This is an appeal by plaintiffs-appellants Robert G. Hayduk, et al. from the district judge’s grant of judgment, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b), for defendants-appellees Finance Company of America (FCA), Mid-Cape Racquet Club, Inc. (Racquet), and Eugene W. Majewski. The court found that the only claims against appellees, fraud and conspiracy to commit fraud, failed to meet the particularity requirements of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b).
The original action was commenced in the Superior Court for Barnstable County, Massachusetts, in June 1978 by Robert G. Hayduk, Willie H. Hayduk, and Mid-Cape Tennis, Inc. (Tennis). The action was a result of the demise of Tennis and the Hayduks’ business holdings therein allegedly caused by the mismanagement and fraudulent behavior of defendants Vincent T. and Josephine Lanna, Frank Bellino, Jr., Eve Lenel, Indoor Tennis Consultants, Inc. (ITCI), and FCA. The case was removed to the federal district court pursuant to 28 U. S.C. §§ 1441(a) and 1332. Plaintiffs filed an amended complaint of right which added Racquet and Eugene W. Majewski as defendants. On November 17, 1980, the district court dismissed the amended complaint granting leave to the plaintiffs to file a second amended complaint.
In a hearing on all defendants’ motions for dismissal of the second amended complaint and/or for summary judgment, the district court dismissed with prejudice Counts One, Two, Four, and Five of the amended complaint for failure to meet the particularity requirements of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b) when pleading fraud. This court dismissed plaintiffs’ appeal of that ruling because it was not a final judgment. Hayduk v. Lanna, Misc. No. 81-8063 (1st Cir. Oct. 21, 1981).
Subsequently, defendants FCA, Racquet, and Majewski moved for entry of judgment pursuant- 1 to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b) on the grounds that the remaining counts did not state a claim against them. On February 14, 1985, the district court granted the motions and dismissed the case as to these defendants. This appeal ensued.
The issues on appeal are whether the district court erroneously ruled that the dismissed counts of plaintiffs’ complaint *443 did not meet the particularity requirements of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b) and, even if it did not, whether it was an abuse of the district court’s discretion to refuse to allow plaintiffs to amend their complaint a third time.
Although state law governs the burden of proving fraud at trial, the procedure for pleading fraud in federal courts in all diversity suits is governed by the special pleading requirements of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b).
Simcox v. San Juan Shipyard, Inc.,
Appellants first argue that the dismissals were erroneous because the dismissed counts contained claims of conspiracy which are governed by the more liberal pleading requirements of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8 rather than Rule 9(b). In large part, appellants base this argument on the district court’s reference to allegations of fraud and conspiracy and their assertion that, absent allegations of fraud, they have still stated a cause of action in the dismissed counts based on conspiracy.
In the pleadings themselves, the conspiracy alleged is directly linked to the fraud allegations: “[defendants] conspired and developed a scheme ... for the purpose of cheating plaintiff ...,” Count One 1! 23; “[e]ach of the defendants, by participation in said civil conspiracy to defraud plaintiffs ...,” Count Two 11 33. As already stated, where fraud lies at the core of the action, Rule 9(b) applies.
Lopez v. Bulova Watch Co., Inc., supra.
Moreover, in actions alleging conspiracy to defraud or conceal, the particularity requirements of Rule 9(b) must be met.
Segal v. Gordon,
Secondly, appellants argue that, even if the particularity requirement applies to the dismissed counts, the pleadings were sufficient to satisfy that requirement. Rule 9(b) requires “specification of the time, place and content of an alleged false representation, but not the circumstances or evidence from which fraudulent intent could be inferred.”
McGinty,
In any event, mere allegations of fraud, corruption or conspiracy, averments to conditions of mind, or referrals to plans and schemes are too conclusional to satisfy the particularity requirement, no matter how many times such accusations are repeated.
Segal,
Count One If 23 states: “At places and dates unknown to plaintiff ... Eugene W. Majewski and others conspired and developed a scheme ... for the purpose of cheating [plaintiffs out of their corporate and partnership interests].” Without supporting facts regarding the circumstances surrounding the formation of the conspiracy to defraud plaintiffs or plaintiffs’ basis for believing that a conspiracy existed for the purpose of defrauding them, the allegation becomes a conclusional accusation of the sort that is proscribed by Rule 9(b). Paragraph 29 of Count One alleges in part: “Based upon information and belief, the purchase was made in the name of the defendant, Mid-Cape Racquet Club, Incorporated, a Massachusetts corporation represented to be owned and controlled solely by the defendant, Eugene W. Majewski, but in fact owned and controlled by defendants, Vincent T. Lanna and Frank Bellino, Jr., as undisclosed parties with the defendant, Eugene W. Majewski.” Here, there is a complete lack of any facts on which this belief is founded.
Count Two 133 begins: “Each of the defendants, by participation in said civil conspiracy to defraud plaintiffs, acted in such a way as to enhance their financial gain____” It then supports the allegation by stating that plaintiffs will suffer loss and that two defendants, ITCI and Eve Lenel, will realize financial gain from their dealings with other defendants. This apprises none of the defendants of the individual charges against them nor do the *445 supporting facts of loss and financial gain, by themselves, have any relation to the allegation of conspiracy to defraud.
In Count Five, the allegations against FCA include 1150 which states that FCA “fraudulently granted, made and recorded ... two mortgages affecting the said jointly owned partnership real property.” Besides being ambiguous as to what act constituted the fraud, the required circumstances of the act are missing. In 11 53, plaintiffs alleged that through FCA’s inspection of the tennis facilities, conversations with plaintiff Robert G. Hayduk, and a review of title records, defendant FCA knew or should have known that the mortgaged real property was jointly held in partnership. What exactly it is that FCA is accused of is unclear; we know that it was to the injury of plaintiffs, but what act the plaintiffs consider to be wrongful is not stated.
Finally, appellants argue that the district court should not have dismissed the counts, but should have granted appellees’ motion for a more definite statement or dismissed the counts with leave to amend. Although federal courts must be liberal in allowing parties to amend their complaints,
Foman v. Davis,
Affirmed.
Notes
.
Ferguson,
however, never expressly considered the question of which pleading rule to apply to a conspiracy to defraud: Rule 9(b) was not mentioned at all possibly because the weakness in the pleading was not as to "the circumstances constituting fraud” but was whether a certain party had been sufficiently tied into an otherwise well-established scheme to defraud. In any case, since the specific question whether Rule 9(b) was applicable was not raised or addressed in
Ferguson,
that case is not circuit precedent relevant to and binding on this issue. We note that even as to conspiracies of a type not encompassed by Rule 9(b), this circuit has required that the complaint "allege with at least some degree of particularity overt acts which defendants engaged in which were reasonably related to the promotion of the claimed conspiracy,”
Kadar v. Milbury,
. Appellant construes
Schlick
to mean that since it states Rule 9 must be construed with Rule 8, the liberal pleading requirement of Rule 8 should govern whether the pleadings are adequate or not. This is not an accurate reading of the case. In
Schlick,
the allegations based on information and belief were "accompanied by a statement of the facts on which the belief was founded.”
Schlick,
