A fraud committed against one person often injures others. Both the defrauded party and those indirectly injured may seek to recover for their losses. In this case the district court dismissed a suit by an indirectly injured party. We agree with the district court that the directly injured party is the right plaintiff.
In 1982 Robert B. Berger pleaded guilty to an indictment charging him with paying money to employees of the Cook County Board of Appeals in order to obtain lower tax assessments for property of his clients. The plea admitted acts that could constitute a violation of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), 18 U.S.C. § 1962, because the payments entailed multiple violations of state law against bribery and the federal law against mail fraud. The plaintiffs in this case— claiming that they had to pay more tax because Berger’s clients paid less — then filed this suit under the civil damages provision of RICO, 18 U.S.C. § 1964(c), which provides that “[a]ny person injured in his business or property by reason of a violation of section 1962 of this chapter ... shall reсover threefold the damages he sustains and the cost of the suit, including a reasonable attorney’s fee.” See
Sedima, S.P.R.L. v. Imrex Co.,
— U.S. —,
Berger moved to dismiss the taxpayеrs’ suit, and the district court granted the motion. The court cited as authority Fed.R. Civ.P. 17(a), which requires every suit to “be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest.” The real party in interest, the court thought, is the one “who, by substantive law, possesses a right sought to be enforced and not necessarily the party who will ultimately benefit from the recovery.” Once the County brought its own suit, it became the real party in interest. That the taxpayers would be the ultimate beneficiaries of the County’s recovery did not make them real parties in interest.
We, like the district court, conclude that the taxpayers are not the right parties to bring this suit. The taxpayers’ injury derives from the County’s, and although investors in private.corporations sometimes may file suits in the right of the corporation, no similar doctrine allows derivative suits on behalf of agencies of government. The closest analogy is the
qui tam
action, a private suit in the right of the government with the recovery flowing to the government.
Qui tam
suits are now specialties of statute. When thе government takes over or dismisses the suit, the private party has no recourse. See
The Confiscation Cases,
The taxpayers reply that they seek recovery not for the County but for themselves. RICO permits each person to recover for injury to his “business or property.” The County, as the taxpayers see things, suffered no injury. When the Board of Appeals rеduced the assessments of some property, the total valuation of property in the County fell. The lower aggregate valuation did not diminish the revenue needs of the political subdivisions in the County, however. Each subdivision determines its needs and passes this information to the Cook County Collector. The Collector selects a rate of taxation per $100 of assessed valuation that will generate the desired revenue. To obtain this revenue the Collector had to increase the tax rate to make up for the shortfall caused by the fraudulently reduced assessments. The plaintiffs had to pay a higher rate of tax (and thus a higher total tax) on their property thаn they would have done had Berger’s clients’ property been assessed honestly. This is an injury to the taxpayers'
*1175
“property” — their money:
Chattanooga Foundry & Pipe Works v. City of Atlanta,
This is a cousin to the “passing on” argument in antitrust law. A cartel establishes an overcharge, which the buyer pays. When the buyer is a middleman, such as a retailer or a construction contractor, it may pass the overcharge along. Because everyone else pays the overchargе, each can raise the price at which it sells its own product. The next purchaser in line will be stuck with some, perhaps all, of the overcharge. See Robert G. Harris & Lawrence A. Sullivan,
Passing on the Monopoly Overcharge: A Comprehensive Policy Analysis,
128 U.Pa.L.Rev. 269, 277-98 (1979); Robert Cooter,
Passing on the Overcharge: A Further Comment on Economic Theory,
129 U.Pa.L.Rev. 1523 (1981). The response of аntitrust law is stark: the direct purchaser recovers from the wrongdoer the full overcharge, trebled, even if it also recovered the whole overcharge by raising its own prices.
Hanover Shoe, Inc. v. United Shoe Machinery Corp.,
The same apprоach prevails throughout the law. The person who pays an excessive charge for transportation recovers the overage, even though it may have collected an enhanced fee from its own customers. See
Southern Pacific Co. v. Darnell-Taenzer Co.,
The other part of Justice Holmes’s “tendency” — that the indirectly injured party may not sue — is equally well established. If a wrong committed against a firm causes it to become bankrupt and discharge its employees or discontinue its purchases, the injured еmployees and suppliers may not sue. See
Grip-Pak, Inc. v. Illinois Tool Works, Inc.,
These principles should apply to RICO cases, not the least because the damages provision in § 1964(c) is practically verbatim the damages provision in the anti
*1176
trust laws. See 15 U.S.C. § 15.
Sedima
held that the “antitrust injury” rule of antitrust does not apply to RICO, see
The County, like the buyer from a monopolist, has a right to recover fоr the full loss. RICO applies to tax frauds, and a government may recover losses from the underpayment of taxes.
Illinois Department of Revenue v. Phillips,
Because the County may recover for the whole loss, the рlaintiffs here may not recover. Treble damages, not sextuple damages, are the penalty Congress selected. The taxpayers could argue that they should receive a share of the County’s recovery, but the parallel argument on behalf of indirect purchasers was rejected in Illinois Brick for reasons that are equally applicable in litigation under RICO.
First, and most important, concentrating the entire right to recover in the hands of the directly injured party promotes deterrence. RICO was designed to make life hard for repeat violators of the criminal law, and it must be generously construed to promote the goal of deterrence. See Pub.L. 91-452 § 904(a), аnd
Sedima, supra,
Both
Hanover Shoe,
A class action would aggregate the damages, but there are problems in distribution to which we turn shortly, and the lawyers for the class have their own difficulties with incentives. What makes the lawyers act as faithful agents of the class? None can receive the entire recovery, and all may be tempted to convert the recovery into attorneys’ fеes or to settle the case for too little. The class action and the entrepreneurial lawyer may be the best possible solution to some legal problems, but here
*1177
the assignment of all claims to a single entity is a superior solution. The available evidence, although scanty, suggests that the rule of
Hanover Shoe
and
Illinois Brick
has increased the deterrent power of the antitrust laws, just as the Supreme Court predicted. See Edward A. Snyder,
Efficient Assignment of Rights to Sue for Antitrust Damages,
28 J.L. & Econ. 469 (1985); Jon M. Joyce & Robert H. McGuckin,
Assignment of Rights to Sue Under
Illinois Brick:
An Empirical Assessment,
Economic Policy Office Working Paper (Department of Justice 1985). We anticipate that a concentration of the right to recover in a single entity, the one with the best access to information, similarly will increase the deterrent force of RICO. As the Supreme Court held in
Sedima,
and we reiterated in
Phillips, supra,
Second, the Court observed in
Illinois Brick
that it is exceptionally difficult to determine just how much of any overcharge is “passеd on” by the direct buyer to its customers. Passing on depends on the elasticities of supply and demand for the products that the initial buyers produce. See
Illinois Brick, supra,
The Court also was concerned in
Illinois Brick
about the difficulties of apportioning the recovery between the direct and indirect purchasers of the monopolized good.
There are some differences between the direct purchasers’ suits in antitrust and governments’ suits under RICO. Perhaps the biggest is that a buyer in an antitrust *1178 case usually is a private firm with every incentive to seek available recoveries. Few businesses forgo treble damages recoveries unless the prospective defendants offer the putative plaintiffs something even better, such as price concessions that are a form of substitute recovery. Governments lack a similar spur of self-interest. The Cook County Collector does not get a large bonus for an especially big tax season or take home a slice of the damages award in a RICO suit. Thеre are substitutes, such as the glare of publicity, but these may not be as effective.
Perhaps even more troubling, a government may find itself under the sway of the very people whose criminal activities produced the loss from which it suffers. RICO was directed in part against the infiltration of governments by organized criminals. Those who bend the governmеnt to their ends may also be able to prevent it from filing suit. The machinations of the wrongdoers, combined with the difficulty of inducing agents of the government to exact maximum effort at all times, may counsel permitting suits by indirect victims more freely in RICO cases than in the law of antitrust.
The Court anticipated a similar possibility in
Illinois Brick.
It said that an indirect purchaser may sue “where the direct purchaser is owned or controlled by” the wrongdoer.
As a rule it is for the County rather than thе federal courts to decide how best to induce its agents to protect the interests of the people. The County might establish
qui tarn
actions in state court or offer bonuses to those who prosecute suits. It could authorize derivative litigation by private attorneys general if the proper authorities decline to act. And perhaps, whether or not the County adopts such devices, the attorneys who initiate enforcement through suits such as this one are entitled to fees under the “common fund” doctrine of
Trustees v. Greenough,
105 U.S. (15 OTTO) 527,
Affirmed.
