The plaintiff, Bachman, brought this suit against the investment company Bear Stearns, charging violations of the RICO statute, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1961 et seq. The district court dismissed the suit for failure to state a claim, and so we treat as true the facts alleged in the complaint, though of course without vouching for their truth. According to these allegations, Bachman was a vice president of Calumet Coach Corp. (Coach), a medical imaging company owned by Calumet Acquisitions Corp., and he was also, along with other managers, a shareholder of Calumet (the parent). The majority shareholder in Calumet was Merrill Lynch Interfunding, Inc. (MLIF), and it agreed with Bachman that if he left Coach’s employ, other shareholders, including MLIF, Calumet, and Daniel Snyder — the CEO of both Calumet and Coach — would be entitled to buy out his stock at a fair market value to be determined by one of several firms that the agreement designated as “selectable” by MLIF to value Calumet. Bear Stearns was one of those firms.
Beginning in 1988, Snyder and John Ferrell, a vice president of MLIF and director of Calumet, defrauded Bachman of money due him as an employee and shareholder. They fired him in 1990, hired Bear Stearns in November of that year to determine the fair market value of Calumet and hence of Bachman’s stock, and directed Bear Stearns to undervalue Calumet. Bear Stearns issued a fraudulent valuation in January 1991 and a revised valuation, also fraudulent, in December of that year. It then assisted the defendants in a suit that Bachman brought in an Illinois state court in 1990 against the two Calumet corporations, Snyder, and Ferrell (a suit that resulted in a $3.5 million judgment in favor of Bachman in 1995) by concealing evidence and presenting perjured testimony. Bear Stearns was not a party to that suit, and no argument has been made that the judgment in that suit has any preclusive effect on the present suit, which is against Bear Stearns alone.
Bachman charges in the present suit that Bear Stearns made 66 mail or wire communications in furtherance of the scheme to defraud him; violations of the federal mail and wire fraud statutes, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341,1343, are within the definition of “racketeering activity” in the RICO statute. 18 U.S.C. § 1961(1)(B). He argues that Bear Stearns violated the statute by participating, “through a pattern of racketeering” consisting of the fraudulent mail and wire communications, in the conduct of the affairs of an “enterprise” constituted by the alliance among the two Calumet corporations, MLIF, MLIF’s parent Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc., Snyder, Ferrell, and Bear Stearns, § 1962(c), and also that Bear Stearns, in violation of § 1962(d), conspired with the other members of the enterprise to violate subsection (c).
The suit fails at the “enterprise” stage. This is not because there is no formal organization denoted “The Partnership of the Calumet Corporations, MLIF, Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc., Snyder, Ferrell, and Bear Stearns to Fleece' William Bachman.” The RICO statute reaches informal as well as formal organizations.
United States v. Turkette,
Snyder, as CEO of Bachman’s employer, and Ferrell, representing the employer’s controlling shareholder, are alleged to have got together with Bear Stearns to defraud an employee-shareholder. That is a conspiracy, but it is not an enterprise unless every conspiracy is also an enterprise for RICO purposes, which the case law denies. E.g.,
Fitzgerald v. Chrysler Corp.,
We have described the alleged RICO enterprise as Snyder, Ferrell, and Bear Stearns, thus leaving out the four corporations. This was deliberate. A firm and its employees, or a parent and its subsidiaries, are not an enterprise separate from the firm itself.
Emery v. American General Finance, Inc.,
Each of the four corporations is an enterprise, however, and Bear Stearns is not their employee. But Bear Stearns cannot be thought to have been conducting, or to have agreed to conduct, the affairs of any of these corporations through a pattern of racketeering activity. That would require Bear Stearns to have exercised (or agreed to exercise, in order to be liable as a RICO conspirator) at least some measure of control over the corporations.
Reves v. Ernst & Young,
Affirmed.
