Solange LANDAU, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Toni VALLEN, Haas Securities Corp., Eugene K. Laff, Stanley
Aslanian, Jr., Mark Burgess, L.F. Rothschild & Co., Inc.,
Robert Schoenthal, Mathew R. Deane, Francois Mayer, Robert
R. Errico, Andrew Berger, Joel Miller, Kuhns Brothers,
Laidlaw, Inc., f/k/a Laidlaw Adams & Peck, Inc., Walter
Bаur, Henry Lorin, Henlor Capital, Ltd., Joelle Harris a/k/a
Mrs. Joelle Lorin, Enn Kunnapas, Linda Kunnapas, Maureen
Steffenson, Dr. Irwin Zandman, Capital Shares, Inc.,
Lawrence C. Caito, H. Clinton Pollack, Frank Shannon,
Yarrimup (A Corporation), J.T. Moran & Co., Inc., John T.
Moran, Paul R. Miano, Jacques M. de Stadelhofen, Legal
Assistant Corporation and John Does I-IX, Defendants,
Frank Shannon, Defendant-Appellee.
LF ROTHSCHILD & CO., INC., Third-Party Plaintiff-Counterclaimant,
v.
Henry LORIN, Frank Shannon & Enn Hants Kunnapas, Third-Party
Defendants-Counterclaimants.
No. 727, Docket 89-9014.
United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.
Argued Dec. 4, 1989.
Decided Feb. 6, 1990.
Mark J. Astarita, New York City (Gusrae, Kaplan & Bruno, New York City, of counsel), for plaintiff-appellant Solange Landau.
Gilbert S. Edelson, New York City, (Rosenman & Colin, Diane da Cunha, of counsel), for defendant-appellee Frank Shannon.
Before NEWMAN and WINTER, Circuit Judges, and TENNEY, District Judge.*
TENNEY, District Judge:
The only issue presented in this expedited appeal is whether the alleged victims of a defendant's criminal conduct may seek to attach bail in a related civil proceeding. We hold that they can.
BACKGROUND
On April 18, 1989, defendant-appellee Frank Shannon pleaded guilty to making a false statement оn a disclosure form in violation of federal securities laws. See 15 U.S.C. Secs. 78m(d), 78ff (1988); 17 C.F.R. Sec. 240.13d-1 et seq. (1989). While Shannon's criminal case was pending, plaintiff-appellant Solange Landau added Shannon as a defendant in this civil action, alleging that Shannon and others conspired to defraud her of millions of dollars. She asserts that the crime to which Shannon pleaded guilty furthered the conspiracy alleged in her complaint. Defendant's bail had initially been set at $10,000,000, of which $3,500,000 was deposited in cash. Bail was later reduced to $350,000 cash, which is still being held by the Clerk of the Court for the Southern District of New York. Those funds represent defendant's only assets in the United States.
While defendant was awaiting sentencing, plaintiff applied for an order to attach his bail funds. She was granted an ex parte temporary restraining order enjoining the Clerk from releasing the $350,000. Ultimately, however, the district court denied Landau's motion for a preliminary injunction to continue the same relief because it held that attaching bail would undermine its purposes. Landau v. Vallen,
DISCUSSION
We agree with the district court that there may be drawbacks to permitting the attachment of bail. In somе cases, it may reduce the incentive to return for trial; in others, it may increase the difficulty of obtaining a bail bond. These are legitimate causes for concern but they do not mandate the broad prohibition on attachment adopted by the district court. More importantly, we believe these problems remain even under its holding. Therefore, at least when the persons seeking attachment are the alleged victims of a defendant's criminal conduct, we hold that they must be given the opportunity to seek attachment of all available assets, including funds posted as bail.
The district court denied plaintiff's application because it believed such action was necessary to address its concerns about the overall purposes of bail. This did not exhaust her options, however, because if plaintiff were prevented from attaching the funds held by the Clerk, her likely next step would be to seek an order directed at defendant himself. See N.Y.Civ.Prac.L. & R. 5201(b) (McKinney 1978); Clarkson Co. v. Shaheen,
Indeed, granting such relief would implicate the very issues that concerned the district court in the application to restrain the Clerk. Therefore, under its approach, courts would have to deny any attaсhment that might diminish a defendant's expectation in the release of bail. That policy might have to be extended to funds defendants still had in their possession but merely intended to post as bail. Taken to its logical extreme, it would give defendants not only a "safe harbor" while bail funds were in the custody of the court, but also "safe passage" in and out of the court's jurisdiction. That would mean a foreign defendant, such as Shannon, could safely bring assets to and from the United States for deposit as bail, assured that they could not be reached by civil creditors. Thоse facts are not before us, and we do not intend to imply that we would necessarily adopt such a broad rule for other classes of plaintiffs, but we can think of no other approach that would address all the concerns identified by the district court.1 In any event, however, we do not believe such a broad ruling would be warranted on the facts of this case.
Nor do we find a prohibition on attachment consistent with New York's law of attachment, which otherwise controls. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 64; Huron Holding Corp. v. Lincoln Mine Operating Co.,
In addition, we are not comfortable with the notion of indicted defendants using funds that may be the fruits of their crimes as bail while their alleged victims are denied provisional relief that might otherwise be available to help redress their damages. All things being equal, we believe courts in the civil context should be particularly sensitive to the rights of the victims of crimes when they seek compensation from those accused of inflicting their injuries.
A. The Effect of Attachment on the Purposes of Bail
We have no doubt that the district court shares our concerns about the victims of crimes. Nevertheless, it identified broader concerns about the impact of attachment on the purposes of bail that it concluded outweighed even victims' rights. We believe it may have placed too much emphasis on these concerns.
While the expectation that bail will be returned is an imрortant consideration, it is only one of the incentives for a defendant to return for trial. Violating the conditions of bail may also create a risk of forcible arrest on a bench warrant, pretrial incarceration, contempt, bail-jumping charges and enhanced punishment at sentencing. For some defendants, these repercussions would outweigh any increased incentive to flee that might be engendered by the potential attachment of bail. For others, the threat of bail forfeiture might be the paramount factor. A blanket rule barring all attachments presumes that every criminal defendant would react similarly to a diminished expectation in the return of bail. In the case before us, the defendant had already been sentenced by the time the district court rendered its decision. Therefore, an attachment could not possibly implicate a risk of flight. See Bankers' Mortgage Co. v. McComb,
In addition, even in those cases where the threat of loss of bail is the most important factor, attachment would not necessarily decrease the incentive to return fоr trial. Granting an order of attachment does not mean that bail funds will be turned over to a civil plaintiff. It only ensures that they will remain in the court's jurisdiction pending resolution of the civil lawsuit. Moreover, no defendant can be fully certain that bail will be returned. Some courts have allowed payment of criminal penalties, without consent, from funds deposited as bail. Bank of Hawaii v. Benchwick,
In each of these contexts, the theoretical reduction in the incentive to return for trial is outweighed by other societal objectives. The plaintiff in this case falls within a special class of civil litigants because she allegedly suffered her losses in a scheme serious enough to warrant criminal prosecution. We believe that preserving the full range of provisional remedies for alleged victims, such as this plaintiff, is an important goal that justifies a possible incremental reduction in the incentive for defendants in other criminal cases tо return for trial. The per se rule adopted by the district court would have had the opposite result. This plaintiff, for example, was denied access to attachment, even though the rationale advanced by the district court did not apply to the facts of her case.
No criminal defendant should be able to post property as bail without its owner's consent. A thief would not be permitted to use a victim's property, see Bank of Hawaii,
Every court considering an application for prejudgment attachment determines a plaintiff's potential interest in property when it examines the likelihood of success on the merits. See N.Y.Civ.Prac.L. & R. 6212(a) (McKinney 1980). If plaintiff proves her allegations, then she will certainly acquire an interest in all of defendant's assets, including these funds. Conclusively establishing that interest as a matter of law may take several years. This means that courts may not be able to prevent defendants who hаve criminally obtained funds from using them to remain at liberty during prosecution. As disturbing as that prospect is, however, we are loath to compound it by helping defendants remove those funds from their victims' reach after the criminal case has ended.
B. Legal Actions Involving Funds in the Court's Registry
The district court believed that funds in the custody of the Clerk were generally protected from litigation. We can quickly dispose of defendant's argument on appeal that this type of attachment would be barred by sovereign immunity. Funds deposited in the registry of a court are deemed to be held by the United States Treasury, 28 U.S.C. Sec. 2041 (1982), but a simple order of attachment of funds held by the United States, in which it has absolutely no interest, does not implicate the sovereign immunity doctrine. Plaintiff does not seek to compel the Clerk to remit funds to her, only to preserve the status quo. The mere act of ordering the United States to continue its possession is hardly sufficient "restraint" or "compulsion" to warrant application of the doctrine. See Dugan v. Rank,
The district court nonetheless reasoned that the custodia legis doctrine prohibited attachment of funds in the Clerk's custody, but that doctrine is also not applicable to these facts. The custodia legis doctrine bars any attachment of funds in a court's registry that would prevent the court from disposing оf the funds in accordance with the purpose for which they were deposited. See In re Watts and Sachs,
The doctrine is often applied in the bankruptcy context to bar the efforts of creditors to obtain preferential status. See Straton,
In The Lottawanna,
The admiralty court in The Lottawanna had distributed the proceeds from the judicial sale of a vessel to a group of sailors who had been able to assert "maritime" liens--the limited category of liens that provide admiralty jurisdiction.
The Supreme Court held that the admiralty court had erred in doing so. Its members were particularly disturbed by the ease with which the state-court plaintiffs had evaded the admiralty court's stringent access requirements.4 It explained that the admiralty court's jurisdiction did not extend to the non-maritime liens of the state-court plaintiffs, concluding that the only authority the admiralty court had over the surplus funds was the power to release them to the vessel's owner. Id. at 221. In addition, the Court found the state-court attachment invalid because it would have required the admiralty court to violate its duty to return the surplus to the vessel's owner. See id. at 224. Thus, the state-court attachment interfered with the admiralty court's authority to dispose of a res in accordance with the purposes for which it had been deposited.
On its face, however, the Court's brief discussion on this point was quite broad. It stated that the admiralty court could not have considered the state-court attachment "[b]ecause the fund, from its very nature, is not subject to attachment either by the process of foreign attachment or of garnishment." Id. at 224 (footnote omitted). It acknowledged elsewhere in its opinion, however, that "[s]upplemental suits in the nature of a suit in rеm may unquestionably be entertained in favor of parties having an interest in the proceeds." Id. at 223 (emphasis in original).5 Therefore, the Court did not identify a general rule precluding actions against funds held in the registry; it merely held that the state-court plaintiffs had not asserted an "interest" cognizable in admiralty.
The Lottawanna has been cited in reference to the custodia legis doctrine on only a few occasions. See, e.g., In re Casco Chemical Co.,
The Clerk's authority to dispose of assets in its registry is dictated by the court it serves. See Atlantic Trust Co. v. Chapman,
Defendant's argument that permitting attachment will cause the Clerk to be subject to unprecedented litigation overlooks many reported decisions in which Clerks of the Court, and other persons acting in the role of the Clerk, have been subject to litigation over the disposition of bail. See, e.g., United States v. $250,000 in United States Currency,
In Jacobson v. Hahn,
By reaffirming the basic premise of cases such as Jaсobson, we merely acknowledge that the door to attachment of bail has always been open. That more plaintiffs may elect to avail themselves of the remedy is no reason to abolish it. Moreover, we do not think that the Clerk's mere filing of a simple interpleader, which could be reduced to a form, would seriously impede its other functions. See, e.g., Schmid,
CONCLUSION
Civil plaintiffs who can articulate a reasonable nexus between their losses and the crimes alleged in an accusatory instrument are entitled to seek attachment of assets posted as bail by a defendant.6 In light of our conclusion that plaintiff's application was not barred by a general policy, we reverse and remand the case to the district court to consider the merits of plaintiff's substantive claims, to the extent normally appropriate to determine entitlement to an attachment. The continuation of the district court's temporary restraining order shall remain in effect until ten days after the mandate issues.
Notes
The Honorable Charles H. Tenney, of the United States District Court for the Southern Distriсt of New York, sitting by designation
We note that the equities of unrelated civil claimants in this context are not as compelling as those of the alleged victims of a defendant's crimes, but we do not reach the question of whether persons other than victims are entitled to seek attachment of bail
In very limited circumstances, a defendant in New York may also be subject to arrest in a civil case and be required to post bail as a condition of release. N.Y.Civ.Prac.L. & R. Sec. 5250 (McKinney 1978) (arrest proper when there is reason to believe a judgment debtor is about to remove or hide assets); see 6 J. Weinstein, H. Korn & A. Miller, New York Civil Practice p 5250.01-05 (1988). Although the procedure is rarely ever employed anymore, see N.Y.Civ.Prac.L. & R. Sec. 5250 (practice commentary), any assets posted as bail may ultimately be used to satisfy the judgment. See, e.g., Chancer v. Chancer,
The district court's concerns about the impact of attachment on defendants in active criminal cases did not support its рer se prohibition. If the class of permissible applicants were restricted to the alleged victims of the crime, the judge initially setting bail could evaluate the possible civil exposure and set bail accordingly. We are skeptical that the possible added risk of flight could ever outweigh a plaintiff's right to seek a provisional remedy granted by state law. But, if it appeared to be a legitimate concern, it is typical of bail issues that are evaluated and addressed on a case-by-case basis. See, e.g., United States v. Nеbbia,
The Court stated:
[T]he right of the court to decree that third persons who could not have proceeded against the property in rem may recover a proportion of the proceeds to satisfy their claims against the owner, in a case where the owner appears and opposes the application, seems to be repugnant to every sound principle of judicial proceeding, and it is certainly opposed to the great weight of authority.
It also stated: "[I]t is presumed that no proceeding to attach such a fund by a creditor of the owner has ever been sustained."
This application was made in the district where the bail is being held. Therefore, we do not address what general power, if any, a district court has to order attachment of funds held in the registry of another. In addition, defendant has been sentenced and has not appealed his conviction, so the purposes of bail in this case have undeniably been accomplished. In other cases with less compelling facts, however, it might be beneficial to have the Government's input on the issue. See, e.g., Bankers' Mortgage Co. v. McComb,
