended complaint, which sprawl over 66 pages. For purposes of the appeal we assume the facts alleged in the complaint to be true, though without vouching for their truth.
Hayden’s will had appointed the lawyer Robert Cochonour, afterward an Illinois state-court judge, to be the executor of his estate. Between becoming executor in 1985 upon the death of Hayden, and 2001, Cochonour looted the Hayden Foundation and the two women (who were still alive during that period, but very elderly) by forging endorsements and signatures on checks, on security agreements, and on other financial documents and by writing checks drawn on the foundation to himself or to entities that he controlled. He tunneled the looted money through an account in the defendant bank, which was in cahoots with him, called the “M & M account,” which he had opened by forging the signatures of Mrs. Johnson and of another woman, who later became Mrs. Johnson’s agent. The defendants assisted Cochonour’s fraud by allowing him to forge signatures and convert funds that they knew didn’t belong to him and by preparing false documents that facilitated the transfer of funds to him from the Hayden foundation and the two old women.
The fraud began to unravel in 2002. It was then that Cochonour acknowledged to Maurine Johnson’s agent (who had a power of attorney because Mrs. Johnson had become incompetent) that he had stolen money from Mrs. Johnson, though he lied about the amount he had stolen; and it was also then that her agent learned from someone associated with the bank about the existence of the bank account through which stolen funds had been channeled. The trustees of the Hayden Foundation became suspicious around the same time when they learned that Cochonour had arranged for a court hearing to approve annual reports of the estate for the years 1986 to 2001; although he administered the foundation’s affairs, he had never filed a financial report with the trustees. The trustees filed a complaint with the Illinois judicial inquiry board and notified the state’s attorney general of their concerns, and the attorney general filed a petition in an Illinois state court to intervene in the Jay Hayden estate, which had never been closed. The petition was granted and Cochonour immediately resigned his judgeship. By this time the trustees knew that the foundation, though believed to have had more than $1 million in assets when it was created on Jay Hayden’s death in 1985, now had no assets at all, and there was no record of what had happened to the money.
All this was in 2002. In January of the following year Cochonour pleaded guilty to having stolen more than $100,000 from the Jay Hayden estate between 1985 and 1990, and was sentenced to prison. Also well before May 5, 2004 (four years, remember, before this suit was filed), employees of the defendant bank tried to persuade one of the foundation’s trustees to get the trus *385 tees to drop their inquiry into Cochonour. They told the trustee that all the irregularities could be explained, and that in any event, because a close confidant of Cochonour had become the subject of grand jury proceedings for stealing from an elderly person, Cumberland County (the site of the fraud) didn’t need more bad publicity. A cousin of Jay Hayden hired a lawyer who told the cousin that he believed there was a conspiracy between Cochonour and the defendants.
Yet besides alleging all these things and more, the complaint also alleges that the defendants made assiduous efforts to prevent the plaintiffs from learning more about the conspiracy. They tried to convince Mrs. Johnson’s agent not to investigate Cochonour and they filed complaints against the lawyer who had been retained by Jay Hayden’s cousin to investigate the defendants. At the behest of the defendants the Illinois Attorney Registration & Disciplinary Commission told the lawyer to leave the state forthwith, as otherwise the commission would reopen investigations of him that had been opened but not pursued to completion. And Cochonour in the legal proceedings against him tried to hide behind the Fifth Amendment, refusing to come clean about his activities, and when his stonewalling failed he defied court orders and was held in contempt. See
Estate of Hayden,
A defendant who prevents a plaintiff from obtaining information that he needs in order to be able to file a complaint that will withstand dismissal is forbidden, under the rubric of equitable estoppel, to plead the statute of limitations for the period in which the inquiry was thwax’ted.
Beckel v. Wal-Mart Associates, Inc.,
We have said (not inconsistently with the qualifications just indicated) that “the plaintiffs lack of due diligence is not a defense [to a claim of equitable estoppel], because the defendant’s conduct is deliberate, just as a plaintiffs contributory negligence is not a defense to an intentional tort.”
Id.
at 597; see also
Flight Attendants Against UAL Offset v. Commissioner, supra,
Most of the frauds alleged in this case date back to the period 1985 to 1994, which was 14 to 23 years before the suit was filed. By the summer of 2003 at the latest, despite (and in part because of) the defendants’ obstructive behavior, the plaintiffs knew that Cochonour had looted the Jay Hayden estate and that the bank’s employees were trying to prevent further investigation of Cochonour, on the implausible, suspicion-arousing grounds that everything would be explained in due course and that further exposure of skullduggery would injure Cumberland County’s good name.
If the plaintiffs didn’t yet have enough information to be able to sue, they did by 2005, when Cochonour was deposed and made (in the words of the complaint) “detailed exhaustive admissions of repeated forgeries and thefts involving the M & M account and the Estate of Jay E. Hayden and the fact that all annual reports submitted ... in February 2002 to the Trustees were false and misleading.” And while Cochonour “continued to assert that all such actions were done by him alone,” the plaintiffs knew better and so knew enough to sue his accomplices despite his and their continued stonewalling. Cf.
Sharp v. United Airlines, Inc.,
The plaintiffs mistakenly contend that a limitations period does not begin to run until the precomplaint investigation is complete, which may not have been until 2005, three years before they sued. Actually it starts running when the prospective plaintiff discovers (or should if diligent have discovered) both the injury that gives rise to his claim and the injurer or (in this case) injurers.
See United States v. Kubrick,
In the case of suits under RICO, as
Barry Aviation
and the other cases cited above explain, the injury arising from the
*387
first predicate act to injure the plaintiff (“predicate acts” are the illegal acts committed by the racketeering enterprise) starts the limitations period running, rather than the injury from the last predicate act, which might occur decades after the first.
Rotella v. Wood, supra,
Yet we said that the defendants’ obstructive behavior may have prevented the plaintiffs from obtaining enough information before 2005 to know they’d sustained a legal injury and by whom it had been inflicted. But that did not automatically give them four more years to sue. Tolling doctrines need not extend the date on which the statute of limitations begins to run; for as soon as the tolling events cease — in a case of equitable estoppel, as soon as the defendants’ obstructive behavior ceases — ’the plaintiffs should get to work and file suit as soon as is practicable, in order to minimize the inroads that dilatory filing makes into the policies served by statutes of limitations.
Certainly this is true with regard to equitable tolling, where, through no fault of the defendant (unlike equitable estoppel), the plaintiff has though diligent been unable to discover the injury or injurer within the statutory period. But there is a division of authority over whether the rule should be the same when the basis of tolling is the defendant’s misconduct, giving rise to equitable estoppel. As we pointed out in
Gaiman v. McFarlane,
In a RICO case, given the Supreme Court’s emphasis noted earlier on the importance of prompt suit to achieve the statute’s public purposes, the plaintiff should not be entitled to an automatic extension of the statute of limitations by the length of the period of concealment by the defendants. The injury on which the present suit is based occurred many years before the statute of limitations would have run had it not been for that concealment, for otherwise the plaintiffs would *388 have discovered the fraud; and it is discovery that starts the limitations period running. To litigate a claim so long after the events giving rise to it is bound to be difficult because of lost evidence and faded memories, and the difficulty would be needlessly augmented had the plaintiff no duty of alacrity once the facts that the defendants had improperly concealed are at last in the open. By 2005 the plaintiffs knew so much that they did not need three more years to complete their precomplaint investigation and file suit. Thus, in a RICO case, the plaintiff must both use due diligence to discover that he has been injured and by whom even if the defendant is engaged in fraudulent concealment, and diligently endeavor to sue within the statutory limitations period or as soon thereafter as feasible. The plaintiffs in this case did neither.
And so their suit is indeed time-barred. But for the sake of completeness we take up the defendants’ alternative argument that the complaint fails to allege a RICO violation because the allegations show there was no RICO enterprise.
Until recently we would have said that conspiracy to commit a predicate act is a different animal from a RICO enterprise. E.g.,
Stachon v. United Consumers Club, Inc.,
But the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Boyle v. United States,
— U.S.-,
Even so, the RICO offense is
using
an enterprise to engage in a pattern of racketeering activity. 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c);
Reves v. Ernst & Young,
The suit was properly dismissed.
Affirmed.
