MEMORANDUM OPINION The motions now before the Court concern the “revenue rule,” a common law principle that prohibits courts from hearing actions by foreign nations to enforce their foreign tax laws, whether directly or indirectly. Danish companies are required by law to withhold a certain percentage of dividends distributed to shareholders as tax, which may be refunded to shareholders in certain circumstances under a double taxation treaty. The Kingdom of Denmark here claims that the defendants defrauded it of millions of dollars by submitting tax refund claims in which they falsely claimed to own stocks in Danish companies that had paid dividends net of withholding tax. In fact, the complaints allege, the defendants did not own those stocks and had had no taxes withheld from any dividends. Nevertheless, the defendants allegedly obtained many millions of dollars in tax refunds from the Danish treasury under false and fraudulent pretenses.Defendants, relying on the revenue rule, seek dismissal of these actions at the outset. If plaintiff can prove that the defendants never in fact owned the relevant Danish stocks — and the Court is obliged to accept their allegations as true for present purposes — the revenue rule would not apply because the substance of the claims would be for garden variety commercial fraud. Accordingly, the motion to dismiss is denied. Whether in light of discovery and a fuller presentation, the revenue rule will be of greater aid to the defendants must await developments.BackgroundThe plaintiff is the Customs and Tax Administration of the Kingdom of Denmark (“SKAT”). It is the agency responsible for assessing and collecting taxes in Denmark and issuing tax refunds to claimants under certain double taxation treaties between Denmark and other countries.1 The defendants are U.S. pension plans, their authorized representatives and, in at least one case, the incorporator involved in creating plans involved in the alleged scheme.2 The scheme involved also payment agents and broker custodians who are not named as defendants.We start from the fact that, under Danish law, “Danish companies are required to withhold 27 percent of the dividend” distributed to shareholders.3 A treaty between the United States and Denmark (“U.S.-Denmark Treaty”) provides for the refund of tax withheld on dividend payments to shareholders that are U.S. pension plans, which are exempt from taxation.4According to the complaints, the defendants and non-parties participated in a coordinated scheme to submit fraudulent applications to SKAT for tax refunds.5 First, the incorporator created limited liability companies associated with the plans that would submit tax refund applications to SKAT.6 Second, the authorized representatives signed powers of attorney on behalf of the plans authorizing the non-party payment agents to act on behalf of the plans in relation to the refund claims.7 The payment agents then completed and submitted the applications, each of which included, among other things, a claim form.8 The claim form represented that the claimant: (1) owned shares in a Danish company; (2) had received dividends net of withholding tax; (3) was entitled to a refund under the U.S.-Denmark Treaty; and (4) was a U.S. pension plan exempt from U.S. taxation.9 The first representation was made through a “credit advice,” “income advice,” “tax voucher,” or other similar document provided by a non-party broker custodian.10 Finally, the payment agents received the tax refunds from SKAT and “distributed the proceeds to the claimants and other participants in the fraud.”11SKAT alleges that these refund claims were fraudulent because the defendant plans did not own shares in the Danish companies that they purported to own.12 It argues that it was not possible for the plans to have owned the shares they purported to own because many, including The Bradley London Pension Plan (“Bradley Plan”), were single-participant 401(k) plans limited to approximately $116,500 in contributions per year, yet they claimed to own millions of dollars of stock in Danish companies within the first year of their existence.13 The numbers, the plaintiff argues, simply do not add up. The defendants therefore were not entitled to the dividends they claimed to have earned and were not entitled to the tax refunds they claimed under the U.S.-Denmark Treaty.14 SKAT allegedly paid out approximately $2.1 billion as a result of this fraudulent tax refund scheme.15SKAT brings this action for damages asserting six common law claims against the defendants. Counts One and Two allege fraud and aiding and abetting fraud.16 Count Six alleges negligent misrepresentation.17 And Counts Three through Five allege payment by mistake, unjust enrichment, and money had and received.18The defendants move to dismiss on five grounds. First, they contend that the Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction, arguing that the revenue rule and U.S.-Denmark Treaty bar the suit.19 They argue next that the Court should dismiss Counts One, Two, and Six for failure to allege a false representation of material fact by the authorized representatives and incorporators.20 Third, they contend that Counts One and Two fail adequately to plead scienter under Rule 9(b).21 Fourth, defendants argue that Count Two fails to allege “substantial assistance” by the defendants necessary to support a claim for aiding and abetting.22 Finally, the defendants move to dismiss Counts Three through Five as duplicative.23DiscussionI. Subject Matter Jurisdiction24A. Legal StandardA court will dismiss a claim pursuant to Rule 12(b)(1) for lack of subject matter jurisdiction if it determines that it lacks constitutional or statutory power to adjudicate it.25 “A plaintiff asserting subject matter jurisdiction has the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that it exists.”26 The Court must take all facts alleged in the complaints as true but will not draw inferences in the plaintiff’s favor when determining whether there is jurisdiction.27 The Court may consider evidence outside the pleadings on a Rule 12(b)(1) motion.28B. AnalysisThe defendants move to dismiss the entire action on the ground that it is barred by the revenue rule and that the Court therefore lacks subject matter jurisdiction.As noted, the revenue rule prohibits courts from hearing claims by foreign sovereigns that seek direct or indirect enforcement of their tax laws.29 Its purpose is to ensure respect for sovereignty by keeping courts out of the business of adjudicating and enforcing foreign states’ tax laws that embody their moral and political choices.30 The rule serves also to preserve separation of powers by carving out from courts’ jurisdiction disputes regarding extraterritorial tax enforcement, which can implicate foreign relations and are better left to the political branches of government.31“A suit directly seeks to enforce foreign tax laws when a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs would require the defendants to reimburse them for lost tax revenue.”32 An action that “seeks a remedy that would give extraterritorial effect” to a foreign state’s tax laws is one for indirect enforcement.33 Courts look to the “substance of the claim” to determine whether it is one for tax revenues.34The defendants contend that the plaintiff’s actions seek both direct and indirect enforcement of Danish tax law.1. Direct EnforcementThe defendants argue that the present actions, if successful, would enforce Danish tax law directly because the plaintiff’s claims are nothing more than an attempt to recover lost tax revenue. The argument goes as follows: the defendants allegedly caused SKAT to pay fraudulent tax refund claims that should not have been disbursed. Those tax refunds amounted to lost tax revenue. SKAT seeks to recover the amount it paid defendants and, if it prevails, defendants would be forced to reimburse SKAT for lost tax revenue.35The plaintiff responds that the rule does not bar the actions because they do not seek unpaid taxes. They seek to recover for what amounted to theft, which “[t]he revenue rule does not protect.”36 Indeed, the defendants, SKAT alleges, have “no legitimate connection to the Danish tax system.”37 According to the complaints, the defendants defrauded SKAT by falsely representing that they owned shares in Danish corporations that paid dividends subject to a withholding tax which, if true, would have entitled the defendants to refunds under the U.S.-Denmark Treaty.38These actions plainly do not seek direct enforcement of Danish tax law. The defendants’ attempt to frame them as seeking to recover lost tax revenue — when the only reason the money was lost is because the defendants in effect allegedly stole it, and the only reason it supposedly concerns tax revenue is because the defendants’ alleged victim was the Danish tax authority — is too clever by half.39 The defendants’ brief admits as much when it drastically mischaracterizes the nature of the plaintiff’s claims in an effort to bring them within the revenue rule. They characterize the claims as seeking to recover for “harms suffered as a result of the evasion of a foreign sovereign’s tax laws,”40 when in fact the plaintiff has not alleged a single instance of tax evasion — it alleges fraud, pure and simple. Defendants’ mischaracterization betrays their knowledge that tax evasion is a crucial ingredient in cases barred by the revenue rule in this circuit.41 Indeed, each case they cite and discuss in support of their position involves an underlying scheme of tax evasion.42Finally, defendants insist that these actions must be regarded as seeking to collect taxes because SKAT “can only be a party in a court proceeding”43 in three limited circumstances: “collection,” “calculation of inheritance tax,” or “additional payment and compensation.”44 The argument is based on Section A.A.10.3.2 of a document the defendants refer to as the Legal Guide and, to a lesser degree, the Danish Tax Administration Act. But nothing in those texts indicates that SKAT may never be a party to any civil case in any jurisdiction in the world outside of those three areas.2. Indirect EnforcementThe defendants argue in the alternative that the actions seek indirect enforcement of Danish tax law because the Court would be obliged to determine whether the defendants owned shares in the Danish corporations from which they claimed to have received dividends, a determination which — defendants contend — would require the Court to “examine and interpret, and potentially enforce,” Danish tax law.45 The argument has three prongs: (1) the issue of ownership is one of beneficial ownership;46 (2) the Court must decide whether defendants owned the shares by analyzing, interpreting, and applying at least (a) Section 23.1 of the Danish Capital Gains Tax Act and Section C.B.2.1.6.1 of the Legal Guide published by the Danish tax authorities; (b) Sections (2)(1)(c) and 2(3) of the Danish Companies Act; (c) Section 16A(1) of the Danish Tax Assessment Act; and (d) Sections 65(1) and 69B(1) of the Individual Income Tax Act;47 and (3) engaging in such an analysis would constitute enforcement of Danish tax law and is “precisely the type of meddling in foreign affairs the Revenue Rule forbids.”48The Court disagrees, at least given the record before it.a. The Type of Ownership at IssueThe first prong of the defendants’ argument is that the defendants might have been beneficial owners of the shares even if they did not own the shares in any other respect.49 The defendants place great emphasis on this distinction. Indeed it is the fulcrum on which their argument rests. And, according to defendants, it creates an issue the resolution of which could require the Court to apply Danish tax law and thus run afoul of the revenue rule.Defendants’ assertion that the issue is one of beneficial ownership ignores the allegations of the complaints and, perhaps more significantly, would not result automatically in a jurisdictional bar even if defendants were correct. As the Court will discuss in more detail below, the defendants have provided no authoritative information on how property interests are determined under Danish law, and even if the Court were required to decide the issue of beneficial ownership under Danish tax law, the revenue rule would not prevent the Court from recognizing — though not enforcing — such a law or laws.As an initial matter, the allegations in the complaints belie defendants’ argument that the issue before the Court is solely one of beneficial ownership. The plaintiff alleges that:“The entities, acting through their agents and representatives, applied to SKAT claiming repayments of tax withheld on dividends that they purported to have earned on shares of Danish companies. These applications were fraudulent because the claimants did not own the shares that they claimed to own, they did not earn the dividends they claimed to have earned, and they were not entitled to the tax refunds they claimed.”50Thus, the complaints draw no distinction between legal and beneficial ownership. To the contrary, they permit proof that the defendants had neither legal nor equitable ownership of the relevant shares.Defendants have offered no evidence to the contrary. Rather, they have merely argued that: (1) their ownership of the shares is confirmed by “bona fide documentation issued by the Broker Custodian,” but they have not provided either that documentation or any evidence of ownership, either in an affidavit or otherwise; (2) there are “many means to obtain liquidity to purchase shares (such as through financing transactions),” but they have not provided any evidence that the defendants used any such means or entered into a single such financing transaction; and (3) the “lack of registration with [the central securities depository in Denmark] is of no significance in determining either legal or fiscal ownership of the shares (for example, because such shares may have been held in omnibus or custodian accounts),” but they have provided no evidence that the defendants owned the shares legally, fiscally, or through an omnibus or custodian account.51 That is to say, the defendants — in an effort to avoid the complaints’ allegations that the defendants did not own the shares — have (1) put forward only hypothetical ways in which a market participant could “own” shares without paying for them with its own cash, and (2) asserted that a document (that is alleged to be part of the fraud) exists that states that the defendants owned the shares. But the Court assumes the truth of the complaints’ allegations of lack of ownership, at least in the absence of competent evidence to the contrary. Accordingly, there is no need on this motion to engage Danish tax or other law to decide any issue of ownership, beneficial or otherwise.The defendants attempt to cast suspicion on plaintiff’s allegations of non-ownership by pointing to differences in language between these complaints and those filed in the United Kingdom.52 The defendants contend that the word “beneficial” is conspicuously absent from SKAT’s complaints here as compared to those filed in the United Kingdom. They urge the Court to infer from this difference that the plaintiff knows that its claims require a determination of beneficial ownership under Danish tax law and therefore are barred by the revenue rule.53The Court is not persuaded. The U.K. filing referred to by the defendants states: “[t]he foreign entity was not the beneficial owner of, or did not own shares in, a Danish company as represented….”54 The complaints here allege that the entities “did not own the shares that they claimed to own.”55 The Court reads this allegation as an assertion that the defendants did not own the shares in any respect — beneficial, legal, or otherwise. Thus the U.K. and U.S. filings allege the same thing or at least plausibly may be so read. There is no basis to jump to the unfounded conclusion that the plaintiff knows that its claims are barred by the revenue rule.56b. Whether and How Danish Tax Law is Relevant to Beneficial OwnershipAssuming arguendo that the Court would have to consider the issue of beneficial ownership in order to decide this motion, the Court addresses the second prong of the defendants’ argument regarding the Danish laws the Court could need to interpret, apply, or enforce.For all the breath spent on beneficial ownership, the defendants fail to explain how beneficial ownership is distinct under Danish law from other kinds of ownership and the basis for their assertion that it is Danish tax law, and not some other category of Danish law, that defines the distinction.57 Of the seven provisions of Danish law mentioned by the defendants as relevant to the “disputed issue of beneficial ownership,”58 five of them appear to be completely irrelevant: Section 16A(1) of the Danish Tax Assessment Act, Sections 65(1) and 69(B)(1) of the Individual Income Tax Act, and Sections 2(1)(c) and 2(3) of the Danish Companies Act. The first states that dividends are included in taxable income.59 The second provides for a “dividend tax” of 27 percent that Danish corporations withhold from the dividends distributed to shareholders.60 The third states that certain individuals may be entitled to a refund of the tax withheld on dividends if they are covered by a double taxation agreement or certain other directives.61 The fourth, with certain enumerated exceptions, states that a company or entity with its “registered office in another country [is] also liable for tax, insofar as [it] receive[s] dividends according to §16a, para. 1 and 2 of the Danish Tax Assessment Act.”62 The fifth provides, among other things, for a discount on the tax withheld from dividends from 27 percent to 15 percent for companies or entities registered in a state that must “exchange information with Danish authorities under a double taxation agreement,” or other agreement on tax assistance.63That leaves only Section 23 of the Capital Gains Tax Act of Denmark and Section C.B.2.1.6.1 of the Legal Guide. The Court notes that the defendants have failed to provide a copy of or excerpt from Section 23. They have provided only a copy of a commentary that accompanies it.64 so the argument for the section’s relevance is not immediately clear. However, the Court assumes from defendants’ brief that they contend that the Court must apply this section concerning the timing of acquisitions of shares to determine whether the defendants owned the shares at a time that would entitle them to the tax refund.65 Such an argument is baseless.There is nothing in the complaints indicating that the defendants owned the shares at issue at one point but not another. Likewise, the defendants do not allege that they in fact owned the shares at one point in time and have introduced no evidence to that effect. The Court is obliged to take the facts in the complaints as true unless placed in dispute by other evidence that the Court may consider on this motion. The defendants have not placed the fact, or timing, of ownership in dispute. The Court notes also that it is not clear how, if at all, the timing argument is related to the question of beneficial ownership as distinct from any other kind of ownership.Beyond the apparent irrelevance of the sections of Danish tax law on which the defendants rely, there are two additional problems. First, the defendants’ insistence that beneficial ownership must and will be decided under Danish tax law does not make it so. With respect to issues of foreign law properly noticed under Rule 44.1, the responsibility correctly to identify and apply relevant provisions of foreign law is that of the Court.66 And while the Court is free to “engage in its own research and consider any relevant material thus found,” it is not required, and does not propose, to do the defendants’ homework for them and scour Danish tax law for a provision that may or may not entitle defendants to a dismissal on this motion.67 Among other reasons, the Danish language is not among the Court’s abilities.Second, and relatedly, the Court would need to know a good deal more about Danish law to determine whether the defendants’ argument could have merit. For example, in the United States, in the application of the federal revenue code, “state law controls in determining the nature of the legal interest which the taxpayer had in the property.”68 “This follows from the fact that the federal statute creates no property rights but merely attaches consequences, federally defined, to rights created under state law.”69 The same may be true in Denmark in the sense that a body of law other than tax law defines a taxpayer’s interest in property. Or it may very well be that Danish tax law defines property rights as well as the tax consequences that flow from those rights. But the defendants cannot prevail on this motion based on the mere possibility that such is the case.c. Whether Analyzing the Issue of Beneficial Ownership Under Danish Tax Law is Prohibited by the Revenue RuleAs noted earlier, even if there were a Danish tax law or laws concerning beneficial ownership, the Court’s consideration of those laws in determining whether the defendants owned the shares in any respect would not necessarily implicate the revenue rule.i. Enforcement vs. Recognition of Foreign Tax Law“From its earliest days, the revenue rule never proscribed all enforcement [or adjudication] of foreign revenue law.”70 But no binding authority has clarified the extent to which the revenue rule prohibits courts from recognizing or applying, as opposed to enforcing, foreign tax laws.71 The Second Circuit indicated in its discussion in the Canada case of a pair of cases from the U.K. House of Lords that the revenue rule does not apply to a claim involving recognition but not enforcement of foreign revenue laws.72 While the Canada court did not explicitly endorse this position, it did not reject it either.73 Indeed, it made a point of distinguishing the two English cases from the one before it by pointing out that the English courts merely recognized foreign revenue law without allowing “damages that would serve as a substitute for previously unpaid taxes to be paid…to a foreign sovereign.”74 More recently, the Supreme Court suggested in Pasquantino that the distinction between recognition and enforcement of a foreign sovereign’s tax law is determinative of the scope of the revenue rule’s application.75In Republic of Colombia v. Diageo North America Inc., the court addressed this very issue.76 It found that claims requiring courts to consider or “pass on” a foreign tax law fall along a continuum with explicit enforcement of a foreign revenue law — barred by the revenue rule — at one end, and “mere recognition of a foreign tax law” at the other.77 Whether “lesser forms of consideration of a foreign revenue law — for example, recognition or application — are permissible depends on the extent to which the consideration of the foreign revenue law raises separation of powers and sovereignty concerns.”78 The Court adopts this test here.The Second Circuit has described the key policy concerns that trigger the revenue rule as the need both to avoid “complications and embarrassment [that] may follow when one nation’s courts analyze the validity of another nation’s tax laws,” and to respect the executive branch’s responsibility to “decide when our nation will aid others in enforcing their tax laws.”79 Neither concern is present in this case.First, the Court need not pass on the validity of any of Denmark’s tax laws to determine whether the defendants were the beneficial owners of the shares. The Court merely would recognize any relevant law and determine its effect.80Second, the plaintiff’s claims have no bearing on the executive branch’s responsibility to decide when to aid other sovereigns in enforcing their tax laws because, as addressed in the discussion regarding direct enforcement, nothing in the complaints seeks enforcement of Danish tax law. The claims, as pleaded, are not ones for tax revenue but for money stolen from the plaintiff by fraud. Any argument that an action is one for “enforcement” if it involves the determination that defendants were not eligible for or entitled to tax refunds under Danish law is foreclosed by the case law discussed above. Mere recognition or even application of foreign tax law is not the same as enforcement.81ii. The Danger of Meddling in Foreign AffairsContrary to defendants’ assertions, rendering a determination with respect to beneficial ownership under Danish tax law would not thrust the Court into the middle of “ongoing, politically-contentious Danish administrative tax proceedings” on the same issue.82Defendants rightly point out that rendering a decision under Danish law on the question of beneficial ownership contrary to an opinion of an administrative or judicial body in Denmark deciding the same question would be exactly the type of harm or embarrassment against which the revenue rule is designed to protect. But at this stage of the litigation, and based on the present submissions, there is no reason to expect that this is likely to occur.The most obvious reason for this already has been discussed. The defendants’ submissions have not placed the fact of ownership in dispute. The less obvious reason is that — as far as the Court can tell — beneficial ownership as a specific inquiry under Danish tax law is not even in issue in the proceedings in Denmark at present. The SKAT determination letters, now the subject of appeal in Denmark, do not address the concept of beneficial ownership or turn on a finding specific to that term under Danish law.83 Instead, they turn on SKAT’s finding that the defendants “[did] not own and never [have] owned the shares listed in the claims.”84 Even more tellingly, defendants’ appeal of those determinations asserts that “there is no basis for challenging the fiscal ownership of the shares in question.”85 Elsewhere in the appeal, defendants describe their ownership as “rightful” or “legal.”86 The only place that the word “beneficial” appears is on Form 06.003, titled “Claim to Relief from Danish Dividend Tax.”87 The question on appeal in Denmark does not appear to be whether the defendants beneficially owned the shares at issue except insofar as that language is used on Form 06.003 to refer to the owner. Instead, the primary if not only issue there is whether the defendants owned the shares, or owned and lent them to a third party, at all.Accordingly, there is no indication at this point that the Court potentially will render a determination with respect to Danish tax law that might conflict with a determination by an administrative or judicial body in Denmark. Absent this prospect, the revenue rule provides no grounds to oust this Court of jurisdiction and the defendants’ motion is denied. If, however, as the proceedings continue and discovery unfolds, the prospect of inconsistent tax law determinations by this Court and a Danish administrative or judicial body becomes a more tangible possibility, then it may be appropriate to revisit the issue, at which time the defendants may file an appropriate motion.As noted earlier, even if the issue of ownership is not decided in this proceeding or one in Denmark under Danish tax law, a different body of Danish law may apply. In that scenario, the possibility remains that this Court and a Danish body might draw different conclusions after applying the same Danish law. The harm and embarrassment that could result from such an outcome could be of the kind that the revenue rule is meant to avert. The Court mentions this issue not to decide how it would proceed in those circumstances, but to clarify a separate instance in which foreign affairs may be implicated and another motion — though not one based on the revenue rule — may be appropriate.3. Defendants’ Other ArgumentsThe defendants make five additional arguments, viz. that: (1) the commercial actor exception to the revenue rule does not apply;88 (2) the U.S.-Denmark Treaty bars the action;89 (3) the plaintiff is attempting to intimidate the defendants and abuse the U.S. court system to conduct expedited discovery for use in ongoing Danish proceedings;90 (4) the plaintiff has sought and received information pursuant to the U.S.-Denmark Treaty, which in itself indicates that the action is one for tax enforcement;91 and (5) the availability of an administrative appeal to the Tax Appeals Agency, which defendants are pursuing, further demonstrates that the action seeks to enforce Danish tax law.92The Court need not address the first argument at any length because the plaintiff does not allege that it is a commercial actor. The defendants’ assertion to the contrary is a red herring.93The second merits only a point of clarification: the U.S.-Denmark Treaty and its provisions for “assistance in the collection of a revenue claim” are irrelevant because the plaintiff’s claims do not seek to collect tax owed by the defendants and covered by the treaty.94 The Danish taxes that make up a “revenue claim” under Article 27 of the treaty include only the following “together with interest, costs, additions to such taxes, and civil penalties”:95 “(1) the income tax to the State; (2) the municipal income tax; (3) the income tax to the county municipalities; and (4) taxes imposed under the Hydrocarbon Tax Act,” as well as “any identical or substantially similar taxes which are imposed after the date of signature of the Convention in addition to, or in place of, the existing taxes.”96 Money obtained by fraud from SKAT is none of these things.There is no evidence that supports the defendants’ third argument. Moreover, the report that the defendants rely on to support their claim that SKAT is seeking a discovery shortcut suggests that SKAT may have little need for such a shortcut, if indeed the process in this Court is one, which the Court does not believe that it is.97The Court does not consider the fourth argument because the propriety of obtaining information pursuant to the U.S.-Denmark Treaty is not before it.Finally, the Court will not countenance defendants’ attempts to use the status of the victim they allegedly chose to target in this fraud to block the victim from obtaining relief.98 The Court does not expect SKAT to sit idly by, and it sees no inconsistency in SKAT’s decision to withdraw its prior decision to refund dividend taxes, leading to administrative appeals in Denmark, and to file the complaints alleging fraud and seeking relief in this Court. Defendants are completely correct to note that “it is the method by which the alleged fraud occurred” that matters — not the chosen victim.99II. Failure to State a ClaimA. Legal StandardTo survive a motion to dismiss, a complaint must allege facts that, if accepted as true, state a claim for relief that is plausible on its face.100 If a complaint alleges fraud, it must comply with Rule 9(b), which requires the plaintiff to plead the circumstances constituting fraud with particularity, but allows “[m]alice, intent, knowledge, and other condition[s] of mind to be averred generally.”101The Court will dismiss a complaint on a Rule 12(b)(6) motion only if it appears beyond doubt “that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts” in support of its claim that would entitle it to relief.102 In resolving a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, the Court accepts as true all factual allegations set forth in the complaints and draws all reasonable inferences in the plaintiff’s favor.103 When material outside the pleadings is presented on a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, the Court may consider the material if it chooses to treat the motion as one for summary judgment under Rule 56.104In deciding this Rule 12(b)(6) motion, the Court considers all affidavits and exhibits submitted by the parties with their motion papers, thereby transforming the motion into one for summary judgment except where such material outside the complaints has no bearing. In those instances, the Court applies the standard for a Rule 12(b)(6) motion. In the others, the Court applies the standard for a Rule 56 motion. That standard requires the moving party to show that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.105 The moving party bears the initial burden of demonstrating an absence of a question of material fact.106 If the moving party meets this burden, then “the opposing party must establish a genuine issue of fact by citing to particular parts of materials in the record” to survive the motion.107 “In assessing the record to determine whether there is a genuine issue to be tried as to any material fact, the court is required to resolve all ambiguities and draw all permissible factual inferences in favor of the [non-moving party].”108B. False Representations of Material FactThe defendants move to dismiss the claims of fraud, aiding and abetting fraud, and negligent misrepresentation against the authorized representatives and incorporator on the grounds that neither made a material misrepresentation or omission of fact. The defendants attempt to cabin the authorized representatives’ roles to the act of signing the powers of attorney, which defendants point out the complaints do not allege to be false. Likewise, the defendants argue that the only allegation regarding the incorporator is that he “incorporated and dissolved certain companies, activities which are not alleged to be misrepresentations.”109The crux of the defendants’ argument is that the authorized representatives and incorporator cannot be liable vicariously for the acts of the non-party payment agents or broker custodians because the defendants did not have a principal-agent relationship with those actors, but were merely co-agents. To establish a principal-agent relationship, the plaintiff must allege: (1) “the manifestation by the principal that the agent shall act for him; (2) the agent’s acceptance of the undertaking; and (3) an understanding between the parties that the principal is to be in control of the undertaking.”110 Additionally, “a party must allege that the agent acts subject to the principal’s direction and control.”1111. Authorized RepresentativesDefense Exhibit 3 includes a copy of the power of attorney signed by authorized representative Doston Bradley and is therefore relevant to this issue. The Court considers the motion with respect to authorized representatives under Rule 56.Drawing all reasonable inferences and resolving all ambiguities in the plaintiff’s favor, the Court concludes that there is a genuine and disputed question of material fact regarding the existence of a principal-agent relationship between the authorized representatives and the payment agents. According to the complaints, the plans, acting through their respective authorized representatives, granted the payment agents authority to act on the plans’ behalf,112 and the powers of attorney that granted the payment agents this authority did so “subject to the control of the [plans].”113 However, the limited power of attorney signed by authorized representative Bradley nowhere states that the payment agent will act “subject to the control” of the plans. Instead, it states that the plan appoints the payment agent “as its true and lawful attorney-in-fact and agent.”114 There is ambiguity surrounding the degree of control the plans retained over the payment agents under the power of attorney. That ambiguity must be resolved in favor of the plaintiff for purposes of this motion. The Court therefore concludes that because the complaints allege that the plans acted through their authorized representatives115 and the authorized representatives would be the ones practically directing the actions of the payment agents,116 the powers of attorney were, in substance, proposals for the payment agents to act for the authorized representatives and subject to their control, to which the payment agents agreed.2. IncorporatorNone of the material outside the complaints supplies the Court with unpleaded facts relevant to this issue. The Court therefore considers the motion with respect to incorporators under Rule 12(b)(6).The Court concludes that the complaints fail to allege facts sufficient to find a principal-agent relationship between the incorporator, Crescenzo, and the payment agents, but allege facts sufficient to plead a claim for individual liability under the alter ego doctrine.To plead alter ego liability, the plaintiff must allege that: (1) the person exercised dominion and control with respect to the transaction attacked such that the corporation had no separate will of its own; and (2) the domination was used to commit a fraud or wrong against the plaintiff, which proximately caused the plaintiff’s injuries.117According to the Aria Complaint and others, Crescenzo “participated in incorporating limited liability companies associated with fifteen different claimants” that were created shortly before the claimants submitted their initial tax refund claims to SKAT and that Crescenzo had a hand in dissolving those same entities, all on the same date.118 It is reasonable to infer from these allegations that Crescenzo controlled the very existence of the companies affiliated with the pension plans and indeed that he created them for the purpose of receiving tax refunds. This inference, coupled with the allegation that Crescenzo’s home address is the same as the addresses listed by at least five pension plans including the Aria Plan,119 permits a second inference: Crescenzo controlled the pension plans themselves.120At this stage of the litigation there are a number of open questions regarding incorporator control of the Aria Plan and others that concern the nature of Crescenzo’s relationship to the authorized representative and the plans and the degree to which Crescenzo controlled or possibly shared control of the plans. If indeed Crescenzo shared control of the plans, then alter ego liability may not lie. But because the plaintiff has pleaded a set of facts, accepted as true, that state a plausible claim for relief, the motion to dismiss is denied.C. Fraud Claims1. ScienterDefendants argue that the complaints fail sufficiently to plead the defendants’ knowledge or intent to defraud and therefore do not meet the pleading requirements of Rule 9(b). Material outside the complaints submitted by the parties bears on this issue, which the Court will consider in deciding this motion under Rule 56.Rule 9(b) provides that the plaintiff may allege malice, intent, knowledge, and other conditions of the mind generally,121 though the facts alleged in the complaint must “give rise to a strong inference of fraudulent intent.”122 A strong inference is one that is “cogent and at least as compelling as any opposing inference one could draw from the facts alleged.”123 A plaintiff can meet this burden either “(a) by alleging facts to show that defendants had both motive and opportunity to commit fraud, or (b) by alleging facts that constitute strong circumstantial evidence of conscious misbehavior or recklessness.”124The plaintiff has met its burden under both tests. First, the complaints clearly allege motive by stating, for example, that the Bradley Plan claimed refunds in the amount of $11 million dollars or more, and received payments from SKAT on those claims.125 The complaints adequately allege that all defendants had the requisite opportunity to commit the fraud by describing each’s role in the scheme. With respect to the plan defendants, the complaints allege that the plans provided documentation to SKAT including claim forms that represented, contrary to fact, that the plans: (1) owned shares and had received dividends net of withholding tax, and (2) were entitled to a refund.126 With respect to the authorized representatives, the complaints allege that they effectuated the scheme by acting “on behalf of the claimants with respect to the dividend withholding tax refund claims,”127 and signed powers of attorney appointing payment agents for the singular purpose of acting on the plans’ behalf to obtain and receive the tax refunds.128 The payment agents submitted, signed, and stamped the claim forms, certifying that the plans owned shares that entitled them to tax refunds.129 Finally, the incorporator created and dissolved entities associated with the submission of applications for tax refunds and receipt of those refunds.130Second, the plaintiff sufficiently alleges strong circumstantial evidence of conscious misbehavior or recklessness. Indeed, the most plausible inference one could draw from the facts is that the defendants knew exactly what they were doing and that what they were doing was fraudulent. SKAT points out that the Bradley Plan is a one-participant 401(k) plan with a cap of approximately $116,000 on annual contributions, and yet it claimed to own hundreds of millions of dollars of shares in Danish corporations within the first year of its existence.131 Moreover, the Bradley Plan did not file a Form 5500-EZ132 with the IRS in 2015 — the year in which Bradley submitted the refund claims to SKAT and received payments on those claims.133 A one-participant plan such as the Bradley Plan does not have to file the form if “the total of the plan’s assets and the assets of all other one-participant plans maintained by the employer at the end of the [] plan year does not exceed $250,000.”134 It strains credulity to claim that defendants — one-participant plans and their agents — did not know whether the plans owned shares that were worth hundreds of millions of dollars or whether they were entitled to refunds from SKAT that were over 44 times greater than the total value of the plans’ assets.Having considered the material outside the complaints relevant to this question submitted by the parties, the Court concludes that the defendants have not met their burden under Rule 56 and the plaintiff has established a genuine issue of fact with respect to scienter,135 including by citing to particular parts of materials in the record.2. Aider and Abetter LiabilityThe defendants argue that the aiding and abetting claims should be dismissed because the complaints fail to allege substantial assistance on the part of any defendant. None of the material outside the complaints supplies the Court with unpleaded facts relevant to this issue. The Court therefore considers it under Rule 12(b)(6).The defendants’ argument fails because as discussed above, the plaintiff has alleged that the defendants acted in concert to carry out the scheme and each directly contributed to the alleged fraud. The motion to dismiss the aiding and abetting claims is denied, substantially for the reasons set forth in the plaintiff’s brief.136D. Restitution ClaimsThe defendants argue that the unjust enrichment claim should be dismissed because it is duplicative of the fraud and misrepresentation claims. Defendants likewise argue that the money had and received and payment by mistake claims are duplicative of the unjust enrichment claim. None of the materials outside the complaints supplies the Court with facts relevant to this issue. The Court therefore considers it under Rule 12(b)(6).A plaintiff may not plead the same claim more than once, which would constitute a duplicative claim, but may plead claims that provide alternative bases for relief.137 A claim is alternative and not duplicative if a plaintiff may fail on one but still prevail on the other.138 However, if the fraud and unjust enrichment claims rest on the same facts and the plaintiff prevails on the fraud claim, then the unjust enrichment claim becomes duplicative.139The unjust enrichment claim alleges an alternative basis for relief from the fraud and negligent misrepresentation claims because both scienter and the defendants’ liability for the alleged misrepresentations are disputed. The plaintiff’s claims for fraud and negligent misrepresentation theoretically could fail and it still could prevail on the unjust enrichment claim. The defendants’ motion with respect to the unjust enrichment claim therefore is denied as premature.The defendants’ motion with respect to the money had and received claim is denied also. Courts in this circuit and district have found that claims for money had and received and unjust enrichment are not duplicative of each other even when they rest on the same facts on the grounds that money had and received is a claim that “has been considered an action at law” even though it rests on equitable principles,140 and the claims, while similar, are not identical.141 Moreover, the motion is premature.142For the same reasons, the motion with respect to the payment by mistake claim is denied.ConclusionThe defendants’ motion to dismiss the complaints is denied in all respects.SO ORDERED.Dated: January 9, 2019