THOMAS W. THRASH, JR., United States District Judge.
This is a qui tam action. It is before the Court on the Defendants The Sultan Center Food Products Co., K.S.C., Emad Al-Saleh, Charles Tobias Switzer, Tarek Abdul Aziz Sultan Al-Essa, and The Public Warehousing Company, K.S.C.'s Motions to Dismiss the Relator Kamal Mustafa Al-Sultan's Complaints pursuant to Rules 9(b) and 12(b)(6) [Docs. 196, 197, 201, 202 & 205]. For the following reasons, The Sultan Center's Motion to Dismiss based on Rules 9(b) and 12(b)(6) [Doc. 196] is DENIED in part and GRANTED in part, The Sultan Center's Motion to Dismiss Based on United States' Notice of Election to Intervene [Doc. 197] is DENIED as moot, Al-Saleh's Motion to Dismiss [Doc. 201] is GRANTED, Switzer's Motion to Dismiss [Doc. 202] is GRANTED, and Al-Essa and PWC's joint Motion to Dismiss [Doc. 205] is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part.
According to the Relator's Complaint, First Amended Complaint, and Second Amended Complaint, The Public Warehousing Company, K.S.C. ("PWC") entered into three contracts between May 2003 and July 2005 with the Defense Supply Center Philadelphia, an agency of the Department of Defense.
The Plaintiff-Relator Kamal Mustafa Al-Sultan is a resident of Kuwait. He is also the General Manager and controlling shareholder of Kamal Mustafa Al-Sultan Company, WLL ("Al-Sultan Company"), a limited liability Kuwaiti trading company that has had arrangements with the United States and the Defendants. The Defendant PWC is a large, publicly traded Kuwaiti logistics company now known as Agility Public Warehousing Company K.S.C. PWC is headquartered in Sulaibiya, Kuwait. The Sultan Center Food Products Co., K.S.C. is a provider of various perishables and consumer goods, also headquartered in Kuwait, which PWC used to fulfill many of its orders related to the contracts at issue.
The Defendant Tarek Abdul Aziz Sultan Al-Essa is an American citizen who served on the boards of both PWC and The Sultan Center, and was PWC's Board Chairman and Managing Director. The Defendant Charles Switzer is a citizen of the United States who was PWC's General Manager of the Prime Vendor Program, which oversaw PWC's contracts with the Defense Supply Center. And lastly, the Defendant Emad Al-Saleh is an American citizen who served as an employee of PWC.
The Defense Supply Center issued a solicitation for the first contract, known as the PV-1 Contract, on May 10, 2002.
All three contracts contained the same contractual language regarding how PWC was to invoice the Defense Supply Center. Under the contracts, PWC was to invoice the "unit price" for each product delivered.
The Relator primarily alleges that the Defendants colluded to overcharge the government by using The Sultan Center as a middleman to increase the price paid by the government. The contracts required PWC to purchase perishable goods on the local market, products called Local Market Ready Items or LMRI. When PWC received orders from the Defense Supply Center for these local market items, PWC typically called upon the Defendant The Sultan Center to fulfill them. The Sultan Center would then purchase the LMRI from local producers and invoice the cost to PWC.
The Complaint states, however, that The Sultan Center substantially marked up the prices it had paid local manufacturers and suppliers for the LMRI. Rather than invoice PWC solely for the "cost of goods," The Sultan Center would add its own overhead and profit. According to the Complaint, the Defendants knew that the prices were inflated, and knew the price The Sultan Center had actually paid, but billed the Defense Supply Center at the inflated price. The Relator argues that because The Sultan Center was not adding anything of value to the contract other than serving as a middleman for the purpose of enriching itself, the Defendants were deliberately structuring their invoices so as to defraud the government.
Soon after the PV-1 Contract had been entered into, PWC and The Sultan Center allegedly attempted to reach an agreement with the Al-Sultan Company and the Relator to participate in the scheme. The Relator refused to participate, and presented a counteroffer that the Relator and the Al-Sultan Company believed was in accordance with the terms of the PV-1 Contract. When PWC and The Sultan Center refused the Relator's counteroffer, the Complaint alleges that PWC transferred responsibility for the supply of LMRI from the Relator and the Al-Sultan Company to The Sultan Center.
The Relator also argues that the Defendants participated in a "kickback" scheme, in which PWC would receive discounts that were deceptively described as "prompt payment" discounts. According to the Relator, the Defendants had agreements with various vendors for discounts ranging between 3% and 8.5%. The parties would call these discounts "prompt payment discounts," stating that they were given to PWC for paying its bills earlier than required. Because of that, the Defendants argue that the payments were not directly attributable to the PV Contracts, and,
The Relator, Kamal Mustafa Al-Sultan, initially filed this
On November 13, 2009, the United States elected to intervene in part and declined to intervene in part. The United States intervened as to the claims against PWC and The Sultan Center relating to the inflated prices and unreported discounts PWC allegedly claimed. The United States originally stated an intention to intervene as to the Defendant Al-Essa, but subsequently declined to include Al-Essa in either of its filed complaints. The United States did, however, expressly declined to intervene against the Defendants Switzer and Al-Saleh. The Defendants now move to dismiss the Relator's Complaint, First Amended Complaint, and Second Amended Complaint pursuant to Rules 9(b) and 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
PWC, The Sultan Center, and Al-Essa argue that the Relator's claims against them should be dismissed because of the United States' intervention. Different courts have taken different approaches on the issue of what happens to a relator's complaint after the government intervenes. Many courts have simply dismissed the complaint altogether.
In response to
But this outcome fails to give to the government the control that the statute expects it to have when it intervenes. Although the False Claims Act allows the relator to continue as a party and fully participate in the litigation, the Act also gives the United States "the primary responsibility for prosecuting the action" should the government elect to intervene.
The third approach, and the one the Court finds the most persuasive, recognizes that a False Claims Act case fundamentally involves only one redressable injury: the government's.
The government's First Amended Complaint did, however, differ from its intervention notice in two substantial ways: (1) it made no mention of conspiracy or any claims under § 3729(a)(3), and (2) it did not include any claims against Al-Essa. The first issue, then, is whether the relator's claims are superseded by the government's notice of intervention or by the complaint the government eventually files.
In the Court's view, it is clear that the government's complaint, not the notice of intervention, supersedes the Relator's Complaint. To hold otherwise would preclude a relator from moving forward in a situation where the government had expressed an intention to intervene but failed to actually do anything. As a result, though the government expressed its intention to intervene as to the claims against the Defendant Al-Essa and the count of conspiracy, the fact that neither were included in the government's First Amended Complaint means that they were not superseded and the Relator can continue to proceed accordingly.
PWC and The Sultan Center still argue, however, that the Relator's conspiracy claim should still be dismissed. First, the Defendants argue that a § 3729(a)(3) conspiracy claim is duplicative of the government's other claims because it depends on the viability of the underlying FCA claims—claims which have since been superseded by the government. It is true that FCA conspiracy claims are viewed the same way as traditional conspiracy claims, and as such are not independent causes of action.
Alternatively, the Defendants argue that the Relator fails to plead the conspiracy claim with sufficient particularity. To state a claim of conspiracy under § 3729(a)(3), the Relator: must show (1) that the defendant conspired with one or more persons to get a false or fraudulent claim paid by the United States; (2) that one or more of the conspirators performed any act to effect the object of the conspiracy; and (3) that the United States suffered damages as a result of the false or fraudulent claim.
The Relator's allegations must also be pleaded with particularity in satisfaction of Rule 9(b)'s requirements.
The only issue is whether the Relator sufficiently alleges that there was an agreement among the Defendants. The Defendants argue that the Complaint alleges nothing more than a proposal, and that the Complaint never specifically alleges that an agreement was actually reached. But the Defendants misread the Complaint. Of course an agreement was not reached between the Defendants and the
The issue is whether there was an agreement among the Defendants. The very fact that the Defendants proposed the scheme to the Relator, and then declined to work with him after he refused to agree to it, shows that there was an agreement between PWC and The Sultan Center.
The Relator's Complaint lists three counts against the individual Defendants for violations of the False Claims Act: (1) presentment of false claims under § 3729(a)(1), (2) use of false statements under § 3729(a)(2), and (3) conspiracy to violate the False Claims Act under § 3729(a)(3). As discussed above, the conspiracy claim fundamentally depends on the viability of the first two counts. Because the Relator has failed to plead his allegations against the individual Defendants with any particularity, all claims against Al-Essa, Al-Saleh, and Switzer must be dismissed.
In its Order addressing PWC's and The Sultan Center's motions to dismiss the United States' complaint, the Court already determined that the alleged
All told, the Relator alleges that Al-Saleh is an American citizen, "served as an employee of PWC," that he was a member of the Partnership Board, and that he also "knew" about the schemes.
Perhaps recognizing that the allegations against the individual Defendants are not specific, the Relator attempts to argue that he does not need to plead the Defendants' particular roles in the schemes as long as he can show that they were in "control" of the entities charged with fraud. To support his argument, however, the Relator mistakenly analogizes securities fraud cases to the case at hand. While group pleading is allowed in certain limited circumstances,
In addition to alleged violations of the False Claims Act, the Relator also brings three common law claims against all of the Defendants for breach of contract, mistaken payment, and unjust enrichment. The Defendants argue that the Relator has no right to bring common law claims on behalf of the United States. The Court agrees that the Relator does not have standing as to the common law claims, and that Counts 4-6 should be dismissed.
In order to bring a claim in court, a plaintiff must have Article III standing.
For the reasons discussed above, Counts 1-2 and 7-9 against PWC and The Sultan Center have been superseded by the government's intervention, while the Relator retains control of Count 3. Counts 4-6 against all Defendants are dismissed for lack of standing, and all counts against Al-Essa, Al-Saleh, and Switzer are dismissed under Rule 9(b). Accordingly, The Sultan Center's Motion to Dismiss based on Rules 9(b) and 12(b)(6) [Doc. 196] is DENIED in part and GRANTED in part. The Sultan Center's Motion to Dismiss Based on United States' Notice of Election to Intervene [Doc. 197] is DENIED as moot. Al-Saleh's Motion to Dismiss [Doc. 201] is GRANTED. Switzer's Motion to Dismiss [Doc. 202] is GRANTED. Al-Essa and PWC's joint Motion to Dismiss [Doc. 205] is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part.
SO ORDERED, this 16 day of March, 2017.