Limestone Development Corporation owned a 55-acre tract of land, in a rural area within the limits of the Village of Lemont (a small town — population 13,-000 — near Chicago), that it wanted to develop. Limestone charges that the Village and other public bodies, controlled by or acting in cahoots with the mayor, other Village officials, and K.A. Steel Chemicals, another Village landowner, constituted an enterprise whose affairs were conducted through a pattern of racketeering activity, in violation of RICO, and that the Village also violated the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and thus committed a constitutional tort made actionable by 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The defendants’ aim in committing these unlawful acts, according to the complaint, was to prevent Limestone from developing its property. The district court dismissed the complaint for failure to state a claim.
Limestone had bought the tract of land, which straddles a canal, in 1989. The tract’s northern segment, 26 acres in size, includes an abandoned quarry in which water has collected, forming a small lake. Limestone wanted to develop the northern segment as a commercial marina. An unimproved road, a section of which was owned by the Village, provided the only land access to Limestone’s northern parcel. In order to bring in materials for building the marina, Limestone widened the road without seeking the Village’s permission. The Village responded by locking a gate across the road, barring Limestone’s use of it.
Limestone sued the Village in state court in 1992. The suit was resolved in 1998 by a ruling by the Illinois Appellate Court that Limestone was indeed entitled *800 to use the road — but not for building a commercial marina, because of the impact that such use would have on K.A. Steel Chemicals, which owned and used a section of the road, and on the Village, which besides owning another segment of the road maintained the entire road.
Limestone sued the Village again the following year, 1999, complaining that the Village was failing to maintain the road. It lost. That same year, the Village sued to condemn Limestone’s property, but in 2002 it dismissed the suit voluntarily. These also were state court suits.
The complaint in the present case, filed in 2005, repeats the allegations in Limestone’s previous suits but adds the following: The RICO enterprise was created in 1993 and operated through 2004. When in 1993 Limestone became delinquent in paying its Village property tax, the defendants made fraudulent representations in an effort to force the sale of the property, though they backed down when Limestone paid the tax. At the same time, the Lem-ont Park District (one of the members of the RICO enterprise, remember) pretended to be interested in joining with Limestone to build a canal that by connecting the lake on Limestone’s property to the Illinois Sanitary and Ship Canal would facilitate the property’s development as a marina. By stringing Limestone along, the Park District delayed the development of the property. In 2000, the defendants used an appraisal that they knew to be too low to obtain the state’s required permission to launch the eminent-domain proceeding, which they knew would fail — for they had no intention of paying the true market value of the property — but hoped would impede Limestone’s development of the property.
All these alleged frauds — “predicate acts” in RICO-speak that if proved would establish the “pattern of racketeering” required for liability under the statute — occurred outside the limitations period for RICO suits, which was four years from the date that Limestone discovered (or should, if diligent, have discovered) that it had been injured by the defendants.
Agency Holding Corp. v. Malley-Duff & Associates, Inc.,
As a result of the defendants’ efforts to impede the development and sale of its property, Limestone was eventually forced to sell the property at less than its fair market value. Oddly, the complaint does not say when the sale took place.
Limestone acknowledges that were it not for the predicate acts committed in 2003, its RICO claim would be time-barred. But it contends that those acts *801 not only enable it to escape the bar of the statute of limitations as to them, but by virtue of the , “continuing violation” doctrine&emdash;a defense to a statute of limitations defense-&emdash;enable it to revive the time-barred predicate acts and thus obtain redress for the harm caused by them.
That does not make good sense, and is not the law.
Klehr v. A.O. Smith Corp.,
Like too many legal doctrines, the “continuing violation” doctrine is misnamed. Suppose that year after year, for ten years, your employer pays you less than the minimum wage. That is a continuing violation. But it does not entitle you to wait until year 15 (assuming for the sake of illustration that the statute of limitations is five years) and then sue not only for the wages you should have received in year 10 but also for the wages you should have received in years 1 through 9. The statute of limitations begins to run upon injury (or, as is standardly the case with federal claims, upon discovery of the injury) and is not tolled by subsequent injuries.
Ledbetter v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.,
- U.S. -,
The office of the misnamed doctrine is to allow suit to be delayed until a series of wrongful acts blossoms into an injury on which suit can be brought.
Heard v. Sheahan, supra,
One can imagine conducting a similar analysis in a RICO case; indeed, since a course of racketeering activity, to amount to a “pattern” and thus be actionable under RICO, requires at least two predicate acts and some temporal continuity,
H.J. Inc. v. Northwestern Bell
Tele
*802
phone Co.,
Against this conclusion it is argued that the harm caused by the old acts could not be quantified until Limestone sold its property at a loss. That is false. Thwarting Limestone’s efforts to develop its property as a marina, subjecting it to the expense of having to redeem its property to avoid foreclosure for nonpayment of taxes and of having to defend against a baseless condemnation proceeding, and preventing it from selling its property at fair market value are all forms of harm for which courts award damages. The argument is also irrelevant. Difficulty in quantifying damages is cured not by waiving the statute of limitations but by granting equitable relief, which is of course available when the plaintiffs legal remedy (that is, damages) is inadequate.
If the plaintiff doesn’t know or have reason to know that he has been injured, the discovery rule clicks in and allows him to delay suing, as we noted in our Galloway opinion. But Limestone knew from at least 1993 that it was being injured by the defendants, and from 2000 at the very latest that it was being injured by a pattern of racketeering activity. It had no excuse for waiting six years after that to sue.
The district judge dismissed the complaint for failure to state a claim, however, and since the statute of limitations is a defense, and a plaintiff is not required to anticipate and refute defenses in his complaint,
United States Gypsum Co. v. Indiana Gas Co.,
With the earlier frauds out of the picture, can the two alleged frauds committed in 2003 establish the requisite pattern of racketeering activity? They cannot, because the allegations concerning one of them—the story (with map) in the
Village
News—fail to state a claim of fraud.
Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly,
- U.S.-,
Under
Bell Atlantic,
the complaint in a potentially complex litigation, or one that by reason of the potential cost of a judgment to the defendant creates the “in terrorem” effect against which
Blue Chip
warned, must have some degree of plausibility to survive dismissal. It is true that the narrowest holding in
Bell Atlantic
is merely that an antitrust complaint charging an agreement between firms not to compete must contain “enough factual matter (taken as true) to suggest that an agreement was made.... An allegation of parallel conduct and a bare assertion of conspiracy will not suffice.”
Bell Atlantic
must not be over-read. The Court denied that it was “requiring] heightened fact pleading of specifies,”
Threadbare is the word for the allegation that the article in the Village News injured Limestone and is therefore actionable. The complaint is silent, as are the plaintiffs briefs, on the location of Limestone’s property in relation to the proposed park. Limestone could easily have shown this by superimposing its property lines on the map of the park, but it did not do so and its lawyer at the oral argument could not indicate to us how far the boundaries of Limestone’s property overlapped with the park. For all we know, most of the property consists of the quarry lake and none of it will lose value by being surrounded by public parkland. It is not uncommon for private property to adjoin parkland and sometimes it is even surrounded by it, and ordinarily and perhaps in this case as well the value of that property is enhanced. It is also far-fetched to think that potential buyers would be deterred by the fact that a newspaper article showed the property overlapping a public park; any implication that the mayor was claiming that the property belonged to the Village would be quickly scotched by a title search. Maybe some promising prospect was scared off, but this is sufficiently implausible to have required a fuller pre-complaint investigation.
The same deficiency attends another critical pleading — the RICO enterprise, about which all that the complaint says is that it “was an association of, between, and among the Village of Lemont, the Lemont Park District, and Lemont Township.” They are alleged to have conspired with each other, and with the K.A. Steel Chemicals company, to drive out Limestone. But a conspiracy is not a RICO enterprise unless it has some enterprise-like structure, such as that of a cartel exempt from antitrust law (OPEC, for example — the international oil cartel). E.g.,
Stachon v. United Consumers Club, Inc.,
We grant that the view that every RICO enterprise must have a structure is not inevitable. The statute defines the term to include “any union or group of individuals associated in fact although not a legal entity.” 18 U.S.C. § 1961(4). If emphasis is placed on “associated in fact,” no structure is necessary, as indeed some courts believe. See
Odom v. Microsoft,
So one is not surprised that the Supreme Court has said that “enterprise” is “proved by evidence of an ongoing organization, formal or informal,
and by evidence that the various associates function as a continuing unit.” United States v. Turkette,
The allegations in the complaint, detailed though they are, contain no hint of a structure. Questioned at oral argument about the omission, Limestone’s lawyer was at a loss to specify any structural features. Nor did he want to conduct discovery on the matter; he was indifferent to the need to prove structure.
We move finally and very briefly to the equal protection claim. It is a “class of one” claim. That is, there is no suggestion of discrimination against a group to which Limestone belongs. The claim is that the Village deliberately and without justification treated Limestone worse than other landowners, specifically K.A. Steel Chemicals, with respect to road maintenance and access. The statute of limitations applicable to suits for constitutional torts under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 in Illinois is two years,
Savory v. Lyons,
Affirmed.
