Appellants in this case are seven current or retired District of Columbia employees whose personal information related to their participation in an employee deferred compensation plan administered by ING Life Insurance and Annuity Company (“ING”) was stored on a laptop computer that was stolen from an ING employee’s home. Citing a “substantial risk” of identity theft and other dangers from the possible unauthorized use of their personal information, appellants sued ING for damages and other relief. 1 The Superior Court dismissed the suit for lack of standing. We affirm the order of dismissal.
I.
On June 11, 2006, an ING agent’s home was burglarized. Among the items stolen during the burglary was the agent’s personal laptop computer, onto which he had downloaded, allegedly without encryption or password protection, personal information (including Social Security numbers) of participants in the “District of Columbia 457 Deferred Compensation Plan.”
2
ING
On or about June 19, 2006, ING notified the District about the computer theft. ING also began alerting affected participants individually, communicating to them instructions about how to enroll in a complimentary credit-monitoring service for which ING would pay. Not satisfied with ING’s response to the situation, appellants filed suit in the Superior Court on June 27, 2006. They claimed, inter alia, that ING failed “to establish and enforce appropriate ... safeguards to ensure the security and confidentiality of records.” The counts of the complaint advanced several common-law theories of recovery, including negligence, gross negligence, and invasion of privacy.
ING removed the case to the United States District Court for the District of Columbia on the basis of diversity and thereafter filed a motion to dismiss on the grounds of lack of standing, failure to state a claim, and mootness. The District Court (the Honorable Colleen Kollar-Kotelly) concluded that appellants had failed to establish Article III standing and therefore remanded the case to the Superior Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c). Appellants then amended their complaint, adding both common-law and statutory causes of action. As amended, the complaint alleges negligence, gross negligence, breach of fiduciary duty, willful violation of appellants’ right of privacy, and violations of D.C.Code §§ 1-626.13 and 1-741 (describing the responsibilities of trustees and other fiduciaries of certain District employee retirement plans). ING moved to dismiss the amended complaint for lack of standing, failure to state a claim, and mootness. (App. 15-18.) Reaching only the first of those issues and reasoning that appellants “cannot allege an injury in fact,” the Superior Court (the Honorable Frederick Weis-berg) dismissed the amended complaint for lack of standing in an order dated June 13, 2007. 3 This appeal followed.
II.
“Whether appellants have standing is a question of law which we consider on appeal
de novo.” Board of Dirs., Wash. City Orphan Asylum v. Board of Trs., Wash. City Orphan Asylum,
III.
“[Sjtanding requirements are met when a party demonstrates (1) an injury in fact, (2) a causal connection between the injury and the conduct of which the party complains, and (3) redressability,
ie.,
that it is likely that a favorable decision will redress the injury.”
Riverside Hosp. v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Health,
Judge Weisberg reasoned that appellants’ complaint failed to allege the type of concrete injury that was necessary for them to have standing to pursue their common-law claims. He summarized the deficiencies in the amended complaint as follows:
Plaintiffs allege, in the light most favorable to them, that they are more vulnerable to identity theft now that their personal data [have] fallen into the hands of the thief of the computer or one who receives it from the thief, and the Plaintiffs who are police officers allege that their home addresses may be compromised, subjecting them to possible threats or violence. No Plaintiff alleges that his or her identity has in fact been stolen or used, and no police officer Plaintiff alleges that his or her residence has been revealed or threatened in any way. The most Plaintiffs can claim is that they are worried that these harmful events may occur and that they have “incurred or will incur actual damages” to protect their credit or to repair any damage if it occurs.
June 13, 2007 Order at 6 (footnote omitted). Judge Weisberg continued:
[F]or all anyone knows at this time, there has not been any exposure of Plaintiffs’ personal information. Even if the information was not password protected, as Plaintiffs allege, it is at least possible that the thief kept the computer or passed it to someone who erased it of its hard drive and memory to make it more pristine for resale. Unless and until any of the stored information is actually used, it is impossible to know whether Plaintiffs will ever suffer any real, as opposed to imagined, injury.
Id. at 6 n. 4 (emphasis in the original). Judge Weisberg concluded that “[f]ear of future harm, even if reasonable, is simply not the kind of concrete and particularized injury, or imminent future injury” that “suffice[s] to confer standing.” Id. at 6.
As Judge Weisberg noted, in addition to the District Court for the District of Columbia (in its ruling on appellants’ original complaint), a number of courts presented with risk-of-identity-theft claims have similarly ruled that plaintiffs lacked the requisite injury to establish standing to sue where they could not allege that any unauthorized use of their personal information had already occurred.
5
In light of the
As the Supreme Court has observed elsewhere, standing “often turns on the nature and source of the claim asserted.” Wa
rth v. Seldin,
IV.
Negligence and gross negligence.
To maintain an action for negligence, a plaintiff must allege more than speculative harm from defendant’s allegedly negligent conduct. “[Speculative harm, or the threat of future
harm
— not
yet realized
does not suffice to create a cause of action for negligence.”
In re Estate of Curseen v. Buchanan Ingersoll, P.C.,
Section 652D of the Restatement explains, in comment c, that “[t]he protection afforded to the plaintiffs interest in his privacy must be relative to the customs of the time and place.... ” Because “[m]od-ern life ... has created novel situations, that in turn gave rise to the problem of protecting the individual who desires ... freedom from intrusion into his private life as well as from undue and undesirable publicity,”
Peay,
We nonetheless affirm the dismissal of appellants’ invasion-of-privacy count, because the amended complaint fails to allege all of the elements of the tort of invasion of privacy. First, in this jurisdiction, invasion of privacy is an intentional tort.
See Heard v. Johnson,
But even if the amended complaint sufficiently alleges intentional conduct, there is an additional reason why appellants’ allegations fail to state a claim for common-law invasion of privacy. An essential element of the tort (whether the focus is on “intrusion upon ... seclusion” or “public disclosure of private facts”) is that private facts must be accessed or publicly disclosed.
See Vassiliades, supra,
Statutory counts. The remaining counts of the amended complaint allege that ING’s failure to safeguard appellants’ “457 Deferred Compensation” personal information gives appellants a cause of action arising under D.C.Code §§ 1-626.13 and 1-741. Section 1-626.13 describes the duty of fiduciaries “with respect to the Trust” to discharge their duties “[w]ith the care, skill, prudence, and diligence under the circumstances then prevailing that a prudent individual acting in a like capacity and familiar with such matters would use in the conduct of an enterprise of a like character and with like aims.” Id., § 1-626.13(a)(2). Section 1-741 describes the same duty of fiduciaries “with respect to the Fund.” Id., § l~741(a)(2)(B).
As Judge Weisberg recognized, the “Trust” to which section 1-626.13 refers is “the Section 401(a) Trust established by [D.C.Code] § 1-626.11,” the entity into which the District places funds of the defined contribution plan described in D.C.Code § 1-626.05(3).
See
D.C.Code §§ 1-626.04(7) and -626.11(a) (2001). The term “Fund” to which section 1-741 refers holds the retirement funds described in D.C.Code §§ 1-712, -713, and -714.
See
D.C.Code .§ 1-702(10) (2001). We agree with Judge Weisberg that neither the “Trust” nor the “Fund” appears to be the § 457 Deferred Compensation fund as to which (according to the amended complaint) ING held appellants’ personal data. D.C.Code § 1-626.05(2) describes “an employee deferred compensation plan pursuant to § 457 of the Internal Revenue Code” that appears to be distinct from both the section 401(a) “Trust” and from the retirement funds that constitute the “Fund,” whose fiduciaries have the duties described in D.C.Code §§ 1-626.13 and 1-741. It follows that, although D.C.Code § 1-626.14 permits a “participant or beneficiary of the Trust” to bring a civil action for “appropriate legal and equitable relief’ •with respect to an act or practice that violates any provision of this chapter (D.C.Code §§ 1-601.01
et seq.),
section 1-626.14 does not create a right of action relating to the “457 Deferred Compensation Plan.”
17
Furthermore, as we held in
Thomas v. District of Columbia,
942 A.2d
A similar analysis applies with respect to D.C.Code § 1-747. Section 1-747 permits a “beneficiary” or “participant” to bring a civil action to obtain redress and appropriate relief with respect to “any act or practice that violates any provision
of this chapter
[D.C.Code §§ 1-701
et
seq.]” (emphasis added). Thus, section 1-747 does not appear to create a right of action relating to the “457 Deferred Compensation Plan” described in D.C.Code § 1-626.05(2). Appellants’ argument is that section 1-747 does not limit a plan participant’s right of action to “enforce the terms of a retirement program,” D.C.Code § 1-747(a)(3)(B)(ii), to programs described in section 1-701 through 1-753. Even if we assume that this interpretation is correct and that section 1-747 applies to claims arising out of the 457 Deferred Compensation Plan, we still would conclude that the provision does not give appellants a cause of action for redress of their concerns about identity theft. Section 1-747 is virtually identical to a counterpart civil enforcement provision contained in section 502(a) of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA”), 29 U.S.C. § 1132 (2009). In
Massachusetts Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Russell,
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court dismissing the amended complaint.
So ordered.
Notes
. The appellants are Regina Randolph, Tony Giles, Tonia Robinson, Darlene Fields, Marth-ine Bartee, Don Pope, and Tamonica Heard. Appellants purport to represent a class of approximately 13,000 similarly situated employees. Some of the appellants are police officers, who allege that their "private personnel information could be used to find out where police personnel live."
. Originally this cause was filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, which dismissed it for lack of standing. See the discussion infra, [see: infra] The federal District Court for the District of Columbia found, and the parties appear to agree, that there is no evidence that the burglary was undertaken for the specific purpose of obtaining the information on the laptop.
. Judge Weisberg did not treat Judge Kotelly's ruling as the law of the case, but instead conducted his own analysis of standing, because "Judge Kotelly did not decide whether Plaintiffs have standing to sue in the Article I courts of the District of Columbia,” June 13, 2007 Order at 3 n. 1, and because Judge Kotelly had not ruled with respect to the amended complaint.
. Although the standing requirements of Article III of the U.S. Constitution do not govern the jurisdiction of our courts, we generally "look to federal jurisprudence to define the limits of ‘cases and controversies' that our enabling statute empowers us to hear.”
Community Credit Union Servs., Inc. v. Federal Express Servs. Corp.,
.
See Randolph v. ING Life Ins. & Annuity Co.,
. In Doe, plaintiff, a claimant who had sought black lung benefits from the Department of Labor Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs, alleged that the agency had violated the federal Privacy Act by issuing, and sending to multiple claimants, multi-captioned hearing notices that contained the Social Security number of each claimant.
.
See also Pisciotta v. Old Nat'l Bancorp,
. As Judge Weisberg correctly noted, appellants' putative class-representative status does not save their amended complaint: "before one may sue for damages on behalf of others — whether the ‘others’ are members of an organization or a class of consumers — he must show injury to himself.” June 13, 2007 Order at 5 (quoting
Consumer Fed'n of America v. Upjohn Co.,
. Our conclusion is in accord with the reasoning of other courts that have dismissed similar negligence actions for failure to state a claim, or have entered summary judgment for defendants, in the absence of allegations of present injury to plaintiffs.
See, e.g., In re Hannaford Bros. Co. Customer Data Sec. Breach Litig.,
No. 2:08-MD-1954,
.
Wagman v. Lee,
. The amended complaint does not include a count alleging breach of a confidential relationship, but, as Judge Weisberg noted, appellants have argued that this tort is a form of breach of fiduciary duty and that they should be permitted to proceed under that cause of action, as described in cases such as
Vassiliades v. Garfinckel’s, Brooks Bros.,
. ING notes that, in March 2007, the Mayor signed into law the District of Columbia "Consumer Personal Information Security Breach Notification Act of 2006,” which requires any person conducting business in the District “who, in the course of such business, owns or licenses computerized or other electronic data that includes personal information, and who discovers a breach of the security of the system ... [to] promptly notify any District of Columbia resident whose personal information was included in the breach.” D.C.Code § 28-3852 (2009). A provision of the same law states that "[a]ny District of Columbia resident injured by a violation of this subchapter may institute a civil action to recover actual damages, the costs of the action, and reasonable attorney's fees,” but that "[a]ctual damages shall not include dignitary damages, including pain and suffering.” Id., § 28-3853(a). ING points to these provisions as creating "incongruity] ” if, by contrast, common law or other D.C.Code provisions were to be construed to permit a suit to recover damages such as appellants seek here. We note, however, D.C.Code § 28-3853(c) provides that "[t]he rights and remedies available under this section are cumulative to each other and to any other lights and remedies available under law.” Id. (emphasis added). Accordingly, we do not read section 28-3853(c) as evidence that the public policy of the District of Columbia is to preclude a cause of action for invasion of privacy arising out of a security breach involving a plaintiff’s personal information.
.
But see Bailer, supra,
. Moreover, liability for invasion of privacy cannot be found where a plaintiff's injury resulted from the intervening actions of a third-party wrong-doer that were not foreseeable to the defendant.
Cf. Black
v.
United States,
.For the reason discussed in note 11 supra, any viewing of appellants' data by the ING employee whose laptop computer was stolen is not the type of disclosure that will support an action for invasion of privacy.
.
Cf. Stollenwerk, supra,
. We reject appellants’ proffered interpretation that section 1-626.14 distinguishes between a "participant” on the one hand, and a "beneficiary of the Trust,” on the other (such that a "participant” in any program, but only "beneficiaries” who are beneficiaries "of the Trust,” are authorized to sue).
