MATTHEW F. KENNELLY, District Judge:
The plaintiffs in this case asserted claims against a number of defendants under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) and Illinois law. When a Cook County property owner fails to pay property taxes on time, the past due tax becomes a lien on the property in favor of the County. The County sells the
Competition typically drives the winning bid to a zero percent penalty, and multiple bidders usually bid zero, more or less simultaneously. This creates a problem of allocation, which the Cook County Treasurer (who conducts the auction) resolves by spreading wins around equitably. This, in turn, creates an incentive for bidders to put multiple agents in the auction or to create related bidders, so that they will have more chances to be awarded liens. The County created a series of rules to prevent this and requires bidders to certify that they do not have certain types of relationships with other bidders. Plaintiffs claimed that the defendants, several groups of related bidders, submitted false certifications and thus had extra related bidders in the auction. As a result, plaintiffs claimed, the defendants acquired more liens, and the plaintiffs (and others who complied with the rules) acquired fewer.
Some of the defendants that the plaintiffs sued settled before trial. A jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs against most, though not all, of the defendants who went to trial. The jury also awarded compensatory damages, which were trebled under RICO, as well as punitive damages on the state-law claim. The Court later ruled that certain portions of the compensatory damage award were subject to setoff based on the settlements the plaintiffs had concluded with other previously-named defendants.
The defendants against whom the plaintiffs prevailed have moved for entry of judgment as a matter of law or alternatively for a new trial. There are two groups of these defendants, to which the Court will refer as the Sass defendants and the BG defendants, consistent with the shorthand references used at the trial and in earlier briefing.
For the reasons stated below, the Court denies the defendants' motions.
A court may enter judgment as a matter of law in a party's favor only if "the evidence presented, combined with all reasonable inferences permissibly drawn therefrom, is [not] sufficient to support the verdict when viewed in the light most favorable to the party against whom the motion is directed." Clarett v. Roberts, 657 F.3d 664, 674 (7th Cir.2011). A jury's verdict may be overturned "only if no reasonable juror could have found in the [prevailing party's] favor." Id. The Court "must construe the facts strictly in favor of the party that prevailed at trial." Schandelmeier-Bartels v. Chicago Park Dist., 634 F.3d 372, 376 (7th Cir.2011).
The predicate criminal acts underlying the plaintiffs' RICO claims against the defendants were multiple acts of mail fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341. Section 1341 proscribes the use of the mail in furtherance of a "scheme or artifice to defraud, or for obtaining money or property by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations, or promises." 18 U.S.C. § 1341. The Supreme Court has interpreted the statute as "limited in scope to the protection of property rights." McNally v. United States, 483 U.S. 350, 360, 107 S.Ct. 2875, 97 L.Ed.2d 292 (1987).
The Sass defendants, joined by the BG defendants, argue that plaintiffs failed to prove violations of section 1341. Specifically,
Cleveland holds that if B defrauds A into transferring something that is not property in A's hands but is property in B's hands, that does not violate section 1341. Here, however, the items transferred — the tax liens, which represented the right to collect past due property taxes — were property in the hands of A, namely the County. Thus Cleveland does not control this case. What Cleveland stands for, as the Seventh Circuit has stated, is that mail fraud "require[s] that the object of the fraud is money or property, rather than an intangible right." United States v. Leahy, 464 F.3d 773, 787 (7th Cir.2006). In this case, the object of the fraud was unquestionably property.
Defendants' real argument appears to be that because the property was never in plaintiffs' hands, there was no violation of section 1341. That, however, is not what Cleveland holds. More specifically, Cleveland does not speak to whether a violation of section 1341 occurs when B defrauds A into transferring property to B rather than C.
Defendants' argument conflates two distinct issues: the question of who is the (primary) mail fraud "victim" with the question of who can sue under the RICO statute. The RICO statute does not say that a victim (as criminal law would define that term) of a pattern of mail fraud can sue. Rather, the statute says that "[a]ny person injured in his business or property" by reason of a RICO violation may sue. 18 U.S.C. § 1964(c). Defendants' argument appears to proceed on the assumption that the RICO plaintiff must be the person who, as a result, of the mail fraud, parted with property under false pretenses. That is not so. Indeed, this question was effectively settled in an earlier appeal in this case, in which the Seventh Circuit and Supreme Court made it clear that the RICO plaintiff need not have relied upon, or even have been the direct recipient of, the perpetrator's false statements. See Phoenix Bond & Indem. Co. v. Bridge, 477 F.3d 928, 932-33 (7th Cir. 2007), aff'd, 553 U.S. 639, 128 S.Ct. 2131, 170 L.Ed.2d 1012 (2008).
In sum, the object of the fraud in this case was property in the hands of the recipient of the fraudulent representations, as well as in the hands of the defendants when they received it, and it would have been property in the plaintiffs' hands absent the fraud. To put it another way, the fraud at issue in this case concerned actual property, not merely an intangible right.
In a number of situations, however, the evidence showed that traders' customers did not have an opportunity to get a better price. This happened on so-called "limit days," in which the price was essentially fixed because of exchange rules that limited the amount that a commodity price could rise or fall on a given day. On those days, only one price was being traded in the pit, and thus customers could not get a better price. The court ruled that in these situations, the defendants did not deprive the customers of any money or property, but rather only the "intangible" right to obtain the single available price by open outcry rather than by prearrangement. Id. at 479. The government conceded that "no customer lost money" on those trades, arguing only that these trades deprived other traders of the ability to be on the other side of those trades and thus make money. The court stated that this amounted to a contention that open outcry trading by itself constituted a property right protected under the mail fraud law, and it rejected the argument, stating that this was not a deprivation of money or property. Id. The Sass defendants argue that this case is similar because the evidence showed that in the vast majority of situations, only a single price was bid for the tax liens being sold, meaning that the County was no worse off having sold to one bidder rather than to another.
The Court does not agree that Ashman controls this case. In Ashman, the mail fraud victim — the customer for whom the pit trader was trading — cared only about price. It did not matter to him who he sold his futures contract to or bought it from. In this case, however, the evidence showed that it mattered to the Treasurer whether it was selling to a bidder eligible to participate in the sale or not. In this regard, the case is more like United States v. Leahy, 464 F.3d 773 (7th Cir.2006). Leahy involved the City of Chicago's award of certain contracts. A City ordinance required companies that wished to contract with the City to commit to spending particular percentages of the contract's value with subcontractors owned by members of racial or ethnic minority groups or by women. The defendants were charged with mail and wire fraud and with RICO violations because they made false representations regarding the ownership of certain
The Seventh Circuit rejected this contention. It stated that the scheme had "precisely and directly targeted Chicago's coffers and its position as a contracting property." Unlike in Cleveland, in which the fraud was committed "against a governmental body acting only as a regulator," the scheme in Leahy "was committed both against Chicago as a regulator and also against the city as property holder. The certifications were necessary steps, but they were not the object of the long-ranging fraud. That object was money, plain and simple, taken under false pretenses from the city...." Id. at 788. The court distinguished the case from Ashman on the ground that even though, as in Ashman, the price for the contract may have been inflexible for several reasons, the City had lost the ability to obtain the services for which it had paid from a qualified contractor. Id.
The same is true here. The County unquestionably parted with property, and it did so under circumstances that deprived it of its ability to transfer that property as it wished, to someone it considered eligible to acquire the property. The defendants' fraud was aimed at obtaining property, and it was directed at the County as a property holder, not just as a regulator. Thus under Leahy, the mail fraud statute was appropriately applied.
The preceding discussion was predicated on the proposition that the County was the mail fraud victim and that the plaintiffs were injured due to the RICO violation that was predicated on the defendants' pattern of mail fraud violations. Plaintiffs have also articulated an alternative theory for sustaining the RICO claim. The Court deals with this only briefly, because the preceding discussion is sufficient without more to require denial of defendants' motion for judgment.
Plaintiffs' alternative theory is that they, along with other eligible bidders at the tax lien sales, were directly victimized by the fraud. At oral argument, plaintiffs' counsel characterized what happened here as a theft of property to which plaintiffs were entitled. The evidence supported this characterization. If an ineligible bidder won a tax lien, he necessarily deprived an eligible bidder of that property. The eligible bidder unquestionably would have obtained the property but for the defendant's fraudulent scheme. To make the case simple,
The hypothetical scenario is far simpler than what actually occurred; in fact, there were numerous bidders at the actual sale as well as numerous liens offered for sale. But the outcome is no different. If the defendants, as ineligible bidders, had not participated, an eligible bidder would have obtained the liens. Plaintiffs offered, via an expert witness, evidence that it was a virtual certainty that they would have obtained at least one more lien, and the jury was entitled to accept that evidence. (And plaintiffs then offered testimony, which the jury likewise was entitled to accept, that in fact it is likely that they would have obtained many more liens than that.) Plaintiffs unquestionably lost money from this, even if the County might not have. For this reason, even if the absence of a pecuniary loss to the County brings Ashman into play, the RICO verdict may nonetheless be sustained on the theory that the plaintiffs were mail fraud victims (or, more precisely, were among the mail fraud victims) and thus were entitled to sue.
The BG defendants, joined by the Sass defendants, argue that plaintiffs failed to prove that the defendants acted with the requisite intent to defraud. Defendants' contention is that they relied on a good faith interpretation of the Cook County Treasurer's rules and regulations governing the tax sale. To obtain judgment as a matter of law based on this argument, defendants must show that no reasonable jury could have found otherwise.
Defendants rely on their purported interpretation of the Treasurer's single simultaneous bidder rule. This focus is misplaced, because the evidence permitted the jury to find that defendants engaged in several other material false pretenses and misrepresentations (including concealing material information). The materials that bidders were required to complete to participate in the tax sale required each bidder to make a sworn statement that it did not have finances in common or a common source of funding with any other bidder or an agreement to sell certificates that it won to another bidder. Plaintiffs offered evidence that the BG defendants had common funding sources with other bidders. They also offered evidence from which the jury reasonably could find that the Sass defendants had an agreement in advance to sell certificates that it won but could not redeem to an entity affiliated with John Bridge, one of the defendants who settled.
In addition, as plaintiffs contend, the evidence permitted the jury to find the defendants had violated the single simultaneous bidder rule. See Pls.' Resp. at 7-9. And contrary to defendants' contention, the interpretation of the rule about which certain defendants testified was not the only reasonable interpretation, nor was the
The RICO statute provides that "[i]t shall be unlawful for any person employed by or associated with any enterprise ... to conduct or participate, directly or indirectly, in the conduct of such enterprise's affairs through a pattern of racketeering activity ...," and the RICO conspiracy statute makes it unlawful to conspire to violate this provision. 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c) & (d). The Supreme Court has ruled that
Reves v. Ernst & Young, 507 U.S. 170, 179, 113 S.Ct. 1163, 122 L.Ed.2d 525 (1993) (footnote omitted). The Court rejected, however, an interpretation that would require a RICO defendant to have "significant control over or within an enterprise." Id. at 179 n. 4, 113 S.Ct. 1163 (emphasis in original; internal quotation marks omitted). Rather, the Court held that the statute requires proof of participation in the operation or management of the enterprise. Id. at 179, 113 S.Ct. 1163.
With regard to the Sass defendants, the enterprise involved John Bridge's establishment of a system for sharing information identifying liens on which participants should or should not bid, as well as what plaintiffs refer to as an "exit strategy" for selling liens that ended up going unredeemed. The Court agrees with plaintiffs that the evidence that the Sass defendants participated in the scheme's design by, among other things, negotiating a pre-sale agreement with Bridge and agreeing in advance to the exit strategy was sufficient to support a finding that they participated in the operation of the enterprise. The fact that Bridge may have used a similar agreement with other bidders, or that Bridge may have been the person who initiated the form of arrangement, does not alter the Court's conclusion. The evidence supported a finding that the Sass defendants made a conscious decision to adopt this particular arrangement as the structure for their dealings with Bridge and their participation in the tax sale. This was enough to permit a reasonable jury to find that they participated in the operation and the management of the enterprise.
The Sass defendants, joined by the BG defendants, argue that the evidence was insufficient to establish a "pattern" of racketeering activity. To establish a pattern of racketeering activity, a plaintiff must establish at least two racketeering acts that "are related, and that ... amount to or pose a threat of continued activity." H.J. Inc. v. Northwestern Bell Tel. Co., 492 U.S. 229, 239, 109 S.Ct. 2893, 106 L.Ed.2d 195 (1989). This may be shown by proof of a series of related predicate acts extending over a substantial period of time. Id. at 242, 109 S.Ct. 2893.
The question is not close. Taking the evidence in the light most favorable to plaintiffs, they unquestionably provided evidence sufficient to permit a reasonable jury to find that a RICO pattern existed. They offered evidence permitting the jury to find that the defendants committed
The Sass defendants argue that "plaintiffs failed to show that they would have obtained any liens if they were subjected to the `correct' selection process.... That failure in turn constitutes a failure to show that any damages were directly caused by the conduct alleged as a RICO violation...." Sass Defs.' Mem. at 15. The Court disagrees. Plaintiffs' expert Thomas Dunn testified that it was a virtual certainty that absent the various defendants' conduct claimed to be improper, plaintiffs would have obtained more liens. Dunn may not have been able to show this was 100 percent certain, but the law does not require that; it requires proof only by a preponderance of the evidence. Taking the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, as the law requires, the jury was entitled to find that plaintiffs established exactly what defendants say they did not show.
The Court rejects defendants' argument that the evidence did not support a finding that the Sass and BG defendants intentionally interfered with the plaintiffs' prospective contractual relationships. Defendants argue that plaintiffs did not prove that defendants even knew plaintiffs existed or that they sought to harm plaintiffs. See Sass Defs.' Mem. at 24. They also argue that their conduct did not prevent plaintiffs from bidding. The latter argument, of course, completely misses the point. Because the norm at the auctions was for all bidders to bid an identical amount, simultaneously or virtually so, the Treasurer's personnel allocated wins as best they could, equitably. The conduct that plaintiffs alleged and that the evidence permitted the jury to find involved defendants having multiple related bidders at the auctions so that they could garner more liens than they otherwise would have. The evidence permitted the jury to find that this prevented plaintiffs from obtaining as many liens as they otherwise would have obtained and that defendants knew their actions had this effect on other bidders. The fact that defendants may not have specifically targeted the plaintiffs is of no consequence.
In sum, the Court agrees with plaintiffs that there was a sufficient evidentiary basis supporting the jury's finding of liability. The defendants were obviously aware that given the finite number of liens available, any liens they won were lost by another bidder — as plaintiffs put it, this was a zero-sum game. The jury reasonably could find that by effectively putting extra ineligible bidders into the room, defendants knew they were causing harm to other bidders, including plaintiffs (who
This evidence was also sufficient to establish a basis for punitive damages. The jury was properly instructed that Illinois law permits a punitive damage award against a defendant that acts with utter indifference to or conscious disregard of a plaintiff's rights. See Slovinski v. Elliot, 237 Ill.2d 51, 58, 340 Ill.Dec. 210, 927 N.E.2d 1221, 1225 (2010) (punitive damages available when "the tort is committed with fraud, actual malice, deliberate violence or oppression, or when the defendant acts willfully, or with such gross negligence as to indicate a wanton disregard of the rights of others.") (internal quotation marks omitted). The jury was entitled to find that by scheming to lie and evade the Treasurer's rules, to enrich themselves and with knowledge that this was to the detriment of other bidders, defendants engaged in conduct sufficient to justify a punitive damage award.
Defendants also launch attacks against the jury's award of compensatory damages. The Court dealt with certain of their arguments in decisions issued on January 2, 2012 and January 24, 2012. In particular, the Court concluded that the so-called "one satisfaction" doctrine applied to the compensatory damage award. Applying this doctrine, the Court reduced the jury's compensatory damage award against the Sass defendants but declined to reduce the award against the BG defendants. The Court also overruled defendants' argument that it should vacate the jury's award of punitive damages on plaintiffs' state law claims. In the present decision, the Court deals with defendants' remaining contentions regarding damages.
The BG defendants, joined by the Sass defendants, argue that plaintiffs' damages theory was "legally impermissible," see BG Defs.' Mem. at 13, and that even if permissible, the evidence was insufficient for the plaintiffs to carry their burden of proving compensatory damages. See id. at 14. For these reasons, the BG defendants argue, defendants are "entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Id.
The Court begins by noting that this is a somewhat odd argument, legally speaking. Typically a defendant challenging a compensatory damage award seeks a new trial because the award was grossly excessive; was not rationally connected to the evidence; or (in certain types of situations) was excessive when compared with awards in similar cases. See, e.g., Deloughery v. City of Chicago, 422 F.3d 611, 619 (7th Cir.2005). The BG defendants, however, do not seem to make these sorts of arguments. Specifically, they do not contend that the jury made any errors along these lines. Nor do the BG defendants appear to say that Court, upon accepting one or more of their arguments, should order a new trial. Rather, they attack the theory of damages as presented by plaintiffs' experts and as argued by plaintiffs' attorneys, and they seek not a new trial, but judgment as a matter of law.
The latter request is particularly difficult to understand, from a legal standpoint. A court is permitted to enter judgment as a matter of law in a party's favor if "a reasonable jury would not have a legally sufficient evidentiary basis to find for the [opposing] party." Fed.R.Civ.P. 50(a). In the present situation, this would in effect require a determination by the Court that even if defendants violated the RICO statute and state tort law, plaintiffs suffered no cognizable injury at all. Any such contention in this case would border on the frivolous.
Thus if one takes defendants' argument at face value, it fails. There is no basis for entry of judgment as a matter of law in defendants' favor on the ground that plaintiffs pursued a flawed theory of damages.
The Court will, however, treat defendants' argument as a contention that the compensatory damage award was unsupported by the evidence, thus warranting a new trial. The Court will begin with an overview of the law regarding compensatory damages and then will summarize the theory that Shaffer and plaintiffs' counsel advanced.
A plaintiff has the burden of proving damages to a reasonable degree of certainty. Haslund v. Simon Prop. Grp., Inc., 378 F.3d 653, 658 (7th Cir.2004). But as the Seventh Circuit stated in an earlier appeal in this case, when it comes to damages, "the plaintiff has a more relaxed burden of proof than on the issue of causation." BCS Servs., Inc. v. Heartwood 88, LLC, 637 F.3d 750, 759 (7th Cir.2011). When a defendant's wrong makes it difficult for the plaintiff to prove damages, all reasonable doubts about the amount of damages are resolved in the plaintiff's favor. Id.; see Bigelow v. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., 327 U.S. 251, 264-66, 66 S.Ct. 574, 90 L.Ed. 652 (1946). "Once the plaintiff proves injury, broad latitude is allowed in quantifying damages, especially when the defendant's own conduct impedes quantification." Id.
As the Court has indicated, plaintiffs' expert Shaffer sought to estimate losses resulting from the defendants' wrongful conduct. In denying a pretrial motion to bar Shaffer from testifying, the Court described his testimony as follows:
Order of Sept. 14, 2011 (dkt. no. 773) at 1.
Defendants take issue with the fact that Shaffer's analysis, and plaintiffs' arguments to the jury, assumed that none of the defendants and others claimed by plaintiffs to have violated the Treasurer's bidding requirements and prohibitions were eligible to bid. In attempting to estimate the number and value of the additional liens plaintiffs would have acquired absent the fraud, Shaffer put back into the hopper, so to speak, all of the liens that were awarded to any of the defendants or to others claimed to have been ineligible. The BG defendants argue that this held them responsible for the alleged misconduct of others.
Plaintiffs attempted to prove their damages by building from a scenario in which the law had not been broken and only eligible bidders had participated in the annual tax lien sales. The BG defendants contend that because plaintiffs contended there were several groups of allegedly ineligible bidders that were unrelated to each other, backing all of the allegedly ineligible bidders out of the sale before hypothetically redistributing the liens the ineligible bidders had won in effect held the BG defendants responsible for the misconduct of other unrelated bidders. The Court does not see it that way, as it has previously explained in earlier oral rulings, all of which the Court adopts and reaffirms here. In any event, the law did not compel plaintiffs to prove or estimate their damages based on a theory that the damages attributable to a defendant were to be calculated based on the assumption that only the ineligible bidders associated with that particular defendant had not participated. Among other things, that sort of scenario would have resulted in a reconstructed sale in which other bidders whom plaintiffs contended were ineligible would have been "awarded" some of the liens that had been acquired by the particular defendant and its associates. Plaintiffs were not required to follow that course.
Plaintiffs' theory of compensatory damages may not have been perfect, nor was it the only possible way to determine compensatory damages. But it met the standard established by the Seventh Circuit. The rigging of the tax lien sale made it well-nigh impossible to determine the exact amount of harm to the plaintiffs. It was left to plaintiffs to attempt to reconstruct and estimate what would have happened if defendants' wrongful conduct had not occurred. Shaffer's estimations provided a reasonable approximation of the actual harm that plaintiffs suffered due to defendants' violations of the RICO statute and state law.
In any event, defendants' argument seems to assume that the jury adopted, lock, stock, and barrel, the theory of damages advanced by Shaffer and by plaintiffs' counsel. That does not appear to be an entirely accurate assumption. The jury did not adopt Shaffer's or plaintiff's counsel's proposed compensatory damages figures for any defendant that it found liable. Rather, it set lower awards for each defendant than plaintiffs had proposed. This is one more reason why an attack on plaintiffs' or Shaffer's theory does not carry the day.
There is no basis to believe that the jury awarded compensatory damages against any defendant due to the wrongful conduct of another defendant or a party not named as a defendant. The jury was
Tr. 3504. The jury was also told that in seeking damages, a plaintiff was required to prove that a defendant's conduct was a proximate cause of the plaintiff's damages. Id. In addition, the Court instructed the jury that it was required to give separate consideration to each plaintiff, each claim by each plaintiff, and each defendant. Tr. 3493. This instruction applied to the jury's consideration of damages just as it applied to its consideration of liability. The jury was thus properly instructed to consider each defendant separately, and there is no reason to believe that the jury failed to do so.
The BG defendants also argue that even if plaintiffs' theory of damages was legally valid, plaintiffs failed to prove that all of the other bidders that Shaffer excluded in his model were actually ineligible. The Court notes, again, that this would not be a basis to grant judgment as a matter of law for defendants even were their argument correct. That aside, the BG defendants' contentions are unavailing. The Court agrees with plaintiffs that there was sufficient evidence, including exhibits, to support a reasonable jury determination that the Peters group entities, Wheeler-Dealer, and various defendants who settled were ineligible to bid. See Pls.' Resp. at 17-23. With regard to Wheeler-Dealer, the BG defendants assume from Wheeler-Dealer's no-liability finding that the jury did not believe that entity was ineligible to bid. This is an unwarranted assumption. The jury could have found in Wheeler-Dealer's favor despite believing it was ineligible by, for example, concluding that plaintiffs have failed to show the intent required to prove a RICO violation or tortious interference. In any event, as the Court has noted, the jury did not adopt plaintiffs' or Shaffer's proposed compensatory damage figures for any defendant but instead made lower awards. One can reasonably infer from this that the jury, which did an extraordinarily careful job, accounted for any failure of proof of ineligibility as to particular bidders.
The defendants contend that the jury instructions were, in various respects, incorrect or erroneously failed to include language offered by defendant. A court considering a challenge to jury instructions reviews the instructions as a whole to determine if they adequately informed the jury of the applicable law. This requires a two-step process. The first question is whether the instructions, taken as a whole, misstated or failed to fully state the law. If so, the second question is whether the instructions confused or misled the jury, thereby causing prejudice. See, e.g., Aldridge v. Forest River, Inc., 635 F.3d 870, 876 (7th Cir.2011); Van Bumble v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 407 F.3d 823, 825-26 (7th Cir.2005).
The Sass defendants challenge the Court's failure to give the following instruction that they requested regarding mail fraud:
Sass Defs.' Mem. at 16.
First, the instruction was incorrect in part. As the Court has explained, though the mail fraud statute requires a scheme to defraud a person of money or property, this was not a suit directly under the mail fraud statute. Rather, it was a suit under RICO, which permits a person injured by a pattern of racketeering activity to sue, even if that person was not the direct mail fraud victim, i.e. the recipient of the alleged misrepresentations. Thus the proposed instruction's statement that "mail fraud requires proof of a scheme that causes the deprivation of property in the victim's hands" was misleading and erroneous.
In addition, the omission of this proposed instruction was harmless, because plaintiffs' claims did not concern intangible rights. The tax liens indisputably were property. In addition, even if plaintiffs' claims had been, as defendants contend, merely about being deprived a fair opportunity to bid, the instructions that the Court gave made it clear that a scheme to defraud had to involve money or property, not simply an intangible right. The Court instructed the jury that "[a] scheme to defraud is a plan or course of action formed with the intent to deceive or cheat a person or entity and to obtain money or property from a person or entity by using one or more material false pretenses, representations or promises." Tr. 3500 (emphasis added). As the Court stated in rejecting defendants' proposed instruction as unnecessary:
Tr. 3460-61. The Court continues to believe this ruling was correct and thus reaffirms it.
The instructions for the RICO claim required plaintiffs to prove as to each defendant that, among other things, "[t]he defendant knowingly conducted or participated in the conduct of the affairs of the enterprise through a pattern of racketeering activity." Tr. 3494. The instructions for the RICO conspiracy claim required plaintiffs to prove that "[t]he defendant you are considering knowingly conspired with one or more other persons or entities to conduct or participate in the conduct of the affairs of the enterprise through a pattern of racketeering activity." Tr. 3495. The instructions also stated that "[a] person or entity conducts or participates in the conduct of an enterprise if the person or entity uses its position in or association with the enterprise to perform acts that are involved, directly or indirectly, in the operation or management of the enterprise, or by causing another to do so." Tr. 3497.
The Sass defendants argue that these instructions should have included the following language: "Liability depends on showing that the defendants conducted or participated in the conduct of the enterprise's
The Sass defendants offer a second challenge to the enterprise-related instructions. The instructions for each of the RICO claims defined an "enterprise" as follows: "An enterprise is a group of people or entities associated together for a common purpose of engaging in a course of legal or illegal conduct. You should consider whether the group has an ongoing organization or structure, either formal or informal, and whether its members functioned as a continuing unit." Tr. 3496.
The Sass defendants argue that this was insufficient and that the instruction also should have included language to the effect that an enterprise must be "more than just a name for alleged fraudulent acts or for an agreement to commit such acts." Sass Defs.' Mem. at 18. The Court notes that this language is not included in the Circuit's current pattern RICO instructions for criminal cases or the proposed new pattern instructions. That aside, the added language was unnecessary, and defendants were not prejudiced by its omission. The instruction advised the jury what plaintiffs had to prove to establish their claim. Having done that, there was no need to provide a list of what sorts of proof would be in sufficient. In any event, the language of the instruction expressly required more than just proof of illegal conduct; it said, among other things, that plaintiffs had to prove there was a group associated together in order to engage in illegal conduct. And the direction to the jury to consider whether there was a structure and whether the alleged enterprise's members functioned as a continuing unit accurately described how a plaintiff goes about proving that there is an enterprise as distinguished from a series of criminal acts. See, e.g., Rain v. Rolls-Royce Corp., 626 F.3d 372, 377 (7th Cir. 2010); Crichton v. Golden Rule Ins. Co., 576 F.3d 392, 400 (7th Cir.2009). Thus the instructions covered the very point the Sass defendants sought to incorporate.
The Supreme Court has interpreted RICO's pattern requirement as requiring a plaintiff to show that the racketeering predicate acts are related and "amount to or pose a threat of continued criminal activity." H.J. Inc., 492 U.S. at 239, 109 S.Ct. 2893. The Court's instructions regarding the RICO claim told the jury that a "pattern of racketeering activity," as used in this case, "consists of two or more violations of the federal mail fraud law that are related to each other and that are either ongoing over a substantial period or are part of the regular way of conducting one's business." Tr. 3497.
At the conference on instructions, the Court asked defense counsel what they thought was missing from the pattern definition that the Court proposed to give to the jury. The Sass defendants' counsel
In any event, defendants were not prejudiced by the absence of this language. The evidence reflected that the defendants had engaged in the conduct plaintiffs challenged repeatedly and regularly over a period of several years. The conduct unquestionably met the continuity requirement, and there is no basis to believe that a jury instructed as the Sass defendants propose would have found otherwise. Any claimed incompleteness in the instruction was harmless.
Defendants challenge the Court's decision not to give a so-called "hub and spokes" instruction regarding conspiracy. Prior to the jury instruction conference and closing arguments, the Court circulated a draft set of instructions. Both sides filed written objections to those instructions. Defendants sought inclusion of the following instruction:
See Defs.' Consol. Objs. to Court's Proposed Instructions, Ex. C (proposed instruction 27A). The Court declined to give the instruction. See Tr. 3415-16.
In sum, the instructions that the Court gave adequately advised the jury regarding the law's requirements on the points concerning conspiracy and RICO enterprises addressed by defendants' proposed instruction. The instructions were sufficient, and defendants have shown no prejudice.
The Court gave what the Sass defendants characterize as an "ostrich" instruction, and those defendants contend this was erroneous. Specifically, the instructions defined knowledge, a requirement of the RICO predicate acts of mail fraud, as follows:
Tr. 3500. The Sass defendants object to the deliberate-avoidance language in the instruction, suggesting it did not apply to them and that it undercut their defense.
The Court disagrees. First, the instruction was appropriate given the testimony of certain defendants/defendant representatives (Bonnie Gray, Lori Levinson, and Arlene Atlas) that they were unaware of what they were signing when they executed certain significant documents. The Sass defendants do not contend that the deliberate-avoidance instruction was inappropriately given as to other defendants. Assuming the instruction was warranted only as to Gray, Levinson, and Atlas, there is no basis to believe the jury somehow inappropriate misapplied it to find liability for the Sass defendants based on negligence. Courts presume that juries sort through evidence capably and follow instructions
The Court gave the jury accurate instructions regarding the requirement, for mail fraud, to prove intent to defraud. Specifically, the Court instructed the jury that plaintiffs were required to prove that defendants "had the intent to deceive or cheat." Tr. 3499-3500. The Court also instructed the jury that "[g]ood faith on the part of a defendant is inconsistent with intent to defraud. A defendant is not required to prove that it acted with good faith; rather, the plaintiffs must prove that the defendant acted with the intent to defraud." Tr. 3501.
Defendants wanted the Court to go still further and to give an instruction that "statements made when there is a good faith disagreement about the applicable governing law or when the law is unclear are not false." The Court rejected the instruction on the ground that it was unduly argumentative, because the instruction essentially focused on a single topic and told the jury what to find based on its determination of what the evidence on that topic showed. The Court did not err in disapproving the instruction. "Rather than describing each possible inference of the evidence, the judge may and usually should leave the subject of the interpretation of the evidence to the argument of counsel." Hasham v. Calif. State Bd. of Equalization, 200 F.3d 1035, 1051 (7th Cir. 2000). The Court in no way precluded defendants from arguing the inference on which they sought an instruction.
In any event, the additional instruction defendants sought was unnecessary in light of the instructions advising the jury that they had to find that plaintiffs had proven both knowing conduct and intent to defraud, not to mention the instruction that good faith was inconsistent with intent to defraud. See, e.g., United States v. Prude, 489 F.3d 873, 882 (7th Cir.2007); United States v. Given, 164 F.3d 389, 394-95 (7th Cir. 1999) (overruling an argument that a specific good faith instruction was necessary when the jury adequately was apprised of the requirement of intent using the Seventh Circuit's pattern instructions); United States v. Koster, 163 F.3d 1008, 1012 (7th Cir.1998) ("[T]he jury could not have found that [the defendant] knowingly committed mail fraud and/or knowingly made false statements ... and yet simultaneously have found that [he] acted in good faith.... Accordingly, [his] theory of defense was already part of the ... charge.").
In addition to the points discussed in detail in this decision, the Court has considered all of the other points raised by defendants — some only in footnotes — and has determined them to be without merit. For the reasons stated above, the Court denies defendants' motions for judgment as a matter of law and for a new trial.