United States v. Reese ( 1993 )


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  •                     UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    For the Fifth Circuit
    Nos. 92-8108 & 92-8109
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    VERSUS
    LOUIS G. REESE, III,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Texas
    (August 13, 1993)
    Before WISDOM, JOLLY, and DeMOSS, Circuit Judges.
    DeMOSS, Circuit Judge:
    I.
    Lewis G. Reese III (Reese) and his Dallas based companies were
    major developers of real estate in Texas.         During the middle 1980's
    Reese financed several of his real estate deals with Lamar Savings
    and   Loan    Association     (Lamar)    and   Western    Savings   and   Loan
    Association (Western).
    On August 7, 1990, Reese along with four Lamar officials, were
    indicted in the Western District of Texas, Austin Division, in
    Cause No. A-91-CR-85 for conspiracy to defraud the United States
    and its agency, the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, in violation of
    18 U.S.C. §371.   Count one of the indictment charged Reese as a co-
    conspirator involved with conduct to defraud the United States, to
    misapply federally insured funds in violation of Title 18 U.S.C. §
    657; to cause false entries to be made in the books, reports and
    statement of Lamar Savings Association, a federally insured savings
    and loan, in violation of Title 18 U.S.C. § 1006; and to make false
    and fraudulent statements to the Federal Home Loan Bank Board in
    violation of Title 18 U.S.C. § 1001.       On June 19, 1991, a one-count
    information was filed in the Northern District of Texas in Cause
    No. A-91-CR-85, charging Reese with conspiring to defraud the
    United States by impeding and impairing the lawful functions of the
    Internal Revenue Service, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371.           The
    case was subsequently transferred to the Western District of Texas
    and consolidated with Criminal Cause No. A-90-CR-117, the Lamar
    case.
    Although both cases arose out of Reese's real estate dealings,
    each case involved independent events.
    A.    The Lamar Savings and Loan Association Case
    Lamar was a savings and loan institution located in Austin,
    Texas.    In 1985, The Federal Home Loan Bank Board (FHLBB) notified
    Lamar that there were deficiencies in its net worth related to real
    estate    which   Lamar   had   acquired    through   foreclosure   (REO
    Properties); and that Lamar would be required to dispose of these
    REO properties in order to correct the deficiencies and to avoid a
    supervisory agreement ordered by FHLBB.
    2
    Lamar decided that it would be difficult to dispose of the REO
    properties in the ordinary course of business because the real
    estate market was poor at that time.                 Consequently, it devised a
    plan whereby        borrowers    would   be   required      to    purchase   an   REO
    property as a condition of receiving a loan on other property,
    thereby making it appear to the regulators that Lamar had sold off
    the REO property. Lamar would finance both the legitimate loan and
    the REO property sale by lending more money to the borrower than
    the original loan request would have required.                   Lamar executed its
    scheme by lending more money to a single borrower than permitted by
    the regulators and disguised these excess loans to one borrower by
    using nominee borrowers.1 Lamar was therefore able to deceive the
    federal regulators as to Lamar's true financial condition.
    In order to carry out its plans, Lamar contacted potential
    borrowers and let them know that Lamar was prepared to lend money
    but only under the above stated conditions.
    Reese needed financing to purchase and develop a 225 acre
    parcel of land located in DeSoto, Texas (the DeSoto property).                     On
    June       29,   1985   Lamar   agreed   to   lend     $37,000,000     to    Reese's
    corporation,        Louis   Reese,   Inc.     with    the   DeSoto    property    as
    collateral.
    As a condition of the loan, Reese agreed to acquire or cause
    someone else to acquire two of the REO properties, the "Witte" and
    "Ponderosa" properties, which were classified as non-performing
    1
    The "loan to-one-borrower" limitation rule restricts the amount of money
    which a financial institution can lend to any single borrower.
    3
    assets on Lamar's books. The down payment for these properties was
    funded by Lamar lending excess money with respect to the DeSoto
    property and the borrower, Louis Reese, Inc., would pass the funds
    on to the nominee purchaser.        The DeSoto property was thus used to
    generate money which would be used to purchase the Witte and
    Ponderosa properties from Lamar.           Proceeds from the DeSoto loan
    were $14,634,663 in excess of the purchase price needed to purchase
    the DeSoto property. Approximately $11,000,000 of the excess funds
    were used to facilitate the purchase of the Witte and the Ponderosa
    properties.      These sham transactions created false entries and
    artificially inflated Lamar's net worth, resulting in deception of
    the FHLBB.
    Because the aggregate of the $37,000,000 loan and the loans
    for the balance of the sales price of the REO properties would have
    exceeded Lamar's legal lending limits to any one borrower, Reese
    gave a business acquaintance, Robert Brown, all of the stock of
    Berkshire Realty, Inc. (Berkshire), a shelf corporation2 owned by
    Reese and     arranged    for   Berkshire,    to   purchase    the   Witte   and
    Ponderosa properties as a nominee for Reese.             Brown and Berkshire
    were thereby used in the loan transaction to circumvent the "loan-
    to-one-borrower" limitation.
    The entire transaction proved to be unsuccessful, and Lamar
    eventually foreclosed on the Witte and Ponderosa properties and
    took back the DeSoto property in settlement of the loan.                  Reese
    2
    A shelf corporation is a corporation formed for future purposes and left
    on the shelf until that purpose come to pass or another purpose is selected.
    4
    agreed to forego any litigation against Lamar for its alleged
    breaches of promises to Reese.
    Lamar was able to later sell the two REO     properties for a
    profit of $1,626,857.      However, the DeSoto property which was
    deeded back to Lamar in August 1986 was appraised in October, 1986
    for $13,000,000.   Lamar was subsequently taken over by the Federal
    Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC).
    B.   The IRS Case
    In 1984, two individuals, identified as "A" and "B" approached
    Reese and proposed a real estate transaction.
    Individual "A" had advanced $2,300,000 toward the purchase of
    a horse farm in Kentucky and wanted to use Reese's equity in a
    parcel of land, LBJ/Central property, located in Dallas, Texas, to
    fund the remainder of the purchase price.    Reese, Individual "A"
    and a third party, Individual "B" agreed to form Slew Farms, Inc.,
    a Cayman Island partnership, to control the property.   Individual
    "A" also formed Haft, Inc. in Nevada.   Haft, Inc. was wholly owned
    by Slew Farms.
    On October 19, 1984, Reese conveyed the LBJ/Central property
    to Haft, Inc. for $15,900,000.    On the same day, Haft, Inc. sold
    the same property to a corporation owned by "B" for $28,186,565.
    Western Savings Association financed the sale with a $29,000,000
    loan to "B"'s corporation.   Haft, Inc. thus realized a $12,000,000
    profit on the sale.      "A" then wire transferred the $12,000,000
    proceeds from the sale, plus the proceeds from a $2,000,000 loan,
    through an Allied Bank account in Dallas, Texas, to a Guiness Mahon
    5
    Cayman Trust Ltd. account in New York City, to an account in the
    name   of   Warrenton   Farms,    Inc.   in   Fayette   Commerce   Bank   in
    Lexington, Kentucky.        Warrenton Farms, Inc., was wholly owned by
    Slew Farms, Inc.     Individual "A" used the $14,000,000 to buy the
    Kentucky horse farm. Haft, Inc. never filed a corporate income tax
    return and did not pay any corporate income taxes.
    These transactions were planned in such a manner that the true
    nature of the deal was not disclosed in the loan documents to
    Western and the loan documents did not disclose the relationship
    between the parties to the sale of the LBJ/Central property.
    Western suffered a $12,100,000 loss as a result of the scheme.
    On July 9, 1991, pursuant to a plea agreement, Reese entered
    a plea of guilty    to Count one of the indictment in the Lamar case,
    Cause No. A-90-CR-117, and to the one-count information in the IRS
    case, Cause No. A-91-CR-85.
    C.   The Sentences
    The federal probation department concluded in a court-ordered
    presentence investigative report (PSR) that there was a $9,265,829
    loss with respect to the Lamar transaction and that Western lost
    $12,100,000 as a result of its loan to B's corporation.
    On February 19 1992, the trial court held a             hearing on
    restitution.    Federal Bureau of Investigation Agent Matt Gravelle,
    a Certified Public Accountant, testified for the government about
    the loss created by the DeSoto loan in the Lamar transaction.
    6
    Agent Gravelle offered two calculations to determine the loss.3                 In
    the second computation, the one eventually adopted by the court,
    the loss was determined by tracing monies expended at the closing
    of the DeSoto loan that Gravelle considered not related to the
    acquisition or development of the DeSoto property.                    According to
    Gravelle, out of the $28,717,000 funded at the DeSoto loan closing,
    $12,274,000 were funds not related to the DeSoto loan.                   From that
    amount, Reese was credited with the $3,700,000 certificate of
    deposit that Reese ultimately returned to Lamar Savings.4                     This
    produced a figure of $8,574,000 to which loan brokerage fees of
    3
    The first theory Gravelle testified about was as follows:
    Total disbursed
    $28,717,000
    DeSoto appraised value
    after return - October 17, 1986
    13,000,000
    15,717,000
    CD return
    3,700,000
    Loss
    $12,017,000
    The second theory calculated the loss as follows:
    Outside normal scope of DeSoto closing
    $12,274,000
    CD Return
    3,700,000
    8,574,000
    +Brokers' payments - Ponderosa
    146,000
    8,720,000
    +Brokers' payments - Witte
    544,000
    $ 9,264,000
    4
    The $3,700,000 certificate of deposit was purchased by Louis G. Reese,
    Inc., a Texas corporation, out of the original DeSoto loan funds. Louis G.
    Reese, Inc., at the time it deeded the DeSoto property back to Lamar Savings
    through a deed in lieu of foreclosure, surrendered this certificate of deposit to
    obtain release of both Louis G. Reese, Inc. and Reese who had guaranteed the debt
    from personal liability on the original $37,000,000 note.
    7
    $129,000 from the Ponderosa loan and $544,000 from the Witte loan
    were added. The result, the $9,264,000 number, was very similar to
    the restitution sum submitted by the FDIC and the PSR; and the
    court adopted that amount.
    The district court sentenced Reese in the Lamar case, to three
    years in prison, $50 special assessment fee and ordered him to pay
    restitution of $9,265,829 pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3579.5             The court
    also sentenced Reese in the IRS case to a consecutive two-year term
    of imprisonment and $50 special assessment fee. No restitution was
    ordered in the IRS case.
    On appeal Reese raises four grounds of relief as follows:
    1. Whether the district court erred in requiring Reese to pay
    restitution for the loss incurred on the Desoto property.
    2.    Whether the district court erred when it imposed the
    restitution without considering Reese's inability to pay and the
    impact of a restitution order upon Reese's dependents.
    3. Whether the district court correctly computed the amount of
    restitution.
    4.   Whether the district court erred in considering a loss to
    Western at sentencing when Reese was not charged with the loss.
    We AFFIRM in part and VACATE and REMAND in part.
    II.
    WHETHER THE DISTRICT COURT ERRED IN REQUIRING REESE TO PAY
    RESTITUTION FOR THE LOSS INCURRED BY THE FORECLOSURE OF THE DESOTO
    PROPERTY
    5
    Title 18 U.S.C. § 3579 (1985) under which Reese's restitution was ordered
    was renumbered as 18 U.S.C. § 3663 (Supp. 1990). This opinion will refer to the
    restitution provisions under their current designation.
    8
    Reese's first claim is that the district court erred in
    imposing   restitution   for   Reese's   role   in   the   DeSoto   loan
    transaction because the DeSoto component of the loan was not a
    criminal transaction.
    Reese claims that the Lamar loan transaction consisted of
    distinct components: the Witte and Ponderosa components which he
    concedes were illegal and the other component which he claims was
    not illegal because it simply involved a regular loan secured by
    real property located in DeSoto, Texas.     He contends that because
    the DeSoto property loan transaction was legal, the restitution
    imposed applied to the non-criminal component of the conspiracy
    and, therefore, any loss incurred with respect to it should not be
    attributed to Reese.     18 U.S.C. § 3663.      See, e.g., Hughey v.
    United States, 
    110 S. Ct. 1979
    (1990); United States v. Paredo, 
    884 F.2d 1029
    (7th Cir. 1989).     Reese points out that Lamar actually
    realized a gain of $1,626,857 with respect to the two distressed
    properties.   Therefore, no restitution is due there either.        Reese
    concludes that Lamar's remedy for its loss is of a civil nature,
    not a criminal one.
    The legality of a restitution order is reviewed de novo, and,
    if the sentence is legal, the award is reviewed for abuse of
    discretion.   United States v. Chaney, 
    964 F.2d 437
    , 451-52 (5th
    Cir. 1992).
    Reese admits that over funded monies in the Lamar loan for the
    purchase of the DeSoto properties were used to purchase distressed
    properties owned by Lamar; that this transaction caused false
    9
    entries in the books and records of Lamar and caused the "net
    worth" of Lamar to be falsely inflated; that he participated in the
    criminal conduct associated with the DeSoto loan transaction when
    he provided a "nominee borrower," Berkshire Realty, Inc. and Robert
    Brown, to the transaction in an effort to circumvent the "loans-to-
    one-borrower rule"; that he was aware that Lamar wanted to improve
    their balance sheet by removing the two pieces of property from
    their books and avoid a regulatory order and that he knew that the
    loan on the DeSoto property would not have been made unless he
    agreed to buy the other property.
    The illegal transaction to which Reese pled guilty involved
    all of the loans relating to three pieces of property.    The entire
    DeSoto loan transaction was criminal.     Reese cannot separate one
    portion of a criminal transaction from the whole transaction.    As
    long as there is any illegal taint to a transaction, the entire
    transaction is considered illegal.     Chaney, 
    964 F.2d 437
    .
    III.
    WHETHER THE DISTRICT COURT ERRED WHEN IT IMPOSED THE RESTITUTION
    WITHOUT CONSIDERING REESE'S INABILITY TO PAY AND THE IMPACT OF A
    RESTITUTION ORDER UPON REESE'S DEPENDENTS
    Reese next argues that the court erred when it disregarded
    certain information in the PSR and in its own findings and ordered
    Reese to pay the $9,265,829 in restitution.
    Reese claims that the PSR indicated that he had millions of
    dollars of civil claims against him and that his only asset of
    substance was the family homestead, an exempt asset under Texas
    law.    The financial information available to the Court made it
    10
    clear, moreover, that the impact of any restitution order would
    affect Reese's family and dependents.          Finally, he says that at
    sentencing the district judge acknowledged that Reese did not have
    the financial resources to pay the restitution, but that the court
    ignored that determination and awarded the restitution anyway.            He
    claims that this procedure is directly contrary to the statutory
    requirements which require a Court to consider a defendant's
    ability to pay and the impact of the restitution order upon a
    defendant's dependents and that it was unreasonable and excessive.
    18 U.S.C. § 3664 (a).     See, e.g., United States v. Peden, 
    872 F.2d 1303
    (7th Cir. 1989); United States v. Bruchey, 
    810 F.2d 456
    (4th
    Cir. 1987).   United States v. Mahoney, 
    859 F.2d 47
    (7th Cir. 1988).
    United States v. Pollack, 
    844 F.2d 145
    (3rd Cir. 1988).            He says
    that the Court retains discretion under the Victim and Witness
    Protection Act to refuse restitution in an appropriate case.             18
    U.S.C. § 3664, See, e.g., United States v. Owens, 
    901 F.2d 1457
    ,
    1458-9 (8th Cir. 1990).
    An order of restitution will be reversed on appeal only when
    the defendant shows that it is probable that the court failed to
    consider a    mandatory   factor   and   the   failure   to   consider   the
    mandatory factor influenced the court. United States v. Gomer, 
    764 F.2d 1221
    , 1223 (7th Cir. 1985).     The Court's failure to follow the
    statutory requirements is reviewed for abuse of discretion. United
    States v. Barndt, 
    913 F.2d 201
    (5th Cir. 1991).
    Reese's claim that the district court made a specific finding
    of Reese's inability to pay restitution is based on the court's
    11
    remarks at the completion of the sentencing in which it responded
    to   the   government's   request   that    Reese   be   required   to   pay
    restitution in some method other than installment payments.              The
    Court stated:
    I didn't say anything about that.      As far as I am
    concerned, he can pay the $9,000,000 today, if he wants
    to or has the ability to pay. I'm sure he's not going to
    do that or doesn't have the ability. But that's part of
    this judgment.
    Reese interprets this comment to be a finding by the court
    that Reese was unable to pay the restitution at all.            We do not
    understand the judge's comment as such, but rather interpret it as
    merely a refusal by the judge to venture a guess as to whether or
    not Reese could pay the full restitution amount on the day of
    sentencing.    The judge made it clear by his statement that he had
    ordered no set method of payment of the restitution to be made by
    Reese, but that the payment should be paid within the statutory
    time limits.
    Title 18 U.S.C. § 3664(a) mandates that the district court
    consider "[t]he amount of the loss sustained by any victim as a
    result of the offense, the financial resources of the defendant,
    the financial needs and earning ability of the defendant and the
    defendant's dependents, and such other factors as the court deems
    appropriate."    But 18 U.S.C. § 3664 (d) imposes on the defendant
    the burden of demonstrating he lacks the financial resources to
    comply with a restitution order.         See United States v. Rochester,
    
    898 F.2d 971
    , 981-82 (5th Cir. 1990).
    12
    Reese never raised the issue of inability to pay in any of his
    objections to the PSR nor did he demonstrate to the court his
    financial   inability      to    comply    with   a   restitution   order.     No
    specific finding was requested of the court by Reese as to his
    inability to pay.         Even after the court imposed the restitution
    order on Reese, Reese did not object to the order based on Reese's
    inability to pay.     Reese has failed to carry his burden of proving
    an inability to pay restitution.                  We are satisfied that the
    district    court   did    not    fail    to   take   into   consideration    the
    necessary elements in assessing restitution.
    IV.
    ASSUMING RESTITUTION IS PROPER, WHETHER THE                    DISTRICT      COURT
    CORRECTLY COMPUTED THE AMOUNT OF RESTITUTION
    Reese next argues that the district court erred because it
    did not correctly compute the amount of that restitution.
    At the restitution hearing, Reese submitted the testimony of
    his own expert witness, an appraiser named Harry Schroeder who
    appraised the undeveloped value of the DeSoto property in May of
    1985 at $37,000,000 and the "as developed" value at $45,000,000.
    Schroeder concluded that, based upon comparable land sales in
    August 1986 (but subject to the fact that he had not done a
    complete appraisal), that a conservative value of the 225 acre
    piece of property would be in excess of $2 per square foot
    (approximately $19,600,000).
    Schroeder      testified      that     the   government    appraisal     was
    incorrectly based upon "fair value", a fictitious figure which
    discounted the value of the property based upon the assumption that
    13
    the property would not be resold for three to four years as opposed
    to "fair market value," an estimate of the price that a buyer would
    pay in an arm's length transaction in August of 1986.                  Schroeder
    also suggested that the government's appraisal included comparables
    that   were    1985   sales   of   much    smaller    tracts   and    thus    would
    potentially affect the validity of the appraisal made.
    Schroeder noted that Lamar made a profit on the Witte and
    Ponderosa properties of almost $2,000,000, and that Lamar suffered
    no loss on the DeSoto transaction because when Lamar foreclosed
    upon the DeSoto property it was worth at least the amount that
    Lamar had lent.
    The    Court   nevertheless    rejected       Schroeder's     opinion   and
    Reese's      testimony,   found    Agent       Gravelle's   estimate     of    the
    restitution amount of $9,265,829 to be credible testimony, and
    adopted the government's computation of loss.
    Reese submits three reasons as to how the court incorrectly
    computed the restitution amount:
    1.    The District Court valued the DeSoto property based upon
    an appraisal dated several months after the date the property was
    surrendered to the financial institution;
    2.    The government's appraisal used "fair value"; and
    3.    The District Court excluded the $6,500,000 payment that
    was made to Lamar at closing for the down payment on the REO
    properties.
    There is no error in connection with the first two reasons
    submitted by Reese.       However, we find the failure of the judge to
    14
    give credit for the amount of the down payment on the REO property
    to be clearly erroneous.
    The standard of review on appeal for a court's restitution
    order is whether the district court abused its discretion in
    directing the restitution.     United States v. Paden, 
    908 F.2d 1229
    ,
    1237   (5th   Cir.   1990).   District   Courts   are   accorded   broad
    discretion in ordering restitution.      
    Id. at 1237.
       The burden of
    proof for establishing restitution is upon the government by a
    preponderance of the evidence.    18 U.S.C. § 3664(d).    The court, in
    determining the appropriate amount of restitution, may consider
    affidavits and letters by the injured party.       See, United States
    v. Rochester, 
    898 F.2d 971
    at 982; United States v. Hairston, 
    888 F.2d 1349
    , 1354 (11th Cir. 1989); and may consider other hearsay
    evidence that bears minimal indicia of reliability so long as the
    defendant is given an opportunity to refute that evidence.         United
    States v. Rodriquez, 
    765 F.2d 1546
    , 1555 (11th Cir. 1985).         If the
    restitution was computed in violation of statute, it is illegal,
    and the correct standard of review is de novo.      Otherwise an order
    of restitution will be reversed on appeal only when the defendant
    shows that it is probable that the court failed to consider one of
    the     mandatory factor and the failure to consider the factor
    influenced the court.     United States V. Gomer, 
    764 F.2d 1221
    , 1223
    (7th Cir. 1986); United States v. St. Gelais, 
    952 F.2d 90
    (5th Cir.
    1992).
    Restitution in property crime cases is governed by     18 U.S.C.
    § 3663(b) which provides:
    15
    The order may require that such defendant--
    (1) in the case of an offense resulting in damage to or
    loss or destruction of property of a victim of the
    offense--
    (A) return the property to the owner of the property or
    someone designated by the owner; or
    (B) if return of the property under subparagraph (A) is
    impossible, impractical, or inadequate, pay an amount
    equal to the greater of--
    (i) the value of the property on the date of the damage,
    loss, or destruction, or
    (ii)    the    value     of   the    property    on    the   date    of
    sentencing,
    less the value (as of the date the property is returned)
    of any part of the property that is returned; . . . .
    The cases have made clear that the measure defined in this
    statute is exclusive.         See United States v. Keith, 
    754 F.2d 1388
    (9th Cir. 1985); United States v. Husky, 
    924 F.2d 223
    (11th Cir.
    1991); United States v. Mitchell, 
    876 F.2d 1178
    (5th Cir. 1989).
    Under subparagraph (A) of this statute, a return of the property to
    the owner is the first measure of restitution.                Looking first at
    the Witte and Ponderosa aspects of the transactions, we assume the
    "property"     is   land   and    improvements    so   labelled       which     were
    transferred by Lamar to the fictional purchasers as a result of the
    fraudulent scheme devised by the defendants.                While the record is
    not   clear,   it   appears      that   these   properties     were   ultimately
    returned to Lamar, probably as a result of foreclosure.                   The trial
    court in its statement of findings about restitution indicated that
    it would consider "gain" realized on the Witte and Ponderosa
    properties by Lamar after return of the properties. We see nothing
    16
    in the statutory provision which would give a defendant credit for
    the gain on resale realized by the victim after return of the
    property to the victim.          Of course the trial judge didn't really
    award the $10,390,000 that he found to be the amount of restitution
    owed, but rather simply adopted the claim of $9,265,829 which was
    described in the letter from the FDIC and in the PSR.
    Subparagraph (B) of the cited statutory provision indicates
    that   "if   return   of   the    property   under     subparagraph    (A)   is
    impossible, impractical, or inadequate" the court may require the
    defendant to pay as restitution, a dollar amount defined therein.
    The application of subpart (B) is conditioned upon a finding that
    return of the property under subparagraph (A) is "impossible,
    impractical, or inadequate"; and there is no such finding in the
    record.
    As to the Desoto property loan side of the transaction, it
    would appear that the "property" as to which Lamar might have
    suffered "damage to or loss or destruction of" could only be loan
    proceeds funded in cash at the original closing of this loan.
    Lamar's interest      in   the    Desoto   property,   (i.e.   the    land   and
    contemplated improvements) was never anything except a lien holder;
    and we doubt that such a security interest would qualify as
    "property of the victim."          The trial court found that the money
    funded at closing was $28,717, 448 which Lamar advanced against a
    promissory note of $37,000,000.            If the "property" is the cash
    funds advanced at closing, then to determine whether there has been
    "damage to or loss or destruction of" such property, you would have
    17
    to first determine what cash, if any, came back to Lamar as part of
    the closing itself.    Typically, lenders require a borrower to pay
    them points for making the loan, various fees and charges in the
    nature of expenses incurred by the lender and, in some cases,
    prepaid interest, all of which would normally be deducted out of
    initial   loan   proceeds   as   reflected   on   the   closing   statement
    regarding the loan transaction. Likewise, in this case, it appears
    from the evidence that the funds advanced at closing on the Desoto
    loan included funds which Louis Reese, Inc., the borrower, passed
    on to the nominal purchaser Berkshire/Brown under the fictional
    purchase transaction, and those funds were used in the closing of
    the separate purchase transaction to pay the cash down payment due
    to Lamar for the sale of the Witte and Ponderosa properties.
    Apparently, these closings were all done simultaneously at the same
    title company, and there was no way that the cash proceeds advanced
    to Reese, so it could advance them to Berkshire/Brown, could have
    ever been used by Reese for any other purpose.          Therefore, at the
    end of the closings, the cash down payment, due to Lamar as seller,
    less any closing expenses which Lamar would normally incur as
    seller (i.e. owner's title insurance, prorated taxes, surveys,
    etc.), would have come back to Lamar as a net reduction in the
    total amount of cash advanced on the Desoto loan. Obviously, these
    funds would not have come back to Lamar as a payment against the
    amount which Reese, Inc. owed on its promissory note; but for
    purposes of restitution, it seems only fair that the "cash" which
    Lamar advanced as part of this illegal loan transaction, should be
    18
    reduced by those sums which came back to Lamar in "cash" as part of
    the closing of the illegal loan.      Neither the government's expert
    witness nor the court ultimately recognized these reductions in the
    amount of "cash" which was actually put at risk by the illegal loan
    transaction.
    The trial judge says there was no obligation to give a credit
    for the cash down payment on Witte and Ponderosa because to do so
    would simply change the gain of $1,600,000 on the Witte and
    Ponderosa property to a loss of $4,400,000.         But, neither the
    amount claimed by the FDIC in its letter nor the amount stated in
    the PSR gave any recognition to the $1,600,000 gain on Witte and
    Ponderosa; and since, in spite of the trial court's own finding,
    the trial court ultimately adopted the $9,265,000 figure as the
    amount of restitution, the reason cited for not considering the
    cash down payment is moot as far as the actual figure ultimately
    awarded by the trial judge.   In any event, as we said earlier, the
    Witte and Ponderosa properties were returned "in kind" to Lamar;
    and there is no evidence in the record that these properties were
    damaged while owned by the fictitious buyer, nor is there any
    testimony that these properties were less valuable when returned to
    Lamar than they were when conveyed out by Lamar at the original
    closing.
    Now, analysis of the testimony of the government's expert
    about the $9,265,000 amount, indicates that it starts with a figure
    of $12,274,000 which was labelled "payments outside the normal
    scope of the Desoto closing."    On cross examination, he itemized
    19
    the various amounts which went in to this $12,000,000 dollar
    figure.      There is no testimony which explains what criteria this
    "expert" used in determining what constituted "payments outside the
    normal scope of the DeSoto closing." Furthermore, there is nothing
    in the statute that would call for a determination of what was
    "outside the normal scope of the Desoto closing."             If that loan is
    illegal because in effect it was made in violation of the "loans to
    one borrower" limit, then it seems to us that the whole of the loan
    proceeds which may be lost as a result of the offense, would be at
    risk and not just some portion categorized by the expert as being
    "outside the normal scope of a closing."
    Looking now at the credits given by the government's expert in
    determination of restitution amounts for the $3,700,000 involved in
    the letter of credit and the $13,000,000 which was the appraised
    value of the Desoto property after it was returned to Lamar by deed
    in lieu of foreclosure, we have little doubt that the surrender of
    a   letter    of   credit   to   the   issuer   is   close   enough   in   legal
    contemplation to the payment of cash to Lamar that it should
    constitute at least a partial "return" of the "cash proceeds
    advanced at loan closing."        We are puzzled why under one theory the
    government expert gave credit for the $13,000,000 appraised value
    of the Desoto property, but did not under his other theory, which
    is the one closest to the amount actually adopted by the trial
    court.       Conceptually, it would seem to us that when a lender
    accepts conveyance of the secured property in lieu of foreclosure,
    the value of such property should constitute a partial return of
    20
    the "cash loan proceeds."         We have no problem with the trial court
    accepting the appraised value of the DeSoto property, as indicated
    by the appraisal done            two months after the deed in lieu of
    foreclosure, rather than the appraisal testimony offered by the
    defendants at the restitution hearing. That is a credibility call,
    and the trial judge is in the best position to make that decision.
    As to the amount of restitution ordered by the trial judge, we
    conclude:
    a. The theory for calculation of restitution in the amount of
    $9,265,000, testified to by the government expert, and as claimed
    by the FDIC and reported in the PSR, finds no support in the
    statutory definition;
    b.     The first theory used by the government expert, and the
    findings described by the trial judge, started out on the right
    track   (i.e.   the   property      is    the   "cash   proceeds    advanced   at
    closing,") but fail to take into consideration payments which
    returned to Lamar as a result of the closing, and, therefore,
    reduced the quantum of the cash proceeds which were actually at
    risk.   Those reduction items would include points paid back to the
    lender, reimbursement of various lender expenses, prepaid interest,
    and the net cash returned to Lamar from the sale of the Witte and
    Ponderosa properties after reduction of normal expenses that Lamar
    incurred as seller in those sales transactions.                    Likewise, the
    appraised    value    of   the   DeSoto    property     when   deeded   to   Lamar
    constitutes a partial return of the property as does the letter of
    credit which was surrendered.
    21
    c.   The testimony and evidence in the restitution hearing is
    inadequate to permit the appellate court to arrive at a correct
    determination of these amounts; and
    d.    We    VACATE   the    portion     of   the   sentence    related   to
    restitution, and REMAND the issue of restitution                    for a further
    hearing in accordance with the provisions hereof.
    V.
    WHETHER THE DISTRICT COURT ERRED IN CONSIDERING A LOSS TO WESTERN
    AT SENTENCING WHEN REESE WAS NOT CHARGED WITH A LOSS
    In addition to the illegal transaction above, Reese pleaded
    guilty to a conspiracy to defraud the IRS when he participated in
    a real estate transaction that was structured in a complicated
    fashion to conceal the gain from that transaction from the IRS.                 At
    sentencing, the trial court imposed no restitution penalties for
    the financial loss to the financial institution involved in the
    conspiracy and no loss was due on the IRS charge because no
    determination was ever made as to the amount of the tax loss by the
    IRS.    Reese's PSR nevertheless contained a statement that Western
    lost $12,100,000 when Western financed some portion of the real
    estate transaction that enabled Reese and his co-conspirators to
    defraud the IRS.
    At his sentencing hearing, Reese objected to the inclusion in
    his PSR of the loss to Western because he says that he pleaded
    guilty to a scheme to defraud the IRS, but did not plead guilty to
    fraud with respect to a financial institution.                      Therefore, he
    complains    his    PSR   should    not    have     stated   that   Western   lost
    $12,100,000 on the loan.           Reese states that he objected to the
    22
    foregoing statement on the ground that the loss suffered by Western
    had nothing to do with the crime; that the government did not
    explain how      the   $12,100,000     loss   was   computed;   and   that      the
    government did not demonstrate that the loss resulted from criminal
    conduct.
    Reese wants the loss suffered by Western removed from the PSR
    because he claims that the figure is incorrect and prejudicial in
    that it would potentially affect his sentence and jeopardize his
    treatment by the United States Bureau of Prisons and the United
    States Parole Commission.
    Reese     argues   that    his    objections     to   alleged     factual
    inaccuracies in the PSR triggered Rule 32(c)(3)(D), but that the
    court failed to comply with the Rule by not making a finding as to
    these inaccuracies.       United States v. Aubrey, 
    878 F.2d 825
    (5th
    Cir. 1989).
    6
    Rule 32(c)(3)(D) provides as follows:
    If the comments of the defendant and the defendant's
    counsel or testimony or other information introduced by
    them allege any factual inaccuracy in the presentence
    investigation report or the summary of the report or part
    thereof, the court shall, as to each matter controverted,
    make (i) a finding as to the allegation, or (ii) a
    determination that no such finding is necessary because
    the matter controverted will not be taken into account in
    sentencing.    A written record of such findings and
    determinations shall be appended to and accompany any
    copy of the presentence investigation report thereafter
    made available to the Bureau of Prisons or the Parole
    Commission.
    6
    This Rule is applicable to offenses, like Reese's, committed prior to
    November 1, 1987.
    23
    Where a challenge is raised by the defendant regarding the
    factual accuracy of the PSR, the judge must either make a finding
    as to each objection or state that a finding is unnecessary because
    he is disregarding the controverted information in making the
    sentencing decision. United States v. Piazza, 
    959 F.2d 33
    , 36 (5th
    Cir. 1992); United States v. Lawal, 
    810 F.2d 491
    , 492 (5th Cir.
    1987). However, the finding need not be in any particular form, as
    long as this Court is able to determine from the record whether the
    district court found the challenged fact in favor of or against the
    defendant and whether the fact affected the sentence.         United
    States v. Puma, 
    937 F.2d 151
    , 155-56 (5th Cir. 1991), cert. denied,
    U.S.     , 
    112 S. Ct. 1165
    (1992); United States v. Perrera, 
    842 F.2d 73
    , 75-76 (4th Cir.), cert. denied, 
    488 U.S. 837
    (1988).
    The government argues that Reese's arguments fail for several
    reasons.    Upon review we agree.
    Reese argues that the facts found in the PSR do not establish
    that any loss to Western was relevant to the conspiracy charge or
    that the loss was the result of criminal conduct.     In objecting to
    the Western loss statement in the PSR, Reese claims that he was not
    personally involved in obtaining the loan which resulted in the
    loss.     But the PSR does not allege that Reese was personally
    involved in obtaining the loan.     It simply alleges the transaction
    as part of the conspiracy.
    The record reflect that the loan obtained from Western was an
    integral part of the conspiracy.         The loss to Western was the
    24
    result of     criminal   conduct    by   which   income   was    obtained   and
    concealed.
    "[O]nly    historical,       objectively    verifiable      information
    reported in the PSI, antedating the report and existing independent
    of it, can properly be contested as a `fact' under Rule 32."
    United States v. Jones, 856 F/2d 146, 150 (11th Cir. 1988).
    Reese fails to allege any such "factual inaccuracies" in his
    PSR   which   would   trigger    Rule    32(c)(3)(D).      But    rather    his
    objections go "merely to tone, form, or style of the report."                He
    attacks only the district court's application of the report's legal
    conclusion, based on the facts therein.          He does not deny that the
    information was accurate, only that it was not properly admissible.
    Reese therefore failed to make the requisite showing that the
    information in the PSI report was "materially untrue."                 United
    States v. Flores, 
    875 F.2d 1110
    , 1113 (5th Cir. 1989), Piazza, at
    37. United States v. Aleman, 
    832 F.2d 142
    , 145 (11th Cir. 1987;
    United States v. Cox, 
    934 F.2d 1114
    , 1126 (10th Cir. 1991).            United
    States v. Hand, 
    913 F.2d 854
    , 857 (10th Cir. 1990); United States
    v. Pellerito, 
    918 F.2d 999
    , 1002-003 (1st Cir. 1990).
    Moreover, there is evidence that the court did comply with its
    duty to make a finding as to the alleged factual inaccuracies and
    with Rule 32(c)(3)(D).          When Reese objected that the loss to
    Western should not have been included in the PSR because Reese was
    not responsible for that loss, the court requested a response
    thereto from the government.        The probation officer explained that
    Reese was responsible because he was a member of the conspiracy and
    25
    that the amount of the loss, $12,100,000, had been confirmed by the
    United States             Attorney's     office     in    Dallas.    The     trial   court
    overruled Reese's objection.                   It thereby resolved the disputed
    facts against him and accepted the findings of the PSR that the
    conspiracy resulted in a $12,100,000 loss to Western.                        See, United
    States v. 
    Puma, 937 F.2d at 155-56
    .                    The court attached      a written
    record       of     its      findings,    an    addendum       entitled    "Controverted
    Presentence Matters" to the PSR which indicates that Reese's
    objections "re: 12,100,000" were overruled by the trial court.
    Puma, at 155-56.
    The District Court's decision to overrule Reese's objection
    was correct.            Reese admitted that he was a member of the conspiracy
    and that it was the intent of the co-conspirators to impede the IRS
    from determining the correct taxable income of the real estate
    transaction and that the transactions were intentionally structured
    to conceal their true nature from Western.                      Because the loan from
    Western       was       an   integral    part     of     the   conspiracy,    Reese   was
    responsible for the actions of his co-conspirators.                         Pinkerton v.
    United States, 
    328 U.S. 640
    (1946); Chaney, 
    964 F.2d 437
    ; United
    States v. Acosta, 
    763 F.2d 671
    , 681 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 
    474 U.S. 863
    (1985).
    Finally, we do not believe that Reese was deprived of any
    information as to the number and the accuracy of the loss to
    Western.          The record reflects that the court did consider the
    accuracy of the $12,100,00 figure set forth in the PSR as the loss
    to Western when the Probation Officer informed the trial court that
    c:br:opin:92-8108p.jm                          26
    this figure was verified by the United States Attorney's office.
    The basis of the $12,100,000 figure is evident from the face of the
    PSR.
    VI.
    CONCLUSION
    We AFFIRM the district court's judgment as to all allegations
    of error asserted by Reese except the determination of the amount
    of restitution; and find that the trial court did not correctly
    compute the amount of restitution.         We, therefore, VACATE the
    portion of the district court's judgment as to the amount of
    restitution and REMAND that portion to the district court for
    redetermination.
    c:br:opin:92-8108p.jm             27
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 92-8108

Filed Date: 8/16/1993

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/19/2016

Authorities (27)

United States v. Giuseppe Pellerito , 918 F.2d 999 ( 1990 )

United States v. Steven Jean Hand, AKA Timothy R. Edwards , 913 F.2d 854 ( 1990 )

United States v. Donald A. Hairston, Sr. , 888 F.2d 1349 ( 1989 )

United States v. Arturo Rodriguez, Vincente Ramirez , 765 F.2d 1546 ( 1985 )

United States v. Monroe Melvin Husky, Jr. , 924 F.2d 223 ( 1991 )

United States v. Richard Bruce Cox , 934 F.2d 1114 ( 1991 )

United States v. Barbara Chaney , 964 F.2d 437 ( 1992 )

United States v. Louis Rochester , 898 F.2d 971 ( 1990 )

united-states-v-manuel-acosta-bobby-ray-weempe-trinidad-aranda-maria , 763 F.2d 671 ( 1985 )

United States v. Leroy Mitchell , 876 F.2d 1178 ( 1989 )

United States v. Salvatore O. Perrera, United States of ... , 842 F.2d 73 ( 1988 )

United States v. Kathy Sue Piazza , 959 F.2d 33 ( 1992 )

United States v. Fred R. Pollak , 844 F.2d 145 ( 1988 )

United States v. Darlene G. Bruchey , 810 F.2d 456 ( 1987 )

United States v. Jimmy Dale Gomer , 764 F.2d 1221 ( 1985 )

United States v. Emmanuel O. Lawal , 810 F.2d 491 ( 1987 )

United States v. Abraham Rodriguez Flores , 875 F.2d 1110 ( 1989 )

United States v. Jean Marie St. Gelais , 952 F.2d 90 ( 1992 )

United States v. Ronald Joseph Puma, A/K/A Ronny Puma, ... , 937 F.2d 151 ( 1991 )

United States v. David F. Aubrey , 878 F.2d 825 ( 1989 )

View All Authorities »