OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff World Wrestling Entertainment, Inc. (“WWE”) filed this action against Defendants Jakks Pacific, Inc. (“Jakks”), Jakks Pacific H.K. Ltd. (“Jakks H.K.”), Road Champs, Ltd. (“Road Champs”), THQ, Inc. (“THQ”), THQ/Jakks Pacific LLC (“the LLC”), Stanley Shenker & Associates, Inc. (“SSAI”), Bell Licensing, LLC (“Bell Licensing”), Stanley Shenker (“Shenker”), James Bell (“Bell”), Jack Friedman (“Friedman”), Stephen Berman (“Berman”), Joel Bennett (“Bennett”), and Brian Farrell (“Farrell”). In its first Complaint, Plaintiff alleged violations of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”), 18 U.S.C. §§ 1962(c), (d), the Robinson-Pat-man Act, 15 U.S.C. § 13(c), and causes of action under New York state law for commercial bribery, fraudulent inducement, unjust enrichment, breach of fiduciary duty, inducement of breach of fiduciary duty, tortious interference with contractual relations, and conspiracy to engage in each of the above acts. In an Amended Complaint, Plaintiff refined its factual allegations of wrongdoing by Defendants and also added a Sherman Act cause of action. Plaintiff seeks compensatory, statutory, and punitive damages, a declaration that the licensing agreements entered into or extended as a result of the alleged bribery are void, an accounting of all revenues and profits obtained by Defendants under the licenses, disgorgement and/or restitution for any improper revenues and/or profits obtained under the agreements, disgorgement and/or restitution of any amounts allegedly paid to Defendants as bribes, and attorneys’ fees and costs.
Because of the delayed timing of the filing of Plaintiffs Amended Complaint, the Court ordered bifurcated briefing. In the first stage, the Parties briefed three threshold issues raised in Defendants’ motions to dismiss the first Complaint, which remained applicable to the Amended Complaint and were potentially dispositive. Those three issues were: (1) whether Plaintiff has sufficiently alleged the existence of a RICO enterprise pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c); (2) whether Plaintiff has pled a cause of action under the Robinson-Patman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 13(c); and (3) whether Plaintiff is estopped from pursuing its RICO claim against Defendants Shenker and SSAI because it is duplicative of litigation commenced in Connecticut state court. The Parties also briefed the Plaintiffs Sherman Act claim, which was included for the first time in the Amended Complaint.
On March 31, 2006, the Court issued an Opinion and Order granting in part and denying in part Defendants’ motions to dismiss.
See World Wrestling Entm’t, Inc. v. Jakks Pacific, Inc.,
Now, in the second stage, all Defendants briefed the remaining issues pertaining to
I. Background
For purposes of this Motion, the Court accepts as true the allegations in the Amended Complaint. The salient facts and procedural history are fully discussed in
WWE
/, and familiarity is presumed.
See WWE I,
Plaintiff WWE is principally engaged in the development, promotion, and marketing of television and pay-per-view programming and live arena events related to professional wrestling. (Am. Compl. ¶ 9.) As part of its business, WWE also creates characters whose names and likenesses may be licensed to third parties. (Id.) The licenses provide a separate stream of profits for WWE, in the form of royalties, that is a percentage from the sale of the licensed products.
Defendant Jakks principally sells action figures and toys. (Id. ¶ 10.) Defendant Jack Friedman is the Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of Jakks. (Id. ¶ 13.) He co-founded Jakks with Defendant Ber-man. (Id.) Prior to founding Jakks, Friedman was the CEO of Defendant THQ. (Id. ¶ 14.) Jakks and Friedman also own Jakks H.K. and Road Champs, both Hong Kong Corporations. (Id. ¶¶ 11-12.) During the times relevant to the Amended Complaint, Defendant Berman was the Executive Vice President of Jakks. (Id. ¶ 15.) Berman also served at times as Jakks’ President, Secretary, and Chief Operating Officer. (Id.)
Defendant THQ markets and sells video-games. (Id. ¶ 17.) Defendant Farrell is the President, the Chief Executive Officer, and a member of the Board of Directors of THQ. (Id. ¶ 18.)
THQ and Jakks formed the LLC as a joint venture on June 10, 1998. (Id. ¶ 19.) The LLC was formed in order to be the official licensee for WWE’s videogame license. (Id.) Defendant Berman was authorized to act on behalf of the joint venture. (Id.)
Defendant SSAI served as WWE’s licensing agent from approximately April 1995 through June 13, 2000. (Id. ¶ 20.) Defendant Shenker is the sole owner and President of SSAI. (Id. ¶ 21.)
Defendant Bell is a former WWE executive and is the President and sole owner of Bell Licensing, a limited liability company allegedly formed to launder bribes paid to Bell while he was an executive at WWE. (Id. ¶¶ 22-23.) On February 10, 2005, Bell pled guilty in the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut to one count of mail fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1342, in connection with his receipt of bribes relating to WWE’s licensing program. (Id. ¶ 24.) WWE hired Bell to negotiate and procure licenses for its intellectual property. (Id. ¶ 30.) From October 1996 to his termination on March 24, 2000, Bell served as WWE’s Senior Vice President of Licensing and Merchandising. (Id.)
In 1995, Friedman asked Bell and Shenker about obtaining a license on behalf of Jakks to make WWE toys.
(Id.
¶ 35.) Thereafter, on October 24, 1995, WWE and Jakks entered into a domestic toy license.
(Id.)
Nothing improper is alleged as to this license. However, one month later, in November 1995, Jakks proposed that Shenker act as its agent on a perfumed doll deal that did not involve any WWE licenses.
(Id.
¶ 42.) On January 3, 1996, Jakks and Shenker entered into an agency agreement for the perfumed doll
By November 1997, Bell was induced to join the bribery/fraud scheme based on Shenker’s promises of payments. (Id. ¶¶ 81-83.) Shenker delivered on these payments, which are alleged to have been provided by the Jakks Defendants 1 , using a variety of covert means. (Id. ¶¶ 85-90, 94-99.) With Shenker and Bell in the fold, the Jakks Defendants sought and obtained a third amendment to the domestic toy license in January 1998, granting to Jakks the rights formerly held by Playmates. (Id. ¶ 93.)
Later in 1996, Jakks sought Shenker’s assistance in driving Playmates, a competitor in the action figure market, from its WWE license. (Id. ¶¶ 57-68.) Using his influence, in January 1997, Shenker recommended that WWE grant Jakks a second amendment to its domestic toy license that conflicted with a license previously granted to Playmates. (Id. ¶¶ 67-71.) WWE accepted Shenker’s recommendation, and granted Jakks a second amendment to the domestic toy license. In February 1997, WWE also granted Jakks an international toy license. (Id. ¶71.) Before Bell had been brought into the scheme, Playmates complained to him about WWE’s bad faith in allowing competition with its products but to no avail. (Id. ¶ 70.) Eventually, Playmates was bought out by WWE. (Id. ¶ 83.) Shenker’s dual role in these negotiations was never disclosed to WWE. On March 17, 1997, WWE hired SSAI as its exclusive outside licensing agent. (Id. ¶ 72.)
Beginning in January 1998, Jakks set its sights on the videogame license. (Id. ¶ 101.) The license was coming up for renewal and was held at the time by a company known as Acclaim. (Id. ¶ 102.) In March 1998, Bell told Acclaim that WWE “would not even listen to any proposal that Acclaim would make for the renewal of its license.” (Id. ¶ 109.) Not surprisingly, Acclaim “went over Bell’s head and complained to senior management at WWE that it was not being permitted to submit a renewal proposal.” (Id.) WWE told Acclaim that it would be permitted to make such a proposal. (Id.) Nonetheless, within a week, Bell, without waiting for Acclaim’s proposal, recommended that WWE grant the videogame license to Jakks. (Id. ¶ 110.) WWE acted on this recommendation. Soon thereafter, other companies informally expressed an interest in the license. (Id. ¶¶ 127-29.) In order to protect the bribery scheme, Shenker and/or Bell concealed the informal proposals from WWE senior management, but advised Jakks of the terms of these other proposals. (Id. ¶ 134-35, 145.) One of these other bidders was Defendant THQ.
Jakks thereafter approached THQ with an offer to act as joint venture partners in securing the videogame license. As part of this approach, Defendant Friedman told Defendant Farrell that Jakks was “in control of the videogame license.”
(Id.
¶ 137.) THQ would be required to pay both Jakks and WWE for the license, while also fund
Jakks and THQ agreed to form a joint venture, the LLC, on June 10, 1998. {Id. ¶ 154.) Effective that same day, WWE and the LLC executed a videogame licensing agreement, with an “extraordinary length” often years and a five-year right of renewal for the LLC. {Id. ¶ 149.) The terms of the domestic and international toy licenses, which Jakks already had with WWE, were extended to coincide with the length of the videogame license. {Id. ¶ 165.)
On March 24, 2000, WWE terminated Bell’s employment for reasons unrelated to the bribery scheme (which, at the time, WWE did not know about). {Id. ¶ 187.) On June 13, 2000, WWE terminated its contract with SSAI based on a change of business direction. {Id. ¶ 189.) In October 2000, SSAI brought a breach of contract claim against WWE in Connecticut state court, seeking to be paid commissions on licenses SSAI had allegedly procured for WWE. {Id. ¶ 190.) Through the litigation in Connecticut, WWE discovered the purportedly unlawful scheme, despite Defendants’ alleged attempts to conceal it. {Id. ¶¶ 210-12.)
On October 16, 2003, the Connecticut state court dismissed with prejudice SSAI’s action against WWE and entered a default judgment in favor of WWE as a sanction for Shenker’s concealment of critical documents and perjured deposition testimony.
{Id.
¶221.)
See also Stanley Shenker and Assocs., Inc. v. World Wrestling Fed’n Entm’t, Inc.,
From the summer of 1998 until today, Jakks continues to receive royalties from the various licenses granted to it (or the LLC) by WWE, all as a result of allegedly fraudulent and corrupt conduct by Defendants. (Am. Compl. ¶¶ 149-64, 173-85, 249(b)(lxvii).)
II. Discussion
A. Standard of Review
Defendants seek dismissal of the Amended Complaint under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) on the grounds that it fails to state a claim. The Supreme Court has recently held that “[wjhile a complaint attacked by a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss does not need detailed factual allegations, a plaintiffs obligation to provide the ‘grounds’ of his ‘entitle[ment] to relief requires more than labels and conclusions, and a formulaic recitation of the elements of a cause of action will not do[.]”
Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly,
— U.S.-,-,
When considering a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, a court must limit itself to facts stated in the complaint, documents attached to the complaint, and documents incorporated into the complaint.
See Newman & Schwartz v. Asplundh Tree Expert Co.,
B. Plaintiffs RICO Allegations
The crux of Plaintiffs allegations is that, through a “scheme and artifice to defraud,” Defendants “deprived] WWE of the intangible right of honest services from WWE’s intellectual property licensing agent [Shenker] and its management supervisor of that licensing agent [Bell], ... to obtain thereby valuable toy licensing rights and a lucrative videogame license at lower than competitive royalty rates[.]” (Am. Compl. ¶ 1.) Plaintiffs substantive RICO cause of action is brought pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c). Under Section 1962(c), it is “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[.]”
See
18 U.S.C. § 1962(c). “To establish a claim for a civil violation of section 1962(c), ‘a plaintiff must show that he was injured by defendants’ (1) conduct (2) of an enterprise (3) through a pattern (4) of racketeering activity.’ ”
Cofacredit, S.A. v. Windsor Plumbing Supply Co., Inc.,
“Civil RICO is an unusually potent weapon — the litigation equivalent of a thermonuclear device.”
Bell v. Hubbert,
No. 95-CV-10456,
In WWE I, the Court found that Plaintiff has properly alleged a RICO enterprise. Therefore, the remaining questions are whether Plaintiff has sufficiently alleged that: (i) each Defendant conducted the alleged enterprise through a pattern of racketeering activity; (ii) the THQ Defendants 2 and the LLC directly or vicariously participated in the operation or management of the RICO enterprise; (iii) Plaintiff suffered a cognizable injury as a result of Defendants’ alleged RICO violations; (iv) Plaintiffs RICO allegations are timely; (v) Defendants engaged in a conspiracy to violate RICO; and (vi) the 2004 Release does not bar Plaintiffs RICO claims against the Jakks Defendants, (see Decl. of Jonathan J. Lerner, Ex. B (“Lerner Decl.”)).
“RICO defines ‘racketeering activity’ to include a host of criminal offenses, which are in turn defined by federal and state law.”
Cofacredit,
C. Pattern of Racketeering Activity
To plead a pattern of racketeering activity, the RICO statute requires that— at a minimum — a complaint set forth two predicate acts occurring within ten years of each other.
See
18 U.S.C. § 1961(5);
H.J. Inc. v. Nw. Bell Tel. Co.,
“When seeking to satisfy the continuity requirement, a plaintiff must show that the defendants’ activities were ‘neither isolated or sporadic.’ ”
SKS Constructors, Inc. v. Drinkwine,
1. Closed-End Continuity
“A party alleging a RICO violation may demonstrate continuity over a closed period by proving a series of related predicates extending over a substantial period of time.”
H.J. Inc.,
Where, as here, a RICO plaintiff alleges mail or wire fraud, the plaintiff “must prove that the defendants engaged in ‘(i) a scheme to defraud (ii) to get money or property, (in) furthered by the use of the mail or wires.’ ”
U.S. Certified Merchs.,
Plaintiff alleges that Defendants committed numerous racketeering acts with the purpose of depriving WWE of the honest services of one or both of its licensing agents — Defendants Shenker/SSAI and Bell — in order to procure valuable licensing rights, and then Defendants covered up their scheme. These allegations can be broken down into five categories: (i) initial efforts by the Jakks Defendants to corrupt Shenker and SSAI, conduct that allegedly took place between November 1995 and November 1997, all to procure toy licenses from WWE and all before the purported corruption of Bell; (ii) conduct by the Jakks Defendants and Shenker/SSAI to corruptly use Bell to procure additional WWE toy licenses between November 1997 and June 1998; (iii) efforts by the Jakks Defendants, the THQ Defendants, the LLC, Shenker, SSAI, and Bell to corruptly procure the license for WWE video-games, conduct that spans from January 1998 through August 1998, just after the LLC obtained the videogame license from WWE and when some Jakks Defendants are alleged to have arranged for bribery payments; (iv) surreptitious payments from Shenker/SSAI to Bell from January 1998 until December 2001, and royalty payments, which arose from various licenses, paid to Jakks Defendants by the THQ Defendants and the LLC from 1999 until at least January 2005 and beyond; and (v) efforts by Shenker, Bell, and some of the THQ and Jakks Defendants, after Bell’s termination from WWE in March 2000 and the termination of the WWE/SSAI contract in June 2000, to conceal their purportedly corrupt activities, all of which occurred between October 2000, when SSAI initiated a lawsuit against WWE in Connecticut, and July 2004.
Turning to the first category of alleged misconduct, which the Jakks Defendants have described as the “front end” of the alleged RICO scheme, Plaintiff claims that the scheme began after Jakks secured the domestic toy license from WWE on October 24, 1995 (“the domestic toy license”). (Am. Compl. ¶ 35.) The initial acquisition of the domestic toy license is not alleged to have been the result of any self-dealing by or corruption of Shenker/SSAI. Indeed, as described in the Amended Complaint, the license was granted after Jakks made an approach to Shenker and Bell at a toy convention and merely asked if it could obtain such a license.
(Id.)
Thereafter, according to Plaintiff, Bell and Shenker presented a “deal memo” to WWE, which resulted in WWE agreeing to grant the license to Jakks.
(Id.)
The absence of any illicit conduct in connection with the domestic toy license is highlighted by the subsequent allegation in the Amended
The first step in this corruption plan, according to Plaintiff, was for Jakks to engage Shenker/SSAI to represent its interests in connection with a perfumed doll deal that did not involve any WWE licensing rights. (Id. ¶42.) These discussions began in November 1995, just one month after Jakks obtained the domestic toy license, and took place at the same time that SSAI was acting as one of WWE’s nonexclusive outside licensing agents. (Id. ¶¶ 38-40, 42.) According to Plaintiff, Defendant Berman linked the perfumed doll deal with Jakks’ interest in using Shenker/SSAI to procure additional licensing rights from WWE. (Id. ¶ 42.) On January 3,1996, Jakks and Shenker entered into an agency agreement for the perfumed doll deal. (Id. ¶ 44.) In the cover letter transmitting the contract, Jakks is alleged to have asked Shenker how soon he could get an amended domestic toy license from WWE. (Id.) On February 12, 1996, Jakks paid Shenker an advance of $2500 for the perfumed doll deal. (Id. ¶¶ 46, 48.)
According to the Amended Complaint, just two days after Jakks advanced the $2500 to SSAI for its work on the perfumed doll deal, Jakks officials discussed their desire to retain SSAI to act as Jakks’ agent in obtaining additional WWE licensing rights. (Id. ¶ 49.) This allegedly was done against the advice of outside legal counsel for Jakks, who supposedly told Jakks that it would be a conflict of interest for SSAI to simultaneously represent WWE and Jakks in connection with WWE’s licenses and that no such arrangement could be made without notice to WWE. (Id. ¶ 50.) That notice apparently was never given. (Id. ¶ 51) Three months later, SSAI recommended to WWE that it grant Jakks the additional licensing rights sought by Jakks in the domestic toy deal. (Id. ¶ 56.) According to Plaintiff, “Shenker made no attempt to negotiate better terms for WWE and recommended the additional rights be given to Jakks on the terms offered by Jakks and without determining if competitors of Jakks would pay more for the rights.” (Id.) 3 Further, the Amended Complaint alleges that Jakks used its relationship with Shenker/SSAI to obtain a second amendment to the domestic toy license in January 1997 and an international toy license in February 1997. (Id. ¶¶ 62-67, 71.)
SSAI became WWE’s exclusive outside licensing agent on March 7, 1997, whereby SSAI would earn a portion of the royalties paid to WWE stemming from licenses SSAI procured. (Id. ¶¶ 72, 77) Thereafter, Jakks’ alleged scheme evolved and grew when Shenker approached Bell in or around November 1997 to bring him into the scheme. (Id. ¶¶ 80-82.) This begins the second category of conduct. During this time, the Jakks Defendants allegedly made a series of bribery payments to Shenker, some of which Shenker subsequently shared with Bell. (Id. ¶¶ 84-97.) According to Plaintiff, these payments resulted in a third amendment to the domestic toy license that Jakks originally procured in 1995. The third amendment was granted in January 1998, and it gave Jakks the rights to certain action figures. (Id. ¶¶ 93, 249(a)(xiv).)
At the same time it was pursuing amendments to the WWE toy licenses in
Plaintiffs Amended Complaint alleges that the scheme extended at least until January 2005 (when the Amended Complaint was presumably drafted) and lives on to this day because Jakks, THQ, and the LLC continue to share the proceeds from the allegedly fraudulently obtained videogame license. (Id. ¶¶ 149-64, 173-85, 249(b)(lxvii).) Plaintiff also claims Shenker/SSAI made covert payments to Bell until December 2001. (Id. ¶ 249(b)(xxvi).) Both of these series of payments, according to Plaintiff, qualify as money laundering predicates, and collectively comprisé the fourth category of racketeering acts. 4 The fifth category involves allegations that the Jakks Defendants, Shenker, and Bell concealed their fraudulent activities from late 2000 until at least 2004, all in connection with litigation between SSAI and WWE in Connecticut. (Id. ¶¶ 186-241.) Thus, from Plaintiffs vantage point, Defendants’ pattern of racketeering activity began in late 1995 and continues until this day.
Defendants argue that the alleged scheme could not have started in 1995 because Bell did not receive his first bribe until January 1998. (Mem. of Law in Supp. of the Jakks Defs.’ Mot. to Dismiss the Am. Compl. 8 (“Jakks.Mem.”).) According to Defendants, the alleged efforts by the Jakks Defendants to deprive WWE of the honest services of Shenker and SSAI prior to the corruption of Bell are of no import because Bell was the gatekeeper for the licensing process. (Id. at 9.) Without Bell’s corrupt influence, according to Defendants, all the bribery in the world of Shenker and SSAI would be worthless as Bell was the WWE official responsible for recommending to WWE which licenses to grant. For example, the Jakks Defendants argue that the 1995 perfumed doll deal did not involve any racketeering acts and that even if it did, the deal was unrelated to the later bribery scheme involving Shenker and Bell. Thus, in the view of the Jakks Defendants, the alleged RICO scheme could not have begun until January 1998, when Bell allegedly was first brought into the scheme. 5
Defendants also challenge the two categories that make up the back end of the
Plaintiff insists that although allegedly having Bell in Defendants’ pocket made it easier for the Jakks Defendants to obtain the licensing rights they sought, the corruption of Bell was only part of a scheme that involved broader efforts to persuade Shenker/SSAI to corruptly represent Jakks’ interests in obtaining WWE licenses. According to Plaintiff, as one of WWE’s nonexclusive licensing agents, SSAI had a duty to avoid self-dealing, or at least to disclose its self-dealing. Thus, in Plaintiffs view, when Shenker agreed to have SSAI represent Jakks in the perfumed doll deal while he was being pitched to represent Jakks in its efforts to obtain additional WWE licenses, he breached his duty of loyalty to WWE. And, according to Plaintiff, Jakks’ deliberate effort to tie the payments on the perfumed doll deal to its efforts to procure, through SSAI, the additional WWE licenses was a fraud aimed at depriving WWE of the honest services of its agent. In Plaintiffs view, the self-dealing was even more problematic when SSAI agreed to become Jakks’ agent in all future deals with WWE without notice to WWE.
In
United States v. Rybicki,
[T]he term “scheme or artifice to deprive another of the intangible right to honest services” in section 1346, when applied to private actors, means a scheme or artifice to use the mails or wires to enable an officer or employee of a private entity (or a person in a relationship that gives rise to a duty of loyalty comparable to that owed by employees to employers) purporting to act for and in the interests of his or her employer (or of the other person to whom the duty of loyalty is owed) secretly to act in his or her or the defendant’s own interests instead, accompanied by a material misrepresentation made or omission of information disclosed to the employer or other person.
Id.
at 141-42. The en banc Court further noted that a “scheme or artifice to defraud” in private-sector honest services cases falls into two categories— bribes/kickbacks and self-dealing.
Id.
at 139. “In the bribery or kickback cases, a defendant who has or seeks some sort of business relationship or transaction with the victim secretly pays the victim’s employee (or causes such a payment to be
Therefore, in order to show that a mail or wire fraud has occurred under Section 1346, a plaintiff must demonstrate at least that there was: “(1) a scheme or artifice to defraud; (2) for the purpose of knowingly and intentionally depriving another of the intangible right of honest services as thus defined; (3) where the misrepresentations (or omissions) made by the defendants are material in that they have the natural tendency to influence or are capable of influencing the employer to change its behavior; and (4) use of the mails or wires in furtherance of the scheme.” Id. at 147. In self-dealing cases, “there may also be a requirement of proof that the conflict caused, or at least was capable of causing, some detriment” to the entity to which the defendant owed a duty of loyalty on par with what an employee owes an employer. Id. at 142.
In light of
Rybicki,
one pertinent question here is whether, at the time of the perfumed doll deal, SSAI was in a relationship with WWE such that SSAI owed WWE a duty of loyalty comparable to what an employee owes an employer. The Amended Complaint is stingy with the details regarding the relationship between WWE and SSAI from April 1995 to March 1997. According to the Amended Complaint, WWE retained SSAI as a “nonexclusive outside licensing agent” in or around 1995. (Am. Compl. 1132.) As a nonexclusive licensing agent, SSAI was able to “procure and negotiate licensing contraets[,]” which would then be reviewed
It is curious that the Amended Complaint provides no specifics about the contract between WWE and SSAI in April 1995. In fact, there is no allegation that there even was a written contract between WWE and SSAI. Nonetheless, it is clear that while SSAI had no power to bind WWE to any licensing agreement, it was authorized to negotiate licensing agreements that it would present to WWE. WWE reviewed and had to approve all licensing deals that SSAI, or any of its other licensing agents, proposed to WWE. Even when SSAI became WWE’s exclusive licensing agent in March 1997, the contract did not grant SSAI “any right to accept licensing proposals or to execute particular agreements on behalf of WWE.” (Id. ¶ 75.) Rather, SSAI “was to present all licensing proposals it procured and negotiated in deal memo format to Bell, who in turn would recommend to WWE whether to accept the proposal.” (Id.) SSAI only received payments for those deals that were executed by WWE.
Notwithstanding the lack of specific allegations about the contractual relationship between WWE and SSAI, the Amended Complaint avers that SSAI owed a fiduciary duty to WWE. A “fiduciary duty arises when one has reposed trust or confidence in the integrity or fidelity or another who thereby gains a resulting superiority of influence over the first, or when one assumes control and responsibility over another.”
Tex. Liquids Holdings, LLC v. Key Bank Nat’l Ass’n,
No. 05-CV-5070,
“[F]iduciary relationships typically do not arise between parties engaging in arms length business transactions[.]”
Abercrombie v. Andrew Coll.,
The Court fully recognizes that the existence of a fiduciary relationship “normally depends on the facts of a particular relationship, [and] therefore a claim alleging the existence of a fiduciary duty usually is not subject to dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6).”
Abercrombie,
Ultimately, the Amended Complaint fails to allege that SSAI was empowered to act on behalf of WWE, or otherwise dominated or controlled WWE between April 1995 and February 1997. In fact, even after SSAI became WWE’s exclusive licensing agent, it was never empowered to bind WWE to a licensing agreement. Instead, between April 1995 and February 1997, SSAI was merely among those businesses with which WWE contracted to find potential licensees and to propose to WWE the terms of a potential agreement between that licensee and WWE.
7
If a deal
Jakks argues that the absence of a fiduciary relationship between WWE and SSAI between 1995 and 1997 prevents Plaintiff from nudging its case across the goal line. If this case had been filed outside the Second Circuit, Jakks might be right. For example, the Tenth Circuit has noted that the Section 1346 “right to honest services is not violated by every breach of contract, breach of duty, conflict of interest, or misstatement made in the course of dealing.”
United States v. Welch,
The Second Circuit, however, has not yet adopted the same view. If anything, strong currents run against Defendants’ position on this point. Five years before the Second Circuit’s en banc decision in
Rybicki,
a panel of the Circuit held in
United States v. Sancho
that Section 1346 “does not require the existence of a fiduciary relationship” and therefore upheld the conviction of a defendant who sought to bribe an undercover agent posing as a consultant to another company.
See
Neither
Rybicki
nor its treatment of
Sancho,
however, should be viewed as embracing Defendants’ view that Section 1346 applies only where there is a breach of fiduciary duty. This point is made evident by a concurrence in
Rybicki,
and the majority’s reaction to that concurrence. In her opinion concurring in the judgment, Judge Raggi observed that, “[wjhile a particular relationship may shed light on whether one person owes another honest services, the language of § 1346 indicates that the critical factor is the type of service at issue, not the relationship of the parties.”
Rybicki,
[A] future case may require us to consider whether there is any principled reason to distinguish between an employee and an arms-length contractor when they engage in identical fraud schemes with the specific intent to deprive a victim of services whose value depends upon honest performance — for example, providing a due diligence report, a compliance certification, or an environmental assessment.
Id. Judge Raggi therefore elected not to join in the majority’s decision to re-affirm the Second Circuit’s decision in Handakas to the extent it could be “interpreted to foreclose the prosecution of a contractor for fraudulently depriving a person of ... honest services.” Id.
Judge Sack, writing for the
Ry-bicki
majority, limited his comment about
Handakas
to stating that the defendant in that case “was not an employee of a private entity purporting to act for and in the interests of his or her employer; neither was he rendering services in which the relationship between him and the person to whom the service was rendered gave rise to a duty of loyalty comparable to that owed by employees to employers.”
Id.
at 144. Thus, “only ... because of the nature of the services to be rendered in
Handakas,
[did] an intangible right to
Applying
Rybicki
to this case, the Court concludes that Plaintiff has made sufficient allegations to state a claim that, as of April 1995, SSAI owed Plaintiff a right of honest services under Section 1346. Even though WWE did not make SSAI its exclusive licensing agent until March 1997, it did employ SSAI to negotiate licensing agreements that would maximize WWE’s profit. In this capacity, SSAI performed a role similar to that of Bell, who was an employee of WWE.
See
Restatement (Third) of Agency § 8.03 (2006) (“An agent has a duty not to deal with the principal as or on behalf of an adverse party in a transaction connected with the agency relationship”). Both were to negotiate and propose to WWE potential licensing deals. While Bell was bound by the terms of his employment contract not to accept fees or payment from any potential licensees, it cannot be said at this stage that SSAI did not owe WWE a similar duty, either to refuse payment by a prospective licensee or to report to WWE the acceptance of any such payments. Moreover, while Plaintiff alleges that economic harm resulted from the corruption of SSAI’s honest services (more on that below), it is enough to say at this stage of the case that WWE has sufficiently alleged that there was at least the potential for some economic harm as result of SSAI’s double-dealing.
See United States v. Gotti
The Jakks Defendants further claim, however, that even if this first category of conduct (encompassing the time between November 1995, the date of the perfumed doll deal, and November 1997, the period during which Bell allegedly joined the corruption scheme) constituted a scheme to deprive WWE of the honest services of its brokers, the conduct involving the perfumed doll deal is insufficiently related to other allegedly unlawful acts to constitute a pattern of racketeering activity. “Relat
Defendants contend that the perfumed doll deal is unrelated because it predates Bell’s involvement in the alleged scheme by two years and does not involve the Jakks Defendants’ efforts to procure WWE licenses. The first claim is irrelevant; the second is inaccurate, at least under the facts assumed at this stage of the case. As noted, Plaintiff has adequately alleged that the Jakks Defendants deprived WWE of the honest services of SSAI/Shenker, and that their efforts predated the corruption of Bell. While the allegedly sordid cooption of Bell may have significantly improved the chances that the scheme to illegally obtain the WWE licenses would succeed, the alleged conduct antedating Bell’s involvement is enough to support the claim that the Jakks Defendants contravened Section 1346. This includes the alleged actions of the Jakks Defendants to convince SSAI to act on their behalf in obtaining WWE licenses, even though SSAI had contracted to represent WWE’s interests. One of the ways the Jakks Defendants allegedly sought to entice SSAI to represent their interests was to provide SSAI an advance on the perfumed doll deal at the same time that they expressed their desire to have SSAI help them obtain certain other WWE licenses. Thus, the perfumed doll deal smells of a RICO violation precisely because, as alleged, the Jakks Defendants themselves linked that deal to their efforts to corruptly persuade SSAI/Shenker that it was in their financial interests to act on the Jakks Defendants’ behalf in procuring the WWE licenses without informing WWE of that relationship. More particularly, the perfumed doll deal properly is deemed a racketeering act because it involved the same or similar purposes, results, participants, victims, and methods as the rest of the alleged scheme, all of which purportedly amounted to an effort to corrupt WWE’s agents and thereby to procure the lucrative licenses. It is true, of course, that the scheme had not been fully developed, either in terms of participants or results, but, as alleged, it adequately marks the starting point of the efforts by the core members of the alleged enterprise to obtain those licenses.
See Procter & Gamble Co.,
The Jakks Defendants further attack the adequacy of the front-end allegations by stating that Plaintiff has improperly recast a single, narrow scheme into a pattern of racketeering. It is true, as the
In this case, Plaintiffs Amended Complaint alleges racketeering acts that involve several different contracts — the domestic toy license, the international toy license, and the videogame license — each of which, according to Plaintiff, resulted in cognizable injury. As alleged, Plaintiffs claim is that there were separate, albeit related, efforts to procure these different licenses between November 1995 and June 1998. Thus, Defendants fail in their valiant efforts to recast Plaintiffs Amended Complaint as involving only a single scheme that involves one victim suffering from cumulative injuries.
See Uniroyal,
Further, Plaintiffs allegations establish that, beginning in 1996, the victim, purpose, and methods of commission of the scheme were the same, and the alleged front-end racketeering acts were not isolated.
See Jacobson v. Cooper,
The back-end of the alleged racketeering acts includes the fourth and fifth categories of conduct described above. The fourth category involves two types of financial transactions: (i) the collection of royalty payments on the licenses involving the LLC, the THQ Defendants, and the Jakks Defendants; and (ii) the secret payments from Shenker/SSAI to Bell until December 2001. Plaintiff claims that each type of payment is an example of money laundering. (Id. ¶ 249(b); PL’s Mem. of Law. in Opp’n to Defs.’ Mots, to Dismiss 18 (“Pl.’s Opp’n”).) In particular, Plaintiff asserts that the racketeering acts continue to this day because the LLC still pays royalties to Jakks each quarter. (Am. Compl. ¶ 252.) The fifth category involves the alleged efforts by Bell and Shenker, well after they were terminated by WWE, to conceal the bribery scheme through perjury and other false statements during the Connecticut state court litigation.
As to the Shenker/SSAI/Bell payments, there can be little dispute that Plaintiffs allegations properly state racketeering acts and thus extend each of Shenker’s, SSAI’s, and Bell’s involvement in the enterprise until December 2001. Simply put, to state a money laundering violation under 18 U.S.C. § 1956(a)(l)(B)(i), a plaintiff need only allege that there are proceeds from specified unlawful activity, known by the accused defendant, and that the defendant conducted or attempted to conduct a financial transaction knowing the transaction was intended to conceal or disguise the nature or source of the funds.
See United States v. Szur,
While Plaintiffs allegations regarding the Shenker/SSAI/Bell payments extend their racketeering acts until December 2001 (only as to those defendants), the claims regarding the royalty payments fail as a matter of law to extend the predicate acts. Though money laundering is a racketeering act,
see
18 U.S.C. § 1961(1)(B), Plaintiffs claim that the THQ Defendants, the LLC and the Jakks Defendants engaged in money laundering is wanting.
As an additional argument for extending the racketeering acts into this decade, Plaintiff cites concealment by Shenker, Bell, the Jakks Defendants, and the THQ Defendants in connection with the civil litigation in Connecticut state court. (Am. Compl. ¶ 195.) Specifically, Plaintiff alleges that these defendants destroyed evidence of the bribery, provided perjured testimony, made false statements to auditors, and concealed documents.
(Id.
¶¶ 191-239.) These allegations, however, fail as a matter of law to extend the pattern of racketeering acts. It is true that acts of concealment may sometimes constitute a predicate act for the purposes of RICO.
See United States v. Coiro,
Here, some defendants allegedly lied to Plaintiff and withheld documents to cover up an already-completed scheme. In fact, these acts were allegedly done long after Bell and Shenker were terminated in 2000, for reasons unrelated to their alleged criminal conduct at issue in this case. Because no bribery activities were alleged to be ongoing by 2000, any alleged coverup could not have been intended or designed to further the still-alive scheme, but instead only to cover up past misconduct. Therefore, the alleged obstruction, perjury and false statements in 2000 and beyond — shocking as they may be — do not extend the pattern of racketeering activity.
See Ray Larsen Assocs.,
Accordingly, as to the Jakks Defendants, Shenker, and SSAI, the scheme began in November 1995, when the Jakks Defendants proposed to Shenker, at the time he was paid for the perfumed doll deal, that Shenker serve as Jakks’ agent in procuring the WWE toy license. (Am. Compl. ¶ 42.) For Bell, the scheme began in November 1997, and for the THQ Defendants and the LLC, it began in April 1998. As discussed above, neither the coverup nor the continued royalty payments constitute predicate acts in furtherance of the scheme, but the Shenker/SSAI payments to Bell do qualify as money laundering/stolen property predicates. Thus, for the Jakks Defendants, the scheme lasted slightly less than three years, ending with the last bribery payment allegedly from them on August 3,1998. For Shenker and SSAI, the pattern of racketeering conduct lasted for more than six years, from November 1995 until December 2001, while for Bell, the racketeering conduct extended from November 1997 until December 2001. For the LLC and the THQ Defendants, however, the racketeering conduct lasted approximately four months (at most). Therefore, the Second Circuit’s two-year temporal guideline is met as to Shenker, SSAI, Bell, and the Jakks Defendants.
See Lavian v. Haghnazari,
The Amended Complaint’s failure to allege legally-sufficient racketeering acts lasting for more than four months by the THQ Defendants and the LLC is fatal to Plaintiffs efforts to keep them in the substantive RICO cause of action under Section' 1962(c) on a claim of closed-ended continuity. “The focus of section 1962(c) is on the individual patterns of racketeering activity engaged in by a defendant, rather than on the collective activities of the members of the enterprise.”
Jerome M. Sobel & Co. v. Fleck,
No. 03-CV-1041,
The THQ Defendants allegedly joined the RICO enterprise in or shortly after April 1998, when they agreed to submit a joint bid with the Jakks Defendants for the videogame license. (Am. Compl. ¶ 137.) The LLC joined no earlier than April 1998, and arguably not until June 10, 1998, upon its incorporation in Delaware.
(Id.
¶ 154.) On August 3, 1998, the last bribe payment was allegedly made in connection with the videogame license.
(Id.
¶ 168.) And, for reasons explained above, because the royalty payments derived from the videogame license do not qualify as racketeering acts, there is no basis to conclude that the pattern of racketeering activity for either the THQ Defendants or the LLC lasted for more than a few months. Accordingly, their Motion to Dismiss the cause of action under Section 1962(c) should be granted, unless Plaintiff has alleged open-ended continuity as to these defendants.
See Cofacredit,
The temporal analysis, however, does not end the story for the remaining defendants, as “the court [also] must examine the overall context in which the acts took place.”
Pier Connection, Inc.,
2. Operir-Ended Continuity
A party alleging open-ended continuity must show that “the racketeering acts themselves include a specific threat of repetition extending indefinitely into the future [or] ... are part of an ongoing entity’s regular way of doing business.”
H.J. Inc.,
Plaintiff offers two arguments in support of its claim that it has adequately pled open-ended continuity. Initially, Plaintiff contends that the enterprise’s business is racketeering, and therefore it is an inherently unlawful organization. In particular, according to Plaintiff, because “[t]his Court has already held that [Plaintiff] has adequately pleaded that Defendants engaged in an association-in-fact RICO enterprise, which was formed solely for the purpose of committing the predicate acts alleged in [Plaintiffs] Amended Complaint,” it has sufficiently alleged that Defendants’ business “is clearly ‘an enterprise whose business is racketeering activity.’ ” (Pl.’s Opp’n 25.) This reasoning is circular, as it suggests that once a RICO plaintiff has adequately pled a RICO enterprise, it has automatically pled open-ended continuity.
11
In fact, courts regularly distinguish between “a long-term association that exists for criminal purposes” and a legitimate business that conducts its business through unlawful acts.
See H.J. Inc.,
In this case, the enterprise is made up of several businesses (among others, Jakks, SSAI, and THQ), none of which is alleged to conduct itself primarily through racketeering activity. In fact, for example, Plaintiff avers that “Jakks is primarily in the business of selling action figures and toys[,]” (Am. Compl. ¶ 10), while THQ is said to be “in the business of videogame marketing and sales[,]”
(Id.
¶ 17). According to Plaintiff, these businesses and the other individually-named defendants operated their businesses together to form an enterprise, the principal goal of which was to procure, through fraud and corruption, certain licenses from Plaintiff. But, this is not the same as saying that Jakks, THQ, SSAI and the other components of the alleged enterprise normally did business via racketeering. On this point, for example, the allegations regarding the
legitimate
perfumed doll deal and THQ’s
miti&lly-legitimate
efforts to procure the videogame license critically undermine Plaintiffs position. Therefore, Plaintiff must allege, but does not, that the racketeering acts are Defendants’ “regular way of conducting [their otherwise] ongoing legitimate businesses].”
H.J.
Inc.,
Plaintiff has a fail-back position, however, which is that because the enterprise engaged in bribery and money laundering, which are inherently unlawful acts, it has established open-ended continuity.
(See
Pl.’s Opp’n 25-26.) While embezzlement, extortion, bribery, and money laundering are in pursuit of inherently unlawful goals,
see United States v. Coiro,
Here, as noted, the enterprise is comprised of mostly legitimate businesses. Moreover, at oral argument, Plaintiff conceded that Defendants’ goal was to obtain a limited number of licenses, and “that’s it.” In other words, what Plaintiff has alleged, even taking all of its claims as true, is an inherently terminable scheme
D. Injury
Shenker, SSAI, and the Jakks Defendants argue that Plaintiff lacks standing to bring a RICO claim under 18 U.S.C. § 1962(e), because it “fails to allege any pecuniary injury to its ‘business or property by reason of a violation of the RICO statute.” (Jakks Mem. 19 (citing 18 U.S.C. § 1964(c)).) Specifically, these defendants contend that (i) any lost profits injury suffered by Plaintiff is not cognizable under New York law; and (ii) Plaintiffs alleged injury, even if permissible under New York law, is too speculative under RICO. 14
Plaintiff alleges that as a proximate result of Defendants’ racketeering acts, it was deprived of the intangible right of honest services from Shenker and Bell, and as a further result, it received lower royalty rates from its toy and videogame licenses. Specifically, Plaintiff claims that because of Defendants’ alleged misconduct, Plaintiff was denied the business opportunity of between 50-66% more in royalties from a non-corrupt licensing arrangement. (Am. Compl. ¶ 163.) 15 This, Plaintiff claims, is sufficient to plead a RICO injury.
“The RICO civil liability provision confers standing on [a]ny person injured in his business or property by reason of a violation of section 1962.”
Hecht v. Commerce Clearing House, Inc.,
As discussed above, Plaintiff alleges violations of section 1962(c), satisfying the first factor. As to the second factor, Plaintiff alleges that it suffered an injury to its business or property in the form of the loss of the honest services of its agents Shenker and Bell due to the bribes allegedly paid by some defendants, and in the form of lost opportunity to pursue competitive licensing offers. The moving defendants contend that if Plaintiff suffered an injury, it is in the form of lost profits, and that under New York law, a plaintiff cannot recover lost profits in a fraud action.
See First Nationwide Bank v. Gelt Funding Corp.,
As pled, Plaintiff alleges a cognizable injury resulting from Defendants’ alleged fraud in the form of lost business opportunities, which New York law recognizes as a remedy for fraud. It is true that in New York a fraud victim may not recover lost future profits.
See Lama Holding Co. v. Smith Barney Inc.,
However, Defendants further argue that even if Plaintiffs injury is of a kind cognizable under New York law, its claims of injury are legally deficient under RICO because they are speculative and unquantifiable. Indeed, as a general matter, even if a plaintiff sufficiently pleads an injury compensable under New York law, it does not mean that plaintiff has satisfied its pleading obligations under RICO.
See Cougar Audio,
Here, Defendants contend that Plaintiffs allegations involve an unquantifiable “potential opportunity to earn ... profits.” (Jakks Mem. 20.) Plaintiff counters by claiming that based on other competitive licenses, the royalty rates it is receiving under its videogame license are 50% to 66% lower than what it could have earned from a competitive bid, thus costing Plaintiff millions of dollars. (Am. Compl. ¶¶ 163-64.) From this and other allegations, Plaintiff boldly asserts that the “calculation of damages on this branch is remarkably simple.” (Pl.’s Opp’n 31.) This is a curious claim, because Plaintiff does not make such a calculation in its Amended Complaint. In fact, it proffers a noticeably wide range of potentially higher royalty rates (50%-66%) it could have earned in a non-corrupt bidding process, and only regarding the videogame license. Nothing substantial is said about the range of lost royalties from the toy licenses. Moreover, Plaintiffs estimate regarding the video-game license, as discussed below, causes Plaintiff all kinds of trouble in rebutting Defendants’ statute of limitations claims. In any event, and to be clear, the problem with Plaintiffs claim of RICO injury is not that it cannot claim lost business opportunities as a result of Defendants’ alleged misconduct. Instead, the legal infirmity derives from the fact that there is no plausible set of facts, consistent with Plaintiffs allegations, that makes the alleged injury sufficiently concrete to state a RICO claim.
The calculation of damages from any lost business opportunities in connection with the licenses will necessarily require some proof as to what a non-corrupt bidding process would have yielded. Regarding the videogame license, Plaintiffs only argument is that it might be able to establish some quantifiable royalty stream from the preliminary interest expressed in the license by THQ, and that dismissal is inappropriate because the information about what THQ might have done is uniquely in its possession. However, Plaintiffs own allegations merely suggest that THQ had aspired generally to provide licensors with royalty rates higher than what the LLC paid to WWE (19% — 22%). Indeed, the Amended Complaint provides few details about any proposal that THQ discussed with Plaintiff before being approached by Jakks, including what the terms of that deal would have been, whether that deal would have been superior to the bid given to the LLC, what the length of any deal would have been, or what THQ’s capacity was to perform under any such deal. The capacity to perform is critical because any licensing agreement that THQ (or any other bidder) might have signed would only guarantee royalties on sales made by the licensee. Thus, a bidder that might have guaranteed less of a royalty rate might still have been better for WWE’s bottom
Moreover, in its response to Defendants’ Motion, Plaintiff ignores its own allegations that there were other potential bidders for the videogame license. This omission, perhaps done to avoid further damaging Plaintiffs response to the statute of limitations argument, serves only to complicate Plaintiffs efforts to establish RICO standing. For example, in late March 1998, a corrupt Bell is alleged to have told a company called Acclaim that he would not even entertain a proposal to renew the videogame license then in place. (Am. Compl. ¶ 109.) Acclaim appealed this move to WWE senior management, who advised Acclaim that it could submit a bid. However, before the Acclaim bid was submitted, Bell recommended to senior management that the license be given to Jakks. (Id. ¶ 110.) Unfortunately, the Amended Complaint says nothing about the terms of the Jakks bid, and, in particular, whether it provided royalty rates that were better than what WWE had been receiving from Acclaim. This omission is inexplicable since WWE presumably has access to that information. Instead of providing this available information, Plaintiff only alleges that the terms of the proposal “were well below then prevailing market rates for a videogame license of the quality of WWE.” (Id.) Apparently, WWE management ignored the obviously low royalty rates to be paid by Jakks (we still do not know if they were above or below what Acclaim had paid or had offered to pay) and approved the deal. (Id. ¶ 114.)
At about the time WWE senior management approved the Jakks proposal, two other bidders (Activision and THQ) entered the scene. Though ignored or stiff-armed by Shenker and/or Bell, both Activision and THQ are alleged to have submitted informal proposals that were “clearly superior” to the deal WWE had already accepted from Jakks (how superior we are not told). (Id. ¶¶ 131-32.) These proposals never made it to WWE senior management, though, thanks to the alleged efforts of Bell and Shenker, who instead shared the bid information with Jakks. (Id. ¶ 134-35.) Eventually, to hide the bribery scheme and protect its interest in obtaining the bid, Jakks reached out to THQ and persuaded THQ to submit a joint bid for the videogame license, a bid that concededly was “comparable to Activision’s initial informal proposal.” (Id. ¶ 145.) It was this proposal that Bell and Shenker submitted to WWE senior management for approval. (Id. ¶¶ 146, 151.) Apparently, while this revised bid was being considered, Activision submitted a “more formalized version of [its] initial informal proposal to Shenker.” (Id. ¶ 153.) Again, no specifics about the royalties in this proposal are discussed in the Amended Complaint, and, in particular, there is no allegation that this bid was superior, let alone of how superior it was, to the joint Jakks-THQ bid. All that is alleged is that, “upon information and belief’ the bid “understated the amount Activision would have been willing to pay to obtain the videogame license.” (Id.)
It bears emphasizing that in its Amended Complaint and in its Memorandum of Law, Plaintiffs only claim regarding the injury from the bidding process for the videogame license is that it was cheated out of a royalty rate that could have been 50% to 66% higher. This is not based not on anything that Activision or Acclaim are alleged to have bid, let alone might have been able to deliver, but instead on what THQ is alleged to have thought it might
From the collection of Plaintiffs allegations, voluminous as they may be, the Court finds that Plaintiff has not alleged an injury sufficiently quantifiable to establish standing under RICO. First, essential to Plaintiffs injury claims is some ability to project what would have come out of the bidding processes for the various licenses. Yet, even taking the allegations and all reasonable inferences from them as true, Plaintiff does not have a crystal ball or any plausible way to allege facts that would establish the outcome of the bidding process. While it may be, for example, that Activision had made a preliminary offer, and might have intended to make other offers, there is no way to predict what would have happened if Activision, Acclaim, THQ and even others, had engaged in a full and fair bidding process.
See Imagineering,
Second, Plaintiff has no apparent way of assessing the profits any winning licensee could have produced for Plaintiff, as a more favorable royalty
rate
would only benefit Plaintiff if the vendor could manufacture and market the videogames and toys on a mass scale equal to or better than the Jakks/LLC bids. This is not a situation where the facts necessary to plead injury are peculiarly within defendants’ knowledge.
See Transworld Mech., Inc.,
E. Statute of Limitations
Defendants argue that Plaintiffs RICO claim is time-barred. RICO does not provide for a statute of limitations, but the Supreme Court has held that civil RICO claims are subject to a four-year statute of limitations.
See Agency Holding Corp. v. Malley-Duff & Assocs., Inc.,
The first step in the statute of limitations analysis is to determine when Plaintiff sustained the alleged injuries for which it seeks redress.
See Merrill Lynch,
Plaintiff alleges that it was injured by the seven licenses granted to Jakks and/or the LLC between April 22, 1996 and June 24, 1998, because they provided for below-market royalty rates and/or profits, all due to the allegedly unlawful activities of Defendants, which denied Plaintiff the honest services of its agents. 18 Plaintiff claims that, in the absence of the corrupt bidding process, each license invariably would have been more lucrative, as more bidders could and would have participated in the process, thus driving up financial gains for Plaintiff.
Defendant argues that Plaintiff should have discovered the injuries Plaintiff allegedly suffered because of the alleged racketeering acts. “An injury is ‘discoverable’ when a plaintiff has constructive notice of facts sufficient to create a duty to investigate further into the matter.”
Congregacion de La Mision Provincia de Venezuela v. Curi,
Regarding the toy licenses granted to Jakks, Plaintiff alleges the following in its Amended Complaint: (i) as of 1996, the “competitive environment among toy companies seeking intellectual property licenses was intense[,]” (Am. Compl. ¶ 58); (ii) Playmates was one of the three top competitors in this intensely competitive market,
(id.);
(iii) in June 1996, Playmates was granted a license by WWE for certain domestic action figures and a right of first negotiation/last refusal to manufacture and distribute these action figures internationally,
(id.
¶¶ 59, 61); (iv) on January 21, 1997, approximately seven months after granting certain licensing rights to Playmates, WWE granted — upon Shenker’s allegedly corrupt recommendation — conflicting licensing rights to Jakks,
(id.
¶¶ 59, 62-69); (v) on January 30,1997, Playmates complained in a letter to Bell — who Plaintiff alleges had not yet joined the scheme — about the grant of conflicting rights to Jakks,
(id.
¶¶ 70, 79-80); (vi) on February 10, 1997, WWE and Jakks entered into an agreement granting Jakks an international toy license, with no apparent notice to Playmates to exercise its right to negotiate for such a license,
(id.
¶ 71); (vii) on November 6, 1997, Bell absolved Play
Regarding the videogame license, the Amended Complaint contains the following allegations: (i) as of January 1998, Acclaim was granted the videogame license, which Bell previously told Acclaim would be renewed with “no problem[,]” (id. ¶¶ 101, 107); (ii) on March 25, 1998, Bell “advised Acclaim that he would not even listen to any proposal that Acclaim .would make for the renewal of its. license[,]” (id. ¶ 109); (iii) upon hearing this news from Bell, Acclaim “went over Bell’s head and complained to senior management at WWE that it was not being permitted to submit a renewal proposal,]” (id.); (iv) WWE senior. management advised Acclaim that it could submit a renewal proposal, (id.); (v) on March 30, 1998, five days after Acclaim complained to senior management and was told it could submit a proposal for the videogame license, Bell sent senior management a memorandum recommending that the license be granted to Jakks on terms “well below then prevailing market rates for a videogame license of the quality of WWE[,]” (id. ¶ 110); (vi) on April 7, 1998, Activision wrote Bell to express its interest to “move promptly to secure the” license on “the most competitive terms[,]” (id. ¶ 128); (vii) on April 8, 1998, WWE senior management approved the deal memo granting the videogame license to Jakks, (id. ¶ 114), apparently not asking about Acclaim’s bid; (viii) on April 16, 1998, THQ met with Bell and Shenker to express an interest in making a bid for the videogame license, (id. ¶ 129); (ix) on April 17, 1998, hoping to dissuade Activision from bidding, Shenker met with Activision representatives, but he refused to give them any terms for the videogame license, (id. ¶ 130); (x) Activision and THQ both continued their pursuit of the license, (id. ¶¶ 131-32); (xi) to protect its bribery scheme, and ensure that it would get the license, Jakks approached THQ and corruptly persuaded it to join in a bid for the license, (id. ¶¶ 133-145); (xii) in another memorandum on May 12, 1998, Bell recommended to WWE senior management that it accept the Jakks/THQ joint bid, which contained terms more favorable to WWE, (id. ¶ 152); (xiii) even though WWE management had not been made aware of any other bid, it accepted the revised bid (which still included Jakks), and executed the licensing agreement on June 23, 1998, which was to be in effect as of June 10, 1998, (id. ¶ 157); and (xiv) the videogame license WWE approved was of “extraordinary length” (10 years with a five-year right of renewal) and guaranteed “below-market” royalties for 40-60 fiscal quarters, (id. ¶ 150).
From Plaintiffs own, detailed allegations, the Court has little difficulty in finding that a reasonable person would have been on inquiry notice of the injury Plaintiff is alleged to have suffered by no later than June 1998. The totality of Plaintiffs allegations is that within less than two years, WWE granted to Jakks, a company that apparently had none of WWE’s valuable, lucrative and market-rate licenses until 1996, seven toy and videogame licenses, all of which provided grossly unfavorable terms for WWE. In the course of granting these licenses, WWE chased away two incumbent licensees, thereby
As Plaintiff makes clear in the opening paragraph of its Amended Complaint, the injury it suffered from the corrupt bidding process was being stuck with licenses that provided “lower than competitive royalty rates.”
(Id.
¶ 1.) Even taking each of the seven licenses as a separate injury, as the Court must under the separate accrual rule, the last three of these corruptly-granted licenses were granted in June 1998, well over six years before Plaintiff initiated this lawsuit. Moreover, while it is true that Plaintiff alleges that it continues to receive the below-market royalties from these licenses to this day, these payments are not the type of “new
and
independent” injury Plaintiff must allege to make its case current. Instead, the receipt of these substandard royalties is linked to the injuries Plaintiff alleges it suffered when it granted these licenses.
See Lucent Techs.,
As to Plaintiffs first argument, the case law does not support the argument that the Court cannot dismiss the Amended Complaint on statute of limitations grounds. ‘"Where ... the facts needed for determination of when a reasonable [person] of ordinary intelligence would have been aware of the existence of fraud can be gleaned from the complaint and papers ... integral to the complaint, resolution of the issue on a motion to dismiss is appropriate.”
LC Capital Partners v. Frontier Ins. Group,
Plaintiffs second argument, regarding a heightened standard for fiduciaries, also fails. Plaintiff cites a series of cases from other circuits in which the courts seemingly articulate a relaxed standard of inquiry notice when insiders or fiduciaries are involved.
{See
Pl.’s Opp’n 37 n. 15) In the Second Circuit, however, courts agree that a party has a right to rely upon the representations of its fiduciary, but “only to a point.”
Addeo v. Braver,
Here, as early as January 1997 and as late as April/May 1998, WWE reasonably should have been suspicious of its alleged fiduciaries. Bell, before he was part of the scheme, was told by Playmates of its “concern” about the granting of a competing license to Jakks. Because of Bell’s position at WWE and because he was not yet part of the scheme, it is difficult to understand how WWE can claim to not have been on notice of a problem with granting the toy licenses to Jakks, particularly given Plaintiffs consistent claim that these licenses were all below well-established
Finally, Plaintiff argues that it has adequately pled active fraudulent concealment by Defendants, and, therefore, the statute of limitations should be tolled. “The Second Circuit has held that the ‘standard tolling exceptions apply’ to civil RICO actions.”
Merrill Lynch,
Even assuming Plaintiff has adequately pled fraudulent concealment that prevented it from discovering the scheme within the limitations period, which is dubious, it has not pled that it exercised due diligence until well after the statute of limitations had expired.
See Lucent Techs.,
F. Conspiracy to Violate RICO
Plaintiff also alleges that Defendants formed a conspiracy to violate RICO, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d). However, this cause of action fails to state a claim, both because Plaintiff has not adequately alleged a RICO injury, and because Plaintiffs claim is untimely.
See First Capital Asset Mgmt.,
G. Release/Motion to Strike
The Jakks Defendants argue that Plaintiffs claims are precluded by a General Release and Settlement Agreement (“the Release”), which was executed by WWE in 2004 in association with the completion of an audit of Jakks’ financial records (“the Audit”). The Jakks Defendants assert that the Release bars “any and all claims” “arising from or relating to the Audit,” including the present claims which “spring from the very payments [Plaintiff] admits were targeted in the Audit.” (Jakks.Mem. 35.) Plaintiff contests this interpretation of the Release, arguing that it was intended only to bar claims pertain
Where the question is one of contract interpretation, a court must begin by examining the language of the contract.
See Maryland Cas. Co. v. W.R. Grace and Co.,
It is clear from the language of the Release that the Parties intended to bar claims arising out of the Audit itself. The purpose of the Audit was to determine whether Jakks had reported all of its sales or taken unsupported deductions, and whether Jakks had overpaid WWE. The language of the Release does not remotely suggest that the Audit was intended to investigate potential bribes paid by Jakks to WWE’s agents in an effort to procure licenses at below-market rates, or to reach alleged misrepresentations made via mail and wire in an effort to allegedly deprive WWE of the honest services of its agents. Given the clear language of the Release, the Court may not consider outside evidence.
See Chevron TCI, Inc. v. Talleyrand Assocs., LLC,
No. 03-CV-4043,
H. Supplemental Jurisdiction
In this and the prior opinion and order, the Court has dismissed the federal causes of action.
22
In addition to the federal causes of action, Plaintiff has brought several causes of action under state law. Because Plaintiff and at least some of the
In the exercise of a district court’s discretion under Section 1367(c)(3), the court is to balance the traditional “values of judicial economy, convenience, fairness, and comity.”
Carnegie-Mellon Univ. v. Cohill,
In this instance, the Court finds that this is the “usual case” where the federal claims have dropped out well before discovery, let alone before any trial of this case. Moreover, the Court is aware that Plaintiff has filed an action against Defendants in Connecticut state court involving similar allegations as those in this case, thus highlighting the efficiency and comity interests that support the Court’s non-involvement in the state law causes of action. Accordingly, the Court will exercise its discretion and decline to keep the state law causes of action.
III. Conclusion
For the reasons stated herein, Defendants’ Motions to Dismiss are GRANTED with prejudice. Additionally, Plaintiffs Motion to Strike is DENIED as moot. The Clerk of Court is respectfully directed to terminate the Motions (Dkt. Nos. 144, 146,150,155,161), enter judgment in favor of Defendants, and close this case.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The Jakks Defendants are comprised of Jakks, Jakks H.K., Road Champs, Friedman, Berman, and Bennett.
. The THQ Defendants are comprised of THQ and Farrell.
. This transaction was the first amendment to the domestic toy license that Jakks had negotiated in 1995.
. Plaintiff also alleges that the Shenker/SSAI/Bell payments were made in violation of the National Stolen Property Act, 18 U.S.C. §§ 2314, 2315.
. Defendants argue that Bell's involvement did not begin until he received his first bribe in January 1998. There is support for this claim in the Amended Complaint which, citing Bell’s guilty plea to mail fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341, alleges that Bell’s involvement began "in or before January 1998.” (Am. Compl. ¶ 24.) However, the Amended Complaint also alleges that even before he received his first bribe, Bell agreed to be a part of Jakks’ corrupt effort to obtain WWE licenses, (id. ¶ 82), and that as part of that plan, in November 1997, Bell sought to buy off Playmates, a competitor of Jakks for certain toy licenses, (id. ¶ 83). Solely for the purpose of deciding the instant motion, the Court finds that the November 1997 date is the appropriate starting point for the second category of alleged misconduct.
. Defendants dismiss Plaintiff's citation to
Ry-bicki
as a “red herring,” claiming that
Rybicki
"concerned whether the statute extending the mail and wire fraud statutes to cover honest services fraud was unconstitutionally vague.” (Reply Mem. of Law in Further Supp. of the Jakks Defs.’ Mot. to Dismiss the Am. Compl. 4 ("Jakks Reply Mem.”).) Defendants are correct that the question in
Rybicki
was whether Section 1346 was unconstitutionally vague. But, in rejecting the vagueness claim, the Second Circuit construed Section 1346 to cover certain, well-defined misconduct, the description of which in that opinion provided guidance as to the elements of a violation of that mail fraud statute. Thus, for example, the majority in
Rybicki
noted that its holding meant that a panel’s decision in
United States v. Handakas,
It also bears noting that in rejecting the vagueness challenge in
Rybicki,
the Second Circuit held that it was proper to consider cases that pre-dated both the enactment of section 1346, and the Supreme Court's decision in
McNally v. United States,
. This is not to say that beginning in March 1997, after SSAI contractually agreed to be
. In a footnote, the
Rybicki
majority observed that the dissent "insist[ed] that the statement in
Sancho
that we address was not a dictum. If so, to that extent,
Sancho
is overruled.”
Rybicki,
. After this motion was fully submitted, Shenker pled guilty to a federal charge of conspiracy to transport money obtained by fraud in interstate commerce and wire fraud. (Letter of Jerry S. McDevitt, Esq. to the Ct., January 30, 2007.) Combined with Bell's earlier guilty plea, Plaintiff argues that it has conclusively established a conspiracy to deny Plaintiff of the honest services of Bell and Shenker, that this conspiracy involved money laundering through at least July 2002, and that this conspiracy involved bribes. {Id.) Pivoting from there, Plaintiff contends both that these defendants are estopped from challenging the civil action issues decided by these guilty pleas, and that, because these pleas establish a conspiracy to deny WWE the honest services of its agents, Plaintiff needs little more to establish the remaining defendants' participation in the conspiracy. (Id.)
This argument is unpersuasive. First, Shenker and Bell did not plead guilty to either a substantive RICO charge or a RICO conspiracy charge. Second, neither defendant's plea makes any mention of the allegedly culpable conduct of the Jakks or the THQ defendants (or the LLC). In fact, neither plea mentions any illegal conduct before 1998, such as the perfumed doll deal or the earlier toy licenses granted to Jakks. Instead, the plea only reflects an illegal arrangement between Bell and Shenker, and the improper sharing of Shenker’s commissions with Bell. Thus, the plea, while compelling evidence against Bell and Shenker of the conduct they have admitted to engaging in, does nothing to
. Additionally, Shenker’s perjury in the Connecticut action does not constitute a predicate act.
See
18 U.S.C. § 1961(1);
United States v. Eisen,
. Moreover, this argument may only highlight the need to reexamine whether, in fact, RICO should be interpreted to require allegations of an enterprise that is more than just the sum of its racketeering acts.
. Plaintiff attempts to avoid this fate by claiming that the threat of continuity from a defendant’s alleged racketeering activities is to be viewed at the time the activities are alleged to have occurred. This effort fails for two reasons. First, the cases Plaintiff cites do not stand for the proposition tendered by Plaintiff. In
Welch Foods, Inc. v. Gilchrist,
No. 93-CV-0641,
Plaintiff’s claim that the scheme continues today because Defendants receive revenue from the allegedly unlawfully procured licenses is no more persuasive in establishing open-ended continuity than it is in establishing closed-ended continuity. ”Plaintiff[] cannot establish open-ended continuity by alleging that the
effects
of predicate acts extend into the future. Rather, there must be a threat that the acts themselves will be repeated.”
Pier Connection, Inc.,
. Because the Court determines that Plaintiff has not made a case for finding that the THQ Defendants and the LLC have engaged in a pattern of racketeering, it need not, and therefore will not, address their arguments regarding operation and management of the alleged enterprise.
. Plaintiff also seeks disgorgement of revenues earned through the allegedly illegally-obtained licenses. Plaintiff argues that the receipt of revenues from those licenses constitutes an ongoing injury. As discussed above, payments under the licenses do not constitute predicate acts. Therefore, Plaintiff is seeking disgorgement of past ill-gotten gains, which is not permitted under RICO.
See United States v. Carson,
.This estimate relates only to the videogame license. No such estimate is alleged as to the domestic and international toy licenses.
. The lineage of this point is worth noting, only because it does not trace back to any New York authority. The district court cases cited by Plaintiff
(I.M. Oberman
and
Academic Indus., Inc. v. Untermeyer Mace Partners, Ltd.,
No. 90-CV-1052,
.
This is true even if the "amount of the damage is not certain.”
In re Merrill Lynch Ltd. P'ships Litig.,
. The seven licenses include: (1) the first amendment to the domestic toy license, April 22, 1996, (Am. Compl. ¶¶ 54-56, 249(a)(vii)); (2) the second amendment to the domestic toy license, January 21, 1997, (id. ¶¶ 64, 67, 249(a)(x)); (3) the international toy license, February 10, 1997, (id. ¶¶ 65, 71, 249(a)(xi)); (4) the third amendment to the domestic toy license, January 12, 1998, (id. ¶¶ 93, 249(a)(xiv)); (5) the videogame license, June 10, 1998, (id. ¶¶ 136-64); (6) the extension of the domestic toy license, June 24, 1998, (id. ¶¶ 149, 165); (7) the extension of the international toy license, June 24, 1998, (id. ¶¶ 149, 155). According to Plaintiff, the last extensions of the domestic and international toy licenses were to be coterminous with the vi-deogame license, which itself is described to be of the “extraordinary length” of ten years, with a five-year renewal right at the option of Jakks. (Id. ¶¶ 149, 165.)
. Plaintiff's reliance on
Bingham v. Zolt,
. Plaintiff claims that its diligence in uncovering the scheme after the 2000 Connecticut litigation began, and the difficulty it had in overcoming some of the defendants' efforts to conceal the plot, makes the dispute over Plaintiff’s diligence a fact question that cannot be resolved through these motions. However, a plaintiff who fails to adequately allege due diligence throughout the time to be tolled is imputed to be aware of the misconduct at the time of the injury as if he had been reasonably diligent.
See also Merrill Lynch,
. Because the Court rejects Defendants’ interpretation of the Release, it need not address Plaintiff's Motion to Strike the Lerner Declaration used to introduce the Release.
. The Court finds that it is appropriate to dismiss the federal causes of action with prejudice as Plaintiff has had ample time to amend its Complaint, and, in fact, has done so once already. Moreover, in opposing Defendants' Motion, Plaintiff never suggested or proposed that it would seek leave to file a second amended complaint to cure any defects in Plaintiff’s pleadings. Accordingly, dismissal here is with prejudice.
See Clark v. County of Nassau,
No. 06-CV-8041, 2007 WL
. Section 1367(c) provides that a district court may decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over a state law claim if:
(1)the claim raises a novel or complex issue of State law,
(2) the claim substantially predominates over the claim or claims over which the district court has original jurisdiction,
(3) the district court has dismissed all claims over which it has original jurisdiction, or
(4) in exceptional circumstances, there are other compelling reasons for declining jurisdiction.
28 U.S.C. § 1367(c).
