OPINION OF THE COURT
This appeal presents two questions: first, whether State courts enjoy concurrent jurisdiction with Federal courts over civil claims brought under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) (18 USC §§ 1961-1968) and, second, whether defendant Leucadia has stated a cause of action for damages under the act in the fifth counterclaim of its amended answer. The Appellate Division answered the first question in the negative and thus did not pass on the second. We affirm but for different reasons. We hold that State cоurts enjoy concurrent jurisdiction over civil RICO claims, but that Leucadia has not pleaded a cause of action for damages under the RICO Act.
This dispute arises out of an alleged agreement between plaintiff Simpson Electric Corporation and defendant Leucadia, Inc. for the provision of electrical contracting work in rehabilitating a building, located at 315 Park Avenue South in Manhattan. The building was owned and operated by the defendant Grand-White Realty Corporation and its president and majority shareholder, third-party defendant Issac Silver-man. At the time of the agreement Leucadia was the mortgagee in possession. Simpson commenced the action to recover damages in excess of $13 million representing the balance due on the electrical renovation work. Leucadia denied the essential allegations of the complaint and interposed several counterclaims. One of them, the fifth, purported to allege a statutory RICO violation.
RICO (18 USC §§ 1961-1968) is part оf the Organized Crime Control Act of 1970. The object of that legislation was to prevent and punish "racketeering activity” (see, Sedima, S. P. R. L. v Imrex Co.,
In its fifth counterclaim Leucadia alleges first, in conclusory fashion, that Simpson, Silverman and Grand-White were an "enterprise” within the meaning of 18 USC § 1962 and then, specifically, that Simpson submitted its bills and invoices to Silverman, that the amount claimed due on them was grossly
Simpson moved to dismiss Leucadia’s counterclaim contending that the Federal courts possessed exclusive jurisdiction over RICO civil claims and, alternatively, that a cause of action had not been stated. Supreme Court ruled that State courts have concurrent jurisdiction over RICO claims but that defendant’s claim did not come within the statute, principally because, as the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit held in Sedima, S.P.R.L. v Imrex Co. (741 F2d 482), a RICO claimant must show that the defendant has been convicted of the underlying "predicate acts” in order to state a civil claim for damages.
Pending appeal from the order, the United States Supreme Court reversed the Second Circuit in Sedima (
The jurisdictional issue has been considered by several appellate courts, including two in this State. The Second Department, in this case, and the First Department, in Greenview Trading Co. v Hershman & Leicher (
Analysis starts with the rule that presumptively State courts have concurrent jurisdiction with Federal courts over Federal claims (see, Gulf Offshore Co. v Mobil Oil Corp.,
A
The statute does not explicitly provide for exclusive Federal jurisdiction. Section 1964 (c), which creates the private right of action, does direct that the action may be brought in "any appropriate United States district court” but that language cannot be interpreted as creating exclusive Federal jurisdiction for "[i]t is black letter law * * * that the mere grant of jurisdiction to a federal court does not operate to oust a state court from concurrent jurisdiсtion over the cause of action” (Gulf Offshore Co. v Mobil Oil Corp.,
B
Nor is an "unmistakable” intent to restrict jurisdiction to be found in the legislative history. The committee reports, floor debates and sponsors’ memoranda do not even address the question of jurisdiction. Nevertheless, several courts have relied on a statement made by G. Robert Blakey, a principal architect of RICO and former Chief Counsel of the Senate Subcommittee on Criminal Laws and Procedures, as evidence of congressional intent. He has stated: "There is nothing on the face of the statute or in the legislative history” that touches the question of concurrent jurisdiction. "To my knowledge, no one even thought of the issue * * * Had anyone brought up the question” of State court jurisdiction, "we would have said no.” (Flaherty, Two States Lay Claim to RICO — Interview with G. Robert Blakey, Nat LJ, May 7, 1984, at 10, col 2, reprinted in Greenview Trading Co. v Hershman & Leicher,
The most widely accepted argument for finding that Congress intended exclusive jurisdiction to reside in the Federal courts relies on analogy to the antitrust laws and rests on the following line of reasoning: (1) the private right of action under the Federal antitrust laws, now found in section 4 of the Clayton Act and codified at 15 USC § 15 (a), has been uniformly interpreted as being maintainable only in Federal court (see, General Inv. Corp. v Lake Shore Ry.,
Several courts have found the reasoning persuasive (see, e.g., Greenview Trading Co. v Hershman & Leicher,
First, although the courts have uniformly held that the Federal courts have exclusive jurisdiction over private causes of action brought under the Clayton Act, it cannot be that the language of the statute led to this interpretation. The private right of action provision of the Clayton Act (15 USC § 15 [a]) simply gives the district courts jurisdiction over suits for violation of the antitrust laws. It does not state or even suggest that such jurisdiction shall be exclusive. "It provides that suits of the kind described 'may’ be brought in the federal district courts, not that they must be” (see, Dowd Box Co. v Courtney,
Moreover, the language of RICO and of the Clayton Act is not significantly different from the language contained in section 301 (a) of the Labor Management Relations Act of 1947 which the Supreme Court held, in Dowd Box, did not confer exclusive jurisdiction in the Federal courts (
Second, as the dissent below noted, in the aftermath of the Supreme Court’s decision in Sedima, RICO can no longer be analogized with assurance to the antitrust legislation (see, dissenting opn of Spatt, J.,
Third, the creation by Congress of a private right of action does not necessarily entail exclusive Federal jurisdiction
Finally, there is little support for exclusive jurisdiction found in other aspects of the statutory scheme. RICO statutes include provisions concerning Federal venue and service of process (18 USC § 1965), vesting the United States Attorney General with investigative powers (18 USC § 1968), granting the district court jurisdiction to prevent and restrain violations of section 1962 (18 USC § 1964 [a]) and allowing the Attorney General to expedite cases brought by the United States (18 USC § 1966) but other Federal acts have similar enforcement and venue provisions and they have been interpreted as permitting concurrent jurisdiction in the enforcement of Federal rights created (e.g., Labor Management Relations Act of 1947 interpreted by the Supreme Court in Dowd Box Co. v Courtney,
C
The final factor identified in Gulf Offshore (supra) is whether Federal interests are clearly incompatible with State
Finally, the majority below referred to the New York Legislature’s passage of a so-called little RICO, the Organized Crime Control Act (L 1986, ch 516), and claimed that the existence of such a law militates against a conclusion of concurrent jurisdiction (see,
Accordingly, we hold that the presumption that State courts have concurrent jurisdiction over RICO claims has not been rebutted.
III
Our conclusion that the State courts have conсurrent jurisdiction over RICO civil claims requires us to determine whether Leucadia’s fifth counterclaim states a cause of action under the statute.
RICO provides that anyone injured by "enterprises” conducted through a "pattern of racketeering activity” shall have a cause of action and can recover treble damages (18 USC §§ 1962, 1964 [c]). A "pattern of racketeering activity” is defined as "at least two acts of racketeering activity” within a 10-year period (§ 1961 [5]). "Acts of racketeering” are defined as a variety of acts chargeable under State law and indictable under Federal law (§ 1961 [1]). Thus, the statute on its face would appear to allow plaintiffs to make a Federal case (and obtain treble damages) out of garden variety fraud, provided that the defendants have committed two predicate acts, which might be as simple as mailing fraudulent bills or making interstate phone calls for the purpose of defrauding a victim.
To restrict abuses resulting from such an expansive reading, the Second Circuit held, in Sedima, that (1) to have standing to bring a civil RICO claim, the claimant must allege a "racketeering injury”, carrying with it "at least * * * the
The United States Supreme Court reversed, holding that there was neither a separate racketeering injury nor a prior criminal conviction component to a civil RICO action. The court left open the question of whether Sedima had stated a cause of action, but noting that a violation of section 1962 (c) requires "(1) conduct (2) of an enterprise (3) through a pattern (4) of racketeering activity” (Sedima, S. P. R. L. v Imrex Co.,
The first theory, adopted by a majority of courts and called the multiple episodes theory, focuses on the word "pattеrn” in the statute. These courts interpret the word pattern as embracing two concepts: the relationship of the predicate acts
In this action Leucadia has not satisfied the continuity requirement. It has failed to allege that the Silverman — Simpson — Grand-White scheme was not an isolated episode and the court cannot infer from the fact that the scheme progressed over a number of months and that several predicate acts occurred during that time that some ongoing illegal conduct is being committed by the enterprise. Accordingly, Leucadia’s fifth counterclaim fails to state a RICO claim under the multiplе episodes theory.
A different approach has been taken by the Second Circuit; it has limited the scope of RICO by focusing on the "enterprise” requirement. Post-Sedima decisions in the Second Circuit, including United States v Ianniello (808 F2d 184, cert denied 482 US —,
We have no need to define with precision the minimum requirements for a RICO causé of action or even to choose whether the continuity component of a civil RICO action should be related to the term "pattern” as it has been held by most of the Federal circuits or to the term "enterprise”, the approach taken by the Second Circuit. Regardless of the approach used, Leucadia fails to state a RICO cause of action because there is no factual allegation that the Simpson— Silverman — Grand-White enterprise is continuing with racketeering activity.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs, and the certified question answered in the affirmative.
Chief Judge Wachtler and Judges Kaye, Alexander, Titone, Hancock, Jr., and Bellacosa concur.
Order affirmed, etc.
Notes
That is not to say that the Legislature is not permitted to amend the CPLR to provide that New York State courts should not exercise jurisdiction over RICO claims (see generally, Brown v Gerdes,
