Cnty. of Cook v. HSBC N. Am. Holdings Inc.
Cnty. of Cook v. HSBC N. Am. Holdings Inc.
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff County of Cook ("the County") has filed claims under the Fair Housing Act ("FHA"),
HSBC moves to dismiss the County's Second Amended Complaint ("Complaint"). For the following reasons, HSBC's motion to dismiss is granted in part and denied in part.
Factual Background
Beginning in 2003, HSBC engaged in a rampant predatory-lending business program in the subprime mortgage market, *955which targeted African-American and Latino borrowers in Cook County, Illinois. See generally 2d Am. Compl.;
A. Discriminatory Marketing
First, HSBC intentionally targeted and marketed predatory loan offerings to borrowers in predominantly minority areas. See
In addition to originating these subprime loans, HSBC also purchased them from other subprime lenders.
B. Discriminatory Pricing
After HSBC successfully generated leads, it charged minority borrowers higher prices-even after controlling for variables such as credit risk-for mortgage loans, as compared to similarly situated nonminority borrowers. See
Data collected pursuant to the HMDA and analyzed by the Federal Reserve confirms these pricing disparities. See
C. Discriminatory Foreclosure-Related Activities
While HSBC often sold the mortgage notes to third parties, it retained the right to service and foreclose on the subprime loans it originated and purchased.
HSBC foreclosed on minority homeowners at a higher rate than similarly situated nonminority homeowners.
HSBC engaged in several business practices that contributed to these results. For example, HSBC failed to adequately provide loss mitigation options to minority homeowners, as compared to similarly situated nonminority homeowners.
D. Ongoing Practices
Although HSBC stopped originating and purchasing subprime loans in 2007, the County claims that HSBC has continued to impose discriminatory pricing terms and has serviced and foreclosed on the predatory loans in a discriminatory manner. See
E. The County's Alleged Injuries
As a result of HSBC's conduct, the County claims that it has been harmed by having to incur additional costs related to conducting judicial and non-judicial foreclosure-related processes; serving eviction and foreclosure notices; registering and monitoring foreclosed properties; inspecting, securing, maintaining, and/or demolishing foreclosed properties; and providing various types of social services to evicted or foreclosed homeowners.
Additionally, the County seeks as damages the loss of tax and other income related to foreclosed, abandoned, and vacant *957properties (as well as neighboring properties that declined in value) and the resources that it had to provide to communities that suffered from the resulting urban blight.
Finally, the County seeks damages for the recording fees, transfer fees, and intangible tax income it lost when HSBC used MERS to allegedly obscure its transactions from public recording systems in an effort to hide its race-based activities.
F. The County's Claims
In Count I, the County claims that HSBC's predatory program has disparately impacted minority borrowers in violation of the FHA.
HSBC has moved to dismiss all three counts. It argues that the County has failed to adequately plead that HSBC's conduct was the proximate cause of the County's injuries; state disparate-treatment and disparate impact claims; file its claims in a timely fashion; and adequately plead that various HSBC subsidiaries and affiliates named as Defendants were involved in the alleged conduct.
Legal Standards
To survive a motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), the complaint must "state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face." Ashcroft v. Iqbal ,
Moreover, the County must plausibly plead that its injuries were proximately caused by a violation of the FHA. Bank of Am. Corp. v. City of Miami, Fla. , --- U.S. ----,
Analysis
I. Proximate Cause
A. City of Miami and Directness Principles
HSBC's principal argument is that the County's claims should be dismissed because the County's allegations are insufficient to show that HSBC's challenged conduct was the proximate cause of the County's injuries. Defs.' Mem. Supp. at 4-12. As both sides recognize, the controlling case is the Supreme Court's recent decision in Bank of Am. Corp. v. City of Miami, Fla. , --- U.S. ----,
There, the City of Miami alleged that Bank of America and Wells Fargo intentionally issued risky mortgages on terms less favorable to minority customers than similarly situated white customers.
Noting the "broad reach" of the term "aggrieved person" as defined in the FHA, the Supreme Court reaffirmed its prior holding that Congress intended "to define standing [in the FHA] as broadly as is permitted by Article III of the Constitution."
The Eleventh Circuit had held that Miami's allegations satisfied the causation requirement, because the city had "plausibly alleged that its financial injuries were foreseeable results of the Banks' misconduct."
Instead, the Court concluded, "[p]roximate cause under the FHA requires 'some direct relation between the injury asserted and the injurious conduct alleged.' "
As to how these directness principles might apply to Miami's claims, the Supreme Court declined to say, leaving for the lower courts to "define, in the first instance, the contours of proximate cause under the FHA and decide how that standard applies to the City's claims for lost property-tax revenue and increased municipal expenses." Id. at 1306. And that is our task here. But, at the outset, it is helpful to examine the trio of cases cited in *959City of Miami - Anza , Hemi Group , and Lexmark .
In Anza ,
In arriving at this conclusion, the Supreme Court applied the "common-law foundations of the proximate-cause requirement" that it had articulated in Holmes ,
Later, in Hemi Group ,
The last in the trio of cases is Lexmark ,
The Supreme Court disagreed. Recognizing the general presumption that "a statutory cause of action is limited to plaintiffs whose injuries are proximately caused by violations of the statute," the Court first observed that "the proximate-cause requirement generally bars suits for alleged harm that is 'too remote' from the defendant's unlawful conduct."
Notably, the Supreme Court recognized that, because the pathway from Lexmark's alleged fraudulent statements to Static Control's injuries went through "the intervening link of injury to remanufacturers," the allegations "might not support standing under a strict application of the 'general tendency' not to stretch proximate causation 'beyond the first step.' "
All told, the directness requirement discussed in these cases "obviates the difficulty in assessing damages from indirect injuries; avoids complicated rules for apportioning damages among several injured parties with greater or lesser injuries; and provides the requisite level of deterrence for...tortfeasors." RWB Servs., LLC v. Hartford Computer Grp., Inc.,
*961B. The County's Alleged Injuries
As HSBC sees it, the various injuries alleged by the County are too attenuated from HSBC's alleged discriminatory loan origination practices to satisfy the proximate cause requirement under the FHA. It is simply too "speculative," HSBC argues, to believe that the purported predatory lending practices would inexorably lead to increased foreclosures, or that such foreclosures would lead to vacant lots and urban blight, much less result in additional costs to the County.
For its part, the County counters that HSBC focuses too myopically on its origination activities, while ignoring the other components of the alleged predatory lending program, such as HSBC's discriminatory servicing, loss mitigation, and foreclosure practices, which are more closely linked to the resulting foreclosures and alleged harms. And, where the relationship between the harms and the challenged conduct may be more attenuated, the County urges the Court to be mindful of the statutory purposes of the FHA, which are broader and more remedial than those of RICO and the Clayton Act. To HSBC, it is the County that engages in a sleight of hand, and HSBC argues that the Complaint lacks any allegations that it discriminated against minority borrowers in servicing loans and prosecuting foreclosures.
But the Complaint does assert that HSBC engaged in loan servicing and foreclosure-related practices that discriminated against minorities. For example, the County alleges that HSBC engaged in discriminatory loan servicing and loss mitigation practices that resulted in more foreclosures for minority borrowers as compared to nonminority borrowers. See, e.g. , 2d Am. Compl. ¶ 292. The County also claims that HSBC discriminated against minority borrowers in the way it handled the resulting foreclosure proceedings.
What is more, according to the County, HSBC's racially discriminatory loan servicing and loss mitigation practices were "part and parcel" of its overall predatory lending scheme directed at minority communities. See 2d Am. Compl. at ¶¶ 291, 350-73, 388-96; see generally 2d Am. Compl; see also Dekalb Cty. v. HSBC N. Am. Holdings, Inc. ,
In this way, the allegations differ materially from those in City of Miami , where the City relied solely on the lenders' initial loan origination practices. See City of Miami,
*962City of Miami v. Bank of America Corp. ,
From this, the question becomes whether the County alleges a sufficiently direct relationship between HBSC's conduct and the various injuries it claims it has suffered. As explained below, the Court concludes that several of the County's claimed injuries are too attenuated from HBSC's challenged conduct to proceed, while others bear a sufficiently direct relationship to the alleged wrongs to survive HSBC's motion to dismiss.
1. Certain "Out-of-Pocket" Costs
The County asserts that it has suffered damages in the form of certain out-of-pocket costs, including the costs associated with serving eviction notices, conducting judicial and administrative foreclosure procedures, and registering and inspecting foreclosed homes. Assuming the truth of the County's allegations, the relationship between HSBC's discriminatory actions (such as its servicing and foreclosure practices related to minority borrowers' loans) and these additional costs is clear: HSBC's discriminatory conduct forced more minority borrowers into foreclosure proceedings, and this caused the County to incur more foreclosure-related costs than it would have otherwise. The County is therefore within the "first step" of injury. Cf., e.g. , Hemi ,
A review of what is "administratively possible and convenient," see City of Miami ,
2. Costs of Social Services to Foreclosed Homeowners
The County's claim for the costs of social services it provided to foreclosed minority homeowners is more complicated. Whether and to what extent the County needs to provide services to foreclosed homeowners presumably depends on a multitude of factors individual to each homeowner. For example, some borrowers may have had other assets, continuing employment, or access to funds that allowed them enough money for housing, food, and other necessities, even after foreclosure. Others may have decided to move out of the County altogether looking for better opportunities. Still others may have faced dire financial and personal hardship as a result of the discriminatory practices and required a great deal of County assistance. Whatever the case, to the extent that the County incurred additional costs for social services, such injuries are derivative of the injury that HSBC caused to the minority borrowers themselves and, therefore, insufficient to satisfy the directness requirement.
*963
In response, the County argues that, by its terms, the FHA warrants a more expansive definition of proximate cause than the definition utilized in the Supreme Court cases discussed above and asks the Court to consider whether there are better suited plaintiffs to recover for damages and whether the goal of deterrence would be served. See Holmes ,
As to the first inquiry, there is no obvious, better-suited plaintiff- governmental or private-to recover the damages that the County seeks here. That said, the goal of deterring similar discriminatory conduct would be adequately served in this case, even if the County could not recover its costs of social services to foreclosed homeowners. The County has other viable claims of injury, and HSBC will be subjected to significant discovery, as well as the risk of significant financial loss and public disrepute. Therefore, expanding proximate cause beyond the traditional "first step" for this claim would only marginally, if at all, increase deterrence and would likely be outweighed by the difficulties of establishing causation as outlined above. Accordingly, HSBC's motion to dismiss as to the County's claim for increased social services costs is granted.
3. Loss of Property Tax Revenue from Foreclosed Properties
The County's claim for lost property tax revenue on HSBC-foreclosed properties
*964These are just a few illustrations of the indirectness of the County's harm.
To the extent the County's claim of injury from lower tax revenue is predicated not on a homeowner's failure to pay, but rather on a diminishment in a property's value post-foreclosure, this introduces significant concerns about measuring the diminishment in value attributable to HSBC's conduct, as opposed to other external factors, such as the state of the general real estate market and the demand for houses on a neighborhood by neighborhood basis. See, e.g., James Cape & Sons Co. ,
For these reasons, the Court holds that the County has pleaded insufficient facts to establish that its claim for lost property tax revenue is sufficiently direct, and HSBC's motion to dismiss this claim is granted.
4. Loss of Property Tax Revenue from Abandoned and Vacant Properties
The County also seeks to recover lost tax revenue from abandoned or vacant properties. Because the County distinguishes these properties from foreclosed properties, see 2d Am. Compl. ¶ 321, the Court presumes that the County refers to abandoned or vacant properties in the vicinity of homes foreclosed upon by HSBC. The County's causation theory as to these properties is similarly unilluminated by the Complaint, and it is unclear how HSBC's conduct would be the but-for cause of the failure or inability of these homeowners to pay their property taxes. And, to the extent the County's claim of injury from lower tax revenue might instead be predicated on a diminishment in the value of these properties, this claim too raises a myriad of possible intervening causes. HSBC's motion to dismiss this claim of injury is accordingly granted.
5. Loss of "Various Revenue" from Abandoned or Vacant Properties
Additionally, the County seeks to recover for a loss of unspecified "various revenue" (separate from property tax revenue) from abandoned or foreclosed properties.
6. Diminution of Property Values of Other Homes
If the administrative difficulty in measuring and apportioning to the County the damages from a reduction in property value on HSBC-foreclosed homes appears daunting, the difficulties with surrounding homes is all the more so. The County's injuries would be derivative of any number of external factors as well as the conduct of other homeowners and lenders. See, e.g. , James Cape & Sons ,
7. Costs of Demolishing Foreclosed Homes
The County asks the Court to award it the costs it incurred in demolishing homes of minority borrowers that were subject to HSBC foreclosures. But the County's decision to demolish a home also may be dependent upon any of number intervening factors, such as the condition *965of the house pre-foreclosure, whether the home was vandalized or otherwise in disrepair post-foreclosure while it was waiting sale, and the strength of the local housing market. See, e.g. , James Cape & Sons ,
8. Urban Blight
The County also seeks damages for the "necessary reallocation" of its resources and other injuries to the fabric of its communities arising from "the resulting urban blight." 2d Am. Compl. ¶ 33. But the line from HSBC's alleged discriminatory conduct to "urban blight" winds through too many other potential causes-such as the economic downturn in 2008, the general state of the communities before and after the foreclosures at issue, and the impact of the Great Recession on these communities-to satisfy the proximate cause requirement. HSBC's motion to dismiss this claim of injury is accordingly granted.
9. Recording, Transfer, and Intangible Fees
Lastly, the County claims that it lost recording, transfer, and intangible fees due to HSBC's practice of using the MERS database to track, transfer and trade mortgage loans in furtherance of its discriminatory scheme. Id. ¶¶ 204-13. Assuming that HSBC's use of the MERS database was improper, the County states a squarely direct relationship between HSBC's use of the MERS database and the County's resulting loss of recording income. As such, HSBC's motion to dismiss as to these injuries is denied.
D. Summary of Proximate Cause
In sum, the Court holds that the County has plausibly alleged that the additional costs that it incurred to serve eviction notices, conduct judicial and administrative foreclosure procedures, and register and inspect foreclosed homes were proximately caused by HSBC's alleged discriminatory conduct. Additionally, the County has also plausibly alleged that its loss of recording, transfer, and intangible tax income were proximately caused by HSBC's allegedly improper use of MERS as part of its predatory lending program. HSBC's motion to dismiss the County's other alleged injuries is granted.
II. The County's Disparate-Treatment Claim
HSBC also seeks to dismiss the County's disparate-treatment claim. Defs.'
*966Mem. Supp. at 3 n.3. In doing so, HSBC asserts in a cursory footnote that the County's disparate-treatment allegations "fail to meet applicable pleading standards." Id. To find its argument, HSBC refers the Court to its motion to dismiss the County's Amended Complaint, ECF No. 49-1, which preceded the Complaint now before the Court. In that motion, HSBC argued that the County had not pleaded a disparate-treatment claim because it had alleged that HSBC's objective was to "maximize profits" rather than to render adverse effects upon an identifiable group. Defs.' Mem. Supp. Mot. Dismiss Am. Compl. at 19. In effect, HSBC asks the Court to import its argument from a prior motion to dismiss and apply it to the County's substantially revised 397-paragraph Complaint, which, inter alia , includes a new, standalone disparate-treatment claim (Count III). However, this is not the Court's responsibility. See M.G. Skinner & Assocs. Ins. Agency, Inc. v. Norman-Spencer Agency, Inc. ,
That said, the Complaint sufficiently states a claim for disparate treatment under the FHA. Under the FHA, it is "unlawful for any person or other entity whose business includes engaging in residential real estate-related transactions to discriminate against any person in making available such a transaction, or in the terms or conditions of such a transaction, because of race...."
As described above, the County has identified specific practices by which HSBC intentionally targeted, marketed, originated, serviced, and foreclosed on predatory subprime loans provided to minority borrowers, on terms different from loans provided to similarly situated non-minority borrowers. See, e.g. , City of L.A. v. Citigroup Inc. ,
III. The County's Disparate Impact Claims
HSBC also challenges the County's disparate impact claims. Specifically, HSBC contends that Texas Dep't of Hous. & Cmty. Affairs v. Inclusive Communities Project, Inc. , --- U.S. ----,
In Inclusive Communities , the Supreme Court held that disparate impact claims are cognizable under the FHA and set out four requirements that plaintiff must meet to make out a prima facie case of disparate impact. See
To this point, HSBC raises two primary arguments. First, it contends that the County failed to identify any particular policy employed by HSBC that caused a disparate impact to minority borrowers. But the Complaint is replete with examples of HSBC policies that, according to the County, resulted in a disparate impact on minority borrowers. These include: HSBC's mortgage lending and services policies; pricing and marketing policies; various underwriting policies; loan servicing and loss mitigation policies; and foreclosure-related policies.
Undeterred, HSBC contends that much of the challenged conduct was "discretionary" and that "[d]iscretion alone may not form the basis of a disparate impact claim." Defs.' Mem. Supp. at 12-13. But the Complaint includes many policies that were not completely discretionary, and to the extent HSBC employees were given a degree of discretion to implement these policies in any individual instance, a uniform grant of discretion can form the basis of a disparate impact claim. See Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Dukes ,
Second, HSBC argues that, to the extent the County has pointed to specific policies, it has not sufficiently alleged a causal link between the policies and a disparate impact. In support, HSBC points to the fact that the Complaint relied upon "general allegations common to all lenders," rather than HSBC-specific data. But even assuming, arguendo , that statistics from multiple mortgage lenders would be insufficient, HSBC's argument is incorrect. In addition to offering statistics from multiple mortgage lenders, the County also provides data particularized to HSBC loans and foreclosures. See 2d Am. Compl. ¶¶ 262-305. Coupled with the extensive allegations in the Complaint that describe how HSBC's policies resulted in the statistical disparities, the County has asserted sufficiently the existence of a causal connection between the policies and the statistical data to survive a motion to dismiss.
In addition, HSBC contends that the County's disparate impact claims must fail because the County also alleges that HSBC engaged in intentional discrimination. Defs.' Mem. Supp. at 13. But this, too, is unavailing for several reasons.
First, a plaintiff may allege claims in the alternative. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(d)(2). Second, although a plaintiff is not required to explicitly allege, or, ultimately, to prove intent as part of a disparate-impact theory, a plaintiff is not precluded from doing so. In fact, one of the factors that a court considers to determine whether a plaintiff has made a prima facie disparate impact case is "the presence of some evidence of discriminatory intent, even if circumstantial and less than sufficient to satisfy" the standards required for disparate treatment. See Metro. Hous. Dev. Corp. v. Vill. of Arlington Heights,
For these reasons, HSBC's motion to dismiss the County's disparate impact claims is denied.
IV. Statute of Limitations
HSBC also argues that the County's claims are barred by the statute of limitations. The FHA provides that "[a]n *969aggrieved person may commence a civil action...not later than 2 years after the occurrence or the termination of an alleged discriminatory housing practice... whichever occurs last."
The County responds that the continuing violation doctrine brings its claims within the statute of limitations for two reasons: (1) as to Counts I and III, HSBC's discriminatory conduct does not cease until the last payoff, default, or foreclosure as to each of the loans initiated between 2003 and 2007; and (2) as to Count II, HSBC's discriminatory foreclosure activities continue to this day. Pls.' Resp. at 2-3.
Dismissing a claim at the pleading stage based upon a statute of limitations defense is typically disfavored. See Reiser v. Residential Funding Corp. ,
"[W]here a plaintiff, pursuant to the Fair Housing Act, challenges not just one incident of conduct violative of the Act, but an unlawful practice that continues into the limitations period, the complaint is timely when it is filed within 180 days of the last asserted occurrence of that practice." Havens Realty Corp. v. Coleman ,
Here, each of the County's counts includes plausible allegations that HSBC continues to service and foreclose on loans in a discriminatory manner. Accordingly, adjudication of HSBC's statute of limitations defense must await summary judgment. See Dekalb Cty. ,
*970V. Dismissal of Non-Originating Entities
HSBC also asks the Court to dismiss HSBC USA Inc., HSBC Finance Corporation, HSBC North America Holdings Inc., HFC Company LLC, and Beneficial LLC. See Defs.' Mem. Supp. at 1 n.1. Again, HSBC simply refers the Court, via a footnote, to its motion to dismiss the County's preceding Amended Complaint.
But, again, the County's claims are not limited to these entities' loan-origination practices. In any event, the Complaint does allege that three of the five entities originated mortgage loans. 2d Am. Compl. ¶ 44 (HFC Company LLC); ¶ 20 (Household Finance Company, "now, Defendant HSBC Finance Corporation"); ¶ 43 (Beneficial LLC). And, given HSBC's failure to address the specific allegations in the Complaint with any particularity, the Court will not scour through it to determine if the County has adequately pleaded a veil-piercing theory as to the remaining two entities-HSBC USA Inc. and HSBC North America Holdings Inc. HSBC's argument for dismissal of non-originating entities is accordingly waived, and HSBC's request to dismiss these entities is denied. See M.G. Skinner ,
Conclusion
For the reasons provided herein, the Court grants in part and denies in part HSBC's motion to dismiss [137] the County's Second Amended Complaint. HSBC's motion is granted as to the following claimed injuries: the County's costs of providing social services to homeowners; costs of demolishing homes; loss of property tax revenue from foreclosed, abandoned and vacant properties; loss of "various revenue" from abandoned or foreclosed properties; diminution of the tax base due to foreclosed homes and surrounding properties; and the costs associated with urban blight. The motion is denied with respect to the County's claimed injuries resulting from HSBC's allegedly improper use of the Mortgage Electronic Registration System, Inc., as well as the additional costs the County incurred for the administration of foreclosure proceedings that resulted from the challenged practices, including the costs of serving eviction notices, conducting judicial and administrative foreclosure procedures, and registering and inspecting foreclosed homes. The motion also is denied in all other respects.
SO ORDERED.
The Court assumes the factual allegations in the Complaint are true and draws all possible inferences in the County's favor. Tamayo v. Blagojevich ,
According to the Complaint, MERS is "an entity that Defendants and other industry participants created to circumvent proper public recording processes, facilitate the transfer and distribution of mortgage loans among Defendants' corporate structure and securitization instruments, and obfuscate the chain of liability in the foreclosure process." Id. ¶ 189. MERS "enable[ed] mortgage lenders to privately originate, track, assign and/or trade mortgage loans, circumventing the entire public recording process." Id. ¶ 205. This in turn made it extremely difficult for the public "to determine from publicly available data which Defendants hold the mortgages to, are in possession of, and/or are or may be foreclosing on properties in Plaintiff's communities and neighborhoods, further obfuscating the predatory and discriminatory lending practices of Defendants and other industry participants." Id. ¶ 210.
For loans that HSBC retained, it had an economic incentive to avoid foreclosures so that it could avoid writing down the value of its loan portfolio. Id. ¶ 289. In those instances, HSBC did not foreclose even though borrower may have defaulted on the note and abandoned the property. Id. ¶¶ 289-90.
The latter analysis includes whether better situated plaintiffs would have an incentive to sue, whether there would be a risk of duplicative recoveries, and "the general interest in deterring injurious conduct, since directly injured victims can generally be counted on to vindicate the law as private attorneys general, without any of the problems attendant upon suits by plaintiffs injured more remotely." Holmes ,
HSBC cites to Hemi ,
To the extent the County may be more or less automatically required to provide certain services to foreclosed homeowners regardless of their injuries, that might change the analysis. See BCS Servs., Inc. v. Heartwood 88, LLC ,
The County alleges "lost property tax revenue on...properties that have not been recovered via tax lien sales," 2d Am. Compl. ¶ 321, and "the erosion of Plaintiff's tax base due to reduced property values on foreclosed properties...," id .
HSBC also asserts, in passing, that the County is barred from recovering any costs for municipal services under the "municipal cost recovery rule" (or "free public services doctrine"). Defs.' Mem. Supp. at 9 n.6. In support, HSBC cites to the Illinois Supreme Court case City of Chi. v. Beretta U.S.A. ,
In the Cobb County case, the district court applied the four-part test in dismissing the plaintiff's disparate impact claim. See Cobb Cty. ,
Title VII and the FHA are to "be given like construction and application." Kyles v. J.K. Guardian Sec. Servs., Inc.,
The rest of HSBC's argument on this issue is a rehash of its arguments for why the County does not state a disparate impact or disparate treatment claim. Id .
Reference
- Full Case Name
- COUNTY OF COOK v. HSBC NORTH AMERICA HOLDINGS INC. HSBC Finance Corporation HSBC Mortgage Corporation (USA) HSBC Mortgage Services Inc. HSBC USA Inc. HSBC Bank USA National Association Beneficial Company LLC Decision One Mortgage Company, LLC HFC Company LLC
- Cited By
- 12 cases
- Status
- Published