MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiffs in this case are Mid-State Fertilizer Company and its two shareholders, Lasley and Maxine Kimmel. The Kimmels are also officers of Mid-State. The defendant is The Exchange National Bank of Chicago. 1 In February 1985, Exchange provided a two-million-dollar line of credit to Mid-State. Repayment of this loan was secured by a security agreement imposing a first lien on all of Mid-State’s nonreal property, including accounts receivable, inventory, equipment, general intangibles, and proceeds. The Kimmels also personally guaranteed the loans. Mid-State was required to establish a checking account from which it could pay all its operating expenses. Deposits were made from the credit line to the checking account to the extent of available collateral as determined by borrowing base certificates submitted by Mid-State. Mid-State was also required to establish a lock box account with Exchange. Customers of Mid-State made payments through the lock box. Mid-State could not withdraw money from the lock box. Instead, the funds in that account were applied to Mid-State’s outstanding loan balance. The line of credit expired on November 30, 1985, but was renewed that December for another year. In May 1986, though, Exchange began to cut off the linе of credit and declared a default on May 19 and 22. At that time Exchange contacted some of Mid-State’s customers to ask them to make payments to Exchange.
Plaintiff’s amended complaint contains four federal counts and nine pendent state law counts. The parties agree Illinois law controls on the state counts. The thirteen *669 counts are designated as follows: I — 12 U.S.C. § 1971 Tying Arrangement; II — 12 U.S.C. § 1972 Tying Arrangement; III — 18 U.S.C. § 1961 RICO; IV — 18 U.S.C. § 1962 RICO; V — Common Law Fraud; VI— Breach of Fiduciary Duties; VII — Breach of Duty as Agent; VIII & IX — Bad Faith Dealing/Breach of Contract; X — Tortious Interference with and Control of Business; XI, XII & XIII — Defamation. Counts I, III, V, VI, VIII, X, and XI are brought by Mid-State. Counts II, IV, and IX are brought by the Kimmels. Count XII is brought by Lasley Kimmel and Count XIII by Maxine Kimmel. Defendant has moved for summary judgment on all counts.
On a motion for summary judgment, the entire record is considered with all reasonable inferences drawn in favor of the nonmovant and all factual disputes resolved in favor of the nonmovant.
Oxman v. WLS-TV,
Defendant argues plaintiffs have no standing under the Bank Holding Company Act (“BHCA”). Section 1975 of Title 12 provides that any person injured in his business or property by reason of anything forbidden by 12 U.S.C. § 1972 may bring a suit for damages under the BHCA. Standing under the BHCA has been limited to direct injuries.
See Campbell v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.,
Defendant still argues that Mid-State’s losses were not caused by the purportedly illegal tying arrangement. To the extent this is true, the Kimmels’ losses also would not be tying losses. To support its claim that Mid-State suffered a loss due to the tying arrangement, plaintiffs point only to one paragraph in the affidavit of its financial expert, William Bryan.
2
The
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paragraph states, “Further, it is my opinion that the handling of the loan arrangement and use of the locked box or blocked account by Exchange National Bank personnel was such that the likely and predictable result was the demise of Mid-State as a going concern.” Bryan states he examined the pleadings, depositions, and documents in this case, but he does not recite any of the specific facts or steps in his reasoning that led him to the conclusion stated in paragraph 8 of his affidavit. Plaintiffs therefore have failed to satisfy their burden of showing specific facts in support of an essential element of their cause of action.
See Evers v. General Motors Corp.,
Even if plaintiffs have shown they suffered injury, they have not shown a violation of § 1972.
A plaintiff must plead and prove three things to recover under the anti-tying provision of the Bank Holding Company Act, 12 U.S.C. § 1972(1). First, the plaintiff must show that the banking practice in question was unusual in the banking industry. Second, the plaintiff must show an anti-сompetitive tying arrangement. Third, the plaintiff must demonstrate that the practice benefits the bank.
June 18, 1987 Order at 4 (quoting
Rae v. Union Bank,
An unusual banking practice does not, by itself, establish a § 1972 violation.
Parsons Steel v. First Alabama Bank of Montgomery,
Counts I аnd II are dismissed. Plaintiffs have failed to show either injury or an illegal, anticompetitive tying arrangement.
Defendant also argues that plaintiffs have no standing to bring Counts III and IV, the claims under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO"), 18 U.S.C. § 1961 et seq. Count III alleges Exchange committed § 1962(a) violations upon Mid-State. It is alleged that Exchange fraudulently represented that moneys deposited into the lock box account would be credited to the loan as soon as available. In many instances, however, the funds were not credited until a day or more after they were available. It is further alleged that the mails were used in this scheme. Mid-State allegedly suffered by not having use of the money as soon as it should have and by being forced out of business and into bankruptcy. In Count IV, it is alleged that, as guarantors of the loans, the Kimmels suffered from the same scheme in that they were fraudulently induced into being guarantors and Exchange is seeking to collect the loan from them and suppliers of Mid-State are seeking to collect on guarantees the Kimmels made to the suppliers.
Plaintiffs have failed to respond to defendant’s argument that they lack RICO *671 standing. 3 On the other hand, defendant has cited only two cases in support of its argument. There are, however, a large number of district court cases, including three from this district, that have reached the RICO standing issue raised as to Mid-State and the courts have come out on both sides of the issue. Although this court is reluctant to make arguments for plaintiffs that they have not made themselves, the existing precedents adequately set out the arguments for both sides. The court will consider the merits of the standing issue.
Section 1964(c) provides a civil remedy for “any person injured in his business or рroperty by reason of a violation of section 1962.” This requirement must be satisfied for there to be standing to bring a RICO claim.
Sedima, S.P.R.L. v. Imrex Co.,
It is clear that violations of § 1962(c) only require a causal relationship between the predicate racketeering acts and injury; there is no requirement of injury caused by a pattern of racketeering.
Sedima,
The § 1962(a) cases cited above were, with one exception, decided subsequent to
Sedima.
They distinguish § 1962(a) from § 1962(c) on the grounds that the “essence” of a § 1962(c) violation is the predicate act,
Sedima,
The minority view is also consistent with the policy of liberally construing RICO to effectuate its remedial purposes.
See Sed-ima,
For the reasons given, this court chooses to follow the minority view and holds that a plaintiff can have standing to bring a § 1962(a) claim as long as it has been injured by a predicate act. The plaintiff need not allege or show injury caused by invest *673 ment of racketeering income. This, though, does not solve all of Mid-State’s problems since Mid-State failed to рrovide any citation to show it actually suffered injury as a result of the allegedly fraudulent acts. But it is uncontested that there were delays in crediting funds from the lock box account to the loan. Final Pretrial Order, Sched. A 119. Even if no evidence is presented to show the additional interest expense incurred and even if the amount alleged is small ($4,676.99 as stated in Schedule G of the Pretrial Order), it is axiomatic that the delayed crediting results in additional accrual of interest and RICO has no minimum requirement as to damages that need to be shown. Mid-State has standing to bring Count III.
The standing of the Kimmels, however, is different. As with Mid-State, they need only show injury caused by the predicate offenses. Unlike Mid-State, they face the problem that they cannot rely on the indirect injury they suffer as a result of their being shareholders and employees of a corporation that suffers direct injury.
Rand v. Anaconda-Ericsson, Inc.,
All three plaintiffs have standing under RICO, but defendant also argues that the RICO claims have not been adequately shown. It argues there is inadequate evidence of a pattern and inadequate evidénce of a scheme to defraud. The latter argument is considered first. 7
It is uncontested that Exchange promised to immediately credit the loan with deposits into the lock box, but that it did not always do so. The question is whether Exchange intended at the time of contracting to delay applying credits to the loan. Exchange also argues there is inadequate proof of fraud in that the purported misrepresentations have not beеn shown to be material. As with a number of other issues, plaintiffs failed to respond to this latter argument. As with common law fraud, materiality is an element of RICO mail fraud.
Grantham & Mann, Inc. v. American Safety Products, Inc.,
Plaintiffs have also failed to establish an intent to defraud. They point to documents prepared at the time the loan was negotiated as proof that Exchange intended from the beginning to delay crediting the loans. Two loan summary forms refer to a 1 day float on the loan. Plaintiffs also contend three profitability analyses show Exchange intended to profit on the investment of Mid-State’s money. An employee of Exchange explained at his deposition that the references to a 1 day float were mistakes on the loan summary forms. The people in the department that prepared the forms were accustomed to having a float on the form and would insert a 1 day float if no float was specified on the documents they worked from. The profitability analy-ses have lines for profits on “net demand deposits.” An employee of Exchange testified this only referred to profits on the checking account, not a profit on amounts to be credited to the loan. Notations on the document, however, indicate the estimated profit was computed on both.
Even assuming the loan summary form and profitability analyses show Exchange expected to profit from a 1 day float from the lock box deposits, plaintiffs have not established an intent to defraud. Other behavior of Exchange is inconsistent with such a conclusion. Exchange made no attempt to hide the delays in crediting and the Kimmels knew of such delays almost from the beginning. Exchange even sent monthly statements showing the delays. Moreover, the damages or profits were (according to the damage claim in the final pretrial order) only $4,677 over more than a year. The line of credit wаs $2 million and payments amounted to $11 million. The evidence, therefore, does not raise a disputed fact as to the existence of a scheme to defraud. There are no misrepresentations, omissions, or concealments to support such a claim.
See Smith v. Grundy County National Bank,
Plaintiffs have failed to provide sufficient evidence to support essential elements of their RICO claims. 8 Counts III and IV are dismissed.
The remaining counts are all pendent state law claims. Since all the federal claims are dismissed, the state law claims will also be dismissed.
Maguire v. Marquette University,
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that:
(1) Defendant The Exchange National Bank of Chicago’s motion for summary judgment is granted.
(2) Plaintiffs’ motion to strike the affidavit of Walter Macur is dеnied as moot.
(3) The Clerk of the Court is directed to enter a judgment in favor of defendants and against plaintiffs dismissing this cause of action. Counts I, II, III, and IV of the First Amended Complaint are dismissed with prejudice as to defendant The Exchange National Bank of Chicago. All oth *675 er counts and all counts against defendants Walter Macur and Mark Fecht are dis missed without prejudice.
Notes
. Two other defendants were dismissed when their motion pursuant to Fеd.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) was granted.
. In their brief, plaintiffs did not respond to the argument Mid-State suffered no tying injury. The affidavit of Bryan is only referred to in plaintiffs’ statement of genuine issues. Plain
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tiffs could have lost on this point simply because they failed to make the argument.
See National Fidelity Life Insurance Co. v. Karaganis,
. Even the statement of genuine issues fails to provide any citations as to whether plaintiffs suffered any RICO damages and as to whether the Kimmels have a cause of action separate from that of Mid-State. See Plaintiffs’ Statement of Genuine Issues §§ III(D), IV(D), IV(E).
. For the most complete discussions of the arguments on each side of the issue, see Grady, supra, and Smith, supra.
. See also the recent case of
Liquid Air Corp. v. Rogers,
. Section 1962(a) focuses on investment of racketeering income, § 1962(b) on gaining control of an enterprise through racketeering acts, and § 1962(c) on engaging in racketeering acts while participating in the activities of an enterprise.
See Grady,
. Contrary to defendant’s reliance on state law, RICO does not require clear and convincing evidence of fraud.
Rogers,
. It is unnecessary to determine if each delayed credit to the loan account is a separate transaction for purposes of determining if a pattern of racketeering activity has been shown.
See Lampe,
