Ideal Steel Supply Corp. v. Anza, et al.

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Plaintiff sued defendants under RICO, 18 U.S.C. 1961-1968, principally alleging injury to plaintiff's business by reason of defendants' establishment of a competing commercial enterprise through the investment of income derived from a pattern of racketeering activity. At issue was whether the district court properly granted defendants' motions for summary judgment on the pleadings and, in the alternative, for summary judgment on the grounds that plaintiff's complaint and the record were insufficient to show that any injury to plaintiff's business was proximately caused by defendants' alleged violation of section 1962(a). The court held that to the extent that plaintiff claimed injury from defendants' continuation in its Bronx store of the cash-no-tax scheme conducted in the Queens store, that claim appeared to be conceptually indistinguishable from the section 1962(c) claim previously rejected by the Supreme Court. The court held that to the extent, however, that plaintiff claimed that it lost sales to defendants because defendants invested the proceeds of their pattern of racketeering activity to establish and operate defendants' new store in the Bronx, the court rejected defendants' contentions and concluded that the district court erred in granting summary judgment on the pleadings on the basis of Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly and erred in granting summary judgment.