32 Mass. App. Ct. 682 | Mass. App. Ct. | 1992
Numerous claims of error are made by the defendant on his appeal from a conviction after a bench trial on an indictment charging him with threatening economic injury. His primary contention is that the statute, G. L. c. 271, § 39(6), as amended by St. 1980, c. 531, § 3, is void for vagueness. Concluding that the statute, as applied to the
1. Background. This case involves a statement made by the defendant in the course of his dealings with the owner of a business who was attempting to secure a bank loan. To put the statement in its appropriate context, we set out G. L. c. 271, § 39(6), before relating the evidence. The statute reads: “Whoever, verbally or by a written or printed communication, threatens an economic injury to another, or threatens to deprive another of an economic opportunity, with intent to compel that person to do any act, involving the use or disposition of anything of value against his will, shall be punished . . . .”
There was conflict between the testimony of the victim and the defendant concerning the pertinent events. However, the trial judge, in explaining the basis for his guilty finding to the defendant, stated that he accepted the victim’s version and did not “credit contrary testimony of the defendant.” We, therefore, set out the facts mostly as related by the victim.
Lawrence Berger and his wife owned and operated the Edgebrook Nursery School, a Business which they purchased from the defendant, an attorney, in 1977. The purchase money was obtained with three mortgage loans, two from banks and one from the defendant. Berger decided, in the spring of 1987, that he wanted to refinance the school. While he was making a mortgage payment to the defendant, he raised the topic. The defendant told Berger that he should speak first with people at the banks holding the two mortgages.
Although one of the banks was willing to refinance Berger’s loans, Berger thought the terms unfavorable. He returned to the defendant in July and asked whether he knew of any other banks that might be willing to refinance his bus-' iness. On or about July 16, the defendant introduced Berger to Craig Schermerhorn, a loan officer with the Lowell Institute for Savings (the bank). Berger was seeking a loan in the
In late July, Schermerhorn informed Berger that the bank would consider a loan but only up to $450,000. Berger would have to pay the bank an origination fee (one point) and the defendant’s counsel fees (the “customary amount” of one percent of the loan) for representing the bank. Berger accepted these terms, and the loan approval process was put in motion. As the days passed, Berger became increasingly anxious about the time involved in the approval process. He made repeated calls to the appraiser retained by the bank to urge completion and delivery of the appraisal report on his property.
There were several telephone conversations between Berger and the defendant on August 7. On that date, the defendant called Berger and made the statement which is the focus of the indictment. He told Berger that he had some “good news and bad news.” The “good news” was that the bank had agreed to give Berger the loan for $450,000. The “bad news,” however, was that “somebody” was going to have to be paid two extra points. More specifically, in order to have his loan application processed, Berger was going to have to pay an origination fee of two points to the bank (instead of one, as previously noted), another point for the defendant’s legal fees, and two additional points for “somebody” outside the bank. Berger responded that, before he paid anyone two extra points, he would like to meet and speak with that person. The defendant refused, saying that it was “impossible.”
Uncomfortable with this news, Berger told the defendant that he did not like the arrangement, that he would have to think about it, and that he would get back to him. He discussed the matter of the two extra points with his wife, and then he spoke with his son, an attorney. Because he “needed the cash,” Berger called the defendant and agreed to pay the'
Four days later, August 11, Berger was trying to reach Schermerhorn. He needed a commitment letter from the bank. When he was told that Schermerhorn was ill and not at work, Berger called the defendant and told him, “Reach this guy and tell him to get going and get this loan put through, and I’ll buy him a box of cigars.” The defendant assured Berger that he had bought Schermerhorn “more than a box of cigars, its on a go.” Berger called the defendant an hour later to ask whether he had been able to speak with Schermerhorn. The defendant said he was going to call the person who was going to get the loan “done,” a Mr. Sullivan. The loan closed two days later.
On the morning of August 13, the loan proceeds were deposited into the defendant’s client account. The 2:00 p.m. closing at the bank was attended by Berger, his attorney,
Four checks were then made out to the Edgebrook Corporation, the corporate name of the Bergers’ business. Two of the four ($15,000 and $47,601.30) represented Berger’s proceeds from the loan and were deposited into the business’s coporate accounts. The other two were in the amounts of $9,000 and $4,500. Their total, $13,500, was equal to three points on the loan. Berger asked the defendant why he was being charged three points rather than the two, as the de
The defendant took the two checks and showed them to a man who had entered the room shortly after the closing had begun. The man never spoke, and introductions were not made. He was later identified as Gary Sullivan. Nodding to each other, the defendant and Sullivan left the room and went to tellers’ windows to cash the checks. There was evidence to show that the bank had a policy that corporate checks had to be deposited into an appropriate corporate account and could not be cashed. There was also evidence,- the checks, to show that, after Berger had endorsed and returned the checks made payable to Edgebrook Corporation to the defendant, the defendant’s name had been added as an alternate payee. After the checks were cashed, the defendant returned to the room, alone, and completed the closing.
It was the bank’s policy to record all loan fees and disbursements on the various loan documents. In the present case, however, none of the documents disclosed that Berger had paid an additional $13,500, or three extra points.
Although the trial judge did not accept the defendant’s version and characterization of the critical events, we set out some of his testimony concerning the disbursement of the $13,500. The defendant took $4,500, as either legal fees or a finder’s fee. If legal fees, they would be in addition to those paid by the bank. If a finder’s fee, it was for services different from those rendered by Sullivan. A finder has no responsibility to push a loan through a bank found willing to lend the money. Sullivan received $9,000 for his role as a mortgage “expediter.” -It is the expediter who “gets the loan officer to complete the package, to write up the report, to put it from the bottom of the pile to the top of the pile, to take into whoever’s the approving authority, to get the appraisal . . . [ done ].” To carry out these functions, an ex
In explaining the basis of the guilty finding, the trial judge found that the defendant knew of Berger’s worries about the IRS and that he was “very anxious that the deal take place.” Turning to the defendant’s conversation with Berger on August 7, the trial judge found that the “good news and bad news” statement was a threat: the loan would not go through “unless the so-called ‘two points,’ that is, the $9,000 payment, which ultimately, the evidence showed, went to Mr. Sullivan, was made.”
2. The statute. In arguing that G. L. c. 271, § 39(6), is unconstitutional, the defendant complains that its terms and scope are so vague that it fails to give a person of ordinary understanding sufficient notice and definition of what acts are criminal and that it lends itself to arbitrary enforcement. See Grayned v. Rockford, 408 U.S. 104, 108 (1972); Commonwealth v. Williams, 395 Mass. 302, 304-305 (1985). As support for his argument, the defendant isolates the words “threat” and “economic opportunity” and conjectures that a person could be subject to criminal liability for threatening to withdraw from a potential transaction.
Our consideration of this attack on the statute “must be based solely on the circumstances of the defendant’s case,” Commonwealth v. O’Connor, 406 Mass. 112, 121 (1989), and the range of behavior which he suggests may be proscribed by the statute is not relevant. As explained in Commonwealth v. Love, 26 Mass. App. Ct. 541, 544-545 (1988), “[b]y a settled rule in the Commonwealth, ... so broad a
As the trial judge found, the defendant knew that Berger “was very anxious that the deal take place.” The defendant, fully aware of Berger’s financial situation, told him that the loan would not be approved unless he paid $9,000 over and above the normal and agreed upon terms to someone outside the bank for a reason unrelated to the lending process. If it appears to the defendant that certain words in the statute are somewhat amorphous, they take on clarity when read in the light of their usage. “[Sjince words are the elements that consitute a statute, mathematical precision in,the definition of legislative enactments is not required. Grayned [v. Rockford, 408 U.S.] at 110. A statute is satisfactory so long as it clearly indicates what it prohibits as a whole. Id." Commonwealth v. Bohmer, 374 Mass. 368, 372 (1978). The statute gives fair warning that it is a crime to coerce someone to give up something of value in order to avoid the infliction of an “economic injury” or the loss of an “economic opportunity.” Irrespective of whatever may be the outer limits of an economic “injury” or “opportunity,” the facts of this case show that the defendant’s actions fell well within the core of that type of conduct prohibited by the statute. Neither the defendant nor Sullivan was a principal in the loan transaction, nor did either man have an interest or say in the loan and its terms.
Both law enforcement officials and the defendant reasonably could be expected to understand that the conduct in
As discussed in Commonwealth v. Snow, 269 Mass. 598, 608 (1930), “[fjour factors constitute the crime set forth in . . . § 25: (1) a malicious threat (2) made to a named person (3) of personal injury to some one (4) with intent to extort money. See Commonwealth v. King, 9 Cush. 284, 287 [1852]; Commonwealth v. Reynolds, 14 Gray 87, 89, 90 [1859].” See also Commonwealth v. DeVincent, 358 Mass. 592, 595 (1971); Commonwealth v. Matchett, 386 Mass. 492, 499-500 (1982). The word “maliciously,” which appears in § 25, is used in its ordinary sense. “The wilful doing of an unlawful act without excuse is ordinarily sufficient to support the allegation that it was done maliciously and with criminal intent.” Commonwealth v. Goodwin, 122 Mass. 19, 35 (1877), discussing G.S. 1860, c. 160, § 28, the predecessor of G. L. c. 265, § 25. The absence of the word “maliciously” from G. L. c. 271, § 39(6), does not make that statute significantly different from the prohibition set out in c. 265, § 25. The significant difference between the two statutes is the object of the threatened harm, § 25 aimed at personal injury and § 39(6) directed to economic injury, which may or may not include property in which the victim has an ownership or possessory interest.
3. The sufficiency and weight of the evidence. Taking the evidence in the light most favorable to him, the defendant argues that the trial judge erred in denying his motion for a required finding of not guilty which was made at the close of the Commonwealth’s case. See Mass.R.Crim.P. 25(b), 378 Mass. 896 (1979). He claims that the Commonwealth failed
We take the evidence in a different light. See Commonwealth v. Latimore, 378 Mass. 671, 676-678 (1979). As previously recited, Schermerhorn told Berger in late July that, if the appraisal and other documents were in order, the bank would approve a loan in the amount of $450,000. The Commonwealth also presented evidence to show that, although the appraiser received numerous phone calls from Berger, he never spoke with a Mr. Sullivan. He completed the report in due course and delivered it to the bank on August 10.
Chester Szablak, Schermerhorn’s superior, testified that only he and three other officers in the bank could approve a loan in the amount of $450,000. Schermerhorn was not one of the three. When Schermerhorn brought Berger’s application for a $575,000 loan to him in late July, he told him that Berger’s real estate could not support that high a loan. Schermerhorn returned to Szablak with an appraisal report on August 12, and Szablak approved the loan for $450,000. Throughout this entire period, July and August, it was the bank’s practice to use mortgage brokers or facilitators only when purchasing loan packages from companies. Although Szablak knew Sullivan, he had no communication with him concerning Berger’s loan application.
This evidence, along with Berger’s testimony and the closing documents, was sufficient to warrant a finding of guilty. The fact finder could reasonably infer that the defendant
4. Other issues. There remain three claims which require little discussion. The defendant argues that, because a violation of § 39(6) is complete once the threat is made, the trial judge erred in admitting the closing documents and cancelled checks in evidence. The claim, that those exhibits were unduly prejudicial and irrelevant, fails for the reasons discussed in Green v. Richmond, 369 Mass. 47, 59 (1975), and the cases and authorities therein cited.
We can find no support in the transcript for the defendant’s assertion that the trial judge displayed bias and prejudice against him by inquiring about the “possibility of a disposition short of a verdict.” While making that statement, the trial judge cautioned the parties that although the testimony and exhibits “so far” received raised serious questions, Berger had yet to be cross-examined. Other statements about which the defendant complains were made by the trial judge in response to inquiries about a guilty plea and for the purpose of clearing up any of the defendant’s uncertainties concerning related charges and indictments. Moreover, we think it hyperbole to characterize the defendant’s sentence (two days’ incarceration, the remaining four years suspended with 500 hours of community service, and restitution) as reflective
Requests for rulings under Mass.R.Crim.P. 26, 378 Mass. 897 (1979), are “intended to secure for the purpose of review a separation of law from fact in cases where the trial judge acts both as factfinder and applier of law.” Reporters’ Notes to Mass.R.Crim.P. 26, Mass. Ann. Laws, Rules of Crim. P., at 441 (Law. Co-op. 1979). Although the trial judge did not specifically rule upon the defendant’s requests, his decision constitutes their denial. See Smith, Criminal Practice and Procedure § 1952 (2d ed. ,1983). Based upon the statements he made in ruling upon various objections and in explaining the guilty finding, we conclude that the trial judge knew and applied the correct principles of law to the evidence he deemed credible.
Judgment affirmed.
Although the defendant may have done legal work for Berger in respect to the loan closing, he represented the bank. Separate counel for Berger attended the closing with him.