Case Information
*1 Before BYE, HEANEY, and SMITH, Circuit Judges.
___________
SMITH, Circuit Judge.
Richard Varner Jr., Kathleen Varner, Richard Varner Sr., and Louise Varner (collectively referred to as "the Varners") sued Peterson Farms ("Peterson Farms"), Decatur State Bank ("Decatur Bank"), and Terrel L. Shields alleging claims for fraud, *2 civil conspiracy, unjust enrichment, and violations of the Sherman Antitrust Act and the Packers and Stockyard Act. The Varners appeal the district court's order dismissing their Packers and Stockyard Act, Sherman Antitrust Act, fraud and civil conspiracy claims because of the applicable statute of limitations and their unjust enrichment claim for failure to state a claim. We affirm.
I. Background
In October 1996, Richard Jr. and Kathleen Varner borrowed $258,000 from Decatur Bank to purchase and upgrade real estate they planned to use for poultry production. As part of the loan agreement, Decatur Bank provided them with a document titled "Projected Cash Flow for Agricultural Enterprises" that estimated their future annual net income from poultry production at $27,594.18. Shields, an appraiser, verified the value of the property. Richard Sr. and Louise Varner entered into a similar agreement with Decatur Bank. With the appraisals and loan agreements, the couples entered into growing contracts with Peterson Farms for the production of "broilers," a type of market poultry. Unfortunately, the Varners were unable to meet their interest obligations with Decatur Bank, which caused them to borrow additional monies from Decatur Bank to cover interest payments and living expenses. After taking out numerous loans, they ended the ventures and abandoned the contracts.
Decatur Bank filed foreclosure actions against the Varners in late 2000. Judgments and decrees of foreclosure were issued in favor of Decatur Bank on February 16 and 20, 2001, and the property was subsequently sold. Louise and Richard Sr. separately filed for bankruptcy. Decatur Bank obtained relief from the automatic bankruptcy stays, and the Varners were subsequently discharged from bankruptcy.
*3 The Varners brought this action on May 28, 2002, in federal district court in Arkansas [2] asserting claims for securities fraud, common-law fraud, and violations of RICO and the Sherman Antitrust Act. After two amended complaints, the district court dismissed the Varners' RICO and securities fraud claims. The district court allowed the Varners to amend their complaint to replead their antitrust and fraud claims in a final effort to avoid dismissal. The third amended complaint contained claims for common law fraud, civil conspiracy, unjust enrichment, and antitrust violations under the Sherman Antitrust Act and the Packers and Stockyard Act. [3]
In their complaint, the Varners indicated that, after the foreclosures in 2001, they located a person who had worked previously as a loan officer at Decatur Bank. The Varners claimed that this former loan officer indicated that the projected cash- flow figures were false and misleading. In addition, the former loan officer indicated that Decatur Bank and its officer, Vernon Austin, knew of the false and misleading nature of the information, yet used it to entice people to enter into mortgages for poultry farms. The Varners summarized this allegation in the complaint by stating, "Although Plaintiffs were suspicious that the figures given to them were fraudulent, this was the first evidence that the Plaintiffs could obtain to prove their suspicions." *4 On June 5, 2003, pursuant to Peterson Farms's and Decatur Bank's motions, the district court dismissed the third amended complaint with prejudice. The district court determined that the claims were barred under the applicable statutes of limitations because each of the allegedly fraudulent documents upon which the Varners relied (Shields's appraisals, Decatur Bank's Projected Cash Flow statements, and Peterson's broiler growing contracts) were provided to the Varners in 1996, well beyond the limitations periods for each claim. The district court also concluded that the Varners’ claim for unjust enrichment failed as a matter of law because this equitable doctrine did not apply where valid, legal, and binding contracts existed. The Varners appeal the district court's dismissal with prejudice of all claims.
II. Analysis
The Varners argue that the district court erred in dismissing their complaint
with prejudice after finding that the statutes of limitations ran on their state and
federal claims. It is undisputed that unless the applicable limitations periods are tolled
the Varners' claims are barred. We review de novo a district court's grant of a motion
to dismiss, applying the same standards as the district court.
Kottschade v. City of
Rochester
,
Generally, a motion to dismiss may be granted when a claim is barred under a
statute of limitations. Fed. R. Civ. P. 12. In order for a party to avail itself of this
defense, the party must specifically plead the defense in its answer. However, while
this failure would normally result in the waiver of a limitations defense,
see, e.g.,
Myers v. John Deere Ltd.
,
A. Dismissal of the Arkansas Fraud, Civil Conspiracy,
and Unjust Enrichment Claims
The Varners first claim that the district court erred by dismissing their state law claims for fraud, civil conspiracy, and unjust enrichment. Upon review of these causes of action and the pleaded facts, we conclude that the district court properly granted the appellees' motions to dismiss.
The Varners complain that Decatur Bank, Peterson Farms, and Shields
committed fraud and civil conspiracy by enticing potential poultry growers to contract
with them by providing false and misleading information in documents and through
representations by employees of the companies. They further claim that the appellees
were unjustly enriched by these contractual arrangements. Under Arkansas law, a
cause of action for fraud is governed by a three-year statute of limitations. Ark. Code
Ann. § 16-56-105 (1987). As such, civil conspiracy–which is not a separate tort and
must be based on the underlying tortuous activity–borrows its statute of limitations
from the fraud cause of action. The statute of limitations begins to run–in the absence
of concealment of the wrong–when the negligence occurs, not when the negligence
is discovered.
Smothers v. Clouette
,
In order to toll the statute of limitations, there must be a fact question of "some
positive act of fraud, something so furtively planned and secretly executed as to keep
*6
the plaintiff's cause of action concealed, or perpetrated in a way that it conceals
itself."
Martin v. Arthur,
Arkansas courts hold that "[a]lthough the question of fraudulent concealment
is normally a question of fact that is not suited for summary judgment, when the
evidence leaves no room for a reasonable difference of opinion, a trial court may
resolve fact issues as a matter of law."
Alexander v. Flake
,
Applying the relevant limitations statute, Arkansas law required the Varners
to either show that they did not–and could not–discover the alleged fraud until after
talking with the former loan officer, or show that Peterson Farms and Decatur Bank
did something overt or failed to act when they should have.
Williams,
The Varners asserted that they only learned of the alleged fraudulent conduct and misrepresentations from the former Decatur Bank loan officer after the foreclosure actions and added:
The information known to this person [a former loan officer] was not information that was disseminated publicly by Defendant Bank or Defendant Peterson. Decatur, Arkansas is a small town, and Defendants Peterson and Bank are its major employers. The information relating to this fraudulent conduct was not published by persons employed by Defendant Bank or Defendant Peterson due to the potential for retribution. Plaintiffs seek to discover names and addresses of other former employees to develop this fact further.
However, the Varners also included in their complaint that "[a]lthough Plaintiffs were suspicious that the figures given to them were fraudulent, this was the first evidence that the Plaintiffs could obtain to prove their suspicions." This added statement noting the Varners' suspicions defeats their claim that the statute of limitations was tolled. Clearly, the Varners suspected that Decatur Bank and Peterson Farms provided allegedly fraudulent information to induce them to contract for property and poultry businesses. However, they failed to act at any time within three years of the contracts' creation. In fact, for nearly six years–from 1996 to 2002–the Varners failed to act with due diligence, despite their suspicions, to discover any facts that could support their fraud or civil conspiracy claims.
The statute-of-limitations inquiry is not subjective–we do not inquire as to
when the plaintiffs should have discovered or did discover the alleged fraudulent
conduct.
Jackson v. Swift-Eckrich
,
Finally, we also agree with the district court that under Arkansas law, the
doctrine of unjust enrichment does not apply when there is a valid, legal, and binding
contract.
Hall Contracting Corp. v. Entergy Services, Inc
.,
B. Dismissal on the Federal Sherman Antitrust Act and Packers and Stockyard Act Claims The Varners next argue that the district court erred in barring their federal claims due to the applicable four-year statutes of limitations. The Varners claim that, although the contracts and supporting documents were not amended after the initial agreement in 1996, the contracts were "tying" contracts that allowed them to proceed under a "continuing violations" exception sufficient to toll the statutes of limitations. Peterson Farms and Decatur Bank deny that the contracts were "tying" contracts or, in the alternative, that the Varners' complaint did not include a "continuing violations" claim or any overt act that would constitute a continuing violation.
Federal antitrust causes of action are governed by a four-year limitations
period. 15 U.S.C. § 15b. Claims under the Packers and Stockyards Act, 7 U.S.C. §
209(b), must also be brought within four years after an action accrues.
Jackson v.
Swift-Eckrich, Inc
.,
An overt act has two elements: (1) it must be a new and independent act that
is not merely a reaffirmation of a previous act, and (2) it must inflict new and
*11
accumulating injury on the plaintiff.
Pace Industries, Inc.
,
The Varners identify two alleged continuing violations: (1) they were required to buy supplies from Peterson Farms or other named entities that benefitted Peterson Farms, and (2) Peterson Farms required new and updated facilities to force the Varners to buy supplies from Peterson Farms or take out loans from Decatur Bank. The Varners acknowledge that the 1996 contracts included these express terms; however, they claim that these contracts constituted unlawful "tying contracts" or "tying arrangements." They assert that each act by Peterson Farms and Decatur Bank constituted an overt act sufficient to toll the running of the statutes of limitations.
We conclude that the Varners failed to plead sufficient facts to support a cause
of action for a tying-contract antitrust violation or to establish an exception to toll the
statutes of limitations. Performance of the alleged anticompetitive contracts during
the limitations period is not sufficient to restart the period.
Eichman v. Fotomat
Corp
.,
III. Conclusion
We affirm the district court's dismissal of the Varners' state and federal claims due to the running of the statutes of limitations. Furthermore, we affirm the district court's determination that the Varners' complaint failed to state a cause of action for unjust enrichment under Arkansas law because the Varners failed to assert any facts that could establish that the loans and grower contracts were not valid, legal, and binding contracts.
______________________________
Notes
[1] The Honorable Jimm Larry Hendren, Chief Judge, United States District Court for the Western District of Arkansas.
[2] Shields, Decatur Bank, and Peterson Farms make their primary places of business in the State of Arkansas.
[3] Specifically, the Varners claimed that Shields's appraisal was misleading, fraudulent, and made with reckless disregard for the truth and was based upon the amount of debt owed to Decatur Bank by the former owners and sellers rather than on the value of the property. The Varners contend that the appraisal was made with the intent to induce them to purchase the property and that they justifiably relied on the appraisal when entering into the loan agreements. In addition, the Varners claimed that the figures contained in the Projected Cash Flow document were also fraudulent and made in an effort to "lure" the Varners into "purchasing a farm loaded with debt."
[4] The Arkansas court in
Friends of Children, Inc.
, 876 S.W.2d at 605,
recognized exceptions to the general rule that a claim for unjust enrichment does not
apply when there is a legally valid contract. Those exceptions include cases in which
there has been a rescission at law,
see e.g.
,
Maumelle Co. v. Eskola
,
[5] A "tying contract" or "tying arrangement" in the antitrust context involves "a
seller's agreement to sell one product or service only if the buyer also buys a different
product or service." B LACK ' S L AW D ICTIONARY 1523 (7th ed. 1999);
see also
Amerinet, Inc. v. Xerox Corp.
,
[6] The second common exception involves situations when the wrongdoer's
antitrust act is "'revived.'"
Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Sales, Inc.
,
[7]
Barnosky Oils
,
