ROBERT L. MILLER, Jr., District Judge.
DirectBuy, Inc. and United Consumers Club, Inc. move to dismiss the second amended complaint of Desert Buy Palm Springs, Inc. under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. The defendants have moved to dismiss Desert Buy's claims for breach of contract against DirectBuy and for conversion, unjust enrichment, and breach of trust against DirectBuy and United Consumers Club. Jurisdiction is based on diversity of citizenship, 28 U.S.C. § 1332, and the parties rely on Indiana law to support their arguments.
DirectBuy sells franchises or clubs to operators, who, in turn, sell consumer memberships that allow members to purchase goods through any DirectBuy franchise or club for below standard retail prices. In 2007, Desert Buy entered into a Franchise Agreement with DirectBuy that granted Desert Buy the right to operate a DirectBuy club in Palm Desert, California. Desert Buy operated the Palm Desert Center until April 29, 2010 when, due to a downturn in business, Desert Buy informed DirectBuy it was winding down its Palm Desert operation and would no longer sell new memberships. The Palm Desert Center continued to receive shipments of previously ordered products and Desert Buy provided service to its existing members into August 2010.
Desert Buy alleges in its second amended complaint that DirectBuy and/or United Consumers Club, DirectBuy's parent company, wrongfully withheld membership, renewal, and handling fees to which Desert Buy is entitled under the Franchise Agreement and wrongfully assessed charges to Desert Buy after Desert Buy announced it was no longer selling new memberships. According to Desert Buy, DirectBuy breached the Franchise Agreement and the actions of DirectBuy and/or United Consumers Club amount to conversion, unjust enrichment, and breach of trust. Desert Buy seeks consequential and punitive damages.
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) allows a defendant to seek dismissal of a complaint that states no claim upon which relief can be granted. A court deciding a Rule 12(b)(6) motion must accept the complaint's factual allegations as true and draw all reasonable inferences in the plaintiff's favor without engaging in fact-finding.
DirectBuy moves to dismiss Desert Buy's breach of contract claims in Counts 1, 2, and 3 of the second amended complaint because, DirectBuy says, Desert Buy was the first party to breach the contract, barring Desert Buy from maintaining an action to enforce the contract. According to DirectBuy, the allegations of Counts 1, 2, and 3 "confirm, as a matter of law, that [Desert Buy] first committed a material breach of the contract and therefore [Desert Buy's] breach of contract claims based on the contract are barred as a matter of law." Memo., at 7.
The essential elements of a breach of contract claim under Indiana law are the existence of a contract, a breach of the contract, and damages.
DirectBuy claims Desert Buy was the first to breach the contract and is correct that "[w]hen one party to a contract commits the first material breach of that contract, it cannot seek to enforce the provisions of the contract against the other party if that other party breaches the contract at a later date,"
Desert Buy alleges in Counts 4, 5, 6, and 7 that DirectBuy and United Consumers Club engaged in conversion by knowingly exerting and maintaining unauthorized control and possession of funds (membership, renewal, and handling fees) to which Desert Buy is entitled. Desert Buy explains in its response to the motion to dismiss that its allegations in those counts are ones for criminal and civil conversion. DirectBuy and United Consumers Club say the conversion claims should be dismissed because (a) Desert Buy hasn't properly pleaded the elements of criminal conversion, (b) the Franchise Agreement authorizes DirectBuy to apply the various fees to offset amounts owed by Desert Buy, so Desert Buy's allegations of civil conversion are "insufficient to overcome or dispel DirectBuy's explicit authority under the set-off provisions" to apply those funds to Desert Buy's financial obligations, and (c) the Franchise Agreement bars recovery of punitive damages.
Indiana Code § 35-43-4-3(a) defines criminal conversion as knowingly or intentionally exerting unauthorized control over the property of another. Indiana Code § 34-24-3-1 provides that one who suffers a pecuniary loss as a result of a violation of Indiana Code § 35-43-4-3 may bring a civil action against the person who caused the loss. Intent is an essential element of a criminal conversion action: "To establish that intent, a plaintiff must show the defendant was aware of a high probability his control over the plaintiff's property was unauthorized."
Desert Buy alleges in each of Counts 4-7 that DirectBuy and United Consumers Club "took possession and control" of various funds to which Desert Buy had an "immediate and unqualified right to receive." Second Amd. Compl., ¶¶ 75-76, 84-85, 93-94, 102-103. Desert Buy says it placed those funds into trust accounts that DirectBuy and United Consumers Club controlled, and DirectBuy and United Consumers Club knowingly and intentionally exerted unauthorized control over the funds, which amounted to conversion of Desert Buy's property. Second Amd. Compl., ¶¶ 78, 81; 87, 90; 96, 99; 105, 108. Desert Buy concludes that "Defendants' maintaining unauthorized control and possession of the [funds] was a substantial factor in causing Desert Buy's harm." Second Amd. Compl., ¶¶ 80, 89, 98, 107. Desert Buy says Counts 4-7 shouldn't be dismissed because it has alleged the necessary elements, including a requisite mens rea, to support claims for criminal and civil conversion.
Taking as true the allegations of Counts 4-7, Desert Buy has set forth facts sufficient to state plausible claims for criminal and civil conversion, i.e., that DirectBuy and United Consumers Club "knowingly and intentionally" took "unauthorized control" over "property" belonging to Desert Buy and converted those funds to a use not contemplated or authorized by DirectBuy's and United Consumer Club's positions as trustees of the funds. Deciding whether Desert Buy had an unqualified right to the funds, whether either or both of the defendants had the requisite mens rea, and/or whether provisions of the Franchise Agreement control on the issues of debt set-off and punitive damages, as the defendants are asking the court to do, would require fact-finding that isn't allowed in ruling on a motion to dismiss.
The defendants argue, too, that Desert Buy's claims should be dismissed against United Consumers Club because, as a parent company, United Consumers Club can't be liable for its subsidiary's actions without an independent legal basis and Desert Buy has alleged no such independent basis. While the defendants are correct that the mere existence of a subsidiary-parent relationship is not, without more, sufficient reason to disregard the corporate identity,
Lastly, DirectBuy and United Consumers Club assert the conversion claims should be dismissed because Desert Buy hasn't alleged that a determinative sum of money was converted. "Under Indiana law, money may be the subject of an action for conversion, but it must be capable of being identified as a special chattel. The money must be a determinable sum that the defendant was entrusted to apply to a certain purpose."
Because the allegations of the second amended complaint are sufficient to state conversion claims as to DirectBuy and United Consumers Club, the motion to dismiss Counts 4, 5, 6, and 7 must be denied.
Counts 8, 9, 10, and 11 contain Desert Buy's allegations of unjust enrichment as to DirectBuy and United Consumers Club. The companies say the existence of an express contract bars Desert Buy's claims, while Desert Buy maintains it's entitled to plead unjust enrichment as an alternative theory to breach of contract.
Unjust enrichment is a quasi-contract claim, which "`is a legal fiction invented by the common-law courts in order to permit a recovery . . . where, in fact, there is no contract, but where the circumstances are such that under the law of natural and immutable justice there should be a recovery as though there had been a promise.'"
DirectBuy maintains that Desert Buy's claims of unjust enrichment should be dismissed because the Franchise Agreement controls its relationship with Desert Buy. The second amended complaint alleges that the Franchise Agreement is a valid and enforceable contract. See Second Amd. Compl., ¶¶ 51, 59, 67. To plead unjust enrichment, then, Desert Buy must claim that a contract did not exist. Desert Buy hasn't alleged that it had no contract with DirectBuy or that the contract was unenforceable. See
United Consumers Club argues that the unjust enrichment claims against it should be dismissed, too, because Desert Buy hasn't alleged an independent basis for liability. Unjust enrichment is an appropriate claim when "no contract actually exists but where justice nevertheless warrants a recovery under the circumstances as though there had been a promise."
Desert Buy hasn't alleged it had a contract with United Consumers Club, but claims it conferred benefits on United Consumers Club by depositing funds into escrow and trust accounts controlled by United Consumers Club and by being required to pay United Consumers Club for marketing leads assessed after Desert Buy was no longer selling memberships. Taken as true, Desert Buy's allegations — that United Consumers Club's wrongful retention of those funds amounts to unjust enrichment — provide an independent basis for liability against United Consumers Club, and the court will deny the motion to dismiss Counts 8, 9, 10, and 11 as to United Consumers Club.
Desert Buy sets forth a breach of trust claim in Count 12 against DirectBuy and United Consumers Club, alleging a fiduciary relationship existed between the parties based on DirectBuy and United Consumers Club serving as trustees of the escrow and trust funds into which Desert Buy deposited funds. Desert Buy maintains it was the beneficiary of the deposited funds and argues that the trust relationship is independent of the Franchise Agreement. DirectBuy and United Consumers Club assert that the breach of trust claim fails because the Franchise Agreement expressly disclaims any trust relationship.
"Under Indiana law, a claim for breach of trust is a claim for breach of fiduciary duty and thus requires a fiduciary relationship."
Desert Buy alleges that the various fees it deposited into trust accounts were controlled by DirectBuy and United Consumers Club, as trustees. Desert Buy also alleges it's the beneficiary of those fees, it has fully performed all the necessary conditions to entitle it to receipt of the fees, and it has been harmed by the failure and refusal of DirectBuy and United Consumers Club to disburse the fees. Taken as true, Desert Buy's claims plausibly suggest a fiduciary relationship between the parties, a breach by the trustees, and harm to Desert Buy. The facts alleged are sufficient to state a claim for breach of trust.
The defendants' argument that the breach of trust claim should be dismissed because the Franchise Agreement prevents the existence of any fiduciary relationship between the parties is premature. Desert Buy has alleged that DirectBuy, as the first party to breach the Franchise Agreement, can't enforce the terms of the contract and United Consumers Club wasn't a party to the contract. The parties' disagreement about whether a fiduciary relationship could or did exist raises a question of fact not properly resolved in connection with a motion to dismiss.
United Consumers Club argues, too, that the claims against it should be dismissed because it can't be held liable as a parent corporation for a subsidiary's breach of trust. Desert Buy, though, has alleged that United Consumers Club was a trustee and administrator of the funds at issue, that as a trustee it was in a position of trust and confidence with Desert Buy, and its refusal to disburse those funds has harmed Desert Buy. Those allegations, taken as true, state a plausible claim of breach of trust against United Consumers Club separate and apart from the claims against DirectBuy.
Count 12 contains allegations sufficient to state a claim for breach of trust against DirectBuy and United Consumers Club, so the motion to dismiss that count will be denied.
Based on the foregoing, the court GRANTS in part and DENIES in part the motion to dismiss [docket # 74] in the following particulars:
The court additionally notes that it has the obligation to inquire into its own subject matter jurisdiction.
In addition, the second amended complaint alleges that defendants Does 1-10 "are responsible in some manner for the occurrences herein," but unidentified Doe defendants are not permitted in federal diversity suits. Diversity jurisdiction must be proved by the plaintiff rather than assumed as a default, so "the existence of diversity jurisdiction cannot be determined without knowledge of every defendant's place of citizenship."
The court affords the plaintiff twenty days from the date of this order to file an amended complaint alleging the existence of diversity jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332.
SO ORDERED.