Adriеnne Richmond brought an amended complaint against defendants Nationwide Cassel L.P. (“Cassel”), Nationwide Acceptance Corporation (“Nationwide Acceptance”), and N.A.C. Management Corporation (“NAC”). She alleged that they forced her to pay for excessive automobile insurance and therefore violated 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c) of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”). She now appeals the district court’s dismissal of her claim. For the reasons presented in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I
BACKGROUND
A. Facts
Ms. Riсhmond purchased a 1984 Nissan Maxima from Let’s Make A Deal Auto Sales. She traded in her old car, made a down payment of $500 in cash, and financed the remaining amount owed through a retail installment sales contract that set up twenty-one monthly payments of $187.28. The installment contract required Ms. Richmond to keep the ear fully insured for the term of the contract. It authorized Ms. Richmond to furnish her own insurance if she so chose, but provided that the contract holder would purchase insurance for her at her expense if she did not provide it.
Ms. Richmond did not purchase her own insurance for the financed car. On March 11, 1991, Cassel and Nationwide Acceptance sent a notice to her stating that the required insurance had been obtained on her behalf from Balboa Insurance Company, but that, “should you or your agent forward evidence that you currently have insurance which protects our collateral, we will cancel the attached insurance, effective the date of your poliсy.” Ms. Richmond paid for the insurance procured by Cassel and Nationwide Acceptance. The cost of the insurance was added to her monthly payments for the remainder of the installment contract. Ms. Richmond then filed a class action against the defendants. The amended complaint alleged that the defendants fraudulently charged her for this “forced placed insurance.”
Ms. Richmond’s amended complaint is comprised of four counts. Count I alleges a RICO violation under 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c).
The factual basis for this complaint is summarized in the introductory allegation.
In paragraphs 6-13 this complaint describes each defendant. Cassel, a limited partnership, is a sales finance agency that purchases ear retail installment contracts and enforces the contracts against consumers. NAC is the general partner and 1% owner of Cassel. Nationwide Acceptance, the other partner and 99% owner of Cassel, is also a sales finance agency. Cassel and Nationwide Acceptance, which present themselves to the public as indistinguishable entities, have ongoing relationships with certain car dealers from which they purchase motor vehicle retail installment contracts. The amended complaint also alleges that Cassel, Nationwide Acceptance and NAC are part of “Nationwide Group,” a group of corporations and entities “associated in fact on an оngoing basis for the purpose of conducting business in selling and financing automobiles,” warranties and insurance, and are under common control of the Lutz family. The group includes the Wix Auto Company, Total Financial American Life Insurance Company, Illinois Founders Insurance Company and Hercules Insurance Agency, L.P., and may also include several other companies.
Under Count I, the amended complaint alleges that there are two “enterprises”
Cassel and Nationwide [Acceptance] conducted or participated in the affairs of the enterprises through a pattern of mail fraud_ In particular, Cassel’s and Nationwide [Acceptance]^ fraudulent conduct continued through at least 1990-1993, a period of three years. The conduct was directed to a large number of related victims, all of whom are consumers who purchased vehicles on credit. The acts of fraud were all related in that they involved charges for the same improper and unauthorized insurance, and the same misleading and fraudulent statements to the victims regarding the nature of the insurance and the victims’ purported obligation to pay were made to all.
Amended complaint at ¶47. Because the defendants used the United States mails in furtherancе of its pattern, Ms. Richmond seeks to recover treble damages, fees, costs, and other relief under RICO.
C. District Court Opinion
The district court dismissed the amended complaint. The ground for dismissal was the complaint’s failure to satisfy the .RICO requirement of § 1962(c): The “persons” allegedly perpetrating the RICO violation were not separate from the two “enterprises” alleged in the complaint.
The district court came to this conclusion by applying the “separateness test” established by Haroco v. American National Bank & Trust Company,
What section 1962(c) renders illegal is the conduct of the “person” that is associated with the “enterprise” in “conducting or participating, directly or indirectly, in the conduct of such enterprise’s affаirs through a pattern of racketeering activi-ty_” .... Richmond cannot meet the demands of RICO just by naming a string of entities that assertedly make up an “association of fact” (even though under proper circumstances such an association can indeed be an “enterprise” for RICO pur-, poses). Instead, it is necessary that the complaint identify such an “association in fact” that is meaningfully different in the RICO context from the units that go to make it up — and that has not been done here at all.
Id. The district court found that the amended complaint failed to suggest how the defendants conducted the affairs of the enterprise, over and above their own affairs. It noted that only the three named defendants (and none of the other affiliate entities) have any tie to the alleged fraudulent conduct that was said to have harmed Ms. Richmond, and also that the insurance company that provided the insurance to Ms. Richmond under the installment contract was not even a party to this action. The district court concluded that the three defendants were both the target “persons” and the “assoсiation in fact” that made up the purported “enterprise,” and thus were
II
DISCUSSION
Ms. Richmond submits that the district court erred in dismissing her amended complaint. We review the district court’s decision de novo. Vicom, Inc. v. Harbridge Merchant Servs., Inc.,
A.
To state a claim under § 1962(c), a RICO plaintiff must show the “(1) conduct (2) of an enterprise (3) through a pattern (4) of racketeering activity.” Sedima, S.P.R.L. v. Irnrex Co.,
The district court determined that the amended complaint’s identification of its twо “enterprises” was far too cursory and eonclu-sory:
Richmond cannot' meet the demands of RICO just by naming a string of entities that assertedly make up an ‘association in fact’ (even though under proper circumstances such an association can indeed be an ‘enterprise’ for RICO purposes).
A RICO complaint must identify the enterprise. Jennings,
This complaint lists the three defеndants ás part of “Nationwide Group,” a group that “includes at least” four other entities, listed in ¶ 14, and that may' include other businesses, three of which are suggested and listed in ¶ 15. The second enterprise, Nationwide Group, plus unnamed car dealers, is even less clearly identified; .in fact, it does not even mention Let’s Make a Deal Auto Sales, the dealership from which Ms. Richmond purchased her used car. Such a nebulous, open-ended description of the enterprise does not sufficiently identify this essential element of the RICO offénse. In Vicom, we held that a lengthy, рrolix complaint was worthy of dismissal because it was not “simple, concise, and direct,” as required by Rule 8(a)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
The primary purpose of these [Rule 8] provisions is rooted in fair notice: Under Rule 8, a complaint “ ‘must be presented with intelligibility sufficient for a court or opposing party to understand whethеr a valid claim is alleged and if so what it is.’ ”
Id. at 775 (citations omitted).
To the extent the amended complaint offers some specific allegations concerning structure, continuity and common course of conduct, it does so not with respect to the two named enterprises, but with respect to the two named defendants, Nationwide Acceptance and Cassel.
B.
Even if a complaint alleging a § 1962(c) claim adequately identifies an enterprise, it must also establish that the “person” associated with the enterprise conducted or participated, “directly or indirectly, in the conduct of such enterprises’s affairs through a pattern of racketeering activity.” To be liable under § 1962(c), that person “must participate in the operation or management of the enterprise -itself,” Reves v. Ernst & Young, — U.S. -, -,
Ms. Richmond contends on appeal that the three defendants are the “persons” under RICO, that their conduct included the forced placement of unauthorized and excessive automobile insurance, and that the enterprises are the group of entities associated in fact to sell used cars and the accompanying car warranties and insurance. She contends that, as long as the “enterprise” constitutes a structured group of persons or firms that engages in organized economic activities, the conduct of one aspect of that economic activity by one member of the group through fraud is cognizable under § 1962(c).
This court has dealt several times-with the question of whether the person and the enterprise are distinct entities. Haroco estаblished that an individual corporation could not be held liable as a “person” that conducted its own affairs through a pattern of racketeering activity, but a subsidiary that had conducted the affairs of its parent corporation could be found liable under § 1962(c). When the enterprise is a corporation or distinct business entity and the person is someone managing it, we have found distinct and separate entities and accordingly have held the defendant liable. See United States v. Robinson,
The Third Circuit considered a similar relationship betweén the person and the enterprise in Brittingham v. Mobil Corp.,
when a defendant is itself a collective entity, it is more likely that the alleged enterprise is in reality no different from the association of individuals or entities that constitute the defendant or carry out its actions.
Id. at 302. In Brittingham, the Third Circuit required that the enterprise be “more than an association of individuals or entities conducting the normal affairs of a defendant corporation.” The Second Circuit also dismissed a RICO claim that failed to establish that the enterprise, an association in fact mаde up of the bank and two loan officers, was distinct from the bank itself. River-woods Chappaqua v. Marine Midland Bank,
In this case, Ms. Richmond’s claim begins and ends with the fraud allegedly committed by Nationwide Acceptance and Cassel. There is no showing that other members of the alleged association in fact participated in the fraud, or that the persons, Nationwide Acceptance and Cassel, conducted the affairs of either of the alleged enterprises (rather than their own affairs) through a pattern of racketeering activity, as required by Reves, — U.S. at -,
AFFIRMED
Notes
. The pertinent portion of the installment contract states:
Buyer agrees to keep said motor vehicle fully insured against loss by fire, theft аnd collision for the entire term of this contract in companies acceptable to holder. Holder is authorized to purchase all insurance included in this contract. Insurance coverages, other than required insurance, have been voluntarily contracted for by Buyer. Buyer may elect to purchase any required insurance from an insurance company, agent or broker of [her] own choice. If Buyer so elects, [s]he shall furnish Seller with a policy or binder issued by a company acceptable to Seller on or bеfore taking possession of the motor vehicle.... In the event of the failure of Buyer to insure said motor vehicle or to deliver a fully paid policy to holder at the times and in the manner herein provided, or in the event of cancellation or expiration of any policy during the term of this contract without replacement by Buyer within 10 days, such failure shall constitute an event of default hereunder. Holder shall have the option, but shall not be required, to procure such insurance for Buyer for the term of one year or for the remaining term of this contract, and to advance the premium therefore. In the event holder elects to procure insurance, Buyer promises to pay the premiums advanced by holder together with a finance charge thereon (computed at the same annual percentage rate per year as the finance charge in this contract) as additional indebtedness due hereunder. Buyer agrees to pay such additional indebtedness in equal installments (at the option of the holder either for a term of one year or for the remaining term of the contract) concurrently with the installments of the Total of Payments then remaining hereunder.
R.10 at Exs. C and D.
. The district court had sua sponte dismissed the original complaint filed by Ms. Richmond on the ground that the RICO count had not satisfied the § 1962(c) requirement that the violation alleged must be perpetrated by a statutory "person” distinct from the statutory “enterprise.” The court permitted Ms. Richmond to file an amended complaint and RICO Case Statement. It is this amended complaint, R. 10,. that is presently before the court,
. 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c) provides:
It shall be unlawful for any person employed by or associated with any entеrprise engaged in, or the activities of which affect, interstate or foreign commerce, to conduct or participate, directly or indirectly, in the conduct of such enterprise’s affairs through a pattern of racketeering activity or collection of unlawful debt.
. The introduction to the amended complaint begins with this allegation:
1. Plaintiff alleges that she was defrauded by Nationwide Cassel L.P. ("Cassel”), Nationwide Acceptance Corporation ("Nationwide”) and N.A.C. Management Corporation ("NAC”). Cassel and Nationwide attemрted to force her to pay for insurance which they procured because plaintiff had allowed her own insurance on her vehicle to lapse ("forced placed insurance"). However, the insurance defendants obtained included coverage for defaults on the loan, and/or was issued in amounts exceeding the outstanding balance on the contract. Defendants were not authorized to charge plaintiff for such insurance under her contract. R.10 at 1.
.18 U.S.C. § 1961(4) defines "enterprise” as "any individual, partnership, corporаtion, association or other legal entity, and any union or group of individuals associated in fact although not a legal entity.”
. 18 U.S.C. § 1961(3) defines a "person” as "any individual or entity capable of holding a legal or beneficial interest in property.”
. The court also granted defendants’ motion to strike the appendices, because the court, under a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, would review only the complaint. No challenge was raised to this ruling on appeal. In addition, the court stated that it would not discuss the allegation that the complaint was insufficient to meet the “pattern" requirement, that the allegations of fraud were not particularized enough, and that the allegations of fraud did not set out multiple acts of mail fraud.
. The complaint defines Nationwide Group at R:10, ¶ 14:
Cassel, Nationwide and NAC are part of a group of corporations, entities and individuals which are, and have been for a number of years, associated in fact on an ongoing basis for the purpose of conducting business in selling and financing automobiles, related intangible products (warranties, service contracts, credit life insurance, credit health and accident insurance), as well as other goods and services ....
. The complaint defines the second enterprise in ¶ 44 as "Nationwide Group and tire car dealers with which it maintains relationships and from which it purchases retail installment contracts.” R.10 at ¶ 44.
. Both Nationwide Acceptance and Cassel have been sales finance agencies for at least a decade, and both purchase motor vehicle retail installment contracts from car dealers and enforce the contracts against consumers. Nationwide ■ Acceptance is the effective controlling party of Cas-sel, and enforces Cassel contracts as well. The two agencies act in concert, and together they are one of the largest financiers of consumer automobile paper in the Chicago metropolitan area. An unidentified "management of the enterprises” gave defendants Cassel and Nationwide Acceptance "the task of acquiring and servicing a substantial portfolio of such [consumer credit] obligations." Amended compl., R.10 at ¶ 46. The complaint allеged that Cassel and Nationwide Acceptance conducted the affairs of the enterprises through a pattern of mail fraud by fraudulently charging for "improper and unauthorized insurance.” Id. at ¶ 47.
. According to the Sixth Circuit, the "non-identity" or "distinctiveness" requirement has been described as the "relatively uncontroversial premise that, for purposes of section 1962(c), a corporation cannot be both the 'enterprise' and the ‘person’ conducting or participating in the affairs of that enterprise.” Davis v. Mutual Life Ins. Co.,
. See also Parker & Parsley,
