MEMORANDUM OPINION
In this transferred federal question case, two individuals, for themselves and on behalf of a putative class, seek damages and injunctive relief against a supplier of financial messaging services for violations of the First and Fourth Amendments of the U.S. Constitution, the Right to Financial Privacy Act, 12 U.S.C. §§ 3401, et seq. (RFPA), and the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act, 815 111. Comp. Stat. 505/1 et seq. (ICFDBPA). These violations allegedly occurred in the course of defendant’s response to administrative subpoenas issued by the United States Department of the Treasury under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, 50 U.S.C. § 1701, et seq. (IEEPA).
Filed originally in the Northern District of Illinois, the case was transferred to this district pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a). Prior to transfer, the transferor court granted in part and denied in part defendant’s motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. In passing, the Illinois district court found that plaintiffs had standing to assert their claims. Following transfer, defendant filed a motion in this district seeking reconsideration of the denial in part of its motion to dis
For the reasons that follow, reconsideration of the Illinois district court’s ruling on the motion to dismiss is premature, as it is first necessary to consider the jurisdictional issue of plaintiffs’ standing. A review of this issue reflects that the complaint 1 fails to allege sufficient facts to support standing, and hence the complaint must be dismissed without prejudice. Plaintiffs will be given leave to file an amended complaint that satisfies standing, provided they can do so in accordance with Rule 11, Fed.R.Civ.P.
I.
Plaintiffs Ian Walker and Stephen Kruse are private individuals who are office workers residing in Washington, D.C. and Chicago, Illinois, respectively. According to the complaint, each plaintiff has completed numerous domestic financial transactions since September 11, 2001, and at least one international financial transaction since that date. Yet absent from the complaint is any allegation identifying any specific transactions or the financial institutions plaintiffs used in connection with these transactions.
Defendant S.W.I.F.T. SCRL (the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication, or SWIFT) is an international cooperative consortium of banks, brokers, and investment managers. Based in Brussels and with its principal American place of business in northern Virginia, SWIFT supplies secure standardized messaging services to financial institutions. Quoting from SWIFT’s website, the complaint describes the SWIFT consortium as follows:
“Defendant SWIFT is ‘the financial industry-owned co-operative supplying secure, standardized messaging services and interface software to 7,800 financial institutions in more than 200 countries. SWIFT’s worldwide community includes banks, broker/dealers and investment managers, as well as their market infrastructures in payments, securities, treasury and trade.’ ”
Additionally, the complaint notes that most of the eleven million transactions per day handled by SWIFT are international in nature in that they involve communication across national borders.
Because the sufficiency of the complaint’s factual allegations is at issue, it is important to focus here on these allegations. They are contained in approximately three pages of the fifteen page, four count complaint. One of these pages is devoted to quoting from websites of various foreign government agencies
2
to the effect that SWIFT’s disclosure of financial data to the U.S. government violates various foreign laws. More to the point for the standing question at issue, the complaint cites a June 28, 2006
New
Plaintiff Walker filed the present suit against SWIFT on June 23, 2006 — the same day the Times article was published — in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. Plaintiff Kruse was added as a plaintiff on February 27, 2007. The complaint alleged four counts of wrongdoing. Count I alleged that SWIFT “denied Plaintiffs ... their rights to speak and receive speech privately under the First Amendment.” Count II alleged that SWIFT “violated [their] reasonable expectations of privacy and denied ... their right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures as guaranteed by the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.” Count III alleged that SWIFT violated the RFPA when it “disclosed information contained in customer financial records without reasonable description or any of the other five criteria enumerated” in the statute. Count IV alleged that SWIFT engaged in unfair, unlawful and/or fraudulent business practices in contravention of the ICFDBPA.
Defendant SWIFT filed two motions in response to the complaint: (i) a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), and (ii) a motion to dismiss on forum non conveniens grounds, which the Illinois district court construed as a motion to transfer venue pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a). The Illinois district court ruled on the defendant’s motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, granting that motion with respect to Counts I and TV but denying it with respect to Counts II and III. Although defendant did not file a separate motion to dismiss for lack of standing under Rule 12(b)(1), the motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim raised the standing issue, and the Illinois district court ruled on that issue as well, concluding that the complaint demonstrated plaintiffs’ standing. Following these rulings, the Illinois district court granted SWIFT’s transfer motion and the matter was transferred to this district pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a). 3
II.
The Illinois district court, relying on the Seventh Circuit’s decision in
Venture Associates Corp. v. Zenith Data Systems Corp.,
It is certainly true, as the Illinois district court noted, that documents referred to in a complaint may, in certain circumstances, be considered part of the complaint for the purpose of evaluating a dismissal motion.
See, e.g., American Chiropractic Ass’n, Inc. v. Trigon Healthcare, Inc.,
The question then is whether the
Times
article may appropriately be used by plaintiffs or a court to supplement or fill holes in the complaint. The article may not be so used because it does not give rise to the causes of action alleged in the complaint, nor is it central or integral to those causes of action. Instead, it merely reports information of questionable reliability. As such, the
Times
article does not fit within the
Venture Associates/American Chiropractic
line of cases and should not be used to fill factual holes in the complaint’s allegations. Put differently, the
Venture Associates!American Chiropractic
line of cases does not extend to allow parties to fill gaps in their factual allegations by reference to unnamed or anonymous sources in a newspaper article.
8
To conclude otherwise would allow
In sum, it appears that plaintiffs’ complaint, which was filed the very day the Times article was published, relies heavily on the anonymous and contradictory information contained in that article. This reliance cannot relieve plaintiffs of their important Rule 11 obligation given the difficulty in determining the reliability of anonymous sources. In any event, as will be seen, reliance on the Times article would not suffice to fill the factual holes in the Second Amended Complaint even if such reliance were appropriate.
III.
Two further issues must be addressed before the merits of defendant’s reconsideration motion may appropriately be considered. First it is important to address whether the law of the case doctrine bars review here of the Illinois district court’s decision. If review here is not barred by that doctrine, then it is next necessary to consider whether plaintiffs have alleged facts adequate to establish standing to pursue their federal claims.
A.
The law of the case doctrine provides, at its simplest, that “when a court decides upon a rule of law, that decision should continue to govern the same issues in subsequent stages in the same case.”
Christianson v. Colt Indus. Operating Corp.,
In this case, the decision at issue was rendered by a parallel trial court, rather than an appellate or superior court, and accordingly the law of the case doctrine applies with less force in this instance. Even so, reconsideration of the Illinois district court’s rulings is inappropriate under the law of the case doctrine unless those rulings are clearly erroneous. And where, as here, reconsideration is sought on a subject matter jurisdiction issue, determination of the jurisdictional issue is both appropriate and necessary. Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(h)(3) (“Whenever it appears ... that the court lacks jurisdiction of the subject matter, the court shall dismiss the action.”);
In re Bulldog Trucking, Inc.,
B.
It is axiomatic that a party seeking to establish standing in the federal courts must demonstrate an injury in fact,
i.e.,
she must demonstrate “an invasion of a legally protected interest which is (a) concrete and particularized and (b) ‘actual or imminent’, not ‘conjectural’ or ‘hypothetical.’ ”
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
The complaint is deficient in its factual allegations relating to standing. Apart from the conclusory allegation in paragraph 41, to the effect that “[b]y the acts alleged herein, SWIFT’s conduct proximately caused harm to Plaintiffs and class members,” the complaint fails to allege
facts
from which injury in fact may be inferred. For example, although the complaint adequately alleges that SWIFT disclosed information regarding certain financial transactions, there is no allegation that plaintiffs’ bank or banks are members of SWIFT, nor is there any information indicating that plaintiffs’ financial information was disclosed by SWIFT. Plaintiffs rely on their own belief that their financial information has been disclosed, but such a belief, without more, cannot support standing. This point is well illustrated by the recent Sixth Circuit decision in
ACLU v. Nat’l Security Agency,
It may be that these omissions can easily be remedied. Plaintiffs certainly know the identity of their banks and presumably can readily determine whether those banks’ transactions are handled by SWIFT.
10
The complaint fails to allege facts sufficient to demonstrate the constitutionally required injury in fact standing requirement.
11
Accordingly, it is appropriate to dismiss the complaint without prejudice and to permit the plaintiffs to file an amended complaint alleging additional facts to support standing. Plaintiffs need not establish standing to a certainty; they must only allege facts that make standing plausible rather than merely conceivable.
Bell Atlantic,
An appropriate order will issue.
Notes
. Reference here is to the Second Amended Complaint. Although the Illinois district court granted plaintiffs leave to file a Third Amended Complaint to correct pleading defects in their state law claim, plaintiffs did not file such an Amended Complaint until the filing deadline had passed and the case had been transferred to this district. Because the Third Amended Complaint was not timely filed, and because defendant seeks reconsideration of the Illinois district court's rulings with regard to the Second Amended Complaint, the appropriate focus of the present analysis is the Second Amended Complaint.
. Specifically, the agencies are (i) the Data Protection Commission of the German state Schleswig-Holstein, (ii) the Belgian Privacy Commission, (iii) the Swiss Data Protection and Information Commissioner, and (iv) the Article 29 Working Party of the European Commission.
. Plaintiffs initially filed, but then withdrew, a request for reconsideration of the transfer decisión.
. In this case the complaint referred to, but did not attach, the
Times
article; instead, the
Times
article was attached to the defendant’s motion to dismiss. This does not change the present analysis.
See American Chiropractic,
.
American Chiropractic,
.
Phillips
v.
LCI Int'l, Inc.,
.
Fudge
v.
Penthouse International, Ltd.,
. It is worth noting that this principle holds true whether the article is from the
Mew York Times,
the
Wall Street Journal,
or the
Wichita
. An Eighth Circuit decision well illustrates this point. In
United States v. Tri-State Ins.
Co.
of Minnesota,
the government argued that an anonymous tip provided sufficient notice to trigger a statute of limitations.
.The Third Amended Complaint alleges that plaintiff Kruse is a customer of TCF Bank which was a member of SWIFT prior to January 2001. For the reasons discussed above, the Third Amended Complaint is not at issue here. In any event, plaintiff Kruse's allegations were made only in the context of his state law claims and were not incorporated by reference into plaintiffs' federal claims. Because a party must demonstrate standing as to every claim, plaintiff Kruse’s allegations would be insufficient to establish an injury in fact as to plaintiffs’ federal claims even if the Third Amended Complaint were at issue.
DaimlerChrysler Corp. v. Cuno,
It is telling that, given the opportunity to plead the identity of his bank, plaintiff Kruse identified a bank that is not currently a member of SWIFT.
. Because plaintiffs lack standing to pursue their own claims, it follows, of course, that they are not, at this time, qualified to serve as class representatives.
Central Wesleyan College v. W.R. Grace & Co.,
. It remains open to SWIFT, of course, to establish that plaintiffs’ financial information was not disclosed, and that plaintiffs therefore cannot make the necessary showing.
