Invеstors Vernon Schaaf, Julian Boik, and Alfred Streufert appeal the district court’s 1 dismissal of their claims against Residential Funding Corporation (RFC) and Heller Financial, Inc. The district court concluded that the investors failed to plead a sufficient causal nexus between their financial losses and the allegedly fraudulent actions of RFC and Heller. Alternatively, the district court rejected the investors’ common law fraud claims because they failed to allege reliаnce, and dismissed their claims under the Minnesota Consumer Fraud Act (MCFA) because those claims did not seek to secure a public benefit. We affirm based on the first ground.
I.
We recite the facts according the allegations of the investors’ complaint. In November 1997, United Homes, Inc., issued debentures worth about $7,000,000, which paid 11 % annual interest. According to the offering’s prospectus, United intended to use the proceeds to pay off a $2.6 million line of credit bearing an intеrest rate of 25%, while using the remainder to pay off debt to Heller (which bore a rate of 9.4% on June 30, 1997) and RFC (9.75% on June 30, 1997). Before allowing United to proceed with the offering, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) required United to disclose in its prospectus the amount of its debt to Heller and RFC, and whether United was in compliance with the terms of this debt. Without contacting either lender to confirm that it actually was in compliance, United modified the prospectus to indicаte its supposed compliance with the terms of its indebtedness to Heller and RFC. Several weeks later, United requested lenders’ certificates from Heller and RFC indicating that United was in compliance with the terms of its debt.
On November 14, 1997, the SEC declared United’s prospectus “effective,” meaning that the offering’s underwriter could begin selling the securities. See 15 U.S.C. § lie. After the prospectus was deemed effective, but before United had hired an underwriter, RFC and Heller provided сertificates indicating that United was not in default. The plaintiffs allege that both certificates were fraudulent because United had triggered defaults by violating its debt-to-worth covenant with each lender.
A day after receiving the lenders’ certificates, United entered into an underwriting *548 agreement with Miller & Schroeder Financial (M & S). The underwriting agreement required United to represent to M & S that neither United nor any subsidiary of United was “in default with respect to any provision of any ... loan agreement ... to which it [was] a party оr by which it may be bound.” After receiving this assurance, M & S went ahead with the offering. The investors allege that M & S would not have proceeded had it known that United was in violation of its debt-toworth covenants with its lenders. They also allege that Heller and RFC recognized that M & S would rely on the lenders’ certificates. The plaintiffs maintain that if M & S had refused to proceed with the offering, then the plaintiffs could not have purchased the securities and would not have suffered the ensuing financial losses.
The offering began on November 25, 1997, and extended into 1998. The plaintiffs purchased debentures in November and December 1997 based on M & S’s oral representations that the debentures were “worthy investments for investors seeking income investments.” Each plaintiff received a prospectus along with his purchase.
In April 1998, Heller declared United in default of its credit agreement for failing to comply with the agreement’s reporting requirements. This declaration terminated United’s revolving line of credit with Heller.
On Nоvember 16, 1998, RFC informed United that United had violated the loan agreement’s debt-to-worth requirement, the same covenant that the plaintiffs allege was the subject of the fraudulent lenders’ certificates. For a short time, United and RFC amended the loan agreement to remedy the default. In February 1999, however, RFC declared that United’s loans were “presently in default and accordingly RFC is entitled to withhold further disbursement and to exercise its rights and remedies under the Loan Documents.” Citing a “severe cash flow shortage” at United, RFC sought to extricate itself from the relationship. Still, RFC did not foreclose on its collateral at this point. It held out hope that United could improve its financial position by selling off assets or issuing equity. Later, in June 1999, when United requested RFC’s permission to pay interest on the debentures using RFC’s funds, RFC refused, declaring that it would allow United to use its RFC credit line only to fund expenses that would “directly result in the completion of partially built houses forming pаrt of [RFC’s] collateral.” On February 8, 2000, RFC foreclosed on its loans to United, writing that “Events of Default are numerous and include, but are certainly not limited to, the fact that interest on the loans has not been paid since December, 1998.”
The source of United’s “severe cash flow shortage” was the poor performance of some of its business ventures. In the fall of 1998, United failed to sell as many homes as anticipated. In this period, “United’s Arizona activities ... performed рoorly ... due to a number of local factors including specific project locations, zoning issues, and personnel issues.” These business failures cascaded because of United’s heavy debt load. When United’s creditors refused to advance new lines of credit, United was doomed to insolvency. On March 9, 2000, after a credit line with National City Bank finally dried up, United filed its petition for bankruptcy, making the debentures worthless.
The plaintiffs first sued M & S under the federal Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. §§ 77k, 771, and the Minnesota Securities Act, MinmStat. § 80A.40 et seq. In that suit, the state trial court refused to certify a class proposed by the plaintiffs, *549 and M & S later declared bankruptcy. The plaintiffs commenced this suit in state court against Heller and RFC, asserting violations of the MCFA and claims of common law fraud and unjust enrichment. Heller and RFC removed the case to the district court, which dismissed the plaintiffs’ claims. The district court adopted the report and recommendation of a magistrate judge, which concluded that the plaintiffs had failed to plead a sufficient causal nexus between their injuries and the allegedly fraudulent lenders’ certificates. Alternatively, the district court concluded that the plaintiffs’ MCFA claims did not satisfy the statute’s requirement that such claims seek to secure a “public benefit.” The court also rejected plaintiffs’ common law fraud claims on the ground that they had failed to allege that they relied on Heller and RFC’s fraudulent lenders’ certifiсates.
II.
On appeal, the investors argue that the district court erred in dismissing their claims on the ground that they failed to allege loss causation in their complaint. In addition, they maintain that their MCFA claim provided sufficient public benefit to satisfy the requirements of the statute, and that they adequately alleged reliance for their common law fraud claims. The investors also appeal the district court’s dismissal of their aiding and abetting claims against Heller and RFC, as well as the court’s dismissal of their claim against Heller for unjust enrichment.
A.
We review the district court’s grant of a motion to dismiss
de novo. In re Canadian Import Antitrust Litig., 470
F.3d 785, 788 (8th Cir.2006). Dismissal is proper where the plaintiffs’ complaint fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). At this stage of the litigation, we accept as true all of the factual allegations contained in the complaint, and review the complaint to determine whether its allegations show that the pleader is entitled to relief.
Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly,
— U.S. -,
To prevail on a tort claim, a plaintiff must show that the defendant’s tortious actions caused the plaintiffs losses. W. Page Keeton et al.,
Prosser and Keeton on Torts
§ 41 (5th ed.1984). When ruling on a motion to dismiss, we look to whether the plaintiffs’ allegations suffice to show the required causal connection between the defendant’s wrongful conduct and the plaintiffs’ losses.
Dura,
Though loss causation is an “exotic name” for this concept, the standard does not differ from that employed in a common law fraud case.
Bastian v. Petren Res. Corp.,
The district court applied this standard to the plaintiffs’ common law fraud claims and their claims under the MCFA. The investors and the Attorney General of Minnesota, as amicus curiae, argue that the common law requirement of loss causation does not apply to claims under the MCFA, which they say has a more permissive standard for shоwing causation.
To assert a remedy for damages arising out of a violation of the MCFA, Minnesota law requires that a private plaintiff be “injured by” the violation. Minn.Stat. § 8.31, subd. 3a. In
Group Health Plan, Inc. v. Philip Morris Inc.,
The federal district court certified this question of state law to the Supreme Court of Minnesota. That court opined that “it is not necessary to plead individual consumer reliance on the defendant’s wrongful conduct to state a claim for damages” under the MCFA, because the legislature *551 had “eliminated the requirement of pleading and proving traditional common law reliance as an element of a statutory misrepresentation in a sales action.” Id. at 13 (emphasis added). Nevertheless, the court declared that “causation remains an element of such a claim,” and that it would be necessary for the plaintiffs to prove reliance on the defendants’ statements or conduct to satisfy the causation requirement. Id. In the tobacco case before it, the court stated that “the showing of reliance thаt must be made to prove a causal nexus need not include direct evidence of reliance by individual consumers of defendants’ products.” Id. at 14. Rather, the court explained that “the causal nexus and its reliance component” could be established by “direct or circumstantial evidence that ... is relevant and probative as to the relationship between the claimed damages and the alleged prohibited conduct.” Id.
The investors argue that Group Health relaxed the cоmmon law’s causation requirements, and that the MCFA does not require the investors to satisfy the loss causation standard applied by the district court. Although the investors appeared to concede in the district court that they must prove loss causation, (R. Doc. 59, at 35), they now seem to argue that loss causation is not required at all, and that they may prevail merely upon a showing of transaction causation. (Appellants’ Br. 25; Reply Br. 9). We reject this far-reaching contention.
Group Health
shows that the MCFA relaxes the common-law standard for proving reliance, which is one element of common-law causation. In the securities context, reliance is another way of describing transaction causation,
Harris,
The state attorney general appears to acknowledge that the plaintiffs must show some degree of loss causation, but contends that the
Dura
standard for federal securities cases, which requires a “causal connection” between the materiаl representation and the loss,
Our understanding of thе MCFA thus conforms to federal law dealing with claims for securities fraud. Although a plaintiff must show both transaction causation and loss causation, the courts presume transaction causation when an investor buys or sells stock at a price set by a liquid market in reliance on the integrity of that price.
Basic Inc. v. Levinson,
We thus conclude that the MCFA’s requirement that a plaintiff be “injured by” conduct of the defendant does not allow for recovery unless a plaintiff can show that the defendant’s actions proximately caused the plaintiffs losses. Because
Dura
and other federal cases address the standard for proximate causation in cases of securities fraud, we find them instructive. To prevail, the plaintiffs must plead and prove that the loss was foreseeable and caused by the materialization of the concealed risk.
Lentell,
The complaint in this case does not sufficiently allege proximate causation. The investors argue that Heller and RFC concealed United’s default and the risk that Heller and RFC could declare a default based on United’s violation of its debt-toworth covenants. They contend that they were injured when this risk materialized. But the investors cannot have been “injured by” this nondisclosure, because there is no allegation that either lender acted upon United’s violation of the debt-to-equity covenants in November 1997 in a way that harmed United or its debenture-holders. Heller allegedly declared United in default in April 1998 because of United’s failure to comply with the loan’s reporting requirements. RFC cited United’s failure to pay interest on RFC’s loans as its primary example of numerous default events before foreclosing on the loan’s collateral. Thus, the investors’ losses were not “caused by the materialization of the concealed risk” that Heller and RFC would declare a default because of United’s breach of its debt-to-worth covenants in 1997.
See Lentell,
With respect to RFC only, rather than rely solely on RFC’s foreclosure on the *553 loаns in 2000, the plaintiffs seek to connect their injury to a November 1998 letter from RFC to United. This letter noted that United was in default because of its breach of its debt-to-worth covenant — the same covenant that was the subject of the default that RFC allegedly concealed in 1997. The investors argue that this November 1998 notification caused their damages, because in June 1999, RFC refused to lend United funds to pay interest on the debentures. But plaintiffs have not adequately alleged hоw RFC’s 1998 letter, or the breach it recognized, caused RFC to stop lending money to United. According to the investors’ allegations, RFC knew that United was in breach of its debt-to-worth covenant since November 1997, but the complaint alleges that RFC’s critical refusal to lend occurred later, in June 1999. Thus, United’s default on the debt-to-worth covenant, in and of itself, cannot have caused RFC to discontinue the necessary lending to United.
The passage of time between the November 1997 lenders’ certificates and United’s bankruptcy in March 2000 further demonstrates the inadequacy of the complaint. The
Dura
court noted that “the longer the time between purchase and sale, ... the more likely that other factors caused the loss.”
Dura,
Because we conclude that the district court properly dismissed the common-law fraud claims and the MCFA claims for failure adequately to allege loss causation, we need not address whether the debentures were “merchandise” under the MCFA, or whether the investors’ complaint alleges a “public benefit.” We also need not consider whether the plaintiffs’ allegations of reliance suffice to state a claim for common law fraud.
B.
The investors next argue that Heller and RFC aided and abetted United and M & S in their scheme to defraud the investors. Because we conclude that allegedly concealing the 1997 defaults could not have proximately caused the investоrs’ losses, we similarly conclude that any misrepresentation about these defaults by United or M & S could not have caused the plaintiffs’ losses. United is alleged to have prepared its prospectus before seeking certificates from its lenders, so the alleged concealment of the default could not have contributed to United’s disclosures. In any event, the investors have not alleged how Heller and RFC substantially assisted any distinct fraud by United. Therefore, the distriсt court properly dismissed the aiding and abetting claim.
See Metge v. Baehler,
C.
The investors also argue that the district court erroneously dismissed their claim for unjust enrichment against Heller. The plaintiffs allege that United used the proceeds of the offering to pay off some of its debt to Heller, and that these proceeds unjustly enriched Heller. The district court concluded that without valid fraud claims, the investors could not recover for unjust enrichment.
To establish a claim for unjust enrichment undеr Minnesota law, the
*554
plaintiff must “show that the defendant has knowingly received or obtained something of value for which the defendant ‘in equity and good conscience’ should pay.”
ServiceMaster of St. Cloud v. GAB Bus. Sens., Inc.,
Here, the investors have failed to allege that Heller was not entitled to the proceeds it received from United. Indeed, they admit that Heller was entitled to these funds, stating in their complaint that these funds enabled United to reduce its debt to Heller by half. The loаn agreement between United and Heller provided a contractual basis for Heller’s receipt of the funds. Hence, the district court properly dismissed the investors’ claim for unjust enrichment.
* * :|:
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Joan N. Ericksen, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota, adopting the report and recommendation of the Honorable Susan Richard Nelson, United States Magistrate Judge for the District of Minnesota.
