David Kurtz v. Gt ( 2021 )


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  •                            NOT FOR PUBLICATION                          FILED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                        JUN 9 2021
    MOLLY C. DWYER, CLERK
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT                      U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
    ___________________________________
    DAVID L. KURTZ, DBA Kurtz Law                       No. 19-16544
    Firm, individually and as President of
    David L. Kurtz, P.C.; DAVID L. KURTZ                D.C. No. 2:19-cv-00152-GMS
    P.C., an Arizona professional corporation,          District of Arizona,
    Phoenix
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.                                                  MEMORANDUM*
    GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER
    COMPANY, an Ohio corporation,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    ___________________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Arizona
    G. Murray Snow, Chief District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted August 31, 2020
    Pasadena, California
    Before: IKUTA and BENNETT, Circuit Judges, and WOODLOCK,** District
    Judge.
    *
    This disposition is not appropriate for publication and is not precedent
    except as provided by Ninth Circuit Rule 36-3.
    **
    The Honorable Douglas P. Woodlock, United States District Judge for the
    District of Massachusetts, sitting by designation.
    Attorney David Kurtz appeals the district court’s denial of his motion to
    reconsider, Kurtz v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., No. CV-19-00152, 
    2019 WL 4736796
     (D. Ariz. Sept. 27, 2019), its grant of a motion to dismiss his amended
    complaint, Kurtz v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., No. CV-19-00152, 
    2019 WL 2996054
     (D. Ariz. July 9, 2019). The amended complaint seeks business loss
    damages Kurtz says he separately suffered from litigation misconduct directed at
    his clients by Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company (“Goodyear”). The litigation
    misconduct by Goodyear occurred during two cases (the “Haeger litigation”) in
    which, on behalf of his clients the Haegers, Kurtz pursued products liability and
    negligence claims concerning Goodyear’s G159 tires.1 We have jurisdiction under
    
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    . We affirm.
    1
    The two cases comprising the Haeger litigation successively sought recovery for
    severe injuries experienced by two couples—Leroy Haeger and his wife Donna
    Haeger, and Leroy’s son Barry Haeger and his wife Suzanne Haeger. Those
    injuries were alleged to have been caused by the failure of a Goodyear G159 tire
    resulting in the family’s motorhome swerving off the road and flipping over.
    Haeger I was filed on June 13, 2005, Haeger et al. v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber
    Co., et al., CV2005-050959 (Maricopa County Ariz. Super. Court) and thereafter
    removed to federal court on July 11, 2005, where it was docketed as Haeger, et al.
    v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber, et al., No. 2:05-cv-02046 (D. Ariz.). Although
    initially settled in 2010 on the eve of trial, the case thereafter became the vehicle
    for addressing the Haegers’ rights to sanctions for later-uncovered discovery abuse.
    Judge Silver suggested in her lengthy opinion finding misconduct by Goodyear,
    Haeger v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 
    906 F. Supp. 2d 938
     (D. Ariz. 2012), that
    the underlying substantive claims be separately litigated in a new action in light of
    the findings of discovery misconduct. Id. at 973. Ultimately the Supreme Court
    reversed and remanded as to the sanctions order, directing that the district court, if
    2
    When the instant Kurtz case2 was presented to the district court by a
    dispositive motion, Goodyear pressed a variety of grounds upon which the various
    claims could be dismissed. The district court chose in disposing of that motion to
    focus on statute of limitations grounds. We are satisfied the district court did not
    abuse its discretion in thereafter denying Kurtz’s motion for reconsideration by
    expanding its focus to consider the specific requirements for a civil Racketeer
    Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”) conspiracy claim and by
    relying on settled principles recognizing forfeiture of claims not adequately argued
    in response to the contentions of a motion to dismiss until belated presentation in a
    appropriate, engage in a reassessment of “fees in line with [the] but-for causation
    requirement” its opinion announced. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. v. Haeger, 
    137 S. Ct. 1178
    , 1186–88, 1190 (2017). We take judicial notice that the district court
    docket in Haeger I reports that a contingent sanction award was granted this spring
    (Dkt. No. 1234, March 26, 2021) by Judge Snow, to whom the case was reassigned
    on remand, and that a stipulated notice of satisfaction of judgment (Dkt. No. 1235,
    April 19, 2021) and exoneration of Goodyear’s supersedeas bond (Dkt. 1237, May
    13, 2021) have followed in due course, apparently concluding Haeger I.
    Haeger II, filed on May 20, 2013, Haeger, et al. v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber, et
    al., CV2013-052753 (Maricopa County Ariz. Super. Court), was the new action the
    Haegers mounted in response to Judge Silver’s suggestion in Haeger I. Haeger II
    was reported settled on January 26, 2017, through a settlement document that did
    not purport to govern whatever basis Kurtz might have to pursue his own claims
    arising from the Haeger litigation.
    2
    This case was originally filed in Arizona’s Maricopa County Superior Court on
    October 1, 2018, and, following the filing of an amended complaint on December
    31, 2018, was removed on January 9, 2019, to the federal court, where it was
    docketed as Kurtz et al. v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., et al., No. 2:19-cv-00152
    (D. Ariz.).
    3
    reconsideration motion. This approach, although not the only one available,
    disposed of Kurtz’s claims comprehensively and efficiently.
    The parties do not dispute the applicable limitations periods: four years for
    Kurtz’s RICO claims, three years for his state fraud claims, and two years for his
    abuse of process and tortious interference claims. Agency Holding Corp. v.
    Malley-Duff & Assocs., Inc., 
    483 U.S. 143
    , 156 (1987); 
    Ariz. Rev. Stat. §§ 12-542
    –
    43. Nor is there a dispute that the district court correctly ruled the relevant statutes
    of limitations began to run no later than when Kurtz knew or should have known of
    harm caused to him by Goodyear. Kurtz, however, contends that the harm caused
    to him is distinguishable from that caused to the Haegers and that the harm
    separately caused him did not become manifest until fall 2016 when additional
    concealed documents were finally disclosed by Goodyear in Haeger II, an event he
    says caused Goodyear shortly thereafter to settle his clients’ claims.
    Kurtz’s argument that his harm was not sufficiently definite and apparent to
    start the statute of limitations clock until fall 2016, when Goodyear belatedly
    released additional previously undisclosed documents, fails under the injury
    discovery rule applicable to civil RICO claims in this Circuit, Grimmett v. Brown,
    
    75 F.3d 506
    , 511–12 (9th Cir. 1996), and to the Arizona law claims Kurtz alleged,
    Keonjian v. Olcott, 
    216 Ariz. 563
    , 566 (Ariz. Ct. App. 2007) (holding that the
    “controlling issue” in determining when the claim accrues is “when [the plaintiff]
    4
    became aware or should have been aware of the cause of [their] harm” (quotation
    marks and citation omitted)). Therefore, the district court did not err in dismissing
    these claims because the statute of limitations had run.
    While Goodyear’s release of the further formerly concealed data may have
    revealed that Kurtz suffered more harm than he had anticipated, this is simply a
    refinement of the damages he then knew or should have known he had already
    suffered as a result of the Haeger litigation. However, the district court initially
    found in granting the motion to dismiss that Goodyear’s concealment of additional
    material concerned the same misconduct—that Goodyear concealed information
    about its defective G159 tires—as that underlying the earlier Haeger litigation.
    The statutes of limitations at issue here do not begin anew each time a party
    discovers the extent of his injury is greater than he expected. Grimmett made
    clear that the limitations period begins to run when a plaintiff knows or should
    know of the injury which is the basis of his injury. Grimmett, 
    75 F.3d at 511
    .
    Arizona law is no different. Keonjian, 216 Ariz. at 566.
    The limitations period applicable to Kurtz began, at the latest, when, on
    behalf of his clients, he filed the May 20, 2013 complaint in Haeger II, plainly
    demonstrating his knowledge of the wrongful litigation conduct by Goodyear and
    of non-speculative injuries applicable to him. Kurtz, however, did not file his own
    complaint until October 1, 2018, well after the statute of limitations had run for all
    5
    the claims he asserted.
    To be sure, as the district court correctly noted in its order denying Kurtz’s
    motion for reconsideration, Kurtz did argue in his response to the defendant’s
    motion to dismiss that his mail fraud claim was within the statute of limitations
    because he alleged there what could be characterized as predicate acts (or perhaps
    could alternatively be characterized as overt acts) that occurred after October 1,
    2014, within four years of the filing of his own separate action. Yet Kurtz already
    plausibly had a RICO cause of action before any mail fraud occurring after
    October 1, 2014. Anza v. Ideal Steel Supply Corp., 
    547 U.S. 451
    , 479 (2006)
    (“[RICO] defines a pattern of racketeer activity to include engaging in at least two
    predicate acts in a 10-year period.” (cleaned up)). The Supreme Court in Klehr v.
    A.O. Smith Corp., 
    521 U.S. 179
     (1997) and Rotella v. Wood, 
    528 U.S. 549
     (2000)
    prohibited plaintiffs from extending RICO’s four-year statute of limitations by
    relying upon predicate offenses occurring after the predicate offenses sufficient to
    establish a RICO claim. See Klehr, 
    521 U.S. at
    188–90; Rotella, 
    528 U.S. at
    553–
    54. Instead, the statute of limitations begins accruing when a plaintiff knows or
    should have known of his injury, and does not “run anew upon each predicate act
    forming part of the same pattern.” See Rotella, 
    528 U.S. at
    553–54. The Supreme
    Court’s review of the discovery rule for civil RICO actions has left undisturbed
    this Circuit’s injury discovery rule. 
    Id.
     at 553–54 (citing Grimmett, 
    75 F.3d at
                                            6
    511). Therefore, the district court did not err in also dismissing this claim because
    the statute of limitations had run.
    In its order denying Kurtz’s motion for reconsideration, the district court
    assumed that Kurtz had adequately pled a mail fraud predicate within the statute of
    limitations. 
    2019 WL 4736796
    , at *2. Consequently it expanded its focus on the
    requisites for a civil RICO claim in order to consider whether the mails had been
    used to obtain money or property from a person who was deceived, as required for
    a mail fraud predicate offense under RICO. See generally Monterey Plaza Hotel
    Ltd. P’ship v. Loc. 483 of Hotel Emps. & Rest. Emps. Union, AFL-CIO, 
    215 F.3d 923
    , 926 (9th Cir. 2000); cf. United States v. Lew, 
    875 F.2d 219
    , 221–22 (9th Cir.
    1989) (application of requisite in criminal context).
    The district court did not err when it held on reconsideration that, even if
    Kurtz’s alleged RICO claims based on an additional predicate offense of mail
    fraud were not barred by the statute of limitations, Kurtz failed to state his RICO
    claims on the merits. This alternative grounds for dismissing the mail fraud
    predicate is also well founded. Mail fraud under 
    18 U.S.C. § 1341
     requires “intent
    to obtain ‘money or property [from the one who is deceived] by means of false or
    fraudulent pretenses, representations, or promises’”; for conduct to meet this
    requirement, it must be “acquisitive,” rather than merely “vexatious or harassing.”
    Monterey Plaza, 
    215 F.3d at
    926–27 (alteration in original) (quoting 
    18 U.S.C. §
                                             7
    1341). Goodyear’s discovery misconduct did not involve acquisitive activity
    directed at Kurtz or wrongful transfers from Kurtz as a putative victim. Even
    assuming that Kurtz could be said to have been deceived by Goodyear any later
    than when he filed Haeger II on his clients’ behalf, his separate business loss claim
    plainly did not allege acquisitive or wrongful transfer of money or property from
    him.
    The district court correctly held that Kurtz forfeited his argument that
    Goodyear’s fraudulent concealment tolled the statute of limitations because he did
    not legibly raise it in his response to Goodyear’s motion to dismiss and waited
    until his reconsideration motion to do so plainly. It is well established that a party
    failing to press an argument in response to a dispositive motion who first does so
    when presenting a motion for reconsideration may be held to have forfeited the
    argument. Kona Enters., Inc. v. Estate of Bishop, 
    229 F.3d 877
    , 890–91 (9th Cir.
    2000).
    For the same reason, the district court held correctly that Kurtz forfeited his
    arguments that Goodyear’s May 2018 deceptive filing with the court in Haeger I
    on remand constituted obstruction of justice, abuse of process, and intentional
    interference because he similarly did not raise those arguments adequately in his
    response to Goodyear’s motion to dismiss and again waited until his
    reconsideration motion filing to do so.
    8
    To close this case with finality we observe in conclusion that the district
    court did not abuse its discretion in not sua sponte granting Kurtz leave to amend
    his complaint because no foreseeable amendment could have revived those claims.
    Cf. Doe v. United States, 
    58 F.3d 494
    , 497 (9th Cir. 1995).
    AFFIRMED.
    9