Filed: Sep. 02, 2016
Latest Update: Mar. 03, 2020
Summary: Case: 15-13792 Date Filed: 09/02/2016 Page: 1 of 33 [PUBLISH] IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT _ No. 15-13792 _ D.C. Docket No. 0:12-cv-61528-RNS BRYAN RAY, on behalf of himself and all others similarly situated, GRETEL DORTA, MICHAEL DIORIO, Ph.D., DEBORAH GIBSON, JENNIFER SILY, DONNA TILTON, JOSH RUBIN, DONALD M. BADACZEWSKI, Plaintiffs - Appellants, versus SPIRIT AIRLINES, INC., a Delaware corporation, Defendant - Appellee. _ Appeal from the United States Distric
Summary: Case: 15-13792 Date Filed: 09/02/2016 Page: 1 of 33 [PUBLISH] IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT _ No. 15-13792 _ D.C. Docket No. 0:12-cv-61528-RNS BRYAN RAY, on behalf of himself and all others similarly situated, GRETEL DORTA, MICHAEL DIORIO, Ph.D., DEBORAH GIBSON, JENNIFER SILY, DONNA TILTON, JOSH RUBIN, DONALD M. BADACZEWSKI, Plaintiffs - Appellants, versus SPIRIT AIRLINES, INC., a Delaware corporation, Defendant - Appellee. _ Appeal from the United States District..
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Case: 15-13792 Date Filed: 09/02/2016 Page: 1 of 33
[PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
________________________
No. 15-13792
________________________
D.C. Docket No. 0:12-cv-61528-RNS
BRYAN RAY,
on behalf of himself and all others similarly situated,
GRETEL DORTA,
MICHAEL DIORIO,
Ph.D.,
DEBORAH GIBSON,
JENNIFER SILY,
DONNA TILTON,
JOSH RUBIN,
DONALD M. BADACZEWSKI,
Plaintiffs - Appellants,
versus
SPIRIT AIRLINES, INC.,
a Delaware corporation,
Defendant - Appellee.
________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Florida
________________________
(September 2, 2016)
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Before MARCUS and FAY, Circuit Judges, and FRIEDMAN, * District Judge.
MARCUS, Circuit Judge:
In this civil RICO case, plaintiffs seek to represent a class of customers
claiming that Spirit Airlines, Inc. (“Spirit”) engaged in an elaborate criminal
enterprise involving the use of mail and wire fraud. The complaint specifically
alleged that Spirit portrayed its Passenger Usage Fee as a government-imposed or
authorized fee when, in fact, it was merely a portion of the base fare price of an
airline ticket charged by the airline.
This is the second time this case has come before our court. The first time,
we reversed the district court’s conclusion that the Airline Deregulation Act,
Pub. L. No. 95–504, 92 Stat. 1705, (“ADA”) displaced a civil RICO claim that an
airline engaged in deceptive practices. Ray v. Spirit Airlines, Inc.,
767 F.3d 1220
(11th Cir. 2014). We remanded the case in order to afford the district court the
opportunity to determine in the first instance whether the plaintiffs had adequately
pled a RICO claim.
Id. at 1229. On remand, the district court dismissed the
plaintiffs’ second amended complaint for failure to state a claim. As we see it, the
district court reached the right answer for two independent reasons: the plaintiffs
*
Honorable Paul L. Friedman, United States District Judge for the District of Columbia,
sitting by designation.
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failed to adequately allege proximate cause; and they also failed to properly plead
the existence of a RICO enterprise. Thus, we affirm.
I.
Plaintiffs commenced this civil suit against Spirit under the Racketeer
Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), 18 U.S.C. §§ 1961–68, in the
United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida, alleging that Spirit
conducted an enterprise by means of racketeering activity -- here, two or more
predicate acts of mail and wire fraud involving the concealment and
misrepresentation of airfares and user fees. Plaintiffs seek to represent a class
consisting of all Spirit domestic and international customers who, within the
applicable statute of limitations, incurred a Passenger Usage Fee “as a result of
Spirit’s practice of assessing and collecting baseless hidden fees.”
Plaintiffs’ second amended complaint alleged these basic facts. Spirit holds
itself out as an “Ultra Low Cost Carrier” offering airfares at rates lower than other
providers. These cheap fares purportedly disguise the total cost of travel because
Spirit forces consumers to pay unbundled charges traditionally included in the
price of an airline ticket. Specifically, Spirit charges a Passenger Usage Fee to all
consumers who buy tickets through its website or call center. When searching for
flights on Spirit’s website, a consumer sees only the base fares. Once he has
selected a flight, a webpage directs him to “confirm” the flight on a page that
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displays both the base fare and an undifferentiated amount labeled “Taxes & Fees.”
For a breakdown of these charges, the consumer then must click on an additional
link for “more information,” which listed a “Passenger Usage Fee” alongside
government taxes and fees. Plaintiffs alleged that this placement was a
coordinated effort to conceal the true nature of the fee by leading customers to
believe that it was an official government tax or sanctioned fee.
The complaint listed seven named plaintiffs with the approximate dates on
which they had purchased tickets and (for most of them) the amount they were
charged for the Passenger Usage Fee. According to plaintiffs, Spirit committed
mail and wire fraud when it used the internet to advertise and engage in sales with
the deceptive inclusion and placement of the Passenger Usage Fee. The complaint
also generally asserted that the plaintiffs and other members of the proposed class
“were harmed in that they relied to their detriment on Spirit’s conduct and, as a
result, needlessly incurred excessive and unconscionable [Passenger Usage Fees].”
The complaint further alleged that Spirit engaged in this fraudulent activity
while associated with, operating, or controlling a RICO enterprise. The enterprise
allegedly consisted of Spirit itself, along with two of its corporate officers and a
variety of outside consultants (both individual and corporate) who provided
various services for Spirit. Specifically, the enterprise was said to consist of: (1)
Spirit; (2) Spirit officers and executives, particularly Chief Executive Officer Ben
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Baldanza and Chief Marketing Officer/Senior Vice President Barry Biffle, who
orchestrated the allegedly fraudulent scheme; (3) Navitaire, a wholly owned
subsidiary of Accenture, LLC, which provided a platform for ticket sales that had
been customized to conceal the Passenger Usage Fee; (4) Colt Cooper, an airline
reservation software consultant who helped Spirit implement its website and
reservation system; (5) Objectart Solutions, LLC, and its owner Kenneth Ramirez,
another software consultant who was involved in the development, management,
and support of the ticketing website; and (6) MSP Communications, Inc., and its
president, Misty Pinson, who were responsible for public relations surrounding the
Passenger Usage Fee. The complaint further recited that the members of the
enterprise shared the common purpose to “increase and maximize the revenue of
Spirit Airlines by increasing the [Passenger Usage Fee] and other carrier-imposed
fees through a scheme that, in part, omitted and misrepresented that the fees were
not related to government taxes and other permitted fees for services but were a
bottom-line assessment for Spirit.” The allegations included that the members of
the enterprise “shared the bounty of their enterprise” by sharing in the “benefit”
derived from concealing the Passenger Usage Fee. But nothing in the complaint
alleged that the consultants’ fees were tied to the deceptive collection of the
Passenger Usage Fee as opposed to simply being compensation for general
business services rendered.
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The district court granted Spirit’s first motion to dismiss the second
amended complaint, concluding that because the Airline Deregulation Act
preempted all state and federal common law claims, it also prohibited a RICO
action. The district court found that Congress intended the Department of
Transportation to be the sole legal control on deceptive airfare, fees, and fare
advertising. On appeal, we reversed, holding that, although the ADA preempted
state law, it said nothing about preempting federal causes of action such as RICO.
Ray, 767 F.3d at 1221. We concluded that the ADA did not repeal the application
of the civil provisions of RICO, either expressly or by implication.
Id. at 1229.
We reasoned that RICO and the ADA are capable of coexistence because they
feature different requirements and offer different protections.
Id. at 1226. Thus,
for example, we observed that it is far more difficult to establish a RICO predicate
act like mail or wire fraud than to prove a violation of the Department of
Transportation’s regulations concerning unfair or deceptive practices.
Id. at 1226-
27. Mail and wire fraud are specific intent crimes, whereas the DOT need not find
a specific intent to deceive or commit fraud or injury “before levying penalties or
ordering a carrier to alter an unfair or deceptive practice.”
Id. at 1226. Moreover,
we noted that civil RICO also provides for treble damages.
Id. at 1227. In short,
we concluded that the Airline Deregulation Act is wholly different from RICO and
that civil RICO claims are not barred by the ADA.
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Our ruling, however, passed no judgment on the adequacy of the plaintiffs’
RICO pleading, remanding the matter to the district court to make that
determination.
Id. at 1222, 1229.
Back in district court for round two, the defendants successfully moved to
dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P.
12(b)(6). First, the district court found that the plaintiffs had failed to sufficiently
plead the existence of a RICO enterprise. The plaintiffs had failed to adequately
allege that the various parties were engaged in an ongoing relationship with the
common purpose of defrauding Spirit customers. Because the complaint made no
showing that the various members of the alleged enterprise actually intended to
participate in Spirit’s scheme to conceal the Passenger Usage Fee or, indeed, even
knew about the scheme, the district court concluded that there was no basis to infer
that the members acted as part of a single enterprise designed to defraud
customers. Moreover, the district court determined that the complaint failed to
meet Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b)’s specificity requirements.1 The district court
highlighted that the complaint failed to plead, among other salient details, the
precise statements in Spirit’s advertisements that were allegedly deceptive, where
the plaintiffs saw the advertisements, the costs of the tickets the plaintiffs
1
Rule 9(b) states: “In alleging fraud or mistake, a party must state with particularity the
circumstances constituting fraud or mistake. Malice, intent, knowledge, and other conditions of
a person’s mind may be alleged generally.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b).
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purchased, and the steps the plaintiffs took on the website when they purchased
tickets. Having concluded that the complaint failed to adequately state a claim for
civil RICO, the district court granted the plaintiffs leave to file a third amended
complaint by June 18, 2015 if there was a good faith basis for doing so. That
deadline was later extended until June 29, 2015.
The plaintiffs did not file a third amended complaint during that timeframe.
Therefore, the district court entered final judgment on the matter on June 30, 2015.
The same day, however, plaintiffs filed a motion for relief from the judgment
pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b)(1), claiming that a calendar error had led to their
failure to file their third amended complaint. With that, the plaintiffs also filed
their third amended complaint. However, the changes between the second and
third amended complaints were exceedingly minimal. The most prevalent change
was the complaint’s re-characterization of its description of the fees; rather than
allege that the fees were hidden, the third amended complaint said that they
amounted to fraudulent misrepresentations. The third amended complaint added
no new facts about the actions of the named plaintiffs, nor did it materially alter the
description of the alleged fraud or the members and purpose of the alleged
enterprise.
The district court concluded that the plaintiffs’ delayed filing of the third
amended complaint was the result of excusable neglect and so granted in part relief
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from the judgment. But, because the third amended complaint failed to overcome
the various deficiencies that had led it to dismiss the second amended complaint,
the district court found that it would be futile to reopen its judgment and allow the
complaint to be pled on the latest amendation. Thus, it denied the plaintiff’s Rule
60(b) motion for relief from judgment and closed the cause.
The plaintiffs timely filed this appeal, challenging the order dismissing the
second amended complaint, the judgment, and the order denying them relief from
the judgment.
II.
We review de novo the grant of a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss for failure
to state a claim. Simpson v. Sanderson Farms, Inc.,
744 F.3d 702, 705 (11th Cir.
2014). We accept, as we must at this stage, the allegations in the complaint as true
and construe them in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs. Ironworkers Local
Union 68 v. AstraZeneca Pharm., LP,
634 F.3d 1352, 1359 (11th Cir. 2011). To
survive a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, a complaint must plead “enough facts to
state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.” Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly,
550 U.S. 544, 570 (2007). “A claim has facial plausibility when the plaintiff
pleads factual content that allows the court to draw the reasonable inference that
the defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged.” Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
556 U.S.
662, 678 (2009). We are, of course, free to affirm the district court’s dismissal on
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“any ground that is supported by the record.” United States v. Elmes,
532 F.3d
1138, 1142 (11th Cir. 2008).
There is some confusion between the parties as to whether the second or
third amended complaint is the operative pleading for the purposes of this appeal.
At bottom, as the parties agree, it matters little which complaint we consider
because the differences between the two are minimal and immaterial. To the
extent it matters at all, the second amended complaint is the operative one because
the district court denied leave (albeit retroactively) to the plaintiffs to file a third
amended complaint. Thus, when considering whether the dismissal was
appropriate, we look to the second amended complaint. But when we review
whether to permit further leave to amend the complaint still again, we may look to
the third amended complaint as a reliable indicator of whether allowing future
amendments would be futile.
III.
Congress enacted RICO in 1970, prohibiting racketeering activity connected
to interstate commerce.
Ray, 767 F.3d at 1224. The statute makes it “unlawful for
any person employed by or associated with any enterprise engaged in, or the
activities of which affect, interstate or foreign commerce, to conduct or participate,
directly or indirectly, in the conduct of such enterprise’s affairs through a pattern
of racketeering activity or collection of unlawful debt.” 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c). In
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addition to creating criminal penalties for racketeering activities, the statute also
created a private, civil cause of action. Thus, “[a]ny person injured in his business
or property by reason of a violation of section 1962 of this chapter may sue
therefor in any appropriate United States district court and shall recover threefold
the damages he sustains and the cost of the suit, including a reasonable attorney’s
fee . . . .” 18 U.S.C. § 1964(c). “To recover, a civil plaintiff must establish that a
defendant (1) operated or managed (2) an enterprise (3) through a pattern (4) of
racketeering activity that included at least two racketeering acts.”
Ray, 767 F.3d at
1224. A civil plaintiff must also show “(1) the requisite injury to ‘business or
property,’ and (2) that such injury was ‘by reason of’ the substantive RICO
violation.” Williams v. Mohawk Indus., Inc.,
465 F.3d 1277, 1282–83 (11th Cir.
2006), abrogated on other grounds as recognized in
Simpson, 744 F.3d at 714–15.
“The upshot is that RICO provides a private right of action for treble damages to
any person injured in his business or property by reason of the conduct of a
qualifying enterprise’s affairs through a pattern of acts indictable as mail fraud.”
Bridge v. Phoenix Bond & Indem. Co.,
553 U.S. 639, 647 (2008).
Although initially enacted to fight organized crime, the Supreme Court has
rejected a reading of RICO that applies only where the pattern of conduct is
“characteristic either of organized crime in the traditional sense, or of an
organized-crime-type perpetrator, that is, of an association dedicated to the
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repeated commission of criminal offenses.” H.J. Inc. v. Nw. Bell Tel. Co.,
492
U.S. 229, 243 (1989). So limited a reading of the statute, the Supreme Court has
concluded, is unsupported by the text or legislative history of RICO.
Id. at 244.
To the contrary, “the RICO statute provides that its terms are to be liberally
construed to effectuate its remedial purposes.” Boyle v. United States,
556 U.S.
938, 944 (2009) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Sedima, S.P.R.L. v.
Imrex Co.,
473 U.S. 479, 497–98 (1985). With that background, we examine this
civil RICO complaint and ultimately conclude that it fails to state a claim.
A.
The second amended complaint fails in the first instance because it does not
adequately plead that the plaintiffs suffered injury as a result of Spirit’s purported
mail and wire fraud. The RICO statute provides a cause of action for “[a]ny
person injured in his business or property by reason of a violation of section 1962.”
18 U.S.C. § 1964(c) (emphasis added). The Supreme Court has been clear that a
party is only entitled to recover under RICO “to the extent that[] he has been
injured in his business or property by the conduct constituting the violation.”
Sedima, 473 U.S. at 496. Thus, a defendant who commits an act of racketeering is
“not liable for treble damages to everyone he might have injured by other conduct,
nor is the defendant liable to those who have not been injured.”
Id. at 496–97
(quoting Haroco, Inc. v. Am. Nat’l Bank & Trust Co. of Chicago,
747 F.2d 384,
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398 (7th Cir. 1984)). Rather, pleading a civil RICO claim requires that plaintiffs
plead facts sufficient to give rise to a reasonable inference that the claimed
racketeering activity -- here, the misrepresentation of the Passenger Usage Fee
through mail and wire fraud -- was the but-for and proximate cause of the
plaintiffs’ injuries. See
Simpson, 744 F.3d at 712;
Williams, 465 F.3d at 1287.
The connection between the racketeering activity and the injury can be neither
remote, purely contingent, nor indirect. See Anza v. Ideal Steel Supply Corp.,
547
U.S. 451, 457 (2006);
Williams, 465 F.3d at 1287–88. “When a court evaluates a
RICO claim for proximate causation, the central question it must ask is whether the
alleged violation led directly to the plaintiff’s injuries.”
Anza, 547 U.S. at 461; see
also
Williams, 465 F.3d at 1287. The injurious conduct need not be the sole cause
of the plaintiffs’ injuries, but there must be “some direct relation” between the
conduct and the injury to sustain a claim.
Williams, 465 F.3d at 1287–88 (quoting
Anza, 547 U.S. at 457). Notably, the fact that an injury is reasonably foreseeable
is not sufficient to establish proximate cause in a RICO action -- the injury must be
direct. Hemi Grp., LLC v. City of New York,
559 U.S. 1, 12 (2010) (plurality
opinion);
Williams, 465 F.3d at 1291. Thus, we have previously held that
plaintiffs did not adequately plead a RICO claim where their complaint asserted
only the bald conclusion that the plaintiffs relied on a misrepresentation without
showing how that reliance was manifested. Ambrosia Coal & Constr. Co. v. Pages
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Morales,
482 F.3d 1309, 1317 & n.12 (11th Cir. 2007). Moreover, we have held
that plaintiffs lack standing to bring a RICO claim unless their injuries were
proximately caused by the RICO violation. Bivens Gardens Office Bldg., Inc. v.
Barnett Banks of Florida, Inc.,
140 F.3d 898, 906 (11th Cir. 1998) (citing Pelletier
v. Zweifel,
921 F.2d 1465, 1499 (11th Cir. 1991), abrogated on other grounds by
Bridge,
553 U.S. 639).
Here, the plaintiffs alleged only that they “and the other members of the
proposed class were harmed in that they relied to their detriment on Spirit’s
conduct and, as a result, needlessly incurred excessive and unconscionable
[Passenger Usage Fees].” But this allegation amounts to little more than a
“[t]hreadbare recital[] of the elements of a cause of action, supported by mere
conclusory statements,” which is plainly insufficient to support a cause of action.
Iqbal, 556 U.S. at 678; cf. Ambrosia
Coal, 482 F.3d at 1317 & n.12. The plaintiffs
argue that “merely purchasing a ticket and paying the unlawful passenger usage fee
in the process, by itself, amounts to reliance on Spirit’s fraudulent conduct.” We
find this argument wholly unconvincing. While paying the fee may establish an
injury-in-fact, it does not in any way establish that the plaintiffs sustained an injury
as the direct result of Spirit’s claimed fraudulent misrepresentations. The mere fact
of having been misled does not ineluctably give rise to a RICO cause of action
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unless the act of misleading the plaintiffs actually caused them injury in their
business or to their property that they would not otherwise have suffered.
To be sure, RICO does not contain a requirement that the plaintiff personally
relied on the defendant’s fraudulent misrepresentation.
Bridge, 553 U.S. at 648–
49. In Bridge, the Supreme Court recognized a civil RICO claim where the
defendants had submitted fraudulent documents to Cook County, Illinois, which
was conducting property auctions, thereby giving the defendants an unfair
advantage over the plaintiffs in securing property at those auctions.
Id. at 642–44.
The Court ruled that the plaintiffs could proceed with the lawsuit even though it
was Cook County, and not the plaintiffs, that had relied on the misrepresentations.
But the Court was clear that its holding dismissing the need for first-party reliance
on the fraud did not mean that a party can prevail without showing that someone
had relied on the fraud.
Id. at 658. Without reliance on the fraud by someone -- in
Bridge, Cook County -- the plaintiffs would not be able to show that they were
injured by reason of the alleged racketeering activity. And a showing of direct
injury is required to sustain a RICO claim. Unable to establish even but-for
causation, such a plaintiff necessarily would be unable to meet the higher burden
of showing that the racketeering activity proximately caused the plaintiff’s injuries.
See Holmes v. Sec. Inv’r Prot. Corp.,
503 U.S. 258, 268 (1992);
Williams, 465
F.3d at 1287.
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Whatever else the second amended complaint asserts, it does not allege a
direct link -- or, indeed, any link at all -- between Spirit’s presentation of its
Passenger Usage Fee and the plaintiffs’ decision to purchase tickets on Spirit’s
website. It pleads causation only at the highest order of abstraction and supports
the claim only with conclusory assertions; notably absent is an allegation of any
specific fact that would make those conclusions plausible. Thus, the complaint
does not so much as tell us the prices that the various plaintiffs paid for their
tickets or the prices that other airlines charged for comparable flights, to say
nothing of the many factors aside from cost that might induce someone to purchase
an airline ticket. The complaint does not even allege that the plaintiffs would not
have purchased their tickets from the Spirit website had they known that the
Passenger Usage Fee was not authorized or collected by the government.
Moreover, it strains credulity to insist -- as the plaintiffs must -- that a customer
willing to purchase a ticket for $129 in base fare plus an $8.99 Passenger Usage
Fee (among other taxes and fees) announced before the tickets were purchased
would balk at purchasing a ticket if he knew that the $8.99 fee came from the
airline and not the government. In short, it seems utterly implausible to us that
Spirit’s customers would have declined to purchase a ticket if, in the “taxes and
fees” listing on Spirit’s website, they encountered an item titled “Airline-Imposed
Passenger Usage Fee.” The plaintiffs have pled nothing even remotely suggesting
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that they -- or anyone else for that matter -- would have acted at all differently had
Spirit been clearer in its presentation and description of the Passenger Usage Fee.
Based on the limited facts alleged in this complaint, we cannot come close to
drawing a reasonable inference that the plaintiffs would not have purchased their
tickets utilizing Spirit’s website or call center, even if they had understood the true
source of the Passenger Usage Fee.
Plaintiffs, however, cite to our decision in Kemp v. AT&T,
393 F.3d 1354,
1361 (11th Cir. 2004), in arguing that where the allegations of mail or wire fraud
involve omissions rather than affirmative misrepresentations, no reliance is
necessary. But this does not excuse plaintiffs from adequately pleading proximate
cause in their RICO claim. The discussion in Kemp revolved around a challenge
to whether AT&T had committed the predicate racketeering acts of mail and wire
fraud.
Id. at 1359–61. We found that a plaintiff does not have to prove reliance on
a fraudulent omission of material information to sustain a claim for mail or wire
fraud.
Id. at 1361. But finding that a defendant committed a predicate
racketeering offense, such as mail or wire fraud, is not the same as finding that it
committed a RICO violation. Civil RICO plaintiffs must sufficiently plead both
racketeering activity and that the activity caused them some injury. “This is true
even when a criminal conviction for the underlying racketeering activity would not
require a showing of actual injury, as is the case with mail and wire fraud.” Beck
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v. Prupis,
162 F.3d 1090, 1095 (11th Cir. 1998); see also
Pelletier, 921 F.2d at
1499. Thus, Kemp provides no relief from the requirement that civil RICO
plaintiffs properly plead proximate cause for their injuries. Because the plaintiffs
have not pled that they or anyone else relied on Spirit’s alleged misrepresentations
in purchasing their tickets -- and, thus, have not shown that they were injured “by
reason of” a RICO violation -- they have failed to state a claim upon which relief
may be granted.
There is no ambiguity in Supreme Court or Eleventh Circuit precedent about
the requirement that a civil RICO claim must sufficiently plead proximate cause.
The failure to adequately plead causation is compounded in this case because the
district court, in dismissing the second amended complaint for the first time,
explained that a RICO claim required a showing of proximate cause and that the
plaintiffs had failed “to include any allegations linking [their] loss to the fraud
here.” The district court added that if plaintiffs planned to file a third amended
complaint, they “should include specific allegations that they would have acted
differently” had they known the true nature of the Passenger Usage Fee. The
plaintiffs nonetheless failed to make any averment in their third amended
complaint that would tend to show any sort of causal link between the alleged
fraud and some injury to the plaintiffs’ business or property. This strongly
suggests that allowing further leave to amend the complaint would be futile. Thus,
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we affirm the dismissal of this civil RICO complaint because it has failed to
adequately plead proximate cause.2
B.
Moreover, the plaintiffs’ second amended complaint has failed for a second
and independent reason: it has failed to plead the existence of a RICO enterprise
because it has not adequately alleged a common purpose shared by Spirit and the
other members of the alleged enterprise. Again, the racketeering enterprise pled
here was said to consist of Spirit, two Spirit officers, three software
vendors/consultants, and a public relations consultant. According to the RICO
statute, an “‘enterprise’ includes any individual, partnership, corporation,
association, or other legal entity, and any union or group of individuals associated
in fact although not a legal entity.” 18 U.S.C. § 1961(4). Thus, the enterprise
alleged in this case is an association-in-fact enterprise; it does not itself comprise a
legal entity.
2
Because the plaintiffs have failed both to properly plead proximate cause and a RICO
enterprise, we need not and do not decide whether they adequately pled the commission of fraud
with the particularity demanded by Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b). That said, we have serious doubts about
whether, were we to consider the matter, the complaint would survive scrutiny under Rule 9(b).
As highlighted by the district court, the complaint failed to plead the precise statements in
Spirit’s advertisements purported to be fraudulent, where the plaintiffs saw the advertisements,
the costs of purchased tickets, what steps the plaintiffs took on the website when they purchased
tickets, even what date the tickets were purchased in some instances, among other salient details.
Indeed, the only plaintiffs who even come close to surviving the particularity requirements
demanded by Rule 9(b) are Michael Diorio and Jennifer Sily, who, in contrast to the other
plaintiffs, pled the dates on or about which they purchased tickets, where they purchased the
tickets (Spirit’s website), and cited the amounts they paid in Passenger Usage Fees.
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The Supreme Court has instructed us that an association-in-fact enterprise
must possess three qualities: “a purpose, relationships among those associated with
the enterprise, and longevity sufficient to permit these associates to pursue the
enterprise’s purpose.”
Boyle, 556 U.S. at 946. It is “simply a continuing unit that
functions with a common purpose.”
Id. at 948. An enterprise need not have a
hierarchical structure, specific governing procedures, or fixed roles for its
members.
Id. at 948. What is required is “evidence of an ongoing organization,
formal or informal, and . . . evidence that the various associates function as a
continuing unit.” United States v. Turkette,
452 U.S. 576, 583 (1981).
The second amended complaint fails because it has not plausibly alleged that
the technology (Navitaire/Accenture, Colt Cooper, and Objectart) and public
relations (MSP Communications) vendors named in the complaint shared a
common purpose with Spirit. The complaint charged that the RICO enterprise
members had a common purpose “to increase and maximize the revenue of Spirit
Airlines by increasing the [Passenger Usage Fee] and other carrier-imposed fees
through a scheme that, in part, omitted and misrepresented that the fees were not
related to government taxes and permitted fees for services but were a bottom-line
assessment for Spirit.” 3 Because we cannot accept purely conclusory allegations,
3
Plaintiffs later attempted to alter their own allegations by arguing that any purpose -- for
instance, the common purpose of making money -- is sufficient to qualify under the RICO
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we look to whether the complaint alleged facts sufficient to give rise to a plausible
inference that the various members of the alleged enterprise acted with this
common purpose.
Iqbal, 556 U.S. at 678.
Nowhere in the complaint do the plaintiffs allege facts giving rise to a
plausible inference that the various technology vendors and consultants, either
individually or in corporate form, were in any way involved in the actual decisions
of how to portray the Passenger Usage Fee, knew the true nature of the fee, or
worked intentionally to misrepresent the fee. Thus, passing over the complaint’s
wholly conclusory claims, there is no plausible allegation that these vendors
knowingly cooperated with Spirit in a scheme that involved misrepresenting the
Passenger Usage Fee.
Consider the following passage from the complaint, which is typical of the
allegations against these service providers:
Objectart Solutions, LLC and its owner Kenneth Ramirez
have consulted with Spirit since 2006 in the area of
software architecture, development, quality assurance
and technology management, including, but not limited
to revenue management system interfaces and support
and interface systems for the Naitaire ticketing and
reservations system. As such they have been involved
with the development management and support of the
statute. But we are bound to examine the sufficiency of the plaintiffs’ complaint, not what they
argue their complaint could have said. Moreover, since making money is the purpose of every
for-profit corporation, at least based on these pleadings, this purpose is wholly insufficient to
establish an association-in-fact enterprise.
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revenue management system(s) that allow for Spirit’s
collection of the deceptive [Passenger Usage Fee] in its
client-side reservation and ticketing process.
In short, the plaintiffs allege that Objectart and its owner helped Spirit set up the
ticket reservation system for Spirit’s website. But this is a wholly innocent activity
undertaken as a course of regular business for Objectart. More importantly, this
passage is notable for what it lacks. It does not say that Objectart had any control
over (or, for that matter, was even aware of) the actual content on the web platform
it helped develop. It does not allege that Objectart worked to conceal the true
nature of the Passenger Usage Fees. It does not indicate that Objectart and its
owner knew that Spirit was engaging in misleading behavior. It does not indicate
that Objectart directly profited from the misrepresentation, as opposed to simply
receiving a fee for the anodyne services it provided. That Objectart helped set up a
platform that Spirit independently misused does not give rise to a plausible
inference that Objectart and Spirit acted with the common purpose, let alone the
common purpose arising out of a continuing relationship, to misrepresent the
Passenger Usage Fee or defraud Spirit customers.
The allegations regarding Cooper and Accenture/Navitaire suffer from
similar failings. For instance, the allegations against Cooper assert:
Colt Cooper[] [is] an airline reservation software
consultant and specialist in Accenture’s Navitaire
platform, who has worked extensively with Spirit to
implement its website and reservation system. Beginning
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in July 2007, Cooper converted Spirit’s legacy airline
reservation system for additional capabilities. Cooper
was involved in several development phases of the
reservation software to the specifications of the
enterprise, a platform that allows for concealment of the
[Passenger Usage Fee] in the booking process[.]
Like the allegations against Objectart, the allegations against Cooper stop short of
saying that he was responsible for any of the content on the platform he helped
develop. The complaint also does not so much as suggest that Cooper was
personally involved in the purported concealment of the Passenger Usage Fee,
saying only that he worked on a platform that “allows” for the concealment.
Indeed, the complaint does not plead any facts suggesting that Cooper knew Spirit
was engaging in misleading behavior or that he shared a common purpose of
engaging in (or even consciously enabling) that behavior.
Likewise, the allegations against Accenture/Navitaire only allege in
conclusory fashion that the company had any active role in facilitating and
promoting Spirit’s alleged fraud. Moreover, the claim that “Navitaire’s Revenue
and Decision Support products and services have been employed and manipulated
by Spirit in devising ways to maximize revenues through hidden fees” is a far cry
from saying that Navitaire shared the common purpose of defrauding Spirit
customers. Spirit’s alleged misuse of a software platform does not suggest that the
maker of that platform knew anything of, let alone shared, Spirit’s allegedly
fraudulent purpose.
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Nor do the plaintiff’s allegations concerning communications consultant
MSP Communications and its president, Misty Pinson, fare any better. The
complaint alleged that MSP and Pinson were largely responsible for the public
relations regarding Spirit’s business model in general and the Passenger Usage Fee
in particular. But, as with the software consultants that we have already discussed,
there is not the slightest factual averment or indication that MSP or Pinson played
any role in determining how the fee would be presented on Spirit’s website, where
the complaint alleged the fraud occurred. Indeed, there are no claims that MSP or
Pinson had any involvement with Spirit’s website or method of charging fees at all.
Moreover, because the plaintiffs disclaimed any reliance on misrepresentations in
Spirit’s advertisements in the district court, it is unclear how the public relations
efforts by MSP and Pinson relate in any way to the wrongs alleged in the
complaint. That a public relations firm engaged in public relations work when
Spirit hired it to do so hardly gives rise to a plausible inference that MSP and
Pinson shared a common purpose with Spirit of scheming to misrepresent the
Passenger Usage Fee.
Moreover, the complaint’s general allegations about the operations of the
enterprise do no better in plausibly alleging a common purpose among Spirit and
its various vendors to misrepresent the Passenger Usage Fee. Thus, for example,
the complaint alleged that “Spirit designed and employed an airline ticket booking
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system to conceal and assess fees and charges, including the [Passenger Usage
Fee], via a website process designed specifically to obfuscate, omit and/or
misrepresent the assessment and foundation for the [Passenger Usage Fee].”
While this may allege Spirit’s purpose, it says nothing about the actions of the
other members of the putative enterprise. The next paragraph of the complaint
alleged that “the concerted scheme involved at least two freestanding entities . . . to
devise a registration practice of generating fees by intentionally omitting and/or
misrepresenting their actual purpose.” But this was pled in a wholly conclusory
manner unsupported by any factual averments concerning the specific roles played
by the vendors to support this purpose. This allegation just claimed that other
members of the alleged enterprise were involved in intentionally misrepresenting
the source of the Passenger Usage Fee, but without offering any factual averments
to make the assertion plausible. Similarly, the allegation that Spirit and its
associates-in-fact engaged in strategic planning, targeted marketing studies, and
customizing website technology described only common business practices and did
not offer facts suggesting that the consultants and vendors working with Spirit
were aware of or participated in Spirit’s alleged misrepresentations. Absent facts
plausibly suggesting that Spirit and the other alleged members of this association-
in-fact enterprise shared the common purpose alleged in the complaint, this RICO
pleading fails. On this bare record, Spirit, the outside consultants, software
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developers, and their officers, agents, and employees were engaged in no more
than a series of legitimate commercial transactions.
Finally, the allegations concerning Spirit CEO Ben Baldanza and its Chief
Marketing Officer/Senior Vice President Barry Biffle regarding the enterprise’s
common purpose also seem to us to be insufficient. The complaint alleged that
Baldanza and Biffle orchestrated Spirit’s “ancillary revenue model” whereby
customers pay “unbundled charges that have traditionally been included in the total
price of an airline ticket.” The complaint then alleged that the ancillary revenue
model was “designed and/or adopted by the Enterprise to be intentionally
confusing and deceptive in order to fraudulently collect additional[] moneys from
Spirit customers.” But the complaint did not say who within the enterprise made
that model intentionally confusing. It did not allege that Baldanza or Biffle
instructed anyone within the alleged enterprise to misrepresent the Passenger
Usage Fee or that they were even aware the misrepresentation existed. While
Baldanza, Biffle, and Spirit most assuredly shared a common purpose of promoting
Spirit’s corporate profits and welfare, the complaint did not allege facts sufficient
to give rise to a reasonable inference that the common purpose they shared
included a scheme to misrepresent fees or otherwise defraud Spirit customers.
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C.
Even, however, were we to assume that Baldanza and Biffle shared a
common purpose to misrepresent the source of the Passenger Usage Fee -- making
it look like it was a tax imposed by the government rather than a fee imposed by
the airline -- the plaintiffs’ association-in-fact pleading would still fail because in
an association-in-fact enterprise, a defendant corporation cannot be distinct for
RICO purposes from its own officers, agents, and employees when those
individuals are operating in their official capacities for the corporation.
Significantly, to state a civil RICO claim, a plaintiff must establish a distinction
between the defendant “person” and the “enterprise” itself. The Supreme Court
has made it crystal clear that the racketeering enterprise and the defendant must be
two separate entities. Cedric Kushner Promotions, Ltd. v. King,
533 U.S. 158,
161–62 (2001); see also United States v. Goldin Indus., Inc.,
219 F.3d 1268, 1271
(11th Cir. 2000) (en banc) (“We now agree with our sister circuits that, for the
purposes of 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c), the indictment must name a RICO person distinct
from the RICO enterprise.”). This requirement arises from the statutory language
making it “unlawful for any person employed by or associated with any enterprise”
to engage in racketeering activities through that enterprise. 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c). It
does not make sense for a person to employ or associate with himself. Thus, an
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enterprise may not simply be a “‘person’ referred to by a different name.” Cedric
Kushner
Promotions, 533 U.S. at 161.
The Supreme Court has held that, where the defendant is a natural person, he
is distinct for RICO purposes from a closely held corporation of which he is the
president and sole shareholder. Cedric Kushner
Promotions, 533 U.S. at 160. That
case involved allegations that the boxing promoter Don King conducted the affairs
of Don King Productions (a corporation of which he was the president and sole
shareholder) through a pattern of racketeering activities consisting of fraud and
other RICO predicate crimes.
Id. at 160–61. The Court started its analysis with
the premise that a corporation and its owner/employee are legally separate and
distinct entities.
Id. at 163. Moreover, RICO was designed to protect legitimate
enterprises from becoming vehicles through which unlawful activities are
committed.
Id. at 164. “A corporate employee who conducts the corporation’s
affairs through an unlawful RICO pattern of activity uses that corporation as a
vehicle whether he is, or is not, its sole owner.”
Id. at 164–65 (internal quotation
marks and citation omitted, alteration adopted). Thus, RICO’s distinctiveness
requirement is met where an individual defendant engages in a pattern of
racketeering activity through a corporation, even a corporation of which the
defendant is the sole shareholder.
Id. at 166. But the Court’s holding went no
further. Indeed, the Court explicitly disclaimed deciding the “quite different”
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issue, arising in this case, where the defendant “person” is a corporation and is
alleged to have engaged in an enterprise with its officers, employees, and agents.
Id. at 164.
The plaintiffs argue that the distinction highlighted by the Supreme Court is
not one that compels a different result because the relationships alleged in this case
are just as much an enterprise as those found in Cedric Kushner. But recognizing
that distinction -- far from being an exercise in sophistry -- is very important. In
this case, the corporation is the defendant person, and the corporation, together
with its officers, agents, and employees, are said to constitute the enterprise. Every
circuit that has squarely decided this matter has recognized this distinction. See
Cruz v. FXDirectDealer, LLC,
720 F.3d 115, 121 (2d Cir. 2013); Fitzgerald v.
Chrysler Corp.,
116 F.3d 225, 226–28 (7th Cir. 1997); Riverwoods Chappaqua
Corp. v. Marine Midland Bank, N.A.,
30 F.3d 339, 343–44 (2d Cir. 1994); Bd. of
Cty. Comm’rs of San Juan Cty. v. Liberty Grp.,
965 F.2d 879, 886 (10th Cir.
1992).
We agree with the views expressed by our sister circuits on this matter.
Thus, for example, the Second Circuit has ruled on this issue at least twice. First,
in Riverwoods, the court rejected allegations of a RICO enterprise consisting of a
defendant corporation and three of the corporation’s vice presidents.
Riverwoods,
30 F.3d at 343–45. The Second Circuit held that because a corporation can only
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act through its employees and agents, the fact that it does so is insufficient to
establish the existence of an enterprise.
Id. at 344. Likewise, in Cruz, the Second
Circuit rejected claims of a RICO enterprise consisting of a defendant corporation,
its parent company, a former equity stakeholder, the CEO, the managing director
and corporate counsel, and various software companies that assisted the
corporation in developing its technological platform.
Cruz, 720 F.3d at 120–21.
The court rejected the RICO claims as to the corporate officers because a
defendant corporation cannot form a RICO enterprise with its own employees or
agents who are carrying on the normal work of the corporation.
Id. at 121. The
former stakeholder and software companies were deemed incapable of being part
of the enterprise because there was no pleading that they were aware of the
allegedly fraudulent activities of the corporation and, therefore, could not have
been working toward the common purpose of committing fraud.
Id. Finally, the
corporation was held not to be able to form an enterprise with its parent company
where they shared a single, unified corporate structure.
Id.
The Tenth Circuit has also declined to find a RICO enterprise where a
corporate defendant was accused of acting through its employees and agents.
Liberty
Grp., 965 F.2d at 886. There, the alleged enterprise consisted of a
corporation, the corporation’s general partners (both legal entities in their own
right), the corporation’s successor in interest, a corporate officer, and a corporate
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employee.
Id. at 881. The Tenth Circuit held that these individuals and entities
lacked the requisite distinctiveness to form a RICO enterprise.
Id. at 886.
Finally, the Seventh Circuit in Fitzgerald affirmed the dismissal of a RICO
claim against the Chrysler Corporation where the alleged enterprise consisted of
the corporation, subsidiaries of the corporation, franchised Chrysler dealers, and
trusts controlled by the corporation.
Fitzgerald, 116 F.3d at 226. The Seventh
Circuit concluded that the various parties to the alleged enterprise were either part
of the same corporation or else they served a role that could have been filled
directly by the corporate employees so that it made no sense to treat them as
distinct entities for RICO purposes.
Id. at 228.
We, too, hold that plaintiffs may not plead the existence of a RICO
enterprise between a corporate defendant and its agents or employees acting within
the scope of their roles for the corporation because a corporation necessarily acts
through its agents and employees. For our purposes, there is no distinction
between the corporate person and the alleged enterprise. See
Riverwoods, 30 F.3d
at 344; Liberty
Grp., 965 F.2d at 886. When an individual defendant acts through
a corporation, he may have formed an association-in-fact with an entity distinct
from himself. In that situation, the rule announced in Cedric Kushner makes sense.
In contrast to an individual, a corporation cannot act except through its officers,
agents, and employees. Thus, a corporate defendant acting through its officers,
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agents, and employees is simply a corporation. Labeling it as an enterprise as well
would only amount to referring to the corporate “person” by a different name. Cf.
Cedric Kushner
Promotions, 533 U.S. at 161.
Moreover, RICO was designed -- at least in part -- to prevent an individual
engaged in racketeering activities from increasing his power to do wrong by taking
over an apparently legitimate firm.
Fitzgerald, 116 F.3d at 227. Doing so allows
that individual to “use[] the firm’s resources, contacts, facilities, and appearance of
legitimacy to perpetrate more, and less easily discovered, criminal acts than he
could do in his own person.”
Id. But here, it is hard to see how Spirit increased its
authority or legitimacy, to say nothing of making its allegedly criminal acts more
difficult to discover, by operating in the manner that every corporation by necessity
acts -- through its officers, agents, and employees.
Finally, while RICO was intended to be interpreted broadly, permitting
plaintiffs to plead an enterprise consisting of a defendant corporation and its
officers, agents, and employees acting within the scope of their employment would
broaden RICO beyond any reasonable constraints. See
Cruz, 720 F.3d at 121;
Riverwoods, 30 F.3d at 344. Because every corporation acts through its own
employees as a matter of course, allowing such pleadings to go forward would turn
every claim of corporate fraud into a RICO violation.
Fitzgerald, 116 F.3d at 226.
No matter how broadly RICO is interpreted, there is no reason to think that
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Congress intended the law to provide treble damages in every conceivable case of
corporate fraud.
In this case, there is no distinction between the corporate defendant and an
enterprise composed of the corporation and some of its corporate officers. While
the outside vendors may be distinct, the second amended complaint did not
plausibly allege that they shared a common purpose with Spirit to misrepresent the
Passenger Usage Fee, as we have already discussed. And the corporate officers
and agents plainly are not distinct from the corporate defendant itself for purposes
of a RICO association-in-fact enterprise. In short, the district court correctly
dismissed the plaintiffs’ second amended complaint because the plaintiffs failed to
adequately allege the common purpose or distinctiveness required of a RICO
enterprise.
AFFIRMED.
33