U.S. 2nd Circuit Court
of Appeals
COMMERCIAL CLEANING
v COLIN SERVICE
UNITED
STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
August Term, 2000
(Argued: November 1,
2000 Decided: November 15, 2001
Errata Filed: November
30, 2001)
Docket No. 00-7571
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COMMERCIAL CLEANING SERVICES,
L.L.C.,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
COLIN SERVICE SYSTEMS,
INC.,
Defendant-Appellee.
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Before: KEARSE, LEVAL,
and SOTOMAYOR, Circuit Judges.
Appeal from judgment
of the United States District Court for the District
of Connecticut (Droney, J.), dismissing plaintiff's
civil RICO claim for damages caused by defendant business
competitor's pattern of racketeering activity. The Court
of Appeals (Leval, J.) vacates the judgment and
remands for further proceedings on the grounds that
plaintiff did not lack standing to bring an action based
on the alleged RICO violations and that plaintiff's
civil RICO case statement was not so insufficiently
detailed as to warrant dismissal of the complaint without
leave to amend.
HOWARD W. FOSTER, Johnson
& Bell, Ltd., Chicago, IL (Clinton A. Krisolov,
Krisolov & Associates, Ltd., Chicago, IL, Curtis
V. Trinko, Law Offices of Curtis V. Trinko, New York,
NY, on the brief) for Appellant.
C. WILLIAM PHILLIPS, Covington
& Burling, New York, NY (David W. Haller, Aaron
R. Marcu, Harry Sandick on the brief), for Appellee.
LEVAL, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiff-appellant Commercial
Cleaning Services, L.L.C. (Commercial) appeals from
the dismissal of its suit. Commercial brought this putative
class-action suit for damages against a business competitor,
defendant- appellee Colin Service Systems, Inc. (Colin),
under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations
statute (RICO), 18 U.S.C. § 1964(c) (2000). The
complaint alleges that Colin engaged in a pattern of
racketeering activity by hiring undocumented aliens
for profit in violation of Section 274 of the Immigration
and Nationality Act (INA), 8 U.S.C. § 1324(a),
a RICO predicate offense. According to the complaint,
Colin's illegal hiring practices enabled it to lower
its variable costs and thereby underbid competing firms,
which consequently lost contracts and customers to Colin.
Colin moved to dismiss the complaint pursuant to Fed.
R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim upon
which relief can be granted. The district court granted
Colin's motion and dismissed the complaint without leave
to amend, granting judgment in Colin's favor, on the
grounds that (i) Commercial had no standing to sue because
it did not allege a direct injury proximately caused
by Colin's illegal hiring, and (ii) Commercial failed
to provide a sufficiently detailed RICO case statement
as required by the Connecticut district court's Standing
Order in Civil RICO Cases (Standing Order).
We agree with Commercial's
contentions that its allegations satisfy the proximate
cause requirement for civil RICO cases and that the
deficiencies in its RICO case statement filed pursuant
to the district court's Standing Order did not justify
the grant of judgment in defendant's favor. We therefore
vacate the judgment.
BACKGROUND
A.The Complaint
For the purposes of reviewing
the grant of Colin's motion to dismiss, we take as true
the factual allegations of Commercial's complaint, as
supplemented by the RICO case statement submitted pursuant
to the district court's Standing Order. See McLaughlin
v. Anderson, 962 F.2d 187, 189 (2d Cir. 1992).
1. The Parties
Commercial and Colin each
provide janitorial services for commercial buildings.
According to the complaint, Commercial is a small company
that has bid against Colin for competitively awarded
janitorial service contracts in the Hartford area. Colin
operates throughout the Eastern seaboard and is described
in the complaint as one of the nation's largest corporations
engaged in the business of cleaning commercial facilities.
The complaint was filed as a national class action on
behalf of Colin's competitors.
2. The
"Illegal Immigrant Hiring Scheme"
The complaint alleges that
Commercial and the members of the plaintiff class are
victims of Colin's pattern of racketeering activity
in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c),1
referred to as "the illegal immigrant hiring scheme."
The theory of the case, succinctly stated, is that Colin
obtained a significant business advantage over other
firms in the "highly competitive" and price-sensitive
cleaning services industry by knowingly hiring "hundreds
of illegal immigrants at low wages." Colin's illegal
immigrant hiring scheme allows it to employ large numbers
of workers at lower costs than its competitors must
bear when operating lawfully. Colin allegedly pays undocumented
workers less than the prevailing wage, and does not
withhold or pay their federal and state payroll taxes,
or workers' compensation insurance fees. The complaint
refers to Colin's prosecution in 1996 by the United
States Department of Justice for, among other things,
hiring at least 150 undocumented workers, continuing
to employ aliens after their work authorizations had
expired, and failing to prepare, complete, and update
employment documents.
The allegations assert
that Colin is part of an enterprise composed of entities
associated-in-fact that includes employment placement
services, labor contractors, newspapers in which Colin
advertises for laborers, and "various immigrant
networks that assist fellow illegal immigrants in obtaining
employment, housing and illegal work permits."
The complaint neither describes how the undocumented
workers allegedly hired by Colin entered the country,
nor claims that Colin had knowledge of how those workers
came to the United States. It alleges that Colin's participation
in the affairs of the enterprise through the illegal
immigrant hiring scheme violates 8 U.S.C. § 1324(a),
which prohibits hiring certain undocumented aliens,
and which is a RICO predicate offense if committed for
financial gain. See 18 U.S.C. § 1961(1)(F).
3. The Pratt &
Whitney Contracts
What apparently led to
this lawsuit was Commercial's loss of lucrative
cleaning contracts to Colin. In 1994, Commercial obtained
a contract to clean Pratt & Whitney's facility at
Southington, Connecticut. After successfully performing
on that contract for approximately one year, however,
Commercial was underbid by Colin for cleaning contracts
at other Pratt & Whitney facilities in the area.
The complaint alleges that, through the illegal immigrant
hiring scheme, Colin could offer Pratt & Whitney
and other potential customers access to "a virtually
limitless pool of workers on short notice" at significantly
lower prices than other firms could offer by operating
lawfully. As a result, Pratt & Whitney and other
large contractors for cleaning services accepted Colin's
lower bids over Commercial's.
B. Proceedings Below
Commercial's complaint
requests class certification, an award of treble damages,
and injunctive relief. Commercial submitted a RICO case
statement with its complaint, as required by the District
of Connecticut's Standing Order in Civil RICO Cases.
Colin moved pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) to
dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim.
Before ruling on Commercial's request for class certification,
the district court granted Colin's motion. The court
dismissed the complaint primarily on the ground that
Commercial had no standing to bring suit because its
injury did not bear a "direct relation" to
Colin's racketeering activity as required by Holmes
v. Securities Investor Protection Corp., 503
U.S. 258, 268 (1992). The district court believed
the perceived deficiency in Commercial's standing to
bring suit was not curable. It therefore dismissed the
complaint without leave to amend. The court also asserted,
as an alternative justification for dismissal without
leave to amend, that Commercial's RICO case statement,
filed pursuant to the Standing Order, was so insufficiently
detailed as to violate the intended purpose of giving
the defendant basic factual information underlying the
RICO claim.
This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
I. Civil RICO Standing
A. Standard of Review
We review de novo
a district court's dismissal of a complaint under Fed.
R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6). See Stuto v. Fleishman,
164 F.3d 820, 824 (2d Cir. 1999). Dismissal of a civil
RICO complaint for failure to state a claim is appropriate
only when "it is clear that no relief could be
granted under any set of facts that could be proved
consistent with [plaintiff's] allegations." McLaughlin,
962 F.2d at 190 (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting
H.J., Inc. v. Northwestern Bell Tel. Co., 492
U.S. 229, 249-50 (1989)). In applying this standard,
a court must read all well pleaded allegations in the
complaint in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.
See id.; see also De Jesus v.
Sears, Roebuck & Co., 87 F.3d 65, 69 (2d Cir.
1996).
B. Proximate Cause
RICO grants standing to
pursue a civil damages remedy to "[a]ny person
injured in his business or property by reason of a violation
of [18 U.S.C. § 1962]." 18 U.S.C. § 1964(c).
In order to bring suit under § 1964(c), a plaintiff
must plead (1) the defendant's violation of § 1962,
(2) an injury to the plaintiff's business or property,
and (3) causation of the injury by the defendant's violation.
See First Nationwide Bank v. Gelt Funding
Corp., 27 F.3d 763, 767 (2d Cir. 1994). Commercial's
appeal turns in part on whether its complaint satisfies
the causation requirement.
RICO's use of the clause
"by reason of" has been held to limit standing
to those plaintiffs who allege that the asserted RICO
violation was the legal, or proximate, cause of their
injury, as well as a logical, or "but for,"
cause. See Holmes, 503
U.S. at 268; see also Hecht v.
Commerce Clearing House, Inc., 897 F.2d 21, 23 (2d
Cir. 1990) ("By itself, factual causation . . .
is not sufficient."). The requirement that a defendant's
actions be the proximate cause of a plaintiff's harm
represents a policy choice premised on recognition of
the impracticality of asserting liability based on the
almost infinite expanse of actions that are in some
sense causally related to an injury. See Sperber
v. Boesky, 849 F.2d 60, 63 (2d Cir. 1988). In marking
that boundary, the Supreme Court has emphasized that
a plaintiff cannot complain of harm so remotely caused
by a defendant's actions that imposing legal liability
would transgress our "ideas of what justice demands,
or of what is administratively possible and convenient."
Holmes, 503
U.S. at 268 (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting
W. Page Keeton et al., Prosser and Keeton on the
Law of Torts § 41, at 264 (5th ed. 1984)).
C. "Direct Relation"
Test
Colin contends that the
chain of causation between its alleged hiring of undocumented
workers and Pratt & Whitney's decision to award
cleaning contracts to Colin instead of Commercial is
too long and tenuous to meet the proximate cause test
of Holmes. The defendants in Holmes were
alleged to have participated in a conspiracy to manipulate
the value of the stock of several companies. See
Holmes, 503
U.S. at 262. Two broker-dealers who dealt in large
amounts of the manipulated stock were put into liquidation
when they experienced financial difficulties after the
fraud was disclosed and the value of the manipulated
stock precipitously declined. The Securities Investor
Protection Corporation (SIPC) alleged that the defendants'
securities and wire-fraud offenses amounted to a pattern
of racketeering activity within the meaning of the RICO
statute. It brought suit, based on a subrogation theory,
on behalf of certain of the injured broker-dealer firms'
customers who became unsecured creditors of the firms
when the firms became insolvent. See id.
at 270.
The Holmes Court
applied a proximate cause test requiring a "direct
relation between the injury asserted and the injurious
conduct alleged." Id. at 268. The "direct
relation" requirement generally precludes recovery
by a "plaintiff who complain[s] of harm flowing
merely from the misfortunes visited upon a third person
by the defendant's acts." Id.; see also
Laborers Local 17 Health & Benefit Fund v. Philip
Morris, Inc., 191 F.3d 229, 235-36 (2d Cir. 1999)
("[T]he other traditional rules requiring that
defendant's acts were a substantial cause of the injury,
and that plaintiff's injury was reasonably foreseeable,
are additional elements, not substitutes for
alleging (and ultimately, showing) a direct injury.").
The Court found that the link between the customers'
losses SIPC sought to recover and the defendants' stock
manipulation was too remote to satisfy the direct relation
test. It explained that "[t]he broker-dealers simply
cannot pay their bills, and only that intervening insolvency
connects the conspirators' acts to the losses suffered
by the . . . customers." Holmes, 503
U.S. at 271. The Court noted in contrast that the
liquidating trustees suing directly on behalf of the
defunct broker-dealers would have been the proper plaintiffs.
Id. at 273.
The Court stressed the
difficulty of achieving precision in fashioning a test
for determining whether a plaintiff's injury was sufficiently
"direct" to permit standing under RICO. Id.
at 272 n.20 ("[T]he infinite variety of claims
that may arise make it virtually impossible to announce
a black- letter rule that will dictate the result in
every case." (internal quotation marks omitted)).
It expressly warned against applying a mechanical test
detached from the policy considerations associated with
the proximate cause analysis at play in the case. See
id. ("[O]ur use of the term `direct' should
merely be understood as a reference to the proximate-
cause enquiry that is informed by the [policy] concerns
set out in the [opinion]."). We have accordingly
turned to those policy considerations explained in Holmes
to guide any application of the Court's direct relation
test. See Laborers, 191 F.3d at 239 n.4
("[T]he outer limits of the direct injury test
are described more by [the Holmes Court's policy]
concerns than by any bright-line, verbal definition.");
see also First Nationwide Bank, 27 F.3d
at 770.
D. Evaluation of Plaintiff's
Claim in Relation to the Proximate Cause Test
We conclude that Commercial's
complaint, when evaluated in light of these considerations,
adequately states a direct proximate relationship between
its injury and Colin's pattern of racketeering activity.
The Holmes Court gave three policy reasons for
limiting RICO's civil damages action only to those plaintiffs
who could allege a direct injury. First, the less direct
an injury is, the more difficult it becomes to determine
what portion of the damages are attributable to the
RICO violation as distinct from other, independent,
factors. Holmes, 503
U.S. at 269, 273 (discussing the difficulty of determining
whether customers' inability to collect from broker-dealers
was the result of the defendants' stock manipulation
as opposed to the broker-dealers' "poor business
practices or their failures to anticipate developments
in the financial markets"). Second, if recovery
by indirectly injured plaintiffs were not barred, courts
would be forced, in order to prevent multiple recovery,
to develop complicated rules apportioning damages among
groups of plaintiffs depending on how far each group
was removed from the defendant's underlying RICO violation.
Id. at 273. Third, there was no need to permit
indirectly injured plaintiffs to sue, as directly injured
victims could be counted on to vindicate the aims of
the RICO statute, and their recovery would fix the injury
to those harmed as the result of the injury they suffered.
Id.
1. Difficulty of
Determining Damages Attributable to the RICO Violation
The district court found
plaintiff's claim deficient on the first Holmes
factor, because a fact finder would be required to determine
whether Commercial's lost business to Colin was the
result of the illegal immigrant hiring scheme as opposed
to independent business reasons, such as the comparative
quality of the companies' services, their comparative
business reputations, the fluctuations in demand for
their services, or other reasons customers might have
for selecting one cleaning company over another. The
district court concluded that, even if a fact finder
could make such a determination, the calculation of
damages attributable to the illegal immigrant hiring
scheme would be "daunting, if not impossible."
The difficulty of proof
identified in Holmes, however, was quite different
from the circumstances of this case. Here, the plaintiffs
bid against the defendant as direct competitors. The
complaint asserts that Pratt & Whitney chose Colin
because Colin submitted "significantly lower"
bids in a "highly competitive" price-sensitive
market. According to the complaint, Colin was able to
underbid its competitors because its scheme to hire
illegal immigrant workers permitted it to pay well below
the prevailing wage for legal workers. Although we do
not deny that there may be disputes as to whether the
plaintiff class lost business because of defendant's
violation of § 1324(a) or for other reasons, the
plaintiff class was no less directly injured than the
insolvent broker-dealers in Holmes, whose trustees,
the Court indicated, would be proper plaintiffs. See
Holmes, 503
U.S. at 273. If plaintiffs can substantiate their
claims, the plaintiffs may well show that they lost
contracts directly because of the cost savings defendant
realized through its scheme to employ illegal workers.
This theory fits our suggestion
in Sperber, 849 F.2d at 65, where we affirmed
the dismissal on proximate causation grounds of a civil
RICO complaint by investors whose share values declined
in the wake of the defendant's guilty plea to insider
trading. Although we found the causation chain offered
by plaintiffs too remote, we distinguished a circumstance
where a plaintiff was a direct competitor against a
defendant. See id. We stated that the
RICO statute would grant standing if plaintiff were
a "head-to-head bidder against [defendant] who
lost because of [defendant's] illegally-enhanced reputation
or economic power." Id.2
Where, as here, the parties have bid against each other,
the difference between the lowest and second lowest
bid3
is readily discoverable. If Commercial can prove that
but for Colin's lower wage costs attributable to its
illegal hiring scheme, Commercial would have won the
contract and would have earned a profit on it, it will
have shown a proximately caused injury, compensable
under RICO.
Colin objects that any
reduced labor costs were due to its alleged underpayment
of workers and failure to pay other employment-related
costs of doing business, not its participation in the
illegal immigrant hiring scheme. In other words, Colin
claims that Commercial complains of an injury caused
by the low wages paid to Colin's workers--and not by
their immigration status. Of course, paying workers
less than the prevailing wage and failing to withhold
payroll taxes are not RICO predicate acts. Nonetheless,
the purpose of the alleged violation of 8 U.S.C. §
1324(a), the hiring of illegal alien workers, was to
take advantage of their diminished bargaining position,
so as to employ a cheaper labor force and compete unfairly
on the basis of lower costs. By illegally hiring undocumented
alien labor, Colin was able to hire cheaper labor and
compete unfairly. The violation of § 1324(a) alleged
by the complaint was a proximate cause of Colin's ability
to underbid the plaintiffs and take business from them.
2. Difficulty of
Apportioning Damages Among Injured Parties
The Holmes Court
warned that if courts did not limit recovery to injuries
directly related to the RICO violation, they would be
forced to devise complicated rules apportioning damages
among plaintiffs at different degrees of separation
from the violative acts alleged. See Holmes,
503
U.S. at 273. The Court noted the difficulty of apportioning
damages between the broker-dealers and customers who
suffered losses when the broker-dealers became insolvent.
Colin contends that its business competitors are not
the only aggrieved parties who could recover under Commercial's
theory and that the difficulty of apportioning damages
among potential plaintiffs will be severe. Colin's response
misses the point. The point made in Holmes was
that, if damages are paid both to first tier plaintiffs--those
directly injured by defendant's alleged acts--and to
second tier plaintiffs--those injured by the injury
to the first tier plaintiffs--then the payment of damages
to the first tier plaintiffs would cure the harm to
the second tier plaintiffs, and the payment of damages
to the latter category would involve double compensation.
Colin's answer is no answer to this point. If a defendant's
illegal acts caused direct injury to more than one category
of plaintiffs, the defendant may well be obligated to
compensate different plaintiffs for different injuries.
It does not follow that any plaintiff will have been
twice benefitted, which was the concern in Holmes.
Unlike the situation in
Holmes, Commercial and its fellow class members
are not alleging an injury that was derivative of injury
to others. Commercial does not seek to recover based
on "the misfortunes visited upon a third person
by the defendant's acts." Holmes, 503
U.S. at 268; see also Laborers, 191
F.3d at 238-39 ("[T]he critical question posed
by the direct injury test is whether the damages a plaintiff
sustains are derivative of an injury to a third party.
If so, then the injury is indirect; if not, it is direct.").
It claims to have lost profits directly as the result
of Colin's underbidding, which it achieved through its
violation of § 1324(a). See Terminate
Control Corp. v. Horowitz, 28 F.3d 1335, 1343 (2d
Cir. 1994) (holding that the value of business opportunities
lost due to defendant's RICO violations is compensable);
Mid Altantic Telecom, Inc. v. Long Distance Servs.,
Inc., 18 F.3d 260, 264 (4th Cir. 1994) (noting that
plaintiff was not seeking to vindicate claims of customers
who accepted defendant's fraudulent, ostensibly lower
rates, but rather alleged "distinct and independent
injuries: lost customers and lost revenues"); see
also Israel Travel Advisory Serv., Inc. v.
Israel Identity Tours, Inc., 61 F.3d 1250, 1257
(7th Cir. 1995). We have stated a plaintiff has standing
where the plaintiff is the direct target of the RICO
violation. See Abrahams v. Young & Rubicam
Inc., 79 F.3d 234, 238 (2d Cir. 1996); American
Express, 39 F.3d at 400 (targets of RICO violations
were competitive rivals not shareholders harmed by decrease
in stock value upon exposure of scheme); see
also Mid Atlantic Telecom, 18 F.3d at
263 (plaintiff has standing if it can show that it was
a "direct target" of defendant's RICO violations).
As discussed above, the theory of Commercial's claim
is that Colin undertook the illegal immigrant hiring
scheme in order to undercut its business rivals, thus
qualifying them as direct targets of the RICO violation.
Colin raises the specter
of a proliferation of civil RICO suits that would be
permitted under Commercial's theory. It argues that
a finding in Commercial's favor would mean that a dance
club that failed to pay license fees on recordings it
played, thereby decreasing its overhead costs and thereby
allowing it to decrease its admission charge, would
be liable not only to the copyright holder but to all
the infringer's business competitors. We do not find
this hypothetical problematic. First, the hypothetical
competitors would still be required to overcome the
hurdle of showing that their loss of business was proximately
caused by the infringer's decrease in admission fees.
But more importantly, once again, the concern of Holmes
was that a violator might be obligated to pay double
compensation if required to compensate those directly
injured and those injured by the injury to those directly
injured. It was not that a violator might be obligated
to compensate two or more different classes of plaintiffs,
each of which suffered a different concrete injury,
proximately caused by the violation. In Colin's hypothetical,
the competitors and the copyright owners would have
suffered entirely separate injuries. Although there
may well be other reasons such plaintiffs would lack
standing, they would not be barred from bringing a RICO
action because of a concern for multiple recoveries.
Compensating both would not overcompensate any plaintiff.
3. Ability of Other
Parties to Vindicate Aims of the Statute
In relation to the third
Holmes policy factor, the Supreme Court has observed
that "[t]he existence of an identifiable class
of persons whose self-interest would normally motivate
them to vindicate the public interest in [RICO] enforcement
diminishes the justification for allowing a more remote
party . . . to perform the office of a private attorney
general." Associated Gen. Contractors of California,
Inc. v. California State Council of Carpenters,
459
U.S. 519, 542 (1983), cited in Holmes,
503
U.S. at 270. Colin argues that this factor weighs
against Commercial's standing, because other parties,
such as state and federal authorities charged with collecting
unpaid taxes and workers' compensation fees, may sue
to vindicate the statute. Moreover, the INS, which enforces
§ 1324(a), has already obtained Colin's agreement
to pay $1 million for violations of the immigration
laws.
Once again, Colin misses
the point. If the existence of a public authority that
could prosecute a claim against putative RICO defendants
meant that the plaintiff is too remote under Holmes,
then no private cause of action could ever be maintained,
for every RICO predicate offense, as well as the RICO
enterprise itself, is separately prosecutable by the
government. In Holmes, those directly injured
could be expected to sue, and their recovery would redound
to the benefit of the plaintiffs suing for indirect
injury. Here, in contrast, suits by governmental authorities
to recover lost taxes and fees would do nothing to alleviate
the plaintiffs' loss of profits. There is no class of
potential plaintiffs who have been more directly injured
by the alleged RICO conspiracy than the defendant's
business competitors, who have a greater incentive to
ensure that a RICO violation does not go undetected
or unremedied, and whose recovery would indirectly cure
the loss suffered by these plaintiffs.
II. Violation of the
Standing Order
The district court's alternative
ground for dismissing the complaint was that Commercial
had "grievously violated" the District of
Connecticut's Standing Order in Civil RICO Cases. The
Standing Order requires that a plaintiff in a civil
RICO case submit a RICO Case Statement within 20 days
of filing the complaint. The case statement must provide
"in detail" information including, among other
things, the names of the individuals, partnerships,
or other legal entities constituting the RICO enterprise,
the dates of the predicate acts with a description of
the facts surrounding the predicate acts, and the identity
of the alleged wrongdoers and victims.
The district court gave
little explanation of this ground for dismissal. It
is not clear whether the court understood the dismissal
as justified by plaintiff's failure to furnish information
relating to the claim required by a rule of law (as
is the case when a court grants summary judgment because
the plaintiff fails to show evidence capable of proving
the elements of the claim, or grants a motion under
Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) because the facts pleaded would
not constitute a violation of law), or as a sanction
imposed because of plaintiff's failure to obey a court
order (as might be appropriate if the plaintiff refused
to appear for his deposition). See, e.g., Valentine
v. Museum of Modern Art, 29 F.3d 47 (2d Cir. 1994)
(dismissing action with prejudice for plaintiff's refusal
to comply with order to appear for deposition). Although
either theory can justify grant of judgment to the defendant
in appropriate circumstances, the circumstances presented
here could not justify the entry of judgment on either
theory.
We consider first the theory
of insufficient information. For at least two reasons,
dismissal for insufficient information was not justified.
First, the Standing Order calls for information far
in excess of the essential elements of a RICO claim.
On a motion for summary judgment, or for judgment as
a matter of law at the time of trial, a defendant would
not be entitled to judgment because the plaintiff's
evidence failed to include all the "individuals,
partnerships, corporations, associations, or other legal
entities [that constitute] the RICO enterprise,"
or the identities of all "wrongdoers" and
"victims." To the extent the Standing Order
called for presentation of information going beyond
what a plaintiff needs to present to establish a legally
sufficient case, plaintiff's inability to produce it
could not justify the grant of judgment to defendant.
A standing order of this
nature may appropriately require a plaintiff to set
forth the information it possesses in helpfully categorized
form, as an aide to the court and to the accused defendant.
But it may not make the prosecution of the action dependent
on the plaintiff's ability to furnish more information
than is required, as a matter of law, to prove the essential
elements of the claim.
Second, the district court
gave the plaintiff no opportunity to conduct discovery
so as to fill the deficiencies in the information it
provided. Although Fed. R. Civ. P. 11(b) seeks to ensure,
by imposing responsibility on attorneys, that claims
are "warranted" and "likely to have evidentiary
support after a reasonable opportunity for further investigation
or discovery," it makes clear by the latter quoted
phrase that a plaintiff is not required to know at the
time of pleading all facts necessary to establish the
claim. See O'Brien v. Alexander, 101 F.3d
1479, 1489 (2d Cir. 1996) (a sanction under Rule
11(b) may not be imposed for failure to make reasonable
inquiry "unless a particular allegation is utterly
lacking in support"). Similarly, Fed. R. Civ. P.
56(f) provides, as interpreted by court opinions, that
when a party facing an adversary's motion for summary
judgment reasonably advises the court that it needs
discovery to be able to present facts needed to defend
the motion, the court should defer decision of the motion
until the party has had the opportunity to take discovery
and rebut the motion. See Meloff v. New York
Life Ins. Co., 51 F.3d 372, 375 (2d Cir. 1995) (holding
that grant of judgment was premature where plaintiff
submitted properly supported Rule 56(f) request for
further discovery in opposition to defendant's motion
for summary judgment); see also Hellstrom
v. U.S. Dep't of Veteran's Affairs, 201 F.3d 94,
97 (2d Cir. 2000) ("The nonmoving party must have
had the opportunity to discover information that is
essential to [its] opposition to the motion for summary
judgment. Only in the rarest of cases may summary judgment
be granted against a plaintiff who has not been afforded
the opportunity to conduct discovery." (internal
quotation marks and citation omitted)). Here, the district
judge construed the Standing Order to justify dismissal
of the action by reason of the plaintiff's failure to
possess every fact needed to prove the essential elements
of the claim (and more) at the time of the complaint
without any opportunity for discovery. We do not think
the Standing Order can possibly be intended to impose
such an obligation.
The district court might
also have understood the entry of judgment as a sanction
imposed by reason of the plaintiff's violation of a
court order. We have observed that the grant of judgment
as a sanction for violation of a court order is an extreme
and harsh remedy. See Valentine, 29 F.3d
at 49 ("Dismissal with prejudice is a harsh remedy
to be used only in extreme situations . . . ."
(alteration and internal quotation marks omitted)).
In general, this extreme sanction is appropriately imposed
only in cases of willfulness, bad faith, or reasonably
serious fault. See Nat'l Hockey League v.
Metro. Hockey Club, Inc., 427
U.S. 639, 640 (1976); Bambu Sales, Inc. v. Ozak
Trading Inc., 58 F.3d 849, 853-54 (2d Cir. 1995)
(defendants' "deliberate obstruction" in failing
to comply with court orders justified the "potent
medicine" of the entry of judgment in plaintiff's
favor); Minotti v. Lensink, 895 F.2d 100, 103
(2d Cir. 1990) (district court did not abuse discretion
in dismissing action following plaintiff's failure to
heed discovery orders on four separate occasions and
the court's warning of the threat of dismissal). Plaintiff's
failure on the first try to supply all the information
called for by the Standing Order was not such an egregious,
abusive disregard of a court order as would justify
grant of judgment in the action.
We conclude that plaintiff's
failure to furnish all the information required by the
Standing Order, especially without opportunity for discovery,
did not justify the grant of judgment to the defendant.
III. Pleading the Elements
of the Predicate Offense
We agree with Colin that
Commercial's complaint was deficient in one respect.
While alleging that Colin has committed "well over
100 acts of knowingly hiring illegal aliens," it
failed to allege an essential element of § 1324(a)4-that
Colin had actual knowledge that the illegal aliens it
hired were brought into the country in violation of
the statute. See, e.g., Sys. Mgmt., Inc. v.
Loiselle, 91 F. Supp. 2d 401, 408 (D. Mass. 2000)
(dismissing civil RICO claim predicated on violation
of § 1324(a) where plaintiff did not allege that
"[defendant] had knowledge of how the aliens had
been brought into the United States and that they were
brought into the United States in violation of
[§ 1324(a)]").
Although Commercial's complaint
fails to allege an essential element of the RICO predicate
offense, the flaw is not fatal, and can be cured by
repleading.5
CONCLUSION
The judgment of the district
court is vacated, and the case is remanded for further
proceedings consistent with this opinion.
FOOTNOTES
--------------
[1]
Section 1962(c) provides:
It shall be unlawful
for any person employed by or associated with any
enterprise engaged in, or the activities of which
affect, interstate or foreign commerce, to conduct
or participate, directly or indirectly, in the conduct
of such enterprise's affairs through a pattern of
racketeering activity or collection of unlawful debt.
--------------
[2]
Colin argues that Sperber,
a pre-Holmes decision of this court, has been
overruled to the extent that it spoke of recovery for
"damages caused only indirectly" by the defendant's
activities. Sperber, 849 F.2d at 63. We do not
see a conflict between Sperber and Holmes.
First, the Holmes Court warned that by using
the word "direct" it did not "necessarily
use [the term] in the same sense as courts before [it]
have." Holmes, 503
U.S. at 272 n.20. Second, the Sperber court
recognized that "indirect injuries" could
not be so "broad-ranging" as to violate proximate
causation's "social policy decisions based on shared
principles of justice." 849 F.2d at 64-65. The
Sperber court rejected plaintiffs' argument that
"the scope of liability is determined only by the
foreseeability of injury." Id. Moreover,
since Holmes was decided we have consistently
concluded that our understanding of proximate causation
described in Sperber comports with the Supreme
Court's. See, e.g., In re American Express
Co. Shareholder Litig., 39 F.3d 395, 399 (2d Cir.
1994) ("Holmes essentially endorsed a definition
of proximate cause that we had earlier adopted."
(citing Sperber)); First Nationwide Bank,
27 F.3d at 769-70.
--------------
[3]
Commercial asserted at
oral argument that it was the second bidder to Colin
on at least one contract.
--------------
[4]
Section 1324(a)(3)(A) provides:
Any person who, during
any 12-month period, knowingly hires for employment
at least 10 individuals with actual knowledge
that the individuals are aliens described in subparagraph
(B) shall be fined under Title 18, or imprisoned for
not more than 5 years, or both. (emphasis added).
Subparagraph (B) of the
subsection describes:
An alien described in
this subparagraph is an alien who-
(i)is an unauthorized
alien . . . , and
(ii)has been brought
into the United States in violation of this subsection.
--------------
[5]
At oral argument, Commercial
asserted that it can allege Colin's knowledge of how
the workers in question were brought into the country
and that they were brought into the country in violation
of § 1324(a).
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