RUBEN MOLINA-ARANDA; JOSE EDUARDO MARTINEZ-VELA; JUAN GERARDO LOPEZ-QUESADA v. BLACK MAGIC ENTERPRISES, L.L.C., doing business as JMPAL TRUCKING; CARMEN RAMIREZ; JESSIE RAMIREZ, III
No. 19-50638
United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
December 21, 2020
FILED December 21, 2020 Lyle W. Cayce Clerk Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas USDC No. 7:16-cv-376
HAYNES, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiffs allege that Carmen and Jessie Ramirez brought them to the United States under the H-2B visa program to work as construction workers. Once Plaintiffs arrived in the United States, however, the Ramirezes allegedly made them work as truck drivers, who typically receive higher wages and for whom H-2B visas are consequently harder to obtain. But Plaintiffs never saw those higher wages; instead, they claim they were paid worse than either truck drivers or construction workers, with the Ramirezes
Plaintiffs sued Carmen and Jessie Ramirez and their company, Black Magic Enterprises, L.L.C. ( Black Magic ), claiming, as relevant here, that the Ramirezes violated (1) the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act ( RICO ), and (2) the Fair Labor Standards Act ( FLSA ). The district court dismissed those claims for failure to state a claim, declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over Plaintiffs related state law claims, and denied Plaintiffs later-filed motion for leave to amend the complaint.
For the following reasons, we AFFIRM the district court s dismissal of Plaintiffs RICO claims and the district court s denial of Plaintiffs motion for leave to amend, REVERSE the dismissal of Plaintiffs FLSA claims, VACATE the dismissal of the state law claims, and REMAND for further proceedings.
I. Background
Plaintiffs are former employees of the Ramirezes who were brought to work for Black Magic in Texas under the United States Department of Labor s H-2B guest worker visa program.1 H-2B visas allow employers to bring foreign workers to the United States for temporary non-agricultural work if (1) qualified workers in the United States are not available and (2) the alien s employment will not adversely affect the wages and working conditions of similarly employed United States workers.
Plaintiffs alleged that the Ramirezes systematically defrauded the federal government to obtain the visas that brought them to the United States by misrepresenting to the Department of Labor the type of work Plaintiffs would perform. According to Plaintiffs, the applications the Ramirezes submitted claimed falsely that Black Magic sought guest workers for physical labor at construction sites . . . operat[ing] hand and power tools of all types. Plaintiffs alleged that the Ramirezes obtained a labor certification by stating that the offered wage for such work equal[ed] or exceed[ed] the highest of the most recent prevailing wage for the occupation $13.72 per hour. Plaintiffs alleged that, after obtaining that certification, the Ramirezes additionally submitted H-2B visa applications stating that they would pay at least the offered wage . . . during the entire period of th[e] application, minus authorized and reasonable deductions.
Plaintiffs claimed, however, that the Ramirezes knowingly lied in those materials: the Ramirezes did not want physical laborers they actually wanted heavy truckers. That lie, Plaintiffs claimed, was central to the Ramirezes getting the visas in the first place. Heavy truckers are paid more than physical laborers at $20 per hour, and, because there might be American citizens willing to work at that rate, the Ramirezes might not have been able to get the H2-B visas had they told the truth in their applications. According to Plaintiffs, the Ramirezes gambit paid off; although Plaintiffs were ostensibly brought in as construction workers, the Ramirezes made them work as heavy truck drivers once they arrived. But Plaintiffs did not make $20 per hour or even the $13.72 per hour they were initially promised. Instead, because the Ramirezes allegedly unlawfully deducted from their pay, failed to pay overtime despite work weeks between fifty and eighty hours, and
On the basis of these allegations, Plaintiffs sued the Ramirezes in federal district court. In their complaint, Plaintiffs sought relief under RICO s civil penalty section,
II. Jurisdiction & Standard of Review
The district court had federal-question jurisdiction over Plaintiffs RICO and FLSA claims, see
We review a district court s dismissal under
III. Discussion
On appeal, Plaintiffs argue that the district court erred in dismissing their RICO, FLSA, and state law claims and abused its discretion in denying their motion for leave to amend. We address each argument in turn.
A. RICO Claims
RICO makes it unlawful for any person employed by or associated with any enterprise 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.
A RICO plaintiff must also plausibly allege that the RICO violation proximately caused the plaintiff s injuries. See Holmes v. Secs. Inv. Prot. Corp., 503 U.S. 258, 268 (1992). The proximate causation standard in this context is not one of foreseeability; instead, the plaintiff must demonstrate that the alleged violation led directly to the injuries. Anza v. Ideal Steel Supply Corp., 547 U.S. 451, 461 (2006); see also Hemi Grp., LLC v. City of New York, 559 U.S. 1, 10, 12 (2010) (plurality opinion). If some other conduct directly caused the harm, the plaintiff cannot sustain a RICO claim. See Hemi Grp., LLC, 559 U.S. at 11 (rejecting a RICO claim on proximate causation grounds because the conduct directly causing the harm was distinct from the conduct giving rise to the fraud ).
Here, Plaintiffs allegations, taken as true, do not support a conclusion that their underpayment injuries were directly caused by the Ramirezes alleged fraud in obtaining the H-2B visas. Rather, their complaint shows that the injury was caused by the alleged underpayments which were not required by the alleged fraud. See Walters v. McMahen, 684 F.3d 435 (4th Cir. 2012). The Fourth Circuit in Walters addressed a similar situation where a set of domestic U.S. workers alleged that a company s managers filed false immigration forms that led to depressed wages for local workers allegations the Fourth Circuit found insufficient precisely because other managerial decisions more directly impacted the workers compensation:
Although false attestations made by the hiring clerks are one step in a chain of events that ultimately may have resulted in the employment of unauthorized aliens . . . , the plaintiffs have not demonstrated that the false attestations themselves have had a direct negative impact on the plaintiffs wages, or on any other aspect of their compensation.
Similar reasoning applies here. Understating the type of work to be done may have supported obtaining the visas, but it was not the cause of underpayment; indeed, if one accepts the Plaintiffs allegations, truthfulness would likely have resulted in a lack of visas, keeping Plaintiffs from being able to come to the United States in the first place.4 But, critically, Plaintiffs reduced wages were several steps in the causal chain away from the transmission of fraudulent forms; nothing about the forms required underpayment. To even have the opportunity to underpay Plaintiffs, the Ramirezes had to submit fraudulent forms, obtain authorization, and bring the Plaintiffs to the United States for work. Only then could the Ramirezes actually underpay Plaintiffs. Importantly, the claim in this case is not just that the $13.72 per hour that the Ramirezes represented they would pay Plaintiffs was inadequate to cover the work done but that the Ramirezes did not even pay that amount properly. It is therefore clear that the Ramirezes underpayment was not a necessary result of their alleged fraud underpayment in no sense required [them] to defraud the Department of Labor. Anza, 547 U.S. at 459. Whatever hourly rate is stated to the Department of Labor is irrelevant if the employer is going to fail to pay what is owed, refuse to pay for overtime, or deduct inappropriate charges.
B. FLSA Claims
The FLSA claims are different. The FLSA was enacted in 1938 to protect all covered workers from substandard wages and oppressive working hours. Encino Motorcars, LLC v. Navarro, 136 S. Ct. 2117, 2121 (2016) (quotation omitted). An employee can be covered by the FLSA if either the employee or the employing enterprise is engaged in commerce or in the production of goods for commerce. See id.; Martin v. Bedell, 955 F.2d 1029, 1032 (5th Cir. 1992). Among other requirements, the statute requires employers to pay any covered employee at least a minimum wage of $7.25 per hour,
1. Enterprise Coverage
The first FLSA issue on appeal is the enterprise coverage provision, which extends the FLSA s requirements to any enterprise that, as relevant here, either has employees engaged in commerce or in the production of goods for commerce (the engaged-in clause ) or has employees handling, selling, or otherwise working on goods or materials that have been moved in or produced for commerce by any person (the handling clause ).
We have not had many occasions to discuss the handling clause, but the limited case law on point makes clear that it does not impose a strenuous pleading burden on plaintiffs. For example, addressing a prior version of the handling clause, we reasoned in Brennan v. Greene s Propane Gas Service that, unlike the engaged-in clause, the handling clause s requirements are in the past tense that is, the employees handling, selling, or otherwise working must be on goods that have been moved in or produced for commerce by any person. Brennan v. Greene s Propane Gas Serv., 479 F.2d 1027, 1030 (5th Cir. 1973). That phrasing, we concluded, means that [t]here is no requirement of continuity in the present. Id. Instead, the legislation was designed to regulate enterprises dealing in articles acquired intrastate after travel in interstate commerce. Id. (quotation omitted).
Brennan s reasoning has generated similar holdings in our sister circuits. For instance, the Eleventh Circuit relied on Brennan in applying the handling clause to items that travelled interstate prior to sale in Polycarpe v. E&S Landscaping Serv., 616 F.3d 1217, 1221 (11th Cir. 2010). In particular, the Eleventh Circuit rejected the alternative coming to rest doctrine, under which interstate goods or materials can lose their interstate quality if the items have already come to rest within a state before intrastate purchase by a business. Id. In turn, the Sixth Circuit has cited Polycarpe in applying the handling clause to a logging company whose employees used logging
The Ramirezes argue that Plaintiffs must nonetheless show that their work directly affected commerce. But the Ramirezes rely primarily on two summary judgment opinions implicating the engaged-in clause not the handling clause for that proposition. See Williams v. Henagan, 595 F.3d 610 (5th Cir. 2010) (per curiam); Sobrinio v. Med. Ctr. Visitor s Lodge, Inc., 474 F.3d 828 (5th Cir. 2007) (per curiam).6 Those cases do not compel dismissal of Plaintiffs claims. As we have discussed, the handling clause does not require the same sort of present-tense continuity that the Ramirezes suggest. See Brennan, 479 F.2d at 1030. That means that, unlike the Williams and Sobrinio plaintiffs, Plaintiffs here do not need to allege that their actual work activities directly affected interstate commerce, merely that the goods or materials they handled had previously come into the state from elsewhere. The Ramirezes argument also conflates Plaintiffs ultimate burden of proof with what must be plausibly alleged. Indeed, Williams and Sobrinio were
We conclude that Plaintiffs have done so. They identified water, sand, gravel, construction equipment, oilfield equipment, trucks, and fuel as goods or materials that had potentially been moved in commerce before being handled by Black Magic and its employees. At least some of these items are plausibly goods or materials: they are all items one could plausibly conclude are used in or produced during construction and trucking work.7 It is also plausible that some or all of these items had travelled interstate at some point in their life cycle. Texas is a large state with considerable industrial capacity, but it does not stretch the definition of plausible for Plaintiffs to allege that at least some of the raw materials and machinery that they handled came from beyond Texas s borders. Importantly, Plaintiffs will have to provide proof of these allegations at the summary judgment or trial stage (after they have had a chance to conduct discovery), but they are not required to provide further details than they have at this stage.
2. Failure to Pay
Plaintiffs also adequately pleaded that they lost wages as a result of the alleged FLSA violations. Plaintiffs claimed that they were paid less than $18 per hour for overtime, less than one-and-one-half times their contractually agreed upon hourly wage. Plaintiffs further alleged that the Ramirezes effectively paid Plaintiffs less than the federal minimum wage by making impermissible deductions from their paychecks. They also identified that, for several pay periods during late August and September of 2015, they worked 50 to 80 or more hours a week but were not paid fully or paid at all. The district court concluded that these allegations were insufficient to establish the amount of compensation and overtime Plaintiffs were due.
We conclude that Plaintiffs allegations are sufficient at the pleadings stage. The allegations put the Ramirezes on notice of minimum and overtime wage claims for specific time periods and set forth a plausible claim for relief. See Twombly, 550 U.S. at 555.
C. Leave to Amend
Finally, we turn to Plaintiffs challenge to the district court s denial of their motion for leave to amend their complaint. Plaintiffs sought such leave more than five weeks after the district court s order dismissing their complaint for failure to state a claim. The district court reasoned that their motion was untimely and noted the numerous opportunities Plaintiffs had to fix their pleading deficiencies. The district court explained that, among other opportunities, Plaintiffs could have raised any new matters prior to dismissal. The district court also concluded that further amendment would be futile.
We conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying Plaintiffs motion for leave to amend. Although Plaintiffs amended their complaint only once, they did not explain what would be accomplished by further amendment in their second request for leave to amend. That deficiency is exacerbated by the fact that Plaintiffs waited more than five weeks after the district court s dismissal order to ask for leave the second time. Plaintiffs failure to seriously pursue amendment until well after
Additionally, amendment was futile as to the RICO claims. As we explained above, Plaintiffs injury was, on its face, not proximately caused by the alleged fraud. Amendment was also unnecessary on Plaintiffs FLSA claims, albeit for a different reason: Plaintiffs FLSA claims were adequately pleaded in the first place. The district court thus did not abuse its discretion by denying Plaintiffs leave to amend their complaint.
IV. Conclusion
Plaintiffs RICO claims fail because they did not adequately plead that their injuries were proximately caused by the Ramirezes alleged fraud. But their FLSA claims were improperly dismissed; Plaintiffs plausibly alleged that the goods and materials they handled had travelled in interstate commerce and that they lost wages as a result of the Ramirezes conduct. Because their FLSA claim were plausibly pleaded, we remand Plaintiffs state law claims for new consideration of supplemental jurisdiction. Finally, the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying Plaintiffs motion to amend their complaint.
Accordingly, we AFFIRM the district court s dismissal of Plaintiffs RICO claims and the district court s denial of Plaintiffs motion for leave to amend, REVERSE the district court s dismissal of Plaintiffs FLSA claims, VACATE the district court s dismissal of the state law claims, and REMAND to the district court for further proceedings.
