Daniel McCOOL, John Pellettiere, Ted R. Potempa, Kenneth A.
Stankievich, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
STRATA OIL COMPANY, an Illinois corporation, Richard A.
Miller and Joseph Jocheim, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 90-1385.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Argued Oct. 17, 1991.
Decided Aug. 21, 1992.
As Amended on Petition for Rehearing Oct. 26, 1992.
Peter S. Lubin, Rudnick & Wolfe, David C. Roston (argued), Jeffrey P. DeJong, David H. Latham, Altheimer & Gray, Chicago, Ill., for plaintiffs-appellants.
Cary S. Fleischer (argued), Jon A. Duncan, Patrice A. Powers, Chuhak & Tecson, Chicago, Ill., for defendants-appellees.
Before BAUER, Chief Judge, and CUDAHY and EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judges.
CUDAHY, Circuit Judge.
The plaintiffs invested in an oil drilling project in 1984. They sued in 1989, claiming that they did not get what they paid for. The district court held that their claims under Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b) (1988) (the '34 Act), and under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), 18 U.S.C. §§ 1961 et seq. (1988), were time-barred and dismissed the pendent state law claims for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
Statutes of limitations tend to be more difficult to apply than to define, but this is no ordinary case. Since the district court issued its decision, we have changed the statute of limitations that applies to 10(b) claims, Short v. Belleville Shoe Mfg. Co.,
I.
A. Facts
In the early 1980s, Richard Miller and Joseph Jocheim formed a business now known as Strata Oil Corporation. Strata manages and operates a variety of oil and gas projects in Illinois and Oklahoma. Miller has (or had) a friend, John Pellettiere, who invested in three of Strata's projects in 1982 and 1983.
In 1983, Strata entered into a joint venture (Strata/Quest) to acquire and develop a mineral lease on a piece of land in Oklahoma, the Lowe Property. Miller invited Pellettiere to an investors' meeting in the fall of 1983, where the drilling project was described in glowing terms. Pellettiere then introduced Miller and Jocheim to other potential investors, Daniel McCool, Ted Potempa and Kenneth Stankievich.
The plaintiffs (Pellettiere, McCool, Potempa and Stankievich, or "the investors") allege that Miller and Jocheim deceived them about the nature of the Lowe Property project. This deception is the basis for both the securities fraud and RICO claims. In their first complaint, the investors alleged the following oral misrepresentations:
1) the Lowe Property had not been heavily worked before;
2) the plaintiffs would be tenants in common on the lease;
3) maintenance costs would be about $80 per month;
4) wells would not be considered "successful" unless they produced at least 50 barrels of oil a day;
5) the initial investment would be $17,000-$13,000 for the lease and $4,000 to drill the first well (to be followed by another $4,000 if the well were successful).
Complaint p 14-16, 35. Further, the investors alleged the following omissions of material fact:
1) that it would be expensive to remove water from the Lowe Property; and
2) that the defendants would receive overriding royalties in the project.
Complaint p 36. In an amended complaint, filed after the entry of partial summary judgment for Strata, the investors deleted the allegation about the past workings (misrepresentation # 1) and added two new allegations:
1) Strata represented that all investors would share equally in the expenses and profits of the Lowe Property project; and
2) Strata failed to provide offering sheets as required by SEC regulations.
Amended Complaint pp 36, 38.
In summary, although the drilling project appears to have been moderately successful, the investors received a smaller piece of the pie than they thought they were entitled to. Strata owns the mineral lease on the Lowe Property while the investors own only "working interests" in drilling sites on the lease. Strata receives a disproportionate share of the profits and pays none of the expenses. Finally, the expenses themselves have been higher than promised.
The remainder of the story is not relevant to the alleged fraud but is relevant to the running of the statute of limitations. In February 1984, each plaintiff paid $17,000 and signed a "Receipt and Working Agreement." For reasons that will become clear, the Agreement bears reproduction at some length:
This will acknowledge receipt of the sum of $17,000 from [investor] to [Strata], said sum of money being payment in consideration of 1/32nd working interest, subject to a 11/42 of 7/8 overriding royalty interest in a certain portion of a leasehold estate known as the EDITH THOMAS # 1A property located in ... County of Creek, State of Oklahoma, more particularly described as follows:
THE DRILLING SITE LOCATED IN THE LEASE DESCRIBED AS: THE E 1/2 AND NW40 OF THE NW 1/4 AND THE W 1/2 OF THE NE 1/4, SEC. 9, TOWNSHIP 16N, RANGE 7 EAST
1. It is understood that payment of said sum of money by the [investor] is a payment for the drilling expense for a test well to be drilled on said leasehold estate. That it is further understood that said [investor] shall provide and will pay $7,000 of the cost of completing and equipping said test well in the event oil and/or gas is found. It is further understood that the legal effect of this agreement is that the [investor] bears a 1/32 share of the cost of operation and maintenance of said well when it is placed on production....
....
4. In connection with such operation and development including the completion and equipping of the first well, the [investor] shall be liable for ... his pro rata share of the costs and expenses thereof....
....
16. This is solely a receipt and agreement for the purchase of a working interest in a certain portion of the leasehold estate hereinbefore described. Nothing in this agreement shall be construed as the delivery of an oil or gas assignment to the [investor].
....
18. The parties hereto shall in no way be deemed to be partners ..., but are now, and shall continue to be tenants in common in the property, whose interest therein shall be liable for only their respective proportionate part of the cost. This Agreement shall not constitute a partnership as defined by the Internal Revenue Code....
Investors' Appendix at 11-12.
In October 1984, the same plaintiffs signed identical Agreements for another investment on the Lowe Property, the Edith Thomas # 2A. This time they paid only $12,000. In May 1984, they invested $12,900 in the Edith Thomas # 3A, and in August 1985, $12,900 in the Fields # 1A.
Periodically, Strata sent newsletters to the investors, reporting successes and problems on "our lease" and "our property." Once the wells began to produce, Strata sold the oil to the Sun Oil Company. Sun provided Strata with division orders, which recorded the allocation of payments to each of the investors. Strata sent copies of the division orders to the plaintiffs, but edited the orders so that each investor received only the notations that related to his share of the proceeds. Each of the plaintiffs received division orders with the notation "WI" beside his name.
In October 1985, Strata accidentally sent out unredacted division orders. At this point McCool noticed that the notation beside his name, "WI," was different from the notation beside the names of the Strata defendants, "ORI." Concerned, he called Pellettiere, who assured McCool that his friend Miller was honest and would never cheat them. Sometime in 1987, however, Pellettiere became concerned when Miller told him that the project was incurring large expenses to build a system that would dispose of salt water from the wells: Pellettiere had thought that a water disposal system was already in place.
The investors sued Strata in Illinois state court in December 1987, contending that Strata was charging them more than actual cost to dispose of waste water.1 Not until September 1988, however, did the investors hire an attorney to do a title search in Oklahoma. When they discovered that they were not tenants in common on the Lowe Property mineral lease, the investors threatened Strata with another suit and entered into an agreement with Strata to toll any applicable statutes of limitations until March 31, 1989. Unable to resolve their differences with Strata, the investors finally filed suit in April 24, 1989.B. District Court Proceedings
The investors brought a six-count complaint against Strata, Miller and Jocheim. The first two counts alleged violations of the securities laws and of RICO. Counts three through six set out a variety of state law claims not now relevant. After some procedural skirmishing, the district court entered partial summary judgment for the defendants.
The court concluded that a three-year Illinois statute of limitations applied to the securities fraud claim, McCool v. Strata Oil Co.,
The allegation that Strata lied about prior drilling on the Lowe Property survived summary judgment, for nothing in the Agreement mentioned the condition of the property. Id. at 1236. But, as noted above, the investors then amended their complaint to drop the allegation about prior drilling. Accordingly, the court entered summary judgment in full for Strata on the federal claims and dismissed the pendent state claims for lack of jurisdiction. Judgment Order (Jan. 19, 1990). Advised that the amended complaint would not affect its conclusions, the court did not discuss the new allegations of fraud.
II.
We turn first to the securities fraud claim. There are three questions: What statute of limitations applies?; When did the statute begin to run?; and Was the limitations period tolled by equitable considerations?
A. Limitations Period
1. Application of the Federal Limitations Period
At the time it rendered its decision, the district court was clearly correct to apply the statute of limitations from Illinois blue-sky law to the plaintiffs' securities fraud claim. See Davenport v. A.C. Davenport & Son Co.,
One year later, on June 20, 1991, the Supreme Court adopted the same period of limitations, but derived it from a different statute, section 9(e) of the '34 Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78i(e) (1988). Lampf, --- U.S. at ---- - ----, & ---- n. 9,
Since the Court applied the new limitations period in Lampf to the parties before it, --- U.S. at ----,
Congress then decided that retroactive application of Lampf was not desirable. Accordingly, one of the miscellaneous provisions of the FDIC Improvement Act amends the '34 Act to do away with the combined effect of Lampf and Jim Beam on cases commenced before Lampf and Jim Beam were decided. The new section 27A reads, in relevant part:
The limitation period for any private civil action implied under section 10(b) of this Act that was commenced on or before June 19, 1991, shall be the limitation period provided by the laws applicable in the jurisdiction, including principles of retroactivity, as such laws existed on June 19, 1991.
15 U.S.C. § 78aa-1(a). In short, Congress has thrown us back to Short.2
In Short, we applied our new rule to the parties before us, but left open "all questions concerning retroactive application of this decision," calling the retroactivity of new periods of limitations "a question of some subtlety." Short,
Section 27A was proposed, among other reasons, " 'because of the obvious unfairness' " of applying Lampf retroactively. Henley,
As noted in Pommer, Jim Beam was foreshadowed by American Trucking Associations v. Smith,
Chevron Oil requires a case-by-case balancing of three factors to decide whether a new rule will be applied to the parties before the court. Prospective application of a new rule is required where:
(1) the decision at issue overrules clear precedent on which litigants may have relied or addresses an issue of first impression which was not foreshadowed; (2) retroactive application of the decision would retard the operation of a federal statute; and (3) retroactive application would result in substantial inequity.
Smith,
In Short, we noted that the plaintiff could not demonstrate reliance on the applicability of the Illinois statute of limitations because she brought suit shortly after she became aware of the basis for her suit. Short,
2. Application of the Illinois Limitations Period
In 1986, several years before this action was brought, the Illinois legislature amended the statute of limitations for securities violations. But the parties did not notice the change. Nor did the district court.
The amendment clearly applies to this case, even though the fraud took place before the statute was enacted. In Illinois, a new statute of limitations applies to all claims brought after the effective date of the statute that were not time-barred on the effective date. Hupp v. Gray,
If the five-year outside limit of the new Illinois statute barred the investors' claims, we would have to deal with two interesting questions. First, did Strata waive the new five-year bar by failing to raise it specifically in the court below, or did its defense that the action was barred, referring only generally to the statute, preserve this issue for review? Second, can federal tolling rules trump a borrowed state statute of repose? But the five-year outside limit is not implicated here, for Strata agreed to toll any applicable statute of limitations between September 1988 and March 1989. If this period is subtracted from the period between the date of sale and the date of suit, the action was brought within five years. Since the five-year repose period does not apply here, the applicable limitations period is three years, as the parties have assumed all along.
B. Accrual of the Cause of Action
In securities fraud cases, the federal rule is that the plaintiff's cause of action accrues "on the date the sale of the instrument is completed." Suslick v. Rothschild Securities Corp.,
The district court applied federal tolling principles to the Illinois limitations period, a practice that we approved in Suslick,
In securities fraud cases, federal tolling delays the running of the statute of limitations in two circumstances: first, when the plaintiff cannot discover the fraud despite her diligence, the statute does not run until she knows or should know of the fraud; second, when the defendant actively conceals the fraud, or takes other affirmative steps to keep the plaintiff from suing, the statute does not run until the plaintiff actually discovers the fraud, whether she was diligent or not.8 Davenport,
1. Fraudulent concealment
We turn first to the allegations of active concealment. The invocation of this equitable doctrine has fairly stringent requirements. In Suslick, we decided that the plaintiff had sufficiently made out a claim of active concealment when she alleged that the defendants had responded to her requests for information by evasion and prevarication.
In this case the plaintiffs never requested information from Strata. Instead, their claims of fraud are based on the communications that Strata sent of its own accord. First, the investors argue that Strata actively concealed the fact that their interests were different from Strata's by redacting the division orders from Sun Oil. We have some difficulty attributing an evil motive to the deletion of the references to other investors. The division orders disclose the names, addresses and investments of a large number of investors. Ordinary concerns for privacy would seem to mandate Strata's redactions. But even if the defendants' motives were bad, the division orders were accurate, and the plaintiffs have thus alleged no more than silence.
Second, the investors charge that SEC regulations imposed a duty on Strata to provide offering sheets when they solicited investments in additional wells. 17 C.F.R. § 230.236 et seq. (1991). The offering sheets might well have disclosed the different interests of Strata and the investors, but this argument again runs headlong into our holding in Davenport--although the breach of a duty to disclose may constitute securities fraud, see Davenport,
The most plausible claim is the third. As mentioned, Strata sent out a variety of newsletters reporting on the successes and failures of drilling on "our property" and "our lease." The investors argue that, in the context of the original misrepresentations, these statements were affirmatively misleading. The investors felt reassured that they were tenants in common on the lease, they claim, when they heard Strata refer to the property as "ours." Of course, the newsletters were not actually false. The Strata defendants could quite truthfully refer to the Lowe Property as "ours"; after all, it was. But this defense of literal truth is perhaps too glib. More important, we think, is the observation of the trial court that the newsletters were, at worst, ambiguous: although Strata refers to the Lowe Property as "ours," it also thanks the investors for their investments in particular wells.
In sum, the district court was correct to conclude that there was no issue for the jury here. The plaintiffs failed to present facts that would support a finding of fraudulent concealment.
2. Diligence
We have some disagreement with the district court on the subject of the investors' diligence. We do not agree that the Receipt and Working Agreement necessarily notified the investors about the alleged fraud. While we are sure that an experienced oil and gas attorney should have known that the contract gave the investors a "working interest" rather than a "tenancy in common," we doubt that a reasonable investor (or even a non-specialist lawyer) can be presumed to know that the two terms have different meanings. Further, the terms of the Agreement do nothing to clarify the difference: while the introductory paragraph refers to a "working interest," paragraph 18 states that the investors will be "tenants in common on the property."
The district court believed that the representation about expenses--that they would not exceed $80 per month--was also contradicted by the Agreement, which says that investors will be liable for a 1/32 share of expenses. We do not see the contradiction. The failure of the Agreement to place a limit on potential expenses does not make Strata's representation that actual expenses would be low inherently incredible.
The Agreement also notified the investors that their interest in the property (whatever that interest was) would be subject to a " 11/42 of 7/8 overriding royalty interest." The court thought this inconsistent with Strata's alleged promise that it would share the profits and expenses of the project equally with the investors. Again we disagree. The Agreement does not specify who was to receive the overriding royalty interest. It would not be unreasonable to surmise that the overriding royalty interest would go to the owners of the Lowe Property as payment for the mineral lease. Indeed, the Complaint alleges that some of the royalties did go to the owners of the Lowe Property. Complaint p 36. Further, this reasonable surmise depends on knowing what an "overriding royalty interest" is in the first place. Finally, the Agreement itself states that: "The parties hereto ... are now, and shall continue to be tenants in common in the property, whose interest therein shall be liable for only their respective proportionate part of the cost." Working Agreement p 18. This language suggests that Strata, a party to the Agreement, would be sharing in the costs proportionately. In sum, a jury could conclude that the Agreement would not notify a reasonable investor that Strata would be taking a disproportionately large share of the project's net profits.
Strata argues that the investors received exactly what the Agreements provide for: working interests in individual wells, subject to an overriding royalty interest and liability for 1/32 of the project's expenses. But this is not a contract case; this is a securities fraud case. The SEC requires the promoters of oil and gas projects to provide offering sheets to potential investors precisely to avoid the possibility of fraud and confusion when investors sign complex and confusing legal documents. If the plaintiffs had consulted lawyers before investing, we would not hesitate to conclude that the Agreements fully notified them of the discrepancies between what they were promised and what they actually bought. Cf. Norris v. Wirtz,
Despite our disagreement with the district court, the investors' securities fraud claim is untimely because they should have inquired about the nature of their interests in October 1984, when they signed the second set of Agreements. The investors may have reasonably believed that the first set of Agreements gave them an interest in a mineral lease and a well--the Edith Thomas # 1A. But when asked to invest in another well on the same property the plaintiffs signed another set of Agreements identical to the first. In the first deal, the Agreement records a transaction for a lease and a well. In the second, the Agreement records a transaction for a well only. While reasonable investors need not necessarily understand legal jargon, they must understand that contracts have some significance. Something is clearly amiss when the same piece of paper purports to mean different things on different occasions.
It is easy to see how the investors could have overlooked the seeming discrepancy between the February and October investments. Moreover, it is apparent that the investors were relying on personal trust to protect their investments, not on legal documents. But neither easy mistakes nor trust toll the statute of limitations. Only diligence suffices.
In sum, finding no material dispute that the investors should have discovered the alleged fraud in October 1984, we affirm the dismissal of the investors' securities fraud claim.
III.
Now we turn to the RICO claim. The parties agree that a four-year statute of limitations applies. Further, they agree that federal tolling principles apply. Fortunately, there are no recent developments in the law that cause us to question either assumption. The parties still disagree about the application of the tolling rules, but this dispute pales in comparison to the argument over when the period of limitations begins to run. The Supreme Court has reserved judgment on that question, Agency Holding,
Before discussing an appropriate accrual rule, however, we briefly summarize the relevant portions of RICO. In a variety of ways, RICO penalizes people who associate with or operate "enterprises" by means of a "pattern of racketeering activity." 18 U.S.C. § 1962(a)-(d) (1988). "Racketeering" is defined as any one of a number of predicate offenses, including wire and mail fraud. 18 U.S.C. § 1961(1) (1988). A "pattern" is (loosely) defined as "at least two acts of racketeering activity ... the last of which occurred within ten years ... after the commission of a prior act of racketeering activity." 18 U.S.C. § 1961(5) (1988). Finally, section 1964 provides a civil remedy for RICO violations: "any person injured in his business or property by reason of a violation of section 1962 ... may sue therefor ... and shall recover threefold the damages he sustains and ... a reasonable attorney's fee." 18 U.S.C. § 1964 (1988). The elements of a civil RICO claim, then, are 1) a violation of the RICO statute, including proof that the defendant has participated in a pattern of racketeering, and 2) an injury to business or property. See Sedima, S.P.R.L. v. Imrex Co.,
In this case, the investors allege that Miller, Jocheim and Strata conducted the affairs of Strata/Quest (the joint venture) through a pattern of racketeering activity in violation of section 1962(c). The pattern parallels the securities fraud allegations: the investors say that they were fraudulently induced to invest in wells by false promises that they would be sharing equally in the revenues and expenses associated with the project. The main difference between the 10(b) claim and the RICO claim is that the newsletters are alleged to be acts of mail fraud, and part of the cause of action, rather than reason to toll the statute of limitations.
A. Accrual
The investors urged the district court to follow the "last predicate act" rule. Under this rule, espoused primarily by the Third Circuit, Keystone Ins. Co. v. Houghton,
The district court, however, followed its own earlier opinion in Abernathy v. Erickson,
We join the First and Second (and probably the Fourth and Ninth) Circuits, and now adopt the accrual rule articulated by the district court. Rodriguez v. Banco Central Corp.,
Use of a discovery principle is uncontroversial. Every court that has considered an accrual rule for civil RICO has adopted some sort of discovery rule. See, in addition to the cases cited above, La Porte Constr. Co. v. Bayshore Nat'l Bank,
Following the First, Second, Eighth, Ninth, Tenth and Eleventh Circuits, we also apply a "separate accrual" rule to civil RICO claims. As in a civil antitrust case, a new cause of action under RICO arises on the occurrence of each separate injury,10 and a suit to recover for that injury must be brought within the limitations period. Bankers Trust,
By applying the principle of separate accrual, we necessarily reject the analogy to criminal prosecutions under RICO, where the last predicate act rule applies. United States v. Persico,
We also reject the theory that a violation of RICO is an ordinary continuing violation, justifying recovery for all injuries in one lawsuit. See, e.g., Taylor v. Meirick,
B. Application of the RICO Accrual Rule
We have already concluded that the investors should have discovered the securities fraud no later than October 1984, when they signed the Agreements pertaining to investment in a second well. See supra at II.C.2. There is evidence that the second Agreements were mailed to the plaintiffs on September 25, 1984. Accordingly, their cause of action, at least as to the first well, accrued sometime in late September or in October, 1984. Whether mere receipt of the documents, or some other event, gave plaintiffs reason to know of the alleged fraud earlier than their October 1984 signing is a factual issue not resolved by the record before us. This factual uncertainty, considered together with the tolling agreement that ran from September 8, 1988, until March 31, 1989, makes it unclear whether the RICO action brought on April 24, 1989, was timely; hence, the district court should address this point on remand.
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court on the securities fraud claim is AFFIRMED, and the judgment of the district court on the RICO claim is VACATED and REMANDED. The investors' state law claims, dismissed for want of jurisdiction, will be reinstated if the RICO claim is determined not to be time-barred. In the event of reinstatement, the court may consider on remand the extent to which the state law claims are time-barred.
AFFIRMED in part, VACATED in part and REMANDED for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Order.
Oct. 26, 1992.
This case is before the court on petition for rehearing filed by the Defendants-Appellees. On consideration of the petition, the court's opinion, issued on August 21, 1992, is amended as follows:
Further, all of the judges of the original panel have voted to grant rehearing for the purpose of amending the opinion as set forth above. Accordingly,
IT IS ORDERED that the aforesaid petition for rehearing be, and the same is hereby, GRANTED to the extent indicated, and in all other respects, if any, is DENIED.
Notes
The state court lawsuit was later voluntarily dismissed by the plaintiffs in favor of the present action
We apologize for the bad pun
If Jim Beam purported to be a constitutional decision, there would be a nice question whether we could obey the congressional mandate. But only three (or maybe four) Justices in Jim Beam opined that the practice of applying a new rule to some litigants and not to others is unconstitutional. --- U.S. ---- - ----,
Given our resolution of this issue, we need not decide whether the Strata defendants waived a statute of limitations defense based on the federal limitations period by failing to raise it in the district court
The statute provides:
No action shall be brought for relief under this Section or upon or because of any of the matters for which relief is granted by this Section after 3 years from the date of sale; provided, that if the party bringing the action neither knew nor in the exercise of reasonable diligence should have known of any alleged violation of [the subsections dealing with securities fraud] which is the basis for the action, the 3 year period provided herein shall begin to run upon the earlier of:
(1) the date upon which the party bringing such action has actual knowledge of the violation of this Act; or
(2) the date upon which the party bringing such action has notice of facts which in the exercise of reasonable diligence would lead to actual knowledge of the alleged violation of this Act; but in no event shall the period of limitation so extended be more than two years beyond the expiration of the 3 year period otherwise applicable.
In Cada v. Baxter Healthcare Corp.,
If we were to apply the Cada framework, however, our analysis would not change. We have assumed in section II.C. that equitable tolling automatically extends the limitations period for a securities fraud claim by the amount of time the fraud goes undiscovered. Davenport,
Although we apply federal tolling rules to securities fraud claims, we do not reach the question whether federal tolling principles should be applied whenever we borrow a state statute of limitations
The reasonable diligence portion of federal tolling doctrine appears to be identical to the new Illinois statute of limitations. See supra at 1459. The Illinois rule on fraudulent concealment, on the other hand, is somewhat different from the federal rule. First, fraudulent concealment triggers a completely different five-year statute of limitations, Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 110, p 13-215 (1991), which may not apply to securities fraud. Pucci v. Santi,
The investors have not argued that they could not have discovered the alleged RICO pattern until after they discovered that they were injured
We speak somewhat loosely here. Under a separate accrual rule, a new cause of action accrues only when there is a new instance of wrongful conduct and a new injury. Different injuries flowing from the same conduct are not usually actionable in separate lawsuits. There is an exception to this rule only for late-developing injuries that cannot be proved in the first lawsuit. Zenith Radio Corp. v. Hazeltine Research, Inc.,
