David MANSON; Mark Manson, Appellants,
v.
Anca STACESCU; David Fitzpatrick; Giulio Monaco; Trager &
Trager; Westfield Management, Inc.; John Kalakay; Jeffrey
Greives; John J. Stavola; Richard Winter; Kenneth Regan;
Lawrence Brauner; Donald Luzetsky; Fred Paoletti;
Brennan, McNamara & Baldwin, P.C.; General Electric Supply
Company; Capitol Light & Supply, Inc.; Warren
Pfaffenberger; Kathleen Fitzpatrick Miranti; Daniel
Brennan, Esq.; David Shaw; John A. Stavola; Connecticut
National Bank; George Geignetter; Louis R. Martino;
Donald Petito; J.C. Penney Co.; Shawmut Bank, NA, Shawmut
Bank Connecticut, National Association, Appellees.
No. 338, Docket 93-7417.
United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.
Argued Nov. 24, 1993.
Decided Dec. 13, 1993.
H. Owen Chace, Branford, CT, for appellants.
David P. Atkins, Bridgeport, CT (Jacob D. Zeldes, Beverly S. Knapp, and Zeldes, Needle & Cooper, on the brief), for appellee Trager & Trager.
Ronald J. Cohen, New Haven, CT (Tyler Cooper & Alcorn, on the brief), for appellee General Elec. Supply Co.
James T. Cowdery, Robert W. Werner, and Chatigny & Cowdery, Hartford, CT, submitted a brief for appellee Westfield Management, Inc.
John F. Kalakay, Bridgeport, CT, submitted a brief pro se.
James F. Stapleton, and Day, Berry & Howard, Stamford, CT, submitted a brief for appellees Richard Winter, Daniel E. Brennan, Jr., and Brennan, McNamara & Baldwin.
Alan I. Scheer, Elliott B. Pollack, Joseph B. Burns, and Hoberman & Pollack, Hartford, CT, submitted a brief for appellees Kenneth Regan and Capitol Light & Supply, Inc.
Raymond W. Ganim, and Lisa A. Ricci-Knopf, Stratford, CT, submitted a brief for appellee Warren Pfaffenberger.
Kathleen F. Miranti, Trumbull, CT, submitted a brief pro se.
John B. Rizo, Sr., Plano, TX, submitted a brief for appellees J.C. Penney Co., Inc. and Donald Petito.
Richard P. Swanson, Pamela C. Tames, and Reid & Priest, New York City, submitted an amicus brief for GICC Capital Corp. in support of appellants.
Before: TIMBERS, MESKILL, and ALTIMARI, Circuit Judges.
TIMBERS, Circuit Judge:
David Manson and Mark Manson (the Mansons) appeal from a judgment entered in the District of Connecticut, Warren W. Eginton, District Judge,
We reject the Mansons' claims. We affirm the district court's judgment in all respects.
I.
We summarize only thosе facts and prior proceedings believed necessary to an understanding of the issues raised on appeal.
The Mansons commenced this RICO action against twenty-six defendants for alleged abuses against the Stavola-Manson Electrical Construction Company, Inc. (the Company). David Manson is a director, president, and fifty percent shareholder of the Company. Appеllee Anca Stacescu is the other fifty percent shareholder. David Manson and Mark Manson are personal obligors on a $450,000 loan to the Company.
The Mansons allege that appellees, who include persons both inside and outside the Company, engaged in a pattern of racketeering activity through a criminal enterprise masterminded by the other director of the Company, Jay Stavola. Appellees allegedly committed various felonious acts, including bribery of a labor union official, attempted extortion, money laundering, threatened murder, credit card fraud, bankruptcy fraud, obstruction of justice, mail fraud, and conspiracy in violation of RICO. These acts allegedly were part of a scheme through which appellees looted the Company to the point of bankruptcy in order to enrich themselves.
In 1988, after the Company had sustained heavy losses, David Manson petitioned for chapter eleven bankruptcy relief and filed a derivative action on behalf of the Company. The Mansons allege that David Fitzpatrick, the attorney for Jay Stavola and several other appellees, manufaсtured evidence and submitted it to the bankruptcy court in order to persuade the court to dismiss the petition. After the court dismissed the petition, Fitzpatrick asked the court to appoint Richard Winter as the receiver for the Company and he was. Fitzpatrick allegedly selected Winter with the understanding that Winter either would not seek to recover debts owed to the Company by Fitzpаtrick's clients or would settle debts for substantially less than the amounts owed.
Since being appointed receiver, Winter allegedly has failed to act in the best interests of the Company. Winter has pursued only two actions on behalf of the Company and settled both for substantially less than the amount owed. When David Manson inquired about these settlements, Jay Stavola and others allegedly threatened him with financial ruin and murder if he refused to "back off". The Mansons also allege that Winter is covering up appellees' fraudulent scheme by intentionally failing to pursue the derivative action filed by David Manson. The Mansons further allege that as a result they cannot obtain relief under state law.
The Mansons claim that appellees' acts injured them personally. David Manson claims that he has lost earnings and profits in the Company and has sustained injury to his reputation and business credit. In addition, he and Mark Manson claim that they have sustained damages by virtue of their personal liability on the Company's $450,000 loan.
On March 23, 1993, the district court held that the case should be dismissed for want of standing. The court held that the Mansons do not have standing as creditors of the Company and that David Manson dоes not have standing either as a shareholder or as an employee of the Company. The Mansons subsequently moved for leave to amend their complaint to allege additional facts relating to standing. The court denied the Mansons' motion for leave to amend their complaint on the ground that it was moot. On April 27, 1993, the court entered an order dismissing the action as to all аppellees.
On appeal, the Mansons contend that (1) the court erred in holding that the Mansons do not have standing to commence an individual RICO action regarding the looting of a company to which the Mansons are personal obligors on a loan and in which David Manson is a fifty percent shareholder and employee and (2) the court abused its discretion in denying the Mansons' motion for leave to amend their complaint.
II.
(A) STANDING
The standing provision of RICO provides that "[a]ny person injured in his business or property by reason of a violation of section 1962 of this chapter may sue therefor ... and shall recover threefold the damages he sustains". 18 U.S.C. Sec. 1964(c) (1988). The Supreme Court has interpreted this language as limiting standing to plaintiffs whose injuries were caused proximately by the RICO predicate acts. Holmes v. Securities Investor Protection Corp., 503 U.S. ----, ----,
The district court reasoned that the Company was the primary victim of the RICO conspiracy alleged by the Mansons and that the Mansons' injuries in their capacities аs creditors, shareholder, and employee were derivative of the Company's injuries. The court held, therefore, that the Mansons' injuries were not caused proximately by the alleged conduct and that the Mansons do not have standing to seek relief under RICO. Our standard of review of the district court's holding, which is a ruling of law, is de novo.
(1) Standing As Obligors
The Mansons claim that they have standing as obligors on a $450,000 loan to the Company. Since the Company allegedly cannot pay its loan obligations, the Mansons are responsible personally for the repayment of this loan and have become creditors of the Company. Creditors of a bankrupt corporation, however, generally do not have standing under RICO. E.g., Mid-State Fertilizer Co. v. Exchange Nat. Bank,
We have recognized a narrow exception to the general rule denying creditors standing. In Bankers Trust Co. v. Rhoades,
Unlikе the plaintiffs in Bankers Trust, the Mansons do not allege a direct injury. The alleged looting of the Company only harmed the Mansons indirectly. Furthermore, since the Mansons are personal obligors on a corporate bank loan and not primary creditors of the Company, the Mansons did not become liable until the looting of the Company rendered the corporation unable to pay its debts. If the Company were to recover its assets, the Mansons' injuries would be cured. The Mansons' injuries are even further down the chain of causation than those sustained by primary creditors.
We hold that the Mansons do not have standing in their capacities as obligors.
(2) Standing As Shareholder
The Mansons claim that David Manson has standing to sue as a fifty percent shareholder of the Company. A shareholder generally does not have standing to bring an individual action under RICO to redress injuries to the corporation in which he owns stock. Rand v. Anaconda-Ericsson, Inc.,
The Mansons claim that, by looting the Company, appellees violated their fiduciary duties to David Manson in his capacity as a shareholder. The Mansons assert that such a claim states a personal, not a derivative, cause of action. Yаnow v. Teal Industries, Inc.,
Evеn if the court had permitted the Mansons to amend their complaint to include such an allegation, David Manson would not have standing to assert a federal RICO claim. We recognized a special duty exception in the context of RICO actions in Ceribelli v. Elghanayan,
In Ceribelli, the defendants fraudulently failed to disclose material information prior to the shareholders' purchase of their shares. Supra,
Furthermore, the Mansons cannot claim that any appellees owed David Manson a duty that was separate and distinct from the duty owed to the other shareholder. Courts have recognized an exception to the general rule of not recognizing a shareholder's individual claim where the injury sustained by the shareholder is separate and distinct from that sustained by other shareholders. E.g., Sax v. World Wide Press, Inc.,
The Mansons rely heavily on Yanow v. Teal Industries, Inc., supra,
The proximate cause requirement serves the interests of judicial economy by allowing courts to determine in a derivative action one damage award that will restore the corporation and, therefore, its shareholders, creditors, and employees. "[R]ecognizing claims of the indirectly injured would force courts to adopt complicated rules apportioning damages among plaintiffs removed at different levels of injury from the violative acts, to obviate the risk of multiple recoveries". Holmes v. Securities Investor Protection Corp., supra, 503 U.S. at ----,
Furthermore, the standing requirement prevents some claimants from diverting the corporation's assets from other creditors whose claims have priority. Mid-State Fertilizer Co. v. Exchange Nat. Bank, supra,
These important policy concerns counsel strongly against a holding that would ease the requirements for standing under RICO. The Mansons essentially claim that the Company was looted, thereby causing the value of David Manson's shares to decline.
Since there is no claim that David Manson sustained injuries that are distinct from those sustained by the corporation or the other shareholder, we hold that David Manson does not have standing as a shareholder.
(3) Standing As Employee
The Mansons claim that David Manson has standing to sue as president and director of the Company. Employees of a bankrupt corporation, however, like creditors and shareholders, generally do not have standing under RICO. The employee's injury generally is derivative of that of the corporation and does not satisfy RICO's proximate cause requirement. Holmes v. Securities Investor Protection Corp., supra, 503 U.S. at ----,
For example, in Willis v. Lipton,
The Mansons also assert that David Manson was injured by appellees' threats, which were made to intimidate him and to stop him from investigating the alleged scheme. These threats were directed at David Manson because of his positions of employment with the Company. The threats, however, were part of a RICO scheme that was directed at the Company, not David Manson. There is no claim that these threats caused David Manson to sustаin any direct injury. To the extent that these threats allowed the alleged conspiracy to succeed, only the Company sustained direct injury, and any injury sustained by David Manson as an employee was an indirect result of the Company's injuries.
We hold that David Manson does not have standing as an employee.
(4) Availability of State Law Remedies
The Mansons argue that dismissal of the federal RICO claim would leave them unable to оbtain a forum for redress, resulting in a manifest fraud and injustice against them. According to the Mansons, the receiver's dismissal of David Manson's derivative action has left them without any state law remedies. David Manson, however, has the right under Connecticut law to challenge the receiver's conduct and to move for the discharge of the receiver. Conn.Gen.Stat.Ann. Sec. 52-513 (West 1991). After discharge of the receiver, David Manson could bring another derivative action. Alternatively, David Manson could request permission of the Superior Court to sue the receiver and hold him liable for his fraudulent actions. Hartford Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Tucker,
The Mansons would prefer to pursue a RICO action in the federal court. David Manson, however, chose to operate his business as a corporation tо gain certain advantages. He cannot now avoid the consequences of the corporate structure. One of those consequences is that he does not have standing in his capacity as a creditor, shareholder, or employee of a corporation to assert a RICO claim for injuries that are derivative of those sustained by that corporation. Since the Mansons do have remedies under state law, our holding that they do not have standing to sue under RICO will not result in a manifest fraud or injustice.
(B) MOTION TO AMEND THE COMPLAINT
The Mansons argue that the court abused its discretion in denying their motion for leave to amend their complaint to include additional facts related to standing. The Supreme Court has held that, absent bad faith or undue delay on the part of the movant, undue prеjudice to the opposing party, or futility of the amendment, a court should grant leave to amend a complaint. Foman v. Davis,
We hold that the Mansons do not have standing to sue under RICO, even under the additional facts related to standing that they plead in their proposed amended complaint. The Mansоns' motion for leave to amend their complaint was futile. The court did not abuse its discretion in denying the motion.
III.
To summarize:
The court properly held that the Mansons do not have standing to commence an individual RICO action regarding the looting of a company to which the Mansons are personal obligors on a loan and in which David Manson is a fifty percent shareholder and employee. The court did not abuse its discretion in denying the Mansons' motion for leave to amend their complaint.
Affirmed.
