OPINION & ORDER
Plaintiff UlIT41ess, Inc. filed this suit against defendants FedEx Corporation (“FedEx Corp.”), FedEx Corporate Services, Inc. (“FedEx Services”), and FedEx Ground Package System, Inc. (“FedEx Ground”) on March 11, 2011. (ECF No. 1.) The gravamen of plaintiffs complaint and
Plaintiffs claims under state law and 49 U.S.C. § 13708 .have-been dismissed for failure to state a claim, as has its claim that defendants engaged in a RICO conspiracy. See U1IT41ess, Inc. v. FedEx Corp.,
The RICO statute imposes liability on persons that improperly use a distinct entity as a vehicle for misdeeds. It is not a statute that attaches federal criminal and civil liability to routine claims of fraud involving a parent and its subsidiary, or two sister corporations. The undisputed facts of this case demonstrate that the defendant corporations, a holding company and one of its subsidiaries, are not “distinct” from the alleged enterprise, another wholly owned subsidiary, for RICO purposes. If plaintiffs theory of RICO distinctness were accepted, it would transform every routine allegation of fraud involving a company that uses the routine holding company/subsidiary structure at issue here into a RICO claim. That is not and should not be the law.
For these and the reasons stated below, the motion is GRANTED.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
A. The Events
Plaintiff is an internet retailer of motorcycle-related clothing, and accessories. (Def.’s 56.1
B. FedEx Corporate Structure ■
Plaintiffs remaining claims allege, inter alia, a RICO enterprise stemming from the actions of three related’ corporations, FedEx Corp., FedEx Services, and FedEx Ground. Defendant FedEx Corp. is a publicly traded holding company for various subsidiaries engaged .in shipping-related businesses. (Def.’s 56.1 ¶ 2.) Defendant Fe
FedEx Corp,. has its principal place of business in Memphis, Tennessee. (PL’s 56.1
FedEx Corp. does not exercise day-today control over the operations of its subsidiaries, including FedEx Services and FedEx Ground. (Def.’s 56.1 ¶ 2.) Each corporation has its own officers and board of directors; there is little overlap between these officers and directors. (Pl.’s 56.1 ¶ 50.) Plaintiff has identified numerous instances of court proceedings in which FedEx and its representatives represented and testified to the legal separation between the holding company and all of its subsidiaries. (Id. ¶ 44.) In one characteristic instance, a FedEx representative testified as follows when asked *‘[W]hat is the difference between the sepai'ate corporations and, say, looking at them as just separate divisions of one company?”
Well, legally because they’re a separate corporate entity, they’re their own legal , entity. They have their own management and they have their own Board of Directors so it is different than operating as a division within the same company.
(Id.)
C. Litigation History
As stated above, plaintiff initiated this case on March 11, 2011. (ECF No. 1.) Defendants moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim in September 2011. (ECF No. 42.) In September 2012, Judge Seibel, to whom the case was originally assigned, dismissed counts II, IV, and V. U1IT41ess, Inc. v. FedEx Corp.,
Judge Seibel denied defendants’ motion as to counts I and III against FedEx Corp. and FedEx Services, both of which allege RICO violations. Id. at 287-91. (ECF No. 55, at 13-21.) These counts assert the existence of a RICO enterprise, defined as “the FedEx Ground Enterprise consisting solely of FedEx Ground.” (Id. ¶¶ 65, 117.) Plaintiff alleges that defendants “conducted] and participate^] in the affairs of the Enterprise through a pattern of racketeering activity.” (Id. ¶¶ 67, 118.)
In their original motion to dismiss these counts, which Judge Seibel denied, defendants “argue[d] that Plaintiffs Section 1962(c) RICO claim fails as a matter of law because Plaintiff fails to allege (1) an adequately distinct enterprise ...; (2) the required ‘pattern of racketeering activity,’ ...; (3) plausible or particularly-pleaded predicate acts of mail and/or wire fraud ...; and (4) the required operation or control.” U1IT4less,
Judge Seibel wrote that “[defendants, relying principally on Discon, Inc. v. NYNEX Corp.,
In February 2015 the case was reassigned to the undersigned. In May 2015 defendants moved for partial summary judgment dismissing plaintiffs class claims on the ground that plaintiff had contractually waived its ability to participate in a class action against defendants. (ECF No. 156.) The Court granted defendants’ motion in June, (ECF No. 169) and denied plaintiffs motion for a certification of interlocutory appeal in July. (ECF Nos. 170, 171.) The Court also denied a motion to compel the production of documents plaintiff filed. (ECF Nos. 172,175.) In its order denying that motion, the Court noted that
[w]hile the RICO [claim] has not been dismissed, it is highly unlikely to survive once a motion to dismiss it (under 12(c) or 56) is made. According to longstanding Second Circuit precedent, a corporation cannot, through conduct of its ordinary business, constitute an enterprise. See Cruz v. FXDirectDealer, LLC,720 F.3d 115 , 120-121 (2d Cir.2013); Riverwoods v. Marine Midland Bank,30 F.3d 339 , 344 (2d Cir.1994).
(ECF No. 175, at 3.) Defendants filed the instant motion on October 16, and it became fully briefed on December 4. (ECF Nos. 181,198.)
II. LEGAL PRINCIPLES
A. Summary .Judgment Standard
Summary judgment may not be granted unless a movant shows, based on admissible record evidence, “that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). The moving party bears the burden of demonstrating “the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.” Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
Only disputes relating to material facts — he., “facts that might affect the outcome of the suit under the governing law” — will properly preclude the entry of summary judgment. Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
B. RICO Distinctness
Section 1962(c) of the RICO Act 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 or collection of unlawful debt.” 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c). The statute provides a private cause of action. See 18 U.S.C. § 1964(c). For RICO purposes, “‘person’ includes any individual or entity capable of holding a legal or beneficial interest in property,” and “‘enterprise’ includes any individual, partnership, corporation, association, or other legal entity, and any union or group of individuals associated in fact although not a legal entity.” 18 U.S.C. § 1961(3)-(4).
“[T]o establish liability under § 1962(c) one must allege and prove the existence of two distinct entities: (1) a ‘person’; and (2) an ‘enterprise’ that is not simply the same ‘person’ referred to by a different name.” Cedric Kushner Promotions, Ltd. v. King,
III. ANALYSIS
This motion requires the Court to determine whether the alleged RICO persons, FedEx Corp. and FedEx Services, are sufficiently distinct from the alleged RICO enterprise, FedEx Ground, to support civil RICO liability.
Congress declared that its purpose ih passing the RICO statute was “to seek the eradication of organized crime in the United States.” United States v. Turkette,
Section 1962(c) of the RICO Act prohibits a person from unlawfully conducting the affairs of a separate, distinct enterprise. The statute’s “distinctness principle” has been the subject of a number of decisions binding on the Court. However, the Court is not aware of any case precisely like this one, in which the alleged RICO persons are the corporate parent and sister subsidiary of the alleged RICO, enterprise, a wholly-owned subsidiary. In order to determine what the distinctness reT quirement demands in this case, the Court must examine a number of binding decisions in light of the RICO statute’s basic purposes, which the Supreme Court has identified as “both protecting] a legitimate ‘enterprise’ from those who would use unlawful acts to victimize it and also protecting] the public from those who would unlawfully use an ‘enterprise’ (whether legitimate or illegitimate) as a vehicle through which unlawful activity is committed.” Id. at 164,
In Riverwoods Chappaqua Corp. v. Marine Midland Bank, N.A.,
The Second Circuit reached a similar conclusion in Discon, Inc. v. NYNEX Corp.,
Five years after Discon, a Second Circuit case on RICO distinctness advanced to the Supreme Court. In Cedric Kushner Promotions, Ltd. v. King,
A unanimous Supreme Court reversed.
The Cedric Kushner Court also distinguished that case from the precedent the Second Circuit had cited, Riverwoods and
The Second Circuit has applied Cedric Kushner’s refinement of the RICO distinctness principle twice. In City of New York v. Smokes-Spirits.com, Inc.,
The Smokes-Spirits.com decision analyzed whether the primary enterprises were distinct .for RICO purposes. According to the City’s complaint, “the enterprise is an innocent corporation, with its own legal basis for existing, and the persons are employees or officers of the organization unlawfully directing the enterprise’s racketeering activities.” Id. at 448. The Second Circuit held that these allegations were “sufficient under the distinctness standards articulated in Cedric Kushner,” which required “that the RICO ‘person’ and alleged ‘enterprise’must be only legally, not necessarily actually, distinct.” Id. (citing Cedric Kushner,
More recently, in Cruz v. FXDirectDealer, LLC,
The hypothetical the Cruz decision raised closely resembles the allegations in the instant matter; rather than accusing a subsidiary of conducting the affairs of its parent company, the alleged enterprise, plaintiff alleges that a holding company, FedEx Corp., and one of its wholly owned subsidiaries, FedEx Services, are the RICO persons conducting the affairs of the alleged RICO enterprise, FedEx Ground, another wholly owned subsidiary. (TAC ¶¶ 44, 65, 104, 117.) The similarity between the facts of this case and the hypothetical the Cruz court explicitly identified as an open question refutes plaintiff and defendants’ dueling insistence that controlling precedent clearly addresses the question before the Court.
Fortunately, several other Courts of Appeals have identified a RICO distinctness test that bridges the apparent gap between the Supreme Court’s focus on legal identity in Cedric Kushner and the Second Circuit’s reaffirmation of Discon in Cruz. In Bucklew v. Hawkins, Ash, Baptie & Co.,
A number of other post-Cedric Kushner decisions are consistent with this inquiry into whether the fact of separate incorporation facilitated the alleged unlawful activity. See, e.g., In re Countrywide Fin. Corp. Mortg. Mktg. & Sales Practices Litig.,
Limiting RICO liability in the parent-subsidiary context to circumstances in which separate incorporation facilitates the racketeering is also consistent with the text and purposes of the RICO statute. As noted above, the language of § 1962(c) clearly requires distinctness, and as the Sixth Circuit has held, “the statute’s distinctness requirement will be rendered meaningless” “if a corporate defendant can be liable for participating in an enterprise comprised only of its agents — even if those agents are separately incorporated.” In re ClassicStar Mare Lease Litig.,
The facts of this case indicate that there is no genuine question as to whether FedEx Ground’s separate incorporation facilitated the alleged schemes; the “something more” is missing. Plaintiff emphasizes the fact that FedEx Ground originated as RPS and that its headquarters and high-level employees are located far from the Memphis headquarters of FedEx Corp. and FedEx Services. (EOF Nos. 189 & 190.) Plaintiff similarly collects a number of court filings in which FedEx Corp. and its various subsidiaries attest to their legal separation and distinctness from one another; (See Pl.’s 56.1 ¶ 44.) Neither of these facts indicate that the corporations at issue are distinct in the manner relevant to the RICO statute. There are many reasons a company may choose to make use of separate incorporation of its subsidiaries, and § 1962(c) does not stand for the proposition that every company that commits fraud after doing so violates the RICO Act. See, e.g., Fitzgerald v. Chrysler Corp.,
The fact of legal separation between FedEx Corp., FedEx Services, and FedEx Ground is wholly unrelated to the alleged improper acts in this case. There is no allegation in the complaint, nor any suggestion in the parties’ subsequent submissions, that FedEx Ground’s separate incorporation played any role in either the Upweighing claim or the Canadian Customs claim. This is not a case in which, for example, a parent corporation portrayed the separately incorporated entity as an unrelated corporation in furtherance of-the unlawful scheme. See In re ClassicStar,
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, defendants’ motion for summary judgment is GRANTED. The Clerk of Court is directed to terminate the motion at Docket No. 181 and to terminate this action.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The notation “TAC” refers to the Third Amended Complaint, filed December 22, 2014 and available at ECF No. 134,
. The notation “Def.’s .56.1” refers to defendants’ statement of material facts pursuant to Local Civil Rule 56.1. (ECF No. 184.) Unless otherwise noted, this opinion relies solely on statements of fact which plaintiff did not dispute in its response. (ECF No. 190.)
. The notation "Pl.’s 56.1" refers to plaintiff’s counter-statement of material facts pursuant to Local Civil Rule 56.1. (ECF No. 190.) Unless otherwise noted, this opinion relies solely on statements of fact which defendants did not dispute in their response. (ECF No. 199.)
. Defendants have also advanced alternative arguments in support of summary judgment. (See ECF No. 182, at pp. 13-24.) Because the
. “[R]emoval services include salvaging and disposing of obsolete telephone central office equipment." Discon, Inc. v. NYNEX Corp.,
. The complaint alleged that other entities also participated in the enterprise, but the 'Second Circuit found that those entities were not plausibly alleged to share a common purpose and thus excluded them separately before considering the distinctness of "the remaining members of the alleged enterprise— FXDD, Tradition, corporate counsel, and the chief operating officer.” Cruz v. FXDirect-Dealer, LLC,
. Careful analysis of the circumstances under which a parent corporation might face liability as a RICO person that conducted the affairs of its wholly owned subsidiary is also consistent with the Supreme Court’s holding that such corporations are not legally capable of conspiring with one another for other purposes. See Copperweld Corp. v. Independence Tube Corp.,
