We must decide whether the civil Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”) statute of limitations begins to run, as a matter of law, upon receipt of written disclosure of the alleged injury.
I
Lafitt Pincay and Christopher McCar-ron are professional horse racing jockeys who have been inducted into the sport’s Hall of Fame. Vincent Andrews (“Vincent”), Robert Andrews (“Robert”), and their company, Vincent Andrews Management Corporation (“VAMC”) (collectively “Andrews”), are investment advisors whom both Pincay and McCarron retained between 1969 and 1988.
Pincay began investing the earnings from his racehorse riding in 1967, when he orally employed Vincent’s father, also named Vincent Andrews, to manage his financial affairs for- a flat fee of 5% of his annual income. Pincay orally continued this arrangement in 1969, including the 5% flat fee, when Vincent took over his father’s business and formed VAMC. In 1972, Vincent’s brother, Robert, joined VAMC. Pincay’s arrangement with VAMC called for the firm to handle Pin-cay’s financial, accounting, and tax matters. McCarron orally entered into the same arrangement with VAMC, including the 5% flat fee, beginning in 1979. Pincay terminated his arrangement with VAMC in 1987 and McCarron did so in 1988.
Throughout their arrangements with VAMC, the firm recommended to Pincay and McCarron dozens of investment opportunities, and they partook in many of these. Many were ventures in which Robert, Vincent, or VAMC held a stake. For example, in some ventures the Andrews held a partnership interest, and in others they would be paid compensation based on the amount of capital invested in the venture. Many of these came with written disclosure of the Andrews’ financial interest. For example, a document associated with one venture, dated 1972 and signed by Pincay, binds Pincay to pay “Andrews & Co.” 10% of the capital distribution of the venture. Another, dated 1984 and signed by McCarron, lists Andrews & Co., a “corporation controlled by Robert Andrews,” as the managing partner of the venture. A similar document, dated 1984
In 1989, after they had terminated their arrangements, Pincay and McCarron sued the Andrews in the Federal District Court for the Central District of California. They alleged various state law claims, including breach of contract and breach of fiduciary duties, as well as mail and wire fraud violations of RICO. Their theory of RICO liability argued that the Andrews had committed mail and wire fraud by taking, in violation of their oral agreements, more than 5% of their annual income, in the form of the payments the Andrews additionally received from the ventures in which they invested. The jury returned verdicts on both the state and RICO claims against Vincent, Robert, and VAMC. The jury found that Pincay would not have invested in 29 ventures, and McCarron would not have invested in 13 ventures, but for the Andrews’ unlawful conduct. The jury awarded Pincay $670,685 and McCarron $313,000 in compensatory damages for their state and RICO claims.- Pincay also received $2.25 million, and McCarron roughly $1.3 million, in punitive damages for the state law violations. The district court awarded Pincay $603,967 and McCarron $255,986 in attorneys fees under RICO. At the court’s behest, Pincay and McCarron elected to treble their compensatory damages under RICO in lieu of the compensatory and punitive damages available under state law.
The Andrews filed a renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law and a motion for a new trial, in which they argued that the statute of limitations had run and that there was insufficient evidence both to support a RICO claim and to support the amount of damages awarded. The district court denied these motions. The Andrews filed a timely notice of appeal and argue that their motions were improperly denied. Pincay and McCarron filed a timely notice of cross-appeal and argue that they should not have been forced to elect either RICO treble damages or state law punitive damages. The appeals were consolidated before this court.
II
We first address the Andrews’ argument that the statute of limitations had run pri- or to the time Pincay and McCarron filed their suits in 1989.
The statute of limitations for civil RICO actions is four years.
The plaintiffs argue, and the district court held, that in cases, such as this one, where the injurer and the injured were in a fiduciary relationship with one another, constructive notice does not begin to run the statute of limitations. There is no support for this contention in our cases. In Volk v. D.A. Davidson & Co.,
The only case cited by Pincay and McCarron here and by the District Court in its opinion and order to support the view that constructive notice does not commence the statute of limitations is a non-RICO decision, Conmar Corp. v. Mitsui & Co. (U.S.A.), Inc.,
We reaffirm the holding in Volk that constructive notice begins to run the statute of limitations regardless of any fiduciary relationship between the injured and the injurer. Thus, if no reasonable jury could find that Pincay and McCarron did not have constructive notice of their injuries before 1985, the Andrews are entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Ill
Pineay and McCarron claim that even if the statute of limitations began to run prior to 1985, the statute was tolled until 1988 because the Andrews “fraudulently concealed” information that prevented them from learning of the fraud. “Equitable tolling doctrines, including fraudulent concealment, apply in civil RICO cases.” Grimmett,
Pineay and McCarron cannot prevail on their fraudulent concealment claim in this case because there is a long line of our cases holding that, in order to prevail on such a claim, plaintiffs “must demonstrate that they had neither actual nor constructive notice of the facts constituting them claims for relief.” Volk,
IV
Because we conclude that the statute of limitations had run as a matter of law prior to 1989, we need not reach the remaining issues raised by the Andrews regarding the sufficiency of the evidence. Moreover, given that we conclude that their RICO claims were untimely, Pineay and McCarron’s cross-appeal raising the issue of election of damages is moot. Finally, our holding is limited to the civil RICO claims at issue on appeal and does not disturb the jury’s verdict with regard to Pineay and McCarron’s state law claims. Judgment for Pineay and McCarron is
REVERSED.
Notes
. The Andrews argued that, as a threshold matter, Pincay and McCarron’s RICO claims were precluded by retroactive application of a provision of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 ("PSLRA”), Pub.L. No. 104-67, § 107, 109 Slat. 737, 1758 (1995). We recently concluded, however, that this provision cannot be applied retroactively. See Scott v. Boos,
. For some reason, the jury was instructed that the statute of limitations was three years, rather than four years. This error does not matter for this appeal, however, because the jury's conclusion that a three-year statute of limitations did not run means that a fortiori it would have concluded that the four-year statute of limitations had not run.
. Although the Supreme Court has overruled other statute of limitations standards for civil RICO, see Rotella v. Wood,
. Pincay and McCarron note that, even if constructive notice could begin to run the statute of limitations in this case, the jury was instructed otherwise and the Andrews failed to object to the instruction. This, however, does not prevent us from reversing the district court’s denial of judgment as a matter of law to the Andrews on this ground because, when reviewing a motion for judgment as a matter of law, we apply the law as it should be, rather than the law as it was read to the jury. See Air-Sea Forwarders, Inc., v. Air Asia Co., Ltd.,
