MEMORANDUM OPINION
Plaintiff, a former partner at the .now-defunct law firm Dewey & LeBoeuf LLP (“D&L” or “the Firm”), brings this suit against Barclays Bank PLC (“Barclays”) and three of its employees (the “individual defendants”). She alleges that defendants conspired’ with the Firm’s management to fraudulently • induce her and other non-management’ partners to take out capital loans with Barclays, the proceeds of which were used to prop up the failing Firm and effectively securitize the Firm’s own loans with Barclays. (See Compl. [ECF No. 1] at 1-4.) Central to the alleged scheme was a concerted effort to “keep the non-management partners in the dark as to the Firm’s financial affairs,” which encouraged partners to take out the capital loans and forestalled a mass exodus from the Firm. (See id, at 2-3.) As a result, she alleges that she was injured when the Firm filed for bankruptcy in May 2012, as she was unable to recover her capital contributions and: other deferred compensation, which
She asserts one claim against the individual defendants for participation in a RICO violation under 18 U.S.C.‘§ 1962(c): (Id. ¶¶ 56-75.) She also asserts nine claims against Barclays: (1) respondeat superior under RICO (id. ¶¶ 76-79); (2) deriving , income from a RICO' violation under 18 U.S.C. § 1962(a) (id. ¶¶ 80-93); (3) conspiracy to commit a RICO violation, under 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) (id. ¶¶ 94-103); (4) fraud (id. ¶¶ 104-10); (5) criminal conspiracy (id. ¶¶ 111-19); (6) aiding and abetting .(id. ¶¶ 120-26); (7) negligence (id. ¶¶ 127-46); (8) breach of fiduciary duty (id. ¶¶ 147-70); and (9) declaratory relief that plaintiffs loan agreement with Barclays is unenforceable (id.. ¶¶ 171-79). ,,
Defendants have moved to dismiss on a variety of grounds. (See Defs.’ Mot. to Dismiss [ECF No. 7]; Def. Martin’s Mot. to Dismiss [ECF No. 9] (joining co-defendants’ motion to dismiss).) The Court need not address many of those arguments,
BACKGROUND
Plaintiff Elizabeth Sandza was a partner at LeBoeuf, Lamb, Greene & MacRae, LLP (“LeBoeuf’) from 1989 until 2007, when that firm merged with Dewey Bal-lantine LLP (“DB”) to form D&L. (Compl ¶ 1.) Throughout Ms. Sandza’s tenure as a D&L-partner, the Firm carried a significant amount of debt, dating back to Le-Boeuf s merger with DB. (See id. ¶¶24, 40.) Plaintiff alleges that, in 2005, DB began, requiring increased capital contributions from -its partners as a result of its debt burden, which grew, from approximately $32 million in 2005 to $145 million soon after the .2007 merger, and by 2010, D&L owed approximately $160 million. (Id. ¶¶ 9-10, 24, ■ 40.) DB (and ■ post-merger D&L) facilitated these capital contributions by directing partners to Barclays, which had established >a capital loan program that gave partners access to the necessary funds. (Id. ¶¶ 11, -25.) .
Plaintiff took, out two loans with Bar-clays: a $38,000 partner capital loan in 2009 and a second loan for $125,000 in March 2010, a month before she left the firm. (Id. ¶ 1.) The proceeds of plaintiffs capital loan were, deposited with the Firm in her capital account, and she alleges that, upon her departure in April 2010, the Firm was obligated to repay the' loan from her capital account and transfer the remaining balance to her. (See id. ¶¶1, 13-14.) However, when she sought the return of her capital account balance, the Firm refused to reléase those funds, instead suggesting she take out the second, $125,000 loan with Barclays. (See id. ¶ 46.) Having been assured by the Firm that it would repay the loan, she executéd the agreement. (Id. ¶ 47.)
Separately, Barclays was also' a creditor of D&L, having extended it an unsecured $5 million loan in August 2007 and- an unsecured $30 million credit facility in, 2008. (Id. ¶¶ 22, 34.) It is these loans that plaintiff alleges gave Barclays the motive to conspire with the Firm, for, having extended $35 million in unsecured loans to a failing Firm, Barclays sought to protect itself by inducing the partners to take out capital loans, which would be used by the Firm to pay off its own loans with Bar-clays. (See Compl. at 2-3.) In other words, according to plaintiffs theory, the unsuspecting partners would be left holding the bag for the Firm, remaining personally liable for their capital loans while the Firm’s own loans were fully repaid as of December 2010. (See id. at 2-3, ¶ 42.)
The alleged scheme depended upon keeping non-management partners in the dark about the Firm’s troubles, thus inducing partners to make additional capital contributions and preventing a mass exodus from the partnership ranks, which in turn allowed the Firm to remain viable for a longer period. (See id. at 3.) Plaintiff alleges that defendants (1) excused the Firm’s defaults under, departed partners’ loan agreements and failed to inform partners about those defaults, and (2) failed to disclose to plaintiff and other partners the Firm’s poor financial condition. (See id. at 2-3.) As to the defaults, she alleges that the Firm failed to repay departing partners’ capital loans, and when the Firm’s growing indebtedness under those loans reached a certain amount, a default was triggered affecting every partner loan agreement. (See id. ¶¶ 13, 17-18.) She does not allege that the defaults themselves caused, her any injury, but rather that their disclosure • by Barclays would have alerted her to the Firm’s dire financial straits, allowing her to make “better decisions or at least take[ ] steps to mitigate her damages.” (See id. ¶ 73.)
Plaintiff also alleges that Barclays and Firm management committed “approximately 114 • instances of mail and wire fraud,” with Firm management “disseminating false and misleading financial statements ..; to non-management partners,” and Barclays “providing the means whereby these partners could make capital ... contributions to the Firm.” (See id. at 1-2.) She makes very few specific allegation^ as to the individual defendants, claiming only that they each worked for Barclays on the D&L account (id. ¶¶ 3-5); that they had “superior knowledge of the Firm’s financial situation” (id. at 4); and that they formed an association-in-fact that “engaged in a pattern of racketeering activity, inter alia, by continuing to offer the capital loan program” without disclosing the Firm’s dire financial condition (id. ¶¶ 59, 63).
In the end, the Firm filed for bankruptcy in May 2012, and plaintiff alleges that it was not until that time that she learned of the Firm’s defaults and its underlying financial' problems. (Id. at 3, ¶ 118.) The Firm’s bankruptcy prevented her from recovering any of her deferred compensation, and in January' 2014, she agreed to repay Barclays her outstanding loan balance of approximately $134,000, while re
ANALYSIS
I. LEGAL STANDARD: RULE 12(b)(6)
To survive a motion to dismiss .for failure to state a claim under Rule 12(b)(6), a complaint “must contain sufficient .-factual matter, accepted as true, to ‘state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face,’ ” such that a court may “draw the reasonable inference that the defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged.” Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
II. IMPLAUSIBILITY
At the outset, defendants argue for dismissal on the ground [that Ms. Sandza’s overarching theory of liability strains credulity. (See Defs.’ Mot- to Dismiss at 7-9; see also Iqbal,
First, the lynchpin of the alleged scheme, Barclays’ capital loan program, was put into place nearly two years before Barclays faced any exposure on its first loan for $5 million to the Firm. (See id. ¶¶ 9, 11,' 22.) Next, plaintiff, alleges that Barclays learned of the Firm’s difficulties in 2007, when it received financial information from the Firm that it “knew was false and misleading.” (See id. ¶ 48; see also id. ¶ 99 (“In late 2007 and early 2008, management developed a scheme, with the knowledge of Barclays ... to inject capital into the Firm and keep the Firm viable.”).) According to plaintiff, rather than cutting off all ties upon learning of the misrepresentation and underlying financial woes, however, Barclays extended the Firm a second unsecured $30 million line of credit in 2008. (Id. ¶ 34.) Even if Barclays only learned of the Firm’s troubles in late 2007, after it extended the August loan, Barclays would still have had to. extend an unsecured $30 million line of credit with full knowledge that the Firm' was both in financial trouble and lying about it.
III. FAILURE TO STATE Á CLAIM— ALL COUNTS
At bottom, all of Ms. Sandza’s, claims and legal theories rest on two central allegations: • (1) defendants failed to disclose that, at the time she took out-her capital loans, the Firm had already defaulted on its obligations to repay capital loans of previously departed partners, which caused her own loans to immediately go into default (see Compl. at 1-4); and (2) defendants failed to disclose that the Firm was facing dire financial difficulties. {See id. at 4 (“The Defendants all had numerous opportunities to educate the Plaintiff about what was going on at the Firm, but chose not to disclose the Firm’s true financial condition 'and the fact that the Firm was already in a default status on its Bar-clays’ debt obligations.”).)
Because there were no unremedied defaults for Barclays to disclose, and because Sandza fails to allege a cognizable duty requiring defendants to disclose the Firm’s financial Condition (even assuming they had notice of this condition), all of her claims fail as a matter of law. " '
A. Unremedied Defaults
Plaintiff alleges that, “under Bar-clays loan documentation,” the Firm was obligated to apply the balance of departing partners’ capital accounts towards the outstanding amount of their Barclays, loans. (Compl. ¶¶ 17-18.) When several partners .departed and the Firm took no actipn, the Firm’s resulting indebtedness, triggered a default, and, due to. a cross-default provision in the loan agreements, the loans of all participating partners also went into default. (Id. ¶¶ 16-18.) Nonetheless,, according to plaintiff, .Barclays allegedly chose not to enforce its right to immediate repayment after those defaults — and not .to inform plaintiff or other partners, about them — because doing so would have revealed the Firm’s deterioration, thereby “precipitating an exodus of partners ,,, [and] ensuring the Firm’s collapse.” (See id. ,¶¶ 53-54.) However, plaintiff’s-allegations of unremedied defaults rest entirely upon a, , misreading of the operative loan agreements.
Ms. Sandza’s loan agreement consists of three sections: (1) a facility letter setting forth the terms-of her agreement with Barclays;- (2) Schedule A, an Instruction Letter in which plaintiff requested from the Firm a Partnership Undertaking in connection with-her loan; and (3)-Schedule B,- the Partnership Undertaking executed by the Firm. (See Ex. 2 to Defs.’ Mot. to Dismiss (the “Loan Agreement”).) The relevant “default” provision appears- in Paragraph 10.1(j) of the facility letter, which states that plaintiffs loan will go into default “in the event of any indebtedness of the Firm in excess of US$250,000 becoming immediately due and payable ..., by reason of default on the,part of any person.” (Id. ¶ 10.1(j).) Next, Paragraph ii(b) of the Partnership Undertaking provides that the Firm “will apply the balance of the. [departing] Partner’s Capital Account in satisfying (so, far as is possible) any indebtedness remaining outstanding, under the Loan with the Bank, before paying any residue to the Partner or to the Partner’s legal personal representatives.” (Id. at Schedule B ¶ ii.) Therefore, plaintiffs argument goes, the Firm’s failure to apply departing partners’ capital accounts toward their outstanding -loans created a shortfall in excess of $250,000, thus sending .Sandza’s own loan .into default. (See Compl. ¶¶ 13,17-18.)
The loan agreement' provides that it “shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of England.” (Loan Agreement ¶ 11.1.) Such a choice-of-law provision is given effect under D.C. law as long as there is a “reason
In determining how the relevant “default” provisions would be interpreted under English law, the Court can rely on “any relevant material or source.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 44.1. It must predict what English courts would find, unless those courts have already addressed the issue. See Anglo Am. Ins. Grp., P.L.C. v. CalFed, Inc.,
Just so here. Plaintiff does not allege that the Firm paid any former partners in preference to Barclays. On the contrary, she alleges that the. Firm refused numerous requests for capital account disburse'ments, including plaintiffs’. own. (See Compl. ¶46.) Therefore, because there were no unremedied defaults under English law, there could not possibly have been any failure by Barclays to disclose them. Thus, any claims relating to “undisclosed defaults” necessarily fail as a matter of law.
Plaintiffs attempts to respond to this conclusion are unpersuasive. First, she attempts to distinguish McMillan because it involved a different procedural posture, i.e., a contractual defense to the enforcement óf a loan agreement,- rather' than a tort action in- which- only one count “even remotely touches upon the question of contract interpretation.” (See PL’s Opp’n at 3-4.) In making this argument, plaintiff ignores’the fact that issues of contract interpretation permeate her entire cause of action, and that, regardless of the procedural posture, the English court considered and rejected the very same “unremedied default” ’ argument she advances here. See McMillan, [2015] EWHC 1596 (Comm) ¶71(6). Next, she contends that, even if this Court were to accept McMillan’s holding, it must still allow expert discovery regarding English law, because a different English court found that 'the' same Bar-clays contract might support a claim that the Capital loan was a sham transaction. (PL’s Opp’n at 4 (citing Barclays Bank PLC v. Landgraf, [2014] EWHC 503 (Comm)).) This is a non sequitir. Even if another English court had found that a loan between Barclays and a Firm partner was a sham from thé outset, it would not follow that the terms of the loan agreement required the Firm to satisfy that partner’s debt, which is an entirely unrelated issue. Thus, there is no reason to allow discovery, for the parties have only identified one English decision addressing
These “defaults”- form the foundation of plaintiffs case, and without them, her other allegations quickly crumble. For instance, her claim seeking a declaration that the loan agreements are unenforceable cannot be sustained, because it rests solely on the fact that she made the agreements without knowledge of the default'^. (See Compl. ¶¶ 171-79.) '
Similarly, her allegations that defendants committed (or conspired with the Firm to commit) mail and wire fraud must also be rejected. She identifies two. types of alleged wire fraud: (1) the Firm’s dissemination of misleading financial, statements, “which the [individual defendants] were well aware of,” and (2) Barclays’ continued offering of capital loans “with superior knowledge that the non-management partners were relying upon false and misleading financial statements.” (See Compl. at 1-2.) In other words, liability arising from either type of alleged wire fraud depends upon defendants’ knowledge that the Firm had put out false financial statements. See First Am. Corp. v. Al-Nahyan,
Factual support for plaintiffs conspiracy claims also erodes once the defaults are disregarded, as Barclays’ allegéd agreement to secretly excuse the’ defaults forméd the initial basis for the conspiracy. (See id. ¶ 101.) Plaintiff alleges that the conspiracy was formed soon after Barclays learned of the Firm’s financial trouble, in order to keep the Firm in business and ensure that Barclay’s was repaid its $35 million in loans.' (See id. ¶¶ 99-101 (RICO conspiracy); id. ¶ 112 (common law conspiracy).) However, again, the only specific allegation that Barclays had advance knowledge of the Firm’s struggles is that it knew about the non-existent defaults. (See id. ¶ 98; see also id. ¶ 175(a) (Barclays made capital loans with “superior knowledge about the true financial condition of the Firm and specifically as to the existing defaults under the capital loan program”) (emphasis added).)
At one point, plaintiff vaguely alludes to Barclays’ awareness of insufficient “projected Firm revenues” (id. ¶ 114), but she does not provide any detail about those projections that might make the allegation plausible. See Iqbal,
B, The Firm’s Financial Condition
‘It should go without saying that a party cannot be held liable for failing to disclose information that it does not possess. See, e.g., Restatement (Second) of Torts § 551(2) (1977) (one party to a business transaction may have a duty to disclose “matters known to him that the other is entitled to know”) (emphasis added). Because plaintiff has not adequately alleged defendants’ knowledge of the Firm’s financial problems, her allegation that they breached their duty to disclose those problems must necessarily fail. (See supra Part III.A.) But even if defendants did know this information, Sandza has not adequately alleged that they were obligated to disclose it to her.
In order for the alleged failure to disclose to be, actionable, plaintiff must first allege that defendants had a cognizable duty to make that disclosure. See Sununu v. Philippine Airlines, Inc.,
Even if the Court were to assume that the English provisions that plaintiff cites are binding sources of law, rather
Under D.C. law, the general rule is that one party to a transaction has no duty of disclosure to the other unless (1) the party is a fiduciary of the other/or (2) the party knows that the other is acting unaware of a material fact that is.-unobservable or undiscoverable by an ordinarily prudent person upon reasonable inspection. See Sununu,
Instead, plaintiff alleges that Bar-clays “knew or should have knovyn how bad things were” at the Firm (Compl. ¶ 150), and that she “had no opportunity to acquire similar .knowledge of the inner-workings of the Firm.” (Id. 11162.), As noted, . it is true that one party’s. superior knowledge can give rise to a duty to disclose, when it knows -that the other party is acting unaware of a material fact that is “unobservable .or undiscoverable by an ordinarily prudent person .upon.reasonable inspection.” See Sununu,
In short, even assuming arguendo that Barclays did have superior knowledge of the Firm’s finances, plaintiff fails, to allege specific facts to support an inference that Barclays knew what she had hot learned and could not have discovered as a partner of the Firm. As such, Barclays cannot be charged with a duty to disclose. To hold otherwise would impose an extraordinary burden on creditors, compelling them to disclose basic information about the ■ debtor’s own business, on the off-chance that the debtor may have been too busy to discover' it herself (see id. ¶¶ 153-57) or may have been unlawfully refused that information by her own partners (see id. ¶ 163). This failure to adequately plead a duty to disclose means that her negligence, fraud, and breach of fiduciary duty claims cannot survive. By extension, given the Court’s rejection of her default allegations, neither can any of her remaining claims.
Furthermore, for the reasons set forth below, there are two additional arguments that doom plaintiffs claims: her civil RICO claims are insufficiently pled, and her state law claims are untimely.
IV. FAILURE TO STATE A CLAIM-CIVIL RICO COUNTS
Plaintiff first alleges that the individual defendants participated in a RICO enterprise in violation of 18 U.S.C. § -1962(c). (Compl. ¶¶ 56-75.) To state a claim'under that subsection, plaintiff must allege “(1) the conduct (2) of an enterprise (3) through a pattern of racketeering activity.” Salinas v. United States,
Where the alleged predicate acts involve mail or wire fraud, as here, plaintiff must satisfy the heightened pleading standard of Rule 9(b), which, at a minimum^ requires that defendants be given “fair notice of the plaintiffs’ claims and grounds therefore, so that they can frame their answers and defenses.” See Bates v. Nw. Human Servs., Inc.,
Under such a demanding standard,- plaintiff’s allegations of mail and wire fraud are woefully deficient, for the
By extension, of course, her related count for respondeat superior liability against Barclays — based on the same RICO -allegations- rejected above — must also be denied. (Nee Compl. ¶¶ 76-79.) 'An employer’s vicarious liability necessarily depends upon the liability of its employees; which has not been adequately pled here. See Crawford v. Signet Bank,
Next, plaintiff alleges that Barclays violated 18 U.S.C. § 1962(a), which prohibits the use or investment of racketeering income in an enterprise. (See Compl. ¶¶ 80-93.) In order to state a claim under this subsection, plaintiff must adequately allege that she was injured by Barclays’ use or investment of racketeering income, rather than by the racketeering activity itself. Danielsen v. Burnside-Ott Aviation Training Ctr., Inc.,
Moreover, this alleged “reinvestment” and the deferred compensation injury lack a causal connection, because her own allegations show that she would have suffered the injury either way. She alleges that the reinvestment caused her a separate injury (id), because she would not have agreed to accept deferred compensation had Bar-clays “not delayed the Firm’s collapse by allowing the investment of the capital funds into the Firm” (Compl. ¶93). In other words, the Firm would have collapsed but for that reinvestment, and because the Firm had not yet collapsed, she was induced to accept deferred compensation. According to her own allegations, then, the Firm would have already gape bankrupt but for that delay, and she would never have seen the deferred compensation anyway. Instead, as she. alleges elsewhere in her complaint, the deferred compensation injury is simply, a second, consequential injury flowing from her unawareness of the Firm’s problems. (See Compl. ¶ 73 (“Had Barclays disclosed the truth about the Firm’s operations ... the Plaintiff would not have agreed to deferred compensation arrangements to be paid over future periods.”).) Furthermore, she claims deferred compensation damages under her Section 1962(c) count as well (see id.), putting to rest any notion that they constitute a separate and distinct “reinvestment” injury.
Finally, plaintiff alleges that Barclays violated 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) by conspiring with Firm management to commit a RICO violation. (See Compl. ¶¶ 94-103.) The Court has already rejected her allegations of an underlying Section 1962(c).violation by the individual defendants, which would ordinarily mean that her. related conspiracy- claim must also be rejected. See Edmondson & Gallagher v. Alban Towers Tenants Ass’n,
V. STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS— STATE LAW COUNTS
The statute of limitations for plaintiffs state' law claims of fraud, negligence; breach of fiduciary duty, aiding and abetting, conspiracy, and declaratory relief is three years. See D.C. Code § 301(8). As such, those claims must be dismissed as •time-barred- if they accrued prior to May 14, 2012. (See Compl. (filed May 14, 2015).) The Firm filed for bankruptcy just two weeks after that date (id. at 3), and it was only then that plaintiff alleges that she and the other, non-management partners first learned of the Firm’s “defaults” and financial woes (see id. ¶118). In other words, she suggests that she did not have actual knowledge of her potential claims until at least May 28, 2012, and therefore her state law claims are timely. As it .must at this stage, the Court credits plaintiffs asser
Under D.C. law, a claim Usually accrues' at the timé the alleged injury occurs. Diamond v. Davis,
Under the discovery rule, a claim accrues “when a plaintiff has either actual or inquiry notice of (1) the existence of the alleged injury, (2) its cause in fact, and (3) some evidence of wrongdoing.” Drake,
There is no question that information about the Firm’s pending collapse was available to Ms. Sandza in the months leading up to the bankruptcy filing. (See supra n.6 (and articles cited therein).) There is also no question that this was the very information she claims should have been disclosed when she took out the loans and agreed to accept deferred compensation,' thus causing her injury. (See, e.g., Compl,. ¶¶ 73-74.) Moreover, the available news articles offered her far more than the simple fact that the Firm was in trouble in 2012; they also' clearly alerted her to the possibility of fraud by Firm management, including the overstatement of previous years’ earnings.
By extension, a reasonable person in Sandza’s -position would have been spurred
Plaintiff raises numerous objections to being charged with inquiry notice. First, she argues that the Court cannot take judicial notice of these news articles, because they are “classic hearsay” and thus inherently unreliable. (See PL’s Opp’n at 32.) However, the Court is not accepting these articles for the truth of their assertions, but rather for the fact that they contained certain information, which (true or’ not) should have put plaintiff on' notice of the need to investigate her potential claims. See Fed. R. Evid. 801(c)(2). Taking judicial notice of the existence of these articles is entirely proper. See Washington Post v. Robinson,
Finally, she argues that the press coverage could not have adequately put her on notice because none of it-mentioned Bar-clays. (See' PL’s Opp’n at 35.) But as discussed, a plaintiff need not be aware of every fact pertaining to her cause of action before the limitations period begins to run. See Diamond,
In Diamond, plaintiff alleged an elaborate conspiracy between the lawyer defending him in a tax fraud case, his lawyer’s firm,-the federal judge presiding over his tax fraud case, and the Reynolds family, which owned a company against whom plaintiff had separately brought a civil RICO case. See id. at'385. In short, he alleged that his lawyer, who also represented the J. Sargent Reynolds estate and whose firm represented Reynolds Metals, advised him to waive a jury trial in order to give control over the verdict to the federal judge, who had a close personal relationship with the Reynolds family .and served as executor, for the J. Sargent Reynolds estate. See id. When the judge then convicted him of tax fraud, plaintiff alleged that the conspiracy succeeded, in that he was subsequently discredited in his failed RICO suit against Reynolds Metals. See id. Plaintiff argued that his claims against the lawyers were not time-barred because the lawyers fraudulently concealed their conflicted representation of Reynolds Metals,* and thus, he lacked knowledge of a crucial link in the alleged conspiracy. See id. at 385-86. The D.C. Court of Appeals disagreed, finding that he had sufficient knowledge to trigger inquiry notice: he knew of his injury (the tax fraud conviction); its cause (the judge’s verdict facilitated by his lawyer’s advice to waive jury trial); the relationship between the judge and the Reynolds family; the relationship between his lawyer and the judge, who worked together in executing the J. Sargent Reynolds estate; and the firm’s representation of another member of the Reynolds family. See id. at 385-89. Armed with that knowledge, particularly the working relationship between the firm and the Reynolds family, a reasonable person would have investigated further and found public documents revealing the firm’s rep
The D.C. Circuit has also followed this approach, affirming dismissal of a complaint where press reports put plaintiff on inquiry notice of an alleged conspiracy to' deny him ballot access, even though the reports failed to name all of the alleged co-conspirators. See Nader v. Democratic Nat’l Comm.,
Taken together, Diamond and Nader foreclose plaintiffs assertion that press coverage could only put her on inquiry notice if it mentioned. Barclays, The press coverage put her on. notice of both the Firm’s problems and. potential fraud by Firm management in covering those problems up. {See supra nn.6-7.) She was thus alerted to her injury, its cause in fact, and the likelihood of wrongdoing by Barclays’ alleged co-conspirators at the Firm. As in Nader, plaintiffs discovery of Barclays’ alleged involvement did not “alter the fundamental nature of the Wrong at issue” {see
In terms of defaults, she knew what her own loan agreement did (or did not) require of the Firm, and she could have inquired of current and former .Firm partners about whether the Firm was living up to those obligations. Most crucially, she concedes that learning of the Firm’s problems “would have given her fair warning that ... certain material facts had not been disclosed to her, i.e., undisclosed debt
The Court recognizes that “[w]hen accrual actually occurred in a particular case is a question of fact,” Diamond,
CONCLUSION
The defendants’ motions to dismiss will be GRANTED. A separate order accompanies this Memorandum Opinion.
Notes
. The Court need not consider whether: plaintiff's RICO claims, are barred by the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act (Defs-.' Mot; to Dismiss at 13-17) and are also time-barred (id. at 17-19); plaintiff's aiding and abetting claim fails as a matter of law (id. at 37-39); plaintiff's criminal conspiracy claim fails as a matter of law (id. at 42-43); plaintiff’s declaratory judgment claim is not cognizable’ as a separate cause of action (id. at 43); and plaintiff has failed to serve defendant Martín, and in any event, the Court lacks personal -jurisdiction over her (see generally Def. Martin’s Mot. to Dismiss).
. There is some ambiguity, in the complaint regarding how this loan was used, either as another capital contribution to the 'Firm' (from, which she was leaving imminently) or for plaintiff’s own benefit, i.e., an advance on the disbursement that the Firm refused to make upon her departure. Compare Compl. at 3, ¶ 1 ■ ($125,000 was a "partner capital loan," and plaintiff's $200,000 total.capital contribution
. Defendants have also attached to their motion to dismiss two emails between Barclays and the Firm, suggesting that Barclays offered another $20 million line of credit to the Firm in April 2010, but it was rebuffed in part because Barclays was "more demanding than
. Plaintiff’s opposition also weakly asserts that defendants “actively disseminated misrepresentations,” citing to Paragraph 107 of her complaint. (Pl.’s Opp’n at 21.) However, Paragraph 107 ‘merely alleges a fraudulent scheme “perpetrated by the Firm ... [thát involved] disseminating the false message that the Firm was in good financial condition,” which Barclays allegedly aided and abetted. {See Compl. ¶ 107 (emphasis added).) Even if the Court were to infer that Barclays aided the scheme by also making fraudulent misrepresentations, such a bare, conclusory allegation would not satisfy Iqbal, let alone the heightened specificity requirement of Rule 9(b). See
. Plaintiff did not attach the loan agreement to her complaint, but she relied on, it .repeatedly in support of her "default” allegations. (See, e.g., Compl. ¶¶ 13, 17-18) 21.) As such, the Court will consider the copy that defendants attached to their motion to dismiss. See Vanoyer v. Hantman,
. See, e.g., Duff McDonald, Dewey & LeBoeuf: Partner exodus is no big deal, Fortune, Mar. 22, 2012, available at http://fortune.com/2012/ 03/22/dewey-leboeuf-partner-exodus-is-no-b'ig-deal/ (noting that, despite Firm's claim-that its finances were sound, "30 partners have fled the law firm after an earnings miss in 2011”); Jennifer Smith & Ashby Jones, More Partners •Leave Dewey & LeBoeuf LLP, The Wall Street Journal, Mar. 23, 2012, available at http:// blogs, wsj .com/law/2Q 12/03/27/shake-it-up-dewey-leboeuf-óverháuls-its-léadership/ (describing a "flow of [partner] defections since the start of the year” and "plans to cut- lawyers and administrative staff, following lower than expected profits in 2011”); Linda San-dler & Sophia Pearson, Dewey & LeBoeuf Approaches Deadline on $75, Million Bank Debt, Bloomberg, Apr. 27, 2012, available at http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/..: 2012-04-27/deweyIeboeuf-approaches-deadIine-on-75-million-bank-debt (Firm facing, "deadline to show bank lenders it has a survival plan, possibly including, absorption by another, firm”); Peter Lattman, Dewey & LeBoeuf Said to Encourage Partners to' Leave, New York Times, Apr. 30, 2012, available at http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2012/04/30/ dewey-leboeuf-said-to-encourage-partnersto-leave/ (beginning "Dewey & LeBoeuf, the New York law firm crippled by financial mismanagement, an exodus of partners and a criminal investigation of its former chairman, encouraged its partners on Monday evening to look for another job____”) (emphasis added); Andrew Longstreth & Nate Raymond, The Dewey chronicles: The rise and fall of a legal titan, Reuters, May 11, 2012, available at http ://www .'reuters.com/article/us-dewey-recapidUSBRE84B00L20120512 (describing a January 2012 meeting of Firm partners at which they were informed by Firm.chairman Steven Davis 'that "[t]he firm was living on the edge [of bankruptcy].”). This list is by no means comprehensive: the Wall Street Journal’s Law Blog alone published forty articles detailing the Firm’s pending collapse between March 2012 and the bankruptcy filing. See http ://blogs .wsj. com/law/tag/dewey-leboeuf/. The New York Times published at least twenty-five such articles in that samé period. See http://queiy.nytimes.com/search/sitesearch/? action=click&contentCollectioñ=TopB ar& WT.nav=searchWidget&module=Search Submit&pgtype=Homepage#/dewey+% 26 + Ieboeuf/from20120301to2012'0528/.
. See, e.g., Julie Triedman, Dewey & LeBoeuf s 2010, 2011 Profits, Revenues Revised, The Am-Law Daily, Apr. 3, 2012, available at http:// amlawdaily.typepad.coin/amlawdaily/2012/04/ dewey-2010-2011-financials-revised.html (noting that the Firm earned "far less” in 2010 and 2011 than it had previously reported to The American Lawyer, causing the publication to issue a correction); Peter Lattman, Prosecutors Scrutinize Ex-Head of Dewey, N.Y. Times, Apr. 28, 2012, available ,at http:// dealbook.nvtimes.com/2012/04/27/new-york-prosecutors-examining-former-dewey chairman/?_r=0; Peter Lattman, Teetering, Dewey Ousts Ex-Head From Post, N.Y. Times, Apr.. 29, 2012, available at http://deaIbook, nytimes .com/2012/04/29/dewey-leboeuf-ousts-ex-headsteven-h-davis/ (state prosecutors’ investigation' triggered by evidence of possible financial improprieties ■ provided by several Firm partners, including management's misleading of lenders about Firm’s financial condition); Ashby Jones, Dewey’s Former Chairman Lawyers Up¡ Apr. 30, 2012, available at http ://blogs. ws] .com/law/2012/04/30/deweys-former-chairman-lawyers-up/ (describing Manhattan DA’s investigation into “goings-on at Dewey, with particular focus on [former Firm chairman Steven] Davis").
. Because every one of the articles cited supra nn.6-7 was published more than three years before plaintiff filed her complaint, it is unnecessary to locate a precise date on which she had inquiry notice. Suffice it to say that she certainly had such notice by the time of the May 11, 2012 Reuters article by Longr streth & Raymond — The Dewey chronicles: The rise and fall of a legal titan. That árticle stated that management "often withheld crucial information from their partners;” that the Firm "never made its budget targets after the merger;” that the Firm’s $125 million bond offering March 2010 — the month before Sand-za’s departure-^“suggested that [the Firm] needed money it could not immediately repay;’.’ that in October.2011, the Fjrm "made a startling disclosure about [compensation] guarantees,” i.e., the "inflated contracts” alleged by plaintiff; that a criminal investigation was underway; and that "[g]iven Dewey’s immense liabilities, no one has offered a likely scenario under which the partnership could survive.” Id. Most, if not all, of this information was already aváilable elsewhere (see supra nm6-7), but'the Reuters article simply laid it out starkly and comprehensively. That information was. more than sufficient to give rise to a duty of inquiry, and thus the limitations period had begun to run by then, at the very latest. See Diamond,
. Whether or not she had actual knowledge of all of thesé facts at the time of the' press coverage, her complaint makes clear that they were then readily available to her in the Firm’s audited financial statements (see Compl. ¶¶ 22, 34, 38), and thus a reasonably diligent investigation would have turned them up. See Ray,
