Schultz v. RI Hosp Trust Nat Bk ( 1996 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion








    United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    ____________________
    No. 95-1997
    PETER M. SCHULTZ AND PAMELA A. SCHULTZ,

    Plaintiffs, Appellants,

    v.

    RHODE ISLAND HOSPITAL TRUST
    NATIONAL BANK, N.A., ET AL.,

    Defendants, Appellees.
    ____________________

    No. 95-2113
    BOWDOIN CONSTRUCTION CORP.,

    Plaintiff, Appellant,

    v.

    RHODE ISLAND HOSPITAL TRUST
    NATIONAL BANK, N.A., ET AL.,

    Defendants, Appellees.
    ____________________

    No. 95-2172
    ALLENBY ENTERPRISES, INC., ET AL.,

    Plaintiffs, Appellants,

    v.

    RHODE ISLAND HOSPITAL TRUST
    NATIONAL BANK, N.A., ET AL.,

    Defendants, Appellees.
    ____________________


    APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Joseph L. Tauro, U.S. District Judge] ___________________
    [Hon. Robert E. Keeton, U.S. District Judge] ___________________
    [Hon. Patti B. Saris, U.S. District Judge] ___________________
















    ____________________

    Before

    Torruella, Chief Judge, ___________

    Campbell, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

    and Lynch, Circuit Judge. _____________

    ____________________



    Edwin A. McCabe, with whom McCabe Brown Sutherland, Joseph P. ________________ ________________________ __________
    Davis III, and Lane, Altman & Owens were on brief, for plaintiffs- _________ _____________________
    appellants.

    Joseph L. Kociubes, with whom Peter Alley, Denise Jefferson ____________________ ____________ ________________
    Casper, and Bingham, Dana & Gould were on brief, for Rhode Island ______ _______________________
    Hospital Trust National Bank.

    Allen N. David, Elizabeth Z. Holmes, and Peabody & Arnold, on _______________ ____________________ _________________
    brief for Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. as receiver of Coolidge Bank
    and Trust Co.

    Robert D. Cultice, Louis J. Scerra, Jr., and Goldstein & Manello, _________________ ____________________ _____________________
    P.C., on brief for Chrysler First Business Credit Corp. ____




    ____________________

    August 22, 1996
    ____________________































    LYNCH, Circuit Judge. These three actions, _______________

    consolidated for appeal, arise out of a failed real estate

    venture involving the purchase and redevelopment of the Sea

    Crest Hotel in Falmouth, Massachusetts ("the Sea Crest"). In

    a federally registered public offering, investors purchased

    condominium unit deeds and "pooled income" interests in the

    Sea Crest project. One of the offering's features, as

    disclosed in the prospectus, was that the offering would be

    terminated and all investor deposits refunded if the

    aggregate amount of investments sold did not reach a minimum

    subscription level ("MSL") by a set deadline. Plaintiffs

    asserted that Rhode Island Hospital Trust National Bank

    ("RIHT"), the lender that financed the developer's purchase

    of the Hotel and served as the escrow agent responsible for

    holding investor deposits, was liable to them for purportedly

    failing to determine that the MSL requirement had not in fact

    been satisfied by the requisite date. The district courts

    concluded, as a matter of law, that the plaintiffs' claims

    against RIHT for fraud, negligent misrepresentation, breach

    of contract, and violations of the Racketeer Influenced and

    Corrupt Organizations Act ("RICO"), 18 U.S.C. 1961 et __

    seq., were all deficient. We agree that plaintiffs have ____

    established no legal basis for holding RIHT liable for their

    losses. Accordingly, we affirm.





    -3- 3













    I.

    Factual Background __________________

    In the mid-1980's, Eugene Marchand developed a plan to

    purchase and renovate the Sea Crest Resort and Conference

    Center, a large beach resort on Cape Cod. Marchand sought to

    revitalize the hotel as a convention-oriented facility. The

    plan involved converting the Sea Crest into a condominium,

    and then selling the individual condominium units to

    investors, together with interests in the pool of income to

    be generated from the resort. The condominium units and

    these "pooled income" interests were to be sold as registered

    securities in a public offering. The issuer of the

    securities would be Marchand's development company, Laurel-

    Sea Crest Realty Sales Corp. ("Laurel"), of which Marchand

    was the sole shareholder. Laurel's purchase of the Sea

    Crest, for $19.4 million, would be financed through sales to

    investors and a bank loan from RIHT. With projected expenses

    of $40.5 million and total expected gross proceeds from the

    offering projected at $45 million, Laurel stood to make a net

    profit of $4.5 million.

    On September 12, 1986, Laurel filed a registration

    statement and prospectus with the SEC, describing the

    proposed offering of 266 "condominium hotel interests." The

    prospectus stated that the offering would be conditioned upon

    a minimum level of investor participation:



    -4- 4













    Unless 60 Hotel Interests are subscribed for by
    qualified investors ("Minimum Subscription
    Level") within 60 days of the effective date of
    the Registration Statement of which this
    Prospectus is a part, but in no event later than
    December 31, 1986, this offering will be
    withdrawn and all funds will be returned
    promptly to subscribers.

    The prospectus also stated that every investor would be

    required to "pay a down payment of 10% of the purchase price

    of the Hotel Interest (the 'Escrow Deposit')," which would be

    "deposited . . . in a segregated, federally insured, interest

    bearing account . . . at the Rhode Island Hospital Trust

    National Bank . . . on behalf of Investor." The prospectus

    named RIHT as escrow agent for the offering.

    As Laurel waited for the registration statement to be

    declared effective by the SEC, it secured the financing it

    needed to purchase the Sea Crest. On November 14, 1986, RIHT

    issued a commitment letter to Laurel approving a fourteen

    million dollar first mortgage construction loan to be used by

    Laurel in acquiring and renovating the Sea Crest facility.

    RIHT's commitment, like the offering, was conditioned upon

    the "presale" of a minimum number of Sea Crest interests

    prior to December 29, 1986, the expiration date of RIHT's

    commitment letter.1

    ____________________

    1. RIHT's presale requirement was, in fact, more stringent
    than the MSL requirement. The commitment letter specified
    that "[p]rior to closing, a minimum of 80 units must be under
    written agreement of purchase-sale with a 10% non-refundable
    deposits [sic]," and that those 80 units must account for "no
    less than $13.6 million" in gross proceeds.

    -5- 5













    As of the date that RIHT issued its commitment letter

    to Laurel, however, the SEC had yet to approve Laurel's

    registration statement. In fact, the registration statement

    was not declared effective by the SEC until December 12,

    1986, leaving just two and a half weeks for Laurel to achieve

    the MSL set in the prospectus and the minimum number of

    presales required by RIHT. It was clear that Laurel needed

    more time. Laurel sought to restructure the offering and

    obtain a new commitment agreement from RIHT, with a new

    timetable for meeting the minimum presale requirement. RIHT

    agreed to renegotiate.

    As Laurel and RIHT neared agreement on a new loan

    commitment, Laurel filed, on March 2, 1987, a post-effective

    amendment to its original registration statement. The

    amendment established a new deadline for Laurel to meet the

    MSL requirement. It also restructured the requirement to

    condition the offering on a minimum dollar amount of

    aggregate sales, rather than a minimum number of unit sales.

    The amended prospectus explained:

    Unless Hotel Interests of $6,000,000 in
    aggregate purchase price are subscribed for by
    qualified investors ("Minimum Subscription
    Level") within 120 days of the effective date[2]
    of the Registration Statement of which this
    Prospectus is a part, this offering will be


    ____________________

    2. The 120th day after December 12, 1986, the effective date
    of the registration statement fell on April 11, 1987, a
    Saturday.

    -6- 6













    withdrawn and all funds will be returned
    promptly to subscribers.

    The amended prospectus left unchanged the original

    prospectus's representation that each investor would be

    required to tender a down payment equal to ten percent of the

    selling price of the unit to be purchased, which would be

    deposited in an escrow account held by RIHT.

    RIHT issued a new commitment letter to Laurel on March

    30, 1987. This time, RIHT agreed to give Laurel an 18.3

    million dollar loan, conditioned upon the presale of only 40

    units with a minimum aggregate selling price of $6 million,

    each presale requiring a ten percent nonrefundable investor

    deposit. Laurel was required to satisfy the new 40-unit

    presale condition by no later than April 10, 1987, the

    expiration date of the new commitment letter.

    Apart from RIHT's lending relationship with Laurel,

    the bank's only role in the Sea Crest offering was to act as

    escrow agent. RIHT did not sign the registration statement.

    Nor did it participate in promoting the offering or in

    selling or soliciting subscriptions. RIHT's duties as escrow

    agent were to be governed by a written escrow agreement

    between Laurel and RIHT, addressed to the investor. A copy

    of the agreement, annexed as an exhibit to Laurel's

    registration statement, was to be provided to each

    subscribing investor. As will be discussed, there is some

    dispute as to the particular form of agreement by whose terms


    -7- 7













    RIHT agreed to be bound. It is clear, however, that RIHT

    assumed at most a duty to hold investors' deposits in escrow

    until "[Laurel] shall verify to the Bank that . . .

    $6,000,000 in aggregate purchase price for Hotel Interests

    have been subscribed for and received as required under the

    Registration Statement . . . ."

    As the offering proceeded, Laurel, through its selling

    agent (Broad Reach Capital), collected purchase and sale

    agreements for individual Sea Crest condominium units ("unit

    sale agreements"). Notwithstanding the prospectus's

    representations that investors would be required to tender a

    ten percent non-refundable "escrow deposit" upon subscribing

    to the offering, Laurel and Broad Reach Capital accepted

    promissory notes for ten percent of the purchase price -- in ________________

    lieu of cash deposits -- from almost half of the investors

    who signed unit sale agreements prior to the MSL deadline.

    Such cash deposits as were tendered by the investors were

    placed in an escrow account at RIHT. But as the deadline for

    meeting the MSL approached, only a total of some $309,000 had

    been deposited into the RIHT escrow account.

    RIHT and Laurel conducted their loan closing on April

    9, 1987, just prior to the expiration date of the March

    commitment letter. At the closing, RIHT was provided with

    copies of the unit sale agreements that had been executed.

    An officer of the bank counted the sale agreements to verify



    -8- 8













    that there had been at least 40 units sold (as required in

    RIHT's loan commitment letter) and tallied the aggregate

    amount of sales to verify that the six million dollar MSL

    requirement had been met (as set forth in the agreement and

    the prospectus). No one at RIHT undertook to verify whether

    there was a ten percent deposit in escrow for each unit

    subscription. Having satisfied itself that at least 40

    subscriptions and $6 million in aggregate sales had been

    achieved, RIHT proceeded to close its loan with Laurel and

    thereafter released the escrowed investor deposits to Laurel.

    Laurel purchased the Sea Crest and separately closed on its

    sales of individual condominium units to investors.

    In May 1987, Laurel hired Bowdoin Construction Corp.

    ("Bowdoin") to serve as the general contractor for the

    renovation of the Sea Crest. Pursuant to a letter of intent

    from Laurel, Bowdoin began construction work and arranged the

    necessary subcontracts. Based on a decision by Marchand,

    Bowdoin continued its construction work through the 1987

    summer season, causing a fall-off in revenues to the resort

    and putting a wrinkle into Laurel's ongoing sales efforts.

    By late September 1987, Laurel was under severe

    financial strain. It had stopped making payments to Bowdoin,

    even though Bowdoin continued construction. On October 1,

    RIHT downgraded the credit status of its loan to Laurel. The

    stock market crash later that month only worsened matters,



    -9- 9













    and in November 1987, Laurel defaulted on the RIHT loan.

    Laurel and RIHT discussed restructuring or refinancing the

    loan. Bowdoin inquired about the status of Laurel's funding.

    After allegedly being assured that it would be paid through

    new financing from RIHT, Bowdoin continued with construction.

    In the meantime, restructuring negotiations between Laurel

    and RIHT had ended unsuccessfully.

    By January 1988, when Bowdoin finally ceased

    construction, it had incurred unreimbursed expenses of over

    $1 million. A month later, Laurel filed a Form 8-K with the

    SEC disclosing that the Sea Crest offering would be

    indefinitely suspended, with only 58 of the total 266

    condominium units having been sold. Soon afterward, a number

    of lawsuits were filed. In April 1988, RIHT sued Laurel to

    collect on its loan. In July 1988, Bowdoin filed an action

    for breach of contract and enforcement of a mechanic's lien

    in state court, but then voluntarily dismissed the action

    based, allegedly, on Laurel's representation that doing so

    was Bowdoin's best chance of recovering any of its unpaid

    debts.3 Ultimately, Bowdoin collected only a fraction of the

    amount owed to it by Laurel. Laurel, RIHT, and others were




    ____________________

    3. After Bowdoin dropped the state court lawsuit and
    discharged the lien, RIHT sold its interest in the Sea Crest
    loan, at a $5.7 million loss, to Coolidge Bank (who had to
    that point owned a participation interest in the loan).

    -10- 10













    named in suits filed by investors, as well as in a newly

    instigated action by Bowdoin.

    II.

    Procedural Background _____________________

    A. District Court Proceedings __ __________________________

    Three separate cases have been consolidated for

    purposes of this appeal. Two of the cases, Schultz v. RIHT _______ ____

    and Allenby Enterprises, Inc. v. RIHT, are brought by ___________________________ ____

    investors in the Sea Crest offering.4 The third case,

    Bowdoin Constr. Corp. v. RIHT, is brought by Bowdoin. The ______________________ ____

    Schultz and Allenby plaintiffs asserted claims against _______ _______

    Laurel, RIHT and several others for alleged violations of the

    federal securities laws and civil RICO, and for common law

    fraud, negligent misrepresentation, breach of contract, and

    breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing. The

    Bowdoin complaint asserted claims against Laurel, RIHT, and _______

    others for violations of civil RICO, breach of contract, and

    breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing.

    In October 1993, before the Schultz action was _______

    scheduled to go to trial, the plaintiffs in all three actions


    ____________________

    4. The plaintiffs in the Schultz action purchased a total of _______
    five condominium units in April 1987 (prior to the MSL
    deadline), at an aggregate purchase price of approximately $1
    million. There are 38 plaintiffs in the Allenby action. _______
    Collectively, they purchased 33 condominium units at an
    aggregate purchase price of some $5 million. Approximately
    $1.5 million of the Allenby plaintiffs' purchases were made _______
    after the MSL deadline (April 10, 1987) had passed. _____

    -11- 11













    reached a settlement agreement with Laurel, Marchand, and

    certain other affiliated parties, and dismissed all claims

    against them, with prejudice. In exchange, the plaintiffs

    received a promise from the settling defendants to waive the

    attorney-client privilege and to provide interviews and trial

    testimony as requested by the plaintiffs. No money changed

    hands.

    The Schultz action proceeded to trial against RIHT and _______

    the other remaining defendant (a bank that had provided

    financing to some of the investors) in January 1994, before

    Chief Judge Tauro. The plaintiffs presented twelve days of

    testimony, including the testimony of Eugene Marchand. At

    the end of the plaintiffs' case, the defendants moved for

    judgment as a matter of law. In its memorandum of decision,

    the district court concluded that Central Bank v. First _____________ _____

    Interstate Bank, 511 U.S. 164 (1994), required the dismissal ________________

    of the plaintiffs' claims for aiding and abetting securities

    fraud under Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of

    1934. The court also concluded that the plaintiffs had

    failed to present adequate evidence on any of their common

    law claims or their RICO claim, and granted the motion for

    judgment as a matter of law.

    Thereafter, Judges Keeton and Saris granted summary

    judgment motions filed by RIHT in the Allenby and Bowdoin _______ _______

    actions, respectively. In deciding the Allenby motion, Judge _______



    -12- 12













    Keeton, discerning no material difference between the issues

    in Allenby and Schultz, followed Judge Tauro's decision, _______ _______

    based both on an independent assessment of the case and as a

    matter of stare decisis. In Bowdoin, in which the plaintiff _____________ _______

    asserted RICO violations predicated upon allegations of

    aiding and abetting securities fraud, Judge Saris entered

    summary judgment in favor of RIHT, on the dual grounds that

    such a claim could not be viable after Central Bank, and that ____________

    plaintiffs had, in any event, failed to adduce sufficient

    evidence of a "pattern" of racketeering activity.

    B. Posture on Appeal __ _________________

    The parties informed us at oral argument that the only

    remaining defendant in all three of these cases, at least for

    purposes of this appeal, is RIHT.5 We limit our review,

    therefore, to those claims seeking to hold RIHT responsible

    for the plaintiffs' alleged injuries.

    In each of the three cases, we review de novo the _______

    district court's entry of judgment as a matter of law.

    Because the appeals largely raise the same dispositive issues

    (albeit on somewhat different records), we distinguish them

    only as necessary. We look to whether, viewing the record in

    each case in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, any

    ____________________

    5. Plaintiffs' counsel stated at oral argument that,
    although one other party nominally remains in the case,
    plaintiffs would be content to have this court's decision
    turn solely upon a determination of the merits of the claims
    against RIHT.

    -13- 13













    reasonable jury could find in the plaintiffs' favor. See ___

    Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(a) (Schultz); Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c) _______

    (Allenby; Bowdoin). Having assessed the merits of each of _______ _______

    the plaintiffs' theories of liability under this standard of

    review, we now affirm.6

    III.

    Breach of Contract __________________

    RIHT's only relationship with the investor

    plaintiffs arose out of the bank's role as escrow agent in

    the Sea Crest offering. The Schultz and Allenby plaintiffs _______ _______

    assert that RIHT failed in that capacity, acting in breach of

    the terms of the written escrow arrangement, in accordance

    with which RIHT agreed to hold the deposits to be tendered by

    investors. More specifically, the plaintiffs contend that

    RIHT violated the terms of the escrow agreement when, on

    April 9, 1987, it released all escrowed funds to Laurel, even


    ____________________

    6. RIHT broadly argues, as a basis for affirmance
    independent of the underlying merits of these actions, that
    the plaintiffs' claims in all three cases are barred as a
    result of their settlement with, and prejudicial dismissal of
    their claims against, the Laurel defendants. RIHT further
    contends that the judgment entered by the district court in
    Schultz, if affirmed, constitutes res judicata in relation to _______
    the plaintiffs' claims in the Allenby and Bowdoin actions, _______ _______
    and that the latter two actions are barred on a theory of
    non-party claim preclusion. See Gonzalez v. Banco Central ___ ________ _____________
    Corp., 27 F.3d 751, 755 (1st Cir. 1994); see also Becherer v. _____ ________ ________
    Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc., 43 F.3d 1054, _____________________________________________
    1069-70 (6th Cir.), cert. denied, 116 S. Ct. 296 (1995). We _____ ______
    decline the invitation to venture into this complex and
    unsettled area of the law, and rest our affirmance on the
    merits of the three cases before us.

    -14- 14













    though, allegedly, the offering's MSL requirement had not

    been satisfied.7

    There is a threshold dispute as to the particular

    escrow agreement that governs. Plaintiffs contend that RIHT

    was in breach of the terms of an agreement referred to by the

    parties as the "long-form" escrow. RIHT replies that it was

    bound only by the terms of the so-called "short-form" escrow,

    but argues, in the alternative, that even if it was bound by

    the long-form escrow, the record establishes that no breach

    occurred.

    The short-form escrow agreement was attached as an

    exhibit to the registration statement that Laurel filed with

    the SEC in September 1986, and had been signed by RIHT in

    November 1986. The short-form provided, in pertinent part:

    TO PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS OF HOTEL INTERESTS IN
    SEA CREST CONDOMINIUM

    Rhode Island Hospital Trust National Bank
    (the "Bank") . . . having been requested to act

    ____________________

    7. The district court in the Schultz action reasoned that _______
    only those investors whose funds were actually deposited into
    the escrow account had standing to challenge RIHT's
    compliance with the escrow agreement. The record shows that
    the two plaintiffs in the Schultz action did not pay a ten _______
    percent cash down payment, instead signing a promissory note
    to Laurel for that amount. Most of the plaintiffs in the
    Allenby case, on the other hand, did pay a ten percent _______
    deposit, but a number of the units -- representing about
    $975,000 in aggregate sales -- were sold without a cash
    deposit having been tendered. Furthermore, some of the
    Allenby plaintiffs purchased their units after the MSL _______ _____
    deadline had passed. While we find the district court's
    point to be forceful, we need not rely on it, given our
    disposition of the merits of the issue.

    -15- 15













    as escrow agent ("Escrow Agent") for deposits to
    be made by prospective purchasers ("Buyer") of
    Hotel Interests in the above-referenced
    Condominium from Laurel-Sea Crest Realty Sales
    Corp. ("Seller") . . . does hereby accept such
    request and agrees to hold deposits made payable
    to the Sea Crest Condominium Escrow Account, and
    received by it, upon the following terms and
    conditions to which Buyer and Seller agree to be
    bound by executing the Unit Sale Agreement
    ("Agreement") for Buyer's Hotel Interest, to
    which acopy of this escrowletter will be annexed.

    1. The Bank agrees to maintain such deposit
    (the "Deposit") at its bank for the benefit of
    Buyer and Seller . . . .

    2. In the event the [Unit Sale] Agreement
    is consummated, as evidenced by Buyer's
    acceptance of a deed to the Hotel Unit, or by
    written statement to that effect executed by or
    on behalf of Buyer and Seller, Escrow Agent
    shall pay over the Deposit to Seller, and shall
    pay such interest as may have accrued thereon,
    to Buyer. . . .

    The long-form escrow agreement was filed with the SEC and

    signed by RIHT at some later time, the precise date being in

    dispute. The first paragraph of the long-form agreement was

    the same as that in the short-form, but the body was

    substantially different. The long-form agreement provided,

    in relevant part:

    1. The Bank agrees to maintain such deposit
    (the "Deposit") at its bank for the benefit of
    Buyer and Seller . . . . The Deposit shall be
    held by the Bank until the Seller shall verify
    to the Bank that (a) $6,000,000 in aggregate
    purchase price for Hotel Interests have been
    subscribed for and received as required under
    the Registration Statement (the "Minimum
    Subscription Level") and thereafter disbursed
    . . . or (b) such Minimum Subscription Level has
    not been achieved within 120 days of the
    effective date of the Registration Statement


    -16- 16













    with the Securities and Exchange Commission. In
    the event the Minimum Subscription Level is not
    achieved within such 120 day period, all
    deposits and interest accrued thereon shall be
    promptly returned to Buyer.

    2. In the event the Minimum Subscription
    Level is achieved and the [Unit Sale] Agreement
    is consummated, as evidenced by Buyer's
    acceptance of a deed to the Hotel Unit, or by
    written statement to that effect executed by or
    on behalf of Buyer and Seller, Escrow Agent
    shall pay over the Deposit to Seller, and shall
    pay such interest as may have accrued thereon,
    to Buyer. . . .

    Both the long- and short-form escrow agreements ended with

    the following clauses:

    8. Escrow Agent assumes no obligations or
    responsibility hereunder other than to make
    delivery of the Deposit, and any earnings
    thereon, as herein provided. . . .

    It is understood and agreed that a copy of
    this instrument will be annexed as an exhibit to
    the [Unit Sale] Agreement. Buyer shall be
    entitled to rely upon this escrow agreement,
    with the same force and effect as if the Bank
    had contracted directly with Buyer. . . .

    The crucial difference between the two agreements lies

    in the description of the conditions that were to trigger

    RIHT's duty to release any escrowed funds to Laurel. The

    long-form agreement linked RIHT's duty to release funds from

    escrow upon the meeting of the MSL requirement; the short-

    form agreement did not.

    There is no dispute that RIHT at some point signed

    both the short- and long-form agreements. The question is ____

    when. The plaintiffs argue that RIHT became bound by the



    -17- 17













    long-form agreement before the April 1987 MSL deadline, and

    that RIHT therefore had a duty of "verif[ication]" with

    respect to the satisfaction of the MSL requirement before

    releasing the funds in escrow. RIHT, on the other hand,

    concedes that it signed the long-form agreement at some ____

    point, but not before June 1987. Thus, RIHT asserts that, as

    of April 1987, it was bound only by the short-form agreement,

    which makes no mention of the MSL requirement.8 Even

    accepting the plaintiffs' rendition of the record, however,

    we conclude that no rational trier of fact could find that

    RIHT committed a breach.

    We look first to the express terms of the long-form

    escrow agreement.9 Under that agreement, RIHT was required

    to "hold deposits made payable to the Sea Crest Condominium

    Escrow Account, and received by it" until "[Laurel] shall

    verify to the Bank that (a) $6,000,000 in aggregate purchase

    price for Hotel Interests have been subscribed for and


    ____________________

    8. On the one hand, RIHT has provided an unrebutted
    attestation that the only escrow agreement on record with the
    SEC as of April 1987 was the short-form agreement. On the
    other hand, there is some evidence (albeit circumstantial) to
    suggest that RIHT had agreed to be bound by the long-form
    agreement prior to April 1987. For example, a copy of the
    long-form agreement (lacking RIHT's signature) was attached
    to a letter from Marchand's attorney to RIHT dated March 16,
    1987, in which the attorney proposed to RIHT a particular
    procedure for dealing with interest accruing to the Sea Crest
    escrow account.

    9. The parties appear to agree that Massachusetts law
    governs.

    -18- 18













    received as required under the Registration Statement (the

    'Minimum Subscription Level') . . . ." This language

    unambiguously limits RIHT's obligations as escrow agent to

    holding deposits "received by it" until Laurel "verifi[ed]"

    that $6 million in subscriptions had been received.

    The record before us permits no genuine dispute that

    RIHT satisfied its limited duties under the agreement. The

    evidence is clear that RIHT did not release any funds that

    had been deposited into the Sea Crest escrow account until it

    had been provided by Laurel (prior to the MSL deadline) with

    copies of executed unit sale agreements with an aggregate

    face value in excess of $6 million. Plaintiffs concede that

    there is uncontradicted testimony to this effect.

    Plaintiffs' argument is that RIHT was required to do

    more. They contend that RIHT should have refused to release

    funds in escrow on April 9, 1987 on the grounds that: (i)

    many of the unit sales counted toward the MSL were not backed

    by ten percent cash deposits; (ii) Laurel had pledged seven

    Sea Crest units as collateral for a "bridge" loan that it had

    obtained from Wedgestone Realty Investors Trust, the proceeds

    of which were applied to Laurel's purchase of the Sea Crest;

    and (iii) the $6 million in unit sales that were applied to

    the MSL computation had not actually been received by Laurel

    before the MSL deadline.





    -19- 19













    The response is that the escrow agreement cannot

    fairly be read to say that any one of these circumstances

    created a bar to the disbursement of the escrowed funds.

    Under the terms of its escrow agreement, RIHT's role in the

    Sea Crest offering was a limited one, narrowly defined in a

    written agreement. The escrow agreement did not impose on

    RIHT a generalized duty to police the offering. To the

    contrary, the agreement disclaimed any duty to the parties in

    escrow "other than to make delivery of the [escrowed funds],

    and any earnings thereon."

    Thus, although the fact that Laurel sold a number of

    Sea Crest units without taking a ten percent deposit from the

    purchaser was arguably at odds with the prospectus, there is

    no language in the escrow agreement conditioning the release

    of any escrowed funds upon RIHT's having received deposits

    totalling a full ten percent of the six million dollar

    minimum sales amount. Similarly, there was nothing about

    Laurel's "bridge" loan from Wedgestone that obligated RIHT,

    under the escrow agreement, to determine that the MSL had not

    been met, or that funds in escrow were otherwise required to

    be returned to investors.

    Finally, the plaintiffs' argument that $6 million in

    actual funds had not been "received" prior to RIHT's closing

    of escrow goes nowhere. To the extent that plaintiffs argue

    that RIHT itself was required to be in receipt of the $6



    -20- 20













    million, the argument is inconsistent with the language of

    the escrow agreement. To the extent that the agreement can

    be read to require that the $6 million have been "received"

    at all, the agreement plainly envisions that it would be

    Laurel who would receive the funds, and who would thereafter ______

    verify the same to RIHT.

    In any event, RIHT's alleged failure to verify the

    satisfaction of the purported "receipt" requirement does not

    help the plaintiffs' case. The purported "receipt"

    requirement is necessarily separate and distinct from the MSL

    requirement, and satisfaction of the latter did not depend on

    satisfaction of the former.10 The only circumstance

    specified in the escrow agreement as requiring RIHT to return

    escrow deposits to investors was the failure to attain the

    MSL; Laurel's alleged non-receipt of $6 million in sales

    proceeds did not require investor funds to be refunded or the ___

    offering to be withdrawn. At most, the logic of plaintiffs'

    theory is that RIHT released escrowed funds too early, and _____




    ____________________

    10. The prospectus itself states that "[c]losings [on the
    individual unit sale agreements] will commence once the
    Minimum Subscription Level has been satisfied." This
    language clearly contemplates that the MSL would be satisfied
    before the actual consummation of the unit sale agreements. ______
    And because the proceeds from the unit sale agreements that
    were counted toward the MSL could not have been "received" by
    Laurel until after the closings on those units, it follows _____
    that the satisfaction of the MSL could not have depended upon
    any such "receipt."

    -21- 21













    not that RIHT wrongfully failed to call for termination of ___

    the offering.11

    The question remains whether RIHT, in its capacity as

    escrow agent, owed any duties to plaintiffs other than those

    spelled out in the agreement. The Supreme Judicial Court of

    Massachusetts has recently indicated that there is an absence

    of discussion in Massachusetts law of whether an escrow

    agent's duties may extend beyond satisfying the literal terms

    of the escrow agreement. See In re Discipline of Two ___ __________________________

    Attorneys, 421 Mass. 619, 626 (1996) ("Massachusetts cases _________

    have not discussed whether an escrow holder has any duty

    beyond fulfilling the terms of the escrow.").12 But we find

    no support for plaintiffs' broad arguments that RIHT, which

    is not alleged to have been in a conflict of interest, was

    required, in effect, to actively root out fraud of which it

    had no knowledge and to police Laurel's conduct in the Sea





    ____________________

    11. This is not a case involving the fabrication of "sham"
    transactions designed to create the mere illusion that sales
    had been generated. The apparent absence of some deposits
    notwithstanding, there has been no suggestion that any of the
    unit sale agreements that were counted toward the MSL in this
    case were anything other than bona fide, binding contracts of
    purchase and sale.

    12. But cf. Schmid v. National Bank of Greece, 622 F. Supp. _______ ______ ________________________
    704, 710 (D. Mass. 1985) ("The escrow agreement or
    instructions constitute the full measure of the obligation
    assumed by the escrow holder and owing to the parties."),
    aff'd, 802 F.2d 439 (1st Cir. 1986) (tbl.). _____

    -22- 22













    Crest offering.13 See Two Attorneys, 421 Mass. at 626-27 ___ _____________

    (citing Maganas v. Northroup, 663 P.2d 565 (Ariz. 1983) (duty _______ _________

    to disclose known fraud); Collins v. Heitman, 284 S.W.2d 628 _____ _______ _______

    (Ark. 1955) (duty not to engage in self-dealing); Kitchen _______

    Krafters, Inc. v. Eastside Bank of Mont., 789 P.2d 567 (Mont. ______________ ______________________

    1990) (duty to disclose material facts relevant to escrow),

    overruled on other grounds by Busta v. Columbus Hosp. Corp., _____________________________ _____ ____________________

    916 P.2d 122 (Mont. 1996); American State Bank v. Adkins, 458 ___________________ ______

    N.W.2d 807 (S.D. 1990) (duty to avoid self-dealing and

    conflicts of interest)).

    IV.

    Other Common Law Claims _______________________

    A. Breach of Covenant of Good Faith and Fair Dealing __ _________________________________________________

    The plaintiffs have not pointed to any record evidence

    that would permit a finding that RIHT's release of the escrow

    funds to Laurel was done other than under a good faith belief

    that the MSL requirement had been satisfied, and that all of

    ____________________

    13. Despite plaintiffs' contrary suggestion, SEC Rule 10b-9
    does not warrant the importation into the escrow agreement of
    a generalized duty to ensure that the offering as a whole
    complied with the securities laws. Rule 10b-9 makes it a
    violation of Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of
    1934 for any person to make a representation, in connection
    with an offering, that securities are being offered on any
    "basis whereby all or part of the consideration paid for any
    such security will be refunded to the purchaser if all or
    some of the securities are not sold," unless the offering is
    structured in a specified way. 17 C.F.R. 240.10b-9. Here,
    however, there is no support for a finding that the Sea Crest
    offering did not comply with Rule 10b-9 or, even more
    basically, that RIHT ever made any "representation" covered
    by the Rule.

    -23- 23













    the conditions for releasing the funds had been met. The

    record supports no conclusion that RIHT acted with the sort

    of dishonest purpose or conscious wrongdoing necessary for a

    finding of bad faith or unfair dealing. See Anthony's Pier ___ ______________

    Four, Inc. v. HBC Assoc., 411 Mass. 451, 471-72 (1991); ___________ ___________

    American Employers' Ins. Co. v. Horton, 35 Mass. App. Ct. _____________________________ ______

    921, 923 (1993). The district court did not err in summarily

    disposing of the plaintiffs' claims for the breach of the

    covenant of good faith and fair dealing.

    B. Fraud and Negligent Misrepresentation __ _____________________________________

    Plaintiffs do not seriously argue that RIHT made any

    affirmative material misrepresentations to them concerning

    the Sea Crest offering. RIHT did not sign the registration

    statement, and there is no evidence that RIHT had any

    involvement in the preparation of the registration statement

    or other offering materials for the Sea Crest project. Nor

    did RIHT participate in Laurel's marketing or sales efforts.

    The only communication between plaintiffs and RIHT appears to

    have been through the escrow agreement, which was addressed

    to investors and was to have been annexed to each unit sale

    agreement.

    Absent allegations of affirmative misrepresentations

    or misstatements by RIHT, the question becomes whether RIHT

    was guilty of any actionable omissions. Absent a duty to

    speak, RIHT's silence could not have been fraudulent. See ___



    -24- 24













    Royal Business Group, Inc. v. Realist, Inc., 933 F.2d 1056, ___________________________ _____________

    1064 (1st Cir. 1991). RIHT's role in the offering was to

    hold funds deposited with it until Laurel verified that

    certain conditions had been met. Even assuming that RIHT, as

    escrow agent, had a duty to disclose known fraud on the part _____

    of Laurel, see, e.g., Maganas, 663 P.2d at 565 (cited in Two ____ ____ _______ _____ __ ___

    Attorneys, 421 Mass. at 626-27), plaintiffs point to no _________

    evidence that would show that RIHT was aware of fraudulent

    conduct by Laurel or any other party involved in the

    offering.

    It is true that RIHT might have had reason to realize

    that a number of investors had provided promissory notes in

    lieu of ten percent cash deposits upon execution of their

    unit sale agreements. But there is no reason why RIHT should

    have suspected that this was the result of fraud. Indeed, _____

    the plaintiffs do not allege that the promissory notes were

    fraudulently made or procured; rather, they were facially

    valid, enforceable instruments. Furthermore, Laurel's

    acceptance of bona fide promissory notes, instead of

    deposits, was not so obviously inconsistent with the

    prospectus that RIHT should have concluded that a fraud was

    being perpetrated. Finally, plaintiffs fail to argue that

    any nondisclosure by RIHT on this issue would have affected

    their decision to invest; nor do they explain how any such

    nondisclosure could have been the cause of their losses.



    -25- 25













    See, e.g., Damon v. Sun Co., Inc., 87 F.3d 1467, 1471-72 (1st ___ ____ _____ _____________

    Cir. 1996) (elements of fraud include proof of reliance and

    causation).

    C. Aiding and Abetting Fraud __ _________________________

    The plaintiffs' common law claim of aiding and

    abetting fraud fares no better. To establish a common law

    cause of action for aiding and abetting, plaintiffs must at

    least demonstrate some measure of "active participation" and

    the knowing provision of substantial assistance by RIHT to

    the principal's (here, Laurel's) alleged fraud. See Spinner ___ _______

    v. Nutt, 417 Mass. 549, 556 (1994). Plaintiffs point to ____

    nothing in the record that would satisfy these basic

    elements. Indeed, the evidence is to the contrary. In his

    testimony in the Schultz trial, Marchand himself expressly _______

    disavowed the existence of any sort of association between

    Laureland RIHT otherthan anarm's lengthbusiness relationship.

    V.

    RICO Violations _______________

    In order to prevail on a RICO claim, a plaintiff must

    prove, inter alia, that the defendant engaged in a "pattern __________

    of racketeering activity." See 18 U.S.C. 1962. Here, RIHT ___

    argues that the district court correctly granted judgment in

    its favor on plaintiffs' RICO claims, because plaintiffs have

    failed to establish that RIHT's conduct falls within any of

    the categories of "racketeering activity" described in the



    -26- 26













    statute, see 18 U.S.C. 1961(1), and because plaintiffs have ___

    failed to adduce evidence of the requisite "pattern" of

    predicate acts necessary to trigger RICO liability, see 18 ___

    U.S.C. 1962(b)-(c).

    A. Establishment of a Predicate Act __ ________________________________

    Plaintiffs argue that, on the record, a rational trier

    of fact could find that RIHT engaged in three racketeering

    predicates: (i) aiding and abetting securities fraud; (ii)

    mail fraud; and (iii) wire fraud. The district court found

    that "aiding and abetting securities fraud" cannot be a RICO

    predicate, in light of the Supreme Court's decision in

    Central Bank, 511 U.S. at 164 (1994) (no private right of ____________

    action for aiding and abetting under Section 10(b) of the

    Exchange Act), and that the record supports no finding of

    mail or wire fraud by RIHT.

    We reserve to another day the issue of whether Central _______

    Bank necessarily implies that aiding and abetting securities ____

    fraud cannot be a "racketeering activity" within the meaning

    of 1961(1). Even assuming that aiding and abetting

    securities fraud can be a RICO predicate act, we find the ___

    record support for such a claim to be lacking, as we do with

    respect to the plaintiffs' allegations that RIHT engaged in

    mail or wire fraud.

    As for the aiding and abetting allegation, we agree

    with the district court that the record contains not a



    -27- 27













    scintilla of evidence that would support the requisite

    finding that RIHT "consciously shared" in the principal

    wrongdoer's (Laurel's) specific intent to defraud the

    plaintiffs. See United States v. Loder, 23 F.3d 586, 590-91 ___ _____________ _____

    (1st Cir. 1994) (describing the elements of criminal aiding

    and abetting). The lack of evidence of fraudulent intent on

    the part of RIHT similarly dooms plaintiffs' allegations that

    the bank committed mail or wire fraud. There is no basis in

    the record from which a rational trier of fact could conclude

    that the mailings or wires by RIHT (described in the

    plaintiffs' brief in only a fleeting fashion) constituted

    communications "in furtherance" of a scheme "intended to ____________

    deceive another, by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, _______________

    representations, promises, or other deceptive conduct." __________________

    McEvoy Travel Bureau, Inc. v. Heritage Travel, Inc., 904 F.2d __________________________ _____________________

    786, 791 (1st Cir.) (emphases added), cert. denied, 498 U.S. _____________

    992 (1990).

    We conclude that the record contains insufficient

    evidence to raise a triable issue as to whether RIHT

    committed any of the RICO predicate acts alleged by the

    plaintiffs.











    -28- 28













    B. The "Pattern" Requirement __ _________________________

    The plaintiffs' RICO claims fail for an additional,

    independent reason. For the plaintiffs to prevail, they must

    establish not only that RIHT engaged in some "racketeering

    activity," but that the bank's conduct constituted a

    "pattern" of such activity. See 18 U.S.C. 1962(b)-(c). ___

    The RICO statute by its terms specifies that a "pattern"

    entails at least two predicate racketeering acts. See 18 ___

    U.S.C. 1961(5). However, while two predicate acts are

    necessary to form a RICO "pattern," they may not be

    sufficient unless they are both "related" and "amount to or

    pose a threat of continued criminal activity." See H.J. Inc. ___ _________

    v. Northwestern Bell Tel. Co., 492 U.S. 229, 239-40 (1989); ___________________________

    Fleet Credit Corp. v. Sion, 893 F.2d 441, 444 (1st Cir. ___________________ ____

    1990). "In other words, a RICO pattern consists of

    'continuity plus relationship.'" Sousa v. BP Oil, Inc., 1995 _____ ____________

    WL 842003, *13 (D. Mass. 1995) (quoting H.J., 492 U.S. at ____

    239).

    This court has remarked upon the elusiveness of any

    helpful, talismanic definition of a RICO "pattern." See ___

    Apparel Art Int'l Inc. v. Jacobson, 967 F.2d 720, 722 (1st _______________________ ________

    Cir. 1992). But, as then-Chief Judge Breyer explained,

    courts have consistently held that a "single episode" of

    criminal behavior, even if it involves the commission of

    multiple related acts, does not constitute a "pattern." See ___



    -29- 29













    id. at 723. Instead, courts have tended to find RICO ___

    "patterns" only where the defendant's conduct consists of

    "multiple criminal episodes" extending over long periods of

    time. Id. at 724; see also H.J., 492 U.S. at 242 ("Congress ___ ________ ____

    was concerned in RICO with long-term criminal conduct.").

    Here, the alleged instances of wrongful conduct by

    RIHT all constituted part of a single "episode." Like the ______

    multiple predicate acts that were described in Apparel Art as ___________

    "compris[ing] a single effort" to achieve one goal (obtaining

    and keeping a Defense Department contract), see 967 F.2d at ___

    723, the alleged racketeering acts attributed to RIHT in this

    case, "taken together, . . . comprise a single effort" to

    facilitate a single financial endeavor: the purchase and

    renovation of the Sea Crest resort. Id. ___

    If the mailings and wires RIHT transmitted in the

    course of its involvement in the Sea Crest offering could

    amount to a RICO "pattern," then virtually every claim

    asserted under the federal securities laws could spawn a

    companion RICO cause of action, because "[i]n today's

    integrated interstate economy, it is the rare transaction

    that does not somehow rely on extensive use of the mails or

    the telephone." Roeder v. Alpha Indus., Inc., 814 F.2d 22, ______ __________________

    31 (1st Cir. 1987) (internal quotation omitted). We conclude

    that the instances of RIHT's conduct identified by plaintiffs

    as constituting RICO predicate acts did not form a "pattern"



    -30- 30













    of racketeering activity and are more "appropriately

    characterized as separate parts of a single [allegedly]

    criminal episode." Apparel Art, 967 F.2d at 723. ___________

    VI.

    Conclusion __________

    The three separate judgments entered by the district

    court in these consolidated cases are affirmed. ________







































    -31- 31