ISystems v. Victor Fu ( 2012 )


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  •      Case: 10-10905     Document: 00511796227         Page: 1     Date Filed: 03/21/2012
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT  United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    March 21, 2012
    No. 10-10905
    Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    ISYSTEMS,
    Plaintiff-Appellant
    v.
    SPARK NETWORKS, LIMITED; SPARK NETWORKS, INCORPORATED,
    Defendants-Appellees
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Texas
    USDC No. 3:08-CV-1175
    Before HIGGINBOTHAM, DAVIS, and STEWART, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:*
    Spark Networks, the owner of the “jdate.com” web domain, won the rights
    to ISystems’s “jdate.net” domain name in arbitration. ISystems then brought
    suit against Spark Networks for damages and injunctive and declaratory relief
    under the Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act (“ACPA”), 
    15 U.S.C. § 1114
    (2)(D)(iv)-(v), and for civil damages under the Racketeer Influenced and
    Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”), 
    18 U.S.C. § 1962
    (c). The district court
    dismissed the action in full for failure to state a claim under FED. R. CIV. P.
    *
    Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not
    be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH CIR.
    R. 47.5.4.
    Case: 10-10905    Document: 00511796227       Page: 2    Date Filed: 03/21/2012
    No. 10-10905
    12(b)(6) and failure to plead fraud with particularity under FED. R. CIV. P. 9(b).
    ISystems appeals the dismissal, as well as the denial of its request for leave to
    amend the First Amended Complaint. We affirm the district court’s ruling on the
    RICO claim and on the motion for leave to amend, but we reverse and remand
    with respect to the ACPA claim.
    I. Background
    Spark Networks, Incorporated (“Spark, Inc.”) is the parent company of
    Spark Networks, Limited (“Spark Ltd.”) (collectively “Spark defendants”). Spark
    Ltd. provides online personal services through various websites, including
    “jdate.com,” which caters to the Jewish singles community.             Spark Ltd.’s
    predecessor purchased the Internet domain name “jdate.com” on January 8,
    1997, and on January 16, 2001, it registered the mark “JDate,” namely for
    “providing a website for facilitating the introduction of individuals.”
    The plaintiff ISystems developed Julian date computation software, which
    it marketed through the Internet domain name “jdate.net.” It purchased that
    domain name on May 21, 2001. ISystems allows an organization called the
    Jewish Dating Network to use a subdomain of its website, “www.jdate.net,” to
    provide nonprofit matchmaking-related services and dating resources.
    In 2003 Spark Ltd., through counsel, requested that ISystems transfer to
    it the domain name “jdate.net,” on the ground that it was likely to cause
    confusion regarding Spark Ltd.’s registered “JDate” mark and “jdate.com”
    website. ISystems did not comply. On May 19, 2008, Spark Ltd. submitted a
    complaint to the National Arbitration Forum (“NAF”) pursuant to the Uniform
    Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (“UDRP”).1 After considering Spark
    Ltd.’s complaint, ISystems’s response, and the submitted evidence, the arbitrator
    concluded (1) that the “jdate.net” domain name “is identical to a registered
    1
    ISystems agreed to follow the UDRP in its Registration Agreement with Stargate
    Holdings Corporation, the registrar of its domain name.
    2
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    trademark in which [Spark Ltd.] has rights”; (2) that “there is no evidence that
    [The Jewish Dating Network] business has been operating without knowledge
    by [ISystems]”; and (3) that ISystems “has registered and continues to use the
    disputed domain name in bad faith.” Pursuant to the arbitrator’s order, the
    Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (“ICANN”) transferred
    the “jdate.net” domain name from ISystems to Spark Ltd.
    On July 11, 2008, ISystems filed a complaint against the Spark defendants
    in federal district court. ISystems alleged that the Spark defendants’ efforts
    resulting in the transfer of the “jdate.net” domain name violated ACPA and
    RICO. The district court granted the Spark defendants’ unopposed motion to
    dismiss in an order on June 10, 2009, which it vacated upon ISystems’s motion,
    but which it simultaneously replaced with a new order dismissing the case.
    ISystems filed another motion to vacate and requested leave to amend its
    complaint, which the district court granted. Spark defendants then moved to
    dismiss ISystems’s First Amended Complaint, which the district court granted
    with prejudice. The district court denied ISystems’s subsequent motion to
    vacate the judgment and request for leave to amend its complaint once more.
    ISystems timely appealed, and a panel of this Court resolved the appeal on its
    summary calendar, affirming the district court in full.2 This Court then granted
    ISystems’s petition for rehearing, withdrew the prior opinion, and set the case
    for oral argument.
    II. Standard of Review
    “A district court’s grant of a motion to dismiss is reviewed de novo, using
    the same standard as the district court.”3 All factual allegations pled in the First
    2
    ISystems v. Spark Networks Ltd., 428 F. App’x 368 (5th Cir. 2011) (per curiam)
    (unpublished).
    3
    Davis v. Tarrant Cnty., Tex., 
    565 F.3d 214
    , 217 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 
    130 S. Ct. 624
    (2009).
    3
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    Amended Complaint must be taken as true.4 “Where a complaint pleads facts
    that are ‘merely consistent with’ a defendant’s liability, it ‘stops short of the line
    between possibility and plausibility of entitlement to relief.’”5
    ISystems argues that the Court should treat the Spark defendants’ motion
    as one for summary judgment because they rely on attachments to their motion.
    But ISystems’s claims are based on those documents, and ISystems did not
    attach them to its complaint. “‘[D]ocuments that a defendant attaches to a
    motion to dismiss are considered part of the pleadings if they are referred to in
    the plaintiff’s complaint and are central to [its] claim.’”6 Thus, the motion-to-
    dismiss standard is the appropriate one.
    III. Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act
    The Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act, enacted in November
    1999, amended the Lanham Act7 to create a civil action for damages and
    injunctive relief against cybersquatters. ISystems brought action under two of
    its provisions.
    A.       
    15 U.S.C. § 1114
    (2)(D)(iv).
    ISystems claims that the Spark defendants abused the NAF procedure to
    obtain the “jdate.net” domain name, in violation of 
    15 U.S.C. § 1114
    (2)(D)(iv).
    Section 1114(2)(D)(iv) provides that if a registrar transfers a domain name
    “based on a knowing and material misrepresentation by any other person that
    a domain name is identical to, confusingly similar to, or dilutive of a mark, the
    person making the knowing and material misrepresentation shall be liable for
    4
    Tellabs, Inc. v. Makor Issues & Rights, Ltd., 
    551 U.S. 308
    , 322 (2007).
    5
    Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 
    129 S. Ct. 1937
    , 1949 (2009) (quoting Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 
    550 U.S. 544
    , 557 (2007)).
    6
    Collins v. Morgan Stanley Dean Witter, 
    224 F.3d 496
    , 498-99 (5th Cir. 2000) (quoting
    Venture Assocs. Corp. v. Zenith Data Sys. Corp., 
    987 F.2d 429
    , 431 (7th Cir. 1993)).
    7
    
    15 U.S.C. §§ 1111-1128
    .
    4
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    any damages.” This subsection thereby “‘protects the rights of domain name
    registrants against overreaching trademark owners.’”8
    ISystems alleges that Spark Ltd. deceptively blacked out portions of the
    “www.jdate.net” webpage screen shots in its submissions to NAF.9 ISystems
    contends that Spark Ltd. misrepresented “www.jdate.net” as a commercial site
    rather than a not-for-profit one. ISystems alleges that Spark Ltd. presented the
    screen-shot exhibit as a “true and correct copy of the web page which opens upon
    entry of www.JDATE.NET.” It also alleges that an actual copy of the opening
    page would have identified the site as a not-for-profit resource evaluating Jewish
    dating services. Instead, ISystems says, the “blacked-out version . . . looked as
    if the site redirected visitors to other websites for profit.”
    This alleged misrepresentation is material. Material misrepresentations
    include those that would influence an arbitrator’s judgment that the domain
    name “jdate.net” is “dilutive” of the “JDate” mark. ACPA’s definition of dilution
    excludes noncommercial uses of a mark,10 so the alleged disguise of the
    noncommercial nature of “www.jdate.net” would impact the arbitrator’s
    assessment of whether “www.jdate.net” is “dilutive of” the “JDate” mark. In
    fact, the NAF explicitly relied on the lack of evidence of noncommercial use of
    “www.jdate.net,” calling the noncommercial nature of the site “an unproven
    suggestion.” From ACPA and the NAF’s reasoning, we conclude that the alleged
    misrepresentation of the noncommercial nature of the “www.jdate.net” site was
    material. In addition, taking ISystems’s assertions as true, as we must, Spark
    8
    Sallen v. Corinthians Licenciamentos LTDA, 
    273 F.3d 14
    , 29 (1st Cir. 2001) (quoting
    H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 106-464, at 117 (1999)).
    9
    The original panel opinion addressed a second allegation, that Spark Ltd.
    misrepresented that it had a trademark on “JDate” rather than a service mark. ISystems
    clarified in its post-argument letter brief of December 13, 2011, that the trademark/service-
    mark distinction “is not the basis of ISystems’ first ACPA claim, rather Spark’s blacked out
    ‘screen shot’ is the issue.”
    10
    
    15 U.S.C. § 1125
    (c)(3)(C).
    5
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    Ltd. strategically, and therefore knowingly, blacked out the exhibit. In sum,
    ISystems has pleaded facts with particularity that are sufficient for the district
    court to proceed on its Section 1114(2)(D)(iv) claim.
    B.        
    15 U.S.C. § 1114
    (2)(D)(v).
    ISystems also brings a claim requesting “[a]n order pursuant to 
    15 U.S.C. § 1114
    (2)(D)(v) establishing that Plaintiff’s registration of the domain name is
    not unlawful.” Under Section 1114(2)(D)(v), “[a] domain name registrant whose
    domain name has been . . . transferred . . . may . . . file a civil action to establish
    that the registration or use of the domain name by such registrant is not
    unlawful under this chapter.”11 If a registrant so establishes, a court may grant
    injunctive relief, including the reactivation of the domain name or transfer of the
    domain name to the registrant.12 In other words, Section 1114(2)(D)(v) of ACPA
    “provide[s] registrants . . . with an affirmative cause of action to recover domain
    names lost in UDRP proceedings.”13
    To evaluate whether a plaintiff’s registration or use of a domain name is
    unlawful, ACPA instructs courts to look for evidence of bad-faith intent to profit
    from the domain name.14 ACPA “treats rights to registration and use of a
    domain name as contingent upon the registrant’s ongoing use of the domain
    11
    
    Id.
     § 1114(2)(D)(v). Because neither party briefed the question whether the result
    of an arbitration pursuant to the UDRP is entitled to deference in § 1114(2)(D)(v) actions, we
    do not address it here. We note, however, that other circuits have concluded that UDRP
    arbitrations are not entitled to deference in § 1114(2)(D)(v) proceedings in United States
    courts. See Storey v. Cello Holdings, L.L.C., 
    347 F.3d 370
    , 382-83 (2d Cir. 2003); Hawes v.
    Network Solutions, Inc., 
    337 F.3d 377
    , 386-87 (4th Cir. 2003); Barcelona.com, Inc. v.
    Excelentisimo Ayuntamiento de Barcelona, 
    330 F.3d 617
    , 626 (4th Cir. 2003); Dluhos v.
    Strasberg, 
    321 F.3d 365
    , 373-74 (3d Cir. 2003); Sallen, 
    273 F.3d at 28
    ; cf. S. Co. v. Dauben Inc.,
    324 F. App’x 309, 316 (5th Cir. 2009) (per curiam) (unpublished).
    12
    
    15 U.S.C. § 1114
    (2)(D)(v); see Barcelona.com, Inc., 
    330 F.3d at 626
    .
    13
    Sallen, 
    273 F.3d at 27
    .
    14
    
    15 U.S.C. § 1125
    (d)(1)(A)(i).
    6
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    name without a ‘bad faith intent to profit’ from a mark.”15 The statute gives
    courts nine non-exhaustive factors to consider in evaluating bad faith.16 The
    paradigmatic case of bad-faith intent to profit involves a registrant who
    “essentially [holds] hostage a domain name that resemble[s] a mark with the
    intention of selling it back to the mark’s owner.”17 Other examples include
    registering “well-known marks to prey on consumer confusion by misusing the
    domain name to divert customers from the mark owner’s site to the
    cybersquatter’s own site,” and targeting “‘distinctive marks to defraud
    consumers, including to engage in counterfeiting activities.’”18
    ISystems alleges that it acquired the domain “jdate.net” for the “sole
    purpose” of “marketing . . . their JDATE software.” According to the First
    Amended Complaint, “[t]he marketing of ISYSTEMS’ JDATE software has
    always been the only commercial use of the jdate.net domain.” Further, it is
    difficult to conclude from the allegations that ISystems’s use of the mark “JDate”
    to market its software was somehow predatory with respect to the Spark
    defendants’ business. At least since the 1990s, JDATE has been a common term
    in computing that refers to “Julian date” – that is, the number of days since
    January 1, 0000. ISystems’s software package, called JDate, allows computer
    programmers to easily perform date computations.
    Unlike many websites, ISystems was not using its “www” subdomain (that
    is, “www.jdate.net”) for its marketing.                   A “charitable organization of
    
    15 Storey, 347
     F.3d at 378; see TMI, Inc. v. Maxwell, 
    368 F.3d 433
    , 436 (5th Cir. 2004).
    16
    
    15 U.S.C. § 1125
    (d)(1)(B)(i)(I)-(IX). “The first four factors have been seen as reasons
    why a defendant might in good faith have registered a domain name incorporating someone
    else’s mark, and the other five are indicia of bad faith intent.” Coca-Cola Co. v. Purdy, 
    382 F.3d 774
    , 785 (8th Cir. 2004). “The factors are given to courts as a guide, not as a substitute
    for careful thinking about whether the conduct at issue is motivated by a bad faith intent to
    profit.” Lucas Nursery & Landscaping, Inc. v. Grosse, 
    359 F.3d 806
    , 811 (6th Cir. 2004).
    17
    TMI, 
    368 F.3d at 439
    .
    18
    
    Id.
     at 439 n.8 (quoting Lucas Nursery, 
    359 F.3d at 809
    ).
    7
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    matchmakers for the Jewish community” calling themselves the “Jewish Dating
    Network” approached ISystems about using the “www” subdomain, and
    ISystems agreed.    According to the First Amended Complaint, visitors to
    “www.jdate.net” were “greeted by the distinct JEWISH DATING NETWORK
    logo, and a no-nonsense statement that the group is not-for-profit, and evaluates
    the best and worst Jewish dating websites and services.” The Network is a
    nonprofit, receives no compensation for operating the site, and paid nothing to
    ISystems for the use of the “www” subdomain.
    In addition to alleging that ISystems received no revenue from the Jewish
    Dating Network’s operations, the First Amended Complaint alleges that the
    similarity with “jdate.com” did not benefit its marketing of JDate software: “The
    Plaintiff’s JDate Expression Calculator has no profit from the Jewish or singles
    scenes, and thus no profit what-so-ever relating to the Defendant’s alleged
    service mark registration for providing a computerized website service for
    introducing individuals.” Nor do we find any indication in the record that the
    “www.jdate.net” page linked to the other subdomains where ISystems marketed
    its software products.
    The First Amendment Complaint alleges that ISystems’s only intention
    in selecting the domain name was to market its software product of the same
    name, which it selected because “JDATE” is a common term in the computer
    programming industry for the function performed by its software. ISystems
    contends that it sought no advantage from any similarity to “jdate.com,” as its
    software product bears no relationship to a dating service. Although the Jewish
    Dating Network eventually used a subdomain of the site, the use was
    noncommercial and contributed no profits to ISystems, either directly or
    indirectly.
    Taking these allegations as true, we are persuaded that the pleaded facts
    sufficiently allege a lack of bad faith intent to profit from the “JDate” service
    mark. ISystems has alleged a claim that its registration and use of “jdate.net”
    8
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    is not unlawful under 
    15 U.S.C. § 1114
    (2)(D)(v) that is sufficient to survive a
    motion to dismiss.
    IV. Civil RICO
    ISystems failed, however, to allege facts that could establish that the
    Spark defendants violated RICO, because it did not allege a proper RICO
    “enterprise.”
    The RICO Act provides, in relevant part, that:
    it shall be unlawful for any person employed by or associated with
    any enterprise engaged in, or the activities of which affect,
    interstate or foreign commerce, to conduct or participate, directly or
    indirectly, in the conduct of such enterprise’s affairs through a
    pattern of racketeering activity or collection of unlawful debt.19
    In other words, “a person who is employed by or associated with an enterprise
    cannot conduct the enterprise’s affairs through a pattern of racketeering.”20
    RICO defines “enterprise” as including “any individual, partnership, corporation,
    association, or other alleged legal entity, and any union or group of individuals
    associated in fact although not a legal entity.”21 The Supreme Court explained
    in Cedric Kushner Promotions, Ltd. v. King that, “to establish liability under §
    1962(c) one must allege and prove the existence of two distinct entities: (1) a
    ‘person’; and (2) an ‘enterprise’ that is not simply the same ‘person’ referred to
    by a different name.”22
    ISystems attempts to connect Spark Inc., the alleged RICO “person,” to a
    distinct RICO “enterprise.” ISystems argues that Spark Ltd. – which is Spark
    Inc.’s wholly owned subsidiary – is a RICO “enterprise” because under Cedric
    Kushner Promotions, a formal separation such as incorporation is a sufficient
    19
    
    18 U.S.C. § 1962
    (c).
    20
    In re Burzynski, 
    989 F.2d 733
    , 741 (5th Cir. 1993).
    21
    
    18 U.S.C. § 1961
    (4).
    22
    
    533 U.S. 158
    , 161 (2001).
    9
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    distinction between the RICO “enterprise” and the RICO “person.”23 Cedric
    Kushner Promotions actually involved a scenario reversed from the one here. In
    that case, an employee (the RICO “person”) illegally conducted the affairs of the
    corporation (the RICO “enterprise”).              Here, the corporation is the alleged
    “person,” and Cedric Kushner Promotions expressly declined to address such
    arrangements. In particular, the Court distinguished a scenario in which “a
    corporation was the ‘person’ and the corporation, together with all its employees
    and agents, were the ‘enterprise,’” noting that “[i]t is less natural to speak of a
    corporation as ‘employed by’ or ‘associated with’ this latter oddly constructed
    entity.”24 This Court has since held in Whelan v. Winchester Production Co. that
    in making a distinction between a RICO “person” and a RICO “enterprise,” “[i]t
    is not enough to establish that a defendant corporation through its agents
    committed the predicate acts in the conduct of its own business. That officers
    or employees of a corporation, in the course of their employment, associate to
    commit predicate acts does not establish an association-in-fact enterprise
    distinct from the corporation.”25
    Here, ISystems pled that Spark Inc. controlled Spark Ltd. As in Whelan,
    ISystems fails to show that the alleged RICO “enterprise” exists, because it does
    not allege that Spark Ltd. did anything beyond carrying out the regular business
    of Spark Inc.26 In fact, it expressly conflates the two in describing their conduct.
    23
    
    533 U.S. at 164
    .
    24
    
    Id.
    25
    
    319 F.3d 225
    , 229 (5th Cir. 2003).
    26
    See Lorenz v. CSX Corp., 
    1 F.3d 1406
    , 1412 (3d Cir. 1993) (“[I]t is . . . theoretically
    possible for a parent corporation to be the defendant and its subsidiary to be the enterprise
    under section 1962(c). However, the plaintiff must plead facts which, if assumed to be true,
    would clearly show that the parent corporation played a role in the racketeering activity which
    is distinct from the activities of its subsidiary. A RICO claim under section 1962(c) is not
    stated where the subsidiary merely acts on behalf of, or to the benefit of, its parent.”); Brown
    v. Coleman Invs., Inc., 
    993 F. Supp. 416
    , 428 (M.D. La. 1998) (“In order to properly plead an
    enterprise, Brown must plead facts showing how the parent corporation . . . played a role in
    10
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    The First Amended Complaint states that “[a]ctions taken by Spark Limited
    complained of herein are . . . alleged to have been taken by Spark Inc., through
    its control of Spark LTD.” And in many cases the First Amended Complaint fails
    to distinguish the entities at all, as it refers to them collectively as “Spark
    Networks,” “Sparks,” or “defendants.” ISystems cannot avoid the distinctiveness
    requirement “‘by alleging a RICO enterprise that consists merely of a
    corporation defendant associated with its own employees or agents carrying on
    the regular affairs of the defendants.’”27 Not every wholly owned and controlled
    subsidiary is an agent of its parent,28 but ISystems’s failure to plead any
    functional separation between the two dooms its RICO claim. ISystems failed
    to allege a sufficiently distinct RICO “enterprise” and therefore an actionable
    RICO claim.
    V. Denial of Request for Leave To Amend
    ISystems contends that the district court abused its discretion by rejecting
    ISystems’s second request to amend its complaint “without providing any
    justifying reason.” The Spark defendants counter that ISystems never properly
    requested leave to amend: in its opposition to the Spark defendants’ second
    motion to dismiss, ISystems did not request leave to amend its complaint, and
    “[a]t no time did ISystems articulate what further amendments it could make
    to the First Amended Complaint in order to cure all of the defects.”
    “Except as authorized by the first sentence of Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a) for one
    amendment before service of a responsive pleading, a complaint may be
    the racketeering activity that is distinct from the acts of the subsidiary . . . .”).
    27
    Khurana v. Innovative Health Care Sys., 
    130 F.3d 143
    , 155 (5th Cir. 1997) (quoting
    Riverwoods Chappaqua Corp. v. Marine Midland Bank, N.A., 
    30 F.3d 339
    , 344 (2d Cir. 1994)),
    vacated on other grounds sub nom. Teel v. Khurana, 
    525 U.S. 979
     (1998).
    28
    See Nat’l Carbide Corp. v. Comm’r, 
    336 U.S. 422
    , 429 (1949) (holding, in an income-
    tax context, that a wholly owned subsidiary that is completely controlled by its parent is not
    necessarily the parent’s agent), cited in Bramblett v. Comm’r, 
    960 F.2d 526
    , 532 (5th Cir.
    1992).
    11
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    amended only by leave of the district court, and, while such leave is to be freely
    given when justice so requires, the decision is left to the sound discretion of the
    district court and will only be reversed on appeal when that discretion has been
    abused.”29 “Permissible reasons for denying a motion for leave to amend include
    ‘undue delay, bad faith or dilatory motive on the part of the movant, repeated
    failure to cure deficiencies by amendments previously allowed, undue prejudice
    to the opposing party by virtue of the allowance of the amendment, futility of the
    amendment, etc.’”30 This Court “generally will not construe unelaborated, nested
    requests for amendment as motions to amend,”31 and “‘[w]hen the reason for the
    denial is readily apparent, . . . a district court’s failure to explain adequately the
    basis for its denial is unfortunate but not fatal to affirmance if the record reflects
    ample and obvious grounds for denying leave to amend.’”32
    ISystems did not seek leave to amend its First Amended Complaint until
    it moved the district court to vacate its order granting the Spark defendants’
    second motion to dismiss. ISystems’s request, in full, was, “to the extent this
    Court has dismissed the case because plaintiff did not label specific facts as
    being cited to specific elements of the law, plaintiff can certainly do so.”
    Several reasons justify the district court’s denial of ISystems’s request.
    For one, the request was “unelaborated” and “nested” in the prayer section of a
    motion to vacate a prior order dismissing the case, so this Court need not even
    29
    United States ex rel. Willard v. Humana Health Plan of Texas Inc., 
    336 F.3d 375
    , 387
    (5th Cir. 2003).
    30
    Cent. Laborers’ Pension Fund v. Integrated Elec. Servs. Inc., 
    497 F.3d 546
    , 556 (5th
    Cir. 2007) (quoting Foman v. Davis, 
    371 U.S. 178
    , 182 (1962)).
    31
    
    Id.
    32
    
    Id.
     (quoting Mayeaux v. La. Health Serv. & Indem. Co., 
    376 F.3d 420
    , 426 (5th Cir.
    2004)).
    12
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    construe the request as a motion for leave to amend.33 If it does, though, then
    the motion was almost certainly unduly delayed, as well as a repeated attempt
    to cure deficiencies not cured by previously allowed amendments. The district
    court had already granted ISystems leave to amend the complaint once, and
    ISystems never explained why it had delayed seeking leave to amend the First
    Amended Complaint until the district court had granted the second motion to
    dismiss. For these reasons, the district court acted within its sound discretion
    in denying ISystems’s request to amend the First Amended Complaint.
    VI. Conclusion
    The district court’s dismissal of ISystems’s ACPA claims is REVERSED,
    and the case is REMANDED for further proceedings on those claims. The
    dismissal of the RICO claim and the denial of the motion for leave to amend the
    First Amended Complaint are AFFIRMED.
    33
    Cent. Laborers’ Pension Fund, 
    497 F.3d at 556
    ; cf. Humana Health Plan of Texas Inc.,
    
    336 F.3d at 387
     (“‘[A] bare request in an opposition to a motion to dismiss – without any
    indication of the particular grounds on which the amendment is sought – does not constitute
    a motion within the contemplation of Rule 15(a).’” (alteration in original) (citation omitted)
    (quoting Confederate Mem’l Ass’n, Inc. v. Hines, 
    995 F.2d 295
    , 299 (D.C. Cir. 1993)).
    13
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 10-10905

Filed Date: 3/22/2012

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 12/22/2014

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