St Paul Mercury Ins v. Williamson ( 2000 )


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  •                    REVISED - September 5, 2000
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    For the Fifth Circuit
    No. 97-31143
    ST. PAUL MERCURY INSURANCE CO.,
    Plaintiff-Counter Defendants-Appellee,
    VERSUS
    ROBERT T. WILLIAMSON; SONYA WILLIAMSON; ARLONE BELAIRE,
    Defendants-Counter Claimant-Appellants,
    VERSUS
    RICHARD VALE; HAYNES BEST WESTERN OF ALEXANDRIA, INC.; H. L.
    HAYNES; MRS. H. L. HAYNES; BEST WESTERN INTERNATIONAL, INC.;
    AMERICAN GENERAL FIRE AND CASUALTY CO.; MARYLAND CASUALTY CO.,
    Counter Defendants-Appellees.
    --------------------------------------------------
    ROBERT T. WILLIAMSON; SONYA WILLIAMSON; ARLONE BELAIRE,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    VERSUS
    RICHARD VALE; ET AL.,
    Defendants,
    RICHARD VALE; HAYNES BEST WESTERN OF ALEXANDRIA; BEST WESTERN
    INTERNATIONAL, INC.; H. L. HAYNES; H. L. HAYNES; AMERICAN GENERAL
    FIRE AND CASUALTY; MARYLAND CASUALTY CO.; ST. PAUL MERCURY
    INSURANCE COMPANY; H.L. & H. HOLDING CO.;
    Defendants-Appellees.
    *****************************************************
    No. 98-30001
    ST. PAUL MERCURY INSURANCE COMPANY,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    VERSUS
    ROBERT T. WILLIAMSON; ET AL.,
    Defendants,
    ROBERT T. WILLIAMSON; ARLONE BELAIRE; SONYA J. WILLIAMSON,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    --------------------------------------------------
    ROBERT T. WILLIAMSON; SONYA WILLIAMSON; ARLONE BELAIRE,
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    VERSUS
    RICHARD VALE; ET AL.,
    Defendants,
    ST. PAUL MERCURY INSURANCE COMPANY
    2
    Defendant-Appellant.
    *************************************************
    No. 98-31243
    ST. PAUL MERCURY INSURANCE CO.; HAYNES BEST WESTERN OF
    ALEXANDRIA, INC.; BEST WESTERN INTERNATIONAL, INC.; H. L.
    HAYNES; H. L. HAYNES, Mrs.; H & L HOLDING CO.; AMERICAN
    GENERAL INSURANCE CO.; RICHARD S. VALE; MARYLAND CASUALTY CO.,
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    VERSUS
    SONYA WILLIAMSON, Individually and on behalf of her minor
    children, ROBERT T. WILLIAMSON, Individually and on behalf
    of his minor children; LAWRENCE J. SMITH,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Louisiana
    August 17, 2000
    Before JONES, DeMOSS and DENNIS, Circuit Judges.
    DeMOSS, Circuit Judge:
    In these three consolidated appeals, we confront a convoluted
    set of facts and issues arising from the unfortunate litigiousness
    of   the   parties   involved.      Despite     hopes    that   the   cycle   of
    litigation would end here today, we must conclude that the district
    court erred in various aspects of its rulings and that resolution
    3
    of these cases must await another time.
    I. BACKGROUND
    In March of 1990, Sonya Williamson (“Sonya”) individually and
    Robert Williamson (“Robert”), on behalf of their children, filed
    suit in state court against various individuals and entities
    including    St.    Paul    Mercury   Insurance     Company    (“St.    Paul”)
    (collectively the “insurance parties”) for injuries suffered by
    Sonya at the Haynes Best Western of Alexandria.              On September 26,
    1994, the jury in this state case returned two findings: (1) Sonya
    had sustained injuries at the motel on July 21, 1989; and (2) the
    insurance parties had proved by a preponderance of the evidence
    that the incident of July 21, 1989, was a result of a staged
    accident or fraud.     Judgment was entered in favor of the insurance
    parties.    On January 29, 1997, the Louisiana Fourth Circuit Court
    of Appeal affirmed the jury’s verdict.             See Williamson v. Haynes
    Best Western, 
    688 So. 2d 1201
    (La. Ct. App. 1997).              The Louisiana
    Supreme Court denied the Williamsons’ applications for writs on
    June 20, 1997.      See Williamson v. Haynes Best Western, 
    695 So. 2d 1355
    (La. 1997).
    On November 4, 1993, during the pendency of the state trial,
    St. Paul    filed    suit   in   federal   court   against    Robert,   Arlone
    Belaire,1 and Seahorse Farms (collectively with Sonya and with or
    1
    Arlone Belaire is Robert Williamson’s mother.
    4
    without Seahorse Farms as the “Williamsons”), alleging violations
    of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”),
    18   U.S.C.   §§   1961-68,     and   state     law    claims   for    fraud    and
    conspiracy.    St. Paul later amended the complaint on December 12,
    1994, to include Sonya as a defendant.               The complaint essentially
    alleged that the Williamsons have a lengthy history of making
    fraudulent insurance claims and that they staged the electrocution
    that supposedly injured Sonya at the motel.
    On September 25, 1996, the Williamsons counterclaimed and
    simultaneously initiated an action in the same federal district
    court, which was ultimately consolidated with St. Paul’s suit.
    They asserted      various     RICO   and    state    law   claims    against   the
    insurance parties.       In general, their counterclaims alleged that
    the fraud defense asserted by the insurance parties in Sonya’s
    state court personal injury trial, and which ultimately formed the
    basis   for   recovery    in    St.   Paul’s     federal     suit,    was   itself
    fraudulent.
    On October 22, 1997, the district court granted summary
    judgment in favor of St. Paul and the other counter-defendants on
    the Williamsons’ counterclaims.             See St. Paul Mercury Ins. Co. v.
    Williamson, 
    986 F. Supp. 409
    (W.D. La. 1997). It further dismissed
    St. Paul’s RICO claims against the Williamsons on October 30, 1997.
    Subsequent to the district court’s dismissal of St. Paul’s
    RICO claims, St. Paul orally dismissed Robert, Arlone, and Seahorse
    5
    Farms from the lawsuit at the final pretrial conference, held on
    October 31, 1997.      With those dismissals, the only remaining
    matters were St. Paul’s state law claims for fraud and conspiracy
    against Sonya.      At the pretrial conference, the district court
    appeared to conclude that the state court jury finding of fraud was
    res judicata as to St. Paul’s state law fraud claim.2                It induced
    Sonya’s counsel to admit that with the dismissal of the other
    Williamson    litigants,   there   existed       the    requirements    for    res
    judicata under Louisiana law.
    Sonya’s    counsel,   however,         contended   that   the   fraud     and
    conspiracy claims had prescribed.            He was given the opportunity to
    file a motion for summary judgment on that issue, which he did on
    November 5, 1997.    St. Paul responded to that motion on November 7,
    1997, six days prior to trial.          That response for the first time
    specifically mentioned a malicious prosecution claim.                Sonya filed
    a reply to the response on the same day.
    On November 11, 1997, the district court denied Sonya’s motion
    for summary    judgment    based   on       prescription.      But   instead    of
    addressing whether the fraud and conspiracy claims had prescribed,
    the district court’s order focused on whether St. Paul’s complaint
    provided Sonya with notice of the operative facts underlying a
    malicious prosecution claim. While acknowledging that St. Paul did
    not expressly allege the legal theory of malicious prosecution, the
    2
    But the district court reserved the right to make a final
    written ruling, which was never issued.
    6
    district court found that St. Paul’s complaint gave adequate notice
    of that claim for purposes of Rule 8 of the Federal Rules of Civil
    Procedure.
    Thereafter, on November 13, 1997, the district court ruled
    that the trial would proceed solely on the issue of damages.         Sonya
    objected and asked for a continuance, which was denied.           The jury
    returned     a   damages   award   against   Sonya   in   the   amount    of
    $411,166.56.
    While the federal suit was proceeding before the district
    court, Sonya and her children, through their father Robert, filed
    a petition in state court in November 1995, to nullify the prior
    state court judgment finding that Sonya’s injuries were the result
    of a staged accident or fraud pursuant to Louisiana Code of Civil
    Procedure article 2004.3     The petition alleged ill practices by the
    insurance parties in concealing the defects on the motel’s premises
    and in presenting false testimony from motel employees regarding
    the condition and alteration of the electrical fixtures.                 The
    nullification case sat dormant during the pendency of the federal
    suit initiated by St. Paul.        But in March of 1998, Sonya and the
    children filed a third supplemental and amending petition in state
    court, reviving the nullification suit.
    3
    Article 2004 states that “[a] final judgment obtained by
    fraud or ill practices may be annulled.”
    7
    On September 9, 1998, St. Paul and the other insurance parties
    filed a complaint in federal court to enjoin the nullification
    action.     They argued that Sonya and the children’s nullification
    petition was an attempt to relitigate the prior federal court
    judgment dismissing the Williamsons’ counterclaims.                       Among the
    counterclaims had been allegations concerning the condition of the
    electrical fixtures and the insurance parties’ representations of
    the motel’s premises.           A hearing was held on the injunction on
    October   5,    1998.      On   October       16,   1998,     the   district   court
    preliminarily enjoined Sonya, Robert, their children, and their
    attorney Lawrence J. Smith, from pursuing the nullification action
    in state court, pending the resolution of the appeal of the federal
    case.
    II. DISCUSSION
    In these consolidated appeals, the various parties raise an
    assortment of issues.           In appeal No. 97-31143, the Williamson
    litigants      challenge    the     district        court’s    apparent    directed
    verdict/summary judgment order concluding that the state court jury
    finding of fraud was res judicata as to the liability portion of
    St. Paul’s malicious prosecution claim, its decision to strike all
    of Sonya’s defenses to that malicious prosecution claim, the
    sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury’s damages verdict,
    certain evidentiary rulings by the district court, and its summary
    8
    judgment order dismissing their counterclaims.   In appeal No. 98-
    30001, St. Paul contests the district court’s summary judgment
    order dismissing its RICO claims against the Williamsons.   And in
    appeal No. 98-31243, Sonya, Robert, their children, and their
    attorney Smith assert that the district court erred in enjoining
    the nullification suit pending in Louisiana state court. We review
    each of these appeals in turn.
    A.     Appeal No. 97-31143
    In this appeal, one of Sonya’s major contentions is that the
    district court improperly determined that the state court jury’s
    finding of a staged accident or fraud was res judicata as to the
    liability portion of St. Paul’s malicious prosecution claim.   She
    offers both a procedural and a substantive reason for reversing the
    district court’s ruling. Procedurally, she notes that the district
    court allowed St. Paul to proceed on the malicious prosecution
    theory despite that claim not having been explicitly stated in St.
    Paul’s complaint.   Moreover, it appeared to grant summary judgment
    sua sponte on the issue of liability without affording her a chance
    to respond.     Substantively, Sonya maintains that the district
    court’s grant of summary judgment misapplied Louisiana res judicata
    law.
    9
    St. Paul never specifically mentioned a malicious prosecution
    claim; that is, its complaint4 did not include the magic words
    “malicious prosecution.”    Furthermore, St. Paul never moved to
    amend its complaint to include a malicious prosecution claim.
    Indeed, the first time St. Paul expressly asserted this claim was
    in its response to Sonya’s motion for summary judgment.
    The notice pleading requirements of Federal Rule of Civil
    Procedure 8 and case law do not require an inordinate amount of
    detail or precision.     Rule 8 provides that “[a] pleading . . .
    shall contain . . . a short and plain statement of the claim
    showing that the pleader is entitled to relief . . . .”         The
    function of a complaint is to give the defendant fair notice of the
    plaintiff’s claim and the grounds upon which the plaintiff relies.
    See Doss v. South Cent. Bell Tel. Co., 
    834 F.2d 421
    , 424 (5th Cir.
    1987) (citing Conley v. Gibson, 
    78 S. Ct. 99
    , 103 (1957)).      The
    “form of the complaint is not significant if it alleges facts upon
    which relief can be granted, even if it fails to categorize
    correctly the legal theory giving rise to the claim.”     Dussouy v.
    Gulf Coast Inv. Corp., 
    660 F.2d 594
    , 604 (5th Cir. 1981); see also
    
    Doss, 834 F.2d at 424
    .
    4
    St. Paul actually filed more than one complaint in this case,
    but none of them specifically mentioned the malicious prosecution
    claim. For simplicity’s sake, we use the singular.
    10
    Here,   St.     Paul’s   complaint   focused    on      RICO    violations
    purportedly committed by Sonya and the other Williamson litigants,
    but in describing those violations, it generally alleged that Sonya
    defrauded St. Paul by pursuing a fraudulent lawsuit in state court
    for which St. Paul sought damages to compensate for the attorneys’
    fees expended in that suit.        Although those allegations did not
    specifically include the words “malicious prosecution,” such a
    claim could conceivably come within those allegations, and those
    allegations state facts upon which relief can be granted.
    Sonya’s second procedural issue is of greater concern.                  St.
    Paul did not move for summary judgment based on res judicata as to
    the malicious      prosecution   claim,   let   alone   on     the   fraud   and
    conspiracy claims, which were the original claims that appeared to
    have been barred by res judicata at the October 31 pretrial
    conference. Hence, the district court must have sua sponte granted
    summary   judgment    on   the   liability   portion      of   the   malicious
    prosecution claim.
    The district court may enter summary judgment sua sponte if
    the parties are provided with reasonable notice and an opportunity
    to present argument opposing the judgment.          See Ross v. University
    of Texas, 
    139 F.3d 521
    , 527 (5th Cir. 1998).         A party must be given
    at least ten days notice before a court grants summary judgment sua
    sponte.   See 
    id. (quoting Miller
    v. Houghton, 
    115 F.3d 348
    , 350
    (5th Cir. 1997)).     But failure to give notice may be harmless when
    11
    the “‘nonmovant has no additional evidence or if all of the
    nonmovant’s additional evidence is reviewed by the appellate court
    and none of the evidence presents a genuine issue of material
    fact.’”   
    Id. (quoting Nowlin
    v. Resolution Trust Corp., 
    33 F.3d 498
    , 504 (5th Cir. 1994)).
    The record is unclear as to whether the district court gave
    notice to Sonya that it was considering an award of summary
    judgment on the malicious prosecution claim.             We can either view
    the   district   court’s   statements       at   the   October   31    pretrial
    conference as having provided notice, with the subsequent November
    13 hearing reflecting the actual summary judgment ruling, or we can
    view the November 13 hearing as having been the first time that
    Sonya was notified about the possibility of summary judgment.                 In
    the former case, there would have been sufficient notice, while in
    the latter there would not have been.             Part of the uncertainty
    stems from   the   district    court’s      perception   of   the     fraud   and
    malicious prosecution claims as being virtually synonymous when it
    considered   whether   St.    Paul’s    complaint      alleged   a    malicious
    prosecution claim.     Because the district court viewed the two
    claims similarly, it naturally assumed that its oral res judicata
    ruling as to the fraud claim at the October 31 pretrial conference
    was controlling.    But the fact that St. Paul’s complaint may have
    averred a malicious prosecution claim, in addition to the fraud
    claim, does not make the two claims the same.            Hence, we conclude
    12
    that the November 13 hearing was the first notice to Sonya that the
    district court was considering summary judgment as to the liability
    portion of the malicious prosecution claim.
    Notwithstanding this, summary judgment may still have been
    proper if the district court’s procedural error was harmless.          We,
    however, believe that that was not the case.        Under Louisiana law,
    a malicious prosecution claim requires: 1) the commencement of an
    original criminal or civil judicial proceeding; 2) its legal
    causation by the present defendant against the present plaintiff
    who was the defendant in the original proceeding; 3) its bona fide
    termination in favor of the present plaintiff; 4) the absence of
    probable cause for such proceeding; 5) the presence of malice
    therein; and 6) damages conforming to legal standards resulting to
    the plaintiff.     See Hibernia Nat’l Bank v. Bolleter, 
    390 So. 2d 842
    , 843 (La. 1980).     Sonya’s state court suit and the resulting
    jury verdict essentially established the first three elements.          To
    determine if there was an absence of probable cause, we must
    examine whether Sonya had an honest and reasonable belief in the
    liability of St. Paul at the time that she filed her lawsuit.          See
    Jones v. Soileau, 
    448 So. 2d 1268
    , 1272 (La. 1984).         The mere fact
    that the state court jury found that the accident was staged or
    fraudulent   did   not   conclusively   establish    that   Sonya   lacked
    probable cause to bring suit.     Cf. 
    id. (holding that
    a conviction
    or its reversal is not conclusive as to whether a defendant who
    13
    pressed criminal charges against the plaintiff had probable cause
    to bring forth the criminal complaint).            Here, Sonya requested a
    continuance   so   that   she   could    present   the   testimony   of   the
    attorneys who worked on her state court suit as to whether she had
    probable cause to pursue the lawsuit.          Thus, Sonya had evidence
    that she wished to proffer to the court and that could have created
    a genuine issue of material fact as to the probable cause element.
    Therefore, we conclude that the district court should not have
    granted summary judgment sua sponte, and that irrespective of
    whether the district court complied with the notice requirements
    for summary judgment or committed harmless error, summary judgment
    based on res judicata was substantively improper.
    The rules of res judicata encompass two separate but linked
    preclusive doctrines: (1) true res judicata or claim preclusion and
    (2) collateral estoppel or issue preclusion.              See Kaspar Wire
    Works, Inc. v. Leco Eng’g & Mach., Inc., 
    575 F.2d 530
    , 535 (5th
    Cir. 1978).   The former is typically what we call “res judicata,”
    and it treats a judgment, once rendered, as the full measure of
    relief to be accorded between the same parties on the same “claim”
    or “cause of action.”       See 
    id. Res judicata
    incorporates the
    doctrines of merger and bar, thereby extending the effect of a
    judgment to the litigation of all issues relevant to the same claim
    between the same parties, whether or not those issues were raised
    at trial. Collateral estoppel precludes the relitigation of issues
    14
    actually adjudicated, and essential to the judgment, in a prior
    suit between the parties on a different cause of action.           See 
    id. The Supreme
    Court has stated that “[t]he preclusive effect of
    a state court judgment in a subsequent federal lawsuit generally is
    determined by the full faith and credit statute, which provides
    that state judicial proceedings ‘shall have the same full faith and
    credit in every court within the United State . . . as they have by
    law or usage in the courts of such State . . . from which they are
    taken.’”   Marrese v. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, 
    105 S. Ct. 1327
    , 1331-32 (1985) (quoting 28 U.S.C. § 1738).         Under this
    statute, a federal court must refer to the preclusion law of the
    state in which judgment was rendered.        See 
    id. at 1332.
    Here, the district court had to give the same preclusive
    effect to the Louisiana state court judgment as would a Louisiana
    court.     But,   because   of   its    civilian   heritage,   Louisiana’s
    preclusion law is quite different from that of its common law
    cousins.   For example, Louisiana explicitly rejected collateral
    estoppel as a preclusive device until certain statutory revisions
    came into effect on January 1, 1991.           See B.E. Welch v. Crown
    Zellerbach Corp., 
    359 So. 2d 154
    , 156-57 (La. 1978); La. Rev. Stat.
    13:4231.   Consequently, the preclusive effect of judgments arising
    from suits filed before that date, such as the present matter, is
    determined by the law in effect prior to 1991.         See La. Rev. Stat.
    13:4231.
    15
    While Louisiana did not have collateral estoppel until 1991,
    it did codify a law of res judicata at former Louisiana Civil Code
    article 2286.5   That provision provided:
    The authority of the thing adjudged takes place
    only with respect to what was the object of the
    judgment. The thing demanded must be the same; the
    demand must be founded on the same cause of action;
    the demand must be between the same parties; and
    formed by them against each other in the same
    quality.
    La. Civ. Code art. 2286.   Thus, for res judicata to have applied in
    the instant matter, there must have been: 1) an identity of the
    parties; 2) an identity of the thing demanded; and 3) an identity
    of the cause of action.     See Terrebonne v. Theriot, 
    657 So. 2d 1358
    , 1361 (La. Ct. App. 1995).
    When determining if res judicata applies, Louisiana courts
    have narrowly construed the doctrine’s scope. See B. E. 
    Welch, 359 So. 2d at 156
    .   Any doubt as to compliance with the requirements of
    res judicata is to be resolved in favor of maintaining the second
    action.   See Greer v. Louisiana, 
    616 So. 2d 811
    , 815 (La. Ct. App.
    1993). And the party urging res judicata has the burden of proving
    each essential element by a preponderance of the evidence.   See 
    id. Under Louisiana
    law, identity of the parties does not mean
    that the parties must be the same physical or material parties, but
    they must appear in the suit in the same quality or capacity.    See
    5
    Article 2286 was redesignated as La. Rev. Stat. 13:4231
    without change in substance by 1984 La. Acts 331, § 7, effective
    January 1, 1985.
    16
    
    id. Here, that
    requirement was satisfied as Sonya and St. Paul
    opposed each other in both the state and federal suits in the same
    quality or capacity.           On the other hand, we encounter difficulties
    in establishing the second and third requirements.
    The thing demanded has routinely been defined as the kind of
    relief sought.       See Cantrelle Fence & Supply Co. v. Allstate Ins.
    Co.,    
    515 So. 2d
      1074,     1078    (La.   1987).     In   reality,    that
    requirement is more complicated as it encompasses the fundamental
    nature of the right claimed.           “[T]he thing demanded in any action
    is the recognition of the parties’ rights vis-à-vis the thing in
    controversy.”       David L. Hoskins, Comment, Litigation Preclusion in
    Louisiana: Welch v. Crown Zellerbach Corporation and the Death of
    Collateral Estoppel, 53 Tul. L. Rev. 875, 880 n.41 (1979); see also
    Dennis   K.   Dolbear,     Note,     The    End   of   Collateral      Estoppel    in
    Louisiana: Welch v. Crown Zellerbach Corporation, 
    40 La. L
    . Rev.
    246, 249 (1979) (“[I]t is the type of relief demanded, but viewed
    in terms of the basis for the right of indemnification.”).                  In the
    state court suit, St. Paul sought a defense verdict so that it
    would not have to pay any damages to Sonya for her injuries.                      The
    thing in controversy was whether Sonya had suffered any injuries
    from the electrical accident and whether that accident had been
    fraudulent or staged.           In the federal case, what St. Paul wanted
    was    damages   for     the    attorneys’      fees   expended   in    fighting    a
    maliciously prosecuted state suit.                Although the issue of fraud
    17
    played an important role in the federal suit, the relief sought in
    that suit vis-à-vis the malicious prosecution claim was palpably
    different from the relief requested in the state suit.
    As for the third requirement of identity of cause of action,
    Louisiana courts have concluded that the phrase is a mistranslation
    of the French and that it really refers to the civil concept of
    cause.   See 
    Greer, 616 So. 2d at 815
    .   Cause is the juridical or
    material fact which is the basis for the right claimed or the
    defense pleaded.    See Mitchell v. Bertolla, 
    340 So. 2d 287
    , 291
    (La. 1976).   It may be likened to grounds, theory of recovery, or
    the principle upon which a specific demand is grounded, and it is
    a narrower concept than the common law’s cause of action.        See
    Cantrelle Fence, 
    515 So. 2d
    at 1078; 
    Greer, 616 So. 2d at 815
    .
    We can distinguish between cause and cause of action by
    gauging their effects under res judicata.    After final judgment, a
    cause of action includes all grounds in support of it, and together
    they merge into the judgment so that relitigation of the cause of
    action on different grounds is barred.      See Cantrelle Fence, 
    515 So. 2d
    at 1078.    But because cause is roughly analogous to theory
    of recovery, a second suit on a different ground is not precluded.
    As a result, with minor exceptions, Louisiana’s law of res judicata
    does not recognize the common law “might have been pleaded” rule.
    See id.; Thomas E. Loehn, Comment, Res Judicata: Cause vs. Common
    Law, 22 Loy. L. Rev. 221, 230 (1976) (“The Louisiana courts have
    18
    judicially declared in effect that res judicata will only apply to
    those matters actually litigated and concluded and not to those
    that might have been urged.”).
    In the state suit, St. Paul defended against Sonya, contending
    that the accident was fraudulent. The cause concerned the defense,
    based on fraud, of a negligence suit initiated by Sonya.          That suit
    ultimately resulted in a jury finding that the accident was either
    staged or a fraud.   In the later federal suit, St. Paul asserted a
    malicious prosecution claim, a theory of recovery that is wholly
    different than a fraud defense.     There, the cause involved whether
    Sonya maliciously prosecuted her negligence suit against St. Paul.
    As previously noted, a malicious prosecution claim requires: (1)
    the   commencement   of   an   original   criminal   or   civil   judicial
    proceeding; (2) its legal causation by the present defendant
    against the present plaintiff who was the defendant in the original
    proceeding; (3) its bona fide termination in favor of the present
    plaintiff; (4) the absence of probable cause for such proceeding;
    (5) the presence of malice therein; and (6) damages conforming to
    legal standards resulting to the plaintiff.          See Hibernia Nat’l
    
    Bank, 390 So. 2d at 843
    .          On the other hand, “[f]raud is a
    misrepresentation or a suppression of the truth made with the
    intention either to obtain an unjust advantage for one party or to
    cause a loss or inconvenience to the other.”         Williamson, 
    688 So. 2d
    at 1239 (citing La. Civ. Code Ann. art. 1953).         To prove fraud,
    19
    one must show: 1) an intent to defraud, and 2) actual or potential
    loss or damages.       See 
    id. A comparison
    of those two theories of
    recovery     reveals    that   the    specific   elements    for    a   malicious
    prosecution claim do not coincide with those for fraud.                 Moreover,
    a malicious prosecution claim could not have proceeded at the same
    time that the state court trial on negligence and fraud was
    occurring.
    Despite those differences, the district court found that the
    state court fraud finding established all the elements of the
    malicious    prosecution       claim.6     The   first   three     elements     were
    satisfied when the first trial terminated in favor of St. Paul.
    The district court then held that the finding of fraud demonstrated
    a lack of probable cause, citing to Jones v. Soileau, 
    448 So. 2d 1268
    (La. 1984).       Because there was a lack of probable cause, the
    district court ruled that the presence of malice was established.
    See Hibernia Nat’l 
    Bank, 390 So. 2d at 844
    .              Lastly, the district
    court said damages are presumed when all the other elements of a
    malicious prosecution claim are satisfied.               See 
    id. We believe
    that the ruling was in error. First, as previously
    noted,   a   fraud     claim   and    a   malicious   prosecution       claim   are
    6
    The district court noted this in its Memorandum Order of
    November 11, 1997, denying Sonya’s motion for summary judgment
    seeking dismissal of St. Paul’s state law claims. In concluding
    that St. Paul had stated a claim for malicious prosecution in its
    pleadings, that order discussed in some detail how the state court
    fraud finding mirrored a malicious prosecution claim.
    20
    dissimilar in their elements and do not involve the same cause in
    the present case.       The argument that a fraud finding establishes
    all the elements of a malicious prosecution claim and, therefore,
    is res judicata on that claim implies that the trial on the issue
    of fraud encompassed the malicious prosecution claim.                 This defies
    logic as a malicious prosecution claim could not have been tried
    until the first trial was over.             Thus, there is an inherent
    contradiction to the notion that a fraud finding establishes all
    the elements for malicious prosecution and is res judicata on that
    claim.    Second, what the district court did by treating the state
    court fraud finding as res judicata on the malicious prosecution
    claim was to use that finding in a manner akin to offensive
    collateral estoppel, incorporating the prior adjudication into the
    subsequent case to shorten the litigation.            Res judicata, though,
    is typically a defensive doctrine, and Louisiana did not have
    collateral estoppel until 1991.             Finally, the district court
    misread   and   misapplied      the   holding   of   Jones   to   support    its
    proposition that a fraud finding establishes lack of probable cause
    as a matter of law.      That case does not state such a holding but
    actually suggests that a fraud finding in a prior case is not
    conclusive as to the lack of probable cause.                 Hence, a fraud
    finding   could   not    have    conclusively    established      a    malicious
    prosecution claim, and the former should not have been used as res
    21
    judicata as to the latter claim.7             Accordingly, we vacate the
    summary judgment and damages verdict in favor of St. Paul on its
    malicious prosecution claim.
    In light of our reversal and vacatur, we decline to address
    Sonya’s arguments as to the striking of her defenses or as to
    whether sufficient evidence supported the jury’s damages verdict.
    As for the remaining issues on appeal in No. 97-31143, after having
    reviewed the briefs and the record in this case, we find them
    meritless.      Thus, we believe that the district court did not
    improperly   grant    summary     judgment   dismissing   the   Williamsons’
    counterclaims    or    err   in   its   evidentiary   rulings,    and   those
    determinations are affirmed.
    B.   Appeal No. 98-30001
    The second of the three appeals concerns the district court’s
    summary judgment order dismissing St. Paul’s RICO claims against
    the Williamsons.      RICO creates a civil cause of action for “‘[a]ny
    person injured in his business or property by reason of a violation
    of section 1962.’”      Beck v. Prupis, 
    120 S. Ct. 1608
    , 1611 (2000)
    (quoting 18 U.S.C. § 1964(c)).          Here, St. Paul asserted violations
    of § 1962(a), (c), and (d).        We have reduced those subsections to
    7
    Furthermore, the state court jury found that the accident had
    been staged or was fraudulent, not that Sonya had specifically
    committed fraud. Without an examination of the state court record,
    we cannot say that such a general finding of fraud could properly
    be res judicata as to claims alleging individually specific charges
    of fraud or malicious prosecution.
    22
    their simplest terms to mean that:
    (a) a person who has received income from a pattern of
    racketeering activity cannot invest that income in an
    enterprise;
    . . .
    (c) a person who is employed by or associated with an
    enterprise cannot conduct the affairs of the enterprise
    through a pattern of racketeering activity; and
    (d) a person cannot conspire to violate subsections (a),
    (b), or (c).
    See Crowe v. Henry, 
    43 F.3d 198
    , 203 (5th Cir. 1995).                   Under all
    those subsections, to state a RICO claim, there must be: “(1) a
    person who engages in (2) a pattern of racketeering activity (3)
    connected to the acquisition, establishment, conduct, or control of
    an enterprise.”     Delta Truck & Tractor, Inc. v. J.I. Case Co., 
    855 F.2d 241
    , 242 (5th Cir. 1988).         Assuming that the three elements of
    a RICO person, a pattern of racketeering activity, and a RICO
    enterprise    are   met,   we   may    then    continue     to   the   substantive
    requirements of each respective subsection.
    Before    proceeding       to    the    three   RICO    elements    and   the
    substantive requirements of the subsections, we initially address
    St. Paul’s argument as to the appropriate standard of review.
    Although the district court made its ruling after the Williamsons
    moved for partial summary judgment, St. Paul argues that the
    district court’s ruling was based solely on the pleadings and that,
    therefore, the proper standard of review should be that for a
    23
    motion to dismiss as opposed to a motion for summary judgment.8                If
    we were to review the appeal under a motion to dismiss standard,
    St.   Paul    particularly     believes    that   it       asserted    sufficient
    allegations      of   injury   caused     by   the     Williamsons’      use   of
    racketeering income to maintain and operate a RICO enterprise in
    violation of § 1962(a).
    When a party moves for summary judgment, as the Williamsons
    did in this case, “[i]t is not enough for the moving party to
    merely make a conclusory statement that the other party has no
    evidence to prove his case.”         Ashe v. Corley, 
    992 F.2d 540
    , 543
    (5th Cir. 1993).       “‘[B]efore the non-moving party is required to
    produce evidence in opposition to the motion, the moving party must
    first satisfy its obligation of demonstrating that there are no
    factual      issues   warranting   trial.’”          
    Id. (quoting Russ
      v.
    International Paper Co., 
    943 F.2d 589
    , 592 (5th Cir. 1991)).
    Indeed, where a motion for summary judgment is solely based on the
    pleadings or only challenges the sufficiency of the plaintiff’s
    pleadings, then such a motion should be evaluated in much the same
    way as a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss.              See 
    id. at 544.
    8
    We review both a motion to dismiss and a motion for summary
    judgment under a de novo standard of review. In the former, the
    central issue is whether, in the light most favorable to the
    plaintiff, the complaint states a valid claim for relief.      See
    Lowrey v. Texas A&M Univ. Sys., 
    117 F.3d 242
    , 247 (5th Cir. 1997).
    In the latter, we go beyond the pleadings to determine whether
    there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the
    movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. See Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 56(c).
    24
    Contrary to St. Paul’s assertions, the Williamsons did proffer
    evidence in support of their motion for summary judgment.                     In
    addition to pointing out the lack of evidence supporting St. Paul’s
    RICO   claims,    they     offered   affidavits,      depositions,   and   other
    relevant documentary evidence suggesting that their prior insurance
    claims, which St. Paul alleged were some of the bases for the
    income that supposedly was invested into a RICO enterprise, were
    not fraudulent and could not be predicate acts for the pattern of
    racketeering needed for a RICO violation.
    On the other hand, St. Paul contends that the Williamsons, as
    movants, failed to comply with the holding in Ashe because they did
    not offer evidence to show that there was an absence of proof as to
    the factual issue of whether there was investment into a RICO
    enterprise.       Admittedly, the thrust of the submitted evidence
    related to the pattern of racketeering issue, and not the specific
    issue of investment in a RICO enterprise.
    But the fact that the Williamsons raised the absence of a
    pattern of racketeering issue in the summary judgment motion and
    provided evidence to corroborate that argument necessarily supports
    the Williamsons’ other argument that there was no evidence of
    investment in a RICO enterprise.             Thus, the Williamsons, in their
    motion   for     summary    judgment,   did     not   rest   on   conclusionary
    statements but demonstrated that no factual issues warranted trial.
    In light of the Williamsons’ satisfaction of their burden to
    25
    demonstrate that no factual issues existed and the district court’s
    conscious decision to go beyond the pleadings, we review the
    current appeal under the de novo standard accorded to motions for
    summary judgment.
    With that standard in mind, we turn to the substance of the
    district court’s summary judgment order and St. Paul’s appeal.            Of
    the three elements required of any RICO claim, the district court
    noted that the Williamsons in their summary judgment motion had not
    challenged whether St. Paul had asserted and/or provided evidence
    of a RICO person or a RICO enterprise.           A RICO person is the
    defendant, while a RICO enterprise can be either a legal entity or
    an association-in-fact.        See Crowe v. Henry, 
    43 F.3d 198
    , 204 (5th
    Cir. 1995).      If the alleged enterprise is an association-in-fact,
    the plaintiff must show evidence of an ongoing organization, formal
    or informal, that functions as a continuing unit over time through
    a   hierarchical    or   consensual   decision-making   structure.       See
    Elliott v. Foufas, 
    867 F.2d 877
    , 881 (5th Cir. 1989).           Here, St.
    Paul had identified Robert, Sonya, and Arlone as defendants and had
    pleaded,   and    apparently    established,   the   RICO   enterprise   as
    Seahorse Farms, and/or an association-in-fact of Robert, Sonya, and
    Arlone, and/or an association-in-fact of Robert, Sonya, Arlone, and
    Seahorse Farms.
    The Williamsons, however, did circuitously challenge the third
    element of a pattern of racketeering activity, contending that St.
    26
    Paul had failed to show evidence of fraudulent insurance claims.
    A pattern of racketeering activity requires two or more predicate
    acts and a demonstration that the racketeering predicates are
    related and amount to or pose a threat of continued criminal
    activity.    See Word of Faith World Outreach Ctr. Church, Inc. v.
    Sawyer, 
    90 F.3d 118
    , 122 (5th Cir. 1996).             By arguing that there
    were no fraudulent insurance claims, the Williamsons essentially
    challenged St. Paul’s allegations of mail and wire fraud, the
    predicate acts asserted by St. Paul as the basis for a pattern of
    racketeering activity. Among other things, both RICO mail and wire
    fraud require evidence of intent to defraud, i.e., evidence of a
    scheme to defraud by false or fraudulent representations.                  See
    Crowe v. Henry, 
    115 F.3d 294
    , 297 (5th Cir. 1997).           After reviewing
    the pleadings and the evidence, the district court determined that
    there were genuine issues of material fact as to the existence of
    a scheme to defraud and, as a result, as to the existence of those
    predicate offenses.
    Despite finding in favor of St. Paul on the three common
    elements of a RICO claim, the district court found summary judgment
    proper    because   St.   Paul   had   failed   to    meet   the   substantive
    requirements of § 1962(a), (c), and (d).             We review each of those
    subsections in turn.
    1.     Section 1962(a)
    To establish a § 1962(a) violation, a plaintiff must prove 1)
    27
    the existence of an enterprise, 2) the defendant’s derivation of
    income from a pattern of racketeering activity, and 3) the use of
    any part of that income in acquiring an interest in or operating
    the enterprise.        Cf. United States v. Cauble, 
    706 F.2d 1322
    , 1331
    (5th Cir.      1983)   (reciting   elements    for   a     §   1962(a)   criminal
    violation).     Moreover, there must be a nexus between the claimed
    violation and the plaintiff’s injury.          See Crowe v. Henry, 
    43 F.3d 198
    , 205 (5th Cir. 1995).        In other words, for a viable § 1962(a)
    claim,   any    injury    must   flow   from   the   use       or   investment    of
    racketeering income. See Parker & Parsley Petroleum Co. v. Dresser
    Indus., 
    972 F.2d 580
    , 584 (5th Cir. 1992).
    Here, the district court dismissed St. Paul’s claim because
    St. Paul failed to show that income from a pattern of racketeering
    activity was invested in or used to operate a RICO enterprise.                   The
    only predicate acts to form the basis of a pattern of racketeering
    activity were several counts of mail and wire fraud, which St. Paul
    explicitly stated in its complaint and RICO case statement.9                 From
    those specific predicate acts, the district court found that the
    9
    St. Paul contends that other predicate acts were stated in
    the complaint and the RICO case statement and that evidence was
    submitted, in the form of admissions, which revealed that income
    from those acts were received by the Williamsons or Seahorse Farms.
    Although both the complaint and the RICO case statement do refer
    generally to some comments about insurance fraud claims by the
    Williamsons, the complaint and the RICO case statement clearly
    state and list the predicate acts of mail and wire fraud from which
    the RICO claims emanate.     All of them concern acts occurring
    between March 29, 1989, and October 22, 1993.
    28
    only evidence of income was several checks from Insurance Company
    of North America (“CIGNA”).           The district court ruled that the
    evidence did not establish that any of those checks were invested
    in or used to operate a RICO enterprise.           It stated that St. Paul’s
    unsubstantiated allegation that income from the predicate acts
    maintained the Williamsons during the prosecution of the state tort
    suit was insufficient to prove investment into a RICO enterprise.
    Although some evidence existed showing investment into the alleged
    RICO enterprise of Seahorse Farms, that investment was derived from
    income attributed to acts that were not alleged to have been
    predicate acts forming a pattern of racketeering activity.
    On appeal, St. Paul primarily presses the sufficiency of its
    § 1962(a) allegations, based on the motion to dismiss argument that
    we previously noted as unavailing.          The initial brief devotes very
    little to the district court’s conclusion that there was no genuine
    issue of material fact as to the investment of racketeering income,
    in the form of the CIGNA checks, into a RICO enterprise.              It merely
    alludes to some evidence indicating that the Williamsons’ lacked
    legitimate income, and therefore, any income derived from a pattern
    of   racketeering   activity    had    to   have   been   invested    into   the
    Williamsons’ RICO enterprise, purportedly the association-in-fact
    of   Sonya,   Robert,   and    Arlone,      in   the   form   of   support   and
    maintenance so that the enterprise could pursue the state tort suit
    against St. Paul.       And other than general assertions that the
    29
    complaint adequately alleges the existence of income from a pattern
    of racketeering activity, the initial brief does not present an
    argument that there is evidence substantiating the existence of
    income, other than the CIGNA checks, that was derived from the
    predicate acts specifically listed in the complaint.      Only in its
    reply brief does St. Paul directly address the district court’s
    conclusion that the evidence only supports the CIGNA checks as
    having been generated from a pattern of racketeering activity.      In
    that reply brief, St. Paul notes circumstantial evidence of several
    settlement checks from a disability insurer, Motors Insurance
    Corporation (“MIC”), which may have been derived from the predicate
    acts that were alleged in the complaint and that formed the basis
    of a pattern of racketeering activity.
    By the time the CIGNA checks were sent out starting in 1991,
    Seahorse Farms had terminated as an entity.      The only alleged RICO
    enterprise that the checks could have been invested in was the
    association-in-fact of Robert, Sonya, and Arlone.        The district
    court, however, determined that St. Paul had failed to prove
    investment   into   a   RICO   enterprise,   notwithstanding   evidence
    suggesting that all three members of the association-in-fact had
    received the CIGNA checks.       It was not persuaded by St. Paul’s
    unsubstantiated allegation that the use of the CIGNA checks to
    maintain Robert, Sonya, and Arlone during the prosecution of the
    state tort suit was investment into an enterprise. That was error.
    30
    Although we recognize and, in a sense, sympathize with the district
    court’s apparent belief that St. Paul should have provided evidence
    beyond mere allegations that the CIGNA checks helped support the
    members of an enterprise to demonstrate investment into a RICO
    enterprise for purposes of a § 1962(a) violation, this Circuit’s
    precedent dictates that a plaintiff “need prove only that illegally
    derived funds flowed into the enterprise.”      
    Cauble, 706 F.2d at 1342
    ; cf. United States v. Vogt, 
    910 F.2d 1184
    , 1199 & n.7 (4th
    Cir. 1990) (applying a broad definition of “use” and acknowledging
    as sound the government’s contention that the depositing of funds
    into an enterprise constituted a use to operate in violation of
    § 1962(a)); United States v. McNary, 
    620 F.2d 621
    , 628 (7th Cir.
    1980) (finding that § 1962(a) does not require direct or immediate
    use of illicit income).   Assuming, as we must, that Robert, Sonya,
    and Arlone comprised the enterprise and that they received the
    CIGNA checks, we believe a genuine issue of material fact exists as
    to whether racketeering proceeds were invested in or used to
    operate a RICO enterprise.
    Of course, to state a claim under § 1962(a), a plaintiff must
    also show that its injuries resulted from the investment or use of
    racketeering proceeds. See Parker & Parsley 
    Petroleum, 972 F.2d at 584
    .    Although the district court did not specifically consider
    that nexus requirement to rule on the Williamsons’ motion for
    summary judgment, they did raise it in their motion.     Because we
    31
    can affirm a summary judgment on grounds not relied on by the
    district court so long as those grounds were proposed or asserted
    in that court by the movant, see Johnson v. Sawyer, 
    120 F.3d 1307
    ,
    1316    (5th   Cir.   1997),   we   address    that   requirement.     In    its
    complaint,     St.    Paul   asserted   that   income   from   a   pattern   of
    racketeering activity, arising from mail and wire fraud predicate
    acts related to certain insurance claims, was invested in or used
    to operate the Williamsons’ RICO enterprise and that the income was
    then used to support the enterprise as the enterprise proceeded
    with a lawsuit against St. Paul, thereby resulting in St. Paul’s
    injuries.      Among the predicate acts alleged to form a pattern of
    racketeering activity were instances of conduct directly connected
    to the filing of the state tort suit, including the filing of that
    suit.
    This is troubling, in light of St. Paul’s other claims under
    § 1962(c) that it was essentially injured by the defendants’
    pattern of racketeering activity, i.e., the predicate acts.10                In
    discussing the investment injury11 requirement of § 1962(a), this
    Circuit, like virtually all the other circuits who have reviewed
    this issue, has intimated that such an injury cannot just flow from
    10
    St. Paul also alleged that those predicate acts injured it
    by violating state fraud law.
    11
    For simplicity’s sake, we use the term “investment injury”
    to refer to an injury from the use or investment of racketeering
    income in a RICO enterprise.
    32
    the predicate acts themselves. See Parker & Parsley 
    Petroleum, 972 F.2d at 584
    ; see also Vemco, Inc. v. Camardella, 
    23 F.3d 129
    , 132
    (6th Cir. 1994); Nuggest Hydroelec. L.P. v. Pacific Gas & Elec.
    Co., 
    981 F.2d 429
    , 437-38 (9th Cir. 1992); Danielsen v. Burnside-
    Ott Aviation Training Ctr., Inc., 
    941 F.2d 1220
    , 1229-30 (D.C. Cir.
    1991); Ouaknine v. MacFarlane, 
    897 F.2d 75
    , 82-83 (2d Cir. 1990);
    Grider v. Texas Oil & Gas Corp., 
    868 F.2d 1147
    , 1150 (10th Cir.
    1989).    But see Busby v. Crown Supply, Inc., 
    896 F.2d 833
    , 836-40
    (4th Cir. 1990).    That is, injuries due to predicate acts cannot
    form the basis of an investment injury for purposes of § 1962(a).
    We must ask whether the injuries were a result of the predicate
    acts or a result of the investment of racketeering proceeds into a
    RICO enterprise.    Otherwise, “it would be difficult to understand
    why Congress enacted § 1962(a).”           
    Danielsen, 941 F.2d at 1230
    .    If
    allegations sufficient to base a § 1962(c) action meet all the
    requirements of a § 1962(a) allegation, then there is no real
    rationale for Congress having passed both.          See 
    id. Here, St.
    Paul
    has come close to improperly conflating § 1962(a) and (c), by
    asserting that those acts related to the filing and prosecution of
    the state tort suit were mail and wire fraud predicates and that
    they caused it injuries.
    In   its   response   to   the   Williamsons’     motion   for   summary
    judgment and in its initial brief, however, St. Paul argues in a
    roundabout way that the investment injury it suffered was not from
    33
    the predicate acts related to the filing of the state tort suit,
    but rather from the predicate acts associated with the Williamsons’
    claims with other insurance companies.12       It maintains that its
    injuries are   cognizable   because   they   were    the   result   of   the
    Williamsons’ investment of racketeering income from a prior pattern
    of racketeering activity.     See Newmeyer v. Philatelic Leasing,
    Ltd., 
    888 F.2d 385
    , 396 (6th Cir. 1989).
    In Newmeyer, the plaintiffs had placed some money into an
    investment plan dealing with stamps, which the defendants had
    marketed.   See 
    id. at 386-91.
      The plaintiffs’ complaints alleged
    that the defendants had been acting in concert over a period of
    five years, defrauding hundreds of individuals, many of them prior
    to the plaintiffs’ own deception.     See 
    id. at 396.
         In furtherance
    of their scheme, the defendants allegedly committed mail and wire
    fraud, which constituted a pattern of racketeering activity.             See
    
    id. Based on
    those allegations, the Sixth Circuit found that the
    plaintiffs had made out a § 1962(a) claim.          See 
    id. It observed
    that if the allegations were true and if the defendants had used
    the income derived from earlier racketeering activity against other
    victims to establish and operate the alleged scam into which the
    plaintiffs placed their own money, then it was not impossible for
    12
    We find this argument odd because, as previously noted, the
    district court did not discuss or base its summary judgment order
    on the investment injury requirement.
    34
    the plaintiffs to demonstrate a § 1962(a) injury.           See 
    id. The present
    situation closely parallels the Newmeyer case
    except that we encounter uncertainty as to whether St. Paul has
    alleged and established more than one pattern of racketeering
    activity.   St. Paul’s complaint grouped all the predicate acts
    together, implying that they composed one pattern of racketeering.
    In addition, of the predicate acts specifically listed in the
    complaint, almost all of them related to the Williamsons’ actions
    to obtain monetary compensation from insurance claims arising out
    of Sonya’s July 1989 electrocution.        Indeed, the CIGNA checks that
    purportedly constitute the investment into the RICO enterprise were
    received as a result of Sonya’s electrocution, the event that also
    spurred the Williamsons’ predicate acts associated with the filing
    of the state court suit.         The commonality in the source of those
    predicate acts suggests that the predicate acts that led to the
    CIGNA checks and the predicate acts connected to the filing of the
    lawsuit   were   related   and    formed   one   pattern   of   racketeering
    activity.   If we were to discern only one pattern of racketeering
    35
    activity, then this case would not fit easily within the Newmeyer
    holding.13
    Despite        the   problems,    we    believe     that    St.     Paul     has
    sufficiently distinguished and established a genuine issue of
    material     fact    as   to   the    existence    of    a   prior      pattern    of
    racketeering activity, which may have produced income that was
    invested into a RICO enterprise, causing injuries to St. Paul in
    the form of legal costs.         Although St. Paul may have confusingly
    included those predicate acts that formed the prior pattern of
    racketeering activity with those predicate acts that injured St.
    Paul pursuant to § 1962(c), it is apparent from the complaint and
    other documents that St. Paul was asserting that it was injured by
    the investment of prior racketeering proceeds into the Williamsons’
    RICO enterprise. And while the CIGNA checks and the predicate acts
    related to the filing of the lawsuit all arose from Sonya’s
    electrocution, that commonality does not mean that no § 1962(a)
    claim can be asserted.         The CIGNA checks were procured as a result
    of Sonya’s electrocution, but they dealt with racketeering activity
    connected     to    the   Williamsons’       actions    with    other     insurance
    companies.     The predicate acts associated with the filing of the
    13
    Part of the problem also rests with St. Paul’s failure to
    allege properly as predicate acts a host of allegations about the
    Williamsons’s insurance claims from the early 1980s to 1989, which
    were purportedly a part of a prior pattern of racketeering
    activity. See supra note 9. If St. Paul had established those
    predicate acts, then the prior pattern of racketeering activity
    would have been much more evident.
    36
    lawsuit, which formed the basis of the pattern of racketeering
    activity under § 1962(c), concerned racketeering activity primarily
    related to the Williamsons’ dealings with St. Paul.      Thus, while
    the predicate acts connected to the CIGNA checks and to the filing
    of the lawsuit all sprang from the same root, those predicate acts
    were the bases of different patterns of racketeering activity.
    Hence, we find that St. Paul has asserted and created a genuine
    issue of material fact as to the existence of an investment injury.
    Accordingly, we vacate the district court’s summary judgment in
    favor of the Williamsons’ as to the § 1962(a) claim with respect to
    the CIGNA checks.
    As for the income from the MIC settlement checks, which were
    received by the Williamsons and which St. Paul raises in its reply
    brief as evidence of other racketeering income having been invested
    into a RICO enterprise, we affirm the district court.     Generally,
    we deem abandoned those issues not presented and argued in an
    appellant’s initial brief, nor do we consider matters not presented
    to the trial court.    See Webb v. Investacorp Inc., 
    89 F.3d 252
    , 257
    n.2 (5th Cir. 1996).    In its initial brief, St. Paul tangentially
    referred to the Williamsons’ receipt of disability checks in
    general, but any reference to those checks were in the context of
    its general allegations concerning the Williamsons’ fraudulent RICO
    scheme.   St. Paul did not challenge the district court’s ruling
    that there was no genuine issue of material fact as to the lack of
    37
    racketeering income other than the CIGNA checks.          Likewise, St.
    Paul’s response to the Williamsons’ summary judgment motion was
    deficient with respect to any argument that there was evidence
    supporting the receipt of income, in the form of the MIC settlement
    checks, from a pattern of racketeering activity.14       Accordingly, we
    believe that St. Paul has abandoned any argument regarding the
    existence of evidence pertaining to income derived from a pattern
    of racketeering activity.
    2.   Section 1962(c)
    As previously noted, § 1962(c) prohibits “any person employed
    by or associated with any enterprise” from participating in or
    conducting the affairs of that enterprise through a pattern of
    racketeering   activity.    See   18   U.S.C.   §   1962(c).   Like   the
    overwhelming majority of our sister circuits, we have held that
    subsection (c) requires that the RICO person be distinct from the
    RICO enterprise. See Bishop v. Corbitt Marine Ways, Inc., 
    802 F.2d 122
    , 122-23 (5th Cir. 1986) (collecting cases); see also 
    Crowe, 43 F.3d at 206
    (“[A] RICO person cannot employ or associate with
    himself under [§ 1962(c)]”.); In re 
    Burzynski, 989 F.2d at 743
    (citing Bishop).    Here, St. Paul identified Robert, Sonya, and
    Arlone as defendants, and thus as RICO persons.            Moreover, it
    14
    St. Paul submitted evidence of those checks, but it did not
    connect that evidence to any argument regarding the existence of
    income, in the form of those checks, derived from a pattern of
    racketeering activity.
    38
    alleged that the enterprise was essentially the association-in-fact
    of Robert, Sonya, and Arlone.
    The district court viewed those allegations as failing to
    establish any distinction between the RICO defendants and the RICO
    enterprise, and it dismissed St. Paul’s § 1962(c) claim.                   The two
    primary bases for the district court’s determination were the
    Burzynski and Crowe decisions from this Circuit. In Burzynski, the
    plaintiff, a doctor who operated a research institute, sued Aetna
    Life Insurance Company (“Aetna”), a litigation consultant hired by
    Aetna, the company started by that litigation consultant, and
    Aetna’s   outside    law   firm    for    violating,      among   other    things,
    § 1962(c).    See In re 
    Burzynski, 989 F.2d at 742
    .                The plaintiff
    charged that the enterprise was an association-in-fact comprised of
    the defendants.      See 
    id. at 743.
             The Burzynski panel found that
    this contravened the person/enterprise distinction as required by
    § 1962(c) and by Bishop.        See 
    id. In Crowe,
    the plaintiff, Larry
    Crowe, sued    his    lawyer,     Sam    Henry,   under    the    RICO   statutes,
    including § 1962(c).         See 
    Crowe, 43 F.3d at 201
    .                   The RICO
    enterprise was allegedly an association-in-fact of Crowe and Henry.
    See 
    id. at 206.
         Citing Burzynski, a different panel of this Court
    concluded that Crowe’s claim failed to demonstrate a sufficient
    distinction between the person and the enterprise.                 See 
    id. 39 St.
    Paul does not dispute the district court’s reading of the
    Burzynski and Crowe holdings.           It concedes that those decisions
    seem to hold that members of an association-in-fact enterprise
    cannot also be RICO persons for purposes of a § 1962(c) claim.                 But
    St. Paul responds that recent case law casts doubt on the validity
    of Burzynski’ s and Crowe’s interpretation of the person/enterprise
    distinction and that those two cases actually conflict with earlier
    Fifth Circuit case law.     Referring to Khurana v. Innovative Health
    Care Sys., Inc., 
    130 F.3d 143
    (5th Cir. 1997), St. Paul argues that
    there is a difference between the naming of a corporation as an
    alleged member of an association-in-fact enterprise and the naming
    of   individuals   as   alleged   members           of   an   association-in-fact
    enterprise when determining the person/enterprise distinction.                   In
    addition, St. Paul asserts that Khurana comports with even earlier
    circuit precedent, United States v. Elliott, 
    571 F.2d 880
    (5th Cir.
    1978),   which     perceived      the        person/enterprise         distinction
    differently than Burzynski and Crowe.
    First off, we note that the Supreme Court vacated the judgment
    in Khurana.   See Teel v. Khurana, 
    119 S. Ct. 442
    (1998).                  Second,
    even if Khurana altered the landscape of the person/enterprise
    distinction in our circuit, we are bound to the holdings in
    Burzynski   and    Crowe,   assuming         that    those     are   our   earliest
    pronouncements on this issue.            See United States v. Texas Tech
    Univ., 
    171 F.3d 279
    , 285 n.9 (5th Cir. 1999), cert. denied, 120 S.
    40
    Ct. 2194 (2000) (observing that when two prior panel decisions
    conflict, the first decision controls); see also Luna v. United
    States Dep’t of Health & Human Servs., 
    948 F.2d 169
    , 172 (5th Cir.
    1991).
    Nonetheless, reviewing Elliott and some of the other decisions
    that led to the Burzynski and Crowe decisions, we believe that St.
    Paul makes a meritorious argument.              In Elliott, the government
    prosecuted six individuals for RICO violations.15           See 
    Elliott, 571 F.2d at 895
    .   Those six individuals comprised the association-in-
    fact enterprise.     See 
    id. at 898
    n.18.            Of the six, two were
    charged as defendants for violating § 1962(c).              See 
    id. at 896.
    Notwithstanding    the   fact   that     both    individuals   charged   with
    violating § 1962(c) were named as RICO persons and as members of
    the   association-in-fact,      the     Elliott     panel   affirmed     their
    convictions.   See 
    id. at 900.
    Thus, when Bishop, the decision to which the Burzynski court
    cited for support, held that to state a § 1962(c) claim, a
    plaintiff had to distinguish between the RICO person and the RICO
    15
    Although Elliott involved a criminal prosecution as opposed
    to a civil suit, the substantive requirements of § 1962(c) are the
    same. Cf. Alcorn County v. U.S. Interstate Supplies, Inc., 
    731 F.2d 1160
    , 1170-71 (5th Cir. 1984), abrogated on other grounds,
    United States v. Cooper, 
    135 F.3d 960
    (5th Cir. 1998) (construing
    criminal RICO cases as relevant for purposes of determining whether
    a violation occurred); see also United States v. Shifman, 
    124 F.3d 31
    , 35 n.1 (1st Cir. 1997) (“[I]t is appropriate to rely on civil
    RICO precedent when analyzing criminal RICO liability.”).
    41
    enterprise, it was not making the sweeping generalization that any
    congruence between a RICO person and a member of an association-in-
    fact,   which    constituted      a   RICO   enterprise,       violated     the
    person/enterprise distinction.        Instead, Bishop merely concurred
    with the vast majority of the circuits that held that a § 1962(c)
    claim requires a distinction between the RICO person and the RICO
    enterprise.     Those circuits were discussing the person/enterprise
    distinction where the plaintiffs were alleging a corporate entity
    as both a RICO defendant and a RICO enterprise.                Bishop itself
    involved a plaintiff who sought a § 1962(c) claim against a single
    corporate defendant, which was also named as the RICO enterprise.
    See 
    Bishop, 802 F.2d at 122
    .
    The reason for differentiating in the § 1962(c) context
    between cases     where   a    corporation   is   identified    as   both   the
    enterprise and the defendant and cases where it is not was aptly
    noted in the Harocco decision, to which Bishop heavily deferred.
    See Harocco, Inc. v. American Nat’l Bank & Trust Co., 
    747 F.2d 384
    ,
    399 (7th Cir. 1984).          The RICO statute distinguishes between a
    corporation and an association-in-fact with respect to the “person”
    element.   See 
    id. According to
    the Haroco court:
    Where persons associate “in fact” for criminal
    purposes, . . . each person may be held liable
    under RICO for his, her or its participation in
    conducting the affairs of the association in fact
    through a pattern of racketeering activity.     But
    the nebulous association in fact does not itself
    fall within the RICO definition of “person[]” . . .
    42
    . In the association in fact situation, each
    participant in the enterprise may be a “person”
    liable under RICO, but the association itself
    cannot be.   By contrast, a corporation obviously
    qualifies as a “person” under RICO and may be
    subject to RICO liability.
    
    Id. at 401.
      Thus, courts have routinely required a distinction
    when a corporation has been alleged as both a RICO defendant and a
    RICO enterprise, but a similar requirement has not been mandated
    when individuals have been named as defendants and as members of an
    association-in-fact RICO enterprise.16
    Indeed, “‘[a] collective entity is something more than the
    members of which it is comprised.’”      United States v. Fairchild,
    
    189 F.3d 769
    , 777 (8th Cir. 1999) (quoting Atlas Pile Driving Co.
    v. DiCon Fin. Co., 
    886 F.2d 986
    , 995 (8th Cir. 1989)).     “Although
    a defendant may not be both a person and an enterprise, a defendant
    may be both a person and a part of an enterprise.    In such a case,
    16
    To get around having a corporation named as both a RICO
    defendant and a RICO enterprise, many plaintiffs have charged the
    corporation as being part of an association-in-fact enterprise and
    also as a RICO defendant.     Courts have roundly criticized this
    formulation. See, e.g., Brittingham v. Mobil Corp., 
    943 F.2d 297
    ,
    300-302 (3d Cir. 1991). In some ways, that formulation parallels
    the situation where individuals are named as defendants and as
    being part of an association-in-fact, and accordingly, the
    criticism has fed the notion that no defendant can be a part of the
    association-in-fact    enterprise   or   it  would    violate   the
    person/enterprise distinction.    But the criticism pertaining to
    having corporations listed as being a part of the association-in-
    fact is due to the fact that a Ҥ 1962(c) enterprise must be more
    than an association of individuals or entities conducting the
    normal affairs of a defendant corporation.” Id.; see also Old Time
    Enters. v. International Coffee Corp., 
    862 F.2d 1213
    , 1215 (5th
    Cir. 1989).     The criticism is generally unwarranted where
    corporations are not involved.
    43
    the   individual     defendant      is   distinct    from     the   organizational
    entity.”      
    Id. Otherwise, an
    individual member of a collective
    enterprise, such as an association-in-fact, could not be prosecuted
    for violating § 1962(c) because he or she would not be considered
    distinct from the enterprise.            See 
    id. Accordingly, we
    vacate the
    district   court’s     award    of    summary      judgment    in    favor   of   the
    Williamsons’ on St. Paul’s § 1962(c) claim.
    3.      Section 1962(d)
    Under     §   1962(d),    a    person    cannot    conspire      to    violate
    subsections (a) or (c).        See 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d).             With respect to
    a conspiracy to violate subsection (c), this Circuit has previously
    stated that just as a RICO person cannot employ or associate with
    itself, it cannot conspire to employ or associate with itself. See
    
    Ashe, 992 F.2d at 544
    .         As a result, the district court dismissed
    the § 1962(d) claim based on an agreement to violate subsection (c)
    because it concluded that St. Paul had failed to distinguish the
    RICO persons from the RICO enterprise.              But in light of our holding
    that St. Paul has established a distinction between the RICO
    persons and the RICO enterprise, we vacate the district court’s
    ruling with respect to St. Paul’s § 1962(d) claim charging a
    conspiracy to violate subsection (c). Moreover, we remand the case
    back to the district court so that it may address St. Paul’s §
    1962(d) claim based on an agreement to violate subsection (a),
    44
    which the district court failed to do in its order.17
    C.   Appeal No. 98-31243
    In the third and final consolidated appeal, we must determine
    whether the district court erred in enjoining Sonya, Robert, their
    children,       and   their   agents    from   pursuing    the   state   court
    nullification suit. Under the Anti-Injunction Act, a federal court
    may not grant an injunction to stay proceedings in a state court
    “except as expressly authorized by an Act of Congress, or where
    necessary in aid of its jurisdiction, or to protect or effectuate
    its judgments.” Next Level Communications LP v. DSC Communications
    Corp., 
    179 F.3d 244
    , 249 (5th Cir. 1999).             These exceptions are
    narrowly construed.           See 
    id. The district
    court granted the
    injunction based on the exception to protect or effectuate its
    judgment, otherwise known as the relitigation exception.                  That
    exception “``was designed to permit a federal court to prevent state
    litigation of an issue that previously was presented to and decided
    by the federal court.’”           
    Id. (quoting Chick
    Kam Choo v. Exxon
    Corp., 
    108 S. Ct. 1684
    (1988)).          Although generally the grant of a
    preliminary injunction is reviewed for abuse of discretion, we
    review    the    district     court’s   application   of   the   relitigation
    exception de novo.       See Next 
    Level, 179 F.3d at 249
    .
    To apply the exception, the parties to the original action
    17
    As we previously noted, St. Paul has established a genuine
    issue of material fact with respect to the § 1962(a) claim.
    45
    must have actually disputed the issue and the trier of fact must
    have actually resolved it.        See Santopadre v. Pelican Homestead &
    Sav. Ass’n, 
    937 F.2d 268
    , 273 (5th Cir. 1991).                     In determining
    which issues have been actually litigated, the federal court is
    free to go beyond the judgment and may examine the pleadings and
    the evidence in the prior action.             See 
    id. If a
    question of fact
    is put in issue by the pleadings, is submitted to the jury or other
    trier of facts for its determination, and is determined, then that
    question of fact has been actually litigated.                 See 
    id. The state
    court nullification petition alleges that several
    acts committed by the insurance parties during the course of the
    state court negligence trial constituted ill practices within the
    meaning of article 2004. Among the acts were the nondisclosure of:
    (1) the identity of George Casellas, the insurance parties’ non-
    testifying expert; (2) Casellas’ photograph of the wall switch; (3)
    evidence indicating water migration from the second floor to Room
    170; and (4) the replacement of the wall switch and lamp fixture in
    Room 170.     Similar allegations were included as part of the
    Williamsons’ RICO counterclaims in the federal suit.                      Indeed,
    attorney    Smith    conceded    that        the   facts    pertaining    to   the
    nullification suit were essentially the same as those involved in
    the RICO counterclaims.         In the federal suit, the district court
    granted    summary   judgment     dismissing        the     RICO   counterclaims,
    finding: (1) that there was a lack of evidence showing an alleged
    46
    scheme by the insurance parties to present a fraudulent defense in
    the state negligence suit; (2) that the existence of certain
    photographs not revealing a cement slab between Rooms 170 and 270
    did   not   confirm      a    scheme   to    defraud;     (3)    that   any    alleged
    alterations of the wall switch or the hanging lamp were not
    indicative of a scheme to defraud; (4) that the possible creation
    of a drain hole above Room 170 after Sonya’s electrocution did not
    confirm     a   scheme   to    defraud;      (5)   that   none    of    the   evidence
    submitted by the Williamsons indicated that Sonya’s electrocution
    could not have been staged or fraudulent; and (6) that an abundance
    of evidence pointed to the possibility of fraud by the Williamsons.
    Article 2004 provides for the annulment of a final judgment
    obtained by fraud or ill practices.                  There are two criteria to
    determine that a judgment has been obtained by actionable fraud or
    ill practices: (1) the circumstances under which the judgment was
    rendered show the deprivation of legal rights of the litigant who
    seeks relief, and (2) the enforcement of the judgment would be
    unconscionable and inequitable. See Kem Search, Inc. v. Sheffield,
    
    434 So. 2d 1067
    , 1070 (La. 1983).                  In addition, article 2004 is
    “not limited to cases of actual fraud or intentional wrongdoing,
    but is sufficiently broad to encompass all situations wherein a
    judgment is rendered through some improper practice or procedure
    which operates, even innocently, to deprive the party cast in
    judgment of some legal right, and where the enforcement of the
    47
    judgment would be unconscionable and inequitable.”                   
    Id. The district
    court’s findings clearly demonstrate that the
    court   considered     and   adjudged    the   issue       of    fraud.      But    the
    amorphous and broad definition of ill practices suggests that the
    district court did not actually litigate an ultimate issue of fact
    that precludes the possibility of litigating the issue of ill
    practices and the corresponding nullification claim.                  Indeed, none
    of the findings say directly that the insurance parties’ actions
    were not ill practices. Accordingly, those findings do not prevent
    the litigation of whether some of the alleged acts committed by the
    insurance parties were improper practices that operated, even
    innocently, to deprive the Williamsons some legal right.
    The grant of summary judgment in favor of St. Paul on the
    counterclaims asserted by the Williamsons in the federal court
    proceeding for acts of RICO and fraud that allegedly occurred
    during the state court trial is sufficient to support an injunction
    by the federal court to prevent relitigation in the state court of
    "fraud" as a grounds for nullification of the original state court
    decision.    But that summary judgment is insufficient to prevent
    relitigation    of    "ill   practices"      under   the        Louisiana    statute.
    Consequently, we vacate the injunction issued by the district court
    and remand     that   injunctive   relief      to    the    district        court   for
    reissuance by the district court so as to be expressly limited to
    the fraud issue.
    48
    CONCLUSION
    Besides the procedural irregularity associated with the sua
    sponte grant of summary judgment, the jury finding that Sonya’s
    injuries were the "result of a staged accident or fraud" does not,
    as a matter of law, satisfy all of the elements of a malicious
    prosecution claim. Therefore, the district court erred in applying
    Louisiana res judicata law to hold that Sonya was liable on the
    malicious prosecution theory.   Accordingly, we vacate the judgment
    against Sonya and remand the malicious prosecution claim of St.
    Paul to the district court for trial on the merits.   In addition,
    we affirm the district court’s evidentiary rulings and the summary
    judgment dismissing the Williamsons’ counterclaims.
    As for St. Paul’s RICO claims, we vacate and remand the
    following for proceedings consistent with this opinion: 1) the
    judgment in favor of the Williamsons with respect to St. Paul’s §
    1962(a) claim, insofar as it pertains to the CIGNA checks; 2) the
    judgment in favor of the Williamsons concerning the § 1962(c)
    claim; and 3) the judgment in favor of the Williamsons with respect
    to the § 1962(d) claim for conspiracy to violate § 1962(c).
    Furthermore, we remand to the district court for consideration St.
    Paul’s § 1962(d) claim for conspiracy to violate § 1962(a).
    Finally, we vacate the injunction issued by the district court
    49
    and remand   that   injunctive   relief   to   the   district   court   for
    reissuance by the district court so as to be expressly limited to
    the fraud issue.
    All outstanding motions are denied.
    50
    51
    EDITH H. JONES, dissenting:
    I respectfully dissent.     Despite the majority’s exacting
    discussion of the issues that allegedly preclude affirming the
    trial court’s judgment, I am unpersuaded on two conclusions in
    particular: that the jury finding of a staged or fraudulent action
    does not subsume the elements of malicious prosecution1; and that
    the    injunction   against   litigation   of    the   Williamsons’   “ill
    practices” claim must be overturned.2           The result of these twin
    rulings is to nullify the original verdict -- extraordinary as it
    is -- that Sonya’s electrocution claim was staged or fraudulent.
    Far worse, though, is the parties’ abuse of the courts
    over the last decade.    To stage an accident for insurance tribute
    is reprehensible.     But it’s also hard to see what good, or what
    collectable money judgment, may come of a RICO suit against these
    pathetic perpetrators.    This litigation, like this dissent, should
    end!
    1
    How is it possible to justify the majority’s conclusion that,
    even though the electrocution accident was staged or fraudulent,
    there might have been probable cause to file Sonya’s suit?
    2
    The majority strains common sense, it seems to me, in holding
    that even though the insurers committed no fraud in defending
    Sonya’s electrocution lawsuit -- which was started by a staged or
    fraudulent action of plaintiffs -- the insurers may have engaged in
    “ill practices” of litigation.
    52
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 98-30001

Filed Date: 9/5/2000

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/21/2014

Authorities (53)

united-states-v-timothy-r-fairchild-united-states-of-america-v-jeffrey , 189 F.3d 769 ( 1999 )

Marrese v. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons , 105 S. Ct. 1327 ( 1985 )

Beck v. Prupis , 120 S. Ct. 1608 ( 2000 )

Greer v. State , 616 So. 2d 811 ( 1993 )

Hibernia Nat. Bank of New Orleans v. Bolleter , 390 So. 2d 842 ( 1980 )

St. Paul Mercury Ins. Co. v. Williamson , 986 F. Supp. 409 ( 1997 )

Williamson v. Haynes Best Western , 688 So. 2d 1201 ( 1997 )

next-level-communications-lp-kk-manager-llc-general-instrument-corporation , 179 F.3d 244 ( 1999 )

United States v. David Jack Vogt, Jr. , 910 F.2d 1184 ( 1990 )

guy-grider-v-texas-oil-gas-corp-a-delaware-corporation-txo-production , 868 F.2d 1147 ( 1989 )

Brenda Bishop, A/K/A Brenda Boone v. The Corbitt Marine ... , 802 F.2d 122 ( 1986 )

rr-brittingham-individually-and-on-behalf-of-all-others-similarly , 943 F.2d 297 ( 1991 )

Gregory Luna v. United States Department of Health and ... , 948 F.2d 169 ( 1991 )

Welch v. Crown Zellerbach Corp. , 1978 La. LEXIS 7584 ( 1978 )

Williamson v. Haynes Best Western of Alexandria , 695 So. 2d 1355 ( 1997 )

Old Time Enterprises, Inc. v. International Coffee ... , 862 F.2d 1213 ( 1989 )

United States v. Cooper , 135 F.3d 960 ( 1998 )

Johnson v. Sawyer,et al , 120 F.3d 1307 ( 1997 )

United States v. Shifman , 124 F.3d 31 ( 1997 )

Nugget Hydroelectric, L.P. v. Pacific Gas and Electric ... , 981 F.2d 429 ( 1992 )

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